von ni: NEW SERIES. rnniifs ■ , Will AlUBd ponrt-:*]lr acd carefully to all ope ratine* in | j , UuV.ed til hi c*re Teeth tiled, plumed, rguialrtl. Ac., wad I 1 . *rt>n<-ukl ueth tsicrbeJ, from <xr< U> an entire let. 1 ' Ciar|;e* (moderate, sad *ll operation* **rr%uU: i * | [W T.-rmi INVARIABLY CASH. i ?/' / Olßti* on En.', Pill .Xr.el. Pa. ygjl DR. F. f. REAMER RESPECTFULLY bows leave to tender his i Professional Services to the Citnens of Bedford and vicinity. Office in Julianna Street, at the Drug aud Book Store. Feb. 17, 1854. Dr. B. F. Harry Kkspkctfclly tenders his professional ser vices to the citizens of Bedford and vicinity. Office and residence on Pitt-Street, in the building formerly occupied by Dr. John Hofitrs. June 24, 1853. LAW PARTNERSHIP. JOB MANN. G. H. SPANG. Thk undersigned- have associated themselves in the Practice of the l.aw, and will attend promptly to all business entrusted to their care in Bedford ami ad joining counties. (T7~ Office on Julianna Street, three doors south of "Mengel Hous-e,*' opposite the residence of Maj. Tate. JOB MANN, June 2, 1854. G. H. SPAWG. WM. P. SCHELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ; "W7" ILL atlend faithfully to ail legal business | T V entrusted lo his care in the Counties of i lit!ford and Fulton. Bedford, .Nov. 1, JS47. John I\ Heed, Attorney at Law, Bedford, Pennsylvania Respectfully tenders his services to the Public ; Gi/"Offiee second door North of the Alengel ; House. Bedford, Feb. 20, 1852. Cessna & shaiiiaoai, nA VE formed a Partnership in the Practice of the Law. neaily opposite the Cased e Office, where one or the other may ■ at ail times be found. Bedford, Oct. 26, 1549. LAW NOTICE* W. J. BAER, Attorney at Law: WILL practice regularly in the Courts of Bedford County hereafter. He may, during Court Weeks, he consulted at his room at the Washinghton Hotel. Nov. 23, 1555. w. j. nxKfi. g. \v. r.KMOKD. n. f. meter*. BAER, BENFO~RD~&, MEYERST ATTOJiNIES AT LAW, BEDFORD, FENN'A. WILL punctually attend to alt business entrusted to | their care. dP"Mr. Baepuill be in regular atttend- | ance at Court. Office on'Jnliana street, same as for- j ri erly occupied by Win. M. Hall, K>q. [jan I TO BUILDERS. The subscriber is fully preprred to furnish any quantity or quality of Building Lumber and Blattering Laths. Orders directed to St. Clairsville, Bedford County, will be promptly attended to, bv giving a reasonable notice. F. D. BEEGLE. WM. FOSTER, with B.ILDIVIA, LLYDERMJ.V& CO. Importers and Dealers in Hosiery, Gloves, Trimmings, Combs, Brushes, Fancy Goods, Looking Glasses, See. No 84 North Third St., Philadelphia. All orders solicited and prompt ly attended to. Sept. 5, IS.oti- THE MEN GEL HOUSE. Valentine Steckman, Proprietor. Boarder* taken by the day, week, month or year, on moderate terms. May 9, 18f>6. Spectacles! The subscriber has just received a splendid variety of Gold, Silver Mounted, and Steel Spectacles, with the finest Scotch Pebbles, su perior in clearness, and designed to suit persons of all ages—warranted never to FAIL—to which he invites the attention of all who are in need of the article. He has also just received an elegant assortment of JEWELRY—aII ot which he will sell on reasonable terms. DANIEL BORDER. Bedford, May 22, 1807. AMERICAN HOUSE, CUMBERLAND MD., ADJOINING THE DEPOT, JOHN C. RIFFLE, PROPRIETOR. JjT"Coaches from Bedford, Greensburg and Washington, stop at this House. Persons going to Cumberland will find advantages, by stopping el the "American House," over that of any other in the place. (may 14-, ? 58-ly.) D. K. Wt NDKRLICH. B. F. NHAP Wimderlich & \ea<U -fonwarbing Sc Commission fHtrcljaitts, North Second Street, opjuxite the Cumberland Valley Rail Road Depot, CHAMBERSBURO. {£7™ They are at ail times prepared to carry al kinds of Produce to, and Merchandise, &c., from Philadelphia and Baltimore, at the shortest notice. ' t * They will also purchase Flour, Grain, inc., at market price. COAL, LUMBER, SALT, FISH, GUANO, and PLASTER on band and for sale low. June 10, 1853. PURK CASTOR OIL, at Dr. Harry "a Drug and Book Store. [July 30, 'sB.] THE BEDFORD GAZETTE IS PUBLISHED EVERV FRIDAY MORMNC BY MEYERS FC BEN FORD, At the following terms, to wit: $1.50 per annum, CASH, in advance. $2.00 " < if paid within the year. $2.50 " if not paid within the year. subscription taken tor less than six months. CtyNo paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publishers. It has Seen decided by the United States Courts, that the stoppage of a newspaper without the payment of ar rearages, is prima facit evidence ot fraud and is a criminal offence. CCThe courts have decided that persons are ac countable for the subscription price of newspapers, if they take them from the post office, whether they subscribe for them, or not. POETRY. SONG OF EMIGRATION. 11Y .MRS. II F. MANS. J There was heard a song on the chiming sea, ! \ mingled breathing of grief and glee ; Man's voice, unbroken, by sighs, was there Filling with triumph the sunny air; Of fresh green lands, and of pastures new It sang, while the hark through the surges flew.