The Democratic Watchman. BF:I I . LEFONTE, PA LOVE-LIGHT t tit down to the meadow at break of dny down to the meadow, son John. . . Anil labor away 'mong Ike sweeteel hay That ever the nun Kiioll‘oll And John ho went down to the mendowdand But he snw not the clover sweet, %nd the sky was shin, fin he inhised the sun, Though it reddened his blow with heat. Ile missed the Fl u ff, Mai he 1111.011 Ilze light Anal the world mooned modile don n, ran lie caught the eight of x chute so bright And ookey gown, Till he el - night the sight of a golden bead, And a fair and merry fatte, lien 00 bright and routul, it lilt a madden hound, The nun mell up in his place, he sun went up, and the light came down, led the field ortm tilt aglow, VI Llle hn hPart kept tbse to the merry rhyme I ' tit the reaper's motif Luton, „.; Awl Mary, she laughed ut her lover i n mood, Aq she turned from his fond carols, 'I hough OW south s Ind blew, from her lips • no true, The SWOOI little answer, "las • • • • • • • nh Nltert•fore so glad 77 ' ntild Parni e r Grey "Oh • wherefore no glad, son John ' tr.drtrrryntlrtt Invere+emt Tina Cr the nun shone on " • hot John knew nothing of rain or flood„ Anil nothing of ruined hay, the floc era of Joy, to the former's boy Were scattered along the any kml mt rr, the wedding-hell! rstngout %rid merry the pipern diet play, ki the golden dawn of the happy morn "I hat mMered the marriage day A HEART HISTORY II) iunie 'MOW to. the last person in the on who wiitild Setftl to have a rilmi n4ocon nerted with her life, and when one its •he told me the following story, I libtene In a, under. Ihar Aunt Alice' I see her now, as Ate:at:that afterneon„with her soft white rap upon the sillier haii‘ and her hands folded over the snowy apron. IVlien I was young, she began, I was ,alll4l a beauty. I was a fair girl with health anti strength, and at one tune quite the belle of our little s dlage Fath er was wealthy, and we 1 , , , •1 *, ' all 11- linp p; a , the day a as long It w aP, at that blissful period of iny life that my playfellow and boy-lo s er. Allen Harley, returned, front college, and from the old time (df the doll-home and its 11,C1',,tni,aninierils, we began to talk of real life and n future in each other's sot iety. I loved the limal •oine fellow, and when lie a..-ked me to its wife, my a iswerrwn.from 11 , 3 Ali, Mabel, the days that followed traught with life a beat butit.A, and was happy Allen Waz to .isrttle tic rI I , 2ge d there pursue the practice of wit was its elms, 11 ill , - le . —Poll, wi n alriady the spot for our 11,111 , wu , , 11,,.,•n All the. long tit inter and Truitt, %i,o11.,(1 on, arid before Warn' a cattier eurne, I had a Idle of sfl,nri,y Llaul.eti, inch sheets, and all the 114 . ,',..-111'\ 111/14 ,,, hull and table !Wellloll, Iso ,1 111 11, 111 , 4 the-t,- 111 Ole et NI Aunt Alit e, w Mew 1111 lII,' bear, strut me lug old helinined silt, I r\ ne, and lather added the }cretin -t t hu n t that eonl4l Le 1.111 , Allen aim I thei Ito I,,ek the-, thin g , oi, r. 1111 , 1 11111. 4 , 1 ll , ' happy 1111), that t1 ,, 111,1 .11f , It I,olll', curd 1.111 11,11/ 1,111 11.11111 . 11:. , 1,55 1111,1 , 1 the pro, huilditmr It wae 111 .1 iodine rose , bloomed in our gatil, in, anti tilled the All both tmgran, 'Pb..- broad Held, were ft - - , 11 , 11,1 , Ilt \1 rib tile sinvel pmk and a lute Inns LL,-gnu and the whole earth re po. .I,lie 111 -ulltrner glom toglit I -tlll.l n, OW door, cinch suit. a- 11 , f111110 . ,1 111 , 11.1 , 1 and titer and anon 11, 111 up lue , hand to me It tuns 11 1,,V , d, 111411 , h i ,. .1 . 1 11 h a d rest, awl lit 1,, Lind n a 11111— of pint, and thou, wliteli now floated afar ..it \ (•the tall pine trite and green capped mountain- Ito ri• N'll, not a rullb• lipoo the 'Aso h. I , hot Irk , . on own hottrt, rt Ins sslns, nn.l 1,4%0110 I stood v.:Lt....Ling It Lill til Allen came up, sprung " I 4.1 tilo gat, and stood hosulo Inv A Milo tart of imam lan through ins., andl .. s o s sssi, when is light breeze ryuled lo•ro.4 the water, and dusts's 64,1 ins giss,,3 -orho o • •MI ' I .rid W hat as it, A Ihe '.l only -well, it ma:- nothing I au loth thinking ' I have a letter for pal, he pulling a tinny white'ini. , si‘e from hi, pocket, ••and I know that it in from so.rne i-ohool friend, who in nn U.). 11l 11,110 t , / ,peild the 4tunmer, and otileiate as bridesn la id at your wedding.- I nay it is to., bad It will destroy our peace' It in lin in ritten in a delicate hand upon ,pented parr, and NIL.. no very like the writer, Nettie Ellis, that I did not need to look at the signature to know at IL, origin "I sin cowing, \llie, to 4ay sum mer, if you will let me," she wrote "and ,hall of course expect to he hi idea- Maid )101 marry your hamkomb coring doctor." "Didn't I tell you so , " lie said tri umphantly. "I knew }mit how it would I coaxed him* bad, into good humor, and we eat there dilating of our fu ture, until it grew lute and father called The next week Nettie came, a nd 1:11 never forget how lovely she looked, as she stepped from her carriage, and came iito our little pNtor She wore a traveling snit of light gray, and a dainty little hat, which re— ted upon her curls like a crown, mei made the h weet child face even prettier than ever. •What a sweet little nest, Alice," she lipid after I had removed the hat, and mantle "I know I shall ho more than contented here with you. And so, brownie, you are going to he married Dear me, it quite . marra , me shiver to think of it. Is he handsome?" “ery." "Of course, you think no. Well, I hope so, Tor I think it must be dreadful tn marry a plain man.'. I smiled nt her and called her a lialiy; rind thus Nettie began her visit. Allen ctune,that night, and I saw th •admiration in his e 3 es when he I,lield her, She was really shy, and crept away into the shadow of the rosebush near the dopr, and sat down, pulling the ears of my tortoise shell kitten, and not until Allen went And gave her his hand, could we draw her from her hiding place. She was a mere, child, and would shake her curls down over her white shoulders and laugh until 1 wanted to clasp her in my arms and kiss her. I think Alen felt so, too', ler at such times the great gray eye , ' grew soft and helm fiful, and the smile upon hts lips tender and -fond.. lie lu'ved to set her upon the fence be fore the door, and laugh n hen the cried out that she would fall ; and when ho had teased her a long while, until the bright eyes were brighter with Oars, he would go and put both arms ttrouaul her and lift the weething down, and pat her upon time head I thought nothing of ft, but, idle fool that 1 was, went on w ith m y work, and left them to them sel yes, A II wty long, they drove together, and 1 was only too glad to see thorn happy 1 never dreamed that aught could come between him and me. 1 thought the love which bound us was so clop and strong that death alone could part us ; but, alas I I knew noth invif One day 1 ennui upon them as the 2, sat under the butternut tree behind the, house, and I raw her hand in his and heard her say : 111E=1 boy Ile laughed litid leaned oaer and ki , 4- ed her I would have gone Litt 14y and left them, but her sharp eves caught a glimpse of me, and she called r'Coltie, Alin., and scold tiny had boy I Tent and sat down brsnle—thv-rn mid tried to be merry , but oh, there was a hitter pain at my heart, nod I could not crush out the dreadful light which hail al suddenly gleamed upon me. The summer days passed on , an d I tan that these two hearts were each day drawing nearer, and my poor tir, drift ing away , but I kept a seal upon my lips and Mothered the sorrow that was devotrring me At last uric night I twat op to my room, and, sitting there, I penned a note Willa I meant to timid to hull early the morning I told Imo that I luta seen Ina love for her, and gave bout her null tiod only knows the tears which those_ Imes cost me, hut I believe I aro., frill. the desk stronger than before I lay down Upon in) bed and wept for hours, until •deep came and Ini;lied my grief It lave, late in the'llight when P awoke, and 1 found that I had left nit indoa open and the night air at as fall ing urn in. I anew and went near to cloQe it I luohod t It MILS almost as bright as day, and I could n afar out over the take I t.,1 until I grey. tirl,l, and Ti IT it 111 kit% I' the Witl,lllW, when it light ,no--,1 the broad belt of moon light 011 Lll4. 