VOL. 42. The Huntingdon Journal (Vice in new Jura:int, Building, Fifth Street. THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL is published every Friday by J. A. NASH, at $2,00 per annum IN ADVANCE, or $2.50 if pot paid for in six months from date of sub scription, and $3 if not paid within the year. No paper discontinued, unless at the option of the pub lisher, until all arrearages are paid. No paper, however, will be sent out of the State unless absolutely paid for in advance. Transient advertisemqnts will be inserted at TWELVE AND A-RALF CENTS per line for the first insertion, SEVEN AND A-HALF CENTS for the second and FIVE CENTS per line for all subsequent insertions. Regular quarterly and yearly business advertisements will be inserted at the following rates : I i Sm 6m 9m Ilyr I 13m 6 ml I 9mllyr 11u 501 4 501 550 BOO 1 4coll 90018 00 $27 $36 2"1 5 06 8001000 12 00 %roll 18 00 36 00 50 65 3 " 700 10 00,14 00 18 00 %..)1134 00 50 00 65 80 4" 1 8 00114 00 i2O 00,18 00 1 c 01136 00 60 00 80 100 All Resolutions of Associations, Communications; of limited or individual interest, all party announcements, and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding five lines, will be charged TEN cum per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to the party having them inserted. A,___ll,o4iiisisrskgents must find their commission outside .11.IM — e figures. All advertising accounts are due and collectable when the advertisement is once inserted. JOB PIRIgTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch. Hand-bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice, and everything in the Printing line will be executed in the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Professional Cards- DR. G. B. HOTCIIKIN, 203 Mifflin Street. Office cor ner Fifth and Washington Ste., opposite the Poet Of fice. Huntingdon. [ junel4-1878 TA CALDWELL, Attorney-at-Law, No. 111, 3rd street. 1). Office formerly occupied by Messrs. Woods & Wil liamson. [apl2,`7l DR. A.B. BRUMBAUGEf, offers his professional services to theeommunity. Office, N 0.523 Washington street, one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. Lian4,'7l DR. ITYSKILL haspermanently located in Alexandria to practice his profession. Ljan.4 '7B-Iy. 1 C. STOCKTON, Surgeon Dentist. Office In Leieter'e 1.1. building, in the room formerly occupied by Dr. E. J Greene, Huntingdon, Pa. [apl2B, '76. GBO. B. ORLADY, Attorney-at-Law, 405 Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [n0v17,16 GL. ROBB, Dentist, o ffi ce in S. T. Brown'R new bnilding, . No. 520, Penn Street, Duntingdon, Pa. [apl2.'7l Tj C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. Office, No. —, Penn 11. Street, Huntingdon, Pa. Lapl9,ll TSYLVANIIS BLAIR, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, el . Pa. Office, Penn Street, three dom west of 3rd Street. ' [jan4,7l JT W. MATTERN, Attorney-at-Law and General Claim . Agent, Huntingdon, Pa. Soldiers' claims against the Government for back-pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attended to with great care and promptness. Of fice on Penn Street. Ljan4,7l 11JS. OEISSINGER, Attorney-at-Law and Notary Public, . Huntingdon, Pa. Office, No. 230 Penn Street, oppo site Court House. Lfebs,ll S E. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., office in Monitor building, Penn Street. Prompt and careful attention given to all legal business. [augs,l4-6mos WILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Hunting -11 don, Pa. Special attention given to collections, and all other legal business attended to with care and pramptness. Office, No. 229, Penn Street. [ap19,71 NEW STOCK OF CLOTHING AT S. WOLF'S. S. WOLF has just received a large stock of CLOTHING, from the east, which he offers very cheap to suit these panicky times. Below are a few prices: Men's good black suits $l2 50 cassimere suits 8 50 diagonal (best) 14 00 Warranted all wool suits 10 00 up Youth's black suits 00 up Cassimere suits 't 50 Diagonal (best) 11 50 Boys' suits 4 50 up Brown and black overalls 50 Colored shirts 35 up Fine white shirts 1 00 up Good suspenders • 18 up Best paper collars per box 15 A large assortment of hats 75 up Men's shoes 1 50 up Large Assortment of TRUNKS, VALI LISES and SATCHELS at PANIC PRICES. Trunks from $2 00 up Umbrellas from 60 up Ties and Bows very low. Cigars and Tobacco very cheap. Be sure to call at S WOLF'S store N 0.420 Penn Street, southeast corner of the Diamond. sepr76] SAMUEL MARCH Agt. Patents obtained for Inventors, in the United States, Cana da, and Europe at reduced rates. With our prin cipal office located in Washington, directly opposite the United States Patent Office, we are able to at tend to all Patent Business with greater promptness and despatch and less cost, than other patent attor neys, who are at a distance from Washington, and who hove, therefore, to employ "associate attorneys.' We make preliminary examinations and furnish opinions as to patentability, free of charge, and all who are interested i* new inventions and Patents are invited to send for a copy of our "Guide for obtain ing Patents," which, is sent free to any address, and contains complete instructions how to obtain Pat ents, and other valuable matter. We refer to the German-American National Bank, Washington, D. C ; the Royal Sweedish, Norwegian, and Danish Legations, at Washington; Bun. Joseph Casey, late Chief Justice U. S. Court of Claims; to the Officials of the U. S. Patent Office, and to Senators and Members of Congress from every State. Address: LOUIS - BAGGER ht CO., Solicitors of Patents and Attorney, at Law, Le Droit Building, Washington, D. C. [apr2fi '7S-tf NT B. CORBIN, -A- • WITH GEGIAGE FGELKER, Wholesale Dealer in Carpets, Oil Cloths, Yarns, Twines, Wicks, Batts, Wooden and Willow Ware, 249 Market and 236 Church Streets, Oct.4.] PHILADELPHIA. WASHINGTON, D. C., HAS THE BEST HOTEL IN THE COUNTRY, At $2.50 Per Day. TREMONT HOUSE. NO LIQUORS SOLD. ' [febls—y CILDREN TO INDENTURE. A number of ohildren are in the Alms House who will be Indentured to suitable parties upon application to tlfe Directors. There are boys and girls from two to eleven years of age. Call upon or address, The Directors of the Poor of Hunting don county, at Shirleysburg. [oct4, '7B-tf OR SALE --Stock of first-class old established Clothing Store. Store room for rent. Owner retiring from business. Sept 27-3m] H. RC MAN. Ucan make money faster at work fur us than at any thing else. Capital not required ; we will start you $l2 per day at home made by the industrious. Men women, buys and girls wanted everywhere to work for us. Now is the time. Costly outfit and terms free. Address Taos a Co., Augusta, Maine. [aprs '7B-ly WM. P. & R. A. ORBISON, A TTORNEYS-AT-LAW, No. 321 Penn Street, HUNTINGDON, PA. All kinds of legal business pr ly at tended to. Se ,'7B. Bbusiness you can engage in. $5 to $2O per day OS made byan y worker oceithersex, rghtinl rownllitipaticularsa.dmples worth $5 free. Improve your spare time at this business. Address STINBON A Co, Portland, Maine. aprs 78-ly WILLIAM W. DORRIS, Attorney-at-Law, 402 Penn Street, HUNTINGDON, PA March 16, 1877 y BUY YOUR SCHOOL BOOKS at the Journal Store. - . . . , ,n, ... . .-. . ..„..-7 ~ .e . .„- .. , -.:.. ....1 : ,0 ..... ,. : . '. ) i . . :,„..,..:- ,„ .... e _ he ~ ntin•don a p . Printing The Huntingdon Journal, PUBLISHED EVERY .FRIDAY MORNING, -I N THE NEW JOURNAL BUILDING, No. 212, FIFTH STREET, HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, • ,-------:o: TERMS : $2.00 per annum, in advance; $2.50 -•••••••ICM.,... within six months, and $3.00 if not paid within the year. 0 0 0 0 000 0 0 0 00000000 A 00000000 0 0 0 0 0 PROGRESSIVE 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 0 REPUBLICAN PAPER. 0 00000000 SUBSCRIBE. 00000000 o o 0 0 0 0 o o ggWiM TO ADVERTISERS Circulation 1800. FIRST-CLASS ADVERTISING MEDIUM. 5000 READERS WEEKLY. The JOURNAL is one of the best printed papers in the Juniata Valley, and is read by the best citizens in the county. It finds its way into 1800 homes weekly, and is read by at least 5000 persons, thus making it the BEET advertising medium in Central l'ennsyl- 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 llggggggg JOB DEPARTMENT p l pp C CS ,< s:L co "tS— I cc 31 o -g gPr :4 _op ro -CO A SPEC: PM: g All letters should be addressed to J. A. NASH, Huntingdon, Pa. E4t Puts' Nobtr `Only a Nigger Preacher." The Rev. Ben Black, a colored Methodist min ister at Holly Springs, proved himself a hero dur ing the prgvalence of the yellow fever. Ile visited white and black, and administered comfort where ever he went, and at one time was the only min ister present in the village to console the sick aad assist in the burial of the dead. Ben Back ! Well, I reckon I know him— That Holly Springs preacher you mean ? Y€s, he's black as old Nature could grow him 'Mongst all the black niggers ypu've seen He wuz born on the old plantashun An' registered thar as a slave, But the Lord in His wise all-creashun Put in him a heart that is brave. He wuz out thar fightin' all evil, An' tryin' ter save his own race Frum out of the jaws of the devil, By the power o' gospel and grace; He was thar when the yaller inflicshun Come stalkin"long over the land— An' the hour of awful afflicshun Showed up the true grit of 'er man ! Thar wuz then er stampede of the people, Ez well of the po'r an the rich, The preacher lost sight of his steeple An' '•hie duty," an' "cross," and all sich They flee frum ther kith an' ther kin, sir, Ther faith warn't ez strong ez that thread, An' only a few stayed to win, sir, That battle 'mongst dyin' an' dead ! Old Ben never flickered a second, Ner faltered when weary an' faint, But wharever the stricken 'un beckon'd He bent to his work like er. saint ! Right thar at the bed o' the whitest He took up er merciful stand, Or trod with er step that was lightest When death wuz the closest at hand. He talked of the Lord, an' his power Ter save an' made holy the heart; He told the weak soul not to cower In the face of Death's pestilent dart ; He spoke the sweet message of Heaven Ter them that never bed heer'd it, An' put a firm faith in them, even, Thet know'd of the future an' feer'd. I tell yet Chet old black preacher Wuz worth thar his weight in pure gold, For he foller'd the path of his Teacher Like them 'Postlemen did of old ! I've seem many parsons in churches A shoutin' of duty an' death, But they left all their folks in the lurches When of danger thar comes er first breath I've heer'd menny high•toned sparkies Go shoutin' round about niggers, An' swearin' the souls of the darkies Weren't worth enny more'n er chiggers ; But of thar's er man in this party With er heart in him as big as er flea, Thet won't cheer for old Ben right hearty, Why, then—he's got ter lick me! Fer I say the Lord had er reason Fer paintin' the old nigger's hide, An' He meant him to turn up in season, With all the world square on his side ; An' when all in the judgment come even, If I pass you can bet on this thing— Thar'll be one nigger angel in heaven I'll jine with ter praise an' ter sing. A tlanti Constitution, C'e *torß-Celltr. THE FACTORY GIRL. It was a little studio, quite at the top of the house. Upon the easel that occupied the post of honor in the middle of the room, a large piece of canvas glowed with the soft tints of a spring landscape, and Frank Seymour stood before it, pallet in hand, his large brown eyes dreamy with a sort of inspiration. In a comfortable easy chair, by the door, sat a plump, rosy little female, in a face cap with plenty of narrow white satin rib bons fluttering from it, and silver-gray poplin dress—Mrs. Seymour, in fact, our artist's mother, who had .;ust come up from the very basement "to see how Frank was getting along." "Here, mother," said tine young man, with an enthusiastic spackle in his eyes, 'just see the way the sunset light touches the topmost branches of the old apple tree. I like the brown, subdued gold of that tint; it somehow reminds me of Grace Teller's hair. Mrs. Seymour moved a little uneasily in her chair. "Yes, it's very pretty; but it strikes me, Frank, you are lately discovering a good many similitudes between Miss Teller and your pictures." Frank laughed, good humoredly. "Well, mother, she is pretty." "Yes. I don't deny that she's pretty enough!' "Yow, mother, what's the meaning of that ambiguous tone ?" demanded the young artist, pleasantly. "What have you discovered about Miss Grace Teller that isn't charming and womanly and lovely?", "Frank, do you know who she is ?" "Yes, I know that she is a remarkably pretty girl; with a voice that sounds ex actly like the low, soft ripple of the little rivulet where I used to play when a boy." i "Nonsense !" said Mrs. Seymour. "Well, then, if you are not satisfied with my description of her as she is, would you ,ike to know what she will be ?" • Mrs. Seymour looked puzzled. "Mother, I think one day she will be my wife" "Frank ! Frank are you crazy?" "Not that I know of," said Mr. Sey mour, composedly, squeez . n2; a little deep blue on his pallet out of a dainty tin tube. and mixing it thoughtfully. "We know so little about her," thought Mrs. Seymour. "To be sure she is visit ing Mary Elton, and Mary belongs to a very good family, if she does live in half a house and take in embroidery for a living. But then she has no style at all compared with Cynthia Parker, and Cynthia always did fancy our Frank. Then, moreover, she has five or six thousand dollars of her own. But, dear me, a young man in love is the most headstrong creature alive." Mrs. Seymour mused a while longer, and then put on her mouse-colored silk bonnet and gray shawl, and set out upon a tour of investigation. "I'll find out something about Miss Tel ler, or I'll know the reason why," thought the indefatigable widow. Miss Grace Teller was "at home" help ing Mary Elton in an elaborate piece of embroidery. The room where the two girls sat was very plain, carpeted with the cheapest ingrain, and curtained with very ordinary pink and white chintz, yet it looked snug and cheery, for the fat black bird was chirping noisily in the window, and a stand of mignionette and velvet blossomed pansies gave a delightful tint to this pretty picture of every day life. Mary Elton was pale, thin, and not at all pretty ; there was a tremulous sweet ness about her mouth that seemed to whisper that she might have been different under different circumstances. Grace Teller was a lovely blonde, with large blue eyes, rose leaf skin, and hair whose luminous gold fell over her forehead like an aureole. As Mrs. Seymour entered, a deeper shade of pink stole over Grace's beautiful cheek, but otherwise she was calm and self-pos sessed, and readily parried the old lady's interrogatories. "Very warm morning, this," said the old lady, fanning herself, "Do they have -, 0 cry 4-, P E BY SAMUEL W. SMALL, HUNTINGDON, PA,, FRIDAY DECEMBER 20, 1878. as warm weather where you came from, Miss Teller ?" "I believe it is very sultry in Factory vine," replied Glace, composedly taking another needleful of white bilk. "Factoryville ? Is that your native place ? Perhaps then you know Mr. Park er —Cynthia I'arker's father, who is su perintendent in the great calico mills there ?" "Very well, I have often seen him." "Are you acquainted with Cynthia ?" "No—l believe Miss Parker spends most of her time in this city." iThat is very true," said Mrs. Seymour, sagely; "Cynthia says there's no society worth having in Factoryville; Cynthia is very genteel. But—excuse my curiosity, Miss Teller—how did you become ac quainted with Mr. Parker and not with his daughter ?" Mrs. Seymour gave a little start in her chair—she was beginning to see through the mystery. "Perhaps you have something to do with the calico factory ?" "I have," said Grace with calm dignity. "A factory girl !" gasped Mrs. Seymour, growing red and white "Is there any disgrace in the title ?" quietly asked Grace, although her own cheeks were dyed crimson. "Disgrace : 0 no—certainly not; there is no harm in earning one's living in an honorable way," returned Mrs. Seymour, absently. The fact was, she was thinking in her inmost mind : "What will Frank say ?" and anticipating the flag of triumph she was about to wave over him. "I do not hesitate to confess," went on Grace, looking Mrs. Seymour full in the eyes, "that to the calico factory I owe my daily bread." "Very ]audible, I'm sure," said the old lady, growing a little uneasy under Abe clear blue gaze, "only—there are steps and gradations in all society, you know, and— I am a little surprised to find you so in timate with Miss Elton, whose family is Mary came over to Grace's side, and stooped to kiss her cheek. "My dearest friend—my most precious companion," she murmured, "I should be quite lost without her, Mrs. Seymour." The old lady took her leave stiffly, and did not ask Grace to return her call, al though she extended an invitation to Mary, couched in the politest terms "Frank !" she ejaculated, never once stopping to remove her shawl or bonnet, and bursting into her son's studio like an express messenger of life and death news, "who do you suppose your paragon of a Miss Teller is ?" "The lovliest of her sex." returned Frank, briefly and comprehensively. "A factory girl !" screamed the old lady at the height of her lungs: "a factory girl." "Well what of.that ?" "What of that ? Frank Seymour, you never mean to say that you would have anything to say to a common factory girl !" "I should pronounce her a very un common factory girl," said the young man with an agravatin g calmness. "Frank, don't jest with me," pleaded the poor little mother with tears in her eyes. "Tell me at once that you will give up this fancy for a girl that is in no way your equal." "Nc—she is in no respect my equal," returned Frank, with reddening cheek and sparkling eye, "but it is because she is in every respect my superior. Grace Teller is one of the noblest women that ever breathed this terrestial air, as well as one of the most beautiful. Mother, I love her, and she has promised to be my wife." Mrs. Seymour sat down, limp lifeless and despairing. "Frank ! Frank ! I never thought to see my son marry a common factory girl." And then the torrnet of tears came to her relief, while Frank went on quietly touching up thescarlet foliage of a splend id old maple in the foreground of the picture. * * * "So you are determined to marry me, Frank, in spite-of everything." Grace Teller had been crying—the dew yet on her eye-lashes, and the unnatural crimson on her cheeks, as Frank Seymour came in, and Mary Elton considerately slipped out "to look for a missing pattern." "I should think so," said Frank, look ing admiringly down on the gold head that was stooping among the pansies. "But your mother thinks me far below you in social position." "Social position beignored. What do I care for social position, as long as my little Grace sunshine has consented to make the sunshine of my own home." "Yes, but, Frank—" ' , Well, but, Grace ?" "Do you really love me ?" For an answer he took both the fair del icate little hands in his and looked steadily into her eyes. "Frank," said Grace, demurely, "I'm afraid you will make a dreadfully strong obstinate sort of a husband." "I shouldn't wonder, Gracie." And so the gold twilight faded into purple softer than the shadow of eastern omethysts and the stars came out one by one, and still Mary Elton did'nt succeed in finding the pattern. * * * * * * Mrs. Seymour was the first guest to ar rive at Mrs. Randall's select soiree on the first Wednesday in July ; the fact was she wanted a chance to confide her griefs to Mrs. Randall's sympathetic -ear. .Trying*Yes, of course I've been cry ing Mrs. Randall; I've done nothing but cry for a week." "Mercy on us !" said Mrs. Randall, elevating her kid gloved hands, "what is the matter? I hope Frank isn't in any sort of trouble ?" "My dear," said the old lady in myste rious whispers, "Frank has bean entrapped, inveigled into the most dreadful entangle ment. Did you ever fancy that he, the most fastidious and particular of created beings, could be resolutely determined on marrying—a factory girl ?" M's. Randall uttered an exclamation of horrified surprise, and abithe same moment a party of guests were announced, among whom was Miss Grace Teller, looking rather more lovely than usual. "Well," thought Mrs. Seymour, as her hostess hurried away to welcome the new corners, 'will wonders never cease ?' Grace Teller at Mrs. Randall's soiree ! But I suppose it's all on account of Mary Elton's uncle the Judge. Here comes Mr. Par der and Cynthia ; dear me, what a euri ' ous mixture American society is; how they will be shocked at meeting Grace Teller. Involuntarily she advanced a step or two to witness the meeting. Mr. Parker looked quite as much astonished as she had expected, but somehow it was not the kind of astonishment that was on the pro gramme. "Miss Grace you here! Why, when did you come from Factoryville ?" "You are acquainted with Miss Teller?" asked Mrs. Randall, in some surprise. "Quite well; in fact I have had the management of her property for some years Miss Teller is the young lady who owns the extensive calico factories, from which our village takes its name." "Dear me," ejaculated Mrs. Seymour, turning pale and sinking down on a divan near her. "Why. they say the heiress of the old gentleman who owned the Factory ville property is the tidiest girl in the coun try " "Grace," said Frank, gravely and al most sternly, "what does this mean ?" The blue eyes filled with tears as she, clung closer to his arm. "lcan't help owning the calico facto ries, Frank. Don't you love me just as well as if I didn't ?'' "My little deceiver. But why didn't you tell me?" "Why should I tell you, Frank ?" It was so nice to leave the heiress behind and be plain Grace Teller for a while. And when I saw how opposed your mother was to our engagement a spark of woman's willfulness rose up within me, and I re solved I would maintain my incogaita, come what might. •`Mrs. Seymour," she added, turning archly around and holding out her hand to the discomfitted old lady, "didn't I tell you that I owed my daily bread to the factory ?" And poor Mrs. Seymour, for once in her life, was at a loss for an answer. stittt gib cellaq. A Good Boy Rewarded. A good boy of twelve having a tear in his eye and a lump in his throat, shied in very quietly and informed Bijah that he had a composition to write for school, but no one would lend him a helping hand. His father hadn't time, his mother was sick, and his big sister couldn't even write a love-letter. "A composition on 'Machinery,' is it ?" observed Bijah as he reached for his pen. "My sou, I've written millions of composi tions, and I'll help you out with the greatest of pleasure. I will now begin : "There are several kinds of machinery, one of which is a wind-mill. If it wasn't for the wind-mill the world would soon re• turn to barbarism. A boot jack cannot be classified as machinery, because it has no escape-valve. The same can be said of an extension table. Among the greatest in ventions in machinery may be classed the engine, locomotive, saw mill, eider press, buck saw, hair-brush and hand organ. If it wasn't for machinery we'd all have to walk around with our hands in our pock ets, and the price of admission to the cir cus would be a dollar and a half. We must all give credit to inventors. We ,must speak kind words to them, never steal their wood-pil6s, and if they die we must feel very sad. This is all about machinery, except that the man who in vented the horseradish grater never re ceived half praise enough. Good by— love to all." "It'll beat the stockings off'n any com position ever read in our school !" he chuckled, as he received it. "I—l flatter myself it will," replied Bijab, as he stroked his chin in a self satisfied way, "and I hope that the moral that runs all through it, and sticks out in every chapter, will have a good effect on teachers and scholars. Good by, my on —remember that the good boy is always rewarded."—Detroit Free Press. How to Tell a Gentleman. You should never judge by appearances The other day a little weazen faced man, wearing a suit of clothes worth about three dollars and a half, went into one of the big hotels and registered himself from Texas, asked for a room, and if breakfast was on the table. The Olympian clerk gazed at him scorn 'ally for a moment and languidly said : .Any baggage ?" "No:" "In that eve," said the clerk, "the rules of the house compel me to insist on the payment in advance." "Very well," said the guest, hesita tingly, "take two days' board out of this," and from a wad of greenbacks as big as his arm, produced a $lOO note. "I beg your pardon," stammered the abashed clerk ; "but we are so often taken in, and your face being unfamiliar to me, "No offe,nce," cheerily responded the guest, "business is business, and rules are rules. It does look a little odd to be with out baggage; but us cattle dealers ain't .much on style, and—" "That's all right, Colonel," said the clerk. "Put up your money; we know a gentleman when we see him. Show the gentleman up to 156. Call for the best in the house General." The old man stowed away an ample breakfast; got the cleark to give him small bills for a fifty ; inquired where Coolbach, the banker, had his office; asked when they bad dinner ; desired the clerk to tell Mr. Farwell if he called, that he would be back at two o'clock, and then went, and has not been seen since. The clerk subsequently discovered that the fifty dollar bill was bad, and the sad event has cast a shadow over the hotel office. IIE was an artist, and he was sparking the daughter of a retired sea captain. Whi.e he was whispering sweet nothings in his sweetheart's ear in the dimly lighted parlor, he was paralyzed by the voice of the ancient mariner in the other room : "Cast off that painter !" But she explained that her father was only dream ing that he was on the sea again, and the engagement proceeded. You may break, you may shatter the vase, if you will, "but the frightful kera. mics pasted on by women folks will stick to it still." ALL the postage stamps arc gummed by eight girls. Same of 'em put better sticks in 'em than others, says one funny man. "1 WONDER what makes my eyes so weak," said a sot to a gentleman. "They are in a weak place," responded the latter. CAN we manage four in hand ? asks "Whip." Certainly we can, if they are four aces. A MEDICAL record says that surf bathers should stick cotton in their ears. ICE is companionable. If left to itself on the sidewalk it will go away. A Wandering Typo. A PRINTER'S ROMANTIC CAREER-HAIR BREADTH ESCAPES BY LAND AND SEA STARTS A PAPER IN JERITSAAEM, AND WEDS A PERSIAN LADY. Little over a year ago a short notice was published in the St. uis papers of the arrival and strange career of a wandering "typo" named Isaac Smith, or, as he was frequently called by his brother composi tors, Ike Smith. At that time he was staying at the Friendly Inn, 1221 Broad way. His restless, erratic nature, how ever, did not permit him to remain long in this city, and he as suddenly disappeared from St. Louis as he appeared in it. Since then Ike has wandered to the golden slope of the Pacific, taking in on his route Den ver, Salt Lake City, Omaha, Deadwood, Carson City and San Francisco, gaining his precarious livelihood at this office or that in the various towns he passed through during his meanderings. Last week Ike unexpectedly turned up in his old haunts in this city on the look out for a job. He looked very dilapidated and battered and his gray beard was unkept and unshaven. Ile is now about sixty-five years of but is still tolerably hale and hearty. One day last week he did some type setting for the "Evening Post," and managed to set up between 5,000 and 6,000 ems. A "Post" reporter yesterday met the old fellow, who was smoking a short clay pipe, and knowing his affection for "Bourbon," invited him to take a drink, when he gave him a short account of his wanderings.— He was born in 1812, in Muskingum county, in the neighborhood of Zanesville, Ohio. When a boy he went to Indian apolis, where he beca72,-; A PRINTER'S DEVIL and learned to set type, and has followed the occupation of a printer ever since. He must have had an extraordinary passion for travelling, fur when he had one: learned his trade he seldom remained twelve months in one place. In 1830, when eighteen years of age, he left Indian apolis, and spent the next ten years of his life wandering through the various States of the Union, and visiting nearly every city of any size. In 1840 he worked his way as a deck hand on a sailing vessel to Liverpool and began touring in the United Kingdom. He always managed to earn a tolerable existence by his type setting After passing nearly eight years in En gland, Scotland and Ireland, he crossed the Straits of Dover, and stayed a couple of years at Paris, where he witnessed the coup d'etat of Napoleon. Thence ho traveled through Switzerland, Spain and Italy, crossed the Alps into Austria, and went to Berlin. At the break out of the last Polish insurrection he was still in that city, and becoming affiliated to a secret order of Republicans, he, with some fifty men, crossed the Prusian boundary of Posen into Russian Potland. Here he followed the fortunes of Gen. Rogulski in many a scrimmage with the Russians, but was un fortunately taken prisoner and sent to Siberia. His sufferings en route to that desolate country he described as intense. Arrived there he was kept at work in the Tobolsk district; but was so far favored as to escape being sent to the mines. After two years' severe hardship he managed to escape from the Russian Territory with a friendly party of Kurds, whose wanderings across the desert he shared until they reached Persia, where he remained for three years, and received an official ap pointment from the Shah as a kind of State's Printer. He MARRIED A PERSIAN LADY of distinction during his second year's res idence amongst the polite Persians, but she died in childbirth. He then conceived a dislike for Persia, although his position there was the best he had ever enjoyed, and he quietly made preparations to leave it. He joined a caravan of Persian mer chants who were en route to Bombay, and in their company traveled the turbulent country of Afghanistan, reaching British India in safety. From Bombay he crossed India to Calcutta, where he followed his occupation as a type setter for some months, after which his love of adventure induced him to ship to Port Louis, in the Mauri tius. This island soon grew distasteful to him, and so he worked his way before the mast to the Cape of Good Hope and passed some time amongst the Dutch Boors He crossed the Keppi region to Natal. From Natal he took passage in an Arab felucca to Zanzibar, and then te Abyssinia. In the latter country he at first did very well, until King Theodore imprisoned all the Europeans, and he remained in durance vile until the English expedition under Napier stormed Magdala, killed Theodore and released the prisoners. Egypt was the next country visited by this restless individual, and here he engaged in the oc cupation of horse breeding on the banks of the Nile. This, however, did not pan out very well, but he made some money. A remarkable idea now took possession of him ; he determined to publish a SEMI-WEEKLY PAPER IN JERUSALEM, He thought the numerous European visitors to the Holy City would be sufficient to make the enterprise a lucrative one.— He accordingly departed for Jerusalem and issued his paper, which was published half in English and half in French. For one month he publishes: this journal. which he called "The Holy City Times," but then his funds gave out. Ike claims to be the only compositor who set type in Jerusalem. His next adventure was to join a company of Turks on a pilgrimage to Mecca, where he saw El Kaaba, or the Holy Cave. One of these devout Turks took a great fancy to Ike and induced him to return with him to Constantinople. In Stamboul he remained tbr eighteen months working as a printer. He afterwards made a tour of Greece, returning to Constantinople, where he re mained a few months longer, after which he crossed the Balkans, wandered through Roumania, and going into Southern Rus sia as far as Odessa. From Odessa he again shipped before the mast to London, where he settled down for three or four years, finally RETURNING TO AMERICA in 1872. He got employment in New York on the "Herald," but his wandering propensities would not permit him to settle down permanently. Without relatives or friends, he resumed his journeys through the States, and Ike is well known to the composing rooms of most newspapers in the country. His course is up and down to and fro on the face of the earth, and Ike will probably spend the remainder of his days in the same erratic, never resting manner. Every now and then he turns up unexpectedly in his old haunts, and just as unexpectedly disappears. How long he will remain in the Future Great is prob lematical, and, in fact, by the time this is printed he may be gone.—St. Louis Post. The Cry of the Maiden Shareholders. The Edinburg Scotsman puplishes the following "Cry of the Maiden Shareholders" in the broken Glasgow Dank, from the pen of WALTER SMITH Pity us, God ! There are five of us here, With three-score years on the youngest head, Five of us sitting in sorrow and fear— Well for our widowed one she is dead. Day and night sitting, we've not laid a head Down on a pillow this week now and more ; Trembling has seized on us, shrinking and dread, To hear the bell ring or be seen out of door. Pity us, pity, 0 God! Pity us, God ! When our father died His mind was at ease, for he left us shares And a roof o'er our heads, too; and side by side, Happy and loving, we faced life's cares. Then we were young, and now feeble and old, But we never wronged any, as far as we knew, And we tried to do right with our silver and gold, And the poor had their portion, the Church had its due. Pity us, pity, 0 God! Pity us, God! We would work if we could, But suppler.fingers must stitch and hem ; And who would give us our morsel of food, Though we spun and knitted all day for them ? We never knew work, but to keep ourselves neat; And never knew want, but our wants are small, And there's bread in the house yet, if we could eat, But the sickness of sorrow is mixed with it all. Pity us, pity, 0 God! Pity us, God ! Must our little things go ? All—even our mother's things cherished with care ? Must we leave the old home--the one home that we knew ? But not for the poor-house--0 surely not there ? Could they not wait a while ? We will not keep them long; We could live on so little, too, cheerful and brave; But to leave the old house, where old memories throng, For the poor-house ! 0 rather the peace of the grave! Pity us, pity, 0 God! Pity us, God! As for them who have wrought All this sad ruin so wide and deep, 0 how could they do it, and know it not? How could they know, and think or sleep ? But we would not, one of us, change this day Our lot for theirs, for our hands are clean ; And the bankrupt soul has a darker way Than the way of the honest poor ever hath been. Pity us, pity, 0 God ! Fluctuations of Gold. THE STORY FROM 1862 WHEN GOLD BE GAN TO RISE IN VALUE UP TO THE PRESENT TIME-AN INTERESTING HIS- TORY Gold is down so nearly to par that the occupation of the broker is gone and the gold room of New York is deserted. Gold has had a fluctuating career during the last decade. The first day's transactions in the New York Gold Exchange were at 103. They were made on Jan. 3, 1862. Then the premium fell off to 102 f on the 16th and 1011 on the 18th, reaching 104 on the 12th of February on adverse rumors from the army, then wintering near Wash ington. In March it struck 101 several times, and in April the highest quotation was 102. In May it was 101; in June 108 and in July 120. Adverse news from the army caused the advance. In Sep tember it advanced to 124. and in October to 133 January 13th, 1863, it advanced to 148. Ten days afterward there was an advance to 150, and the highest price on the 31st of January, 1863, was 160. The greatest fluctuation in any one day was five per cent. Late in,February there was bad news from the west and other points, and 171/ to 172 t closed up the month. In March, the Eastern army being in motion, and a successful cavalry raid having been reported, the price ranged from 150 to 168, with the advantage in favor of the highest figures. The pre mium afterward fell in this month as low as 104, but on the 31st it touched 150. In April, May and June there were no eventful movements, but in July there was a drop to 125/, and Agust, 1863, saw gold down to 122/. From that time out for the rest of 1863 the premium ranged from 140 to 152, but the fluctuations were frequent. In May, 1864, the price was 176 and 177. In June it ran from 194 to 250. In July, 1864, the premium - advanced from 250—making a jump of 28 per cent. in the first day—to 280. Then there were several victories, and the highest and low est prices on the 20th of July, 1864, were 253 and 258. On the 11th the price went to 285, on unfavorable news from the South, being the highest price on record. In August, 1864, gold declined from 259 to 231 (not to touch the fractions), and in September of the same year the premium fell to 191. October, 1864, closed at 227/, having once showed a quo tation of 189, but in November, on the uncertainty of Southern events, the price was run up to 253, although it closed at 238. On one day the fluctuation from the highest to the lowest was 14/ per cent. January 1865, opened at 226 and 228 and closed at 202 ®2ll, but on the 20th 201®207 were the quotations, and after that the range was from 198 to 220, the latter being on the 28th. From February, 1865, gold fell. From 233 on the 4th of January, there was a dedine to 146 on the last of Apil. The day of the assassin nation of President Lincoln was a dies non for the gold room ; the next day was a holiday, but when business opened again on the 17th the price went up from 1461 to 148®153. Subsequently the alarm caused by the assassination subsided, and there was a slight decline. In May 128 was touched, and thenceforward there was a gradual advance to 148. The year closed at 144®145. In April, 1866, the pre• mium had fallen to 125, and in May it advanced to 140. June, 1866, was a month of big fluctuations. on account of the Fenian raid on Canada, and the spec ulators' pretended fears of a war with England. On the 15th the highest and lowest prices were 149/ and 1471, on the 16th they were 160 and 1541, and on the 18th (the intervening day being Sun day) they were 1671 and 1551. The fright soon subsided, however, and a de cline to 131 closed the year. In 1867 the lowest price was 132, in January, and the highest was 146, in October, and the year closed at 133 f. The year 1867 showed fluctuations from 147, August, to 134, in December, and 1869 was the panic year. From January to April the fluctuations were slight but in May there was a rise from 134 to 144, which was lost before Black Friday. On the 23d of September there were signs of a coming storm. It was known that the Jay Gould and Fisk clique were resolved to hoist the premium, and nobody knew what would be the ac• tion of the Secretary of the Treasury. Gold sold at 141®1441 in the gold room, but at the hotels sales were made at 145. and even, it was said, at 150. On Black Friday the storm broke, and before noon the price had been run up to 162/. Bro kers became madmen, and bowled and yelled and jostled like wild beasts. One man lost his mind and fortune together, and was led away from the noisy scene a maniac. "Will the Secretary of the Treas ury sell gold ?" was anxiously asked on all sides, and throngs beseiged the Sub-Treas uryl to get early news of his action. At 1 noon it came, Gem Butterfield was in- structed to bell $4,000,000 of gold and buy $4,000,000 of bonds. In less time than it takes to write the words, the news was known in the gold room, where the pool brokers were offering 162/ and 165 (the latter figure was offered but not recorded), and there was a general rush to sell. At the close of business the dial showed 133, and the brokers retired to their offices to count up their gains or mourn their losses. Some of the heaviest houses in thd street had been ruined, and those that had gained millions by the breaking of the pool had no assurance that they might ever be paid. The Gold Exchange Bank could not make the immense clear ances of the two days, and had to be put into the hands of a receiver. The gold room was closed for nearly a week, and none of the brokers knew how they stood. Failure followed failure in rapid succes sion, and business outside of Wall street received a stunning blow. The French war in 1870, combined with commercial causes, sent the premium up from 111 in April to 122 f in July, but in 1871 and 1872 it ranged between 108 and 115. In 1873 there was an ad vance to 118, followed, after the Jay Cooke panic, by a decline to 109. The highest price in 1874 was 114$, and the lowest 109. For the past four years the decline has been slow but generally steady. Our Washington Letter. WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 11, 1878. Mr. Blaine's resolution of inquiry into Southern bulldozing presented on the first, day of the session, and Fernando Woods gratuitous and ill-timed assault upon the President's reference to the same subject, have cast gloom upon the unfortunate Democrats once more. It was their policy to prevent all discussion of their transac tions in the South, having enough already to shoulder in the cipher despatches and other.disagreeable affairs. What was their astonishment, therefore, when Wood invi ted the firebrand on the first day of the ses sion, thus illustrating what Mr. Lincoln said he relied upon for success in politics, the unvarying stupidity of the Democratic party. Both Houses will now probably investigate in its own way the outrages in South Carolina and elsewhere. The caucus of Republican Senators took a stalwart turn, decidedly. It voted to push Senator Blaine's resolution for inves tigation, and then added a proposition to reduce the representation of the South in Congress and in the electoral college just in proportion to the disfranchisement which the Democrats forced. This is in accord with the Constitutional amendments. The committee appointed to shape and en force the policy of the caucus is as follows : Senators Blaine, Edmunds, Dawes, Christ ianey and Howe. The programme is fur Mr. Blaine to call up his resolution, have it amended as above, and make a short speech upon it. Senator Edmunds and others will follow in the same line. That the Democrats will be forced to make a defensive and weak fight is very true, but who will come to their rescue is not s clear, although it is said Ben Hill is ready to eat fire again. The debate will be a very interesting and able one and may have grave political results—for the Detu• ocratic party. Of course not much business has yet been transacted, the session having con tinned only four days. The House passed two appropriation bills, those f - tr West Point and fortifications, and several others are ready for action. But these are most ly unimportant and they are rushed thro' to give an impression that the Democratic House is a business body. This bubble will be pricked when the session draws to a close and the buncombe economy of the party managers is exposed to view. It has come to be pretty widely known now, and will not help the Democratic party in fu ture, that its paring down is chiefly tor the purpose of embarrassing the Govern ment, and only little for economy. The Senate has not, of course, got at any of the appropriations. The only important meas ure it has had under consideration is the Texas Pacific R. R. aid bill, in favor of which Stanley Mathews made the only set speech yet made in either House. The bill will come up for action in a few days. and since the corrupt and oppressive trans actions of the present Paeifia R. R., rat) • nopoly have disgusted the country and the Government, the friends of this Southern line are confident of success. Mr. Math - ews argued strongly for it as a free and competing highway, which would be a great relief' to trade and efficient aid to the trat,s action of public business. Now Or leans commercial convention sends a dele gation here to urge the adoption of this measure. Secretary Schurz, several Indian Com missioners and ether officials in that ser vice have been testifying before the Indian Committee against the transfer of the In dian Bureau to the War Department. One of their chief arguments is that the Indi• acs do not like the military service and are averse to the change. This opposition is quite natural on the part of th•»e tribes that habitually make war upon the border settlements when the military are absent, but it is not universal. Some of the Endi an tribes will testify just as emphatically against the present Indian service as not, serving them fairly and honestly, but thi4 should have little influence. The question is whether the Government and the Indi ans on the whole would be best served un • der the present management or under the War Department, and all should hop f)r a just and impartial conclusion. Postmaster General Key says that unless the Democratic House is more lib,ral in ita appropriations, he will have to curtail the postal facilities. The desire to make po litical capital, in other words, threatens to cripple the business of the country VOLUNTEER. A YOUNG man sat tip half an hour one night after his chum bad gone to bed, sewing the legs of the innocent sleeper's trowsers together. He sewed them strong, and laughed long and silently after he went to bed, as he pictured the scene in the morning. When the morning dawned he arose with a glow of anticipaii4n in his face, and as it slowly faded away he sat down upon the side of the bed, and deject edly out open the bottom of his own care fully sewed trowser legs, and when his unsuspecting chum asked him what he was doing, he sighed and said, sadly, "Oh nothing." And he wearily thought how full of meanness was this tow, deceiving old world. IN a suburban school a teacher gave out the word "paalter" to a class in spelling. It was a "poser" to all till it reached the foot of the class, when a curly-beadei little fellow spelt it correctly, and, bet)* asked to define it, shouted out, "More salt." SUBSCRIBE for the JORRNAL. NO. 50.