Clearfield Republican. (Clearfield, Pa.) 1851-1937, June 28, 1871, Image 1

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CLEARFIELD B(Pl'BLKAV
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M ii mi to arssr m)inAr, ar J
MOI)LAnF.n 11 AOKKTY,
CLBAllFlELn, 1A. 1 " V- '
KMTABilHIIHII IN tt.
' e
fht Inr.-fHl riiTulatliin of any Newspaper
In Mirth Central Pouimylvtnliu ,
... . i v
TvTiua.of -Subscrjptioo. ,',
pi1 1 mi .dinner, r within 11 months.. ..ft IN)
ii .,i,l nflrr S and hoforo (I month. ... S SO
j fti i hi eiplration of nionlhi... 3 Ql)
, f- - ' I .
Rates ot Advertising.
Tnin-iit n lverll-einent., par rqiuireof 1" line, or
i,M. -i limrl nr lose...... 91 311
1-i'n "ira'Drli unit Uxocuton notiofit
, I so
Ail tiiir' ii'i'it-.t'.Mif.xM.ri' ..(
, 1 so
, 1 to
, 1 on
(4,iii.n. Kii't Kiitrayi.im....nn,(tl.n ,
p ,..',-i'ii il CrlM. I ytnr .
, I on
Lwal ndtii'i1".ppr line
, '' 20
YKAR1.V ADVERTISEMENTS.
1 .qiurr n
eo1umri...,...'.9.18 00
J.KR".. ..U 01)
1 ,gja.............20 oa
cnluma..1. it; 45 00
I otiluan. ........ 80 00
Job Work, "
Bl-ANKfl,
Sin;V tn: S 50
S ijuirci.prijiiirev 00
I I 0 qnlrel.pr. qulrrll TS
.l Ovor 0 por ift AO
ItANtlBIU.fl.
I'W.'JSorlFM.S 00 I ) tliiwt, 15 vi Icil.ti'OO
; iSrt.!i or Ira, .1 00 I W,55 or icm.ll) (10
Out 23 of ri.ch of nhore nt proportionate ratof.
nKlHnB ft. OonnMNDER,
OEOKUE IIAGERTY,
l'iMl.l,r.
Cards.
VII.I.IAU A. WAI.I.4CR. HH tlKI.DIMO.
WALLACE &. FIELDING,
" ATTORXKY- AT- LAW,
Clcsrflclil, Pa. , ' ;
WMia1 rmtlnrit ot k". lb-nil l
wi'h nmmptnm "nd (lilcllty. O:-" ln rnl-nre
of William A. WiiIIao.. Ja"12:..
A. W. WALTERS,
ATTOUXEV AT LAW.
C'lfurtlcld. Vi.
uOfflpa In tho Conrt llnnsa. fdeo3-1y
H. W. SMITH,
ATTORN E3T - A T - L A W ,
JeSO rioRI flcl.i. Pa.
' I SR AELTEST,
ATTORN FY AT LAW,
Clearfield. Pa.
ir-nffla In th Oniirt ll'i'jna. f J jrl I .'7
JOHN H. FULFORD,
ATTPHN'FV AT LAV(
Cleaifleld, Pa.
OTn on Mtirkpf St . oor Joejh Showen
-i-PrnmM ttnrrtlon rirrn to th cnrng
J n -iintr. Ptntm, 4o..and lu all logal busiDeK.
tiios. J. K'cin.i.oitnrt. wji. h. ii'ci i.i.otiou.
T. J, McCULLCUGH & EE0THER,
AlTl'liXKY" AT LAW,
- rirarflftlil. Pa. - - -
ORIfA on Morto't iri .in door Aatof th riiar
ld County Rank. (3:1:71
J, D. McEN ALLY, ;
ATTOItV K.Y AT LAW,
I'lcarflcM, Pa.
)p?.r71 I'liNin',, nlfi"ilid to proinp'ly with
f l'litv. tiOlcr on Sreond .trect, n'.oro t'lr Firnt
Salioiiiil Dank. ... - . J :1'S: 71 -1 vp J
ROBERT WALLACE,
ATTonvrv- at-Law.
Wallace'ou, Clearfield County. Pcnna.
.All Iral liu.inms proirptl; nttrndrd to.
J. r. invii ,.n. l. Kutus
IRVIN & KREBS,
Piioocori to II. B. Pwoopp,
Law and Collection Office,
n:m'70 rr.EARFrEI.D. PA.
W ALT ER BARRE TT,"
ATTftRXKY AT LAW.
Uffi.-t on Second St., ClMrOald, Pa. norll.OO
JOHN L. CUTTLE,
ATTdRNF.Y AT LAW.
And Real Katale Agent, Clearftold, Pa.
Ollios on Third atrrat. bet. Cherry Sl Walnut.
Ri,pfiirolly nffcre h In .ervlce. In .eltlng
and h.iyinc land. In Olnarfiold and adi'dninK
ciiiinilna j and with an exprlonoe n' nt r twenty
yiini a. a anrveyor, flatter, him.olr that ha ran
rin ler .atl.fnrtlon. Feb. i'l'&tr,
J. J. LINGLE,
ATTORNEY -AT - LAW,
I IS Onreola, Clearfield Co., Pa. jripd
J. BLAKE WALTERS,
REAL KSTATK BROKER,
1!d naiuia is
Saiv JLofS' niul dumber,
OLEARFIELD, PA.
Iteal E.tate ooiiht and aold. title, esmnlned,
tu ten pitid, and eonveynnee. prepared. Office in
ftln.onic IluililinK, Room No. I. l:2j71
John II. Orvlt. C. T. Alot.ndor.
ORVIS &. ALEXANDER,
ATTttl NKYS A r LA IK.
Itrllcl'onte, Pa. .rpl.l.'ds-j
DR. T. J, BOYER,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Office en Market Street, Clearfield. Pa. '
pirOflice hour.: S to 12 a. in , and 1 to 8 p. m
DR. W. A. MEANS,
PHYSICIAN Sl SURGEON,
Ll'TllF.RSIll'Rt),- PA. : (
"Will attend proreaalonal eall. promptly. auKlO'70
DR. A I tTToRNI
TIIVSICIAN & SUUOEON,,
"I TAVINO loo.trd at Kvlirtown, Clearfield eO
Xm. I1- "(FuTi hii pn.feonit.iKil Bprvjc" to ttic
if'.le ulthe fiirnun'litig country. fcpt. Iv,
DR. J. F. WOODS, ,
PHYSICIAN A SUIl'l KON.
...!. I a. 1 : 1 1 t. IT.. 1,1.
profoAnional BrrriM-t to tlir prple of that place
I .1 - 1 . - All ..11.
alipfiiltd to. D'-fl. 3 6m j.d.
jThTlinim. d.. T "
PIIYHICIAN A HUUGEOX,
nWIVH lf.t-ntr.1 nl PcnnflrM. Pa.. oiTrrii hii
pruifMlonal Afrrlcef to th pV'rl of I tint
pl.fii an 1 mirruuudiiigeuuntrjr. All cnlla pronr)iljr
DR. J. P. BURCHFIELD,
L If 8 rueotiof tb8;:d Hrt!iniml,Pntiirlvnla
Voluniuarg, havlni remrtifd frm ih rmf,
, oHen hi prnfeNt taoal larvfoa to UitcMtimoi
of Clearfield O'aoty. ,(
Pffoion!l nulla promptly at tan lod to,
OTlf on fiooad itraal, foriaartyofuplfd by
Dr. Wooda. , fapr4,'o-ll
JEFFERSON LITZ,
PHYSICIAN A SURGEON,
HAVIVll loeited at O.eeola, Pa offer, hi.
profe.,lonal errlne. to the people of that
"leee and .arranndlnv aoantrr.
A II eall. rriiuiptly attended to. OfMee
and reelHenee oa Curlin U lormerly neenpied
by Dr. Kline. May, l:l.
Fishing Tackle 1 'i
Jt'ST reeelred, a eomplete a.ortment, eon.l.t
Inn of Trool Mod., Fi.h llarkota. Line, and
ilook., of all d.-.nrlpOon,. at
IUUIIV F H1ULEB A GO'S.
lrl.ld, April Ji, . .
-
'' GOODLANDER & HA0ERi
.-' '.' ." " " : ' ' - 1
VOL 44-WHbLE NO.
F. K. ARNOLD &. Co.,
. If A N K KKn,
l.ul1ieribHrg, C'learfleU couufy, Pa
Mtinpy lnnncrl at rpnuntikbls rtij exchangp
hnutit And inli; r)(-pol(i roeirrd, tnd A
tnrl lianking builnen will b carried cm nt Ihs
mtioro piHOn. . . - 4:1 2:71 :4f
JOHN D. THOMPSON,
Jultlce of tht ref ae iiiii Sorivenor,, t
' J rurwnirH!e, fa. '- l
Vt-Collcotiom
paid orrr.
made and
no one? promptly
" JAMES 0. BARRETT,
Juatios of Ui I'uoca wad LitTanwd CanvAanoer
l ulhomburff, CU-arllrld Co., Psu
' rollecflntii A rnnittanefi promntW triad,
and atl klndf of Ifgil instruraetita ttmitH on
hort nottee.' ' tnay4,70tr
. GEORGE C. KIRK, .
Jnttleouf the Pparo, Rorvryor and Conreyaneer,
l.ulliersbiirg, P. '
AH bufinfM hitrufted to bim will be promptly
attended to. PtTtoni winhinr to employ a Sur
veyor (till do well to five hi in a eall. ai be flatten
hi.DeH that he can nnder vatiitaction. leedi of
ooaveyanoe, artti'le of ajfrormrnt, and all trtal
pacri, promptly and notly p4outrd. manyp
HENRY RIBLING,
HOLSfi, SIGN A OHNANKNTAL PAINTER
Clearfield, Pcii(u
The frrnftoinir anl painting of ohurehee and
oilier public bnildlnica will receive particular
attentUn, n Wfll ai the paintinft of oarria)Ffi and
uleihi. (lUdintt done In Ihe nealrRt eiylvi. All
work warranted. Hhn on Fourth atreet, formerly
occut by Kuire ihuirart. oetl'7n
G. H. HALL,
rRACTICAL ?UMP MAKER,
NEAR CI.EAR.F1EI.O, TEKN'A.
tfl-Pumiii alwart on hand and maiu" to ."'dor
on iiliort nulice. Pipe" liond on re..onnlilc lerrn. j
All work Wltrra'nted to render mti.fiielinn, anil
delivered if dc.ind. Biyijilypa
DANIEL M. DOHERTY.
BAREER & HAIR DRESSER, "
SECOND DTREF.T,..
y2:l C I. II A It F I K I. I). P A. tt
DAVID REAMS,
SCR1VKN KI! A SURVEYOR,
1 ulliei'tburg. Pa,
rpil E luWriher ofTer. hi. .ervicce to the puWic
J. in the enpxiily of Hrivaner anil Surveyor
All oali. for eui vevinn pruniptly attended to, and
lUemakinK of Jrufla, dcrd, mid other legal in.tru-
aient. of writing, caeeuleu wiiuoui. uemy
and
warranted to be uorrect er no cuarje.
SURVEYOR.
rpilE under.iKiud offer, hi. .ervlee. ai a Sur-
veror. imd may he loond at hi. re.l.lence, In
Lawrence townidilp. Letter, will reach him di
reeh d to t'leaittcld, Pa.
u,uv7-lf. JAMES MITCHELL.
J, A. BLATTENBERGER,
Claim and Colleclion Office,
OSCEOLA, Clearfield Co:'," Pa. I
fSotConvetaneinie and all lrnl paper, drnwn
ttilb accuraey and di.pntoh. Diaft. on anil pne
.iifro tieketa to uud from any point in Europe
proeurrd. ootl'70 fiui
CHARLES SCHAFER,
IAGEU BKEK K IX K W En,
Clearfield, Pa.
HAVINO rrnted Mr. Kntree' Brewery he
honca by atriot attention to btiftneM and
lliu uianalncture of a ftiperior article of 11 K E II
to recetro the patronage of all the old and many
oew cuilonera. Aug. 2i, tf.
THOMAS H. FORCEE,
DAtra ,
GENF.RAL MKHUUANDISE,
t.lt.tll AlTO. Pa.
Also, exten.ire mnnufnetorer and dealer In Square
Timber and Sawed Lumber ol all kind.
CO-Ordrri lolicited and all bill, promptly
filled. - Ut"-I7
GEO. ALRKRT HKnr A1.BRaT.M W. ALBERT
W. ALBERT & BROS.,
Manufacturer. A extcn.ive Dcaler.in
Sawed Lumber, Square Timber, &c,
WOODLAND, PINS'.
J40rdcrl lolieitcd. 11 i 11 filled on thort notiee
and rea.onaoie term..
Addreel Woodland P. O., ClearhVId C. Pa.
25.1y . . W Al.llf.ItT A IIR OS.
FRANCIS COUTRIET,
MF.KOHANT, .
Frrtifhvllle, ( learflcld County, Pa.
Keep, oon.tnntlv on hand a full aa.ortment of
Dry (iuotla. Hardware, Oroeerie., and everything
ii.uiilly kept In a relail .lore, whirh will be .old,
for eahh, a. cheap a. el.ewhere in the ooanty.
rrciichvillr, June 17, isoi ly.
REUBEN HACKMAN,
Houso and Sign Painter and Paper
Hanger, . ..
Clearfield. I'tnn'a.
u-Will execute lid. In bi. line promptly and
In a workmanlike manner. arrt,n7
J. K. BOTTORF'S
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY,
, . Market Si reel, Cleirfield, Pa.
-I'ROMOi MADE SPECIALTY.
"VrpnATIV' made la nlnwdy e. well a. in
1 1 clear weather, t'onatantlv on hand a rood
a-eortment of fRAMKH, (IK II KflSUOPKS and
STKRHOSt tll'IO VIEWS. Kramer, from any
etyle of moulding, made to order. ' apr28 If
J. MILES KRATZER,
MERCHANT,
DRAI.KR IK
" Dry Goods, Clothing, Hardware,
Cutlery, Queen. were, flrneerie., Provl.lnoi and
Hblnglee,
Cleailleld, I'eiin'a.
-At their new. lore room, oa Second .treet.
near II. f. Bljiler A Co'. Hardware atore jenlt
4. JtoLlowauiH
a. nan. oanar
H0LL0WBUSH & CAREY,
DOOKSELLEUS, '
lilank Hook Manufaclurcrs,
AND STATIONERS,
21S Jim tit t SI., i'hllntlf lphlti.
waPnrier Flnnr Sank, and Ilae., Foolae.p,
Letter, Nuta, Wrapping,. Certain and Wall
Papon. '0 feli24.7l-lpd
A Notorious Fact!
rpilKItU are more people troubled with Lung
I IliH'aer. In Ihi. town than any olherpiaee o
ii. alee In.lhe Slt. One nf Ihe great eanee. of
thlr It, the nre aa Iropnrearlieleof Coal, largely
miaod with lulphur. Now. why not eroid all
II, i.. end ..rweeve Tour Hrea. try n.iag only
llumphri!)' Celebrated Coal, free Irom a'l
imnurillea. Order, left et Ihe .lore, of Richard
Moe.op and .lamee D. (Irabam t Son. will rreilve
protnpt attention,
ARRAIIAM lirMPIIRKY
Cleerfleld, Nnremher in, tf. -
DREXEL & CO.,
No. S4 nonih Third fitrerl, PhlUdclptiU
. I.I.VlVr fl,
And Dealers in Government Securities.
Application by mail will rereiee prompt atta
tlnn, and all tuftiraiatieq fbeeffullj furoi-hodi
OrOen wbettt . j ApuJ H-t.
i ""d -I'ln-i' l :,,i ',-"'-' ,..-.')
Vublishere. " ,;L',';
1 "-' II' - 1 -.V ..I...:
2224."
.'III! 1
! iJ
t.Hl. (
. 'i. t
.1
'.the; republican;:
CLHARKJ KLD, Pa. "
WEDNESDAY MORNINO. JUNB 2(1, 1R71.
.'1 i; -'.t i
HEUIIttUI
Renpctfully Innorilred to the Editor of enl.yt
vaut a, oa loe oooaeton oi tueir aaaombimc in
OoBToutloa M VV.UiaiBBptrt, June 14, 1871.
; , : J' -
' IT ttORM fOAD.
t;i: ; . . ;.';;.; i .. , i i
i From Ueonisff Talea and mountain ateona 1 .
( , W'bero uiiuiy a atreamlvt laugba and leapt.
rnnu viiiv. taw an, mnu uauiieu gray
' 1 1'hey tiutueai ootoe tho beam of day.
Tbey (Borne" ! a Irird and uboaon band, ' '
I' Tbe nobloet tribune of our land) T ; 1
- They atiue f bold arbiters of titate,
, j bubuineei tbemca tocaiulaite.
VTe haUthein Euijieror'i of thouRbt) (, .
Kvangele with rich tidiuxi fraught ;
Truth's bnrltinjrori, wift-wmtfid and wiae,
Before whoe breath pale Error I) tee.
No poi1 brtnt; they of lurid war.
No tcan from weeping landi alar, '
No ohnplotii woo on blaHtwl fielde,
, Sio blvodinf hvnrte their barveat yicMl.
Tbeir anna are wrought from livina; worda,
And peni, the attvereign of iword;
Their mision-HeaTtu,i endearinjc plan
Of " i'onov od earth, good will to man."
Who would not guard with Eagle ex
The PreM, dear boon of Liberty F 1 ' '
. Who wcloome not with gladnet rare '
, , The tuindi which kocp U in repair,
The tow'ring intclleota that ipring
From Nature's Uod, on graudeit wing, -'
That nobly h rare 4 he tyrants frown.
And lift the Man above the crown f
A IhounanJ wrlonmen greet them here !
A tboaxand uvarta bid thrin " (to4 ehacrT
Autl thric? a thouiand Jof b tbeira,
When Time lies buried with hit oaret.
O.ittile an4 Itutteti.
THE RED RUIN IN PARIS.
The Ueetroved Tullrrlca. Louvro, and
llolrl de 111c. , ,
' TDK PALACE OE Till! TU1I.F.RII!'.
' The mntfniflccnl biiilJini; which h:is
been sacriflved to Ihe Insanity of the
I'lti-is mob Inn lil.Hory rxtcnding
over centtirios. In Uul, Uiitiicnnr
Jo Modicis bpt'M iUcrcullun. A pro
diction bitlilini; hrr bnwitro of St.
fiorniain :ind llio Tuilm ics cuuseil her
to ubiiiulon tho work, and leiivo it for
Henry IV. to extend itnd enibelislt
Ho lioi':in tho loni; work which joint
tho Louvro to tho palace ; ttnJ tho
woikit aiiHpenucu by Ins tleuth wore
ciirriod on nnd tertiiinuled by Louis
Mil., who tlxod hm rosiJotifO there,
l.oiiin XIr. Imviiiir orJurod Levati
and D'Orliay to harmouiza tho wliolo,
an ntlic wuh udded to tho central
builditijr. and other iniproroinuiits
mitJo. This moimreh tettided in the
T uilorie occanionttlly until tho build
dinn of Vcreuilos, when tho court en
tirely forsook tho capital. Ihe uu
freel Duke of Orlonnn b'xed Inn uhodo
in llio Tuiloiien during the minority
of Louis XV.j but fl-um that period
till lite loi'cou rolurn of Iionm AVI
tho finvlirl of pornons oiliciully al
luchcd to tho Court occupied it.
Dunni; and 8tnee tho ureal Kevolu-
I ion, the palace of tho Tuilerica wa
nuMocialed with many memorable
nceneB. Tub mob entered it on the
20th of Juno, 178:!, and it wan attack
ed and tho Swine Guards uiiiiwucred in
the August following. It wus the of
hiMul rcHtdence ot JNtipoloon when
Kirnl Consul, and when ho became
Kinperor it formed one of tho impe
rial ptiliicen. In 1808, Napoleon ba-
gnn the Northern pallery to servo na
it comntiiiiictitioii with tho Lonvro.
After the RoMorution, the Louvre
continued to be the chiof rosidenco
of the King ond Iloynl family. After
the Revolution of 1K80, when the poo
plo attttt'ked and took tho palace,
(Juno 20th,) Louis Philippe fixed his
residence in it, nnd continued to in
habit it until tho 24th of February,
1848, w hen it was again invaded by
the people, nnd tho King made hi
I'scnno. Hy a decree ol tno rrovi-
Hinnul Government of 1818, it wus to
bo transferred into nn aylum for in
valid workmen, but that intention was
not carried out.' During nnd after tho
formidable insurrection of Juno of the
amo your. It was usod as a hospitul
fur the wounded. In !M!. tho yearly
exhibition of painting wns 0iened in
the Tiiileries. During tho reign of
Napoleon III. it was his official resi
dence, and was tho sccno of magnifi
cent balls nnd reception. A concert
was recently hold in the 'Hall of tho
Marshals, under tho auspices of tho
Communo.
Tho exterior of tho palaeo was grand
and imposing. Tho extreme length of
tho luscndo was ii.lt) yards; its hreuillh
3t yards.. Owing to the difToronl
pen oils at which it was built, its ar
chitecture wus not uniform. All that
wealth ntitl tnsto could accomplish
wus employed under successive nion
arvhs to einbclinh its intorior. Tho
hmperors private apartments- vera
gorgeously decorsled. 'J'ho theatre
could uccomoduto 800 anoclators, and
was used as a supper room whon balls
wcro given at Court. Tho chapel of
tho pulai H was rather plain, nnd had
a gallery and ceiling resting upon
Doric columns! of stouo and sfucco.
The Hullo do la l'aix wus used us a
ball room, and was 140 feet long by
30 feet broad, and enntuined splendid
staluiiry. Tho Hull of the Marshals
was retnnrknhlo for its splendor. Tho
mimes of the great battles fought tin
der the First lCmpiro were Inscribed
on its walls, and uround the ball wtru
busts of distinguished generals and
naval commanders, while portraits ol
the great Marshals of Franco ndornod
its panels. Tho furniture was orna
mented with green velvet and gold.
This wus used as a ball. room on Stale
occasions. Four other mitgnillceiit
hulls wore conspicuous fentnres. The
carpels on them worn of Irobolin's
miiniifacliir., and cost (200,000.
These hulls were tho While, the Apol
lo, and tho Throne Halls. Tho Throne
Hull, a splendid uptii'lnient, contained
the imperial throne. The hangings
word of dark velvet of Lyons manu
facture, with pitlni leaves and wreaths
wrought in gold. Tho throne, fining
tho windows, was surmounted by u
canopy of the atttnt, and the drapery
depending from it was studded with
bees embroidered In gold. " A descrip
tion of the remaining apartment would
simply embrace a repetition of decor
ations nf nnrivsllad elognnoo, there
stilts of lavish expenditure., s. .' ,
;,(;,.,. ,,, I .,'.;:, I
.,,-il-J
PRINCIPLES
...I...' W,.V II... l(
CLEAiiFIELD
(,'" tltn PALACE or-THS LOUVRI. ' 1 '
Tho curly htsiory of 'th,' Louvre is
obscure; but from the great tower
which Tliilip Augustus built in 1214,
as an urt-cuul and atute prison, this
huge.piln gradually grew.- Charles
v. lit leu up the Louvro ol his period
as a royal rosidunco, adorning it with
gardens and terrncos. In tho reigns
of tho Sixth, Sovonth and Eiihth
Charleses, ' and tho Eleventh and
Twelfth Louises, it was Converted in
to a fortress. Francis 1. Invited his
great rival, Charles V., to accept bis
hospitalities.. Il was in this mon
arch's reign that the tietunl Louvre
had its beginning. ' Pierre LcsootiOiff1!
ot me gi-cuiusi arcnitccts or tno ro
nnissunco, assisted by the sculptors,
Jcun Goujon and Paul 1'oncino, was
intrusted with tho work. Horlio, nn
architect, of Bologna, built one of the
galleries and covered it will) a ler-
raco under tho auspicos of Henry IV
This monarch couoefvod the idoa of
joining the houso with tho Tuilerics,
u projact which was adopted hy Louts
Aiv., inspiretl Dy t.'oloerl, who doubt
loss wished to ossocialo his ministry
with such a work in imitation of the
builder of tho Palais Cardinal. Aflor
tho death of Louis XIY. littlo was
done until the middle of the lust cen
tury, whon tho architect Gubriul was
employed to finUh tho llireo facades
coimnoncod by Colbert's arehtiect,
Claude Perruult, and tho vestihtilo of
Ruo Marengo wus completed by Souf-
flot. Aftor the cumpuign of Iluly, the
art tt'cusiiros brought buck to Pans
required suit.ihlo galleries. It wus do
terminod to prepare tho Louvre for
thctn. Tho great Muircaso of the
Museums of Ancient Art, th. stair
cases on llio twoexlremo ends of tho
colonnade, tho Egyptian Museum, the
chambers for the Council of State, and
other portions of tho Louvre worn
built. M. Thiers, when Prime Minister
of Louis Philippo, proposed to spend
18,000 francs on thecomplolion of the
palaco, but the suggestion was not ac
cepted. After the revolution of 184S,
2,000,000 francs wcro appropriated to
tho restoration of tho Apollo Gallery
and tho general repair of tho building:.
Tho decoration of tho intorior was in
trusted to Delacroix. Tho now Louvre,
begun in accordance with the plan of
tho provisional government in 1852,
was completed in 1857, nt a cost of
Hfl.OOO.OlM). It was built by Visconti
nnd Leftiol, TIloTulterlcM and Louvro
form on J palace now ami .oovor sixty
acres. The Louvre is situated on the
right bank of llio Seino and consists of
the old and new Louvre. Tho old
Louvre forms a square 670 feci long
and 438 wide, enclosing a quadrangle
of 400 feel square. The fame of its
Corinthian eolotinado on tho eastern
fiiciido. looking towards tho Church of
St. Germain I'Auxerroit, is world wido
The now Louvre consists of two lateral
piles of buildings projecting at right
angles from tho two parallel galleries
which joinod tho old Louvre with the
Tuilerics. Between the Kite deliivoli
and the Square Napoleon III. they
Iihvc n front of 300 foot, intersected by
three pavilions, to be ocenpiod by the
Department of Stato and of tho Into
rior, by tho Administration ol the Te
legraph, tho imporiul library and a
permanent exhibition of fine arts.
Thore is also in the Louvre the council
chamber to bo used as an assembly
room for tho public bodies of tho na
tion on tho opening of tho Legislature
and on such occasions. It communi
cates with tho Tuilerics.
the hotel tt vili.e.
During tho long duel of tho feudal
ages between the monarchy und the
nobility, the Communo, tho "Hanse,"
as il was originally culled, of Puris,
(its origin, liko that of the " Hanse
towns" of Germany, referring to a
community of merchants which as
sumed fiscal rights over the navigation
of tho Seine,) made itself tho ally of
tho King. 1 ho meetings ol Hits hotly
were held first in a house nn tho quay,
now culled Megisserio. Thenco they
were transferred to a building on the
pluco now known as tho Place du Chit
telet, and this building was called the
" Parlor Aux Bourgeois," or talking
place of tho burgesses. Philip Angus
tns next gave the merchants n rci'ugo
in ono of the towors of the fortifica
tions which he roareil around Paris.
It was in 1857, five conturies ago, that
the muniuipojily was lodged where it
hits ovor siuco remained. In that year
tho famous " Provost of tho Mer
chants," Stephen Marcel, bought a
houso on tho Pluco of tho Public Exe
cutions, Lu Grove-, citllud the " House
of Pillars." Neurly two centuries
later, whon the Italian genius domin
ated Franco in art and politics, the
" House of tho Pillars." wus pulled
down and a now edifice was begun
under tho supervision of Siguor Do
minico Bocurno do Corlona. Under
tho Terror this edifice was cxtomled
by tho annexation to it of tho confis
cuted church of St John cn-Grevo
and Hospital of tho Holy Ghost. .
The first Napoleon, uinong Ins many
grand projects, contemplated sweeping
away nil but tho building of the six
teenth century, nnd developing the
Hotel do Villa into ono of the most
stalely and splendid palaces of Ku-
ropo, 1Cipsic und Waterloo ('lit this
project short, with many others, and
it was only under Louis Philippo (who
haa boon proclaimed jving ol llio
French from its balconies) that in tho
your 1833 tho Hotel do Villo was
brotiuht by an expenditure of somo
tbreo millions of dollars nearly Into
its present condition. Alus! we must
now say llscopdilion 1
To recall tho thrilling events which
have culinlniiloJ In and around tho
llololdo Villo would ho toskolchtlio
history of modern Franco. Tho Hotel
do Ville was tho headquarters nf tho
during Duke of Guise, tho 11 King of
Paris," in bis war against Henry III.
Within its walls the lenders of the
Frnitdo look refuge. , Under Loni
Kill, it helped Iiiulielioti against I he
Huguenots of La Itaehelle. . Under
Louis XVI. it defied the monarchy by
whioh it had boen protected into being
flvo conturies beforo. It became the
fortress and the pn I ace in on, of th
people, the Tuilerics of lh, repuhlio.
From the Hotel do Villo radiated the
dive lil of th,, revolution. - There
Louis XVI. accented from the bands
' , ' paW' i. ."ll'll.W l '! '.il', ..-... ,- .... ',.v't. . . V tc'V
'7 AlUVIIU I ' ', ' . --'l I I. 'I !. .All . . I .k . L . . . . H - t .
' JFjtfotetiti- ..M.iv... :.., ,.i . ,. ,. ' n
y' -w r . . M. wj.-ai vv y ......
' NOT MEN ' n I'.'.'J.ii '
iVi I -r. , V ,,.!: 1,-
of Baily, Mayor of Puris, lb, cockade
of tho insurrection. Tliore,. throe
years later, the sanguinary lunatics of
me involution, seized coulrulol 1 aria
sua o I' ranee, , In September, 1702,
tho roastorsof tho Hotel do Villo took
an active part in tho horror of the
Parisian msssucros. Billund-Varonnes,
Collol d'Uorbois, Panis, Murut, wore
those mustors llio lultor abovo all
rairintr with Ihu nnnt.nn rmr, ,f !!..
mii-iy years Ol exil. ana liumi nation
In England, und his wanderings to and
iro us un itinerant quack. It . wus at
tho Hotel dtiVllle thut his fate overtook
Maximilian Robespierre. He sat there
ul midnight, piamiinir tho otlor cxter-
Ini nation i of his enemies, while the
vusi pluco without Bwurmed with his
armed adhoronts, whon suddenly there
full liko a thunderbolt among these
iiiiior tno aecroo passed by the Con
vention putting him and bis " beyond
tho pule of the law." , His adherents
dispersod. Steps echoed through tho
corridors of Lhe hotel. They were the
steps of tho soldiers of the Conven
tion led by 1 roaron and Hurras. A
gondarme leaped upon tho Into terror
of France und with a pistol shot broko
us jaw. janajatiust. Just tverocap
lured with him. , ,
So onded at tho Ilntol do- Villo, in
blood, the Commune of 1792. The
Commune of 1871 dies t boro to-day in
Humes. In 1830, and again in 1848,
tho llolel do V tllo filled a groat place.
From ono of its balconies in 1830, La
fayette proclaimed., tho Duko of Or,
leans to bo " tho best of jlcpublies."
From ono of its buluonics in 1848,
Lumurtino conf ranted " tho red fiae
which hud only been curried uround
i tic nciu oi .Mars trailed in tho blood
of the peoplo with tho tri-color hich
had niado tho tour Of tho world."
Tho tri color triumphed then without
a blow. And today tho rod flag goes
down with tho poplu't pahico ufler
twenty years, bathed in llio people's
blood, and scorched in flitino I
VANnEiinii.T'a Beginning in Life.
Tho nowspapors often contain an
account of Vandei bilt's bcirinuins,
Most of these accounts are anoclirv-
phal. His own statement of ins first
real 'success is this: " Ho was a
young man on Stuton Island. Ho was
master ol rowing. JIo was nth lie,
strong, and during. Ono "night a
strunger cunio to tho landing und
wanted to bo rowed across to Gowa-
nus. I he night wus dark and stormy,
and tho wind blew a gale. Not a
boatman could bo- found who would
cave. Tho krvlloi'd said, " There is
nobody who can row you' over but
Corn. Vnndcrbilt " for so ho was
culled. U was donutiut, lie ani.i.
whether ho would do it. Vandorbilt
wits found, nnd in answer to tho re
quest, replied : "Its pretty rough,
but if you II givo mo f 10, ho down in
my bout, mid not stir, or do just what
I bid you, 1 II try it. JIo royed the
niun over una buck in suloly. as
soon as he landed on Stutcn Island,
the stranger said: "Young mini,
how would you liko to run an oppo
sition steamboat 1" " Nothing woutd
suit me better," was tho reply. "Have
yoa pluck enough to obey orders f"
said tho stranger. " 1 nave, was the
response. .' Supposo I was to toil yon
to run into a steamboat, what would
you do?" " Kun into her, by -."
Tho bargain was Boaled amid the
storm thut night on the island, and
Vunderbilt soon begun bis will known
career as a stt ami out man. .Sinf. n
Island Leader.
Thouoiitlcssnkss. Young man, In
the flush of early strength, stop and
Illicit ere you tuke a downward step.
Mnny a precious life is wrecked
Ihroiiirh thoiiirhllcssticag alono. If
ypu find yourself in low company, do
not sit carelossly by till you are grml
uullv but surely drawn into llio whirl
poof and shame, but think of the con-
sequoncos of such a course, iinlional
thought will lend you to seen llio so-
ciely of your suponors j and yon must
improvo by tho association. A bo
ncvolonl oso of your example and in
fluence for the elevation of your infer
iors, is a noble thing ; evon tho most
depraved are not beyond such help.
But tho young man ol iinprossitno
character must, 'at least, think, nnd
beware lesl be fall himself a victim.
Think beforo you touch tho wino;
see Its ctlocts upon innusunos, aim
know thut you are no slrongor thun
thov wcro in their youth.
77itn before you allow angry nns
sions to ovorcoino your reason ; it. is
thus that murderers aro made.- Think
before, in a dark hour of temptation,
you borrow without leuve, les-, you
becomo a thief. Think well ore a lie
or an oath pusses your lips ; for a
man of puro speech only run merit
rospnet. Ah! think on things truo
and lovely, nnd of good report, thnt
there may bo butter men nnd happier
women in tho world. jixcnange.
Somo men movo through life as a
band of music moves down the street
flinging out pleasure on every sido
through tho air to every ono, fur and
near, who can liston. Somo men fill
tho air with their presonceand sweet
ness, as orchards, In October days, fill
the air with tho perfumo of ripe fruit.
Some women cling lo their own houses
like the honeysuckle over the door,
yet. like it fill nil the region with the
snbllo friifrriineo of their goodness.
How irrsiit a hnuntv and blessing It is
so to bold the royal gifts of tho soul
that they shall bo musio to somo, nnd
fragrance lo others, and life to nil.
It would be no unworthy thing lo
live for. lo mnke tho power which we
have within us tho breath nf other
men's joy) to fill the atmosphere
which they must stand In with a
brightness which they cannot create
for themselves.'
A MOBMAN IN THE VaMEY. TIlO
Easion &mtinel snvs: The i Lehigh
Valley was gracod lust week with the
presence of a son of the Mormon
prophet, Briuhain loung. He spont
ft day. or two at Muuch Chunk, a.
the Kuost of John Jjeisoring, &q..
Mr. L madq his aoqoiiinlanpo whilst
tKall Utke City, a lew week since,
and Una visit wus nvado, wo under.
land, ia piirauaiiae of an invitation
ttenqwo at that Vitne.
. I ii . . i
..." ; ;;: VVV ;;.,7'V; ',' : : TERMS-$2 pwiimum, la Advance.';
- i Drosg aa a Fine Art, .
Musio, painting, and sculptnro havo,
for ages held unbounded sway as tho
fino arts. Surely, in this progressive
ngo, another should bo udded to their
number f. Why not druss f .
.'Music, the universal languogo of
leciing," was first hoard in Egypt j to
Italy we look for painting and sculp
tiiro, although wo aro indebted to
Groeco, for our curliest specimens, und
to P uris wo look for dress. There uro
the originnla to bo found. They aro
studied and arranged with artist's
hands, and never was.Vonus copied
with greater euro than aro llieso copied
by tho universal world. "The long
aisles und echoing vuttlts of vitbl cathe
drals" ring out with tho notes of tho
docp-toned organ ; on tho ceilings aro
rolled out the paintings of greul mas
ters, and from niches in tho walls look
down tho sculptured forms of gods
and saints tluoo fine arts ; why not
udd the pows ura crowded with speci
mens of u fourth 7
Woman has spont timo, talcnU, and
money in copying and beautifying this
art. Sho bus yielded all other things,
homo, husband, children, friends, and
given uli to druss. It is tho shrine nl
which sho worships, and nolhim; is
spared in rendering it perfect.
rslio stands before tho mirror deck
ing herself for the bull room, where
ho will either pleuso or uflend tho
fastidious lasto of tho other sex. Her
dress has cost its mukor many a weary
iiigui, inucn anxious mougiit, and
upon it sho has exhausted all hcrskill
rhiuncc, rufllo and ribbon have been
studied und tried in every conceivable
position, una now, thut it is finished.
sho contemplates it triumphantly, and
exclaims, "Beautiful J It is reully a
piece of urt. Tho owner havinir
donned llio "piece of art,"rougod nnd
powdered In tho highest decroc, feath
ered, curled, crimped, and ruflled, cn
lers the crowded hull, and wo pro
nounco Iter reully nn art.
I.ittlo does sho nrcnin or care how
many tired bauds havo been employed,
in subterranean vaults, making (ho
dclieulo lace that covert her neck ;
how many heart hopes havo been
W04CH into its ' moshes; bow many
tours from sightless eyes have fallen
upon it, or of tho sickly emilo thut lit
their faces when it was finished
What triumph do they enjoy upon tho
completion of a pieco of urt! She,
tho wearer, alono feels and enjoys
thut.
In tho history of tho world dross
has ever held it niliiiit position. Al
though its claims to bo ranked among
tho fino uits havo boon unacknowl
edged, vet its Influence fur gnnil nr
ovtl bus been as greul at tiie greatest.
Napoleon guino I a ihrone by finaise,
Kugenio established bim t hereon by
her artistic di apery and her delicate
manipulation of tho popular tastes
As a great artist, her name deserves
men tinn among those grcut,"immorlul
natnos that wero not born lo dio."
Tho beautiful in dross comprises till
things shade, material, stylo, com
plexion, station, and many other par
ticulars, all of which have to bo taken
into account und weighed with arl'slic
carefulness lo produco llio master
piece. It is thu duty of every 0110 to
make use ol ull llio advantages thrown
into their pathway; and no outcry
can juslily us in disregarding the
drapery "which shadows for lhe soul."
It is only when laslnon becomes a
blind leader, governing us hy an iroo
law, that wo rocognir.o tho distinction
between tho truo divinity nnd tho
tyrant. Fashion is not a fine art, hut
rather an intruder within tho nucfed
precincts, which has degraded dress
from tho high station ot use nnd
bounty into glittering show nnd idle
vanity.
Woman has bocn accused of milk
ing herself a slave to her beautiful art,
but ihcuecusulion is false. By natural
right -sho mingles with tho Graces,
and nppropriates to her adornment
all that can enbanco her beauty or
add to her charms. It is only
when sho bows before tho fulse doily,
Fashion, thut she becomes the slave
Il is (hon thut her soul dwarfed, und
her body becomes the more frame upon
which to display ull the "ill digested
mass of things, not well joined togeth
er, which wo call chaos. in tins
mad worship alio and tho brainless
fop meet upon a common level.
Noiihor is worthy of notice.
Hut, is the world benefitted by nt
toniion to dross Hits not woman
wnslod many golden hours and slight
ed many favorable opportunities in a
vain pursuit r Would 11 not be holler
to devote moro lime to home, where
she can rulo tho heart, which ought
to bo considered vastly superior to
ruling fashion f The Covenant. .
Without a Newspaper. Noil ing
presents a sadder commentary upon
the present unhealthy condition 01
our once loved and prosperous coun
try thun tho largo number of familios,
1 ,
both in tho town ana country, out
more especially in tho hitler, thut sub
scriho to no paper of any kind.
Hundreds and thousands ot luuiincs
uro thus growing tip in utter igno
runco of what is transpiring In the
world around them ignorant of the
nilghiy events of to day.
. But who can tell the vast amount
of injury that is being inflicted upon
lhe rising generation tlioso w ho aro
lo lulio our pluco in the busy world
nt no distant duy growing up with
out nny knowledge of lhe present the
past, or any study of the future, this
ignoranco, too, being Inibuod into
lh cm by tho sanction of those who
should and doubles, do, know better,
did they only think of the Injurious
cfTccis of I heir Insane cmtrso. Let
tho head of every family think of this
nnd place In the hands of Ihoso for
whom be is responsiblo the moans or
acquiring a thorough knowledge of
tho moving panorama In which wo
enact our parts. Exchange. ,
"Wife, do you know thafrt have got
the pneumonia V "Now mollis, in
deed I Such extravagance I : You're
the spend tin iftest man I ever did sea,
lo go und luy out your monoy for
suoh Irtish whon I do noed a now bon
net w much !"
I ) i.i..l " r , "
NEWSERIES-V0L:12,N0.25.
n anasmg
kjOT AI LIM UIIINGINU IJ1. ,
It l.n't ell In bringing op, ' ' ' ' '
I Let folk, any what hry will;
You ailrer-wa.li a pewter oup, 1
It will be pewter still.
E'en tin old wie Solomon, ' ' '
Wbooaid, "traia apaeblld,"'
If I ni.take not, raised a eon,
, Oar, r.tUo-braiued and wild.
A uaa of mark, who fain would paw
For lord of aea and Und,
May hare the training of an aaa,
And briny, bim op lull (rand,
Uay (ire hue all the wealth of lore,
Of eollege and of libool ,
Tet after all, mako him no more
-1 Than ju.t a decent fool.
Another rained by penury,
Upon her hitter limed, ' l
rVhriM road te kouwUidgo 1. that .
The r-mkI for heaven must tread i ,
Ha. but a .park of nature's light.
Will fan It to a Dame,
Till ia il. buniisif letter bright.
The world oiay reed bis uaine.
If it were all ln bringing op.
In ooun'el and rostraiut,
Some rascals bad been honest men
I'd been myself a saint.
Oh, 'ti.o't all in bringing up,
Let folk, .ay what thoy will, ,
Neirleel may dim a silver eup.
It will be silver .till.
What is the worst scat a man can
sit on f Self-conceit.
Whatever is, is
loft band and foot.
ight except your
A girl might as well hung up her
fiddle when eho loses her bcuu.
Addison says: Prcjudico and self
sufficiency, nuturully proceed from
inoxporienco nf tho world und igno
ranco of nmn'tind.
It is not enough to believe what
you maintain ; yon must maintain
what you beliovo, and maintain it be
cause you believe il.
Conscience Is a sleeping giant ; wu
liiuy lull him into a longer or a short
er slumber; but his suu-is uro fright
ful, nnd terrible is lhe hour when be
awakes.
A truo religious instinct never de
prived man of ono single joy ; mourn
ful faces and a sombre aspect arc the
conventional affectations of the weak
minded.
It is quito tho fashion to drop now
nnd then u lump of piety into personal
conduct, but loo often there is little
euro lo "work it in." A lifo properly
seasoned with gruco bus a tin, form
flavor.
Popo Pius IX. on tho lGth of this
month completed tho twenty fifth
year of his Political reign a ler in
only two of his lonj line of prcdeces
nn.. Iirto. Alivu. sum uveiic nn,
titrally call forth great rejoicings
wherever a Catholic exists. Tlui
vcnorahlo Futlror bus had a most
eventful reign. From liberal he ho
came an ultramontane; he has lived
lo have the dogma of infallibility af
firmed hy tho grandest council ever
called together.
Tho Huntingdon Monitor says:
'Senator Scott's Ku-Klux Cointniltoo,
fearing to meet llio investigation of
individual cases, as reported, are go.
ing to rely upon a General lieport on
tho subject, nnido tip from h tiers to
Northern papers, and unverified state
ments of negroes, carpet baggers, and
scalawags. Such a document will fail
lo impress the people of the country.
But it will hIiow to what desperate
means the Radicals will resort in order
to re elect Gen. Grant, and keep pos
session of lhe tieiiMiry of the nation.
A good story is told of a Into col
lego president near Boston On ono
occasion tho students substituted a
large dictionary in place of the Bible,
ut tho morning devotions. On open
ing tho book ho i t oneo saw tho situ
ation ; hut he said nothing, nod pro
ceeded lo Ihe prayer, which he pro
longed f'ornn hour. The student got
out of all patience; but they appre
ciated lhe sly remark of the vener
able president on his retiring, that he
' found all tho words he needed in the
volume they hud placed on his desk."
Fame After Susan B. Anthony loo
tured at Riplon, Wis., sho wanted
somo recreation and amusement, so
she look it walk on Sunday nround the
graveyard there. While sho wus on
joying llio li'eratitro of a tombstone
she heard a lot of boys saying, "That's
her I" and she thought, "such is
fumo." Congratulating herself tliul
even tho children of the land knew
her, alio was accosted by an urchin,
whosnid: "uiiit you tho old woman
who walks up the wire on tho circus
tent to morrow 7" Susio stored and
so did the boys.
I '
A fond father, blest with eleven
children, and w ithal a very domestic
man, lolls this slory : One afternoon,
business being very dull, ho took the
early train nut to his happy homo,
and went up stairs to put I ho children
10 bed. Being missed from Ihu amok
ing-room, his wife went up stairs l
sou what was going on. Upon open
ing tho door she exclaimed, Why,
dear, wbitl for mercy's sake are you
doing?" " Why," savs bo, '' wiley,
I am putting the children lo bed, nnd
having them say llicir little prayers."
" Yes," says wiley, "but this is one
of our neighbor's children ull undress."
and he bud to redress it and send it
home. After thai bo called tho roll
every morning und night.
Bk Busy. To be constantly huy
is lo be always happy. Persons who
have siult'i n'y aiquirtd wmlth Iro
ken up theira-'liv, pursuits, and begun
lo i vo at their ouso, wasto uwuy and
die in a very short time. Yo who uro
sighing fur tho pomp and splendcr of
life, beware ! Ye know not what yo
wish. No sil nation, howevcrexalted ;
no wraith, however magnificent; no
honors, however glorious, cun yield
veil solid enjoyment while discontent
lurks in your bosom. The secret of
happiness lies in this lo be always
contented with your lot, Persons
who are always busy and go cheer
fully to their daily tasks tiro the least
disturbed by the flucltiat ions of busi
ness and al night sleep with perloct
composure
Thoro hro thousands of busy peoplo
who dio evory year for want of sloop.
It may be tbul loo much shop injures
some; but in an ex'citublo nooplu, and
in our intense business habits, thero is
fur more mischief for want of sloop
thnn from too much of it. Sleepless
ness becomes a disease II ia the pro
cursor of insanity.' When it does
not roach thut sad result., it ia still full
of peril, as wull its of sull'uring. Thou
sands of niun huvo been indebted for
bud bargains, for lack of courage, for
Ineffectiveness, to loss of sleep. ...
It is curious that all tho populu!'
poetical represcotution, of sleeping
und wukiug aro tho reverse of ihu
Irulh. We spcuk of sleep us tho
imago of deulh, und of our wuking
hours as tho imago of life. But the
setivily Is the result of somo form ot
decomposition in tho body. Evory
thought, still moro evory motion, any
volition wasts some purl of tho ner
vous substauco, precieely its, flame is
produced by wauling llio fuel. Il is
llio death of somo purl of the physical
substances that produces tho phenom
ena of intelligent and voluntary life.
On tho other bund, sleep is not liko
death ; lor il is the period in which
tho tvaslo of the system ceases, or is
reduced lo its minimum. Sloop re
pairs tho war-tea which waking hours
have made. It rebuilds the system.
Tho night Is tho repulr-Miop of tbo
body. Every' part of the system is
silently overhauled and ull the organs,
tissues and substances uro replenished
Wuking consumes, sleep replaces ;
waking exhausts, sleep repairs, wak
ing is death, aleup is lito.
Tho man who sleeps Utile, repair
littlo ; if ho sloeps poorly, ho repairs
poorly. If bo tisen up in a day less
than iio accumulates ut night ho will
gain In houlth und vigor. If he uses
up ull that he gains at night bo will
just hold his own. If bo uses moro by
duy than he gathers fit night ho will
lose. And it this hist process bo long
continued, he must succumb. A man
who would bo a good worker must sea
to it that ho is a good slcopcr. Hu
man lilo is liko a l.ii.i; Souk limes tho
streuin is so copious thut one neods
euro but little nbout his supply. Now,
often, the st rrani thai tiiius tho mill
needs to bo economized. A dam U
built to hold a largo t.tipply. Thu
mill mns the pond pretty low through
thu day, but by shutting down tho
gate, tho night refills the pond, mid
llio wheels go merrily uround uguin
tho next day. Ouco in a while, when
spring rains uro copious nnd froshets
overflow, the mill may run night and
day ; but this is raro. Ordinarily the
mill bhould run bv day und tho pond
fill up by night.
A man has us much loreo in him as
he lias provided for by sleep. The
quality uf action, cspicinlly incuts!
activity, depends upon tho quality of
sleep. It day timo is the loom in
which men weave their purposes,
night is tho. timo when the thread
ate laid in and lhe filling prepared.
Men need on un avvrjgo eight hours
of i-hcp a day, or ono lhird of their
wliolo lime. A mini ol lymphatic
temperament may require nine. A
nervous temperament may require
but feven, or six, and instances hnvu.
been known in which four hours huvo
been enough. The teiini is pluin.
A lymphatic mini is sluggish in ull his
-.,-.. .1 If. - .1....-,,. 1,,,lr
slowly, cats slowly, digests slowly,
utid sleeps slowly, thai is, ull tho res-
torntivo nets ol Ins system goon siuw
ly, in analogy with his temperament.
But a nervous man acts quickly in
overy thing, by jnghi or uy uuy.
When awake, lie u )cs moro in uu nour
than u sluggish man in two hours;
and so in his sleep. Ho sleeps faster,
und his system nimbly renuirs in six
hours what it would lake another ono-
eight hours to perform.
Every man must sleep according lo
his tcinpcrant. But eight hours is tho
uvcrugo. II one requires a nine moro
or it little less, ho will find it opt for
himself. Whoever bv work, nleasnro,
sorrow, or by tiny other cause ia reg
ularly diminishing Ins sleep, is do-
siiovniir Ins lilo. A man muy noiu
otil fir a time, but Nature keeps closo
accounts and no man cun dodgo her
settlements. Wo huvo seen impover
ished railroads thut could not keep the
truck in order, nor spare tho engine
lo bo thoroughly repaired. Every
year track nnd equipment deteriora
ted. By-iiml-by conies a crush, and
the road is in a heap of confusion und
destruction. So it is with mon.
They cannot spare timo onough lis
sleep enough. They slowly run bo
hind. Symptoms of general waste
appear. Premature wrinkles, woik
eyes, depression of spirits, failure of
digestion, feebleness in the morning
and overwhelming nicl.tiicholy thesu
and olhur signs show a ircnerul dilspi
dulion. Il', now, sudden calamity
euusosan extraordinary pressure, they
go down under it. Tliry have no re
sources to draw upon. They havo
been living np lo tho verge of their
wholu vitality every day.
There is a great deal of intemper
ance besides that of lolui'fo, opium or
brandy. Men aro dissipated who
over tax their system ull day uod
under sleep evory iiiht. Some moil
are dissipated by physical stimulants,
nnd aonin by social, and some by pro
fessional und coin ohm ii il. But n man
who dies of doliritin tremens is no
moro o drunkard and a suicide ihnn
tho lawyer, llio minister nr tho mer
chant thut works excessively all day
and sleeps but littlo all uigllt.
Many a discouraged mother fold
her tired hands t,l Highland feels its
if sho ha I, uller nil, done nothing, al
though alio hud not spent nit idlo
moment since she rose, is it no'hing
thai your little helpless children have
hud some one to c ono to with nil
their childish irri-f und joys? Nit
not hing I hat your husband feels "safe,"
when ho is nwuv to his business, be
en u-o your (-.-ireful liuml directs every,
thing nt home? Is it mil hing, when
his business is over, that he has the
blessed refuge of home, which you
have hut day dnie your host to
brighten nnd refine? ( weary and
faithful mother! yon little know your
power when you say : "I have done
nothing." There is a hook In which
,i fairer record thun this is wriltcD
ovor uguinst your hiiiiio.
Zeai. It is dilliuiilt for singlo In
dividuiils, unless thoy bo very highly
endowed. to create in themselves fervor
when nliino. Now and tften there ie
a nntiiro that n generate its own
fire; but ordinarily you must put
stick upon stick, and spark to spark,
ami flume to flume, in order In milk,
fervor. Ami it Is tho association nf
fueling, it is feeling in the multiltldo,
wliosd thought kindle in ench indi
vidual tho highest forms of emoliim.
There aro wry few W'ho havo lh,
power of siiliufy Eoul ; und thorn are
very few who li.iva not tho power of
associated teal.