- But ever and anon A murmur of farewell Told, by its plaintive tone, That from woman's lip it fell. "Away, away, o'er the foaming main This was the free and joyous strain— "There are clearer skies than ours afar, We will shape our course by a brighter star; There are plains whose verdure no toot hath pres sed, And whose wealth is all for the first brave guest." "But, alas ! that we should go," Sang the farewell voices then, "From the homestead, warm and low. By the brook and in the glen.'' "We will rear new homes under trees that glow- As if gems were the fruitage of every bough; O'ei our white walls we will train the vine, And sit in its shadow at day's decline; And watch our herds as they range at will Through the green savannas all bright and still." "But woe for that sweet shade Of the flowering orchard tree, Where fiist our children played Midst the bird 9 anil honey bees ! "All our own shall the forests be, As to the bound of the roebuck free! None shall say, 'Hither no farther pass !' We will track each step through the wavy grass, We will chase the elk in speed and might, And bring proud spoils to the hearth at night." "But oh ! the gray church-tower, And the sound of the Sabbath bell, And the sheltered garden bower, We have bid them all farewell." "We will give the names of our fearless race To each bright river whose course we trace; We will leave our memory with mounts and floods Ar.d the path of our daring in boundless.woods; Ar.U our woiks unto many a lake's green shore, Where the Indians' graves lay alone before." "But who shall teach the flowers Which our children loved, to dwell, In a soil that is not ours ? Home, Home, and friends, fare well." SECTIONALISM REBUKED! Extracts from the Great Oration of HON. CA leii CtsHiNG, in j\'etc York, on the Fifth July, 18-iS. I do, indeed, sometimes hear men talk of the dissolution of the Union. Such peisons, it is , true, do exist among us, denationalized women, unhappy that they are not men; denationalized men, unworthy even to be won n. They, al so, will assemble somewhere to-day, not as A mericans, but as libellers and vi'uperators of Americans-to desecrate some venerable church, or detiie some sylvan shade-to say how much they love alt black men, and how much they detest all white ones—and in the profaned name of Libi rty to pre claim their unappeasable en mity to the Union, to the Constitution, to the Bible, and to their Country. Well, be it so. What, are there not Amer icans enough in heart as well as in name, to preserve the integrity of the Union in spite of all these ravings of unloosed Bedlam ? Aye, ten, twenty, thirty millions of such devoted A mericans, devoted to the Union, and who, if need werp, could and would, occasion requi- j ring, devour and swallow up this handful of Negrophilist Union haters, as the boiling whirl pool of Niagara overwhelms the slight skiff of some intoxicated Indian. Yes, we are strong enough in the light of our freedom and in the vigor of our country to tolerate and to pity all such impotent foes of the Union. 1 say to tol erate and pity them; for when I witness their ebullitions of wild wrath,as they sptak of the American Union, I become sure that their souls are writhing with distracted and "tioubled thoughts" of the fallen spirit. Each one of them, as he gazes at the day star ot the Union, seems with desperate passion to say: "0 thou, that with surpassing glory crowned, Look'st from thy sole dominion like IheGod ; Of this New World—to thee 1 call, But with no friendly voice, and add thy name, O sun, to teil thee bow 1 hate thy beams." Is it not so? Isnotthata true picture?— Well, let them hate and rave. They, are, in deed, to us in the North, where they hold their annual convention orgies, the drunken Helots of the common wealth—useful to show firth the | ugliness of infidelity and of treason, for the edi fication and admonition of the ingenuous youth of our Laced.vmon North. Dissolution of the Union by such influences? 1 scorn the very idea. It is equally absurd in the mouths of those who threaten it as the means of aggression, of the North or South, and of those who threaten it for defence of the South against the contingent aggressions of the I North. But then, it is said, if such men tlo not peril our institutions, yet others of larger arms and of discreeter factiousness, who use thpm to disturb the popular mind, do: others, who talk of Freedom when they mean power: who cla mor continually of the imputed encroachments of the South on the North; who organize and uphold sectional party combinations, and whose avowed objects are the establishment of a sec tional administ:ation of the Constitution. Well, these I admit are dangerous men, who, not by their own strength, but by the dissen- j sions of the true friends of the Constitution, have attained too much influence in the North. ; They are dangerous because they have no fixed ' j principles, no stable convictions, no samples of, consistency to control their acts, because their only creed is what has been called the duty of success; the successful accomplishment of a . sectional organization of the government on the ruins of its nationality, would be the dt fucto dissolution of the Union, j Their incessant cry is of the "slave power.'' If, perchance, new realms are to be added to the magnificent domain of the Union, though j such addition be for the desire and superior benefit of the population and commerce of the North, they cry out on the slave power. If the revenue of the Union is to be modified, though it be done with their own hands, and j for the advantage of the North, again they cry j out on the slave power. If new territorial gov-1 ernments of the Union are to be organized >n the West, though such organization be in t e , interests and to the gain of the North, still th ■- j cry out on the siave power. If the dign v | and honor of the Union are to be vindicate' i war, though the grievances to be redressed, tn*w f the securities to be conferred, are at the North, always they cry out on the slave power.— Shame on the parrot cry ! Never, in the worst days of the worst factions of Greece or Rome, of England or France, was there a more gross ef fort to inflame the popular passions by false ap peals to prejudices—never a more wanton abuse of the freedom of republican spreeh , never a more abominable attempt to gratify per sonal ambition at the expense of a country's welfare and peace. Slave-power! It is the cry of "stop thief" on the part of the burglar fleeing from the pursuit of the officers of jus tice. We at the North have been addicted, more j or less, for Ihe space of some twenty years, !o persistent attacls on the constitutional rights of the South. Ilu.sy mischief-makers, the "can- ( kers of a calm world's peace," have set up j newspapers, formed societies, thrust themselves : on the public attention, subscribed agitation j funds, perverted legislation in the seveial States, and usurped, as far as they might, the j voice of Congress, in order, if possible, to irn- j pose their opinions and their intruded authority on the sister States; laboring to destroy their property, and to exclude them from their com-j mon share of the inheritance, and of the public ! rights of the Union. These acts of aggression! on the part of some .Northern States as againsi ! those ct the South have been perpetrated under j the shelter of our common government, when there would have been just cause of war as be tween foreign governments; and occasionally reach to such a point that some States and statesmen of the North, in the extremity of their blind zeal, apply to their fellow-citizens of the South, language of political and personal denun ciation fit only for the case of declared national enemies. And then, if goaded by the sense of wrong, a State or a statesman of the South, re- ; curs to defensive words or acts, there is anoth er outcry of the Slave power. Meantime, all these aggressive acts at the North are underta ken, we are continually told, in order to repel the aggression and overthrow the domination of the slave power! Does the South dominate over the Union ? That is the question. It is a matter, in which ! I myself, a man of the North, have for one rea son or another, felt a little interested, and: which, as a matter of philosophical study well j adapted to an hour of rural idleness, under the shade of green trees, and with the melodies of the many voiced sea to lull me into the mood of tranquil contemplation, 1 have undertaken to investigate. My friends, you know we naturally, almost necessarily, regard things from cur own stand point, at least in the first instance. I, there fore, in reflecting on the present question, be gan in this way, that is from the point of view of my own State of Massachusetts. It rather seemed to me, on looking back, that Massachu setts had had a pretty fair run of the power of Freedom of Thought and Opinion, BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 13, 1858. her political wealth, furnish a King, a Marcy, or a Bancroft, to be accepted and honored even here in the Empire State of New York ? And yet, in the lace of all this, and with some per sonal reminiscences of my own to aid me to the conclusion, that Massachusetts men are prone to be, I will not say domineering, but dominant enough, either in Congress or in the Cabinet, I am to oe told that the South dominates over the North. And New York, the Empire State of the U nien, what is her testimony in this present issue of the alleged domination of the South over th p North ?—Were the Hamiltons, the Jays, the Livingstons, the Burrs, and the Kings of the earlier days of the Repii blic, men without wills oi their own ? Were the Clintons, the Tomp kins, the Van Burens, the Wrights and the Marcys of a later day ? Why, who does not know, what schoolboy of the first form is there so ignorant as not lo have heard, not onlv that these men o( New York ruled in their time and t-rn, in the high places of the Union, and ruled by the intellectual right divine stamped on their immortal brows, and ruled as men of the North, in their proper persons—not only this, but that histoey is now pieoccupied with the question, whether (hey did not also in, fact rule, when the titular places of power were held by the South. The South dominate over the North, with New York in it, and holding, by her population? her wealth and her power, the hegemony o' the North New York, who assumes in the scroll of her arms that she is ever to be upper most, just as Charles of Spain inscribed "Farther yet" on the pillars of H-rcuies ! Oh, most ab surd, most preposterous, most ridiculous of a! 1 (he foolish imaginations which ever entered into the head of wayward men. Why the South like the North, struggles and struggles in vain to escape from the authority, and to shake off the ascendancy of New York. is there nothing in this cry of slave power ? Is it mere faction and falsehood from beginning to end ? I think it is utterly destitute of any foundation in fact. I had long and diligently sought in the proper quarters, for its pretended foundation, and it is but recently that I have discovered it, in a much applauded speech of one of the senators from the State of New York. That eminent person, if any one, may be presu med to understand the subject, and he explains the mystery of iniquity thus ; It appears, that when the Constitution was adopted, and for some time afterwards, there was but one free labor State in the Union ; all the rest were slave labor States. And so the slave power got the upper hand, and has held it "almost uninterrup tedly" ever since, notwithstanding subsequent changes in the relative number of the free labor and slave States. That is, New York and Pennsylvania having been at the beginning slave holding States their power is slave power! I hope and trust that, in the lamentable state of things, New York will continue to govern herself in all tenderness and mercy, and will, moreover, have a little consideration to spare for the rest of the North, and especially tor Massachusetts, who, as the only original Don slave-holding State, is hopelessly dependent on the ''slave power," and its representative, N. York. My friends, I pray you not to laugh at these fallacies, ludicrous as they are, with which as piring men seek to insurreclionize the whole North by factious appeals to the faisely imputed domination of the South over the Union ; tor the avowed object of such appeals to mere pre judice and passion is sufficiently serious ; it is not merely to change the administrators of the government of the country, but also to change that policy of Democratic nationality which has prevailed for so many years, and has been the efficacious instrument of the support and elevation of the Union. God forbid that this should be ' The con ' stitution was inaugurated by the men who had this Union. Two Presidents, two Vice Presi- dents, a place on the bench of the Supreme Court for sixty-six out of sixty-nine years of the Federal Government, a seat in the Cabinet lor sixty-seven of the sixty-nine years; Secreta ries of State, of Treasury, of War,of Navy, of Justice, most of them again and again, and one or another almost always; embassies without number, and a half monopoly of the most impor tant one, thai of St. James; and a potential ■voice always in tl*e councils of the Government and of the people—a voice, which when it did not rule by authority, ot office yet governed by the higher authority of genius, of virtue, of elo quence, and which never spoke but to pene trate as with an electric flash, to the uttermost bounds of the wide Union. Js it not so? When was there a day, that an Adams, an Ames, a Quincy Adams, a Webster,an Everett, aChoat, did not live to maintain by voice and pen, by opinion and act, the due ponderance of Massa chusetts iu the conductof public affairs of the United States! When was there a day that Massachusetts did not from the exuberance of Hut, some simple hearted person may say, mt " ,e ?hej Revolution. So long as their great leader in peace and war, the typica-l man of the Revolution, Washington, lived, party divis ions were of secondary accottnt in the govern ment of the United States. When he died when the work of constructing and sefting in motion the machinery of the Union had bepn done—then the people of the United States began to discuss and to divide upon theo ries of administrative policy ; in other words, to form into political parties; and the history of the country exhibits the memorable fact that from that day to this, with brief and apparently but casual interruptions, one grand party has controlled the administration of the govern ment. It has been the fortune of that party to initi ate all the great measures of administrations, each one of which the adversary party opposed in their inception, to acquiesce in them after ward as fact, and to accept if not approve them as theory. I can remember but one great meas ure of policy, foreign or domestic, which had different origin. I mean the subsisting imperfect arrangement of the common relations of Great Britain and the United States to Central A merica ; and that has never been anything but a stumbling block and an offence in the path of the Union. All the signal steps in progress of the country, as the acquisition of Louisiana, Florida and California, the accession of Texas, the vindication of our rights on the side of Great Britain and Mexico by the successful prosecu tion of war with each, the successive adjust ments of the financial system of the government, the determination of the proper relation of th e Territories to the States and the Union ; all these are the work of the same Democratic and National association of men and interests which still presides over and administers the Govern" ment of the United States. All this, we are told, is to be changed, fai th" very reason that it is national; for the reason tliat the tin;v-hont red theory of Administration refuses to be sectional—refuses to defer to the exigencies of the North, so far as to disregard the rights of the South—refuses, in its paternal justice, to see or know that there is a North or i • | South, an East or West, and looks only with impartial eye on the whole undivided Union. ! For this the people of the United States are to be persuaded to substitute a sectional administra ■ tion—or, to speak more accurately, the people I of the North are invited to make a second effort Ito impose, by their spctional votes, such a sec tional administration on the people of the Uni i ted States. Can this be done ? Will it be done ? I do not believe it. lean see, on the one band, a political association, which holds in its keeping | the traditional public policy of the country ; ! which, at both ends of the conntry, North and South, courageously and conscientiously as : sumes the burden of nationality, in defiance of focal jealousies and prejudicies ; which alone professes a Constitutional political creed, and follows a Constitutional theory of action; | which calmly i hut resolutely maintains our in ternational rights in ail emergencies ; which is j Constitutionally conservative—because it is | Democratic in principle, and thus conciliates ! together the rights of the States and the rights of the universal people. I see, on the other hand, a political association, which is not indeed, an association, but a loose conglomerate ! onlv of the fragments broken off from other as sociations, which has no definite platform of ! doctrines and lloats at random on the tide of ! public policy, m the hope of picking up some chance helmsman, it knows not where, who may bring it into port, which lives only by hate ful vituperation of the South, which is the re fuge and receptacle of all the crochety isms of ithe dav. I "Both are vain things, and all who in vain thing®, Build their fond hopes of glory or lasting fame, Are the unaccomplished works of Nature's hand, Abortive, monstrous, or unkindly mixed," tossinz and whirling about in that limbo of vani ty. Can those eminent men, who, on the dis solution of previous political associations, have improvidently allowed themselves to drift up into that limbo, govern and guide '.heir hetero geneous, incongruous and impracticable com panions to any useful purpose,either in the at tainment or the exercise of power ? I doubt. They may do it, I admit, in single Slates. I deny that they can do it, on the broad field of the Union. "I HAVE NOT BEGIN TO FIGHT VET " The above language of the gallant and brave Paul Jones, when the British commander asked if he had struck his flag and surrendered, are memorable words. Although his deck was slippery and streaming with the blood ol his gallant crew, his ship was on fire,-his guns were nealv every one dismounted, his colors shot a wav", and his vessel gradually sinking, Paul Jones with an immortal heroism, continued to "Do you surrender I" shouted the En glish captain, desiring to prevent further blood shed, and seeing the colors of the Bon Homme Richard gone, supposed the American hero wished to surrender. His answer was, "I have not begun to fight vet !" The scene is thus de ! scr ibed —There was a lull in the conflict for W HOM: 3810. an instant, an ! tlie boldest held his breath as Paul Jones, covered with blood and black with powder stains, jumped on a broken gun carriage, waving his sword, exclaimed in the never-to be-torgotten words, "I have not begun to fioht ye? ' And the result was, the battle changed and in a few minutes the British ship struckher colors, and surrendered, and Paul Jones, leaping upon the British vessel a conqueror and a hercT VV hat an admiral watchword for the battle of life, does the above stirring incident five to every ma 1. Reverse may overwhelm ° for a trme, deupur may ask hope to strike her fia?. but planting the foot more firmly, bendinf the back more readily to the burdens imposed, stram ng the muscles to the utmost tension, and bra cing the dropping heart, let him who is driven to the walls, exclaim, "I have not beo-un to fight yet." They are words of energy" hope and action. They deserve, they will command success. In the darkest hour let them rin® out and forget the past, the years wasted and "gone by, and give them as an inaugural address "of a new era. When the misfortunes of life father too closely around, let the battle cry go"forth trom the thickest of the conflict, "I have not begun to fight," and you will find vour foes flee before the new strength imparled,'and yief ding the vantage as you press forward in the battle strife. V A STORY.