TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per annum in advance Six months !taco mouths =I 1 time. 2do Ido 1 month . ... S I 1 50 $1 . 2 5 5 s ' l, 705 $1 75 .. 2 25 325 400 475 One inch, or lees Two Inchen Three 3 months. 6 months. 1 Year One lath, or !PBS $4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 Too inciies, 6 25 9 00 15 00 Tune inches 3'50 •• ' 12 00 20 00 Pour inch a 10 75 16 00 26 00 Quarter colonic', 13 00 18 00 30 00 11 , 11colunin, 20 00 30 00 ...... ....45 00 One column, 30 00 45 00.... ...... 80 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six Hoes, One year 15 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 6 times, 92 50 Auditors' Notices. 4 times 2 00 Betray, or other short Notices 1 50 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tions desired, mull ho continued till forbid and chili ged or. cording to tbeso terms. local or Special Notices, 10 cents a line for single to. eqrtion. By the year at a reduced rate. Our prices for the printing of Blanks, Handbills, etc. lire reasonably low. roitssionif Nusintss earh. T DE BURKHART, M. D., Physi tp • ci•in and Surgeon, has located in Huntingdon, and tends r. his servo en to thin and neighboring community Office on Railroad street, near tho Depot. fe2.l-smo TIM A. B:- BRUMBAUGH LI Haring permanently located at Huntingdon, offers but pref.:vim:lel service, to the community. 00lee, the same no that lately occupied by Dr. Loden .on Hill street. ap10,1960 DR- JOHN McCULLOCH, offers his professional services to the citizens of Iluntingdon and vicinity. 01lice on Hill stree. one door east of Reed's Drug Store. Aug. 28, '65. T) ALLISON MILLER, ii rm. DENTIST, Haszemosed to the Brick Row opposite the Court house. pN111.3, 1859. J. GREENE, DENTIST. MINS Dace' removed to Le'star's New Building, • Hill street. Huntingdon. July 31,1857. j . POLLOCK, *VA TETTE &REAL ESTATE AGENT, lIONTINGDON, PA Will attend to Survoying in all its branches, and will bay Cud sell Real ratate in any part of the United Rates. Send for circular. dec29-tt A C. CLARKE, AGENT, ..CX• Wholelalu and Retail Dealer In all kinds of iNt(B2lt HUNTINGDON, PA Opposite the 'Franklin Hansa, In the Diamond. Cbutttry trade supplied. apl7'o3 T A P. DIAIiGAN, PROFESSOR CF MUSIC, Yee located to Huntingdon and will giro lessens in Music upon the Plano, Melodeon, Cabinet Organ and V 6 ollu also, Lessons in Vocal blade. The Professor has received a diploma from the Institu tion for the Blintiin Philadelphia, and flosla himself fully tompotent to impart instruction in "focal or Instrument al Music. Ho expects to meot with liberal patronage. - talktihalso prepared to tune riVIOOS. m 617 J. a. SIMPBOX, O. H. ARIIITAGIt. SIMPSON & ARMITAGE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, liUNTINGDON, PENNA. OFFICE IN BRICK ROW °prows Tux COURT UMW. Jan. 27, 1668-6 m. GE EN C Y FOR COLLECTING !SOLDIERS' CLAIMS, BOUNTY, BACH PAY AND • who may have any claims against the Government for Bounty, Back Pay and Pensions,can have their claims promptly palletise by applying eithr in person or by , leb ter to W. H. WOODS, ATTORNEY AT LAW. HUNTINGDON, PA 5ag19,1803 !MAUL T. BROWN, ICE=MI The name of this firm has been clang w from SCOTT a BROWN, to SCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, under which name they will hereafter eunduct their practice ■e `:ATTORNRYS.AT LAIV, lIIINTINCDON, PA. PENSIONS, and all claims of soldiers and soldiers' heir_ against the Government, will be promptly prosecuted. May 17, 186..c-tf. " It o COLLECTION ~„ sti • t , • OF . . _K.. ALLEN LOVELL, District Attorney of Huntingdon County, HUNTINGDON, PA. OFFICE—In the room lately occupied by R. M. Speer. jau.1.1667 T. X. Lytle & Milton S. Lytle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, PA., Have formed a partnerehip under the name and firm of P. M.. & M. S 'LYTLE, And have removed to the office on the south side of Hill aimed, fourth door west of Smith. • They will httend promptly to all kinds of legal busi ness entreated to their care. ap7-tf. NM sioat 7E. Z. GraELMICIP+T'.7O, Puccessor to 13. M. GREENED DEALER IN STEINWAY & SON'S PIANOS, , And other makes, MASON & HAMLIN CABINET ORGANS, idelcdoons, Guitare,Viollne, Fifes, Flutes, Aecordeone, An. dm. JR-Pianos, Organs, and Melodeons Warranted for Aro years. Circulars sent on application. Address Huutiugdon, Pa., 2d floor Leiater's New Building. fen 27,69 1 1 1 1-1 - FJ a-L033F., . - jOB PRINTING OFFICE. 'T" " GLOBE `JOB OFFICE" the most complete of any In the country, and pos. emses the most ample facilities for promptly executing In ,the bat style, every variety of Job Printing, such as NAND BILLS, CIRCULARS, pjI,L HEADS, BALL TICKETS, CARDS, PROGRAMMES, LABELS, &C., &C., &C CALL 'AND EXAMINE. SPECIMENS 01 WORE, --LEWIS • BOOK. STATIONERY 8 MUSIC STORE JOHN HOSE, W. H. WOODS, W. D. LEOS. JANES HOWIH, B. MILTON MED, JOHN BARE & CO., 011., r as 9 HUNTINGDON, PA. CAPITAL - - $50,000. Solicit accounts from Banks, Bankers and others. A liberal Interest allowed ml time Deposits. All kinds of Securities. bought and sold for the usual COmmisolun.