VOL 40 11-d'liingdon Journal. R. DURBORROW, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS Ujicc yew JOURNAL Building, Fifth Street. TIIE 7.IUNTINODON JOURNAL is published every Frid ty by J. R. DVIIII“RCOW and J. A. Nam, under t • than name of J. R. Duanonnow & Co., at $2,00 per :mum. IN Ali ANCE, or $l5O if not paid for in six months fi , ea date of milwription, :tint $3 if not paid within the N.: paper di,continard, unless at the option of the pub until all arreara;,, are paid. No paper, however, will he sent out of the State unless 64* in Advarom. advoaiieiTiotit4 Mil! be inserted at TWELVE it. ( . I,IS hi., for Ow first insertion, SErEN ILF.:EN7z , f., Iho 411.1 FIVE CENTS per fine 1: quart,ly :ma r. ai y business advertisements zi, , et . T,• , l at t u it)11 6m rsi !1 yr o:)' 4 s'l! .5 50! S 00:Vcoll 9 00118 00127 636 MI ) s 0 )110 -: 12 005Mrl, 18 00 16 00 60 65 0,) 11 !11 11 00) 00'1 3 4 c:01134 00150 00 65 80 00 ;14 00 1 ,20 60118 00 1 c01;36 00160 00 80 100 All I:esnluti,,l. of Associations, Communications of iui,it ,1 or individual interest, all Party announcements, s:o1 ootiees of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines, w:ll I.• char2ol rid CENTS per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to the party having them inserted. A,lvertising Agents must find their commission outside of these figures. All atTertteing accounts are due and collectable when the advertisement is once inserted. PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors, (lime with neatness and dispatch. Handbills, Blanks, Canis, Pamphlets &c., of every variety and style, printed nt th- shortest notice, and everything in the Printing tiny' will tn• executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rhtes. Professional Cards i s) CALDWELL, Attorney-at-Law, No. 111, 3rd street, . 0111, formerly occupied by Ikl,ssrs. Wombs & Wib Np 12,11 T 1 IL. A. li. BRUMBAUGH, offers his professional services to the •••aiiin a tatty. Office, No. 523 Washington street, ~i.e l r ya,t of the Catholic Parsonage. Ljan4,7l e. STOCKTON, Surgeon Dentist. 011ie° in Leister's 114. imildirs, in the room formerly occupied by Dr. E. .1. 0 ,- . , 11e, llaritingtinn, Pa. [apl2B, '76. n ORT.A.DY, Attorney-at-Law, 405 Penn Street, 1T liaatingdon, [n0v17,'75 r(`l L. lbaß, Nnti.st, office in S. T. Brown's new building, 11. N. 52.0, Perin Street, Huntingdon, I'a. [ap12.71 T 1 W. BUCHANAN, Surgeon Dentist, No. 228, Penn I 1 . Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [wchl7,'7s • IT C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, No.—, Penn 1I . Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl9,'7l IFRANKLIN seitoeK, Attorney-at-Low, flouting. d .da n , Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal bust ass. fitfica, '229 Penn Street, corner of Court Ilous( (dec4,'72 Sqnari T SYLVANUS FLAIR, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, 1. Pa, Oflico, Penn Street, three doors West of 3rd 't! !t. :rjan4,'7l T . IV MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim . Agent, Huntingdon, Pa. Soldiers' claims against the G.ilerunt,n! for Lack-pay, bounty, widows' and invalid Pensions attended to with great care and promptness. Of fice on Penn Street. Lian4,ll . R hallp lO c ß it c R e O I W n , t the :k e r , n e ey -a bLa Co z i. H o u f n t i i i n u g n d t o i n n •gdon .attity. Particular attention given to the settlement of ••states of decedent.i. Office in the JOURNAL building. S. OEISSINGER, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public, JJ. Huntingdon, Pa. Office, No. 2;0 Penn Street, oppo site Court House. [fobs; 71 D A. ORDBON, Attorney -at-Law. Patents Obtained. IL. Office, 321 Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [niy3l;7l SE. FLEMING, Attorney -at-Law, Hnntingdon, office in Monitor building, Penn Street. Prompt and careful attention given to all legal business. [augs,74-Bmos UTILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney -at-Law, Hunting '', don, Pa. Special attention given to collections, and all other legal business attended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 229, Penn Street. [ap19,71 Miscellaneous MARK THESE PACTS ! The Testimony of the Whole World. HOLLOWAY'S OINTMENT RAD LEGS, BAD BREASTS, SORES AND ULCERS. All descriptions of sores are remediable by the proper and diligent use of this inestimable preparation. To at tempt to cure bad legs by plastering the edges of the wound together is a folly ; for should the skin unite, a bog gy diseased condition remains underneath to break out with tenfold fury in a few days. The only rational and successful treatment, as indicated by nature, is to reduce the inflammation in and about the wound and to soothe the neighboring parts by rubbing in plenty of the Oint ment as salt is forced into meat. This will cause the malignant humors to be drained off from the hard, swol len and discolored parts round about the wound, sore, or ulcer, and when these humors are removed, the wounds themselves will soon heal ; warm bread and water pout ices applied over the affected parts, after the Ointment has been well rubbed in, will soothe and soften the same, and greatly assist the cure. There is a description of ulcer, sore and swelling, which need not be named here, attendant upon the follies of youth, and for which this Ointment is urgently recommended as a sovereign reme dy. In curing such poisonous sores it never fails to restore the system to a healthy st4te if the Pills bo taken accord ing to the printed instructions. DIPTHERIA, ULCERATED SORE THROAT, AND SCARLET AND OTHER FEVERS, Any of the above diseases may be cured by well rub: Bing the Ointment three timesa day into the cheat, throat, and neck of the patient, it will Boon penetrate, and give immediate relief. Medicine taken by the mouth must operate upon the whole system ere its influence can be felt in any local part, whereas the Ointment will do its work at slice. Whoever tries the unguent in the above manner for the diseases named, or any similar disorders affecting the chest and throat, will And themselves re ed as by a charm. All sufferers from these complaints should envelop the throat at bedtime in a large bread and water poultice, after the Ointment has been well rubbed in ; it will greatly assist the cure of the throat and chest. To allay the fever and lessen the inflammation, eight or ten Pills should be taken night and morning. The Oint ment will produce perspiration, the grand essential in all cases of fevers, sore throat, or where there might be an oppression of the chest, either from asthma or other PILES, FISTULAS, STRICTURES. :The abuts class of complaints will be removed by night ly fermenting the parts with warm water, and then by most effectually rubbing in the Ointment. Persons suffer ing from these direful complaints should lose not a mo ment in arresting their progress. It should be understood that it is not sufficient merely to smear the Ointment on the affected parts, but it must be well rubbed in fora con siderable time two or three times a day, that it may be taken into the system, whence it will remove any hidden sore or wound as effectually as though palpable to the eye. There again bread and water poultices, after the rubbing in of the Ointment, will do great service. This is the only sore treatment for females, cases of cancer in the stmnich, or where there may be a general bearing INDISCRETIONS OF YOUTH ;-SORES AID ULCERS Blutclics, as also swellings, can, with certainty, be radi ally cured if the Ointment be used freely, and the Pills taken ni;:lit and morning, as recommended in the printed initrual,,ns. When treated iu any other way they only dry op in , die placa to break out in another; whereas this Ointment will raniovo the humor from the system, anti leave the patient a vigorous and healthy being.— It will require time with the use of the Pills to insure a lasting care. DILOPSIU.L SWELLINGS, PARALYSIS, AND STIFF JOINTS. Although ti ahoy° complaints differ widely in their origin and nature, yet they all require local treatment.— Many of the worst cases, of such diseases, will yield in a comparatively short space of time when this Ointment is diligently rubbed into the parts affected, even after every other means have failed. In all serious maladies the Pills should be taken according to the printed directions ac companying each box. Both the Ointment and Pills should be used in the follow• ing cases : Bad legs, Cancers, Sore Nipples, Bat Breasts. Contracted & Stiff Sure throats, Burns, i Joints, Skin Diseases, Bunions, i Elephantiasis, Scurvy, Bite of noichetoes , Fistulas, Sore Heads, and Sandflies, , Gout, [ings,r Tumors, Coen bay, !Glandular Ewell- Ulcers, Cliego-tbot, Lllmbago, Wounds, Chilblains, Piles, Yaws. Chapped Hands, Rheumatism, C.rus (Soft) Scalds, CAUTION :—None are genuine unless the signature of J. Atom as agent for the United States, surrounds each box of Pills and Ointment. A handsome reward will be given to any one rendering such information as may lead to the detection of any party or parties min terieiting the medicines or vending the same, knowing them 5, be spurt 'us. .** Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOLLOWAY Jr Co-, New York, and by all respectable Druggists and Deal ers in Medicine throughout the civilized world, in pots at 25 rents, 62 cents, and 3t each. 44". There is considerable saving by taking the larger sizes. N. B.—Directions for the guidance of patients in every disorder are affixed t each pot. rapr24,l6-eow-ly WEDDING CARDS ! WEDDING CARDS ! ! We have just received the largest assortment of the etyles of WEDDING ENVELOPES, and WEDDING PAPERS, ever brought to Huntingdon. We have also bought new fontes of type, for printing cards, and we defy competition in this line. Parties wanting Cards put up will save money by giving us a call. At least fifty per cent cheaper than Philadelphia or New York. ap7-tf.] J. It. DURBORROW & CO. J. R. DURBORROW, - - - J. A. NASH. The Huntingdon Journal, J. A. NASH, EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING, No. 212, FIFTH STREET, HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA 3m 16m i9m Ilyr $2 00 per annum, in advance; $2.50 within six months, and $3.00 if 00000000 0 RF:PUBLICAN PAPER. 0 0 0 00000000 SUBSCRIBE. 00000000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 mum TO ADVERTISERS : Circulation ADVERTISING MEDIUM The JOURNAL is one of the best printed papers in the Juniata Valley, and is read by the best citizens in the county, homes weekly, and is read by. at least 5000 persons, thus making it the BEST advertising medium in Central Pennsyl- vania. Those who patronize its columns are sure of getting a rich return for their investment. Advertisements, both local and foreign, solicited, and inserted at reasonable rates. Give us an order. mggg; JOB D .•••• ..... COLO' Imo' All business letters should be ad dressed to J. It. DITRBORROW & CO., Huntingdon, Pa. •,:,,r. - ----4 - ,- .'i , - . - ... ..‘', • t) ...., , ,- , 'f:.:) 41. ' , 4 _ I I C ----7 ,• , , , ...,;" . ~.., / ~ :.° '.l 1 . 1. . • -; 111 e ...4. ..,...... ..v., ~.„ 41 , tf , r,...,: 1 4 ° .crri . ri - , ...,.....}1._ 1 11 1 4..1 l l , ii - .. t . e „ 11 .____ . . ,-- 1 , 02 - -, ~..., .„ .z: • ii• . 4..., '‘..ff I _2,11 ournaL . lin_ .. no :.,T ~...-,.... Printing PUBLISHED -IN TERNIS not paid within the year. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00000000 PROGRESSIVE 800. - FIRST-CLASS 5000 READERS WEEKLY It finds its way into 1800 ,PARTMENT i, " 1 Gr' 1 e. , = ...4 o O CIQ 0 -1 ar ja 4 0 Fr' 4 i rL r 1.-. 0 CIQ il El PRINTING PECLAL Original otiq. Despair, Ah ! who can express its bitter pangs, But he who feels their presence in his heart; And even he, with his moot exprestive lines When alt is told, has but expressed a part. A heart o'erwliehned with saddest remorse or grief Is scarcely a foretaste—its direful gloom Casts a shadow, even in the "vale of death," And is illumined by the less dark tomb. With the same breath imploringly it pruys to God, 'When the delusive phantom, Hope's bright ray tornu•ntingly, across its gloomy abode, And curves Ilhts when Hope has flown away. It Amu, a thought of heaven, for well it feels, That in yun bright realm it cannot dwell Nor lloeg it dread the dark Platohian altore:4 But finds in life its most horrid hell. It smiles at Death in his most horrifying garb, And invites his messengers to advance, And laughing, guides their poinards to the seat of lifei In madness, with its own determined hands. 0, Oblivion I if Eternity could give the room how vastly great would be thy populace! Tho hosts of souls that dread the future dreams of death, Would early seek in thee a resting place. 0, Despair, the Holy Spirit's adversary Most potent ! Most indomitable Thy castles, erected in the hearts of men, Dwellings for the sin unpardonable! Begone, thou hell-born sprite, abhorred of God! Come, Holy Spirit, resume my heart; "Whoever doubts, is dammed," cries Christian faith,— Lord Jesus, save me from a doubter's part. iIIINTENGDON, Pa., Sept., 1,1875. .elert 'fflisceling. Good Advice. Kate Thorn gives the following good advice about "How to travel : In the first place, know where you are going and how you are going. And if you know what you are going for it will be quite as well. Dress well, for on your dress depends in a great measure the treatment you will receive on your journey. The world at large. has never.learned to discriminate be tween tho deserving and the undeserving in any other way than by appearance, and if you would be treated with courtesy and attention, wear good clothes. Not gaudy or showy ones, but something of a materi al that looks well, and which will not be ruined by rain, or dust, or dampness. Avoid all trailing skirts, for men to wipe their feet on, and trimmings of fringes and laces to catch on other people's buttons, and parasol handles. Dress warm enough to save from the necessity of carrying more than one extra wrap, for bundles are a nuisance on a jour ney, particularly on a long journey. Take no more baggage than you can help. You will be surprised, if you try it, to see bow little you can be comfortable with. In hand satchel, take along combs, brushes, soap, towels, needles and thread, scissors, boot buttons, strings, handker chiefs, extra gloves, and stockings, and other personal necessaries, for if your jour ney extends over a week you will be sure to need them before you can get access to your trunk. Check your trunk when you set forth for the place of your destination, and hav ing put the checks where they will be in no danger of getting lost, dismiss the trunk from your mind. There is not the slight est necessity for worrying about it, as most ladies are in the habit of doing. When you buy your ticket, get a rail road map of the country you propose to travel over, together with a time-table of distances. These are furnished by every railroad of note, and by consulting them you will be saved from annoying conduct ors and fellow travelers with questions. Carry no money in your pocket beyond the little you need to supply you with ra pers and refreshments, and do not confide to anybody where you have secured your money or other valuables. In large cities make all inquiries of ho tel clerks and policemen. In choosing a hackman always take the one who solicits you least. Be courteous to everybody, and confiden • tial with nobody. A lady is much better protected on a journey by her womanly dignity than by the gallantry of a gentle man of whom she knows nothing. Make up your mind before you start on your journey to bear all the little trials and disagreeables incident to traveling, with good humor and equanimity. Do not fly into a passion if a drunken man staggers into the car, or turn up your nose if somebody swears, or look insuffera bly annoyed if a baby cries, or if some old gentleman falls asleep and snores. Be patient, quiet, and mind your own business thoroughly, and if the boiler does not burst or the train does not meet with broken rails, washed out culverts, or some thing of that like, you will probably reach your journey's end in safety. Food for the Nerves. The mind, as it is called, and the body are one, and can only act by the same laws; whether action proceeds from the nervous centres and is invisible, or from the mus cular system, and is invisible—it is action produced by force generated within. The German Professor Helmholtz has lately brought the calculations of the force that has to be engendered within our com prehension, and if such a force has to be maintained, it can only be done by nourish ment or food. Food consists not only of organic vegetable and animal matter, but also of air and water, and therefore a change of air is often invigorating to the nervous system Our ideas of the mind's work are still very confused, for all ner vous action is produced by exertion or waste of force. Grief is nervous exertion ; joy is nervous exertion ; every thought is nervous exertion, and all this exertion wants maintaining and feeding. When• ever exhaustion appears, or so called dis orders, it is nothing else but the conse quence of want of nourishment. Grief makes a greater claim on the nervous cen tres than joy, and it is exceedingly wrong to avoid food in grief. Despondency is nothing but the result of incomplete nutri tion of the nerves, which give way under outward pressure ; it is only necessary to be judicious and give good nourishment to despondent persons, such as will invigorate and prove of tonic value, and the nervous system will return to its natural elasticity. Despondency exhausts the nervous system greatly, for all 'thought is action, and des ponding thought wastes more force than joyous thought. Nervous diseases are the consequence of continued waste of nervous action and incomplete nutrition, and re quire nothing but judicious dietic treat ment. We have, at the outset of our movement, always maintained that all ner vous disorders and so-called lunacy can be greatly affected by diet, and we maintain this now ; healthy and judicious food moulds the character and nourishes the brain. --National Food and Fuel Reformer. I.—• v., O , -1 .., et, ;i1 !Y. - "My boy, were you ever baptized ?" "Oh, yes; half a dozen times. But it never took " Despair, BY Al,. R. F. HUNTINGDON, PA., F. A London Detective. SOME OF MS EXTRAORDINARY EXPLOITS. One of the most remarkable of the Lon don police is Druskowitz. No one looking at the short, blonde-moustached, and rather dandified young man would suspect him of being the cleverest of detectives. He is about thirty-four years old, but looks less. His father was a Dalmatian. He himself speaks any number of languages, and is thus nearly always sent abroad where any case occurs in a non-English speaking country needing the services of an English detective. In London his special work is among foreigners who go there as fugitives from justice. It is generally found that such persons betake themselves to special localities. Usually they lie hiding for a few days, but they soon find it impossible to remain indoors any longer ; and so, hav ing shaved off their beards, it' they had one, or having put on a false beard if they had formerly shaved, and wearing a wig and spectacles, they sally forth at night, and, being in want of amusement, they betake themselves to the Alhambra. That is a favorite resort for foreigners in Lon don, and Druskowitz is, therefore, a fre quent visitor there. He appears much interested by the performance, but his thoughts are elsewhere. He is watching some one individual in the audience, fol lows him when he leaves, tracks him to his hiding place and then sets to work to find out who ho is. Woe be to the man who really is a criminal if Moskowitz be on his trail. There is little chance for him. Droskowitz has an extraordinary moral influence over criminals • it is something like that of the rattlesnake Upon the bird. He carries no arms, yet be does not fear to go up to an armed and desperate man and arrest him ; and, though armed and desperate, he succumbs. Druskowitz was engaged nine years ago in a remarkable case. In 1866 Vital Dourt, a Bordeaux wine merchant, went to Paris and insured his life for a sum equal to £5,000. Shortly afterwards he went to London in order to escape the consequences of a fraudulent bankruptcy. Some time later his wife, clad in widow's weeds, presented herself at the insurance office with the necessary legal document attesting her husband's death. There was nothing suspicious in the papers. Nevertheless, the company determined to make some inquiries before handing over the amount of insurance.— Druskowitz was called in, and he ascer tained that on December 1, 1866, some one named Bernandi had called at the register's office in Plaistow and registered the death of Dourt, and it was entered as due to heart disease. Druskowitz found out the undertaker who had conducted the funeral, and learned that everything had been properly ordered and paid for, and that the funeral had been performed at Leytonstone by the Catholic priest. One thing seemed strange. The coffin had not been sent to any private house, but direct to the cemetery. Further inquiry failed to discover any doctor of the name attached to the certificate of death. The next step was to obtain an order for exhu mation, and on the coffin being opened there was found, not the body of Vital Dourt, but a block of lead. Further in quiry elicited the fact that Dourt had been present at his own funeral, and after wards gone to America. whence he sup plied his wife with the documents in tended for the insurance company. Some time afterwards he returned to Europe, went to Antwerp, bought a ship, sent her to sea with a lot of rubbish, and, having previously insured for a large sum, had her burnt. Arrested and brought to trial, be was visited by Druskowitz, who felt sure that this was the man he wanted.— Dourt was found guilty, and condemned to imprisonment with hard labor, but the French Government claimed him under an extradition treaty, and he was tried on the charge offraudulent bankruptcy, found guilty, and sentenced to penal servitude for a comparatively short period. Catching Reindeer. In many bleak Northern regions these animals are the sole support of people. When liberated from harness they go di rectly in search of food, a peculiar species of nutritious moss, which their instinct enables them to fled deeply covered with snow. Sometimes as many as one hun dred start off foraging, there being nothing provided for them by their exacting mas ter. Like camels under similar circum stances, when unladen they strode off miles in different directions. When they arc wanted again their seal skin-clad drivers get behind them in several directions, and by hallooing, throwing snowballs and mak ing considerable uproar, the deers are gradually driven into a smaller circle.— The herd is then encircled by a small cord, the men draw it nearer, until it strikes their long legs. They neither try to leap over nor break through it, but huddle to gether as close as possible. Finally the two ends meet, held by one person while the others enter under line and select the animals they want, seizing them by their horns, bringing them out and tying them to something strong enough to hold them until harnessed to a sled. The remainder again scatter in pursuit of moss. Strong, tall and fleet though they are, able, with a sweep of their antlers, to mow down a score of sturdy Northmen, they cower at the voice of man. Their masters are harsh, rude and unkind to them. They are so timid that the sound of the driver's voice sets them running at such speed, that they will die before halting, if their drivers continue to urge them. Economy Due to Employers. "Waste not, want not," is a grand old proverb. "Ile that is faithful in little is faithful also in much." It is true enough that a person who takes no care of materials committed to his hands by an employer, will not be careful of his own property. Economy and wastefulness are habits that will influence us, whether with our own substance or that of another. As a rule the man or boy who takes care of his employer's goods will be likely to look after his own, and is on the road to pros perity. Some men are worth much more than others simply because they waste nothing. If an employer be wealthy, and stock abundant, that is no excuse for waste or carelessness. Loss is loss, and robbery is robbery, whether it be in much or little. It is forcibly said that "Ileaven allows nothing:to be destroyed." There has not been a single drop of water wasted since the creation. The decomposed elements of the past autumn will supply ailment for the next spring. Economy, rigid economy, is one of the laws of nature ; and we shall not realize the "good time coin ing" until we are careful and economical. Fire and water are good servants, but bad masters. lIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1876. Custer 2nd his Grayhound A soldier who served three, years under General Custer, relates the following in cident which was characteristic of his des perate and determined manner : - "It was five or six years ago that we had a fight with the Chippewas on the Washita river, the expedition being led by Custer. For a long time the General had with him on the plains three magnifieent Scotch grayhounds, by which he set great store, and for which he would accept no price. Twenty miles from the Chippewa'; village we struck the trail. It was in the evening and before proceeding on the rrarch, Custer ordered that the gray hounds be placed in the wagons, which were not to accompany the detachment. This was done. We took up our line of march and found the village on the Wash ita at midnight, the inhabitants being wrapped in slumber, and all about the camp silent, Custer concluded to wait un til daylight to make the charge, and after commanding silence all along the line, sat upon his horse like a statue waiting for the first indications of dawn. While sit ting thus a slight pattering on the ground attracted his attention, and upon looking down he perceived through the gloom one of his hounds crouching at his horse's feet, the dog having escaped from the wagon and followed his master. The Indian village was swarming with dogs, and Cus ter knew it. lie also knew that if his hound emitted the slightest yelp or bark it would agitate the entire canine force of the camp, put the Indians on their guard and probably frustrate the object of the expedition. Slipping gently from his horse, he grasped the dog's throat with both hands, and slowly and quietly choked him to death. So silently and quickly was it done that in the gloom that prevail ed, only a few soldiers, standing in the immediate vicinity perceived the desperate action. With the exceptiou of his last fight, this engagement on the Washita was one of the most desperate ever fought on the plains, and resulted in a grand victory for the "creeping panther," the name by which Custer was known among the Indi ans. Be Nlppy. There are many people in this world who are afraid to be happy, who go mo ping about with the accumulated mould of sourness clinging to them so closely that nothing short of an earthquake or resur rection could shake it off, thereby deny ing themselves the pleasure of seeing the laughing side of nature that trills and rip ples all over, just like the sunshine. Sure ly there is enough joy in God's worship 1 to sweep out all sadduess if we would seek it. Shall 1 tell you when you may hope to find this antidote for sorrow ? When the angels have enlarged and purified your own heat t. When pain, fear, woe, anguish, hunger, thirst, has penetrated through every corner. When you have winced under necessity of a lifetime. When you have lived long enough to de tect the mockery in the keynote of living. When you depeni less upon the disposi tion and acts of others than on your own. When the rooms in your head and heart are all rented to responsible tenants whose articles of agreement will be to keep the furniture and drapery in repair, and whose lease will only expire with life. When forgetfulness, selfishness, envy, malice, hatred and all the catalogue of deadly sins will be rare visitors instead of fixtures. When love, joy, hope, care, thoughtfulness, and above all, charity, have taken posession and will thus secure to you the full and unabridged edition of happiness in this world, as well in world No. 2, and will open up a thousand outlets toward God's suffering childern, and the poor, whom ye have always with you.— Gleaner. Styles of Conversation. 'l'asso's conversation was neither gay nor brilliant. Dante was neither taciturn nor satirical. Butler was sullen or biting. Gray seldom talked or smiled. liogarth and Swift were very absent-minded in com pany. Milton was unsociable and even ir ritable, when pressed into conversation. Kirwan, though copious and eloquent in public addresses, was meagre and dull in coloquial discourse. - Virgil was heavy in conversation. LaFontaine appeared heavy coarse and stupid ; he could not describe' what he had just seen ; but then he was the model of poetry. Chancser's silence was more agreeable than his conversation. Dryden's conversation was slow and dull ; his humor saturine and reserved. Corneille in conversation was so insipid that he never failed in wearying ; he did not even speak correctly of that language of which he was such a master. Ben. John son used to sit silent in company and suck his wine and their humors. Southey was stiff, sedate and wrapped up in asceticism. Addison was good company with his inti mate friends, but in mixed company lie pre served his dignity by a stiff and reserved silence. Fox in conversation never flagged ; his animation and variety was inexhausti ble. Dr. Bently was loquacious. Grotius was talkative. Goldsmith wrote like an angel, and talked like poor Poll. Burke was eminently entertaining, enthusiastic and interesting in conversation. Curran was a convival deity ; he soared into every region, and was at home in them all. A SHARP BOY.—A Brownsville young man called on his intended the other eve ning, and while waiting for her to make an appearance he struck up a conversation with his prospective brother-in-law. Af ter awhile the boy asked : "Does galvanized niggers know much ?" "I really can't say," answered the amus ed young man, and silence reigned a few moments, when the boy again resumed : "Kin you play checkers with yer nose ?" "No, I have not acquired that accom plishment." "Well you'd better learn, you hear tne." "Why ?" "Cause' Sis says that yer don't know as much as a galvanized nigger, but yer dad's got lots o' stamps, and she'll marry you anyhow; and she said when she got a holt of the old man's sugar she was again' to all the Fourth of July pereesbuns and ice cream gum sucks, and let you stay at home to play checkers with that hollyhock nos of yourn." And when "Sis" got her hair banged and came in, she found the pallor deserted by all save her brother, who was innocent ly tying the tails of two kittens together, and singing : "0, I love the Sabbath school." No statue that the rich man places os tentatiously in his windows is to be com pared to the little expectant face pressing against the window pane, watching for his father, when his day's occupation is done. 4 ,1)c o_,iimp:tip. Marchincj on Tilden. 1 it—Mut ..14 Throrigh. Stint the good )id iv.tr-cry +roll , ing the olden r , ing , Sing it with the spiri , that liar horn,' -nr along; Sing it as in •iv , e for tlo. and strong, While wa are inar,i.ing ,;11 Churns- - iiurrAh ! hurrah f..r Rub. 11. 11,,, in 4 1e, Harrah' !.:trrah .'or :he , r.in tl So ,Ippru4 fr.•tu the beating th,-hogn, r•,f.riner. How the rehe:s trea:ble a; they eight Of another Uni.,n 2,1 her w:nriing , •••,ry ,r the right: How the uati.)h Viluu. , .l with r , g,iierkri,g light A WA p. in:l.—Ling .11 T,l,kn Choru Lot us ,ing fur Hayes the song of equal Soon awl North; Equal rights for white an.l bhtek his era shal! hring forth ; So we sh it make this choosing the Nazi ,n'A newer hirth ; Ilayre goes marching ••ri ( . I.rus- So we make .► tiicr , ,:glit.tre for Free.l...r. an-I her train, Su we lift the 31 - Ltelcie.A enfran,iiiite.l l LIMA 4 again: Su we elennsfe the natiun frum the rel.eli latent If aye.; 11:+trohir; - : ~n T ' CJ•nri So here'.; the sta'e.-man nr.n .level I of !,lame, Who'll take t 9 hi,: high , •ff,... r name, Who makes uf sham, an ! rLe;:t4 rejected shame, he goes marching Tilden. Chorthi— Fix the Dates. We fear that Congressman 110witt s IP` tI to defer:id Governor Tilden will result as (1: 345 . trously to himself as 'lid hie efforts to defend the emasculation of records on the Brooklyn Ring's Bridge hooks. lie has gone so far in his defence of Tilden as to say : "In regard to the insinuations connecting Governor Tildens name with that of William M. Tweed, he ph Hewitt" said that Gorenor Tilden had, for more than three years, like a hound on the scent, followed the members of the Ring patiently, secretly. diligently. lie knew Mr. Tilden's untiring efforts day and night: be knew how he tracked thee, people to their dens of iniquity and inally drazge.i them forth to public execration." The "dens" to which Yr. Tilden tracked Tweed must have been the Tammany Com mittee, of which they were both officers. Also, the Legislature where Tweed was chairman of a committee, and where h "bought Legisla tors like cattle in the shambles, - and enacted bills which Hoffman, the Governor. to whom Tweed and Tilden caused to be given s fake certificate of election. eagerly sigued. the dates. The New York Tunes published the Ring expose, July 30, lAfl. At the Rochester Convention in September, Is7o. Tilden, Tweed and eight others had themselves and their delegates admitted by the ruling of Chairman Tilden, while the delegatei two hundred and twenty-nine of the Demo cratic committee were not allowed admission. This was pretty close "connection, - but it came still closer when Tilden made his speech and approved the ballot-box stuffing and rob beries by which Tweed bad disgraced party and wronged the people:. The connection becomes still closer, wh , n we see Tilden before Tweed at Albany on April 4. 187 U. assuring him in the most tine tious manner that he bad •'never entertained an unkind feeling - toward him. A known thief. and yet no unkind feelings by the offirial head of the party of the State : a ballot-bot stutter, and yet no unkind feelings ; a sub orner of the press to the extent of 52,205,00, paid from the public treasury in the space of twenty months, and yet no unkind feelings This is just what Sammy Tilden =aid to Tweet on the •4th of April, 1870. -I came here, sir, (to Tweed, chairman) to aid no party, nor to injure any party man.— And let me say here that I have no feelings of unkindness to any human being. TO YOURSELF, MR. CHAIRMAN, (TWEED) I AM UNCONSCIOUS OF EVER HAVING EN TERTAINED AN UNKIND FEELING." How bad it is that Tilden should have to face such proofs of his trickery through the zeal of an unjudicious friend. F.x the dates. Tilden himself said in his letter to the New York Times of January 27, 1873 "I had no more knowledge or grounds of suspicion of the frauds of 1861. as they were discovered three 1?) years afterward. than the Times or the general puttee." From July 1869, to July 1 4 71. Mr. Tildeu. is just two years, not three ~ , ears and from April, 1870, when you made the Alhany speech and assured Tweed of your kindly regards. was but fifteen months. But yon had no grounds for "suspecting fraud in 1869 Why do you say 1869, Mr. Tilden ? You sustained your friendly relations to Tweed way down through 1869, 1870 and 1871. three month. after the Times published the documents.— You sustained your relations with him until after you "pressed Connolly to reign. so that he could not be proceeded against as an official, and until alter those ,flichers were 4e atrnyed. Then you commenced your sham fight with Tweed aad not till Men. Hut you did not only "suspect, - you knew of Tweed's rascalities before the fall of 1871, before 187 U, before 1869 and before 186 e.— You were made Chairman of the. State Com mittee in 1866. You knew that Tweed w a s a bankrupt chair maker, in 1860, and that without any business he had become worth millions in 1866. You saw the Court Howie. and was daily reminded of the robbeties then going on, long before 1464. You knew that yourself and Tweed were responsible for counting 37,000 false ballots for Hoffman in 1868. for legal action against you watt threat ened, and Horace Greely warned you, through an open letter in 1869, not to undertake it again. Yon knew the schemes fi)r rubbery whit h went through the Legislature and the Common Council: you knew that certain newspapers were suborned, because their hills were published by other papers : yon knew that nearly $2,000.000 were added to the city debt in 1867. over $5.000.00 in 186 a, over $13,000,000 in 1869 and over 325,00,000 in 1870. You knew that your tax assessment's were increased one-quarter between and 1871. How does the following from friend 11...w -itt's speech sound atter reading the foregoin,,r -No one will intinskte that there wa,i the slightest intimacy, personal or political. at any time, between :_ , atnuel J. Tilden and IFil• Liam M. Twee']. There never was. • We rather think that many will not only "intimate' that there was a slight intimacy between Samuel and William, but a very cor dial and close intimacy. We shall furnish the proofs in a very few days. If those roae4ore had not been destroyed. after the interview between Tilden and Connolly on the 15th of September, 1871. we should still have farther proofs. For the present we r•:vr to Uncle Samuel hire tell. who wrote a letter to the New York Times January 27, 1873, in which he clinches the "intimacy - pretty well and lays Mr. Hewitt out very cold. In that letter Mr. Tilden said: pressed Mr. Connolly (September 15, 1871) to surrender the office of (Comptrol• ler). "* * * That be had lei to fear from the public than from his confederates. ••• • * THE STORM WOULD PASS OVER 11111 ASD BEAT UPON OTHERS." Who of the thieves Tilden conferred with. he does not say; neither does he say what other things he "pressed Connolly todo. Rut Touchers were soon after burnt, and Connolly took his departure for Egypt. It MIAt also be remembered that Tweed is not in prison, and that no one has been disturbed for letting him off. By fixing the dates carefully, it will assist to unravel many vexed questions.— Brooklyn 7rgus. • he Put; !i^ Farr -' 3 !. - r.. - , aine. The is. -.I i.l plow •-• * 'reit mot -• ^ -4 . _ .-4. i • esti iso * amollbess* our I , !•)pte.'.. *4 ... in 7 ~ .te4 ptiailltietiery w• '!! --Ty. mei he lbw by ID oroi.ient onto* A ; helm TC.11..n. • • • . , os•r••,* - - artiottst.rog to , • ..-odoirosipo.t ey Ow owe throng% , no • v-ir :•• • •-r. yr! , t Ft owfwmpor -0 sant gp met rn.;'•aray. •• I .:there- • 4 • „ se a ms *a. 4 . • h•ln•ir , 4.- 74 7- ' • • • • Lp. 0..-repti 1111.0 8 / 1 ••• V . T 11 44 ,1 ; 4 ":- 7 :ar . ` 4, .". ,4 linprip •' .1 A • .• t - or , Allrootootod sour•-owo, - - e *a t •, , r 1 • . ". • • •1 ,t - r • Tr.A.I. r• . ! .!, rriv . . r r.nt •.- 44 . amt Convent:. .t ••• - I^4r 7 asni WHICAIt.. ru:irime{ Or.; 1. I i:r s•icor re . by the ••• , ion. • r 7 ,41): : ) "Wrir % trin4p. ,- •.i ' _ N- are poet via $4 ths • iv-. .1 awl "wen,. is *me ' DKi bit sub •• ••• ine alp tomb t r. h. ri 4.-tr.-, tint, ' • 1.4 rtf 444 ••• •. pot .10 • "To-- • 1...44 'to %.44 3710 ti! 11.4.911ire.yr • Virirsit - ...-votettt %rya 194 P , ••••• • -• .•1•0 1. • pe- T'ie ±tmr d•-cr-0-7.i..1 *b.• 4 ' ate twf 14.rb i cyst.•,* p , nter.. •. .4~~ ~/r..{. Thr N . r• it is Ai3tt !!), :ICIA re . for •l.•r•n veil,. vs sivitPsi etirrenr- •n.! ,12.-1•• r !airs. I. " .1 J. Ti"fi.,l rri ~-.‘ as he W;l: 110.04,1 bI the former. an,l tri , i•-onen •ie V.,:itireft print to 1 4 441. wh..n airy roof , in rpen r-bollino against "tut rnany , rmnanetinn• in TiMeo't to the itfl'ern ., ,itz. are yet tn he rcm.+o,,+, in the inierett of Tinhke oinriaity and n,tirow.l h4.n.ir. the .trrts win. in At few 4a:co. tweeiewt * *necinet hignr• .f the pighiie te,.t r'.7 TN,* raitron.i innotepoi;.• , io-faini•pr pr,n. e of .I.nerirle Tilden's Two Olths : Mr. T'l .^n :1 te rir to 3 returil, riityrt in which h. ;3. , 1 .4tAies is !be