( fnil mew macrtnatinnir tdmionso<mm3maße3manios;:a. Neatly and PrompUy &mated, at the ADYERTIBBH 071103, LEBANON, PENN'A Tics estmblishmont in now supplied with en extensive assortment of JOE TYPE, which will be increased as the patronage demands. It can now turn out PRINTDrO t of every description, in a neat and expeditious manner— and on very reasomble terms . Such as Pamphlets, 'Cheeks, Business (lards, Handbills, Circulars Labels, Bill Headings, Blanks, Programmes, Bills of Fare, Invitations, Tickets, As., ece. Dubs of all kinds, Common and .Tudgment BONDS. School, Justices', Constables' and other BLANES, printed correctly and neatly an the beet paper, conshitttly kept for sale at this office, at prices "to suit the times." ows antieriptlon price of the LEBANON ADVERTISER One Dollar and a Half a Year. Add - rens, WM. M. BRESLIN, 'Lebanon, Pa. STEAM MILL AND Cottage FAR REN T: g Home FOR EN riclttE SUBSCRIBRRS, offer for Rent ITERTZLER'S MAU /PLANINO I MLL and SAW MILL, located near I wleigaidnrgil Myeatowu, on the 'Union Canal , and ' L ey. about ogle from the Railroad.— lAA 4 : LEar 4 This UM ha two pair of Burn for Flour end 1 pair for Chap. ALSO, COTTAGE DWELLING HOUSE, „ in Myeretown, on the road loading from Myers . 'town to the Mill. - *Sr the let Pce eerelo will be given immediately, or on ot Apr il, next. n JOIN A. DONGES, THOMAS 13ASSLER. Assignees of Levi Hertaler. Myeretown, February 19,1892. 5 lit . t RENT. 1P Ol " i y. .. SrSOBSCRIBIIR offers to Rent his large three -1.. story BRICK BUILDING, in Cumberland street, Women, between the Meek Horse and Washington Hotels. " Said building wee lately in possession of Mr. Rehmer.,lt has a tine Store Room, Basement, large Hick Building, Outbuildings Garden, to. It will. be -rated in whole or pat eto said applicants. Apply to J. C. Reimer on the premises, or tothe undersigned above Aonville. t Possession will be given on Aprli 1, 1861, Januar 8,1804. WM. AULT. Store Rouse .for Rent. • f MIS Staid contains a large Store Room and eleven 1 4 .1 Other rooms for family dwelling and M . ore house . t le situated In Heilman 's Dale, Lebanon county, four and a half miles west from Lebanon, on the Tinion Canal. Store bee been kept In theabove house for the last three years. This stand Is eituated In a - thickly settled part of Lebanon counand ill calculated to do a large Country and y Boat business, having a fine wharf and lending for boats to lay, and large and convenient stabling -for .boat hotwee. This stand is well worthy the, attention of such wishing to engage In Store, Grain and cold bu• ginese. Terms very moderate, Oetotar SO, 'al. JOUR NEIMAN, It. S. Private Sale. lIIGE Subs:Aber offers at private vale all that certain 1 farm or tract of land, situate partly In Plnegrove township, Schuylkill county, and partly In Bethel town- Bitty, Lebanon county, bounded by landsof Eck ere and Guilford, Benjamin Aycrigg, Daniel Doubertend others containing one hundred and torty-eight acres and a quarter, with the appal , tenances, consisting of a two story log dwelling-house, (weather boarded) a 114 story log dwelling house, a new • bank barn, other outletildings, and a new water power aaw For tonna, ko., which will be easy, Apply to V. SP. SIATCHIN, Agent. Pinegrove, April 20, 113611.-tf. Out-Lots at Private Sale; WILL be sold Private Sale, 8 ACRES OF LAND, situated In Long tone, near the borough line, in Corn well township. It adjoins the land of Widow Fulmer, on the North, 'Wm. Atkins and John Krause on the East. There is a one story LOG HOUSE, weather boarded, • erected on the land, and a good WELL. in the garden.— The lend has line Atonee for quarries. This tract will Make a nice home for a small family. It Is tree from Ground Rent. Good tttle*will be Wren. ADAM RITO t Ell. N. 11.—Thls train is now covered with nue grass, half of which will be given to the purchaser. • Lebanon, June 13, 1860, • For Bent, STORE ROOM , No. 2, '.Eagle Building," now occupied bl e ßelsenetela E Bro., as Clothing Stare. For 2 rm. apply to Mrs. SARAH LINEAW BAYER, or Sire. ELIZABETH C. WEIDMAN, • Lebanon, Jan. 16,1884. Assignee Notice. -A L TOTION is he% etry given that William Geis and - Fan. ny, his wife. of South Annville township, Lobe. non eounty,Pa,, have assigned their properly and ef fects to the undersigned, of the said township and coon ty, for the benefit of creditors. All persons having claims against said parties, as well aa those indebted, are requested to make settlement. JOHN ALLWEIN. JOHN FRANTZ. S. Annville, Feb. 19j 011:11.11? T IDatilAr ATTORNEY-AZLAIV.—OffIce In Cumberland street, Its the office of bis father, (len. John Weidman. Lebanon, August 28, 1801. CYRUS P. lIIILLER, AIVORIVEY•AT•LAIV.-013co In Walnut street, neer ty opposite the Buck note), and two doors month from Karrunny'a ifordwore afore. Lebanon, March 28, 1861.4 y, • -- faniinistrator's Notice. - m . OTIOR le hereby "iron that Letters or Adininistra „ Lion on the eetateof Major Fanatics. Exam, late of the baronial of Lebanon, Lebanon county, Pa., de exceed, have been granted to the undereigned, residing In the same place. All persons indebted to said estate will make immediate payment. and these having claims will present them to F. M. EMIR, Admtn'r. Lebanon, February 12, 1802. CLOCKS. Thirty Day, Eight Day, Thirty Hour, CLOCKS, Just Received at J. J. BLAIR'S Jewelry Store, Lebanon Pa. James H. Kelley SIGN OF THE MAMMOTH WATCH, .ftgi Agile Hugs, Cumberland Street, LEBANON, Pa. OFFERS to the Public an elegant and catenalcoapeort ment OF PARIS STYLES OF FINE JEWELRY, , consisting of Diamond, -Ruby, Emerald, Pearl, Stone, Canleo, Enameled Work, and Etruscan Coral Breast Pine, Ear Rigne and Finger Rings. ' GOLD OBA /SS of, every style 7 -sy-."rt and quality. • ' English, French, SWISEI and Ameri can Gold and 811vei Watches of the must approved and celebrated makers. Clocks of every description. A largo variety of Fancy Goods, Paintings, Vases, dia. The stock will be found among the largest in thissec • don of Pennsylvania, and bee been selected with great care from the most celebrated Importing and manufac turing establishments in New York and Philadelphia. RaPatalito done at the shor teat notice, and in a most workmanlike manner; My friends,. mid the Pubile generally are invited to an examination of my superb stock. JAMES U. KELLY, Sigo of the Big Watch, Lebanon, July 9,1801. NEW CASH STORE! NEW GOODS AND NEW PRICES. MATZ hereby inform the public that he has just opened a stock of NEAP GOODS at the al Stand Of Swartz a Bro., Ball Building s which will be sold fbr Muth at primes to suit the times. All ore In vited to call and examine. [Lebanon, April 10,'01. .IE - ARDWARE AT COST. "rum subscriber offers his large and well selected .1, stock of HARDWARE, PAINTS, 011,9„&c., •GS T COST FOR Cs" SM. la. Parties who bare settled their accounts to April 4.180, will be allowed a liberal credit ou purchases-- Those Who ham not settled will And their accounts with , Ara. Ely, Esq., for immediate settlement and collem tine. D. M. liArtblANY. • LebauCM, July 17, 1851. Hiram W. Rank, fFORMSRLF OF .I'9N MOWN. L'Ku A N 0 .14 COUNTY, wonld'respeotfulty Worm his friends, and the pub is, that he has conneota - Nnatelf with Mr. LOWIft, In the TOBACCO, SNUFF A. SF,O Alt BUSINSSF, No. 188 North Third Street Philo, where be will be Lead to receive customers, and will 1141 et ratastitit will prove satisfactory. Philadelphia, July 'IT, ma, , - 1801 NEW STYLES. 1861 allBN,in Cumberland Street, between ill arlret and the Court Houee,north side, has now on halt splendid assortment of the New Style of H ATE AND CAPS, for men and boys, for MK, to which tite attention 9f the public ia respectfully lovi ted, mon of all - prices, from the cheapest to the most costly, always' on harid. He has also just °pencil eplen did assortment of SIISIBIER HATS, embracing such as STRAW, PANAHA,_ PEDAL, PEARL, HORN, LEO. HORN, SENATE, OUBIAN, and all others. 1111—lie wlll also Wholesale all kinds of Hate, Caps, 45., to Country Merchants on advautugeoue terms. Lebanon, July 11, 1881. ON, 011 YES 51 INJEI B undersigned re irpostrully Informs the Public that be will Attend 5.31 AUCTIONBERING , & will Oftle BALES at short notice ind Orl reasonable l 2" c 4 1 . ''L \ sinfms, Ile eon be found - kat bit midtown ht North' WWl= Borough. JOB R 8 BRIOICEIL Leb3uOu Borough , Jou. IS, 'd2.-uus ' . . 11Ih • • ..*%ef . . cli n It • . - , ; -.:viefft 'll4fr 4323112.1nr4211131111. D3;311167 Abio et, to ler VOL. 13---NO. 40, THE NEW BAKERY, PIE undersigned would respectfully inform the cit. Zens of Lebanon, that betels commenced the BARB IE° BUSINESS, in all its varieties, at his stand, on Cumberland street, Lebanon, nearly opposite the ; Buck Hotel, and will supply customers with the best BREAD, CANES, & 0., &o. Flom. received from customers and returned to them in bread at short notice. CONFECTIONERIES, of all kinds, fresh Auld of the beet quality, constantly on hand, and furnished at the lowest prices. Th.. public Is invited to give ens a trial. Leb non, Nov. 9, 1959. F. H. FUR. Blanket Shawls, rILOTII, WOOLEN OLOTITINO of all colors, dyesiSet V Black or Blue Black, pressed, the color warranted and goods turned out equal to new, by LYON LEMBERGEft, East Hraover, Sir Articles to be dyed can be left at Tor. L. Latsber ger'e Drug Store where all orders for the above will be attended to. [Feb:B, 1860, THE .NEW YORK. WEEKLY JOURNAL OF COIRIRERCE A Conservative Funk and Ensinets Paper. THE CHEAPEST ANDREA' WEEKLY IN AMERICA CONTAINS news from all the world, the best reports of the Produce,,Oraln and` Cattle trade, Dry Goods and Msney markets. . The foe to dlsoripaalpers, North; or Eolith. , The sup porter of the Union, the Constitattm and the.laws. TRR3I S FOR ONR YEAR Twenty Copies or upwards, to one address VI each.— Thirteen copies to oue ruldruse $l5. Eight copies $lO. Four copies $6. Three copies $5. Under Three copies $2, each. An extra copy to any one sending a club of twenty, with the money. The Belly.fournal of Connome, Jun. ler. issued for the Cuuntry, $5 a year. Specimen copies sent gratis. PRIME, STONE, RAJA AND EfALLOCK, 91 Wall street. New York, January 22, '62, 100,000 BARRELS OF THE "LODI SIEND FACTURING 00.'s POUDRETTE r For Sale by LODI NIANUFACTURINEI COM PANT -120 South Wharves, Philadelphia, Pa. This Company, with a capital of $150,000, 61 e most extensive works of the kind in the world, and an ex perience of 22 years in manufacturing. with * reputa tion long established. having also the exclusive control of all the night soil from the , great City of New York, are prepared to furnish an article which is, without doubt, the cheapest 5021 very beat fertillter In market. Price for 7 barrel and over $2.50 per barrel, or only $l6 per ton. It greatly increaxea the yield and ripens the crop from two to three weeks earlier, atan expen. of from $3 to $4 per sera, and with very little labor. A Pamphlet, vontaleing all the information necessary, with letters front llorace Greeley, Daniel Webster, and hundreds of farmers who have used It extensively for many years, may be had free by addressing a letter as above or JA3IES T. FOSTER, 68 Courtlandt St., New York Care or the Lodt Manufacturing Co. February 13, 189_.-3m. M INHOOD ; How .Lost! How Restored ! Just Published, in a Sealed Envelope. Priee Six Cents. A LECTURE ON TILE NATURE, TREATMENT, and Radical Cure of Sperthatorrhcea, of Seminal Weak ness, Involuntary Emissions, Sexual Debility, and Im pedimente to Marriage generally, • Nervousness. Cow sump tion, Epilepsy and kits; Mental and khyeleal In capacity, resulting from Self-Abuse, Roar. J. OULTEBWELL, DI. D., Author of the Green Book, Ac. The world.renowned author, in this admirable Lec ture, clearly proves from his own experience that the awful consequences of Selfetbuse may be effectually removed withaut .eedicine, and without dangerous sur. gloat operatianK beagles. instruments, rings, or cordl els pointing out a mode of cure at once certain and effectual, by which every sufferer .no matter what hie condition may be. may Cure kilinself cheaply, privately, and radically. This lecture will prove a boon to thou sands and thousands. Sent under seal. in a plain enveloped, to any address, on the receipt of elz ceuts, or two peetage stamps, by addressing. Br. CHAS.,. J. C. KLINE, 187 Bowery. New York, Post Office Boa, 4686. February 12,1862. George Illoffinauls LIMANON COUNTY I f -4,41. TRANSPORTATION LINE. By Lebanon Valley Railroad. PARTICULAR attention will be paid to Goods &slop• ed by the Lebanon Talley Rnilroad. Goods will be sent daily to and from Philadelphia to Lebanon, 31yers town and Annville Stations ; and all other points In the County. FREIGHTS contracted for at the least possible rates and delivered with dispatch. The Proprietor will pay particular attention to,,and attend personally, to the receiving and delivery of all Freights. For information,apply Nike at the Lebanon Talley Railroad Depot; Lebanon., EDWARD MARK. his Agent In Philadelphia, ways be found at W. H. Bush's Merchant's Motet, North Third st.. PhHade/phia. July 11,'60.1 . GEO. HOFFMAN. KOL LOCK'S DANDELION COFFEE. rilllS preparation, made from the hest Java Coffee, is Irecommended. by physicians SS a superior NUTRI TIOUS nEvunAGE for General Debility, Dyspepsia, and all bilious disorders. Thousa ads who have been compelled to abandon the use of coffee will use this without injurious effects, One can contains the strength of two pounds of ordinary coffee. Price 25 cents. Kollock's Levitt's, The purest and bent BARING POWDER known, for making light, sweet and nutritious Bread and Oaken.— Price 26 cents. MANUPACTERED BY KOLLOCK, Chemist, CORNER OF BROAD AND CHESTNUT STRXETS, PRILADEXPIIIA, Aad sold by all Druggists and Grocers. February- 26, 1862.—1 y. 111ARR1AGU. Its loves and hates. sorrows and angers, 7 1"." Qsthopes and fears, regrets and joys; MAN ,. HOOD, how lost, how restored; the nature, 114211 - EX . treatmont and radical cure of spermaton. rbtra or seminal weakness; involuntary PIIIIMI.OOB, sex ual debility and impediments to marriage generally ; nervousness, consumption, file, mental and physical in. capacity, resulting from SELF-ABUSE—nre fully ex plained In the MARRIAGE GUIDE, by %Val. YOUNG, 31. D. This mostextraordlnary book should be in the hands of every poling perenn contemplatipg marriage, and every man or woman who desires to limit the num, her of their offspring to their circumstances. Every pain, dierese and ache incidental to youth, maturity and old age, is fully explained; every particle of know ledge that should be known is here given it is full of engravings. In fact, It discloses secrets that every one should know ; still It le a book that must be locked up, and not Ile ,boat the house. It will be sent'to any one on the receipt of twenty-five cents in specie or postage stamps. Addrece Dit. WM. YOUNG, No. 418 spill= Street, above Fourth, Philadelphia. dB"- AFFLICTED AND UNFORTUNATE, no matter whet may be your disease, before you place yourself nndor the care of any of the notorious Quacks—native or foreign—who adve. tine in this or any other paper, get a copy of Dr. Young's book, end react it carefully.— It will be the means or saving.yott many a dollar, your health. and possibly your life. DR. YOUNG can be consulted on any of the diseases described in Ids pudlfeatt_n ' at hie office, No. 418 SPRUCE Street, above Fourth, Philadelphia. Office hours from 9 to d, Philadelphia, Fatima, y 20, 1882.-1 y. Farmers and others Take Notice. THlSundersigned haring purchased the en tire establishment of A. MAJOR do BROTHER, will manufacture and keep on band a very general as sortment of MACHINERY and FARMING IMPLE MENTS, embracing Improved FOURHORSE Powers and Threshers; Railway Horse Powers and Threehers, Morgan's Independent steel-wire Tooth Horse RAKE; kf u mme,s Patent Fodder, Straw and Hay COTTER; Cast Iron Yield Rollers. Grain fans. Hay Elevators, Clover Hullers, Comehellere, by binder power, Corn Plough. and Planters, Cultivators, £o.,' with a variety of the beet PLOUGHS in use, &e. All of the above Machines are of the latest and best improvements, and %resit warranted to give eatisfaction. Castings of all kinds made to order. and at short notice. He ales manufactures STEAM EN GINES, Mill Cleariug,StiSting, and Mill work in general, and pays particular attention to Repairing Engines and Machinery of all kinds. lie invites all to call and examine the work at the Ma chine Shop, on IrtatineVe Sumer, Lebanon. G All orders or communications by malt will be promptly attended to. D. M. HARMAN'S". Lebanon, Lebanon Co., Pa. Lebanon, August 8,1860. Ii k ,TOTICE.—I have appointed A. MAJOR & BROTHER 111 my, Agents for the purpose of carryingueihe above businesa.. D. M. SARBLANY. Lebanon, August 8,1880. JAMES T. - YOUNG, G.F I TTE R, "UT ALNOT S T RE ET, xt door to. A. B. sLris o VV SC% LEBANON, PA. March 18,1861. LEBANON, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1862. smite Entire. A. °ONION STORY HT TOP AUTHOR OP JOON EILLITAX So, the truth's out. grasp it like a snake— It will not slay me. My heart 'hall not break Awhile, if only for the children's late. For his too, somewhat. Let him stand unblamed ; None say, be gave me lees than honer claimed, Ricept one title scarcely worth being named. The heart. That's gone. The corrupt deed might be As easily raised up, breathing. fair to sae, As he could bring hie whole heart back to me. I never Wight him in ceetiettinhapert, Or courted him as .Illy maidens court, And wonder when the longed.for prise falls short. I only loved him, any woman would: But shut my love up till be came and sued, Then poured. It o'er his dry life , like a, flood. I was NO happy could make him blest! So happy that I WAD-his lest and hest, As he mine, when he took me to his breast. Alt met if only then he had been true: If for one little year r a month or two, He had given me lova for love, as wasl24.Y..!ine I Or had he told me, are the deed was done, Ile only raised me to his heart's dear throne ; Pear substitute I because the queen was gone! Or, had he whispered when his sweetest kiss Was warm npim my mouth in fancied Olin, He had kissed another woman like to this. It Were less bitter! Somethnei I could weep To be cheated, like a child asleep : Were not the anguish far too dry and deep. So I built my house upon another's ground ; blot ked n ith a heart just caught at the rebound ; A Clinkered thing that looked so firm and sound . And when that heart grew colder, colder stlli, I, ignorant, tried all duties to fulfill, Blaming my foolish pain, ezacting will. All, anything but him. It was to be: The full draught others drink up carelessly Was made this bitter Tantalus cup for me. I say again, he gives me all I claimed, I and my children never shall be shamed : He is a just man; he will live Miblamed. • Only, 0 God, 0 god, to cry for bread, Aad get a . 3 toxin I Daily to lay my head Upon a bosom where the old love's dead Dead? Fool! It never lived. It only stirred Galvanic, like an hour•old corpse. None heard : So let me bury it without a word. he'll keep Mut other woman from my sight,. I know not if her face be foul or bright ; - I only know that it was his delight— As his was mine: 1 only know he stands Pale, at the touch of, their long severed hands, Then to a dickering smile his lip. commands. Le I I Bhould grieve, or jealous anger show. He need not. When the ship's gone down, I trow, Wi little seek whatever wind may blow. And ea my silent keen begins and ends, No world's'itiegh. or world's taunt, no pity of friends Or sneer of foes, with this my torment blende. None knows; none needs. I have a little pride; Enough to stand up, wile-like, by his side, With the same smile as when I was a bride. Biot eitaiterato. BATTLE OF THE PYRAMIDS, On the 17th of May, 1798, Napole on sailed from Toulon, on the Egyp tian expedition. His armament con sisted of 102 vessels of war, with 46,000 combatants: With dispatch never before equalled this gigantic expedition was got up. Napoleon worked night and day, infuiing his energy into every department, and superintending the minutest details. "Now, air," said he to one of his agents,"use dispatch. Remember that. the world was created in but six days. Ask me for whatever you please ex cept time; that is the only thing which is beyond my power." The destination of the fleet W(113 kept a profound secret even from the leading Officers of the expedition.— Stearn, was, then unknown. A voy age of twenty-seNri days conveyed them to Malta. This fortress, deem 7 ed impregnable, was promptly seized, and 3,000 men being left to garrison it, the fleet pressed on its Way. On the evening of the first of July, after a passage of forty-one days- from' France, and having traversed a dis tance of 2,000 miles, the fleet entered the bay of Aboukir, within sight of the minarets of Alexandria. The landing of the troops was commenced within anhour's delay; and was con tinued through the night. .The hor ses were lowered into the sea, and swam to theland, following by instinct the few which; led by halters, con ducted the column to the shore...; When the morning sun rope over the desert, a proud array of cavalry, infantry, and artillery was marshalled upon the beach, prepared to resist any attack. That very morning, while the disembarkation was continuing, Napoleon placed himself at the head of three thousand men, and marched upon Alexandria, that he might seize the city before the Turks had time to prepare for a defence. "Every hour of time loser said Napoleon, 6 -is a chanee s ofmisfortune,i' , Napoleon eoiirnenced march, upon upon the city actually before the morning had dawned: .I . t,wes, found that he was as; minutely intornied re specting the country as if he had there from childhood. Tho Mem elukes rushed bewildered to the ram parts. The French, with their lad ders allready and of the right length, swept over the walls like an inunda tion. The conflict was short, and with,the loss of but •thirty, men, the offlag the conqueror waved over the city .of Alexandria. Six days Napoleon remained in the city to establish and consolidate his power, and to prepare for his inland march. Instantly al-titans, artists, and engineers, all were busy, and en ergies unknown before were infused into the sepulchral streets of the Atos• lern city. The barhOi'tvas improved, the fortifications repaired, mills erect ed, manufactories established, schools founded, and the antiquitiesexplored. On the 6th of . July, leaving 3,000 men to garrison Alexandria, Napole on set oat to cross the desert sixty mileslO the Nile. A flotilla, laden with artillery, provisions, amw uni Lion and baggage sailed along tlp shore to ascend the Nile and meet. the army, to accompany its march up the river to Cairo. Four days of great suffer ing were occupied in crossing the des ert- Arab horsemen boiered around, cutting down anypho straggled from the ranks. Napoleon, share the fa tigue of the humblest. soldier, toilingg through the sand,' on foot; at the head of the ooliimn.- He was .the laet;to fold his cloak' around him for the I night, and the first to spring from the ground in the morning. As the army approached the Nile, the Mameluke horsemen increased in numbers and in the frequency and recklessness of their. attacks. The morning of the sth day of their march had just dawned, when the long wish ed for Nile appeared, winding thro' a valley of the.richest verdure. The whole army, 30,004 in number, rush ed to the river with shouts,,and in al most a delirium of joy. But just then a body of a thousand Mameluke horge men, on fleetest chargers, came sweep ing down, rending the air with their yells. The well-drilled soldiers stantly formed in squares, with, the _artillery at thy'. angles. A palisade of bristling baYonets was opposed to the breasts of be herses. ,Avoleanie .4 , ttret of fire Wein4itillery arid' rims. ketry, prostrated steeds and riders by scores in the dust. The survivors wheeled .their steeds, arid like the whirlwind, as they' had--come, disap peared. The march of the army was now like a dream of romance. Be neath sunny skies, and thro,ugb the luxuriance and verdure, of the Nile valley, they sang and danced in the exuberance of joy. Pigeons were abundant, and the most delicious wa ter-melons were brought to the camp in exhaustless supplies. Bat scarcely an hour was allowed for rest.. Day after 'day the army was pushed energetically on, daily encountering the foe, but never in suf ficient ferce to arrest their progess.— The delay of a few days Would have enable the enemy to concentrate so as to organize a veiy formidable re sistance. The Maineslikke horsemen composed the most-formidable .body of cavalry in the world: On their fleet Arabian chargers they came sweeping almost resistlessly, from be hind the hills, and it was .necessary to be prepared every mdment for an attack. The disposition made of the troops for this purpose was - novel and effective. The army . was organized in - .five squares,,each square composed of ranks six men deep. The artillery .was placed at the angles. The cen. tree of these squares were occupied by the officers, the baggage, and by troops in platoons ready at any in. stant to support the point of attack. When on the malidi all faced in one directien, the two sides marching; in flank. At any alarm they halted and fronted on every side-Ale outer ranks kneeling, that those behind might shoot over their heads. The whole square thus presented a -living for tress, bristling - with bayonetsi- which no cavalry could penetrate. When necessary to make an assault the three front ranks detached them selves from,the square. The remain. ing three ranks still preserved the iu tegrity of the square, into which the column could be received in case of a repulse... On the morning of the 31st of 4.uly, after an almost uninterrupt ed march of fifteen days,. the army came in sight of the deinesOf : Cairo. The_city was. on,the eastern bank of the river, while the narrow, bat won derfully luxuriant valley of the Nilo was bordered on the west by the ap parently illimitable desert, fringed by those gigantic pyramids - which, 'for ages, have been the wonder of the world. The whole army instinctively halted, gazing awe-stricken upon.these sublime memorials of the past. "Sol diers," said Napoleon, , "forty centu ries, from those summits, contemplate your actions." - At the foot of these pyramids tile whole plain. NV ft.B 'filled with armed men, glittering in all that, barbaric displaS , of plumes and gold, and gleam lag banners which has ever. charac. terized the Orient. Here. Murat} Bey had. assembled his great strength_for final resistance. Twenty.four thou. sand men were placed behind the most formidable entrenehments, am ply supplied with heavy guns and all the munitions of war. Ten thousand horsemen, magnificently mounted, were ready to plunge upon the French with all the fury fatalism can inspire, so soon as the Moslem artillery should make a gap.in the ranks. . The spectacle : was_jodeed terrific. Teri thetisind lvorsenrien, On fleetest steeds,.rending .the skies with their yells, came down upon the squares, ceasing the very. earth te trernble.be fieath their...tread War never .pre sented a more furious charge. The soldiers, holding their breath in awe, stood shoulder to shoulder, present. ince o .their: bayonets to receive the shock. The moment-the Mamelukes arrived within gun-shot, volley after volley of musketry and artillery swept their ranks. Horses and riders roll ed over each other by . • hundreds on the sand. The-dying. and the dead were trampled mercilessly by the rush of the impetuous squadrons. But the-French• squares stood firm ae the pyramids-at whose base they fought. The Siamelukes, in'thefreniy Of tbeir courage, reined their hoinieSliack, that they might kick theii way into those terrible ranks, belching fire and brist ling steel. The Wounded, pierced, by bayonets, endeavored by crawling up. on, the 'ground, to smite . the legs of their foes with their seiteetars. But nothing could resist the disci plined courage of the French. Vol canic sheets of flame were incessant. ly bursting from the square; every bullet flailing its mission, and aeon the plain was covered with the dead. The infantry in the entrenched camp, witnessing the discomfiture of the mounted Mamelukes, who were sup posed to be invincible, were , seized, with a panic, and a scene of indescri-. bable confusion. emitted. • Thii;, - " . fi7e French squares were instantly -6i:in verted into coinmns ef ": .attack.„`The' rout - was :complete. When 'thii nun went down, the tri.eelored flag was floating over the Moslem entrench. ments, and by death or dispersion the foe had utterly disappeared.. The French lost bat one hundred killed and wounded, while ten thousand of the enemy, perished. . Allowing the troops one day -to rest and to preserve the boundless wealth, which was found in- the Orien tal camp the next day Napoleon en. tered Cairo in triumph, and the .city with a population of 300,000 bowed peaceably to his sway. Thus, in eight weeks, Napoleon sailed over a sea 2,000 miles in length, captured Mil• ta, one, of the most formidable for tresses upon the globe, took the city of Alexandria, containing 30,000 in habitants by storm ; marched• across the desert sixty miles to-thirNile, and ascsnded the Nile witty Miles to Cal. ro, - fighting - the Turks nearly all the way; assailed the Turkish army, out. nu Bering his own, behind their en trenChments—annihilated that army, and took undisputed possession of the capitol of Bgypt. Such vigor might well astonish the world. Napoleon conquered Egypt in eight weeks, with the loss of but about two hundred men in killed and wounded. ROW MR. BRECkusat LOST EIS BOOTS. The following is in Henry Ward Beecher's best-vein : • • The difference between 7-and 8 is not .very great ; only a single unit.— And yet that difference has power o ver a man's whole temper, eenveni. once, and dignity. !Thus .at Buffalo, my boots were set out at night to be blacked. ,In the morning no &kits were there, though all the neighbor ing rooms had been served. I rang, I rang twice, . "A pretty hotel—near ly eight o'clock, going out at nine, breakfast to be eaten, , and. no boots yet." The waiter came, took .my somewhat emphatic order, and "left.— Every minute was an hour: It al. ways is when you are out of temper. A man in his stocking feet, in a third story of a hotel, finds himself restrict ed in locomotion. I went to the door looked up and down the hall, saw ' frowsy chambermaids; saw afar off, the master of the coal scuttle ; saw gentlemen walking in bright boots, unconscious of the privileges they enjoyed, but did not see any-one coin ing with my boots. - A German ser vant•at length came round and rud dy-faced, very kind and good natur ed, honest and stupid- He informed me that a gentleman had already taken boots No, 78 (my number.)-= He would , hunt him up ; thought he was at breakfasting. Here was a new • vexation. Who was the man who had takep my number and. gone . for my boots 7 Somebody.had them on, warm and nice, and was enjoying his. coffee, while I walked up and down,, with less and less ,patienee, who had nom too much at first. No ser vant returned. I rang again, and sent a most energetic: and stacato ines eenger to the office. Some water had been spilled on the floor. I step ped in it of course. In winter, cold wa ter feels as if it burned you. Unpack ed my valise for new stockings.— Time was-speeding. It was quarter past eight; train at nine, no boots and no breakfast. I slipped on a pair sandel-rubbers ' too large by inches for my naked foot, and while I shuffled along the hall, they play. ed up s and clown on,, my feet. First, one shot off; that Oeured, theeother dropped on the stairs; people that I net looked as if they thought that I was not well over last night's spree. It was very annoying. Reached the office and oxpresed my mind. First, the clerk rang the bell three times furiously, then ran forth him self, met the German boots, who had beets 79 in his hand, narrow and long, thinking, perhaps, I could wear them. Who knows but 97 had my boot 7 Some curiosity-was begining to be felt among the bystanders. It was likely that I should have half the. ho tel inquiring after my . boots., I ,ab hor a scene. Retreated to thy ;rooni. On the way thought I would look at room 77's hoots.. Behotdthey were mine ! There was Abe broken pull straps; the patch on the.. right side, and the very shape of my .toe--in fallible. signs I The fellow had mark ed them 77 and not 78. And all this hour's tumult arose from just the dif ference between 7 and S. I lost my hoots, lost the train, lost my -temper, and of course, lost my good manners. ;Fivorybody does that loses temper. But boots on, break fast served, a cup of coffee brought peace and good will. The whole matter took a ludicrous aspect. I moralized upon that infirmity that puts a man's peace at -the mercy of a Dutchman's chalk. Had he writ- . ten seventy-eight, I had been a good• natured man looking at,Niagara Falls in its winter d‘ress. Re wrote sev entysoven,. and I fumed, saw only my own falls, and spent the day in Buffalo 1 Are not most of the pets and rubs of life such as this? Few men could afford,, to-morrow, to review the things that vexed them yesterday,— We boast of being free, yet every man permits the most arrant trifles, to rule and ride him. A.,,Man that is vexed and angry turns the worstpart of himself into sight, and, exhibits hiniself in buffoon's coat and fools cap, and walks forth to be . jeered !-- Apd yet one's temper does worse by, h'im then that. And men submit to it, not once, but'often, and sometime every day ! I wonder wetter these sage reflections-will - inake•.me patient and quiet the next tiiint, my bootie are misplaced ? WHOLE NO. 666. THRILLING INCIDENT “Don't,you see this kick of hair.?” said,on olcitnan to me. 'Yes, hut what of it ?. itis, I suppose, a curl from the head, of a dear child long since, tc; Qod."- ; is not It is a lock of my own . hairl,,,and it is now nearly sev enty year since it , was cutfrom this head , .' "But why do you prizes lock of your hair so much ?" "It has a story belonging to it, and a strange ohe. -I keep it thus with care:because it speaks to me more of God and His speeiril care than anything else I possess. /Was a child of four years old, with long curly locks, which in ' sun or rain or wind, hung down my cheeks ',uncovered. One day my fa ther went into the woods to cut a log, I went wit4l, hint. I was standing a Atte way behind him, or rather at his side, witching with interest the Strokes of the heavy. ate as it went up and came down upon the wood, sending off splinters with every stroke in all directions. Some of the splin ters fell at my feet, and I eagerly stooped to pick them up. In doing so I stumbled forward, and in a mo• went my curly head lay upon the log. I had fallen just the moment when the axe was tooling down with .all its force. It was too late to stop the blow. Down came the axe. I screamed, and my father fell to the ground in terror. -He-could not stay the stroke, and in the blindness which the sudden horror caused. he thought he had killed his boy. We soon re covered ; I from my fright, and he from his terror. lie caught me' in his arm and looked at me from head to foot, to find out the deadly wound which he was sure he had inflicted.— Not a drop of Wood nor a.scar was to be. seen. Ile knelt upon the grass and gave thanks to a gracious God.— Raving done so, he took up his axe and found a few hairs upon its edge. He turned to the log he had been splitting, and there was a single curl from his .boy's hair, sharply cut thro' and laid upon the wood. How great the escape ! It was as if an angel , had turned aside the edge at the mo ment when it was descending on my bead. With renewed thanks upon his lip he took up the curl, and went home with me in his arms. That lock he kept all his days, as a memo. rial of God's care and love. That lock he left to me on his death-bed' FACTS in a church, which is ho hottest situation, and why ? The gallary ; because-the cold air lies nearer the floor till it has become heated when it ascends towards the roof of the building. Why are the quills and bones of birds hollow and without marrow ?-- That they, may not only be light to assist their passage through the air, but that they may be possessed of the greater strength. What solid bodies are artiong the beet conductors of sound ? Iron and glass; these transmit sound at a rate of more than three miles a second ; and after them come copper,, several kinds of wood, silver, t:n, and so on. Why does a metal spoon, left in a saucepan, retard, the boiling process? Being an excellent conductor, the metal spoon carries off the heat from the water, and consequently prevents it boiling as soon as it otherwise would. What is the temperature at which water-scalds ? One hundred and fif ty klegrees. There is no greater rudeness to company than entertaining them with scolding your E43iia n ts. What is the general effect of heat upon substances ? It enlarges their dimension, by expansion. What is the strength of a horse as compared with that of a man ? The strength of , one horse is as the strength of five men. Whether does a piano give a high• er tone in a cold or a warm room, and why ? Ina cold room, on account of the strings being tighter, or more con tracted.. In building a room for public speak ing, what.sliould be the limit of the height of its ceiling 7 It shoUld not be above ,thirty - or thirty-live feet. GATHEHING SPONGES AT THE B4ae.- uns.'-=the sponge blisitinas is largely purshed =•at the Bahama Islands.— 'fhe exports of .this article amount annually to about $200,000. It is al most entirely the growth of 'the last twenty years. During that period the article has almost, quadrupled in alue, and has been applied to agreat variety of new purposes, especially in France. • - The sponge is compressed in pow erful presses and packed like cotton. It is assorted and graded, sample be ing thstened on each package to show its quality. It is fished, raked, or grappled from the clear sandy bot tom, at the depth of. twenty, forty, and even silty feet, , and often •far frona - the shore. The water is so transparent that the glowing sponge is visible on the bottom. The sponge is the covering, or the habitation of the lowest order of animal nature.— Indeed, organization can hardly be detected in the animal.- The sponge, when first taken frona7the water, is black, and at once becomes offensive to, the smell. It almost causes the. flesh it touches to blister. 'The first process is to bury in the .sand, when the gelatinous matter seems to be ab sorbed and..destroyed, or eaten .by the inkects that swarm in the sand. • The boatmen who obtain it are,paid in 'lsbares,bY .owners of the Moats.--- This, akorefoopbecomes a .precarious todl4egitigaralitiq' g fiursni t, like wri3ek attrietive to 'the eolOred population. hatait artilantiod. A FAMILY PAPER FORTOWN - 416 - 60UNTE_ f ir IS PRINTED AND • PU-I3LISTIED WRRRLY By WM. ffi BREST.Eff, 2d Story of Fareck's Now Buil(4g, Cumbeitscid St At Ono Dollar and Fifty Conte a Year. zap ADVI.IITIMENTEI Inserted tit'the usual rates. 'VIII The friends of the establishment, and the public ammo: Ely aretespectfally solicited to rend in their cutlers. Printed at an hours notice. RATES OF POSTAGE. In IJelianen County, postage free. In Pennsylvania, out of Lebanon county 354 cents pet quarter, or 13 tents a year. ' . Out of this State, 6M eta per quarter, or 26 eta. a year if the postage in not paid in advance, rates are doubled. AssAILING WOMEN.—We see ieoB.- led that President Lincoln, moved to great indignation by the estriiordi nary and bitter assaults upon his wife, which have appeared in many-of the Republican papers, has expressed his regret that he could not throw officir a time the cares,- the responsibilities and the dignity of :his. station;'*and inflict summary chastisement apoa some of Mrs. Lincoln's unmanly vil- Hers. We respect and honor the President for this burst of proper and natural feeling, and do not dou.bt-that he is strongly impelled to give it prat. tical effect. There seems to be a grow. ing disposition to assail women and to connect them with political events, that is mean as it is co - marl:llY. Annan. who cherishesit - is - not only destitute of the - principles.of courtesy and, chiv alry, which ought to characterizVhis sex in their deportment- tavverd_thit other, but he is unworthy the nam e . of man. It' is 'high' time it was re. buked and put under the ban of an enlightened public opinion. It is e nough that we of the sterner twit should be brought into - the turmoil of politics andundergo the ordeal of defamation, which seems to -be. its concomitant, without . bridging in the women to share the same fate. NEW 14tobi or COMPUTING /ling- ICST.—A new, mode of computing in terest at ailt per cent. has been pub. Hailed, which appears simple. Multi ply any given number of (Wars, by the days of interest required, separate the right hand figure, and *divide by six, the result is the true - rate of in terestior such sum for such number of days at six per cent. The rule is so simple and so true,according to all business usages,, that every banker, broker, merchant and clerk should post it up for reference and use-- There being no such thing as a frac tion in it, there is scarcely , any liabili.. ty to error or mistake, By no atitib.• metical process can so desired infor mation be obtained with so few fig ures. . WHO ARE ENTITLED TO PENSIONB.-L The Attorney General'of the United States has decided that all disabled soldiers of the three years of war men are entitled to invalid pensions under the act of July 22, 1862; and that all disabled three months sol diers called into the service under the President's proclamation of April 15, 1861, are entitled to pensions under the acts of 1802 and 1816. He also decides that—there is no law giving pensions to 'widows and orphans of deceased soldiers of the present war. ler An lowa regiment has a rale that any mand who utters an oath shall read a chapter in the . Bible.— Several have got nearly through the Old. Testament. Iris also stated• of the Chaplains of one of the•regiments in service who has been assisting in the Commisary Department, in the capacity of cook, that , he upon the occasion having furnished rather bad butter; that the Col. Command'. ing threathened him if he offended again in like nfanner, that he would be compelled to preach a sermon on the following Sunday ! ve,,, A goad many men are in the beet health when they are out of bpirits. Burnside Viotortous at Newbern;' North Carolixta. BA:t.iimoas, March Ig.—The steamer Commodore arrived here this morult . k - 14 7 rect from GLn. Burnside's expediiion. , She brings the announcement of, the capture of Newbern, 14forth Carolina, and the defeat of the rebels there, with the capture of a large number of artillery,after . a hard fought battle.- • Our loss at Newbern WWI about 90 killed and 400 wounded. Our men displayed great bravery. Newbern is a town of about 4500 inhab itants, situated at the conflnroce of the Neuse and Trent rivers. It bad, before the war broke out, a large trade in lumber, turpentine, tar, naval stores, &c. It is the county seat of Craven county. •-• A railroad runs from - Newbeivf etGolda borough, Efty-idue miles distant44teriect ing there the main railroad tinit4 Wel don and Wilmington, N. C. - -...- Gen. Burnside having moved'4. this di rection, is not in any danger of - attack from the rebel army that has been concen trating at, Suffolk, Va. The captu're of Newbern makes it eer:' taint• that the town of BeatifoO,N. 0., dan easily be taken, together waft - Fort Macon, the strong work constructed for its de, fence by the Federal Government. There is a railroad from Newbern to M.oorehead City, opposite Beaufort, the distance be tween the two places being thirty-six miles. . . ANOTieER .i..CoOVNT OP,THR4A.TTLE. A correspondent of the Inquirer graphs as follows • "The enemy's works, eix , ; rallea below Newbern, were attacked on Friday morn ing last. They were defended by a force about ten thousand strong, and having twenty-,one guns posted behind formidable batteries, over two miles long. -The fight was one of the most deeps , rate of the war. Our troops behaved with the steadiness and-sosirsge of vdterans,and after nearly leerrthours' hard fighting,Oovii the rebels out of their positions, eaptzfred three light batteries of field artillery, WV: heavy, Eiiege-gutis, large stores of fixed anoriunition, three thousand small nrinii and two hundred prisoners, including one Colonel, three Captains and fourLiettten; ants. Theo enemy 'left a large number of dead on - the field. • "They escaped by the care to Goldebo. rough, burning the bridges 'over the Trent and Olarement, and - tiring the city of. New.,.- born. No extensive damage was done to the place., We, lost About one hundred killed and fear ,hundred' wounded, mostly beloniing•to New - linglandreginients. - "EteV;O:qateittod: was ,kiiipd : ,l4sf - Ms. jor Lektiari, or ?he Pitcy-6iit Naiv:MA; was `Oottirlir ivoOded. • Liententliti-: nel Merritt, of the Twonty-thiid , Matilt setts, and Adjutatt F. A. Stearn,4,Athir Twenty-first.Maseacjw(oB. Refit art„ . Amherst, were alsend their toodiel are on the way homeW
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