2/88 MI BEFQI3,E. YOU cm. ;Your Way lies over the Oat in rain an&sleot, Out in tho %Timid's wild turmoil,' - Where bustle untl bitainese tuest4 But wino by the noiseless preside, Where the fauelfol embers glow With' u - ebaugefut life.ll4 =Leticia t Dies tria before you My'guiet way will be bmulted yisiuns none others can see, Glnnees tunie precious than diamonds, Smiles roll menning to mop The sound of a welcome footstep, A Whisper thrill ug low, Ah. thought will oiosp tneunq oloselyj Xiss me before yon go.. . - ror this word is full of inischanona; - • Auttone the.° ohances may fail, • That zos nu'er again in the On:light Make one elinclovr upon tho wall; Oh, thun, olico more io tho pattlnio• Ahtel thatit must. tio Levti*ino it fond bonotliotionst gin nits Wort, you bo. _ [Forihe Asitutpr.) An Appeal to Working Itepublielm. After a storm comes, a calm •, after severe physical labor, a lassitude and longing for rest. So in , our politic {il strifes, after a terrible contest in Which am immense amount Of labor, and much of it unavailing. is crowded into a short period_ of time, comes ludifferenee, in action, languor and ai rest is taken until neseyeat'N struggle. " is.- although it cannot lAs "prevente4; can be partially obviated ; ;ratheri-' the necessity for this over 'exertion done away _with. _ We ooUunencedi our can. visa teerlateand in the - Wrong way. A score of good honest newspapers so dis tributed that thinking rueui : whit' are doubtful, will have a weekly serail:ft as it were, will do more go o d, than= fifty frantic speeches delivered l - the 'heat of political excitement. ‘-- -•— believe our Republican ~friends, those who' *believe in ;then's. rights, should go •to - Work'' "Work will accomplish soniething., - ,"fho, true way Iles la educating the ,plasS of vo ters ; and no way Is so cheap Or :area as through .newspapers.,_;NO 'faintly can afibrd to be' without one. , It lathe great educator of the day.- Aside fiom the general entertainment and if44eful 4iforination imported by alive news• paper, it is, in a political sense,-tin en gine of Immense power. A fearless:lml ante paper, battling for 'Alinhootii, Hight,. will - secure not only _the head of the family. but the soils;,t6Aliii'side of Preciloin nod justice. : t believe, these are truths which none Will' ;deny; and appeal to goud wen to : apply them pruktleully. • . fl et up, clubs of newspapersla every neighborhood. First, get every man to take his own county party- paper and pay for it r , But tlol.l't Lim subscribe for one-or •more 'large weekly, thia shall. , supply' with more mental palmltim in citieWeek titan a country newspaper, whose contents are ilect.ssarily, and properly too, made' 1.) matn ly of matters or local I oterest, can in three in niche. " - I do not belieVe there are - to-exceed five townships or boroughs in,this coun ty in which a club of liity . or , ixtpre cop ies (it% Weekly TlibuneS, costing ,only Tme dollar each, cannot be obtained,— Mitii,y places -much larger, tatinbers can .be -enured. Here we talt`O'civex% three times that number: . T speak of the :Weekly Tribune becatte. , all in all, I deem it the be-i . paper published:' Men may not like Horace Greeled—in- some things L cannot agree. with him-but The Tribune is not Hora c e Greeley. Tod many supi.o:--e the death of Qtreeley win, id be the death of The Tribune.— I t wsinlil live rizlit on, a power in 'the land as it now is, and although we mi.: ht .in ),4 ibe :+l,tirily blows he Is ever :kill..< .Or liberty and Justice, yet we ivoisai yiol the great paper beckonin •• the peilple (la towards. truth. In my, jtok. meht an honest r-incere 'man, who' i- ,--eek I iig to know the right, politically,- w who can carefully read the Weekly Triune ror 4 , rit . ye ar, tsv4.l 4.•. t. 1.....• d............... into the correct path, is well nigh past tope; certainly- intemperate' speeches and ', citinpai 4 gn \documents" cannot move him. Now I hope that every man whose heart is with the great cause we advo cate, will be: stir himself and' do what lie can to circulate newspapers, and i Commence the labo at once. This year is our githerna rial contest" and let us prepare sound ir the tight that shall give us the' victory. ,S.B. E. Ann OUR FEET PROPERLY OLOTHED: It is soinewbat surprising that, with all our boasted improverneuts, we have not yet produced a proper covering -for.the foot. ' Barbarous people, if their cli mate admits, go with bare feet or wear sandals, covering only the sole of the foot. We, however, encase the whole foot and a portion of the leg, in a ma terial almost imperforatably hard and rigid. The color . and polish of our boots arei directly calculated to attract the Run's rays ; and the enamel on pal entoleather, and the blacking on calf-; SKID, tend :to harden and solidify the substanee„closing the pores and mak ing airtight cases for the portion of the body which exudes more perspiration than any other, and is subjected to a greater strain. Our boots in' summer parboil our feet in a warm bath, and in winter freeze them In an fey envefope. It is doubtful if wet feet are,•in them selves, very conductive to disease, some men to the contrary not withstanding; but cramped confine ment of the feet, in an icy cold enve lope, generated by perspiration and chilled by the- external atmosphere, thus shutting the' imprisoned' feet' al most air-tight, is as unhealthy as it is uncomfortable. For hot weather, there is hardly any shoe so agreeable as that Introduced within the past three or four yelirs, known as the army shoe, and extensively used by the base ball Mayers. It is of heavy canvas and unblocked leather, 4t is cool and re mit, kiddy easy to 'the feet. The tex tut e of the canvas allows the escape of the Perspiration, and the color of the slim? 'Mies not attract the beat . orate sun. .would seem that the phut of covering other portions of our bodies with Material pervious to air might advantageously be extended to our feet. Tireie Is no natural reason why our feet should be so murk less sensitive than our hands. They • become .- indurated of their. natural activity by long close contieenient. The people 61 warm di /71;11, itio use their toes its we do our fingers, bd the hare.footed schoolboy, NV im pick up and throws pebblee with his feet, show that the foot of the civil ized adult in our climate is ay much abused member. A more flexible and putout material for our bouts and Shoes might save us from many 'of those ter rible alinOyaneeS UM forum of vires and bunions, Make our pilgrim age One of pain.---.s . tricntifie American. A elergS , 7uan sass it is curious to note how III:tit.): fieople attend if circus fluty becato.e they want to plviD , e , their °lli ; but ...till more !urious to observe that in orally insjafires it takes two or 1 lime talk- With as malty %%oiof-ii, in wok &ter ow ) little bey or girl.", An editor. .. who is troubled with hand ()rgnitt .. hiS yindow. longs for the "evitSlays" iiollitioned in kileeletti tislos. when " the grinders shall eett!‘e tlwy are few." and the t?ounti of the griodiog" Alan tie " .luW." A 3 oung' woman, meeting a 'former fe)h.%‘ -set van t, uas asked how site lik