JOB PRI NTErnia D RIPTION Neatly and Promptly Executed, at flee Advertiser Office, Lebdimii, Tins e.hd.li,lnnent is now supplied with au extctish., , as,wrtment of Jill TYPE, which will be inrrease.l Me ritroluoro demands. It out MAY I urn out of overy tieseription, 1n It neat and expeditious Manner— MO on very reasonable terms. Such at Pamphlets, Checks, . Business Cards, Handbills, Circulars, Labels, Bill Headings, Blanks, Programmes, Bills of Pare, Invitations, Tickets, &c., &c. The friends of the establishment, and the public goner. nlly 1110 ro,nectfully rk,licited to soul in their orders. .oz-IIANDIIILLS Printed at an hours notice. it,4-Deep9 of MI kinds. Common and Jodgment BONDS. School, ;Natlean% CollAtablete and Mbar 141..0nta, printed vorreetly and neatly MI the be 4 paper. constantly kept fur Hata ot this office, at pricett "to suit the Dines." *0 Sul.o.l.ll.thm prier of dm LEBANON ADVERTISER, Ono Dolhir and n n Vt.nr. WSI. M. BRESLIN, Lubanon, LANDRETIIS' a I gricultur al Tr are-house Nes. 21 5: 9.3 South Sixth :Rivet, near the State Home, PHILADELPHIA. r ItiN FLOORS of this spacious building, erected came* iy for the Proprietors' trade, are stored with Seeds and Implements of interest to Fornwrs and Gardeners. „ ,Vi.rt,s Years Estoblisheil.—'rhe subsortiors desire to call the attention of every one interested hi Farming and Gar dening, to their tvell-seleettal stork of -VrieuMint& INgelnents mid Machinery. Great tarirty lurid Ttinls, Witrrantal Garden and Flower Seeds, 00(144$ awl Meld SGrd (if the naal reliable qualif y The Agricultinul implements sold by us tun mostly utonnfoctored nt our Strum Works, Bristol, Pa. Having HUH up this establishment without regtmd to expense, with the most complete machinery, for the man ufacture of various kinds of Agricultural Implements, we aro now prepared to supply all articles in this lino fully email, If not superior, to any thing of the kind ever offer ed to the public. I,a»dreth's Mwranted Garden sreds, Wye been before the public for upwards of !sixty years; their wino-spread popularity, mid the consbintly increna log demand from year to year, is the bent evidence of their superiority over all ahem Country merchants CHO he supplied with wean in pa pers. or bulk; on the moot liberal terms. near Bristol, l'n., our Minion Seed grounds contains three hundred and seventy acres, and is the lar gest establishment of its kind in the world. 11. LANDI U & SON. 0ct.7,'57-3m. Nos. 21 &23 South Sixth Street : Minutia Of all diseases, the great, first cause Springs from neglect of Nature's laws SUFFER NOT! CURE IS (IP.A.ARANTEED IN ALL MORS OF SECR ET DISEASES, Self-abuse, l'it•rvnus Debility, Strictures, Chas, Grav• el, Diabetes, Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder, Mercurial Rheumatism, Scrofula, Pi 11.38 in the Bones end Ankles, diseases of the Lungs, Throat, Name and Eyes, Ulcers upon the Body or Limbs, Cancers, Dropsy, Epileptic Fits, St.Titue' Dance, and all Die . (Wes arising from a derangement of the Sexual Or. Bans, saris as Nervous Trembling, Loss of Memory, Loss of Power, General Weak ness, Dimness of Vision With peculiar sputa appearing before the eyes, LOOS of Sight, 'Wakefulness, Dyspepsia, Liver Disease, Eruptions upon the Face, Pain in the Back and Bead, Female Ir regularities and all improper discharges from both sexes. It matters not from what cause the disease originated, however long standing or obstinate the case, RECOVERY to Mum, and in a shorter time than a permanent cure can be effected by any other treatment, even after the 'disease has baled the skill of eminent physicians and re sisted all their means ofeure. The medicines are pleas ant without odor, causing no sickness and free from mercury or balsam. During twenty years of practice, I have rescued from the Jaws of Death many thousands, who, in the last stages of the above-mentioned diseases, 'NW been givep up to diu by their physicians, which war rants sue in promising to the afflicted, who may place themselves under my care. a perfect maid most speedy cure. Secret Diseases are the greatest enemies to health, as they are the first cause of COnsumption, Scrofula end ninny other diseases; and should be a terror to the hu man family. As a permanent cure is scarcely ever ef fected, a Majority of the eases falling into the bands of incompetent persons, who not only Mil to cure the din. Vases but ruin the rem:Mutton, filling the system with mercury, which, with the disease, hastens the sufferer into a rapid Consumption. But should the distuse and the treatment not cause death speedily and the victim marries, the disease is en tailed upon the children, who are born with feeble con stitutions' end the current of life corrupted by a virus which betrays itself hi Scrofula, Totter, Ulcers, Ems. dons and other affectinits of the Skin, Eyes, Threat and Lungs, entelling upon them a brief existence of suffer ing soul consigning them to en early grave. SELF AROSE is el - tether formideble enemy to health, for nothing else in the dread catalogue of icemen discs- Fes muses so destructive a drain upon the system, draw ing its Moine/oda of victims throtighm few years of sof faring down to an untimely grave. it destroys the Ner vons System, rapidly wastes away the energies of life, causes mental derangement, prevents the proper deyel opmeut of the system, disqualifies for marrirge, society. bosiness, and all earthly happiness, and leaves the suf ferer wrecked iu body or ndild, predisposed to Consump tion and a train of evils more to be dreaded than death itself. With the fullest confidence 1 assure the unfortu nate victims of Self Abuse that a permanent and speedy ` `rare Cat, be effected, and with the abandonment of ruin tuts practices my patients can be uttered to robust, vig- ' orons health, The affiieted are cautioned against the use of Patent :Medicines, for there are en many ingenious snares In the columns of tint public prints to catch and rob the unwary sufferers, that millions have their constitutions ruined by the vile compounds of quack doctors, or the equally poisonous nostrums vendoi as "Patent Medicines." I have carefully analyzed many of the so-called Patent Ilitslielties. and find that nearly all of them contain Cor rosive Sublimate, which is one of the strongest prepara tions of mercury and a deadly poison, which, instead of curing the disease, disables the system for life. Three-fourths of the patent nostrums now in use are put up by unprincipled and ignorantpersons who do not understand even the alphabet of the Sievraeto 3leati`A, and are-equally as destitute of any knowledge of the hu man system, having one object only to TIM, and that to tai)R9 meney, regardless of eonsequenees. Irregularities anti all til'Seases of maid and females treated on principles established by twenty years of practice, and sanctioned by thousands of the most re- Mailtable cures. Medicines with full directions sent to 'any, port of the United States or Canadas, by patients 