— Collmtio9t made on all points. Drafts On all parts of Europe supplied at the usual mime. Persons depositing (Mid and liver will receive the In same return with Interest. Tue parthers are individ ually liable for all - Deposits. jy22,180-tf COUNTRY DEALERS can /a 4i• buy CLOTHING nom me in ilnetingdon at WHOLESALE as choap aa they can An the pea, as I havo a tqlolesele store in Philadelphia IL ROMAN. $2 00 1 00 WM. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers. VOL. XX IV. § § k KID. CLOVES, Ladies and Gentlemen's Sizes, The Tourist or Grant Hat 1%, , M01§Z - €, - 11Y, TrikEPlit OD' D'AVAUCM CORNER OF: ME DIAMOND, thiiiii , FASHIONABLE •GOCIDS FOR SPRING AND SUMMER WEAR. GEO. F. MARSH, MERCHANT TAILOR, Has removed to the second floor in Read's New Build ing, where ho intends to keep constantly on hand the latest styles of PIECE G 3 0025, comprising AMERICAN, INGLIsH AND FRENCH CLOTHS, CASSIMEIIES, AND VESTING'S. CLOTHS, CASSIMER ES, AND V iiSTINGS. CLOTHS, CASSIMEIEES, AND VI:STINGS. Being a practical workman of malty years experience he is prepared to make to order Clothing for men and boys, and guarantee neat, durable and fashionable work manship. Ile Is determined to please everybody. ACV-All are invited to call end examine my new stock of beautiful patterns before purchasing elsewhere OEO. F MARSH. Huntingdon, Mai. 9 MEE= WIWI. B. ZEIGLER, DEAL= IN Furnishing, Fancy, —AND_ DR,VAS OODS, Alpacas, Poplins, Plaids, DoLaines, Lawns, Gingham', Prints, fine Carnbrica, Muslim. Denims, fine Linen, Mar seilles, P cones India Twill", Ac. A largo maortment of Lathes' Fashionable Dress Trimmings, Silk Fringes, Buttons, Bugles, 'Velvet Ribbons. etc. Furnishing Goode, Stockings, Moreno, Cotton, Wool, An GricrureNes, Kid of all colors, Silk, Thread, Cotton, Sc,, of all sizes, and latest styles, Under garments of all kinds, for La. dies, Gents and Children. Table Linen, Muslim, Napkins. Doylies, Sc. Sheeting and Shirting, Bret, n and Bleached, from Scents up. C101_350 A large stock of the latest styles. A large stock of Notions, Zephyrs, Yarns, Se. All cheaper than the cheapest, 4Z-Itoom, opposite the First National Bank, Hunting- don, Pa. NEW LEATHER STORE. THE undersigned would respectfully announce that. In connection with their TANNERY, they have just opened a splendid assortment of FINE LEATHER, Consisting la part of FRENCH CALF SKIN, KIP, MOROCCO, LININGS, BINDINGS, SOLE, UPPER, HARNESS, SKIRTING, &C., Together with a general aseortmont of TOBIATMA. The trade is Invited to call and examine our stock. Store on HIM. street, two doors west of the Presbyto• rian church. The highest price paid for HIDES and BARK. C. H. MILLER & SON. Huntingdon, Oct. 28, 1808 IMIEETED POSTERS NEW LEATHER HOUSE. BLANKS, TEE rinm OF LEAS & McVITTY, have leased the large are etery Leather House (rum Janice Naulty. O. 43'2, NORTH THIRD STREET, PIIILADELPIITA, And intend doing a 'lido and Loather Commineion Duni Ina& Their eons D. P. LEAS, and T. E. McVITTY, are there, and authorized to carry on the business for thein--Its they are young men of good moral character, and Site busies. qualifications. They solicit the patronage of their brother Tanners is the county and elsewhere 4f:if-They still Still continue to keep a good assortment of I.panitth and Slaughter sole Leather on bands, at their Tannery, near Three Springs. Huntingdon County, Pa. mar3.tf. LEAS & 310VITPY. ROsENsI'EEL & SON, VV • lIANDFACTUILEBB OP 6 SUPEIIIOI4 Oak Slaughter Sole and Belting 500 Bushels Ploateror's HOF, for Bale. taroAsu PAID FOR HIDES AND DARK.I4 W. 11. ROSEIit'EEL A EON, Mapleton Depot, Huntingdon Comity, Penises Dec. 0,1811.34:n. BOURDON'S & JOUVIN'S Az so, HUNTINGDON, PA 1-13 P. 41-9C.13C303a.. ~;fli HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21 ; 1869. lIOORMIN GERMAN BITTERS' Hoofland's German Tonic. The Great Remedies for all Diseases of the LIVER, STOMACH, OR DIGESTIVE ORGANS HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS Ti composed of the pure juices (or, a e they are medic( nally termed, Extracte,) of It oot a, Herbs, and Barka, making plepara tion, highly concentra ted, and ontilely free from altahottc admixture of any kind. lIOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC, Tx a combination of all the ingredients of the Bitters, with the purest quality of Santo Ortkr Rum, Orange, &c., making one of the most pleasant and agreeable remedies ever offered to the public. Those preferring a Medicine free from Alchohollc ad• mixture, will use , 1100FLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS. Those