— A good story is fold of a New Orleans editor, who thought himself "some" at ten-pins, fie challenged a s'trano-er one e vening, who said that he wasn't much of a play er, but he'd roll him a game just for amusemenf and they began. The stranger won two games easily, and then proposed that he should roll with his left hand against the editor's right. This was assented to, and the result was"as be fore, two more games being scored against the editor. Ihe stranger then seriously proposed to roll again, and not use his hands at all, but to kick the balls down the alley, the other usinf his right hand as usual. The editor ao-reed" thinking he had the fellow sure then; but he kicked the balls down the alley with astonish ing precision and success, making "strikes" and "spares in a style which struck terror to the soul of the dumbfounded editor. Two games were played in this unique manner, and "were both scored against the editor. He then offered to play another game, and blow the balls down the alley, using neither hand nor feet, but the editor was quite satisfied, and left the place amid the laughter of the company. THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS.—THE old and erro neous idea that the whole region of the Rocky Mountains north of the 40th parallel is a sterile : region, presenting an almost unbroken ice field, is completely refuted by Gov. Steven's explo rations. One of the officers of his partv, Lieuf. Saxlon, says, in his report : "I find that my previous ideas of this Rocky Mountain ran<;e are, so far as this section is concerned, entirely erroneous. Instead of rocks and mountains al most impassable, I find a fine country, well watered by streams of clear, cold water,"and in terspersed with meadows covered with a most luxuriant grass. THE RICHT USE OF THE EYEST—An Italian bishop, who had endured much persecution with a calm, unrutfled temper, was asked how he at tained such a mastery over himself. "By mak ing a right use of my eyes," said he. "I first look up to heaven, as the place whither I am going to live forever. I next lock down upon the earth, and consider how small a space of it will soon be all that I can occupy or want. I then look around rne, and think how many are far more wretched than I am." HORSE STATISTICS.—It is estimated that there are 50,000 horses in the State of Massachusetts, "221,000 in the New England States, and 4,500,- 000 in the United States. Ohio stands for most in the number of horsps, New York next, Penn sylvania next, Kentucky next, and Minnesota last ot all. Estimating the horses of Massachu setts at $75 per head, their value will be $3,- 750,000, and all the horses in the Unite ! States at the same rate, would make a value 0f5337,- 500,000, or more than three times the whole cotton and woolen manufacturing capital in the j Union. The horse interest is a most important one to the wealth and prosperity ot the States. POWER OF GOLD.—A person writing from San Francisco, relative to tire gold discoveries on Frazer river, says : "We had a revival here | but Frazer river knocked it cold. People care less apparently just now for salvation than gold. The coroner of this city complains that new dig gins put an end to the suicides. Several literary and political gentlemen of this city have been infected, and have gone off to dig the shining ore; they have forgotten to sigh for the land of Mi non, where the yellow oranges blaze amid the dark green leaves." DID YOU ever travel in an omnibus, on a rainy day, windows and doois closed, eight on a side, limited, of course, to six, and among that num ber two women covered with musk ? "Driver," said the Frenchman, "let me come out of ze door: lam suffocated ! You 'ave vat you call one musty rat in ze omnibus. T 'ave no parapluie, mais'd prefare ze rain water to ze mauvais smell." NOT SO BAD. —The Georgian papers tell the following with characteristic unction : A ladv, formerly a resident in Georgia, very much discontented with Mississippi life, and longing to return to her native land, was shout ing at camp-meeting last year, and became so exceedingly happy th&. she exclaimed, "Glory to God, I feel like 1 teas in Georgia!" DGF*A dandy lately appeared in lowa with legs so attenuated that the authorities had him arrested because he had no visible means of sup port. KF" u Come in out of the wet," as the shark said when he swallowed the little negro boy. VOL 2, NO. t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers