I-41,5001a If wild within three months —SOO If diayed alantonQa, and 11244 If not paid within the year. These tenon will be rigidly ad hered to. ADVIIRTXSEMENT - 13 and Business Attest Insert led at the Windt ranee. Mind every deseritrtion of ,tlOB PRINTING EXECIUTSD in the neatest matiwer, at the lowest • priives and with the Waned despelob. Haying purehised a large nolleetion of.type we are pre pared to WM, the orders of our friends Luife9*o/1D: , Credit liberal, goods plenty and °heap at the Pm porituit for Dry OwSda and Cleating of Wood Ea wen h 90., NI. 300, market at., Phalwael plan: Where C Iloutrar will be happy to receive ate welt upon his friends All orders entr noted to him wilt he attended to with promptness end fl. d billy. August 5.'5.9-tf. TAU RIMMED. STATES UNION HOTEL, MI A 008 Market Street, ■bove sixth, , PHILADELPHIA, PA O. W. HINKLE, Proprietor. — Bl 25 ►RR RAT.. RIM ADAM! HOY, ATTOANRY AT LAW AZGLILYONTIC, P•NIII Will attend promptly to ell begat business intrusted to Wan. Bpeolsl attention will be given to the Orphans' Court Practiee and &trimming Ilia Mime le with the lion. James T llale, where he eon always be consulted In the English and Germen !amssteges J. U. STOVES, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAY.? 11111.1.RIONTIE, Will prsatloals profession In the I Courts of Centre County, All beanies, Intrusted to blm will be faithfully attended to Particular attention paid to collection., and all monies promptly re Can be consulted in the German as well as in the English lalguage 01Sem Mt High at., formerly occupied by Judge Barnsids and D C Baal, I.sq _ _ _ I=lll= CERN l Wife ATTORNEY'S - AT LAW Ogee oe Allegany elreet, in the building for Merly 000npled by Barnes, McAllister, lisle & Co Rankers. August 10-34-Jysar. WILLIAM, 11. es.win, ATTORNEY AT LAW 81L1.111 , 01.1T5, TA Milos with lion James t 11L1e 61110 A ►AIIBLAIID, D D ./■ DODPIVII, AI DOBBINII, rilysiglANs d suitaromi, r Ofßee as heretofore oa Bishop street, opposite the Telavraneeilotel. as. 411 %was r. imuTvissfilon, TIITSICIAN A f;1111.01i0g, Soiroomor to /11r Wm. J..WKfa, ramomfollylen• den his professions! fforrtom to the ofLmoof of RUTTER/A .11111.1.14 and ttointty Office at ttiti Eutaw 'loom° BEITCOICIA, & 1111.11/1111 ATTORNEY 9 AT LAW, =I Trot C Mitchell awl D 6 Rush hot •ntere,{ ilu'l copartnerehip In the practice or the Lon, .tin "derthe name of Mitebell A Boob, rtol trill give pr om pt arid proper attention to all hnoinew en trusted to them Orme in ite)nol,le . Meade, veer the Court Jl•ute Dirtl•fnnto, 'November 21{-IR-If j. A itleltOT ei emus, CitTSTALLOGRAP IIB 6 BAIIUBILIZROTYPE:i Taken drily (except Sundays) from ti A II to 5 r N fly J. H BARNHART, In his splendid Bsßstn, In the Arcade Building, Boliefente, Peon'• JAMKa N• a A *Ai nt, ATTORNEY AT LAW Pr • (Moe au J Street, optpoeito U. ro.tdence of Jndge Burnside. - I= !OTTE & It ITC 111 16 LI PHYSICIANS A ST'IMEONS Dr alto. i. Porn boo removed te the Brick House directly epismite hiii former residence, and Dr. J. B. Mircmist,L to the house lately occupied by Wm. Harris, Esti ,oh Spring it. Office, next door above Dr Potter's residence, where they eon be oososited, ticks. Freres@tonally engaged J. D. WI NIA A Tit, RESIDENT DNNTIST Office and residence on the Notth Sect Corner of the Diamond, neer the Court Nouse or Will be Pound et hie office except two weeke In each month, commencing oaths first Monday of the monti ,whea. he will be away filling prefeesionel duties 41IIMMN & BIetIEEPI, DILUI/Oltars. r as Lberosielf - IVuouti• Ls AND R GYM IDEA LIM 11.61 Drugs, liediolues, Perfumery, Palma, Gila, Vor Waal, D7it430111 1 1, Toilet Seeps, Brunice, llair and Trail! nrglitelh Yeany lad Toilet Articles, Trumoir and. Shoulder Jimmie, Garden Seeds. Customers will find our stock oumplata and fresh, and 1111 aold at moderate Twines. Mlianriere and Phyeloiena from the country and rand to examine our stook • 16.11 G GL MOT IF 1., 6PPOSITETHE WEST BRANCH' DANK, WILLI•MAPORIS PA WILLIAM 11. IIAY, PROPRIETOR. • R. 11.—Adertas will rue to and from the Depot, and Pocket Landings, to 4131/ Hotel, free of charge. Sept. 3-371? DPCNTAL CARD. R. B. Pany.--SURGIZON DENTIST. (Ler' or LANtkErSs, PA 4 HAS boated permanently in Bellefonte, Notbrepostity, where he pitposta prow tie log al! the various breaches of Ma monieolon in the molt approved seastmr, and at moderate °hareem. Offioe _ae4raddenee he the house eooopled by Mn. B. Aaltnneerr, ereetiv ppiallo the residence ,of the late Hoe. Thome Barmaids. CARD. We take ,plessure In reoommending Dr 11. PAIRIVI to our-friends as • thorough and senoth pH/Mod Dentist. 0. 11. DRESSI,MR, M. D., JAMES LOCKE, M D balleceole, Mardi 25-13-'6B - - 's~i'illf~ - sari ~[, IC. U• Ileums, JAR. T. Ilium Whir.tyrrsa. ' A. 0 Curvrtir INTEANAT PAW 024 SPBOIAL DBPoBl'rB HUMES, MoALLISTER, HALE A CO , Din.L•rogris, Ociri•us Co. PA. DaPosn's Ittosivsb. DINA OF HICHANCIM OUNTED. AND NOTES DIS- C ,- .• COI4.EHT/ONS MADE, AND PROCEEDS RE. ?OTTO moony: ntit n j t rv ltes, rDoNSPEOTAL papos ITS HS ' FOR DA o TEAND UNDRII SIX MONT WHIN • RATS OF POUR -PERCENT PEE4NNUM.—POR SIX' MONTHS AMP.,UPWARAAT OF FvE PER PER Alq EXOIANDE•ON Tun MST NSTANTLY ON • HAND I met a girl lbe other day, Some twenty yours old or so, Tile Image of a nymph I loved Pane twenty e years ago 4 The blushing cheek, the spetkling eye, Te flair of raven flow— now they got heart aldose, Bane twenty year, ago ' I aguko—her linemen did out much Of wit or wladutralkaw. , But thug the limply maiden talked Some twenty yeers ago What' mold ae64lluw heart like this, My heart in littnult throe ' I marl hare been a little growl, Some twenty ysacestir 1 mat the le% ely Mary sinne— Iler therms sae vanished though nor wit and wisdom—are the anion ! - As twenty yearn ago I looked upon bar faded obiiek • Until my Coetinsel glow, And Week het th.l .he 0001.4 loy Rome twenty yearn Aro Fond !my' who oould'il gladly din To prime some simpering miss— Who know, what though will think of hot SOW twenty years from thin' ,isttlianann Towards the latter part of the year 1751. the French, aided by vast bodies of the Ilg e ron and Iroquois Indians had begun to make themselves very disagreeable neighbors to I the llntish and American colonists in north ern Virginia and Ohio, and the northwest portion of New York State—the French by their encenachments on the frontier, and the Indians by their numerous forays, and say age brutality to all who were unfoftunate enough to fall into their hands. To put a stop to these aggressive proceed lags, numerous bodies, both of the regulars and the colonial militia, were despatched to the several points assailed ; and among the rest, Cot Ilttiry limes, a all a company of thirty :nen, among whom waft a party of soma desert- Virgtnt a Ittfftwnt - M , was — cae red to occupy a hmr*ll outpost or log fort, which at this period stood a whin few miles of Are north fork of the Allegheny river. Haring arrived safely at their quarters, the little company set about righting up the 1:=1 old outpost to make it as comfortable a, circumstances would permit ; and this being dune, and order once restored, sentries were placed at all the advanced points of the sta tion, while the strictest vigilance was both enjoined and exercised by day and by night Among the Virginia riflemen who had vol ur Leered into the company, was a tall, man ly looking fellow, who from his fatal, unerr ing skill as a marksman, had received the non de plume of Beath. But, with whatever justice the name had been applied to him for skill, his disposition certainly entitled Inin to no such terror spreading epithet. thi the contrary, he was Elio Very life of the cooi ■aLi.aro,ve, . Ills rich fund of mother wit, large social prnpensitiett, and constant good nature, ren dering him a general favorite with the men, while his never failing stock of game, with winch his skill enabled him to sappy the mess table of the officers, not only recom. mended him to their good graces, but caused many a little shortcoming of his to be wink , ed a awl poised over in silence, which oth erwise perhaps he mii,ht not have gotten over I so easy. (the cD,DIRDY Inl4 Dot keen atatiored itt• ni , the fort iieb more"than "a week, ere Death. in one of his excursions for game, dimoover that at a small farm house, some three miles or so distant from the fort, there lived a cer lain Miss [fester Stanhope, whose equal in iniauty and amiable qualities 6. had never seen befori'. And to render hirnsell still 'more certain of the fact, he called the day following, under , aover of a-pretence of hav ing forgotten his powder flask. Death was invited to come again, by Far mer Stanhope. who happened to be from the same Parish as the father of our hero, and we need not say that the invitation eras both eagerly and joyfully accepted, and as often as cisisinatances would permit, comidied with. Thu second week alter the occurrence took place, was marked by two events, which, though both affecting the welfare of the little , el:immunity atilthe- tort, were widely different in degrees of importa; th The find was that link' either sud denly lost all his skid as a marksman, or that the game brad rplnpved tojk Hirer and more distant neighborhood, for the officers' larder had been sadly wanting in the 'tome of woodcocks, tel the week Pasl, and the second and tnost important of Ilk' two events wee, that in regulat imoconsiou, four sentinels had disappeared ham the extreme left line, without leaving the slightest trace to elucidate the mystery of their disappear /:CC. Thu last circumstance struck such dread into the breasts of the rest of the company that no ono could he found willing to volun teer to tako the pout- well 'knowing that it would be only like signing their own death e'ititiattrp. Twenty Years Ago THE OUTPOST =I eLommumailima w trarrnnt tl7 do sn and Cot times, not wish ing to wilfully sun itive the lives of 1114 nu m by comprThav them to go, enjoined double caution to the remainder of the sentinels, and kit the fatal ppm unoccupied the a night of two. It was on the third ni4lit of the desertion or the post, that our hero, Death was nitwit ing to the fort. Idler paying a •i 'sit to,Stan hope firm. The Moon was up, but her light, was almost obscured by the dense mutts of el.mda which at every 1112 w minutes ,were Jaren by a pretty still breeze over her face, while the huge trues, now in full Icor, OVA ed and groaned and bent their tall4Ortns to. and fro, and the heatT gust rustle I whiSt ling in among their branches f hir hero had approached within a hun dred yards of the termination of the forest that skirted the small open space in which the fort stood, When suddenly ho paused, and crouching down ott his hands and knees crept emit wally forward a few limeys flay ing remained hi tint iristt ion several minutes he again quickly retreated in the manner he had advanced at a point considerable lower than %there he had intended to leave it be fore OM. Innen sat reading alone, in his pri rate apartment, VI lien an Orderly entered the room and informed him that o ur of his inen 101.4hed to speak to him. ' Send hint in,' replied the l'olonel and the next moment oar friend Death hail en ter( d and made his best bow to his coin. • Mid %chit scrape have pm hren get lin,t; 'Tito no r said Iht ‘,llOl he saw tt ho his isitor •,1 as. None Colonel repl 41 . but I has , Amy In nsk n favor ' Lit nr ),,nr the (Amid, • and o e n di I lien sir %%hint w r ran do ' 11, IL 11 amply thi. f yen Ntll pet the nth.," und. r my .rdeis to 4”.1 let TOl. •rtipy ohlersti'd I will nn +t,ry of thiesilis appearance of tk, (Jar t; bit mO. the pout tenable 111 wore.' But how f Colqnel, in the moil oteivir ' I guf of 09901: n , i.wei , •'l I) .111), ' 1 1114 bolter I, :no it 9, Ow to ..11 nod or I, lIKaII nod I II t. II you the whole aII op r I plornit:o (tint nn one rliall roceivo a lc:11volt it Irwy-1414r9r my- thrrotl m Irn , itb.lt I p• • 1 os. you Ire it writtir,ri roan.' timid Colon. I, I think I ai II lot )0 3.. 1r %in) 0111 C Whit I/ r 3101 liftl9l Ito %tart r •In RI, rut rt.] Ito tr r. 4 1), air ••l cry n t 11, I o ill 4 tv• yoo the '4.W f t , order, or (lint can start JI Inn 011 proper whit tc 111.1 r.., if 100 I ,.•tr, in all you arc itroowled nil tl.rt't C 3 I oto to rertit having hottioed y m vo 1 . 41 ,11 has,- p.m Cdtoplotll'4 itlsee ' Hector Camiits.ll 0.14 a bray, 1 0 1 l very licatbitrottt; °Hog S‘tote '11)1 111, who 1111 I I/ culm.,l the port of Lteotesi tot al the ftrt. In a attrition freak of daring he inn I VOI ntt feint to fitllll,l serttty at the rm.l spot from %Atoll three nentro, hail already wt n);4ts musty tuts tird....ted, and lie pdttl for his rill?) 111 , 04 Httll trim life, •• Now my lads,' 411c1 •ath a. ul :shout all half all hour tier 1114 1 . 41 Iverson°. with Col Inner, hs aporolehe I the desert. d likst at the head of at Joao. rillern,l who had Bern temporarily placed antler 1111 orders. 