UU BY S. J. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 22, 1864. VOL. 10.-NO. 43. j?dcrt octrtt. KISD WOED3. kind word are liko the morning sun, . That gild the summer nhower; Kind word are like the blessing spread kj every rummer shower. They light the heart with sunny bc&mj; They hed a fulgent ray. And cber the weary pilgrim As be wanders on hi way. If you bare nought to give the poor, W hen winter's anow-cluudj loom. Oh ! nerer forget that oue aweet smite May cb4e away their gloom. Kemeu)brr, too. that one kind word May blunt affliction's dart, And softly full, like healing balm, Upon the wjunded heart Let us hear cone but gentle word ; No talss of dismal strife ; lJut only kind word whisper. As you tread this vale of life Thtn try by every word and glanoe The suffering to beguile ; And watch tbem when you speak kind word, Ilow happily they smile. . PEAOTIOAL INSTRUCTION. In the admirable report of Agazzis in re lation to the museum of comparative zoo logy, the great naturalist gives an interest ing sketch of hisniethcd of natural history. He puts them at work among the specimens themselves, studying tacts, tracing analo gies, developing differences, and mastering principles; for, say lie, "1 have satisfied myself long ago that the general and most elementary principles of one science are bet ter understood when illustrated from nature than when explained in a mere apstraet manner." On this the Washington Chron icle makes the following sensible comments : 'The divorce between text-book instruc tion and practical knowledge is one of t ha g eat curses oi American education. e j know accomplished divines who cannot U l j We have seen more thanone excellent (J reek scholar who was incapable of distinguishing 1-ctween a fif Id of -growing wheat and one of rye. A large proportion ot our college grad uates ate ready to confound iron pyraU-s With specimens of goM ore; and we have known numbers who made capital recitations in chemistry in their college coarse, who. never really learned, are now in entire mae- iu.-umi;ii;iii.c win ecu a cuesi nui anu an oak t tcai ignorance ot tno appearance e. cuavac- j chemicals, j istics ami users o: the simplest te nave seen more than one voting man I who. .niter twelve years good K-hoohng, and tinder ai-complL-dicd teachers at that, could not draw an ordinary note of hand or calcu late a simple- sum at interest. It is this ignorance of eveiy day things vhich makes our scholars the tport of your rough practical men. They get plundered in the market and cheated iu the More. 1 hey am taken advantage ot by th r gr -'-! c.T. and imposed upon bv their L- i ureiif-r. oiiscious ol lucir ignorance of what many ii wide-awake eight-year old is famiJIiarwit.'i, thev shrink from coming in contact wit h iiien in business ways, and so go through life one-sided. We do not believe it will hurt a statesman to know how to sew on a button or handle a hammer. We are sure that no divine will be worse for beins famil iar Will; d. the secret or the kitchen arid pan- j .nd we are quite certain it do..- hot I ir . .via we are .VIC iiuit an editor to bu a indfe nf Hon- nr of gwnl beef Ours is a practical people, and we need a more thorough every-day educa tion of young men and young women. The ji idlest .-O' iety is the most thoroughly self helping. It is compatible with the highest caiture to be able to wait on one's self. For ourselves we would as soon be: handed over to the executioner as to be dogged by a va let. But in order to free men from imposi tion and fit them for every day duties they ii.u.-t he trained to them'ih "tlic-'r youth. A child will learn by observation and by t-jucli a thousand thin?:) in his early years fci'fiout effort, which it would take weeks of j imrd work to secure at a liter period. We I our ctuktrentoo iuucn in school rooms. I ! hey wa-ie too many precious hours over ! ?H;s that, duwdhng over them as thev do. ! the niin i more harm than food. The KUoUl'l mid surrounded more with objects and j i''SS v,:rh text-hooks : tautrht sizos. Torm yjutifj. color', aetiisi contact, rather than ;Ur to acquire abstract descriptions. We tape '.cine day to see a reform in the meth "U i'" teaehing, and to see chiMren practi 'liy inducted into the secrets of nature, &n'! .'.quiring by actual observation and ex Knnicnt an amount of valuable knowledge -iii.h tiiere study of tcxt-honL-s enrmot ro-- iMj bestow Coal Harbor, iiiis name is indiscriminately spelt Cold "Mbor and Coal Harbor. Some of the "sps have it one way and some the other, -n McCjellan-a report it is called Coal Har-p'!"