3 IS THE CIIEA X. 13 T ! THE SINGER" SEWING MACHINE. SINGER jT"V MACHINE. MACHINE. MACHINE. MACHINE. MACHINE. MACHINE. 1 MACHINE. MACHINE. MACHINE. MACHINE. MACHINE. SINGER RINGER IT SINGER 9 RINnK7l.iT iXf , SINGER Xhl XtYt'- o SINGER rtlJ&r J i? SINGER KTNOKR BRWINO MACHINE I so well . kuowu that it Is nut necessary to lunnlioi ITS MANY GOOD QUALITIES! Every one who has anv knowledge of Sewing Machines knows that It will do EVERY KIND OF WOKK In a Superior Manner. The Machine I easily kept In order i easily op el ated, and is acknowledged !y all, to be the The Best Machine in the World ! Persons wanting a HewlnR Machine should ex amine the Singer, before purchasing. They can be bought on the Most liberal Terms F. MOUTIMEK, NEW BI.OOMKtEUJ.FA., General Agrnt for Perry Co. OF 49 Or of the following Local Agents on the same terms : A. K. KEIM, Newport, Pa.' JA8. P. LONG, Duocannon, Pa. YOBK CONTINENTAL ,Life Insurance Company, "" ' op new york; w -strict; l y mutual i THHTTHH all the new forms of Policies, and ore. L sents as favorable terms asany company in the United staux. i , , Thirty days' traee allowed on each payment, and the policy held good during that time. Policies issued by.t his Company are non-forfeit lira, No extra charges are made for traveling permits. Policy holders share In the annual profits of the Company, and hare a voice In the lections and management oi me company. No policy or medical feecharged. ' Z. W. FRONT, PnHdrnt. M. B. Wthkoop, Vice Pres't J. P. RftflKIlg. SfiC'V. J. P. EATON. General Agent, ' No . North Third Street, College Block, Harrlsburg, Pa. THOa H. MILLKJAN, 8 12 ly ) . . Special Agent for Newport B' T. BABBITT'S . Pure Concentrated Potash, OR LYE, Of double the strength of any other - ' Hponifylng' ' Snbtifauco. I have recently perfected a new method of fwkingmy Potash, or I. ye, and am now pack ng it only in Balis, the coating of which will ion ily, and does not injure tiie soap. It is packed i'.l boxes containing 14 and 8onell. Balls, and in no otlier way. Directions In Kuglbh and German lor making hard and soft soap witU this Potash accompany ' a paeaaxn, . jJP. T. BABBITT, 16 6m h. M to M WASHINGTON St., IK Y ' A.' J.' I). IIEXSZEY, Produce Commission Merchant, Nuts and . Poultry , ', ... i i.-A 'flrlCIALITY.'"J-J '"' , No. MO NOItTH FRONT ST., 41 f,t , 1-UILADKLPIIlA, I'A.. 0(JNHIflNMKNT8 solicited. Prompt returns. KcIit to lion. O. AlberUnn, Camden uo., N. J. H'gRlu. Bui u Bell, PhilaUelphla, :1. ' 'vv MR. MERTON'S LESSON.- f CANNOT wait any longor. I must X have my money, and if you cannot pay I must foreclose the mortgage and sell the plaoe," said Mr. Merton. ' " In that case," said Mr. Bishop, "it will of course he sold at a great sacrifice, aud after all the struggles I have made, my family will again be homeless. It is very hard. I only wish you had to earn your money as I do mine ; you might then know something of the hard life of a poor man. li you could only in imagination put yourself in my place, I think you would have a little mercy on me." " Jt is useless talking ; I extended this one year, 'and I cannot do so any longer," replied Mr. Merton, as be turned to his desk and continued writing. The poor man rose from his seat and walked sadly out of Mr. Morton's office ; his last hope was gone. IIo h:id just re covered from a fit of illness, which had used up the moans with which he had intended to make the last payraont on bis house. True, that gentleman had waited one year, when he had failed to meet the demand, owing to illness in the family, and he had felt vory much obliged to him for doing so. This year he had been laid up for several months, ' during which he could earn noth ing, and all his savings were then needed for the suppoit of himself and family. Again he had failed, and now he would again be homeless, and have to begin the world anew.. Had Heaven forsakon him and given him over to the tender mercies of the wicked? After he had left the office, Mr. Morton could not drive away from his thoughts that remark to which the poor man in his grief bad given utterance : "I wish you had to earn your money as I do mine." In the midst of a row of figures, " Put yourself in my place" intruded. ' Once after it had crossed his mind be laid down his pen, saying : " Well, I think I should find it rather hard. I have a mind to drop in there this afternoon and see how it fares with bis family ; that man has aroused my ouriosity." About five o'clock he put on a gray wig and some old, cast off clothes, walked to the residence of Mr. Bishop and knocked at the door. Mrs. Bishop, a pale, weary looking woman, opened it ; tha poor old man requested permission to enter and rest awhile, saying he was very tired with bis long journey, for be bad walked many miles that day. Mrs. Bishop cordially invited him in, and gave him the best seat the room afforded. She then began to make preparations for tea. -The old gentleman watched her at tentively. He saw there was no elasticity in her step, no hope in her movements ; and pity , for her began to steal into bis heart. When her. husband, entered, her features relaxed into a smile, and she foreed a cheerfulness into her manner. The travel ler noted it all ; and be felt himself forced to admire this woman who could assume a cheerfulness she did not feel for her bus band's sake. After the table was prepared, there was nothing upon it but bread,buUer and tea. They invited the stranger to eat with them, saying : " " We have not got much to oD'er you, but a cup of tea will re fresh you after your long journey." . lie accepted their hospitality, and as they discussed the frugal meal, he led them without seeming to do so, to talk of their own affairs. , , ,..; "I bought this pieoe of. land,", said Mr. Bishop, , " at a very low price, and instead of waiting as I ought to have done, until I bad saved the money to build, I thought I would borrow two hundred dollars, .The interest on the money would pot be nearly so much as the rent I was paying, and I would be saving ruouoy by so doing. ' I did not think there would be any difficulty in paying back the borrowed money.' But the first year my Wife and one of my chil dren were ill, and the expenses, left me without the means to pay tha debt. Mr. Merton agreed to wait another year, if I would pay the interest. 1 did that, This year . I was for seven months unable to work at my trade and earn anything ; and of course when pay day comes around and this is very soon, I shall again be unable to meet the demand.!' , ,. , ' " But," said the stranger, " will not Mr. Merton wait another year, if you make all circumstances known to him ?" ,",No, sir,", , replied Mr. Bishop, ' saw him this morulug, aud be said ha must have the money, aud should be obliged to foreclose the mortgage." '' " " He , must be very hard-hearted," re plied the traveler. " Not necessarily so," said Mr, Budiop. " The fact is, these rich men know nothing of the struggles of the poor. There are men just like the rest of mankind,' and I am sure if they but had the faintest idea of what the poor have to pass through, their hearts and their purses would open. . You know it has passed into a proverb ; "When a tpoor mat) needs assistance be should apply to tha poor," The reason is obvious. The poor only know the curse of poverty. They know how heavily it falls, crushing the spirit out of a man ; aud to use my fa vorite expression, they can at ouce put themselves in the unfortunate one's place and appreciate bis difficulties, and are therefore always roady to render assistance as far as they are able and if Mr. Morton had the least idoa of what I and my family had to pass through, I think he would be 'willing to wait several years for his money, rather than distress us." With what emotion the stranger listened may be imagined. A new world was being opened to him. He was passing through an experience that had never been his be fore. Shortly after Uio conclusion of the meal, he rose to take his leave, thanking Mr. and Mrs. Bishop for their kind hospi tality. They Invited him to stay all night, tolling him he was welcome to what they had. He thanked them and said, " I will tres pass on your kindness no longer. I think I can reach the next village before dark, aud be so much further on my journey. ' Mr. Merton did not sleep much that night. He layed awake thinking. He had received a now revelation. The poor had always been associated in his mind with stupidity and ignorance, and the first poor family he had visited he had found far in advance, in intelligent sympathy and real politeness, of the exquisites and fashiona ble butterflies of the day. The next day a boy oalled at the cottago arid left a paokago in a large blue envelope, addressed to Mr. Bishop. Mrs. Bishop was very much alarmed when she look it ; for large blue envelopes were associated in her mind with law and lawyers, and thought that it boded no good. She put it away until her husband came home from his work, when she hand ed it to him. IIo opened it; in silence, read its con tents, and said frequently, "Thank