TERMS OF 'THE GLOBE. Per annum in advance ix months Three months TERMS OF ADVERTISING 1 time. 2do 3do 1 month ...$ 75 41 25 $l5O $1 76 ... 1 - 50 2 25 2 75 3 26 .. 2 26 325 400 4 75 Dne inch, or less Two inches, Three inches,..... 3 months. 6 months. 1 Year • One indi; or less $4 00 $6 00 ' $lO 00 Two inches, 6 25 9 00 15 00 Three Inches, 8 50 12 00 "0 00 Four inches 10 75 16 00 25 00 Quarter column, 13 00 18 00 30 OD Ralf column, 20 00 30 00. ..... ....45 00 Ono column, 30 00 45 0D.... ..... .80 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines, One year, $5 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 6 times, $2 50 Auditors' Notices, 4 times 2 00 lstray; or other chart Notices 1 50 Advertisements not marked with the number of icier ittons desired, will bo continued till forbid and charged sc. pording to these terms. Local or Special Notices, 10 cents a lino for single in. Onion. By the year at a reduced late. , Our prices for the Printing of Blanks, Handl/111e, etc. are reasonably low. Voicssional-k NUSiIICSS garbs ir DE BURKHART, M. D., Physi c/ . clan and Surgeon, tins located in Huntingdon, and tondora his aortices to this and neighboring community Office on Railroad street, nour tho Depot. te24-sm. PR.P R. A. B: BRUMBAUGH, ' ' Having permanently located at Huntingdon, offers h . pr ofessional services to the community. Office, the same as that lately occupied by Dr. Laden on Hill street. aplo,lina li1?R. JOHN McOULLOCH, offers his professional services to the citizens of Huntingdon n Tlciatty. , Office on 11111 street, one door east of Reed's Drug Store. . - : , . , ' , slug. 25, '55. T 1 ALLISON MILLER, DEYTIST, Hu removed to the BI lek Roi; opposite the Court Rouse April 13,1859. ! - J. GREENE, DENTIST. ' , Moat • 1. Mice removed to Leister's New Building, 11111 street, I - Jun[lllo o u. 'July 31,1867. le ils A. par,LocK, • ,s;u1? TEYOR &REAL ESTATE AdENT, HUNTING DON, PA Will attend to Surveying in all its branches, and will buy and sell Real Estate iu any part of the United States. Band for circular. dee29-tf A C. CLARKE, AGENT, Whole.sale and Retail Dealer in all kinds of ,tmaaat vciama, HUNTINGDON, PA Opposite the Franklin House, in the Diamond. Country trade supptied. apWGB P. IiIANGAN, T• PROFESSOR 1? MUSIC Has located in Huntingdon and mill give lessons in Sande upon the Piano. Melodeon, Cabinet Organ and VI. iolin; also, Lessons in Vocal Music. The Professor has received a diploma from thc Institu tien for the Blind in Philadelphia, and feels himself fully zompetent to impart instruction in Vocal or Instrument al Music. He expects to meet with liberal patronage. is also prepared to tone Pianoes. mlll7 I. L MOWN, O. H. AIIIIITAOE. SIMPSON & ARMITAGE, ATTORNEYS AT LA TV, HUNTINGDON, PENNA OFFICE IN BRICK ROW mos= THE COURT LIOUSF. lin. 27, 18666 m. AJINGE ENCY FOR COLLECTING . SOLDIERS' CLAIMS, BOUNTY, BACK PAT AND SIONS. All 'who may have any claims against the Oosernment for Bounty, Back Pay and Pensions, can have their claims promptly collected by applying either In person or by let ter to W. 11. WOODS, ATTORNEY AT LA HUN TIMIDOZI, PA aeglE,lB63 MI. BOOM anmun. T. BROWN, The name of this firm has been Ghana. •ed from SCOTT & BROWN, to - SCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, under which name they will hereafter conduct their practice as -ATTORNEYS AT LAW, lIITSTINGDO.S; PA: PENSIONS, and all claims el - soldiers and soldiers' heirs against the (lovernment, wilt ho promptly prosecuted. May 17, 180.11. ' COLLECTION _ Pp•14,1'311) u b _ - OF 00 , • - - K. ALLEN LOVELL, Distriot Attorney of Huntingdon County, HUNTINGDON, PA. OFFICE—In the room lately occupied by It. M. Speer. jau.1.1.867 P. X. Lytle & Milton S. Lytle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, PA., TIONO formed a partnership under the name and firm Sit ' P. M. & M. S. LYTLE, And have removed to the office on the south side of WI street, fourth door west of Smith. They will attend promptly to all kinds of legal Mud ,ness entrusted to their care. up7-tf. NM Mat _ :3E.. 3. Gr3LRL3.O.IST_IE, EucceTwr to IL M. anEgla, I=l - sT,E4i WAY ,& SON'S PIANOS, And other makes, •ItIASON & lIANLIN CABINET ORGANS, Melodeons; Gultare,Vlnlins,T Elutes, Accordeons, ae,&e. , • - Organs, and Melodeons Warranted for fir, rw Circular. sent on application. Address ...11. u J u fl .gREENE, oor Eeist i e l r's N ew Iluildiug. lazt2i,69 'Yon" IT:IMMO 'OFFICE frHE "GLOBE JOB OFFICE" tile most complete of any in the country, and pos. tosses the most ample facilities for promptly executing in pie but style, platy variety of Job Printing, such as • HAND BILLS, ' , CIRCULARS, ' '• .BILL , lIEADS, POSTERS, BALL TICKETS, pARDS, PROGRAMMES, LABELS, &C., &C., &C CALL AND EXAMINE OPECIMENS OP WORE, LEWIS' BOOK. STATIONERY & MUSIC STORE . . MEIN DARE, D IP. R. WOOpS, , . tr. D. 1.E%8, ; fauns NOME, R. PaLTON SPEER, JOHN BARE & CO., (a X 9 lIUNTINGDON, , PA, , i I • CAPITAL - . r $59,060. 'PAL* aepounts from 'Banks, Bankers and others. A }lberia' Interest alltiwed pn time Deposits. All kinds of Securities, bought and ?old for the usual commission.— Collections made cis all pointl. Drafts on all parts of Europe supplied at rise usual totes. • 'Persons depositing Bold and Silver will receive the In mute retort, with interest. - Tbe partners Lally liable for all Deposits. • ' b•22,ll3bSti t COUNTRY DEALERS can ) buy CLOTHING from me in Hantingdon at WHOLES/ILl:as cheap as they can in the ttee, all I have a Altolosale store in Philadelphia. ItOlt&N. c 00 1 00 WM. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers VOL. XXIV, `~- ~ .~ KID CLOVES, The Tourist or Grant Hat o ZU' LirMDTPRA Of.? MMILICIE CORNER OF THE DIAMOND, igAiiii FASHIONABLE •GOOBS SPRING AND SUMMER WEAR GEO. F. MARSH, MERCHANT TAILOR, Ms removed to the second floor in Bond's Now Build Ing, where ho intends to keep constantly on hand the latest styles of PI=ECE 0 - 00-IDS, comprising CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, AND VESTINDS CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, AND VDSTINGS CLOTHS, CASSIMENDS, AND VESTINGS EMEIMIM Being a practical wolkman of many yells experience ho is prepared to make to order Clothing for men and boys, and gunlantee neat, durable and fashionable work znaush ip. Ile is determined to please everybody. 4GP-All are invited to call end examine my new stock of beautiful patterns before purchasing elsewhere GEO. F MARSH. Huntiugdon, 31c11. 9 WWI. B. ZEIGLER, - DEALEII IN Furnishing, Fancy, agss gOaDB. Alpacas, Poplins, Plaids, DoLainos, Lawns, Gingbaws, Prints, flue Carubrica, itluslins, Denims, lino Linen, Mar seilles, P.conas. India Twills, Ac. A large assortment of Ladies' Fashionable Dress Trimming. Silk Fringes, Buttons, Bugles, Velvet Ribbons, etc. Furnishing Goods, Stockings, Moreno, Cotton, Wool, Au 4 044 GOV' . Did of all colors, Silk, Thread, Cotton, Ac., of all sizes, nod latest styles, Linder garments of all kinds, for La. dies, Gents nod Children. , Table Linen, Muslim, Napkins. Doylies, Ac. Sheeting and Shirting, Drown and Bleached, from 8 cents up. rks.A.V7 a(:) 0 L)C3O A largo stock of tho latest styles. A large stack of Notions, Zephyrs, Yarns, Ac. All cheaper_ than the choopest; .41W - Itoous, opposito the First National Dank, Hunting. don, Pa:' '" ' \ I N • W LEATHER STORE. THE undersigned would respectfully announce that, in connection with their TANNBRY, they have just opened a splendid assortment of FINE LEATHER, Consisting in part of FRENCH CALF SKIN, KIP, MOROCCO, LININGS, - BINDINGS, _ SOLE, ' - UPPER, - -' - • HARNESS, -SKIRTING &C., Toglititer'svith a general assortment of The trade is invited to call and examine our stock, Store on HILL street, two doors west of the Presbyte. lieu church. The highest price paid for lIIDES and DARK. C. 11. MILLER & SON. Huntingdon, Oct. 28, 1868 NEW LEATHER' ROUSE. BLANKS, 91nE rriem or LEAS. & 1 . have leased the large jive story Leather house, from James Neuity. N 0.43% NORTH THIRD STItnET, PHILADELPHIA, And intend doing a Hide and Leather Commission Bug- DM. Their sons D. P. LEAS, and T. E. McYITTY, are there, and authorized ,td carry ou the business for them'-as they me young men of good moral character, and 'fine business qualifications. They solicit the patronage of their brother Tanners in the county and elsewhere. - • /Ynl'They !dill will continuo to keep a good a,sortment of :vanish and Slaughter Sole Leather on hands, at their Tannery, near Three Spttrigti, Huntingdon County, Pa. marLtf• • ". LEAS S McVITTY. WT 11. ROSENSTEPIL & SON,_ V t b , iNVFACITREII9 or A 9UPERIO6 Oak, Slaughter Sole and Belting 500 Duel.ls Plasterer's Hair, for Sale. .oa-OAMVPAID FOB. HIDES AND BARK. W. H. DOSENeTEEL Mapleton Depot, Huntingdon County, Penns Dcc. 0,1509-6ut. BOURDON'S & JOUVIN'S Ladies and Gentlemen's Sizes, ALSO, HUNTINGDON, PA AMERICAN, ENGLIBIR AND FRDNCII Ma30.E12 1 1°39C303EL. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28. [869, HOOFIJAND'S GERMAN BITTERS Hoofland's German Tonic. The Great Remedies for all Diseases of the LIVER, STOMACH, OR DIGESTIVE ORGANS ROOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS Is composed of the pure juices (or, a s they aro media malty termed, Extracts,) of It o o te, Herbs, and Barks,naking a prepare then, highly concentra ted, and entirely free front alcoholic admixture of any kind. lIOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC, la n combination of all tho ingredients of the Ilittere, with the purest quality of Santa Ow Ruin, Orange, making one of the moot pleasant and agreeable tumulies over otleted to tho public. Those preferring it Medicine free front Alchoholic ad mixture, 1111 t U6O lIOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS Those uho have no objection to the combination of the bitters, as stated, will use HOOFLAND'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 stomach, from a variety of CAM., each as Indigos. 0 Hen, D)spepsia, Nervous Debility, etc, is very apt to have its functions de ranged. The Liter, sym pathizing as closely as it does with the stoma:, then becomes affects:lAm 'malt of which is that the patient suffeia futile several or more of the following dis- CASCO : Constipation, Flatulence, Inward Piles, Fut ness of Blood to the Head, Acidity Ville Nausea, Rear/burn, ust Stomach, for Food, Fulness or Weight in the Stomach, Sou• Eructations, Sink ing o• Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of the Bead, Hurried or DO:fie:di _Breathing, Fluttering at the Heart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when in a lying posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs" bgbie "the' Sight, Dull Ran'in the Head; Deft ciency of, Pciipiration; ness o/the Skin, and Eyes, Pain in the Side, Buck, LiMbs, etc., Sudden Flushes of Heat, Burning in the I'lesk, Constant Imaginings of Evil, and Great Depression of Spirits. The aulTerer from these di,easen should exercise the 0 gicatest caution in tlio selection of a remedy fur his case, puichasing only that which he is assured from his investigations and inquiries possesses true merit, as skillully compounded, is lace front injurious ingtedients, and hss established for itself a t op- Iltittioll for the cute of these diseases. In this connection Ire would submit these well buou n i entedies— UOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS 1100FLAND'S GERMAN TONIC, PI craw< tl by Dx. C. 31. JACKSON, Tment3-tun years since they trei'e, first introduced into this country hem Germany, during which tine• they halo undoubtedly pelf med mote cures, and bcnented butte, ing humanity to u greater extent, than any oilier reme dies hnoun to the public. . ..... .. . F These remedies will ell ectually cure Liver Com. plaint, Jaundice, Dyspep sin, Chronic or Nervous Debility, Chronic Dior shwa, Disease of the Kid neys, and all Di... at i slug It um a disordered Li ver, Stomach, or Intestines. DEBILITY, Resulting front any Cause whatever; PROSTRATION .OF THE STA TEM, minced by Severe Labor, Hardships, Exposure, Fevers, de. There is no medicine extant equal to these remedies in such eases. A tone and vigor is imparted to the whole system, the appetite is strengthened, tool is enjoyed, the stomach digests promptly, thin blood is putilled, Mecum. plosion become, sound and healthy, the yellow tinge is eradicated trout the o) as; u bloom is gt, en to the cheeks, and the weak and masons invalid becomes a etioug and healthy being. PERSONS ADVANCED IN LIFE, And feeling, the hand of limo weighing heavily upon them, %MI all its attendant ills, will tied in the use of thin IZIT TEItS, or the TONIC, an elixir that VIII instil nose life into their veins, restore in a measure the energy nod ar dor of more y outhful days, build up their sin unken forms, and give health and )11 , 1Thu:se to their remaining years. NOTICE_ It is a well established fact; that fully ono half of the L female portion of our pop ulation aro seldom in the enjoyment of good health or, to use their own ex pression,,um er fe..llV ell. 'they are languid, devoid of all energy, extremel y nervous, and have no ap petite. To this class of persons the BITTERS, or the TONIC, is especially recommended. . - WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN, Are mash, strong by ti, uso of either of those rotnedies. They will cora es ery case of MA ICA SMUS, without fail. Thousaudsof certificates have accumulated in the hands of the proprietor, but riser° will allow of the publication of but a tow. Those, it will bo obsessed, aro mon of note and of such standing that they must Ins heliostat. TES'S2MONSA2 , S. HON. GEORGE W. WOODWARD, Chigf Justice of the Supreme Court of Pa., mites: Philadelphia, March 18,1767. A "I find 'lloolland's Ger wan Bitters' is a good tonic, useful in diseases of the digestive organs, nod of groat bene fi t in cases of debility, and aant of nervous action in the system. Yews, truly, GEO. W. WOODWARD." HON. JAMES TIIOMPSON, Judge of the Supreme Court of Pennsyluarica Philadelphia, April 28.'1566 "I consider 'lloolland's German Bitters' a valuable vied f eine in cote of attacks of Indigestion or Dyspepsia. I can certify this from my expel Pince of it. Yours, with respect, , J AMES,T.IIO:SII'3ON." FROM REV. JOSEPIIII. KENNARD, D. D., Pastor of the Tenth Baptist Church, Philadelphia. Dr. Jackson—Dear Sir: I have been Itequently reques ted to connect my name pith recommendations of ddler ent kinds of medicines, but regarding the practice as oat N of my appropriate blame, I hate in ail cases de clined; but mph a clear ' proof in various instan ces and particularly in my own family, of the usefulness of Dr. fl oor land's Bernina Bitters, I depart tar once from my usual coins°, to express my full conviction that, for general debility of the system, and especially for Liver Complaint, it is a safe and valuable preparation. In some cases it may fail; but usually, I doubt not, it will be very beneficial to those mho sullen from the above causes. Yours, very respectfully, J.ll. KENNARD, Eighth, below Coates St FROM. DIM. E. D. DENDALL. Assistant Milos Christian Chronicle, l'hiladelphia I have derived decided benefit fican the use of Hoof 601 . 