VU L. 41 . The Huntingdon Journal J. R. DURBORROW PUBLISIIERS AND PROPRIETOR 3. (Vice in new Joun.NAL Building, Fifth Street, TILE LICNTINi3DON JOCRN'AL is published every Friday by J. R. DLIREORKOW and J. A. NASH, under the firm name of J. R. Dranoanow & Co., at 62,00 per annum IN ADVANCE, or $2.60 if not paid for in six months from date of subscription, and 8.:3 if not paid within the year. No paper diseontinnetl, unless at the option of the pub lishers, until all arrearages are paid. No paper, however, will be sent out of the state unless absolutely paid fur in advance. Transient advertisements will be inserted at TWELvE AND A-HALF CENTS per line for the first in,ertn.n. BrYEN AND A-HALF ecava f-r the second and FIVE CENTS per line for an subsequent ineertions. Regular quart •sly and yearly business advertisements will be inserted at the following rates: 13m I6m 1 9m 11 yr I 1 13m1 Gm I 9mllyr lin $3 501 4 50; 5 501 S OfW4coll 9 ( , 911S 001274 36 2 " 5 001 8 09110 00112 001,Vcol jlB 00136 001 501 65 3 " 7 00!)0 11(04 00! Ig 001%coll 34 00150 001 63, 80 4 " 8 00,13 00;20 00118 0011 c 01136 00;60 001 801 100 _ . AU Resolutions of Associations, Communications of Dinkel; or individual interest, all party announcements, and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines, will be charged Es CENTS per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to the party having them inserted. Advertising Agents must find their commission outside of these figures. All adrertising accounts are due and collectable when the adrertisement is once inserted. JOB PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Hand-hills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, Ac., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice, and everything in the Printing line will be executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Professional Cards• .D CAL! WELL, Attorney-at-Law, No. 111, 3rd street Office fortnerly occupied by Mesere. Woods liantson. T 1 A. A.B. BRUMBAUGII, offers his professional services totherainin may. A: Mice, No 52:3 Wai,liiugton street, one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. ijuu4,7l CTOOKTON Surgeon Dentist. Office in Leister's E'4. building, in the mum formerly occupied by Dr. E. .1. Greene, Huntingdon, l'a. ( 11 1 ,128 , '76- GEO. B. ORLADY, Attorney-at-Law, 4115 Penn Street. Huntingdon, Pa. Ln0r17;75 G. L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. Brown's new building, No. 520, Penn Street, Inintingdon, Pa. [apl2.ll HW. BCCITANAN. Surgeon Deutist, No. 22R. Penn . Street, llontlogdon, Pa. [mchli ;45 U C." MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, \o.—, Penn H Street, Huntingdon, Pa. kipl9,ll JFRANKLIN SMOCK, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting . don, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal busi ness. Office, 229 Pena Street, corner of Court House Square. [deco, it JT SYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at-Law, llnntingclon, . Pa. Office, Penn Street, three doors west of 3rd Street. pan4,ll JT W. MATTEItN, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim . Agont, lltintinzdon, Pa. tioldiers' claimsagainst the Governmon: for back-pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attended to with great ewe and promptness. Of- See on Penn Street. [jawl,'7l T R. DITRBORROW, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., 1. will practice in theceveral Courts of Huntingdon county. Particular attention given to the settlement of estates of decedents. Office in the JOURNAL building.. LS. GEISSINGER. Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public, . Huntingdon, Pa. Office, No. 230 Penn Street, oppo site Court House. [febs,'7l 1) A. ORBISON, Attorneyat-Law. Patents Obtained. It. Office, 821 Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [my3l;7l Q E. FLEMrNO, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa, kJ. office in Monitor building, Penn Street Prompt and careful &Mention given to all legal bulginess. [augs,'74o3mos WFILLIAM 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. 221, Penn Street. [apl9,'7l Miscellaneous HEALTH AND ITS PLEASURES, - OR - DISEASE AND ITS AGONIES: CHOOSE BETWEEN THEM. HOLLOWAY'S PILLS. NERVOUS DISORDERS. What is more fearful than a breaking down of the ner vous system? To be excitable or nervous in a small de gree is moat destressing, for where can &remedy be found? There is one:—drink but little wine, beer, it spirits, or far better, none; take no coffee,—weak tee being prefera ble ; get all the fresh air you can ; take three or four Pills every night eat plenty of solids, avoiding the nee of slops; and if these golden rules ere followed, you will be happy in mind and strong in body, and forget you have any 11 erves. MOTHERS AND DAUGHTERS. If there is one thing more than another for which these Pills are so famous, it is their purifying properties, es pecially their power of clensiag the blood from all im purities, and removing dangerous and suspended seers tione. Universally adopted as the one grand remedy for female complaints, they never fail, never weaken the system, and always brings about what is required. SICK HEADACHES AND WANT OF APPETITE. These feelings which so sadden no, most frequently arise from annoyances or trouble, from obstructed preepi ration, or from eating and drinking what is unfit for us, thus disordering the liver and stomach. These organs meet be regulated if you wish to be well. The Pilm, if taken according to the printed instructions, will quickly restore a healthy action to both li,rer and stomach, whence follow, as a natural conseqence, a good appetite and a clear head. In the East and West Indies scarcely any other medicine is ever need for these disorders. HOW TO BE STRONG, Never let the bowels be confined or unduly acted upon. It may appear singular that Holloway's Pills should be recommended for a rufi upon the bowels, many persons supposing that they would increase relaxation. This is a great misstate, however; for these Pills will immediately correct the liver and sup every kind of bowel complaint. In warm climates thousands of lives have been saved by the use of this medicine, which in all cases gives tone and vigor to the whole organic system, however deranged,— health sad strength following as a matter ofconrse. The appetite, too, is wonderfully increased by the use of these Pills, combined in the use of solid in preference to fluid diet. Animal food is better than broths and stews. By removing acrid, fermented, or other impure humors from the liver, stomach, or blood, the cause of dysentery, diar rhea, and other bowel complaints is expelled. The result is, that the disturbance is arreAed, and the action of the bowels becomes regular. Noshing will atop the relaxa tion of the bowels so quickly as this fine correcting med icine. DISORDERS OF THE KIDNEYS In all diseases affecting these organs, whether they secrete too much or too little water ; or whether they be afflicted with atone or gravel, or with aches and pains settled in the loins over the regions of the kidneys, these Pills should be taken according to the printed directions, and the Ointment, should be well rubbed into the small of the back at bedtime. This treatment will give almost im mediate relief when all other means have failed. FOR STOMACHS OUT OF ORDER., No medicine will so effectually improve the tone et the stomach as these pills; they remove all acidity, occasioned either by intemperance or improper diet. They reach the liver and reduce it io a healthy ae•ion ; they are won• derfully efficacious in came of spa.sm—in fact they never fail in curing all disorders of the liver and stomach. Fevers of all kinds, Fite, Gout, Headache, Indigos iou, Inflammation, Jaundice, Liver Complaints, Lumbago, Piles, Rheumatism, Retention of Urine, Scrofula, or King's Evil, Ague. Asthma, Bilious Complaints Blotches on the Skin, Bowel Complaints, Colics, Constipation of the Bowels, Consumption, Debility, Dropsy, Dysentery, Erysipelas, Female rregn larities, CAUTIONI—None are genuine unless the signature of .1. Haydock, as agent for the United States,enrrounde 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 counterfeiting the medicines or vending the same, knowing them to be spurious. Sold at the Manufactory of Professor HOLLOWAY & Co., New York, and by all respectable Druggists and Dealers in Medicine throughout the civilized world, in boxes at 25 cents, MI cents, and El each. air There is considerable saving by taking the larger sixes. N. B.—Directions for the guidance ofpatients in every disorder are affixed to each box. apr. 28, 1876-eow-ly. THE JOURNAL STORE Is the place to buy all kinds of OM OM AT HARD PAN PRICES J. R. DURBORROIV .J. A. NASh The Huntingdon Journal, EVERY FRIDAY MORNING, THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING, No. 212, FIFTH STREET, HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, $2 00 per annum. in advance; $2.50 • within six months, and $3.00 if 00000000 O REPUBLICAN PAPER. 0 0 - 0 00000000 SIIBSCRIIE. 00000000 gmuu TO ADVERTISERS [-CirculationlBOO. 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, Lames weekly, and is read by at least 5000 persons, thus making it the BEST advertising medium in Central Pennayl- 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 ugugg JOB DEPARTMENT Sore Throats, Stone and Gravel, Secondary Symp- toms, Tio-Dou loureux, Tumors, Ulcer. i Veneral Affections Worms °fall kinds Weakness from L any cause, &c. ••• • ..... CO Per All business letters should be ad. dressed to J. R. DITRBORROW 8.:. CO., Huntingdon, Pa. r-- .t ' ; ?"--1 . ' ' 4 ',l•-: I '‘ V "nyi .! . .:: .i. i i . .ti —,--., - "r-p— a. Irt }. .i .... V's . l'i , 4... t. • .., . , ,- r 't / 1 ",.. i , 7 llll i it , . . . ... fkij . eft -i , '4..... _ .;,....,'' 1 7 1 G rt . •: 4. tllit , -s - --v._ ----. ...,.._ . ~ : , ~,,. 0 ~ . '4 ..'. e • . ~ -11_ . , . i 5. .1 .t, ,FA -,, /te ,es -:- .fl. _ _ _ ) J-1 P 7 t. ~,.. ___); ---, ...---- - °ll 1 rnal . Printing, - .1. A. NASH. PUBLISHED -I N - TERMS : not paid within the year o 0 0 0 0 0 o • 0 00000000 PitoGßEsilve 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 FIRST-CLASS 5000 READERS WEEKLY It finds its way into 1800 --- A ro dc SPECIAL' PRINTING c(litlusts"olutr. Down falling winter snows cover my dead With a pure robe of white Sombre-plumed winter birds, over their graves Pause in your flight ; Mourn with me for the lost!— But no! they are not lost ! Only the stream that laves The heavenly shore is crossed. My lonely breast pines for a baby head Which erst did nestle there; The touch of infant hands, the dear blue eyes, And clustering hair. But they are hid from sight, Joined with the angels bright, My darling's safely there, Where all is pure delight. My mourning heart sighs for the dear one gone, Companion of my way— Borne to the tomb whilcyct in manhood's prime, Of Death the prey ; Torn from my arms away, In life's fair-promise day— And I must walk by Faith, Adown my darkened way. And is this all that's left of those i loved, These snow-clad mounds of earth, And must I wander on, alone—alone, Till the new birth ? No dear one's circling arm Protects me now froin harm. My loved ones all are flown. What now can life lie worth ? But spring time comes anon, renew:ng me, Through Nature's grand employ, 'V.th promise of the long, long golden day, And no alloy: Thus when life's minter's past, 'leaven's spring-time comes at last, My dead, transformed from clay, meet in enliess joy. Irontier oitory. LONESOME CHARLEY. Now that the details Of the terrible bat, tle on the Little Horn, have come; now that the list of the dead is spread out be fore us, and the story of their terrible fate is told us with all its horrors, the more we realize what an act of awful bravery that ride of Custer's was. Linking facts With circumstances, and the truth is apparent that over-confidence was the cause of their death Three hundred braver men never died in war; there never was a sterner test of personal courage. 1 see iu the list of the killed the name of Charley Reynolds—" Lonesome Charley" Reynolds. He was one of those remark able characters sometimes met with in the rude life of the frontier—more remarkable in some respects than any it. has ever been my fortune to meet in a somewhat varied experience and a somewhat wide associa tion with people of this class; for under his rough exterior there was a soul as re fined and gentle as ever reigned in a woman's breast, and, as is usual in such cases, no amount of vulgar association or want of kindred sympathy could dull its lustre one degree. When Custer was at the base of Har ney's Peak in 1874, and our camp was ablaze with excitement over the gold dis coveries, Custer sent for Bloody Knife, the chief of his scouts, and asked for an In dian to carry dispatches to Fort Laramie, 200 miles beyond us. Bloody Knife shook his head solemnly, and said in reply : "My warriors are brave, but they• are wise. They will carry a bag of letters to Fort Lincoln, but I cannot ask them to go through the Sioux country to Laramie." Fort Lincoln was 200 miles farther than Laramie, although the route to the latter place was beset with ten fold more danger. It led directly through the Sioux hunting ground, and just at this particular time of the year the young men were all out in hunting parties, so that the plains were full of them. Bloody Knife's braves were Rees—a tribe for which the Sioux had a hereditary enmity, and be was too wise to ask one of them to take so suicidal a pro ject. But mails must be sent somehow, and Custer was pondering what to do.— Charley Reynolds was sitting by on the ground, with his legs crossed; cleaning a revolver, seemingly inattentive to the con versation. Custer had been thinking but a moment when Reynolds looked up and said "I'll carry the mails to Laramie, Gen eral." Custer was familiar with courage in every form, but such a proposition sur prised even him. "I wouldn't ask you to go Reynolds," he said. "I have no fear," responded the scout, quietly ; "When will the mails be ready 7" "I was intending to send something to morrow night," replied Custer. "I'll go to-morrow night." And picking up his piece of buckskin and bottle of oil, Reynolds strode quietly away. "There goes a man," said Custer, "who is a constant succession of surprises to me I am getting so that I feel a humiliation in his presence. Scarcely a day passes, and I have known him three years, that does not develop some new and strong trait in his character. I would as soon have asked my brother Tom to carry a mail to Laramie as Reynolds." The next day I saw Reynolds lead an old, ill-shaped, bony, dun colored horse to the farrier's. I was somewhat curious to know whether he was going to ride that animal to Laramie, and asked him. "Yes," said he, in his quiet way. "The General let me pick my own mount, and I got one that suits me " Noticing my surprise at his choice, he continued : on = •C 4 7 - 1 '0 "I suppose I could have picked out a better looking one, but this is the sort for my trip." And scanning the beast over, he added : "He knows more than a man, if he is bony. Look in his eye." ET. .<9 . On 0 • *: The farrier took the horse's shoes off and pared his hoofs neatly. Reynolds then went to the saddler's and had a set of leather shoes made to fit the horse's feet, so as to buckle around the fetlocks. What are those for ?" I asked. "A little dodge of mine to fool the In dians. They make no trail. Then he packed three or four days' ra tions in a saddle pocket, prepared a supply of ammunition, and cleaned up a long old fashioned rifle. Then, eating a hearty dinner, he lay down under a wagon for a nap. About four o'clock that evening an en gineering party started off in thb direction Reynolds was to take, and saddling his horse and strapping on a canvas bag of letters, he accompanied us. We rode till about ten o'clock, and went into camp in a cluster of trees, near a brook. A fire was lighted, a pot of coffee made, and after drinking a cupful, Reynolds mounted into his saddle and rode silently off into the dark. tZ 0 ,Y. - - His path lay through a trackless wilder ness (200 miles of it), the constant haunt of hostile Indians, and not a foot of the My Dead. HUNTINGDON, PA , FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 187 7 ground had Ecynolds ever srcn Lefbre.— He had never been at Laramie; he only knew the general direction in which it lay, and his only guide board was the stars.— After lima nights of riding and three days of sleeping he reached his destination un harmed. I saw him afterward at Fort Lincoln on our return. He told me he got through nicely and mailed the letters I had entrusted to his care. I had been told that under this gentle demeanor lay a ronvince as reinarkabk! any Ctoper ever wrote. and one dy asked him to tell me the story of his life. He blushed a little, laughed quietly, and replied he didn't think it worth while. "But they tell me you have had a re markable experience," I suggested. "Not so very remarkable," he answered. "I guess you can find enough to fill your paper without publishing anything about me." And this is all the romance I got from his lips. But from the lips tor others I have learned that he had not always been "Lonesome Charley Reynolds." No one, however, knew his true name. He was called "Lonesome" because of an absent, pensive way he had—a habit of seclusive ness. He came to Lincoln from Montana three years before, with his "partner," where the two had been hunting and trap ping together several years. The story of his life that the "partner" told was this : Roynolds was the son of a wealthy and aristocratic family in Tennessee, but was educated in the North, and when the war broke out he found himself in a painful dilemma. Ile had imbibed enough of Northern ideas to make him strengly hostile to the secession movement, while his family consisting of a father, mother and sister, were violent sympathizers with the South. His father entered the Con federate many as an aheer in the war.— The sou could not go with him and fight against his principles, nor could he stay at home and brook the taunts and plead ings of his mother and sister, nor could he join the Federal army and fight against his father, so he left his home and wandered away to the mines on tile Pacific slope.— His home was at the centre of hostilities, and all communication was off. At the close of the war be went back to Tennes see, and what was once his home was desolation. The neighbors told him that his father was killed in one of the early battles, his mother had died, and his sister had married a Confederate officer whose name was not remembered, and all traces of her bad been lost. The old plan. tation bad been confiscated, and there was not a single tie left to bind him to the past. He spent some months in search of his sister, without r,sult, and finally, home lessness and a disposition which shrank from fellowship with men, drove him back to his old home in the mountains to spend the rest of a dreary life. From 1365 to 1872 he was in the wines in Colorado and Montana, and hunting and trapping along the streams of the North-west, being em ployed occassionally by the Government to do some work for which ordinary men were too cowardly or incompetent. He was a short, stocky man, with a little stooping in the shoulders, and a way of carrying his head bent forward with his face bent to ward the ground. He had a shrinking blue eye, a very handsome mouth and. a forehead on which one could trace the blue veins, as you could trace them on the forehead of a woman. He was full beard ed, but neither the growth of hair or the marks of exposure had effaced the lines of beauty from his face. His manner was unobtrusive and gentle, and his voice was as soft and as tender as a woman's tones. He was a man that horses and dogs loved instinctively at first acquaintance; whom men respected, although he was never fathomed by his friends. He had fought a whole tribe of Indians single handed, people said, although no one ever learned of an exploit from his own lips. He nev er learned the necessity of swearing, never smoked a pipe or cigar before a camp fire, and never drank any liquor.— C'or. New York Graphic. (seitrt The Man of Business and the Busi ness Man. The man of business and the business man both have business to do ; but the business man is the one who does it. The business man thinks, moves, acts, and makes himself felt in the world. If a thought comes into his head, it is one of breadth and compass—it does not center on self and its narrow world. It reaches away and embraces others. It has a wide range, and does not stop till it touches and effects for good the interest of all. Nor are the thoughts of such men immobile. They become active, living realities in the wide and busy world. The authors of them make of these business thoughts ao tualities, give them "local habitation and a name," and steamboats are built, and ocean navigated, and distant climes and nations brought together ; an electric tele graph springs into being as by enchant ment, and lightning becomes garrulous and voluble and thought out-travels the wing ed winds; and in a twinkling the bands and shackles of trade are loosened. Such are the workings produced by the business wan. He awakens the drowsy and help less multitudes, puts life and thought, en ergy and action, into them, and makes the world leap rejoicing along the path of ages. Where its step before was but a single year, now it strides by scores and fifties. 'Men of thought and men of action, Clear tho way." And they do clear the way—their thoughts become tangible, moving, demol ishing forces, that break down and crush all opposing barriers, opening a pathway of progress, into which the more sluggish and timid portion of humanity may securely travel. But the man of business is emphatically what the name indicates. His business is always on his hands. He does not do it. He does not know bow to go to work in the right way. His thoughts are all meas ured and slow. He weighs self-made doubts and supposedsontingencies, and be fore be moves the business man gets up and runs away from him and wins the race. The man of business won't go ahead, he only eddies round and round—he does not progress—his path is a circle. He does not find himself at night many miles on his journey's way, but, like the hour hand of a elook, just where he started. He is not clear and decided in what he does, but often stands hesitating and puzzled. He ventures and falls back ; has a stout heart in fancy, but none in fact.—Scientific American. A PERSIAN proverb says : There are only two days for which to feel anxious. One is the day that is past. the other is the day to come. A Bak for Losings 31 . REV. T. I. cb LER, D. I On the chief thoroughfare of tit:, city I ()hen pasi a stately Savings Bank, built of free6tone, and I see large groups of working pcop:e going in to dep.,sit their hard eatned money. Some are tneehanie.-; some are Mil domestits; some are poor widows laying by a few dolbus for their falwrless children. But on the same street the Tempter has opmed wore than one bank for .•Losings. - In some parts of the city there is one on nearly every corner. In almost every rural hamlet, too, there is a similar insti• tutien. New cork City contains six thousand of them. In each of these Banks for linsings is a counter, on which old men and young. and even some wretched women, lay down their deposits either in paper or coin. The only interest that is paid on the deposits is in redness of eyes, and foulness of breath, and remorse - of conscience. Every man who makes a deposit gains a loss. One man goes into the Bank with a full pocket. and comes out empty. Another man goos in with a good character, and conics out wilh the word "drunk" written on his bloated countenance. I have even seen a mechanic enter in a bran-new coat, and coming away again as if the mice had been nibbling at his elbows. I have known a younz clerk to leave his "situation" hellind him °lle of the Devil's Banks of Losing. Several pros perous tradesmen have lust all their btr-i !less there, Church membors have been known to reel out from these seductive haunts—trying to walk straight but back sliding at every step. What is worst of all, thousands of potpie go in there and lose their immortal souls. If the cashiers of these institutions were honest, they would post on the door some such notice as this: "Bank for Losings. Open at all hours. Nothing taken in but goad money. Noth ing paid nut but disgrace and disease, and degradation and death. An extra divi dend of delirium tremens wits be given to old depositors. A free pass to Perdition given to those who pay well at the counter ; also tickets to Greenwood and other cem eteries. entitling the holder to a Drunkard's Grave ! Ail the children of depositors sent without charge to the orphan asylum or the alms-house." Young wen ! beware of the Bank for Losings. Some bait their it. , positors with champagne ; some with ale or B.iurbon some with a pack of cards; and others with a billiard table. If you wish to keep character—keep out ! Young ladies ! never touch the hand that touches the wine glass. Never wear the name of a man who is enrolled on the deposit-list of the devil's bank. Never lean on the arm that leans on the bax- mom c9noter, it will be rotten support. The best savings-bank for a young man's money is a total abstinence pledge. Tne best savings-bank for his time is honest industry arid a good book. The best savings bank for his affections is a tree woman's heart. The best-savings-bank for his soul is a faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. But if you do not want your greenbacks turned into black eyes and red noses : if you don't want your pocket emptied, and your character worm eaten, and your souls drugged with the poisons of the pit—then keep outside of the "National Brandy Bunk fur Losings." Stick to your Job. Many employes who wish to increase their income take a very . short-sighted way of doing so. Considering themselves fairly entitled to all the compensation they can get, they demand more than employers are able or willing to pay. To such an extent does this acquisitiveness in many cases go, that four or five men, if left to themselves, would often appropriate the just pay of ten ; and the most difficult task of an em ployer or superintendent frequently is to decide what portion of employe's demand to concede. Pay is commonly a compromise between the amount of work desired and the amount of remuneration claimed ; and with a free market the sum given will closely approximate to just wages. The true question of an . employe is, not how much he can get forthwith, but how much he can keep steadily employed. The men who get rich are not usually the strikers who refuse to work for par ticular wages. Those who increase their income arc the men who accustom themselves to regular industry, who keep steadily at work for such compensation as they can get, live within their means, and invest it. Thus they keep up a good income and increase it from year to year ; quite as fast, in both cases, as they become able to manage it with judgment. The employe who takes the most pains to find out exactly what service his em ployer wants, to render that service care fully and generously, and who, having mastered the details of his work, does nut leave it to go into sonic other employment when a larger but uncertain compensation is promised, is the man who is certain to rise. When hard times et - one, or when his employer is unfortunate and compelled to retrench, be is the man who will not be dismissed, and who will not lose time in seeking work, when he would of necessity be eating up his savings till he found it. When vacancies occur in the establishment, he is the one who will be entrusted with the most valuable work, which commands the highest• pay. When his employer wants a partner, he is the man likely to be chosen. When others are discharged fir incom petency. he will be retained, for his knowl edge of the work and his known reliability make for him a good position, in which he is sure to be able to do well. True, this way of life is net always easy ; it requires self-control, conscience, and steadfastness ; but it is the way to self-respect, honorable standing, legitimate wealth and happiness. Hence, though it be often hard, it is after all the easiest way. It offers the great prizes of life, and they are surely worth the striving required to obtain them. CHEAP RENT.-A person who was look ing at a house the other day,says the Lynch burg News, said he couldn't afford to pay so much rent. "Well look at the neigh borhood," replied a woman ; "you can bor row flat irons next door, coffee and tea across the street, flour and sugar on the corner, and there's a big pile of wood be longing to the school house right across the ahoy, and in the name of Julius Cm sar, what more could you ask r" He rented and moved in with nine children, four dogs and a dray-load of household awl kitchen furniture. Secret E7rlii "I liE • r r r , •• THE 1 .6 ill fi LI 0 ,:ch` I, , • j. , ,;.. n a c"Tre: ry , TH ti ;ityret. ilia ry of t;1.! fr.,nl •• II) ;ho, 1)•••; (; • in • 1; r y 13 %Vedir).:t ?qr. • , 1M.;2. volume on it 4 1 , • ducc! , l an .r.ttra .r linary . siippr(:.,,c.l. it,r the work in :=e; years ago W e fb s Prj r: OW OW full aCeOlibio AA i 4 WOll k 110 g il G. Urge llt. was ninth d:stre..sel, not WI ly by the state of the I:topire dnrinz tip Fitter part c•filli4 hit tho wr. t••;1 ed 1.1 . 11l I 7./ s. PO, 1:1 , ^, tyra~ni :J apprehension ol• a ntiniber o. persons on the trv.a4.,n great fteliug agaiit,it the government. 31orlfaiqt. and nhie only crime inmi4A in h .1;,- ported Mr. Pitt 's own 0.j; , ..:4:;31 reform, witii..ut a ap,rpetit's) pre% i..us lice were stirp's , ?.l in tir.ir : T. • : !r, gate ruti s;i titt! ViLt let .+ Wool Couy vc,,re a t 1 an-pat rratiy I.‘) rt.. ire .‘r thi. Prifirn of 1 .V.,1,4 in lill:.11"C mar, laptilred h0w1.4 Ltlis ,i2.tbefl Irn: T') a ; 01.1•1: bl!s, blt: to ;Jay he ;:pplitd t.. n this extremity i 7.1 11) ,,1 i to his lather, . all t•i t-, any advice tvllira tL. Kith; tni,..llt In a n interv:ew With the :he ti•T , ': t,b,ersed •‘t11....t it v:as ;,, Pitt i ut C.; any rt,•,._f„ ;,s ; t the ini,t,r could (I, it. rrt i; of State If, 111 V: iou, to it requin...l 10;111.- , ti make up I Ito ictiey (:;r *cut it 11,t Kil:4 FAP , SO,I tirlt tt.,t httit',./, acid th.,t a Lily (,:1...#y%1 ;,.• s.:lthlf . Nl, as agre-able to the the as pos,.,ible. ev,:nt the 31irlisier 41 !uk•ittis lin- his Ft:it:N.o4m Ciebt 11.4.70u1C lir the Upon • ;,.. Pri::ce received tit.; n r Sri varied !..eil.-ation,, and I,T; to think upon the propos-ttiou. a tryinL; sllnal ion ;or -,:t• i had c.nmidert.d the l'rinve . ., nrarri ,;!- Mrs Fitzherhert solemn an i thisi,ght lictven, direct opp-si:ion tip the itt) , 1!; ~ ...,•rati.tta tile time it euthizel. Ott the oiner hand illat a royal luarria4C vims au r%,' would e t., and might, I,el haps. re , iai!,l the fi‘on tn,:se et,ti• r ious parsniti %aid' .i.e;.:. entangled. After conferences w.til Mrs Fitzherbert, the Queen, aed a few others closely interested in the affair 'aad taken place, the Prince acquainted his father with his submission to the royal w.ll. and requested to know whom his Maj , sty would recommend for his bride. The King sug gested hi: , niece, the daughter of his sister, the Duchess of Brunswick, for Wili.Se ac ceptance he urged the Prince to send his miniature, and ether formalities usual on such occasions. The Prince, with appir, cut vivacity, acquiesced ; but his Maje,t3 thought that his son's language w,.t.ted sincerity. The evening was spent in rev elry and debauchery by the Prince and his companions, and his loyal Iligheess swore, "I will marry the Princess of Bi-uns wick—which," said he, "will be no mar riage at all—and desert her, of whieh I will give her timely notice." The minia ture was sent to the Niece-A Caroline. sad with it a letter from the Prince. Ile told her frankly that he could not love her ; that his heart was long since attached to another, and that if he was obliged to mar ry her, he would make up his mind to abandon her. At the same time George 111. addressed a letter to the young lady, in which he expressed his eareest desire that she would consent to the union. The King also wrote to his sister, the Dad:less of Brunswick, asking her to use her best efforts to induce her daughter to accept the hand of the Prince. But while these preliminaries were in proiress. the royal rake was plunged is vice The Old Maid's Thermometer. 15—Anxious for coming ~ ut, ;n,l the 2r tentions of the other sex. 1 4 3—Boginning to have some i.l*' of tho tender passive. 17—Talks of love in the cottage. and dis• interetted affections. 18—Fancies herself in love with some handsome man who has flattered her 19—Es a little more diffident on account of baing noticed. 20—Commences being fashionable. 21—Still more confident of her own at tractions, and tweets a brilliant es tablishment. 22—Refu-es a good offer, because he is not a man of fashion. 23—Flirts with every yonng man she tu..:et.s. 24—Wonders she is not married. 25—Rather more circumspect in her con duct. 26--Begins to think a large fortua- not quite so indispensable. 27—Prefers the company of rati• nal omen to flirting. 28—Wishes to he married in a quiet w..y, with a comfortable ineome. 29—Almost despairs of ent,ring the mar riage state. 30—Rather fe.irful of being ell!iel an 'o!d maid." 31—An additional love of di-ff... 32—Professes a dislike for balls; find i: difficult to get good partners. 33—Wonders bow men can leave the society of sensible women, to flirt with a foolish girl. 34—Affects good humor in her conversa tion with men. 35—Jealous of the praise of women. 36—Quarrels with her friend who is lately married. 27—Thinks herself slighted in society. 38—Likes to talk to her acquaintances who are married unfortunately. 39-111 nature increases. 40—Very meddling and officious. 41—If rich, as a dernier rotort, makes Live to a young man without fortune. 42—Not succeeding, rails against mankind. 43—Partiality for cards and scandal (-em inences. 44—Severe against the manners of the age. 45—Strong predilections for a clergyman. 46—Enraged at his desertion. 47—Becomes despondent and takes to tea. 48—Turns all sensibility to cats and dogs. 49---Adopts a dependent relation to attend upon her feline and canine nursery. . .I~r: 11 ; , • .; • .0 . Pli•on , A ro A .4'..1 t r sit t Ito g-. ill, 1. :I - h- I ; tir. I ti... '~~~;:~ fi:: '1 c: is It! r I, "7 I -t tin. t I:1 h it it/ •. . i li,• '3 i~. - ' 1 j •••;; •,rrt•r !•ot ~~r~•j ~ n't•( !) ii•• t [ i. I 3 • ; 1 i.I .) %,r, I t• r Si .1 ,1~~~~ i,.'l i. s • , -•i• • I') ift.! j ‘. e'rx •. 4` , 4••• p00k,04 ap doors awl windows of the structure !nosed , until tb. firemen come ; pot a 7.t sloth inseam, oier t h e mouth. All t .1.,71f0 , 13 an 6111141!..., • voomt aa4 in a stoo:iy rem: ova the upper p:rt of : the hairtie ^ the win.l"sw to art t;:e smoke nut ; , tin a The bps theatre. church or room. keep ceoi; :0 Go the line " lw as l " Z "Z s. lieg gimw7 l. op. leseend 'whiers .t re7:.ular "op go rr i p- s I minute. be had mimed the mils es are. vent the !ran-Aiwa If leroeene sod is LIM 1.110110114 WNW he see bogies ChiLlic:d Can be wale to turn in an apes es 1 info robe saucer bi Ip:inn:: twirl' 3 teat:n, throw it am. sad oihaaaai Th'P w w . aaa away I" n t ' air " a " ri ‘ '' r ir4 "" hvil " over pretty sown her hashasd hod le stand es w 313'1 :n be.l h.. ms with eurzalis; sprink"e sand in- 1,..4 sus Le the stead of alwd.kt ttior4 of oil stor". hr wsrea+i. se hip eisme "; l 7; kt'F. ..w .1 can whip the bogie ere ye Sim fr,,ta rn au.l 7.T.•;.4y tr -st . h , rrp " ..4. and a . 6 . 41 . poono loft cul .4-.14 '• c!. ' 4 * .e th-it I)sa iftSlllo . • Awry stifle amit storeptios enter wr.l the chinew.:r • lie b.0b...t0 woo 3.4 bonded ban is that al: lights assd h ire nnt before -e .be be obrop hie tiring or havint: I.kee b.t.incis; oopisoii bob boo bomb loa l bo. baa, 7 006.4 7 keep matches in metal or earthen Tempi., lima. and is arreelbiff seaman hod and out of the re..ch ni ehitlren ; std pro- „ ge e. , haon lir . side a piece " 144 " 0 roPv. ea M S 4 '” 4. '"!Z3/li. 41P TAD AV. "• she shed me be reach the in rviry chamber. oiet Neither atlart any one if the htspoe be ow sisal self saw and re, a fire, except pu;,ee. fir•al.l3. 2041 known 'irked air -. mosoost neighbors; nor lights.,l vas brackets , the lee ikon b., theagainst the wall; nor ;cave small children %-ickieurvis, ass ialeised: in a room where there arc Illatekes or ae in . a a r 104 r - open fire : cor deposit ashes in a wooden ,T= is box, or on the door ; nor u..e alight in ..x lees [ mom emitting the gm.. meter. Meter leas , . ife saunas mot boa. et sa) baaamand clothes near thQ 'are p;ace dry p.m bat, seek hie nee. 2 : 1 1 3 . be abia . wet smoke or read is bed by eandle sir Sop be rmobr i e r bo . wood r ha look. light ; nor pot kindling wood t.) dry oe „ oomb. " 4 . 1 .„ Re igreed tolo aced 7.4 the top of the stos . ,!.; nor take a light inn, moi bore l ac c . Thew „ maw se a CitleWt ; net pour oat liquor :n open ii::;-trighireer. bt amp, li g ht n o r k e ep burning or ot'oer infiansable ! _me& oust 1. drawn , : yor bold air in when , there " a fire ; R.K traistilis Om* fa r. aid ye diarist Wiles far allow smoking About !ruin.. • r a tr,hrttavea. nicks eM 0.44. ' t rifle .I,7l,r:can i Asa 611 the 4assat. Tear and sir s so NM se sight -Gesell 'est es the Awe& astusel the vie ism. shirr him "tot her ighs -, weight ie elm deers ae sable 7 The Charm of Reserve. not h.l too anvons •zire Away younicif, to wear your heat!. urn ?drew.. It t7l I,IK on'y unwise. it U. sront , to make your secret soul enform , n proper Iv. For yt.o brin4 the , feheate th1; 0 1.4 of the heart in:o contempt by expesintz them to th.,!.• who cannot tuoler+rar.i them (: you throw pearls beforr sw tie, :hey yid turn actin and N-r. aZ,in 4h01114 you el.siku to with •.pen.-se. a* a duty due to y-tt from your etuld. p o et fr , ,ntl, your wife w 7 tur humnanti. qach .1 . the charm efille i. rtuneti e i. iw t t n 4 tletnithill of ennEirlenc, Itespert the 1111 turai modesty ef the , vu; : its re• re deli c3 t, flt , tgr er 4 of feelin% elm". their pr-ale when they are t.rileh , " toe rude!! Wa.t with e•tricuA lovt —w:th en , ze- intere , r - for the t'ov! when, :1l; brio. ,barinontotri. the rev-:ato , n will coin.. its torn vcroci. ue , !emandetl. The espee..ltion h.a a• civil-go, for ios long at ;ifs h.i.3.ltlt , ll;llTll' le:an, life i 4 intotvltinz ; a,4 lonz iv a friend has something' to friendship is delightful. Thr e e who wish to destroy all 'mystery in thoge they !nye. *n have everything revealed. are 1111 ,, TINW10 9 1Ply killing their own happiness. I: Li Oath to he with tho.e who have mvay thirty, to say to us which we cannot 'near n.rw. It is mach t !tee with those who sometimes speak to as in pirables--If we love the.. Lore needs a •me indefinite/sees in crier le keep its charm. Respeet which eam?..l: lows from the familiarity which degrade" it. ia kept vivid when we feel that there te • mystery in tht . ...e we lov , t which come, of depth of eharae!er Rensember that is violating your own re-erve. or that of an- other, 7 rnt destroy that seasitivaara of character ; and of Azrzeter sr ions so common I 4 not to make 43 creel thin to spoil it.—Re'.. .4.pfsri -1. R,..?ke. SVitr.-: an Indians zit., !pets tiro .4 Inver and determines to dismiss him, she di,even't throw much ire en work into her speech. ••I zue‘s you ram pion of. mow. Sam. " is the rernirk thi4 www*t hati.b.'• Ls3tr - J H;. id -T • i -.I irp- • w .1) if r '!1.0 fr ! v • 1 r •!, n •n - r4..t ? f•••lr 1,111 + , f1"..: I T• 7 ' 7 7 1. ti 6 , - , % .Utfit .r .!'"le .n-• 4 I ' , , :t . -4 • - . : •-•r •:4 I"? • , 8 t ..• . I'. • r r •'+'.•• if Ir•t ri 4t r • (: , :rtr,)t.7 :.? ' 11 - ',l I ~ II Lase n f F:re ,:. . .• *RI . . 1 -)llivv7 914, Carv?t, - . Trig Twr 4 ,,r 17711111 • W I t 4 rpri , vrrio v #. 11 . 4 iq..r t r hvyrz. limo fir-4H eye: .1 -vs 0.44 --try higgi mom • 7 y. s piney 1' • , • r rid U. barb "Pm* • - 111 1 .gritegare "OW -"gra..fy 4101Pri011. sits. ,-. 4. a.** bags P rdita •.r 1 41 a .ri *i.e..% frit owl olio. 4 1..1 fr. 4 imieses '/' . - t .. i ii.mett • -"hod lb. low 6 ..,er , frfool-47.1 nonserr. Aar bow ^ : e +► eilPolVt T 7 • '4. o .irzrr rmes4 ;,'fps y. fst . sof wood 4,3 Woo. rho. arposiirr 3-. ir-.-r• simour albry bail I t: , 111 Clr oramerr- gni - I . 7 ,4, ..• 4rtipv *him Albs jrrir - towel's, ompairoub - 4saiterborlpt 'spry • A. :I busamie " I . r •-- r Mirk Amy pripowsit flirt , - he 'Vat Ars shoos 7 . • • •So. le :fr , inor,•• •- nit i.os sr, Ir'ljor es .1 r ;1111.111,1111 pie . "I i 4 47.• awe .r •{ , - • in I !h. M•i - 303 • gime . • .4, • m•i toys-by. 1 ., . •r - Lnavies, sir t. • 33 , 1-4 w 4 'l...t* W4"vs it .ant 1t i no 41.1 sod ow s .4384 'ea oigna. Ltt so it4.llllg. i . a...”-Ty.'" v.,. 3 :5•, V ..14611- }PIT .114 3 91 0.•:... tag, i S3•lltts' 33333-0. ...100. • , . f•• T 102.61 3?:.3011 •n z • . 43• fw SO . . • • ....••T ' - !`b: -s 51111 • .1440616 wh,. 3:: 33 Ito -33w/two' : is& •••.•• .;••. . .f 3 . 13 , .:•.tl. I.; triorei ) !. ; it.. • Of ~"s I • 3 7 .1 • . rioner - . 1•• rA, n , ..! aMA in ..t) • . roe ••• Mak .434 ',v.:. aai • 'I • r•Atf • Lod or., • - t boob dvi op . Igloo—se ~t 111 , 10 I V. ;: • . ? 'Nye that 'Ors - _ • • swat To Noe 1. . •- • sukii arta _1 • • • OW, - , t • 1114•41,p rid* r • • 1 t it , *t. sn•l b 4 pr A Farelib lemesUm Is I*.et's overt :here est s rime ef sgserg that .puil itieseirr sea pass f.sver:te. Der, - soil ler Diehtsts. the literary_ was etataisiait a whom tsetse— Hew bar. 111 to Ash. the =an when be xraltitryi bps ' W I 4.le't tansy Panty Irma Diet Pea— virh,/i in 7 , 1 pansy her 4 w w -a* rwt ty ni-- tbat • • 341 I C2lll day D+eliornt—eneser. pis ww•47 boas ay :es rime ripen easy ANS s -i1 pretty kirt.r . :rwr-o— I view Tie roan. I: 1,14 F 1 t he s-t sr 4.. rt ira NNW In.l eprlac:sz .rp,e atm sellarrevy. wiled kw hy As wait. ase. mat a Mean. SSW rebore *b. Woks, bat ma slit Seer Thum bs gatbeved ben wp tad limposell bisatimas eh.ir— thee be bod me bum bine exer !be leer. jos bun lap wire tibe mil ma better boa aramatil ever the bostibma ea-- t eadereemll " elbeliad thy lawyer -:Tlits se how be forbad bile." leeeetei I la• givesir bus aril Wme't di* e' art nit sot lig aswirw" I , P6pret,.• itnri 111111141.1. big bresabt. • I f yen witbairew ; is. tomiumt. void tie Jodi. ; sod. oprifigis. AmPie Sow wok ih irisirse sad tame hiav ,ff. • flu 2 yes -, velosoisog oostsalosy der. Piorwit ivied rembee of preseer arreersod he vs boa% PIS •erstelood beg heed s sisser. soh s sow seroord se Avve on him. Illelkaim iv ' !above Is' &if. Aloe* dirlllllllllllr. yrs , loser ; the biewpfy brae Masi se II sine* of sow ow WI es ter breerhoo. linsenr. there Irby Ps NOM to. Jay Pse was N 4 . R. 7 •vr 1 4 • rropi -wry 101 , .6111111101, IT ', O 4. 11 . ," 42 "t 1 S. a pose am ;a=f► 3A~~