- , 4 .IIMNIMMIIMkt --, ~ ~.., , ' ~., . .y..; „..,' -,•.:,:•.=-:. . . i- !- .•. •;t • : : .:.• , •i , _ :-, I`.-., • ... , ..r—l: 2,- -•-',. . i -_. '...? • .: , ••• =.l ' ..•, -•, - .... -7 . ..F.., -,•. -•-• .• . ,t ;:' r ~1 ' - ::r.' ‘,. _,•,-.: „'..::•-•.- ':::„..., ~ s.:- . .*:.r. , - 4....,.. :.,.: i'-)1;!1:1..ii' ; .'s ' , i' ,. s , l ' '-'• '....'-. I ' ~ia . .:. • . - ° :-' s ''. . r . . ! 7s-7, .• ~ ~-; ' • ~. i_o,o', 'r - ., r.;;'' •—', ' -: . - •,•• •,•• , ," --' - - .'•• ''' :-:- --- -- ,--- • ' • -'•—• ''----'-'-', -'• • - • - , 1 7. ,• . -_ ' 0 - ...„,„-• p,' . 1 . : ') , / ,- --, ,' . ' , 7 .... , 3%-, 1 1 .::„ ~, ...., , 0 p,r : . ~..„,ef o , ,1, 14. \.1, & v .. 1,.. - - - ; -...,.• i. .c 4 ;•, „ - 4to . . 0 - , . .. ~....• ; , .. FYI . „ .. . . . ~, 0 ' . , ~. ~,... ~,^ ~ . . ._ 11 E, 3, CHASE, PROPRIETORS OpirDts , r, Tho Way to be brast. S peak kind', to that poor old, mai, pick op his fallen' cane, And piece it gently in his hand, Th a i he may walk again. D WI. too, replace with Cats -,Pecesthhis trembling arm;. Brace di the manta that you may Jeosti To his life a charm. A braver deed than scorner, bout ilk be year triumph Men. . . A Wear deed than annals tell, °tone distinguished men. yes, leave that thoughtless, sneering =ma; Dare to be good and kind; Then let them laugh as,langh they way,' pno 01/ ;: but never mind. Pus an; bet think once more of him The wreck that you have seen, Bow once a happy boy like yon n e s ported on the green. . ' - cloadleasky above hie head, • The future bright and fair, And frieuda ell watching o'er his couche . To breathe ailection'aymyer. Bat ah, the change. He wanders now, Forsaken, lone, and sad— • Thrice blessed is the task of those Who strive. to make him glad. Speak kindly to that poor old man, ' Fick up his fallen cane, For that will ease his burdened heart, And make him smile again. from the Binghamton Democrat. other's and Mother's Voices. Br JESFIE JONES Father's and Mother's voices! - Thank God! I hear them now, , -- • , 71=0 Time has dimEned their vision, ' And with wrinkles seamed each brow; The change le only outward, No change doth Lore nallow.. Faber's tod 3fother's raises! When in childhood's helpless yews, Doe oft their kindly accent's Dispelled my rising tears, And laving—watchful—ever, Gars sunshine to my loam Ind when upon youth's threshold My wayward feet did stand, And the temptress siren, Error, 'Grasped my too rifling hand, They, like life a good Evangel, Held;ne in Lore's strong band, Father's and•;Hnther's voices ! Now that I'm in my prime, Sewn like rich notes of music, Sang to some olden rhyme ; Mpleastat, as when summer flowers As sent in winter lime. Erin's trod Mollies voices ! &arts speak your gratin:de ! Ttat midst the wrecks of earthly bliss, Thoa'rt strared - tarth's greatest good ; TIM thy Eden's gate, isnot unlocked -.for zones to intrude.. Fater's and Mailmen voices! Cod hely in that day ,When the word from Death's dread angel Shall summon than away; And leave me litlpeells, hopeless, • • To tread I item otortcy way. Oh then will rigony unmeasured, I'd pray a Death, out foe, To low" at once the '.silrer cortf, n. Astl:et my sprit go. publication neveropers of this county. Verj• respectful!y your ob't eerv'ts, • Doourne, D. PLAIDWIN. LOEBST-LE March 24, 1852. Gtratuis:—The article to which yon re. • sa written only at the request of the So= of which you speak, and it will lack mil; inalilies that should belong to a printed ' but should yen deem that anything of &$ could result from its further publicity-, is at your disposal. t erltroly your ob't Beret, E. A:Wr.srox. acre, 11.Doomrrt,r D. B, anns% ' • - 4f fecLodersville -tt, cla Great Bend Lyceum : .: ilB trtir is one of the most impor inquiries efe insttuted. The solution of , problem in mote or in less particulars in a essential to the happineskof every 61,.beitg. Ihm has bat ono sure beacon °;.7 which to direct his course - en the ‘ed ocean Of time, and that is the pure 'hrlYralthedivine emanation of Truth. Qrk.es Investigations less Pleasing Shin ° kis. ' Endowed with poyers , of re - Pnsaessed Of an: innate curiosity atin se ate ever impelled, we, return 4'at° a/ tnioration in the realin of filet with eir. aell4r ight, and feel an added eatisfaction ralitquisition to the store of knowledge. ' 141 s ixcatitY-4i intrinsie:eharm which 'Pia naught beside Upon it the mind , "1 ha ' 1 "Th term! I a PPS' seenn y. e, e ;6,,fGodire hers:',' • . ' 4-I ' t eovery and perception Of. truth, 4f13 tie rand regulife: and ita -114et lie n an d , diseusion of -differences 41',Iindividuala may he made a pow. ''','• Renee it is that disquisition' .t orator other, derivei its utility- :. , nt •in order to. Babson° anyheneficiai purpose, it.is neeei 7 sary,Trist - of rilktliat_,:the constant endeYiatieg . object of diseoision he to elicit 'and 'maintain the truth, not to achieve ti futile iihimph - over opposing argument. -;The-Jetter is to,the fur. mer as vanity isle reality—aslnanitylo sub ; stance. If a *mere wordy conquest be the thing aimed at, theti the effect isfarrinore -likely to be pernicious - then good. If theitilluenee O' on others he not injurious; the ardent, enthisi T _ mak champion may pertruinantlY imbibe nib. tal error as the consequence of , its.advoiacy; The herd and excitement of debate , may leave upon:his mind impressions and ,:biases which. cooler and.more rattling :no:ants ,may fail to efface: The mind 'is thus constituted. It fortifies itself and neries its .'energiei - against 1 opposing forces;, until the .wrong may assume, ' the semblance of right. - Hence it is requisite to be guided only by ;principle, by. itttraerit and strict integrity. ; r . Nor are the mannerand spirit in which nr., gumentation is condueted, of mush less coril sequence than, is the Motive,. AS one should] not bar his own naiad.; against' truth's COnvie.' . tionisolie shoeld riot stir up the lhostilityand repugnance' of others i by- presenting[-it in re wilfully forbidding and unnatural' arb., Dog. matical and dictatorial positiveness on the part, , of the utterer, will often insure aversion to' I and rejection of what Might otherriise be Con.' Isidered and received. t The thought of tuan'si fallibility' should ever temper, the enforcement of, his sentiments ond -opiniona, 'unless , be; would act the part of en injudicious ridvoeate, who by his magisteriat, rt.ssurance - injures his [own cause; thouglr it be the :wise' of verity., It has been truly seid,:!