111%11. I •t,crtrd tip Ti 1111 n c•rT 14:110, mi l, TI fear crept nTII- nm, nna 1 wont Into \t•ltto•' chamber The Nth. room 1, -I (1,101, and the 1,1 , 1118 1 haul It It 11 in ih,• !Hot 111 1110. itt• ,Ito Ali fr.rti t ht• 1111111t1.1, and I ,tool.ll 111111 814 101 l it tip It Wits the sitnw :111d (hal 1 1111(1 1,11,1 I)..b)re, the duet th.• curl) %Hie, forgile iie for him d.airl3 :alai !iv int , ,l hdd 111 that In• .ann.d,, %%ill not hit 1111. , 11t ura• F.•r,tis I and 11,r1.!1't t' I rank all hi:: rtift maul w hien I 11%1 , .10 11 week% lutri , mid the tut, far tt‘‘ity i\j,,l,,hild,the nears, yt:art, htne dru„ till, amid 1 . 11:1%e told tip with 111. 1 111 /11e1 that In 1111 1 1111%0 li t 11%10 1 111%.t 1 lit 111 1 1.11 1 11. Nettw, tutor child, dune hurl: to die 111 . % 1101111 1 , tell ,% luter, litt, I,'.:r, It, 11, ml net Ilya , el, alone k ii t, N %tt .there 111 1 110 W p e old green iheht Ire her -lie I objet t. H 111111, 111 tine, happy ~,I,,v e d to 1111/k upon are 1111 that I 1111 1 . left TIIO ••4,1 t MI ISIIIkNI i WII 111/01 . 1 lIIC 1/11t1 , below the hill,nturt 1 FIIIV II little 1111 V. r her hie She anti pra . Ing fir hire A I lardtdiell IkaptlNl reached 111 \Vaaltington etty lately, and took t or, h tm tex t, "deed Ironic inapt to 1111 i ua•n image. - Ile then commenced, "An hone-d II IS the noblest work of t;od 'Feu 11r made a long pause, and looked searchingly about the tilt 111 e and then exclaimed, "lint I 11111111' (II id Alttligblv haws I had a Joh to thoi city for nigh on to tilleeen -- -A 'Wanda! DA abroad in Butler's district that the thrtfe ladies of the committee chosea at a tali' !fleeting ur Essex to visit the liquor dealers, called on one of them, who invited them into his parlor, and, tiller a short converma tion about their business, brought forth some whisky, which went out of sight at short notice. Only three or four century plants are known to have blossomed in the Uni. ted Status. There was , 01111 in Albany about twenty years ago , one in New York and one in Boston. nue was one in Troy, we beliiits•rlast year, of the year before, and now we hear of another upwi the eit-a-taLVoi.womang in Rochester! The tree is MT American Aloe. It flowers at the age of a cen tury, avl then (lien. --=-"My friends," said a returned inissionary. at a late anniversary meet ing, "let ns avoid sectarian bitterness. The inhabitants or Itindoostan, where I have been laboring for many yearH, have a proverb that 'though you bathe a dog's tail iii oil and bind it up in splints, vow -cannot get the crook out of it.' Now a tuna's AVelarian bias is simply the crook in the dog's tail, which cannot be eradicated; and I hold flint iivere man he tillum.ett a i l-,,a1, 1 1.111 • Life Among Our Ancestors-TheirMan ners and Customs. Thecustoms, manners,literature, arch itecture, history; everything in fine per taining to England, previous to the. seventeenth century, may be regarded as the common ancestral property of all John Bull's progeny, wherever scattered over the world. To a large majority of our readers, therefore, whatever throws light upon the olden time ofareat Britain can never cease to be of interest. The I whale was eaten by the Saxons; and when men were lucky enough to get it, it. ap peared nt the bible in the fifteenth cen tury. In I 246,11enry liL directed the Sheriff of London to purchase one hun dred piecesof whale fur his table. Whales found on the coast were pergaisites of rliyalty; they were cut up and kent to the Ding's kitchen in carts. Edward II gave a reward of twenty shillings to three marines who caught . a whale near Lon don, bridge Those that were fuuud on the bank , ' of the Thames river were claimed by the Laird _Mayor, and added to the.civic feast. Pieces of whale we. often purchased In the'thirteenth century for the table of the Countess of Leicester England was supplied with this choice dainty by the fishermen of - N(;rmandy, who ulnae' it an article of commerce. The Normans had various ways of cock ing it; sometimes it was roasted and ,Theft to the table on a spit, but the jlsuul way was to boil itand servii it with peas Epienres looked out fora slice flora the tongue or the tail. The gram -I+l or sea-wolf, was also highly e.f. 0011- ed, but of all the-blubber dainties,the rilrialiSe Was (11 1 ( 1 111141 the mail savory he Sasouls catl,rt a sett-swine, and the ecclesiastics of the middle ages pus' COIIIIIB - Porpoises were purchased for the table of henry 111 in 1241 i In the reign of Henry I l the wind(' stock of a carpenter's tools was valued at one shilling, and consisted ~fu broad 11X1 1 , 1111 odic, a square, and a spoke-shape "There were very few chimnryii; the lire was laid to the wall, and the binoke is- sued out at the roof, ardour, or window, and the-furniture and utensils were of wood. The people slept on straw pallets, ith u lug of wood for a pillow " Even as late as the time of Elizabeth, 15514,it 1 , stated apologies were Ma& (11 visitors then could uul be accommodated 111 looms pros tiled N l . Ith chimney's They had a few glass windowi,and when glass Was Introducedot we' for . 1114111;.: tune So scarce that when people is,`lll, away they entered the winolow• taken out and lnxl up in safety in the fourteenth eintury none lint the clergy wore linen The household furniture, among the wealthy, consisded of an occasional, a brace pot, a brass cup, I gi idiron and a rug or two, and per- I Imps a tow 1 (if (hairs alai 1111/1 1. 1 we hear nothu .; Es en the nobility sat upon th. hots in which they kept their clothe , . It at. man in seven ) ours after marriage could purchase a flock, bed and a sack of uh 1r to rest Id , head upon, he thought lusziaelf as well lodged as the lord of the town. In faldmon to thus poverty of what scum , to us absolute neeeseities, the home , and tire people wore PTl l ll l llllll4ly dirty Er:1.111111, a celebrated scholar of who y looted England, 111111- plains that "the nastine,oo id the people was the pause of the frequent plagues whop destroyed them , ' and he says their "floors are commonly or clay. strewed with rushes, under w hioh Ito unmolested 11 V1)111.1t1 11 1 1 1,1 hoer, game. 11'11 1 1111 1 11t. 1 , 1111111 1 ., Spittle and of every thing that is 111111.1 1 1111 , Th,ir tables were in, nu-croup supplied u. then dwellings They had little fresh meat, but salted most "(their cattle and swine in November, upon which they m u ,-thy depended, through the win ter Very lew Yegetables of any kind 0111111. 111/4/11 their t. 11 1 ,1 1 1. It r stilted that in the curly part of the reign of Veers 11l not a cabbage, turnip, carrot , or other collide root grew in England The as 'rag.' duration oof human life woe , at that period not one half as long as at the present day The cringtant , use of salted meat, fedv or 1111 vegeta tiles, e,.ut minded to the ,h,, r terua 4 of life, ti) sins' walking of t.lle largo , number sop pt sway by pestilence and famine —Pluck that beautiful flower. Look at it a longlune, aching that it o. the expression of It beautiful thought of Howe lIIIrNI. 'This is the finagle key that will unlock the reason of all nature. All the flowery are thought realized 1'11 , 4 irons the flowers to the trees. The rounded ma tle, the graceful elin,the stratglit pop ar, the bending willow -- every tree is the thought of some mind. I'iu+-4 froul„ tree to mountains. II ow iniglimlh~ se realised thoughts ! l o ook at the ,ca What an undivided thought' der Ile whole earth A world of some ere.' ling flood. Gate at. ~t are Thoughts hue the firinainjtit, flow great, how VI Isl., how 101ely, 110 , A incomprehensible the spirit whose thoughts at e thus put forth ! "The Ilea% elly declare the glory of God, and lie firmament show etli His Lanclivi (irk Day unto da, , uttered) speech, 111101 night unto night showeth knowledge There is no speech 110 T language w here their voice is not heard." Ile that built all things lath - id. We walk upon end in the tnidat of his realited thought,. Ha, carefully and lovingly toward II on we should walk. A yartion warn !Actium. g to an oldsitiner upott liiydearth bed the glorivm tliat awaited hint if he would revent. Ile prow 'tied him, among other things, that he would moon bean angel. "Don't talk that way, pltany k latrnon," maid the tli ing wan i "if there? anything I liner ht,reorof,'tiAßfl4imgaa angt.l, sitting on a Inup elondiTnicking n harp fn the moot, lone.'' The heaviest tall of whisky heard of for a long time occurred at Pittsburg on last Thursday adernoon, when the bonded warehouse of Vinch k poi y way, depositing some three thousand bafreht pithe article in the baseineffi-- aboutpne hundred of which, worth ten thousand &Hats, wan lost. ---Woigh every step that you are about to take whenever passions become ii,volved. How often do things assuine tt different alowt when they are fairly ❑ - i d erod THE GIRL FOR ME Just fair enough to he pi city, Just gentlo enough to he sweet Juni, Fleury enough to be witty, Just dainty enough to be neat. Just tall enough to be graeeful, Just alight unough for a fay, Just dress enough to be - taste!'ll Just merry otiough to he gay. Just tears enough to he tendet, Jost tilghs enough to be sad, 'l • onev Hutt enough to I f`1110 . 111 10. 1, 10tH heart Oro' thetreadenee mad.• glad Just ritoek enough for submission, Just hold enough to he brave, Just pride enough for iiiiihrtion, Just thoughtful enough to ho grave A longue that van talk without bunting,/ Just mischlof enough to tease, Manners pleasant enough to he charming That put you at once at your 01150 Disdain to put down presumption, NO, eO]. to allYYTeril fool, Contempt enough Shown to riamirnpllon, Propel dignity always to rule Flights of fair font y ethereal, Dei Mimi to iimenee full 11111.1, Stuff of the sort of fll/1(el Mid lenity good houseu tins are made Generous crimlgh to he kimnicarttql, Pura as blio ithgolx above—• oh I from hey may 1 aster bn ipuLted, _ For finch Is the Odell I love. The Career of a Guerrilla's Bride— A Romance of the Late Civil War. ' Neatly every pleonnt day pedestrians on our principal avenues pass a dark eyed brunette, of medium size, plump figure and richly dressed In the early spring of 1861, Sue K iteradge, a lovely girl just returned from boanling school, lived upon her father's phintation in one of the rural districtq of hentueky, uncer tain whether to iisk her fate with the new "Confederacy" or hang back She wan seventeen, and tr frequent at • the adjoining plantation of Mr Mundy. an old gentleman, whose wife and son, it young man, composed a happy family One day a company of Union cuvult y rode down upon the place, plundered the premises, carried off the valuables, burned the residence and finally slaughtered the parents, who wer,c defending their own firesides, laying waste the country in their Ira( k, and leaving Mundy and Sim or- plums indeud oung Mundy wne 111 Inst aroused, and while being, carried 011 a prisoner no words escaped his hie , but "Sue. - \V hen asked his name he re peated "Sue - -probably the effect of a disordered brain Ilia linen exuminel, the indelible name or "Niundy was - found, and ever after he was known as "Sue Mundy," the constant terror of and soldiers in that se, - lion. Released an palole, lo• in medi ateß returned and nittlred the charred , remains of his own parents, as well us the body of Mr K Taking a solemn and fearful oath of vengeance, and tie- • 1 companied by Sue, who was now without Mane or ii lends in the wide world, he ' started for a neighbuiing camp of bush- 1 whackers ur guerritlas, w hole he was received with open arms, an7ll wn-Nsociii promoted to the tales of commander ul the force, while Sue, disguised, and pi sing by the name of "Kit, nn abre • N ut tion of Kpletadgo, proved incatunble as a spy, a fearless rider, and of undoubted bravely Kit,after sort ing nearly two years as spy and general planner for the band, found her health failing. Di ginned and armed with the highest testi monials, she succeeded in heCII ring a po sition on tin' stair of General Claiborne, the hardest fighting I rodunan in the tel army This position she held, hi r duty like a man, until the battle of Atlanta, July 12, Istil I, 11l Wll/111 ( . 1111borlIC was ,1,1114.11 Retur mirg to her youthful hero and his band, slo• again re ell, din the 111V111 or blood, -and tho' ter spirit was willing, the flesh cod Klt was again transferral lu guard duty nt Andeisons ;Ile Prl,oller , ' Wlll/ bat o ~111t1, 1 1 the ho:p,tality of that celebrated C/111111 will perhaps remember a short, stout and mu-4_llllu young Lieu tenant, with flushing black e)l,, a file, smooth WI It Inaldefl'S, and cruel, us though u fiend incarnate lurked within TMs ,„•;,, Si..' K iteradge, the anituble young boarding school miss, the 1111 cempanom, the one,. wealth heiress, the beautiful maiden and firm friend of young Mundy, whose life to her was dearer than her own Sue Mundy and a part of his hand were captured, and trued by court 'partial. ICit wad, present during the whole trial, and used her greatest olln ence, but of no avail Sue Mundy wa ,, convicted and hung at LouiPville, Ken tucky, in March, Dins The liou ing hair dill hung about his shoulder,, and when his youthful co-pse %iv+ taken down and laid away In his narrow bed, the likeding and broken heart ut Si' Kiteradge was buried with it , and a wonderer on the fw e of the earth, heincless and friendle,,, she 11%1, A ItllOUt hOpe 'nlllo'l'll or 1116'- c) , forsaken and dishonored, and east away - Darya !'eS(. Till, v Al.l Et' OF JF.IIO4A NI A. - The " ant a good ed111:11.11.01 teach )101r1.0.1‘ 00.. Nor would the ink iee, if understood effirts thoi• Jews bate made, and sid felines, i u. „ ‘„ an d hunainiumai titer in too literal a sense, be sound; lila it is true, beyond altdould, that every 1111111 lime borne for the purpose ~f obtani ing sepulture in, the Vallee of .Ivhosa- who h" had a reall y go" "hleati". luo, II“ne nitely wore for liiiin , elt ghat, forma singular feature 111 human ' than his teachers Late Berne for him, history. No other nation has ever and it is equally true that many of die thus struggled, not to live In their on ii greatest 'nen that In er lit ed, have been land, but to be suffered to lay their dent therein. Many descriptions have selt - educated. For my own part Ibe ii v , e the greatest ilillieulv f in learning been made of this imirvelowi place , but I i 0111C14,1 Ironic of (bent ever aflorded ' I" '''' ''''"'"' " 11, ' 1 J fbe i , liolar in made enure that, with ardor and industry lie etc a notion of its actual appearance. s i': , r , i , i t o i l ,, e r ii i i l hii and t pant lie of h,, h:u ttli . e foun ta in i. , t; mat ,lii viery (lung I s i a himself; and e that w ithout these good qualities no it suddenly opened to toe a perfect trftcher can help hi in." 11.01111141111 of graves—at hillside paved with sepulcilral slabs. Each stone is lo lead to the eOle A poor fennel asked how I kept tny plows so bright I told him when elusion that the Iso.lies hued be buried ever I got through using them -in the perpendieularly. Ar 011 e% ants, if the full, I cleaned and gave them a good multitude there interred %sure .Heiulta coating of grease. lie said thopractice neously to arise, they would VIII "didn't pay." Perversr person, does he crowd as dense and compact es it would not know that the oil and labor cost less mu be enoros. Short Hebrew inscup than the waste of metal by rust, and Irons, some evidently of great age—ate does ho not remember that my spring on all the stones; and these are laid I plowing is half done before his plows together with intervals of only n are io working order? his hens roost few [lichee, as in our oldest in trees during.the Storms of winter,pd churches. The slabs . are almost he complains that they lay no eggs; his on it level with the ground, Ind 0 1 . 1 cows shiver by the side of the fence, equal height, so that it is literally one and he complains that the children ent large pavement of death —an at all Mg too much butter ; he goes to the grocery i , almost NM overwhelininx sight: I wit]) a Jug in ono end of the-seek and a stone in the other, and ho wipes his nose On Ids coat bletwe. - -1 1101111aref7roVer 'I- 11 . 1,11 t IV 111 1 1/ 11 111t4,1 I.V clotntl Giant, row lwanur 111111 'I 1,.. Flulfoln e.o It lor •o‘• 1 ,tolio 1 I it . e of ph , 11 1. .•1, 111, iil.l I, l ' Lilt I I////.fl t 10 ann u l Sollum Thoughts la JON minus. The fear of God is tho tibilosophy ov religion ; the love ov (kid lz the charity, ov religion. Hope is a hen that lays morn eggs than hho , Iml i eh out. Better leave youre than , money ; hut this is a sekret known only hew it few., honestly belenve it it better tee know wit ing than tow know What ain't About the hardest worka ken do ti low spark two galls, at once, and preberve a good average. Prudery IC ono ov lirtew'S bastards. A IliCkflalllo will outlive (may man or thing ; it i•e.. like the crook in It dogg's tale, you may cut it opt, and throw it behind the barn, but the crook 17. Omar yet, and the stump iz the epitaph. If you anallze what must men kali plczzure, you will find it composed ov one part humbugg, and two low pan, \' hen you hain't got nothiNtew - do, do it at once, this iz the way to learn to be bizzy. "'" hay bin told that the Lest way In uverkum nusfortunes ii Ow fight with them—l line tried both ways, and rec ommend a successful dodge 9'h, , art ov becoming ov importance in the eyes or others, if. nut to overrate cour*lt, but tem came thrum tew do it The true way to understand the judg ments ov heaven is to submit to them. 111.0111 d i 4 (ver) thing, (.pechilly to•w rdiuury wen, the fov uun Wilo Call lift w tun, 2it plen.tire, hnvn a divine right ti) take 11 , ,1t of it ti•vv n dno,l,,antago ON Mall I/. hhe a piece et hued that, te%‘ lie lie intintir• ed %%nil learning., idiaitrdied with etleril, with virteNk, and liarvilded tttth \\ /, IL II11411:, 116 , 1111 it I/. a Inert hundl ( . 0.11VIT , ;1 , 111111 811,t111(1.1A . I•1111N I'd Wltil wit, nut ~,11110,011 ON it 'l'llr wan ktp.w%, the inure lie will gue.s at, antl gues,ing ti nothing more than muloicion Going tew law, Ir. like kinning a new 11111C11 i Viv for the hide, mid go% lug the 1111.11 t to the lawyers.. Death tew nio , t of tv, iz a kind of "Otrewell benetit"--"po4itively our laq apperanee Phook aro quite often like hTtrnet-, verr3bizAy, but about what, the Lora only know.• • Living 4,11 Ilnpe, IA like li% ing wind, a gn4id wi43 te , v git Owl!, but pont. ‘vity ti w get phial ,lo i ttotpdy dnn't pay, thr bn,t it can do, 14 t.'W di•eovur what we dont Willa to 1111(1, 'tor doll t expckt to. :- , e-ret4 nre n mortglige Tio friend-hip. I dent think a lint nuui it ui dfingo roui ui n weak one —I don't think that ha.; “iiie tia n lied, IA n 1nd.14 ii one, that nun• ti, it Linz- Aett A Int trl ,4111 I IN multi% thin:;. et it dl.ttitturt lotlk trete, tt.r. atm, Laid Iti•• • t“, tt%ite I titi.y tilt ii n draft I/II futurity. unllune hitt g.I l tllt rvlendrd ; If the Nvurlit (11 , 1.1/.0 , a hvitokrit, what intt4 the) think ttt hint ut - Itttat.en? l'lttlt , l3 like kttittne water he -Itittit m , nut swallowed A Itt•r all, tiara don't 441. in taw I. hull (14..1 ,, a. la•ltNelat the %%If, 111,11 1.4 ti N't 1/., men la, all 111-• uud'-ant fr;tthet while the 1.111/1/1% lire -4144 t•INI \1 it heat It and % lottit ettf•itt. lIMIZI NM \lrnLym•rull , ill , ,Vllllllllllll'. ,Wlitc, OW 111111 v 1C1.1 , 1111,01, •\ , ,11r1 - up:, but bugtt- 1114. 114 n.. 4 1,1 'l%ll 11.0. t gmnl li Bill 1.1/-11:1 MO M:7 .ttter 1.11 n.• it Illo• 11.1101'1g r ‘, -Litre II nn. s i It s. II cit. ..r d.n. t k,t, li Nll•iiii) -1,, thoir 1.:111,i (riving tfim, find tlii• ‘vliiire 14„t 11,1, 11.r1,1 If 11011 brill, • thn,uGl, tin 11, Mt a MinWWI tl/1 . had 'WWI 11 , 11,i ! glom' hole t,•sy glt out, Int lo than trit ri,t,. ~ long iirvitrwilit the% tan In tt•w nun 6 indulged in, , r i m I. tortured into realst 1/. one way that good hems thieta are made; n urnn lealot over n fence-nil day, and im agines the IIoNS 111 tin 'it 1,10111114% -rind .burn rnutl it,, fua rho k night. ? the turret doe. • If ‘ott ittuttt t haw titrloackttr, )ttutig lona, I'nr 11 , 10.1•11', •116.' 11111 W ill itlitgl4 -It I/ IL. un-Iv•,t I \ "" \ • ' 11.."1 4) :" cell •t nJ k gi,on I ; 4 11 1 4 1. 4 II g )14•1( IS 11.4 rihrd tip 111 r 11 i 7 Ilill. — lst - 11.111:n 5ii4,•1144411 ((ant a good ail. on I,iirsell I alight raaellv )44a by +aying, pm ____CleVelatui is to have a lake tun nel to procure water. /Thie,l That 'end the —Sore thy to turn peopltim lie chtirch. —A wifo'n k len fur money 1e gartenderneen. —Fashionable Mlles are lit, houses—they both-have high ra —The President of the Cohan patriots is him rionator —Tile light of other flays Is al Whack as bistory tolls anyllan —.lohn'llussen Voting 111111 sue lass x orth of character than he —The, net lotudity of the jevel rle hav i'leen settled. lie au 8 —Every ILird rndienl in the en weighed and found warding—e, floe. —The "bleaneyi hpy" h i luting the'example Ulyseve, tern, have peace!" —A Jersoyman, who invenle. her earring°, has sold Ids paten a million —A nenntor Said he w(l4 mile three Omen In one night by out Washington. —Young mon should beware aecountant If they do Ho the der to their 1/0801118, —A chaplain In l'ilipitaa prop the stirpllees or hie choir to in Ilie school children. —There Are 30,060 Kan burner of Paris. to'Lcep which alight the e1t\4,400,00 —A tnit , ler nt the Routh a there "chin city is lento INV are roost Of this ~111,14111Mtr —An elk exenped from the Ne Park recently, And tin ni }mind arm, the I onnintry elinNlng It —Prof .1 Ville find% }hot the 111111. !ahem w T11.1 , 11f1) erwlete It •ulphnit• of 11411 11111 l lilt —Cotton clothing will not ton If ruined in Muni m.itoi A I, ton tub of iialer in nullh•lenl it lath te of SM. I eeeall‘ of tatter at one menl—nntt lit a tilt a enator-01l 4 00, hill] - The London Spertol., Hay 4 lir mg In London is but halo k k, of en for —The Nlayor Tt,ictla , a Hebrew. Much hotter fcr I than the Ilehreas. —lf we see a person whole in the presence of Whew, n • kit Is brave —Thor ivlho hare peeehed hare g'l nn Idea that ha al a --Mai they lire rip,tht Loulsi Ills reporter reed, nn Lour In . 111.11 with It Wohliltin 4 . 1.111,1 :WI 111'11/ 11. -4 Sew (rrlenen paper say i.rer I. t• the whantph.mllo tar It. lonng —The long gauntlet ki t Ow, able small gilt buttons, is vt just st present among the Indo —ln Englund, clergyinell may for fourteen year/. for marry in 12 nt , w ithoul iit•Ctlke - lu (limn, one ego oblige gitrii With but it nrnitli outlay r.III Mir]) of w huh equal one --A outdo of 100 (clop ly puwdrrnd eliiireogl, ht alum iAibi to relieve nli It henditehe man thrill Er flonno here alt' t ery few alum( Itellef,,nte Sprillk led al tie. of quarter to half a pmil I,y nm. Len, rrdl extern --The (amour London Beefs. un exualenr, of one hundred IMP P. tins Li °ken up and sold WEB Irvin, M,,11111118, had a lir for lark of water, liarrelti of el pooled ilium the !Immn to qty. -The Lei.lon Hn le re patly Pt zilit ly krlAnl ih;ra 111 , 0 i. 1,.15111 101.,1 Lit•l 101.0.11 rudiculh, tt.tlt.. ii4.1•41.ke Th. 1,..r.1 f.vdure of it ttin 110 - Il •uu I, her 111 Nl,. ...mu• kid 1.1111[.•1 p __Jer,hl s that \ 0110 4( I • nln 1.14, • gat I r, iu the Pp g 01.1,1 Iltitill,lll A r moot, 1.1 urn id all likely to t, Standing t.i. r etlll. ollil .11111 1114 111. /011111i/Id, 1111 Alls 4 111 lime 1.• •Thrit 11 111 111 , . Sllllll iie It,' 111111 /I Ibtip!“ S"'t, If Ir iltil rhwg 11111410111111,11 M htlil -•a.ln S. 4tteh 111 I.lsll H, • •• •,114. )e got a 11. ii Ic I' Int., dim. p.m —The Now lurk Ilernl.l Mee I :ralkem dminlnbwUuu 'Main 1 1111).!, 1err114 , 1 , y...v31 Ilii. ••••1111 54,1101. -I,ol'll tniditlne trouble: 111/fit I/I • blic your col wmilm ),.., 1.. die lie will shoe it easy --The etnehin.ti rornforTrol go ration spereli of this I n•ni uum•il. i u%aldly atitwk language - h.• N , l I forint ha. liege net the 11i111 121...11. 1.1,,11 1111 /1,11 Mid (of illi:all -- 111 . 11 1.11 1.111111.1;11A 1111 1 1• , 11 1,11"111t, Vt ul,ll A 111.11. 11.4 1. /i l / 1 1 14nl to/ .. 11,11 - Nn.• liondrud Minh 1011 lei 01 duung IL.. loin y.•ur fur / 1.1..11.41. II 111.•11 ,11.1olm - A ritoalimlle paper maw+ tha "f the Anglielllll . olllllllllll l ,1;11 n l / 1 11.4,111111 Sl•Vell of titer ~ I 1 llm 1/No of tie mitre. -- There are reporta In Engle will be rale ..1 to the peer llr the Parliamentary neenJoll, Viacotint lietteottelleht —Went Tennessee In reJoici Immigration now•setting In ( ly received an addition to I 200 persons !torn Pentinylvanii —A deputation or Englialtin Ito tomb of Max Mundn dT solid itilver The crown a eminent Jeweler of Pails. —'the berirt fiNlx Loehr.; In diem In diameter, and beat, He thhinte, 4,11,1 Union per hour, tiny, and 37,770,000 thrum per ym The idreet tempi of New lighted by electricity. The In er will tiny, "let them be light slant All Clotho°, will bo marlo --Wesion, the period rtan, Itompt to walk ono hundred .-four hmtra, recto/lily, and fall t;rant'n adminintrallon, a “(.111 urn" —The eentennery of Lim I nomination in the United Stat. Inland next year. An nart o offering, It IN propound to ore church at Washington, to rout —Don Platt has just boon In wont to one of thu theatres tnilled 'The Tolnpest " "It on moat uppallln* Wahines , of thi a canal boat In a storm tWlit at 1 thought, while the nhlpwre. those lonehlng linen of the• In Ing of the loss oflilshrotolho •Stir heaved and nevi, 111 A .11111 high hri Kiltl.ler thin Awl et ely Imm ,•111• A itigger 11.141(
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers