A GLIMPSE OF HEAVEN =I A sweet little from with tender eyes, Aid a mouth where smile are playing, A dear little head of yellow curls, with the sunlight through them straying Close to the window-pane is pressed, Tiled of book end story— Standing to wetch.the stoVm clouds ctrift. And trace the lightning's glory. The smile fades out (ruin tho sweet rod mouth; floe eyes grow,diro with- wonder— B o i l ed is ,the breath—an with awe she hears The roll of distant thunder, Softly she steals to her mother's side; Pear mamma I the Lord has glien Ms angels charge to open the gates And show me,a glimpse of !leaven ! "They wwung them hack but a little %%aye, Ilut I saw the light and glory— And it came co bright that I closed toy eyes, but I heard,the angel's story— • F o r he spoke in a voice so deep and grand, That it made me start and shiver ; A n d he said the words you read last night ; 'The Lord— , lle is God forever.' "Sometime, I think I am Clod's own child— And ill my faults are forgiven ; And that—if I'm good, He'll carry me home For lie gave me a glimpse of Heaven." a . . • r s • 4 Ah ' the simple words of that little one. How they thrill us with new trusting flow they bring again the earnest faith Where doubts and fears were resting. Again and again, by the'•J y and pence Which panneth understanding," Ilan ltod proclaimed, we 'WO Called or II - What wore are we demandinV Can we not say, remembering thin , our father—thou art calling' Renew once more Our trembling faith And keep thy child from falling. Remove the fears that weigh us down ' Let fuller light be given— • 'fill we ran say, with that little child, We've had a glimpne of heaven. hangr The Loet Ring _t_. I= t.)lr Docket' , t) 1111 ft WAY all VI irrly St 0111'1'1 'limn wkise Draw care hal furrowed W rink le SLr Reis tlre , m,l In homely gar nient 4, :ttid tho struggle betwt en penury and or,titnoss which they r•lnce.l would hour burn an inler'sling si udY philn , plier lkr eyes 'Mere reel as thojigh 4111'11114 ken seeping, he .1.1!” I 11,r4 . 1f11y c.irt rut of her girt har ; ( tort!, Le; ry 11,r tu.ttitr, my g ,, ) I 7% ,, fern"in .1,1, 'sir, I r , • ut tt'.• 1 111 ,4I en, •I'l\ the I. • ill .r , art in ,11floll'Ig, 1011 un• L^ mr4ht krJ,ll.• I d ty n^ 14, 111 1 , 1 ‘1`110,,,,4 lir , »n good. h:c, tt ❑illy moment:l , i to 11 11•'d heard WI c%cr•llrut ~e rulon 111 bly 1 , 1 ,re, fir 11 11,11 S NI ',nth) on Ti.), 1:11; awl I I, .1 . 1 Mt In thr I ramp .4 tow' I , r giving other-n 11101? vICOlell: perllll,, I ,hr , ul•l 111%i: Lent fOnOW if till 1.111, ' WlOll'l of troublo 113,1 roll, , t over Iv I bear IL n 4 I ails, `II • v“prig nvi 1,, r tea TS Wl!li I: trmd of her apron t I ben I htioVt its %Oh y 411 i, !/11Cita, " I ,nl,ge , teil, for the Pori OSP of eharig mg the nub Id mg log her to hi i , ii ,emo , •I don t know as 3ou are, ,, she re plied , and roe proceeded to give me %cry long and Vi . ly Milt iliCt account of her previowo history, beginning hack some lusty tir., when she wus born among the While Maintain, of :New Li am rdi tre I tried to olive!, her, but it was no use I was na pati-nt i i tnie c tie would and inindful of too duly vr , OW , to the wkak, the infirm and the igno rant , but my patience was surely Utell 19.1111%0. punish the reader with the long, fine spun story she told me, ' for a fen linen will euflice to inform him of the material facts. H 1143 wart a widdow, Fier niwti NAB Morel' She had an only nun, Philip, who was employed in an insurance office, and received three dollars a week for his nervicee it wan a good boy and loved hill mother, as a eon Should Up on their united earnings they lived very comfortably in an obscure street, whore they hired two roome. Mr', March's catalogue of her son's virtues was cer imely very r edifying Fle , never spent a cent upon himself , never went out night' , and ittlendedchrolt forenoon and afterno to An evil day hau come On the Sat urday three wealth proceeding, Mr. Carmen, the President of the insurance company, as hit declared, had sent Phil ip with a vnlnable diamond ring to toe jewelers to have the stone reset On inquiry the ring was found not to hove reached its destination The jeweler had never seen it To make the case more or mplicated. the boy denied hav ing received, the ring• Mt. Carmen had never sent him on any such errand. Thu boy had been arrested on charge of s tealing the ring, and was now con fined in jail Mr Carmen was ready to ewesr he delivered the valuable article into the hands of the boy, with explicit directions as to where he should carry it and what should he done with it. ) f--- A r tar VOL. 13 BELLEF O NTE, PA., FRIDAY, NOV] MtER 6, 1868. NO. 44. It looked like a bad case. The poor woman woe in deep distrt‘a. 'She was sure that her darling boy was innocent. .She knew he wouldn't steal. I pitied her and promised to do whai Ocould for her son. When she h i ed gone I called upon Mr. Carmen. I found he wee one of those still dogmatic old fellows: who are never in the wrong, who find It imptiotbie to err, ever, even by design or to, ake a mistake. I tried to argue the point with him, but he would not say much. He told me the story ; was sure he sent the ring by the boy and by nobody else ventured to suggest autt he Might ho mistaken, that ho had sent the ring by some other person "Do you take me. for a sienpletlM, sir? Do you think I don't know what I am about?::- he exclaimed, Imstowing upon me a look of withering contempt. "1 sent the ring by the boy, sir The boy has stolen it. Ncslhing more need be said, sir." Atil he turned to the news paper he hail teen reading. I was not much pleased with the in terview 1 was vexed at the haughty, cte: hearing manner of the fellow ; and c, ideas that oily pique rendered my en dettAttrs clear my youthful client. Irt tied Philip at the jail Ile Was Nely nod OU hie mutlier'e account ; on his own, lie awned not to care. A Inure (rink open lienr(o I boy I never now Ile to d him glory , Itt,ll though him prosy trevettly, h.• wits consibient f n.tLu lA4I I in , oie the 00, lily own, Witt worlekl !nuncellq ll 7.'3": ll n it gernrcl *to m. then for PI !Flat 111 tow rns11111114.1Ilipt11). much rur ur 06....a1vm00t of thr Wl.l 01 111.1 ht I N` 111 g • .11 11, ot 0,1 m,I L , 11E01 IL „vnle vs let ' l l,l/1 111,1L1111er11001111111/ the nl zi morning , ivith what rusAilig the learn 111 the deintlm of the tt .1, I. am.. on Ibr mph day. 1 " 111111 8114 duly ei t t.r,zo 4 1, stud his “Pt• trot Iker .11r, Wet ping iLlnug Ilk , ft Child ni the nil pi... Nlr I' am , n, wok thop•she .tk•iprr.l wl I,i Ile 101 , 1 the duty llt to Vit re at t•tHetl, anti 1111.1 1111 . 11. , / over to me tor cr0...-e t iota I C , ll/1.1 vrr ill:It Ile was bellied, for lir , eorurLinly roul.l livr no met cy Illy 1,, "Ir y u ;Lit , w 'Hung to "wear that yekt I.y.ve the rit.g In tht '•1 ert.ituly I am,'• be replied, vexed sttpl a n gry, for lie tpul ttli4weletl the mime a tiptett 111111'4 In the cout—e if 110 I'ro4l.eX.lllll IWO 1011 lu•g your Honor to nonce r i cticu lady the w,rd of tii wiJuese," Ire marked to the court II 11 I I onor t est ifted readily t hut he had noticed them, as a matter of °nurse; he ol them 10 11 . 14 0111111te4 1111 , 1 Ito rather nntibbeo inn for pro,ning so reepeetable a wariest in to tevere a wanner. ' ,ow, lqr Carmen, way I bog you to viatotne 11111 ring'' ntol I handed hun the (melte had lost It iy mine," he replied, with evident tu;lornulunen ou identify the ring, klo'riu, eir'" '•I do " "That k nil, air. Nifty it pleabe your honor I ehl.il bring but one witness for thedufe ce - 71111TP: TITO MT! trtice the stand 9 " r Crnham took the stand. I show ed him liu• ring. "have you ever seen thin ring be fore "" “I have 'State to the court what you know %boat it Mr. Graham proceeded to state that he was a jeweler; that the ring was loft at his shop three weeks before, by an elderly gentlemen, to have the stone reset -In the gentletnaulp thecourt room" naked. "Ile itl, there he 'its;" and ho poin ted to Mr Castneri The court was astonished; the officers were astonished ; and Mr. Carmen was overwhelmed with confusion Ile ac knowledged his error when there Reg no possibility of concealing it. Ile - asked to correct his testimony, and did to. Mr, Carmen was a very absent minded man ; and the solution of the whole matter is that he forgot all the . 