who havo no objection to the combination of ha bitters, Re stated, will use lIOOPLAND'S GERMAN TONIC. They aro both equally good. and contain the same medicinal virtues, the choice between the two being a mere matter of taste, the Tonic being the most palatable. The etomach, from a variety of causes. such as ludigsd -0 tion, Dyspepsia., Nervous Debility, etc, is very apt to have its tunctions Jr I auged. The Liver, sym pathizing as closely as it does with tho stomach, then becomes atfectcd,the result ot which is that the patient suffers from several or more of the following die. eases: Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Piles, Al ness of Blood to the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, heartburn,Disgust for Food, Fulness or Weig ht in Me Stomach, Sour Eructations, Sink ing or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of the Head, Hurried or Difficult Breathing, Fluttering at the Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when in a tying posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Dull Pain in the Head, Defi ciency of Perspiration, Yellow ness of the Skin and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, etc., Sudden Flushes of Heal, Burning in the Flesh., Constant Inn.;9inings of Evil, and Great Depression of Spirits. The sufferer from these, diseases should exercise the 0 greatest caution in the selection of a remedy for Ills case, purchasing ouly that which ho is assured from his iuvestigatiout and Inquiries possesses true merit, is skilfully compounded. is hoe from injurious ingtedieuts, and has established for itself a 1 ep utatiou for the cure of these diseases. In this counectiou We would submit those well kuoo. it tem:days— 11.00FLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC, Prepared by Dz. C. H. JACKSON, Twenty•two years since they were first introduced Into this country from Gorwaity,dutiug which time they but e uadoubtedly per formed more cm es, and banunted suffer ing humanity to a grofter extent, than an) other reme dies known to the public. F These remedies will dr ectually cure Liver Com plaint, Jaundice, Dy spep ifia, Chronic or Nervous Debility, Chronic , Diet theca , Disease of the Kid ney., and all Diseases arl slug from a disordered Li- TOT, Stomach, or Intestines. . . DEBILITY, Resulting from any Cause whatever; PROSTRATION OF THE SkIsTEM, induced by Sicere L<thor, .Lfardships, tzposure, levers, dc. There is no medicine extant equal to these remedies in such cases. A tone and vigor is Isamu ted to the whole system, the appetite is strengthened, toed is enjoyed, the stomach digests promptly, the blow la purified, the cons. plexior. becomes sound and healthy, the yellow tinge is eradicated from the ej es, a bloom is given to the cheeks, and the weak and nervous invalid becomes a strong and healthy being. PERSONS ADVANCED IN LIFE, And feeling the band of time weighing heavily upon them, with all its attendant ills, will bud in the MO of this 111T PER3, or the TONI°, an elixir that will instil cow lito into their vetne, reetoro in a measure the energy and ar dor of wore youthful days, huild up their shrunken forms, and give health and happinovs to their remaining years. NOTICE_ It is a Hell established fact; that fully one half of the L female portion of out pop ulation are seldom in the eujoymensof goodhealth or, to use their oven ex pt esslon, , never feel w ell. 'they are languid, devoid of all energy, extreme%) nervous, and have no ap petite. To this class of persona the BITT CRS, or the TONIC, in espetially recommended. • WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN, Are made strong by the MO of either of these reinedies. They will cut a every coo of MA RA SMUS, without fail. Thouietuds of certificated iIIIVO aceumulated in the hauls of the proprietor, but space wdl allow of the publication or but a few. 'node, it xilt be observed, ale men of note and of such standing that they moot be believed. T.MSTIa2O'=_A.I_.S. 110 N. GEORGE W. WOODWARD, chkbrustice of the &prone Court of Pa., writes: Pailadapha, Mal el:18,116T. A "I find gloofland's Ger man Bitters' is a good tonic, useful in dui:uses of the digusttve organs, and of great benefit in asses 01 debility, and mend of nervous action in tho system. Yours, truly, GEO. W. WOODWARD." HON. JAMES THOMPSON, Judga of the Supreme au? 1 of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, April 2S, HO ' , I consider 'lloofland's German linters' a valuable med icine In cues of attacks of Indigestion or Dyspepsia. I can certlly this from my experience of it. Yours, with inspect s d. 1011.6 T110.111.SON." FROM REV. JOSEPH 11. KENNARD, D. D., Rotor of the Totth Baptist Church, Philadelphia Do. Jackson—Dear Sir: I have been itequently reques ted to connect my name with receinnietalatiutis of differ ent