Whole No. 2574. BLYMYER & STANBARGER, PRODUCE & COMMISSION .Year Canal Basin, Lewistown. Pa., YVill purchase every description of Produce at current prices. ! AL W AYS ON' II AND, PLASTER, SALT\ FISH, STONE COAL ; of assorted sizes, LIME BURNERS' " ,( BLACKSMITHS' COAL. GEO. BLYMYER, dec 2 0. C. STANBARGER. j UiL J* t r j ? "a-t /"'ri 0 OFFICE on East Market street, Lewistown, adjoining F. G. Franciseus' Hardware Store. P. S. Dr. Locke will be at his i ffiee the first Monday ol" each mouth to spend the week. niySl DE.. A. J". ATKINSON, HA\ IXG permanently located in Lewis town, 'offers his professional services to the citizens of town and country. Office UY.-t Market St., opposite Eisenbise's Hotel. Residence one door east of George Blymycr. Lewistown, July 12, l&GO-tf Dr. Samuel L. Alexander. ti lias permanently located at Miiroy, YS( ani i> prepared to practice all thebrancb -4& es uf iiis Profession. Office at Swine hart's Hotel, niy3—ly EDWARD FRYSINGER, WHOLESALE DEALER & DIM F.Ull RER OK ClliMS, TOBACCO, SiMIF, &c., &e., Orders promptly aiteuded to. jelG GrEO. W. ELDER, Attorney at Law, ullire .Viatket Square, Lewistown, will at u-i.d to tiu-uiess in .Vlllilin,Centre and Hunting don counties. ro,2ti mmm* Seigrist's eld bland, Near the Canal liridye, Lewistoirn, Fa. Strong Beer, Lager Boer, Liudenberger and Switzer Cheese—all of tiio Last quality j constantly on band, for sale wholesale or re tail. Yeast to be had daily during summer. niy24-yr JUST RECEIVED A StI.KCT SToC'K OK Boots, Shoes, Gaiters, &c. for men, wont, n, boys, and children, which are offered for sale remarkably low. J. CLARK, my 10 Opposite the I. uion House. McALISTERVILLE ACADEMY Juniata County, I'a. (il'.O. /•'. McF.IPLArYI), Piincipal 4" Proprietor. J.tCOH MILLER, Prof, if Mathematics, \c. .Miis .IN.YIE S. CRIST, Teacher of Music, Sfc. The next session of this Institution com mences on the 2Gth of July, to continue 2*2 weeks. Students admitted at any time. A Normal Department will be formed which w ill aiioid Teachers the best opportunity of preparing for fall examina tions. A NEW APPARATUS has been purchased, Lecturers engaged, &o. Tlu.ms — Hoarding. Room und Tuition, per se>jion,§s3to Tuition alone at usual rates. sent Iree on application. TRIDLEY & CORNMAN'S Patent Self-testing. Self-sealing. Premium, Air-tight FRUIT C.® & JARS. Patented Octo^ €r 25 ' 1859, WT/w. Exclusive Right of y [ ak „" UJ d \ 'iig these Cans and Jars in Jb.'/fl'f 1 an f Cen tre counties is held by the unders'!/" e 'PHESE Cans and Jars being perfec t 'y. ti j in " 1 pie in their arrangement, and requ.' rlD £ n i cement or solder to make them air-tigCb are the most reliable and convenient vessels that are in the market for preserving fruits and Vegetables of all kinds. They possess the following advantages over all other Cans and Jars that are in the mar ket: FIRST —AII that is required after the fruit has been put in hot, is simply to screw the cap down tightly. SECOND —They can be opened by a single turn of the cover, and the contents taken out in one fourth the time required by other ves sels. THlßD —Besides their simplicity and ease of adjustmeut and the impossibility of stop pers blowing out, they show at all times the exact condition of the fruit by simply looking at the top of the cover: if the gum gasket is concave, the fruit is good; if convex, the fruit is going to spoil, but will always show itself in time tube saved. . For sale by JOHN B. SELIIEIMER, at his tin, stove, and 6heet iron manufactory, East Market street, Lewistown, Pa., also by coun ty stores generally. 28 iPiEiESJMFiixn) lom&a mmm FAR, FAR O'ER IIILE AMD DALE. Far, far o'er hill and dale, on the winds stealing, List to the tolling bell, mournfully pealing, Hark! hark! it seems to say, As melt those sounds away, So life's best joys decay, Whilst new their feeling. Now through the charmed air slowly ascending, List to the mourner's prayer, solemnly blending, Hark 1 hark! it seems to say, Turn from those joys away, To those which ne'er decay, For life is ending. O'er a father's dismal tomb see the orphan bending, From the solemn church-yard's gloom hear the dirge ascending, Hark! hark! it seems to say, How short ambition's sway, Life's joys and friendship's ray, Are iu the dark grave ending. So when our mortal ties death shall dissever, Lord may we reach the skies, where eare comes never. And in eternal day. Joining the angel's lay, To our Creator pay Homage forever. Spiritual Stores. AYe cannot ail become rich in a worldly sense. 3lany seek to become so, but are not able. It is not so with regard to spir itual riches. Here, whosoever will may be come rich by taking of the water ot life irecly. 