• . , - • 'O. . i • .. .. . . 1 .. ... . • 5 • ... 5 . -..-.....-..".--._ ... • . • . . • , r . f5 ,..... .. . . • • , . , 1. . . , , 4 .„_. , T ,.•,4,- .• . .. A . •,„ ', A • i : . ,• . , - • - 7 7. t, ."' - ~.._ , ' 4E'''''': '•'.-: • -F.- ilk - SIX. , /' ' . .. , '"Ar*.,"' . 1 i' 4 1 4 '..... .. i r s•„ . , • i , f.-,t . i 5 - i .... 1 .' .: 4 7 ''. -----r • ..,_. , • _ • - 7: 5 . ''' -, ' p " k ': . I },, i - ' \, ' ... • ialr . :''' ' .1 A ~ • is ., \ , • ,-;• j AV. ' --- , • . . ..... . . f - ..• . ; ,gi k\ ,‘i,' ' ) ',-,„. 1 7 . . - • \..P1.-.: 1 h , , ~... og "'A i . , . l ' l' ' , •• ~i, ' : i Z1 T 4,1 7 . ' . l ' :. t ie :::::! r :.; :`•-• :9. . " ' 7 , # 2 r :, ..1 ‘ ) 1 \ A \ \ A , f 4 f - 0 1 fir , .0 'NA VII . . . . " 4 , ,.- ~,,,.., c i l , ,(„ ~, , .. ~ .. . i . 0 .-,4 ) . A 141 1 1 4 ' ' t :, ' [ .- , ,W (t * l'l , '.'.. -_.: ' mr. .- --.*) '-, , '-ci- ; "<t).-1:, :..., Jr , No i i 1 A , „. ~ i —1 .._. / v 4.-- Y . ~ F '.! i ,:'" '. '.l --- ' VP / ,4. / l '' ..., 7 . / 4' ' f. 4\sol __ .. ',...' 4 IMP. : , 1: . , ~ , -_.',...-.—s. P '.. , ilci • t (--, 'llklihruirmilo '. '' ....'' "' " ' --::•14161' .i, ' ' A - r" -. \- 43. ...4. , . ^.• ...,, 1:: . ; . k.:.'iav nu; 4/ ~ ..sai...-ro‘1 " -:4".'-'' ' - ...,. '- ' ' ' •'' • '. - ,‘lyilf `, -..-- ~_ - 4 ' .. W . , '.. ~• e ,!''. .. . ' •, -i.;.. 44, .". ' S.— N•••••••••••=444•4••••••• -I'IaLE NTT, 'CENT N' BM hA~ 'Toms of Publication TERMS eta if paid wittiin three menthe KOO if dlayed sin menthe, and 89,60 It dbt tiaid within the year. 'rheas torme will be rigidly ad- Mired lo A DVlRriSpfliNTS,anil Ilastileta7clifiiia insert et at the named ratoi. and every deaortotion of JOD tXECUTED In tini,neatest manner, at the Inweat prince, lied with the (Inmost despatch Having eurobond a lop oolleetion , of type, we are pre. , valid to esti* the orders of our friends 'firsitreis Pxrettotg. .11.111001111 AN, BUILVEYOR AND CON VEY A I Mat RICLILAYONTIS, PENN'A M IeALLISTAR, A OSA A AKA VIII avai6zotorrislik -et ste-Nverni ATTORNEYS AT LAW, DaLLIVOSTII, rENN'A ' WILLIAMS M. 111111.1111114, ATTORNMY AT IA W ALLLAIVATI, PA °Moe In the Arcade, second floor UNITIM STATE• HOTS.., TIII RD BTU Kla WILLIAMSPORT, PENN'A. v. xi DUJERLX.II, .111.01'.11.1.EXUR JAallfeß H. JEANICAN. ATTORNEY AT LAW, esmdrrotter, reeler .)ITutie, on the Diamond, one door event of the ..al Office IL. J. CHASM, IoicNEY AT LAW AND HEAL ESTATE IMEREI I=l S.l, 111 CNIAKI,IIO4 NM, IMAILIS, Al"roitNEY Al' LAW, I fr, with th [lon Jitmt. T. Halo N.,. 'l., Isslo If DR. JAMES F. nuriunisori, PHYSICIAN A BUKatON, taccesmor to Dr Wm .1 McKim, re&peetfelly ten ern his professional eerNtene to the citlsonestlf OTTEIt'S MILLI 3 and vicinity Mite at:thi utnw Ilouie J. PRAOTICAL SURVEYOR, °ME 111•14.1111,Lis, PfNMA ' 11l attend to itirveyin9l farm., roads, Ao Al .plioatlona addressed to BualtLiarg P 0, will re lye prompt atLealiOn. Feb 10. 69 Om. WILLIAM IP NV ILIPOS 111 I 4 wiLeptc, ATTORM NY'S AT LAW- rueL LIMIN ollise on Alleglinj street, to tho building for srly oneepled by Iletnee, McAllister, Hale A Co auks's. 10-bo•lysar. 1 - ATTORNEY AT LAW, attend to All proferaional huatnees entreated hie oar.. Particular oiler don paid to colleo out, Ao °Mee in the Arcade, second /lour, with of 11 n II hlalr J 'weary 13-59 If IRA C. fIIITCIIIELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, BILLI.6YONTIL, PIIINN'A., .11 caul roue the practice of Ida profeeelon, In the "n., • heretofore occupied by him, and will attend promptly and faithfully to all butainces entrusted 1,, him Dec 21, 19SH ly. WAS V RIACIIAN Val, ATTORNEY AT LAW, OSIAX.PONTS, PA. Pro Cello omit Maxine._ roomy° prompt Mien 'iou Collections mai in Centre, Clinton aud counties omen on Alleghenystreet In the building for oierly ocoupledby Linn k 'Winona. Belli Pints, J woe DO, 'bit J. D. WINOATE, RESIDENT DENTIST . _ Niko and swidence on the North Ewa Corner of the Diamond, near the Court llut4se. &v Will be rotted at him office ezoept two week's to ouch tumult, commouoiitg on tho first Monday of the cuenth,wheh h wltl bo awe fillies profaufonat data. D. G. L. rovries, PHYttiet AN- at 131:tftfirkg)NV` - 11111LLIPONT11,,,O MMMMM CO , PA, (Mr., , OJ High Strust (old °Mae ) Will attend to rornmelon.d nails rs Iturutofure, and roeneetfully hli Curl itne to 1114 friuude and the public Uut 1S• 58-tf. DR. J. U. VIITCHEI.I., PHYSICIAN A SURGEON, osta,croscra, c TTTTT co.f rg - Will attend to professional exile u horetofore, and respeolfully offers his services to his friends and the puhlat (Moe next door to his residence on