'conitetnicating their symptoms by letter. ,111161131:98 cur .:460%0a strictly confidential. Andress S. gUILIDIRVILIA, IL D., Office N 0.1131 Filbert St„ [Old No. lui)j below twelfth, Plll LADELPHI.I. 21ily 8, 1857-Mirth 18, 1857, Important Discovery. CONSUMPTION AND ALL Diseases of the Lungs and Throat ARE POSITIVELY CURABLE BY INHALATION I!! triad; conveys the itemedies to the cavities in the lungs through the ale passages, and coming In direct contact with the disease, •neutralizes the tubercular matter, alleys the cough, causes a free and easy expectoration, heals the lunge, ?purifies the blood, imparts renewed vitality to the ner vous system, giving that tone and energy so 11/dispense. ble for the restoration of health. To be able to state ronfidently that Consumption is curable by Inhalation, Is to me a source of unalloyed pleasure. It is as much 'under the control of medical treatment tis any other 'formidable disease ; ninety out of every hundred cases can be cured in the first stages, and fifty per cent. in the second; but In the third stage it is imposaible to save 'more than five per cent., for the lunge are so cut up by 'tbe disease as to defy medical skill. Even, however, in the last stages, inhalation affords extraordinary relief to 'the suffering attending this fearful scourge, which an nually destroys ninety-five thousand persona in the U nited States alone ; and a correct calculation shows that of the present population of the earth, eighty millions `are destined to fill the Consumptive's grave. Truly, the quiver of death has no arrow co fatal as ' Consumption. In all ages It has been the great enemy ' ante, for it spares neither age nor sex, but sweeps off 'alike the brave, the beautiful, the graceful, and the gift ed. By the help of that Supreme tieing, from whom cometh every good and perfect gift, I am enabled tooffer to the afflicted a permanent and speedy cure in Con. gumption. 'The first cause of tubercles is from Impure Blood, and the immediate effect, produced by their depo sition In the lungs, is to prevent the free admission of air into the air cells, which causes a weakened vitality through the entire system. Then, surely, it is morn ra tional to expect greater good from medicines entering the cavities of the lungs ' than from those administered through the stomach ; the patient will always find the lungs free and the breathing easy, after inhaling rune dies, True, inhalation is a local remedy, nevertheless, it acts constitutionally, and with more power and cer tainty than remedies administered by the stomech. To prove the powerful and direct influence of this mode of administration, chloroform inhaled will destroy sensibil ity In a few minutes, paralyzing the entire nervous sys 'tem, no that a limb may be ampu toted without the slight est pain; inhaling the ordinary burning gee will destroy life in n few hours. The Sub elation of ammonia will rouse the system when 'fainting or apparently dead, The odor of many of the 'medicines is perceptible In the skin, a few moments af ter being inhaled, awl may be immediately detected in the blood. A convincing proof of the constitutional ef fects of inhalation, is the fact that sickness is always pro duced by breathing foul air. Is not this positive evi dence that proper remedies, carefully prepared and j utli• d ow d y administered through the lungs, should produce the most happy results During eighteen yeera' prac tice, many thousands, suffering from diseases of the lunge and throat, have been under my care, and I have effected many remarkable cures, even after the sufferers had been pronounced In the lust stages, which fully sat isfies me that Consumption is no longer a fatal disease.— kly treatment of Consumption is enamel, and founded On long eitpvience and a thorough investigation. My perfect acquaintance With the nature of tubercles, enables me to distinguish, readily, the various tones of disease that simulate consumption, and apply the proper remedies, rarely being mistaken even in a single This familiarity, in connection with certain pathological and microscopic discoveriee, enables me to relieve lite lungs from the effects of contracted chests ; to en large the chest, purify the blood, impart Lott renewed vi tality, giving energy and tonoto theentire system. Medicines, With full directions, sent to any part of the United States and Cantatas, by patients communicating their symptoms by letter. But thp cure would be more certalo if the patient should pay me a visit, which would give me an opportunity to examine the lungs and enable me to prescribe with much greater certainty ; and then the cure could be effected without my seeing the patient again. 0. W. GRAMM, M. D., Office, 1131 Filbert. St., (old No., 109,) below 12th, I . IIIIIAIDELPIIIA, duly 8, 1847-3.lazuh 18, 1807. 4110 1 1 111 . - - — IJeERTY IP‘TUE ) • aburrtici VOL. 9=--XO, 26. Well, Peterwheradve you been? w Hy, I have been at the STOVE STORE of JAMES N. ROGERS.. mid bought one of his superior COOK ING STOVES, as he has just returned from the city and brought one of The largest assortments of STOVES' ever brought to Lebanon. My neighbor got one from him, and it is the best Cook ing Stove I ever saw. They cap Bake, Roast, Cook and Wash et the same time, if they wish to, and it does eve rything to perfection; I was determined to get one of the same sort, and the best of all is he warrantaevery COOKING Svoye he sells to do. as he represents. A few more of the same sort left, with a general as sortment of Parlor, Hail, dr Dining Room Stoves, which will he sold cheap, with a full assortment of TIN and SHEET IRON WARE, generally connected with his business. All work entrusted to him will be done With neatness and dispatch. Lebanon, Sept. 23,'57. JAMES N. ROGERS. CLOTHING! CLOTHING ! CLOTHING! Clothing tin. the HiMoil. runt P;LAlitiEST,bee fUlßorteil stock of Ready-made Cloth- I log ever exhibited in Lnlinnon, was just [Tema at tho Head-Quarters for Good and Cheap Clothing! In Cumberland street, opposite the Court House. Itaiscvsysor t BROTHER take the lead in selling cheap; they can't be beat. We invite our numerous Customers and the public in general, to call tool examine oar new stock of FALL and WINTER CLOTTELNO, consisting of all styles of Over coats, Sack and Frock Coats, Raglans, Mamas, Cassimer and Business. Coats, Boys' Coats. Pants and Vests, as well as a large stock of new styles of fancy cassimer pants, silk, velvet, plush and satin Vests; Underclothing, suchas silk shirts, merino shirts and drawers, heavy cotton and wool drawers, German knit Jackets, wool and cotton hose, Muf fere, comforts, neckties, suspendeis, gloves, shirts and col lars. Ac.. Ac., Ac. Jrz- Hats and Caps, Trunks,Valises and Carpet Bags, all will he sold at the lowest gure. Lebanon, Oct. 7,'+i7. IIBIZENSTRIN A BRO. NEW CLOTHING STORE, ARRIVAL OF NEW GOODS! Luba wt,.irtjeztfillvinfwntbe Gentlemenof :iar itit,.thatwekavo orenedao Cloth ing Store, in Cumberland street, next door to _Henry It Stine's Store, where we intend to keep constantly on hand a most select assortment of Ready-Made Clothing, such as Frock Coats, Overcoats, Dross Coats, Cassimere, Sattinett and Cassitiett rants, of all prices and descrip. Lions, front $1,50 up to :,,o; Pests, cloth, plain and fancy Silk of all - styles and designs, and a general assortment of • . Furnishing Goods, such as Neck-ties. Suspenders, Wool and Suckskin Mores, white and flannel Shirt. Wool and Silk Undershirts, &c. Being in connexion with a large Wholesale mamufiteturing establishment in the city, where our floods aro manufac tured in the best manner, and buying our materials at the lowest cash prices. we are confident that we can please all who will favor us with their. custom. 911 we ask, isa trial, as our motto is—'Quirk - Otio;ic anti Small Profits SCIIWEIT7.EIi, .ILMILBRONNEII & CO. Lebanon, Oct. 14, CM=i= TOIIN FAItEIRA Co., (New No.) SIS Market t.f street, above Eighth, Philadelphia, Importers, Almmfacturera and dealers in Ladies, Gentlemen and Children's FANCY FURS. wholesale and retail. • J. F. & Co., would call the attention of dealers and the public generally to their immense Stock of Fancy Furs for Ladies, Gentlemen and Children; their assortment embraces every article and kind of Fancy Furs that will be worn during the season—such as Full Capes, Mall Capes, Quarter Capes,'relines. Victorines, Bons, Muffs and Mull - Moos, from the finest Russian Sable to the low est price Domestic Furs. For Gentlemen the largest assortment of Fur Colpirs, Gloves, GauntletS, &e.; being the direct:lmporters. our Furs, and Minuftcturers of them Outer our own Su pervision, we feel sattsßed we can offer better induce ments to deahms and the pitblic generally than any other house, haring an immense assortmenttoselect fromand at the Manufacturers prices. itat.`Fe only ask a call. JOIUN FA REINA & Sept. No. Sit Market St., above Sth,Phint. Illotees Liquid Hair Dye. quilEliillawin g , from th:it emtne4,Physician of Phil. adtlphia, Dr. Drinekle, added to t'Se ,testimony of Professor Booth, only confirms what is evidenced by thousands who have used Ilover's Dye: tlinAno Row, CIETESTITUT STREET,I Philadelphia. December 22d, 1853. "In regard to llover's Hair Dye, I can state unhesi tatingly, that it contains no deleterious ingredients, and may be useti with entire safety, and with the utmost confidence and success." W. D. DRINCKLE. 31. D. • Mr's Writing and Indelible Inks, Arc so well and widely known, as to require no eulogy of their merits, it is only necessary ta'say. that the steady and increasing thiniand t gires the best evidence that they maintain their character for superiority, which distin guished them when first introduced; years ago. Orders addressed to the Manufiudory. No. 416 Racy street, above fourth, (old No. 14-1,) Philadelphia, will re eeive prompt attention, by JOSEPH N. HOVER, Sept. 1ii,.57.4.April Id, '5B. Manufacturer. REMOVAL. Lebanon Marble Yard. THE subscriber respectfully informs the public in general that he is Prepared to don't kinds of 1 , , , ,xer ANDORZVAMENTAL work et his Marble yard, in Walnut street, half way between the Court House and Lebanon Talley Railroad Depot, at the shortest notice, as good cc work done in any city in the 'United States, Bud being the only Stone Cutter in Lebanon county who has served angular apprenticeship to the business, be pledges himself that he cau toanufhe tare cheaper, and glee a better finish than auy other man engaged in the $lll:llObUNineSS. His stock consists of Monuments, Grave Stones, Mantels, Cemetery Posts; Furniture Slabs, &c. - - Also, SANDSTONE of the best finality for all uses, plain and ornamental. A large assortment of LIME STONE for all hinds of housework, - of any size and quantity. s'Please call and examine prices and the stook before you purchase elsewhere. JOHN FARRELL. Lebarak b'e'Cuxubvr 19, 1655. N. 11.—LETTE1t1NG done in German and English, by the beat practical workineh . HOWARD ASSOCIATION, PHILADELPHIA. Important announcement MO all persons afflicted with Sexual Diseases, such as Spermatorrinsa, Seminal Weak aeW4. ImpotenceXionor r boom° leet,Syphilis, the Vico of OnanisimorSeif-Ahuseote. The Howard Association, in view of the awful deatruc tk of human life, aimed by Sexual diseases. and the de ceptions practised upon the unfiwtunate victims of such diNCIISPS by Quacks, have directed their consulting Sur geon, as a CV/art - Me& „elet worthy of their name, to give Medical 41duice Gratis, to all persons thus afflicted, who apply by letter, with a description of their condition, (age, occupation, habits of life, Fee...) mid in all eases of extreme Poverty and suffering, to : famish Mllicines free ofclearge. The Howard association is a benevolent institution, es tablished by special endowment, fur the relief of the sick and distressed, afflicted with "Virulent and Epidemic Dis eases." It has now a surplus of means, which the Direc tors have voted to expend in advertising the above notice. It is needless to add that the Association commends the highest Retlical skill of the age, and will furnish the most approved modern treatment. Just Pnblished, by the Association, a Report on Sper matorrhoaa, or Seminal Weakness, the vice of Onanism, Masturbation or Self-Abuse, and other diseases of the Sex ual Organs, by the moulting Surgeon, which will be sent by mail, (in a sealed envelope,) free of charge, on the re c.,ipt of two stamps for postage. Address, Dr. OEO. IL CALHOUN, Consulting Surgeon, Howard Association, No. 2 South Ninth Street, Philadel phia, Pa. By order of the Directors, EZRAD. LIEARTWELL, Pre*. , • SecSy. 7 . [Oct.7,'s7-Iy. Splendid Girls! AT" 439 CHESTNUT STEEET, PEHIADP ELHIA! The Original Gift Book Stairb: • • GG. EVANS would inforin his friends and the public, that he has removed his Star Gift Book Store and Publishing house, to the splendid store in Brown's Iron Building, 439 Chestnut street, two doors below Mfth,wliere the purchaser of each hook will receive one of the follow ing gifts, valued at from 23 cents to $lOO, Consisting of Gold Watches, - Jewelry, &c. WOUTIS 550 Patent Engliiih Lever Gold 'Watches, $lOO 00 each. 550 Patent Ancluir do. do. • 50 00 " 400 Ladies' Gold ltratChes, ISk. cases. 35 00 " 600 Silver Lever Watches, warranted, 15 00 " 500 Parlor Timepieces, ' 10 00 " 500 Cameo Sets, Ear Drops and Pins,. 00 4 • 500 Ladles Gold Bracelets, $5 00 tiil2 (El " " 500 Gents Vest Chains, 10 00 1,000 Gold Lockets, (large size doidde ease)' 300 " 2,000 Gold Lockets, (small size) 300 " 1,000 Gold Pencil Cases, with Gold Pens, 500 " 1,000 Extra Gold Pens, with cases and holders, 10 50 " 2,500 Gold Pencils, (Ladies) 250 " 2,500 Gold Pens, with Silver Pencils, 250 " 2,500 Ladies' Gold Pens, with wises, 150 " 6,500 Gold Rings, (Ladies') 1 00 2,000 Gent's Gold Rings, 2 75 2,500 Ladles Gold Breastpins, , 250 " 3,500 Misses' Gold Breastpins, • , • • 150 3,000 Pocket Knives, ' • , • 76 2,000 Sets Gent's Gold Bosom Studs, 3 00 2,000 do. do. • Sleeve Buttons, 30 ° 2,000 Pairs Ladies' Ear Drops, . 250 " 8,000 Ladies' Pearl Card Cases,' - 500.'r 15,000 Ladies' Cameo, Jet or Moiiide Pins, s'oo " 2,500 Ladles' Clinic.° Shawl and Ribbon Plni, 360 " 5,000 Petridge's Balm of a Thousand Flowers, 50 " EVAN'S new Catalogue contains all the most popular books of the day, and the newest publications, all of which will be sold as low as ea,n,be obtained at other stores. A complete catalogue of books' ent free, by application thro' the mail, by addressing G. G. Eiins, 439 Cheat:Rd street, Philadelphia. ifr.l" Agents wanted in every town in the United States. Those desiring so to act can obtain full particulars by ad dressing as above. N. 11.—In consequOnce of the 'money crisis, and simmer ous failures, the subscriber has beep, enablell to purchase from assignees an immense stack of books, embracing ev ery department of literature, at prices which will enable him to give $5OO worth of the above gifts on every $lOOO worth of books sold. frig-An extra book, with a gift, will be sent to caelt per son otderingtenbookii tot* sent to one adilrele, by Ezpreoe. Aup soul far a actarapue. November 4,1857. LEBANON, PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 23, 1857. Nutty. BURY ME IN THE monmtro Bury me In the morning, mother; Oh, let me have The light, Of one bright day on my grave, mother, Ero you leave me alone with tits night, Alone, in the night of the grave, mother, 'Tie a thought of terrible fear— And you will be here alone, mother, And stare will be ehi ning here, So bury me in the morning, mother, And let me have the light, Of one bright day on my grave, mother, Ere I am alone with the night. You tell nio of the Wevior's lovis mother— I fool it in my heart; But, oh, from this beautiful world, mother, The soul is fain to stay— For the grare is dark and dpep, mother, And heaven seems far away. Then bury me in the morning, mother, And lot me have the light, Of one bright day on my grave, mother, Ere I tun alone with the night. Never iiitalisp my hands, mother, Tin it !ails away froni.thine— Let me hold the pledge of thy love, mother, Till I feel the love divine; The love divine—Oh! look, mother! Is smiling down on me! So bury me in the morning, mother, When sunbeams flood the sky— For death is thp gate of light, mother, And leads to . light on high. 4 aCO:itt ghats A THIRD BOWL. "Draw your chair close up. Put your feet on those skins. You will find them soft and warm. Light another pipe and fill your glass, Philip. It is k bitter night,. My old bones shudder when I hear the wind wail over the house and through the oak tree. "Capital punch, that! John has a knack at the article that I have rarely seen equalled—never surpassed. lie is a prinee of a servant, that John, if,he is black—let me see, it must be thirty years at least—it is thirty-two years riext Christmas week, and I have never quarrelled with him,,and ho has never quarrelled with me, A rare history for master and -man. I think it is because we love each other's weaknesses. Here he comes. "John, another bowl of punch;if you please'.-7- Wid, hat another! Certainly, man, I must have It. This is only the second, and Philip, yonder, has drank half, of courp. Not drank any! You don't mean to say that he hal been drinking noth ing but that vile claret all thablessed evening ? Philip, you dog, I thought you know my house rules better than that. Bit "ytiit would always have your own way. "One inure bowl, John—but•one. It shall 'to the last; and Sohn, got the old Marasehino,,one of the thick black bUttles with the small necks, and open it gently. But you know how, old fel low, and just do your lieSt to ludic us comforta ble. "llow.the wind blows ! Philip, my boy, lam seventy-three years and seven days over. birth-day was a week ago to-day. ''"An old batchelur! Yea, verily, one of the old est kind. But what is age? What is the paltry sum of seventy years? Do you think lam older in my soul than I was half a century ago? Do you thi ik because my heart -beats slower, that my mind thinks more slowly, my feelings spring up less freely, my hopes are less buoyant, less cheer ful, if they look forward only weeks instead of years? I tell you, boy, that seventy years are a day in the sweep of memory; and one young, forever young, is the motto of an immortal soul: I know I am what men call old; I know my cheeks are wrinkled like ancient parchment, and my lips are thin, and,my head gray, even to silver. But in my soul I KO that I am young, and I shall be young till the earthly ceases and the unearthly and eternal begins. "I have not grown one day older than I was at thirty-two. I have never advanced a day since then. All my life long since that, has been one day—one short day; no night, no rest, no succes sion of hours, events, or thoughts has marked my "Philip, I have been living forty years by the light of one memory—by the side of one grave. "John, set the bowl down on the hearth. You may go. You need not sit up for me. Philip and I will see each other to out rooms to-night, John, Now go, old fellow, and sleep soismil:y. "Phil., she was the purest angel that - flesh ever imprisoned, the most beautiful child of Eve. I can see her now. Her eyes raying the light of heaven—her brow, white, calm and holy—her lips wreathed with the blessing of her smile. She was as graceful as a form seen in dreams and she moved through the scenes around her as you have aeon the angelic visitors of your slumbers move through crowded assemblies, without effort, appa rently wills some supernatural aid; "The child of wealth, she was fitted to adorn the splendid house in whieh she was born and grew to womanhood. It was a grand old place, built in the midst of a growth of oaks that might have been there when Columbus dis*cred Amer ica, and seemed likely to stand a century longer. They are standing yet, and the wind to'-nighl makes a wild lament through their branches, that sounds mournfully above her grave. "I ihust pause . to recall the scenery of the old familiar spot. There was a stream of water that dashed down the rooks a hundred yards from the house, and which kept always full and fresh, an acre Upend, over which hung maples and Willows, and other trees, while on the surface the white blossoms of-the lotus nodded lazily on the ripples' With Egyptian sleepiness and langitor: "The old house was built of dark stone, and had a massive appear:thee, not thlieved by the sombre shade in which it Stood. The s'iirisliine seldom penetrated to the - ground in the summer Months, except in one spot, just in front of the library windows, where it - used to lio and sleep in the grass; as it loved the old place. And if sun shine loved it, why should not E "Gen. Lewis was one of the pleasant, o ld.fash. ioned men, now quite gone out of memory, as well as out of existence. lie loved his horses, big dogs, this place and his punch. Ile loved:his nephew, Tom, wild, uncouth, rough cub as he was; but above horses; dogs, or house, •or altogether, ho loved his daughter, Sarah, and I loved her too. "Yes, you may look at Me Its you will, Phil., I loved SaralLewis, and, by all the gods, I leveler now as I loved her then, and as I shall lovelier again if I meet her where she has gone. ' "Call it folly, call It boyish, call it old' man's second childhood, I care not by . tvhat name yoti . mill it; it is enough that to-night the image of that young girl stands 'before pae splendidly beau tiful in all the holiness of her young, glad life, and I could VOW' down on my - isnoes and worship her now again. "Why did.l sapagain? For forty .yeara-Ibroro not ceased to worship tier. kneel to pray in tbo morning; elm passes beturtion-mo and tlcid.4- 7 If :I would rand the imiyira eveziiiig she looks up at me from the page. If I would worship on a Sabbath morning in the church, she looks down on me from some unfathomable dis tance, some unapproachable belga, and I pray to her as she were my hope, my heaven, and my all. "Sometimes in winter nights, I feel a coldness stealing over me, and icy fingers are feeling about my heart, as if to grasp and still it. I lie calmly, quietly, and I think my hour is at band; arid through the gloom, and through the mists and films that gather over vision, sco bcr afar off, still the same angel in the distant heaven, and I cry aloud on God to let me go and find her, and on her to come to me, and then thick darkness settles on me. "Tim doctor calls this apoplexy, and says I shall some day did in a fit of it. What do doctors know of the tremendous influences that are working on our souls? He, in his scientific stupidity, calls it a disease;rind warns me against wine and high living ; as if I did not understand what it is, and why my vision at Buell' tithes reaches so very far into the deep unknown. "I have spoken of Tom Lewis, her cousin.— Auer said he was tho old man's heir ia equal proportion with the dak - iihteri• for he bad been brought up iu the family, and bad always been treated as a son. 'He was a good fellow if ho was rough, for he had the goodness that all who came within her influence must have. • "I kayo seen her look the devil out of him of ten. I remember once when the horses behaved in a way not to suit him, and he had to let au oath or two escape his lips preparatory to putting on the whip. We were riding together down the avenue,.and he raised the lash. At the moment ho caught her eye. She was-walking up from the lodge, where she had been to see a sick child.— She saw the raised whip, and her eye caught his. He did not strike. The horses escaped for that time. He drove them quietly through the gate, and three miles and back without a word of an ger. "Did I tell you I was her cousin also? On her mother's side. Not on the General's. We lived not far off, and I lived 'much of my time at his house. Tom and myself had been inseparable, and we did not conceal our rivalry from each other. "Tom," said. I, one Morning, "why can't you ho content with half the Goneral's fortune, and let mo have the other half?" "Bah ! Jerry," said' he, "as if that would be any wore even, when you want Surah with it. In heaven's name, taka - half the - money, if that's all you want." "Can't we fix it se as to make an even division Toni ? Take all the fortune, and let me have her, and I'll call it square." "Just what I was going to propose to you. Be reasonable now, Jerry, and get out of the way.— You must see she dosen't care a poppy for you." "I twirled a reached in my fingers that she had given ice that morning, and replied. "Poor devil ! I did not.. think you could be so inh:tuated. Why, Ttini, there is no chance for you under tote sun ! But go tiliead; find it out as you will. I'm sorry for you." "A hundred s'neli pleasant talks we used to have and she never gave either of us one particle more of encouragement than the other. She was like a sister to us buth,and.neithet dared brake the spell of our perfect happiness by asking liar to be more." "And so time passed on;;" "One Sundity,e4celloon , wo weree&together on horseltelt, all three'etrits, over the mountain and down the valley. We' were returning towards sunset, sauntering along the road, downn - the side of the bill." "Phil, stir the fire a little. That howl of punch. is getting cold,' it seems to me, and I am a little ehilley myself: Perhaps it is the recollection of that day that chills me." "I had made up my mind if opportunity occur red, to tell her that day, all that I had thought For years. I had demi-Mined to know, once for all if she would love nut or no." "If not, I would go I cared not where; the world was broad enough, and it should be to someplace where I should never see her face again never hear her voice agaih, -never 1)A 'down and worship her magnitleent beauty agaih i Would go to Roo and offered myself to the Czar, or to Syria, and light with Napoleon, or to Egypt and serve with the men of Murad Bay. Ail notions were milita ry, I remember, and all my ideas were of war and death on the field." "I rode by her side, and looked up at her occa sionally, and thought she was looking splendidly. I had never seen her more so. Every attitude was grace, over look was life and spirit." "Tom clung efo‘66 to her. One would have thought he'was watehing the very opportunity I was after myself. Now he rode a few paces for ward, and as I was catching my breath to say Sarah, he would rein up and fallback to his place, and I would make some flat remark that made me seem like a fool to myself, if not to her. "What is the matter with you, Jerry," said she, at length. "Jerry's in love," said - Tom. "I could have thrashed him on the spot."' "In love Jerry in love !" and she turned her large brown eyes towards me. . • "In vain I sought toTathom them, and arrive at some eenclution, whether or no the subject in• terested her with special force. - "The eyes remained fixed, till I blundered out the old saw, Tom judges others . by himself." "Then the eyes turned to Tom, and ho pleaded guilty by his awkward' looks; and half-blushes, averted - eyes, and forced laugh. ' "By heaven l . thought what Would I not giVe for Tones awkardnes -The seoundrel is win ning his way by it." - "Jerry, is-Tom in love?" "The naiieta of the question, the correctness of it; the vary simplicity of the thing was irresistible and I could not repress a smile that grew into a broad laugh. "Tom joined in it, and we made the woods ring with our merriment!' "I say, Toni, isn't that your whip lying back yonder in the road ?" "Confound it, yes; the cord hits broken lion: ray lyrist," and he rode back for it. "Jerry who does Tom lever' said she quickly, turning. to me. "You," said I, bluntly, "Why, of course; but who is he inlove with I mean ?' "It was a curious way to get at it. Could Ibe justified ? It was not asked what I had intended but it was getting it it in another way, and just as well, perhaps. It was, at all events, asking Torn's question for.hirn, and it saVed, me the em barrassment of putting it as a;ty own. I determin ed this instant. "Sarah, could you love Tom well enough to marry him?" "I! Jerry; what do you mean?" "Suppose Tom wants you to be his wife, will you marry him?" "I don't, know..—can't never thought of such a thing. YOwdon't think he has anysuch idea, do you.," "That was my answer. It was enough as far as it went, but I was no better off than before.— She did not love - Tom, or she would never have answered thus. - .lint - did' she tale me? Would , net she receive.the Idea: in just,the, same way? • , "I looked back. Tom was on the ground—had picked up his whip, and had one foot in the stir rup ready to mount:ligain. I gulped down my heart that was up in my throat, and spoke out. • "Sarah, will you marry me ?" "Philip, .she turned her eyes again toward me —those largo brown eyes, those holy eyes—and blessed me with there unutterably glorious gaze. To my dying hou,r, I shall not fOrget that gaze; to all eternity it will remain in my soul. She look ed at me one look; and whether it was pity, sor row, surprise or love, I cannot tell you, l. that filled them and over owed towards mo froraout their itnmeasurable depths ; but Philip, it was the last light of those eyes I never saw—the last. "Is there anything left in that bowl? Thank you. Just a 'glassful. You will not take any? Then, by your leave, I will finish it.. My story is nearly ended, and I will not keep you up much longer. "We had not noticed, so absorbed had we boon in our pleasant talk, that a black cloud had risen in the west and obscured the sun, and covered the sky.; and even the sultry air Woof, called our at tention to the coming thunder storm "As she looked at rue, even as she fixedhcf 'eyoi on'in'ino, a flash, blinding and fierce, fell ou the top of a tree by the roadside, not fifty yards from us, and the crash of thunder Shook the founda tions of the hills. "Fur a moment all was dazzling, burning, blaz ing light; then sight was gone and a momentary darkness settled on oureyes, Therkorsevrouch ed to the ground in terror, and Sarah tkimi3a her head i as if in presence of God. "All this was the work of an instant, and the next Tom's horse sprang by us on a furious gal lop, dragging Tom by the stirrup. Ile had been in the act of mounting when the flash came, and his horse swerved and jumped so that his foot caught, and ho dragged with his head on the ground. "There was a point in the road about fifty yards' where it divided in two. The ono was the car riage track, which wound down the Mountain by easy descents; the other was a foot-path, which was a short, precipitous cut to a point on the car riage road nearly a quarter of a mile below. "Calling to Sarah to keep back and wait, I drove the spurs into my horse and went down the steep path. Looking back, I saw her following, her horse making. tremendous speed. She kept the carriage road, following on after Tom; and I .pressed on, thinking to intercept his horse be low. "My : mi.& was terrible. I Could hear then' thun dering down the track above. I looked up and caught sight of them through trees. I looked down and saw a gully before me full eighteen feet wide, and as many deep. great horse was that 'black horse Cmear,and he took the gully at a flying leap that landed us far over it, and a moment latei, I was at a point where the . roads -again met, but only in time to see the other two horses go by at a furious pare, Sarah's abreast of the gray, and she reaching her hand out brairely, trying to grasp the flying rein, as hei'horse went leap for leap with him. To ride close behind them was worse than use less in such a case. It would serve a te ,increase their speed; so I fell back a dozen roils and fol lowed, watching the end. "At the foot of the mountain ti& river ran broaki and deep spanned by the bridge at the nar rowest point. To reach the bridge, the road took a short turn up stream directly on the bank. "On swept the gray, and black horses, side by side, down the hillside, not fifty leaps along the level ground, and then came the turn. "She was on the off-side. At the sharp turn she pressed ahead a half length; and reined ber horse across the grey's shoulder, if possible, to turn him up toward the bridge. "It was all over in an instant. The grey was the heavier horse." Ile pressed her close ; the black horse yielded—gave way toward the fence, stumbled, and the fence, a light rail, broke with a crash, and they went over, all together into the deep, black stream. "Still, the sound of that crash and plunge is in my ears. Still I can see them go headlong down the bank together - , into the deep, black water. "I never knew exactly what I did then. When I was conscious,liound myself swimming around in a circle, diving occasionally to find them, but in vain. The grey horse swam ashore. and stood on the bank by my 'black, with distended nostrils and trembling limbs, shaking from head to foot with terror. The other black horse was floating down the surface of the stream ? drowned. His mistress was no where to be scan, and Tom was gone also. . "I found her 'at, last." - "Restore her ? No ! AVance at her face show ed how vain all such hope was. Never was hu man "face so angelic: She was already one of the saintly—one of the immortals—and the beauty and glory of her new life had left some faint like ness of 0.84 on her,deita form and *time. "Philip, I said I had never grown a day older Since that time. You know not why. I have nev er ceased to think of her as on that day. I have never lost the blessing of those eyes as they look ed on me in the forest on the mountain road. I have never left her, never grown ay from her. If,,in the resurrection, we are to re o , the bod: Ms most exactly fitted to—represent our whole lives; if, as I have sometimes thought, we shall rise in the form and•feature as I was that daymnd no record will remain °ran hour of my life after her burial. • • "We bailed her in the' old smolt close• by the house, among the solemn oaks. ii:eautiful, angel like, to the very last. .- "My .voice is broken. I can say no more, Phi -1:p. You have the story. That is the whole" of it. God bless you, Phil, my boy. You have list. ened—pationtly—toiny—talk. "Good. night, boy. - Go to bed. stay Bois iu the old chair awhile. I don't—exactly—feel —like—sit4 g ..ye t." I left hint siting there ; bis . head bowed on his breast, his eyes closed, his breathing Short and heavy, as if With supressod grief. My own eyes were misty. the hail I found John, sitting bolt upright in a large chair. "'Why, Jain; I thought the Major sent you to bed long ago ?" . "Yeselt ; the major always sends too to hod at the third bowl,,Sir, and I always don't go. He has been telling you the old story, now hasn't he; Mr. Philip ?" "What old story, John ?" "why., ibi4it Miss Lewis, and Miller Tout, anti the General ?" "Yes." John laid his long black finger knowingly up the side of his nose, and looked at me. "Why - John—you don't mean to say—eh ?" "All punch, What, Sarah, and the black horse, and—" "All punch,• Sir." "John, my man, go in and take caro of him.— Ile is either asleep or drunk. Curious that! Why didn't I think that a Man was hardly to be believ ed after ibis second bowl, and perfectly incredible on the'third. By Jove ! he is a turnip at. 4 sto ry, though." . . • It would be difficult to describe all that I dream ed about , that . . WIYOLE NO. 443. iudiantruto. MEMORY NEVER DIES. One of the survivors of the Central America, in narrating his . sensations while floating on the waves, after the vessel had sunk, gives the follow ing forcible illustration of the powers of mem ory . "I guess I hatymen about four bours in the water, and had ihnsied away from the rest, when the waves eat sed toTmake any noise, and I heard my mother say—:- "Johnny, did you eat sister's grapes ?" I hadn't thought of it for twenty years, at least. It had gone clear out of my mind. I had u. sis ter that died of consumption more than thirty years ago, and when she was sick—l was a boy of eleven or se 7 -1 . , neighbor bad sent her some ear ly hot-bousAirapes.- Well, these grapes wereleft in a room wherefl was and—l ought to have been skinned alive ff it, little reseal that I was—l de voured them , all; „Mother came to use after I had gone to bed, .wisaphe-ooniiiiot od..the, fruit for sister ti..mobitaßficr nniuthmith ia the night, and said— - • ' "Johnny, did you eat sister's grapes?" I did not add to the meanness of my conduct by telling a lie. I owned up, and my mother went away in t i 7ars, - hut without flogging. me. /t oc casioned me many a qualm of conscience for mri, ny years'after; but, as I said, for twenty years at least, I had not thought of i t, till when I was float ing about benumbed with cold, I heard it as plain as I over beard her voice in my life; I beard my mother say— "Johnny, did you eat sister's grapes ?" I don't know how to account for it. It did not scare me, though I thought it was a presage of my death." THAT UNLIJC.K X NOSE. George Frederickr Chilton, a very handsomely dressed young gentleman, with auburn whiskers and moustache of the same color, complained that Simon Bolivar l'uddiman had pulled his nose in the piazza of a fashionable hotel, where both of these youngsters have fixed their abode. Cpiltun the proprietor of the injured nose, is a very tall person, and Rudoiman, the nose-puller, is a very short one; so that it is difficult to coneieve how the latter could perpetrate the.outrage without the help of a stepladder, or some such convenience.— The story told by Mr. Chilton, the sufferer, was so extremely affecting that the whole auditory seem edt• to melt at the i yecital. . "Your Honor um:y observe (sail he) that my nose has an unhealthy appearance; in fact, it is much swollen and inflamed, and I have some rea son to fear that it will be permanently diseased. All thess "Maideasant effects, air, have been caused by the violent conduct of my fellow-boarders.— Nose-pulling appears to be a sorter mania, or mor al epidemic, at our hbtel; every man who stops there becames infected, as I should judge, with an unconquerable desire, to execute the feat—and my nose is constantly selected as the most suitable sub ject for the experiment. I dare say, your Honor would be puzzled were you to attempt to guess how many times this nose had Imenpulled within the last three months." "It is impoesible for MO to make any such cal culation, Mr. Chilton," said the magistrate. "Of course, sir, yeu ean formno - idea of the in credible number of times this act has been repeat ed. I hesitate to mention the figure, for fear you might find it difficult to 'believe, though . my ve racity has never been impeached, and I am not , at all given to boasting. lam pretty sure, howev er, that no door-bell in our street has been tugged oftener, during the autumn of 1857, than this un fortunate feature." "rWbatean you to provoke`so many assaults ?" asked the magistrate. "That is the strangest part of the business," an swered Chilton. "I am always giving offencawith out meaning; it—one of the boarders charges me with winking at his Wife, or his sister, and pulls my nose on that score; another tweaks my nose because I do not pay proper attentions to his fe male relations; a third.pulls, because I offer to stand a treat; and a fourth, because I neglect to make thasame offer; in short they are never at a loss for one pretence or another. This gentleman, (pointing to Ruddimany) ptilledmy nose because I peeped over his head into a looking-glass at which he was adjusting his shirt-c'ellar. His head was so much below the level of my own that I actually did'not observe him until I felt the pressure of his Anger and thumb. Now, sir, (con tinued Mr. Chilton,) if the law cannot protect my nose, I shall have to enclose it in a case of dm green or japaned tin, as a safe guard against -ill, treatment I am not Each a milk-sop as to mind a small inconvenience, and au occasional tweak, if managed with any degree of tenderness and deli cacy, might be passe'd over aS a trifle. But the rough style in which they overdo the thing by con stant repetition, is rather more; t ibi4, than any man of honer and spirit can be eitucted to put up with." - The magistrate Sedated to think so too,. and therefora took all the neecessary measures for the protection of Mr. O's -nose in time to Come. The last aggrasserißuddiman, was bound over to an swer fur an asiault.Phitudelphia Press. SELF-IXAMINATION. . Let tnit fiat elumbor close my eyes', Before I have recollected thrice. , The train,of actions through the day Whore 4ave my feet marked . out their way t - What haye Vomit *herpfer I!ve.betnal,, , From, all I've heard,,frmn all I've seep! What know I more, that's worth the What have I done that's worth the doing? What kave sought that I would shunt What duties have I left it,ttdo ‘ rie? Or into what new follies run? The r se selfinquirfes.are the Tam i l That leads to virtue and to do& A Snorer STORY 'DY Dickasip:---Dickens tells the following% story of an American sea-captain:— "On Wig Veyage ihe captain bad on board a §onlig lad} , of remarkable personal attrac tions, (a fibres(' I use as one being entirely new, and one never Met within the newspapers.) This young lady was beloved ititonsely by five young gentleman passengers, and in return she was in 14re with them all very ardently, but witb'out any follicular preference for - either. Not knowing koW to Make up him mind in this dilemma& she con sulted any friend the capts.M. The captain, being a man of an . original turn . of mine, says to the Young lady, Jump overboard, and marry the maxi that jumps after you. The young lady, struck with the idea, acid fi;l4 naturally fond of bath ing; , espeoially in warm weather, aiitahert took the advice of the captain, who had* boat manned in care of accident.AeekdAgli :)text_ morning, the five lovers being on deoli,'lsadlooy. ing devotedly at, theioung lady,' she plunged to fie: sea; head forinost... rota of We layers im mediately-jumped in after her. When giiicyoung lady and the four lovers were got oat itigain; she says to the captain, 'What am Ito do:with them now, they aree se wettl'tliyirthereitplaill, , Take the dry one!' And the younsl4y did, 04 she :Married WIG', Ittantin itErttsu A Family Paperfor ,Town 4. Country, IS PRINTED ANDTUBLISIIED WEERLE By WM. N. BRESLIN, In the 2tl Story of Rise's New Ipiilding, Cipabeilarat sc.„ At One Dollar and Fifty Cents. a Year, ADYEltUntesme inserted at the usual rates RATES OF POSTAGE. In Lebanon County, postage free. • In Pennsylvania, out of Lebanon county, 3 1 4 cents per quarter, or 13 cents a year. Out of this State, 6c ct.vpet quarter, or 26 ots. a year. If the postage is not paid in advance, rates are doubled. THE RED tsiIICOAT AND THE WHITE, 0, the red, tliallannting pettiosst, That courts the eye of day, . That loves ro flare and be admired, And Winks frdinleir away-- ' It may Wight the roving sight, And cher& the fancy free:. flat If its wearer's half as bold / I'll pass and let:teri : IVlth, her rod, her flaunting pettiomt, She's not the girl for met 41/1- But the white. r tn nio4ost petticoat, As pure as drifted Sneer, That shuns the gaze in crowded ways, ' Where follies; come, t:nd go: it stirs-the promise on its path, 01 daisy-on the lea: • And: if the wearer's like tho garb, berintifulys she • With ber.wbito, het nftlest petticoat, Ohi she's the girl for mel OLD AND BLOODY ENGiali LAWS "Under thuhop-lifting, aet,7,Baya,Sir William Meredith, addressing thp,ljouie'of Common's, in 1711, "One Mary Jones Was executild, whose case I shall just mention. It was about the time when press-warrants,were issued on the alarm about Falkland Islands. The Woman's husband was pressed, their goads seized for some debt of hi,„ and she, with two small children, turned into the streets a begging., 'Tis a eircurestance not to bo forgotten, that she was very young, (under nine teen) and remarkably handsome. She went to a linen draper's shop, took some coarse linen off the counter, and 8111)1)4 it under her cloak.. The shaman. sim aer, and she laid it down. For this she was kqage4 I "Tier defens : e was, 'that she hadlived in credit and wanted for nothing, till the press-gang came and stole her husband from her; but since then she had no bed to lie on—nothing to give her children to eat, and they were almost naked ! and perhaps she might have done something wrong, for she scareclY knew what she did.'. Alte parish officers testified to the truth of this story. - . But it seems there had been a good duak.s4BPlifting in Ludgate; an example was thought necessary (by the judges) anti thiawoman was hanged for the comfort and satisfactini of some shopkeepers in Ludgate street. "When brought to receive sentence, she behav ed in such a frantic manner, as proved - her mind to be in a desponding and distracted state, and the child was sucking at her breast when she let out for Tyburn (gallows) r- nITCHING TU DARNED Ttirto.-The N. Ramp- shire Register gives the follVwfni-- account of an incident on the New Raven and Hartford Road, soon after it went into operation : The train stopped at Meriden to wood up,and a fidgety gentleman who was probably- the first time in his lice\ in a railroad car, and who held on to his seat with both hands from the time the oars left Hartford, looking as though he expected_ev cry moment: to be 'book out.of• the window, sud denly stepped out on the platform and took a rap id look at the locomotive. "Anything tho matter?" inquired a wag who had greatly enjoyedithe countryman's perturba tion. "I should think there was something the mat ter if you,ever noticed it! road, and right in the middle of tie od the darned thing. 'Spam it should start? hey! I guess some of us 'ad be in kingdom eomo afore nigh t." A ruur, si i f laughter from tho passengers iu nu wise altered the man's iquyra of his' position, "in case the daruedthing should start." CMNOLINE.-At a grand bait in Parise lately, a fashionable lady, who had gone to the utmost is her extent of crinoline, was talking gaily to her friend General—, who so distinguished himself in the war with Russi.. As she played * iwith:the of foil; a her enormous petticoat, she Playfully inquired of her military friend whatlMthiniglit of her toilette for the evening ? "Alt, Madame," he said, *id: a sigh, "i'Lii..b:te,te than beautiful to me !" • - , . . "How" the asked dropping her eyes to• eiil _ her pleasure at the expected complimoixt;* •••• "Itreminds me so," said the General, "of tha teat under wkiiehslept so soundly in our encamp ments in the britnia!" This from a General, being rather portieutar, the lady pushed the analogy no farther. • Itirman ! Altman: what have you done ? paid a little newsboy to a greenhorn who. had just tied his horse to a spruce pole, as he thought, on sth street, Philadelibia. 0 Done?" said the fellow, "what do you mean? I hart been doin nothin as I knowd "Why, yeth you have thir ; you've hitched your horse to the magnetic telegraph, and you'll be in New. York in loss than five minutes, if you don't look out." The man untied his horse with nervous anxiety,. and jumping in his wagon - drove hastily down the street. Air Dr. :Rene, chi) scuptor, has fin iehed Hie nude figure of his statue of John Hancock, order- ed by Congress, and is now "draping it," having the actual habilaments of the illustrious Boston merchant to model from. The statute it about seven Teet high, and represents the first riessideni of Congreie,,WhMi; aftertheDeclaration had been signed, be urged a Unity of action, saying: "We must all hang together !" It-ivas then that Franklin allded,.sotio voce /or be hung together." . 4 7.0" One of the uninfoimed Pcstrnascurs, out in Suekerdom, ;rholoririddinopg the postOffiealaws; a clause to the effect that, "each postmasteris may be allowed two mills for delivering from his of fices io a subscriber each newspaper not chargea ble with postage," sent in hie bill to the Depart n ent for delivering the only paper sent to his of fice, and told them that, as his Wife was out of the article, they might send him a couple Coffee mills. The conversation turned; one night,, upon the last war with England, and the invasion of dans - do by the American troops; when, a . loyal aubjeet of Ear Majesty, I:itttiVOßtf the pit:Timm mention ed, stated that the 'Yankees "took goo d oare"not to meet the Canadian militia." "Well," said George, an invoteratejoker, "that A not at strangi.: in oidii tWhinat a man, he must-bosom , ' fag toward yen.; I" "Vie hams s open of horses," *Sid. the eeencenie the other day, "on,bkir juin, that euppott therm takes without "ativ" j`f:Why-i.iloW it nisi!" tads: bred , a listener. "'Why; yon:sta;'.*lsyked the questioned; "one it a 1it:0,0 4 ;A1,, littler ft , horsey _ Bishop WeigoVglistriariq stil'ePpgirt inoitreted on an ellephwat, Isryisig. down ,tireo. ries es V) .the vast mutual from . the Pagan:leo& of thelside: • - - kt3iald jagedlii a'frititr ill