4 Let him that hath no money come and buy wine and milk, without money and without price.' Oume where? \\ hero is this wine and milk—this water of life? Ah, we all need the admonition that l'aul gave to the Romans :—' .Say not, who. will ascend up to heaven—that is to bring Christ down from above? but the word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth and in thy heart.' Nothing is nearer, nothing more accessible, than this rich supply so freely offered. It is not away up in heaven, beyond our reach; it is not alar off, in some vague, dreamy region, of which we can form no definite concep tion ; but in our hands —in that blessed book whose treasures of wisdom and grace arc perfectly inexh .ustible. Now, it we only look at a richly-spread table, it will not satisfy our hunger; so the mere reading of the Scriptures-will never satisfy our spiritual wants. We must ap propriate them in humble, child like faith. The bare knowledge that 'God so loved the world that he gave bis only-begotten Son, that whosoever belicveth on him might not perish but have everlasting life,' will do us no good unless we comply with the conditions The affecting narrative of blind Bartimeus will do us no good unless it causes us, as poor, blind creatures, to run to the same Saviour with the same cry. What benefit is it to uie to know that Je hovah was David's Shepherd ? but let me adopt David's language, and then I too am placed beyond the reach of want, or fear, or any evil. I too may look forward to a comfortable life and happy immortality. When I read the gracious words, 4 1 am the Lord thy God/ aud can feel that he is speaking to me, then I drink of the water of life freely. How rich, how blessed, is he whose mem ory is stored with the words of eternal truth It is a treasury f rom which he can draw in every time of need. While en gaged in the duties of his calling, they will be floating through his mind, exerting a sanctifying influence, even when he is almost unconscious of it. They will ena ble him to resist temptation, to bear up under the trials of lite, and in the most se questered hours they will be with him, as friends aud companions, to give form and expression to his holiest thoughts. We think in language: but, unless the words of inspiration came to our aid, how cold, feeble, confused and indefinite are our spiritual meditations! \\ ell, then, if the words of God are not in our memories, how can we meditate ? Nay, how can even the Holy Spirit operate upon our souls ? The Saviour says 4 31 y words, they are spir it and they are life.' And again: 4 He (the Comforter) will take of mine aud show them unto you;' but where shall he get them if they are not read or not treas ured up in the mind? Here, then, we are to come. Here are the wine and the milk. Here is that which will make your soul de lirlit itself in fatness. These are the words of God. upon which the soul feeds as the body feeds on bread. This is the great storehouse whence we must draw our supplies. It is not enough that we look in aud admire its fulness. We must draw upon it for ourselves, continually, diligent iv, eagerly. Like Bunyan's Pilgrim, we mus? carry the roll in our bosom, so as to have it always near, always ready. Trouble i" Jerusalem. —A letter was received iu Boston on Friday, from Simeon Murad, the acting* American consul in Jerusalem, who says ihat considerable anx iety is felt by the Christian European resi dents. The Arabs without the walls as well as those witbin, are evidently un der unusual excitement. Those of Djbel Kuds and Djbel Mablous have already des troyed the surrounding crops. Bread is beginning to be very dear, so that a loaf which ordinarily cost five paras now brings twenty, and scarce at that. The poor are sufl'eriug, and apprehensions of a fearful outbreak are anticipated. There is no cal culating the amount of misery that would follow, should the fanatical spirit of the Ma- THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1860. honiedans break forth as it has on former occasions at Jerusalem, which has in past ages passed through more extraordinary scenes of blood, slaughter, and rapine, than any other place on the face of the globe. M€EmMffiT Horrible Excesses of a Tenuessee Des perado. | He is Killed ly a Party of Citizens.— The Moristown (Tenn,) Intelligencer of last week contains the following narrative: 4 We have hardly heard ot a more dia bolical and fiendish outrage than the one perpetrated eight miles above this place, and two miles above llusselviile, in Haw kins County. It seems that a man or rath er a demon, by the name of Joshua Bal lard, armed himself with a scythe blade, | and started from his home with the intcn | tiou of murdering some person. The first man he encountered was a 31 r. Bcwley; i but it appears that Bewley escaped with | out material injury. lie went to the house of a 3Jr. Horner, and told him he intend ed to kill him, and commenced cutting him with his scythe blade. Ilovner rc j ceived eight severe wounds upon the head and other parts of his person. We are informed that he cannot possibly survive. Ballard then went to the house of 31 rs. ltobinson j she saw him come and she clos ed the door. Ballard, however, broke the ! door down, went in, hauled her from under the bed, and inflicted several severe wounds j upon her. She by some means escaped ! from him. Not satisfied, lie commenced | upon the two children, inflicting several ! gashes upon their bodies. By this time ! several of the neighbors collected to take him, but Ballard swore he would not , be taken, and started in a run for his home; j he was hotly pursued, however, and bare ly reached his house and secreted himself | in the cabin when he was fired upon ; through the cracks between the logs. ! There was a bag of cotton in his loft, which : he used to screen himself from the bullets, ' and our informant, a gentleman of veracity, j says that some seventy-five shots were fired | before he was killed. He stood and curs ied his pursuers till he fell dead. His j mother also stood in the yard during the | time, swearing she would send the whole i parish to h—l before she was done with them. It appears that Ballard was a desperate character—addicted to strong i drink, aud all kinds of dissipation. He was the champion of the neighborhood, j and most men were afraid to en counter him single handed. We saw him engaged in a row with the Irish in this i place some five years ago, and he made a ' party of about twenty leave the street. We are opposed to lynching a man, but in | this case there was no alternative. A New Mania. About one year ago, a Frenchman, whose 1 lot had been cast among the tinsel angels and heroes of the theatrical world, became weary of the little notoriety acquired by dancing with clogs upon a tight rope, and decided to make a bold stroke fur fame. | The name of this man was Blondin, and ! the feat which he attempted was that of ! crossing the torrent of Niagara on a single strand. He succeeded, and from that time until quite recently, the world has been under the impression that there was but one Blondin. Within a few weeks, however, another Frenchman has dared to conquer Blondin and Niagara. His victory was complete, for when in the centre of his fragile bridge ; he seized a rope and descended to the deck jof the river steamer. Great Farini! Wonderful acrobat 1 Since then the rope walking fraternity \ has gone mad. The scattered fragments j of the Ravel troupe throughout the coun | try have rushed for streams over which to risk their lives. Their ambition no long er aspires to mount cords leading to the roofs of buildings, but all alike seek high |er glory. One or two unfortunates have slipped and narrowly escaped, but this does ! not seem to have deterred the remainder. It is uncertain where this thing will end. Many men have attained unenviable pub licity by their performance on a single rope, assisted by the Sheriff'. Blondin will some day, perhaps, volunteer a Sam Patch leap into the flood. Farini will take a nap on his perch, and some new adventurer may be found who will carry a miniature print ing press with him, and strike off" an edi tion of a newspaper, containing an account of his own feat, while dashed by the Fath er of waters. While anxiously waiting for an exploit of this nature, we look daily for some dreadful accident to the present per formers. — Philadelphia Inquirer. fcafMrs. Elizabeth Litzenberger died at the Stark County (Ohio) Infirmary, on the Ist inst., aged 102 years, 10 months and 20 days. When a girl she was a great favorite of General Washington, for whom she cooked during his visits to Little lork, Pa., which so pleased him that he of fered her a permanent situation in his fam ily, which she declined. Duriug her whole life the deceased was a hard working wo man. For the last quarter of a century she has struggled with abject poverty, of ten not knowing where she should find a shelter and a bed for her worn-out body. Mr. Lincoln on Mr. Clay. The Illinois Journal, of July 21, 1F52, in noticing the public proceedings in the City-of Springtieid in token of respect to the memory of the illustrious American, Henry Clay, says that before a vast audience, assembled in the Ilall of Representatives, Hon. Abraham Lin coln pronounced an eulogy on the public char acter and virtues of the deceased. From that oration we make the following extract : Having been led to allude to domestic slavery, so frequently already, T am unwil ling to close without referring more partic ularly to 3lr. Clay's views and conduct in re gard to it. lie ever was, on principle and in feeling, opposed to slavery. The very ear liest, and ouc of the latest public efforts of his life, separated by a period of more than fifty years, were both made in favor of grad ual emancipation, lie did not perceive that on a question of human lights, the ne groes were to he excepted from the human race. And yet 31 r. Clay was the owner of slaves. Cast into life when slavery was al ready widely spread and deeply seated, he did not perceive, as I think no wise man has perceived, how it could be at once erad icated without producing a greater evil, even to the cause of human liberty itself. His feeling and his judgment, therefore, ever led him to oppose both extremes ot opinion on the subject. Those who would shiver into fragments the Union of these States; tear to tatters its venerated Consti tution—aud even burn the last copy of the Bible, rather than slavery should continue a single hour, together with all their more halting sympathizers, have ieceived, and are receiving, their just execration; and the name, and opinions, and influence of 31r. Clay are fully, and, as I trust, effectu ally aud enduringly, arrayed against them. But 1 would, also, if L could, array his name, opinions and influence against the opposite extreme- —against a few, but an in creasing number of men, w ho, for the sake of perpetuating slavery, are beginning to assail and to ridicule the white man's char ter of freedom —the declaration that 44 all men are created free and equal." So far as I have learned, the first American of any note, to do or attempt this, was the late John C. Calhoun; and, if 1 mistake not, it soon alter found its way into some of the messages of the Governors of South Caro lina. We, however, look for, and are not much shocked by, political eccentricities and heresies in South Carolina. But, only last year 1 saw with astonishment, what purported to be a letter of a very distin guished and influential clergyman of Vir ginia, copied, with apparent approbation, into a St. Louis newspaper, containing the following, to me, very unsatisfactory lan guage :' ' 1 am fully aware that there is a text in soine Bibles that is not in mine. Profession al abolitionists have made mere use of it, than in any passage in the Bible. It came, however, as I trace it, from Saint Voltaire, and was baptized by Thomas Jefferson, and since almost universally regarded as canoni cal authority: ' All men are born free and. equal.' ' This is a genuine coin in the political cur rency of our generation. lam sorry to say that I have never seen two men of whom it is true. But I must admit 1 never saw the Sia mise twins, and therefore will not dogmati cally say that no man ever saw a proof of this sage aphorism." This sounds strangely in republican America. The like was not heard in the fresher days of the Republic. Let us con trast with it the lauguage of that truly na tional man, whose life and death we now commemorate and lament. 1 quote from a speech of Mr. Clay delivered before the American Colonization Society in 1827 : 'We are reproached with doing mischief by the agitation of this question. The socie ty goes into no household to disturb its do mestic tranquillity; it addresses itself to no slaves to weaken their obligations of obedi ence. It seeks to affect no man's property. It neither has the power nor the will to affect the property of an)' one contrary to his con sent. 'The execution of its scheme would augment, instead of diminishing the value of the property left behind. The society, com posed of free men, concerns itself only with the free. Collateral consequences we are not responsible for. It is not this society which has produced the great moral revolution which the age exhibits. What would they, wh'o who thus reproach us have done. If they would repress all tendencies towards liberty and ultimate emancipation, they must do more than put down the beuevolent efforts of this society. They must go back to the era of our liberty and independence, and muzzle the cannon which thunders its annual joyous return. They must reuew the slave trade with all its train of atrocities. They must suppress the workings of British philanthro py, seekiug to ameliorate the condition of the unfortunate West Indian slave. They must arrest the career of South American deliver ance from thraldom. They must blow out the moral light around us, and extinguish that greatest torch of all which America pre sents to a benighted world—pointing the way to their rights, their liberties, and their hap piness. And when they have achieved all those purposes, their work will be yet incom plete. They must penetrate the human soul, and eradicate the light of reason and th? love of liberty. Then, and not till then, when universal darkness and despair prevail, can you perpetuate slavery, and repress all sym pathy and all humane and benevolent efforts among free men, in behalf of the unhappy portion of our race doomed to bondage.' The American Colonization Society was orgauized in 1810. Mr. Clay, though not its projector, was one of its earliest mem bers, and he died, as for the many preced- ing years he had been, its President. It was one of the most cherished objects of his direct care and consideration, aud the association of his name with it has pro bably been its very greatest collateral support. He considered it no demerit in the society that it tended to relieve slave holders from the troublesome presence ol the lree negroes; but this was far from be ing its whole merit in his estimation. In the same speech from which ! have quoted be says:—'There is a moral fitness iu the idea ot returning to Africa her children, whose ancestuis have been torn from her by the ruthless hand of fraud and violence. Transplanted in a foreign laud, they will carry back to their native soil the rich fruits of religion, civilization, law and lib erty. 31 ay it not be one of the great de signs of the Ruler of the universe, (whose ways are often inscrutable by short sight ed morals,) thus to transform an original crime into a signal blessing to that most unfortunate portion ot the globe ?' This suggestion of the possible ultimate redemp tion of the African race and African con tinent was made twenty-five years ago. Every succeeding year has added strength to the hope of its realization. 31 ay it iu doad be realized! Pharaoh's county was cursed with plagues, and his hosts were lost in the lu d Sea for striving to obtain a captive people who had already served them more than four hundred years. 31ay like disasters never befall us ! If, as the friends of colonization hope, the present coming generations of our countrymen shall by any means succeed in freeing our land from the dangerous presence of slav ery, aud, at the same time, in restoring a captive people to their long-lost father-land with bright prospects for the future, and this, too, so gradually, that neither races nor individuals shall have suffered by the change, it will indeed be a glorious consum mation. And if, to such a consummation, the efforts of 31r. Clay shall have contrib uted, it will be what he most ardently wished ; and none of his labors will have been more valuable to his country than his kind. But, Henry Clay is dead. His long and eventful life is closed. Our country is prosperous and powerful; but could it have been quite all it has been, and is, and is to be, without Henry Clay ? Such a man the times have demanded, and such, in the providence of God, was given us. Let us strive to deserve, as far as mortals may, the continued care of Divine Providence, trusting that in future national emergen cies. He will not fail to provide us the in struments of safety and security. Photographing from a Balloon. —A novel and interesting experiment was tried in Providence on Thursday, by iNIr. Black, daguerreotypist, of Boston. It was an at tempt to obtain photographic views of Providence and suburbs from a balloon. A balloon, held by a rope, was allowed to ascend to the heigh th of 1,200 feet, l'rotu which elevation several photographic views were taken of the city, bay and surround ing country. The result ol this experi ment, which was undertaken under the di rection of Dr. Wm. 11. Holme, of Provi dence, cannot be fully known until the im pressions are taken from the plates; but it has proved the feasibility of' taking photo graphic views in this manner. It was the intention of the aeronauts, after this pre liminary ascension, to make a long voyage in the balloon, and take views over an ex tent of country; but the obscuration of the sun rendered this impossible. Convenient Custom. —The author of ' Wanderings in Brittany' gives the follow ing illustrati <n of thoughtful care for the wants of marriageable young men : ' The peasantry around Josselin retain their old dresses and customs in perfection ; the girls especially have a habit that would save much trouble were it introduced into more civilized circles. They appear on fete days in red under-petticcats, with white or yel low borders around them ; the number of these denotes the portion the father is wil ling 11 give his daughter; each white band representing silver, betokens a hundred francs of rent, and each yellow band means gold and stands for a thousand francs per year. Thus any young man who sees a face that pleases him, has only to glance at the trimmings of the petticoat to learn in an instant what amount of rent accompa nies it.' Bulling his Eyes out. —A rag-picker, in Memphis, while walking about the wharf was seized with a fit of insanity, and made a vigorous attempt to pull both of his eyes out. Running his fingers into his eyes, he endeavored to pull the balls from their sockets, and before discovered, actually succeeded in tearing away a portion of his left eye ! He was discovered, however, in the attempt, and four men found it diffi cult to prevent him from carrying out his determination ; nor did they succeed until they had bound him fast with cords.— Memphis Inquirer. Jtet?"An eminent Massachusetts wag has expressed his surprise that in view ol the fate of six cows being killed by electrici ty during a thunder shower in the western part of the State, an extra session of the Legislature was not called to provide the rest of the cows in the commonwealth with lightning rods. New Series—Vol. XIV, No. 42. A !>!</$ /ntc)■<?'■ <! /':• 11 rJ:hnj Men.—A Brussels paper records the laconic address to the King by the President of the Free' Association of Printers in Brussels—n' numerous, intelligent and important body. ' Sire," he said, ' 1 place in your hands the address of the Typographical body of Brus sels. In the presence of danger, people range themselves around the throne.' The King's reply, as given by the Independou dence, was equally brief and to the purpose. ' I thank you, gentlemen,' he said ; 'my heart and my life have always been for the working man ; and as long as I live the working man may reckon on me.' These words ran through the crowd, and caused a fresh burst of enthusiasm. Snow and lluil Storms in dine/land. — The Liverpool Mercury, of August Ist, says that the phem mcua of snow storms in the dog days have occurred in Yorkshire. On the previous Saturday a very severe thunder storm passed over Muiston district, ending i Ti shower of snow and hail of fully an ! ur's duration. 'J be ground was quite white, and on the Wolds the snow was two inches deep in some pla ces. Hailstones as large as nuts fell in quantities. A few days after there was another snow and hail storm. ' O, my Countrymen, what a Falliiu/ Of was t/,, r <-.'' —During the prevalence of a furious thunder storm at Burlington, the other day, a wagish gentleman, an inmate of a fashionable boarding house, casually remarked in the hearing ot a number of lady boarders that the reverberations indi cated heavy and vivid lightning, and that no person should handle or have steel about their persons during its continuance for fear of accidents. The ladies of the house made a simultaneous rush for their rooms, and soon thereafter appeared, vastly reduc ed in rotundity. The gentleman of course said nothing and looked innocent. When Parson Brownlow Will Join the Patent Democrats. An Arkansas correspondent, who proba bly wanted to ' wake up' Lev. Mr. Brown low, of the Knoxville (Tcnn.) Whig, wrote to the latter, stating that he had learned with pleasure upon what 'he con sidered reliable authority,'that Mr. Brown low was about to join the democrats, and asked for the probable date of that inter esting occurrence. Mr. Brownlow gave the date, or at least data for the date, a ■ follows: KNOX YILI.K, August 0, 1800. Mr. Jordan Clark : I have jour letter of the 20th ult., and hasten to let j-ou know the precise time when 1 expect to come out and formally announce that i have joined the Democratic party. W hen the sun shines at midnight, and the moon at midday—when man forgets to be selfish, or Democrats lose their inclination to steal when nature stops her onward march to rest, or all the water courses in America flow up stream —when flowers lose their odor and trees shed no leaves—when bird:: talk, and beasts of burden laugh— when damned spirits swap hell for heaven, with the angels of light, and pay them hoot in mean whiskey—when impossibilities arc in fashion, and no proposition is too absurd to be believed, you may credit the report that 1 have joined the Democrats. I join the Democrats —Never, so long as there are sects in churches, weeds in gardens, fleas in hog pens, dirt in victuals, disputes in families, wars with nations, wa ter in the ocean, had men in America, or base women in France—no, Jordan Clark, j'ou may hope, you may congratulate, you may reason, you may sneer, but that cannot be. The thrones of the Old World, the court of the Universe, the government of the world, may all fall and crumble into ru in—the New World may commit the na tional suicide of dissolving this Union, but all must occur before I join the Democra cy 1 Ijoin the Democracy! — Jordan Clark, you know not what you saj - ; when I join Democracy, the Dope of Rome will join the Methodist Church, when Jordan Clark of Arkansas, is President of the Republic of Great Britain, by universal suffrage of a contented people, when Queen Victoria consents to be divorced from Prince Albert by a county court in Kansas, when Con gress obliges by law, James Buchanan to marry a European Princess, when the Pope leases the Capitol at Washington for his city residence, when Alexander of Russia and Napoleon of France are elected Sena tors in Congress from New Mexico, when good men cease to go to heaven, or bad men to hell, when this world is turned up side down, when proof is afforded, both clear and unquestionable, bat there is no God. when men turn to ants, and ants to elephants, i will change my political faith, and come out on the side of Democracy ! Supposing that this full and frank letter will enable you to fix upon the period when I will come out a full-grown Democrat, and to communicate the same to all whom it may concern in Arkansas, I have the honor to be, &e.> W. G. BROWNLOW. Never go to bed with your feet stick ing out of the window, particularly when it is raining or freezing.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers