VOL. 47 The Huntingdon Journal. J. R. DURBORROW, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS Office 0. the Corn, of Fifth and Waehington streets. Tula Hummonos Jounwat. is published every Wednesday, by J. R. DURBORROW and J. A. NASH, under the firm name of J. R. DURBORROW & CO, at $2,00 per annum, IN 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 wi:l be inserted at the rate of ONE DOLLAR for an inch, of ten lines, for the first insertion, end twenty-five cents per inch for each subsequent insertion lees 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, &0., 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, 14 F. GEHRETT, M. D., ECLEC -1-4,•TIC PHYCICIAN AND SURGEON, hay ing returned from Clearfield county and perma nently located in Shirleyeburg, offers his profes sional services to the people of that place and sur rounding country. apr.3-1872. DR. F. 0. ALLEMAN can be con salted at his office, at all hours, Mapleton, Pa. [march6,72. DCALDWELL, Attorney -at -Law, *No. 111, 3d street. Office formerly occupied by Messrs. Woods & Williamson. [apl2,ll. DR J. C. FLEMMING respectfully offers his professional services to the citizens of Huntingdon and vicinity. Office No. 743 Wash ingtpn Street. a may 24. DR. A. B. BRUMBAUGH, offers his professional services to the community. Moe, No. 523 Washington street, one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. Dan. 4,71. EJ. GREENE, Dentist. Office re • moved to Leister's new building, Hill street Peltingdon. [jan.4,'7l. (1 L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. 1.-4 • Brcwiee new building, No. 520, Hill St., Huntingdon, Pa. [apl2,ll. GLAZIER, Notary Public, corner • • of Washington and Smith streets, Jinn tingdon, Pa. Dan. 1271. C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law A A • office, No. —, Hill street, Huntingdon, Ps. - [up.19,'71. JSYLVA-NIIS BLAIR, Attorney-at • Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, Hill street, hree doors west of Smith. [jan.4'7l. R. PATTON, Druggist and Apoth- K. , • ecary, opposite the Exchange Hotel, Hun ingdon, Pa. Prescriptions accurately compounded. Pure Liquors for Medicinal purposes. [nov.V,'7o. T HALL MUSSER, Attorney-at-Law, rfi • No. 319 Hill st., Huntingdon, Pa. [jan.4,'7l. R. DURBORROW, Attorney-at t., • Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will practice in the several Courts of Huntingdon county. Particular attention given to the settlement of estates of dece dents. Office in he JOURNAL Building. [feb.l,'7l j W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law K. , • and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa., Soldiers' claims against the Government for back pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attend ed to with great care and promptness. Office on Hill street. Dan.4;7l. Tr' ALLEN LOVELL, Attorney-at .. • Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Special attention given to COLLECTIONS of all kinds; to the settle ment of Estates, ac.; and all other Legal Business prosecuted with fidelity and dispatch. Aff. Office in room lately occupied by R. Milton Speer, Esq. 8an.4,11. MILES ZENTMYER, Attorney-at- Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will attend promptly to all legal business. Office in Cunningham's new building. [jan.4,'7l. R. ALLISON WILLER. 11. MILLER & BUCHANAN, DENTISTS, No. 228 Hill Street, UUNTINGDON, PA, April 5, '7l-Iy. PM. & M. S. LYTLE, Attorneys ..A. • at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will attend to all kinds of legal business entrusted to their care. Office on the south side of Hill street, fourth door west of Smith. [jan.4,'7l. RA. ORBISON, Attorney-at-Law, • Office, 321 Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. [may3l/71. JOIIN SCOTT. S. T. BROWN. J. Y. BAILEY SCOTT, 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. [jan.4,7l. rp W. MYTON, Attorney-at-Law. Hun -A- • tingdon, Pa. Office with J. Sewell Stewart, Esq. Dan.4;7l. WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Special attention given to collections, and all other lsgal business attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 229, Hill street. [apl9,'7l. Miscellaneous GO TO THE JOURNAL OFFICE For all kinds of printing. EXCHANGE HOTEL, Huntingdon, Pa. JOHN S. MILLER, Proprietor. January 4, 1871. N EAR THE RAILROAD DEPOT, COR. WAYNE and JUNIATA STREETT UNITED STATES HOTEL, HOLLIDAYSBURG, PA M'CLAIN .4 CO., PROPRIETORS , L EWISTOWN BOILER WORKS. GEORGE PAWLING & CO., Manufac urers of Locomotiveand Stationary Boilers, Tanks, Pipes, Filling-Barrows for Furnaces, and Sheet Iron Work of every description. Works on Logan street, Lewistown, Pa. All orders pro,ntly attended to. Repairing done at short notiee. [Apr 5,'71,1y., Tite A. BECK, Fashionable Barber • and Hairdresser, Hill street, opposite the Franklin House. All kinds of Tonics and Pomades kept on hand and for sale. [ap 19;71-6in FOUNDRY FOR SALE on line of Railroad, in one of the beet agricultural re gions in Pennsylvania. For information inquire of T. A. POLLOCK, zaohl3,'72—tf.) Huntingdon, Pa. he Huntingdon Journal. TO ADVERTISERS J. A. NASi, :0: THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY MORNING 801 180 J. It. DITRBORROW ,t, J. A. NASH. Office corner of Washington and Bath Ste. HUNTINGDON, PA . THE BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA. :o: CIRCULATION 1700. HOME AND FOREIGN ADVERTISE MENTS INSERTED ON REA- SONABLE TERMS. A FIRST CLASS NEWSPAPER TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 per annum in advance. $2 50 within six months. $3.00 if not paid within the year. :o:-- JOB PRINTING ALL KINDS OF JOB WORK DONE WITH NEATNESS AND DISPATCII, AND IN THE LATEST AND MOST IMPROVED STYLE, SUCH AS POSTERS OF ANY SIZE, CIRCULARS, WEDDING AND VISITING CARDS, BALL TICKETS, PROGRAMMES, CONCERT TICKETS, ORDER BOOKS, SEGAR LABELS, RECEIPTS, .PHOTOGRAPHER'S CARDS, BILL HEADS, LETTER HEADS, PAPER BOORS, ETC., ETC., ETC., ETC., ETC., Mohls-tf Our facilities for doing all kinds of Job Printing superior to any other establish ment in the county. Orders by mail promptly filled. All letters should be ad dressed, J. R. DURBORROW & CO. I wouldn't give much for a girl who would follow Such fashions as our girls do— Who dress in the finest of silk, then be-ides Wear bracelets that shine as if new I wouldn't give much for this girl— Would you? I wouldn't give much for the girl whe would bend, As graceful as Grceianers do ; Who struts down the street to exhibit her feet, While the boys stand with eyes all askew ; I wouldn't give much for this girl— Would you? I wouldn't give much for the girl who would try To cut herself almost in two, With the hope that she'll o'erhear somebody say "That's a. nice little waist, I tell you;" I wouldn't give much for this girl— Would you ? And the girl who ought to wear shoes numberfour, Yet torture themselves with a two, And then wish the Boston limp, onward they go, With the grace of a kangaroo ;- 1 wouldn't give much for this girl— Would you ? I wouldn't give much for the girl who would cut Such extras as most of them do; Who tries to convince all the gents that their hump Is the natural flesh as it grew ; I wouldn't give much for all such— Would you? Married for Pity. THE bright, countless stars were dotted over ,he broad blue heavens, and the full moon had just thrown aside her dark cur tain and was flooding the earth with a sil very splendor. Every now and then the shrill cry of the night hawk and the wail of the whip-poor-will broke upon the silent night. The soft June air was heavy with the perfume of rare flowers, and, in the distance, the faint, musical sound of falling waters could be heard. It was a glorious night, and all lovers of nature would stand and gaze upon the scene, entranced, with mind and heart filled with the one thought, that the wonderful works of nature were the most beautiful and perfect of all works. Around the porch which surrounded this lovely home, numerous rose-vines, and rich foreign plants, trailed their luxuriant branches and gave forth their sweetest perfumes. At one end of the porch, entirely con cealed from view by the dense shrubbery, sat a young girl. The pure moonlight, falling across her face, revealed the fine, delicate features, and heavy light hair, brushed away from the broad white brow and worn in a wavy mass over her shoul ders. Her thoughts were pleasant ones, for a sweet smile hovered around the rose-bud lips, and the soft brown eyes shone resplen dent with happiness. This slender, white-robed girl, was Vir gie Atherton, the child-wife of Col. Ath erton, a wealthy young merchant. Her husband had gone to Philadelphia to meet a viand, - and knowing that I[e' would soon return, she had come out to wait for him. She was toying with the roses she bad gathered, crushing their scented leaves between her little white hands, thinking herself the happiest girl in the world. She loved Morris Atherton from the first mo ment she had looked into his kind eyes.— It was only one short month before, on her fifteenth birthday, at her father's death bed, that she had met him. She bad been summoned hastily from the distant Academy to receive, for the last time, her only parent's blessing. . . eoi. Atherton was withher father when she arrived, and upon him fell the task of soothing into quietness her wild grief. As is often the case, Mr. Ingram's in come ceased at his death, and when the funeral expenses would be defrayed and all debts discharged, there would remain but three hundred dollars for the orphan. With his dying breath, John Ingram commended his daughter to the care of Morris Atherton, and begged him to pro mise that he would never see her want. Col. Atherton gave the required promise, adding with much emotion, "John, your daughter is a sweetgirl, and if she will consent, I will marry her to-night, and by this means have a right to protect and care for her all my life." John Ingram grasped his young friend's hand, and silently thanked him. Canino. ' his daughter to his bedside, he said in abroken voice: "Virgic, my dar ling child, you know that I must die, and when I'm gone you'll be left alone, with out one friend in the world. Morris Ath erton will make you his wife, if you'll consent, and, oh ! my child, it will make my death so ninth happier, to know that there is some one who will love and care for you when I'm gone." He fell back among the pillows exhaust ed. His weeping daughter bent over him, and kissed his pale brow softly. The shy, timid girl looked up at the tall, handsome Colonel, and meetinc , his warm glance, her eyes drooped and the color leaped into her pale cheeks. She had known him scarcely a day, and yet she loved him. Placing her little hand in his, she said in a trembling voice: BUSINESS CARDS, "I Will obey papa, and, if you wish it, I will become your wife.". Col. Atherton raised the hand to his lips, released it, and left the room imme diately to go in search of a minister. In a short time he returned, accompa nied by the Rev. James Southerton.— Standing by the bedside of Mr. Ingram, they were made man and wife, and receiv ed the dying man's blessing upon their union. LEGAL BLANKS, When all was over, Morris Atherton took his child-bride to his beautiful coun try home in Pennsylvania, and by his gen tle kindness to her, soon taught her to think but lightly of her recent loss. Eve ry day her love for her husband grew stronger, and her life with him was one long, happy dream. "Oh! dear, I wish he would come ; I'm so lonely." murmured Virgie Atherton, half aloud, tossing back her hair, with a slight show of impatience. Suddenly she started, and leaned eager ly forward, as the sound of voices broke upon the still air. She instantly recogni zed one as that of her husband, and the other must be the friend whom he had gone to the city to meet. The speaker paused for a moment, a short distance from where Virgie was sit ting. PAMPHLETS, But, Morris," said the strange voice, "what tempted you to marry if it was not love ?" "It was pity, Harry; Virgie was such a sweet, timid child, that I shuddered at the thought of one so young and pure strug gling alone in this wicked world. I thought in time I would learn to love her, but she is such a mere child that I fear I have ht ".: unto' courtr. I Wouldn't! Would You? Zhe cOtorg-Zelltr. HUNTINGDON, PA., JUNE 5, 1872 done wrong in binding her young life to mine. In time she would have met some one who would love her as she deserves to be loved. But I fear that I will never teach myself to love her." , But come, Harry, let's go in, or Mrs. Atherton will begin to think we are never coming." They passed on and entered the house. Virgie Atherton sat as motionless as a marble figure ; her face looking stern and deadly pale in the clear moonlight. A few short moments before she was one of the happiest mortals on earth; now she was miserable. Her husband, whom she loved better than her life, did not care for her. He had married her for pity. Her scarlet lips wreathed themselves in a scornful smile, as she slowly repeated the word.— Her heart was filled with a wild anguish. So keen and bitter was her grief that for the moment she cared not whether she lived or died. She rose, and entered the house, silently seeking her own room. She hid left it so short a time before, a light-hearted, happy child ; now she stood within its walls again, a broken-hearted woman. Her heart was dead ; from its ashes had sprung a cold, hard heart, that would require many years of waiting to warm it into lore again. She stood for a moment before the glass, drooping some scarlet flowers in her hair, and then she went down to welcome her husband's guest, her plain white dress sweeping after her with every turn of her slender, graceful figure. She was very pretty, with a proud, high-bred look about her, that instantly proclaimed her a lady. And all who gazed into her soft brown eyes, found in them a strange attraction. Ner husband rose as she entered, and introduced Harry Hoffman. She welcom ed him in a graceful, dignified manner, which was highly pleasing to Col. Ather ton. Soon she was chatting as freely and pleasantly as though she had known him all her life. Shortly after, at her hus band's request, she seated herself at the piano and began to sing; she was a fine singer, but to-night she surpassed herself; clear and beautiful as the notes of the lark at early noon, rose the sweet voice, floating through the room and out on the still night air. Morris Atherton was astonish ed, and a feeling of pride rose up in his heart, that she was his wife. When she had finished, Mr. Hoffman approached the piano, and complimented her so highly that the color burned in her pale cheeks. The evening passed very pleasantly, and when Virgie had retired Harry turned to Morris Atherton, saying : "By George, Morris, you've got a sweet little wife.— She's a real beauty; if I was sure of win ning such a jewel, I would get married tomorrow; but those kind of wires are scarce now-a-days." "Yes, Virgie is a good girl," replied Morris, coolly, turning the leaves of a book. Another month passed slowly, and as yet there was no visible change in the youno• ' wife's manner; she was the same gay, happy, bright-eyed spirit that had first made the dreary home of Morris Ath erton a carve 6 plea". No eabo dreamed, while gazing upon her bright young face, that her heart was slowly breaking, with a keen, bitter grief. But a change was taking place in Mor ris Atherton ; in his heart there was spring ing up a warm, earnest love for his sweet girl-wife. . _ Returning from his office one evening, he thought: "I will tell Virgie how dear she has become to me, my little treasure, how dreary and desolate would be my life without her." When he entered his house his wife did not run to meet him, as was her usual cus tom, and thinking that she was in her room, he went in search of her; but she was not there. Coming down again he in quired of the cook, if Mrs. Atherton bad gone out. . _ _ "Yes, sir," replied Jane, ''she started this morning, just after you left. I think she must have received some bad news, for when she told me that she would not be back to-night, she could scarcely speak for crying. She told me to give you this let ter when you returned, sir." He took the letter, and tearing it open, read the contents, which ran as follows : MY 111:913A.ND:—Before you receive this I will be many miles away, out in the world, alone. On the evening that Harry Hoffman arrived. I heard you tell him that you did not love me, and that pity prompted you to marry me. Since then I have waited, with a bitter pain on my heart, praying that you would learn to love me ; but it was in vain. The love I feel for you will last forever; I will never love again. Seek not to find me, fur I serer will return. Good-hy, and God bless you, is ever the prayer of Vintae. Morris Atherton stood motionless, with pallid face, and wide standing eyes, crush ing the letter in his hand. She was gone, his Virgie, his sweet young wife, gone—just when he had real ized how dear she was to him; out in the cold world, without a friend. "I will search for her," he exclaimed; "tell her how fondly I love her, and make her come back to me. Oh ! Virgie, Vir gie, what have I done !" He buried his face in his hands, and his strong frame trembled with suppressed emotion. Weeks lengthened into months, the months into years, and still the weary search was continued without success. No trace of the young wife could be discovered. Ten years have passed since last we saw Col. Atherton ; but time in its passage has dealt gently with the handsome Colonel, and the added years left not a wrinkle upon his noble face. He was standing in the centre of a group of ladies and gentlemen. in the splendid reception room of one of New York's most prominent statesmen. "Colonel," said one of the gentlemen of the party, "have you been introduced to Miss Burdell, the distinguished young au thoress ? I am told that she is to be here this evening." "No, sir; I've not had the honor, al though I should be delighted to form her acquaintance," replied Cu!. Atherton. "Look, there she is, leaninn. ' on the arm of Judge Seighbert," exclaimed another of the party. Miss Burdell was a tall, stately looking girl about twenty-five. She had a face of surpassing beauty, its marble-like white ness only relieved by the vivid crimson coloricg of her sweet lips, and the lustrous brightness of her large brown eyes. She wore a rich dress of pale blue silk, with white flowers in her dark brown hair.-- There was an air of sadness about the sweet face which one could not fail to observe. "Col. Atherton, Miss Burdell," said Mr. Lewis, presenting Morris Atherton to the young authoress. They looked into each others eyes for an instant. Morris started and cast a keen, searching glance upon Miss Burdell ; she bowed and passed on, while Morris Ather ton turned aside to hide the look of pain which swept across his face. Why had this young lady affectal him so strangely ? Her presence had torn open the wound which he had thought was heal ed forever, her eyes were so like his young wife's; his lost Virgie. Ten years had flown since she had left him, and yet the wound was still fresh. Calling upon an old friend one evening shortly after, he was surprised to meet Miss Burdett. It was her home, and in a short time Morris Atherton became a reg ular visitor. Miss Burdell treated him kindly, but gave him no encouragement. She was distant with all, and appeared to have no desire for gentlemen's society.— She rarely ever laughed, and many called her the "woman with no heart." Morris Atherton called one evening, and finding her alone, he informed her that he was about to start for Europe in a few days. He watched her face eagerly to see if she evinced any sign of regret at his de parture. She looked up quickly, and Morris. saw a tear sparkling in the brown eyes. He took her hand, saying in a qui et voice, "Miss Burdell, may I tell you the story of my life?" Yes, I would be delighted to hear it !" she replied in a slightly tremulous voice. "Ten years ago," he began, "at the age of dirty, I married a young girl of fifteen.— The marriage was performed at the death be of her father. It was pity prompted me to make her my wife, but it soon ri pened into a deep, earnest love, before I became aware of the true state of my feel ing toward her. I thoughtlessly mention ed to one of my friends what motive had prompted me to marry such a child, and she overheard the remark. One month after ' she left our home, and I have never seen her since. I love you, Miss Burdell, but it is because you possess my lost dar ling's eyes. I would not ask you to share a divided heart, for I love Virgie best.— Yon are the first person to whom I have told the sad story, and now I will say good-by, perhaps forever." Niss Burdell raised her eyes, and looked at him steadily for a moment, then leaning forward, she exclaimed in a sobbing voice, "Oh ! Morris, don't you know me, lam Virgie, your wife !" He opened his arms and clasped her to his heart, his long lost treasure. Winding her arms about his neck, Virgie wept tears of wild, happy joy. For ten long, weary years she had wait ed and prayed for this meeting. When she met him at Mr. Dolton's reception, her heart threw off its icy bondage and throb bed again with the passionate love of years ago. She would not make herself known to him, she would wait and see if he was still true to the memory of his wife, who had been as dead to him for so many years. The second time that she met him, she knew that he loved her, and the knowledge filled her heart with a sweet, inexpressible joy. At last, Oh ! at last! the yearning wish of her heart was satisfied, her hus band loved her. When her sobs had become less frequent her husband raised the drooping head, and looking into the beautiful eyes of his wife, asked, "Why did you leave me, my darling? Oh! Virgie, if you had but waned a few short hours, you would have learned how dear you were to me, and all the bitter anguish of those long, weary years would have been saved." "I could not wait any longer Morris, the thought that you could not love me, was slowly killing me, and I knew that it was better for us to part. I was possessed of the same talent as my father, and I would try to support myself. I went di rect to New York, and with the few hun dred dollars left me by my father, I man aged to live until I found a publisher for my articles, I assumed the name of Bur den, and dragged out a weary existence, living in hope that we would meet and that you would learn to love me. God has answered my prayer ; Oh ! Morris, my husband !" He drew the slender figure closer to his side, and kissed her softly, gently. Back to their lovely home in Pennsyl vania, went Morris Atherton and his beautiful wife, to spend their days in peaceful joy. Beautiful children cluster around their hearth-side, and love and happiness reigns supreme. atentling fur th Sonography, A hopeful philosopher thinks the time may come when a man's words will be made to write themselves down automati cally as fast as they come from his lips— when a speech will yield a sound picture, or a sonogram, that we may gaze upon, as we do now the notes of music. Light, he says, is a wave motion, and the chemist has found a substance which the waves, as they dash against it, can transform or transmute, and so we have got photo graphy. Sound is a wave motion ; its waves are as breakers—lights are as rip ples ; the former large and slow, the lat ter small and rapid. Since we have got the substance that is impressible by the little weak waves, why should we despair in finding substance that will alter under the influence of the great strong ones ? We can make a lamp-glass ring with the voice pitched to a certain note ; soon we may cause the same sound to vibrate a body that will make a mark on paper while it swings, and then we make another work ing body vibrate to another sound, and so on up the gamut. Thus we shall get an apparatus which will mark the notes of a melody each as it is sung ; and after this it is not difficult to conceive a series of vibrations, each attuned to one of the few separate and distinct sounds the human voice can utter. Here will be an analogue to the photographic camera. Placed be fore a speaker, such an apparatus will son ograph all he has to say. Queer. Mistakes There are in Dorchester, says a corres pondent, twin brothers, whose resemblance to each other is so strong that strangers can hardly tell them apart. They keep a grocery and provision store, and were one day bringing in bags of meal from a wagon, which was out of sight from inside the store. Nathan had his coat on, but Eli was in his shirt-sleeves. A stranger in the shop watched them coming in and going out one after the other, but only one was visible at a time, and at last he ex claimed to Eli, "Well, you're the smartest man I ever saw, but why do you keep put ting on and taking off your coat ?" These brothers and several other men were in the habit of getting up very early and go ing to swim in the "reservoir pond," and once Eli going, as was his wont, to Na- than's house to call him, by tapping on the pan, saw his own face reflected from the glass, and taking it for his brother, called out, "Come on ; they're all waiting for you." The General Laws, The whole makes a pamphlet of seven ty-five pages and contains forty-nine acts, not more than one twentieth part of the legislation of the last session. For every general law that was passed at least twen ty private or s7ecial acts were granted, nearly always prejudicial to the public good. Some of the general laws are very important, and their existence on the statute book should be made public. From an exchange we copy an abstract of them : Enlarging Powers of Common Pleas. No. 6—Enlarges the powers of Courts of Common Pleas so as to authorize them M incorporate gas and water companies, market and town-halt companies, and so cieties for the protection and preservation of birds, fish and game. Married Women and Sewing Machines. No. 7—Permits married women to con tract for the purchase of sewing machines for their own use, without the husband joining in the contract. Monument to Promoters of Common Schools. No. B—Authorizes the appropriation of a site in the Capitol grounds fur a monu ment to be erected by the State Teacher's Association "to the memory of the chief fuunders and most distinguished promo ters of the common school system of Penn sylvania." Liquors on Election Day. No. 11—Prohibits the selling or giving away, by tavern or saloon keepers, of any spirituous or malt liquors, on any general or special election day, during the time the polls are kept open—under penalty of fine and imprisonment. Ejectment Suits. No. 22—That whenever, in any action of ejectment, a non-suit or judgment for defendant shall be had, the defendant may enter a rule upon the plaintiff to sue out a writ of error thereon, within one year ; and if plaintiff shall fail to do so, he shall be forever debarred ; and thereupon de fendant may enter a rule upon plaintiff to show cause why he should not bring a second action within one year from the de termination of the rule ; and if no good cause for delay be shown, the rule shall be made absolute ; and upon the expiration of the year the plaintiff shall be debarred from bringing any action upon the same title. Earnings of Harried Women. No. 24—Secures to married women their separate earnings, either of labor, business or property, free from any legal claim of the husband, or his creditors. To prevent fraud, before any married woman shall be entitled to the benefits of this act, she must first petition the Court of Common Please therefor, which petition shall be entered on record. Preferred Stocks. No. 28—Authorizes any company in corporated under the general law, with consent of a majority in interest of its stockholders, to issue preferred stock shall be entitled to such dividend not exceed ing twelve per cent, as the directors may prescribe, payable out of the net earnings, and the holders of such preferred stock shall not be liable for the debts of the company. Execution Attachments. No. 25.—Where execution attachments issued from court, attaching debt, money, stocks, or other property in the hands of persons, or corporations as garnishees. and where proceedings have been stayed on the judgment, from any cause, defen dant may file a bond, with sureties, condi tioned that the defendant shall pay to plaintiff, on the determination of the case, whatever amount shall be due by the gar nishees, whereupon the garnishees shall be discharged from further liability. The cause may be prosecuted to final judg ment, but the defendant and his sureties shall be alone liable for judgment and costs. Wages of Mechanics and Laborers. No. 40—Provides that all moneys due any miner, mechanic, laborer, or clerk, from any person or chartered company, owing or leasing any mine, manufactcry or other business, for any period not ex ceeding six months procoding the sale or transfer of such works, by execution or otherwise, preceeding the death or insol vency of such employers, shall be a lieu upon the property, and first paid out of the proceeds of the sale; provided the claim does not exceed two hundred dol lars, ana shall be filed as mechanics liens are now filed. Labor Statistics. No. 46—Provides for the appointment, by the Governor, on or before the first Monday of May, inst., and biennially thereafter, a suitable person to act as Chief of the Bureau of Labor Statistics and of Agricultuture, who shall collect and systematise statistics with reference to labor in its relation to the social, educa tional, industrial and general interests ; the condition, wages and treatment of all classes of our working people, and the ef fect of the same upon the permanent pros perity and productive industry of the commonwealth. Statistics relating to the mineral, manufacturing, agricultural and commercial productions of the State, shall also be collected and classified, and report thereof made to the Legislature. The Commissioner of Labor Statistics shall be paid a salary of two thousand dollars an nually, and shall appoint an assistant at a salary of fourteen hundred dollars. Want in Life. There is nothing more fortunate for moderate genius than to be born poor. The "silver spoon" class are a very com fortable people, no doubt, but the great trouble with them is, their education is mainly of this order, and if they don't be come very great they are extremely likely to become the very opposite. There is no middle ground for them, for they were not taught to regard any, and consequently, they are, as a general thing, unfit for it. Poverty has helped men to solve some of the greatest problems of life. Half its brave deeds have been a necessity, and the most of its noble sayings have been born of a determined opposition. It does a man good to put him at his wits' ends. Emer gencies make men. Any man can be a general or a pilot in a calm.; but storms show the mental. Reputation is made more by boldness and will, than by ability and patience. Life is too short to wait for the tide whose ebb leads on to fortune. We must make the most of present oppor tunites, but we shall hardly do it, unless present opportunities are in the main pres ent necessities. The man who works out these to the fullest extent is the most suc cessful man. Dangerous Telegraphy. Two young men, telegraph operators, boarding at one of our leading third-class hotels, find great amusement in carrying on conversation with each other at the ta ble by ticking on their plates with knife, fork or spoon. A combination of sounds or ticks constitute the telegraphic alphabet and persons familiar with these sounds can converse thereby as intelligently as with spoken words. A few days ago, while these fun-loving youths were seated at breakfast, a stout-built young man entered the dining-room with a handsome girl on his arm. whose blushing countenance showed her to be a bride. The couple bad, in fact, been married but a day or two pre vious, and had come to San Francisco from their home in Oakland, or • Mud Springs, or some other rural village, for the purpose of spending the honeymoon The telegraph tickers commenced as soon as the husband and wife had seated themselves. No. 1 opened the discourse as follows : "What a lovely little pigeon this is along side of me—ain't she ?" No. 2. "Perfectly charming—looks as if butter wouldn't melt in her month. Just married. I guess ; don't you think so ?" No. I. '•Yes, I should judge she was. What luscious lips she's got ! If that country bumpkin beside her was out of the road, I'd give her a hug and a kiss just for luck." No. 2. Suppose you try it, anyhow. Give her a little nudge under the table with your knee." There is no telling to what extent the imprudent rascals might have gone, but for an amusing and entirely unforeseen event. The bridegroom's facehad flushed and a dark scowl was on his brow during the progress of the ticking conversation ; but the operators were too much occupied with each other to pay any attention to him. The reader may form some idea of the young men's consternation when the partner of the lady picked up his knife and ticked off the following terse but vigorous message : "This lady is my wife, and as soon as she gets through with her breakfast I pro pose to wring both your necks—you inso lent whelps." The bridegroom was a telegraph opera tor and knew how it was himself.—San Francisco Oironcile. Educating Girls. Educating girls for household duties ought to be considered as necessary as in struction in reading, writing, and arithme tic, and quite as universal. We are in our houses more than half of our existence, and it is the household surroundings which affect most largely the happiness or misery of domestic life. If the wife knows how to "keep house," if she understands how to "set a table," if she has learned how things ought to be cooked, how beds should be made, how carpets should be swept, how furniture should be dusted, how the clothes should be repaired, and turned and altered, and renovated ; if she knows how purchases can be made to the best advantage, and understands the laying in of provisions, how to make them go farthest and last longest, if she appreciates the importance of system, order, tidiness, and the quiet management of children and servants, then she knows how to make a little heaven of home—how to win her children from the streets; how to keep her husband from the club-house, the gaming-table and the wine cup. Such a family will be trained to social respecta bility, to business success, and to efficiency and usefulness in whatever position may be allotted to them. It may be safe to say that not one girl in ten in our large towns and cities enters into married life who has learned to bake a loaf of bread, to purchase a roast, to dust a painting—to sweep a carpet, or cut and fit and make her own dress. How much the perfect knowledge of these things bears upon the thria, the comfort and health of families, may be conjectured, but not calculated by figures. It would be an immeasurable ad vantage to make a beginning by attaching a kitchen to every girl's school in the na tion, and le: sons given daily in the prep aration of all the ordinary articles of food and drink for the table • and how to pur chase them in the market to the best ad vantage, with the result of a large saving of money, an increase of comfort, and higher health in every family in the land. Sewing Machine Sales for 1871 , The magnitude to which the sewing ma chine business has grown is only surpassed by the rivalry of the various competitors, few of whom are unfamiliar with the nu merous artifices resorted to for the com mendation and sale of the particular ma chine sought to be sold. If the number of sales be any criterion of merit, the Singer seems to bear the palm, as shown by sworn returns of the companies, made under the licenses granted them by the owners of the sewing machine patents, and which are as follows : THE SINGER MF'll C0...501d 181,260 Machines Wheeler .t Wilson Mf'g Co.. " 128,526 Grover & Baker S. Al. C 0... " 50,838 " Weed S.M. Co " • 39,655 Bowe Machine Co. (Jan. 1, " to July 1.) .. " 34,010 Wilcox & Gibbs S. M. " 30,127 Wilson S. M. Co " 21.153 Amer. B. H. 0. &S.M. Co " 20,121 Original Howe S. N. Co 20,051 Florence S. M. Co 15,947 Gold Medal S. M. Co 13,562 11.565 Davis S. M. Co. 10,397 Domestic S. M. Co. Finkle & Lyon birg C 0... /Etna S. M. Co. 4,557 Blees S. M. Co Elliptic S. M. Co " 4,555 " Empire S. M. Co " 2,965 " Parham S. M. Co " 2,056 " The Chicago Relief Committee's returns show a like result : THE SINGER Wheeler & Wilson — Howe Grover £ Baker Wilcox & Gibbs Florence Finkle & Lyon Blees /Etna Wilson Western Empire Manhattan Davis Elliptic Gold Medal American Button-Hole We are told that the applicant in every case has designated the kind of machine desired.—New York Daily Witness. A MAN from one of the rural districts recently went to Washington to see the sights. A member of the House, whose constituent he was, said : "Como up to morrow and I will give you a seat on the floor of the House." "No, you don't !" replied Johathan ; I alway manage to have a cheer to set on at home, and I bet I hain't come to Wash'n'ton to sit on the floor ! Injuns may do that when they come, if they like, but I, that am civilized, don't do it NO. 23. Around the Fireside. Let every one who has the privilege of one foot of ground raise some flowers. Nothing so beautifies the homestead or ren ders the heart light and happy as beauti ful, sweet, fresh flowers. Cultivate politeness in the home circle. Manners, says the eloquent Edmund Burke. are of more importance than laws. They give their whole form and color to our lives. According to their quality, they aid morals; they supply them or to tally destroy them. A real impetuous laugh dissipates many illusions, sweeps the twilight out of our imaginations ; and brings honest daylight. No dry, hacking laugh. It should be spon taneous. We have seen men fall to laugh. ing, who had not heard the cause of mirth, but only had caught the contagion of oth er men's laughing. It is hard not to laugh with men who are in earnest about it. A neat, clean, fresh, cheerful, sweet, well-arranged house exerts a morsl influ ence over its inmates, and makes the mem bers of a family peaceful and considerate of each other's feelings and happiness. The connection is obvious between the state of mind thus produced and respect fir others and for those higher duties and obligations which no law can enforce. On the con trary, a filthy, squalid, noxious dwelling, in which none of the decencies of life are observed, contributes to make its inhab itents selfish, sensual, and regardless of the feelings of others. Get a small covered basket—loosely made wicker work is the best. Mix oats, grass seed, clover and peppergrass, or a:- most any other small seed handy, with earth, fill the basket, tie the cover tightly down and leave strings so that it may be hung in the air with either side up. It only needs occasional watering to put forth a wildness of green shoots that within two weeks will hide the basket, and when these are kept tamed down it makes one of the prettiest oddities imaginable. Sometimes little children come to us, bringing in their tiny hands the keys to the kingdom of Heaven. The man whose heart was perhaps growing hard in the struggle of life—who unconsciously was becoming worldly; whose face, practised in meeting men, was gradually becoming rigid in its outlines ; whose keen eye was losing its tenderness—has been sent to him these sweet little angels as a voice from God ? Trailing clouds of glory do they come From Heaven, which is their home. If there is any environment which can degrade a human being or harden a young heart, it is the atmosphere of merely fash ionable life. You may take the tenderest and most beautiful and lovely girl, the one that is kindest at home, and loves her father and mother best, and put her into the highest circle of fashionable life, with plenty of money and plenty of scope to do as she pleases ; let her dress herself as she will ; cover herself with diamonds and pearls, costly silks and laces ; let the love of admiration become the controlling pas sion ; and by and by all the tenderness of that young nature passes away ; her thoughts concentrate upon herself, what figure she is cutting, who her admirers are, what conquests she can make ; and by and by the youthful, beautiful modesty is gone, and the way is open for vice that, in the beginning, would not have been dreamed of, or if thought of, put away as utterly impossible. Sitting up for Her Boy Here and there throughout the village a few lights flicker like pale stars through the darkness. One shines from an attic window, where a youthful aspirant for lit erary honors labors wasting the midnight oil and the elixir of his life in toil, unless it may be save as patience and industry are gained, and give him a hold upon eternal happiness. Another gleams with a ghastly light from a chamber into which death is entering and life departing. One light shines through a cottage win dow from which the curtains are pushed partially aside, showing a mother's face, patient and sweet, but careworn and anx ious. The eyes gazing through the night, are faded and sunken, but lighted with such love as steals only into the eyes of true and saintly mothers, who watch over and pray for their children ; who hedge them in from the world's temptation, and make of them noble men, and true and lovinr , women. It is nearly midnight, and the faded eyes are strained to their utmost to catch the fax-off sight of some one com ing down the street. The mother's listen ing ear loses no sound however slight that breaks upon the stillness that reigns around. No form seen, no quick step heard, she drops the curtain slowly, goes back to the table where an open book is lying and a half knit sock. The eat jumps up in her chair, and yawns and shakes herself, and gradually sinks down again into repose. No one disputes her possession of the easy chair. Up and down the little room the mother walks, trying to knit, but vainly; she can only think of her son, and wonder and imagine what is keeping him. Iler mind pictures the worst, and her heart sinks lower and lower. Could the thought less boy know but one-half the anguish he is causing be would hasten at once to dis pel it with his presence. She trembles now as she listens, for an uncertain step is heard—a sound of coarse laughter and drunken ribaldry; her heart stands still and she grows cold with appre hension. The sound passes and dies away in the distance. Thank heaven, it is not he, and a glow comes over her, and once more her heart beats quickly. Only a moment, for the clock on the mantle shows on its pallid face that it is almost midnight. Again the curtain is drawn aside, and again the anxious, loving eyes peer into the darkness. INrk ! a sound of footsteps coming nearer ; a shad owy form advancing shows more and more distinct; a cheery whistle, a brisk, light step up the pathway; a thowing wide open of the door, and the truant boy finds him self in his mother's arms, welcomed and wept over. He chafes at the gentle dis cipline ; he don't like to be led by apron strings; but he meets his mother's gentle questioning gaze with one honest and manly, and makes a half-unwilling prom ise, and in after years thanks heaven again and again that he had a mother who watched over him, and prayed for him. He knows better than she now, the good that was done by her sitting up. A CANDY-BOY, passing throu g h a car, salutued a cross old gentleman with "Pop corn, pop-corn !" "Hain't got any teeth," angrily replied the man. "Gum-drops, gum-drops !" persisted the enterprising lad.