1111111 ELEM.; and ',el it my privilege ,to 1'41411- Ila theft lln It meet valuable tunic, to all who mu auf fining Irian general dehilit3 or tionulibeases ai tling hum deraugeinekit, of the liver. - Yours truly, • _ E. D. EEN DALL. CAUTION_ Hoeflapil's German Remedies aro counterfeited. Seo that the signature of C. M. JACKSON is on the wrapper uf each bottle. All others aro counter feit. Principal Office and Manufactory at the Ger. man Medicine Store, No. OS/ ARCM Street, Philadelphia, Penntslviona. Charles Evans, Proprietor,. Formerly C. M. JACIUON Si CO. PR , .I?ES , Malland's German Bitten, per bottle, . . $1 00 ' " " • ' " • bait dozen, . '5 00 Ifoofland's German Tonic, put up in quart bottles $1 60 per bottle;• bed half dozen for $7 55. 11 - e'D °Mut forget to examine well the article you buy, inrordrir to gel the genuine. i"Fil? sale by all Dealers Drldedicine. April 2,11.55 1 •11 `' • • • Ely 61obe. There's no novel road to greatness, Men must ever climb to fame ; All the wealth to miser's coffers Wouldn't buy a deathless name. IS a noble goal before you ? Would you great achievements dare? Brother, then be up and doing— Brother 1 you must '•Win and Wear." Toil and labor—never stooping - Till you make the prize your own, For, you know, 'tis "constant dropping Wears away the hardest stone." Never slack sublime endeavor, Nor 'mid cheerless toil despair; If you'd rise above your fellows, - Brother ! you must "Win and Wear." 'Tis the lesson Nature teaches All throughout her wide domain ; And the test from which she preaches Is "that labor leads to gain." Moral worth, and honest merit— Brighter crowns than monarchs bear, These you never can inherit— Brother ! these you "Win to Wear." DETECTIVES ON THE PLAINS, The Skill of the Indian Trailers---Their Observation, Tact and Shrewdness. [Dakota Col respondonco of tho Hudson Star.] The most extraordinary skill that is exhibited in this part of the country, either by the white man or red native, is in the practice of trailing. Here it may be accounted an art as much as music, painting or sculpture is in the East. The Indian or trapper that is a shrewd trailer, is a man of close obser vation, quick perception and prompt action. As he goes along, nothing escapes his observation, and what he sees and hears he accounts for imme diately. Often not another step is taken until a mystery, that may pre sent itself in this line is fairly solved. The Indian trailer will stand still for hours in succession, to account for cer tain traces or effects in tracks, and sometimes give to the matter unremit ting attention for days and weeks. The trailer is not a graceful man. He carries his head much inclined, his eye is quick and restless, always on the watch, and he is practising hie art unconsciously, hardly ever crossing the track of man or animal without seeing it. When lie enters a house, ho brings the habits he contracted in the practice of his art with him. I know a trailer as soon as he enters my room. lle comes in through the door softly, and with an air of exceeding caution. Before he is fairly in, or at least has sat down, he has taken note of every article and person though there may be it dozen vacant chairs in the room. He is not used to chairs, and, like the Indian, prefers a more humble seat When I was employed by General Harney last summer to tako charge temporarily of the Indians that were gathered here to form a new reserva tion, one day a guide and trailer came into the General's • headquarters. I told him to be seated. He sat down on the fluor, bracing his back against the wall. The General saw this, and in vexation cried out. "My God, why don't you take a chair, when there are plenty hero not occupied ?" The man arose and seated himself in a chair, but in so awkward and uncomfortable a manner that he looked as if he might slip from it at any moment. But when this uncouth person came to transact his business with the General, he turned out to be a man of no ordi nary ,abilities. His description of a route he took as guide and trailer for the Ogallalas, in bringing them from the Platte to this place, was minute and, to me, exceedingly interesting. Every war party that for the season had crossed his trail, he described with minuteness as to their number, the kind of arms they had, and stated the tribes they belonged to In these strange revelations that he made there was neither imposition nor supposition, for he gave satisfactory reasons for every assertion he made. I have rode several hundred miles with an experienced guide and trailer, Hack, whom I interrogogated upon many, points in the practice of this art. Nearly all tracks I saw, either old or new, its a novice in the art I questioned him about. In going to Noibara river, we crossed the track of an Indian pony. My guide followed the track a few miles, and then said, "It is the track of a stray black horse, with a long bush tail, pearly starved to death, has a split 'hoof on the left forefoot, and gees very' lame, and ho passed here early this morning." As tonished and incredulous, I asked him the reasons tor knowing these partic ulars by the tracks of the anima!, when he replied : "It was a stray horse, because it did not go in a direct line; his tail was long, for he dragged it' over the snow; in brushing against a bush he left some of hie hair,'Nyhich shows its color. He was very'bungry, for, in going along, he ' had nipped, at those high, dry woods which horses seldom eat. The fisspre„ of the left fore foot left, also its. track, and- the depth of the indentation' shows the degree of his lameness; and his tracks show ho was hero this morning when the snow was hard with frost." PHILADELI , II/A, PA At another place wo came acrossan Indian track, and he 5a41,;"41§,v 7 p old Yankton, who came across the souri last evening to lOok at his traps. In coming over ho carried in his right hand a trap, and in his left a lasso, to catch a pony which he had lost. Ho returned without finding the horse, but had caught in the trap he bad out a prairie "Wolf; which be carried home on his: back, and a bundle of kinniki kick Wood in his right hand." 'Pfeil be gave his reasons, "I know he is old by the impression his gait has made, and Yankton by that of is mocenein. He is from the other side' of the river, as there aro no Yanktons on thiii lido. -PERSEVERE.- WIN AND WEAR • , ~.:se=. " ..s -.;.;;'1 .; "t: I. ;;Zii -4L ' e T ai ' - s. 4. !:*: k i ' 7i t ' 1:',... $ ' ,c' I. f j • . ffi r v, : t • .-„, •z., ..• „:, ~ 4 ci.,-( , 4-- j— ,:34. 1 , 41„..., ...‘ „ 7 'II ' '.''' ' 4 '':: ' f'.. 1 The trap, he, carried struck the Snow now and then, and in the same man ner as when 'he catne, shows that ho did not find his pony. A drop of blood in the centre of his tracks shows that he carried the wolf on his back, and the biindle of kinnikinick wood ho used for a staff for support, and catch ing a wolf shows that he had traps out." But," I asked, "how do you know it is a wolf, why not a fox, or a coyotte, or even a deer? Said he, "if it had boon a fox, or coyotte, or any other small game ho would have slip ped the head of the animal in his waist belt, and so carried it by his side, and not on his shoulder. Deer are not caught by traps, but if it had been a deer, he would not have crossed this high hill, but would have gone back by way of the ravine, and the load would have made his steps still more tottering." Another Indian track wo saw twen ty miles west of this he put his serious construction upon. "He is an upper Indian—a prowling horse thief—car ried a double shot gun, and is a rascal that killed some white man lately, and passed here ono week ago; for" said he, "a lone Indian in these parts is on mischief, and generally on the lookout for horses. He had on the shoes of a white man whom he had in all proba bility killed, but his - steps are those of an Indian. Going through the ravine the end of his gun hit into the deep snow. A week ago we had a very warm day, and the snow being soft ho had made these tracks; ever since it has been intensely cold weather, which makes very shallow tracks." I sug gested that perhaps he bought those shoes. "Indians don't buy shoes, and if they did they would not buy them as large as these were, for Indians have very small feet." The most noted trailer of this coun try was Paul Daloria,, a half breed, who died under my hands, of Indian consumption, last summer. I have spoken'of him in a former letter. At one time I rode with him, and trailing was naturally the'subject of our con versation. I begged to trail with him an old track over the prairies, in order to learn its history., I had hardly made the proposition when he drew up his horse, which was at a ravine, and said, "Well, here is an old elk track. Let us get off our horses and follow it." We followed it hp but a few rods, when he said it was exactly a month old, and made at 2 o'clock in the after noon. This he knell-, as then we had our last rain, and at the hour named the grOund was softer than at any other time. The track before us was then made. He broke up here and there clusters of grass that lay in the path of the truck, and showed me the dry ends of some, the stumps of others, and by numerous other similar items accounted for many circumstances that astonished me. We folldwed the trail over a mile. Now and then we saw that a wolf; a fox, hnd other ani mals had practiced their trailing in stincts on the elk's tracks. Dere and there he would show me where a snake, a rat, a prairie deg had crossed the track. Nothing had followed or cross ed the track that the quick eY n e of Daloria did not detect. He gave an account of the'habits of all the ani malS that had left their, footprints on the track, also of the state of the weather since the elk passed, and the effect of sunshine, winds, aridity, and storms, and other. influences that .had a bearing on these tracks. The old.man, like all trailers, was reticent, but on this occasion, seeing I was interested, became especially corn- Munieativo. 'DII. RACUENBERG. Too MucHMARRYING.—''The Liberal Christian" has an article on the above subject, from which we take the fol lowing:' "It is not in the facility with which people get divorced, but in the facility with which they get married that the mischief inheres, It is not the unmarrying but the marrying— the marrying without.properconsicffir ation, marrying from wrong motives, with false views and unfounded expec tations, marrying • without knowing who or what—that causes all the die turbance. And there is altogether too much of such marrying. Marriage is a'thing of quality and degree. A mar riage the blood is usually a. short lived affair, while a marriage of the brain or of the heart islife-long. When man and woman marry all, over. and clean, through, every faculty and senti ment of ,cacti finding its complement and t;clunterpdrt in the other, iteliai'W-• flan' is impossible. But when they are only half•married, when only a third part of • them , is. married, when they are married only in their instincts or thekimaginations, or their 'fortunes, the' unmarried part of them is very apt to get uneasy, tiiid rebel, and they find a Bedlam where they look for Elysium. * • • * , ' There' is altogether too much urg ent,' and coaxing,' and untiring 'young people into'the Most; Important and sacred of:Mt:bun - mu relations; befoie 'they - are iii.epared for ,its reSPodsi tics or . Moved to'- assumeUS buddies, - an,d'llyll4e who' odglit...to - kiiiikv bet ter and aet'witil morn Nyis m too'uchn, of mai:y,ing'find being_Married, until'ie .. bi thought' by many people aptr'cWhat of a disgrace 'fora woman to pass through life aedne; "when, in fact, the life of any a single woniun' is 'poetry, romance, rapture &lin, in eomparlson'with many a wife." *3-..A.eountrytnan ;.who had, never paid more tba9 "fwenty-fiyo mite . t:o see in, exhillition, Went, to vinw the "Forty Thiev i es : " The ticket, seller charged . hini ,eventy-five cents, fcir ticket. Plisl3ing tbo pasteboard back, he quietly: remarked: "Loop it, mis ter,ldon't want to see tho other thirty ; nine," and out he marched. TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance. [Written for the Globe.] ' The Moral Telescope, When we first turned our glass to ward void and empty space, nonentity and darkness prevailed there, but soon we saw Satan'with his rebel hosts dri 'ven from the battlements of heaven to wander in dark and empty space, to seek by sight or . sound:some object up on which to revenge his fall, and vex his God. Presently we see our world, first in crude, chaotic term. We saw this dark and heterogeneous mass of matter, by the laws of chemical affinity and gravitation, come into order, the vegetable kingdom spread over the surface in gorgeous beauty. We saw the animal kingdom clothed in strength pride and beauty; we saw the progen itors of our race clothed in heavenly beauty and innocence, the very image of their creator, and lords of creation. -The adversary saw, too, the objects of envy, hatred and revenge; he emitted the deadly poison. The moral virus tainted the soul of man. He fell and became subject to death—spiritual, temporal and eternal. We looked again, and saw that from a corrupted fountain-head the whole race descend ing from them by ordinary generation, were corrupted. Death, cruel, fratri cidal death, broke in upon the family circle, and introduced weeping and la mentation where once innocence, joy and gladness prevailed. And as we turn our glass downward on the path way of history, aided by the heavenly lamp hung out by the prince of peace, (reason,) we find that the bitter upas planted in Paradise by the adversary, bad sent its fibrous poison through ev ery human vein, until the moral lep rosy had withered up nearly the last vestige of goodness in the human heart, and until "God saw that the wickedness of man was groat in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually." The God of love resolv ed to exterminate such a race of gi gantic rebels from . the face of the earth; .with the exception of one fami ly, and accordingly all those elements conducive to the happiness of unfallen man,•were used in the hands of an an gry God for his destruction. Tho win• down . of heaven were opened and pour ed out rain in torrents; the earth trembled and sank 'under such a load ! of sin, till sea met sea and storm met storm, till the whole race except Noah and his family were whelmed in awful destruction. You turn your glass further down ward upon the pathway of history and you find the human record a history of carnage and death; nation at war with nation, and kingdom against kingdom, empires rising through blood over the ruins of their predecessors, in order to play tyrant in their turn, and drench the earth in human blood.— Where is Nineveh? Where is Baby lon? Where are the doomed cities of the plain ? Where is the glory of Je rusalem, or the power of Rome, once the mistress of the world; now a by word and disgrace? All aro dead -or dying—monuments, of the just ven geande of •an • offended God, toward cruel rebels against his righteous gov ernnient. How often have we looked in sorrow over the ravages of sin, and wept over the moral desolation of our earth, once, with all the works of God, "pronounced very good;" but now, alas, "the whole head is sick, the whble heart is faint. From the sole of the foot even unto the head, there is no soundness in it, but wounds and brui ses, and. putrefying sores; they have not been closed, neither ; bound up, neither mollified with ointment." The carnal mind' is enmity against God, not subject to the law of God, neither can be: "So that by the deeds of the law no flesh living can be, justified." Such was the moral condition of, our .earth that if an inhahitant . of , another' and an unfallen world, ignorant of our h:story, had been permitted to visit our planet, to witness the sin and sor row, with the dark and gloomy degra dation and suffering of :snail a fallen , race, he might have concluded that our world was not a creation of his benev : ,olent,God, but rather the work of some malignant fiend, thrown into space to wander amongst the works . of God, as a mockery of Divine benevolenee; or perhaps permitted to revolve in .the sight of unfallon worlds as a warning to their inhabitants to avoid such . a re bellion as would bring them into such a state of sin and misery. But after all, ours is ,not a forsaken world. You know that when stoop ing mdera,)oad of, sorrow over, the devastations'of sin, and' weeping over our moral desolation, we wore moved by some moral impulse to .look.againi and turning our. glass once more upon the pathway of human history wpdis 'covered that ours was not 'world, and that' God had "at Suitalflo intervals appointed t3ymbolwand ern: biome, whipli harmoniously,- though dimly, prefigured some great future relief, and, that there were prophets "raised ''up - froth time, to; time, 'rising early and teaching the peoplo. Here you find :,ono 'weeping. over the-sin's _and'desolation_ofZion and eNhorting Lae people.io repent., There you find anbther;sta - Mlieg high above earthly 'vanities, looking down into the'distant Suture and singing joyfully of the com ing Saviour, and others. tuning their harps for songs, of joy as though lie had already come. One there was, who, sold to sin and Satan, was !lire(' for great reward 'to curse the' armies of the hvingnGod; but here arose in a human soul that remarkablo conflict between the Prince of darkness and the Prince of peace, in Which' the latter prmMiled—an evidence of; His final victory. bicither . would the Lord per. mit Ralaarn' to curse Israel from the 'top o!'iliskah or Peer, but iri spite of the wicked prophet's desire to secure great wealth in . 'these'rviae of sin,, §htan TO SUBSCRIBERS. Those subscribing for three, six on twelve menthe with the understariding that the paper, be discontinued unless subscription is renewed, receiving ape, per marked with a f before thee:name will understand that the time for which they subscribed is up. If they wish the paper continued they -will renew their subscription through the mail or other Wise. tf. In_ All kinds of plain, fancy and ornamental Job Printing neatly-- and expeditiously executed at the "GLo)W' office. Terms moderate. NO, 41, was foiled in his soul, and found him, self in the grasp of Jehovah, and oblig ed to hear through his own instrument the voice of God in that inimitable parable, beaming with light, heauty and grandeur, which, remains fresh as the morning light, though thousands of years have passed away, and no lit; erature has dimmed it in comparison; and also to listen to that glorious pre, pheey in which is foretold the destruc tion of his kingdom and the victory of fallen humanity, when his own prophet was forced to say : "I shall see him, but not now; I shall behold him, but not nigh: then shall come a star. out Jacob and a scepter out of Israel,;" "out of Jacob shall come he that shall have dominion and shall destroy hire that remained] of the city." Hero we saw the only genuine his, tory of our race, interspersed with streams of eloquence which for gran-. deur, beauty and thrilling pathos could only flow froth the fountain-head :of inspiration, and defy human imitation —with the most fascinating biography --with poetry the most sublime and beautiful ever written, and a system, of morals which beggars in the com parison all the efforts of the sages and philosophers of antiquity. •All thiS we see converging remotely or clearly to some great future event, with a powerful tendency to enlighten the mind, improve the heart, and work in the soul those high anticipations of the coming one, predestined to "bear our griefs and carry our sorrows." "makia an end of transgression and sin," and give his people a perfect triumph' over. their malignant adversary: Wo turned our telescope toward Bethlehem, and there was , 'the babe, the God incarnate, who was the Oren, tor of all worlds, clothed in all the, ha biliments of poverty. The universe was astonished. A star left its laea.v.- enly orbit to guide the eastern magii to the place where the babe lay, and looked down upon the wonderful yid-. tor. Angels visited earth and'sang to lonely shepherds in the night season, the thrilling song of anticipated umph, saying, "Fear not; for,'behold, I'bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people; for unto, you is born this day in the city of Da vid, a Saviour, which is Christ, the Lord." Then was the realization of. that ancient prophecy made'over sev: en hundred years before, saying, "Un to us a child is born, unto us a son is given; and the government shall ha upon his shoulders; and name shall be called Wonderful, Counselor, the Mighty God, the Everlasting Fa 7 Cher, the Prince of Peace." Thep'vas that other prediction, made over. ti thousand years before, fulfilled—" The kings of the earth set' themselves, and the rulers took counsel together, against the Lord, and au b ainet, his an-, ointed"—for they desired to. murdec, the babe. Horz.• ' Going to.diriner the other day,• say ah exchange,,we saw a little fellp,w, about two years old, sitting in a wheel barrow, and trying to wheel himself. It struck us that many_ people in this vorld are often caught in the same get, and we shall alwayi Oink het after When we see a- business mart trusting everything to his clerks; 4 1 4 continually seeking his - house, , e2c 7 pectinglo get 0)11g- 7 -he's sitting in. ti wheelbarrow, and •'trying to "wheel himself. When we see.a -professional man better • acquainted with !'every thing else,tban bis 'profession - always starting sonic' new scheme ' anti - never 'attending to his Calling., his Wardrobo and credit ; will soon. , designate,hinr ait sitting in wheelbarrow;, and trying to wheelhiniself.', Wheat' we'see far. Mer' with 'ail Over-ahhhilaiice 'Or""hired help," truSting•to-c.their' manaaernetiti, his fence .down, implements out of .re_{ pair, and land suffering for want, pf propor tillage—too proud, or too lady, to take off his coat and go to work he's sitting in a wheelbarrow, and- try ing to wheel himself. When we see man busily, engaged in circulating scandal concerning -his •neighhor,- we infer he is pretty deep in the mud, anti is sitting in a.wheelbaxrow, and, trying to wheel himselh ' • . ' 'GIVE YOUR CIIIIM - A LOCAL PAPER:77 A child beginning to read becerneff_de: lighted-ivitb a newspaper, bepalipe he roads the namesOf persons rind thing's which aro very familiar:, and Will Make progress apcordingly. A newapapei im one year is worth a quartor's school ; ing to a child, and every -father muck consider that substantial informntion is connected,.with - advancement.- The mother,,of family,,, being Rn eL ef ,t , be hend,s arid haVing a:MoicCirninediate charge of chtldree, abeuld herself be instructed. A mind'oeciipied-bedomen fortifted , against the:, ills of • life and-is braced agains i t,,any emergency. , phA: drop, ,anansed ,by 'rea4ing or studying, i 1 .1 4 'Of 'course Moro - cOnsiderat'e arid more easily' 'golierned 'H'ow -Many parents who have , not 'spent twenty dollars for bobks for their• families \VOW given', hundreds to reclaim it'Son„or'dau'ghter,who had igooruntly or thotightlessrYfallen into temptation. -7.Excitange. , ,„. , -..„ Var. Each ant in •an ant hill knowS his companions. Mr. Darwin', sovpial times' c arried ants. from ono- hill p r p- Other, inhabited appartintly by' . tehs•or thousands or ants; but the strangers yore inyariably ciet64o and Thinking that there might be a fami,: ly odor, by which which they . worci recognized, be put .some ants frOm Inrge nest into a bottle strongly per ftimed with assarcetida, and - restored thom;after twenty-four hours. At first they wero threatened by their com panions, but sbou recognized, and lowpd to pass. [To be continued.] Wheeling One's• Self,