'till lell you n list we are to do. The long and N'tort of thy offer is 4111)1I it .4 a gang of them ell+ o• I the r to' 11. °Thus that baa circumvented nll,l earned off four of our men rdwoling thew oath their arrows and then dts:ortipeti wit It theelaitlitts I To night no I was returuntg- to tit • fort, f suddenly thought I heard the oma 1 o Ce Vt s ra V . Y014.1.11• CrCepl 1% 4 , MI my hands toWaro 4 the t nigh enough to see "tfhd~llear - Easy rili4iit n dozen of Iroquois were then and there arraiWg limb plans to suiprke the full Lo.night—intending to eteal in upnl it by the point which their cussed develtry had rendered so easy Or flexes I Only stopped to learn this, when I hurried to the Colonel, and asked him to place you at my disposal, and here we are. I 111111 not say a word to him about what I hal learned, being determined that if 1104111110, llto should have the honor of exterminating the vatlets. And now I ask you, ore you wtl ling and ready to follow my orders f' Every cheerfully answered in the affirma tive, and with quickening pulse and hopes, the little comeany again Emmett for ward. The post consisted of a long.narrow space, boimded on each side by a rocky bank, while its extreme end wss closed in by a dark an I impenetrable looking forest. The bank on each side of the pass war'llnekly covered with brush mill untlervreod, Death -now concealed his men, taking care to acrange them so that their tire would not coos each other, autibbiddini them not to tiro until he gave the signal; and after they had fired, not to reload, lint clubbing their rifles, to Jump down MO finish the struggle in that manner. With steady al,terity each man took up the post assigned him and in another mid._ Lite the spot prefonteil the same lone, still and solemn appeariince it had worn previous to their arrival. , 'rho little company had begun to grow very itup4tient and Death hinmelf to folur that the 111,114111 114.1 titlicr loud t 11.211 tt• EIS tempt, or else ha - aClianied their plan of hit- Ile, irhen suddenly his' quit* eye detected the form of t his crafty foes issuing in 4 a crouching position from the deep shadow which the lofty tree' threw far tip the pigs ' Three, six. nine, terelso,..thirteen,' coon• ted Death, as one idler nit. Cher emerged jn single tile from the n• I) 1, ni l with quirk, cat like site thinness of m atleanred up the pass, their , trail, and their faces and bodies were rendered still more ferocious lookin4 by Vie gi:atFotile marking of their war paint. Olt , they cam., swiftly and silently, and all uneonsci , itis of the fate that was 11/ X Lon, !Fite - - • The fPretnoyt of the Into!, w•hosecorninut ding stette, wolf teeth, collar sod ea4le turf rit once proclaimed him ttoi chief. had nil vaitced until he was onpostte tfre bush in which Death way hit when the Pit ter with startling distoi -tee 14 11111i4t011 the ory of an owl and Eight of the hokin , fell by the volley Which the 'lllation" iitiv poitre(l ii ito the re mainder of them : hilt straogn In nay, nut of the hire who 11111 not fall, wan the Chief %loon De.itlt aimed at. This unusual eveiTT - W1 owing to the followinpreall to the bench on winch lie hail steatite I his arin in "trio; hzd suddenly yielded at the moment he din- charged los meet, thug rendering- harmless his otherwise •r et ti; aim Uttetin4 an imprecation* at his 11l in-k, Death sprang down the ban!. With the rest of log e onnatinety, autj with o r It 1 . 1.% I 11'.1 reaelied the sole or the Irmo no chief They grapplo3 and fell h•tvily to tile grotto(' and ihruog glatireo of q wage Mired at each oth ei lieltee tit then killitCtlO,. • , 04 . 1ing two v 'Keep ”ir shente(l Death no 110 811% , / (MC of I to of his ootriploiocs in Ih • net 4 1 4 1 .0 1 j ). 1,4 il lA' 111 anoint him, •iree;r oft !anl if Ito in-veers in 11 1 t him ge. - Dyer th y rifled Writilillg an 1 ttraiii ur„ 11111 Wenun;lt neither oliiititied any ad i.nitage of the other. At hat the head of Ilse Irepons chief came in non taut with 11... print of a big rock that ppijorted from the hank, stunning him am that he re lapsed 1114 vice grip of Death's throat : aft tl the latter Otos released, npnnging to Ina feet heisted his Career by bringing the heavy breech of his nth.; with Riede ham nor force dow‘h upon Iwo head. Thnit iremamin4 four . Itubany had hiacs. auta. I th e i ktoriolis rigout .n tom of whim hail reeterel any unite I n orth In ntmn:nt) raw neat rip Merit a oh t• or trion,:n rt.. tie ‘icittry th it the ol I wort, ra.ig• with it for minutes after .14 Col loot, hid prenotied, lk,,th watt proino.t .1 to the \',l•:‘ , Lt 1, NC of ; Ana now, dear retpler, we beg to Inform you that our hero and the 11,teuip1+robtoong VeL emu I; •oentl Nfor,ort 'of the revolotiototry eelehrtty, 1138 the On , nod the sate, 110[- 1111131. About a fortnight after tho grontful Stanhope Farm w ti th • svno or much north. good e wag and darning as rook! be disnos ol of during tho tvielity-lonr hours, and though Wt. (111111( n siiperfliinu4 to do t o, wo will add that the rottr4e of this —in .rry ink king" was the nouria4e or the li•litiemis Iletter Stnollooe with Lieutenant Ileory \I organ Qi Kri; STO , tI tills;•lll.tilke•t Inquirer rellitcs the foihrwin z .: av all 'o4er true tale' Wilde a are, belonging 10 311 - Lemuel Joints, was passtrit; thrott4li itioad street, on Saturday afternoon, her tail, which she was vigionni,l) using as a fly extirparor, - .1111. ali isherl amined a post, and became fasten ed ; 1111, frightened the anitinial arid she 111.1111` a 10/11/ 1111[1111; OW tail about evil way, 0111 1,11r04 , , imo l ikalf of th- v , ry useful ap pniehge hauling on the f iner ' The above is related t; ii,by a gemlem 01 who saw the noinasEatriNi 71' " - 1'"'" 11'p 4-s,itiwthatt.tory %Ouch we have n+TtliPitillt, ' , ltriiitqY..pli's Insiiig his coat-tail When was caught by that naughty woman, but t , 1 believe sieth a tail story as the above, is pi tong our faith to a very se vere tbi,t. A Nit:sit:at, En. -The last novelty from German.) is a I,usical bed, which receives the vivary.lsoily' and iistilatutiately -laps it in ElSfitlool," , li f ithe invention of a mechanic injlotveratarito is' so constructed that by the means or hidden mechanism, a pressure upon the bed CaIISCS a soft and gentle air of Huber to be played, which continues long enough to hill the most wakeful to sleep.— At the bead is a clock, the baud of which being placed at the hour the sleeper wishes to arise, when the tune arrives, the bed plays a march of Spontom with 'Minims, and cymbals, and, in s„hoit, with noise enough to rouse the seven sleeper-i. Foam v less. —The brave -only know how to forgive ; tt is the tmost refined samiikgen . it• pitch of virtue-human- matunrcan - SW rive at. Cowards hare done good and kind actions—cowards have fought. nay, some times conquered; but a coward never for gave ; it is not in his nature ; the power of doing it flows only from a strength anti greatness of soul OOASCIOUA of its own force and security, and above till the little temp tuitions of resenting every fruitless attempt to interrupt its happiness. r_psomo of the farms or Vermont stand no much on their edge, that plowmen with one short leg command double wages. Citi zens who " clintinguyilied" themselves in the Lite War with lit \1. , /will pleaso notice. A., THURSDAY SEPTEMBE From too Now ll'won Journal A Quaint Will. J lidge Nwri; 11.4 shown In the following copy of a will recorded on tho New 'lnvert Probate lt,,cord+.- In the s name of God, siAltivernor of Irll worlds, Jesus Christ, the Holy Ghost. the twelve Apostli:s,,Saiiils, Throne+, Pow- ,1 ers, Virtinis, Angels. Archaugels Clherob i tinsd ' ani4 S Yarnims, Amen. I David OgilCo, of : 1 New Haven, in the State of Connecticut, be ing in uncommon good health and spirits, and in my right ntirUl and wits, do to the following manner Inalte testament. Imprimis. My body, this owls compoged of flesh, blood, arteries, bones, ear:obliges, fibres, and (Ina vent not all be sides, I commit, when IlrvgAed in 'my best suit of hl ick clothes, to its deep, dark, silent grave—'tie a dismal house I am to dwell yen v.trily , a mourniul one, therefore the dress or mourning is the most proper one for me. 'rhos let this body be chest ftir its which I pray to be made of sound mahogany wood and not ornamented with brass Jails mid bit plates telling my nnmo age or death —my head will tell these things to the luminaire in the grave. When this mass of corruption is thus equipped, let it be borne on, the shoulders, of four sturdy youths to its long home, the narrow grave, nhotu I would should be rewarded for their trouble with a decent pair of gloves each. Ily the way, shoold David Edwards, the Sunday after my exit, conceive either my life or my death to merit a sermon, a short sermon, prayer, or It few Vines to hoe sent up to the throne of an all pitying and memo foil God, pray then let it be done: and for his trouble and good services in this silenin bus . ute s, give biro my best lielad/Mi4 for Ma wet fare, accompanied with a conyliment of 5.3, 40, Nvw Xerk currency. item —Nly soul, God grant, if I have any or ever had, it mty stn s ; its flight to heaven, be pia conspicuously among the stars. fly on the vrings of the winch food the beasts of the held, the birds of the sir, the insects of the earth, or the fishes of th equine deep waters: upon the whole, I i 7my soul to God. Item—lt is my will and pleasure that a monument worth LlO,OOO be erected in the burying ground in New Erevan to my -umlauts- ilia mouto oeisapitt leave wholly to the discretion of my worthy friend and brother, Plerpond Fclwards, Eim , Tn iitY sister Polly Encino Ogden I give. II grant. ; bestow and Isle:ad] all my worldly conrerns—goats, Chattels, lands tenemcnts ,111111 and hereilltaments which I, whilst an Inhotb unlit of this planet was in possession of, in fee simple or otherivire, to tier and her heirs forever, she first paying, satisfying.. and cancelling all lawfol dues, debts and de mends against the same : also, pitying to So. nen Edwards, my lovely neice, the sum of £25, New York nymey, to be laid out for a , !morning dress for her, the said Susan I appoint, constitute, and make PierPont Ed• wards and David Daggett, Fags., of New Haven, and Aaron Ogden, E 411 , of Elia*. bethlown, in New Jersey, evecotors of this my last pill and testament Witness my I hand and seal D.itisi at New Haven, thin 12th day of I'efiroary, Ii 49 Gavinainev. Wit 1T C 1 V IIK DONK ON 4N ACI4I: Or ROUND —The editor of the Maine ra:tioator pub fished a few days ego hls management of one acre of from which we gather the follouing milt One third ors!) act eof corn woolly pro duced thirty bushels ofsmind corn for grind ing, besides some refuse. This quantity was eoltlru•nt for family use, and for fattening one large or two amid' hogs. From the same grotind he obtained two or three hundred piimpkina, and lus (sillily supply of beans From ,the same bed of six roils square be neurally obtained sixty bushels of onions : these ho sold at SI per bushel - and the a mount brought purchased his flour. Thus from one third of an acre and his man bed ha obtained his breadstuff's. The rest of the ground teas appropiated to all sorts of veget ables for the summer and winter use -pota toes, beets, turnips, cabbage, green corn, peas, beans, cucumbers, melons, squashes, Sze , with fifty or sixty bushels of beets and carrots for the wtsit4 r foe* of a cow. Then lie had a flower serial:, also raaphdrraes, currants and goosehdaVies,in great vartety, and a few choice apple, pear, plum. cherry, peach and quince trees. lion% read lives do—fur certain days or ears - actually anticipate the harpiness of !leaven ; and I believe, if such perfect hap piness is once Mt by good people (to the wicked it never-comes,) its 'sweet effect, is never- wholly lost, • Whatever trials fblto e, hetewer pains of sickness or shades of death, the glory precedent still shines throli, clirerjng the kecu anguish, and tinging the dev.eloud. L will go further. ldo believe there are some Lunen beings so born, so num], so guided from • talk cradle to • calm and late grave, that no excessive suf ferink; penetrates their journey. And often these arc not pampered, selfish beings, bat nature's elect, harmonious and benign ; men and woolen wild with 'Meaty, kind agents s kind attributes. but it is not so foi'all. What then I His will be done, as done it surely will be, whether we humble eiir.elvve to resignation or not. J,l. '. ES 23 1858. Shunihino and Cloud. 9 , kr. -0%36 '4 Who should Speak Pint Ladies frequently complain that gl atlemen pass lhtm m the street, unnoticed when, in filet the fault arises from their own breach of r acCf nr. It' IS their duly to du the nmnilde first for it iv a tirivilege ouch la , • Mee enjoy of choosing their own associates or aramaintances. No g,entletn.in likes to ri,k the “otte . in the Street by n le elk, thremgh litemotnie salute. Tot) many Indira, it would seem don't know the i tilt of politeness Meeting ladies in t .. e street, whom one has' casually met in company, they Iteldoto bow unless he bows first : and when a ~e ntleman everdeparts from the rule of good breeding, except orcasPinally, by the way of e sperl !tient his aetinamtanren do not mohiplt , but he stand+, probably, charged with rude , neSS. A lady must be civil to a gentleman in whose company she env co , mally be ida• eed: but a genth man is in7C, upm 'hi. : to presume spoil an acquaintsoceship the first time sue littera Ards:meets him tit th.! street. If it be her will, she gives nom: token of recognition, when tf#l, gentleman may bow : but otherwise he must pawn on and consider himself a stranger. No Lady ne ed hesitate to bow to a gentleman ; for ho will promptly and politely answer, even if he ban forgotten his lair ssluter. Nei one but a Orate can do otherwise Should he pasa on rudely his character in declared and there is • cheap riddance Politeness or good breeding is like law - rho -reason of things." Gnus Widows in Indiana A correspondent of the LP:Vion Journal, who has been travelling out in the IVabash regions or lloomenlom discovered one peril li•rity in every town he tarried in : Speaking 01 grass reminds one of the fict that bulimia (and particularly the IVabash) is laterally swarming will. .vrass tr,dners.— Ertry hotel or tavern has or have had one or inure of those branching vixens_ domi ciled with them for 1,1 d 11111, which makes them of,:rni and re.lidents, of tho State of Indiana and with a little hard swearing. na tives too. At the expiration of ten days • suit is commenced against some rile hus band, and as a matter of course, a divorce is granted, if fur no:other cause than incompat ibility of temper. Bern are oongreglited from sill the States in the Union (exceptl3 fincissailts ble lawyer trade) alt the dieconsala . .cd grassy- Wiaowa. A cannel heard of in Peru, whore the widow of a millionaire bed come from , Brazil, remained here ten days, got her di. 'TOrret , , with moon of alimony and would have Itpd more, brit old Crtems had no more in the United Stites that was consterutable. Death in Childhood How true and exiiii.sitely bornnful is the following impressive passage, which Is ta ken from an article in the lisubirn University Magazine : '• To me, few things appear so beautiful as a very young ohild in its shroud. The little innocent fare looks so auldinirly simple and conliling amongst the cold ter mini of death. Unnwless and fearless, the little mortal has passed alone under the shadow, and explored the mistery of disso lution There is death in sin I,IIIIL-it and purest image: no hatred, no hypo !rosy, no 8111410C11111 00 care for the moi row fief dar kened that little face : death has come 100 MOy upon it there is nothing cruel or harsh in its viatory. The yearning of love. indeed cannot be stifled: for the prattle, an•l smile, all the little world of thoughts that were so delightful are gone, for we are looking 0.1 death, hut we do not fear for the lonely voy ager, for the child his gone, simple 'sod tnisturtrinto l ,,the prescustel of its all wise father, and of hurl:, we know, Is OW king dom of Heaven RN LINZ ELQUENCIi. —There is no people in the world with whom eloquence is so uni versal a gift as the Irish. When Leitch Ritchie was tiarrling in Ireland, he passel a man who was a painful spectacle of pallor, squalor ; and raggedness. Ilia heart smote him, and he turned back. "If you are in want," said Ritchie, with some degree of peevishness, '.trlty don't you beg f"' "Slo^l it'si begging I am, yes honor " "You didn't . say& word." 't Or coorec not, yer hono-; lint see how the akin is speakin' through the holes of inc tremors , and the hones cryin' out through me skin ! Look at me sunken cheeks, and the famine that's starin' in me eyes! 'Man %lire! isn't it boggire I am wl'h a hundred tongues?" Ax Berroas Anemones - -It does abody goo4"lo have hie pride flattered once in a while. We realize the benefit of it mace a year, when we hard the asseasneuorne round and ask how mushAtiongy we have at inter eat, how much stock we biriah the publso ortatkit iiidilTlOna oiler eubjecti that and eifpposed to be put only to the "solid men." It there is anybody arohnd, we streighten up slightly, expand our cor porosity, and in as heavy a chest tone as we can command, we answer : —About the rams as last year'. —" They know well enough what that is. So do we. paragraph has been going the rounds about ► lady who has a moustaeho on her upper lip. ft is not uncommon for young ladies to have moustaches on their lips, but rare that they greitene. If e o wo,pren would have tlm'world tweet her ‘husland; she must net the example. rg 1 771, (PM/ Centropridothe• of Ilse R. Y :r-/ The' Bed of ()liver Cram Brian+ leaving Edgfand I hid an Oppoea !unity of seeing a gee* curiosity, a relic of nmninity. *lnch few Englishmen have.wen• Yost n ill be vorprivrit and perlias inbred• ulons, when I say t hirre'seen the head n/ ();.rer Crontirt/1--not the Metre skull, but the head entire and in a state of remarkable pr,serratton. lug history is authentic. and there is Verbal and hiatitrieal evidence to place the thing beyond cavil. Cromwell ilied at Hampton Collet in h 658. giving the stmisgest evidemy of Ilia taping. religion.• cons Wanes, and of his sincerity as a Chris. flan After an imposing funeral pageant, the body having been embalmed, he wag finned in Westminster Abbey. On the re- StOral tstil of the Bullets he, was taken up soil bung Tt T) burn. Afterwards his heed *as cut. all, a ((Ike driven up through Om neck and itll,'an.l exposzil rn Westminlit ter Ball. It iettiaisted there IL long while, until, by *OIIIIV VlUkil V, tyre pike was broken and the lead thrown down. It eat picked up by a soldier and concealed. and alter wards conveyed to some friend, who key' It carefully Iv years. Through a succession of families, which can easily be traced, it l lsar came into the possession of the daughter of lion. Mr. Wilkinson, ex-member of Par liament from Buckinghain and Bromley. It a ass at the reaulencv of this gentleman that I oar.- the head, and his daughter, a lady of line manners and great culture, exhibited it to Itev. Mr , I . errell, the pastor of the Brom • try Ihoenting chapel, and myself. Ttuv Lead of Cromwell Is almost entire.-- The It sit is black and sunken, but the tea -1 tures are nearly perfect, the hair Mill re . maiuMig. cud evaii the large wart orer tho, eyes—such be-mg a distirwtive mark on hie face - uit yet perfectly vutible. • The pike which was thrust through the sock still re remains, the upper part of iron, nearly nisi ;at °Clint the lower wooden portion In failiutens, showing that it waft broken by some act of viol. net. It ls known hisitari cally that Cromaell wait embalmed, and Ile, person thus,eareit for was ever publicly e h. WWI. escort thi(illustrious man. In ad dition to the moat authentic 'records con ' .:ertiing the hca.l possessed, by the family:, . tea. w. a; and eTelOl a* old nt~oaltladpf Flasnaln, the disungiii•hill sculptor, once pre It Al hilt optision that this was none other than the head of thiewr Cromwell. Yet its existence seems ilmost unknown in England, and only II few years ago a dismu.ion in leltne of the I, public journals stoat I hare seen alternate ly denied and advocated it. :w..111 a rumor was iu cir. Laiation, and as no one had then t.cen the head. it having been cant-oiled, none could speak by auth.iity. Recently the to 'tire for concealment lass passed away, and perniikdm to see it was carefully grant ed It is a curious keep sake for a lady,hat it is car,fully preserved under 10eT; and key ; in a box of great atithiu:ty, wrapped in a ! numlK r of ocodly envelopes, and when it is raised from its Imlinz, place and held in one's hand, what a word or thott.,glit ix suggested! Illustration of Life- 11141,01. Ilefor, upua departing for India. sold in his fArewill sermon fe hears on : file the stream of a mighty river. Our hoot at first gess down the mighty channel. through the p!si fill murmuring of the tittle brook : and the willows upon its glassy borders. The tress shed their blossoms over our young heads, the flowers on the brink seem to offer themselves to ouryoung hands. ' ac are happy iri hope. and grasp eagerly at the has oat tes around un, the stream hurries on. and still our hands are empty. Our 'oesiorse in.yonth and manhood is along a wi i &Tr. deeper flood. and amid objects mom ' striking and magnificent. We arnaininisted by the moving picture of enjoyment and in &nary inswing us ; we kali efacited 'tty our short lived enjoyment. The stream bears um as, and yra and griefs ere le ft bchical . We may be shipwrecked. but we can not be shlayed ; for, rough , or smooth, the river hastens Weirdo its hems, till tiro roar of the ocean iajn our ears, and the waves beneath our ftletsstid the !bode are lifted up around us, fist we take our lento of earth and its inhabitants. until of our further voy age there hi now Untie sere the Infinite oaf Eternal." Vot:se.; 31sx r.te Arrastiox.—Don't be a loafer, donee can yourself a loafer, • don't I keep loafers company, and deal leant abaft loan •ig pia roe. DAter work bard hr every thing and board yourself thensit 'vend day after day; or stand it corners with yosir bairlds in your poeleete.- &Orr (opt our ruse r "T eCtg ' , 4 11 th kt-X4d lave anything to bustle about bw, Many a physician tut obtained a realletleat by ' rt ding hard to attend teem innfinity one. -A qiiire of blank paper tied np with nett* , antecanied under a liwyer'ilisainadell cure him his first cud sod snake kitli • tar Cum. Such is the world—to Idserdist bath be given. Quit ihnoldir and nemplain ing, keep busy and mind your dristoo. It is comp9ted that ht Abe Crimean low the British knit by Una wort br dbease and oCher,uoutingsaoisis oC war. OM linsufsisdind sloven thousand throe hundred and glirtain mon. aud that Biliti-iirrea Bisnassind abut four hundred more. irrro itolre Invalids, for tlfb, 11 WI MB =MEI
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers