I=3l TERMS OF THE GLOBE Per annum in advance ?ix months three months 33 1 time. 2de 3do 1 month One inch, or leas $76 $1 25 $1 50 $1 55 Two inches, 1 50 2 25 2 75 " 25 Three inches, . 225 3 . ”I 4OD 475 3 months. 6 months. 1 Year One inch, or less e 4 00 $6 00 $lO 00 Two inches, 6 25 9 00 15 00 Three inches 8 50 12 00 0 0 00 Your inches 10 75 16 00 0 5 00 Quarter eolumn, 13 00 18 00 30 00 Half column, .2000 30 00 45 00 Ono colnmu 30 00 45 00.... ..... .80 00 Professional and Business Cards not exacting six lines, Ono year, $5 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, 6 times, $2 50 Auditors' Notices. 4 times 2 00 Estray, or other short Notices 1 60 Advertisements not marked with the number of !mor ons desired, will bo continued till foi bid and charged ac ording to theta terms. . . TERMS OF ABVERTFSING. Local or Special Notices, 10 cents a 800 for single in set lion By the sear at n reducA rate. Our pr.rea for the printing of Blaulic, Handbills, etc are rem - oh:11113 low. Vrafts,sionaltV 'gusintss aids. R. A: B: BRUMBAUGH, Having permanently located at Huntingdon, offers as professional services to the community. Office, tho came as that lately occupied by Dr/Loden on Hill street. • . t aplo,l:lGt, DR. JOHN 31eCULLOCH, offers his professional services to the citizens of Huntingdon and vicinity. OfCce on Hill street, ono door east of Reed's Drug Store. Aug. 28, 'O5. T 1 - ALLISON MILLER, D E NT IS T, - If a a removed to tho Brick Bow opposite the Court Boum Apr 1113,1850. IJ. GREENE, 7. DENTIST. Office removed to Leimter's New Building, hill street; Iluutingden. July 31,181:71. lORRISON HOUSE, le 11UNTINGDON, PE.N.N' A JOLIN S. MILLER, Proprietor. April 6,1870. A P. W. JOHNSTON, ..SaVEYOR d; INSURANCE AGENT, lILINTINODON, PA Office on Smith street. e j A. POLLOCK, AVEYOR &REAL ESTATE AGENT, HUNTINGDON, PA. • Will attend to Surveying in all its branches, and will buy and null lied E...tatu iu any part of the United UMW, tread fur cucular. i1ec20.41 MILES ZENTMYER, - ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, lIUN'TINGDON, PA Office in Cunningbam'a new building, Moutgomory st All legal bueluess promptly attended Cu. bedi'ln -SYLV ANUS BLAIR, ATTORNEY AT LAW, , - 711JSTINGDON, PA, O on VIII street, three doors west of snail'. 55'69 J. MU, muss= & FLEMING, ATTORNE YS-AT-LA IV. lIIINTINGDON, PA Office second floor of Leieter'e building, on 11111 *Arent. Pensions and other chains promptly collected. wygn'td GE EN C FOR COLLECTING CLAIMS, BOUNTY, BACK PAY ANL L TUNS. - All who may have auy elating against the Government or Bomity,llack Pay sad reirwieme, can have their chums vromptly collected by applying either m parson or by let r W .11. WOODS, ATTORNEY A If; ❑pYTLVOLUY, 1A ang12,1863 Ml=Ell ATTORNEY AT LAW, HUNTINGDON, PA Emig attention given to Collections of ail hinds; to the immanent of Estates, &c.; and oil other legal bust aloes prosecuted with Adelit) and dispatch. jan.l.lbbi lOWA BOOST, UNTIL T. BROWN, r he name of this firm has been chang -11 from SCOTT 14 BROWN, to SCOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, under as whlch nape they will hereafter conduct their practice .ATTORNEF&AT .1:1 Jr, HUNTINGDON PA. PENSIONS, and all claims of soldicre and soldiers' help against the Government, mall be promptly prosecuted. May 17, 186 h—tr. T. N. Lytle & Milton. S. Lytle, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, 11UNTINGDON, PA., Hate formed a partner.hip under the name and nrin P. M. & M. S. LYTLE, And have removed to the office on the south side of BM street, fourth door nest of Smith. They nfil attend promptly to all kinds of legal busi nese entrusted to their care. ap7-tf. W.II. WOODS, B. WILTON SPEEN R. D. LEAS, The Union Bank of limatingdor (Late John Lam & C 0.,) HUNTINGDON, PA CAPITAL, Paid up, Solicit accounts from Banks, Bankers and others. liberal Interest allowed ou time Deposits. All kinds f Securities, bought and sold for the usual commission.— Collections mode on all points. Drafts on all parts of Europe supplied at the usual rates. Persons depositing Gold and Silver will receive the n earns return with interest. Tao partners urn individ smug liable to the extent of their m hole property for all Deposits. The unfinished business of the late firm of John Bare & Co will he completed by The Union Bank of Ilnutingthm 3 1.6138.1.1 C. C. NORTE', Cashier. T TADIRERSON, U. A Wholesale and Retail dealer In TOBACCOS, SEGARS and NOTIONS (Near the Broad Top R. R. Corner,) 11UNTINGD ON, PA R.rilfellortrie baring dipposed of his stock tome, I have tiakon charge of this establishment with a determioati co to please customers with the quality and prices of So gat s, holoking and chewing Tobaccos, As., awl will be pleased to receive u liberal share of public patronage. beaters will Sind it to their interest to buy flout me, nal am prepared to sell tie low as eastern duelers. Aug, 0.70 . JACKSON L.43IIIEIiSON, IMPORTANT! H. D. RHODES, gt enpec t I y informs his friends and the ',Otto goner. that he hoe bought the store of C. Lot.g, IN WEST lIUNTINGDON, tinh la prepared to offer goods In big line Cheaper tba. the chenpegt. I have a vary tins stock of the following Pry Good; Groceries, flats and Caps, Boots and Shoes, Glassware, Queensware, &c., nil of which will ho sold cheap. Produce token in exchange for goods West Huntingdon, Aug. 2-3 m -TIM--` J. M. WISE, Manufacturer and Dealer in i' - U - 31=t, IV I ri" II EL ], Respectfully invites the attention of the Public to his eland on Hill et, Huntingdon, in the rear of George W Pwartz' Watch and Jewelry store, where ho tuanufitctui es and keeps all kinds of Furniture at reduced prices. Per sons wishing to purchase, will do welt to glee him a call. Repairing of all kinds attended to promptly and charges reasonable. Also, Undertaking carried on, and Coffins made in any stylo desired, at abort notice. The subscriber has a NE IF AND ELEGANT - HEARSE and is prepared to attend Funerals at any place in town or country. J. M. WIER Ituntingdon, May 9, 1866.4 LEWIS, Dealer in Books, Sta T bowery and Music• lalstruments, corner of tiro Piatnond. 42 CO . 1 40 v 4t4 1 . / . 5 . 6..,..L.....4.,......t.W ,fl ' „.41,.. - LA: :54-. ' "V:e. , 4 11 s, , " !W -I.IZ •.• .e.t . ".• . ~, ip \., , ,„... , •-• s - 1 , , ..,..;-• -.., . . WIT. 'LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers. VOL, XXVI, HOW TO CUBE CONSUMPTION. THE PHILOSOPHY OF DII. SCHENCK'S GREAT MEDICINES.—WiII people tower learn to know that a diseased liver and stomach necessarily disease the entire system 1 The plainest principles of cs]nunon sense tench this and yet there are hundreds who ridicule the id] a. and continue In the course v. Islets almost inevitably brings them prematurely to the pave. Living es ,the majority of the people do, at complete Valiance with the laws of nature, it must be appal cut to all that, sooner or later, nature will 'avenge herself. Hence we find that pervons who indulge to excess in the tine of very rich or indigestible food or intoxicating drinks, invariably pay a heavy penalty its the end. The stomach. becomes dis ordered and refuses to act: the liver fails to perform its functions, sly epep•ia and Its attendant evils follow, mid still the suffering individuals persist in clinging to the thoroughly exploded idea of the past. Dr. SCIIENK'S medicines are tecommensiest to nll such. They bring sure and certain relief wherever they are used as directed, and all that is necessary to establish their reputation with every ailing 111/11.1 or Ironies In the land is a fair and impartial trial of them. Let those who aro skeptical on tisk point, nod oho have permitted interested persons to prejudice then] against these now celebrated remedies for consumption. discald their pnjudices, and be governed by the pi inciples s.f reason and common sense. if the system Is disordered depend upon it, In nine cases out of ten the seat of the disorder will he found tu the stomach and liver. To cleanse and invigorate the stomach and to stimulate the liver to healthy action, use SCHENCK'S MANDRAKE PILLS.—The daily increas ing demand for these pills In the best evidence of their value. Thousands open thousands of boxes are sold daily. Why 1 Simply because they act promptly and efficiently Invalids who may not lind it Convenient to call on Dr. SCHENCK in person are informed that full and cotn plots dinette]s for use accomp.sny each package of the MANDRAKE PILLS, PULMONIC SYRUP AND SEA WEED TONIC.-1 hese medicines 0 ill core consumption unless the lungs OM BO far gone that the patient is entire ly beyond the reach of metlisal reHef. It may be asked by those Iv Ito me not familiar wills the virtues of these great temedies,"llow do Dr. Schenck's medicines effect their 001AI:frill cures of consumption V' The maw cr ten simple ono. They begin their work of restoration by bringing the stomach, liver and bowels. intent] active healthy condition. It is food that cures this formidable disease. SCHENCK'S :MANDRAKE PILLS act on the Div Cr and stomach, promoting healthy secretion.and removing the bile and slime which have result, d from the inaritvc or torpid condition I f those or gans, and t f the system generally. Thin sluggish state of the baly, and the consequnnt:wenraulalion of the nn healthy substances named prevent the proper digestion of feed, and,ns a natural consequence crates disease, which results in prostration and finally hi death. SCHIENEE'S PULMONIC SYRUP and SEAWEED TON JO, vs hen taken regularly, mingle with the food, and tiro digestive organs, nutko good and rich blood. and es a nat. in al consequence, gin a find] and strength to rho patient. Lot the faculty nay what it may, tills is tine only true curs for consumption. Experience has proved beyond the shadow of n doubt. and thousands aro today allvu and well who a few 3eaua since were regarded as hope less caeca, but who wore Induced to try Dr. SCHENCK'S remedies, and woe restated to permanent health by their use. myl2`69 One of the first steps the physician should take wlth a consumptive patient in to invtgorrto the system. Nosy hose is this to be done ? Certainly not by giving medi cines that exhaust and enervate—medicines that impair instead of improve the functions of the digestive organs Doctor SCHENCK'S medicines cleanse the stomach and bowels of all substances A, hich are calculated to irritate or weaken them. 'they create an appetite—promote healthful digt Mien—make good blood, and, as a conse quence, they insigerate and strengthen the entire aye tent and more especially those parts which are discesed If this cannot be dune, then the case must be regarded as. it hopeless one. If the physician finds it impessiblo to make a patient feel hungry, litho deceased person cannot partake of good nom ishin,r food and properly digest it, it is impossible that Ito errs gain in flesh and strength; and it is equally impossihie to bring a path nt to this condition so long as the liver is burdened with diseased bile, and the stomach laden with unhealthy slime. Almost the first recount made to the physician by a consium.tive patient is that he will prescribe medicines that will allay the cough, night sweats and chills, which EES=I2 ale the auto attendants on consumption. 1301 this should not be done, on the cough is only an effort of nature to relieve keen, and the night bWeAt9 and chills me caneed by the diseased lungs. The remedies 02 di nut ily preecrib• ed do more hat or than good. . They impair the functions of the stonmeb, hivede lwaltny duiestlon, and aggravAte rather than cure the dist 'LSO. There is, after all, nothing like facts width to Substan tiate a position, and it is upon facts that Dr. Schenck's relies.: Neatly all who have taken his medicines in ac- cordance aRh his du ections have sot only bum mud of consumption: but, from the fact that these medicines act with wonderful power upon the digebtiveorgans, patients thus carLd speedily gain flesh. Cleansing the system of all impurities, they lay the foundation for to solid, sub stantial structure. Restoring these org ins to health, they create an appetite. The food Is properly assimila ted ;the quantity of biood is not_ duly increased. but is made rich and strong and in the face of curls a condition of rho system all disease must be banished. Full dhections accompany each of the medicines, so that it is not absolutely nece,sary that patients should see Dr. SCIIiINCIC peronsally, unless they desire to have their lungs ex ;mined. For this purpose he is at his of. flee, No 15 North Sixth St., corner of Commerce, Phila., every Saturday, from 9 A. SI. until 1 P. M. Advice is Olen without charge, brit for a tnorough ex amlnation with the Itespirometer the charge is $5. Price of the Pulmonic Syrup and &auto! Tonic each, $1.50 per bottle, orgy 50 n half dozen. Mandialce Pills 25 emits a box. For ;Welly all druggists. Ap.12.1y. JOAN IL. UOILZ! [ESTABLISHED 1851.1 Highest Premium, Sliver Medal, awarded over all competition, at Mechanics' _exhibition, Boston, October, The original and genuine SELF`-REGULATING, WROUGHT-IRON, AIRTIGHT, GAS-CONSUMING HEATER - WITH PATENTDD DUST SCREEN, GRATE DAP. RESTS, and . WROUGHT-IRON RADIATOR. and AUTOMATIC REGULATOR. For Burning Anthracite or Bituminous Coal or Wood. 10 812133 for brickwork - , and two sizes Portable MANUFACTURED ONLY BY J. REYNOLDS & SON, N. W. CORNER 13rn AND FILBERT STS. PIIILADELPIIIA, PA. These heaters aro made of heavy Wroughtaron, well riveted together, and are warranted to ho absolutely gas and dust tight. They arc the only heaters that aro man aged without any dampers, and in 'MIMI all kinds of fuel can be burned xabout al tern Mon . COOKING RANGES for hotels restaurants, and families, Also, a FLAT-TOP HEATING RANGE. FIRE PLACE HEATERS, LOW DOWN GRATES, SLATE MANTELS, REGISTERS AND VENTILATORS. P.111101°63 giving full description, sent free to any ad dress. (June 21.1y-'70.) JAMES NORTH DAVID BARRICY $50,000 aV01.111,, , , \TOU can save from 10 to 30 por et. j_ by buying your Instruments from 40r7E1.3030.1V3i, DEALER IN STEINWAY & SONS, °DICKERING & SONS, THE WEBER, RAVEN & BACON'S, THE UNION PIANOFORTE CO'S GEORGE M. GUILD & CO'S. CONRAD MEYERS, AND ALL OTHER MAKES OF PI NOS. H. D. RIIODES MASON & HAMLIN'S, end GEO. WOODS & CO'S celebrated ORG WS, or nny other make desired. Also, MELODEONS, GUI TAIts, VIOLINS, German Aceordeous, Shoot Music, Mu sic Books, to. New and good Pluses for $3OO and upwards. New 0 °mese Organs for $OO New Melodeon:, for 070 " Insti meats llhrrantedforlire "jean. ,Agents supplied at wholesalu Pisces, the same as in the city. Call on or address 0n12. - 0 ENVELOPES- By t'...abox, pock, or less quantity, for sale at Lloris , BOOK AND STAZIONKRY ,STDBK NO SECTS IN BEAVDN P. J. GREBNE, ltuntingaou ' Pa 24 floor Lciater'e Now .13uildirig. HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1870. Talking of each; tilt late ono aro, Of tha various doctrines tho saints bailers, That night I stood, in n troubled dream, By tho sido of n darkly flowing stream, And a "Churchman' &mu the river came, When I hoard a strange voice call his name, "Good father, stop: when you cross the tide, You must leave 3 our robes on tho other bide." But the aged father did not mind ; And his long gown flouted on behind, And down his stream his wily he took, Ills pale hand clasping the gilt-edged book "I'm bound for Ileavon;rtnd when I'm there, I shall want my beg; of Common Prayer; And though I put on u eturry crowu, I should feel quite lost without wy gown." Then ho fixed his eye on the shining track, But his grown was heavy, end held him back, And the poor old father tried in vain A singlet step In the flood to gab]. I saw him again on tho other side, But hie silk gown floated on the Me; And no one asked, In that Llisslul spot, Whether lie belonged to "the Church" or not Then down to the river a Quaker str..yed; His dress of a sober hie tras made; "My coat and bat must ho all of gray ; I cannot go any other way." Then he buttoned Ills coat straight up to hie chin, And staidly, solemnly, leaded in, And hie broad-brimmed hat he pulled down tight Over hie forehead, BO cold and White. lint a strong wind carried away lila hat; &moment ho silently sighed over that ; And then, as he gazed to the further ahem The coat °lipped off and was aeon no morn. As lie enterod heaven, his suit of gray Went quietly sailing, away, away ; And none of theAg els questioned him About We width of his beaver's brim. Next came Dr. Watts, nit!, a bundle of Psalms Tiod nicely up in his aged arms, And hymns as many, a Y cry wino thing, That ;he peoplo In heaven "alt round" might slug But I thought that he heaved an anxious sigh, AB ho saw that the river was broad and high, And looked rather surprised as ono by one, Thu Psalms and Hymns in the ware went down And after him, with hie MSS., Came {Feeley, the pattern of godliness, But he cried, "Dear me, what shall I do The water has soaked them through sad through," And there on the rifer far and aide, Away they went, dawn the swollen tido; And the saint, astonished, passed through alone Without bin manuscripts, up to the throne. Then gravely walking, two saints by natio, Down to the stream together came; Dui as they stopped at the river's brink, , I cow one saint' from the ether shrink. "Sprinkled or plunged, may I ask you, ft icud, IIow• you attained to BRA, great cod ?" "Thus, with a low eiro,;s on my NOW," "not I hare been dipped Os you'll sec mo now, And I teAlly think it nil( hardly do, As I'm 'close communion,' to moss with you; You're bound, I know, to the rLal ms . of But you must go that way, and I'll go this. Then straightway plunging n ith nil his might, Away to the lett—his friend to the tight, Apart they went from this world of But, at last, together they entered And now, n hen the river was rol tog on, A Presbyterian church wont down; Of women there scorned an innumerable throng, But the men I could count as t hey passed along. And, concerning tho rood, they could never agree, She old or the now way, which should it ho, Nor CVOII a moment paused to think That both would lead to the Liver's brink. And nound of murmuring, long and loud, Como ever up from the moving crowd; "You're in the old wny, and I'm in the new; That in the false, and thin in'the truer , Or, "rot in the old way, and you're in the new; That to tho false, and this is the true." But the brethren only seemed to spook; Modest the sisters walked, and meek, And If ever one of them chanced to any What troubles she met with on the way, How she longed to pm to the other aide, Nor feared to cross over the swelling tide. A voice mon from the brethren then, "Let no ono speak but tne 'holy men;' For hare ye not heard the words of Paul, Thplet the women keep silence alit" I watched them long in my curious dream ; Till they stood by the borders of the stream; Then, just as I thought, the two nays met; But all the brethren wero talking yet; And would talk on, till the heaving tido Carried them over, side by sldo,—. Side by aide, for the way was one; Tho toilsome journey of life was done, And all who in Chriet tho Saviour died, Game out alike on the other aide. No forms or crosses or hooka lind they; No gowns of silk, or suits ofgru7; No creeds to guide them, or MSS.; For all had put on Christ's righteousness GOING TO SCHOOL. "Did you like to go to school ?" "No, sir, I did not. I detested it-- all its precedents, all its accompani ments, and all its sequents.' But this applies only to primary schools. The aeralemy furnished ma ny hours which aro to be remembered with gladness; the early schools not one. They were engines of torture, devised expressly to make good boys unhappy, and succeed so well. Let us see—the first school that we remember was Miss Collins'. Deacon Collins lived southeast of Litchfield's old church. Up stairs wo climbed, wo re member that; on a long bench we sat, with our feet dangling in the air, and a tall, kindly-diced woman there was. But besides, we remember nothing— of book, slate or recitation. Next we went to Miss liilbourn's, on the west side of the square, and of this school two things stand forth in memory; first that the wind on this ' high hill used almost to take us into the air; the wind that never seemed to be done with blowing. It blew high and low. It 'swept along the ground, slamming open gates, whirl ing around corners; pushing us against the fence, and then into the ditch; lit tie, fat, clumsy boy, that hardly feared anything visible but dreaded all mys teries, and shook with vague and name less terror at the roar of the wind up in the high tree tops—the great elms swayed and groaned as if they, too, were in cruel bands. The other mem ory of this school was sitting weari somely for hours on a bench, and swinging our little logs in the air, for want of length to reach the floor. Yes, two other things wo recall; one, a pinch on the ear, the other a rousing slap on the head, for'itinne real or pu tative misdemeanor, and a helpless rage inside, in consequence. But of -PERSEVERE.- lessons, knowledge, pleasure, there is nothing. The picture is blank. Not a word of tenderness, not one sympa thizing, coddling act, not a sight of a sugar-plum, which in that day would have been to us more beautiful than the stones of the wall of the Heavenly City. Oh, why did they put such tempting candy in long glass jars, and set them in the windows, to put little wretches in such a longing, and make them so unhappy l How many times we have walked the long road to school looking all the way on the ground, in hopes of findinr , a cent— Such things had happen ed I Boys there were in our neighborhood who had found cents along the road, and even a six-pence in one case. But wo never heeded that. Il i ad a quarter been lost, the whole town would have been searched as with a lighted can dle, and no boy would have been left the luck of ending it. ,Still the story acted on the imagination like an Ara bian Night's tale. But over against that window—was it Buell's store?— ho never gave us a particle of candy, and so his name rests Uncertainly on our memory—over against that store we paused full often that the day might come—what things ht&l riot happened that seemed extravagant to think of?—when we should set up a store, and keep candy, and have a right to put our hand in just when we pleased. Wo like to have done ourselves a wrong in saying that we learned no thing. We know distinctly that Har riet, ono brilliant morning, plucked dandelions and taught us how to split them and roll them up into curls. It has been a great comfort to us many times since. Our next school was Miss Pierce's. It was a lady's school. We wont there under the care of older sisters. 'Wo don't recollect a single recitation. For days together wo were regarded as a mere punctuation point, not noticed unless dropped out of place, or turned upside down. Mr. Brace, the father of C. L. 8., used to pass by and look at us with a knowing face, and snap his finger in a significant way, without a word. But that mysterious snap was good for ten minutes propriety, and sometime; for even half an hour. Once, for laughing out loud at some body's fun—one had only to put hi'i tongue in his cheek, or to point a fin ger at us, to set of that laugh that al ways lay pont up, waiting for deliver ance—we were tied to the leg of the bench. The acute pain of shame pierced us like a knife—a kiss cured it. For a kind faced girl, one of tho elder young ladies finishing • her education there, looked upon our tearful eyes and scarlet blushing misery, took pity on us, put a soft hand on our head and stooped and kissed If a cup of cold water to a thirsty child shall bring an immortal blessing to the giver, bow much more a warm kiss to a crying child unable to defend itself against shame! May the angels lay their hands upon her as she dawns upon Heaven, and kiss from her face every tear and sorrow of the sad world be hind I All experiences of children are evan escent, and few sorrows have they that are not drowned in the first sleep, dead as Pharaoh's host in the Red Sea. The school was not expected to teach us, and it fulfilled every expectation. Our time was in danger at home of ravel ling out into mischief, and the school was a mere basting thread to hold down the hem of good behavior. Next we wont to the district school. Not a tree ! not a bush I only a stone wall on ono side and a board fence on the other. No window blinds. The summer sun heat down full upon the small, rough, unpainted school-house. Hero we learned to catch flies, to crook pins for boys to sit down on, and from which they always rose with alacrity. If any man wishes to know what spontaniety is, let him sit on a well prepared pin. We learned the rudi meats of the coat of "carrying on"— an art of the largest proportions, and which in schools, academies and collo ges is amply taught, whatever else is omitted. Our bearing was very hum ble. We could make a cat's cradle under the bench unseen. We learned to make paper spit-balls and snap them across the room with considerable skill But beyond these interesting things wo do not think we over learned a thing. Why should we? Is it possi ble for a boy of six or eight years in the school prison, with no incitement and no help, for from four to six hours a day, and with all out doors beating on the school-house, streaming in at windows, coming in bewitching sounds through every crack and crevice, to be studious, regular, and exemplary? A good village primary school ought to be a cross between a nursery and a play-room, and the teacher ought to be playmate, mother and nurse, com bined. One teacher we had, young, pale, large-eyed, sweet of voice, but not prone to speak—why must she hare consumption and disappear? And the next day, behold in her place, a tall, sharp, nervous, energetic, consci entious spinster,whose conscience took to the rod as a means of grace ! The first would have made us love and obey her. Wo were even beginning. Prom the second wo were marvelously delivered. "Mother, I don't want to go to school," '.You don't want to grow up a dunce do you, Henry ?" "Yes, maim." ''What! Grow up like a poor igno rant child, go out to eervice, and live without knowing anything?" "Yes, warm." "Well, suppose you begin now. I'll put an apron on you and you shall stay at home and do housework. How would you like that ?" "0 do, ma." , . . 1 1-3 - V;,',. . , , ..,_ - , .. ,;, if, .. ~,.• :%. :t r , _ :;,... • 1..,,, . . I:ki.'. 1 i. - V ;:: , ', : ' .'. .( 7 : , • '‘ l 1 : r .: :', .• .' \k k . ' '\ •'• ' Z s, ..a' ,441 , Sure enough, we were permitted to stay away from, school, provided we would "do housework ;" and all slim mer long our hands set the table, washed dishes, swept up crumbs, dust ed chairs, scoured knives; our foot ran of errands, besides, the usual comple ment of chores in, the barn. But, oh, did wei not glory in the ex change? Yes,' *and in the long sum mer afternoons, when nothing more was left to do, did we not allow a good aunt to lead us along those paths of learning which before our feet eschew• ed ? Great is our zeal for 'common schools, and disinterested : For we are not biased in favor of primary schools for ono single pleasant memory con nected with them. They lie in our memory as cunningly devised engines for putting poor, little, innocent, ro guish boys to torment because they are mercurial, fun-loving, and impa tient of restraint.—henry Ward Bee cher in Christian Union.' RUSSIAN PEASANTS. - Throughout the whole of Great Russia the dwell ings of the peasantry are still more log huts, frequently without chimneys, and uniformly containing only ono room which is the common dormitory. The rigor•of the climate renders these habitations misereable in the extreme. Swarming with vermin, where not, filled with smoke, and without ventila tion, the hut is generally in winter the refuge of the sow and her farrows, of the Jamb and the weakly _sheep, as well as of men, women, and children. It contains no furniture beyond a deal table and a bench against each wall.— Pillows, and sometimes felt, constitute the only bedding, the place of which is supplied by the sheepskin, that sel dom leaves the peasant men and wo men of Russia. Their domestic uten• sits consist of a few pots of burned clay, or cast-iron, the "samovar," or tea urn, being only found in the hut of a well-to-do-peasant. An earthenware cup and saucer, or a glass tumbler, aro among the articles which the peasant deposits in a small cupboard below the images of saints. There is no garden• to this log hut. The heavily worked peasant woman can scarcely find time to attend to the plot of flax which be longs to her individually, and on which• the family depends for the more neces sary articles of clothing. Any great material improvement of these peasant dwellings can only follow on education and enlightenment, for it is the ten dency of the half-civilized peasant to expend his surperiluous money on arti cles of personal adornment rather• than on those of inert) comfoi t, of which he has in reality no understanding. In villages on the Vola, whore peasant families share the same roof with do mestic fowls and animals, and burn wood laths instead of tallow candles or oil, the women attire themselves on holidays in crinolines, and bilk damask dresses and jackets, while the men cov er their unsightly sheepskins with good broadcloth. Scor.nixo.A little girl not six years of age, screamed out to her little broth er, who was playing in the mud: "Bob, you good-fur-nothing rascal, come right into the house this minute, or PH beat you till the skin comes off." "Why, Angelina, Angelina, dear what do you mean? Where did you, learn such talk ?" exclaimed the mor tified mother, who stood talking to a friend. Angelina's reply was a good commentary upon this manner of speaking to children : "Why, mother, you see we were playing and he's my little boy, and I'm scolding him just as you did me this morning, that's all." Pennsylvania bachelor" thus gets after a lovely woman: "I impeach her in the name of the groat whale of the ocean, whose bones tiro torn asun der to enable her to keep straight. I impeach her in the name of the pea cock, whose strut, without his perm's. sion, she has stealthfully and without honor assumed. I impeach her in the name of tho horse, Whose tail she has prevented from its use to the making of wavy-tresses to decorate the back of the head and neck. 1 impeach her in the name of the kangaroo, whose beau tiful figure she, in taking upon herself the Grecian bend, has brought into favor and disrepute." m,At a serenade as we wore going borne a few evenings since, we heard the following serenade of a sentimen• tal swain, which we had the curiosity to take down, as repeated by him: ."Oh ! Polly poke your night-cap out, And listen to my sighses; My heart it beats a rub a dub And my eyes, oh bow they crisis, Then haste dear Polly, haste away, Day breaks and time discs; .. rfho stars are going out my lovo, And the sun, oh, see it—." _ Just at this instant a bootjack flew out of the window,. andhe again saw the stars. T1E!,..4,:, A piece of petrified oak, two feet in length and ten inches in diameter, resem bling flint, was fished up in St. Helena sound, near savannah, n few days since. A Boston dry goods firm has a lady customer whose bill for goods purchased fur her personal wear, during tho nine months ending July 30, footed up ovor $9,500. On nn apple tree in Bridgeport, Con. there were grown the present Benson two ap plea, one weighing twenty-one ounces, th other less than one ounce. .lAy- An English lady on her honeymoon tour has lately lost her life in Switzerland by falling into a crevasse covered with thin frozen snow. Better be upright with poverty than unprincipled with plenty. tEr- A good conscience is a casket to keep divine truth in. TERNS, $2,00 a year . in advance. Happy Nancy's §ecret. Thorn onee lived in an old brown cottage a- solitary twoman. She 'wits known, everywhere from village to-vil lage' by the name'of.92Luppy Nandy." She has no money, no . family, no rela tives, and was half blind, quite lame, and very crooked. There was no comeliness in IMr, and yet there, in the homely deformed body, the great God, who loves to bring strength out of weakness, had set his royal seal. -Nancy, singing again ?" would the visitorsay i as he stopped at her door. '0 yes, I am forever at it.' wish you'd ‘ tell mo your secret, Nancy. You're alone, you work hard, you have nothing Very pleasant sur rounding you; what is the reason you're so happy. 'Perhaps it's because I havn't any body but God,' replied the old creature, looking upward. 'You see, rich folks like you depends upon their houses, they've got to be thinking about their wives and children - ;and then thoy'real ways mighty,afraid of trouble ahead, I ain't got any thing to trouble myself about, because I leave all to the Lord. I think, well, if Ho can keep this great world in such good order,the sun rolling day after:day, and the stars shining night after ; night, and make my garden things cbine up the season after Season, he can take care - of such a poor thing as I am; and so youisee I leave it all to the Lord, and the Lord takes care of me.' 'Well, but Nancy suppose a frost comes after your fruit trees aro all in blossom, and your plants out; sup•' pose:— 'But I don't suppose;' I never can suppose, I don't want to suppose, ex cept that the Lord will do everything right. That's What makes you people unhappy : you're till the time suPpo3- ing. Now, why can't'you wait till the suppose comes and then make the best of it ?' 'Ah, Nancy, it, is pretty certain you'll get to heaven, while many of us, with all our worldly wisdom, will have to stay out.' 'There you aro at 'it again,' said Nancy, shaking her head, 'always look ing out for sonic, black cloud. Why, if I were you, I'd keep the devil at, arm's length, instead of taking him into my heart. do you a deeper ate sight of mischief.' She was right,. We do take the de mon of care, of distrust, of melancholy forbodings, of ingratitude, right into our heart . We canker every pleasure with gloomy fear of coming ill. ' We seldom trust that blessings will enter, or hail them when they come. We should be more child-like to our Heavenly Father, believe in ;His love, confide'in His wisdom, and not in our own; and above all wait till the 'sup. pose' comes, and then make the best of it Depend upon it, earth would seem au Eden, if you would follow Happy Nancy's rule, and never give place in your bosons to imaginary evils. The Lesson of Life. When everything is counted, it will be found that the sum total of our lives resolves itself into but two things—an ticipation and memory. The pleasures and miseries of the moment are ephe meral, and only to bo taken note of as they have been looked forward to, or as they leave their record in the past. In youth, life is richest in anticipation; but as years roll on the mind acquires the habit of looking backward, and when old ago has come, there is noth ing left this side of the grave. Fortu nate is that man who, in the midst of the cares and turmoils of a busy, and often unsatisfactory, life, has a happy childhood to look back upon a pic ture gallery of loving fares that once formed a home circle, a record of sun ny years, which includes gentle tones, kind- actions, cheerful- surrounding, smiling skies, twittering birds, bloom ing flowers and innocent amusements. Whoever robe a child of these, robs him of, more than ho can over return to him in any other shape. A close, hard,nar row life, lived in childhood, not only dwarfs the future man's whole moral and affectionate nature,but leaves him DO blessed atom of memories to fall back upon, when the present is Unsat isfying. Make your little child happy. Provide for him what enjoymOnts you can, be they great — or - small, and be grudge no money that you can spare in securing him these. In doing this you are not only giving him present pleasure, which is a great deal, as, in youth, impressions are stronger and more readily received and the capacity for enjoyment consequently greater; but you are really laying up a store of happiness for him in memories which shall last him all his life. Let the at mosphere which surrounds your child ren be so impregnated with affection that they shall breathe it in, as it were, at every inspiration, and their hearts will grow larger, and , their blood run the clearer and purer for it. Let your own lives, mothers and fathers, be so upright and pure, that when you have passed away, your memories shall bo enshrined in their hearts, and a halo will surround them like the aureole of a saint. Sitting, my friends, by the evening fireside, sitting in your easy chair at rest, and looking at the warm light on the rosy face of your boy. or girl, sitting on the rug before you, do you ever wonder what kind of remern branco those little ones will have of you-if God spitros them: to grow old ? Look into the years to come; think of that smooth face lined and roughened; that curly hair gray, grown careworn and sad, and you long to bo in your grave, Of course your son will not have forgotten you; ho will sometimes _think and,speak of his father who is gone, What kind remembrance will ho have of you ? Turn 'Olti_oto33 JOB PRINTING OFFICE. THE " GLOBE JOB - OFFICE" the Meet cemplete of any in !the country, andler- Beesee - ttiO most ample facilities for promptly executinglu the best style, every variety of 'Joh Printing, , -- HAND BILLS, CIRCULARS, - BILL HEAD,S 72.. • • '. , POSTERS, • JARDS, NO. 15. CALL AND EXAMINE BPACIDDLND Ol WOED~ LEWIS' BOOK BTATIONEBY Blinile STOI4-3 CAUSE AND PREVENTION OF' INFANT 111 - OATALITY.-.-AD exchange, speaking of infant mortality, says there f is,,pot fever, no preVailing epidemic to carry off these little ones. It will not dicto attribute ,the mortality to, the :heat alone, for among adults it is seeagat the deatl'3 kini . this cause are gradu ally decreasing.iii dumber.- There then, a•cause•more potent. tharr :heat: That cause must be -,ascribect - .to- , iol-) proper diet. Were all the infantp,un, dor ono year old given that food which nature provides for them this fearful inortuary.list would be greatly deore'dsl ed.: They need such food •as *ill sop; ply the largo demand for growth, and in such weather as this very little ; to, maintain the body at the standard temperature. In all kinds of 'aliment there are constituents :which fulfil two distinct parposesi.Eone . supports growth, the,other heat., , milk ,these, constituents are as one o two, in sago, tapioca and arrowrOcit, as one to t*en, ty-six, and even in wheaten 'flour but one is adapted tcrto the .growth'of sue, while seven, are . adapted! to,. the, maintenance of. temperature. If a child be fed upon those starchy articles of food, that which is not meed ed in the economy must pass. off,. through the bowels, if the. stomac' re. tains it at all, and the bensequence i len that fermentation is set up andAis•-• tressing,and often fatal .diarrhoea: re sults. The' whole digestive, apparatus is inflamed; the little. nourishment contained in the large mass, of , food is; ' not digested, and the infant , actually) dies of ,starvation., Whatever truth , there may be in' vegotarianism•when,l applied to adults it is plain "tbatqm a eh diet was never intended for in'fants.. r — Nature Brae gives her 'Children anitrial 'food. No motive of convenier.ce.or:ipleas ure should prevent the mother., from performing t that part _toward,borshoffr., spring. which the infinite wisdom ofithoi Creator has assigned• 'to, her; it ;thei child cannot bo nursed, tip only l avail- i able substitute that, wili , fulfil theipur-. , pose of a noorishingdiet is coy's t railk,l pure and fresh., ,For an infant under three months of age it should he:djin ted with an equal , quantity of *titer ) ; between that age and•six'montlis"offe.7 third of the mixture 'should be iwater, and aftei that ago -the -proportion , of water ought to be gradually tessened to one-fourth when the child is a, year old. It is much better to use.no sugar:at, all than to use too much, and itheAddi 7 , lion of it is altogether utinecessary : The milk must - not'be';' hoileil but aim - - ply warmed. • The -Cottla:th'at 'is ivied . to contain it must be very carefully, scalded out after each' time that it is used for the smallest portion-..0f : left to sour Will be sufficient to cause fermentation in whaiis"afierWar l d` used, ' On such a diet many-an infant' =might be saved which now falls a victim:to. the ,evil _consequences of arrowroot, corn starch, potatoes, "iefant,fotl'"and their mischievous compounds. It is a' vain solace Co suppose that cholera in: fantum is an evil which must be Submit-' ted to in the summer season. Its cause, and its prevention are in human hands. Ad vices from Santa Fe state that Governor Amy, the Special Indian • Agent for that Territory, has found the Canon de Chelly, which:was ex-. plored for twen miles. :The - .party found canons whose walls tower Tier pendicularly to an • altitude of from 1000 to 2000 feet, the rock strata be ing as perfect as if laid by the skilled hands of masons, and entirely symme trical. Among these ruins Were found deserted ruins of ancient Agtee cities, many of which bear the evidendes of having been populous, to the extent of many thousands of inhabitants. In one of these canons, the rocky walld of which rose not less than 2000 feet from the base, and whose summits onleither hand inclined to each other, -forming part of an arch, there were found, high up, hewn out of the rocks, the riiinsof Aztec towns of great'extent, noW'ten antless, desolate. In each• of these rocky eyries there reMained in a - state of good preservation a house , of stone, about twenty feet square, containing ono bare and gloomy room, and a sin gle human skeleton. In the centre of the room were the evidences that fire at some time had been used. The on,• ly solution of this, enigma thus . far ventured is, that these solitary rooms were the altar places of the Aztec fires; that froMsome Cause the people at a remote period wore constrained to abandon their homes, but left one faithful..sentinel in each instance to keep alive the flame that aederding, to the Indian traditions of 'these "re, gions, was to light the'verty of-MonteA uma again to his people—their hoped fur Messiah and their Eternal King. A close examination of many of the ruins proved - that the builders must have boon skilled in the manufacture' of edged • tools, masonry, and other mechanical arts. But who these people were, whence they came, or whither theyare gone, is now, probably, one of the mysteries to remain eternally un solved Some of the ruins aro reported to be stone buildings seven and eight stories in height, being, reached by ladders planted against, the walls.-- Round-houses, twenty feet in diame ter, built in the most-substantiarman ner, of cut-stone, and plastered inside, were also found in excellent preser vation. Astonishing discoveries bavo been made of gold and silver regions richer than yet known on this _conti nent., They are supposed, by . formed persons, to be the. East mines, of which tradition has handed down the most marvelous; 'tales, and ',the mines themselves discover untnista'- ka.ble evidences of having •beeh suc cessfully worked ages ago. BALL' TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, , BLANKS • "LABELS, &C., &-c., kQ Discoveries in New Mexice.