Heav en !" " What is it John ?" inquired his anxious wife. ' - "Good news," rcpliod John;-"such news that I bad never hoped for, or even dreamed of." " What is it what is it ? Tell me quick I want to hoar if it is anything good." "Mr. Merton has canceled the mortgage, reloasod me from debt, both interest and principal, and says any time I need further assistance, if I will let him know I shall have it." " I am so glad, it puts new life in me," said the now happy wife. "But what can have come over Mr. Merton?". ' , " I do not know. It seems strange after the way he talked to me yesterday morn ing. I will go right over to his office and toll him bow happy be has made us." ' He found Mr. Merton in his office and expressed his gratitude in glowing terms. ' "What could have induoed you," be asked, to show us so much kindness ?" "I followed your suggestion," ' replied Mr. Merton,' "and put myself in your place. I expeot it would surprise yon very much to learn that the strange traveler to whom . you showed so much kindness yesterday was myself," , ,,., ,? Indeed 1" exolaimed Mr. Bishop, " can that be true ? , How did you disguise your self so well ?'.' ... . ,. i ..... : "I was not so much disguised after all, but you' could not very readily assooiate Mr. Merton, the lawyer, with a poor way faring man ha 1 ha I ha 1" laughed Mr. Merton. ' n... . . . . i . "Well, it is a good joke," said Bishop j "good ' in more senses than one. - It baa terminated very pleasantly for me." "I was surprised," said Mr. Merton, " at the broad and liberal Views you ex pressed of men and their actions generally. I supposed I had greatly the . advantage over you in means, education and culture ; yet bow cramped and narrow-minded have been my views beside yours That wife of ypura is an estimable woman, and that boy of yours will be an honor to any man. " I tell you, Bishop," said the lawyer, becom ing animated, "you are rich rich beyond what money can make you. Yon have treasures that gold will not buy.' I tell you, you owe me no thanks. Somehow, I seem to have lived years ' since yesterday morning. I have got into a new world. What I learned at your house is worth more than you owe me, ' and I am your dobtor yet. Hereafter, I shall take as my motto: "Put yourself in my plaoe," and try to regulate my actions by it. ' "' Ladles Should Bead. ui (- ... " It Is a great mistake in female education, to keep a young lady's time and attention devotod only to the fashionable literature of ..the day. j It. you) would qualify her for conversation you must give her something to talk about, give her education iu the actual world and it , transpiring event. Urge her to read the newspaper, aud be come familiar with the present character aud improvements of our race. , History Is of some importance ; but the past world is dead we have nothing to do with it. Our thought and our concerns should be for the preseut world ; to know.wbat it is and improve ita condition. , Let her have an intelligent opiuiou, and be able to sus tain conversation according to the mental, moral and religious improvement of our times. Let the glided annuals and poems on the contre-tuble be kept a part of the time covered with weekly and dally jour nals.' Let the whole family, men, ' women and childien, read newspapers. Harried Without Knowing II. lA Mr. Thoma Cooper, an Englishman, has publiahcd an account of his travels in Thibet, whloli ho visited disguised as a Chinaman. Among his stories is the fol lowing : lie was just halting for breakfast, after leaving the Thibetan town of Bathang, when a group of young girls, gayly drcssod, and docked out with garlands of flowers, eame out of the grove and surrounded him, some of thorn holding his mulo, while otbei-s assisted him to alight. He was theq led into a grove, where he found a feast prepared, and after ho had eaten, and smoked his pipe, the piil came up to him again, "pulling along in their midst a pretty girl of sixteen, who was attired In a silk dress, and adorned with garlands of flowers." He adds, "I lind already noticed this gill silting apart from tlios others during the menl, and I was very much as tonished when she was reluctantly drained up to me, and made to seat herself by my side ; and astonishment was considerably heightened when the rest of the girls began to dance round us in a circle, singing and throwing their gnrments around me and companion." The meaning of this singu lar performance was, however, made clear to Mr.1 Coopor. He had been married ! without knowing it. At first ho tried to I escape the liability ontailed upon him ; but such an outcry was made by alt the people around that he was forced to oarry off his bride. He managed to got rid of hor before very long, by transferring her to ore of her relations, but even that was not treated as a dissolution of the marringe. On his way back be was joined by a Thibe tan dame, about thirty years old, who said she had come to him with the consent of herhusband,to supply her daughter's place. We can well imagine Mr. Cooper's sur prise at meeting with this novel proposal on the part of his mother-in-law. Courtship of Savages. ' Among the aboriginal blacks of Austra lia, courtship as the precursor of marriage is unknown. When a young warrior is desirous of procuring a wife, he generally obtains one by giving in exchange for ber a sister or some other female relative of his own, but, if there should happen to be no eligible damsel disengaged iu the tribe to which he belongs, then he hovers around the encampment of some other blacks until he gets an opportunity of seizing one of their leubros, who, perhaps he has seen aud admired at one of the feasts of the oorrobories. His mode of paying his ad dresses is simple and efflcaoious. With a blow of a war club he stuns the object of his "affection," and as she reoovers her senses, brings her home to his own gun yale in triumph. Another method with wife-stealera is to ascertain the camp-fire at which the' girl whom he oovets sleeps. When he gains the knowledge, he creeps close tj the camp on some dark windy night, and, stretching out Ills spear, inserts ita barbed point among her thick, flowing locks, turning it ' slowly around, some 'of her hair beoomea entangled with it ; then with a iiudden jerk, she is aroused from her slumber, and as her eyes open she feels the point of another woapon pressing against her throat. She noither faints nor creams. She knows well that the slight est attempt at escape or alarm will cause her Instant death ; so, like a sensible wo man, she makes a virtue of ' necessity, and rising silently she follows ber captor to be gin a life of toil from whioh she ia not re leased till death. "' 'r:! ;'.""' '!' , .Who are Your Aristocrats! ' ,' ... X ,., . If- f. . t ,1 ...r n, Twenty years ago, this one made oaodlea, that ohe sold cheese and batter, that one butchered, a fourth thrived ou a distillery, another was a contractor on canals, others were merchants and meobanica. They are acquainted with ' both ends of society, as their children - will be after them though it would not do to say so out loud t for often1 you shall find that these toiling worms baton butterflies and tbey live about a year. Death brings a divisiea of property, aud it brings new finaneiers I The old gent is discharged, the young gent takes his revenues, and begin to. travel to ward poverty which be reaches before death, or his children do, if ho does not. -So that, in fact, though jfhere is a sort of moneyed raoo, it is not.bejeUiUi'j ; it is ac cessible to all. The good seasons of cot ton.' will send a generation off men Up a score of years, will bring them all down, and send their, children to- laboj. .,,The , fa ther grubs, and grows vicky. tha children trust, and spend the mouey. The ohlldreu in turn inherit the price- and go to shiftless poverty ; next their chiltlrea, reinvlgorated by fresh plebeian blood, aui by the smell of the clod, come u again.' Tuns society, like a tree, draws its sap- from the earth, changes it into loaves, and spreads them abroad in great glory, shads them off to fall back on the earth, sgain to mingle with the soil, and at )engtb, to reappear in new dress and fresh garniture. ' :! ' t ' ' tW Is it wrong for m to use rouge I" asked a homely splcster of her clergyman. "What do you use it for?'! "To to make' rne handsome.! 'Well madam, gu8 IV will do no harm for' you to use lOUKf, for, you e homely', euyuh even with it.- ' . -i '' '' ' ' Old Timber. Probably tho oldest timber in tlio werld which has boon subjected to the use of man is that found in the ancient temples of Egypt in connection with the stone-work, which Is known to be at loast four thousand years old. This, the only wood used in the construction of the tomple, is in the form of ties, holding the end of one stone to another to its uppor surface. When two blocks were laid in place, an excavation about an inch doep was madeiu each block, Into which a tie shaped like an hourglass was driven. It is thorcforo very diffioult to force any ' stone from its position. The tie appear to have been of t!ie tamarisk or shittem wood of which the ark was con structed, a saorod tree in ancient Egypt, and now very rarely found in the valley of the Nile. The dovetailed ties are just as sound, now as On tho day of their insertion. Although fuel is extremely scarce in the country, these bits of wood are not lare enough to make it an object with the Arabs to huave off layer after layer of heavy stone to obtain them. Had they been of bronze, half of the old . temples would have been destroyed years ago, so precious would they have been for various purposes. German Genius. It is less than seventy yoars since illu minating gas was introduced. Writing from London in 1807, Walter Scott sneer ingly referred to the folly of a German who actually proposed lighting the streets of the city with coal-gas. It is to Germany that the world is now indebted for an invention which will probably supersede lamp-lighters, their torches and ladders, and also electrio wires. Certain German engineers have constructed an apparatus which is quite simplo, and can be fixed to all gas- jots. It acts solely by the increased pres sure whioh is laid on from the gasometer at lighting time. When the gas is turned on at the main, all the burners fitted with the apparatus are at once lighted, and the diminution of pressure can be so regulated as either to lossen tho amount of gas con sumed oi totally to extinguish the flame. By this means a whole city can be simul taneously lighted, and one man be enabled instantly to do the work which scores are now required to perform in a slow and laborous manner. In this,as in some other departments of practical science, the pres ent generation has little more than crossed the threshold. , The Secet of their Power. A gentleman one day earnestly requested Mr. Webster to speak in the Senate on an important subject. " I have no time," was the roply. I have no time , to master the subject so as to doit justice, "But Mr. Webster," urged the applicant, "a few words frem you would do much to awaken publio attention to it.." .' "If there be such weight In my words as you represent," re joined the great statesman, "it is because I do not allow myself to speak on any subject till 1 have imbued my mind with It" . ' " " Men give me the oredit for genius," said Alexander Hamilton ; "all the goqius I have lies just in this when I have a sub ject in band, I study It profoundly. , Day and night it is before me. I explain it in all its bearings. ' My mind becomes' perva ded with it. ' Then (he effort which I make the ' people ' please to call the fruit of genius.. It Is the first fruit of labor and , thought' ' ' V '. ',".' ; '' The Population of China. ' " '' Abbe David,1 who has recently devoted some years to the exploration of Chinese territory and the study of the people,' say a that the estimate of statisticians that the. total population of the Chinese Empire is but 100,000,000 souls is entirely ineorreot The error is due to the terrible ravages, made in certain small political divisions, which have rebelled at times, and in which wholesale) massacres have reduced tha in habitants to one ; half and some eases one fifth their former numerical strength. . Tha province f Eiangsi is, however, the least populated, and the average of each canton, therein is 4,000 people... . There: are 4,345, oantons, making an approxiaiate total oft 17,880,000 inhabitants.!; Among the 18 provinces of the Empire, It is certain that several largely exceed Eiangsi in popula tion ; but taking the above given aggregate as a uuit, there must be at least 300, 00000 individuals in the' country. tW It is a Strange characteristic of Rus sian juries that they sonslder, theuisclvea unbound by any law, and, Indeed, by any evidence, if ' directly their feelings are, touched.' Lately a private teaoher was, shown to have stolon to the amount of 100, roubles the things were traced, and, in. short, the man did not deny it, It appeased that' he had been, driven, ta it by sheer want, aud tho circumstance were Certainly of a pitiful nature. The mau was acquit ted, and a purse made up for him by the jury aud the publio. ' Such verdicts con, stautly com'. A fraudulent bankrupt, as, an exeuse for not keoping book iu . his. business,' as required by law, ' pleads that others do not, and be I acquitted, . A man, hires a piano and pledges it the next day, pleading that it was all the. oame to tho owner whether it stood with him or iu pawn, aud be, aguiu, is acquitted. It Is tlift same In more serious oases.