TERMS OF THE GLOBE Peinnimm in edvance ?ix months Three mouths =1 • • • • - I Milo 2 de 2 do ...$ 75.-21 25 $1 50 ... 1 50 225 275 .. 2 25 3 oc - 00 One inch, or legs Two inches Three Inc _ 3 months. 6 mouths. lEt ar One irmh, or less 04 00 $ 2 00 $lO 00 Two,. inches 6 20...,9 00 15 00 Three inches 8 50 -- 12 00 "0 00 Four inches 10 76 16 00 ^5 00 Quarter column, 13 00 18 00 ^ 0 00 Halkolomn, 0 0 00 30 00 45 00 Ono column, 30 00 45 00.........80 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding six lines, One year, 05 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 6 times, $2 50 Auditors' Notices, 4 times 2 09 -F.stray, or other short Noticeq 1 50 Advertisements not marked with tho number of loser ens desired, will bo continued till forbid and chat ged ac• ording to these terms. Local or Special Notices, 10 cents a lino for single in• sartion By the 3 ear at a reduced tate. Our prices for the printing of Blanks, floodlight, etc. are reasonably low. V,rofessionat& Nusiness garbs. - FIR. A. 13: BRUNIBAUGH, Ef Hating pernmently located at Huntingdon, offers hm profisiesual services tolhe community. Oilice, the same as that lately occupied by Dr. Laden OA Hill street. TAR. JOHN 11.ICOULLOCII, offers his If professional services to the citizens of Huntingdon and vicinity. * Office on Hill street, one door man(' heed's Drug Store. Aug. '18,'55. T) ALLISON MILLER, DE Y.T.IST, VAS rcmol ed to the Brick: Roo opposite the Court Muse 1.859, , , . . . J. GREENE, • DENTIST. MCC; rot noted to Leister's Now 13uildIng, tint street, Ilunttugtion. July 31,1867. :NIORRISON HOUSE, - • HUNTINGD ON,- PENIV' A JOHN S. MILLER, Proprietor. April 0,1670. P. 'NV. JOHNSTON, 4.IIVEYOR & INSURANCE AGENT, 1103TINGDON, PA Oinco ou Smith !Alva A. POLLOCK, I?VEYOR &REAL ESTAZE AGENT, HUNTING DON, PA Will attend to Surveying in all Its branches, and will buy and sell lteal Estato in any part of tho United twos. Send for circular. dectid-tf j SYLV &NUS BLAIR, ATTORNEY AT LAW, lITINTINCIDON, PA, • Office ou street, three doors Mist of Smith. 3 5'09 3. HAIL MUSSER. MUSSER & FLEMING, ATTORNB YS-A fe-LAIV, HUNTINGDON, PA Offiro second floor of Lelster's Luildiug , on 11111 street. Pensions and other clams 1 , 1,111141 y Cuiketed. 111326"G9 AGEENCY FOR COLLECTING ,(11,DIEILT CLAIMS, BOUNTI, DAM PAY Alill ..A.RINS. All nlw Mily have any claims against the Government or Bounty, It.tck Pay and l'ensione, can lime their clainet promptly collected by uppl)ing either in perison or by let ter to W. IL WOODS, TTOR AT LA Ir, 4.10,1663 ALLEN LO VELL, K. ATTORNEY AT LA ITT, lIIIN'fINODON, PA Special attention given to Collections of all ; to the bethentent ut Molter, S.c.; and all taller legal hu.i• nos prosecuted still, fidelity end titspoten: I= UM= The name ofihis firm has been ehang ed from SCOTT & BOWN, to SCOTT, BROWN & BAMEY, tinder which name they will herealt3r conduct their practice as ATTORNEY AT LA S, 11 - 0217.1,17:D011r, PA. PENSIONS, and all claims of soldfurs and soldiers' heirs optima tho lloventment, null bo promptly prosecuted. May 17, 1866-It. P. X. Lytle & Milton S. Lytle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, IPJA TING PON, PA., Have folmed n partnerthip under 1120 name and 11101 of & M. S. LYTLE, And have removed to the odic,' on the south side of tI I start, Worth door west of Cznith. They uill attend promptly to ull kinds ol legal busi ness tut meted to their cat, up7-tt. JOSEPH ABT, MANUFACTURER OF AM) DEA LER IN WILLOW AND SLEIGH BASKETS, Ole)) sizes and descriptions, ALEXANDRIA, HUNTLNODON CO., PA, Juno J, 1J4:3-U BLANKS! BLA/) KS ! BLANKS LuNSTARIXS SALES, • ATTACIPT EXECUTION ATTACUMENTS, EXECUTIONS, SUMMONS, DEEDS, SURPCENAS, MORTGAGES, sCIIOOI. ORDERS, JUDGMENT NOTES, LEASES rou HOUSES, NATURALIZATION B KS COMMON BONDS, JUDGMENT BONDS, WARRANTS, , FEE DILLS, NOTES, with a waiver of tho $3OO Law. JUDGMENT NOTES, with a waiver of the $3OO Law. ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT, with Teachers. MARRIAGE CERTIFICATES, for Justices of and Ministers of the (logic'. COMPLAINT, WARRANT, and COMMITMENT, in case of Assault and Battery, and Affray. :CLEM: FACIAS, to recover amount of Judgment. COLLECTORS' RECEIPTS, for State, County, School, Borough nod Township Taxes. Printed on superior paper, and for sale at the Office o the HUNTINGDON GLOBE. BLANES, of every description, printed to order, neatly at shoat:Mice, and on good Paper. W. B. LEAS, 1:1=1 =I The Union Bank of Huntingdon (Late Jan Bare & C 0.,) HUNTINGDON, PA paid up, CAPITAL, Solicit accounts from Banks, Bankers and others. liberal Interest allowed on time Deposits. All kinds f Eecurtties, bought and sold for the usual commisaion.— Colleetiens made ou all points. Drafts on all parts at Europe supplied at the usual rates. Persons depositing Bold and Sliver will receive the us same return pith interest. Too {Lathers ate Indira' :tally liable to the extent of their whole property for all &posits The unfin:thed bueineas of the late firm of John Bare St Co trill be completed i, The Union Bank of tient inttdat . 3::!.tba9-tt C. C. NORTH, CUSiI pAPER ! PAPER!! PAI-!Elt !! I.7racjus Paper, Impression Paper, Drawing Paper, Iked Paper, • Tislau Paper, Silk Paper for Flom era, Pertoroted Paper, Priatol Board, rim Cap Paper, nolecapPmmr, Letter Paper, Commercial Note Paper, Ladies' Gilt Edged letter or. Note Paper, Ladiea' Plain and Fancy Note Paper, White and Colored Card Paper, in Packß and Sleets .or sale at LEWIS' Book, Stationery and Basic Store. WINDOW CURTAIN PAPERS A LARGE STOOK AND SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF Window Curtain Papers, • JUST RECEIVED AT LEWIS' BOOK STORE• T IME. From the kiln 't e T. ler, Mathleetinig. pros hy chemical analy,ii to lie of the best 1 111.113ty. 1.1)II etantly kept and for vale in any quantity, at the depot 0 t he Ilnnt,ngdau and Broad Tup t. - 4 "Apply to Item From of of the '•11toel I.leunti.” unc.thit .$2 00 . 1 00 1 month $1 75 3 25 ... 4 75 WX. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers. VOL, XXATI, HOW TO CURE CONSUMPTION. THE PHILOSOPHY OF DR. SCHENCK'S GREAT MEDICIN ES.—Will people never learn to know that n diseased liver and stomach necessarily diseese the entire system ? The plainest principles of common sense teach this and yet there are hundreds who ridicule the Id. a, and continue In the course which almost inevitably brings them prematurely to the grave. Living as the majority of the people do, at complete varieties, with the laws of nature, it mast bo apparent to ell (lint. sooner or later, nature , will revenge herself.' Hence we find that persons who indillso to excess in the use of very rich or intlige4ilde food or intoxicating drinks. invariably pay a heavy penalty in the end. The stomach becomes die. ordered and refuses toilet: the liver fails to perform its functions, tit spensin and its attendant evils follow, and still the suffering individuals persist in clinging to the thoroughly exploded idea of the past. Dr. SCI ENK'S medicines are recommended to all such. They bring sure and cortnln relief wherever they are used as directed, end ell that is 110e0i3111 y to establish their reputation with every ailing inen'or woman In the lendia n fair and Impartial trial of them. Let those.who aro skeptical on tins point, nail who have permitted interested persons to prejudice them against these now celebrated reniedles for consumption. discard their prejudices, and be giiierned by rho principles of reason and COIIIIIIOII sense. •If the system is disordered depend upon it. in nine eases out of tea the seat of the disorder will be found in the stomach arid liter. To cleanse and invigorate the stomach and to stimulate the liter to healthy action, Imo SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS.—The daily incomes ingdemand for there pills in the best. evidence of their value. Thousands upon thousands of boxes aro sold daily. Why ? Simply because they act promptly nut efficiently Int alids Who may not find it cOnvenient to call on Dr. SCHENCK ni ()Pisan are informed (hat fill and com plete directions for nee accompany each ',lckes° of the MANDRAKE PILLS, PULMONIC SYRUP AND SEA WEED TONlC.—These medicines will mire consumption unless rho lungs are BO far gone that the patient is entire ly beyond the reach of medical relief. It may lie asked by (11090 who are not familiar with the virtues of these great remedies,9low do Dr. Schenck's medicines etTJet their wonderful cures of consumption I" The enswer is a simple one. They begin their work of restoration by bringing the stomach, liver and bowels into an Retire lie ilthy condition. It is food that cures this formidable fIiSOMO. SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS act on lire liver and stomach, promoting healthy secretion:and removing the NM and stints which have resulted Dean the inactive or torpid condition cf those or gans, and of the system generally. This sluggish state of the body, and the consequent accumulation of the un healthy substaneee named prevent the proper digestion of food, and. as a 'lateral consequence creates disease, which results in prostration and finally in death. PULMONIC SYRUP and SEAWEED TON IC, when taken regularly, mingle with the food, and the digestive organs, make good and rich blood. and as a nat ural consequence, giro flesh and strength to the patient. Let the faculty say what it may, this is the only true cure for consumption. Experience has proved beyond the shadow of a daunt. and thousands aro today alive and well who a fete years since were regarded as hope. less cases, but who were induced to try Dr. SCHENCK'S remedies, nod were restored to pertnanent health by their use. , MEE I= One of the first steps the physician should tabs sslth colniumpt ire patient is to ins (game the system. Non• bow is this to he done 7 Certainly not by giving medi cines that exhaust and enervate—medicines that impair instead of improve the functions of the ingestive organs 'Doctor SCHENCK'S medicines cleanse the stomach and boss els of all unbstanccs which are calculated to irrltnto or Is calten Linens. 'they cleat° an appetite—promote healthful digestion—make good blond, and, na a conse quence, they invigninto and strengthen the entire sys tem and more especial ly those parts u Melt are discescd If this cannot be done, tines the case must be regarded as. a hopeless one. if the physician finds it impossible to make a patient feel hungry, if the deceased person cannot partake of good noun minted food and pt operly digest it, it is impossible that he can gain in flesh and strength ; and it is equally hullos-Ibis to bring a patient to this cond i lion so lung as the liver is lundeined with diseased bile, slid the stomach laden settle unhealthy slime. Alonc.t the first tequeat made to tine physician by 11 COIISIIIII, lire patient is Stilt he will prescribe medicines Eliot well allay the cough, night sweats :ma chills, n bleb are the sore attendants on consumption. But this should Dot be done, as tin cough is only an effort of nature to telieve it-elf, and the night sweats and chills into canoed by the diseased lunge. The remedies ordinarily prescrib. ed do more halm than good. impale the functions of the stoinsch, Impede healthy digestion, and nggravAte rather than cute the dist aqe. Thet e is, after all, nothing like facts which to substan tiate a position, end it upon fre:s that Dr. Schenck's relies. lk:early all who trove tilk(11 Iris medicines in at ,ordanco 0 ith his directions have not mil) been cured of congimption, but, front the fart that these medicines act with wonderful power upon the dige,ttve organs:, patients thus cured speedily gain fleet. Cleansing the e) tent of all impurities, they lay the fontulation for a solid, sob stantial structure. Restoring these ergots to health, they create an appetite. The food is properly assimila ted ;the quantity of blood is not only increased, but is mode rich and strong and itt the face of each a condition of the s 3 stern till disease must ho banished. Full thtections accompany each of the medicines, so that it is not absolutely necessary that patients should see Dr. SCHENCK peronsally, unless they desire to trove their lungs examined. For this purpoo Ito is at his of. lice, No 15 North Sixth St.. corner of Commerce, Phila., every Saturday, from 9 A. 3t. until 1 P. 31. M=EI Ails ice is giien without charge, but for a thorough cx ninth:Pion with the Resplrometer the charge la 55. Price of the Pillinonic Syrup and &au ped Tonic each, tI.LO per bottle, or $1 5Un half dozen. Mandrake Pills 25 cents a box. For mashy all druggists. Ap.l2ly. ` OOD BOOKS FOE ALL." Ur "BOOKS 71'111CH ARE BOOKS." Bern is a list of such Wm Its as should be found in or ery I do my—ti ithin the ri orb of every under—Works I. entertain, instruct and improve the Copies %s ill be bent by return post, on receipt of price. Kew Physiognomy; or, Signs of Character, vs manifested through Temperament and External Forms. and especially in the -Haman Face Ohs ille."— Wil II more then Ono Thousand Illustrations.' By S. It WELLY. ('rice in one Elmo volume, 705 pages , hand somely bound, $5 Mint, in Genesis and in Geology; or, tho neconnt of Man's Creation, tested by Scientific Theories of his thigni and antiquity. By Joseph P. Thompson, DO, LLD. One vol., 121 no. $1 Wedlock; or, the Right Relations of the Sex e tiro Laws of Coningal celection, and idiewing who may and who may not Marry. For both sexes. By Blt Wells , $l5O How to Read C'haracter. A new Illustrated Handbook of Phrenology and Physiognomy, for stu dent, and examiners. scltlt is Chart for recording the cites of the tilde-rent organs of the brain, in (ho dMino etimt urellartiel or, with npnards of 170 OngraS itigi.- 11111:1/11, $1 2 - 3 Its elementary Principles found ed on the tinturo of man. ItyJ 0 Spitralielm, MD. With on Appendix, coot mining the Temperaments and a brief analysis ot ic Faculties. illustrated. $l5O Family PhYsician. A ready Prescriber and Hygienic Adviser. With reference to lho Nature, 0111.8, Pro,ntion, and Treatment of Diseases, Acci dents. and casualties of every kind. With a Glossary and copious Indus. By Juel Show, 311). Muslln t s4 Food and Diet. With Observations on the Dietical regimen, suited for ili.ordereil states of the di gestive organs, and an account of the Dietaries of some of the in ineipal Metropolitan and other establishments for paopers, lunatics, criminals, children, the sick; Ac. By Jonathan Pereira, 311)., 1 , It S., and LS. Edited by Clunk, A Lee, SI D. $1 75 for home Improvement; compri sing, "How to Waite,"' Bow to Talk," .'llow to Be. louse," and ''llow to Do Boliness," in one vol. $2 25 Constitution of Man. Considered in relation to external objects. By Oearge Combo. The only no tion ;red American edition. With Monty engravings and a pot trait of the author. Mocha, $1 75 Moral l'hilosophy. By George Combo. Or the duties of man considered in his Individual, Domes. tic and Social capacities. Reprinted from the Edin burgh ed., with the author's latest corrections. $175 Mental Science. Lectures on, according to the PhiloL-eptiy of Phrenology. Delivered before the Anthropological Society. By Rev. 0 S Weaver. $1 50 Management of Infancy. Physiological and Moral Treatment. By Andrew Combo, M D, A Book for Mothers. Muslin, $1 50 Denny. An Illustrated Poem. By Annie Chambers Betchinu. Published in the elegant sty to of Enoch Arden. A beautiful present. $l5O ~E'sop's Fables. The People's Pictorial Edi tion. Beautifully Illustrated with nearly sixty engra vings. Cloth, gilt, beveled boards. Only $1 Pope's Essay on Man. With Notes. Beau ninny Illustrated. Cloth, gilt, beaded boards, $1 Xatural Laws of Man. A Philosophical Catechism. By .1 0 buttrzheim, 311). Muslin, 75 its. Frit.7 Culture for the Million. A Lland-hook. Being a Outdo to the cultivation and management of Si nit Dees. Descuptions ut the best varieties. $1 Inclose the amount in a registered letter, or in a P. 0. Older, for one or for all the above, and addrebs S. It. 1% El LS, Publi.hot . , .1S) Itioaduay, New Yerk. Agents llanted. Sich:lo I=l $50,000 Latest Anival of Gent's Goods, H. ROI3LEY MERCHANT TAILOR, tins realty, ed to the room over John Bare it Co's Bank, (01,1 Broad Top Cotner.) uhe, lie to prepared to do all Limb; ut murk 111 Ills hne of businesr. Hu has Just recth ed a lull line of CLOTHS, VESTINGS, CA SSIMEES, COED UIZO VS, Sx Thankful for past patronage he solicits a coutionanco Of the cams. Tito a:teutiou of the pithily is called to hie stock of cluth4, he Is pup rd to mar up to of der to .t I.e.hionableoint able Mid N cork roanltk., manner. Please gll a me a LAD 7tli COUNTRY CHILDREN. Little fresh violets ; Born in the wildwood Sweetly illustrating Innocent childhood ; Shy es the antelope— Brown as a berry— Free as the mountain air, Romping and merry. Blue eyes and hazel eyes Peep from under the hedges, Shaded by sun-bonnets, Frayed at the edges; Up in the apple trees, Heedless in danger, Manhood in embryo, Stares at the stranger. • Out in the Lilly patch, • Seeking the berries— Linder the orchard trees, Feasting . Tramping the clover blooms Downmong the grasses, No voice so.hinder them, ' Dear lad's-and la'sses ! No grim propriety— No interdiction ; Free as the birdlings From city restrictions Coining the purest blood, Strength'ning each muscle, Donning health armor 'Ciainst life'e coming bustle! Dear little innocents ; Born in the wild wood ; Oh 1 thnt all little ones Had such a childhood I God's blue spread over them, God's green beneath them, No sweeter heritage Could we bequeath th em 1 The Real and the Ideal, Subjoined is an eloquent extract from an address delivered by. Col. A. K. McClure, before the literary socie ties of Washington and Jefferson Col lege, Washington, Pa , August 3d, '7O: "How brightly the ideal portrays the triumphs of statesmanship ! Flow the student's heart quickens as he reads of the giants who have swayed Senates and nations, and who have loft enduring monuments of their great ness in their political achievements -1 They tower above their fellows on the pages of history, as if they had been created unlike other :nen. But histo ry is forgetful 'of their• groat deeds, and their virtues alone survive them. They all have dreamed, and vainly dreamed, as have the humblest of their followers. They hoped, attained, and suffered more, and there the distinc tion ends. I speak of Henry Clay with reverence. He was the idol of my boyhood, and his name is linked with the grateful memories of the sea son when we invest greatness with the perfection of human attributes.— He was beloved, even idolized, by his partisans. It would seem as if he had been born to test the measure of affec tion that could be lavished upon a pop ular leader by a free people. Others have been esteemed; have aroused a nation's gratitude; have commanded the sober approval of the country, or have been borne upward upon sweep ing tides; but who, fallen and power less, was followed to the close of his eventful life with such sincere and pro found affection ? He was great in all the groat qualities of man, and yet he was but a child of larger stature. You will read of his victories—of his life, that seemed to be but ono continued ovation—of his matchless eloquence in behalf of human liberty in every clime, and of his . heroic, pacification of our sectional estrangements.' He was hon ored with every official trust, save the ono he most desired. His ideal achieve ment was to be chosen ruler ,of the people Who loved him. It was the sweet dream of half of his allotted days. It seemed even just within his roach, and yet was over lost. Twice in his riper life his principles triumphed in national contests; but others were made his loaders, and wore the wreaths his tact and statesmanship had woven for his party. Never was a life so full of hope ; never was the ideal so rich in promise; and never *ere diCappoint ments more filled with bitterness.— When you .havb' read of his.brilliant career : turn .to - the gad sequel in Col ton's compilation of his private corres pondence, and the bright picture is blotted out in the painful realization of a great life with its great ideal des tiny overthrown. "Another name is immortal in the nation's pride and sharedits affections. Webster was our profoundest states man a score of years before his death. j He crushed out a gigantic crime by a single appeal to the Senate. It will be enduring as time in the - annals of rhetorical victories. Ho, too, was Commoner, Senator, and Premier; but was not what he inost ardently hoped to be. His ideal destiny was plainly written in his later years, and his life went out in harrowing disappointment. He had defeated Hayno and the threa tened dismemberment of the Union, and the whole world confessed the pre eminence of his fame. He had an swered Hulseman in behalf of the rights of -man, and thrones trembled; but he was riot President. His dreams ended, and in a few fretful days ho slept with his fathers. "Calhoun was distinctively a repre sentative man. lle was sincere, pro found, subtle, and was worshipped by his adherents. He had reached the chair next the throne, and he had but ono step more to realize his single ambition ; but, he faltered as the chasm widened; ho dreamed of ruling over fragments of a dissevered country, and in ~r and and gloomy perseverance, ho labored ' until the shadows gathered in• to night. "Winfield Scott was the chieftain of his age. The hero of two wars, ho had reached the topmost round of military glory. The impetuous victor of Chip pewa and Lundy's Lane perhaps dreamed only of twin stars, but the commander-in chief and the conqueror IL ROBLEY, ,Mvp.liant 'Dolot HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6. 1870. -PERSEVERE.- of Mexico accepted a higher ideal des tiny. The stars paled when' ' they were,won, before ono bright dream that was colossal in its freight of min gled joy and sorrow. At last, after many sickening days of bomdeferred, a subordinate swept over him like the simoon of 'the desert. If you would know how much a child a man tnay be, summon your generous forbearance and read Scott's autobiography, where he tells why•ho was not President.— Ono, great 'hope, ono 'great infirmity; and one great grief sum up the sequel of his great' distinction. "•'illy life has been a failure,' • were the sad words I heard uttered by Thaddeus Stevens when he was set ting his house in order for the coming of the inexorable messenger.. He was the great Commoner of the nation's sorest trial, and had witnessed :the tri umph pf his earnest and consistent ef forts for the disenthralment of the op pressed. Ile ; was content with brav ing popular ignorance and 'prejudice against education and freedom ; but when. he became the acknowledged leader of the House, and saw the sub stantial success of his cherished prin ciples, his ideal life was not fulfilled.— To himself his life appeared as does the statue fashioned to rest upon some high pinnacle. It seems ungainly, ill proportioned, and wanting in symme try and harmony,; but as it rises to the distance from which it was design ed to be viewed, its awkwaid, shape less linos disappear, and its grace and beauty win the admiring gaze of the multitude. He had his measure of in firmities, but there have been few so sincerely devoted to their convictions, and who would so willingly forego ho nors and applause for conscience sake. When posterity shall read of him, it will be as one of the grand.central fig ures in the panorama of a nation's re demption, and his frailties will be un recorded—the common tribute the his torian pays to the fallibility of men whose names are immortal. I thought that he, of all our statesmen,. had most nearly realized the hopes which in spired his noblest efforts; but ho had learned the•lessOn that the ideal desti ny of every life points to the unattain able. How much he dreamed, and how keenly lamented that ho only dreamed, there are few prepared to tell. "Look out over the countless throng that have dreamed, and are still dream ing, of the Presidency. The time was when only the wisest statesmen looked to the chair of Washington in their ideal achievements, but now, who that worships at the altar of ambition can plead exemption ? Not sages and he roes alone now turn their anxious hopes toward the mighty sceptre of the first people of the world. Preten ders of every grade, who have climb ed into position through slimy paths, swell their shame by indecent strug gles to rule in dishonor. Their ideal is success, and 1 would not say how ma ny bow before that fickle divinity. A few of them will win in their moan struggles, only to find their stolen ho. nors turn to burning, ashes on their brows. The broad path to the highest trust of the Republic is thickly strewn with skeletons of riven, castles, and yet the throng that presses over thorn to the same sad destiny is countless as before. This one dream has unsettled the best and bravest men, and is the parent of strange misfortune. It has made strong mon weak, And estranged mighty leaders from the very devotion they most,songht ; and it has made the Union the prey of the tempest to grat ify ambition. It invented the spolia tiop of Mexico; it destroyed the Mis souri compromise; it fashioned the Bred Scott decision ; it enacted the fu gitive slave law; it consigned the Whig party to a dishonored tomb; it made the Democratic party forget its cun ning, and sacrifice its power; it made men in every section, and of every thado of sentiment traitors to them solves, to truth, and to their country; it bombarded Sumpter ; it prolonged the bloody strife to destroy our na sionality; and after the storm of battle ceased it came with horrible discord to lacerate the ghastly scars of war." LOVE OF TIIE FRENCH SOLDIER FOR His MOTHER.—The love of a French soldier for his mother is proverbial ; it is a sentiment which survives every other ; ho can never be laughed out of it: and as long as ho holds sacred be will always be reclaimable. There were many touching instances of this characteristic attachment during the Crimean campaign. "One day," says the aumonier, "atter a desperate action a young sergeant of chasseurs was ly ing awaiting his death, for a ball had passed through his . body. Ho know his case was hopeless, and T. poured the consolations of religion into his heart. 'Ah, hither,' he said, "the ap proach of death does not make mo un easy; I have just been reconciled to God; I do not fear his justice; I - know how loving and merciful He is. That which fills mo with anguish is'—and he paused for the tears rose to his oyes, and choked his utterance—"tho thought of my poor mother. As long as I was receiving my pay, I always managed to put by something to send her. When lam no longer here, she will die with grief and misery ;" and the tears flowed afresh, for ho was praying for his mother. I recited with him a pater for her and with the words, "Give her this day her daily broad," on his lips, he calmly expired." A traitorous woman avows the be lief that if all the men were in ono country and all the *omen in another, with a big river between them, lots of poor women would be drowned. 863" Irpostage on papers is reduced to ono eel) t, there will be two sent where there is one sent now. ; :,.., . . ..... . f•274..'', , :: 5 " 7 ,' -,,_ e . ' . . . . ': . '• 0 1 ' ' ' f ' ' ? • Z 4, :li:; • k ..::" ,• - ' •:.,,-,,_ „ ; . . . . • ~,,etv,lV , `, 4 1t.„.0 '. I'. :1. 4 , '''''-•=ee . .."'" ' ‘•:',; -'" ..Y:' 1 ' \ : 4 ,10 ' / '''' ''''' ' • How Mr. Weed used to Work. B . T." writing on labor on a morning paper relates the following : I met Mr. Thurlow Weed a day or two ago in the office of one of,our load ing papers,:and 1 alluded to. Mr.. Jas. Harper, and mentioned his , views •as to the way for a , workingman to ac-, quire' independence. Mr. Weed, re flected a, moment and then replied : "It was most. emphatically,the yule of James Harper's whole life to study, not bow little hemould, work, but how much. Mr. Harper and I learped,our trade more than fifty years, ago, of Mr. Seymour, then the leading.printer of the city. • He was our ameter, and was one of the best-morn that (fed ever made. He resided at•No.4o, John st., and lived, directly opposite his place of business. J [MOB , and I were partnere. The advantages of having a good part ner, where you worked months togeth er at the,satue press, must be • appar ent. Often, when we had done a good day's work, James Harper would say, "Thurlow, let's break the back of an other token—just break. its back." I would generally reluctantly .consent just to break its hack of the token,but James would beguile me, or laugh at my complaints, and never - let. me off until the token was completed, fair and 'square. It was a custom with' us in Summer to do a fair half day's work before the othe r ]: men and boy's got their breakfast.' James and I would meet by apdointment, in the gray of the morning, and go down to John street We got the key of the office by tapping the window, and Mr. Sey mour would take it- out from under his pillow and hand it to ono of us through an opening in the blihd. "A pressman," continued• Mr. Weed, "who could do 20 or oven ten per cont. more work than usual was always sure of a situation. Jaines Harper, Tom Ken nedy—long since dead—and 1 made the largest bills in the vicinity. We often earned as much as $l4 per week —liberal wages when you remember that good board•could be obtained for $lO per month. As Mr. Weed tittered these words his eyes lit up with the fires that illu minated them in his youth, and there was that expression a moment about his face that showed he was for an in stant living over again what wore pro bably the pleasantest days of his.. var ied and successful life. In alluding to these "giants among us," let us ask : Does the modern system of labor, under the supposed ameliorations of eight-hour law,trades, unions, and constant strikes, promise to bring up any representatives from the ranks of the toiling millions, like the legitimate fruits of old indus tries, as represented by Thurlow Weed, James Harper, and their co equals and associates, "self-made men?' Cdntrast the bitter spirit• of antagon ism that now prevails between the em ployed and Thurlow Weed's utterance with deep emotion in his voice, speak ing of his master, who had been dead scores of year's, as "one of the best men God over made." It is something for the youth of the country, thrown upon the world with no resources but their hands and brains, to •figure themselyes James Harper and a Thurlow Weed, tall, ath letic, six foot high, splendid young mon, of the host American typo, shak ing off sleep ere dawn, and hurrying to their business. Human Life. How truly does' the journey of a single day, its changes and its hours; exhibit - the history of a human life ! We rise up in a glorious freshness of a spring morning. The dews of night, those sweet tears of nature, arerhang ing from each bough and leaf, and re flecting the bright and myriad hues of the morning. Our hearts are beating with hope, our frames buoyant with health. We see no cloud, we fear no storm; and with our chosen and be= loved companions 'clustering around us, we commence our journey. Step by step the scene becomes brighter.— A few of our companions have'dropped away; but the multitude remaining, and the beauty of the scenery, their loss is unfelt. Suddenly We have en tered upon a new country. Tho deWs of the morning are exhaled by the fer vor of the noon day sun; the friends that started with us are fast disap, pealing. Some remain, but their looks are cold and estranged; others have become weary and have laid down to rest; but now faces aro smiling on us, new hopes beckoning us on. 'Ambi tion and fame are before us, but youth and affection are behind us. The scene is more glorious and brilliant, but the beauty and freshness of the morning have faded, and forever. But still our steps fail not, our spirits fitil not. On ward and onward we go; the horizon of happiness and fame recedes as we advance to it; shadows begin to length, en, and the chilling airs of evening are usurping the fervor of the noonday.— Still we press onward; the goal is not yet won, the haven not reached. The bright orb of Hope that has cheered us on is sinking in the west; our limbs begin to grow faint, and our hearts to grow sad; we turn to gaze upon the scenes we have passed, but 'the shad ows of twilight have interposed their vail between us; we leek around for the old and familiar faces, the compa nions of our travel, but wogazo in vain to find them; wo have out-stripped them all in our race after pleasure, and, the phantom yet uncaught, in a land of strangers, in a sterile and in hospitable country, the midnight over takes us—the dark and terrible night time of death, and weary and heavy= laden we lie down to rest in the bed of the grave! Happy, thrice happy is he, who bath laid up treasures in him self for the distant and unknown 'to morrow.— Charldom TERMS, $2,00 a• year in advance. Eating Men's Honor and Names, If I were to take, you ,to my house, and say that I had an exquisitely fat man, and wished you to join me in eating him, your indignatiOrreculd' be restrainod by nothing. You' Would pronounce mo,to _be, crazy., There not a . man in New Y,ork ; so' mean that be would itiot;put me,doWti n man whO would' propose to have a-banquet from off a fellowlman; cu'tting etealtS out of him and eating them. .And that _is nothing but feasting,ou ti?e n human Jo dy; while they all . will sit down and take a man'Ei soul and'look for` the tee det; loins, and itiVite theirtteighborEi to little:tit•bits.',:They• will take a;man's honor and name, and .broil them over the coals of -their indignation, and fill the whole room witliAbe aroma there from, and give:their neighbors a'pieco, and wink as ho tastes it. You all 'eat men up, and you ate , cannibals every one of you, and worse. • You will be glad to get off at God's judgment seat with the plea, "I only ate the outside." You eat the souls, the finest elements of men. You are morn than glad if you can whisper a word that is not de rogatory to a neighbor, or his wife, or his daughter., :And yet, by an oblique senteneo, you make up i avorable _im pressions on the mind of the person addressed in respect to the subject of your'eriticism. '"Ah'!" he says, "I had' not been informed ;" and he goes to the next neighbor and says, ;'Mr. So and-so says this and that about So-and so." And that neighbor says, "In deed," and runs to his partner, and they both run to their wives; and the thing goes all over town. Everybody becomes an unpaid devil's mail carri er, and goes hero and there bearing, infernal messages. And what is the result ? It is damnation to some poor creature that is unconscious, or that is innocent or that if guilty ought to be pitied and succored, rather than con temned. But ah ! the morsel is too exquisite to. be lost. Hero is the soul of a person's hope for this world, and, you have it on your fork, and you cannot refrain from tasting it, and giv ing it to some one else to taste. You are cannibals, eating men's honor and name, and- rejoicing in it, and that, too, when you do not always know that the things charged against theta aro true; when in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred, the probabilities are that they are not true,---Beecher. Didn't ()atoll the Train. The most difficult thing, says a cyn ical old hell, in the world for a woman to do is to get ready to goanywhere,. And there is nothing a woman will re sent quicker or more fiercely than an intimation, that she may possibly miss the train. ,Our friends, Brayfoglo, gives us an instance of this. Mr. Bray fogle was supposed to take the ten o'clock train on the 800 lino, to visit some relative in an anterior town.— Having suffered on,preVioes occasions from injudicious, suggestions.. Bray thought for once ho would let things take their own coarse. So lad sipped his coffee and ate , his eggs on toast, while madame •curled and .powdered and danced'attendaneb on the looking glass and tied hair on the back 01 her head. . Then. Bray sat by the stove :in hour reading the morning paper, while the madame still continued , to get ready. At last, just as he , had reached. the fi nal paragraph, madame tied her bon- net stringi under her chin, took one long; lingering, loving look at the im age reflected— in the 'glass,. and an; nounced: • "Well, my dear, Dm ready." "Ready for - what?"' asked Bray, in well affected 'astonishment. . .• "To go to the depot, to be sure,! said Mrs. Braylogle, tartly. "Oh !" said Bray; "I'd forgotten.— Well, madame," continued ho, looking at his. watch, "that train has been gone thirteen minutes. Just keep on your things, and you'll be ready for 'the train •to-morrow morning?? Wo draw a vail over what followed. Wo aro assured, however, - that , the nest morning Mrs. B. was ready an hour ahead of timo. A DEVOTED WIDOW.— Lady, Jane Franklin, widcitv cif,tho distiOguished Arctic; eXplorer, Sir, John Franklin, whole fate in the regions of efernal and snow the civilized world has long Sought' to "discoVer, arrived in New York, Saturday, and became the guest of kr. Grinnell; who fitted out an ex pedition at his own expense, to seek for the lost navigator. Years have past since Sir John entered the icy re gionsWitich were to he his tomb, his wife being at' the time in the prime and beauty of fresh womanhood; she is now old and some What feeble, but the interest in her departed husband is as fresh with her as ever. She vie-, ited Alaska in that spirit of emotional romance which made her feel that in the icy atmosphere of that northern region she might more closely com mune in soul With her long-lost part ner. She returns to Englund in about two weeks. Every moment is a golden op portunity, and it wo• only regularly, habitually, gather up these moments, in.process of.timo wo shall have ac complished a work as great as those who were favored with clear months and years in which lo work. Southey' has proved this by calculating that in fifty years one may read and speak seven languages, by the devotion of only ten minutes each day to their ae• quiroment. Thus Franklin; while working as a printer's boy, laid the foundations of his wondrous know ledge; and Elihu' Burritt is a living testimony to the great things that may be done by the use of the moments— the constantly recurring small oppon: tnnities.—Quiver. THE G-1_,073M JOB PRINTIN.'G-'OFriCE. T"" GLOBE JOB OFFICE" - tho most complete of any in the conntey,'lind pole SUM the moat ample facilities for promptly executing ill Os but style, every variety of. Job Printing, endow rri HAND CIRCULARS, - , • •,1 ,BILL HEADS ; ; - POSTERS, ' A' A, LARDS, NO. 9. CALL AND ramanrz 9iT,CItiEN/30# *V44_ LEWIS' BOOS STATIONERY & MUSIC STORE A Remarkable Cas'e efßepilfaotlen. .A writer from Reading to the lila' burgh Christian Radical, relates a re markablefand apparently well anthet4l ticated,case„of petrifaction of.a,human body Mrs: gobp.Tipell : ipple dteflAt •l4iou t rovia, Kansas, on.the 22d of. Vebuary, 1866,in the, sixty-fifth Your She Was hnried'thereen the 24th. I December:lBo'4ler ,died his dories io Tiernont, ty, Penns r,` that his wife's Ternains be hroughf•titid hurhicl by his side in Tremont. Cemetery. On the 20th of Febnary,-1869; thre'e gears after the mother had - beeti hilt - 10130 grave" Was' , opened ; the re moval of the covering of the. outer cdffin it . WaSdiscOvered that both coffins were "filled with a dark , dbhired water' and on raising the coffinto , ilitisurfieet. of the earth they found Eit'l markably :hoary. ; • •- ) The-coffin , was emptied of the water; and on, examination of ,the;body it was: pronounced . by those present eomplete n ly petrified. The-color of the.faen and hands was, perhaPS; two shades ,ciatior. than natural,- and somewhat, resembl, ling a varnished surface. The features were as full end• perfect as when 'she ;was aiiire; so that all, who bad knovirt , her, and came'to see; her, reMairia,,in 3 sum tly recognizecrthe ellrre :i,i;l,l)er• ed 'countenance.: T4ebody.;remained exposed.to atmostpheric influence for four .days, in order to ascertain wheth er any change Would take' ,place, paratory' to its trantqirtatiOn, ward. No •abange whafeVer, ilil3 - manifeet. The remains Were roughly handled at all transfer points, were, transported fourteen hundredrmiles by. rail, and before the burial at Tremont the body was again examined; Prevost of that place, and found - to be thoroughly petrified,, and in- - the same condition as it was when,Jaken 'out of the grave. , Some cooks will throw out, water in' which meats have been, boiled, With out letting it cool to take off the fat. Bits of ;neat are thrown out which would make hash meat or hash. The flour is sifted in , a careless man. nor and the bread Tian left with thit dough sticking to it. „ „ Pie crust is laid by to sour, instead of making tarts for tea. Cold pudding is considered good for nothing, when oftentimes it can be steamed for tho next day. ' Vegetables are thrown away that would warm for breakfast nicely. -- Dish cloths are thrown ~ w here mic) can destroy, them. , The scrubbing brnsh'is left in thq water. Tubs and barrels - are loft in the sun to dry and fall apart. Nico handled knives arbtbroWn into hot water. . Silver spoons are used to scrape kot, ties, , Cream is allowed tdmould_sull,spoili Coffee, tea, pepper, and spleen are'lefi' to stand open and lose,tkeir strength. The cork iS left - ont - of 'the molasses jug and the flips take possession. Vinegar ie drawn in a tin baein and allOvired to Stand until both ,baOn and vinegar is spoiled.• "- • •• •THESIIIRT TREE.—The aceoutita of travelers.have• made ns•we.ll, acquaint ? ed with the "bread tree'-' but it rot:mau l ed for 4 the,' indefatigable Humboldt to discover in the wilds of South •Ameiii... ca a tree which produces ready made shirts.. We copy his: account of: this: tree.: , : •1 "We saw . on, the slopo of. the Cerra Duiciti,Thay M. Humboldt, "shirt:trees fifty'foot • The Indians Cut. off cylindrical pieces tivo feet in diameter, from which they peel the red- an& fibrous bark, without making any long-. itudinal incision. Tlio_bark affords a sort of garine,nt-whichyesenblesAacke of coarse textUre,_arid witliciat'a'seam. The upper opening serves. 'for. the head, and two latteral .holes are cat, to admit the arms.; The - nativOS wear these shirts of marina in' tba rainy sea.' son; they •have the form of th °ponchos and ruanos of cotton, which are so com mon in New Granada, at Quito, and in Peru." Washerwomen aro rarely needed in those regions. When the native wants a "change of linen", all he,:does.la to doff the soiled one, climb :a • tree and pull down a bran new'cneand. put 4, en A Beautiful Comparison. • Rev. Dewitt Talmadge, now of Brook, iyn, closed a sermon as follows: ','Seat ed at a country fireside, the•Ottior day. I saw the fire kindle;blaze and go out; and I gathered np froth. the • heartlf enough for my reflection. Our Mortal life is just like the fire on that ,•hearth. We put on the fresh, fragraent,and,the flame burets through; arktl'UP, and out, gay of sparkle, gay of flash, gay of crackle—emblems of briyhood. Then the fire reddens into coals.: The heat is fiercer; , and the "more it le stir,, red the more it reddens. With sweep of flame it clears its Way till. all the hearth glows with intensity—emblems of '•full ;manhood. Then dunes the' whiteness in the •coals. : The flickering shadows have died along the The faggots drop apart. The house: hold hover over the expiring embers. The last breath Of smoke has been lost up the chimney.. Fire is oak—. Shovel up the white sremaine, Ash , es!" it is difficult to conceive anything more beautiful than the reply - given by one in af fliction when he was asked how' he' bore it sit well : "It lightens the stroke;' he elaa, "to draw nearer to Him 'who handles the rod." BALL TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, - BLANKS, LABELS,' 350., &O Isn't it True.