Vol XXX VII —Whole Ao. 15)7.1. Terms of Subscription. OXE DOLLAR PEIt IXXI.V, IN ADVANCE. For six months, 75 cents. Jd 5 * All NEW subscriptions must be paid in j advance. If the paper is continued, and not < paid within the first month, $1,25 will be char- I ged ; if not paid in three months, $1,50; if not j paid in six months, $1,75; and if not paid in ; nine months, $2,00. Rates of Advertising. One square, 16 lines 2 squares, 6 mos. $5,00 j 1 time 50 " 1 year I°.°o j 1 " 2 times 75 A column, 3 inos. 8,00 | i < 3 " 1,00 " G " 10.00 j " 1 mo. 1,25 44 1 year 15,00 j 3 " 2,50 1 column, 3 mos. 10,00 j 1 " 6 " 4,00 44 G " 15,00 i " 1 year 6,00 " 1 year 25,00 j 2 squares, 3 times 2,00 Notices before MAR- I " 3 mos. 3,50 RIAGES, &c, sl2. The above rates are calculated on burgeois i type. In smaller type, 15 lines of brevier, or 12 lines of nonpariel minion constitute a square, j For stereotype plates, a liberal deduction j . will be made. _ ] | The above are cash terms for all advertisements | , inserted for three months or less. Yearly ad- | | vertisements are held payable, one halt at the end of three, and the balance at the end of six ' montlis. ; Communications recommending persons for : office, must be paid in advance at the rate ol j 25 cents per square. J. W. PARKER, Attorney at Law, Lewistown, Jlifllin eo. Pa. DR. E. W. IIIEE OFFERS his professional services to the : citizens of Lewistown. He can he con sulted at all times at the Bee Hive Drug store. Lewistown, August 30, 1850-tf DR. JAS. S, WILSON, OFFERS his professional services to the ; citizens of Newton Hamilton and vicin- j DR. A. W. MOSS OFFERS his professional services to the citizens of Lewistown and vicinity. Of fice with Dr. HOOVER, one door East of F. Schwartz's store. oiay 9, 1851-tf MAGISTRATE S OFFICE Cll it ISTI 1 > II OO Vi: R . Justice ol'l lie Peace, CIAN be found at his office, in the room re y cently occupied by D. W. Hulmg, Esq. where he will attend to all business entrusted to him with the greatest care and despatch. WILLIAM LIND, ifclSKlD'ilMti East Market striet, Lewistown, IN returning thanks to his friends and the public generally for the liberu! support heretofore j extended to him, would respectfully infor.n them that he ha. just received a splendid assortment of Fashionable Ctst VT -,:r O. - - RA.-'. 3 CASSIMERES & NESTINGS,' selected in (he city with special reference to being made ' tip for customer work, which be is enabled to furnish at lower prices than simitar articlescnuM be procured in 1 the stores. Gentlemen desirous of having a superior article of clothing, are requested to call and examine his stock. With long experience and the aid of first rate workmen, he ft itter? himself that he can furnish tiis 1 customers and friends with superior garments, at rea- ; SOII&ble prices. Lewistown, Nov. IFIOI. Ml. JOHN LOCKE,' I) 1. \ 1 IST, Dr. L. is a regular graduate of the Balti more College of Dentai Surgery, and devoted his entire attention to the business for seven years, which warrants him in offering entire ! satisfaction to all who may favor him with their patronage. Lewistown, Oct. 2-L 1851—tf. iMi'A fn saroia, r■ IHE undersigned continues to manufacture JL celebrated Quilted antl French calf Boots, together with all articles connected with his I business. MOSES MONTGOMERY. Lewistown, August 8, 1851-tf REMOVAL. Operations on the Teeth. SAMUEL BELFORD DENTIST OFFERS his services to the citizens of Lewistown. and the adjoining counties, in DENTAL SURGERY. Hav 'n? ' a^Rn lessons in this branch of business from the late Dr. J. N. Sumner, and recently frem I)r. J 11. Bressler, of Bellefonte, he is satisfied that he will be able to give general satisfaction. Ca rious teeth Plugged ivilh Gold, and Incor ruptible Mineral Teeth Inserted, from n singlu tooth to a full set, on Gold and Silver Plate, also on Pivot, in the most durable manner. All work undertaken by him he will guar antee to be satisfactory, and if it is not, the ; money will be refunded. He may be found at. his residence in West Market street, opposite the Red Lion Hotel, at | all times. Lewistown, Aug. 29, 1851.