- - • , - , .f.• Men muet'hs taught t' ifyeu taught them not," Aud things uultuon-a - prtiposed as thiugs forgot." . It was to.this ingenious modesty-and courtesy that our immortal Ivinklin .who tamed and controlled the thunderbolt and 'played with the lightnings of heaven, - attributed his chief. powerte away the minds and, wills :°fide fel low meta. ', , . ~ - . , . But,the labor'of investigation . , in search ;of truth increases the ability to investigate. The I intellectual powers like the physical ; are strengthed and ,improved by exercise. ,Facili ty end grace .in the use of Our , 01511 ' native , tongue, though a lii•gh' invaluable attainment, is not the only lofty •..dijeet promotedbv prop erly conducted verbal disputation. Language is but the dreis-the drapery of thought 4 Its only value..-its 'only beauty even - consists in the - worth of the thing it dectirates and sends I abroad.. The assertion that "it - tatters not] so much what is said as how 'cis said" may i to a great extent be true; yet 'Os true only in 1 consequence 'of the vast Modifying influence of( manner over matter, or over the true,import.4 , - In a word it is the alleged "boW 't - isaid" that I very much makes np the " what • ii• sail"— ! Hence, after all, 'tis chiefly the sulisinnee, - not the medium—the frieght not the yehisle;Which demapds and receives regard. And ;.this, ns well Ai the means - of Itarcortittinicatier 151 the fruit of mental toil—the result of Intel lectual culture. The development of thepoiv ers and resources of the human - mind its a worthy—a grand pursuit.' For what else were I they conferred upon man i That the niind—the thinking, the moral, the - immortal principle in man, is, the most noble part of his naturiyis as trite and commonplace as it is true.- What proficiency—what sublime anti' astonishing , I achievements is this principle capable of reach- , lag! To what magnificent deeds4whatlofty heights of grandeur is it able te 'soar! The mighty march•of advancement in the:scitnees and useful arts - within the hat half century attests: Oceans are crossed and continents I are traversed with a velocity which almostliets at defiance time end= spae'e; Antipodes ha'O become neighbors.: The electric messenger ,iii starts off on his attenuated track, With speed - 1 that outstrips the wings of the wind, and more 1 - than keeps pace with the witeelsi of time which . : , bear our earth onward in [ ceaseless'revollution4 He darts along his wiry road from city to city,' from province to province,and even froth'shore I to shore, wading the - waters of the de.,p with ontimpediment. Mankind: are _united in broth., ergeocl_ by frequenCy of intercustuqnitaltion4 Theirinterests are &lend together with' ironl bands of more thati ironstrength, and theli be- I come-one great family Portraits are diawri' in the fair rich beauty ; of)ight itself, - and in all - the exactness with Which naturals woneto ~ perform all the operations,' mocking ilia prac. I ticed, elaborate skill of the sculptor and Tim..; ner.—'there are but a fewof the more oaten-1 . ishing[of inventions and improvements, inner. membly verities, which. have keen effected in every department - of knowledge and . diticovery,- from the etherial flelds-onl high where planet after planet has been added to the number of the known world's . Solar System, down to the lock and the safe which defy pillage and fire, or the pen, and 'the phonographic, celerity which enables it to ran and evert race with the talker. •-• ' . ,1 only Aixl yet present indientionn rendeziit probad eth° the on°vailing sverthinesa to' have, it said of him:L.= God made man upright. bat he has ble that we are on the eve ; of • the secon3plisb, meat of results still more astonishing, .' ; The sought out many inr,entione Ileredetnry supposition that aerial carriages May become transmission of-disease of of predisposition thereto ; the use of unnaturally stimulating common—that we may furnish ourselves With swift pinions -and skim throngli the regions :viands, of condiniente-pnd `spices, of 'tea, 'dol. obaeho_and opium ; excess in quantity of above, we- Would set dowril, as an idle 4 .extrava. I!fee, t mint vision; by fur more airy than the huppos. feod owing to itS., improper ,qualities which ed flight itself; ,and still should this ~f eat be i create and excite 'morbid,. perverted, unnatural witnessed beforethe ,expiration mat i tastes and eppetite,S;" and hurried rail-road. , fifty years,l it would perhaps be no 'more tint- speed in despatching it•that precludes the prising than what has been!seen to thepast. Pfle 3llsll itY. of masticationlThe habitual breath, - • That theynoisy snorting horse which Is how tug of hoPoiel confined, air ; modes. of dress harnessed to our: rail-road ears, paging with • Which cramp, and prevent and destroy the fan& tions of the vital organs. , -,these with 'a host his pondrotis load,'May; within that, tittie,, be I superseded; by, a mute, more magic and more I of Other," palpable' and flagrant departures from 'nettled steed, is not tinloolied • for.; • ird ee d,; thesimplicity of nature; and,the ' requirement the wonderful"agent Electro.niagnetiste seems he of r laws, leave. to man but a scanty destined become a - great revolutionixer o .- - ied remnant of vittlity'and mental foree. _And We know not howextensiviely thiS Mysterious even, this meager reskluianother areh-foe, principle is bstrummital mull:the operationscellel, le - eases deplorably ninny, stands 'ready that transpire , in the universe; Mir, do . .we khow to,•devour and consummate its destruetioth,— how intimately it is cOnnectect 'with, • or ho w The horse, the or' or the•most hardy; of essential it is to Our - own. :31estneriiitei or animals could endure and - Survrie a and believera in the so.ieputed'p m a n. i moiety-_ a tithe of the abdie and infringement ifestations" so much` noised at the present dhy, of Constitutional-to Which man su hjeets claim for it still More amazing'powers; the biniself. his eyes are blinded br familia"; truth Or tpe'falsitj . of - which elaim, • time, Inuit sty and custom' and kiistopi not to thinkor re. 'determine. 'But though the'orizers' ',exp . , fleet:._ In by far too bread a sense, hi takes it tiate too largely in' •the teld'a eptieulatiOn, as. for , Mated that " Whatever is, is :right."—,ii eutiiing ground not .virell:ehhitantiatedl still: Whatever a vitiated misdeed appetite craves, the exexperiments : meote of the f ew, . piet have .he 'deem to te•ii " g ood creature" 'made for demonstrated OA- this sobtle Hold , pervades the .identical PthPee. never imagining but hllmatter,-and that its influtne4 mid"agency that everything in Ger 4 "Wide .universe is our world are very great: •:• exPreasly adaptedto-his omniverous stomach; Butthetwithatanding thesi.spleildid 'tri- or designed, solely .to be . appropriated nmphs of human' intellects and • genius,. 'Mid *Ai to' hle•thae;„ • some . - their attainment to•this *profundity ,of knowl. ' Here, then, is debasing influence of edge-is tiotiman far, far Inferior to, what thesethinge u p o n .t he intelle c t an d the ' n 'th r alg , ' Creator designed' him HOEs2kiti - hot tihiolly 0 • wfthd othrflrOot eau* for Ahe4walfablielta , I.erierted`and 'derided •the rioble belittles Of Pe one and the depravity of the other-.a w i t h w hi c h fidentztakiii so kindly e4 .; cause . Which cries 'for= removal. Hind and Awed him !- Phyideally,Mciatallyand Z ol a: bodYlare so ,closely inter-related that thtion. ly, how:ter is le f r o m 1 ,1 19 1h p : 1: do t dition`of the one powerfully affects that of the what he should be ! How, radically; wiong - 140 * former.ie'Slers'ated wjlet•the Wpt*ttf gal SlMen 3 9 I MMO, Ean°llll2lllrc 014VaTtaittam. 6cEeme t , igta auzigeep2. MEI . and corrupt - are the' education-and-habits of society! Frominfancy,and: from childhood with I its too frequent', pernicione , confinement 1 'and ;restraint. its severities and its, ,overtesks, 1 its .oft Injudiciousstrictures and, requirements- , of what to incite ‘adianced'' age Might seetn; and indeed to that might be preprietY—froth this earlieit period on 'to manhood' and its de. - 1 elinn, houi.mnny arethe Customs of -mankind whose.solis effict iwinjurions. . Imman's puer ile years, how_often by , Misjudging kindness gnd . regard are his'ambititm and energiee stun ted and crashed and left to shoot oitin a per. verse directien,: instead of being drawn,' out land encouraged, and, guided in . the proper channel' by an affectionate hand. - • ;Compel led to the revolting-- task to study what - he does not-undetstaild'and,what no one - tries te 'ex plain-ebis liberties i.bridgeci—theitnpulse,the positiie dcmand for almost'. constant _egility. and muscular motion iurteiled and suppressed, or, on the other hand, hi§ growing strength overtaxed by requisition & too lab orions—tth us Ihe sets out, and on-he 'goes in the school of 1 pervertion making characteristic progress and improvement.. 1 .. Physically the half of ninnitind are bat,:tlea subjecti-of - disease and Suffering l and - imams. ly death ;%nnd dmajority -cif the other half are the degenerate-enfeebled wreck Of the strong nerved,„rebust, vigoroes frames - Which nnture Would gledly'con,fer upan them. i The benign; !Author of all things, hi his wisdom and good. ' nessiThas made ample provision tO supply the. Wants and secure the happiness of all - the be- j ingi holies created. Ile has furnished for er. 1 erg creature itc appropriate food and drink in abundance. Brutes eat this food and drink.' I this drink, ind,enjey the felicitous consequen-, seesof obeying the laws af their constitutions , i —the laws of GOd. Except occasional install:, ces among atiineds ander the control of man, they are.never known to-drag out a painful, miserable life, and die prematurely; unhem it , be the result of accident. . Domestic, animals 1 subject to the dictation- of man, sometimes suffer the consequences.' Even the cow hns been tnade to depart so. far from nature es to. become' fond of flesh. Cases of this kind bayo occurred on ship board: ; But let alone, beasts and reptiles andineanerlllings obey and enjoy.. . But man disregards the dictates of nature. mid takes the matter into his own hands. jHe says virtually," I know better, than the All ! wise."; He.purse,es his own course, dictating fto hithself upon what he will Subsist, and how, Ihis life shall be led. „He forms and entails up- L ,.on 'himself vitiated tastes hard to be 'eradicated; Ell hiig been remarked that to subdue a king. ! doin_is easy compared to- overcoming a .per f.verted appetite. These corrupted tastes and lappdtites become inan's second nature, and he I follOW,s them fatally supposing it is the voice lof piistine nature's self. . The boasted lord of creatiOn the brute might instruct, lie refuses Ito learn, save it be, neglecting to receive ad monition from the more noble and sagacious of beasts and, the more heantiful of song and plumage among "birds, he . ,turns him an but !b.u112, - 'eripies the instincts 'it the . hyena.,mal the - wolf, the vulture and the owl: Custom j asicle,xvhe tumid think of cutting down ati Innocent inorending animal to obtain-his i daily , esmeal? , And yet this is by no means the great. . tof our pervertions. . . Sickness and sufferine, and prematuredisso e !talon follow; and nil these evils are charged '.upon the Supreme, whose 'laws have been trampled under foot, whose kind care and re gard tor man's welfare hare been spurned.— Thep are; indeed,His Chastening dispensations,! and yet they are but the - consequences of, iio., kited law. Physical evils- accrue - from the tranggression of physical laws, and moral evils, from the infraction of moral laws. Both have . their certain penalties;' both are_ iMmutable 1 'and sure; * Else the beautiful harniony mul order Which now: prevail throughont lecture's ! I?ide qofruan might soon , end in the midnight ' ditzkriess of chaotic contusion._ Else the same means:and instrumentelities by which the, del ieate flower now springs up, might,-when . the genial breath of Spring Shall again sweep Overs oar land, produce - a - Viper or a monster in its stead. l''Else .. , 7 seed-tithe ran I d harvest, summer and - winter", might cotne 'or notin their anon. 4 round.