I•L''XitlJ • U.N LUSA' Per'ltminiti In - advance Six 'months snontbe OV .I.py.ERTIS.Wq. litre.' do- 4 - ^ . 07,1 month :$ 75 11 ' - 1,11 , 50 "$1 75 . 1 50 2 25 2 75 3 25 , 225 '1"_0 400 4 75 3 months. 6 months. 1 trim .$4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 .1)or !nrb, or Ir.s inchri "Three , t 9ne inch, or Nog •T.O inches, 6 25 0 00 15 00 Three inches 8 fig 12 00 ^0 00 Four incip:s , 10 1 . 5 16 00 ^5 00 Quarter column, 13 00 18 00 30 00 lialfeolunth,.."..l. ' • .'2003` " ' 30 . :(10 " 4 '45 00 One column, 30 00 - - 45 00..........80 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines One year, 45 Od Administrator? and Executors' Notice; 6 times, 52 50 Auditor? Notices, 4 times 2 00 Estray, or other short Notices 1 50 Advertisements not marked with the number of loser sus desired, will ho continued till brbid and charged sr- ording to them terms. . Loral or Special Notices, 10 tents a line for single in• set ties. By the year at a reduc<d I ate. Our prices for the prtuttng 01 Blanks, 11E1110111s, etc. I are teasonabfy low. • • , ... v ro f tsstona t* usfitess gars. DR. A. B: BRUMBAUGH, Having p^rmanently located at Huntingdon, die. Lie I.luftssional sers ices to the community. Office, the tame as that lately occupied by Dr. Luden rott Hill street. aplU,Htl6 DR. JOHDI4cOII,LLOCIii coffers his profossionallotOiet fi/eiffiiisns•Of Onntinplon and vicinity. O ffi ce on street, one door east of Heed's Ilrug Store. Aug. 2S, '55. R t. AL:LISON • ' DENTIST, jibe removed to the Brick ROA opposite the Court House April 13, 1859. E J. GREENE, DENTIST. .oflice removed to Leister's Now Building, Hill street, llontingdort._ - - July 31,1847, REP AP. ,W. JOHNSTQN, R Vi"YOR & IN'SURANCE AGENT, HUNTINGDON, PA Offtco on Smith ettrot. e j A. POLLOCK, ASA VEYOR&REAP - EBTAT4 AGENF, iIUi;TINGDON; PA Will attend to Surveying in nil its branches, and wilt Lu,y and sell ite.itEst.t . te in guy part of the United Ll Wan. herald' for iiiculitr,•• .{ • ; dec29-ti ' • Yr W. MYTON," • ATTORNEY AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, I'A. ( Mee m ith J. Smut. STE.WArsT, Esq. nolo-Gor* SYLV ATTORNEY AT LA r , • HUNTINGDON, PA, Wee on Hill street, three doors west of SinfilL4 . HALL SICSSI.Tt. S. r. MUSSER & F.LEMING, A TTORNEYS-AT-LAW, InfiC2:IVGDON Office second floor or Leifiter'ii building, on hill bisect. SL'eneions unclothes drams promptly collected. my2.6%.9 A NAL COLLECTING ,OLDIEHS' CLAIMS, BOUDTV, DACKPAY AND All lillo may hare any claims against the Government for bounty, Bach Pay and Poinduna, can lint e their Ci.lilltd pronoly collected by apply mg either co person or by let ter to W. 11. WOODS, 42TOli.,VEr 42' LA Ir. it/{:Y2L4➢uY, PA au c ,12,1863 =1 EZCZEI . . rilbe Dime of this firm has bap chang ed (loin seen k BROWN, to ' - SCOTT, BROWN & BAZLZY, under which Venue they will kerridlor conduct then practice as A I' TOR.NIXB AT LA TE" , //kV TYNUD ON, l'A. PENNONS, and all cliiiiinfOrs — Urdiarsinintsitudturritei.. against the llosernment, wdl b. promptly prosecuted.' Slay 17, lba7ti. P. M. Lytle & Milton S. Lytle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, PA., Hare hunted a partnership under the name and firm of P. 11i. M. S. LYTLE, 'And hare renierteto flits offic'e on the 'ouch eld•of street, fourth deer west of :tooth. 7 hey Inn attend promptly to all kinds of le g al buet- Ctee II to their care. JOSEi 3 .II- 3 ' l Ai3T, ' 4 MANUFACTUIcER OE AND DEALER IN WILLOW AND SLEIGII BASKETS, Of MI sixes and descriptions, ALEXANDRIA, lIUNTINOLLLN CO., PA. June 9,leo—Lt . „ LOSSES PROMPTLY PAID „HUNTINGDON INSURANCE AGENCY. •.. I G. B. ARMITAGE, IitiNTINGDON,;PA. Represent the meet reliable Companies in the Country. Rates as low as is tonsistent with reliable:lndemnity. aep 2,'63. Capital Represented over $14,000,0 OIL CLOTH WINDOW SHADES call - GOO SIIADES, , :MUSLIN . SHADES, pATLEY'g TAPE, CORD AND TAMILS 'LL MEOICTSLLNT , AT LEWIS' 1300 K STORE DUMB - • ETRIL ..•77 , 4 At ' ; ' : , %' 2 - ,4it-.7:rr::** V!..r. .... - >WIT% - i: 4 l - ....';: . .1 ~- r ":• .•Cri . 1 = 1. Q om ` , --...71 . ,;?-.,'',•. iV, . ~, 4; ‘, • •••;x:___ - .1... 5.174,-,r,:-.21•. - 1 ,46...41 : ..4 . 4% 1, 1, .. ••, A 1,1 . r .-„,„„,,_. „ t_.,. 0 ._ 'AT 1z....}- k:e ---: f' - ' S UO. .:JEL3M30.1 . 41710, ~..q u ‘c conri t p B. it h IIBBBNE,I DBALEtt §TE,IIOV4.X:.4,SQN'S : PIANO§, • • - t !, An i l other makes; lIAMLIN CABINET ORGANS; 3telnleons, Cluitars,Violins, Flfesißlutss, Accordoons, Atc., ttre, farrinnus, Organs, and Melodeons Warranted fur flee, Circulars sent op app'ication Address JiDlltibgdOns 2d floor Leistif a Now Dulldlng Jan 27,69 .::NEW: : - ,Ariillt . gl-tous E.' lIE FIRM OF LEAS & iIIcITITTY, have lenseitttra , Larg e livestarLeather Jamiri Y ""' Lum A.c.ut y,- NO. 434 tontrrimiti' gTREET,'PIIIL ATiELPRI A, And intend doing a Tilde and Leather Comndvdon Iluel beta. Their sons D. I'. LEAS, and T. E. 110171 TTY, are there, and nuthorind to catry,eu &heti:in:di:less for them—as they are youngs.rndh •gbad moral character, and fine bnsinees qualiflcathins. They solicit the patronage of their brother Tanners in the county and elsewhere ga?''fbey rttll will continuo to keep n good nseormen tif pniltsh and Stringhter Q6lo Liitiller.int blinds; at tiled Tannery, sear Three Springs. 0,11 .0, Pa. mEO3.lf. ' ' "I DIAS 516VITTY: • \IVANTED. Partner for the half alienist lila good Wood Engraving, Litho graphing, And Steam Power Printing basineaa, in Phil adelphia. An unpatalieled chance for Capital and a practical printer or lithographer. Address M. R. LONGACRE, ' • • Na.`3o & 04 - 5 , 311 th bra 2" 10.9.41 • LANK BOOKS, • or vAtirm MU% for gala at -4 ‘ 4. LEWIS'I39O.IK 4.1 n) srdnosziersroßg $2 00 . 100 WIVE. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publi§hers., VOL XXVI GREAT BARABS Cunningham & Cannon.' s, Corner of Railroad and Montgomery Ste WE would cull special attentior, to y tho doily arlival 011OICE AM) IMALITIFUL GOODS, %Walt aro ofrorad at IMEI Tempting Prices, Consisting of tleantiful bilks of all shades, all Woe, Poplins, Alpacas, Melanges, Arraurs, C;hinlass, a most beautifol lino of floe Combrics, Barred Muslins, Nain- sooku, Ginghams, and OhnTbrays ALSO, a Minns of Domestic 0 ooLls, such as HEAVY BLEACHED MUNE, Fino Brown Muslin, 40 inches wido, Blsacbed Muslin from u to 2 1 ,4 psnis nido, Koutitcky Jeans, rarsnera Cassintere, Sc„ Sc.- Our stock of SHOES swots anything of tho kind this ido of Plalleitlelplaa. ALSO, a largo ana .elected stock HATS suit EZETIEM CARPETS. We make a specialty of this article, and hare en howl a ♦eq fine ashortment of I= DESIRABLE PATTERNS, hich bo lower than CAN bo sold by aillother halm ou hada of Philadelphia. We hove hand a =21121M21!! hill AND BALT ',lad& we are selling Tory low In order to be convinced that ours is the place to buy,' call and VX.1%13111111 our goods and primes Re take ploa.urein .bowing our good., 1{11,512 If you do not vast! to buy. Itio you will please call and get posted, CUNNINGHAM&CARMON. Oct. 28, 1805—tf. SPANISH HAIR DRESSER FBA I‘llo3torlOvi our GOOFSIf, BLAtilrlili4Cl Vila HAIR, And rendering it dark and glossy. No other compound possesses the peculiar properties nhich so exactly suit the Vitriol. conditions of the human hair. Thu use of this oil as a hair dresser has been tilllTOrtial In ovary arc. lion of the cannily in the itpantsli Slain fur centuries.— plep.tentsct 01 art could giver that elegant luxuriance and abundance of hair whielt hare so often horn the ad miration of travelers in Spain. 'Una oil is highly and delicately pea famed, forming au article unrivaled in ex. tellei..e and upon %Ouch the htmutsh people tor many yenta horn Bet Its seal of enduring aeproral. lifoxicaillifildFlworsSlanoo botioll For removing dandruff and scurf from the head, v. triton lug and perluming the skin. halo article is entirely del ierent front any thing of the kind ever .41ered in ill. corm try and is warranted free from all poisonous silbsuintes Ihrs s aloubla lotion ears need by the Emperor Maxima lair, arid Empress Carlotta of 'Mexico, and unlimrsally used by Mexicans fur three hundred years. As 11 wish Mr the head—it is cooling, cleansing nod refreshing.= I% lieu thus used it at once relieves headache. McG U IRE'S , WILD FLOWERS FOR THE TEETH. All those a ho are in fu or of ala Ito teeth and it pleasant and pertained Me Alt, 8110111 d ut _once use Mettuire's Wild I , lou ets tor the Teeth. All these Reparations are pat up, itt the most elegant and ornamental manner. 110 make Ily C. 1.1111011 in saying that they are en ornament to a tady's toilet table, and noun complete a about them. %retaliated satislactuii or money refunded. Dealers willl bear this hi mind. bold by all respectable thng aiets in the United States and Canada. Address eiders to - . - _ _ _ RICHARD McGIIIRE, , Dopot a,n4,lllllll(actury,. ,263 §cconA Streo , t, DlAlndelphDi salo - at hoeis' 14,4 Ore, CA NEW STOEE IN lIIINTING.DON TAMES A. BROWN has just opened a largo • CARPET .STORE u. J:OIfEENIC, on the .89ciuld fluur, or, his brick building, 1, hero buyvre will jililiUllillthlut Fat aud beef tostrbwalrli or 13RtiSSErA,.' - ' 2 INGE,4IK7, WOOL, - _ COTTON, . • • •_' „, ' LIST, VENITIAN-and -SCO TOIL 11E511 3 - i; (DaViLorlPteltS4,.. Also, CO,CQA:'aud ,CANTON, NAT- ' TLINIGS; and; .1f1,06,1t OIL CLOTHS, Ever offered in central reunsylvaula.,. , It is bell known that nterobaut who derdiintirely aft otos line of purls, bu3lnli- largely, front teauufacturers,is , enabled to gird-ble , oustornera advantsgee In prices aildi assortment (In that line eigorals) that are not to be Ound, luateres professing to do all binds of buelneu. ,, , ' lohalllitim thereinto trininkcit the interest ,of all ill, -want Of the above-graals r to-buy at-the regular_Eargen and OE Cloth Stare. ; • , . )„,,; ,o,3,Dcgtetr' qati boy qf rue by' the roll all wholesale), prices.. ap13.64 OE HUNTINGDON, PA. McGUIRE'S McGU IRE'S JAMAS A DROWN. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19. 1870. BAR GAINS I BARGAINS ! NUE OFF AT COST ' 13.artan1. cfc 3Cliast,lc, Are now disposing of their entire stock of Goode AT COST -,Pertona wishing DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, QUEENSWARE, BOOTS AND SHOES, lIATS'AND CAPS; ETC , ETC., ETC., Will save money by calling on us, as we are determined to close out our entire stook without reserve MEMBER 'ME -PLACE: Smith's new buiiding,-Hill Street, Hunt ngdon, octl2::\ West Huntingdon Foundry. JAMES SDIPSON EMEZZEI PLOWS, THRESHING MACHINES, NARK DELLS, SLED AND SLEIGIL SOLES, VAGONBOXES, IRON KETTLES, Fur Funinces, Fdigep; G Eat and Saw TanU;rfes and nnelqards, _ AND JOD WORK IN GEINDRA.D. ARCHITECTURAL k.'ORNAMIII , ITAL DEPARTIIIINT, Iron Porticos and Verandahs, , Columns and Drop Ornament (sr wei d.o porticos and verandahs, , Window Lineal, and Sills, t Cast Oruamonts for 'wooden lintels, Cellar Window Guards all atm, Chimney Tope and Plum Saeh Weight., Carpet Strips, Registet a, theaters, Coal Orates, Vault Castings for coal and wood cellar., Arbors, Tree-Loxes, Lamp -poste, Ilitching•poSts, Iron Ratting (or porticos, verandahs, balconies, dower• beds, Yard aud Comot,ry FIRMS, etc. Parlinter ablution paid to fencing Csnutiery Lens. Addrens JAMES SI3IPSON. ee23,63 " Hunt! ugdon,•Pa HUNTINGDON FOUNDRY. EASTON BLAKE. M. MARION MeNEll. BLAKE & MeNEIL, [Succeasore to J. M. CLINNINCI SON.] Iron and. Brass Founders, 11111s1 'l' IN(1 Inv. 13 A. lllOH • itnd` IMASS CASTINGS - made h 6 n first clng4 Foundry, IVe hay° ninny eon hand all ki1..1. I 1 flaw and Stove Casting, Winds h Nettle-. eel lar•wlndows, Grates, Coal hole I . 6,etlne% for paeoments, Window weight. all sizes and weights. Pipe joints, Sled and nlenth coke, Wagon boxes, Machine Canting., for steam and water, iv let, saw, Intone and plaster milli', of all &sm.:idiom IIEA'ITRS AND IRON FENCES, of the mast Improved etylo, oven doors and frames, door sills, and in fart 011.0 thing made in this lino. We have a larger stock of paths no, and can furnish Coo. titsgs nt short notice. and cheaper than they con ha hod in the country. tinning a good drill, no aro prepared to do drilling and fitting tip of all binds. 011ico in Eiestors' Sow• Building, 11111 strout, Hunting don. l'a. Meh. 17, 1900. BLAKB lc MoNLIL. =1 UNION STEAM BAKERY CM Candy Manufactory, UNTING,DOX, P A. TRH undersigned have fitted up a drat- lats n'tcron RAKI , :IIY at Iho Cattdfau Garden n Church slicet, and ate picparrd to furnish all ninth BREAD; ROLLS, BISCUITS, PIES, Plain and Fancy CAKES, &o, In large or small qmintities, at reAsonable prices. We would calk especial attuntiou of country dealers to OUR CANDY MANUFACTORY. We manufactore all kinds of Fancy and Common Con fectionerics. equal to any that council from the city, and are prepared to fill largo or mall orders on short notice and at CttY Wo also keep on hood a largo and constant supply of FRUITS AND NUTS, obkh they will turn inh nt reneotiablo ratan. The proprietor, natter themselves that it need, but a trial to convince tho moat sceptical, and please the must fastidious. %Ye respeafully solicit a liberal 'bare of public pstra• nage. sod sball endeavor to meat its continuancn. ee1,1869 SUMMERS & It F:ILRY. RE.A.I) QUARTERS - FOR NEW GOODS.. D.'P..CWIIN INFORMS THE PUBLIC THAT HE HAS JUST OPENED A SPLENDIT STOCK of NEW GOODS THAT CAN'T BE BEAT IN CHEAPNESS AND QUALITY. - COME AND SEE. D. P. GWIN. Huntingdon, Oct. 4, IBM TAYLOR'S CELEBRATED: CONDENSED.' '3Easi - 7 , srm • • FOR SOAP MAKING, , For sale .whoiesale and retail at Lewis' ;Ree Front Grocery, ' This' Lye ie said to bo and ; o66apost,ini,thoAnarliatr,;;:',' ' • 11DOUSINt8S 1 1 417 N, PAK% 140140.111 It you won your card !tectly, printed on omit Pm, P, call at • ' -' • • • • L!Q . O6 , A/VD qT:ITIONERY3rORE. ta;- tiopery an 4 MAalcg Instrumento, eorner of the dlataohd4 ."i • SOMEBODY'S BOY. BY BARTON K. rauscon Is somebody's Mother thinking , That somebody's boy gets "tight," While somebody's boy is drinking , Somewhere or other to=night Who was that somebody lugging To heavy It load to-day . Of brandy and rum, and hugging The posts on the corner, oh ? Who is that handsome fellow, The handsomest face wo meet, Who comes homo so late and so mellow Ile cart scarcely keep hie feet? Who is that somobody'reeling First from the-loft to the right, With empty pockets, yet feeling As rich 11:i Creams to-eight 1 Ah ! pavements have grown unsteady ; They wave like a wind blown sheet, And have interfered already With somebody's drunken "feet." And still to the world his drinking Is neither hero nor there; But somebody's pa, I'm thinking, Or sister or mother would care. He'll wake to.morrow, it's patient, And he'll conic down stairs all right, And look almost if ho hadn't Been out on a "tear" last night. And somehody's mother-nnd sibt9r, ' • When told that brothel: gets "tight," Aro almost inclined to blister Your oheekn with their hands outright But somebody's sins are wearing 'rho jewel of life away ; And somebody's boy wayfaring, Will die on the 'street inme day.; The ."• Sweeping Brigade," "Invisible," the Harrisburg corres• pondent of the Blair County Radical, thus 'writes Of thelchweePtat'brigade: The "sweeping . brigade" is one of the institutions of the Capitol. it numbers sixty women, divided into three companies of twenty each—•ten for each house—and each does duty two evenings a week. At precisely six o'clock each week day; high up goeS the !Argo Windows and in rushes the keen, bracing air of the Susque hanna, penetrating every nook and corner oldie chambers and committee rooms and admonishing the tardy leg -1"1!11.032,_1.0 ills Premise's Wifh mop and broom, cloth and brush, the charge is made.. Ono platoon pierces the centre of the one hundred and fif• ty-seven spittoons, another keeps an enfilading fire with sand and, soap upon the unpretending, nnoffending fenders that stand picket between leg islative coat-tails and the material fire of the hickory back-logs behind, and another, still, captures the little wil• Hems and unhatched snakes that have carelessly found their way outside of desk locks to the floor. The avalanche of little bits of paper. segar stumps, peanut shells, apple cores, bits of cake, (for legislators, as old Abe Lincoln onto said of Presidents, "aro only men of ter all," and have more stomach than brains,)and so forth, that rolls down the main isle, proclaim the bri gade more than mistresses of the situ ation. This sweeping process lasts ono hour and costs the State fifty cents apiece for each woman, or $lO a night. =I The contests for these little crumbs are often fought with an earnestness similar to the masculine tilts for the higher positions; and on the evenings the two Chief Clerks make the selec tions (usually about the middle of the first week,) the excitement in the Ro tunda among the applicants and their children, often equals that of the stern er crowd awaiting a caucus delibera tion. I have often lookdd on as the sweepers were announced, and pitied in my inmost soul many who have been disappointed. For there aro ma ny deserving women who fail at each annual selection, but through no fault of the Clerks It may seem strange to the Radical's, readers that Clerks should be importuned night and day by applicants and even Members, for positions worth but a dollar por week; but your renders arc morn familiar With tliii - Mti‘iitifadtird of iron and - the" growing of wheat than the wiles of the legislature. Many, many, ask em ployment only for the Utile pittance— others, for other purposes. To some the hour's service is life to a helpless family of nearly starving little ones as dear .to the, mother ,as : life,itself—to otbbririt . is an ifitrodu6tion, an' adier• tisoment. Their history is not briefly told. In many cases it is the old ato m). Some work in tbe,cotton factories during_ the'day tinki ; some' have no other visible means of support; some are married; some not; some widows; some, "war widows"; some, old and wrinkled and haggard; some, young and comely to It:Mk:lo6th To virtuous : ones, sweepingjhere,is the last resort; Strong drink andidesertion has driven many a noble wife and mother to ask labor from the State: could .we but , road the heart-histories of the women who dust, the desks of the lawmakers, what a picture would we behold ! God is mercifulin keeping us finite. giff;Somo dosconilant of Solomon has wisely remarked that thoso who go to law fOi - datuitges are sure to got thorn.,' tlf it'be truelhat a inan'May bo known by tho company he koops,what a shocking4lbacljog.the,gey,ernoys of our jails mhat be: wmjsn't iCtinde - iThai 'a shoomaker, who is ever lastin,s, is continually t.PPgdifiC -PERSEVERE.- . , y y, ~- ,!. , . . .1 - 7/4 . ' .. .I ....,, _....74 q,'.A. :...,. -;..,.. 14,1: ~ •,v ii i..., it: \ - Wi:: , • wi.., . I ii: "*"\ ;Compulsory Attendance at School; ThO following remarks were made by Mr. S. D. Caldwell; a teacher from Morris, at the recent! session of the County Institute : MR. PRESIDENT-FELLOW MEMBERS : Sensible of the honor conferred upon mo I rise to cast ,into the scale of Pub• Ile Opinion my slight influence in fa vor of a law compelling children to attend school. Conscious of the fact that many, very many voices aro against it, I' ap. pear as its advocate, believing that ,such legislation would be both just, and beneficial to the youth of our land. It is but justice to them that they should be educated, and if they in their ignorance prefer to remain away from places of instruction, and their parents in their foolishness, allow them to do so, I say it is the duty of those who are entrusted with the care of our country to provide a law for such an ,exigency. When we notice how small a number of the youthful portion of our population attend school, the necessity for such a law becomes at once apparent. Some object to a law of this' kind because it would exercise, or seem to exercise too much authority over their children. In answer to this objection,, serious as it may at, first appear, I would simply say, 'that the parent who is doing, his duty toward his child, by sending him to shool, will not consider such a law as usurping his authority, and as for those who aro Nor doing their duty, in this respect, toward the children God has given them, 'it 'is about time some one else was doing it for them. If a parent shows himself incompe tent, or unwilling to direct his offspring aright 7 -if he appears satisfied to let thorn wrap' ua their talents in a 'napkin and turn them down into th'o earth with a plow—it is time 60y1.3 oho' Was speaking for. his defeneoless, and inno, cent children. And who,or.what can do this more effectually and decidedly than can a litw'of our country ? ' Some one will say, I had to stay ut home when I was young and work, instead of sitting at my ease in a school,rontn—and I do not intend that my childnii - shall faro any better in this respect than 'I did." I haVo'often.heard men talk in this, strain and a peculiar absenee of 7,4 sys l a:. di , lllay d, - "Then wo hear persons talc - after tide firshion.--L- Men who would hurler away ibeir l childreifs happiness for the sake' of amassing -a little more wealth—who would, deprive their children of an edUcation, merely because they can save a few more dirty, greasy dollars, or because they themselves wore so unfortunate in youth as to be depriv ed of such an opportunity. 1 say, men who could safer forget their duty to—and bo gni!ty of such base conduct toward the children God has given them, are, to use the mildest term ap plicable, ignorant and unworthy the gift.of a child, much less absolute au thority over ono. Gentlemen, the time has passed when an ignorant, honest nation can stand. We must have an intelligent, and a very intelligent people to decide • the great and intricate questions which will rise ere many years have passed over the head of this people ; and if an intelligent people we must have;. to preserve the gift of our fore gathers from dissolution and ruin. shall wo allow misguided, ignorant, and over-indulgent parents to mould the minds of the rising generation ? It is, I repeat, into the hands of an intelligent and learned people we wish to hand over the ruins of this govern ment, when we—l mean the present generation —"shall shuffle ,off this mortal coil." , The " signs of • the times" are unu sually significant, and indicate a time in the future when hard and difficult problems will be given this nation to solve,—and God grant that the Amer ican People, who elaini to bo a far seeing nation, will prepare the heads of our young people—who aro destin ed, in future time, to guide our " Ship of State,','—to grapple with, and cut successfully the Gordian limits which will fall to their lot to untie. •And how can the legislators of our nation more effectually secure this end, than by 'mesh - I'g an_ ordinance which will the regul • ai., attendance'' of Young America at Sphool? Although_ the number of those ehil, dren who do not attend school, is large in the country,' it is still larger in our cities. Take Philadelphia as an exanipl& What proportion of the juvenile population of that city attend places of instruction regularly ? SPeaking from' the number I have seen upon its streets during the day, Iwould -suppose about ono-half of Ihem•attend. The other half belong principally to the , boot-black, 'news boy, rag-picker and „ragamuffin, brig ades. Thoypiek up their education Avon the street; and what tin eduea- Alen I Few Persons have an idea'hew thoroughly depraved" and''' idielted those little friendless brains became. Motherless fatherless—'za" - great many of them;andallwe;might flay,, friend less, With' on©' to' guide or - direst them aright—no one to see that they! over have a chance to rise above the degraded sphere in which they move. flow grateful would a great many. of them be, hod we a law,..which would say; peremptorily,:you. entiLn be educa ted: Sueh would lead to the petabliehment of a greater • number of benevolent institutions .we new boaet..nf, 13(1' rebid - thiii one pars tieular bo God-send and a _blessing tw.many;a poor ande, fricpdleast If such a law should, be , ,added-,to;he already large numberytif geocL and ME NM ; -,•,: I ,• •:;,.„ •. ) -'•'. Al .4.•;.: ',: ..:17 ! 1::4, ,'-, ;:, •• i 7 ‘. , - , ~j „;, i .., • .3i -,, b, , ..,•, • : , • ,` , 1 5.„,„,, ‘ . t • ". . ••,,,,i,„ it ; • <I) TERMS, 1,00 a year in advance. beneficial School laws we now - s etljoy . it would hare to make provigions for ;certain eases whereiblit: would=be it& possible for some to , obeY' it in order that it might go'irito;kenerta effect honestly bblievelliatoliehl an ordi= nance-would lead to'nnatly , a, re form in dur• present' school:systom. It would lbaci , to the'fbariaing Of many a philantlbropical 'institution, for the education, and candequent moral eta vation of the young America of our land. Foolishness of Intemperance. BY "BROIL' POMEROY." The habit of liquor drinking:io,AO our mind, the most foolish; inexcusa ble piece of destructive nonsense in the world. And nowhere is it more prevalent than in cities. The money poured down the throats of mon each year is greater than the amount spent for improvements: Whiskey-shops, saloons, gin -mills, beer-cellars, wine rooms, and all sorts of irrigational de vices and places to fool away money, are found by the hundreds and thous ands in cities. If a man is tired, he drinks. IF doing nothing, - he must have a nip each hour..lf too warm, he takes a mint julep. If too cold, a hot whiskey. if he is by himself, out comes a flask or bottle. If 'in compa ny, he stands treat till his money bo gone; then, like a, dead beat, sits areund'fill some r one asks him up. A man on 'moderate 'salary steps into a saloon, invites half-a-dozen friends to; drink, pays half a dollar or more, and walks Three or' four times a day-he ,repeats this,' and al 'ways drinks when asked. It is social. Jlen mean nothing by it. But during •the week half a man's salary is poured down hiS throat, detitroying his stom ach, weakening his nerves, over-ex citing his brain, robbing himself and fomily of money . needed :for abet' -purposes. -But it ie.s9citil I Drink in the morning—at"iicion- 7 -at night==snd then a few times between • drinks. 77 Then brain 'whirls—the hash becothes 'unsteady—the pocket empty---the' home ones - suffer—the' eye looks red and trereulods, as 'if ashamed—ambi• Lion is drowned or poisoned. Pretty soon the poor fellow is unfit for Lust• noes. He makes mistakes. Ho is sick, unable to work. He is not the man to be relied oa. He leaves his place, and in time finds a poorer . one. Then he: feels . hltte—drinks still more—his family ffershe •leaves his- place a gai n ,t a n t. he Illes-aywretch-.-- But it is Social ! We believe a•'m:ie' has 'a right to kill himself suddenly or by slow poison. It may be none of our business in the abstract, yet we are sorry to sce'men' fooling themselves away, dying like weeds in a gutter; 'when they might be men, upright, healthy, loved, and useful ; of benefit to themselves and others. And this is why we write' against intemperance. Health is too precious to be wasted. Manhood is' too noble to be thrown into the gut ter. Life is ton sweet to be drugged with poisons now compounded and sold as liquors. To drink poison may be social, but it costs too much for 'us or fur any man of sense who loves himself or others. Who of our readers dare think of this matter, and act as their better judgment shall dictate ? The Duties of a Mother. Sho should bo firm, gentle, kind; always ready to attend to her child. She should never laugh at him, at what he does that is cunning—never allow him to think of his looks, except to be neat and clean in all his habits. She should teach him to obeyh look, to respect those older than himself.— She should never make a command without seeing that it is performed in the right manner. Never speak of a child's faults or !bibles, or remarks before him; it is a sure way to spoil a child. Novor reprove a child while excited, nor lot your voice be raised when cor recting him. Strive to inspire love, not dread—respect, not fear. :reach your child to,wait upon him self ; to put away 'a thing when done with it. But do not forget that you were once a child. The griefs of little ones are fob often neglected—they are great for them. Bbar patiently with them, and never in any, way' rouse their angel-ifit avoided, Duties of, a lVife aad 11Mtiekeeper.— Yotir tirstland highest dutyls to maks homelhappp•for. yOur Husband,- and how to . make it should be your con slant study. Bo always ready to receive , him when he enters the- house— yourself dressed neatly, the,house, meal ready., „; . . ••; Never complain or 'f`tet bait, any thing troubles you, ask advice in a cheerful tone —'not - a' woe-begone, abyhed one, tfi if life's trials had all been deali:to you, 'and' eve4body`ehie was, comparativelY liapj)Y: ' - ' To make home happy, let the hmise ,wetir a'cbeerful look'and the meal be inviting. This will require no' little care and eiperienee. ' Be frugal -'and Bo ever readr.to•oblige hiui,' even. if it. put yourself to considerable incon venience. fie may have found in your many faults of. which ho novor dream ed, and a willing spirit "wilfaid mate rially.,in effaciug,them from his ; mind. It is your duty, to,make,.44, keep friends._friends. It may promote your hus band's, prOspOCts in life,,: and can do you nolutrm,, Whereas, it: will" be; Of Mitch service to your children as they grow older, and very often be a source of Obi:leek - LIAM and happiness for yOur self. • ' ' J.t, you wuut to got the, worth of t , ypgr, money„ - subueribe or the GLOBE. TO_SITEPCRIBERS: Those subscribing for three, Six dt ,twelve months with the understanding that the paper be .discontinued nnlesi subscription is renewed, receiving a pa: bernia r ked with - a t before the ,name • Understand"time fot Which they habseribetris ft thidi 'wish the. papr continued, they will renew their' subscription- through thil mail or otherwise. All kinds of plain; fancy' and: ornamental. Job Printing' neatly and:-• expeditiously executed at the "(lion': office. Termsmoderate. • . • NO. 27. llt one of the oldest points of Air: Arenee between man and woman that •, i Nyor f ian has no first love. The long: alphabet of her affections is without 'any distinct end or beginning; .she mounts by insensible ~gradnlationtt, 'from dolls and kittens and pet. broth ers, to the zenith of paSsion, to descend by 'the same insensible gradulation from the zenith of passion through Pet • brothers to. tabby-cats. There is -ntit-i such, event as.a first kiss, forins ,frt., ie boy's life to niark , for.the woman ; the transition from' girlhood 'the 'And den maturity of passioni she has been kisSing and purring`And fondling and , petting from her cradle, and she: pet and fondle and piirr ,and kiss ;to,, - her grave. Love, in . the' technical sense of the word, hi "'With her little' more than intensifying of her ordinary life. .There'is no new picture; but'the colors are for the while hightened and the tone raised. Presently the vivid ness of color will fade again, and %de cool grays lower the tone, and tho pas sion of life will have died away. But„, there will be no definite movement' at which one could fairly say -that-levo' ' came or went. A girl who is nott'i whispering in a lover's ear will always ',- say frankly enough that. she never knew what it was not to be in ldve. There is one obvious' -'deduotietr which she forgets'to draw—that there' - never can be a time when, she can know what it is to be,ia, love. Here and there, of course, a woman may be , colder, or later in development,Or more' self-conscious, and may divide by more rigidly marked lines the phases of her - life. But even then, if she be a we- man at all, she can have no first love. Feeling, with woman, has no past; as:;, it has no future. Every phase of her - ' life bogiris.with an act of oblivion. Every ,love is a , first love. "I never? ' loved any .one, before," is said, and, said truly,,to a dOzen . loving ears.,in,.' succession.' "The 'first thing I, shou.lit like to 'meet •with in !Paradise," Lady Wortley • Montague, (would, be': , ; the river Lothe—the stream of, For- 0; gotfulness." But woman finds a little; rivulet of Lethe at every stage of her , !, heart's career. If she remembers the'` pastat all, it is to offer it up • as, ae - burnt sacrifice,to the deity of the preL . When Cleopatra talked ,about, „ Cresar to Mark Anthony, she passed;. 'no doubt, h'er fingers through her lov hair, and'wondered how'she could , "huVO.• doted on such a half -paled' fett= - ' :low as' the Diefathr - . Had li - trsecceed'-- ed in' charming ,Octavins, she . Weald. hai , e" wontiertic equally - ' bete infatuation for such an ne'er-do-Welli as 'Anthony... • And.so it is no :wonder , •z that a woman's first love, even if. she realizes it at all, goes down in the ;On eral' wreck of the past. But in man's , life is a revolution. it is, in fact, the-`1 one thing that , makes him a man. The world - of boyhood is- strictly.w; world of boys. , Sisters, aunts, cousins,,, • mothers, are mixed up in .the general crowd of barbdriaua that stand 'with out the playground. There 'are fee' warmer or more poetic affections than: the chivalrous friendship of school-fel-- lows; there is no more truer or more genuine worship than a boy's worship of the hero of the scrimmage or the* cricket-field. It is a fine world in it self, but it is wonderfully narrow; and restricted world. Not a girl may peep over the pailings. Girls can't jump,., or fag out, or swarm up a tree; they have nothing to 'talk about as boys talk ; they never heard of that 'glori ous swipe of Old Brown's; they are . awful milk-sops; they cry and "tell, mamma;" they are afraid of a gover ness and a cow.. It is impossible to , conceive a creaturp more utterly con-. temptible is a boy's, eyes than a girl of his own, age usually is. Then in.som* fatal moment comes the revolution.-• The limier of' contempt goes down with a crash. The boy-world disap-- pears. Brown, that god 'of the- play ground, is cast to the owls and' to the' bats. There is sudden coolness in the' friendship that was to last, from the school to . t 6 grave. Paper'''chaies. and the annual match with the '"Old,;" fellOW," cease to, be the'highest, objecit• , of human interest. There is' less' ex citenient than there 'was last year' , when a great cheer welcoms the news , that Alugby has got *the The boy's life has become muddied" and confused. The old • existenee, is , sheering off,andthe new-comes shyly, fitfully. It is only by a sort of corn pulsion that.be, will own, that „he" "making this f‘fues"•abOut a girl:-- For the moment he rebels against the spell o'f that one little face, tbe' witch-: ery' of ihaVotip little hand, ho on the' herder of this' "new' country;;' from Whence there is'no.rettire•to the old playing-fields. He'is•shy; strange: to this world,of woman, and ;womanfa.. talk ;and, woinan!s ground , tumblese., over foOt-stoole, arid, tangles itself in. colored' . svools:' . "*Tlie that ober wieldedbatitrembleaat‘the tench of-.the tiny,; finger: e voice.- thatyang..outslike trumpet, among thn, tutnnit. of foot-ball, bushes, ancl, treubleettn'll falters 'saving' . half a. dozen 'coninidiOlaedi word's. • The - old sdniid of mastery is gone. He' -knows, that .every chit in _the nursery has., found out hie secret, and is, laughing over, it: Ho bluehes, and a boy's" blush is a hot, Painfnl - thing, when' 'the sis terly heads bend together,' and he• hears them whispering what-a fool he. is. Yes, ho is a fool, that is -one thing which ho feels quite certain about.— There is only one other 'thing' which fetels"eirer Mora' that he is'in has: Made a man of - him. -" gfig:.T9 economize is'to draw in as. possible. The lades® apply thje, art to thoir,Orion s and', the result 1.4 a iorf Small Was(ti. • • , First Love,
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