tiprfug street Oot 28-58-tf. ADAM HOY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, esiA.gronts, W 11l attend promptly to all legal business Intrusted to bim. Epeeist attention will be given to the 00 rphene Couti Frei:Ups and lEierivening. His office Is with the Hon. James T. Hale, where he oan allwaye be ooneultad in the English and German .riatiguages ■ C. IWIIII. X. X. WA1.1./STXX. J. T. lALI :•. e. CURTIN. impvivirt 1111441111. -o►- HUMES, MoALLIETER, HALE & 00 1111.1.111101?1, CO., PA. Depoilts Reoelved—Bllls of ambling. and Notes Dlesountad—lnterest Paid on Spatial Depoalts— Collections Made, and Proceeds Remitted Prompt• ly—Exclinge on the East constantly on hand• June 2nd, 18b9. J. B. IMO Winl, ATTORNRY AND COUNSELLOR lIILLB /011 Tlll, W ill practice hla profession : in yhe several Courts of Oestre Ceenty, AU Mishima Intrbsted to hint will be faithfully attended to. Partlenlar attention paid to eolleotiens, and all 111011101 promptly re. milted. Can be consulted in the German u well as in the English language. 011ioe en Hight., fortuorly oeoupled by Judge Burnside and D. O. Beal, Esq. sArcameo nouns, —ow WM. P. REYNOLDS & CO., wit.Lgroirri, 011PITS.11 00., PA. Bills of exohanse and Notes discounted. Col leottons made and proaseds prostiptd, remitted —• Interest paid on special deposits. Ezohans,ja thQ eastern clam oonstantiy r hood jot sae. Depot. its re:miring ti A .ril 7th, 1889. • V. r t JcilllSlAßri DRUGGIST 11111LLarOlti, rA, WIIIOI4IIALII Altallll DI•LAIR , rage, liedlotnes, Pe ery, Paints, ON, Var. dishes, Dye•Stulte, Toilet Soaps, Brushes, Heir and rooth Brushes, Pane" and Toilet Articles, Transit' 'id Shoulder Brans. Garden Seeds. gluttonies" will And 'aye' oak maples" sod hulk 4 all sold it moderate prioas, Premiers and Phyelelsee ent the ocsistiry nailed to 03141111110111 m 7 stook. Lady-141"W* -- The following grooeful tribute to Lull;trank lin is from the pen of Elisabeth H. Whittier, ei■ ter or the Quaker Poet of Amesbury. Fold thy hands, thy, Work it over Cool thy watching eyes etPlt tan Let thy poor heart, overwetuled, Klett alike frotn hopol Mid rearm Ilopeop, ibitt saw with sleepless vision, One end plauro fading mloW , Fears.that followed, vague and nameless,. Lifting bank the veils of /now. For Lb* bravo osio r tuf -thydationts, - -- Trueet heart of 'woman. weep ' Owning Still the love that granted Unto thy bblevod Weep Hot for him that hour of terror, When the long toe-battle o'er— In the aimless day his comrades Deathward trod the i'otar shore Spared tho cruel °old and famine, Spared tho faiallng.haartiaolaaptur— What but that could mercy grant hum ' What but that haa been thy prayer Dear to thbe that last memorial, Prom the dnirn beside the sea Evermore the month of roans Shall be mitered limo to thou' Bad it is the mournful ynw tree 0 er his slumbers many not *eve , find it in the Knglish daisy May not blossom on his pare But bin tomb altall atom and winter Shape and faablon year by year Pilo his mighty ntatntoltunt Block by block, anal tlaron her I= Guardian of its gletuning !Hoist Shall his stainless honor be, While thy love a sweet immortal Hovers o'er the winter sea ' [Correapondence of the Charleston Mercury Naw ICUSIL. Oct 27.—1 t stir retreating to talk with Lowe, the big balloon man. Ifs is perfectly sure of crossing the ocean in safety. Much sublime confidence in tmid( breeds it in others ; and all who have ever listened to !kw Professor's calm &acolytes upon the possibilities of the thing, share with him the belief that tie will achieve a comfortable passage to Itirope 'Use alti • tude of his flight be about three miles ; and sflould he find the expected easterly current flowing, steadily enough, anti the texture of the balloon, and the operation, of the ma chinery (for ascending and demo-titling with out a waste bf gam) equal to his hopes, -the daring wronaut will probably continue his journey from his first landing place tit Eu rope, and make the entire circuit of the globe by a senes of flights, lauding eventually cii the American seaboard The principal bat k er of the enterprise, Mr Gilbert, a driving young business man in Utica, 111 this State, is wholly confident in the suceewful reyitit of the grand experiment. fle offers the best proof of his faith by investing a large sum of money in a shape on which the in surance companies will take no amount of preudun. His only hope of muuneration is in the twenty-five cents patronage of the fickle public, for the securing of which he has obtained from the COll/1121011 Council the free use of the Crystal Palace Square, fenced it in, and will theme exhi lilt the balldon and all the mechanical apparatus and parapher nalia, for about a foi yiglit before the exeur sion. Should the trip be made as safely and expeditiously (thirty-six or forty-eight hours) as he expects, he may, with the coutinued co-'operation of Lowe, attempt to establish a regular balloon express kletweeu this country and Europa, fee the purpose of taking out orders, and other important business paper from our merchants, and doing, in fact, the same class of work which the Atlantib Tele graph was intended to perform, and for whioh life merchants of New York could af ford to pay handsomely. An 'order upon a European house for goods, sent over eight or ten days in advance of the steamer might be worth thousands of dollars to a liege dealer at I particular state of the market. The ef prose charges will be paid only on proof of delivery. Of course lhe balloon will have to be sent back by steamer, as no regularly westerly current has yet been discovered.— Mr. Lowe's accompanying party of six per sous is said to be made up, but he keeps their names to himself, I saw a young fel low at the Crystal Palace Square, the other day, anxiously hunting after the wronaut, to offer him $125 fbr one seat in the car. Al though Mt. Gilbert is appposed to be the principal capitalist of the enterprise, several other smart operators have a financial finger in it- - among them Benjatbin and Henry -Wood, brothers of ]Fernando. Fernando him 41f is investing, sot half so wisely, in the tozart Hall organization, with the Idea- of being elected Mayor. BXLLXVONTR, PA You will observe that a Col. Forbes makes some very interesting disclosures 'limit tho Harper's Forty treason and murder through the columns of the Herald of to-day. This Forbes is one of the best known figures cm Broadway. He Is a tall, bald-headed, care lessly-dressed man, with a half-warrior and half-student: look, andAitput 55 years of age. Be is an ardent Republican,. of the cosmo politan school. Hs has been an adherent in turn, of Mesta', Kossuth and Liaribaldi. Belem VOttrt [Yroln the indepenaenc) istellantous: New York Gossip He was a man originally of great wealth, but spent it lavilhly 111 advancing the, " human' itiiidn cause," and reliMring the everlasting "dowti-ltbdtton nationalities" of 1 4 3uropo.— RASE% ti R * ItinearirdUrrfan ,enoug - h. Tad waa misled by lila nyinpatlies, and his lye; noiance of Mit inatttotiotai into a• co-operri. tion'witb "Old Brown." Some is aO4OIIIIIIIIMW After a well known thong' or n atal had administered the usual oath to the grand and petit juries and bailiffs, be turtbd to the presiding Judge and remarked : Solicitor—May it please your 1100 I do l l not remember any form of an oath_ lam Wed hillielo - T4Y Whirs / but by your per mission, I think I can frame ono that will be satisfactory to the Court. Judge—Proceed, Mr. Solicitor. yohr hand on the book—where upon a tall, lean, vinegar faced son of Anak St'epped op And 16:imptly gribbed the hook. Sol.—You to solemnly Swear, in presence of this Court, and us lawyers, that you will yourpositien nx artd — thkre remain with your eyes skinned during the entire Session of this court. That you will not suffer any one to !peak above a low whisper, and if hny ono shall dare to- do so in presence of your royal highness you will vociferotisly exclaim, "Sifence in the lob by ! ' and if (utter Is not immediately restor ed, you further swear that you will, by one pondertus blow of your list, planted between the peeperi of the olTentlet*, knock hirndowlt. Ali this you will do to the 'best of your skill and knowledge, nn help you trod. Thu bailiff took the pueltion assigned him, and inumdiately after the court was organ ized, Tom Digger*, who looked as grebn hn young gourds, walked into the room wear ing brogans No. It, and his hands thiust deep in his pockets, and inquired : " Hello, fellows, where in thunder is Jim linelhns I" •' ' - knee in the lobby !" roared tho en raged uflietal lirogxne Yon must be an all-flreditarna foul, and et ye list open thit bread trap of yonr'n agin your mammy won't know ye Wherein.,” Jim Jarvis, the hada, let fly the dogs n 1 star. and greeny roll flat on his hack, with hie pedva}alai at an asiChor toTty degrees in tfie KW. lre grarkbeil greeny by the seat el his trousers, and dnigsed hitti wrong end jun.:no/it into the presence of his Minor the presiding Judge and said: " Mr. Judge, here 'a that infernal John Diggers, tl.at wasn't never in a court house afore, and he undertook to run over this rhlrken : but neeordin' In my oath I fetched the tarsal older up stooding, by giving him jerl, ate tin the eyes 'eordin to law, and nowuny the elm] and HI maul the dogwood puce octet I afore you kin Wink yer eyes twice Judge - turn him loose, .11r. Bnihf , and accept the thinks of the Court for the prompt disehioge of your inetal duty. [Exit greeny, tyl.th eyes as large as sau cers. The Bashful Man Washington Irving, at a party in England, one day pleylully asserted, that the love of annexation a loth the Anglo Saxon race displayed on every occasion, proceeds prob ably from-its mauratse nettle rather than its greediness. As a proof, he cited the story of a bashful friend of his, who, being bilked to a dinner party, sat down to the table next to the hostess in a groat state of excitementt owing to his reclean life. A few glasses of wine mounting to his brain, completed his confusion, and dissipated the small remains of Ins presence of mind. Casting hia eyes down he saw on Ins lap some white linen. •' My Heavens," thought he, " that's my shirt protruding at my waistband." He immediately commenced to tuck In the of fending portion of his dress, but the more he tuckedrin, the more there seemed. to re main. At last he made a desperate effort, when a sudden crash around, and a scream from the company, brought him to his senses. He had been all the time stuffing the table cloth Into his breeches, and the" last time had swept everything clean oft the table.— Thus our bashful friend annexed a table cloth, thinking it his own shirt. A prisoner unde sentence of death in jail in pover, Del.. broke his prison bars and es caped. Ile afterwards called upon the At torney General, coolly seated himself In his °face, and informed the gentleman that he was prepared.to go back again, whenever ho could be assured that he would be safe in so .oing. Several °Shim social companions had been discharged, and In their stead a woman had been placed in jail near his colt who was afflicted with thoscarlet fever. Ile said he did not care a straw about •the iltentenco of death hanging over him, but ho didn't want to catch the disease. The escaped prisoner was escorted back to his old quarters. "Ain't it winked to rob din chickon roost, Bob I" .... sipd a Williamsburg colored worthy to his pall "Dut'.g a great moral question, Jim ; we hain'tiiie.-thns to argue know. Hand down another pullet." The four notes, of $lOOO each, stolen dom tune ago (rein the Commercial Bank •f Mon treal, have been returned by a Roman Cath olic priest. It is supposed that they reach ed him through the confessional. COUNTY, PEN raying to a'Andienot.of One. Governor Poster, tho known thelitii • cal manager, some time ago orpnized a the atrical =clammy:ifs-play shertrongagellhents in various towns and cities of lib Wait. • A tek or two ago they arrives; at tuayttiA, where thlla wore issued, 3 ball rented, and proprietors engaged. During their stay a novel incident occurrto, al ii4ph is bold so *tally by the Jam nal b that village, that we giro it in its own wonia : Voster was sitting in the hotel, rutni., hating, itt alt probability, upon tie 1111 house he With to have in the evening, whei) stranger ente6ii the room, with , The - tiveinitiglii on teti in haintitent i hand. "Are yod the Irminger i3ll the theatre ?" (tooth the stranger. am, air," replied Mr. Fostarr. "You are to play Richard !IL to-eight ?" "Yes, sir." am. and always have bepn extremely fond of 'theatricals, bufnever : have had an opportunity of seeing Richard ."Yery welL sir, come to.-night." "Unfortunately, I leave laraPpiabis evening on the 6.46 train. New hoof vouch money would induce your company to tday Richard for me, this afternoon ?" Foster, thinking the Want* was joking, replied that ho would do it for twenty•five dollars. The stranger looked at the bill again, and Winfred what would be the ex tra charge for the "Rough billitoond." To carry out Vie joke, Foster replied ten dol lars. To his utter surprise, the stranger "pilled his weasel," counted oat thirty•flve dollars, and handing It to remarked that he would like to have th. play corn mcnce no later than two o'clock,. roster got the company together, and re lated the circumstance. The idea of playing Richard to on audiedde of one, was so ex cessively ridiculous, and so now to their ex perience that they consented. Two g;iclock came, and the iolitary audi• coca assembled . ehoJetng en • hie posi tion, and cocking his feet uptio _ back of a seat in front of him, he waited or the +per formance to begin . The bell g. up went the chrtain, and the play coin d. Never did actors do better. They an e to them attires to give their primes, Aineenteempolient fatty worth the orient Old flit ill **My succeeded. The strangor aPPrcled rigor candy at different points, and a tfioaciie of the play called Mr. Fannin before the cur tain, who responded in a neat little speech. A dance and a song followed, after which the farce of the ••Itoitgli Diamond" was played, the audienue.laughed, roared, and applaud ed, aud,es at th 6 close of the first piece called out the lea ling actors. Who thi i lib eral patron of the drama is we know not, but a inure eccentric operation we never wit nessed Union of a Man and Wife after a Sep- aration of 47 Years A man and wife have recently been united in lowa, after a separation of forty-seven years. Mrs. Crull roce . ntly applied for a bounty land warrant, as a reward for the service of her husband during the war of 1812. Ile had enlisted while on a visit to Philadelphia, and was reported to have been killed in an engagement near Lake Cham plain. -Messrs. Shepard . 1 Overton, of Bur lington, lowa, her lawyers. asmrtained that Mr. Crull himself had entered • land war rant for lands in Hancock county, and it was eventually shown that he was living in Jefferson county, New York. The Burlington liawkeye rays : "haulms that soon after the enlistment of Mr. Crull, Mrs. Crull, finding it difficult to support herself and her two small.. children, ono a babe, re moved to another part of thit State, and there hearing that her husband was killed, made no further effort to loam of bim, And he, after his discharge, returned to the town where he formerly resided, and was there told that his wife and children had moved away, *no since died. Believing himself alone in the world. ho left forever his old residents and assobtates, and took up his abode in Jefferson county, New York, where he has since resided, ever cherishing in fond remembrance his now, to him: forever lost faintly. After years of hard toil and suc cessful effort, and the marriage of her only daughter, Mrs. Crull in company with her son audition-in-law, moved to this State, and settled in Wappollo, Louisa oonnty, where she has since resided in the family of her daughter. A few days since, - Mr. Crull ar rived in Wappollo, eager to see her whom he had mourned as dead, and once again behold his children. But what a change forty-seven years had brought about I A formal intro duction was needed to aestualif—chose wko should have spent their lives tootheirk" , RATHIR: Rowawrio.—A butcart an Eng lish provincial town, was recently married in church ; and, after the knot was tied, the bridal party proceeded to an inn to tqfruh themselves. While drinking and carousing. an GSA sweetheart of the bride dropped in, and while the party were in "high jinks" he put his arm around her neck and gave her a kiss. This enraged the bridegrooin. and a tight took place. As the rivals were spar ring on the floor, the wife jumped np; and placing herself between them, took off her ring andAsilaiig it at the bridegroom, and shortly afterwards made oft with her former lover. The bridegroom sobbed and wept bitterly at his loss. i l iiiEliBlA - Vc - NOVF I MBER 24,1859, We take the following from the November numbei of the Atla,ntic Monthly. It is very truthful and tery belutthil f'o hunian being can rest for any time In a state of equilibrillin, whore the desire 'to live and that, to depart just balances e h other. Il nee has a house, d and always means to !IVAN. he p eines 'hilnself with the thought of all the coneeniences tt offers ,Aim, and thinks - little of its wantA of Imperfections But once] haling made up Kis Mind to move to a better, every incom modity starts out upon Lim.,Until the very ;_ratind plan of it-aeeine to Iran - qtmpiged:in his mind, and his thoughts and affections, each of theirii, packing up - its little bundle of Circumstances, have quitted their several chambers and nooksand migrated to the new home, long before the apartments are ready to receive their bodily tenant. "It is so with the body. Most perbons have died before they expire—died to all earthly longiegn, so that the last breath is Qnly...ssitor.ciatAte. demi t • already deserted manshiri. The fact of the tranquility with which the great Majority o't dying persons await this locking of those gates of life through which its airy angels have been going and coming, froth the Me mel of the first cry, is familiar to those who have been often called upe i to witness the last period of life. " Almost always there is a preparation made by Nature for unearthing a soul, just as on a smaller scale there is for the removal of a milk tooth. The roots which hold hu man life to earth, arc absorbed berets it is tufted from its place. Sotne of the dying Aro weary and want rest, the idea of which is almost inseparable in the universal mind from death. Some are in pa 1 .4., an want to be rid of it, even though the -Anodyne be dropped, as in the legend, from the sword of the Death Angel. " Soine Are Stupid, mercifully nacortized, that they may go to sleep without long toss ing about. And some are strong in filth ant hope, so that, as they draw near the next world, they would rain hurry toward it, as the caravan Moves (miter co'rer the sands when the foremost travelers tend 'Nord along .thsAlo the{, witAlT2s. 'eitch title party that forloari in a foot track of Its own will have it that tbb water to which others -think they are Jutteti ins is a mirage, not the less has it been true in all ages, and for human beings of every creed which recognized a future, that those who have fallen worn out by their march through the Desert, have dreamed at least of a River of Life, and thought they beard Its murmurs as they lay dying." The New liork Tnbnne publishes a long letter from the notorious James Redpath, one of the vilest of thh pack of Abolition emissaries who was active with the pen and not the sword in the Kansas troubles, the object of which is to attack and weaken the testimony given against John Brown by the editor of Lll Herald of Freedom, in the arti cle lately published in that paper. Ile Un blushingly avows that he was one of the members of the " Secret Oath-bound Order" .referred to in the article,, - whose password was " Lane," and whose object was the cold blooded assaosinatiou of unarmed men. llc also avows that old John Brown had no hand in the murder of Doyle and his companions, and assigns as a reason, that, he has been told so by a man who was one of their mur derers, and who confessed to him all the par ticulars of the transaction. What reliance is to be placed on the statements of a man who thus acknowledgeshimself the associate and confidant of assassins I Tme 1111213tY-UP MANIA. -A Down East pa per expresses the opinion that if a big mor tar could be constructed, which would throw an immense bomb shell, containing fifteen passengers, from St. Louis to Boston, in five minutes, with an absolute certainty that fourteen would be killed by the explosion, tickets fbr seats by the " Express Bomb Shell Line" weula at once be at peciremium, each passenger being anxious for the chance to provephimself "the look; fifteenth." An o4itor had a bottle of. London,' Dock gin piose`nted to him, and after drinking the whole of it, he wrote an article in sub stance : Here'slo the ladies and other tninches or business (hic) in and around town—and especially tho Mesident's Pressage, Mon ington Washument, etc., all of which may be found cheap at the Burek--(hic)—DroOk —Prook and Duck store of old London Doe jin, for $2 ► year if payment (hie) is de layed until the end ,of the Calantic Tablet' "I ray, liiiidlordo that's a d—d dirty tow al for, a man to wipe on I" Landlord with a look of amasement "Well, I swear, your'o mighty par ticular. Sixty or Seventy of my boarders have wiped on that towel this morning, and you are the first one to find fault" Labor to be rich in grade. A little star yields but a little light, and a little grace will yield but a comfort ; but great mess urea of grace will yield a man not only a heaven hereafter, but also a heaven of joy here: Woe comfort 14,a heave* flower -u pitmans jewel and only to be found in their bosom who are rich in grime. Dyihft 1:f," A man—so called—residing in Johns town, beat his wife nnmtrelfully and almost bit the nose from her (ace, one night last week. The brute ought to have both hi* arms amputated at the shoulders and'-hl teeth all pulled out of his head. j]:=7" Noble Consistence.—When Algernon Sydney was told that he might !Ave his life by telling a falsehood—by denying hls band writing—he said : When God has brought me into a dilemma in which L must assert s lie or lose my life, he gives me a clear indica tion of my duty, which is to prefer death to falsehood." t o- When you have overcame one temp tation, you must be ready to, enter the lists. with another. As distrust, in some sense, is the mother of safety, so security is the gate of danger. A man had need to fear this most of all, that he fears not at all. Ir 7" Weak ohnstians are overcame with little crosses ; the least cross does not only startle them, but sinks them, and though they have many comforts for one cross, yet their hearts are so damped and daunted that joy and comfort flies away from them, and they sit down overwhelnrd. Certainly this speaks but little of Christ within. Some idea of the extent of the gam bling operations in Memphis at the present time may be based upon the knowledge that a gentleman from Arkansas-lost the sum of $20,500 one day last week at cards. , I the game upon which the money was adventured and lost is known to modern card players as " seven-up," and will be remembered by the ancient as " old sledge." (7 What strange Creatures girls are.—; Offer one of them good wages to work for you i and ten chances to one if the old woman Can spare any of her tit*; but just propose tnatiimony, and see if they dont juttip at the chalice of working a life-time for their via tuall and clothes. (ICJ"' When Mr. Jethro:at was asked re specting his religiono his Memorable answer was : "It is known to God and myself.— Its evidence before the world is to De known iu my life.; if 'that has been honest and du tiful to Society, the religion wbioli Inn regu lated it cannot be a bad one." oupPrNas Irr The breve may full, but q&nnot yieM, The just man will flonrieli in apte of envy. ktperience, bought with pain, hi in s'ructive. lE7' It is escier to be wise, for othels, than for one's sell. Tho drop boilows the stone not 07 force, but.frequent [V — - The Yellnsy 1 ama rentral Audi - mid has carried, in the past two years, over two millions of passengers, without the loss of a single life. • , rr The first sroallow.tailed emit that old Sourby got;" so displeased him that he starched the tails and used it for a boot jack. c r y- Duelling came into general practice in settling points of honor, in 1515 It is pro hibited by law in the United Siates Army and 'Navy. Q? It is a Chinese maxim, that for every • stimulate'. nat. stock, and exer.y. -WWl= who is idle, some must suffer cold or hunger. Loafers take notice. _117" An exchange paper say.; : The best Safety valve to a boiler is a sober engineer. Congress may legislate till doomsday, but as long as - the officers carry ton much strata the boats will folloW their example. When a Lake Superior Indian gets the small pox lie closes the door of his hut— kills his dog, and then shoots himself. For arresting a contagion, we can inniglne no plan more simple or enemal. 1 3:7- Thirty four years ago a rmilVicted mur derer escaped from the Cumberland, Md., jail. Thinking the memory of his 'crime ellaced, he visited the town week trfore hitt was recognized, arrested ■nd commited to jail. - A m►gistrale asked an Irishman whom he was questioning ; " have you ever seen the sea ?" I ver seen the say, yer honor 1 Bo sabers, and dra your honor wipriose that I was trundled all the way over the salt ocean in a wheelbarrow I" ET Near Warren, Conn., is posit& on a meildow tbnee the following (ttiessenl to • Hera. !Every man or I;oinan lonia there kows run the rode what gits inter mi med ders aforesed shell hay his tale kut of/ WM* Obilish Rogers. ):7" Toleration.—Two lines by Pope char itably pronounce mere) , to men el every re ligion, provided it Is not a rellelfiri without morality • • For modal of faith lot greasien zealot/ fight ; hie can't be wrong, whose life b in the right 07 When a Man goes from the sun, yet the stfnbeams follow him ; so when we go from the Sum(' righteousness, yet then the beams of his tom and mercy follow us.— Christ first went to Peter, who had denied him, and the rest who had forsaken him. rr The Ring of the Sandwich Islands. hi fit of. jealousy, shot and dangerously Wounded his Private Secretary, on Septem ber 13th. The glair caused great excite ment. The King at one time contemplated abdicating hie throne, but had reconsidered his Intention. : SI bon' •DirAMM. • VOLUME 4—N unit A' 47 shverpolterp t iie 111r97 W. Shelley, herself 'genius, and wife of Shelley the poet, wrote as 44_7 leWs, filter ° li`ei-litfebAturs death. Theiriel of the queen who Said, an she sung herself on the grOont4- "Item 1 sorrpn end sit, Here is my throne, bid Itinginsome bowls) it," • was not more overmastering. Religious writers have quoted the passage to show how powerless arc ^the consolatimui of in-- delay, in the tesgidipre.:ence of some tro ll] ri.dous sorrow of real lire. It .is as ".I will only say._ that all except hisheast (which was inconsumable) was burnt, and tlfat two days ago 4 went to •Leghorn' and beheld 'the small box that contained his earthly dress. Thane smiles- that form— Great God' no -he is not there • he it; with me, about me life of my life, apd soul or any soul I II his divine spirit did not P'eni trate mine, I could not survive to weep thus. Von will be with me in all my studies, dear eat lore 1 , Your tunes-wilt no- 4espoi , eir-- plaud me, but hi sp:iit you Will visit and encourage me : I know you *ill. What were I, if I did not believe you still exist I It is riot with you as with another. I be 7 tier., that we all live hereafter : but you, my osly one, yowl *spirit caged, an elemental being, enshrined in a frail image, now shat tered. Do they net all with one voice assert the Sallie ? —l'relawny, Hunt, and many others. And en at last you quitted thia painful prison, and you are free, my Mel:. Icy ; while I, your poor chosen one, am left to live as I may. What a strange life mtne has been ' Late, youth, feat. and leatleiti ness, led me early fro the regular kill:Rine of life, and I united myself to this being; whc, not one of US, though like to us, was pursued l'y numberless miseries and annoy ances, in all which I shared. And then, i was the mother of beautiful children ; but these stayed not by !tie. Still he was tl.,re t 1 and though, in truth, after my W. - . 011111 death, this world seethed only a ciuijkii.nd o sinking beneath my feet, yet beside nig Wail this bank of refuge—so tempealctorn and frail, that methought its very weakness wad strength, and since nature has written del , act.actithi Oh its brow, so the Piwit lijlet ru es hilmila shill had ergiuthorbed, In spilt of nature, that it should satire. Bat that Worse. iilli Seiseailiir.aiii..4lKOeiiii , S the earth no longer receives the Akins tit his form ; annihilation has come peer the . earthly appearance of the most gentle crest. Lure that ever set breathed this air; and I hm still here--still thinking. existing, all but hoping. I cannot grieve for you. be loved Rhelley. I giieie for thy friends—for the world —for thy child—Most for myself. enthroned in thy lope, growing Miser and better beneath thy gentle infitienth, tktight by you the highest philosophy- 1 004 friend, lover, wife, mother of your children l The glory of the dream ii gone. lam cloud from which the light of the sunset hail passed. (lire me patience in the presont struggle. Meow cordrum roe ! 134,44 night ! , "I would giro All that I ath to beam thou no. art. But I tat chained to time, mad cannot thanes tia part." GM Wile as.• Pelliabbeitur; A Richmond letter-writer thus *Osaka or Goy. Wises rapidity of fir...Jun=llllp: " Gov. Wise, in the character of a scribe. surpasses, perhaps, any man tieing. In point of rapidity he can only be paralleled in short hand, while his writing is almost as legible as print. I lad occasion some time ago to coo , same writing of his, and did so page arterPage as he produced them, I start ed when he was about two pages ahead, and though ballad to compose while I had mere ly to copy, at the close pf the tenth page he was still two in advance.. At this stage he was called to dinner, and I availed myself of this opportunity to proctire a peculiar style of pen, which I thought would facilitate the operation. We both sot to wort again sielz ultaneoutly.; and though he stopped watt (imply to mend his Pen, (he 'ditto with a Oda pen) and now end then walked tepidly round the room, while I meanwhile write with all the tepidity of Which TwtorinilMe ye wound up st the end of the 99th page with the two pages in advance which he had at the start. t understand that he thinks nothing'of answering 23 or 30 letters a day. or rather within the three of four hours be spends in his office, besides attending to other duties and reesiving visitors, 1410 pc dupy much of his tone. ' What I reporter he would make John Wen], of Pslmre, Ms, the MAE' of "the child with two funds," one of whit& wee =patted, Mt we hays previously ted, writes to the Portland Argus the,t on the 3d inst , thirteen days alter Ihe tiptirAtion, the child wee Ilrlog, but oot fully retioreteds IL B. Conner, lictattemster of Pittafieid, te• dorsea the statement in rapid to the chiltli It is a vory singular-eon. , - 'to cure scratches on horses, Wash theft legs with warm soapsuds, and than ink beef brine ; tito itpidtditiOna SO curs Use woro Cage' , A little boy eretirothig fro* t I thandier Sob irr ool: oh d ism :4 katos 1 oothet tori ': klilk adamodaa llfillet kbOre a i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers