OL. 46 Huntingdon Journal, T. A. NASH, LTRBORROW, a the Corner of Bath and Washington streets. Ilurrnicnort .Tottanat. is published every day, by J. It. Dtrunonitow and J. A. NAsn, he firm name of J. It. DERBORROW & CO., at •r.annutn, IN ADVANCE, or $2,50 if not paid ix months from date of subscription, and t paid within the year. iper discontinued, unless at the option of lishers. until all arrearames are paid. 13ItTISEMENTS will he inserted at TEN per line for each of the first four insertions, CENTS per lin, for each subsequent inscr s than three months. lar monthly and yearly advertisements will led at the following rates : 3ml6m 9 mil y I 3m 6m mil y 2 501 400 5 Gel 6 00,!4col 900 18 00 $ 27 1 $ 36 400 £ 00 , 10 00112 00ViA" 24 00 36'0 •60 65 600 10 00'14 00,18 00,y, 3400 1 5000 65 80 8 00,14 00 . 20 00,21001 9 50 , 18 00125 00130 004 col 38 00 60 00 80 100 al notices will lie inserted at TWELVE 400 CENTS leer line, and local and editorial no- VTEI, CENTS lier . . . . . . .6solutions of As . sociations, Communicat ions ed or individual interest > and notices of Mar ind Deaths, exceeding fire lines, will be TEN CENTS per line. 1 and other notices will be charged to the acing them interted. rtising Agents must find their commission of these figures. drertiming7recoonts are doe and collectable c adecrtisement is once inserted. PRINTING of every kind, in Plain and Colors, done with neatness and dispatch.— Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets. &e., of every and style, printed at the shortest notice, wy thing in the Printing line will be cares he most artistic manner and at the lowest Professional Cards. DENGATE, Surveyor, Warriors mark, Pa. [ap12,71. CALDWELL, Attorney -at -Law, No. 111, 3d street. Office formerly occupied .srs. Woods & Williamson. [ap12,71. :,. R. R.IVIESTLING, respectfully offers his professional services Atisens of Huntingdon and vicinity. t removed to No. 61S1 Hill street, (Seines Na.) [apr.s,7l-Iy. L. J. C. FLEMMING respectfully >tiers his professional services to the citizens tingdon and vicinity. Office second floor of igham's building, on corner of 4th and Hill may 24. L. D. P. MILLER, Office on Rill street,•in the room formerly occupied by hn M'Culloch, Huntingdon, Pa., would res ly offer his professional services to the cid ' Huntingdon and vicinity. Dau.4,11. t. A. B. BRUMBAUGH, offers his professional services to"the community. e on Washington street, one door east of the is Parsonage. Dan. 4,11. Z. G. D. ARNOLD, Graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, offers his pro tal services to the people of Huntingdon and ERENCE :—Dr. B. P. Hook,of Loymille, Pa., , hom he formerly practiced; Drs. Stine and r of Philadelphia. .e on Washington street, West Huntingdon, [ap.19,11. J. GREENE, Dentist. Office re znoved to Loister's new building, Hill street ngdon. L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. • Ilrcisn's new building, No. 520, Hill St., ngdon, Pa. [ap12,71. GLAZIER, Notary Public, corner • of Washington and Smith streets, Hun 3n, Pa. [jan.l27l. C. MADDEN, Attorney-at• Law. • Office, No. —, Hill street, Huntingdon, [ap.19,'71. SYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at- Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, Hill street, doors west of Smith. Dan.47l. R. PATTON, Druggist and Apoth• , ~,,,,,, miry, opposite the Exchange Hotel, Hun on, Pa. Prescriptions accurately compounded. Liquors for Medicinal purposes. Ln0v.23,70. HALL MUSSER, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, second floor of Jr's new building, IEII stret. Dan. 4,11. R. DURBORROW, Attorney-at- • Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will practice in the al Courts of Huntingdon county. Particular tion given to the settlement of estates of deco- Bee in he JonitnAL Building. [feb.ll7l A. POLLOCK, Surveyor and Real Estate Agent, Huntingdon, Pa., will attend irveying in all its branches. Will also buy, or rent Farms, Houses, and Real Estate of ev- Lind, in any part of the United States. Send circular. [jan.4'7l. W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law • and General Claim Agent, Iluntingdon, Pa., iers' claims against the Government for back bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attend , with great care and promptness. flee on Hill street. Dan. 4,71. ALLEN LOVELL, Attorney-at- L• Law, Huntingdon', Pa. Special attention nto COLLECTIONS of all kinds ; to the settle t of Estates, &c.; and all other Legal Business ecuted with fidelity and dispatch. VIA Office in room lately occupied by R. Milton or, Esq. [jan.4,'7l. TILES ZENTMYER, Attorney-at- Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will attend promptly 11 legal business. Office in Cunningham's new ding. Dan. 4,71. I M. & M. S. LYTLE, Attorneys • at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will attend to kinds of legal business entrusted to their care. ffice on the south side of 11111 street, fourth door t of Smith. [jan.4,'7l. Attorney-at-Law, 1'• Office, 321 Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. Driay3l;7l IN SCOTT. R. T. BROWN. ,le If. BAILEY COTT, BROWN & BAILEY, At torneys-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Pensions, l all claims of soldiers and soldiers' heirs against Government will be promptly prosecuted. )ffice on Hill street. Dan.4,'7l. I W. MYTON, Attorney-at-Law, Hun - • tingdon, Pa. Offiee will, J. Sewell Stewart, 1. [jan.4,'7l. VILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney : V at-Law,. Huntingdon, Pa. Special attention , en to collections, and all other legal business ended to with care and promptness. Of f ice, No. I, Hill street. [ap19,"71. Miscellaneous i I XCHANGE HOTEL, Huntingdon, A Pa. JOHN S. MILLER, Proprietor. January 4, 1871. ALLISON KILLER. R. {ILLER dr. Blierf AN-AN, DENTISTS, Na 228 Hill Street, MINTIIcGDON, PA April 5, '7l-ly "EAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT, COR. WAYNE ftml JUNIATA STREETT UNITED STATES HOTEL, HOLLIDAYSBURG, PA 'CLAIN J 6 CO, PROPRIETORS. plot OBT. KING, Merchant Taylor, 412 Lai Washington street, Huntingdon, Pa., a lib •al share of patronage respectfully solicited. April 12, 1871. he Huntingdon Journal. gin -4,; uoto' fflotutr. A Sterling Old Poem Who shall judge from his manner? Who shalkknow him by his dress ? Paupers may be fit for princes, Princes fit for something less. Crumpled shirt and dirty jacket May beclothe the golden ore Or the deepest thoughts and feelings— Satin vest can do no more. There arc streams of crystal nectar Even flowing out of stone ; There are purple beds and golden Hidden, crushed, and overflown. God, who counts by soul, not dresses, Loves and prospers you and me, While he values thrones the highest But as pebbles in the sea. Man upraised above his fellows, Oft forgets his fellows then ; Masters—rulers—lords ; remember That your meanest kinds of men ; Men of labor, men of feeling, Men of thought, men of fame, Claiming rights to sunshine In a man's ennobling name. There are foamed-embroidered oceans, There are little wood-clad rills; There are feeble inch high saplings, There are cedars on the hills. God, counts by soul, not station, Loves and prospers you and me, For to him all vain distinctions Are as pebbles in the sea. Toiling hands alone are builders Of a nations' wealth and fame, Titled laziness is pensioned, Fed and fattened on the same ; By the sweat of other foreheads, Living only to rejoice, While the poor man's outraged freedom Vainly lifts its feeble voice. Truth and justice are eternal, Born with lovliness and light; Secret wrongs shall never prosper While there is a sunny right. God, whose world-wise voice is singing Boundless love.yo you and me, Counts oppression with its titles But as pebbles in the sea. Übe Alor2-Zeller. The Beggar Girl of Paris Dunn% the "Reign of Terror" in France there were many deeds of daring performed even by women, and many examples of affection exhibited. The streets of Paris were deluged with human blood, but near the guillotine it ran in torrents. One dark morning an unusual number of aristocracy had been marched forth, and countless life less heads rolled from the block. Gaping multitudes stood by, and with shouts rent the air as the aristocracy were thus butch ered. Among the assembled multitude that dreary morning were two females. One of them was plainly clad, while a cloak was thrown around her with which she kept her features nearly concealed. But a close observation would betray the fact that the woman had been weeping. Her eyes were inflamed and red, and she gazed upon the platform, while a shock of the glittering knife severed the head from the body of some one who had been unfortunate enough to fall under \ the ban of the two leaders.— The face of the woman was young—not more than sixteen or eighteen years of age. The other female was quite different in character. Her face was fair, but there was a brazen expression about it. She was clad in rags, and as each head fell, she would dance, and in various ways she would dm. in various ways express her delight, and then exclaim : "There falls another aristocrat who re fused -me charity when I humbly sued him." Each expression of the kind would create a laugh from those who heard her. But any thoughtful person must wonder that one so .young could have been so depraved. The first female watched this creature for a few moments, and then pressing her hand to her side, she laid a hand on the shoul der of the wretch and whispered : "Would you like to become rich at once?" The female of rags turned about with a look of surprise, burst into a loud laugh, and then replied : "Of course I would !" "Folio g me and you shall be." "Enough. Lead on." It was with considerable difficulty that the females extracted themselves from the crowd ; but they did so at length, and the first female asked of the other : "What shall I call you ?" "Oh !,I'm called the Beggar Girl Marie." "You live on begging ?" "Yes; but what's your name, and what do you want ?" 4 •My name is Marie, the same as your own." "Are you an aristocrat ?" "It does not matter. If you know where you can fitcd a room lead me to it, and you shall have gold." The pauper led the way into a narrow, filthy street, and then down into a cellar and into a dark, filthy room. The other female could not but feel a sickening sen sation creep over her, but she recovered herself. After contemplating for a time the apartment and what it contained, she asked you - wennowil iVraiis?" "Yes, everybody knows Marie, the Beg gar Girl." "Are you known to Robespierre ? If so, I want to make a bargain with you." • "I am. What do you wish ?"! "You see that my clothing is better than your own, and I wish to exchange with you. I want you to remain here and not show yourself at all for a short time, or until I come to you again. As a recoth pense for aiding me I will now give you a thousand francs. As a security for my return, take this ring. The lady drew a diamond ring from her finger and gave it to the beggar girl, then handed her a purse containing gold. The girl appeared a little puzzled, then asked: "Well, what are you going to do with my dress ?" want to put it on and go where I first met you." "lih! I understand you now. You want to see the chopping go on, and you are afraid that you will be taken for an aristo crat if you wear that dress. You want to represent me." "Yes, I want to look as near like you as possible." They exchanged dresses ; and soon the young, rich and noble Marie de Nantes was clad in the rags of the Beggar Girl of Par is. Thd . history of Marie de Nantes was a sad one. Her Either and two brothers had fallen victims to the remorseless fiends of the revolution, and a third and last broth er had been seized. But of his fate she was ignorant, although she expected that it would be similar to that of her relatives. He had been torn from her buta few hours before. After the exchange had been made 3felils-tt the pauper looked on the stockingless and shoeless feet and ankles of the lady, and said : "That will never do. Your feet are too white and delicate. Let me arrange mat ters." In a few moments Marie was prepared, and in the fiilth and rags she emerged into the street. She now took her course back toward the guillotine, and at length reach ed the square, where the bloody work was still going_on. Gradually she forced her way through the crowd, and nearer she came to the scaffold. She even forced a laugh at several remarks she heard around her, but those laughs sounded strangely. She now stood within the platform, swept it with her eyes, but her brother was not there. The cry was raised. Her heart fluttered violently, and she felt a faintness come over her as she heard the tramp of the doomed man approaching. Her brother walked proudly and fearlessly forward, and ascended the very steps that led to the block. Marie's heart had failed her, and she was unable to put her resolve into execution. But now a sister's love swelled up in her heart, and she recovered her strength. She sprang forward, burst ing through the line of guards, and ran up the steps. Grasping her brother by the hands, she cried : "What does this mean ? It is only the aristocrats that are to die." "Away woman," exclaimed one of the executioners. "No; I will not go away until you tel me why my brother is bound." "YoUr grother was an echo." "Well, who are you ?" "I am Marie;,donyou know me ?" "The Beggar Girl ?' 7 "Aye." "But this is not your brother ?" "It is. Ask him'—ask him." _Young Antonio de Nantes had turned a scornfal glance upon the maiden, but a light crossed his face as he murmured: "0, my sister." "Is this your brother?" asked Robespierre of the supposed beggar, advancing near her. "It is." — "Does Marie speak the truth ?" asked Robespierre. "She does," was the brother's reply. "And are you de Nantes ?" "I tell you I am her brother." "Why did you not tell us of this be fore ?" "I attempted to speak, but was silen• ced." "But you might have declared your• self." "You would not have believed me." "But your dress ?" "It belongs to an aristocrat. Perhaps to him for whom I was taken." "Robespierre advanced close to young Nantes, and gazed earnestly into his face; then he approached Marie, and looked steadily in her eyes for a short time. It was a moment of trial to the poor girl.— She trembled in spite of all her efforts to be calm. She almost felt that she .was lost, when the human fiend, whose word was law, turned and said : “Relewse the luau." The chains were instantly remove& and Antonio de Nantes walked down from the scaffold, followed by his sister, while shouts rent the air, for they supposed he was a commoner who had thus been saved. The young man worked his way through the crowd as rapidly as possible, leading Marie. They scarcely escaped it before the poor girl fainted from tne intensity of her feel ing. The brother scarcely kne'w what to do, but a hand was laid upon his arm, and a voice said : "Bring her to my room again. She will be safe there." The brother conveyed her to the apart ment of the pauper, and asked of her : "Have you seen the female before ?" "Yes! I know all about it," returned the pauper. "She has done it, and lam glad.' Before the noble lady had returned to consciousness the brother had learned all. When she did so, they both sought more secure quarters, after rewarding the beg gar girl, as promised. "Do you think Robespierre was really deceived ?" asked Marie de Nantes. think not," returned the brother. "He saw your plan. He admired your courage. Could a fiend have done less ?" "Perhaps this was the case, but if so it was a deed of mercy, and is the only one that man ever did." "You are right." Antonio de Nantes was not again arrest ed, and lived happily with that sister who had so nobly periled her own life to save him, by representing the Beggar Girl of Paris. pioallattem. A Country Post-Office A country post-office is thus described by the Kennebec Journal : There are sometimes tragic-comic scenes witnessed at every well-regulated post office. It is quite a humorous scene, when the mails are in, the schools just out, and the post-office is filled to overflowing4rst are the little folks, small in stature, but with a wonderful capacity for making a noise—and what is a boy worth if he can't make a noise? Here in one corner Tom and Harry are engaged in the delightful pastime of pulling each other's hair, and seem to enjoy it immensely; and here are a bevy of young misses, one of whom is saying, "Now don't you tell for the world," to which they all assent with sundry jerks of the head; and here just in front of us is "Uncle John," asking "Aunt Hannah" about "that ar' sick child," and at our left two young ladies are watching with ex pectant faces certain boxes, to see if he has written. And when the mail is aistribu ted it is quite a study to watch the faces as the crowd passes out, from the self-im portant office boy with his huge budget, to the shy young widow with her single dainty missive ; with now and then a sad face---yearning for words that do not come. The dull, empty boxes have a meaningless look about them now • but a moment ago they held the words of loving hearts .and issues of important business relations. A IFIEDIcAL journal gives this as a cure for a cold : Upon the first indication that you have taken cold stop eating until the cold is cured; drink freely of cold water,, induce a free perspiration over the entire body, either by exercise, the Turkish va por, lamp or hot water, bath or wet sheet pack, followed by a tepid spray or spong ing; go to bed, cover up warm, and breathe all the pure air you can. Nine cases out of ten will yield to this treatment in less than twelve hours, and the tenth one will hardly continue twenty-four hours. HUNTINGDON, PA., AUGUST 23, 1871 About the . Beverage which Fizzes but does not As the warm weather approaches, soda fountains, which have lain idle all winter, are mounted again, syrups manufactured, and various drug stores and confectionaries prepard to furnish a large class of thirsty citizens with a: foamy and favorite bever age. A large proportion of our population, including the fair sex, drink soda water as occasion offers. Even the devotee of Bourbon, who sneezes at thin wines, and looks upon lager as a weak invention of the enemy, relishes an occasional glass of soda•when his coppers are hot and his blood feverish. Others take it with a good dash of whisky in each glass. Soda water is simply plain water, heavi ly charged with carbonic acid gas, the gas being evolved through the action of sul phuric acid on lime. Formerly *soda water was made with soda and tartaric acid, but as the sulphuric acid plan is much cheaper it is generally adopted. The fountains charged with soda water are subjected to a heavy pressure, and when the work is care lessly done they not unfrequently explode —sometimes causing loss of life. Soda water, without syrup, if unimpregnated with minerals, is a healthy and pleasant beverage, having a slight biting, stinging taste in the mouth and assisting in the work of digestion when taken into the stomach. In England it is generally taken in this way or mixed with brandy. In this country, however, it is usually taken with syrups, flavored with some sort of fruity essence, of which the chemist has given us an endless variety. In this state soda is more palatable, but not so healthy. Soda water is deleterious, mostly on ac count of the lead it holds in solution. Be ing conveyed through leaden pipes, the action of the carbonic acid gas rapidly ox odizes the metal, which is hld in folution by the beverage. Lead, as is well known, is a dangerous poison. When the weather is not, and the beverage in demand, the danger is not so great, as the fountain is exhausted before it has time to become thoroughly impregnated, It is not so good to drink soda on a cold, chilly day, when there is little demand for it. And occa sionally, in generating the gas, the sulphu ric acid slops over and mixes with the bev erage. . . . Every popular fruit has its representa tive syrup, tile customer paying his money and taking his choice. The unsophistica ted fondly imagine that these grateful syr ups are manufactured directly from the fruit, and it is a pity to undeceive them. But the glory of chemistry, as demonstra ted.in the manufacture of delicate flavors from the most unpromising substances, must be vindicated. The most popular soda syrup is straw berry. The glorious fruit after which it is nanipd numbers its friends by the mil lions, and the soda tippler, with the re membrance of vanished strawberrier and by gone cream still lingering on his palate, when he orders a glass of soda takes straw berry in "his'n." We trust that in ex posing the formula for the manufacture of strawberry syrup, nobody's appetite will be spoiled. Butyric ether is the base of all fr. 4 ay_ ether is made sometimes of rancid butter, though old, rotten cheese is generally preferred, the loudest quality of limburger affording the best quality of ether. The cheese is treated with sul phuric acid, and if a particularly nice and finely flavored ether is desired, a few chips of old leather are added. Any sort of leather will do, but old boots and shoes are preferred. Strawberry syrup is made of twelve parts of butyric ether and one part of acetic ether, diluted with alcohol and water. A pint of real strawberry syrup added to the gallon of mixture will im prove the syrup but it is not absolutely necessary; color with cochineal. Raspberry syrup is made after the same formula, except that a pint of real raspber ry syrup is added, if the chemist has it. If not, he takes a jar of his strawberry syrup, colors a little darker, and changes the label. Banana syrup is made of butyroamylic ether, and acetic ether. The latter ether, is formed by the action of sulphuric acid on sugar of lead. Sarsaparilla is the simplest and nastiest of the syrups. Molasses is its base, with a little essence of sasafras and wintergreen added. A few roots of sarsaparilla "biled" in the mixture will do no harm and no good. Vanilla syrup is made of tonqua beans and fresh hay. Pineapple syrup is made of butyric and formic ether. Formic ether was formerly made by the actiou of sulphuric acid on red ants, but latterly it is made of glycer ine soap. Peact syrup is made of bitter almonds and acetic ether. Twenty drops of bitter almonds will kill a man. Necter is formed by mixing various syrups and adding slink madeira wine— the wine being compounded of neutral spirit, logwood, sugar and raisins. Lemon syrup is the purest that can be obtained. It is made of citric acid and sugar, with perhaps a few lemon peels. The citric acid is made of lemons. Scores of other syrups are in use. Lat terly, buchu is used to some extent. It has a greenish,, nasty look, and a taste that is unpleasant at first, though a taste for it is easily acquired. The above statements in regard to the manufacture of syrups are a true bill. A glass of soda water with syrups costs the manufacturer about a cent or a cent and a quarter. It retails for ten cents, leaving a good margio for profit. The re tailer makes from 800 to 900 per cent. on each glass. Notwithstanding all that we have said, soda water is a comparatively harmless beverage. Barring the led held in solu tion it may be drank even to excess, and the drinker live to a green old age. The soda toper never disgraces himself by whooping and yelling abOut streets or roll ing in the gutter, never gets in the station house, never beats his wife,. and doesn't steal the spoon at the hotel table. WHILE a vender of greens in Boston was endeavoring to dispose of his stock his poor old nag balked, and refused to budge an inch. The driver finally commenced belaboring the animal with a stick, when an old lady thrust her head out of the window and exclaimed, "Have you no mercy ?" "No, ma'am," replied the pedler, "Noth ing but greens." A Galesburg farmer Whose pew rent was raised to $25, ' exclaimed : "Great Ca3sar, here's a nice atat4, of affairs—the gospel going up and pork going down. What's to become of us ?" A postmaster by the name of Goodele when he is in a hurry, signs himself XX. Stimulants That man is a maniac, a deliberate sui cide, who drinks tea, coffee, or ardent spirits of any kind to induce him to per form a work in hand, and when he feels too weak to go through with it without such aid. This is the reason that the majority of great orators and public favor ites die drunkards. The pulpit, the bench, the bar, the forum, have contributed their legions of victims to drunken habits. The beautiful woman, the sweet singer, the conversationalist, the periodical writers, have filled but too often a drunkard's grave. Now that the press has become such a great power in the land, when the magazine must come out on a certain day, and the daily newspapers at a fixed hour, nothing waits, everything must give way to the inexorable call for copy, and sick or well, disposed or indisposed, asleep or awake, the copy must come; the writer must compose his article, whether he feels like it or not, and if he is not in the vein of writing, he must whip himself up to it by the stimulas of drink. Some of the greatest writers of the country have con fessed to the practice on urgent occasions, of taking a sip of brandy at the end of every written page or even oftener. Lord Byron, at the end of every paragraph some times ! It may have escaped the general reader's notice, that more men have died young, who have been connected with the New York press, within ten years, and that too from intemperance, than in all the other educational callings put together ; young men whose talents have been of the first order, and gave promise of a life of useful ness, honor and eminence. The best pos sible thing for a man to do, when he feels too tired to perform a task or too weak to carry it through, is to go to bed and sleep a week if he can; this is the only true recuperation of brain Bower ; the only ac tual renewal of brain force; because, during sleep the brain is in a sense of rest, in a condition to receive any appropriate particles of nutriment from the blood which take the place of those which have been consumed in previous labor, since the very act of thinking consumes, burns up solid particles, as every turn of the wheel or screw of the splendid steamer is the re sult of consumption by fire of the fuel in the furnace. That supply of consumed brain substance can only be had from the nutrient particles in the blood which were obtained from the food eaten previously, and the brain is so constituted that it can best receive and appropriate to itself those nutrient particles during the state of rest, quiet and of stillness sleep. Mere stim ulants supply nothing themselves----they goad the brain, force it to a greater con sumption of its substance, until that sub stance has'been so fully exhausted that there is not power enough left to receive a supply; just as men are so near death by thirst or.starvation, that there is not pow er enough left to swallow anything, and all is over. The incapacity of the brain for receiving recuperative particles some times comes on with the rapidity of a stroke of lightning, and the man - becomes mad in an instant ; in an instant falls in convnl lnang all SEMCP, and is an idiot. it was unaer circumstances of this very sort, in the very middle of a sen tence of great oratorical power, one of the most eminent minds of the ageskargot his ideas, pressed his hand against his fore head, and after a moment's silence said, "God, as with a sponge, has blotted out my mind." Be assured readers; "there is rest for the weary," only in early and abundant sleep, and wise and happy are they who have firmness enough to resolve that "By God's help I will seek it in no other way."—Hall's Journal 0/ Health. Boxing the Ears. Boxing the ears is an inexcusable bru tality ; many a child has been made deaf for life by it, because the "clium" of the ear is a membrane as thin as paper, stretch ing like a curtain just inside the external of the ear. There is nothing but air be hind it, and any violent concussion is liable to rend it in two, and the "hearing" is destroyed forever, because the sense of hearing is caused by the vibrations of this drum or "tympanum." Picking the ears is a most mischievous practice. In attempt. ing to do this with hard substances, an unlucky motion has many a time pierced the drum and made it as useless as a pierced India-rubber life preserver; noth ing harder-or sharper than the end of the little finger, with the nail pared, ought ever to be introduced into the ear, un less by a physician. Persons are often seen endeavoring to remeve the "wax" of the ear with the head of a pin ; this ought never to be done, first, because it not only endangers the rupture of the ear by being pushed too far in, but not so far it may grate against the drum, excite inflamma tion and an ulcer, which will finally eat all the parts away, especially of a scrofu lous constitution; second, hard substances have slipped in, and caused the necessity of painful, dangerous and expensive oper ations to fish or cut out; third, thg wax is manufactured by nature to guard the entrance from dust, insects and unmodified cold air, and when it has subserved its purpose, it becomes dry, scaly, light, and in this condition is easily pushed outside by new formations of wax within. Occa sionally wax may harden, and may inter fere with the hearing; but when this is the case it is the part of wisdom to consult a physician, and let him decide what is the matter and what the remedy. If one can not be had the only safe plan is to let fall into the ear three or four drops of tepid water night and morning; the saliva is better still, it is softer and more penetra ting, but glycerine is far preferable to either ; it is one of the best, blandest fluids in nature, and very rapidly pene trates the hardest wax, cools the parts and restores them to healthful condition. If, in a week, there is not a decided improve ment in the hearing, medical advice ought to be had at once, as, next to the eye, the ear is the most delicate organ of the body. A CONFIDING individual who believes everything he reads in the newspapers, was advise in a stray item, to pin down some old newspapers over his squashes to keep the bugs off. He tried the experi ment on one hill. Two days passed, and on the morning of the third he raised the covering expecting to find the plants in third leaves, but, instead of this the ten der plants were withered and dried up; not a green thing remained. He had cov ered the hill with the Bangor Democrat, containing the speech of Jeff. Davis in Georgia—enough to blast and stop the growth of a "bull thistle." NEVER mention what you wish should not be mentioned again, two to a secret are enough, and one should not know any thing about it. How to Keep Cool. A correspondent furnishes the London Times with the following hints, which will be found pertinent to our own climate : "In these hot days a cool apartment is a real luxury, to be had far oftener than most people suppose possible. The secret consists not in letting in cool air, for nat urally all do that whenever they can get a chance, but in keeping out the hot air. If the-air outside a room or house be cooler than the air inside, let it in by all means; but if it be hotter, carefully keep it out. " A staircase window left open during the night will often cool the passages of a house, and the rooms, too, if their doors be not shut ; but it must be closed at eight or nine o'clock in the morning, or, if on the sunny side, at four or five o'clock, and the blind drawn down. The mistake people generally make is to throw open windows at all hours of the day, no mat ter whether the atmosphere outside be cool or scorching. " Let us have some air, they say, and in comes the treacherous breeze—for even hot air is pleasant while it is gently blow• ing, taking away perspiration, and there by cooling the skin; ut this apartment is made warmer; in spite of the draught they find their room to be more uncom fortable than before. " Let in cool air—keep out hot—that is the only formula to insure the minimum of discomfort. Sitting-rooms may gener ally be kept cool durinc , ' the whole day if the doors be only opened for ingress and egress, and windows kept closed and shield ed from direct sunshine by a blind. If the atmosphere of a room be impure from any cause, let it be renewed, hot air is less injurious than bad air. If a room be small in comparison with the number of per sons engaged in it, free ventilation be- comes indispensible. "In a cooking apartment the tempera tore will probably be higher than outside, hence the free admission of hot air will be desirable. If persons do not object to sit in a direct draught of air, windows and door may be opened, a breeze being more refreshing, even though several degrees warmer, than still air ; but under nearly all other circumstances rooms should be kept closed as much as possible until after sundown, or till the air outside is cooler than that inside. Let in cool air; keep out hot." A Dead Hero. Martin Cooney is the name of the boy who, deep down in the horrid depths of the Pittston mine, performed a deed of heroic self-sacrifice which shames into in significance the actions by which many happier men have climbed to fame and honor. Cooney and a companion stood at the bottom of the shaft as the car was about to ascend for the last time. High above them roaring flame and blinding 1 smoke and the crash of falling timbers were fast closing up the narrow way to light and life; below them, in the gloomy pit, were a score of men working on, uncon scious of their deadly peril. Cooney, with one foot upon the car, thought of his en dangered friends. He proposed to his compainey — strould`Mara and warn the miners of their threatened fate. 1 Cooney, without a moment's hesitation, but with full consciousness that he had chosen almost certain death, leaped from the car and groped his way back through the grimy darkness. It was too late; the miners had closed the ventilating door be fore he reached them, standing there, be tween that immovable barrier and the shaft,the hot breath of the fiery pit poured in upon him in a pitiless blast, and so he died. He was but a lad, poor, unlearned, and probably unconscious of possession of the higher virtues, and yet he died as great and noble a death as man can ever die; he deliberately sacrificed his own life in an attempt to save those of his friends. Here is a theme for the most exalted poetic genius. Compared with this poor boy, how quickly do the profane and slangy heroes of the coarse poetasters of the Hay school sink into contempt; and how unworthy and insufficient seems the fiction in which they are placed ! It is from such persons as this poor and obscure lad, doing deeds of infinite heroism with a simplicity that is altogether pathetic, that we learn that the purer and higher qualities of the race— the qualities which reveal the presence of the spark of Divinity in the soul—exist even yet in the humblest of mankind. Sleeping, Fainting, Apoplexy. When a man is asleep, his pulse beats and his lungs play, but he is without sense, and you can wake him up. If a person faints, he, too, is without sense, but he has no pulse and does not breathe. Apoplexy is between the two ; the heart beats, the lungs play as in sleep, and there is no sense as in fainting, but you cannot shake the man back to life. In sleep, the face is natural ; in a faint ing fit, it has the pallor of death ; in apo plexy, it is swollen, turgid, and fairly livid. If a man is asleep let him alone; nature will wake him up as soon as he has got sleep enough. When a person faints, all that is needed is to lay him down flat on the floor and he will "come to" in double quick time. He fainted because the heart missed a beat, failed for an instant, failed for only once to send the amount of blood to the brain. If you place the patient in a horizontal position, lay him on his back, it does not require much force of the heart to send blood on a level to the head ; but you set a man up, the blood has to be shot upward to the head, and this requires much more force ; yet in nine cases out of ten, if a person faints and falls to the floor, the first thing done is to run to him and set-him in a chair. In apoplexy, as there is too much blood in the head, every one can see that the best position is to set a man up, and the blood naturally tends downward, as much so as water will come out of a bottle when turned upside down, if the cork is out. Dinner Horns This is the oldest and most sacred kind there is. It is set to musik, and plays "Home Sweet Home" about noon. It will arrest a man and bring him in quicker than a sheriff's warrant. It kauses the deaf to hear, and the dumb to shout for joy. Glorious old instrument ! long may your lungs last ! Whisky Horn : This horn varys in length from three to six inches in their favorite size. It is differ ent from other horns, being of a fluid na tur. It is really more pugnashus than the ram's horn ; six inches of it will knock a man perfectly calm—Josh Billings.. HE learns much who studies other men, but he learns more who studies himself. A Mistake, It is a great mistake to suppose that great wealth brings happiness, although too many of us are in the habit of imagin ing that such is the case. It was once said by a millionaire, who had made his wealth by his own efforts that the first dollar he made gave him more delight than the thousands he gathered afterward. He learned to despise so small a thing as ai l dollar, and in doing so forfeited all the joy that its possession gave him. In all our relations the value of small things is constantly suggested to us. The sum of happiness is made up of trifles. The fra grance of a flower will sometimes steal over our depressed and despondent spirits like a golden memory, and fill us with an un definable peace that dispatches all the darkness from our souls. A cheery word, an endearment or caress, or a voice of en couragement will sometimes awaken our half-dead hearts into new life, and change the sullen and somber aspect of all things around us into brightness and beauty. The familiar hearts, the easy chair, the open window, the well-worn book, the kiss of children, the voice and smile of a loved wife, the family board, the chance visit of an esteemed friend, or to come down to still smaller trifles, the evening pipe, the merry hum of the tea kettle, and the blazing fire after a battle with the rough weather outside, these and such little things as these, involve more happiness and solace than the great triumphs and success that awaits us in the world. The world's triumphs and successes soon clog us, so that we demand greater victories to day than we were satisfied with yesterday. But these little trifles, if we are wise enough to be content with them, grow dearer as they grow familiar, and become parennial fountains of joy and solace. Let us take care of the little things of life that contain so much of happiness or misery, and the great things may be left to take of themselves. Tit-Bits, Taken on the Fly.- The last accounts from Zanzibar states that Dr. Livingstone had made a journey to a point 200 miles west of Tanganyika. The New York Tribune announces the return from the far West of Hon. G. A. Grow, of Pennsylvania, in vigorous health. The Democratic leaders in North Car olina, in view of the recent defeat of their party at the polls, are calling lustily for a reorganization of the party. Between fifty and sixty persons ; includ ing the proprietor and wife of the Alham bra Hotel, at Atlantic City, wine poison ed one day last week by eating desert. The Rev. Thomas H. Hanna, of Pitts burgh, Penn., has distinguished himself among his clerical brethren by refusing in exchange his $2,500 salary in the City of Smoke for a $6,000 salary (gold) in -Sanl Francisco. Such loud calls as that seldom go unheeded. Victor Hugo's fortune is estimated at over 2,000,000 francs, and yet since the Yranee-ernesian war he has had an appre hension that he might come to want, and many believe he has grown deranged on the subject of money—in other words that he is a money maniac. Secretary Boutwell confirms the Lon don advices of the absorption of the re mainder of the $200,000,000 five per cent loan by Jay Cooke, M'Culloch & Co., in connection with other London capital ists. The amount will be over one hund red and thirty millions. The Hon. Schuyler Colfax writes to a friend in Washington that he is now in excellent health, better than for many years, that he is taking constant out-door exercise in the field and garden, and wri ting but little. Next week, in company with Senator Windom, he will vist Minne sota. Mr. John Stuart Mill has been aston ishing his Scottish friends by the versatil ity of his accomplishments. While visiting Edinburgh, this season, he passed much of his time in sketching, which he does, it is said, to perfection. Mr. Mill, besides, is a fine pianist, an able philologist, arch nlogist and botanist. The New York thieves do it in this, one of their many ways: A business man, having a claim against New York city of $lO,OOO, was unable to collect. it until, after a significant intimation, he made out his bill for $64,000. He then promptly received his $lO,OOO, the balance (54,000) having been pocketed by the Tammany thieves. The Tribune gives the name and residence of theparty engag ed in this transaction. The friends of the Cary sisters will be pained, though not surprised, to learn that Phabe Cary died at Newport, R. 1., on Monday night. From a touching sketch of her elder sister, written a few weeks ago, for a paper called the Ladies Reposi tory, we gather some particulars of, her early life. The sisters were the daugh ters of Robert and Elizabeth Cary. The father was a farmer. His place, which had been reclaimed from the original wilderness, was about eight miles north of Cincinnati, and lying in the Miami Valley. Here Alice was born in 1820, and Phoebe five years later. They grew up simple country girls. They owed most of their education to their mother, who appears to have been a woman of unusual intelli gence. They saw few books or newspa pers, but wandering as they did daily amid the picturesque scenes of the Miami Valley, acquired that familiarity with and fondness for nature which showed them selves so plesantly in their writings in af ter years. A movement has been inaugurated at Danville in this State, looking, it would seem, to the union of labor and capital. A call for a meeting, to be held at the rooms of the "Anti-Union League," says : "Rec ognizing the rights of all men, manufac turer and laborer, must in the end triumph. We believe in the eternal brotherhood of mankind, that all men are equal before the laws, that the rights and duties of all must be respected to insure prosperity, peace and happiness to society and the country. No reign of terror, mob law or strikes can exist without injury to all men." In con clusion it adds : "Furnaces out of blast, mines closed, mechanics idle, laborers out of employment are the results of Unions which are not based upon mutual princi ples." The main object of this new or ganization is to establish the idea that strikes or lock-outs should invariably be the last resort of laborers or employers, and that mutual concession and concilia tion be made the understanding between the two classes. NO. 33. gin Al ow Crag. Heaven Beyond these chilling winds and gloomy skies, Beyond death's cloudy portal, There is a land where beauty never dies, And love becomes immortal. A land whose light is never dimmed by shade, Whose fields are ever vernal; Where nothing beautiful can ever fade, But blooms for aye, eternal. We may not know bow aired the balmy air, How bright and fair its flowers; We may not hear the songs that echo there ; Through those enchanted bowers. The city's shining towers we may not see, With our dim earthly vision ; For death, the silent warden, keeps the key That open that elysian. But sometimes wllen adown the western sky The fiery sunset lingers, Its golden gates swing inward noiselessly, Unlocked by unseen fingers. Aud while they stand a moment half ajar, Gleams from the inner glory Stream brightly through the azure vault afar, And half reveal the story. The Fruit of Sorrow. He who has no dear friend in the better world, who has not been called to surren der to heaven on; whom he has cherished here, lacks as yet an experience that would link him to the spiritual and the eternal with the most fervent sympathies of his being. All heavenly he may be in his temper and in his life; his faith may be strong, his hopp bright, his .union with Christ complete, but he wants that tender and endearing sympathy with heaven that comes from having there a parent, a child, a sister, a wife, and that gives to the un seen world a home like feeling and a pre sent reality. He who has caught the last affectionate breathings of the departing saint, who, even as from the other side of the river of death, has received the fare well greeting of faith, and love, and joy, has henceforth a new experience of things spiritual and heavenly; has a vested inter est in heaven, has a more assured hold upon its realities, and is a nearer partaker of its life. The gain of such an experience, the value of such a palpable and personal in terest in that world, may well mitigate, if it do not compensate, his loss. New links bind him to that great spiritual world of which he is a member, and of which he shall soon become more cognizant, when flesh and sense and all the external media of thought shall give place to the direct intuition of God and of the future state.— As each relationship of life—son, brother, husband, father—opens a new experience of sympathy and affection, so does this per sonal affinity with some already in the world of spirits—the marriage of souls that survives •the dissolution of earthly ties— bring with it a life-like experience of the unseen, the spiritual, the eternal that binds the soul more closely to its higher destiny, and imparts to it in hopes and aspirations an exceeding gain. Why art thou bur dened, 0, my soul, with the pain of earth ly loss ! Is not thy loss their gain whom thou diclgt love ? and if their gain is not thy gain also, who art forever linlied — to them as a partner of their blessedness ? J. P. Thompson. _ _ _ Level Up. It is better to level up than to level down. The average man grabitates down; ward with sufficient rapidity when left alone. Even the practice and principles of the Christian need• bckcing. The wise physician does not, in ordinary cases, ad minister laxatives continuously, nor with great frequency. He makes larger accounts of tonics. It is agreed, and by those who are not devoted to the dissemination of the principles of puritanism, that the age tends to laxness. Self-indulgence com mands the greatest host. Of Christians whose knees are weak, and whose arms are feeble, who go forth to battle with "sword of lath and shield of pasteboard," we have whole regiments. We want men and wo men in our churches and out of churches, who think of other things than how far it is safe to go in the direction of danger.— The age wants_v_eriebraLcolumns. In the prayer meeting, and the pulpit, in the home and the street, by the preaching of the life and..lips, of the voice and pen—be a tonic. Or, to come back to the original figure, level up.—Congregationalist. The Dying Never Weep. It is a striking fact that the dying never weep. The sobbing, the heart-breaking agony of the circle of friends around the death-bed call forth no responsive tears from the dying. Is it because he is insen sible and stiff in the chill of dissolution ? That cannot be, for he asks for his father's hand, as if to gain strength in the nibrtal struggle, and leans on the breast of his mother, sister or brother in still conscious affection. Just before expiring, he calls the loved ones, and with quivering lips says, "Kiss me !" showing that the love he has ever borne in his heart is still fresh and warm.. It must•be because the dying have reached too deep for earthly sorrows, too transcendent for weeping. They are face to face with higher and holier things, with the Father in Heaven and His angels. There is no weeping in that blessed abode to which he is hastening. Old Age Without Religion. Alas! for him who grows old without growing wise, and to whom the future world does not set open her gates, when he is excluded by the present. The Lord deals so graciously with us in the decline of life, that it is a shame to turn a deaf ear to the lessons which He gives. The eye becomes dim, the ear dull, the tongue falters, the feet totter, all the senses refuse to do their office, and from every side re sounds the call, "Set thy house in order, for the term of thy pilgrimage is at hand." Thy playmates of youth, the fellow la borers of manhood die away, and take the road before us. Old age is like some quiet chamber, in which, disconnected with the visible world, we can prepare in silence for the world that is unseen.—Tkolack. The Bible. Out of it have come all pure moralities, forth from it have sprung all sweet chari ties. It has been the motive power of re generation and reformation to millions of men. It has comforted the humble, con soled the mourning, sustained the suffering and given trust and triumph to the dying. The wise old man has fallen asleep with it folded to his breast. The simple cottager has used it for his dying pillow; and even the innocent child has breathed its last happy smile with its fingers between its promise-freighted leaves.