6101.1133- stances eouneeted with the ring. He in• tended to have sent Philip to the jewel er's with it, and eatautly called him for that purpose, but his attention VAS at tracted to somethiu else, and bethought EMI /4 Ti ‘`- TA WI RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION." no more about it: On' hitt way home to dinner, while 'hie mind was absorbed by an important bueineye operation, he had left the ring at Mr. :(Irahatn's. The Me presnion that :he had given the ring to Philip Wms faatened'upoo 6la mint). lie remembered the fact of calling him, and hie Intention Winne a reality. When thus cid-oared he amused the judges with several other instances of absent mindedness of which be hail been guilty, in this manner explaining the mistake he had made. I must dO him the justice to say that he made Philip ample amends in the shape of a hundred dollar bill for the trouble he had caused him ; but I be lieve that Mr. Carmen hated me to the day of his death.. I can only say I should not have punished him so se lei e :y if he hail treated me like a gen tleman A Good Story for LaWyerd\ . _.... It is probable that every lawyer of any note li . an heard of the celebrated Lu ther Martin, of Maryland. !lig great ef fort in the 01S0 of Aaron Burr, as well aq hie .ditiplays in the Senate of the u n ited Stateq, will never he forgotten. Triti , iv in the - hio,r; of gamins are im portant, 1101 We hope to show in this his tort'. Mr. tfitrf.ain was on hie ways to An napolis, to attend the Supreme Court of the State A solitary passenger was in the stkkatwith him, and, tli ale weather Was eXlletiiely cold, the passengers soon resorted Li conroriation i; divert them e ' elvtx froin d.bo much sengdbellty to the, inclement weather Ttie young man knew Ihrtin by sight, itnll 119 lie was ni so a I twyer, the threml of talk aerie be 1 1 gin 11 spin ,ue , elf outof legal matters 11r here i n, " said the young man. I sio just enteiLig upon my carver as a' I twy r, )011 le II no the .ecrer yolks girt' lf, sir, you will gne ttisllr a , i youL,4xpertence, the key to disi :la at the bar, I will ' wh it s ,'" exclaimed Martin Why, Sr. , I will pay your expenses while you ire at Autlapolis ''l) me Stand to your bargain now, and I II furnish y m with the great se of lily mucce as a lawyer The young man assented — Very well said Mir ) Martin —The whole sores of my , 1110e114 in 1 . 0111 . 1111 el ono lii,la uri3ylD, wlnch 1 111.1 down early to go Me ih s. It you I , llow it, you cannot fat; to succeed It is this .1/ ir,rv• 1,, goo, eroit•tira The ,istener wa4 atteuliee—Mullled - threw hitn niinself back to a ph 11090 phical posture, and gave his brain to tue analyst+. with true lawyer palience,of " ilwaya be sure of your evidence " It was too cold a night (or anything to he murk peculiarly out of the old man's wisdom, and at the promising adept in in 111111 learning gave himself to stage dreams, in which he was knock ing and pushing his way through the world by the all powerful wortle, "Al ways be a ura uOllllr evoreuce" ' The morning came, and Mr Martin with hit trudent, took rooms at the beat note' to the : city. The only thing pe. culla,* to the hotel, in the wine bottles I and the etre('roo of fine living, repined to recall very vividly the maxim about the evidence. rhelrottng man -remelted Me -1141X-LlLL lViierever eating and drinking were con cerned he woo indeed a man to be watch ad, evecially in the latter, as lie was immoderately fond of the after dinner, after supper, after everything luxury of wine A few days were sufficient to show the incipient legalist that he would have to pay dearly for his knowledge, as Mr. Martin seemed resolved to make the most of his part of the conraot. Lawyers, whether young or old, have legal rights, and no the young man be gen to think of the study of self protec tion. It certainly was a solemn duty. It ran through all creation. Common to animals and men, it was anoble instinct not to be disobeyed, particularly where the hotel bills of a lawyer were concern ed. The subject daily grew on the young tan. It was all-absorbing to the mind an 4 pocket. A. week elapsed, Mr. Mar tin was ready to return to Baltimore. So was the young man, but not in the same stage with his illustrious teacher Mr Martin approached the counter in the bar-room. The young man wan an anxious spectator near him "Mr. Clerk," said Mr. Martin, "My young friend, Mr.—, will settle my bill, agreeable to the engagement," Tte young man said nothing, but looked everything. , I ' , _ i j / /,- • . : ; _..„..„,, . J OM 'lle will attend to it, Mr. Clerk, as WO have already had a , 'efinite uuder standing on the subject Ile is pledged, professionally pledged to pay my he hurriedly repeated. Where is your evidence 7" asked the „young man. .Eridonon_l” sneered Mr. Martin "Yes, sir," said the young man dt =rely. "Always be sure of ,/our era deuce, Mr Martin. Can,you prove the bargain !" Mr. Martin saw the snare, and pulled out his pocket book, paid the bill, and With great' good humor assured the youngenian • 'You will do,' sir, and get through the world with your profession without advice from me" Progress of the Excavation at Jeru- 12=1 A correspoodent i ef the New York Tunes writes from Jerusalem. The diseoveride flied° hitherto may be Bummed up briefly. The south wall of the sacred area, Harem El Shereer, within which stood the temple, bee been explored to the very foundations. It is found that en one place the wall was no lees than one hundred and eighty, feet high At the lowest point of wall, which is now determined to be also the lowest point of the Tyromeon %Alley, he discovered a small paessewhich he ex plortl for some 1511 feet, of every an cient construction, and evidently intend ed t catry all superfluous water Pre- 1 •lonsly to this diseove4 IL hail been suppled Lunt. the lowest point nab the , soutosest angle of the wall where was the great arch known as ltot , inson Arch Visitors of .berusaletu well re member the spring of the old arch ;it this point. They wen he gratified to learn that all the conjectures A, Ith re I , relic, to what formerly stood there trite been abundantly verified Not oily Naas there a eplendid arch erkeising - the Tyrol-eon valley (the span eel Nil/telt was forty feet across, and the ronssoire and 1111119 %ditch now lie buried in the debris), but beneath this old arch, cue t reed over with a pavement built preselect ably to cover these ruins, lee the ,ones lof au ascii older still, perhaps the etch built by Solomon hits elh The cum plete inve,iigation of dill arch has been a long and costly undertaking, but its Illlee, 14 rely great Hu the side of the Hai tin wall lies the valh y ut the iledruti ant Warren, by a series of shafts and bnrun t, li is ascertained that the pre sent bed of,the stream Iv no lees than forty Net higher than the old bed —I.IIQ bed having been raised by the enormous masses of delatB and ruins that have been hurld over in to the v.illey By the last letter from Jerusalem we received a plan of the system of chambers discovered at "Wilson's Arch," h igher up on the wes tern wall, near the "Walling Place" ut the Jews. Lieutenant Warren has die covLred at a depth of some fifty feet be low the surface of the ground a vast sys tini4of chambers and passages These chambers, whose use has not yet been derided, are mostly about twelve feet square, vaulted and tilled up with rub bish or with water. About eighteen havo been opened, of which it is con- Jectured that two or three are of Sara coati origin and the rest of Jewitil. They branch off right and kit along a great passage This has been followed up for a distance of 2,'t feet; its desti nation being yet uucertaiu, [toil its use problematical. Perhaps, however, 4t was to secret passage for troops, The discovery is intensely interesting, and may lead to singular and most limper , taut results ---A skeptical young eoltegian con. trentedva old Quaker with the etate• went that he did not believe in the Bible. Said the Quaker : "Does thee believe in I France?" "Yes; for, though I have not seen it, I have seen others that have . Besides, there is plenty of corroborative proof that su6h a country does exist." o•Then thee wiy not believe anything thee or others has nt4t seen?" "No ;to be sure I won't . " "hid thee ever see thy own brainsn' "No." "Ever see anybody that did?" "No." "Does thee believe thee has any?" —A Minister met ono of his con gregation, who had coma into possession of handsome property by the death of hie brother, and inquired how he was getting along. "Oh," salt{ he, "I am having a dreadful time, with getting out letters of administration and