* . J v - • *aHaEBBHOPBMaBCBiiyaAAF r- •** •=~ JI GI '_—• fin NR IH 31 ** & Whole No. 2575. BLYMYER Sl STANBARGER. fill! t COIIJiIM M3RGiHAIT2S, Year Canal Basin, Lewistown, Pa., Will purchase every description of Produce at current prices. ALWAYS ON UAX D , PLASTER, salt, fish, stone coal of assorted size.?, LIME BUHNERS? IT' BLACKSMITHS' COAL. GEO. BLYMYER, DEC' 2 C. C. STANBARGER. Jib J, ■_R_J 'OH "GAY ~R r- J F Y R A OFFICE on East Market street, Lewistown, RIJ.'II.ITIIL F. G. Franciseus' Hardware I' ~• Dr. L .EKE will be at his > {lice • -T M inlay of each month to spend tbe WAK. my 31 A. J. ATKINSON, T lA\ IXG permanently located in Lewis town, offers his professional servi-es toe CITIZENS of town and country. Office Wot .Market .sr., opposite Eisenbise's Hotel. K- -i it rice one door east of George Blyniycr. Lev. istown, July 12, IBf>o-tf | Dr, Samuel L. Alexander, I? lias permanently located at Milroy, ML - inJ IS prepared to practice all thebranch of LIS Profession. Office at Swine |,l TS Hotel. myo-ly EDWARD FRYSINGER, WHOLESALE DEALER & RAM FAITIRER UWliUMrajffl, &e., &c , Orders promptly attended to. jelfi " • nma ntimf A IKR NJ *to Attorney at Law, j Otiire Market Square, Lewistown, will at- D to iiu-i.'ICSS in .Vl lJllin, Centre and Uunting -1,1 counties. royJti jiii'Of-IS WMWMV* fccigrist's Old St-nd, Vor ihl' Canal Bridge, Lew: -down. Pa. N. N>' Beer, Lager Brer, Lindenherger I"I Swit/.er Cheese — all of the best quality -tantly on band, for sale wholesale or re lail. irast 11 be had daily during summer. MJ24-yr JUST RECEIVED \ A -ELECT STUCK OK Boots, Shoes, (waiters, &c. a, w •o-ii, hoys, and children, which - UAEU for sale remarkably low. J. CLARK, MY 10 Opposite the Union Iluu.e. iff ALISTERVILLE ACADEMY Juniata County, Pa. AO F. McF. iRLANI), Principal ,V Proprietor. •iCOB MiI. I.EH, Prof, of Ahii/um'tlic-, Re. J.WYItI H CRIST, Tenclur >J' Alusic, Re. T t ne*t session of thi.i Institution com es HI the 2tith of July, to continue 22 Stuiieiits admitted at any time. A Normal Department TIE formed which will atf ID Teachers the ' pportui.if \ of preparing for fall examina- MA. APPARATUS has been purchased, - -rtrs engaged, &c. Urms — Beaming, Room und Tuition, per T .jf)slo >6O. Tuition alone at usual rates, V Circulars -R.T lree on application. FRIBLEY & CORNMAN'S Litnt Vflf-testlns. Self-sealing, Premium, Air-tight til If C.LM S, J ARS. Patented October 25, 1859. •Ex An.Ave Riyht of Making n the market fur preserving Fruits ; Vegetables of all kinds. ■ ■")' possess the following advantages over ( "'' vr Cans and Jars that are in the mar- Lpot-AH that is required after the fruit •wen put in hot, is simply to screw the i TTPICN tightly. •" N'D—FLA-V be opened by a single R NT cover, and tbe contents taken out 1 : urth the time required by other ves- ; ■ ID—. Bps IDES their simplicity and ease j f justmeut and the impossibility of sti p- ! G'JWIUG out, they show at all times the - ndition of the fruit by simply looking TO P °I the cover: if the gum gasket is the fruit is good ; if convex, the F 18 S°ING to spoil, but will always show N' time to BE saved. .;■ ■**! by JOHN B. SELIIEIMER, at bis -WTP. VFl ' AN '' iron manufactory, East . tr ' !REET> Lewistown, Pa., also bv coun J J generally. J E 28 i ®l3Sihkb ah® jptKtMßsaussß ws ®a®!E®is Mmsamms! 9 ssxmnxx 3>A IHB MINSTREL NELLY'S GRAVE. Near a clear and laughing brooklet, Down in the flowery dell, Where the birds are gaily singing And rosea love to dwell. V here the tall and blanching willows riieir weeping leaflets wave, In a sweet, secluded corner, Is darling Nelly's grave. Rich clustering vines are twining, Around her lowly tomb, And in Spring the brightest flowers, Mingle their sweet perfume. While the sighing zephyrs murmur A low and plaintive sound, I lie happy angels are guarding Her little grassy mound. W en ev -niiig shades ar gathering, And dews are falling t'a-t, I often wander to that spot To dream about the past. H'-r pleasing smiles so bright, so pure, To me again appear, And scenes of other days come back A thousand times more dear. Her speaking eyes, so large and full, Beamed with joy and lov, And her heart was pure and guileless, As the angels up above. ITer charming voice, so soft and rich, Methinks 1 hear it yet, H - r fnuhh-ss i >rni ami ea-y grace, I never can forget. iiioi The First Kind Word. \\ as your lesson difficult ?' kindly en quired a young teacher of a ragged, un couth looking lad of about ten years, who was one ot a class which had just finished a recitation, —'was your lesson difficult, my Hf ; he hoy thus audressed, raised his large gray eyes with euquiiiug look, as if to sat isfy himself that words breathed in so i sweet a tone, were intended for him ; but, as he met his teacher's gentle gaze, they fell, and uroopiug iiis head, he forbore tore ply. (lis teacher perceiving that he felt the rebuke, and deeming it sufficient, said no more, and dismissed the class. This lad, •johnny by name, was the son of poor pa rents, both of whom were habituated to the use ot ardent spirits, and, of course, gross ly neglected their children, beating and abusing them, as their excited passions prompted ; s dduni. and perhaps never let from their lips a word of kindly interest even, much less of love. Johnny being of a mischievous tcniper anient, was the reeij ient of unbounded harshness: but to this disposition he oweu a pr;\ tio c •of attendance a ; the village school, ' "Mther he was sent to -be cut of the way.' i 1 his was toe first day he had been under I the care of the pr-.ccht teacher, whom I [w: 11 call Miss Aimer. Johnny possessed a quick and retentive mind, and when he chose to apply himself could stand at the head o!" h;> class. But Ins half-learned lessons came oftener than his perfect ones, and always brought, him a severe reprimand, and often a chas tisement, which seemed to have no other effect than to harden and debase him. (.rowing tip under such influences at home and at school, he became a morose and ill tempered boy, disliked and shunned by his schoolmates on whom he sought to revenge himself by all the petty annoyances his fer tile brain could devise. Such was the lad when he became a pupil of Miss Aimer. She had rebuked him for his first error gently, as was her wont, and, trusting to tfc potency of such reproof, had dismissed hi.a from her mind; but not so easily were the kin I words forgotten by the poor boy, to whom so gentle a tone was so rare as to awaken astonishment. It fell among the rude thoughts and feelings of his heart, as a flower among thorns. It was to his ear, that was wont to catch only the harsh tones of unkindncss, as a strain of sweet melody after a jarring discord. Oh I why do we so often withhold that which costs so little to give, and yet may prove such a treasure to the receiver? But to the story. Miss Aimer lingered at the school room till all the piupils had left, and was walking alone homeward, when this, to her, trifling event of the day, was brought to her mind, by observing Johnny sitting by the roadside, apparently waiting for her. When she came to him, he rose and offered Jura nose gay of violets, saying, 4 l'lcase ma'am, will you take these ?' 4 Certainly, Johnny, they are very sweet, and the finest I have seen this season; I love them dearly, and you too, for bringing them to me.' She had taken the boy's hand in hers, despite its disgusting appearance, and, as she finished speaking, his eyes were lilted to her's with the same expsession as in the morning, and a tear was making a furrow through the dirt that begrimmed his face. 4 Johnny, what is the matter?' asked his teacher, in surprise. 4 What you said,' falteringly uttered the boy. 4 Do you love me V 4 Indeed, I do,' was Miss Aimer's reply. 4 But something must trouble you. Can I do anything for you ?' 4 Oh, you have done more for mc than any one else, for nobody ever loved me be fore ; but I thought you did when you didn't scold me for not getting my lesson, but I'm a dreadful boy 1 you don't know it THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1860. 4 Well, tell me all,'answered his teacher, touched by the earnestness of his manner. So saying, she led him to a large stone, and bade him sit by her there, and, as he un j folded his tale of wrongs done as well as as received, she mingled her tears with his, which flowed freely. They sat long, and ere they parted, she had given rest to his eager heart, by promising ever to be his I friend. '1 he next morning Johnny was missed from his place at school, and at the close of the school, Miss Aimer called at the rude hut which had been his home, to learn the cause of his absence, and to her surprise, found it vacated. Whither the people had gone no one knew. ; Many years after this, (fifteen I think,) | Miss Aimer was visiting far awav from this J scene of her early labors, and during her visit, attended a meeting for teachers. Re marks were offered and experiences related by many laborers in the good work of in structing youth, and, at length a gentleman ; rose and expressed a wish to say a word to | the band of teachers, on the power of kind j ness, and in the course of his remarks, re j lated the story I have given above, closing | with these, or nearly these words:— 4 I am that lad; those were the first words of kindness T remember ever to have had , addressed to me. They have been my tal ; isman, my guiding star through life. They • have made me what 1 am, and, God help | ing uie, it shall be the aim of my life torc | ward the friend of' my youth, in the only j true way in iny power, namely, by precept : and example, the influence of the divine principle of love which actuated her.' Miss Aimer listened to this recital with an agitated heart, for she recognized in the j speaker tlie little Johnny, whom she had j never forgotten. She sought an interview, i and learned his history. How, alter leav , ing his early home, the love of virtue, 1 which Mie ha .1 roused in his bosom, was ev er leading him away from his evil courses, ' and urging him to a higher life. Need we say to any teacher who may ; rea l this, 4 Go thou and do likewise?' All may not meet with so speedy a reward as did Miss Aimer; but let us remember that the time i-: not yet, and if we labor faithfully, we may hope that the guerdon shall yet lie ours to find that some poor soul has been rescued Ir on degration by our en deavors, to shine lorever, a star in the Sa viour's coronet! A harsh word will kill, where a gentle one will make alive. NOVEL HEADING. ' [We extract the following from the able and interesting report of Dr. Hay, of the Butler Hospital for the Insane, Providence, It. I ] Among the mental exercises character istic of our day and generation, which are unfavorable to mental health, it would be j something like acting the play with the ! part of Hamlet left out, were we to omit j all mention of one scarcely secondary in importance to any other. The effect of novel reading on the men talj health is what we have to consider in the present inquiry. Of course, it varies with the character of each individual mind, and with the circumstances thut ac company it Generally speaking, howev ; er, there can be no question that excessive indulgence in novel reading necessarily enervates the mind, and diminishes itspow er of endurance. In other departments of literature, such as biography and history, ! the mental powers are more or less exer : cised by the ideas which they convey. ; Facts are stored up in the memory; hints I are obtained for the further pur.-uit of : knowledge ; judgements are formed respcct j ing character and actions ; original thoughts are elicited; a spirit of investigation is ex cited ; and, more than all, life is viewed as jit really has been and must be lived. A mind thus furnished and disciplined is pro j vided with a fund of reserved power to | fall back upon when assailed by adverse forces, which all of us, in some shape or | other, at some time or other, must expect Ito encounter. In novel reading, on the | contrary, the mind passively contemplates j the scones that are brought before it, and j which, being chiefly addressed to the pas [ sions and emotions, naturally please, with I out the necessity of effort or preparation. Of late years, a class of books has arisen, ! the sole object of which is to stir the feel | ings, not by ingenious plots; not by touch ; ing the finer chords of the heart, and skill- • fully unfolding the springs of action : not by arousing our sympathies for unadulter : ated, unsophisticated goodness, truth, and beauty, for that would assimilate them , to the immortal productions ot Shakspeare and Scott; but by coarse exaggerations of every sentiment, by investing every scene in glaring colors, and, in short, by every form of unnatural excitement. In all this I there is little or no addition to one's stock j of knowledge; no element of mental strength is evolved, and no one is better j | prepared by it for encountering the stern realities of life. The sickly sentimentality : which craves this kind of stimulus is as ; different from the sensibility of a well-or dered mind as the crimson flush of disease j ; from the ruddy glow of high health. A mind that seeks its nutriment chiefly in ■ books of this description is closed against ; the genial influences that flow from real i joy and sorrow, and from all the beauty 1 . an 1 heroism of common life. A refined . selfishness is apt to prevail over every bet- I ter feeling; and when the evil day comes, tbe higher sentiments which bind us to i our fellow men by all the ties of beuevo i lence, and justice, and veneration, furnish no support nor consolation. Let me not be misunderstood. I do not say that no one can read a novel without endangering the health of his niind; for, under certain qualifications, nothing could be further ' . from producing such a result than this kind of recreation. Who can number the hours ot d -comfort and sorrow which j have been relieved ol half their burden by the delightful fictions of Feott ? Th o spc cific doctrine 1 would inculcate is, that the ■ excessive indulgence in novel reading, which is a characteristic of our times, is chargeable with many of the mental irreg ularities that prevail among us in a degree unknown at any former period. r i he views here given concerning the ef fect of certain kinds of reading on the health of the brain m iy not be readily ac cepted by those (and they constitute the ; larger part of mankind) who are unable or | unwilling to perceive any relation of cause | and effect between tilings apparently so ; remote from one another. Because tha j mischief does not follow, fully foimed and developed, on the first application of the , noxious agent, the latter is supposed to ! have had nothing to do with it. Such | reasoning receives no support from our knowledge ol the animal economy. We might as well say that dyspepsia always | originates in a particular surfeit, or even frequent excesses, and never in a long ccn- j turned habit of eating or drinking some thing which, taken occasionally, may be borne with impunity. The evil is no less real, and no less serious, because it re quires a certain amount of accumulation to render it visible. Here, too, the remedy D higher culture and worthier aims; and though slow in its operatic we may be sure it is the only one that will bring re lief. Good Nature. Good nature is a gem which shines brightly wherever it is found. It cheers the darkness of misfortune, and warms the heart that is callous and cold. In social life who lias not seen and felt it- influences? Don't let iiftle matters ruffle you. Nobody gains anything by being cross and crabbed. If a friend has injured you—if the world goes hard—if you want employment and car. t get your honest clues—or fire has consumed, or water swallowed up the fruits of many years' hard toil—or your faults magnsS. d, or enemies have traduced, or friends deceived, never mind; don't get ! mad with anybody; don't abuse the world or any creature; keep good matured, and our word for it all will come right. The solt south wind and the gentle sun are not more effectual in clothing the earth | with verdure and sweet flowers ot spring, ! . than is good nature in adorning the hearts ! of men and women with blossoms of kind . ness, happiness and affection—those flow ers, the fragrance of which ascend to lleav- 1 en. What is Life. The mere sleep of a year is not life. To eat, and drink, and sleep—to be exposed to darkness and the light—to pace round in : the mill of habit, and turn thought into an implement of trade—this is not life. In j all this but a poor fraction of consciousness j of humanity is awakened, and the sancti- I ties still slumber which make it worth I while to be. Knowledge, truth, love, beau - j (}', goodness, faith, alone can give vitality ito the mechanism of existence. The laugh of mirth|that vibrates through the heart—- i the tears that freshen the dry wastes with i in—the music that brings childhood back i —the prayer that calls the future near— the doubt which makes us meditate —the death that startles us with mystery —the hardship which forces us to struggle—the anxiety that ends in trust —are the true nourishment of our natural being. ®5&-Goodness is goodness, find it where we may. A vineyard exists fur the pur pose of nurturing vines, but he would be a strange vine-dresser who denied the reality oi grapes because they bad ripened under a less genial soil, and beyond the precincts of his vineyard. A good man in affliction, who was ! asked how he bore his sorrows so well, re | plied : 4 it lightens the stroke to draw near to II im who handles the rod.' A mn FOR FAERY BODY. THE DAYLIGHT GAS BURNER COOK. VCCORDING to a bona tide agreement be tween A. J. Gallagher (the manufactu ; rer of the above stove) and J. Irvin Wallis, no one can get this stove direct from the Foun- | ! dry to sell in this place, but the undersigned; i j therefore, all persons wanting this Stove will find it to their interest to call on the proper person, aj they are not second handed and can be furnished cheaper than the cheapest j for several reasons. j Don't mistake the place—Sign of the BIG COl I LL POT, where you will also find me in nty legitimate business, trying to : make a fortune by selling Tin Buckets, Pans, and three cent Tin Cups, i jy l9 J IRVIN WALLIS, j 1 lIKEIiMMEOBX Can'ion to B ys. —Those who drive cows with full bags, should never make them run, savs the Massachusetts PI w man. This we all know, but it is well to repeat oven what the cow-driver may know | perfectly well, as it will freshen his feel ings oi kindness towards these useful uo luest.'C animals. If the ca'.Te are lazy and it ;s necessary to use force to make them walk smartly, a pliable stick -hould be em p'oyed, or a 4 black snake whip.' When a toy, we were very fond of a whip of this kind, and used to save the skins of all the : eels caught and dry theni for lashes. It makes a loud crack, is good company, and muck feared by the cuttle, which take good, care not to lag behind. Never throw at eatt;e stones or pieces of wood, and never cau-e them to run, boys. Bra d Tit rbs. —All herbs which are to be dried should be washed, separated, and carefully picked ever, then spread on coarse paper and kept in a room until perfectly dry. Those which arc intended lor cook ing should be stripped from the stems and rubbed very tine. Then put them in bot tles and cork tightly. Put those which are intended tor medical purposes into paper bags, and keep them in a di t place. h> Stop lib id ing. —((). J„yon, a den ti-t of Maspeth, L. 1., writes to the Scien tific American as follows: Observing re cently a ease of death caused by hemor rhage from the extraction of a tooth, the following should be universally known as j an infallible remedy: Make Plaster of Paris into the consistence of soft putty and fill the cavity. It will soon become a' solid plug.' &2L>TO prepare iron cement for stopping leaks, take sixteen parts of clean wruught iron filings, three parts powdered sal am moniac, and two parts flour of sulphur, mix all well together, und preserve thccompound in a stoppered vessel and in a dry place till wanted lbr use. Then take one part of the mixture, and add twelve parts of clean iron filings, and mix this new compound with as much water as will bring it to the con j sistence of a paste, having previously ad ded to the water a few drops of sulphuric acid. Liquid Clue. —The following recipe, the discovery of a French chemist, is selling, about the country, as a secret, lor various prices, from one to five dollars. !t is a handy and valuable composition, as it does i not gelatinize nor undergo putrefaction and fermentation, and become offensive, and can be used cold for all the ordinary pur poses of glue in making or mending furni ture or broken vessels that are not exposed to water, Ac.: In a widemoutlied bottle ; I dissolve eight ounces of best glue in a half pint of water, by setting it in a vessel of ! water and heat: g it until dissolved. Then add slowly, constantly stirring, two and a i half ances of strong aquafortis (nitric | acid.) Keep it well corked, and it will be ' ' ready for use. This is the ' Celebrated Prepared Glue,' of which we hear so much. Who are the Druses? '] he wholesale frightful massacre of the : Christians in Syria, by the Druses, will lead our readers to inquire, Who are the I Druses ? and we take the following de- | j seription of this fanatical people from the Washington Constitution : ' They are a i sect of Mohammedans who trace their ori- ! gin to a wonderful fanatic named Ilamsa, who, in conjunction with one of the fol- \ lower -, wrote a sacred book, embodying his j i doctrine for the guidance of the priesthood j only. lie taught that Gou could only be j known to mankind by manifestations of his , i presence in human form, and that he had ; so manifested himself ten times, the lust time being in 1020, in the person of Ila kem, a Caliph of Egypt, who left the care of the faithful to five principal ministers. A complicated system of priesthood is main tained; and many of the doctrines of the sect resemble the Christian theology.— I They are said to derive their name from a Mohammedan missionary named Darazi or I Drusi, but they disavow both his name and | doctrines. The Druses have iu former j I times been noted for cruelty, and for hatred ' ! of the Christian religion, especially of a sect called Maronites, whose spiritual head is the Patriarch of Antioeh, though they have some relations with Home, ai the lute slaughters, however, the fanaticism of the Drupes has not permitted them to ; : make any distinctions, and all Christians have been indiscriminately the victims of their rage. The New Cut. —An old clergyman who had an old tailor as his beadle for many j years, returning from a walk in which the ' minister's man' was in the constant habit of attending him, thus addressed his fellow traveler : 4 Thomas, 1 cannot tell how it is that our congregation should be getting thinner; for I am sure I preach as well as ever I did, and must have gained a great deal of experience since 1 first came among you.' 4 Indeed, sir.' replied Thomas, 'old parsons now-a-days are just like old tailors. I am sure 1 sew as well as ever I did, and ; the cloth is the same; but it's the cut, sir i —the new cut—that beats mc.' New Series—Vol, XIV, No. 43. gyaji he New York Leader contains a marvelous tale of the resuscitation of the pirate Hicks, why has hanged on the 12th of last July. Much excitement has natu rally Icon created on the subject, especial ly as the names < f several prominent med ical men have been given as participants in the affairs. Dr. Carnochan, who w;s said to have taken great interest in the ase. and who had been the adviser during | all the stages of the 'operation,' was called upon, but t.e denies the slightest knowl edge of the fact. The loader s.iys he was 1 rought to life by moans ot au 'electro chemical bath, and describes him a- 'hav ing Lis left arm and leg paralyzed able to open his mouth, but totalij without power ol utterance.' The whole affair is most ; !•••• :My a sensation hoax, though Deputy Marsha Thompson, of New York, main ta-i s that the story is very plausible, and might \tel! he tiue. lie says a gentleman had called to see him, who stated that 1 licks had been brought to Poughkccpsio, and there subjected to the treatment. Mr. 1 hompson also said that Mr. Massett, the alleged biographer of the pirate, had cor roborated the story. .1 Saddening Picture. —The King of I'ru--ia is said to be now under the influ ence "!' fearful visions and hallucinations. Sometimes at night he will start up from his couch, and addressing ttie imaginary spirits around him, will tiil the air with cries ; and then again, at another time, he will sit for whole days and nights in astute of complele torpor, taking no refreshments, and uttering no sound. The gardens of Sans-Souci, where, until quite lately, he used to be wheeled about in a chair, on rollers, now see him no more, and he is, to all appearance, dead already to the outer world. \ isitors, walking on the rosc crowned tt rraces of the new palace, some times sec a thin shadow, pale and tremb ling, flitting in front of the windows above, and are overcome with awe, on being told, 'Das i>t Jer krankle Kouig!' And all this at the favorite residence of the most geni al of Pi us.-i in Kings, the place built ex pressly to banish cares. Milk in Frawr —Wc want a little touch of French despotism in these matters. Ev ery drop of milk brought into Paris is tes ted at the barriers by the lactometer, to sec if the ' Iron tailed cow,' has been guilty of diluting it—if so the whole of it is re mor.-ek-s'y thrown into the gutter —th< Paris miik is very pure in consequence If a tradesman adulterates any article of food offered for sale he i- - first fined, and then made publicly to confess bis fault, by means of a large placard in his window, setting forth the exact nature of the trick lie has playc I upon his customers. Imag ine some of our leiding tradesmen obliged to sit in sackcloth and ashes, and suffer this moral pillory! One or two rogues thus ex posed would have a marvelous effect ir. keeping the sand out of the sugar and the burnt beans out of the coffee. Among the curiosities lately added to the Museum is a flea's bladder, contain ing the souls of twenty-four misers, and the fortunes of twelve printers—it is near ly half full! roit SAI.E BY A to AkLiSTiSiJ-A T > LIXP PI TTS, several patterns Iron Wire ; Tinned and iron Rivets Wood Saws; Sash of all sizes Brass oii can Corks No. 1 article Blacksmith's coal Cast and Blister Steel Waffle Luiis, Stove Griddle 3 Bull Rings, Bull Leading Clasps Tinned and Enameled round and oval Boilers Copper Kettles, Brass Kettles, fum 1 qt to 40 gallons Saddlery of ali kinds CVntre Bitts, Shoe Knives, Apple Parers Sauce Pans, dinner Buckets Coffee Boilers and Pots Gilchrist's celebrated Razors arid Pocket Cut lery Lb htning Rods complete—Points," Burrs, Classes, connections, fee. Cotton Out Lines Gold Leaf, Florence Leaf Brass Curtain Holders, Rattan Springs Carriage Canvass, Head Lining, Hobs, Bows, and Shafts Sliutt rs, Blinds, Paling and Plastering Lath Tin Speltre, Sheet Iron. LANCASTER Fanning Mills—Star id Reading Corn Shellers, and P.fft's, Iluy ctt's and Muinma's Fodder Cutters, for sale low l.y F. G. FRANCISCUS. PLOWS ! PLOWS! M CYEYTOWN Eclipse Plows Jamison do Mexico do with Shears and Landsides, for sale at redu ced prices by augO F. G. FRANCISCUS. PAINTS. HAYING increased our stock of Painte, we offer for sale in large or small quan tities, dry and in oil. Pure White Lead, Snow White Zinc Chrome Green, Paris Green, Chrome Yellow Orange Mineral, Vandyke Brown Florence White, China Gloss. Stone Ochre Chrome Vermilion, Yellow Ochre, Imperial Green, Burnt Umber Black Paint, Venetian Red, Indian Red; American Umber, Celestial Blue, Ultra Marine Blue, Prussian Blue Burnt Sienna. aug9 F, g fv •'