—tf I ( \ Liverpool Ground Alum J. YIyJ Salt. For sale by afarse JOHN KENNEPY. ; TONS Soft Plaster. For sale bv U" I ap2's2 JOHN KENNEDY. I R'EESE—S(K> lbs. Ohio Western Reserve Vy Cheem. For sab; by ap2's2 JOHN KENNEDY. I.YRESH LEAF LARD—IO cwf. fresh Lard, of the subscriber's own rendering, at 10 ets per jiouml. Fur sale by ap2's2 JOHN KENNEDY. ("AIDER VINEGAR —A new supply— first < J rate—just received at deci2 RANKS' Variety Store. B>2£BSN23HB AS s® vmmsizm) SKT aaßsmsna im-sroiSKßaiaa. zmmsmws!} sasnmas ®®sjmr a S>A* REGIMENTAL ORDERS. ATTEVHOA the WHOLE! Forward March, by Sections of Eight, to the McClure stand ! WM P. MILLIKEN has just received from the city a large and well selected stock SPRING & SUMMER GOODS, which he is dispopod to offer to customers at GREAT BARGAINS, the proof of which he respectfully invites the public to call and test for themselves. Among his stock will be found an elegant supply of LADIES' DKCSS GOODS, embracing Silks, Cashmeres, Dc Laines, &c.; a line stock of CALICOES of every shade and color, among them a number of new styles; and a large supply of nil the articles in general use, which he is enabled to sell at prices that cannot fail to be satisfactory. Also, a large assortment of goods suitable for Summer wear, as well as blue, black, green and brown CLOTHS; Cassimeres, Vestings. Cassinetts, Jeans, &LC. ; Muslins, brown and bleached; Ribbons, Laces,and Fringes; Bhawls; Carpets, Carpet Chains, and a choice lot of bags. In llic Grocery Line, he has the best of Coffee, Tea, Sugar, Rice, Cheese, Molasses, &c. Boots and Shoes, Looking Glasses, Cedar Ware, Hardware, Nails, Fish and Salt, Tobacco and Cigars, 0C?~AII kinds of PRODUCE taken in store and forwarded to Philadelphia, or bought at cask prices. Ladies and gentlemen who desire to pur chase Spring and Summer goods, are requested to call early, as they will unquestionably find a choice stock to select from. WM. P. WILLI KEN. Lewistown, April 9, 1852. VALIAISIJi urn Discirai! Tlie I'roLlem Solved. ROME had herCinsar, England le r Crom well, France her Napoleon Bonaparte, and Lewistown at last has a store where goods may be purchased at the rruist reasonable pri ces, as any one can be satisfied who will call or. mmm & jfMiiMib who have just received a splendid lot of New Goods which are the admiration of aii who have viewed thrm. They are cheap, too, and no mistake—not cheap ju.-t on one yard of the counter and deai over all the other, but from side to side, from front to rear, and from toj to bottom, whether COTTON, LINEN, SILK, or anything else, you'll find our motto is " MAI.K PROFIT sand QUICKSAI.F.S." with the ready Juhn Davis down— the only way uie desire to do business! Now we don't intend to enumerate what we have; we shall not say a word about our sleek CLOTHS and CASSIMERES; nor the ELEGANT SUP PLY we purchased for DRESSES f. r our easts nor about the SILKS, and SATINS, and RIBBON'S, and ten thousand (tlier matters iliai go to make up a tip-top assortment, because we not only anticipate, but are sure, that all who expect to appear in unparalleled apparel, will come and see for themselves—judge tor themselves, and buy for themselves (just as we do when we go to the city.) Ami now take our advice— " Buy cheap while sluggards sleep, And you will have goods to wear and keep.'' Aii Unprecedented Display 'iin uiJJ idwji. f i EORGE BLYMYER, in tendering his VX thanks to numerous friends and the pub lic io general for the liberal patronage bestowed on his establishment, would take "occasion to say that he has just returned from the citv with an extensive stock of Dry Goods, Groceries, Hard ware, <lnceii swat**', Ac., that may well challenge comparison, compris ing, as it does, a variety in all those branches probably not to be met with in any other town on the Juniata. It would he an endicsstask to i enumerate even ail the leading articles—he I W! " therefore only mention that hissheivesand | racks contain an unequalled assortment ot r rench, English, and American Blue, Black and fancy colors CLOTHS AND CASSIMERES ; a great variety of SATTINKTS; black and tancy Siik and Satin Vesting, with all the mi nor descriptions in piles; FLANNELS all ! f °l°f rS .V^S. h l in<lanCe ; MUSLINS in cartloads; I GALILOLS in stacks; and Bonnets, Ribbons, Laces, Edgings, inseriings, Gloves, Mitts, Crapes, Veils, Handkerchiefs, &c., by the bushel in fact the Ladies, in anytliinv they | may want, whether in parlor or kitchen, from the finest Silk and Satins to low-priced domes- I tic goods—from the elegant Cashmere, Broche, , l e ' or ' n( '' a ,0 'he common Cotton Shawl—from the rich and costly Bonnet toone costing next to nothing—from Cloth for Cioak or Hiding Dress to a Neck Ribbon, CANKOT no ASTRAY ! the goods are all there, and the prices right ! His stock of GROCERIES consisis of a large supply selected with great care, and com prises all kinds of the various articles in gen eral use. His QUEENS WARE embraces a , beautiful assortment, from which a choice can not fill to be made. There is also an excellent , siock of REiDIVnADE CLOTHING, ROOTS & SIIOFS CCDAIt WARE, &€., with Roll upon Roll of 0 2. S.PETHTS. and a great many other matters, all of which go to show that the question is not " What has [ilymyer got 1" but •• WHAT HAS HE NOT ?" Lewistown, April 9, 1852 tf. RWLOBACCO, Snuff and Segars at J- U A. A. BANKS'. FRIDAY EVEAIAG, APRIL SO, 1852. i3ortri>* i Don't Run in Debt. Don't run in debt—never mind, never mind, If thy clothes are faded and torn ; Fix 'em up, make them do; it is better bv far, Than to have the heart weary and worn. Who'll love you the more for the set of vour hat. Or the ruff, or the tie of your shoe ; The shape of your vest, or your boots or cravat, If they know you're in debt for the new. There's no comfort, I tell you, in walking the street, In fine clothes, if*you know you're in debt, And feel that perchance you some tradesmen may meet Who will sneer—'they're not paid for yet.' Good friends, let me beg of vou don't run in debt, I r If the cfiairs and the sofas are old, — : I hey will tit your back better than any new set, j Unless they're paid for—with gold; i If the house is too small, draw closer together, Keep it warm with a hearty good will; A big one unpaid for, in all kinds of weather Will send to your warm heart a chill. Don't run in debt—now, dear girls, take a hint, (If the fashions have changed since last season,) Old Nature is out in the very same tint, And old nature we think has some reason. Rut just say to your friend that you cannot afford To spend time to keep up with the fashion ; 1 hat your purse is too light and your honor too bright To be tarnished with such silly passion. Gents, don't run in debt—let your friends, if they can, Have fine houses, feathers and flowers, But unless they are paid for, be more of a man i Than to envy their sunshiny hours, If you've money to spare, 1 have nothing to say ; To spend your dollars and dimes as you please; But iniud you, the man who his note has to pay, Is the man who is never at ease. Kind husbands, don't, run in debt any more ; '1 will till your wife's cup full of sorrow, '1 o know thai a neighbor may call atyour door, With a bill you must settle to-morrow ; |O, take my advice—it i- good, it is true '. (But, lest yuu may some of you doubt it,) I'll whisper a secret, now seeing ' lis you— I hurt tried it and know alt about it. The chain of a debtor is heavy and cold, Its links all corrosion and rust; j Gild it or as you will—it is never of gold— Then spurn it aside with disgu>t. I he man w ho's in debt is too often a slave, Though his heart may he honest and true ; f an he hold up his head, and look saucv and brave, W hen a note he can't pay becomes due ? fHisccHn u r o as, YY hat a Rich Tlaii Owes. 'I can pay my way, and am obliged to nobody.' is tlu; frequent expression of the selfish ricli man.— Wo fancv we can see him, while lie utters ii. with his purse proud, defiant look, buttoning up his pock et as it he thought YOU a thief. ) on can pay your way, can von I yon are obliged to nobody ? Good sir, we don't believe yon know what you say. 1 hat you'can pay your pecuniary debts, we have no doubt, hut these, it seems to us, are the last part of your obligations, you owe duties to society as a man, a citizen, and a millionaire, of which, per haps, you have never thought; certainly not as debts to he paid, in your own person, and hv an expenditure ol your own time, and thought, and money. My dear sir, consider tiiis Well. Do not live and die in the false belief that, because you owe this debt to society in the abstract heaven will never require its payment at your hands. Do not imagine either that you can delegate its liquidation to others. No well-suiaricd minister, no sleek visitor of the poor can become your nmhilc-inan in this matter, doing your work for vou. Monopolize your time in mere money iuaking, and suffer your heart to grow hard as steel, as all hearts will that never i come into contact directly with human misery. 4 I can pay my way,' you say, 4 1 am obliged to nobody.' Perhaps, as you ut ter these words, you look rebukingly at some poor debtor, who has failed to meet his engagements. Beware, oh 1 rich man : 4 judge not; lest ye he judged.' You know not what defects of early training, what cruel disasters of fortune, what treachery on the part of others mav have led to his bankruptcy. With all his er rors and even faults, for probably lie has not been entirely free from either, he may yet be a better man, taken all in all, than you, with your bank-stock, your mort gages, your ships, and your real estate, lie may not neglect his children, as you, absorbed in your speculations, probably j do, leaving their moral training toothers, instead of superintending it yourself*. He may he a truer husband, not acting as you j perhaps do, as if a wife was either a slave or a plaything, and not a compan ion. He may he a kinder friend, a more ; conscientious citizen, a man better im i bued with the thousand sympathies of | humanity. But believe lis, there are more crimes than being in debt, though, where debt comes from imprudence or a j reckless spirit of speculation, it is, heaven knows, bad enough. 4 1 can pay my way,' you say, 4 1 am | obliged to nobody.' You are obliged, on the contrary, to every fellow-creature ! with whom you arc thrown into contact, | cither in social life or in business.—With- I out their courtesy, their attention, their I kindness, their society, vo'u would he the i most miserable creature alive. Every j hour you live you are indebted to some ; fellow being for some attention or other, , and it is only because they are so freelv and commonly given, like the air of heaven, that you do not realize their value. The I time will come, if it has not come alrcadv, when some great family affliction shall j teach you that, with all your riches, you \ are but a frail, helpless, human creature : J and m that hour of grief and heart-wrung : agony, you will recognize at last, even if hut for a moment, the precious boon of human sympathy; you will feel how much you owe, after'all, to your fellows, j 1 Lank, heaven ! all rich men are not i like you. 1 here have been many, in ; every generation, who acknowledge that they owe other debts than pecuniary ones, ■ and who strive faithfully to liquidate them. 1 heir number is increasing, moreover, with each successive generation. When the day arrives, as we believe most firmly it will, when all rich men shall recognize the obligations they owe in society, the Millenium, in one sense at least, will have come. 1 hen may llie rich man truly say, '• I can pay my way, I am obliged to nobody."— Evening Bulletin. Kindness of B!cart. Goodness, or in other words, kindness of heart is llie result of earlv training, i seconded by hooks, companions, and ju dicious counsel. How its influence bright ens the journey of life, and makes smooth the rugged path, llovv the heart gladdens when receiving some little act of kindness front some real and true friend : so does one feel the glow of pleasure thrill through his veins as an act of kind ness is done him from the promptings of unaffected goodness of heart. f hen, as it costs nothing to bestow kind words, or harbor kind feelings, let all cultivate goodness ol heart and mind— remember that a kind word is as easily j spoken as one that will cause pain and bitterness. Mark. Ye Girls. , It is high time somebody told vou a lit tle plain truth. )on have keen watched lor a long time, a certain class of you, and it is plain enough you are trying plans to cheat somebody. You intend to sell chaff for wheat ; and there is danger some of the foolish gudgeons will lie sadly taken in. It may he your lault that you belong to the ' one idea party * —that the single idea , of getting a husband is the oniv one that engrosses much of your lime and attention. But ii is your fault that vou pursue this i idea in the wrong direction. Your vener able mother of Eden memory was calied a ' * help' lor man, and you are looking for a man to help you ; to help you to live in the half-silly way you have commenced. Men who are worth having, want women for wives. A bundle of gewgaws, hound with a string of flats and quavers, sprin kled with cologne, and set in a carmine saucer; this is no help for a man who ex pects to raise a family of boys and girls on veritable bread and meat. The piano and the lace frame are well enough in their places; and so are ribbons, and frill, and tinsels, hut you can't make a dinner of the former, nor a bed blanket of the latter. And awful as the idea may seem to vou, both dinner and bed blanket are necesvarv to domestic enjoyment. Life has its real ities as well as its fancies ; hut vou make it all a matter of decoration ; remembering the tassels and curtains, but forgetting the bedstead. Suppose a voung man of good sense, and of course good prospects, to he looking for a wife, what chance have vou to he chosen ? You may cap him, or trap him. or catch him ; but how much better to make it an object for him to catch you ! Render yourselves worth catching, and you will need no shrewd mother or man aging brothers to help you find a market. Comedy of Errors. Kendall, in one of his letters from Par is, relates the following amusing occur rence : A regular " Comedy of Errors" was performed a few days since before the Tri bunal of Correctional Police here in Paris, the particulars of which arc given at some length in the Gazette des Tribuneaux. It seems -that a man named Remont was brought up, charged with having beaten his wife with a yard stick in the street. The woman, who was present, testified that she was married four years since, but that she left her husband, pointing to the prisoner in the box, immediately after- Wards, since which time she had not lived with him. She furthermore slated that every time lie met her he gave her a beat ing, and that in August last in particular he broke a yard stick over iter head in the Rue Neuilly. Two witnesses present at ' the time were in court, and also swore flatly to the fact of the heating. The prisoner, at this stage of the proceedings, was asked by the judge what he had to say in his defence, when he stoutly denied everything. He said the woman and wit nesses were all mad, or else they had in vented a silly tale against hint. Ho never , met his wife in the Rue Neuilly—never broke a yardstick over her head there or anywhere else—never saw the woman he fore who put on airs and pretended to be his wife—in short, did not know what ! they were all talking* about or driving at. j The woman was now asked bv the judge : what it all meant—whether the prisoner ; was really her husband or not. Regard ing him with searching attention, in a du- ; biotts way she said that she hardly knew ; j she had not lived with him for four years, and every time he met her he beat Iter so | that she had had no opportunity of seeing ; his face closely, or noticing the changes time had wrought. The judge here asked Reniont ii he was in the habit of beating his wife, when he admitted that he had thrashed her occasionally in a quiet way, but never in the Rue Neuilly nor in any i other street. In this mysterious state of ] the case the judges, sorely puzzled, asked the prisoner his name. "Charles Victor Reniont" was the response. " What was or is your husband's name, madauie ?" next asked the judge, turning to the com plainant. "Charles Hvpoiite Kemont" answered the woman. 44 Polyte !" cried the prisoner, " why, he's my brother, and we are as like each other as two peas." Ihe case was now clear-—the; wrong Dromio had been arrested. Turn ing to the wotnan, the prisoner, who was at once released, now continued, " And so, you are my sister-in-law ; 1 had'ut the pleasure of knowing you, but 1 am de lighted to make your acquaintance." lie next politely offered her his arm, and out of the court they went together, apparent ly on the best possible terms. ■Extraordinary Trick of a Ventriloquist. 1 1' roin Broceau, a learned critic of the sixteenth century, we have the following accounts of the feats of a capital ventrilo quist and cheat, who was valet de cham bre to J? rancis the first. This fellow, whose name was Louis Brabant, had fallen des perately in love with a young, handsome, and rich heiress ; but was rejected by the parents as an unsuitable match for their daughter, on account of the lowness of his circumstances. The young lady's father dying, Brabant made a visit to the widow, who was totally ignorant of his singular talent. Suddenly, on his appearance in open day in her house, and in presence of several persons who were with her, she heard herself accosted, in a voice perfectly resembling that of" her dead husband, and which seemed to proceed from above, ex claiming : 4 Live tuy daughter in marriage lo Lou is Brabant; he is a man of great fortune, ami ot excellent character. I now endure the inexpressible tortures of purgatory, for having refused him. If you obey litis ad monition, 1 shall soon be delivered from this place of torment. You will at the same time provide a worthy husband for your daughter, and procure everlasting re pose to the soul of your poor husband.' The woman could not for a moment re sist this dread summons, which had not the most distant appearance oi" proceeding from Louis Brabant, whose countenance exhibited no visible change, and whose lips were close and motionless during the delivery of it. Accordingly she consented immediately to receive hint for her son in-law. Louis' finances, however, wore in a very low situation, and the formalities attending the marriage contract, rendered it necessary for hitn to exhibit some show of riches, and not give the ghost the lie di rect. He accordingly went to work upon a fresh subject, one Cornu, an old and rich banker at Lyons, who had accumulated . immense wealth by usury and extortion, and was known to be haunted by remorse of conscience on account of the manner in which he had acquired it. Having contracted an intimate acquaint ance with this man, he one day while they were sitting together in the usurer's little back parlor, artfully turned the conversa tion on religious subjects, on demons and spectres, the pains of purgatory and the torments of hell. During an interval of silence between them, a voice was heard which, to the astonished banker, seemed to be that of his deceased lather, complain ing as in the former case of his dreadful situation in purgatory, and calling upon him to deliver him instantly from thence by putting into the hands of Louis Bra bant. then with him, a large sum for the redemption of christians then in slavery with the Turks, and threatening him with eternai damnation if he did not take this method to expiate likewise his own sins. The reader will naturally suppose that Louis Brabant affected a due degree of astonishment on the occasion ; ifttd further promoted the deception, by acknowledging his having devoted himself to the prosecu tion of the charitable design imputed to him bv the ghost. An old usurer is natu rally suspicious. Accordingly the wary banker made a second appointment with the ghost's delegate for the next day ; and to render anv design of imposing upon him utterly abortive, took him into the open fields, where not a house or a tree, or even a bush or a pit was in sight capa ble of sfcreening any supposed confederate. This extraordinary caution excited the ventriloquist to exert all the powers of his art. Wherever the banker conducted htm, at every step his ears were saluted on all sides with the complaints and groans not only ot his father, but of all his deceased relations, imploring him for the love of Hod, and in the uarne of all the saints in lite calendar, to have rncrcy on his own rV<*u Series—Vol. 6—l\o. 28. soul and tlioirs. by effectually seconding with his purse the intentions of his worthv companion. Cornu could no longer resist tlic voice of heaven, and accordingly car ried his guest home with him and paid him down 10,000 crowns, with which the honest ventriloquist returned to Paris, and married his mistress. The catastrophe was fatal. The secret was afterwards blown, and reached the usurer's ears, who was so affected by tiie loss of his money, and the mortifying railleries of his neighbors, that lie soon took to his bed and died. No Use for Trousers. On the morning of the meteoric shower in 1833, Old Peyton Roberts, who intend ed making an early start to work, got up just in the midst of the display. On going to his door, he saw with amaze ment the sky lighted up with the falling meteors, and lie concluded at once that the world was on fire and that the judge ment day had come. lie stood lor a moment gazing in speechless terror at the scene, and then with a yell of horror sprang out of the door into the yard, right into the midst of the falling stars, and here in his efforts to dodge them he commenced a series of ground and lofty tumbling that would have done honor to a tight rope dancer. Ilis wife being awakened 111 the meantime and seeing Old Peyton juirtping and skip ping about the yard, called out to him 1 to know what in the name o' sense he was doin' out there dancin' around with out his clothes on. Rut Peyton heard not; the judgement and the long and black account he would have to settle made him heedless of all terestial things, and his wife by this time becoming alarm ed at liis strange behaviour, sprang out of bed, and running to the door, shrieked out at tlte top of her lungs— ' Peyton ; I say Peyton, what do you mean jumping about out thar; come in and put your trowsers on ' Old Peyton, whose fears had now overpowered him, faintly answered as he fell sprawling on the earth— 'Oh! Peggy, Peggy, dont vou see-e-e the w-o-r-l-d-s a fi-r-e, thar haint no use for trow-sers now.' CONTEXTS OF A LITTLE Bov's POCKET. —Among all our young readers, 1 wonder it there be a liltic boy of five years with his trowser pockets filled with such a va riety of ' nick nacks'' as was that of a little boy whose mother was changing his clothes to make him ready for school. I dont suppose any of the little boys will ' own up,' if any of you can boast of such a portable museum; but 1 hope some one will report the contents, if anv puckct is found to excel in number and variety the following— INVOICE :—One pocket handkerchief; one oak block; one barlow knife; two ten-penny nails; two white pebbles; one red pebbie ; one hog's tusk ; two cotton strings; one leather string; one linen string; one 4 wax'd end,' and a small quantity of shoe leather. S-SAV. —Do you believe in the Knot chester Rockers ? Do you love tigs' pcetDo you live near the shotecary's pop { Did you ever ride in the wagage baggou ' I.T XATIC ASYLUM.—A kind of hospital where detected lunatics are sent by those who had the adroitness to conceal their own infirmity. Wood Turning /Establishment, la* wist own, Pa. Vl"7"OOI) TURNING, in all its various ▼ w branches, in city styles, at low prices, done to order on the shortest notice. Bed Posts, Chair Spindles, Broom-hand'es, Hoe-handles, Rosettes, Newell Posts, Awning Posts, Pillars, Rods, Rounds, Balusters, Table Legs, Patterns, Wagon Hubs, Chisel and Auger Handles, Columns, &.c. Willi* SAW. Wagon Fellows, Columns, and all kinds of Carpenter and Cabinet work sawed to order. CIRCULAR SAW. Plastering Lath, Roofing La'h, Paling, and all kinds of Ripping, also done on the shortest 1 notice. Plaster Hill. At all times on hand, Ground Plaster, and f>r sale at as low prices as can be obtained in this county. Ail the above work done and articles fur nished at the Turning Mill and Machine Shop of the subscribers, situated in WATER STREET, immediately above the Lewistown Mills, m the borough of Lewistown. N. B. Mechanics, Farmers, and all others who desire anything in any of the above named branches of business are respectfully invited j to favor us with their custom. DAN ILL ZEIGLER & CO. June 13, 1851.—tf The National Restaurant, JN the basement of the National Hotel, is now open, and refreshments of all fcinds will be served up as called for. on the European plan, by J THOMAS &, CO. Lewistown, Sept. - 2G, 1851.—tf Fish, Salt, and Plaster, POR sale by C JOHN STERIIETT & CO., Jur.e 27.-tf At the Lewistown Mills.
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