- Else the , food:that affords, suste.. I ronce and nourishment at one time, :might . at 1 another prove a deadly poison,--Bes the Al. ' mighty been more pretious to ,the lower' ranks Of animate beings : than lie has to the l masteryieee of his terrestrial Works? Have.: his' care' and providence been exercised BO' largely to ensure the physiCial well being of of beast 'and bird while:The has placed. the same 'beyond - the reach of man'? Or...has He given- td the brute the power to, determine what shall be for its own best good, and yet withheld that power from tnan? And shall finite minds presume to amend the doings' of the Infinite ? . Man figs lofty powers conferred forixalted purposes, but , when he thinks to, rectify the . perfect wkdoni of Natirie; wreteli ed consequences will ensue, and he will elf ...••• . - .... MONTROSE, TiII.IIISDAt APRI „--. are the morel - faculties of - eres ing 0 s .., ' Lit t, n iniiifbando' ter is eick.. Nor .. mind bnyend the pale of this annual influence An old man communicates in article for the They . like Wise• may biome sympdhetieally Syracuse-Star, math° olden time, froin which i 'diseased rind •eduretl; Ad teedered•more prone, v,e copy ,thelollowing.retniniacence Of Wash-, to evil. More teniporaryas well as confirmed 4 inaton ned*Franklin. •'' • '-a•' • • - conditions, too, have their eitittrol. .1. Ardent ta lon the a7th of September, 1789, 1 ifl nm spirits may tniike ia, man a fool—c fiend.- And ; at te the exact time; the.,eonvention.in can it be snpposedthat tide_ subatiumels_ the tr city agreed open the9onatitution of the only one capable of producing dread ?, • . ‘ Il ited States. _This' instrument is :next in: ."'ln view of all'these things what , ivonder 'is . h . i poi-Elaine to the decteration'ofindepetidenee, itthat, campered With tvil - at • .; they' might '"be, 4 d Many of its;noble signers were members' themase of mankind are bitt 4 The dwindled sons of dwindled-Mee.”, 0 P thn resident ..conventfon,: and 'General - .lla,ibington •‘ - ' - . ' .• • w e•, - ' •. a - • ' • - ' :Another outrage upon .man's welfare, and Ihitlngthat .interesting time, the ,general, int • ifistirniontitable: barrier to his . elevation' en Walking the streets, was atone, and in lemisieits in the unequal diatributlon and the d vv, efiStinly. - If a Person' met him and tande'n excesses of bodily labor—in enervating: idle v ry . ,•obsequione bow. he was careful to toneh nese en the one, extremeaand incessant toil hi beaverabut.keep his . head hi the -studied nrid drudgery 'on the other., . Man has a two. mmd. One morning he, came into the state fold nature, au unima/ nrid• an lateil_Olual."' house ~: o ne the cenvention sat.. H assed The true end'and design of his being, IMMO y. through the crowd in that manner. lie Was. his happiness, require the harmonious exer th'ill dreased in 71 : plain citizen's dreSe--Iblue else of-both these. The body denintide\ - -it „ at, coc k e d hat, hair , quened,sand- hanging must -have exercise and activity to retain and dawn hie hack, head powdered, as • wits the ' ' ' With- • • . ' priimote its healthfuleess and; - vigor, vigor. . ~. , . fashion, lie went, into the Convention.— out these it languishes; and mental debility Presently the' venerable Franklin was 1 brought as; well as debility of body ensue. The mind in 6 liksedari•bi too men ; they set him down needs labor also. Every property it possesses iti the hall of the stute house, opened the doorl points tothe . fnet; end renders it necessarily elped him out. ; Hethe palsy, and true that, it is. constituted-and'. intended ,for could.not raise his feet onlie floor, but shur a progress and iinproVement—intended ,to Vitt fle along to the coineuten. and took his seat _ ... • , forth its energies and augment'its strength: as n' ember: . Ile Was net a speakee, but m 'Both these-t the preservntion and development the debates upon a knotty 'question he - would of corpora:l. efficiency. mid mental expansion ill estrate his ideas by eottiparisone-Lfor in. slibuld be pursued together. .They. are to st: nee.:-"lye must do ns the joiners do when each other reciproem n id e , -Neith er can be th I want to make a good joiet, . take a little neglected without the most disastrous conSe- dif oee aide and rt little,:oft• the other." He Ireeneci either to the attainment of man's real w4s or greatness and mejeetie position, or to his q 'middle :die, pretty thick set, had large features, and always;'l suppose; woreispectee. physical Well-being, or to.botli. None should la ~ toil all the thee; all should labor some. ' The !When General Washington . was inangura necessity which compels So runny to it life of a te for' the second term as President of the unremitting bodily effort and hardship, is la- i Hilted States, Congress as in Philadelphia. timetable ; and the avarice which competes so rm . a before the hour of inauguration; he sen imany more, is execrable. i The squeamish at .chamber and house was - crowded. The slave to sluggish affluence -ntid luxury who , la Me were in, the Seqate-chamber. A space lemma all mustular exertinaawhase s ensibi'itY dir!ectly at the end of the - f ont of _wa d lis Shocked at the - very tholight of a labor- hot open. Three cliairs'in front of the crowd soiled hand, and who would hire . a lackey. to were kept free: About 12 o'clock M., the breathe for him were it posible, is a 4318474- w rd plumed from the door to the chambers= - ble, burleseque upon humanity'—a 'reprobate 4H 's come ! he's come?' Ilia chariot and pair i to every characteristic of manhood: . dr ve up to the sennte.house door, The gen-, i.' In our own loved country compared with4e I walked through the crowd with na tench , isbutlittleof : t ' r ' hirer.Thel I most others, there - eerie as), no person were near II ity-L this baneful evil.. But. even in this land crowd opened and closed after him. He tooki of freedom there is Muck that is sadly wrong. thomiddle chair, Chia! Justice Cushing, a i Industry; s n fondameetal virtue.. In doing s a4 c F e, venerable person, with n large white 1 I'geed to himself or ()then should every one wivhe right, and Senator Lngdon, .of New be , constantly engaged. The exercise and . 11 pshire, • then president pro terni of the' i training of man's bodily, mental and Moral , Senate, and an elegant person, teak lie left , I poWers, are his employment kindly 'assigned I ' 1 chr. After they- - were seated a lit to time, ltohirnefor his benefit; for in the, wise econo- ISe ator, Langdon rose upon 111 feet, faced niY , of Heaven. a rational being without em- General Wrishington, in the Most reepectful nloyment trOuldssink to the level of the sensed mareri and asked him if it was his pleasure ' lessbrute, or the inanimate stove. - . to ko the oath of office aa the President of Every individual on eerth, unless from some i the United States. The general,theiri with a cause disabled,lhould supply his own wants Ismail paper in his left band, made a short ad with' Minds: Werethe• his own wealthy, the dreits. a Then the Chief justiee roacl 'with 'a Ii araltocratie and .thepriind- - --•iiere'all constrain- 'Mr e open bible and. , held it to, him. He d doso, it Would be a blessing to them- plated his right hand upon the book, land re e to. selves and to the raoe. It would afibrd to the peated-the oath ate/ the chief juelice. : When many liesure for intellectual avocations, and the general repeated his 'own TUMID after the an opportunity to fulfill theirnobleciestiriK— chioajustice t 'I Geotge • Washingten," seminal' like - en electric shock •my bloed,ran 1' - He who spends Ms life in constantcorporeal ilaboratoiling - from'rimming till ni g ht a t his dead.' "When this business was finished the i daily task, thwarts the grand design , of n; be- 6 gen taf sat down. , - After a figtv , ininiiteil. he Ineficent Crenter—injures himself; and injures rose - iiiii made a graceful con* to the right and mankind.. He who, on the other hand, en 1-- • i rleft of the chamber The ladies nod gentle 1' • ' ' ile 1 u;suits'—whose ga.ges nn-y Herr Ime atm P • meu kept their seats for tionre time, and the mind "'Preys on itself and is destreyo by 1 croWd left the hens - ea:ill they Were leaving a thought," inflicts an equal or a greater wrong church:, During the pause, while the 'general upon himself and his - fellow man, and must as was seated, I looked Around to see if aft 'eyes surety fail of intellectual, worth or greattiess• I wer riveted on liim—l can't say thatl saw a . And; who does - neither—Who Works_ not sinale person looking another Way. ' with, body or mind bin leads- :•i life of inert in- 7 A i tlign'tiniq he wait in deep nrourniew for a dolente and sloth, is a curse to himself and a ; n p earalifajor Washington, whd lived hid double nuisance to society. . Every individual I , hou ein Mount Vernon —he 4.1 d a mourning has,"Ly God-given right, a claim to a spot of; lima 1 sword.- He had lost mina of his leng earth—to land, as to air and water, stacient I hair and_what was: left was tied In ;a little fcathit sustenance.. Crime only can suspend : ' lilac - silk bag with a roseate on it,' which his title. 'Tis tyran n y and oppressinoaatia , she' ..s over his shoulder in 'hie partrait, Mira, , dowdright injuetice 'winch debars him from it. I i s s , ppoded to be .taken from his position at And ;either uPon this employed in its tillage , lthis interesting time,. I did' _understand that or inatoine other way his own muscular exer.:j man persons- wanted' hint to ride to the state tons' shoUld minister to his neeessitiee. The . hou ein a Coach and feur - or six Andl a life ample residue' of time . should be devoted, to innerd in uniforin, but his good"SeiAS and sound the study of countless objects - of interest and I 6ar4pao m pt e d , hi m t o p u t a veto on all suc h wonder—to .enterprides of a mental moral .or I 1 I pagentrya , I don't believe thnt we Mid a . trait philanthropic character. Were this but so, ,or in' i ttin'Americataranks at that ;MM. 4 Some hoW . Vestiv would Or Condlticin be einbettered;l may ,ay .you have fotgetten tee. notorious Nerved by hi the sweetluxury of refreibing toil, , Inoldl He is never to be forgotten .4 whilet the the Mind would rise to itshiglr level; and en- i earth beara . a . plant or the sea rolls its ware s fold its native powers; Nor Could such a stet i -i• ißut Qur ambition Wes' greet, and some'tvished of thihg4 fail to be conducive to moral men ,„d th cag h t itg„d policy to make as dtam. rntion nod reform. le would banish many 'of; fled 7/n appearance - as the Europeans • but not . the vices of whith idleness and- ignioance are • t !mixed'avith . royalty., . ' _ the parents. The minds of the over-wrou,glit I I, _____,.....„ a a a .._ multitudes" depressed and . bOund down,- midi - 1 the Worse degraded groveling minds of the in delenta would stretch, away-to worthy attain ments.. I hive briefly noticed what seetnerl to. me - to be muting the causes operative' in degrading roan;FObstaeles which . oppose his elevation to his appropriate sphere, My limits have allow ed. me , little more tharr to hiot at them, but they list tinaer the;observation of every one. Their prevalence only prevents - them-from being no.. toricas. . . - . • ..Wrongs like' these, and they are' many and monstrous, ask the earnest attention and the energetic' action of every admirer of excel:. lence,uof every lover of mankinP, of every patriot., - tiler need the prospect to him appear cheerliss. • Public regard is being turned . to the.se.,things.. Physiological, truths are being dissethinated,and favorably received,and soma. innetiial,respert paid totheir inetdeationa. Itlanyare diseardiug adherence to frishithiable follie4 . which have contributed •so largely to deprive man of the possession• of "a sound, mind In a sound body.," And .while Liberty seems io . be about togrtt,fier blessing-a uporr down-froddewnationa, Reform stands ready to bestow many propitious gills: Theie prospects fo - rm the beams of a morti , Ilag star , whiCh has arisen, and vrhieh neems to foretokenthe dawn of a brighter day in whidb (gigantic evils shall -be corrected.. To hastn the tuthient of this_ gjorious era-'4Lthis " golden og" o. rday - the Members of thisassociation er lend', their indience and their aid. . I Gentlemen,lt has been said-that the object t . ofVveri' POlie address should be t 9 instruct ;or to please- I must fail of the forrner, and leaf I miss thelattetalso, I hasten to my most attractive poi n t, • , , :137A triTE PIitiSOPLITII, says that itpeeeli wen given- to man that he, might imingle with his neighbour, 'Whether it's teeny given for that- purpose we can't say--that - it le used for that poli7Ose no, ono . doubto Who lhas lived next door Wu pettifogger.' " ' • fere that PrYden' 47 .7 far An exclio n T ep , ; frdwit remark-to not opposed.to . ina7 omit, the 76. once OWO+ thda8424 1 1 ,, , :..;. • ; • otralnente brhaPitea.' 