•' '——~ •• - - _ _______ ' ''^ Whole No. 2602. ILLL !LQ323 4 '£> -C_P LA OFFICE on Est*t Market street, Lewistown, adjoining F. G. Franciseus' Hardware ..pre. 1'- S. Dr. Locke will be at his office the first Monday of each month to speud the week. my 31 x>H. A. J. atkiwbost, HAVING permanently located in Lewis town, offers liia professional services t tho citizens of town and country. Office West Market St., opposite Eisenbise's Hotel. Uesidence one door east of George Blymye?. Lewistown, July 12, 18t>U-tf Dr. Samuel L. Alexander, o Has permanently located at Milroy, WGml is prepared to practice ali the branch £% c o! his Profession. Office at Swine tarda Hotel. my3-ly EDWARD FRYSINGER, rfHOLKSiLE DEALER & HAXt FUTCRF.ft or (IK tltS, TOBACtO, SMFF, &c., &c., i^iwnfi®<B)Wsr§ Orders promptly attended to. IC W J W • /' • JmJ hmi! uw* j Attorney at Law, office Maiket Square, Lewistown, will al ien! to business in MilHiu. Centre and flunting l:ei counties. rov2d Seigrist's Cld Stand, .Year Ihe Canal Bridge, Leicistoum, Pa. Strong 11, 'er, Lager Beer, Lindenbergcr snl Switzer Cheese—all of the best quality constantly on hand, for sale wholesale or re tail. Yeast to be bad daily during summer. my'24-yr McALISTERVILLE ACADEMY Juniata County, Pa. iiF.O F ,Vf FJP/.J.Yh, Principal tf Proprietor. JACOB MILLER. Prof, of .Mathematics, &fc. Miss.l.SWIE S. CRIST, Teacher of .Music, SfC- The rest session of this Institution com- • meiices on the 26th of July, to continue 22 ! w -rLs. Students admitted at any time. A Normal Department :ii be formed which will afford Teachers the j r-q opportunity of preparing for fall exauiina lions. A NEW APPARATUS has been purchased, Lecturers engaged, A-c.. lep.ms—Hoarding, Room mid Tuition, per j itMion. jo. r )to {,60. Tuition alone at usual rates, j sent free on application WILLIAM LIND, has now .ipen A NEW STOCK OF Cloths, Cassimeres AND VESTS ft G S, ,ich will bo rnadc up to order in the nrat t and most fashionable styles. apl9 Lock Repairing, Pipe Laying, Plumbing and White Smithing THE above branches of business will be X promptly attended to on application at t * residence of the undersigned in Main Lewistown. janlO ' GEORGE MILLER. New Fall and Winter Goods. j) F. ELLIS, of tho late firm of McCoy 11 • i Ellis, has just returned from the city '■ th a choice assortment of Dry Goods and Groceries, fleeted with care and purchased for cash, s iicii are offered to the public at a small ad r Mco on cost. The stock of Dry Goods em- i Daces ali descriptions of Fall and Winter Goods Citable for Ladies, Gentlemen and Children, ; *'tn many new patterns. Ilis C&voccrCct* Uprise Choice Sugars, Molasses, Java, Rio j tad Lagayra Coffee, superior Teas, &e. Also, ®wts and Shoes, Queensware, and all other : nicies usually found in stores—all which customers of the late firm and the public 2 general are invited to examine. P.. F. ELLIS. . --untry Prodace received as usual and the j ■-'market price allowed therefor. Wistown, October 25, 1800. pLOUR by the barrel or hundred—Fancy, j A Extra Family and Superfine Flour for We by JOHN KENNEDY & Co. J fIOAL OIL LAMPS, Shades, Chimneys, \ V Brushes, Burners. &c„ for sale by JOHN KENNEDY & 00. Cheaper than the Cheapest! (|CASS\YARE. —Tumblers at G2£,75,87, .-a Jl, 1 50, and 200 per dozen. Goblets, -tchc-rs. Fruit Stands, and Covered Dishes, * c > at JOHN KENNEDY k Go's. JI'ST RECEIVED. 10 bbls. Pic Nic Crackers, 10 " Boston Biscuit. " Sugar Crackers, 1 , D " Family *' r . 5 boxes Soda Biscuifc. Bakerv. Low to vh trade. f alcly JOHN KENNEDY & Co. : 1 9 spjuSflß&s iisys) jrsaaaa&a© ws >&3B®3®a jm-srsssT'Kaa&a EawaswswsTj sonmLEH mrsWi, Edited by A. Smith, County Snpeiintecdent ' " -jtmPf tti For the Educational Column. • School Teachers and School Teaching ! Mr. Editor: Before commencing ' sec ondly I must enter my protest a '.oinst the ' printer s devil, or some other equally law , less personage, taking quite so much liber ty with my vocabulary as he did in mv I iast. For instance, when I would speak of ; 'mercenary motives/ I am made to say ; ' r<.cce&:\ury motives;' and again, instead ot permitting me to say whining, he coins the i word fctiiiiu/ tor my use, and instead oi allowing me to say 'moiety received/ he in : sists on having it 'merit received.' <)! the 'pauses' I don't know that I ought to say anything, lbr it is very cvi ; dent that the supply at the case was ratlj -1 cr short, athcrvviso it would not have been | amiss to place a period alter the sentence i 'Let the associations and conventions an , rwer; and certainly had he followed the •gulden rule' he would have granted us sev -1 era! more 'breathing, stati; ns' towards the el se of the article, to say nothing of a i 'quotation mark or two or three parcnthet : to marks that might nave been used to very gocu advantage, i -vow, A!r. iy-iilor, „ submit ;i ail this is , uut tii.-cour.miug it- nou -appreciated yet as ■ pirtng leaching talent, i 1 so. is if not your I f -ly to bring that 'devil' to ; task. 4 A,dto 3 ju, Mr Devil, i submit the propriety, nl f-m,fining- your (.porations fo some le-- -cii-itive ,;rul iess persecuted •eli- .-! IIi:f -si condh in speak in of school teaching i do not propose a dr-sertation upon schoo! room dis j ciplitie. hut simply to consider iho subject : as an occupation, if here are in (!•.is-State I alone, aecurdnie! to lute official leoirtis uo less than 13,0' 'G teachers who have receiv : ed during the past year From the F'otnmon j wealth the sum of $311,072 00. | This state of things proves and in fact : the free school law presupposes certain ; ; present worldly relations which this army | of teachers hold to society, inasmuch as j that law is based upon the principle that ! ; the progress and happiness of human soci- i ' ety, and tlie justice and perpetuity of the I government even, are dependent upon the ; intelligence of the masses in temporal mat ters. . iho subject has already been sufficiently j ! eulogized as a 'pr.dcssion,' as a 'calling,'as i ; a 'missionary work;' and now we propose : to speak of it a • a business, ns an occupa ■ tion, ciigag d in by men and women pos | scssed of the same aspiration, the same ! frailties that, belong to other men and oth , or women who engage in the thousand and | i one act: -ities p< riaining to society. We j would dive.-t the subject of ali its philau- I ; thropic charm--, and bring it right down to i j a plain matter-of-fact, every day position; | and inasmuch as the duties of to-day do j ' not include those of tomorrow or of the i ! next day, or of' any day or space of time : to come, and inasmuch as the present is all j : we have or can have t > deal with, we must j | insist that this occupation pertains prima- j ■ rily to this world and not !<) the next ;that , j it has its necessity and immediate devel- j | opment here with us 'poor worms of the ! ! dust, and not with saintly natures in dis- i ; tarn realms of bliss. Don't let us le tin- j , der.-tood as denying a future, or as under i rating the influence of the present upon j | that luture, but simply asserting the long j admitted and axiomatic principle that to- ! | day properly improved prepares ua for to- j | morrow; that this life, rightly lived, is our [ best preparation for tho life to come, and, i consequently, that our main business in ! this world is with the present, postponing j the duties of heaven until we get there. ! H'c have to deal with things as they are, ' not as they v:ill be Our business is with men and things here, and with children that i are to be subject first of all to the trials and ' perplexities of the present life. Moreover I I it is not our province to act as universal ' | expounders of everything pertaining to ex- • j istence, or to attempt to supply specifics for every emergency of the luture. There i i are agencies in tire various stages of man's j development that are not legitimately with- j | in the public school teacher's sphere, and j | for us to attempt to use them all, for us to ' 1 attempt tim whole work of all mankind, is j ' simply to throw away what little -strength we do possess. It is for us to act as other men act. If we would succeed in the world, conformity to the laws of society must be observed. As the merchant, who would raeceed, must study the law of supply and demand and practice in accordance with them: or as the lawyer, who would convince the jury, must understand the principles of his profession; or as the clergyman, who would be heard, must know and be able to work upon that nice vein of human nature, the judicious management of which is so essential to his success, so must the teacher understand his true relations to society and act accor- ! dingly. Success in teaching, as in other matters, depends upon principles which are to be known and practiced, and not solely upon Providence. Suppose a bookseller brings to an over-stocked market a supply j , of Bibles, would the sacredness of his , merchandise, or his trust in Providence, j insure him from loss ? Suppose a minis ter harangues a critical and already dissat- j i.-ficd audience, will his denunciations e: their indifference, or certainty of his own future reward, a id to the success of his la bors? Suppose an unsuccessful teacher it , equally certain of future reward, does thai help his school, or add to the cause of ed ucation I Isn't it too self-satisfy in?, rath er, to afford a healthy stimulus to action. : ' Root, hog, or die!' That's the doctrine. Cultivate a manly self-reliance and a hearty interest In the various workings of societj", and know that we get about what wc des erve as wc go along. Then we shall no longer look upon ourselves as laborers in an ungrate tut cause, whose tardy rewards i are reserved for a misty future, but as work i ers in the common hive of humanity, where, under the wise division of labor, each builds in his own sphere, nor deems j himself slighted if perchance his brother laborer in another field, sedulously minds ; his own business. At present teachers are out slders, or rath | er visitors in their relations to their fellows, ■ and although they are favored with the ! me,ininghss ski ,7c , they havn't the hearty rc cognition : nor will they have so long as I they insist upon ' parlor hospitality' at ov it\ turn, as manifested by tho unnatural sc-n.-.itivcnessdisplayed when in contact with | the hardy but bracing atmosphere of the world. Oh thnt this ( higher law' idea of , teaching mici-.i; be reserved for higher : spheres than this! It don't work here From this idea proceeds much that wc hoar of the indifference of parents. ' Par ents don't visit the school/says Mr. Teach er, and thereupon follows a homily upon i (he thankless task of teachers, and the oandness of parents to their own interests; ; or perhaps a comparison is instituted, from which is deduced the relative interest with which a father views his children and his j cattle. Now if school teaching were a pdain mat ter of fact, worldly occupation, the matter coUiii iie disposed ol very easily, and that j too without making a barbarian of the par i cut. i he answer would be, a teacher has no ■ right to oxpec-t a parent to interest himself especially in the school room routine —it isn t a part of his business. The various I expedients resorted to in the school discip line, are no especial interest of his. It is the results he look- at. Rest assured, he ; has some idea of the totals. 'The test of the pudding is in ike eating' says Mr. Ben j sible, nor docs it follow that we have no interest in, or repudiate puddings because we may boose to spend our time eisewhere than in the kitchen. The true test of teaching is tho work accomplished, and that work, it properly done, will show it self out of, as well as in the school room. Besides school drills arc not generally very entertaining at best, much less to j those whose thoughts have other channels, i , and it is simply unjust to thus stigmatize ' i parents. Indeed ! we young striplings of : not half their v-ear-x presume a higher and j more abiding interest in the children than ; the fathers and mothers themselves! and all because ue teach school. If school ; | teaching were the ultimatum of all earthly i ends, then there might be some excuse for j the presumption ; but since it is only one ! of the many agencies for human progress, ; it must and will gravitate to its own pro ; per level, there to pass fcr all it is worth. A Teacher. MOMMEEMIOiiS, THE TWO GIFT 3. A boy with earnest eyes knelt at his mother's knee. She stroked the gold of his yeliow hair and Lade God bless her boy. He grew in years and strength; and one day in his bo3 r ish dreamings, there appear ed to him spirits, eneh offering him a gift. The gifts were attractive but he could choose but one. One was a pearl, which at first sight might seem of little value, but the more he looked at it, the brighter it grew, until he saw it was the pearl of great price —the love of God. The other was a yel low gem of most goodly seeming, burning with fervent radiance, and the love of gold. Y ears passed away; springs were succeed ed by summers, and summers passed away 1 into coid autumns and cold winters. And ! as the years came and went, all the time j the boy's heart was busy within him. He was a hold-browed youth with flashing eyes, but their tire was dimmed for a time, for ; his mother faded, and then withered awa}-. , Birds sang, and danced, and the silvery water bells tinkled in the streams, and dan- i delions spangled the green turf upon his j mothers grave, and the 3-outh's heart was ■ softened. The mildly beaming pearl seem- ' ed lovelier in his eyes, for his mother had ] blessed it. He would have taken it to i heart, but the spirit of the other love was i close beside his ear. ' Wilt thou choose j that, and with it property and content j among men ? Look ! this shall bring thee j happiness, for it rules mankind. It shall fill thy coffers and the men shall call thee I honorable. It shall make for thee ready sarvitors, for thou shalt say unto this one 'go' and to another 'corne/ and all shall do ! thy bidding. It shall bring thee that what ' satisfies, for it shall bring thee homage from 1 fellow men.' Then the boy s ears sounded hi 3 moth ers wordt. ' Fear God rather than man.' j ..Seek first the Kingdom of God.' THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1861, >f! The boy became a man, yet be?un to n i pass unheeded among men, for he had not - gold. His proud spirit could not brook s the world's neglect. I lie peari was offier t' ed to him again. Would he choose that I- ' and walk obscurely, or the other, and he vieh and honored for this crown of gold ? j He forgot his mother's words, he forgot !. j the all seeing eye, he forgot the yearning y tenderness of Ilini that became poor that , ! we, through his poverty, might be made - j rich. He forgot it ali, and took tohisoth -0 i er love ; and so subtle was his nature, that, 1 | unconsciously to him, itsuppiantf d all other 5 ! affections. The desire of gold, that he - j might command the homage ot men, burn ,j ed deep in his heart. It corroded and con- ■ , j sumcd the memories of his early life ; and ; f the lon r grass sodden with rain, over his r mother's grave, wept the only tears which . $ were now shed there. The earnest tender light had faded from I : his eyes—they were now cold and hard; ' , j and instead of his open grace which had ' | been their want, they had now a repellent, ] ■ suspicious glare, liis form was beat, too, j ; j and the brow, furrowed and knit with care. j In the worn, repulsive man, you scarcely recognized that frank and noble youth; for : 1 i those powers which might have given him ; • j a high place iu the intellectual world were j j prostitu.ed to the base, sordid use of mon- ' •■ ey making. His heart was canker eaten. But he gained his ends. Gold freely, j lav.sJilj- flowed into his money chests, and 1 ■ 1 men—low minded men—bowed, but they ' 1 reverenced him r.ot! With those who had ' | early loved him lie lived unloving and un- : | loved. For he had lost all generous irapul- : j sc.-, and was now only nsa miser. Other j I men had treasures in the households; he ' i "one but in chests, drawers and hags.— i ) Other men had treasures in heaven; he had j I none there, but hoarded them all on earth. ! He was offered tho pearl or great price, but i ' reiused it. lie was offered the love of gold and accepted it. He cliose for what | he should live, and lived for it. And then | he miserably died ! The first spirit csrao I to his bedside, and the other came also and j mocked. \Y hat shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world, and lose his own i soul. ? H'omctn's Hopes. —ln early youth per- i haps they say to themselves, 'I shali be j j happy when I have a husband to love me ! | best of all;' then when the husband is too ' i careless. 'My child will comfort me;' then i through the" mother'., watching and toil, I ; 'My child will repay rae when it grows ! up.' And at last, alter a long journey of j years has been wearily traveled through, I the mother's heart is weighed down by a ' : heavier burden, and no hope remains but 1 the grave. IBB From the Belief.-,nto Press, March 14. Judge Ilale at Home—Magniffcent Re ceptioa—The Court House Crowded— Speeches cf McAllister and Hale, i Yesterday evening may well be considered : ' the proudest evening of Judj-e Hale's life, i j Last Thursday evening a meeting of the citi | zer?, irrespective of party, was called, to 1 u)..xe arrangements Lr the reception of Judge • Hale on his return home. Yesterday after neon -Judge Hale arrived, and accordingly j after dusk over eight hundred of his constit- ! ucnts assembled in the court room, anxious • to tender their thanks for his patriotic course, j Quite a number of ladies testified by their j • presence that they ti.o wore not disinterested ' spectators in a struggle which involved the overthrow of our country. Democrats as well as Republicans composed the meeting. The meeting was called to order bv appoint ir.g Hen. George Boa!, Rep., President; Jan. Giinland, Pou. Dem., and Hugh Larimer, Breck. Dem., A ice Presidents; Dr. Dobbins, ' Pou. Dem., and Hugh MeGonagle, Rep., Sec retaries. the committee of arrangements, Messrs. ! Beaver, Durham, W. p. MoManus, A. Hoy ; and Stover, then with the baud escorted the Judge to tho court room. lie had hardly set foot inside the room when three tremendous ' cheers went up from the vast audience. Mr ; McAllister then 011 behalf of the citizens, in 1 a neat and eloquent speech, tendered to the | Judge the approbation of his constituents.— '■ ; Ihe speaker said that Democrats as well as j Republicans were present to thank the Judge ! , I fcr whaf he had done. That although they ! : stir! adhered to party organization, yet, now, ' | toey naa sunk the partisan in the patriot.— < Toe speaker briefly alluded to the acquisition 1 of territories, and p/oveu that from these ter- ( riiories spring all the troubles which over- £ , whelm us. From a difference of opinion in : regard to the government of these, a portion , j ol our brethren seceded'from the Union, and j then it was that our eyes were realty opened to the danger which was before us. And as J 1 our representatives were sitting in council de- | 3 : vising some means to again restore peace and j iraternity of feeling, Satan was going to and ; , ifo, walking up and down the earth, on one , swte asking " what i will you compromise with j • the black abolitionists?" and on the other, " what, will you compromise with traitors 1 ' and rebels vvith arms in their hands?" It j I * as then,sir, when clouds, dark as the black- i 3 j ness of night were overhanging our political J horizon, that you, vvith the Border State prop , osition in your band, pointed out an honora ble and practicable mode of settlement. The ; speaker remarked that objections were made i by some against altering the Constitution.— lie would alter it only when necessary. Nor I was it a new thing. In 1793 a change was c made in the oonstitution as also in 1803, and were not changes made in regard to the judi -1 ciary and the method of selecting the Presi ! dent of the United States? Judge Hale replied in one of the most elo- j ' 1 queQt addresses to which we have ever listen- i ! ed. end triumphantly vindicated liia course, shrining conclusively that there is no plank in tlio platform of the Republican p*rty whi *li \von!J require the racrific:- of our coun try. It were impossible, in the cr wiled state of our columns, to give more than a m*re sketch of hK speech. The speaker was thankful fir this kin 1 express? n of their ap probation. V, hile a Representative, he en deavored to discharge his duty regardless of COB sequences, lie understood it was charged that his i course was not in accordance with the Chica t p'ptform. He would say here, that such is not the case, lie understood that platform as it read and as it was interpreted by the meu who helped to frame it The true Re publican doctrine, as laid fftwn in the Chica ; go platform, is that the normal condition of ad the territory of the United States is that of freedom, and that is our duty, hv legisla tion, whenever such legislation is necessary, to maintain tiiis provision of the constitution! j Now who is bi judge when such legislation is ; i necessary ? The sworn representative of the ; peopic, or some excited politician who seeks i to ride on the wave of popular opinion, by : excitement of his own manufacture. During ' i the l ist session cf Congress, three new terri- I j tones vn. rorganized, and yet not a word of i . savory was said even Oy the most extreme ' men , f the North; and why? Because they i did not cos?dor such legislation necessary, j Ino speaker considered the slavery question : jan abet met. Slavery has had its day. The ' j last great battle between freedom and slavery ' was fought in Kansas. Look at the vast odds j ; with which freedom had to contend. Array ; ed against it were ail the powers of a hostile , government: government officials without number; the army of the United States; traud and violence at the polls, while thou j sands of border ruffians crossed the Missouri ; line, an i were determined to establish slaverv there at the point of the bayonet. Kansas b'-ptiaed ;n blood for freedom, is the grieve of ' slavery. the border States resolutions, the re es tablishment ot the Missouri Compromise line would settlo this question foreyer in three- I-urlhs ol our territory, while the remaining | territories of New Mexico and Arazona, un fitted for agriculture, in time, wiii also be come free, lie had said before, and bo re j peated it now, that he never would vote for i ; the extension of slavery whore it had not al ! ready a legal existence. Was this a depart- i tire from the Chicago platform ? He would j say, however, if, at any time, the interests of : his party and country would come in conflict, 1 ; he would he found arrayed on the side of his j country. He was a strict party man, but he 1 held the preservation of his country above j i everything else, and would sacrifice every- j thing but his honor, for that country. But j ho was glad to find that his country was ai- j ways on the side of his party, and he believed ! it would continue so, as long as the party and j the country existed. lie feelingly remarked i that he sat, perhaps, in the last Congress of ' t'u t nited States. God alone knew what j would hi the result, but he hoped that, as we are now passing through the political cruci hle, we may comc out a wiser and better peo ple. It rested, in u great degree, with the masses. I hoy must not allow the politician to con trol them against their country's welfare.— ! ine speaker paid a high compliment to the i Douglas democrats for the sacrifice of their I prejudices, and noble lauded such patriots as I Johnson, Nelson, Eetfeeridge and Gilmer.— 1 V. e are sorry tnai want of space prevents us ; f'om going more into details. With the best ! of fec-iings prevailing, the meeting adjourned after the bans had played Jlail Columbia. A LEARNED JUDGE. One of the first mummies brought into j Europe from the East gave rise to a most j dramatic adventure. About a hundred j years ago, during Hie reign of bis imraac ! ulate majesty Louis \. of France, an au- j tiquary returned from Cairo, bringing with ; hiui a mummy presumed to be" at least I three thousand six hundred years old.— j Our savant, tired of the dilligences in 1 which he had been traveling from Mar- 1 seilies, took a Large at Fontainehicau, | which landed him safe and sound at Port St. Bernard. Eager to see his family, lie ! had his effects loaded on a litter, hut left his precious mummy in the bottom ot the ! boat. The custom house officer, cn board- ; ing it, discovered a box of strange shape and aspect. Suspecting it to contain con traband goods, he had it opened. What; a spectacle ! A woman swathed in linen bandages from head to foot! No doubt this was a wretched victim strangled by a jealous lover or a grasping heir. The commissary of police was instantly sent for, aud made his appearance, flanked by j two surgeons as skilful as himself in ar chaeology. The crime was recognized, a i report made of it, and the body transport- j ed to the Morgue, that the friends might come and identify it. It is presumed that i none of them made their appearance. Our learned traveler, however, in taking an in- j ventory of his effects the next day, be- I thought himself of his great curiosity. He flew to the beat, when the learned com- ! missary and three minions of the law seiz- ' cd him and dragged him before the inagis- i trate. ' Aha! my fine fellow/ cried the judge, 'we've got you.' 'Will your honor favor me with the rea son of this extraordinary proceeding?' 'ft remains for you, sir, to explain the circumstances of the murder you have com mitted.' ] 'Murder?' 'That is the word, sir.' 'The murder that I have committed!' ex - , claimed the savant, aghast. 'Or at least the crime in which you are an accomplice.' 'Good Heavens! Your worship is dream ing.' 'Ah! dreaming am I? No sir; you will 1 New Series—Vol. XV, No. 20. , j find mo av.ako to jour cost. The eve of justice never closes. Did not my vigilant • officer discover the body of your victim, | strangled and shut up in a box? Here's : the report of the discovery, duly sealed, ' signed and attested.' 'ls that all?' said the antiquary a hearty iaugh. 'Hardened ruffian!'cried the judge. 'Do you indulge levity with the shadow of a crime s > Idack hanging over your head? Now, sir. look me in the face, and answer the questions 1 shall nnt. Tty whom was the young girl placed in the box in which she was discovered?' 'By myself sir.'. ! '.Mr. Clerk, please take down his confes sion,' said the magistrate. 'Who swathed her wiih linen bandages from head to foot?' 'I did, your honor.' 'Write down, Mr. Clerk, that he admit§ his crime.' 'The exprcss'on is rather strong, sir. 'The deed is heinous. How old was the girl?' 'About nineteen years.'. 'Of what country?' 'Memphis, T think.' i Watioy importing a girl such a distance ;to murder her! When did her death take I place?' 'About three thousand six hundred years ago.' 'Prisoner! how dare you indulge in this misplaced levity.' 'I am not joking sir. I assure you thq deceased lived in the reign of one of the Pharaohs'. 'l'll put the handcuffs on you, rascal.' '1 our honor,' said the prisoner, sternly, ' this pleasantry has been carried too far. I And let me say, sir, that you are the most marvcloudy ignorant man that ever3at up on the judicial bench. Where were you brought up that you havn't even suspected that for two days you have been holding an inquest on the pretended murder of an I Egyptian mummy?' ' 'A mummy!' 'Of course sir; and if you had conducted ■ your examination properly,you would know i that you are addressing Count de D , ■ a member of the Academy of Inscriptions | and Belles Lettrea.' ! 'My lord,' said the judge, 'I begatlioua • and pardons. I hope your lordship will ! forget'—• 1 '1 will forget everything. Give me my mummy, and try in future to obtain ex j perts who will come a little nearer than three or four thousand years in guessing at i a person's death.' The police magistrate, very much morti fied at his blunder, gave up the mummy, | but ho never heard the last part of the sto j r 7- A Prophecy by Col. Benton. —Rev. Geo ! Duffieid, Jr., states that a few months bc j fore the decease of the late Col. Benton, ! he said to a young political friend, then ob ! a visit to Washington: ' Young man, you have seen the hall of patents, the post of fice, the capital; for whom have they been built at such an enormous expense V Lnited States! 'No, sir, no! They are for tne Southern Confederacy, which has been plotting for the last five and twenty years, and which, I greatly fear, the nation will not wake up to discover until it is too late.' Jaoofc G, Blymyer & Co., Produce ana Commission Mer chants, LEWISTOWN, PA. and Grain of all kind* pur chased at market rates, or received on storage and shipped at usual freight rates, having storehouses and boats of their own, with care ful captains and hands. StovoCoal, Limeburhers Coal, Plaster, Fish and Salt always on hand. Grain can bo insured at a small advance on cost of storage. n022 JOHN G. McCORD. Strode s Mills, Oliver Township, OFFERS his services to the public on reas onable terms. jati3l-ly. AMBROTYPES AND The Gems of the Season. is no humbug, but a practical truth. I The pictures taken by Mr. Burkholder are unsurpassed for BOLDNESS, TRUTH FULNESS. BEAUTY OF FINISH, and DURABILITY. Prices varying according to size and quality of frames and Oases. Room over the Express Office. Lcwistown, August 23, 1860. I* ALL ITS BRANCHES, Executed in the besi stylo known in the art, at C. Gr, Crane's Gallery, 632 Arch St., east of Sixth, Philadelphia. Life Size In Oil and Pastil, STEREOSCOPIC PORTRAITS, AMBROTYPES, DAGUERREOTYPES, 4k. Fot Cases, Medallions, Pine, Rings Ac. '• Philadelphia, November 15, 1860-ly,
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