attend• lug probate court and settling claims. sometimes almost wish he hadn't died." THE NEGRO PARTY'S PRAYER 4 II X. 0. L. All hail the/power of phi Abe's name; White foßis must prostrate fall. Bring out tlie ileeky woolly beads, And crown thorn lord of all. Lot white folks no more raise their beads, Nor dare his ante reprove ; The mighty Lincoln—Abe the first— lies treed the ones we love. Let Constitutions itnil the rights Of Stet°, no more be known: i For he has mete the Sumho roue Superior to our own 'I, this we proved,-for this we fought— The natson's life-blood given, Lord' send the - While - NU till to ll—, - The derkies all to Heaven. Thou 'gent Supreme' ishen done with earth (live to our chosen hand Of woolly heeds, sweet 'rented tribe, A ',lace at thy right hand. Thi• is the prayer of Charles and Thad Aiol Ben, the spoon thief, too , And )3111y, with the vicious eye, And all,the Ruddy crew, My H ong is ono. Old The.l has gone The brunt; ono to prcipara ; So when t whitee came um, by one, They en (nay get a 'here. TH) , THAT AND THE OTHER thlng—A glove. --Tradert to heart.—Confeetionere Near Nlqrtno, in Sicily. in 1815, was found the skeleton of a giant thirty feet high, the head way the size of a hoKs head,' and each of his teeth Weighed Div 1, •t support 00)1,0.1y can have five ounce 4 pL tc t, to board—A :umber yard —Dry '1 hinds— Crackers and codfish —'l hp I Tilt of gowi wiety—Polite A whim at ory ,n 1-• 1,1. i. in ill, I h e Inns 4,1 ILu in%tirrechun to ::.•En ral.r , l 1 , , Itrt tiller:, - • I•IIs Ihi Urn!. r “rk of art —DranNiDg.,(ll t; .0.1 int , to :Mewl itttettoit r I tee+ nn• her boldirl4 Imu h at tvs twin wag Ii hat turn Up ‘ , ll, il/gl . t+ 11.1 Ir I. n+ iy. Ow o 1,11) Ilro t re‘eltlyn w..:lln+t hnn falhng fift p,-c,ent a 11 , or cranking -\,it u t, MI) A La4•hrl, r 4 ft girl ii 41101 Wlll.ll I 'no her h....g) I,ba4ting of the gre it Nlll. yin.. of tt, evening ei houl han.;r• ha it pytriiied cruvodili. 121; loct N said to be engegeil up• n ar , ther Loy k to take the form of a motel - —Mr Dickens 14 .1.1 toy EnAtr.lt pt pent tr h..u• r It Irett :•• ,6 0,00 0 1..) , 664 country ----It i. not plea 'ant when you null upon an ~,luanitaneo an.l expeot a good dinner to he °llene,' nothing but cold shoulder. ' - - hi I 11‘ 111 , 1 you ever see the (at. kill Mountatur N o, Saull,o, but I's e .teen the e..t..4 kill owe hat is the slight ddforeneo between a warrior and a• infant? The one is in, and the other under ones. ._- In Par./. It is raiJ that hoops aro no cigar worn and tiLlt the dk Ills aro either •ry long or 44.50 Mort. Trans n stru sum tag nave hundred ,s t l twenty lit miles east 01 Saertunen to the Cent rst! Itste Hie rood ---The fashion in New York this season is said to be to have no groomsmen at the w edit in .of. _—.-Th e wh ee l of fortune turns suddenly. IMITIE Mite white nice the 44-uweaa of tpain offered protection to the Pope and now she 'leeks it of him. ---Dr. Johnson was wont to Ray that a habit of looking at the best xiule of every event id far batter than a thpueand pounds CO= —Fanny Fern having said that "the men of the present da f y Were fast," Prentice ropfiee that "they have to be, to mach the women." —lf a man bas got any religion worth haring, ho will do ble duty and not make a fuse about it. It is the empty kettle that I=l2 --A wise man once said, "ft has been • source of weakness to every nation under Heaven, that its woman hate had but little to do, and a great deal to say." --Formed long ago, yet made to-day, I'm moat In use when others sleep; What few would like to give away And none would ever like to keep 7 A bed. —The most solemn hour of my life, says old Bachelor Simkins, wee when I was goin home on a dark night from the Widow Sin ith'e after her youngest daughter Sally had told me I needn't come again. lleunorartiy.—There ire 3,837 homeo pathic preotioners in the United States. There are seven oollsges=at. Phdadelphda, Cleveland, New York, Chicago, St. Louis and Boston. Ciente of Olden Times In one of his recent lectures, Profes sor Silliman, the younger, alluded to the discovery of tht_ekeleton of an, enor tnous lizard, of eighty feet. Front tlils the professor inferred, as no living apeol tnen of such magnitude has been found, that the species which it represents, has become degenerated. 'The verity of hie posithin he endeavored to enforce by an allusion to the well-known existence of giants in olden times. The following is the list on which this singular hy poth'esis is based: The giant exhibited at Rotten in 1.850, the professor says measured nearly eighteen feet. Gorapius saw a girl Gist was ten feet high. The giant Galabra, brought from Ara bia to Rome, under Claudius Cosier; was ten feel high. Pentium, who lived in the time ,of Eugene measured 111 feet. The Chevalier Borog, in his voyage to the Peak of Teneriff, found in one of his caverns of, that mountain, the head of Ounich, who had sixty teeth and was not less than fifteen feet high. The giant Ferregus Blain by Orlando, nephew of Charlemagne, was twenty eight feet high. In 1814,1;tear St , German, was found the tomb of the giant leorent, who was not less than thirty feet high. In 1600, nsar Rouen, was found a skeleton whose skull field a Bushel . of corn, and who was nineteen feet high. The giant Bacart was tvleoty-two feet high; hie thigh bones were found in 1704, near the River Moderl. 1823, near the castle In Dauphine, a tomb was found thirty feet long, six teen feet wide, and eight feet high, on which was out in gray stone these words, "Kintolochue Rex " The skeleton was found entire 23/ feet long,' ten feet across the shoulders L and five feet from the breast bOhe to the -back. Near Palermo, in Sicily, in 1516, was found the skeleton of a giant thirty-four feet long We have no doubts that. there were "ginnt ... in those days," sod the past perhaps was more prtylic in producing them Ilion the kreient But the his tery of pants luring the olden time was not wore remarkable than Hilt of dwarfs. 4everql ~ f whom were even smaller than the. Thumbs and Nutls of Mir n Wn time Things that 1 Haw Seen I Ii iv , .con a I•vrwrr }lllll , l a 110114 e .0 largo, that tli sheriff lorord hull out of MS I hate meen a young 111311 sell a goo I farm lurn merchan., and die in an in slne I I. tee seen a farmer travel nh9tit to ❑inch, that there waal Illg xt 1101110 worth looking after hay,. peen a rich inan's P KO begin where hti father left MI, an d end where Ilia father began —perin)lG.4. I hair , seen a young girl marry a young rtimi of dissolute halms, and 're pent cf it as long RP she lived I have omen the extravagance and folly of children, hrtng their parents tepov et ty and want, and themselves ititto dis- grace ,I have seen a prudent, Industrious wife, remove the fortunes of a ,fatuily. when her husband pullyd at the other end of the rope I have seen a young Man who despised the concoct of the wise and advice of the good, end hip career in poverty and wretchedness. I have seen a man spend more in folly than would support his faintly in corn fort and independence. I have seem' a man depart from the truth, when candor and veracity would have aerved him a much better purpose. I have seen a WWI engage in a law suit about a trifling affair that cost him more In the end, than would have roofed all the.Gltihlinga on his farm. _ ARTKIJUN WAItD . I.I TOAST.—Artemus Ward being present at a celebration ex hibition'', was called upon to make a op el', when be replied in a "toast to theVittir eex : Ladies, se: 1, turnin to the butiful (smalls hooee presents was pephumin the fair ground. 1 hope you are enjoy in yourselves on this ocoaahun, and that lemiaaid and whaler es 4hich you air drinkin, may not go agin you. May you allers be fair as the non, bright as the moon, and butiful as an army with Union tinge—also plenty of good clone to ware. Tu yuro sex—commonly called the phair,sex, wo aro indebted to borninge, as well as many other blessings in they) to grownee of sPrro. Hum poor spirited fools blaim yure sex for the difficulty in the gardin, but I her no dowt but Adam would hey rigged a cydor press, anillike as not went into a big bust and drive oaf oaware. Yore first tnuther was a lady and all her &Liners ditto, an 4 nun but aloafin cuss will say a wurd agin yu,— liopire that no waive or trouble will aprons yure peastul breasts, I konolude Lime reauirka pith the telleriu oeuty mint : Womso—e6 e ore a good egg
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers