TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per antrum in advance Sir months Three menthe TERMS OF ADVERTISING. 1 time. 2de 3do 1 tnonth .$ 75 $125 $l5O $1 75 . 1 50 2 25 2 75 3 25 .225 325 4 00 475 One inch, or lose Too inches Three inches, a mouths. 6 mouths ....$4 00 $6 00...: Or ipc.h, or loss, Two Ares Mame,. Tont inches, Winter column,. Italtcolumn . 8 60 12 00 20 00 ..1076 16 00 2500 ._l3OO 18 00 30 00 ..2000 30 EL. ... ...AS 00 One column, 30 60 45 00......... 00 00 Prole/1816nel and Business Cards not exceeding six lines, ( One year, $5 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 6 times, $2 60 Auditors' Notices, 4 times 2 00 'Betray, or other short Notices 1 50 —.Any, or owe. ............ ......... Advertisements not marked with the number of inset , - ens desired, will be continued till forbid and charged no. .cording to these terms. Local or Special Notices, 10 cents a line for single to. , am lion. By the year at a roduc.d rate. - Oor prices for the printing of Blanks, llaudbtlll, etc. are reasonably low. i.acssional.ct` Nusincss Qtarb, I. A. B: BRUM.BAUGH, Having permanently located at Huntingdon, oiler,dre Id proressiOnal services to the community. Office, the same as that lately occupied b," Dr. Laden on 11111 Weed. aP110,1:66 DO. JOHN MeOHLLOOH; 'offers his proteasional eervices to the citizens of Huntingdon end vicinity. Office on. 11111 street, one dooreast of Heed', Krug geom. Aug. 26,'36. IL ALLISON MILLER, DENTIST, Hu removed to the Brick Row opposite the Court House April 13, 1850. J. GREENE, DENTIST. Signs once rusnoved to Leitter'o Now hill •treat, Huntingdon. • 'July 31;18tii. P. W. JOHNSTON, ,saVEYOR & INSURANCE AGENT, 11UNTINGDON, PA Waco on Smith street. j A. PO.LLOOK, 'N(111VE.1012& REAL ES7'A2'E A GMT, HUNTINGDON, PA Will attend to Surveying In all its branches, and null 'buy and sell Real Estate in any par,lsolthe United :tette. send fur circular. decdn-t( w.M.YT 9 N,, , •' ATTORNE.Y AT LAW, ECUNTINGDON, , PA .40-411Ites.witit.J..S.scau. STEWART, Eq. SyLV &.N US BLAIR, ifs • ATTORNEY AT LAIV lIDNTINGDON, PA, Office on 11111 street, three doors- meet of &Mil. y 5.69 .a. am/MAMA. D. Z. /LW:W. MUSSE.R & FLEMING, ATTORNEYS-AT-LA IV. HUNTINGDON, PA. Mee mecum] floor or Lehter'n building, on HUI etreot. 2 Peuehme nod tither 4.111.1tue promptly rout-Med. Illy 2o'till A GEENC Y FOR COLLECTING ,OLDIERS' CLAMS, BUIJATY, BACK PAY AMI J /0 'S - All who may bare any clohne agnlnat the tlovernment • or Bounty, Bock ray and reinsionb,cou Lulu their claim. protusly collected by applying dabcr in inrrinni or by leb ter to W. 11. WOODS, .4 TICIRAVI.I" .4 .1' LA In win:woos, PA augl2,lSG3 K ALLEN LOVELL, ATTORNEY AT LA Irr, HUNTINGDON, n 1' pedal attention given to Collections of all kinds; to 'the netticancut of inures, an.; nod all tither legal basi lican prosecuteil*itit adi lit) nod dispatch. :3•111 Mt; ILMOIL T. 0000 N, 'ho name of this firm ha's been ehatig .l ed from SCOTT k BROWN', to SCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, Rieder which, mime they will hereafter conduct their _practice as ITORNE IS AT LAW, lILLVTINGDON, rithl SUMO, and all teen. of soldiers and soldiers' 'trite Jegahlst the tioVellimunt, will he prompt* prosecuted. !toy t 7, ,acs—tf. X. Lytle Br,lililton,S,.Lytle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, 11UNTiNGDON, PA., ,formed m partnerplilp under the name mid firm P. Di. & M. S. _LYTLE', And hare remorol to the unite 011 the south side of Bill street, fourth door west of smith. They will attend promptly to all kinds of leapt Mist imes entrusted to their cure. up7dt. JOSEPH , MANUFACTURER OF AND DEALER IN WILLOW AND SLEIGH BASKETS, Of all sixes and deeeriptioul, ALEXANDRIA, MUNTINOWN CO., PA. Juan a, lawn-tll LOSSES PROMPTLY PAID - HUNTINGDON INSURANCE. AGENCY. -G. B.- ARMITAGE, _ - HUNTINGDON, PA. Represent the must reliable,Conspaniea in the Country. Bates as lour et it sonsiatent with reliable indemnity. nep 2, '6g. pitalßepresented over $14,000,0 JIEAD QUARTERS FOR NEW GOODS. INFORMS THE PUBLIC . . THAT HE HAS. -- - JUST OPENED A SPLENDID STOCK of NEW GOODS THAT , CAN'T BE -BEAT IN ' CHEAPNESS AND QUALITY. • COME AND SEE. - D. P. GWIN Huntingdon, Oct. 4, 1809. JB7O. _____ 1870. CLOTHING. H. ROMAN. MO MEN AND BOYS' CLOTHING TALL AND WINTER, =I H. ROMAN'S CHEAP CLOTHING STORE. Pot dentkmen'e Clothing of the beet material, and made In the beat workmanlike manner, call at N. ROMAN'S, or p h ,h, th, Vrahltlin House to :4Arktt Squaro, /Nuting $2 00 1 00 Ytar 0 00 15 00 WM. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers. - VOL. XXV. KIISB 3702,1 1 )4 • .• _ ) - tr. J. 4 1-11.3E191k1M, i:cce, , sur to 11...t.t. G It EEN DEALER IN STEIN WAY & SON'S PIANOS, Mut other =keg, MASON & lIASILIN CABINET ORGANS, Meleileone, Go tars, Violinv, Fifes, Flutes, Accordeons, Acc.. Ae. Orgatc., and Melodeons 1 Vat ranted for five years. Circulars sent on app:ication. Address E. J. 0 It E ENE, I luotingdon, Pa., jini97,69 2,1 floor Leister's New Budding. MESE HUNTINGDON FOUNDRY. FIASTON BLAKE. M. MARION 3IcNEIL. BLAKE & McNEIL, ['Successors to J. 31. CUNNINGHAM & SON.] Iron and Brass Founders HUNTINGDON, PA. IRON and BRASS CASTINGS made in a first class 11e hard alu.tys on hand ail - kinds ut Plow and Stove Castin, Wash Ket t les, Cel ludo% s, rates,Wal hole Castings for ',moments, Window weights .•, ,j all sizes and weighis, Pipe Joints, bled Wagon boxes, Meeha, Castings, for straw and water, glint, saw, sumac tin n plaster nulls of nll desi.riptions. ILEATERS AND IRON FENCES, of the most tenni ovtel style, oven doors and ft antes, door and in tact every thing mole iii this line. e hm e n larger stock of patter lis, nail can fur: deli cas tings at short notice, and cheaper than they can to had iu the cowl try. I laving a good drill, nu ate prepared to do drilling yid fitting up of nli tillice to Liestars' Neu Building, Hill street, Hunting don' Va. . )hell. 17, ISO. • BLAKE & McNEIL. =I West Huntingdon Foundry. JAMES SIMPSON • • • mANIJUCTURES , PLOWS, THRESHING MACHINES, FARM DELLS, SLED AND SLEIGH SOLES, WAGON BOXES, IRON KETTLES, Fur Furnaces, Forges, Ur;lst and Sntr Mitts, I . 6llooriell 1110.1 sale h.) aids, AND JOB WORK IN GENERAL. ARCHITECTURAL & 01.NAMEZiTAL DEPARTMENT. Iron Purlieus and V.11'01111:1, Balconies, Culututai and Ihup Ornament for traded; put liens and t et initial's, Window Lintels nod Sills, Cast Ornainualts fur 'Amadeu lintels, Cellar M anduw Unman all tires, Chimney Tops mid blues,. bush la eights, Carpet Str ips, Itegastern, Heaters, Cost Haste., Vault Castings toe cunt and wood cellars, rtsue, tre•busa.s, lnup•punts, Ilitennag-posts, Iron balling fin purtaeus, rentudults, balconies, flower. b, d,. Yard and Cemutrry Fences, etc. Parlicufrr allottion paid to fencing Centelery Lois. Address J AMES SIMI'S PN, Huntingdon, l'a. =!EMM iirrw - mixwm:ocomx MARBLE YARD. J. M. GREEN & F. 0. BEAVER Having entered into partnership, tnt um, the public that they are prepared to exreote all eta (Cr of Plain and ornamental Marble Work Such as MONUMENTS, HEADSTONES. also Building Wink, at as low prices as any atop in tha tounts Orders fronts. distance promptly attended to. Shop on MIFFLIN street, a few doors east el' the I it therm, church m M 6,186 From $4,00 - to $150,00 a sot LADIES' and GENTS' TIEfIEr.IMEIB.t bCIC:)IDr, Notions, Ladies' Hoods, best .K d Gloves, Zephyrs and Yarns of all kinds, Heavy .Fine Black Beaver Cloth for Ladies' Sacques, ,Shawls, double and' hinglo, Corsets, Boulevard Skirts, Dress Goods, Domestic Goods, Hats and Caps, GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, QUEENBWARE, TOBACCO AND SEGARS. GUM OVER SHOES, and a thousand and one other things, all cheaper than any oth er house In town At ZEIGLER'S, TAYL,OR'S CELEBRATED CONDENSED 1-117tri09 FOR SOAP 111ARING, For sale wholesale and retail at Lewis' Red Front Grocery. This Lye is said to ho the host and cheavvst in the latarliqk . , - It 1.:. ... .. 4 ..,..,.: 41 ,., t ,..., t ,,,,,,,„,,,, ift5, ,,.,,,,,,, z ,. ,, ,.. i.t„ ,,,, 5 ., : „ . . ii ,••.. it ti,,z,„.•,,,, • •..../ ~/.••• i , : . • ,- -ts-t.l%4•A<*-„•-• ..-- ...,,, ~ .., ,E 4.174,'. • -•'/ 'zr ------- ......,:.„•, .. • - •• •✓ 4 , 4•••-5•:.,•--k , T_ -- ''' . ..t':':ta' • ' '''-‘,',\ ..„ '',.. • • ~"..i•fis > sl',...t.i. . ;, ‘ i • ‘' ' - ' 4 •-•',..1.,:•. ~• - . • ,__,et,... ----r • ----.::--- A ~,-.• r4 .„.i,. v: _,., •, ... ..,,•_.,„.„.._,.-, _ .":- ••. t,.;„„.,,......-_- -- „ ,.1.,---- „ ---;---•__---- ,•,; -: ... . .., • „ . ;-3_ ---1 k.,..,- :, ~ -. ... , c , ..„, 1 ,„ ,„-. ,, , , ,,....7,-.._,..t: , -,...•-- •,, __„,....„N--,•,,•,--iz..-z, '''- - ,t• '• *.P.."Nr,- • , • 4 , 's' ' ''N -, !'‘ .:4 ;e40 - t.,'tf .• ~ , ( •:•,..„.. ~---:,A.:. 1............,.:„. , q , . 4'; e• , -i- - - T..•:'? -::':\N - ;.:,- , . ~ • ;4; it .. \ `•• ' . ' ''•-•.... 1t '. - , ..." ....• .." ,' , i'' • • 11 ( 1 1 11 .6 ( • . ).`r • ..,-,- 4, ''• .-.7 . _...._. ,- . , .. . . . ... . ' . , IRISII WlT.—Wiuchell tolls a story of a stranger meeting an Emeraldsr who was leaning against a post, loop ing at a funeral procession coming out . of a house, when the following dia logue ensued : "Is that a funeral ?" "Yes, sir, I'm thinking it is." 1- "An) body of distinction ?" "I reckon it is, sir." "Who is it that is dead ?" HUNTING DON, PA HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23..1870, [For the Glob°. i t'r A SIN TO LOVE TREE I" Why arouse the conflict that for years has rack'd my soul, But at last had ceased its shrges, as the billows cease to roll? Why nwak• the slatubsring conselanco by nslthig "if it be A sin to lore ono" who hoe ow wiirshippatl thee/ Were thy strange idolatry lams In position power, Then thy spirit's weakness tnight deplore the hour When first our raptured souls drank Ot the Peerless vleted Of the golden, misty splendor, that veiled a life Elysian• renotrubor too the hour wu thought to break tho bands That bound our souls, but 1.,011 then we closer blasted our hands ; And bewildered stood we, silent, on the portal, Forgi.thil of the woi Id, forgetting we were mortal. Whispers of the angel were 1111110edell mid the bliss Of loving, and the wildly KJ Yea kiss. ' Even though It ware a sin, could we then him broke tho spell t Al,, Ho! the rots not ours to love, suwisely soil too well. I mould not that my hand by one to dreg dm down; I'd rather place upon 'thy brow the victor'. starry crown. I would not dim thy manhood's glory with the crimson of shame, If it be a sin hi love no, If to 101'0 me bo but pain. If thy sacrifi co is gloat, dolt think thou mine Is smell! If thou host given me thy homage, I have given than my all; If thou host bad thy hours of anguish, have I not drank of bitterness And through all the gloom of conflict, I bare known thee but to bless. Not ours the laggard 140011 to tarry an the strand That hare the sheeny doorway to n golden Falrylaud. Not ours the hearts to falter when shown the hidden glory; Not ours the brans to:ea:Riau when told the mystic story : Dut ours the souls unduunted,—Leedlng not tho warring din— That loveth on through fate and fortnno, believing it no sin. And fronting n pitiless fate, It tilt a heart as proud as I murmur in lite hour of triuniph, '•tbun art nine, for. over mine.". This lore of owe—eo holy, pure •od sweet all eereph gong, A love so silent and endearing—is it, can it be a wrong I Who can read the ninny figures of the haul's uncertain lore t Wino can find the gems of ocean, if fettered on ihoshoret If our hearts hate traced tine story, fearing not to.nnme; It our souls hare broke the shackles, how can it be situme Though between our lives the Bridge of human law is wide, Together through the Bowen, trend we side by side. 'Tis not a sin for us to love, but loving, that no may Ely sacrifice and patient waiting ace the perfect day That lights the upturned brows ofiewrilled hosts above, Where life is life iunnottal, vibes° 'tie not a sin to love. And when thou Alys't thy orisons, at morning or at neon, rear mot to ask fir me the price hues gift of iiOllSOll ; And with hearts thus sanctified, we can pray that God the Giver • Grout a life, a lute, a hope, to us beyond tlio liver. THE WORKMAN AHEAD.—A good story is told of a certain prominens railroad gentleman of Philadelphia, who is equally renowned for his abili ty to make and take a joke. A rail road employee, whose home is in Avon came on Saturday night to ask for a pass , down to visit his family. "You are in the employ of the rail road r said the gentleman alluded to "Yes." "Yon receive you pay regularly ?" "Yes." "Well now, supposeyou wore work ing fora farinor: instead of a railroad, would you expect your omployer to hitch 'up his team - Livery Saturday night and carry.you home ?" This seemed a poser, but, it wasn't. "No," said the man promptly,' "I would not expect that, but if the far mer had his team hitched up, and was going my way, I should call him a darned mean cuss if .ho wouldn't, let me ride." Employee came out in three minutes afterwards with pass good fir twelve mouths. "Why the gentleman in the coffin, to be sure," replied Pat, with a know ing look. THE BIBLE —There aro sixty-two books in the Bible, written by forty different men. Some were written by statesmen, some by kings, some by shepherds, some by Vinodressors, seine by prophets and apostles, and some by physicians. The authors lived in dif ferent countries, and wrote at different ages of the world, there having been ono thousand five hundred years from the writing of the first book to that of the last. Yet there aro no special contradictions, but a wonderful har mony throughout the whole. klEtlisA physician stopped at the door of a country apothecary and inquired for a pharmacoptea "Sir," said the apothecary, "I know of no such farmer living about thcAe parts." gm...lt was a laconic: letter from a lady to her husband : "I write to you because I have noth ing to do, and 1 conclude because 1 have nothing to say." gm... Little is denied to industry and perseverance, though much is frequent ly acquired with either. SW-Capacity for greatness exists in the most humble. Circumstances on ly are required for its development. ntsWhy is laziness like money F Beenuse the more a man has of it, the mole he wants. Be-What is tho first thing a lady does when she falls into the water ? Shp gets wet. /al - Flattery is an art easily practi ced, and promptly rewarded. ---,-- gir Signal for a bark—Pulling a dog's tail. te,„,Subserihe for the GLontt -PERSEVERE.- Gems of Western Scenery. BY BON. SCHUYLER COLFAX The near approach of the, season when many families and individuals will . be discussing the direction in which they shall turn their steps to enjoy the pleasures of travel, induces me to write this article, commending a Western journey toward our own Pacific slope, rather than daring the storms of the ocean by a visit to Europe. The extravagant and oftquo• ted exclamation, "See Naples; and die," has in the past turned the thoughts of many whose leisure and. means 'en able them to travel to the Old World, where so much that is venerable, so much that is picturesque, so that much is noted in history,so much that is sub= limo in grandeur, is to be witnessed. .Not "to die," of course.: But to make life happier over more, by the wider experience, the broadened mind, the fuller knowledge that results from travel, besides the pictures of iwpres sive scenery so often ineffaceably im pressed upon the mind, and which the Mystic power of memory can summon again and again, before the mental vision It has always seemed to me how ever, wiser and more profitable for Americans to travel over the conti nental area of their own nation, to learn more thoroughly by actual observa tion of the grandeur of its more than imperial domain and vastness of its almost illimitable resoureet., as well as to enjoy the magnificent scenery of its mountains, before they ramble in re gions foreign to them in all their inter ests, and which excel their own land in attractive features mainly in anti quity and accumulated wealth, rather than in natural scenery which glad dens the eye by its beauty. Of Salt Lake City, and the peerless Yosemites, so much has been written the past season by tourists that I shall omit the reference to them here, and allude to other objects of interest to be found by traveling toward the setting sun. The Rocky Mountains and Colorado. Where the Union Pacific Railroad reaches its highest summit, at Sher man; over 8,000 feet above the level of the sett, but little mountain scenery is discernible. Like the South Pass, on the old route of emigrant, travel, and Bridger's Pass, on the latter route of the daily overland sta, 4 e, the frond Pass seems to have been markad out by Nature, leveling down these moun tains that form the backbone of the North American Continent. To see the Rocky-Mountains in their majesty, with the wonderful parks (lying 6,000 or 8,000 above the sea and larger in area than seine of our States) which they enfold in their em bracing arms, the traveler should leave the Pacific Railroad at Cheyenne for Denver, 110 miles south, half of which distance is already traversed by rail, and the rest a fine natural road, re quiring but a few hours in a stage coach, There, on the bank of the Platte, with the apparently boundless plains to the north east and south, a sublime panorama olmountain scenery to the west is ever before the behold er. In the glance of a moment the eye sweeps over one hundred and twenty, miles of a range, with its peaks and cliffs and table mountains, grand ly towering toward the skies, spark ling in the morning sun, darkening at eventide, and blackened sometimes by the storms that swoop over Cities, and mines, and natural parks aro emboaomed within it: A deep blue sky that could scarcely be rivaled by Italy, almost always gladdens you. And the air that you breathe, clear anddry and pure, is like a tonic to the system. Two or three weeks will enable the trave'er to cros3 the Snowy Range on horseback at the Berthand or Bowler Pass, stone 12,000 ft. above the sea, with grand and changing views at every hour; enjoy the beauty of the brilliant, flora close to the edge of the snowline; traverse the Middle Park, surrounded am phitheatrically by its encircling mountains; visit the Sulphur Springs, and enjoy its healing virtues; and ascending Gray's Peak, 15,000 feet high, see mountains rolling away in every direction. Returning:to Denver through the mining towns of Empire, Georgetown, Central City, etc., and slopping over at Idaho, the Saratoga of Colorado, you can visit the South Park on wheels; ascend the majestic Mount Lincoln, chief of the towering mountaiins of our nation; cross the range over the valley of the Arkansas, and the charming surroun dings of its Twin Lakes; and return by Colorado City, the Garden of the Gods, and Pike's Peak (a mountain standing out from the Range on the Plains, and comparatively easy of as cent) back again to Denver; the whole of the South Park trip, with its wild and varied scenery, easily per formed in a carriage—except,of course the ascent of Mount Lincoln. No where, can three weeks be more profit ably and delightfully spent by the in valid or the seeker of the pleasures of travel ; and to those who enjoy the roughing and bracing experiences of camping•out, and the pleasure of fish ing in streams filled with delicious trout, there is a double enjoyment. The Great Basin and the Sierras Dashing on westward in a "Pullman Palace Cur"—the perfection of ease in travel—you cross the great intermon tane basin of the continent, which, over 300 miles by 600 miles in extent, wailed in by the Rocky mountains and the Sierra Novadas, has no outlet for its waters in any direction of the sea. Here rivers, like the Echo Canon, and Humboldt, rise, swell into fine streams, and then, instead of seeking the ocean through lake or bay sink Orever nut of sight ; and other rivers, so largo in volume as to be unfordablo, like the Weber and Bear, pour their fresh wa ters into Great Salt Lake—that inland sea 100 miles in length, with moun tainous islands towering above it—to bave them converted there into the briniest water on the globe—so salt that fish cannot live in it, and so dense that thoso who cannot swim float in it like a cork. The grandest scenery in this part of the route to the Pacific is where the road passes through Echo Canon, formerly the 'gateway , of ap proach to the Mormon ;capital, and fortified by the followers- of Brigham Young against the approach of the United States army, tient• there by President Buchanan, in 1858. It is a natural Nancy, cut through a' moun taitcratige, opening widely ut its east ern approach, with grassy and sloping hillsides on either hand, but'gradually narrowing in between bold and 'pre cipitous rocks until, where it 'strikes the Weber Valley there is but little more space than the iron tracks re (pin. The Devil's Hato and Weber Canon rival it in their bold and strik ing features. Curving northerly, to strike old the emigrant trail, in the Valley of We Humboldt (apparently designed by Providence, like the Valley of the Platte, Echo Canon, etc., for the path way of the swift, Railroad Company, with almost herculean labors, carried their trains over its summits. Words are weak to describe the engineering which achieved this result. Enormous ravines filled up by the Persistent la bor of years, huge hills cut down to the required grade, dark tunnels blas ted though towering cliffs, a track cut into the side of almost precipitous mountains, where from the car-win dow you can look down into the val ley 2.500 feet beneath you, and nearly forty miles of snow sheds of solid tim hers to guard against the thirty feet snows for which the Sierras aro famed. All these triumphs of man over the obstacles of Nature attest the gran deur and immensity of the work by which this frowning range has been scaled. Nur is it a single range, as has been generally supposed. There are often two or three ranges, with their re spective summits; and instead of crossing them in eight or ten miles, they roll away in a billowy succession of mountains, seventy miles, and over in width clothed in the living green of gigantic forests, until, above the bases which wagon and railroad trains have sought, the lino is reached of perpetu al, unmelting snow. At Summit Station, over seven thou sand feet above the sea (and at and around which the summer traveler can spend a delightful day, with a pleasant and homelike inu fur meals and rest,) you look down on Donner Lake, nest ling no quietly and attractively amongst. the mountains Its to charm you with its beauty. And' you will not, soon forget a drive on its shores, with its unruffled waters at your side, and the grand and impressive view of the railroad track carved along the fade of the range which overhangs it, and which you can follow with the eye for miles. Lake Tahoet Bnt the pro-eminent gem of scenery of the Sierras lies a few miles from the Pacific Railroad. Leaving it ut True. kee, the next station cast of Summit, a stage takes you fifteen miles up the valley of the impetuous and brawling Truckee river, which falls 600 feet in that distance, and there embosomed amongst these mountain summits, sue , rounded by dense forests and snow clad-peaks, 6,500 feet above the sea is Lake Tahoe. It is a beautiful sheet of water, 20 miles by 10 miles in extent, so exquis itely clear that you can see fifty to ono hundred feet down, as if it wore but ten, and with a steamboat upon it, on which you can sail the fifteen miles between the hotels that are built at opposite ends of this remarkable moun tain lake, and enjoy an experience difficult to duplicate abroad. FASHIONABLE WOMEiI. -Fashion kills more women than toil and sorrow.— Obedience to fashion is a greater transgression - of the laws of woman's nature, a greater injury to her phys ical and mental constitution, than the hardships of poverty and neglect. The slave woman at her task will live and grow old, and see two or three gene rations of her mistresses fade and pass away. The washerwoman, with scarce a ray of hope to cheer her in her toils, will live to see her fashionable sisters all extinct. The kitchen maid is hear ty and strong, when her lady has to be nursed like a sick baby. It is a sad truth that fashion pampered women are almost worthless for all the good ends of life; they have but little force of character; they have still less pow er of, moral will, and quite as little physical energy. They live for no great purpose in life—they are dolls, formed In the hands of milliners and servants, to be dressed and fed to or der. They dress nobody, they bless nobody, and save nobody. They write DO books, they set DO 1101 ex amples of virtue and woman's life. If they rear children, servants and nurses do all, save to conceive and give them birth. And when reared what are they? What do they ever amount to, but weaker scions of the old stock?— Who ever heard of a fashionable wo man's child exhibiting any virtue and power of mind, for which it became eminent Y Read biographies of our great and good men and worsen. No one of them had a fashionable mother. They nearly all sprung from strong minded women, who had about as lit tle to do with fashion as with the 011111 g -big clouds, TERMS, $2,00 year in ad.vanee. For Moderato thinkers, A "merchant Trince, of New York, a portly six-footer, of great . manly beauty, who never dined without his brandy and water, nor 'went to bed without a terrapin , or` `oyster supper, and who 'Was never" known to be drunk, died of Chronic diarrhea, it common end of those who are never intoxicated and never out of liquor. Hall's Journal of Health gives this ac count 'of his death : Months before he died—he was a ye:win dying—he could eat nothing without distress, and at ,death' . the whole alimentary canal ‘yai3 a mass of disease; in the midst of his millions ho died of inanition:' That is not the half; reader. lie had been a steady drinker, a datily,for twentyeight years. Scrofula had been,eating up one,tiaugh ter for fifteen years; another in the mud house; the third and fourth of unearthly beauty; but they blighted, paled and faded—into heaven we trust —in their sweet teens; another is tot tering on the verge of the grave, and only one is left with all the senses, and each of them is as weak as water. ' The'sarno periodical instances ; an other case that should supplement the one just given : A gentleman of thirty-five was sit ting in a chair with no especially erit-. ieul symptoms present; still, he was kno ten to be a'dissipated young man. le rose, run fifty feet, fell, down and died. The whole covering of.the brain was thickened, its cavities were filled with a fluid that did not belong to it, enough to kill half-a-do Zen with apo plexy—a greater portion' of one lung was is a state of gangrene, and near ly all the other ,was hardened and useless; blood and yellow matter plas tered the inner cuVering of the lungs, while angry patches of destructive in flammation were scattered along the whole alimentary, ,canal.. Why, there was enough of death' in that ode man's body to have killed forty. The doctor who talks about guzzling liquor every day being healthy is a perfect disgrace to the medicalnatno, and ought 'to be turned out to hreak stone for the term of his natural life at a shilling a day, and find himself. Josh Billings in a New Role, Josh Billings is now in the editor's, chair, and his answers to correspon dents include the•following: Fred—You aint obliged to ask the girl's mother if you may go home with her from a party j get the girl's en dorsement and go in; it is proper enough to ask her• to take your arm, but you have no right to put your arm around her waist unless you meet a bear on the road and then you are supposed to relinquish' your hold as soon as the bear gets safelrby. Whip—You are right—mules live: to a lonely ago, and I have known them myself to live to ono hundred years and not half try. You aro also right about their being surefooted ; I have known them to kick a boy twice in a second, ton feet off. • Gertrude—Your inquiry stumps me. The more I think about it, the more I cant tell. As near as I •can recollect now, I think I don't know. Much might be said both ways; neither may be right. Upon the whole, I think I would or wouldn't', just as 1 think best or otherwise -Plutarch—You are mistaken; the Shaker's don't marry. If young Sha kers-fail in love they are set to wcddin onions, which kures them fi,rthworth• ly. 1 can't tell you how much it takes to join the Shakers, but I believe the expenses used to be, including having your hair cut and learning to dance, about sixty-five dollars. . Sportsman—Your inquiry is not ex actly in my lino but I haste to reply as follows, to wit: The right length to cut off a dorg's tail has never been fully discovered, but it is undoubtedly somewhere back of the ears, provided you get the dorg's consent. N. 8.-- It is not necessary to half° dorg's con sent in writing. Kitty-7-To my own personal views in the premises,- it appears that the beat:rat and mice exterminator is. a well regulated Thomas eat; beware of base imitations; sold by the respecta ble druggists. A GOOD WIFE.—The following sen tences, from Archbishop on Seeker's "Wedding Ring," are worth reading twice : East thou a soft heart? it is of God's breaking. East thou a sweet wife? she is of God's making ? 'The Hebrews have a saying, "Ho is not a man that bath not a woman." Though man alone may be good, yot'it is not good that man should be alone. "Every good gift, and every perfect gift is from above." A wife, though she be not a perfect gift, a beam darted from the sun of mercy. How happy 'are, those marriages where Christ is at the wedding ! Lot none but 'those who have found favor in God's eyes find favor in yours. Husbands should spread.a mantle of charity over their wives' infirmities. Do not put out the candle because of the snuff. Hus bands and wives should prove one an other to love; and they should lore one another, notwithstanding PrOT-Q:: cations. The tree of love should grow up in the midst of the, faMily, as the tree of life grew in the garden of Eden. Good servants Ave a great blessing blessing; g ood children a greater blessing; and such a help let him look for that lacks one; lot him sigh for him that bath lost, one; let him delight in him that enjoys one. 11&•A good gum at a tailor'a ham° an So and au, TO SUBSCRIBERS. Those subscribing for three, six Or twelve months with the understanding that the paper be discontinued unless subscription is renewed, receiving a pa per marked with a before the name will understand that the thaw. for which they subscribed is up. If, they wish the paper continued they will renew their sfibscription through' tlio mail or otherwise. • tf. gm.. All kinds or plain, fancy and ornamental Job Printing neatly- and expbditiously executed at th&"GitAe film Terms moderate. NO. 86. How People Take Cold, Not by tumbling into the riVer,and draggincr b home wet'as a drowriarrie; not by being pitched into the mucit , rir spilled out in the snow in sleighing time; not by walking for hours, over shoe top in muit;' , not 'by' soaking In the rain, without au umbrella; not by scrubbing the , floor. until the ,unmen tionable sticks to you like ,a iwet rag.; not by hoeing potatoes ,until you are in a lather or sweat; these are not - the things which give people colds;' aild yet, they are all the time telling ushOw they "caught their death of cokl,by 'exposure." . ! i The time for taking cold 'is after you exercise; the place is in your house.— It is not the act of exercising, which gives ,the cold, but the getting cool,too quick' after exercise. For example, you walk very fast to get to Ihe 'rail road station, or to the ferry ; or'lin catch the omnibus, or to make time for an appointment; your mind bqing ahead of you, the body makea an eXtr,a effort to keep up with it, arid 'Wh'eti you get to the desired spot,'•yourrise your hat and find yourself, in,a;perspla ration ; you take a seat, and feeling quite comfortable as to temperature l you begin to talk with a friend, or-lfa Now Yorker, to read a newspaper, - and before you are aware of it, you expe z riencea sensation of chilliness, and. the, thing is done ; - you look around to see where the cold comes from, and find'iiti open window near you,, or a door,;Or that you have taken a seat at the,fer, , , ward part of the car, and it moving against the wind,a strong draft is tirade through the crevices. ' After any kind of exercise, do 'not' stand a moment eta street corner, for: anybody or anything; nor at an open door or window. When you havo,heen exercising in any way whatevqr,:wirlit ter or summer, go home at once,,oritcr some sheltered, ,place; and, however ; warm the room may Soon become,, do, not at once pull off your hat 'and coat,' but wait awhile—some five'minuiesok more, and layaside !meat a timb';thuth acting, a cold is impossible. Noticq, a moment: When you return from a, brisk walk, and you enter a warn'' room, raise your hat, and' your'ford." head will be moist; let the hat remain% a few moments and fbel the forehead, again, and it will be dry, showing that ( the room is actually cooler than y?tfr body, and that, with outdoor clothing' on, you have really cooled off fullSOdift enough.- Many of the severest colds I have ever known men to take, were. tho result of sitting down to a Warm meal in a cool room after a long walk;' or to being engaged in writing, bate: let the fire go out, and their, first,,ad— monition of it was the creeping.chillf., ness which is the ordinary forerunner. of a severe cold. Persons have often' , ' lost their lives by writing or reading') in a room where there was no fire, alb though the weather outside was rathu l , comfortable.' Sleeping' in room's long has destroyed the life Of unrinY l a visitor. and friend. Our . splendid“ parlors and our nice "spare ,roonna l help to enrich miiny a doctor.—Hall's,: , • Journal of Health. "My dear," said Mrs. Greeno.to her husband, one morning, "the meal that we borrowed from Mr. Black, a re* , days ago, is almost out, and we must's bake to-morrow." "Well," said her husband, "send and borrow a half bushel at Mi. Whitb's'i he sent to the miii yesterday." "And when it comes shall we returuil the peck we borrowed more, than month ago from the widow Grey?"., ; - "No said the husband gruffly: 6 B e can send for it when she wants Sam, do you go down to lar.'Browtes and ask him to lend me his axe to chop;.. some wood this forenoon, our's is dull, and I saw him grind his last And Jim, do you go down to Mr: Clark's and ask him to lend me a ham-' mer, and, do you- hear you might as •well borrow a few nails while you aro abotit . , A little boy enters, and says:' ' 'Father sent me to ask it yeti' had done with his hoe, which you borrow.vf ,od a week ago last Wednesday; ho wants to use it." "Wants his hoe, child ? What nail: . he want with it? I have not &ono ' with it yet; but if he wants it Isup= 4, posu he must have it. Tell hitr. toe: send it back, though, as soon as hngao.i spare it." . They sit down to breakfast: "Oh, mercy," exclaimed Mrs. Greene, "there is not a parcel of butter in the house. Si, run over to Mrs. Notable's,--stie al, ways has excellent butter in . her ' ry—and ask her to lend me a•platei• fut." . , After a few minutes Si returns:— "Mrs. Notable says she has sent, you , „ the butter, but begs you to remetnbenr— that she has already lent you seventy 2, nine platefuls, which are scored on Lbw dairy door." ; : , . "Seventy-pine platefuls !" exclaim - e}l the astonished Mrs. Gr3en, holding afr both hands. "It is no such a thing; I - never had half that quantity; and if 1* ' had, what is a little plateful I I should never think of keeping account of such .; a trifling affair; I declare I bare mind never to boegow anything of that mean creature again as long as I live. t ga... An Italian in his 110th year, [ming asloud the secret of his living so long, rop!ind : "When hungry, of thee ' best I eat, and dry and warm I koory my foot ; I screen my head from 81111 . and rain, and let few esres perples my brain." 11S—"1. say, John, whore did you got. that rogue's hat g "Plea.so your hon. or," said John, " 'tis an old one of yours that missus gavo mo yesterday, whew you went to town." Borrowing,