kinds of medicines, but regai ding the practice as out of my appropriate sphere, I have in all cases de clined : but with a clear proof in various tartan- N ces and particularly in my own tinnily, of the usefulness of Dr. flout land's German Bitters. I depot t for once from my usual course, to expi ess my full conviction that, for general debility of the system, and especially for Liver ailphruit, it is a safe and vat aable preparation. lu some cases it may fail; but ithtlitily, I doubt not, it will be very beneficial to those who Suffer from the abuse causes. Yours, very respectfully, J. D. li.brs NARD, Eighth, below Coates It. FllO,ll 11EV. E. D. FILICDALIi. Assigant Editor arirtian Chronicle, Philadelphia I have derived decided beoeht from the use of hoof laud's German Bitters, and feel it my privilege to recom mend them as a most valuable tunic, to all woo mu suf fering from genaral depility or from disuses inking 11.0111 derangement of the then Veers truly, B. D. FENDALL. CAUTION_ Ifoofland'a Ocrinan Remedios aro counterfeited. See that the eignature of C. M. JACKSON to on the Is rapper of each bottle.' All others ate counter• felt. Principal Office and Manufactory at the Ger. plan Medicine Store, No. oJt AMU Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Charles M. Evans, Proprietor, rotni.riy C. M. JACK `JOY ,t CO g~~~s lionfland'a German Bitte', per bottle, . . $1 00 hall dozen,. . 6 00 lloofland'a German Tonic, put up in quart tiottleti $1 60 per bottle, or a half dozen for $7 50. 4 - -Donot forgot to examine well do article you buy, in order to get the genuine. kor ealo by all Dealbre In Medicine. April 2,1:1119-ly petrol. ' • y~j_tA. ,~~ 'i.4. Olabe, NAVE COURAOEI TO SAY, NO You're starting to-day on life's journey, Alone on the highway of life ; t . You'll meet with a thousand temptations, Each city with evil is rife.' This world is a stage of excitement; There's danger wherever you go; But if You are tempted in weakness, Have courage, my boy, to say, 'No., The eirea's sweet song may, allure you ; Beware of her cunning and art; Whenever you see her approaahing, Be guarded and haste to depart. The billiard ohloong are inviting, Decked out in their tinsel and allow; , You may bo invited to enter; Have courage, my boy, to say, No. The bright ruby wino may be offered— No matter how tempting it be, . From poison that stings like an adder, My boy, hive tho courage lo flee. The gambling hells are before you, Their lights, how they dance to and fro, If you should be tempted to enter, Think twice, even thrice, ere you"go. „ In couragemlono lies your safety, When you the lung journey begin, • And trust in a Heavenly Father .. Will keep you unspotted from sin. Temptations will go on increasing, As streams from a rivulet flow, But if you are true to your manhood, Hove the courage, my boy, to say, No "Airs. Wilkins, of all the aggravating women I ever came across, you are the worst. 1 believe you'd raise a riot in the cemetery if you were dead, you would. Don't you ever go prowling around any Quaker meeting, or you'll break it up. Why? Why, you'd put any other man's back up until ho broke his spine. 0, you're too annoy ing to live; I don't wan't to bother with you. Give me more covers, and go to sleep." "But, Wilkins, dear, just listen a minute. We must have that piano, and --" "Oh, don't, 'dear' me, I won't have it. You're the only dear thing around here; you're dear at any price. I tell you once for ull Abut I don't get any new piano, and Mary Jane don't take singing lessons as long as I'm her fa ther. There, it you don't understand that, I'll say it over, again. And now stop your clatter, and go tmeleep. I'm tired of hearing you cackle," 'But Wilk—" "Now don't aggravate me. I say Mary Jane shan't learn to sing, and plant another instrument of torture in this house, while I'm boss of the fami ly. Her voice is just like yours; it's got a twang to it like blowing on the edge of a piece of paper." "Ain't you ashamed, Wilk—" "It's disgrace enough to have you sitting down and pretending to sing, and trying to deafen people, without having the children do it The first time I heard you sing, I started round to the station-house and got six police men, because I thought there was a murder in the house, and they wore cutting you up by inches. I wish somebody would. I wouldn't go for any policemen—not much." "I declare, you are a perfect brute." "Not much I wouldn't; but Smith he told me yesterday that his family were kept awake half the night by the noise you made, and said if I didn't stop those doge from howling . in my collar, he'd be obliged to complain to the Board of Health." PuluourinA, r/.. "What an awful story, Mr. Wilk—" "Then I told him it was 'you, and you thought you could sing; and he advised me as a friend to get a divorce, because ho had said no man could live happily with any woman who had a voice like a cross cut saw. lie said I might as well have a machine shop with a lot of files at work in the house as that, and he'd rather at any time." "Plough! I don't care what Smith says." "And you aro talking about a new piano ! Why, haven't wo got musical instruments enough in the house?— There's Holofernes Montgomery been blowing away in the garret for ton days with that old key bugle, until he's got so black in the face, that ho won't got his color back for a month,' and then he only gots a spurt out of her every now uud then. lie's blown enough wind in her to get up a hurri cane, and I expect nothing else but he'll got tbo old machine so chock full that she'll blow back at him some day, and bust his brains out, and all along of your tomfoolery. You're a pretty mother, you are. You'd better go and join some asYlum for feeble-minded Idiots, you had." "Wilkins, I declare you are too bad, for—" "Yes, and there's Bucephalus Alex ander; be's got his bond lull of your sentimental nonsense, and ho thinks, he's in love with a girl around the cor ner, and he meanders about and tries to sigh, and won't eat his victuals, and he's got to going down into the cellar end trying to sing, 'No ono to love' on the coal-bin, and he liked to scare the hired girl out of her senses, so that she went up stairs and had a fit on tho kitchen door-mat, and came near dying on my hands." "That's not true, Mr. Wil—" "And never came to until I put bar head under the hydrant. And then what does Bucephalus' Alexander do but go round night before last and try to serenade the girl, until the old man h'isted up the sash and cracked away at Bucephalus Alexander with an old boot, and bit him in the Thee and blackened his eye, because ho thought it was twq cats a yelping. Hang such a mother as you are ! You go right f!,o work to ruin your own offspring." "You're talking nonsense, Wilk—" "You're about us fit fp bring" up children as a tadpole is to run a ferry boat, you are ; but, while Pm alive, f / /// r••• 0103Wv"... .111/ 410 , , • \ -PERSEVERE.- Wilkins on the Piano. Mary Jane takes no singing lessons. Do you understand ? It's bad enough to have her battering at the piano like she had some grudge against it, and to have her visitors wriggle around, and fidget, and look miserable; as if they had cramp colic, while you make her play for them, and have them get up and lie, and ask what it was, and how 'beautiful' it is,and steep their souls in falsehood and hypocrisy, all on ac count Of you, You'll have enough. to answer for, old woman, without that.',' "I never did such thing, and you "Yes, and then you think Mary Jade can play don't you You, think she can sit down and tackle that piano, and jerk out more music than a whole orchestra, don't you ? But she can't. You might just as well seta crow bar to opening an oyster, as to set her, to playing the piano." "You talk like a fool, Wilkins:" "Play; ! she play ? Pshaw ! Why, she's drummed away at that polka for six months, and she can't get her grip on it yet. • You might as well try to sing a long metre hymn to a hornpipe, as to undertake to dance to that pol ka. It would jerk yourlegs out at the'sockets, certain, or else it would give you St. Vitus' dance, and• cripple 'on for life." "Mr. Wilkins, I'm going to tell you a seerst!t, "Oh, I don't won't to hoar your se crets; Ite . op them to yourself!" "Ws about Mary Jane's singing." "What ?" "Diary Jane, you know her singing." "I don't know, and I don't want to; she shan't take essons, so dry up." "But she shall take them." "I say she shunt." - - - "She shall, and you can't help it." "By George, what do you mean ? I'm master in this house, rd like you to know." "Yes, but she's been taking lessons for a whole quarter, while you were down town, and I paid the bill outof the market money." "Well, I hope I may shot! You don't mean to say that? Well, if you ain't a perfectly abandoned wretch, hang me. I'm going to sleep alone after this." And Wilkins kicked out on to the floor, and wont into the other room. But he made up with hie wife, for I heard him - quarreling , with hor next day, because she left a' work-basket full of needles on the chair, covered with a piece of work, and he eat down on it. Story of a Paris Rag-Pioker. The wife of one of the most eminent bankers of Paris went some days since to ono of our most fashionable mantua makers to try on some dresses, As she was leaving she complimented the mantua-maker upon the courtesy,good nature, and skill of the seamstress who tried on the apparel. The mamma maker replica; "She is one of my most valuable workwomen and I should like to be able to pay •her a higher salary than she receives, but my expenses are so very heavy I am obliged to cut down everybody to the lowest figure; besides, Louise is not strong and is able to give me only half a day, which reduces her wages fifty per cent. I believe, however, she works at home." At midnight the banker's wife return ed from the Italian Opera, where Mlle. Patti had drawn an immense audi ence. As she was entering her door she saw from the carriage window a girl rag-picker hunting carefully among the refuse of the house thrown in heap before the door. The• "girl had the usual rag picker's basket on her back, a lantern in her left hand, and a curved pick in the right hand. •She was wretchedly, very wretchedly, at tired, but the meanness of the habit was almost redeemed by its cleanli ness. Sho was in rags, but she'pro tested they were not her fault, for ,',hey were clean rags. The banker's wife instantly recognized Louise. She said to her, "Mlle. Louise, come with me, I must speak to you." The girl hesita ted, but losing self-command in her em barrassment at being discovered, sho followed tho banker's wife into her• boudoir. Tressed with quesCions, she related her story, which was as fol lows : "I am the eldest of five dren ; my father died suddenly throe years ago; my mother some mouths since became paralyzed,and is unable to move hand or foot without assistance. To support her and to give my broth ers and sisters trades, I am a seam stress in the morning and a rag-picker at night. It may seem• incredible to you, but it is nevertheless true. I make More money as rag-picker than as seamstress. ' Therefore I hasten at 4 o'clock to quit my mistress to return home and disguise myself as a rag picker in 'Order to go my rounds in Paris. I have been able by dint of economy to lay by something besides defraying all the expenses of our fam ily, and I hope to be able in eighteen months or two years to resign basket, pick and lantern. I beseech you mad ame, to keep my secret until then if you would not ruin a poor girl whose battle of life has boon anything but easy." Tears trickled down the cheeks of the banker's wife at this tale of mis ery honorably and gallantly combated. She took Louise's hands in hers and told her henceforward she would sup port the mother and other children, and that she 'would set her, Louise, up as a mantua-makor. She has kept her promise [Moral, for home consumption; there are rag-pickers or other deserving per sons iu every community, but persons, like the banker's wife are 8o rare that we have to go to wicked Paris for a little tale, all too true, that should open the hearts of Christian men and wo men everywhere.] lls is tall enough who walks uprightly TERMS, $2,00 a . year in advance. Written• for the Globe.] The Moral Telescope. JOBF.PII ESQ.--DEAR Sea:— Yoe and I ware once young, but are now old. Our social relation has con tinued so long a topic of conversation, and is far exhausted, that I fear in writ ing,shall fail to introduce a Single idea that has 'riot passed under your revio,v, until it bris become stale. Thus it is especially with our lamentations over our illiterate, and humble destiny. HOSV shall I resuscitate, and keep alive upon the altar of friendship that living sympathy, without which, our'oarthly pilgrimage would be a dreary solitude? Could I lead . , you down throng's the earth's erust,,say,eight or ten :miles to that region below the silueitin, where life was eVer Impossible, and . retarn to our alluvium home with geological hammer in ; hand i through a vast wild derness of fossiliferous remains, which lived and moved countless ages before our 'earth received 'its present beautiful form from the plastic hand of God-- mark each 'epoch, where our race of beings ended, and successive and more perfect races took their beginning from 'their Creator's handreflect air on the strange features' of this' out earth, in its diveriiified , forms,'long be fore it, was clothed in its present gor geous riches and beauty, a suitable res idence for intelligent and, immortal beings; and then return to our tertiary home, exulting with Chalmers, Miller, Harris, and other Christian chieftains, in their triumphant harmony of our history by Moses, and the utmost claims of science or the antiquity of the material of our world. Could we unbar the door and enter the dark re gions of early creation, witness the chaos of primitive matter, mark the progress - of successive creations, ever since, at Jehovah's fiat, matter burst from nonentity into chaos, read the hieroglyphics upon the rocks, learn the age of each order of remains in their successive generations, down till our world; through countless' ages of im. prevenient, was,under the plastic hand of God, brought into its present form, clothed in all its gorgeous beauty, laughing at the artists' chisel and brush iu their vain efforts at imitation —learn - how - to expose the sophistry of that class of philosophers who presume to make a world of matter and of mind without a God; as-taught by Lamark, Oken, and - the anonymous "vistages of creation," and throw into ridicule that development tlieory by which they would evoke life and perfection out of fire, mist, albumen, infusoria, mollusc, monad, or some imaginary substance, thus: in a few millions of years they would present to you the slimy tad polo, and in a 'few millions more the Monkeys and from him to the appear ance of man, would require but a few millions of years; and thus these suck ing atheists would by the fortuitous concourse of intangible 'matter make this world of ours in all its perfection. Could we enter the arena of chemis try and physical forces, and explain those laws which were impressed upon matter when it was yet "without form and void," through which every atom sought and, by affinity, found its place with - other particles, until," altOgether, this our earth - in all its wealth and twenty was fitted for our habitation— write a vocabulary by which those wonderful transformations, with their ancient history, might be explained, and expose the fallacy of the unknown laws of fortuity ; and prove by demon stration the necessity of a God of un• bounded power, wisdom and goodness —then away with your thirty thous and Grecian gods, away with your Pantheistic impersonal God, and the sleeping god of Epicarins; but deny us not our right of access to our living, personal and active God, who reigns in the armies of heaven and amongst the children of men. Could we roll back the barriers with which every science is bounded, and which bid defiance to 'the loftiest hu man intellect, and expatiate in that vast, untrodden territory, lying be• tween the most exalted created intel lect and an infinite God. , . Could we, like Gabriel, when the command was given him in the central heavens to fly quickly; to Babylon, to answer the prayers of the loyal pro phet, which was done with such cele rity that the heavenly messenger ar rived before Daniel was done sraking; just think how be started from the throne of the Eternal, somewhere in the vast empire of God, and flying with angelic speed through immensity, passing world after world and system after system in his flight, each swell ing out in majestic grandeur on his ap proach, and each diminishing in the recession, till they disappeared in the distance ; onward and onward he flies. till he crosses the milky way, through a wilderness of worlds blazing in aw ful grandeur; then onward till our so lar system appears, a single speck in the distance, but swelling into gran deur on his approach; then onward a little farther and earth appears, at first a dim point, but soon expands into a moon, and in a moment the heavenly tourist descends through the blue at mosphere spread over the plains of Ba bylon, and lays his hand upon the prostrate Daniel, with words of com fort to the anxious prophet. Or could wo with suitable magnify ingpower, take our stand upon ,that I grand luminary in the center of Plei ads, around which astronomers declare our sun, with its sisterhood of BUDS with which our heavens are bespan gled, with all their Satellites, are re volvincr's'—survey the magnitude of such a body as can. hold in their orbits those countless suns and systems whilst they perform their ceaseless re volutions around it as their center of gravitation; and then discover that it was but a satellite to some other body, exceeding it as far in magnituile and Those subscribing for three, six or. twelVe. monthe.willi the understandiing that the paper be discontinued unless subseriptien is'renewed, receiNing a Pa per marked with u t before the . name. will • - tuiderstund that the timp,;for , which they subsmibed is up. : -If-tikey wish 'the paper continued 'they Will. renew their euhseription. thrOUgh'ilie• mail or otherwise. - - rtgl s . All kinds of plain, fancy and ornamental Job Printing ,neittlyli'ai3d expeditiously executed at the "GLoax." office. • Terms moderate. NO. 40. grandeur as it excenda our little earth and that glorious body only one of an other Bh:deities:id of tee - thousand equal. 1:y glorious bodies which - in'their turn . are held subordinate to; and revolve around another body as their.Ceater of gravitation, with suffioierit attraction to keep them in their (whits; 'and after' Wc;'had`thus multiplied ' , apts:Mx-up:in system, far beyond the Teach of ;11u,,, man powers, until w e . discovered- the central heavens, where Yehovahreigns universal King of kings add - teid; of lords, directing all events both in tini physical and moral universe, from-in: fusorial up to unmeasured worlds,- as well as the angelic hosts. - But had we all those, priinleges, with ouch' intellects' that' we would inie' to stoop to' tisecit the higheit der of humarver angelic powers,q.still; without Christ, we might:- `sins the gall lot 'bitternese and,in ,the,_boncl . iniquity," - or in 'tip tiba 'de d'eterniti despair. - If Wall those high.Piiiiilekes you would add, not the gold'of'Ophit; not the control 9f the greatest entipiritt upon earth, but the governinent of,our planet, in' fee simple, still; pride ivOuid be but another name for Whilgit God has written, net only in hie vidici, but upon the whole face of. creatiOit and, in the !cry. atmosphere .whichwe breathe, "dust thou art, and 4e dug thou'shalt return;" and Could . cord our names highest in the teniple of earthli , fame, if insubordinat‘ to the authority' of heaven,. the King in , his glory would gay that where_ he is. we. should never come.. . But your destiny and inine'was:to. move in the humblest Walk's ofdifiand to drink deep in the cup of that just sentence, "by the sweat—of thy,tface shalt thou eat thy ~bread." There were none to. lead us up throUgh 'the. vast fields of philosophic lore; none to carry us up into those' poetic regions to feast in irnaginary ; bliss, nor were there any to teach us4low tonse onto enjoy those rhetorical powers by Which kingdoms have been np; an 4 under the influence of which thrones have trembled and empires have heel shaken to pieces. Whilst moving in the dust, bemoan ing the hardness of our lot, a beneve-: lent Prince preseatcd to us' a telescope, of such wonderful' poWers that we, could survey time from the" morning of its birth down •to the pros= ont moment, and by a single move ment' we'COurd look into the darleVitita of the `futtire, down' till - . "timO*44,ll cease - and-be no more;" rand killfur-. ther, we.aro permitted ,by it te.loOlt.es far into eternity as mortal eye can , see or mortal mind can comprehend, - Offr telescope has not only the power•Of On; larging the visual field but also thatier sound. . ' BLACK BAss.—The Black Bass takes a fly, a "spoon" or a spinning' minnow; during the Summer months;: and . makes, when hooked, a bard fight; rushing hither and thither and Spring ing into the air as actively as a Arouti - In late Autumn it; will biteat a ,stanth, ing bait. During May they eeme ,in pairs and make a spawning bed or: 'a sandy bottom in from four to six - 'feet of water. This they sweep witli'theirt tails after the manner of trout; 'and the male.remains on guard , over f ilm spaWn, and'drivesaWay, the many ,in ; truders 'which hang about grendy for this savory food. thO'yoling —recognizable by it black binid - adoss the tail—are first observed, arid these, by Autumn, have grown to a length of three or four inches. At one' year old they weigh from a quarter to halts: pound, and increase about one half pound yearly, till they, arrive, 'at sin or eight pounds, according to foed,and water. They aro .in prime condition in August and September; bift - tri Win . ter aro black and lean: The'objeetion in some cases to this species is its great voraciousness. It destroys almost everything before it, exoept the perch,, and even kills out pickerCl by deyourt ing the young. Rut 'in . ponds, already infested with pickerel 'and 'abounding in "shiners," it may bo_intrOduced with much, profit, because„it repla,cg bad fish by good. 'lt should be Aftket fully' excluded, however, ft'oni - itll wa, ters that contain trout, white fiali,'•Ort other valuable species, arid from , ponds communicating with such waterk•Tfor it, is a most restless and puabing.„rob:. ber, eagerly searching and following the 'inlets and owlet's of'its pond:, Ay. this propensity' the' Brookline 'resev veir gives the Most curious instance. Nine black bass; of two'and a half Act three pounds, were put there 'in' July 1862; since then, in the examination of the water pipes leading from reservoir to Long Pond,, three have been found in considerable , bers and of large size ; moreover; either by their young or their egg* they have penetrated the screen ,at the mouth of the pipe',and have ap peared in the pond' itself! ' So - those black bass, apparently impelled-by no other feeling than that of restlessness, performed an underground journey of fifteen miles in - a• brick aqueduct,. whose greater diameter was six feet I_, Fanny Fern sayg that for every woman fool she• will find a'nicin "fie' to be her mate,"and that because a few men in New York and Londervand- Paris, wear corsets, and :dye !Abair. whiskers and hair,,and,,pad egt hollow cheeks and shrUnken calves, it does not follow that Yietni ITugo and John Bright, 4nd gFe4Army of brave men who ,viou pnr.luta, vlefory t , are all popinjays. tar In an obituary notice of an old. citizen, an Ohio paper, says:,"He was honest, and industrious until enfeebled by disease and age." What sipitylif become dishonest with age. •.,' laa.Vi r bat is better than a "prouils !rig" young man ? A paying one, TO SUBSCRIBERS. [To be continued.]
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers