VOL. 47. The Huntingdon Journal, J. IL DURBORROW, PUBLISHERS ♦ND PROPRIETORS. I) . fiee MI the C•Jetter of Bath and Washington etreets, Tan HUNTINGDON JOURNAL is published every Wednesday, by J. R. DURBORROW and J. A. NA., under the firm name of J. It. DCRBORROW Jc Co., at $2,00 per annum, ix ADVANCE, or $2,50 if not paid for in six months from date of subscription, and $3 if not paid within the year. No paper discontinued, unless at the option of the publishers, until all arrearages are paid. ADVERTISEMENTS will Le inserted at TEN Coats per line for each of the first four insertions, end mu CENTS per line for each subsequent inser tion less than three months. 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JOB PRINTING of every kind, in Plain and Fancy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch.— Hand-bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice, and every thing in the Printing line will be execu ted in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Professional Cards. DR. F. 0. ALLMAN can be con sulted nt his office, at all hours, Mapleton, Pa. [marell6.72. TA CALDWELL, Attorney -at -Law, •-•M—/• No. 111, 3d street. Office formerly occupied by Messrs. Woods & Williamson. (ap12,71. TIE. J. C. FLEMMING respectfully offers his professional services to the citizens of Huntingdon sod vicinity. Office N 0.743 Wash ingtpn Street. may 24• DR. A. B. BRUMBAUGH, offers his professional services to the community. Office, No. 523 Washington street, one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. pan. 4,71. V J. GREENE, Dentist. Office re -1-1a• moved to Leister's new building, Hill street Pr-ttingdon. [jan.4,7l. Ct L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. ILA • Brt ;en's new building, No. 520, Hill St., Huntingdon, Pa. [apl2,'7l. A GLAZIER, Notary Public, corner A A • of Waahington and Smith street., Hun tingdon, Pa. [jan.l2'7l. IT C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law • Moe, No. —, Hill acroet, Huntingdon, Pa. [ap.19,71. SYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at v. • Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, Hill street, lime doors west of Smith. pan.4'7l. R. PATTON, Druggist and Apath y., • ocary, opposite the Exchange Hotel, Hun tingdon, Pa. Prescriptions accurately compounded. Pure Liquors for Medicinal purposes. Lu0v.23,*70. HALL MUSSER, Attorney-at-Law, • No. 319 11111' et., Huntingdon, Pa. Dan. 4,71. R. DURBORROW, Attorney-at r, • Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will practice in the several Courts of Huntingdon county. Particular tirtition given to the settlement of estates of deee- Office in he JOCIINAL Building. [feb.l,'7l. j W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law • and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa., Soldiers' claims against the Government for back pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attend ed to with groat care and promptness Office on Hill street. TZ ALLEN LOVELL, Attorney-at .‘- • Law, Huntingdon', Pa. Special attention given to COLLECTIONS of all kinds; to the settle went of Estates, &e.; and all other Legal Business prosecuted with fidelity and dispatch. _vet- Office in room lately occupied by B. Milton Speer, Esq. pan.4,'7l. ILES ZENTMYER, Attorney-at- Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will attend promptly to all legal business. Office in Cunningham's new Dan.4;71.. R. ALLISON MILLER. E. MILLER & BUCHANAN, DENTISTS No. 223 Hill Street, lIUNTINGDON, PA April 5, '7l-13. la 31. & M. S. LYTLE, Attorneys • at-Law,.lluntingdon, Pa., will attend to all kinds of legal business entrusted to their care. . ........ ........ Office on the south side of 11111 street, fourth door west of Smith. [jan.4,'T I. 121 f A. ORBISON, Attorney-at-Law, • Office, 321 Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. [may3l,7l. JO:I3T SCOTT. S. T. BROWN. J. Y. BAILEY ICOTT, BROWN & BAILEY, At torneys-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Pensions, and all claims of soldiers and soldiers' heirs against the Government will be promptly prosecuted. Office on Hill street. TW. NYTON, Attorney-at-Law, IIun • tingdon, Pa. °Mee with J. Sewell Stewart, Esq. [jan.4,7l. "WrILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney at-Law, Ilunti ngdon, Pa. Special attention given to collections, and all other 1 3gal business attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 227, 11111 street. [apl 9,7 1. Miscellaneous VXCHANGE HOTEL, Huntingdon, .I.LI Pa. JOHN S. MILLED., Proprietor. Jmivary 4,1571. C OLORED PRINTING DONE AT the Journal Office, at Philadelphia prices NEAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT, COR. WAYNE and JUNIATA STREETT UNITED STATES HOTEL, HOLLIDAYSBURG, PA 3I'CLAIN A CO., PROPRIETO.. ROBT. KING, Merchant Tailor, 412 Washington street, Huntingdon. Pa., a lit eral share of patronage respectfully solicited. A prill2, 1871. .EWISTOWN BOILER WORKS. _l-41 GEORGE PAWLING & CO., Manufac urers of Locomotiveand Stationary Boilers, Tank., Pipes, Filling-Barrows for Furnaces and Sheet Iron Work of every description. Works on Logan street, Lewistown, Pa. All orders pr.— , done a short 'iv..., attended to. Repairing [Apr 5,'71,1y.. AR. BECK, Fashionable Barber • and Hairdresser, Hill street, opposite the Franklin house. All kinds of Tonics and Pomades kept on hand and for sale. Cepa/71-Bin GO TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE For all kinds of printing. The Huntingdon Journal. Zlit Nom' ffletutr. Luoille's Mistake. The visit over, bidding her adieu, I took my hat, and bowing low, withdrew. Then, starting homeward, soon I missed my cane, Retraced my steps and rang the bell again. I heard a rush, the door flew open wide, And with a bound Lucille was at my side: Around my neck her lovely arms she threw, Kissed me. ye gods ! she kissed me through and through. Stock still I stood, not staring to return The glowing kisses that my lips did burn. I tried to speak, and gasped, "I clean forgot— I left my cane." She started as if shot, And cried, with sobs she vainly tried to smother, "Oh, dear! oh, dear! I thought 't was Dau, my brother. What shall I do ?" she asked me o'er and o'er; I lacked the courage to say, "Do it snore!" So, looking sheepish, seized upon my stick, And forthwith homeward trotted double quick. When on my conch, in vain I courted sleep, I tossed and pondered. "What wealth of love That girl possesses other girls above ! And if a brother she should hold so dear, What must a husband to ber heart appear ?" The idea grew, and—well, to end the tale, I sought her often, and to such avail That ere a twelvemonth its full course had run. I wood, I won her, and we twain were one. And once I told her that my love began The night she kissed me in mistake for Dan. "For Dan !" she said ; "why bless your stupid head, Poor Dan was safe and snug in bed." "You didn't know it?" "Why of coarse I did," And on my breast her blushing face she hid. Through all these years I did not onceregret My having fallen in the trap she set. happy nm I, and happy, too, I've made her, Although at times I laughingly upbraid her; And then she says, "The moral, dear, of this is, That girls don't often make mistakes in kisses:" J. A. NASII, In a Powder Magazine. WE had nut been many days at sea be fore my mind misgave me, and I began to dread an unfortunate termination to our I voyage, for matters had gone wrong from the very beginning. There had been trouble with the , crew, who seemed to have an idea that perennial drunkenness was the proper state of man's existence; and who, as long as sixpence lasted, obstinately re fused to go on board, in many cases, hav ing to be hauled from the wharf over the side like so much suspended animation. Then when we had been warped out in the river, and where lying awaiting the captain, we found that he had been taken suddenly and violently ill, so that a week's delay followed, ending in a fresh appointment, and the coming o a new captain—a man of quiet, genial aspect, whose presence seemed to augur a termination to our troubles, and he was welcomed accordingly. For a merchantman outward bound is by no means the paradiseexisting in the minds of ardent school boys, bitten with a long ing for a life at sea. Twenty-four hours of the life on boord and its discomforts effec tually sickened me ; but then I had chosen my vessel for reasons of ^^enomy, knowing that every five-pound note would be, per haps, of priceless value in my new home ; so I made up my mind not to be discon tented, but to bear all that fell to my lot. I had taken my passage to Buenos Ayres, with the full intention of roughing it for some years to come, and therefore, I argued that it would be cowardly to turn tail at the first trouble that fell to my Aar. But really it was trying work, in spite of the strongest determination. The sailors were soon in that pleasant state of despondent mystery which succeeds a long debauch, and, as if giving the unfortunate passen gers the credit of being the cause of their sufferings, lost no opportunity of visiting the said sufferings upon their heads : I said upon their heads, but the feet asfrequently suffered, buckets of water being dashed upon them—cf course accidentally—if we ventured on deck during holystoning times. We came to grief, too, over ropes, over the stowing of cargo, and in a variety of ways during those first days—our seagoingfriends looked upon us as an inferior race of beings, whom, as lubbers, it is their duty to afflict. But by dint of good temper, this was all pretty well got over, in time for the rough weather we encountered down channel, and right away across the Bay of Biscay; sufficiently bad to confine us all, sick and well, below hatches for many a dreary day of pitching and tossing, with the ship's timbers groaning and creak ing to a degree that seemed to threaten falling to pieces. Picture to yourself, you who have not been on shipboard, a gloomy, low-ceiled prison, with stout beams crossing every here and there, the light stealing feebly through the little windows, the air you breathe hot, foul and stifling, the hatch above you battened down, so that, save at special times, there is no communication with the deck, and nearly every fellow passenger either bemoaning his hard fate, or else groaning as he lies in the helpless misery of sea sickness. I think that if all the miseries of a rough voyage could be foreseen those who take trips to far off lands would be greatly reduced in number. A couple of days' respite came at last in the shape of fine weather, and in the reac tion produced by the bright sunshine and the free brisk air we breathed on deck, the troubles of the past were fbrgotten. The captain still seemed all that was pleasant ; but there was a flushed and heavy look in his countenance that I did not hke, and before long I had another opinion upon the subject, for in conversation I found that the second mate had been at the same school as myself, and together we went over the old days and compared notes, as I walked the deck with him far into his watch. The weather turned foul once more, but this time, through the mate, I contrived to stay on deck, when, to mysuprise, I found that the greater part of the duty was shift ed•on the chief mate, the captain seldom showing himself on deck. . _ Dan.4,'7l "Now I don't think it's from coward ice," said my friend to me, as we walked the deck that night, when the gale had somewhat moderated. "Of course this is in confidence." I nodded. "Well," he continued, "I don't know what to make of him ; sometimes I think he is mad. How he got appointed to this ship I can't tell. Mr. Ray don't say any thing, but he is one of those men who think all the more, and of course he'll be particularly careful least the captain should think that, as first mate, he is jealous be cause the command was not placed in his hand." khls-tf No more was then said, but beforemauy days had passed we found that the man who had been entrusted with a fine vessel, a valuable cargo and, mere than all, the lives of passengers and crew, was one of those beings who, not content with the enjoyment of the good things of this life, are in the habit of having intemperate out breaks, when the impulse to drink, com mencing perhaps with the stimulants taken in some time of peril, grows perfectly un controllable, and culminates at length in one of those horrible fits of mania known as delirum tremens. It was enough to make any landsman nervous as to our fate should the heavy weather continue; but there was still the satisfaction of knowing that the two mates were thorough seamen, who would, no doubt, take upon themselves the manage ment of the ship should there be any real danger. The feeling did not trouble me long, for, the weather again brightening, hope rose, and day after day glided pleas antly by. We saw but little of the cap tain, and only learned that he was confined to his cot by indisposition, the cause of this indisposition being only known to a few ; but. I could see that the first mate, Mr. Ray, looked more anxious thin usual, and, taking the opportunity of being on deck one night, I had a long talk with any friend, to learn that. the captain only recov ered from one fit to seek the means for bringing on another. "Pity we did not leave him behind alto gether," I said at last. "I've thought so a dozen times," said my friend, for the sailing with a madman on board does not suit my book." The days glided slowly by with varying weather. The hot latitudes were reached. There was a little horse-play as we crossed the line; then a shark was caught, and ;it times a dolphin or bonito • and at last, panting with the heat, we fay beneath the almost vertical rays of the sun, without a breath of wind to fill the sails as they hung from the yards, the vessel gently rolling in the swell as the sea heaved and fell without as much as a ripple visible. Rough cover ings were rigged up; but in spite of all that could be done to mitigate it the heat was unbearable, beating down upon our heads and reflected from the sea, which shone like a Vast mirror of polished metal. Gaping seams, with the tar oozing forth, rails and stanchions so heated that a hand could not be borne upon them, it was no wonder that we were constantly longing for the comparative cool of the night; but even then there was no time for the tem perature to grow much lower before the sun once more rose, each day apparently hotter than the last.. We were seated one evening, watching the last glow of the setting sun, when An derson, the second mate, made the remark that be thought a change was coming, and then our attention was taken up by Mr. Ray passing close by us and descending as if to the captain's cabin. "How has he been to-day ?" I said, as Mr. Ray disappeared. "Worse than ever," was the reply. "If I were Ray I'd make a prisoner of him and take sole command. He'd be quite justified in doing so." Further conversation was cut short by the appearance of the mate, who beckoned hastily to my companion. "Something wrong," he exclaimed as be leaped to his feet, and quite as quick I fol lowed him to the hatchway. "Good Heavens, Anderson !" exclaimed Mr. Ray, "what is to be done ? He is raving mad !" "lave you no medicines ?" I asked. "Medicines? Yes; but how are we to deal with a man in his state ? Just listen." In effect, as he ceased speaking, there came from below the sound of breaking chair., smashing Oasis and a noise of some one leaping from side to side of the cabin, fol lowed by alremendous battering at the door. "I have locked him in," said Ray, "for he is not fit to come oil deck. But get help and we will secure him and strap him into his cot." A short consultation was held, and then it was decided to call one of the seamen, a sturdy, quiet man, and to do all as quietly as possible, so as not to alarm the rest of the passengers and crew,,, Anderson fetched the old sailor, who came rolling up, turning the lump of tobac co in his mouth, and from his remarks it was evident that he bad been enlightened upon the business in band. _ "Ah," he growled, "what a thing it is us any one will go on wasting precious liquors and turning blessings into poison ! I knowed this would be the end of it." "Don't preach, man," said Ray angrily, "but come along. Now, look here," lie whispered. as we descended, "as soon as I open the door all step quietly in together. He'll dash at us the same as he dashed at me a while ago ; but he can only tackle one man at once, so that while he is en gaged the others must secure him." We had hardly nerved ourselves fim the task, and the mate was holding up his hand as a signal as he unlocked the door, when we were staggered by the sharp report of a pistol, simultaneous with which there was a dull thud close to my ear, and I started back with the knowledge that a bullet had just passed through the cabin door and whistled by my head. Then followed a loud, harsh laugh, followed by a couple more pistol shots, both of which passed through the pannel of the door. I need hardly say that we beat a retreat directly, and as we stood once wore on deck the first mate wiped the perspiration from his forehead and looked from one to the other, as much as to say, "What shall we do ?" It was, indeed a trying position, and foe a few moments no one spoke. Then Mr. Ray seemed to recover himself; and said quietly and firmly : "We should only be casting away our lives if we were to go in now. The only plan I can suggest is to watch him through the sky-light and go in when he is asleep." "I don't think he can do any mischief in the meantime," I said, "but we must seize him soon." "Mischief !" said the old sailor, dryly. "Well, I dunno ; but what if he keeps on popping off that revolver thing ? We shall be having a bullet in among the powder and a blow up." "Powder !" I said. Yea; in the magazine.". "Is there powder on board r I said, with a strange tremor in my voice, as I turned to Anderson. "Yes, a heavy lot of it," he said, husk ily ; and as he spoke he glanced involun tarily in the direction of the boats. Another shot made us all start, and now passengers and crew began to collect, eagerly asking what was wrong—questions, though, which, in dread of a rush to the boats, we forebore to answer. The peril, though, was indeed great, for in one small cabin, especially strengthened for its reception, a large quantity of pow der was stored, and if one bullet happened to pass through, the chances were that the heat evolved in its passage would explode it all, and in a moment the whole vessel would be blown to atoms. There were two courses open to us : to seize the boats at once, and push off, or to make a bold and manly effort to subdue the madman, in whose hands our lives seemed to hang. The same feeling must have pervaded all our breasts as we stood looking at one another, and then I saw the old sailor wet the palms of his hands andrub them gent ly together. HUNTINGDON, PA., MARCH 20, 1872 "We must run in on him, Master Ray," he said. "Could we not shoot him down through the sky-light'?" said the chief mate; and then. as if blushing at his own proposition, he added hastily : "No, no; that would be like murder. We must dash in upon him at all risks. But what's that ? Look out ! He is coming on deck." As he spoke, we heard the cabin door unlocked; then the rattling of keys and the crashing of a door, when Ray cautious ly peered down the hatch ; and as he kneeled there gazing down, I could see a tremor running through his whole frame, and when at last he turned to us, his voice was so husky as to be almost inaudible. "He has got into the powder-room !" he exclaimed. I shall never forget his countenance as he gazed up at us, fixed—rigid, to a de gree. For a few moments, horror and dread of impending death seemed to have robbed him of all power. Then he sprang up, the man once more. "Quick !" he exclaimed, "fur your lives :" Then leading the way, lie dashed down the cabin stairs. We followed him, but only to find our progress arrested by the closed door, which resisted all our efforts. "Listen !" whispered Ray ; and then he continued : "Good heavens, if he were to fire now !" The next moment there was a sound which seemed to make every nerve in my body thrill, and I frankly own that had my limbs obeyed my will, I should have rushed on deck, seized a coup or grating, and leaped over the side, for plainly to be heard came a sharp, cracking noise, and it wanted not the mate's word to enlighten us as he hissed "Lucifers !" "Here, quick, for God's sake !" exclaim ed Anderson. "Look here; we are forcing the wrong way at the door." He dragged at it, but in vain, for a few minutes, till, running on deck, the old sailor returned in au instant with a couple of marlin spikes, which were inserted just as we once more heard the crackling of a match. "Quick I it's for dear life !" cried Ray ; and the door crashed, gave way and flew open, to reveal to us, standing perfectly unmoved by our forcible entry, the captain, holding a lighted splint to an iron-bound cheat, which was already blackened and charred at the edge, For a few moments we could none of us stir. It seemed as if on the slightest mo tion on our part, the chest—which I after ward learned was filled with - cartridges for the supply of one of the petty armies en gaged in the Paraguayan war—would ex plode, followed by other chests and kegs piled around. Then came the captain's low chuckling laugh, and we heard him say: "This will drive you out, then, strong as you are." Then, with a gesture of impatience, he threw down the burnt-out splint, tool: a fresh match from the box he held, and was about to strike it, when with a cry that did not sound human, Anderson leaped upon him, and with one tremendous blow struck him down, tramplinc , on him the next moment as he applied his moist lips to the charred and smoking edge of the chest. The captain was not stunned, though ; and directly after a fearful struggle took place amid these kegs , my part being con fined to the securing of the match box, which I tore , from his hand, trembling as I did so, lest it would explode. Then came the lond'panting breathing of the wretched man as, held down by our four strong men, he bowed his body up again and again with a power that was almost super-human. But the danger was now passed; and without losing a moment, we dragged him out into his own cabin. Water was abun dantly applied to the charred side of the box ; and Mr. Ray's first act was to make the carpenter screw up the door in a way that restored confidence as every screw was driven in. I say his first act; for his sec ond was to sit down on the deck and cover his face with his hands, and remain in that position for fully an hour. Constant watching, binding, and the use of potent drugs placed the captain out of the reach of means to plaoe us again in peril. But though a breeze sprang upthe next day, and our well-manned ship pros perously finished her voage, I never lay down to sleep the rest of the time without a shudder, and never once dropped off without waking with a startfrom a horrible; dream of seeing the captain, match-box in hand, applying a light to the edge of the cartridge box—Chambers Journal. 4Eading for tilt Country Taverns I like country taverns! That is, some of them ! Some of them are good taverns for man and beast. But not good for a beast un less it had a man to care fin• it. These country taverns where a big fat man plays checkers and sleeps in the bar room in a chair beside a dog, while his pale, back-aching, sickly, over-worked wife picks chickens, washes dishes, makes dumplings, mends children's clothes, makes beds, sweeps out rooms, empties slops, patches her husband's breeches and scratch es his back for her board and two calico dresses a year. There is fun in stopping at seine coun try taverns— - Where they have but one towel for two persons, and that towel a cotton one. Where the windows rattle like a bag full of shin-bones struck by lightning. Where there is a four-quart water pitchr er full of settlings, and only a two quart slop vessel, and no place to empty it ex• cept in the stove. Where the curtains to the windows were only made by spiders, and all the world can look in to see you pull off your boots and things. Where the pillow is soft and dimpled like a fat baby's fist, and, if your ear be not covered with a postage stamp, the darned flimsey thing works into your head before morning, making you feel like a billy goat with the catarrh. *ere the feather bed is filled with hens' heads, pigs' toes; necks of parregoric vials, butternut shells, broken up pitcher han dles,-boot heels, spelling book covers, bro ken goose quills, roosters' tails and bits of carpet rags. Where the bedstead weaves to and fro like a timothy stalk with a bumble bee on the top of it, and the entire contrivance squeaks and groans when you get in, turn over or get out, like a jackass with the mumps. Where the under sheet was changed in June, and the upper one in January, all in the name of neatness. Where the covers are few and too short everywhere, except in the middle, and the wind blowing through a broken glass full and furious on your threadbare head. Where the stove in the corner is full of ashes, the wood too long for the stove, the sap not yet out of the wood, the kindling in the barn, and the boy to build the fire not yet hired. Where the landlord comes into your room without knocking, just as you have your head hid in the folds of a night-shirt, and says, "Never mind, it's only me ;" or asks if you know of anybody who wants to buy a good hotel. _ _ _ Where the matches are not to be found, and the only way to call a servant is to throw a water pitcher down stairs, break a door down, cry fire, and then take your pick from the astonished folks who come to see what is up. Where the little slice of soap smells of fish oil, so your hands washed with it makes you think your grandfather was a number 2 mackerel. Whre there is not a nail in the room on which to hang clothes, or a chair in which to sit while your wife is letting down her best back hair. Where the only glass or tumbler in the room is art empty soup•dish, and the water for cleansing teeth is thick and ropy, like the last will and testament of a drunken politician. Where they have rump-steak for ten derloin, melted lard for gravy, soggy po tatoes and fried pork in chunks, sailing in a dish of grease, as raw as when it first came into the world. Where the pepper-bas lid drops off into your eggs, the salt is at the other end of the table, the vinegar bottle carpeted in side with flies In soak, and the crackers covered with periods—so called. Where the pie-crust is a cross between tripe and juju paste. • Where the pancakes •Ire as white as a soap suds soaked thumb, or half filled with butter, like a boy's mouth with worms when he goeth forth to fish for bullheads. Where the table cloth is soiled and spot ted like a map of the Indian Archipelago, or a Chinese sailor just over the small-pos. Where the molasses jug has not been cleaned since the death of John Brown. Where the piece of meat brought on your plate is covered with grease, like a cross-cut saw on a winter morning. _ Where the plates are colder than the gable end of an ice house. Yes—l like countr' faverps—.that js some of them, False Friends The mean jealousy which hates the sue cess and prosperity of others, eminates from very narrow souls, and causes much unhappiness. There are many who can not endure to have others thought well of, by those whose good opinion and admira tion they crave themselves; and there are many more who really intend to do right, who are weak enough to, and be influenced by slander against an old apd tried friend. If one envies and secretly traduces, while another weakly or vainly listens to slander from the lips of a comparative stranger, against a friend of years' acquaintance— is either worthy of the sacred name of friend Y Such flimsy creatures are not capable of comprehening the gfeat signifi cance of the term. Deceitful smiles and caressess have something cold and clammy about them , which an earnest nature al most always feels ; but too often the snake coils itself around an nnsuspecting heart, with its deadly sting and poison, whithers its sweetest flowers, and destroys its most sacred treasures. It is unsafe to . open the heart, and allow strangers to enter—un happiness is so apt to follow. It is noble to rise above the attempted injuries of grovelling people; but each time one is deceived, each time a friend proves false, the honest hearted becomes a little more suspecting, with less ability to believe in such a state of perfection on earth, a real unselfish friendship Women generally sacrifice each other in the most wholesale manlier, if a man is in the question. Hoping to stand first in his estimation,• many women will slander their own sex to a man—even their best lady fi km]. They may not always lie in so many words, but false insinuations often cut deep er than any other weapon, and are the worst kind of lies. A person can seem to be just, so unwilling to injure another, and at the same time drop the venom which does its work effectually. Heaven defend and protect all honest people from friends who talk dreadfully mysterious things about them ! They would not for the world say anything against the friend, or reveal the dreadful secret they know, but if they were to tell, what earthquakes they mild cause in some houses ! Knowing all they do, they have often had hard work to keep their month shut, when questioned about strange appearances ; but they have done it, and base always defended their friend. They hope to be forgiven for the lies they have told to conceal facts, for they never told any for themselves. Oh, no! If there is a place being kept warns for the false and deceitful, there will be fresh stirring up of the perpetual fires, and a white heat produced for the purification of such unclean souls, when they pass over to the other side.—Elm °riot'. Longevity of a Good Deed Here is a neat little story from Ken tucky : About twenty-five years ago a young man from that State took a horse back ride to Virginia, where his father came from, and on his way he met a man and his family removing West, who were so poor as to be almost reduced to starva. tion. He had compassion on the wretched group, and gave them a $2O bill with which to reach their journey's end. In about fifteen years the young man received a letter from the man he had befriended, saying he was a prosperous merchant in Southern Kentucky, and enclosing a $2O bill to pay his loan. After another ten years, which included the great rebellion and its termination, he was elected to the Lower House of the Kentucky Legislature, and being a man of talent and influence, was chosen Speaker, in the contest for which he bad noticed that• a stranger, and one of the other party was his strongest supporter. His curiosity was aroused by this, and he asked the man's motive, as he never had, to his knowledge, seen him be fore. "Sir," replied the member, "memo ry will recall, when I mention it, a little scene that occurred when you were a boy on your way to Virginia. It was you who saved my wife from starvation. She told me time and again that never did a morsel of food taste so sweet, so unutterably deli cious as that you gave her then. She was just six years old at that time; but when she saw your name, during the late can vass, among the prominent probable can didates for the Speakership, she laid down the law as to how I was to vote. This is all. Neither she; nor her father and moth er, brothers and sisters, nor myself can ever forget you." [For the JOURNAL.] How Peter Green was Scared out of Getting a Wife. BY \V. 11. NV The narrative which I am about to write was told me, one bleak, cold night, in a country parlor. It was one of those nights in midwinter, when the wind sweeps over the land, making everything tingle with its frosty breath, that I was seated before a blazing fire, surrounded by a jolly half dozen boys, and an old bachelor—Peter Green—about forty and eight years old.— It was just the kind of a night without to make those within enjoy a good story, so each of us had told his favorite story, save Mr. Green, and as he was a jolly old fellow we all looked for a jolly story. We were somewhat surprised to hear him say, "I know of no story that would interest you," so we had to find other entertainment for a while, when one of the boys told me to ask him how it happened that he never married. So I did. "Well, gentlemen," he began, 'it don't seem right for me to tell how that happen ed, but as it is about myself, I don't care much. You see when I was young, we had to walk as high as five miles to church and singing school, which was our chief enjoyment. But this don't have anything to do with my not getting a wife, but I just wanted to show you that we had some trouble them days in getting our spor t.— John Smith and I were lik brothers, or like "Mary and her little lamb." Where one went the other was sure to go. So we went to see two sisters, and as we were not the best boys imaginable, the old gentle man took umbrage, and wouldn't allow us to come near the house, so we would take the girls to the end of the lane, and there we would have to take the final kiss. That's all we got for our eight miles walk. We soon grew tired of that sort of fun, and I told John, on our way to singing school, one night, that I was going to take Sadie home, and that I was going into the house too: He said the old man would rum me if I did. I told him I was going to risk it anyhow, let conic what would. He said he 'would risk it if I would.' So home we went with the girls. When we got to the cud of the lane j told the girls we pro posed going all the way. They looked at each other in a way I didn't like too well, but said they Cthe old folks) would be in bed, so they didn't care if we did. They were more surprised yet when I told them we thought of going in a little while, but as all was quiet when we got to the house, we had no trouble in getting into the kitchen. Then and there we had our first court, and I made up my mind to ask Sa die to be my wife the next time I come. It was now past the turn of the night, and as we had four miles to walk, I told John we would have to be going. So we stee ped out oh the porch, but just as we did so the sky was lit up by lightning, and One tremendous peal of thunder rolled along the heavens and crashed along the mountain sides. Its echo had not died out in the far off vales until the rain began to pour from the garnered fullness of the clouds. We waited for it to stop until we were all sleepy, when the girls said we should go to bed in the little room at the head of the stairs which led out of the kitchen, as their father didn't get up early we mild be home before the old folks were astir. So, after bidding the girls a sweet good night, and wishing them pleasant dreams, and promising them to come back on the next Saturday night, we started for bed. We didn't have far to go, as the bed stood near the head of the stairs. John was soon in bed, but as I was always a lit tle slow, and full of curiosity, I was look ing around the little room. At last I thought I would sit down on a chest which was spread over with a nice white cloth, while I drew off my boots. So down I sat, when stars of the east, I was plump into a big egg custard pie! I thought John would die laughing, for he said I bad smashed that custard all to thunder and the plate right in two. You see we had to be awful quiet so that the old man wouldn't hear us. I was now ready to get into bed, so I put the light out, and picked up my boots, thinking to put them in a more convenient place, when down my one foot went through a pipe -hole, which had been covered by paper, up to my very hip. Now one part of me was up stairs while the longest part was in the kitchen. As my leg was very long, it reached a shelf which was occupied by dishes, cans, coffee-pots, etc; and turning , it over, down they all went with a tremen dous crash. As the girls had not retired yet, I could now hear them laugh fit to split their sides. I felt awful ashamed, and was scared until my heart was in my throat, for I expected the old man every moment. I extracted my leg from the confounded hole just in time, for the old lady looked into the kitchen, from the room door, and asked 'what all that noise was about ?' The girls put her off as best they could, and I went to bed, while John was strangling himself, under the cover, to keep from laughing aloud. We soon went off into the land of dreams, with the hope of waking early. I wish I could tell you my dreams; but it would take too long. For one moment I would fancy myself by the side of Sadie, sipping nectar from her heaven-bedewed lips ; the next I would be flying from the old man, while he would be flourishing his cane above his head. This all came to an end by John giving me a kick. On waking up and look ing around I saw John's eyes as big as my fist, while the sun was beaming in at the window. What to do now we couldn't tell, for we heard the old man having fam ily prayers in the kitchen. John looked out of the window and said we could get down over the porch roof. 'Get out and dress as soon as possible,' he said. So in my hurry, my feet got fastened in the bed clothes, and out I tumbled, head foremost, turned over, and down the steps I rolled, from step to step, until I struck the door, which was fastened by a wooden button, and it giving way, out I rolled right in front of the old man! He threw up both hands, and cried, 'Lord, save us!' for he thought I was the devil. The old lady screamed until you could have heard her a mile. I was so scared and bewildered that I couldn't get up at once. It was warm weather and I didn't have any undercloth ing on but a shirt. When I heard the girls snickering it made me mad, and I jumped up and rushed out of the door, leaving the greater part of my shirt on the old iron door latch. Off I started for the barn, and when half way through the yard the old dog set up a howl and made for me. When I got into the barn-yard I had to run through a flock of sheep, and among them was an old ram, who backed off a little and started for me. With one bound I escaped his blow, sprang into the barn, and began to climb up the logs into the mow, when an old mother hen pounced upon my legs, picking me until they bled. I threw myself upon the hay, and after John had slid down the porch post into a hogshead of rain water, he came to me with one of my boots, my coat, and one of the legs of my pants. He found me perfectly prostrated. Part of my shirt, my hat, one leg of my pants, my vest, stockings, neck tie and one boot were left behind. I vowed then and there that I would never go to see another girl, and I'll die before I will." Crossing the Desert, One might imagine that the arid Sahara bad been the bed of some great sea, and that wearying of its burden of waters had refused to hold them, and been doomed for its rebellion never more to know the bless ing of its cooling and life-preserving pres ence. The ancients imagined that the desert was formed by wind spreading sand over the cultivated soil, and that the oases were spots of greater elevation and thus escaped, as the knolls are swept bare of sand which the drifting storm deposits in the low places. But instead of beinc , higher than the surrounding surface, the oases are depressions, and are of such a geological formation that the water from some hidden spring is retained, and a ver dure nourished which has won for them from the desert travelers the name of Islands of the Blessed. Were it not for these resting-places it would be impossible to traverse the desert even with the aid of an animal so wonderfully adapted to en dure the peculiar hardships, as is the camel. Supplied by nature with wonderful store places for food and drink, it can sub sist for a long time with but very slight nourishment. The hump which we in our childhood days imagined was especi ally provided to afford a seat for a rider, is a reservoir of fat from which the camel draws nourishment, so that sometimes when tho animal comes in from a long journey, the hump is greatly diminished. The countries adjoining the desert are al most as effectually separated as if a sea rolled between, and were it not for this "Ship of the Desert," as the poetical Arabs call it, the separation would be greater. The desert is the camel's home, he can eat the scanty herbage that springs up here and there, and which no other creature would deign to touch. His foot is so adapted to the sandy ground that he can travel without difficulty where a horse would fall exhausted on the yielding soil, before half his day's journey was accom plished. But stranger still is the wonder ful provision which enables these patient creatures to toil beneath the burning sun for days without drinking. They have been used in explorations in New Mexico and California, and the commander of one expedition testifies that the camels have carried water for the mules used by the men sometimes for more than a week with out tasteing it themselves. The general ignorance concerning the whole continent of Africa, and especially the desert portion of it, has afforded a strong temptation to such as have-penetra ted into its secrets to exaggerate them, and as we are becoming better informed, some of the traditions of the past are los ing their terror. Desert journeys are cer tainly not luxuriously comfortable, but they are probably attended with no severer suffering than has been experienced in mountain climbing, But men are less in clined to defy obataclos under a scorching sun whose enervating rays, reflected from the burning sand, acquire terrible power, than amid a cold and bracing atmosphere. Monsieur Ponehet graphically describes his approach to one of the deserts of upper Eypgt "The eye only sees an unbroken sheet of burning sand. And yet upon its bor ders I found, having the heat of the sun, and never refreshed by a single drop of rain, uumeroua tufts of an asclepiad, the large, moist, velvety haves of which glist ened with freshness. It was an inexplica ble problem. But this last effort of life soon disappears, and we see before us only an ocean of sand and a horizon of death. Not a cry, not a murmur is heard, and scarce even a loitering vulture devours the last fragments of some camel which has fallen on the sand, and the bleached skele ton of which will soon be added to so many others now marking out the desert routes. Not a cloud tarnishes the azure of the sky, not a breath refreshes the air; a sun, the ardor of which nothing moderates, pours down its sparkling light and fiery rays, burning even through one's clothes. The motionless and heated atmosphere tortures the face with its fiery breath, and even the sand attains an extreme heat. My thermometers being broken, I tried to as certain the temperature by plungino• ' my hands into the superficial layers, but at the end of a few seconds a stinging pain compelled me to withdraw them. The soil also, by reflecting the solar rays from the sparkling fragments of mica and quartz, sometimes becomes insupportably dazzling to the eye. "Instead of the rolling waves and the cool breezes of the sea, this funeral region only gives out burning gusts and scorch ing blasts which seem to issue from the gates of hell; these are the sintoon or poison wind, as the word signifies in Ara bic. The camel driver knows this formid able enemy, and as soon as he sees it loom ing in the horizon, he raises his hands to heaven and implores Allah; the camels themselves seem terrified at its approach. A veil of reddish black invades the gleam ing sky, and very soon a terrible and burn ing wind rises, bearing clouds of fine im palpable sand. which severely irritates the eyes, and makes its way into the respira• tory organs. The camels squat down and refuse to move, and the travelers have no chance of safety, except by making a ram part of the bodies of their beasts, and cov ering their heads so as to protect them= selves against this scourge." It is said that entire caravans have sometimes perished in these sand-storms, and it was one of them that buried the army of Cambyses when it was traversing the desert. The oases vary in size from such as are just large enough to afford a halting place for a small caravan, to those which are re ally kingdoms. Of the latter, Fezzen is one of the largest and most noted. Its population is variously estimated at from 75,000 to 150,000. The inhabitants are a mixed race, speaking a langua g e corrup ted from the Arabic. Far behindsurround ing nations in civilization, they devote themselves to raising and manufacturing the most indispensable necessaries of life. Caravans from the interior of Africa to the coast make here some exchange of mer chandise. Their chief traffic has been the slave-trade, Muzzuk, the principal town of Fezzan, being the great starting--point from the north for the interior of Negro-land. The most interesting of the oases which border on Egypt is that of Siwah, the an cient Ammonium, made famous in history by the visits of Cambyses and Alexander the Great. It is about six miles in length NO. 12. and two or three in breadth. The ground is highly impregnated with salt which in ancient times was purified for sacrificial purposes, and for the royal tat*, yet the production of fruit in sufficient quantities to form an important article of merchan dise, indicates a remarkable fertility of the soil. The ancient inhabitants who came partly from Egypt and partly from Ethio pia, brought with them the worship of the God Amnia, and an oracle was established there, to which kings repaired for counsel. The ruins of the temple are still to be seen and near them is the famous Fountain of the Sun, of which so many wonders have been related. Marvelous tales of its boil heat at night, and its icy coldness by day, come from the simple truth that like many similar tepid springs, retaining its' own temperature while that of the sur rounding atmosphere changes, it seems during the warm hours of the day to be quite cold, and in the cool hours of the night to be warmer than it really is. Although there is so much that is dis agreeable in a journey across the desert, there are some sights of beauty which can never be seen elsewhere. The mirage which entrances while it deceives the traveler, is no where else seen in such perfection, and the aurora of the desert is described as gorgeous in the ex treme. So there is no spot in this won derful earthly home of ours, so barren that God's touch bas not left its impress in ex quisite charms of color and outline.— Owls tine Weekly. Fiji Cannibals A private exhibition was given yester day by four Fiji island cannibals, at room No. 14, Astor house, under - the auspices of Mr. Barnum. to one hundred and fifty friends. He has obtained three of these by depositing $15,000 with the American consul as security for their return in Au gust 1873, to Throkambau, the king of the largest of the Fiji islands. In the event l of their return they are to suffer death and possibly to be eaten alive by peacemeal, ac cording to cannibal custom. Mr. Barnum. however, disclaims any intention of send ing them back to satisfy the demands of Fiji justice. A woman who had been ed ucated by missionaries, accompanied the agent to this country, through the advice of the Missionary society. She read r ai sages yesterday from a copy of the Bible printed in the Fiji language. The captives were liberally daubed with paint, and dis played ostrich and peacock feathers on their heads. They performed war dances to the accompaniment of monotonous songs. The dwarf. Ra Biau, who has the most fierce and treacherous aspect of them all, varied the entertainment by playing on a flute through his nose. The tune was as enliving as variations on two notes could pos sibly be. Mr. Barnum has lost none of his customary zeal in providing rare and ex pensive novelties for the patrons of his last great achievment. His Sea Lions, liv ing Giraffes, RIDING GOAT "Alexis," Black Leopard, ABYSINIAN VLACKE 'ARK, Moving. Musical and Mechanical Automatins, and last, though not least, the four FIJI CANNIBALS, and the Mueseuni Collection of Curiosities from the South Sea Islands, are sufficient of themselves to make a great show. But these are only a few of the many thousands of extremely rare and reherche attractions with which this show prince proposes to regale his customers throughout the country during the travelling season of 1872—New York Tribune of Feb. 24th. Lulu's Lesson "Here it is, mamma I Lu and 1 have watch• ed it every day. It is sweet as sweet can be. You will wear it mamma ?" Thus spoke the little pleader, bringing in her hand a timid pansy, the first spring nurs ing that she had watched, and now brought for mamma to wear. "And mamma, Ln says she wishes she had another, a prettier one, perhaps. Would it be wrong, mamma, would it be wrong tQ carry violets to Jesus T. "I cannot think it wrong, darling. The firstlings of the spring belong to him. You bring them to Jesus because you love him, because you desire him to wear them for your sake. Is this it, child ?" "Yes, mamma, " and the blue eyes filled. "I'll look close f or the next one ; and will he know if 1 bring it? Will he care 7" "Yes, child. lie will know, and he will care. The first of everything we should bring to Jesus. We may love him, and we may tell him so. He never tires of hearing us." "The first of everything I" ;vested the child. "Was that the reason you gave him Jessie, mamma ? If I had known it at the time, I shouldn't have felt so bad. Jessie was such a good little thing, I didn't wonder Jesus wanted her." A pang shot through the mother's heart. Jessie was the eldest of the group ; a timid, delicate child. Had she given her? Was it an offering that she yielded with a cheerful heart, or was it wrested from her? She could but own that since Jessie went, she had tried to walk closer ; the lamb in His bosom had won her to keep the path. "I've found a bud, there'll be another in a few days !" cried Lu, springing along the path. "I've asked mother; she says we may bring 'em to Jesus. He'll know." The mother's arms closed around the little ones. "Bring your flowers toJesus, and with them bring your hearts. The sweet fresh love of your childhood." - , lf he was only here to take them, mamma. Could we see him wear them," said Lu. "Bring your books, children. Let us read what he says." "Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blesseOf my Father, in herit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world : for I was a hunger ed and ye gave me meaf; I was thirsty and ye gave me drink; I was a strang er and ye took me in ; naked and ye clothed me ; I was sick and ye visited me; I was in prison and ye came unto me. Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee a hungered, and feed thee lor thirsty and gave thee driak ? And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me."—Christian Weekly. "I Would Rather Be Scolded than Tell a Lie." This was a noble reply which Augustus made, and one which we wish all boys would remember, when any one asks them to tell a falsehood. One day when Augustus was sent to a dairy by his mother, to get some milk in a pitcher, Robert wanted to go in his stead; and when they got into the street he tried to force the pitcher out of his brother's hand. Augustus held the pitcher fast, till at last it was broken in the scuffle, by falling on the ground. A person who was in the street, and saw how :t happend, came up and told him to say, when he got home, that the woman who sold the milk had broken the pitcher. Augus tus wiped his eyes, and looking steadily in that persoti's face, said, "That would be telling a lie ; I will tell the truth, then my mother will not scold me ; but if she should, I would rather be scolded than tell a lie." Facoatrrr mairie term - al the daughter of prudence, the sister of temperance, and the parent of liberty. EVNRY man has his weak side ; and it is very often the case that his weak side is the best part of the man.