- lue place is simply a locality no vil--a cross roads and a dilapidated old ern. The roads passing here, however, '-ciporrant ; oue leads to Richmond, sev a toits distant; another to White House, tl . L,ules distaut ; another to - Old tn u"' ve miIes f'rora which a road leads "naimvertown ; another to Dispatch sta n, near Bottom's Bridge, on the Rich hI and York river railroad. iI-'e "?vy department has received infor- 'onol the capture, off Velasco, Texas, tte 2sth May, of the blockade running j"" Isabel by the steamer Admiral. She juoade upward of twenty successful trips Thfr f!at anl Mobile and Galveston. ij f atjd crew the IsabeI foaght tJMii i11 courage before they were urea, and did not surrender until they The broadsides at short range, cargo consists of powder, arms, percus fi aP8, jardware and medicine. , Sf0I,lract for dead hcrses in tte nny hw fat bB let for fl2,00a-- SPEECH fjF DB. BSECKINBIDGE. Rev. Dr. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, on taking the chair of the Union National Con vention as temporary President, delivered the following pointed and eloquent address : I Gentlemen of the Convention : You i cannot be more sensible than I am, that the j part which I have to perform here to-day is i merely a matter of form ; and, acting upon uie jiuucipieui my wnoie me wnen me sug gestion was made to me from various quar ters that it was iu the mind of many mem bers of the Convention to confer this dis tinction upon me, I honestly declined to ac cept of it, because I have never sought hon ors. I have never sought distinction. I have been a working man and nothing else ; but two considerations Jed me to change my mind. One was personal to a class of men in the country, far tjo Email for the good of the country those men who, merely by their example, by their . pains, and by their voice, try to do good, and all the more in j perilous times, without regard to the rewards i that may come. It was good to make such ! men understand by the distinction conferred upon oiiii ot t lie humblest or their clas, that they were men that the country would cherish and who would not be forgotten. Applause. J The other motive related to yourselves and to the country at large ; and it is good liryou it is good for every na tion, every btate, and every party to cher ish all geih-rons impulse, to follow all noble instincts ; and there are none more generous and none more noble than to purge your selves of ail v. ho jook to self, all betrayers, and to confer your favors, if it be only in the mere term, usion those who are worthy to be trusted, and ask nothing more. Ap plause. Now, according to my notions of propri ety, havings-aid this, 1 should say no more I '0o on. J but it has been intimated to 111C from many quarters, and in a way which 1 camiot disrc-ur,K that 1 would disappoint the wishes of iny friends, and nerhans. the j;ist expectations of the Convention, if I did not, as briefly and yet as precisely as I eouM, say a word upon the great matters which have brought us here. Therefore, in a very few words, as plainly as I can, I will endeavor to direct your "attention to one and another of these great matters in which we are all engaged. Ifl tin f;rs;f". Tit:tm -iint1nnnr nan 1 r r i-a striking than the fact that you are here, the representatives cf area'lv great nation the voluntary representatives chosen without form of law, l ot as truly representing the feeling, ami, if you choose, the prejudices of the' American people, as if it were all written in the laws, ana sii passed by votes ; for the man that vott will nominate here j fur the Presidency of the United iStates.the ruler of a great people in a great crisis.' is, 1 suppose, just as certain to be that ruler as !,rii-triin!v u'i.Iai- ICin-n .,i-f..;., i .,,..: - - - ' - - - i v-'l ' V 11 I . " V V. I L (111 1 ut-lVlVi 1 L fates nhiei- II.n.,,1 I And, moreover, ynu will allow me to say, though, perhaps it is hardly proper that I should, but, as tar as i know your opinions, I suppose it is just as certain now, before j oit utter it, whose name you will utter,and which wiii be responded to from one end of this nation to the other, as it will be after it tr.ry. LApplause. Does any man doubt that. thi. ( 'oni-pnf;Ti ;wLm c,-,il,,t a. Lntham Lincoln should be the next Presi dent of the United States. Vociferous applause. What, however, I wUh to call your attention particularly to is the gran deur of the mission upon which you are met, and therefore, the dignity, the solemnity, the earnestness, and the conscientiousness with which you, representing one of the greatest and freest people of the world, ought to discharge these duties. Now, besides the nomination of the Pres ident and Vice President (in regard to which second office I will ray nothing, because I know there is more or less a division of o- pinion anion 'nations you you, ) but besides these noni have other and most solemn duties to perform. You have to organize this party thoroughly throughout the Uni ted States. You have to put it into form. t that will contribute all that wisdom, oacked by energy and the most determined effort can produce, to gain the victory which I have already said was in our power. More than that, you have to lay down with clear ness and precision the principles upon which you will carry on this great political contest, and prosecute the war which is underneath them, and the glory of the country which lies before us, if we succeed. Plainly, not in a double sense, but briefly, and with the j dignity and precision I tericg iy its represe of a great people ut- seutatives the political principles by which they intend to live, and for the sake of which they intend to die, so that all men everywhere may understand precisely what we need ; to run your furrow 80 deeply and so clearly that, while every man worthy to associate with freemen may see it, and pasd over it to us, every man who is uuworthy may be either enabled to pass or may be driven from us. We want none but those who are like us to be with us. Loud applause. From among these principles if you will allow me, for a moment, to say so the first and most distinct is that we do not intend to permit this nation to be destroyed. We are a nation no doubt a peculiar one a na tion formed of States, and no nation, ex cept as these States form it ; and they are States, but they are no States except as they are States in that nation. Applause. Historically they never were, and they have no more right to repudiate them ; and nei ther of them have any shadow of right, and we intend, God helping us, so to vindicate that truth that it shall never be disputed any more in this world. Great applause. It is a fearful alternative that is set before us, and yet there are great compensations for it.- Those of you who hare attended to thif? subject, know, or ought to know, that from the foundation of the present Govern ment using that word in its proper sense, mis present institution there have al ways, in every generation, been parties that nau no taitu in it. The men who tornied it were doubtful of its success. The men who opposed its formation did not desire its success and 1 am bold to say, without de taming you upon this point, that after all the out-cry about our violation of the Con stitution, this present liviuer generation and this present Union party are more thorough ly devoted to that Con stitution than auy generation that has ever lived under it. While I say that, and while olemnly be lieve it while I believe it is capable of the clearest historical proof I will also add that it is a great error which has been propaga ted in our land, to say that our Federal life, our National life, depends merely upon the existence of that Constitution. Our fathers made it, w e love it, and we intend to main tain it. Applause. But if it suited us to change it, we would change it, and when it suits us to change it, we will change it. Applause. If it were to bo torn into a thousand pieces, broken all over, the nation would be as much a nation as it i3 to-day as much a nation as it was before this par ticular Constitution was made; a nation which always declared its independence as a people, ana who have lived united until now, a nation independent of the particular institutions under winch they lived, and ca pable ot moaeling them precisely as the in stitutions of successive generations may re quire. Applause. J V, e ought to have it distinctly understoou, both by friends and eneoiies, that while we love that instrument, and are in most, respects satisfied with if, and will maintain it, and that we will, with uudubitable certainty, put to death the fri end or foe who undertakes to trample it under foot, if we can get rid of them in no other way, yet, beyond a doubt, we will al ter it to suit ourselves from generation to generation. Cries of "good, good," and applause. Xow, one more idea on that subject. Wc have sanctified andput into that instrument the natural right of revolution. This very thing, that you may change it, which never existed before the American Constitution, and which existing, there is no rebellion, in surrection, or civil war, except upon the denial of the fundamental principle of all free governments, to wit, ; That the major part must rule. There is no other method of carrying on society except that the power of the majority shall be the power of the whole so that, in one word, to deny the prin ciple which I have tried to state , to you, is to make dogmatic assertion that the only form of government that i-? possible, or that is approved by philosophy, or mat h acknowledge by uml.is pure and ab solute despotism. The principles, there fore, which I am trying, in this feeble man ner, to state Ik-fore you, are principles which, if they be not true, freedom is impossible, and no other government under the sun but a government of pure force is or can exist and ought not to endure among men. But the idea which I say they are to carry out as special compensation for these troubles and sorrows is this : Jreadful as they are, these fearful truths run through the whole history of mankind, that whatsoever else may be done to give stability to an authority; what ever may be done to give perpetuity to institutions, however may be the philosophy of it, it has been found that the only imper ishable cement of all free institutions has been the blood of traitors. Applause. J No goverment has ever stood upon irresistible foundations, which foundations were not built on traitors' blood. It is a fearful truth, but we had as well avow it at once. L'very blow you strike, and every rebel you kill, and every battle you win, reluctant as we are to do it, is adding a decade, it may be a century, it maybe ten centuries, to the perpetuity of your Govern ment, and the freedom of your children. Cries of "good" and applause. Now, passing from that point, and passing over many other things that it would be proper lor me to say to you if the time ser ved, and this were the occasion, let me add that you are a Union party. Your origin has been referred to as of 8 years ago. In one sense it is true, that you are far older than that. I see before me here not only primitive Republicans and primitive Aboli tionists, but I see also primitive Democrats. I see primitive Whigs. I see primitive A mericans, and if you will allow me to sav so, I myself am here, who, all my life, have been in a party to myself. Laughter and applause.J As'a Uniou party I will follow you to the ends of the earth, and to the gates of death. Applause. But as an Aboli tion party, as a Republican party, as a Whig party, as a Demoratic party, an American party, I will not follow you one foot. Laugh ter and applause. And this is true of the American people. Whatever you may be: come hereafter, however you may divide or scatter, while the country is in this peril, call yourselves as you call yourselves to day, as you styled yourselves in the call of this convention, a ' 'Union party. ' ' You are for the preservation of the Union. You are for the destruction of this rebellion, root and branch ; and, in my judgment, one of the grand errors that has been committed by the Administration of. the Federal Government, the chief of which we are now about, as I think, to give another term of office ap plause one of the errors which has been committed is their readiness to believe that they had succeeded in places where they had not succeeded, and to act in a manner in which it would be proper for them to act in accordance with that belief. But you never willucceed until you have utterly broken the military power of these people. Enthusiastic applause. . Well, I will not detain you on these points their incidental points pne of which has been made prominent in the remarks of the excellent chairman of the National Commit tee. I do not know that I would be willing to go so tar as, probably, he would; but I cordially agree with him, in most that he uaa saiu. considering what has been done about slavery, taking the thing as it now oiu3, ovenooKing altogether everything u couuemnauon or approval, what has brought us to the point at which "?aic present r jseueving m my con science, with all my heart, that what has urougntus to what we are is the original sin and the tody and treason of the secession ists in ine matter ot fclavery : because, you wid remember that the Chicago Convention itself was understood to say that they would not touch slavery within the States,yet leav ing this altogether out of the question, how came we where we are. Upon the particu lar ground we are prepared to go further i-uiu, LJie original nepublicans themselves were prepared to go. Applause. We are o Y 7- ueinana not only that the whole of the lenitories of the United States shall nufc l me sIave Territories, but to demand that the General Government, and tin A- mencan people, shall do one of two things, (and, as it annears to me. t,hpr is nnd,;,, se that can be done,) either to use the whole power of the Government .Wh th war and the peace power, to put slavery as near as possible back to where it was, so that, athough it would be a fearful state of society, it is better than anarchy ; or else to use tne wuoie power ot the Government both for war and for peace, and all the fur ther power that the people of the United States will give, to exterminate and extin guish it forever. Vociferous and Prolong ed cheering. Now, I fcave no hesitation in saying for myself, that if I were a pro-slavery man, t hat if I believed this institution was an or dinance of God and was good for man, I would unhesitatinglyjointho.se who demand of the Government to put it back where it was ; but as am not a pro-slavery man, and never was, applause I write mvself with those who believe it is contrary to the hirb- i est interest of all races and all governments, contrary to the spirit of the Christian reli gion, and incompatible with the natural rights of man, and would join myself with those who say "away with it from the face of God's earth. " Loud and continued ap plause. I fervently pray God that the day may come wheri, throughout this whole world, every man may be as free as you are, and a capable of enjoying regulated liberty. Well, I will not detain you any longer. A single word you will allow ine to say on behalf of the State from which I come one of the smallest of the thousand of Israel. Laugh ter. ) We know very well that our eleven votes are of no significance in the Presiden tial election. We know very well that in our present nnhappy condition, it is by no means certain that we are here to-day rep resenting the party that will cast the ma jority of the votes in that unhappy State. know Very Weil that the sentimpntu wMoli I am uttering will cause me great odium in the State in which 1 was born, which I love, and where the bones of two generations of my ancestors and some of my children are, and where, very soon, I shall lay my own. I know my coleagues will incur odium, and they know it, if they endorse what I say: but we have ptlt our faces towards the way in which we intend to go and we will go in it, come good or come evil. If we are to perish, we will perish in that way. All I have to say to you is, "Help us if you can; if you can not, Jjeheve in your hearts that we have died like men. (Loud applause. OBEGON. It is announced that the State most dis tant from the Federal Metropolis, one of the youngest and geographically most likely to slough off from the Union, has just elected the Union ticket by a largely increased ma jority. This, ; though expected, is a grati fying result. Oregon was prematurely ad mitted as a State in order to increase the already overwelming Pro-Slavery majority in the Senate. . One of her earliest Senators was Gen. Joseph Lane, a North Carolinian, sent out to her as Territorial Governor, and one of the most servile tools of the Slave Power. He was chosen Delegate in 1S57 by 5,605 votes to 3,471 for Lawson, Repub lican ; and her people that year, while re jecting Slavery, adopted a brutally Pro-Slavery Constitution and forbade negroes to settle in their State by 4,828 majority. It thenceforward voted for whatever was call ed "Democratic' till 1860,when Lane & Co. represented it at Charleston, helped frame the Breckenridge platform, bolted from the Convention on its rejectiou, and Lane was the Breckenridge candidate for Vice-President. The party then broke in two, but Lane held on to the larger fragment the vote of Oregon forPiesidentstanding Lin coln, 5,870 ; Breckinridge, 5,006: Douglas, 3,951 ; JBell, 183. Its represetative in the last, as in the preceding Congress, was pret ty fully in sympathy with the Rebels. It is now represented by a thoroughgoing Union ist, and one of like faith has just been cho sen to the next House the first Member e lected to that body. The votflpof Oregon may be counted morally certai1or Lincoln and Johnson. Tribune. ""WTiat is a Copperhead An anonymous corresponbent whT signs himself" "Inquirer," wants to know the meaning of the term "Copperhead," as ap plied to the friends of Jeff Davis in the North. For his benefit wee the follow ing analysis which wc find ready at hanfc Copperhead means : C onspiracy. Opposition. ' ' P eace on any terms. P iracy. E nmityto the Union. -R ecoguition of the C. S. A. K.. 11 atred to the government . .' E arnest sympathy with traitorsf' A narchy. , . V : v D isloyalty; " V - ' ' --. , THE OLEYELAND CONVENTION. Since our last issue we have read with feel ings of disgust and pity the letter of Gen eral Fremont accepting the nomination ten dered him by this pitiable Cleveland Con vention. Disgust that a man of Fremont's unquestioned ability should be made the dupe of cunning tricksters, and pity that a man who has received so marked a token of a people's partiality, as Fremont did in the campaign of '56, should have fallen so low in the mire of partisan politics. But the old adage that "vaulting ambition too often overleaps itself has found found a fitting indorsement in the case of Fremont. As fen evidence that not only the mana- gers of the Cleveland Convention were in fluenced in their action by bitter hostility to President Liucoln, but that their candi date for the Presidency is influenced by the same motives, we quote the following ex tracts from Fremont's letter of acceptance. Had JUr. Lincoln remained faithful to ' the principles be was elected to defend, no schism could have been created and no ' contest could have been possible. This is ' not an ordinary election Tt. w " for the right even to have candidates, and i:uu mncy, aa usuhj, ior i ne cncicc among ' them. Now, for the first time sinea '7fi. " the question of constitutional liberty has wkcii uiuugui, uirecuy ueiore tne people uitu 6C11UU3 eonsiueiation and vote. The ordinary rights secured under thp constitution and the laws of the country " have been violated, and extraorrlinarv " powers have been usurped by the Execu- tivo. It is directly before the people now w "iiiuici ui hoi, ue principles es tablished by the Revolution are worth maintaining. ..Again : u " 'J-'o-day we have in the country the &bu 4 scs of a military dictation, without its u- nity of action and vigor or execution: An 4 administration marked at home by disre- gard of constitutional rights, by its viola 4 tions of personal liberty and the liberty 4 of the press, and, as a crowning shame, by 4 its abandonment of the right of asylum, a right especially dear to all free nations 44 abroad. Its course has been characteri 44 red by a feebleness and want of principle 44 which has misled European Powers aud 44 driven them to a belief that only commer 44 cial interests and personal aims are con 4cerned, and that no great principles are 44 involved in the issue. And again It the Convention at Baltimore will nominate any mrlrl whose past life justi fies a well grounded confidence in his fidel ity to our cardinal principles, there is no reason why there should be anv division 4 4 amo g the really pat r iotic men of the cou n 4 1 try. To any such I shall be most happy " to give a cordial and active support. "My own decided preference is to aid in 44 this way, and not to be myself a candi 44 date. But if Mr. Lincoln should be re 44 nominated, as I believe it would le fatal " to the country to endorse a policy and re 44 new a iiower which has cost us the lives 44 of thousands of men, and needlessly put 44 the country on the road to bankruptcy, 44 there will remain no alternative but to or 44 ganize against hira every element of con " stientious opposition, with the view to " prevent the misfortune of his re-election. . 'In this contingency I accept the nomina " tion at Cleveland, and, as a preliminary 4 step, I have resigned my commission in " the army. The above extracts plainly show the real sentiments of Gen. Fremont. In attempt ing to stab the man and party who gave him whatever name or fame he may have, l e makes patent to the world the fact that his patriotism looks only to the defeat of A braham Lincoln, and not to the preserva tion of the Union and the salvation of the country. In doing this, too, he makes use of assertions, charges and misrepresenta tions which would do no discredit to Vallan dighain, Voorhces or Fernando Wood. Lancaster Examiner. Foreign Loans. The New York Times makes the following definite statement as to some reported proposals for a foreign loan, by accepting which it is believed that the Secretary of the Treasury may affect mate rially the gold market : 4 'He will be res pectfully urged to accept certain offers of money from Europe, which have been un der consideration for several weeks. These offers we understand to be coupled with no conditions that reflect upon the dignity of the public credit, or that imply any advan tage to foreigners in the purchase of or by way of advances upon the stock of 1881 o ver our own bankers or the people of the U nited States at large. We hear that in one init-iiin.1 ft-l nnn IWkA x-s, fforJ ininflTT V... certain firms in England, Holland and Ger many, on no other stipulation different from the ordinary federal tenor of the stock, than that the gold should be paid on the half yearly coupons in the commercial capital of Holland a State always friendly and ever likely to be in accord with the United States -in place of JN ew i ork. 1 he difference, in any event, would be the trifling one of the freight and insurance-.' . ti Taunton, Mass., there is a turkey that has entered into copartnership with a cart ridge, both setting aide by side on the same nest, with an indiscriminate mixture of eggs oeneatn them.- .. - The consumption of meat in New York has fallen off one-quarter .under the high prices. ..People eat fish, and vegetables. cheap and "werry filling at th price." A Good Thing to Breathe. . The great mass of the inhabitants of the Northern United States live in better houses, wear better clothes, and eat better food than the mass of any. other nation, but they breathe the worst air of any people.in the world. They like bad air. Every man chooses to have his clothes and food prepared fresh . and new for him self, but he likes to have his air breathed over a few times by his neighbors before he takes it into hia own lungs. In this process its oxygen is diminished, its carbonic acid is increased, it gets a little warm, and moist, and dirty, and then it just suits the Amer ican taste. ; All through the winter months our city radroad cars are literally packed with pas sengers, and the doors, windows and ventil ators are kept tightly closed. If any pas senger ventures to open one of the little nar row ventilators in the upper part of the car, some very nice gentleman, with a clean col lar, white teeth, and a carefully-dressed wig, who is drawing in at everv breath marts air loaded with tobacco fumes, and animal matter from the lungs of his fellow pas sengers, is sure to give a shiver, and re quest that the minute opening may be closed. In our churches the eon Ternti iino epnor. ally have air in the forenoon which is quite tolerable, but in the alternbon their con sciences and good manners are subjected to a constant strain m enorts to resist the etur, pefying effects of the noxious gases with' which the church has become filled during the mornine service. But the worst effect of this national pre delection i3 seen in our schools. T?nndr4 of little boys and girls are confined in close rooms for three hours at a time, breathing over and over again the same air, constant ly diminishing its oxygen which is the sup porter ol life, thus reducing the force of the vital functions ; while at the same time the brain, that inevitably shares the enervating influence, is stimulated by the most exciting ambition to exertions too great for even its undiminished strength. By this course hundreds of helpless children, each the pride and joy of its home, have been doom ed to lingering disease and early death. There is no necessity for breathing pois onous gasses. We are placed in a great o cean of air which has been prepared by na ture in just the proper .proportions, or ox 3'gen, nitrogen and watery vapor to adapt it to the structure of our lungs and the health ful action of all our organs. We know that by breathing constantly this atmostphere, tak ing a fresh and pure supply at every breath, our physical system will attain to the high est degree of health and strength of which it is capable. It is only by laborious effort that we can box ourselves in, so that we can obtain the foul air of which we are so fond. French Designs on the Isthmus. Recent developments lead to' the opinion that France does not intend with th duest of Mexico to cease her encroachments upon the terntorail integrity and national independence of American republics. The New York Evening Post has received nu merous intimations from reliable sources that the policy of the French Emperor in cludes an attempt to establish his power permanently on the Isthmus, aud that w are about to have a revival of the once fa mous Panama question. One of its cor respondents, whose letter is published, as sests that certain prominent persons in Gua tamala arid Nicaragua 4,have perfected an arrangement, through the intervention of Gutierrez de Estrada, the originator of the Mexican monarchy, by which a movement for annexation will be set on foot immedi ately on the arrival of Max the First in his dominions." Mr. Lincoln was about the last, man in Washington to hear of his nomination on Thursday. A dispatch was sent to him,but it failed to reach him, announcing that he was nominated by acclamation. Towards night he was looking over the war telegrams in Mr. Stanton's office, when a despatch was brooght to him stating, that Mr. Johnson was nominated as Vice President Mr. Lin coln asked, "Is it customary to nominate a Vice Ptesidentzr" A friend asked him in astonishment if he had not heard who was nominated for President? and Mr. Lin coln replied that he had not ! There proba bly were few men in Washington who had not heard of the action of the Convention at that time. .2 . : Ma. Wade on Lincoln. A copper head Congressman was bewailing, a day or two ago, the prospect of hard work ahead in the political campaign, and, speaking to Ben Wade, remarked that stump-speaking was dreadful hard labor. "So it is," said Mr. Wade, 4 'but there won't be much, use in it this time. Out in Ohio we're going to take it easy. We'll just let old Abe run himself. There's no use in saying anything for or against him. The people have : e lected him already, and saved us a great deal of trouble. Ir you don't want to em bark in a very fruitless business, you Dem ocrats had better stay at home next sum mer, and save your powder for some other time." . . How to Spoil a Girl. Tell her she is a little lady, and must not run, and make" her a sunbonnet a yard deep, to keep Jier from tanning. Do not let her play with her male cousins, ."they are so rude., jell her not to speak loud it is so masculine; and that loud laghing is quite ungenteel Teaah. her music, Dut never mintf hr spelling: Give her ear rings at six years, of age. Teach her to set her can for beaux ateleven. And after your pains-taking, if she does not grow up a simpering, nnrenecnng noDoay, that cannot answer a love letter without some smart old aunt to help her, give her up she is past all remedy.:.. . , . , . Novelty alwayg appetr ltH45in;' ' f i : II Mi i-l v 5 ) I- it i: -1 f t. Jiff : inr