SUBSCRIPTION TERMS, kC. The Isertßßß I fiulilislieil every FHIBAV morn in,- the following rates : ~."r. .Vrv,(lnadvnee,) $2.00 it not paid within six un>o... $2.59 ■< " (if not paid within the year,)... $3.00 All papers outsi ie of the county .in-continued without notice, attho exp ration of tho time for which the subscription has heen paid. Singleeopict of the paper furnished, in wrappers, at five cents each. muni cations on subjects of local or general interest, are respectfully solicited. To ensure af tenti in favors of this kind must invariably be -rnpanied byt.he name of the author, not fur publication, hut as a guaranty against imposition. Ail letters pertaining to business of the office hon'.dhe addressed to DL'RUOKROW & LI T'/., Uterolith PA. SEW SPAPSR LAwsfc —We would call the special utt'cniioa of Fust Masters and subscribers to the tu the following synopsis of the News p*per h*v?: I. A Postmaster is required to give notice ly . returning a paper d not * iswer the law) when a subscriber does not tah- hi- paper out of u -ffice, and state the reasons for its not being taken; and a neglect to da so waki\> the Postmas ter r€p*onj>i<>le to the publishers tor the payment. Any pt rMn wb> takes a paper from *he Post O. WIM sher dm. Ie t to his name or another, or w!; her he has sntaaribed or not is responsible i re pay. . if a person orders his payer discontinued, he pay nil ar \ . .agc.% or the publisher may ii.ue to send it until pnyinent is made, and ■i the whole amount. wA ether it he taken from ..j •e or not . There can be no legal diseontm ueTicc until tho payment is made. 4. If the subscriber orders bis paper to be rped at a certain time, and the publisher con ues to rend, the subscriber is bound to pay for t. he taken it out of the Port Office. The law eds upon the ground that a man mu-t pay r what he uses. . The courts have decided that refusing to take i .-ipers and periodicals from the Post office, n moving and having them uncalled for, is ' /in ia evidence of intentional fraud. fr&ktaal & cards. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. I "IIS T. KKAGY, ATTOBNKY-AT-LAW. .... Of ; "LP itc Ilec-1 A Sclicll's Bank, i-iscl give iiu English anil German. [ap!26] j" 1M HELL AND LISGENFKLTE R, ATTO > BY- AT LAW, IIEOFUBP, PA. 1 ;.vo formed a partnership in the practice of Law, in new brick building near the Lutheran . arch. [April I, 1864-tf \ | . A. POINTS, A rrORNEY AT LAW, Bedford, PA. tc-fulljr tenders his professional services j-j . Office with J. W. Lingenfelter, , ■ n "üblie Square near Lutheran Church. ■ • i'..'b -tions promptly made. [Dee.9,'64-tf. r ( AYES IRVINE, i 1 ATTORNEY AT LAW, il ill ilifully and promptly nttcud to all busi i ■ ihiiHsled to bis care. Office withG. 11. Spang, ■ a .Juliana street, three doors south of the Mr :ycl House. May 24:1y rtSPY M. ALSip, ill ATTORNEY AT LAW, BEDFORD, PA., V.'il! faithfully and promptly attend to all busi i - entrusted to his care in Bedford and adjoin counties. Military claims, Pensions, back Bounty, Ac. speedily collected. Office with on A Spang, on Juliana street, 2 doors south .e .Merge! Home. apl 1, I Sfi-t. —tf. J F. Jitvi.lis J. W. DICKERS-OS NYLYERSA DICKERSON, AL ATTORNFYS AT LAW, BEDFORD, BESS'S., I ', p nearly opposite the Mangel House, will I . (ice in the severul Courts of Bedford county. lYnsi. 'is, bounties and back pay obtained and the 1 cof Real Estate attended to. [may 11 ,'66-1 y 13 B. STUCK EY, it. rOBNEY AXI) CORNS 1-ILLOR AT LAW, and REAL E.STATE AGENT, •> n Main Street, between Fourth and Fifth. Opposite the Conrt House, ' KANSAS < ITY. MISSOURI, e in the a if ining Counties of Mis- Kansas. " * July 12:tf . I . , , , CELL S- ■- LOXOENECKER •>l SELL A LONG F.N E-'KEU, ATTORSEVS A Cot NSELLORS AT LAW, Bedford, Pa., Will attend promptly and faithfully to all busi vitrusud to their care. Special attention i n to collections and the prosecution of claims Rack Pay, Bounty, Pensions, Ac. ,** Office on Juliana street, south of the Court Aprilotlyr. j. , n. SHARP-: *• '• KRXR C? IIAIII'E A KERB. p ■ A TTOISXE YS-A T-1 A. IE. Will ;.-r f ein the Courts of Bedford and ad ng counties. All business entrusted to their will receive careful and prompt attention. .... 1: unty, Back Pay, Ac., speedily col b .-ted from the Government. Office on Juliana street, opposite the hanking 1 nee of Reed A Sehell, Bedford, Pa. mar2:tf J. p.. NRRBOKEOW JOHN I.UTZ. Di RBORROW A li T/.. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, BEBFORU, PA., Will ntte. 1 promptly to all business intrusted to their care. Collections ma le on the Aortest no- Thry are, also, regularly liccns: 1 Claim Agents i wiH give sp i isi attention to the prosecution • : '.rims (gainst the Government for Pensions, Li Pay, Bounty, Bounty Lands, Ac. tifli-. EOS Juliana street, one door South of the ■ii'rer See. and nearly opposite the 'Mangel April 28. 18fi5:t PH VS IC IAN 8 • MM. W. JAMISON, X. !>., BLOODY Rt , P,v., lb si -(fully tenders bis professional services to , people of that place and vicinity. [deB:lyr > tit. B. F. HARRY, r f ' Rc.-p.-tfully tenders his j-rofeasionnl scr ■ - t • the eitiicn- of Bedford and vicinity, ice and residence on Pitt Street, in the building erly occupied by Br. J. H. llotios. [Ap'l 1,64. I \R. S. O. STATLEB, near S.-hellsb.trg. and i ' l>r. J. J. < ! lUKE. formerly of Cmnbeilr-nd unty, hiving as.-' ciated themselves in the prac ■ of Med -ine, re-pet-Ifully offer their profes aa! -c: . i -o the citixeni of Schellsburg and M ,I :y. Pr. Clarke's office and residence same ■ ■ rujerly occupied by J. White, Esq., dee'd. S. G. STAT LLP., hellsburg, April!2:ly. J. J. C'LAKKE. MlBCE LLAN KOUS. / i K- SH ANNON, RANKKB, " BFOFORP, PA. BANK OF Il, ; AND DEPOSIT, dections n aAc K ,-t. Wet. North and -oath, and the geigMt ••■•■.- tic-" of Exchange transacted. Notes te d Accounts IVlWcied and Rcmßtancea promptly made. REAL ESTATE ■ ought and sold. reh22 I \ \ XIEL BORDER, ! ' PITT sTr SET. TWO DOORS WEST or THE tr.n I -in HOTEL, BEEFJRD, PA. y.'AT nMAKER AND DEALER IN JEWEL RY. SPECTACLES. iC. . ect - on hand a stock of fine Gold and Sil r Witches. Spectacles of Brilliant Double Refin. tl Git-.-ea, also Sc 'tch Pebble order - n hi* line not on bnnd. [• j r.2s,'fts. Travelling Dealers in N O T I O N S. r o the county once every two months, 1 1- GOODS AT CITY PRICES. Jet for the 01 itubersburg Woolen Manufac ' r ">B C tnparny. Apl 1.-ly j ) w. caoosK ,, WHOLESALE TOBACCONIST, '' l 1 treet two door- west of B. F. Harry's '' L J" re, Bedford. Pa., is now prepared by wholesale all kinds of CIGARS. All v " r^" ' Promptly filled. Persons desiring anything iu . - ill.. ~iij j„ (re]j ♦(, giv # him a call. Bedford out 3d. '6i., DURBORROW & L.UTZ, proprietors. g'ortvvt. : THE SHADOW ON THE WALL. My home a stately dwelling is, With lofty arching doors ; There is carving on the ceiling high, And velvet on the floors: A rich and costly building, \Y here noiseless servants wait, And ' neath the escutcheon's gilding, N one enter but the great. But a happier home is near it, a humble cot- ! tage small, And I envy its sweet mistress the shadows on the wall. My pictures are the pride of Art, And drawn by cunning hands; But the painted figures never move, Nor change, the painted lands; Before the poorest window ■lore gorgeous pageants glide, Within the lowliest household, More lifelike groups abide; And I turn from sonless symbols, that crowd my gloomy hall, To watch the shifting shadows upon the cot j 'age wall. ■ My stately husband never bends To kiss me on the lips; His heart is in his iron safe, His thoughts are with his ships; But when the twilight gathers Adown the dusky street, The little housewife listens For the sounds of coming feet: And by the gleaming firelight I see a figure i | tall Bend down to kiss a shadow, a shadow on the wall. My garden palings, broad aud high, Shut in its costly spoils, And through the ordered paths all day i The silent gardener toils; My neighbor's is a grass-plat, With a hardy buttercup, Where children's dimpled fingers Pull dandelious up, Where on a baby's silken head, all day the i sunbeams fall, fill evening throws its shadows upon the cot- j tage wall. My netted lap-dog, warm and soft, Nestles upon my knee: My birds have shut their diamond eyes | That love to look for me; Lonely, I watch my neighbor. And watching can but weep, To see her rock her darlings I'pou her breast asleep. Alas! my doves are gentle, my dog comes at my call, But there is no childish shadow upon my ! chamber wall. My beauty is the talk of fools, Anil by the gaslight's glare, In glittering dress and gleaming gems, 1 know that I am fair: But there is something fairer, Whose charm in leving lies, And there is something dearer, The light of happy eyes, i So I return triumphant, queen of the brilliant ' ball, To envy the sweet shadow of the housewife on the wall. The earthly lot is rich and high, And hers is poor and low: Yet I would give my heritage Her deeper joys to know: For husbands that are lovers Are rare in all the lands, And hearts grow fit for heaven. Moulded by childish hands: And while I go up lonely, before the Judge ; of all, A cherub troop will usher the shadow on the wall. — Galaxy. rTiiapaphicnL JOHN QUINCE ADAMS. BY JAMES BARTON. IF it were possible to make a man great ! aud wise by giving the best advantages of | education ami training, then John Quincy Adatns would have been one of the great j est and wisest of human beings. Few per sons have ever enjoyed early advantages so | uumeroti- and desirous as his. His mother, one of the few intellectual women of her lime, would have been distinguished for | her talents and worth at auy time. His father's position gave him opportunities for study, reading, travel, and intercourse with the best minds of both continents, such as no other young American has ever had. Moreover, he was in the public service, in various capacities, from his fifteenth year, with occasional intervals, until his eighty fir-t, a period of sixty six years. He was born in 1767, at Braintree, iu Massachusetts, and at eleven years of age accompanied his father to France, in the American frigate Boston. The voyage was as beneficial to the boy as it was interest ing. i "M y son," records the envoy, in his I diary, "it treated very complaisantly by I>r. Noel, and by a captain and lieutenant of ar tillery who are a board —all French gentle men. They arc very assiduous in teaching : him French." And again: "I set a les son to my son in tuc French grammar, and .asked the favor of Dr. Noel to show him i the precise critical pronunciation ot all the French word.-; syllables and letters, which the Doctor very politely did, and Mr. John is getting bis lessons accordingly, very much pleased. The frigate had many adventures and nar row escapes. It gave chase to ships of the enemy, made some valuable prizes, and encountered most violent storms. In the midst of one fearful gale, a flash of light ning prostrated thtee of the crew, and in jured twenty more, besides splitting the main topmast. "I thought myself in the way of my du ' ty," wrote the robust and valiant ambassa dor, and I did not repent of my voyage. I confess I often regretted that I had brought my son. I was not so clear that it was my duty to expose hnn as myself; but I had heen led to it by the child's inclination, and by the advice of ail my friends. Mr. John ny's behavior gave mo a satisfaction that I | cannot express; fully sensible of our dan : ger, he was constantly endeavoring to bear it with a manly patience: very attentive to | mo, and his thoughts constantly rnnning in a serious strain." On arriving in Paris, ".Mr. Johnny," was placed by his fath- r in a French boarding school, with several other American boj's, j the sons and nephews of American resi | dents in the service of Congress. Kvery -Sunday ail these boys were invited by Doc tor Franklin to dinner, which was attended also by all the principal Americans then in J Paris. The boy, as hoys u.-ually do, learn ed the language of this foreign country much more rapidly than his father, so that when they returned homo after a year's res idence, the lad became hini-elfa teacher of English to the French gentleman on hoard the ship. There is one other passage of! Mr. Adams's diary which exhibits to us a pleasant scene in the cabin of the return ing ship. "The Chevalier de la Luzerne ami M. i Marhois are in raptures with my son. They get him to teach them the (English) lan guage, I found this morning the ambas ß a dor seated on the cushion in our stato-rooui. 3 Jloral ant) (Grnrval flrtospaprv, DrbotrtJ to politics, ißtJucation, literature anti i&otals. M. Marbois in his cot on his left hand, and uiy son stretched out in his at his right. The ambassador reading out loud in Black- i stone, and my son correcting the pronuncia tion of every word and syllable and letter. I The atnbassadoi said he was astonished at my son's kuowledgothat he was a master of his own language, like a professor. M Marbois said; 'your son teaches us more than you; he shows us no uieroy; he pays lus no compliments. We must have Mr. j John.' " After a residence of a few months at home, John Quincy Adams again went with | his father to Europe, where he attended ; schools in France and Holland, and finally \ j went to the University at Leyden. At the j age of fifteen years he received the appoint ment of Secretary of Legation to the Amer- j ican Minister at St. Petersburg, and from that time to the end of his life ne was eel- I doui out of office more than a few months at a time, lleturning to America, he com | pleted his education at Harvard College, and, immdeiateiy alter graduating, he began the study of the law in the office of a dis tinguished practitioner. With all thcadvan tages of his father's celebrity, and his own recognized ability, it was only after practic ing at the bar for four years that he earned ; . money enough for his maintenance. Meanwhile, he attracted atteution by his i contributions to tho public press, in which he defended, with much vigor, the foreign policy of' President Washington. General , Washington was particularly susceptible both to the applause and bathe censure of the press; and these articles gave him so \ much pleasure, that, in the year 17144, when Mr. Adams was but twenty-seven years of age, be appointed him Minister to . Holland. This was the beginning of a long and successful diplomatic carcqj-. On the j accession of his father to the Presidency, he | : was appointed Minister to Berlin, where he I continued to reside until the election of Mr. Jefferson recalled him to his country. Some men, without being dishonest, have j a particular knack at changing their party ; opinions at precisely the moment when i such a change will most promote their own advantage. No one has ever possessed this ■ faculty in a more eminent degree than John ; Quincy Adams. Toward the close of Mr. Jefferson's administration, he could not but be aware that there were only two courses | open to a federalist; namely, to get into the republican party, or abandon all hope of j j further political employment. He sustained ; 1 Mr. Jefferson on the embargo question j against the majority of the people of New England. Inheriting an amjilc share of his i father's habit of distrust, he went so far as | to say President Jefferson, that, in his opinion, the federalists of New England, were traitors to their country, and were pre- I ! pared to assist Great Brittain in the design j attributed to her of reconquering America, j Tu persons unacquainted with the peculiar; j disposition of tbia family, such conduct j eould only appear in tho light of carrying j favor with power. In all probability, how ever, Mr. Adams as firmly believed this j charge as the democrats of a later day be lieved in the charge of bargain and corrup tion agaiust himself. Mr. Madison rewarded his services to i the republican party by nominating him as j Minister to' Russia: whence he came in ISI4 i to assist in negotiating peace between the United States and Great Britain. On his j return, after an absence of eight years, he j at once took possession of the office of Sec retary of State, to which Mr. Monroe had; appointed him, and which he held during the whole period, eight years, of President Monroe's service. It fell to his lot, as Sec rectary of State, to defend all the irregular proceeding- of General Jackson in Florida, which he ail as forcibly as though he really approved them —which, I happen to know, I lie did not. He also negotiated the treaty with Spain by which Florida was ceded to | I the 1 tilted States. In the Presidential campaign of 1824, the leading candidates were six in number; Crawford of Georgia, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, John C. Calhoun, Henry i Clay, and l)e Witt Clinton. The people failing to elect either of' these gentlemen, the choice devolved upon the House of Rep resentatives. Through the influence of Mr. Clay, who had been for many years the ad mired and popular speaker of the House, General Jackson, who had received by far the greatest popular vote, was set aside and Mr. Adams was elected. It soon appeared, from the messages of the new President, that though he had joined the republican [■arty, he was as truly a federalist in 1825 as he had been in 1800, when he was in full opposition to the republican party. I have \ read all the messages of all the Presidents of the United States, and in none of them is there such extravagant toryism as in the uic-sages of John Quincy Adams. He veri I ly seems to have thought that the govern ment ought to do everything for the peo ple, and the people everything for the gov ernment. Swept from power in 1829, be went home to Massachusetts, to find the Northern people intensely oxeit 1 by what is known ' as Anti-Masonry, which was caused by the mysterious disappearance of a young prin ; ter, who had betrayed the secrets, such as they are, of the Free-Masons. Mr. Adatns, then sixty three years of age, threw himself into this movement, and <-ame very near being elected Governor of Massachusetts by ti c Anti Mason party. The same party elected hitu a member of the House of Representatives, in which he continued to serve for the remaining seventeen years of I hi- life. Now it was tliat the heroic part of hi- life heean. When the attempt Was made to deprive the people of the right of i petition, and to silence members of Con- i cress on the great topic of the day, he led the Opposition to these iniquitous measures, I i and startled the country by the vigor of I his eloquence in the midst of a storm of j obloquy. On the 21st of February, 1848, while sit ting in his usual seat in the House of Rep rescntativee, he was suddenly deprived of the power of speecli and motion by a kind of paralysis, of which he had had some expe- j riencc previously. He was conveyed insehsi- j ble to the Speaker's room, where be linger j ed for nearly two days, never regaining the possession of his senses, though occasional ly uttering incomplete or incoherent words. The la-t words uttered by him, of which he knew the meaning, were: "This is the la.-t of earth; I am content." It was the habit of this able and eminent man, during the whole of his long life, to record the eveDts of every day in a diary. This is still preserved; and I aui informed, j that the time is not very distant when the tno-t material and interesting parts of it will he given to the public. The only child of Mr. Adatns who survived him, was Chat les Francis Adams, now sixty years of age, aud till recently Minister of the United States at the British Court, an office first filled by his grandfather just after the revo lutionary war. Two members of this fami ly have occupied the Presidential chair, and many things less unlikely have occurred than that a third of the name should fill j the office. WAYS OF COMMITTING SUICIDE.— Wear- J ing thin shoes on damp nights in rainy weather. Building on the"air-tight" principle, i Leading a life of enfeebling stupid laziness, and keeping the mind in a round of un natural excitement by reading trashy novels. Going to halls in all sorts of weather in the thinnest possible dress. Dancing till in a complete perspiration, and then go home through the damp air. Sleeping on feather beds in seven by nine j : beil-rooins. Surfeiting on hot and very highly stimulat ing suppers. Eating without time to masticate tho foot]. Allowing love of gain to so absorb our minds as to leave no time to attend to our health. Gormandizing between meals. Giving way to fits of anger. Neglecting to take proper care of ourselves when a simple disease first appears. BEDFORD, PA., FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1868. sU:e a eheapeuer of 1 priced things, but never of things of the lowest value. Inventors in the arts, discov erers in the sciences, educators, and iinprov | ers of men generally, are of this high-priced class of laborers. They could drive oxen ' and dig potatoes as well as others, but they can do better. ; The total of the occupations of a people are all capable of higher things, and better for themselves and for all men, than confin ing themselves to the cheapest commodities ■ which they can produce, and surrendering j all other forms of labor to another jieople, ; simply because that other people s work is relatively cheap in money price. In some \ departments of labor, more mind is worked into muscle than in others. Some work i shops are the best schools in the world, and turn out the best scholars; that is. the liigh -1 est-nriecd men. Then, again, there are many people of a high possible value, who cannot work at j cheap things at all. There arc a great ma ny of these. Women, for instance, are very unfit for hod-carrving or ox driving; and all such persons, embracing half-grown persons of both sexes, all women, and a good half of : the men of every country, physically disqual -1 ificd for drudging—the ]>ecial work of new j countries—are thrown into the supported classes by this policy of cheap commodities or. are dreadfully cheapened themselves, by j being limited and compelled into submission i to tin cheap trade policy. Brains and hearts, hopes and aspirations. , ' ought to lie taken into account in projecting j a system of industry for a nation. Provi sion for the highest development should lie made, and this requires that every worker should be invited by higher reward to move constantly toward higher and better forms of labor. For these higher forms of work are worth infinitely more than any difference of market price of commodities can measure, to the individual and to the country. Ev ery higher stage is better than the next be low it. for giving value to uieu. which isthe thing to be accomplished.— Natianal Aider | ican. THE VALUE OF SKILLED LABOR. It is unpleasant to read in our daily jour nals of the destitution among our laboring | classes because of the lack ol work. Yet it j is the factthat thousands are actually snffer -1 ing for want of employment, and still itisno ; less the fact that skilled labor is in as great demand now as ever. The thorough master : of his business, unless that business is cn | tirely prostrated, will never find himself, for i any long time, unemployed, if he desires employment, ll'a workman at any business —mechanical or intellectual—is not a coui ; petcnt worker the place he desires will be sure to be filled by his superior, the master of his business. Men, like the particles of fluids, must dnd their level, and neither can rise above it without outside aid. The man in any business whose sole use and value is i to fill a hole accidentally left open, does not amount to much. He only is valuable whose services are eagerly sought, and, be ing secured, are retained. When the em pioyer seeks the worker it may be consider ed that the latter is worth the seeking; but : there are thousands who might be sought, but who never would take the trouble to make themselves worth the seeking. These "slumps" of mechanics, making pretense to a name to which they have no right, are stumbling blocks in the way of really worthy ! men. We speak not of the apprentice and learner who have never had a sufficient op : portunity to acquire a full knowledge of ' their business, but of those who, being ! either unfitted by taste or talent for their chosen business, look upon it solely as a means of earning their bread and butter and never imagined such a thing as enthusi asm or interest in their work. iSueli men, even in the best of times, are suffered and borne with, rather than valued in the shop. They may do the work set before them, but never care enough about its character when finished or their own reputation as workmen to take care and pains, use thought and brains, as well as muscle, in its prosecution. Being only automatons —breathing machines i —their places are filled by work men as soon as business becomes slack. Yet it is not difficult for the worker to ar rive at the head of his profession, whatever it may lie, if first be has any aptitude and taste for it. All that is needed is applica tion and an iuterest in his work. It may take years to accomplish the result, but the time will have been profitably spent. Once a workman, in the highest sense of the term, his future is secure. His efforts will be appreciated and his proper position as sured 011 a very brief trial, even by a j stranger. These remarks apply equally well to those who live by their brain rather than their muscle; many a 60 called editor is such simply by the circumstance that no proper man has found and occupied the position assumed by him who cannot properly fill it. And possibly there is no more bare faced assumption of responsibilities and duties for which the pretender is totally unfitted than that of some would be literary people; yet the mechanical branches of in industry are thronged with such apologies for workmen; men who have no love for their work, no respect for themselves, and no regard for the interests of their cm ployers. Such men should turn their at j tendon to work requiring scarcely more i bruins than that of the ox. The skilled workman is to be envied. He knows his own value, and feels thereby a pride in his business and a respect for himself. He is, in a measure, independent lor his services are needed and will always receive their full market value. It is bet ter to be a thorough workman in the lowest ! branch of mechanical business than a mere hanger on in a popular or genteel oceupa tion. Will our young men and mechanics eonsider this matter Scientific American. THE PUNISHMENT OF CHILDREN. Not long ago an editor in the northern! part of the State of New Yotk told his son, about eleven years old, that he would whip him in the course of a few hours, and locked him in an upper room until he had leisure to do so. \\ lien the boy heard the father j coming, he became so alartued that hejump- : ed out of the window aud broke his neck. About a year ago a mother puni.-hed Iter little daughter, about eight years, by shot ting her up in a dark closet; the child be came so frightened that convulsions were induced, which resulted in death. In an ! other ease of similar character, the result j was atill more calamitous, for the child be 1 came epileptic and so remained for a long life afterward. I'he object of parental cor rection should be the ultimate g o od of the child; and to make it effective. 1. The character of the punishment should be according to the disposition and temper ament of the child. 2. The punishment be in proportion to the nature of the offence. 3. The punishment should be inflicted ; with the utmost self-possession; for if done in a towering pa-ion it takes the character of revenge; the child sees it and resists it with defiance, stubbornness, or with a feel ing of being the injured or oppressed party. 4. Punishment should never be threaten ed, for one of two results, both unfortunate are certain; either the promise will not lie kept, and the child lose confidence in paren tal assertions; or the child's mind, dwelling upon what is cxpected, suffers a lengthened torture, imagination always aggravating the severity of the chastisement, and the child gradually learns to startle at every event which is likely to usher in the correction, and the foundation is laid for that fearfulness of the luture which is the bane of all human happiness; and in some cases the severity of the expected suffering looms up so largely under the iufluence of a distompered imagt nation, as iu the case of the editor's child, that suicide is'considered the lesser evil. It is nothing less than a savage barbarity for any parent to hold the mind of a child in a state of terrorism for a single hour, let alone for days and weeks. 5. Never correct a child by scolding, ad monition, or castigation, in the presence of any other person whatever. It is an attack on its self esteem, which provokes resistance and passion. Let grown persons recollect how ill they bear even deserved reproof in the presence of others. 0. Never punish a child twice lor one of fence; it is a great injustice, a relic of bar barism, and always discourages or hardens. Make each settlement final in itself, and don't he forever harping on what is past. 7. Punishment should not be effected in any case without placing clearly before the child's mind the nature of the aggravation, and that the sole design of the chastisement or reproof is his present and future welfare. 8. In all cases where punish mentis decided upon, it should be prompt, or deferred, ac cording to the degree of aggravation or pal pable wrong. It is almost always better to defer it, but in such cases threaten nothing, say nothing; do nothing which indicates in the slightest degree that auything is to come. And when the time does come, ao not alarm the child with anv show of preparation, but gradually and affectionately bring up the whole matter; place it in its true, just, and clear light, and act accordingly; and always, as much as possible, appeal to the child's conscience, to its sense of right, to its mag nanimity, to its benevolence towards man, and gratitude towards God. Hull's Jour nal. STARVED TO DEATH. In the autumn of 1846, a party of emi grants, left Independence, Missouri, to make the trip to California, overland. Many of them passed on and arrived at j their destination before the winter com nienced; hut a party, under the lead of Cap -1 tain Bonner, numbering eighty persons, in cluding women and children, travelled at thvii cisure, and turned off from the accus tomed track. to see, to explore, and to make the mast of the trip, thereby not reaching the pais of the Sierra Nevada until the last of October. They found the pass so block aded by snow as to be impassable; and here, ■ near the beautiful Truekee Lake, alias, | Donnei Lake, they encamped for the night, j Next uorning they awoke to find that sev eral feet of snow had fallen while they rested, anil that still it snowed. They erected cabins, and made preparations to spend the winter here. Their cattle had strayed away, and by reason of the deep snow, they could get DO trace of them. The snow fell rapidly, and their case was ■ - well nigh a hopeless one. With little to sustain life, no habitation within hundred of miles, and with mountains ofsnowaround them, nothing more desolate can well be conceived. Still, there were heroic Chris tians among the number, who repined not, hut earnesty and persistently prajed for de ; iiverance from what daily threatened to be ; couie to them a living tomb. I have seen stumps on the site of their encampment, ! from which tbey cut trees for fuel; and | these stumps were from fifteen to twenty feet high . so very deep was the snow. Parties were sent to push through, if pos ! sible, and gain relief- Many of these par tics were lost entirely, and others were greatly reduced by starvation and exposure. At last a party of fifteen—eight men, four ! hrave-bearted women, and two Indians —set out, and after untold sufferine, eight of i thetn reached a settlement on Bear Creek. The other seven, among whom were the two red men, had perished, and their bodies I been consumed for food by their comrades. For several of the last days, the undaunted i eight had subsisted upon hits of leather taken front their boots. Of this number ' was a Mr. White, who hastened back to the relief of his wife and child, accompanied by men and supplies from the settlement, j But, in his absence, both had died. We saw their place of rest, and from the grave of the mother picked some fragrant sweet briars that had been planted there by the hand of affection. Mr. Donner was unable to be moved; he i urged his wife to leave him, but she de clined. One Reseberg insisted on remain ing; and when the second rescue party ar rived, he was the only one living. 51 r. Donner had died, and it was generally be lieved that llesebcrg had killed slrs. Don tier. He had some of her flesh boiling in a | kettle, and looked like a wild man. The Donner party consisted of about eighty, only forty of whom remained to tell the heart-rending tale of this terrible win ter. Two of Mr. Di nner's children—a son i and a daughter—are now living. slary Donner, the daughter, was a schoolmate of 1 one of my intimate friends, and from her I learned much of this story.—A etc York \ Ledger. M- >'• CHARACTER AND REPUTATION.—A Wes tern pastor having written a reply to some malignant newspaper attacks, sent it to a friend to be submitted to Dr. Wayland for his advice. The doctor read the article, con sidered it for a few moments, and said, in su&stance, "fell brother—to take no notice of the attacks. A man's character will take care of his reputation , anti he need not fear the malicious attacks of his enemies. It is never well for a man puhliely to vindicate himself fronYeharge which the whole tenor of his life contradicts. Those who know the man do not need tho vindication, and those who don't know him will not care enough about it to read what he may write." Our ministering friend said he had lived lone ! enough to be more thankful than he could express for the advice then given. EACH true Christian is a night trav ■ ; eler his life his walk. Christ his way | and heaven his home ; bis walk m pain , ful, his way is perfect, his home *pleas ■ ing. I will not loiter, lest I come short; : I will not wander, lest I coine wide of home; • but ho content to travel hard and be sure I ! walk right; so shall my safe way find its end ; at home, and my painful walk make ty home welcome. ANECDOTES OF GENERAL GRANT. "A W oman ' writes to the Philadelphia I'rest, from Ashland, Pa., the following stories about General Grant: In the winlei of 1862-3, when the army arrived at Memphis, aftcrlong, weary march ing and trials that sicken the heart to think of, two-thirds of the officers and soldiers were in hospitals. General Grant was lying sick at the Gayoso House. One morning Mrs. Grant came in the ladies' parlor, very much depressed, and said the medical direc tor had just been to see Mr. Grant, and j though the would not be able to go any • j further if he did not stimulate. Said she: 1 "And I cannot persuade him to do so; he says he will not die, and he will not touch a ; drop upon auy consideration." In less than ! a week he was on board the advance boat on the way to Vicksturg. "Again, a few months after, I was on ! board the headquarters boat at sliiliken's ! Bend, where quite a lively gathering of officers aud ladies had assembled. Cards and music were the order of the evening. Gen- j eral Grant sat in the ladies' cabin, leaning upon a table covered with innumerable mapsand routes to Vicksburg, wholly absord- i ed in cotntemplation of the great matter be fore him. • He paid no attention whatever to what was going on around, neither did any one dare to interrupt him. For hours he I sat thus, until the loved and lamented .Mc- Pherson stepped up to him with a glass of liquor in his hand, and said; "General, this ' won't do; you are injuring yourself; join | with us in a few toasts, and throw this bur- ; deti off your mind." Looking up and suiil ling, be replied: "Mac, you know your ; whiskey won't help me to think; give me a j dozen of the best cigars you can find, and, if the ladies will excuse me for smoking, I i think by the time I have finished them I shall have this job pretty nearly planned."! Thus he sat; and when the company retired, I we left hini there, still smooking and think- 1 ing, not having touched one drop of liquor, j " When the arnty lay around Vicksburg i during that long siege, the time that tried ; men's souls, T watched every movement it was possible for me to do, feeling almost | certain that he would eventually succumb j to the custom, alas! too universal among the officers. I was in company with a gentle man from Chicago, who, while calling upon the General, remarked, "I have some very j fine brandy on the boat, and if you will send an orderly with me to the river I will send you a ease or two." "I am greatly ; oblige.d," replied the General, "but I do not use the article. I have a big job on baud, and though I know I shall win, 1 know I must do it with a cool head. Send all the liquor you intend for me to my hos pital in the rear; I don't think a little will hurt the poor fellows down there." "At a celebration on the 22d February | before the surrender of Vicksburg, while all around were drinking toasts in sparkling j cbampaigne, I saw General Grant pushaside j a glass ol wine, and, taking up a glass ofj 51issi>sippi water, with the remark, "This j suits the matter in hand; drink to the toast, | 'God gave ns Lincoln and liberty; let us 1 fight for both.'" ANECDOTES OF REN. WADE. The following we derive from a prominent I citixen of Jefferson, a fellow church ir.em- i ber with Joshua It. Giddings, and they are j authentic: About the time Mr. Wade opened a law ! office in Jefferson, a traveling preacher j stopped at that village and delivered a lec ture on the sinfulness of slavery. slr. Giddings and the pastor of the church, of which he was a member, deemed this highly wicked and incendiary. And to counteract any evil which the abolition lec ture might have done, these two men ! drew up a plan for a society which was to j hold stated "meetings for the purpose of j proving the divinity of slavery from the j Bible. In canvassing for members to j search the Scriptures for this purpose, j they called at Wade's office, who, after | hearing them patiently, remarked:_ "If I was an infidel, and thought it desirable to make the people believe the Bible a fable, I would begin not by openly discrediting it, but I would organize just such societies as you propose, and set out to prove that (he God of the Bible was a being that sanctioned slavery and all its iniquities." The pastor spent a few moments in deep j thought, and exclaimed: "You are right, j Mr. Wade; [ now see this thing inadif- j fercnt light: I will have nothing further to do with it." Not long after this the scales fell from 51r. Gidding s eyes, and he, too became an apostle of liberty. While Wade and Giddings were law part ners, they sold a horse to a preacher and took bis note. Mr. G. made the trade, and drove a hard bargain, although he belonged to the same church with the preacher. They shortly after dissolved pattnership and divi ded the notes, Mr. G. assorting them out, and somehow the poor and doubtful were counted into slr. W.'s half. slr. W. made ! no objection to this, doubtless thinking this ] would afford a good opportunity to exercise j some of that large hearted practical benevo- | lence for which he is noted. The preacher's ; note fell to >lr. Wade, and when it came i due he was informed by slr. G. that Mr. ; W. had bought the note. On calling to ■ pay it, Mr. Wade asked him how much : money he had, and was informed "just i enough to pay this note and get back home I on." Mr. Wade replied, "well, in the first ■ place, had I heen selling the horse, my con- j science would not have allowed me to exact [ of you more than he was worth, and in the i second place, you preachers have a hard | time of it, and I am the last man that would : have a desire for your money. Here is your | note, I make you a present of it." The ■ minister was affected to tears, and remarked ] to a brother member shortly after, while re i iating the occurrence, "that man's rough exterior covers a noble heart." — Chiliicothe ] Gazette. YOUNG UNMARRIED LADIES OF ITALY. The idea of a girl in Italy Is indissolublv conceeted with that of being devoid of all : moral sense, infallibly preferring wrong to j right, and who can only be kept from harm : | ami evil by the most incessant watchfulness. ■ A mother's whole maternal dutics_ toward her daughter seem considered in Itaty- ] to be comprehended in the one act of vigi- j ! lance. . "My daughter has never been, since she was nine years old, for more than twenty minutes out of my sight," said an Italian countess, boastfully; and by this declaration she appeared to think that she merited to \ take rank in the world's esteem with the; • : mother of the Gracchi. ! A girl belonging to the upper ranks of life , j iu Italy is practically a prisoner until she marries. The girl belonging to the humbler ! classes of society shares also, in a great de- j i gree, in the same restrictions on her libertv. ' The grown-up daughter of a woman keeping a lodging-house in Florence could not profit by my offer to take her to see the ceremony 1 1 of the ' Lavanda" at the FittiPalace, solely : 1 because she was unable to procure a proper 1 escort to accompany her in a ten minutes' ; walk through the best part of the town, to 1 the place where I resided. A work girl ! going to her employer's house has to pro vide heiself with some companion; and in 1 emergencies I have souietims seen a little ; child do duty as duenna for the occasion. [ • In the country the same rule prevails; no ! peasant girl is ever alone; and equally in j the higher as in the lower classes of society ' would any infringement of the social code, in this respect, be fatal to matrimonial ex pectations. Under these circumstances, the - j proceedings of unmarried English ladie* ,- excite the wonder and envy of their sex in - Italv. Often have I been amused at the ■- 1 way in which the most common-place ex ; ploits have been magnified into heroic ac ■; tions; and not unfrequently did I find myself I elevated to the dignity of a heroine, when d ; utterly unconscious that I had in any way y i merited the nanyj assigned mo. from a Lady's Journal. VOL. 41: SO. 19. j A VERY OLD LAUV. [ recollect returning from school one eve- [ ning when a child, and finding myself, as I ; entered the "door yard," at home, in the : mid.-t of a group of visitors, who were tak ing leave of the family. A very old lady, in a neat block "scoop-shovel" bonnet, was j leaning on the arm of her daughter, who was also an aged woman. Several others were standing about—my own dear old grandmother among the rest—and all of them seemed to be old enough to be daugh ters of .Methuselah. I stood peering at them curiously, sun- Ironnet in band, when .the very old Jady came slowly toward me. "flow old are you, little girl?" she asked. ! "Sixyears old." "Are you? I was six years oid a hund red years ago." flow I started and looked up wonderiugly under the deep black bonnet. She smiled as she added, "My dear child, I am a hund red years older than you are;" and as she kissed my forehead, and laid her thin hand : tenderly on my bare bead, I felt even then ; that it was a benediction. r How honored wo all felt by her presence! j No one else was spoken of for a week ; arid | we children all felt that it would be very ! lleasant to li7c a hundred years longer, and to lie still good-natured, and have everybody very proud of us. Let me live to an old age, but let me not outlive the free use of all my | faculties, should be the prayer and aspira tion of every child. Let us poinr him to | that goal and bid him seek to win the race. Heaven often forces us to answer our own prayers ; and wc must undoubtedly do so in this case, or they will remain unanswered. We ought to live for old age just in the ' spirit we are constantly exhorted to live for heaven, that is, to think of it, take i ; measures to attain it, and provision for I I it. I do not mean merely the laying up of! "much goods" for the "many years." An j | honest old age has a right to be independent, i and to be no more cumbered with "much ! serving." It often Deeds change. Let the , u!d man be free to leave his home occasion- I ally, and with his old wife, hand in hand, I let him go travelling to see the world and enjoy it. They may thus add years to their | length of days, much to their stock of | happiness, and more still to their vigor and j restoration of their decaying faculties, I After three score years and ten of robust i work, either with brains or hands, society ) owes the veteran a competence, and every , rational enjoyment it will procure; and it is ! ; all wrong if he has not been able to obtain j ; tbis.— Atlantic Monthly. 'SHE LOOKS MOST LIKE MOTHER.' A Paris letter tells the following story of a Twelfth night fete in that city: A wealthy family in the aristocratic I Boulevard Malesherbes were amusing tbem j selves in seeking the King's portion, or the ring in the festival cake, when a lady of the | company says to the hostess: i 'I wish my portion to be given to the ■ poorest little boy we can find in the street." ! The servant was dispatched on this freez- • ' ing night, and not far from the bouse he i found a ragged urchin, trembling, with : cold and huoger. He brought him up, was ; j ordered into the saloon, where a thousand lights glittered, and a sparkling fire glad j dened and surprised him. lie drew his por tion which the benevolent lady bad promis , ed, and as luck would have it, the little fel- j low found the "ring" (beans they use in ; | Paris instead), and, of coarse, he was I i "King." They all shouted out that, being i a King, he must choose a Queen. He was ! asked so to do, and, looking round the com- i i pany, he chose the very lady who had pro- | posed to cede her portion of cake. He was j asked why he chose her. He said: "I don't know: she looks the most like ; mother?" "Mother! whose mother?" "My mother! I never knew her, but was I stolen away from her, and here is her por- j j trait!" With this he drew from out his ragged [ coat a likeness, which proved to be that of the very lady herself, who, in Italy had her child stolen from her, and now he turns up a poor little ragged Savoyard, dragging along a miserable existence in Paris, while 1 his mother, by an iDtuttion, perhaps, felt ; that in the air near to where she was, was one so dear to her. STRONG MEN. Strength of character consists of two things—power of will and power of self restraint. It requires two things, therefore, for its existence —strong feelings and strong command over them. Now we all very often mistake strong feelings for strong character. A man who bears all before him, before whose frown domestics tremble, and whose i bursts of fury make the children of the household quake, because he bos his own 1 way in all things, we call him a strong man. The truth is, that he is the weak man; it is his passions that arc strong; he, mastered by them, is weak. You must measure the : strength of a man by the power of the - feelings he subdues, not by the power of those that sundue him. And hence com posure is very often the highest result of strength. Hid we ever see a man receive a flagrant injury, and then reply quietly ? That : ;is a man spiritually strong. Or did we ever see a man in anguish stand as if carved out j of a solid rock, mastering himself? or one bearing a hopeless daily trial remain silent, and never tell the world what conquored his home peace ? That is strength. He who, with strcng passions, remains chaste; he who, keenly sensitive, with manly powers of indignation in him, can be provoked and yet restrain himself and forgive, those are the strong men, the spiritual heroes. MISUNDERSTOOD THE TEXT.—A worthy deacon hired a journeyman farmer from a neighboring town for the summer, and in duced him—although he was unaccustomed to church going—to accompany the family i to church on the first Sabbath of his stay. • Upon their return to the deacon s house, he asked his hired man how he liked the preaching. He replied: "I don't like to hear any minister preach ! politics" "I am very sure you heard no politics to j day, "said the deacon. "I am sure that I did," said_ the man. "Mentionthe passages," said the deacon. "I will. He said, "If the Republicans scarcely are saved, where will the Democrats arpear?" "Ah, ' said the deacon, you mistake. These were the words—'lf the righteous scarcely are saved, how will the ungodly and wicked appear?'" "O, yes," said the man, "he might have used those words, but I knew deuced well : ichat fie meant\" "THEN I'LL SEND HIM A KJSS." —Lit- tle Mary was sitting with her mother on a Cleasant evening, while the stars came rightly out, and, looking up, she said : "Mamma, who made all those beautiful stars in the sky?" The mother replied: "Our Heavenly Father, my child." "Then, mammy, I'll send Htm a kisa, Mary answered; and suiting the action to the words, she kissed her hand, and threw > it upward toward the sky. Was not the offering accepted by the lov ing Father, who has said to all who do not trust and obey Hint, "Kiss the bon, lest He bo angry, and yc perish by the way, when His wrath is kindled but a little? ' A CONDUCTOR on a railroad running from Hartford, agreed in the kindness of his heart > to pass a poor penniless fellow on his train. „ An officer of the road sitting in the same cai a with the man, observed that the conductor e took no fare of him, and called him to ac - count for it. "Why do you pass that man? - said Mr. Treasurer. "Oh, he's a couduc If tor on the railroad." "He a conductor! n why what makes him dress so shabbily T'J y ' "Oh, he's trying to live on his salary 1 a 1 was the quick reply. Mr. Treasurer saw the puiut aud dropped the subject at once. RATES OF ADVERTISING. All advertisement* fur Jes* than 3 month* 1# cents per line for each insertion. Special notice* one-half additional. All reaolntion* of Associa tion, communications of a limited or indlvldal interest and notices of marriages and deaths, ex ceeding fir# line*, 10 cts. per line. All legal noti ces of every kind, and all Orphans' Court and other Judicial sales, are required by law to be pub lished in both papers. Editorial Notices 15 cents per line. All Advertising due aftei first insertion. A liberal discount made to yearly advertisers. Jmonts. 0 months. 1 year One square $ 4.50 $ 6.00 SIO.OO Tare squares 0.00 9.00 16.00 Three squares 8.00 12.00 20.00 One-fourth column - 14.00 20.00 35.00 Half column 18.00 25.00 45.00 One column 30.00 45.00 80,00 A LIST OF I'ESi NAMES WITH REAL NAMES ATTACIIEU. Gail Hamilton —Miss AbigailE. Dcslgc. Florence Percy—Mrs. Elizabeth Aikors. Timothy Titcooib —Dr. J . G. Holland. Orpheus C. Kerr— Robert H. Newell. Mrs. Partington—P. B. Sbillaber. Doesrieks P. It. —Mortimer Thompson. K. N. Pepper—.James M. Morris. Mtester Karl and Mace Sloper, Esq. v. G. Iceland. Josh Billings—Henry M • Shaw. Jeems Pipes—Stephen Masset. Nod Buntline—E. Z. C. Judson. Edmund Kirk —J. K. Giimore. Country Parson —A. K. 11. Boyd. Mary Clavers —Mrs. C. M. Kirkland. Currer Boll— Chailotte Bronte. Village Sbhoolmaster —Charles M. Dick inson. Owen Meredith—Bulwer,jr. Barry Cornwall —William i'roetor Author of John Halifax", Gentleman M iss Muloch. Ike Marvel —Donald G. Mitchell. Jennie June—Mrs. Jenny Croly. Fanny Fern —Wife of James G. Parton, (the historian,) and sister of N. P. W illis. Petroleum V. Nas by—D. 11. Locke. Howard Glynden—Miss Laura C. Red den. Some of these names are not. however, assumed as aliases, but are simply those of characters in the writings of the ladies and gentlemen in question. That of Arte mu.- Ward reminds us that there have been two Congressmen of that name. The first was in 1 TT-> appointed Maj. General of the American army, and was much esteemed by General Washington. The other who died in 1847. was for nineteen years Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas in Boston. THE Boston Traveller says: "To an in quiry how one of the Bank Presidents in this Commonwealth had made his fortune, the reply was: 'Mainly by economy. When rendering an income return, this gen tleman's attention was called to an apparent omission. 'Have you more than one gold watch?' asked the official. 'Not one —a useless expense.' 'Any carriages, sir?' *1 don't indulge in one.' 'A piano I think yon have?' 'Sir, I wish you to understand I own nothing that does not draw interest. (OIUTS m\ WHICH of Mr. Dickens' works is hardest to get through? No thoroughfare. WHY is a coquette like a minister? Because she never gives assent. WHY is the Pope like a faithful goose ? Be cause he sticks to his own Propaganda. MRS. E. T. Carter has been elected county superintendent of public schools for Maury county, Tenn. Hox. THOMAS B FI-OREXCE, an extreme Democrat, is out is fuvor of conferring suf frage on all races and sexes. All the towns throughout the State com plain of the high price of butter, which ranges from 50 to 75 cents per pound. SHAD have been caught in the Susquehanna this spring above the dam of Columbia, caus ed by a break in the dam. THE Pittsburg Fust, declares General Han cock willjnot receive a single vote ;n the Dem ocratic National Convention. WHERE should one always expect to find a bountiful supply of the milk of human kind ness ? Within the pate of the cbnrch. THE Ku-Klux-Klan burned the new School i house in Carthage, Tenn., on Saturday night, fta offVmoo tka in sheltered coloredl pupils. No less than six of the most influential Republican newspapers of Missouri have run up the name of Colfax for Vice President. A STEAM ferry boat is to be placed on the ; Susquehanna river at Peach Bottom Ferry to ply between the Lancaster and York county shores. FARMERS have been busy sowing oats dur i ing the past week and planting potataes. Com planti eg is next in order. The farmers are hard pushed. MR. SEWARD is going on au extended for eign tour it the impeachment results in con viction. It has been suggested that he will endeavor to find out, if possible, where some of his resent purchases are located. A corr of Eliot's Indian Bible, a work which no living mac can read, was sold at auction at New York on last Tuesday, for the extraordinary sum of SI,J 30, the high est price ever paid for a printed book is this country. THE rolling mill of Messrs. Light is now in working order. They roll cut plates to the length of twenty-five feet, and make all kinds of boiler and locomotive iron. They have a fine prospect of success before them.—Leba non Courier. "THE pen is mightier than the sword.'' Gen. It. E. Lee believes this to be true, as i he killed more Union soldiers in the Ander sonville pen, than he did in any battle of the war, by the sword or rifle. THE new telegraph line between Denver and Sante Fe will be completed by the Ist of June. A new mail route will be opened be tween the latter city and Hays city by the j 15th of May. THE Mayor of Philadelphia has licensed one hundred and eleven places of amusement this year, including theatres, concert halls, lager beer saloons, with music and dance houses. THE only counties ia Pennsylvania through which no railroad passes, and the limits of which are not likely to be soon toncbed by a railroad, are Fulton, Forest, Potter and Greene. C. W. MILLER, farmer, near Manheim, Lancaster county, ha 3 a young chicken with four legs. It only uses two of them in runn ing and goes about quite briskly. Is Greenland the young people who woo each other, eat ten pound of tallow every.day to prove their devotion. Scandleous. A SMII.E may be bright while the heart .s sad. The rainbow is beautiful in the air while beneath is the moaning of the sea. THE poor pittance of seventy years is not worth being a vidian for. What matters it if your neighbor lies >n a splendid tomb? Sleep you in innocence. GCILT is that which quclla the courage of the blood, ties the tongue of the eloquent, and makes greatness itself sneak and lurk and behave itself poor— Shut/t. PERSONS plowing and digging garden al ready begin to turn up the locusts. The land will soon be swarming with "Pburohs," come to see the modern Moses!'" POTTSTOWN has no water woiks. Tho Ledger is urgiug the formation of a Compa ny. for the purpose of supplying that growing . town with water. I A STEAM boiler exploded at Marshal, i Phillips & Co.'s rolling mill, in Philadelphia, on Monday of last week, )killiug one man and 1 injuring twelve others. I THE new- bridgo over the Su.-quehauDa at Columbia, Petnis., is to be erected on the piers of the old one. and will be completed l,y the tirt ot J next.