1,1852, , l , , STITGOI.AR ' Mere:dear. Taci..—The: Neir York Express brings to; light "a singular !his. toric t -fact which is not generally known. It sa i that in .1147 41- Russian of eminence, i IM. Pexze de Borgo, being then in Paris, 'pro. posed in a memoir addressed to his' Court on I the importance of replacing South - America un ,ler trdominion of Spain, that the United 1 State should be' subjugated. Its 'said that i"Foended on the.severignity of rthe'people,; the It.ptiblic of the United StAteS ,- pf America 1. was a fire, of . which.' the daily contact' with',, :Europe threatened the -latter with tenthly's ; CCM ; that, as an asyluni for all, innovators, it gave ;them the means ,of diescinihating nt, a distance their writings and by the' authority. of their example ? a:poison of wilier-the cont. muoication, could not be qiiestioned v as it was . 1 I well ,knewn - that tile French revolution bad, its origin - in - the United' States. that already 1 traublesonae•MlTicts were' felt from 'the ones. enes 44 the French refugees lathe U,'Statei." • Tha Ituisian Ambassador went .ort to stets and mu Me that the conquest of the United Statesl was an easy enterprise : that tnedegtee of povier to %did -- the Aine - ricans had risen i Made them objects of: fear to the - European. monarchical Governments, ~- ' ''_._. , The editer of the Express came in contact ivitlithis'curious paper in Ihe State Librily. at Albany/ i lia an old filo Of the Misicuirißepub. lican, Printed 'more than thirty years ego.- Earrl'ile best anecdote of Lorenici Doti is. that being.. one,evening attbe hotel kept iry one Bush, in Delhi,,N.X., the resider's° or the celebnited Gen.' Root, be, wius finiiiirtuned by thei-latter gentienran,4ll the 'proved° . Of the I landlord, to - deseribe-tleaven. , ! Yaw say aging deal-of that plate; =id the Genera', tell us how , it looks.' , • Lorenzo turned ; his 'gray° face; end long ! beard,ttiwanis hiessrs.Root and 13Ush, and replied with iMriertuibre gravitk - -' • 'Hetwencfriends, is A vest extent nf smooth; rich territory—,there 4 not :a root.nor.a'hush la it, and there never wili • -ririNEvra pinchien laveor - triendibig by gifts oilhen thus obtained thy are 100 as soon Ar YPWroP PaYmezti,i , - :t .1: M9MMI asolzlt our . . . when u City Posto ffi ce was under the direce l ;- tiOn,of oar; gobd friend,Generzd Bailey. •t ! 1 will go no: further back than -1805, when the' Getieral,Peetoffee,' as' ii rn was then - called b. inany;' , wasloCrited on th corner or.-Garde n zuad,Williainstreets, in detail room, net large,' • • , enough for a cigar shop at the.present day..... 4 , • —.. ~ _ ' --•- . The house : was What is 'pew termed a 4 fleree , • ; 1 a asaer resi wrote the Ntiv Yort Lligoridal Sct 4 etY. I quarter house ;" the GeneraPe : family Ocoupy s 9"!- 7 ' ! 8 q 74 - •-. , , • --, ' - lug the:south .eini; which_Consisted'of two!' Mr: W. B. Tatmen, who, has been connect* goorksieed.parlors, and on;the north. the Post-+ ed with th,e' . .Postotlitie Department more than office; So.far as ,my, memory, serves me; the. thiry-five years; thirty-of whieh haabeenim i s office was about tivelve . feet wide' aed twenty • ed in this city, contributed a paper of original ' in: length.' • On the front, pa - William-street e researeb •on the. NeW,yorir. Vostotliee, mirra- was 4 email recess for, the accommodation Of:: ting many eneloalties - Of 'the early:hist - ore, of these.wha were Waiting for letters. The on- the country, notices of the 'subject bylthe l GM., ly boxes for subscribers- were,placett in this:., end Court Reeords of Massachusetts in 1639, email apace, which; for some -yearsieinswered of the carciof foreign letters in charge if- very , well: ,In the interior-WaS a table in the "Richard 'Fairbanks; his houscin,Roston;" et Centre, leavingepsee; enough Ithget round and - Virginia regulationa in larei and '5B, providing 'bus. the letters".for kthe. mails. - Areund , the' a messenger to convey- the despatch to the sides were boxes or pigeorehoies for the let: next plantation - on the route, and on from tiers to be placed' .in 'after they had ' been, one to time other, till it reached its destinatioa; marked. "On time north will the 'Printers' boxe with the , greatest speed, under a penalty of I ea! were placed, some half dozen at that time. one hogshead of! tobaectit. In 1083 .WillianilAt the west "end of the room, bbtween the end 1 Penn established a Posteffice.: l andiappointedlof a 'long, table' and the Ft auk lift fireplatM, the 1 Henry Waddy efatielmin,g,;lPrizitiriaster, with an-linail-bags were deposited, - both those coming' 1 ltboritv la "smipply pariseagers with heroes fromliu andlhose gding out. •By and ••byia little Philadelphia to New Ca.stle, or.to the 1 , 110, 1 6f 1 more teem (table -room) was Wanted, and Delaware." lie fixed the rates of postage thus; good General ordered, his carpenter, MrsCrantat 0 LetteM from' the Fulls of. Philadelphia, Bd.; to pit a Small', circular • board' at the' second" to Chester; 6d.; to New Castle; 'id.; to, Mary= windo ' w'en Garden 'street. - This was a great lend, 5d." The pont.wenr once a Week..eridirelief for a time, ris it answered both as a veris its movements were regularly. published "on lting stand for the Generahoind for.the opening the unieting house door and other-.places." '1 of the small mails.: The marelrbeine onward ; The first, regulation_ providing. fur the trans- more room' was .dennimded,,and the? General mission of letters by post' in the province Or was cotupelled to give.up hie little back per. iNeri York; hears . date - 10th Deeember;l672; ler, adjoining _the office. ' , This, agaiin, was a when Governor Leveler° establislaM "a post great relief;afTording sufficient 'space feral-the to go monthly" from Now York to Boston and letter-terriers to assort their, letters, Aiello back again. ,Tllis regulation. purported to be Were Mr:Davie, Mr: Lynch, runt then Mr. p.,:iy.. in obedience to his .51ajesty's commands,"who rester, and one or two -others Whose tmatnet enjoynes all subjects;in their distinct colonies; "bave escaped me. ;Abbot this lima there were to enter into a atriet allyante" and correspond. only three or four regular clerks ; Messrs.- Ste- 11 l enee With .each other; 'as - likewise•• fei the 'id. phenS, l nnd . John mid ;Robert l ßailey ; sons or, vaneement of Negotiation, Trade, and. Civil the General. A third son assisted oecasienal ,l I Commerce, and for the speedyintelligence and ly. - Soon after, Mi. McCready and Mr.-Wiley Dispatch iif afravres. l ' It gave notice that a came into the ollice,. both exceedingly netlike' Messenger should start "on Ist January, 1672 I never knew men more teliveltr' boxing lets and Ma. " If any, 'therefore; have any snail! ters-t than those gentleinen.- The seirspepeni letters or portable goods, to be conveyed to were generally deserted- by Mr. Lang of the Hartferd, Connecticut,. Beaton ; or .any, other. Gazette; Mr. Butter "Of the Mercantile," Mrs • parts on the road, they shall be carefully deliv- Burnhion . of the Post, or time writer of this.- lit 1 - ered according to the directions by a sworne after time We were joined by Mr. Noah: The; Messenger and Post, Whri, is prePesely employ: writer of this might be a.rignizir as i ed in-that nffayre. 'in the ifiterim,those that sistafit,es he had taken the oath then tequirerti bee disposed -to - 86A letters, lett them bring and was generally-at the office morning and them to the Secretary's office, where, in lockt evening;espec4illy When a 'British mail' are. box, they shell be preserved till the, Messen. rived. or a inerchairt .vessel from Englanil.... - s: ger calls for them, All persons_ paying the The British mail was then ineirthly s - Wiwi Post before the bag be scaled uo. • In vari; the mail arrived it was taken- to the office of !ous patents granted"subsequently for lands agent Moore, and after passin,g his inspeethiti , along this route, a condition was inserted, obli-I was. sent to the Poltoffice. The lettersby the ; ging the patentee to. ferry the postman over merchants' ships Were I sametTimes - inimerouS,, , gratis:, Matters continued in this position ini-leapecially by the faVoriteShipst ' I : think Cap,. 'tit Dongares, arrival," when he. recoMmendeditain Isane Vt brought' thee largest initabem . i setting up post houses'along the Coast, Trona! of'arty ship before 1 ihe e lliseic•Rall 'line wiz:- Carolina to Neva Scotia. Ile Mae authOrizedientablishek Welled then no steambeattrourl to farm time :privilege to any undertaker for I for some. time after" they .were - established' the three .or five years, the profits efell the float-- mailswere not sent by theM; Thes; Were enris 1 offices within his 3 fajesty'a.dihninions, wheth- i rich in U - bag'which the steward of the' hat' lonl er foreign plantations o f in" Unropei beings brought to the Postoffice,'and received two claimed; by the Duke of York. (Lontl: dec. cents for mach letter. The largest mails 'then:: iv.) ; Accordingly, ,an Order in council was received and sent were the'ensterrr tinds-, passed on the 2d March, 1684-5, establishing 1 ere; . the . latter at that time taking all nail', _ • la po'stoffice for the better correspondence be- matter,- fcr the. Western States ; .ithich were " I - 1 tween the COtordee of America.' The rides ceinparatively few: If the'great Mail' filled. i of riding post was fixed :it 3d: per mile; the more than one portirmanteen ; inehading . PaPerma postage- on every singleletter nut above 1001 and letters; it, mas an extraordinary cireum miles men ; to be 3d.; if . tuore "proportionably, stance : ' I believe you have nen , . two - eta of" (Penne. Min. v. 100.) :In 1636, 44th Septern-lcierks le; the ofFiae, COe for the; day,‘ - the other: ber, eta order Was, niadzi' for the delivery of • for the-night At My earliest . recalleetkur ' ship letters in these Minis: " That' rib letters' there was init little nighriVork; except-these' he delivered in any place whatsoeirei except , rival of a" ship, or - the waiting for a mail Itr. the Custont house in thi4 city;. paying for•ev-1 WAS not a very eaey. test, "Sometimes, to get:. • cry paekett or double letter nine pence, for ev.lal the - hitters' ready far the morning tramilme."•••• . , cry single , letter fotir pence half Penny; the The letter carriers - that could be found We*, I,one movety 'et' which meneys shall be given enfted to Psi/sty , . Mr: Lynch; residing net lk I to each . poor as shall he nominated . by. the n great, way offi Wiie generally atliispOstt One, Capt. General! and Connell, the other.half to ' resided -..as far up as Sp ij ng:street,7si3d that.' the officer, of the :Custom linuie, which is to, great distance assured his safety fre a call, • I continuo Until further order." Ati January, on nn extra oethisioli., The Gebend was al- , 160"1-^2, litters patent were issued under the Ways with us, and-we then ilwiytt knew - What " 1 great seal, gianting• unto Thoneis Neal, his ex- Was going on in the - political ..world. Eyes s , ceUtora :and - assigns; authority to erect post. daily paper Was represente'3 an itios'seveningst: t i offices in America; tor, the- period of: tweet ye I besides these, we frequently' had. ilia or them e one years,;" He appointed Colonel Andrew of the following gentlemenf-Gavernor Geungeo, illamilton;of Nen , Jersey, Postmaster General! Clinton, De ;Witt Clinton. FlauM e i .oeg oo d i I for the colonies: In 1692 the latter brought ; I)aniel Smith, Dr. S. h , -Mitchell, Dr. John Ab . . 11-. the subject before the Council at New Yerk,-IGraliain,Dr. Walker; Juilg"f Miller, Pierre•Vatt, •• and the consequence was an act e.striblishingltVyek, Judge Tallmndge, General Tallmadge,; a postoffice in that ettys The rates establish. i John Ferguson, Williara Van Hoek.-Riabardi led were: For every single letteito - New York,lßiker. .If 'these geotlemen wanted , a,. good' -' 191; "from Virginia to Neiv York, 1.2: . d,; andlglimsef ivirie; or. nti excellent eigaitlhey knew.' ifor eighty miles and umier, - foln- pence half; either t'mmid he ebtained, in time 'Amick parlen . penny: _ (Bradford's .1..0w5, Ed.-1;694.) _Meier the.Postoffice:' '• .- .-.. ,- • ' I charge was- tithed, in. the following year.,tel ''• General was succeeded in tho-Post. 1 exceed the profits fourfrild, and afraid u t fi fty 1 office bv Sarrnel L. Goyernetir,the sorein.law, pounds, was voted; which ; was :rene wed in lof ex-Pres;dent Monroe., DO was appointed,: 1695: - The above net was renewed by the! by John Quincy. Adams, and heldtleoffice tor-'. 1 Lekialature _from time to time, yet , fur ter: about eight years. J 1 )1 183 9 1 , - Congress Passed ' l ‘. - years ;miter this time post - frorir New York .wentla ;law requiring Postathsteri to.be appointedt eastward no further than Boston, and mest-; tor foneyears only, nt.ilie expinition of Which.: Ward Only to Philadelphia.' 6 Therels no nth-lperiod a re-appointareat or a new 'appointment er post upon all this continent?' 'write:a - Lord j Merit . be Mado. , Where a Pestinaster's Cores • : Cornbury, in 1704. "If - I lutvo any letters to • lensation 'exceeds . st.ooo. per 'annum, he is send to Virginia or to Meryland,l must:either lappeinted by the' Pivsident,' by and with the:; send , an -expreSs„ who ie,.often retardqd for 1 mivjee and consent of 'the -Senate; but the::' want of bride to ernes flint:if:great rivers they r• Small fry,` i name is legion,' are zip- 1 •, 1 =I must goeiver,'or else for. Want - of horsee t or . ; pointed by the Postmaster . General, h ello - I must" send them 1 s hi 'some passengers! ,'" Those Postmasters , who are appointed by whip aro. going thither.::; The least • I : have the Preeident, and Senato 47C not always cart;'' known fumy express take from hence to Vir, I twin to retain their plaies tilt the Commmssion-: -,-,, gir l ie, has beeu three weeks. Col. Nicholsen I expireat for it a now adminitatiztion of 0pp0.,,, •'• :- and Col Seymour have Wrote me went theij sfte! . polities comes into Power, they are dee*. will be ;here; in September; and - I do then ia- I Darted' speedily, es seieraV instances have oc. ' tend to propoSe to them the settling oe a ptsst i emirred in the history of the Posteffiers. to-go , through Virginia,,",- (Lend, Doe, rah) Inh ' "In 1836 John I. Coalogtoni.Eti., was ap... i1.7/o,,Homilten having sold his privilege to the I pointed hYPresident Jackson, and re4ippOints.•' •I Crown,the pestofficed of Great Britamm Ireland (ed iii l lB-10-bv President Vaillurets. In 1843 ' - and America - were plzieed understand direction,' Colt:John L.Gralmin wai appointed AY Preais _ Ihy the 9th of. - 14rieen 'Anne. I (See'llohnee'e dent- Tyler; In 1845 1 ' Robert H:,hforris Wali .; Anne's, ii.' 78.) -.The department"; of America appointed bY PresimientlPolk.; 'Mr; 'Morri' was put under a - Deputy Postmaster General ,seeved a full term of fouryeirs: ll e ilia Isti4 .-- " to which office. Benjamin_ .Fr.uiklin _was ape ceatied by : our present 'mh reatmected'Posts' 1„ pointed in 1753. The_ beaks of the-Departs master, Wittiest V: Brady;" "Esq., who` wins, else I mast' were', then kept, : by" Iterijninin'Frankiin I pointed in May, 1849,- by Gen; Taylor.' - ; himself,- and , aro still. preserved enter g the .•""''" In a periOd;therioif s'ixti. yea*, tliOie bitiot '- archives of• the depaitmentOhhisf own: hand , he el blify -. sereii. prietthisters,;- jeeiredine , th 4, writing, When thoNhoie form, °tithe deport. present foithlfi "city ;1411.iit whom, - . men t was the Postmaster General, at a ,selary oseept, . Col. Bay men'. l etlid..Oethl, IbilleY tire stilli • " of s lo oa Per antillie- The PreSeet. ' PeStmas-‘ living in - this ch 'ihe exception of Xn. ' 1 1 ter General is assisted bY`nearlYtWalumhdred" subordinates In the Depertinenk, rind. nearly - g e n c o .. 1 etieereellr,'who resides ;MI 'hit WM - la - Vie... ... Ur: Jeffersan'al - eelebrated saying haes 1 • . thirty then:Mod scattered throughout the courts belou fully 01 .1fi e d - *lsi s ;bit e r history:at' our' '-'-'' ' l '. - .. 1 ' . 11 - --...- 1.1 ,,,• , - PiiiiiitattirtheitAlo-die, 4 10 ..,iim d ,,.. 14 5 i git. ' -.' Trom,all..tbis it le A lain th a t .eieW. 1. era mut It is said. shet . ool6 - ; Balky was 'e nen root.: - - the first_ colonyin America that madelod Master Who put-up baxesin the PenteSmez fer..' , . _ • Preriel9s.',fq, ti l e , ! ral k! lni c ui 4.1 r letters .!'",i the•imenornintidiftion'of m erchants . 'Sod, „„ _'eu'erf- 1 = - ' Pest; * "'" ' ' 'I L 1. ' .' ''" .-' . 1 ' fn; this city. 'I have been credibly mfortnerf.; -, , - OP 'nn old ' ""zind..menirablel-Postmarifer:in that when s u s .tgitl wo ay e &et Redo to Mae - !. • this city, GenerSinsliefi l Wha . filled theLeffine to"- put Up beive,.••l4:lo 01 ,- ,1140.4 0 . .- ! from - 1804 to,.1828; Mr. ' Ta y lor'd 'paPer l .- 1 Pte:11 declined orithe•gteeed"thst e ie ttgkeet ll 4 Opt& sented some a greeable reinieleeenees,from-the be rented. te-,pay for theirlieing-Inuidet- botr. ' pen of Mr. - Francis Hall' of the *!*aer'ciat bong Mother pressedoind etl'efet,beicigraluip - : Advertiter: ~., -'. ' ' --' -`-:-', ':- ' , • .:- ' to indemnify( hint {twilit losiz;••a.. few. !iomut.: ' i ' . "You - ask IVO'. saYa M.i. iti , '+' to fungal" Wire put op, Whielinuttiber" , kei boettipiti** ; : . __*".,' you with:some _reminiteeneenof-lherse tithes ed feoo3 time to. tit*, till it h4 - rtcettltilliti l ' ' 1 ' - The New i rcirli Poit-Ofßio . in 01 den ' Times. - ; ';IIY W: B: TkYLOR : 1 i ,00131 - tii..t::::l'PlslißElrl ii
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers