II II II Bi ll II . . U S . -y II l II II U 1 S I I 9 A. A. BARKER, Editor and Proprietor. .TODD IIUTCIIiafSON, Publisher. I WOtJLD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Hbsbt Cut. TERMS- IER AIVIVUM. i ii - III II Hi ll 31 II SI I till V HI VOLUME 5. THE ART OF MONEY" GETTING. fiarnum's Advlce and Practical Suggestions to Persons Desi rous of Achieving Fortunes. The art of Money-Getting is a subject which must, to some extent, interest all taen. Au ; empty pocket is a most un wholesome possession,' and avowedly the "worst of crimes;" he, therefore, who is able to devise ways and means to suc cessfully counteract the malady is a great public benefactor. P. T. Barnum, the Prince of Shopmen, who latterly has turned lecturer, proves himself a public benefactor by letting fall the following wise and timely suggestions : MEANNESS NOT ALWAYS ASSOCIATED WITH WEALTH. Money is the key that opens all doors, the power that removes all obstacles, and that procures everything worth having in this world. It is a mistaken idea with most people that meanness is always associated with the possession of wealth. The wealthiest men have always been the greatest philanthropists. Benjamin Frank lin is an instance. Ho was always very much interested in money getting, and wrote a great deal about the ait, bat he was also a great philanthropist. Stephen Girard look at his munificence; he was a true benefactor. As there are sometimes buses in religion and politics, so you may find abuses of money getting. ' There are misers among money getters, butlhey are an exception to the general rule. MIAN MEN DO NOT ALWAYS MAKE MONs It is not, as some suppose, every one who gets money that is a miser; only a portion" of them are miserly, because it is a most difficult thing for misers to get money. It is not an easy thiug for a mean iaan to make money. Such a man ought not to make money, because he cannot enjoy it himself, nor does it give enjoy ment 10 anybody else. I remember hearing of an Eastern man who, having accumula ted money by his meanness, upon one occasion was invited by a gentleman to dioe with him. He sat dows at the table, and being accustomed to diue from a single joint, he expected no more there. He helped himself very liberally at the first course, and when the second came he found reat difficulty in partaking of it, but when the third and- fourth courses came, he sank back in despair, and in reply to his friend's pressing invitation to fat, replied "I can eat no more victuals, ut I will take the rest in money!" I remember meeticg an Englishman iu Paris, a miser, who would never go out except with some one who had an inter preter with him, because he was too mean to pay for one himself. One day, however, j te went out alone, and when ue rcturuea he told me his adventures. He went outside the walls of Paris to get his dinner, became he heard that he could get it cheaper there than in the city. In relating Hisadventures he said, "I was unfortunate. lave tiot been able to get my diuner." "What was the trouble," said I. "Well," says he, "I had, a little smattering of French, and I went into a restaurant to pet my dinner. I asked the servant to brinme some potage, but he didn't under hand me. I told him I would try some fish, in French oissont but he hesitated he didn't wish to buy me poison.. Hap pening to pronounce the word correctly, ie understood me, and asked me what iind of fish I wanted. I told him turbot, tut pronounced it in' such an ambiguous manner, that he brought nic a boot-jack. I told him I didn't want that, and,- seeing ibe servant growing impatient, as a last resort, I asked him for some roast beef. He brought it, and now says I, 'As every Englishman wants horse radish with his Toast beef, I must have some'. But what " horse radish in French 1 horse, elieval, fed or reddish f rouge cJteval rouge then nast be the French for horse radish; so lie asked the garcon for some cheval rouge, hut the servant mistaking him, and think- g he was cal.ing the roast beet" red horse, kicked him without ceremony into the streets "On another occasion, a miser " New York fell overboard, when an Iruhmpn, wrho was standing by, jumped jn. and dragged him ashore, thus saving s life- The miser, seeing his benefactor yeing him askance, as though he. was pectiug something, put his hand into ui pocket and handed the Irishman a wxpence! "Are you t-atisfied asked we mUer. The Irishman eyed him for a hle, and said : "Be jabers, I think l am 9Terpaid." MONEY MAKING IS NOT DIFFICULT. ! ..A general rule it is not a difficult thp to make money. .It is about as licipie at anything .'else, but I have uo EBENSBTJRG, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1864. doubt that' my auditors will testify tj the truth, that though it is easy to make it is difficult to keep that is the great trouble. Dr. Franklin said the road to wealth was plain as the road to a: mill ; ' it consists simply in spending less than you earn." Mr. Micawber, one of the happy creations of Dickens, says, "To have an income of 1000 per annum, and to speud 1100, is to be the most miserable of men; whereas to have an income of -100 and to spend 99, is to be the happiest of mortals." The trouble is we don't like to hear anything about this old story. Every man says "economy is wealth.' Wc know all about that, but the great misfortune is, in almost every commuuity there is a large class of people who suppose they under stand economy, but who really do not. Instead of being a principle which perme ates their whole financial existence, at any rate always looking from the meaus to the cod, many persons look instead at one thing only, and eternally quibble about this one thing. On account of their economy in this, they are very extravagant in others. The old lady in the couutry farm house is very economical at night in the use of light. She uses but one tallow candle, and is so strictly economical in tallcw candles, that she loses much valua ble information which she might have obtained; and on the strength of having saved in a year four or five dollars by this management, can go down to the village and sp?nd ten, fifteen, twenty or thirty dollars for trifles and gimcraAs, because she is economical, and "economy is wealth." FALSE AND TRUE ECONOMY COMPARED. There are many merchants in business who fancy they are economical because they are" sparing in the use of writing paper. They lose sometimes hundreds of dollars' worth of valuable figures, for the purpose of economizing so many cents' worth of paper. Thus is the old story of the bunghole and spigot illustrated. Punch, who 3ometimes says some very good things, once remarked, "a man once bought a penny herring, and hired a coach aud four to carry it home for him." - There are persons who, in spite of this, do not know why they cannot make both ends meet. I recommend to people who have a tolerable salary, to get a little account book and mark down every penny expen ded just for three months, three months will be sufficient, and post off every week. Have two columns, one headed "necessaries," and the other "luxuries or unnecessary expenses." . The last column will often prove to be double or ten times the former. This evil, by this contrivance, will correct itself. You will see where the trouble lies. Some people fancy that economy consists in being mean cuttiug off a penny from their laundress' bill, and in screwiug down the wage3 of their servants. That is not economy. That is meanness. Economy consists in being liberal, but liberal according to your ability. The great trouble in this country,' more than in any other, is in having three ur four classes mingling promiscuously. Here we are all on an equality. This may have its abuses. Of course wo are all born to be Presidents, every one of us; we know we are, aud therefore wc can say, "I am as good as you are, any day."" lint here is jour fortunate neighbor who i3 worth 500,000, and who can afford hie coach and horses, because he is economical on an income of 30,000 a year, while you, with an income of SS0O or 1000, get your hoise and carriage, and strive to be equal with him. If you cannot afford a horse ani carriage, you hire a horse and buggy, and try to make people believe you own them. We are trying to seem what we are not that is the trouble. Whcu the rich man's wife comes out, the poor man's wife must have her silks and velvet. She must do that to the detriment of her children at home. Every city is full of this kind of people.' No person has common sense who attempts to pretend to afford more than he can. I recollect last year, a 6tovepipo in my office happen ing to fall down, I sent for a man to put it up. A gentleman dressed in broadcloth shortly afterward came in, and said he wished to see me. "You sent for me to htvA th stovenine rjut uo." said he." "I won't let you do it," said I. "The man who U above nutting on overalls to put up a stovepipe,. nW be starving his family to preserve falso appear.aDces. . I won't patronizo you won't have bucu a aian. Sometime afterwards, having sent lor a servant, T was told a lady wished: to ce me. I went down, and there was a lady with a thirty or forty dollar shawl on, and other extravagances in dress. I put my best bow on, not much at any time, and asked, "What can I do for you?" Sayg she, "Sure an I heard you wanted a laun dress, an' I've come for the place, sure." It's all wrong, the whole thing, but it runs through every community. It is this artificial sort of living that causes more misery than anything else, except, perhaps, evil propensities, intemperance, vice' or bad habits. : J - young men should select A congenial BUSINESS. .The best plari and the one surest of success,'I think, is to have every young man, when he starts in business, select that business which best suits his natural genius. .Now, phrenologists tell us, and we know it ourselves, that there is -as great a difference in the formation of lhe brain as in that of the face. We are each created fur some wise and different purpose.. Some boya are natural mechanics, while others have not the slightest idea on these subjects, and have no taste for them. For my part. I never had the slightest curiosity to know anything about mechan ics. I would not know to-night the prin- L ciples on which the steam-eugine works for a hundred dollars. You may take such a boy as I was and set him to watch making, and after seven j-ears he might be able to take apart and put together a watch, but it would be contrary to his inclination and up-hill work all his life. But if he selects the vocation he is fitted for, it is a pleasure, and nothing for him to succeed and make money. It is difficult to go across the grairr You will find from the pulpit to the anvil many people who have mistaken their avocation. Get them on the right track, and they would succeed.- Sometimes persons will get on the right track, and yet not succeed, be cause they may be placed in too circum scribed a position in some village or town where they cannot get full play for their faculties. A man iu this case should get out where he is uot so circumscribed. THE LONDON SIIOWMAX. . I remember a case. Once in London, on passing down Hobern, we passed by a place where some small shows were loca ted, many shanties with placards stuck up, misrepresenting the wonderful curiosi ties to be seen within for a penny. Well, being a little in that line myself, I said to my friend, let us go iu and see this. We made our way through the rabble, and soon found ourselves with theFhownian the sharpest geniu3 of tho kind I ever met with. After drawing our attention to certain other monstrosities, he called our attention to the "illustrious gallery of wax statues," pointing to about fifteen miserable dust-covered wax figures, which had becu there, perhaps, since the deluge, and had never seen water since that epoch "Sir," says he, "these were taken from life. You can easily imagine you are looking upon the living persons." Glancing casually, I saw one labelled "George the Fourth," a loan, lank indi vidual. "That was taken from life?" "Ye sir," said the showman, "that, sir, is probably the only correct statue of his late majesty. That was taken at Wind sor Palace at such a day," and I suppose had I pressed the inquiry he would have ' 1 .1 i . iiiri If i t 1 nuiutu me very uour. v ny, saia x, "I thought George the Fourth was a large, portly man, not lean and lank, as thi. represents him to be." "Yes," replied he, "and you would be loan and lank if you had set there as long as -he has." ,' We examined and cross-examined him, and he was always too much for us, and I i gave up in uespair. wu waining oui, iuc , fellow followed us to the door, and seeing the rabble there, he called out "I beg to draw your attentiou to the respectable character of tuy business," pointing to us. 1 thought that man was iu his sphere, but in too circumscribed a position. I called on him again, and I took him out of this limited sphere to New York, and he is now a traveling showman, one of the richest in the West. "PAY AS YOU GO"." If you would make money, avoid debt, personal debt. "1 have discovered the philosopher's stone," said John llandolph, on one occasion, 4;l'ay as you go !" That is a'nearer approximation to the philoso pher's stone than has ever bceu attained by the alchemist. Some young men just out of their teens, you will hear boasting that "so and so trusted, me to a suit of clothes, another person to a pair of boots, and another person a hat," endeavoring to get credit for the trust reposed in them, and vain to show their standing. They look at these debt? as though they were gifts, and the trouble is they too often are gifts. Yet they keep on in this habit of debt, drawing on the bank which may not be op? "tomorrow. SSo man na3 a Tif tn draw on the Juture occause it i .- . . a. . " . h mill he becomes a slave to debt all bis iife. Ii would be better to have a cannon ball chained to his leg a.l his day. There U no class oi men in the world so roinarkablo or tenacity of memory , as creditors. Frsiuklin said, "CrsditOM are a superstitious sect, but are great admirers of set days and tiojes."--One of the good-things comiug out of this war i a mou axclusive cash business. - ,- V -, Avoid debt; wear the old coat a little longer, till you can earn a new one. Money is good, but it is not the best thing in the world Money is in many respects like tire, a very excellent thing to have, but it ruins a great many people, injures many. Some people become the slaves instead of the masters of money. If you get in debt you are a slave, and money is master. While you are sleeping, the interest is accumulating. It has the advantage of you. But get ahead, get your nest-egg, and while you are sleeping it is working for you. PERSEVERANCE NECESSARY TO SUC CESS. .Men calculated to succeed, must lay down plans with judgment; and when tbey have done so, and looked at the end from the beginning, then persevere, don't be afraid. Perseverance is an element of success which every man is not born with, but which can be cultivated. How ever cautiously you may lay down your plans, there is no man that has 'not exi gencies to arise which he did not foresee; and when these specks appear upon the horizon, a man with no perseverance imagines night is near at hand. He strugle3 till he nearly touches the gold ; but owing to this speck, he despairs. Now J bhakspcure says : There is a tide in the affairs of men. Which, taken at tho flood, leads on to fortune; but a man don't jret these chances 'often. J aud very likely the flood-tide of your prosperity is when you get nervous and leave all go. Davy Crockett said : "Be sure you're right, then go ahead." lie member fortune only favors the brave. Yu must not stand, like-Micawber, wait ing "till something turns up ;" fur that will be a poor-house. . A philosopher once said to a millionaire : "I have got an idea. I have discovered that there is money eutmgh iu theworld for U3 all. The fact is, you have got enough to ruin your children, and I have none at al'. I am going to announce this fact, and we will have a general distribution all around." Said the millionaire, "That is very pleas ant to you, but you would spend all your portion in thref months." "Oh ! then, we would divide again," said thophiloso pher. That is a state of things not to be expected nor desired, and every man should depend on hi own exertions. Cromwell was right when he said to his soldiers, "Trust in God, but keep your powder dry." It is said that Mahomer, when marching through the desert, heard one of his subjects say, "I will loose my came' and trust to God." "Xo, no," said Mahomet, "not so, tie thy camel and trust to God." You muhelp yourselves. I hold, a man. to be successful mast depend on his own personal exertions, and there is not one chance in one million if he does not depend ou those. The eye ot the employer is worth more than a dozen hands working for him. You cannot tiust to others. By a man's attending to his own business, there are a thousand advan tages. He gets to learn all the details of business, the laws of supply and demand, every minutia of his business. Theped ler once said, when cheated, "I have gained some information by it; I shall never be cheated in that way again." rERSONAL ATTENTION NECESSARY TO PROFICIENCY. . Every man should, by constant personal ( attention to his occupation, be prohcient as the great French naturalist Cuvier was in the science of Natural History. From a single bone, or small ssction of a bone, reasouing by analogy, he could draw a perfect picture of tho entire auimal, tho' he might never have seen it. On one occasion, wishing to frighten he natural ist, a man encased in tho skin of a cow came into hij study. "What animal i3 this?'' asked Cuvier. . "I am the devil, and I am going to cat you up," responded the strange animal. Perhaps this might be, but Cuvier, being a naturalist, very naturally wished to classify him. Looking intently at him, "divided hoof," said he, "graminivorous. It can't be done." He understood Natunl History, and knew that animals with divided hoofs must live on grain, and were not inclined to eat meat dead or alive, and he was safe. If every man knew hi? business as well as this, he would close all avenues to being cheated. BOLDNESS NECESSARY, AS WELL AS CAU TION. . Among the maxims of the elder Itoths-J child was the paradox, "Be cautious and bold." This is a correct maxim. It requires great caution in laying plans, but it requires great boldness, at times, to put them into execution. A man who is all caution cannot' succeed, because he is afraid; a man all boldness, on the contrary, is merely reckless. He cannot succeed. He may, by his bolduess, make a fortune on stocks to-day, but he will lose it to morrow. It is mere recklessness; "there is no reason to govern it. He must be cautious and bold. Another of llothschild's maxims was, "Have nothing to do with unlucky men or places." Every effect is produced by some cause. It a man is known to be ahrays unlucky, you may depend upon it, although you may not be able to fathom it, there is a good reason why that man does not succeed, or else he would not be unlucky. So in regard to unlucky places. Man after man takes a certain place and fails. There is some thing about that locality why you should avoid it.. I believe we. should avoid all men and locations which are perpetually esteemed, from experience, as being unfor tunate. Some young men, when they get thro' their apprenticeship, fold their arms andj say, "I am not going to work as journey man. I understand my trade. I am going into business when I can got capital to start. They fol Jheir arms in idleness, instead of workOg at their trade to make capital to start. They are wailing for some rich old fool (for he'would be a fool) to lend them capital; but they would not succeed had they the capital, because they do not know ita value. A man must earn his money before he knows the value of it. The chances are, if he got the money, he would lose every dollar. John Jacob Astor used to say that he fouud more difficulty in acquiring the first thousand dollars ot his fortune than he did all ihe rest, because the discipline that was required taught him the. true .value of money, and how to use it, and then led him oa to make the rest of the money. MISTAKES OF YOUNG MEN. Some young man says," "I am going into business when old grandmother dies" but old people are very unaccommoda ting, and never di3 till they get, ready.' When men of wealth die, worth half a million, - with ' five or six children,-ihe three eldest, who have probably helped hira to make his money, have learned the value of money, find with their portion will be successful, if temperate; but the other little fellows, five, six or seven years of age, ara brought up and pvtted On the back all the way till they are twenty one. Born with a golden ppooa in their uiouths, they are sent to college, and the chances are that betore thev ret through there they will be poor, miserable drunkards. When they come to their fortune, they know nothing ot the value of money, and run-through the whole of it, contracting all sorts ot bad habits" besides. Money to the latter is a great evil. It is bad to leave money to children unless they know how to earn it, and therefore know its value. Young men, waiting for these things to turn up, look about you through the country, and you will find that more than three-fourths of the rich men started life where you arc now with empty hands, determined resolutions, and good habits. They went on and made their own fortunes; and how much plcasanter for you to do the same thing, and look back and say, "I made my fortune by my own industry," than to be under obliga tions to any one. It is the only way to acquire a fortune so as to be able to enjoy it. . THE IMPORTANCE OF SYSTEM. Men should be systematic in their bus iness. The man who docs his business by rule will accomplish more in half the timeihanhewho does it in a slipshod man ner. There is a great deal in this, and yet there are limits to it as well as - to every rule. There should be a happy medium between too rigid a system, and carelessness.' Some are so systematic and careful that they put away things, where neither they nor any one else cau find theni. lied tapeism is wrong. The Astor House, many years ago, before your noble Continental Hotel was built, was considered the finest in the country in every respect. It stiod number one, and the proprietors boasted that they did everything systematically. By merely touching a bell, every employee of the house came with a bucket of water in hand. On one occasion two gentlemen were to dine, and an Irishman was to wait on them. Everything was to be system atic. Orders were given to the Irishman to be attentive to first bring each a plate of soup ; after they had eaten that, and wanted fish, he could, find it at a certain place. The gong struck, and the two gentlemen came in. Pat brought each a plate of soup, but they set that aside and asked for. some fih. Says Pat, "Not till you have ate your 'soup !" This was carrving svstcm to far. . Archbishop Purcell, of Cincinnati, says, in an address (just published) to the clergy and laity of his dioceso : "We go, with our whole heart 1 and soul, for the maintenance of the Union aud the abolition cf : slavery." ' Sound, orthodox doctrine. - 1 ; ' NUMBER 22. Educational Department. AU communications inttnded for thi column thould be addressed to " The Alley haniaa."1 The Problem. We have been reading the debates of the late convention of Co. Superintendents on the grade of Teachers' Certificates. Whatever else may bo.ia dispute, it is apparent that a large portion of our schools are kept (would it-be right to say taught ?) by incompetent persons. This may be a humiliating fact, but it is nevertheless true. ., As a remedy, it is proposed to grant no certificate of a lower grade than that de noted by the figure 3. We are unable, for our part, to see how this will help tho matter. It is an entirely gratuitous as sertion to say that if certificates below a certain grade be refused to applicants, they will qualify themselves sufficiently to obtain those which are of a higher order. If other means of obtaining a livelihood were not accessible, then such an assertion might hold good, Humbly seated here in our sanctum, . in this back woods Mountain county, we yen lure, to suggest that if any of the speakers at the Harrisburg Convention fully comprehen ded the difficulty of obtaining competent . teachers, they failed to make their com prehensions manifest in their speeches. The matter of dollars and cents has more to do with this difficulty than it gets credit for. The State has undertaken th education of its youth, and having pro gressed thus far, it finds itself without u sufficient number of competent teachers to take charge cf the public Echools. Why is this ? and how will it be reme died ? It would be a sorry compliment to say that our school system, after being in operation for more than a quarter of a century, has not turned out a sufficient number of persons competent to take charge of our schools. The evil, we think, is not here. It lies, rather, in the fact that the teachers' calling does not offer enough inducement to entice per sons of sharp intellect away from other pursuits. Nay, mors ;, it docs not afford attractions sufficient to retain those who have embarked in it with the bet motives. There are persons, both worthy and com petent, educated in our best Normal schools, who turn their backs ou teaching because teaching means extreme penury. As it is now, so it will, it must be again, unless the calling is made more remune rative. No sane man would undertake to raise and support a family on the average wages of teachers. Within the limits of our acquaintance, are teachers of acknowl edged ability moving forward to old age and something akiu to starvation. ' To us, then, there appears to bo but one solution to this problem. ' The State, having undertaken the education of tho masses, cannot retrace her sten3. She must have competent teachers, and to get them she must pay them. Devout shall be our thanks when, with our-' brother laborers, we arc counted "worthy of our hire." Let the teachers' vocation be made to yield living wages, and at the same time let superlative competency be de manded, and wo doubt not the present difficulty will vanish like the clouds of morning. Uutil this be done, we fear that much of the labor of our higher schools is in vain that they educate forall pro fessions save that of teaching. We rejoice in the hope that when we cease to 'tako part in the huge comedy of hfe; we shall leave to those who come after us in our profession a better inheritance than wo inherited. ; " ' - ' Providing they have not done so already, we would advise those of our readers who are teachers to subscribe for tbc SclioolJournal. It is an ably, edited moathly, and the ojjkial educational pub lication of the State. Tho. II. Burrowes, formerly State Superintendent, ' and a gentleman of enlarged culture and expe rience, is ita editor. .Published at Lan caster city, at 100 rjer annum. Send for a specimeu copy, after perusing which we know you will not consent to be with out its regular vUitaticuv