Lewisburg chronicle. (Lewisburg, Pa.) 1850-1859, May 26, 1854, Image 1

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    CHRONICLE
EWIS
BURG
1
0. N. WORDEN, Prixtek.
aw
Thl I .PWlQmirir I, nrillllClL
illy uuti luuuin "
4 1HT FAMItT OClll.
I" ' f"'rj a,,ia.
fy.10. cw"7 .
u rr. tr wh art..lljr in .dranc; i A
"Sf&&JXZtt'& mi
Sir- iW lM 1,jre " JC"
a iluH umber.
Awn"'' lobLrnt iwrtton.'tl
H. C. IIICKOK, Editob;
ll&T. ooi . : a. ......
Mai
oil
,10., e. .... ,r"vr iina-is
OuomUnaanMOrTOm.. ,,.., I
- ...... ta..a.a:.i,.,. ataa. .11
j t .nj. imcr-. .. . '
rBVTp7.S
uit. m. pMt.paU. r!njrrJ;L, V-tik
rti'ariT." m M"w7'l,hi ;
woti " too ! i w-oVvS. -uuu-. I
'SZXZiSJZ!.wxA down its long halls and capering ;
Tt" .n".rr.-i .r. t. .bui j existed in such a place, without embody-!
toeing it in some tangible form, neither did
iib"?,," iboj want of the necessaries and luxuries
'llrthsrur situated in the midst of a rich and
alaar .bore Ine ru, we.
oor .bore u. o h WORDEN. Proprietor.
t Tiirt V'h'ttllD BHD BT. 51 :
Jji 4 i) J M UJjt. " J J. 1
May 20, 1854
LETTERS frox GERMANY.
GwroerooooK " lbur Chronicle .
WCRZBUBO, April Zi, ico--
Mein Hcrr, mcin Ilerr, cs iss nan
funf !" I sprung out of my bed, hastily ;
dressed, drew on my over-coat, threw my
. i ' Kl,ouldcrs aud huiried aloug
. 1 1 '
the silent streets across the Lridge, down
.l. - ,,a nffi.-o. rirocurud a ticket,
ticket,
and in a few moments more was uu mj w noie neiguooiing vuiagu uau usseiuunu seen tuu ruuuu " a.. -
way to the city of Frankfurt. ' there for some purpose, as we approached , confines ; and below is the city and the
The morniug was cool, with a strong a boat darted from the shore, making for winding Mayne, giving an enchauting
fresh wind, and the sun had not yet risen the steamer. The four or five persons it beanty to the whole,
above the mountain tops, that on each side contained were in deep grief, and their Pfarrthnrm is near the Bridgc,the latter
hemmed in the Mayne. To be on deck, frioods on shore were waving their hand- ' a large stone work built in the tenth cen
thcrefore was exceedingly uucomfortable, kcrchiefn, swinging their hats and shouting tury. It has upon it a statue of Charle
and to go below was equally disagreeable, their last farewell. They were evidently ! magnc, and near the statue is an iron post
u a...t;n narrow and no view to emigrants to America. I again remarked with a golden chicken upon the top. The
. ... 1,nla wifirlnws. 1
tL steamboats here differ materially, '
The steamboa s here
and are tar luiu.i.-a a. r ' ; r- ,
venience and splendor to those floating would more than probably be remembered completion. The builder, finding it lmpos
Talaces w'hich adorn our waters. The boats ' in future years with joy. Why, said she, ! sible to fulfil his engagement, in despair
of the Mayne are similar to those of the WL.ro you ever there? I am proud to call 'and anguish called npon the Devil, as his
Rhine but smaller. They have arrange- it my native land. A smile at once played j last resort, to assist him. His Satanic
Utenta' for three classes of persons and over her features, and during the remain-', Majesty agreed to finish the work by the
price accordingly. The 1st class occupy ' dor of the trip I found her an interesting time required, provided he might have the
if. v: kohind the endue : the 2d and and acreeable companion. I am a Roman ' first living creature that crossed it. This
3d in front of the cnine. The cabins are '
acinar deck with very small wiudows on 1
DCIOW utxa, J I
achside along the cciliug. ine seats arc
'ttached to the sides of the room, similar
! l ... 7
. .
- i -a- ii.n rnnm Him.iar .
to those in our
1I1P naC.Cb LIUaVVD. . - :
.1 11 I. 1,
no covering
whatever on inc itutuc tiuaio .
they spread a cauvassas a protection from
tkaaanri The fore-cabin resembles the first !
in every respect, except tliai me totu... :
i . -. r..mhioned To cive you
has not IU seats cushioned. 10 . .
an
. ai.- nf thfse boats, tue
K.twcen this and Frankfort is a
dlStanCO DClWCCn tuw ,
a ...i
1. . .1 . 1 r.fl milpa V e lCaVC .
ittle more than IW mues.
. . .; .t five and arrive
here in the morning at me ana arri
t. it . ; h. ,ino at nine. Re-;
at Frankfurt in the evening at nine, x
turnm
g against the current it taJ.es two
o b ... .i :
days, lying over at night
flit 1 IlC laiU IUI v
' jn.,.
first class, five norms,
nd cTr'thrce florins, forty-eight kreut-!
oTCne dollar and fifty-two cents. '
cll have an advantace over other ;
I, wr vj j
. . i xi .la
travelers on the num. anu , , - -
lecond class ticket secures them all we
privileges of a first class.
... . t at.. IT..:, at.
This being tue season ot iuo ...
messe, as it is called in German, at Frank
furt, the vessel was loaded with merchan
dise. A number of merchants were also
on board, going to the Fair, some to pur
chase, others to sell. The number of first
class passengers was probably a fifth of the
whole, and while our cabin was compara
tively empty, the other was literally
crowded, and the decks also full. And
now, I suppose, I am bound to say a word
about the captain: he was a rough looking
specimen of humanity, and not at all wor
thy of those high encomiums, which are
so liberally bestowed upon men occupying
corresponding positions in the States. To
call him, for example, the " Prince of good
fellows," would be perfect mockery, the
height of sarcasm, besides being disgrace
ful to Capt W. and Capt. II. and " mine
host of the Bull's head," men of world
wide celebrity.
Having ordered coffee and horncheres,
I went below to eat and drink at mine
ease and at the same time to scan the va
rious physiognomies around me, in order
to find a congenial spirit, with whom I
could enjoy the excursion. It was evident
that the trip to F., with most of them, was
an old affair. They might have once ad
mired the beauties of the meandering
Mayne, but now they were altogether ab
sorbed in criticising the last opera, and Zell
and Lowenstein were passed unnoticed. I
had jnst about reconciled myself to a soli
tary tramp np and down the deck, when
my attention was attracted by a lady of
prepossessing appearance, apparently as
lonely as myself. I immediately conclu
ded to cultivate her acquaintance and at
the same time learn a lesson in human
Baiue relying on my foreign air and ac
eeat as to excais for my impudence. An
t 5t.nlf fnr narrv-'
UUUUIiuut.j avvvu Fnvv- y
liuirniv dosisn into execution. Aewere
passing a large, handsome old Luilding,
o
surrounded by a wall, including a small
ibt beautiful park.
In the days of the
Arch-Bishopric of Wnrzburg, it had been
a nunnery, now it was inhabited b, private
IiiilitMiliifila The merrv nuns must have
oninvpd life within its walls ruuninff UP
J J I
around the carden walks and through the
HWU3UUUUII lua. a.a...
,-a ... J .1., f K.
mDni i l niuia buu iuc ooituuiii
hour, near the old wall, for I can not
believe that thoso nuns were without their
lover. They must have had the soul and I
poc,,., 0f iife in them, and could not have
fertile countrv. with an Arch-Bishop for
j their patron, who was at once civil and I
cclcsiastical ruler of the land one of the
richest of his rank, in all Germany, their
wants must have been abundantly sup
plied. Had there been a Henry the
IKir-liili in Frauken. historv micht have
O J J G j
devoted a page to the revelations of Zcll.
Under the pretext of seckiuc; information
relative to the nuuncry, I addressed qucs -
tioos to the lady, but her answers were j
ja mein Ilerr, and I soon retreated in des-
pair. Some hours afterwards we saw in,
. ... '
(Ue distance a large mass of people col-
looted alous the bank of the river, the
looted alous the bank of the river, the
ii-ii -II 1- . '
yi tliai. 1'iilv flint. tKiiv trari rrninir to a. ban-
p, land, and that this day, which now ap-!
l , ,
citizen. j
On my arrival at F. I did not, as I ex- morning of the second day, was found by
.... .....a ... 1 e IPU.'.I. 1.-11 l.a.J IT.
pecteu, nna my incoas on tue wun. am
next morning at an early hour I found
tiost mitrn n? at ttu ewiv uuu. a .uiaaii.
O 1
T i- Po. f,f.W. 1nme. I
ti! I.. VA 0 llnalranhaitni.a av.C.n
. . ... rf .
ticaieu m ana.an..v.... b .
We visited our consul, Mr. Gracbe, wit
whom I was very well pleased. He is,
Uracue, wuu
I
uc,.t.vL, . ., v... .. ..
ica, accumulated a large fortuuc, obtained
! , . ' j 1
tue consuisuip auu muiucu . oucua.
remainder of his life iu his native city,
r.l.fr.
i r i . i : r . : .. I : ..
A SIT011 arOUUU IUC irutiftiUO Ui av aaaaaaaaaaa. c ati9U Hiaaaajaa aaaw aa... i
aiaiuu.. , ,. ,. . t, c l.
is delichtful. The old walls and former tute, under the direction of Dr. Schwarz.
is uei.bmtu.. , Jitr... rVnm
fortifications have been torn down, the'Ihs system, I believe, differs rrom that(
wr ....,,...,;',...:, l ... :. .ui T i.!i.iM ftrr
moa.s uneu wua t. . - .
I., o.,.;r.,l ar-klVa nml irardi-nq '
1.. nd flWer-bcds. lakes and water- i
wtuuwiui j
fe v '
Falls, affording elegant and agreeable :
promenade grounds for the citizens. There '
Is a fine monument in the grounds, erected !
- .1.. I . r.t tl.aaip nrinmntur Spnalnr '
. , , 7". I "Tu ...
ifUlOlfctl. VI ID ulU i'jriiuwuuus muc
vet remains an interesting five pointed
J . .
!lTr,r'Tia called the Escbcn-
a .... i
'heimcr Thurro. Through it is the en-
i trance to the street of the same name, and
it .t this irate that the revolutionists
in 1848. killed Prince Lychnowsky. It is
a powerful, massive building, surmounted
. . . aa . .
by a weather flag, with a figure in 11.
It is 6aid that once of a time a poacher
was incarcerated here and sentenced to
death for bis unlawful appropriation of
other people's property. While in his
prison, he entered a complaint to the
weather flag, "nine nights," said he, "have
you disturbed my rest by your grating,
. . ..a - ! T ..1,1 .IiaaI
Were 1 Iree, WHO nine UU11CIO WUU.tt oaauv. auawaaaaa... a. aaa aav.. .... 1
the figure 9 into you, in memory of my ; than any of the preceding. There were
pain.' The jailor overhearing him informed some large purchases in jewelry by Ame
the council and they appointed the next rican houses.
day for a trial of his skull, buouiu uc
accomplish what he boasted, he was to be
sct at liberty, if not to die instantly. He . ing his name to a large square ana crcct
,. ...aM.aa.ful. Hans Winkelrie was free, ; ing in its center a colossal statue in bronze
.nrltht. figure 9 is vet there to authenticate:
the legend.
Witl.nnt the nromenade cronnds are a
0 .
. , "... I
number 01 pcauuiut tuin!, aaU. a,.a-.
dens and yards attached to them. The
. . '
a t :n... ;aia fiA trfip. i
number of these are increasing yearly, at -
present the most beautiful are along Bock-
enhcimer strussc. The Rothschilds have
several splendid residences in the suburbs.
There are a number of places of great
interest in Frankfurt and intimately con
nected with the history of the city and of
Germany. The Romcr is an old edifice , Duuoings, ineir grotesque biic, tue ut.ut
saidto have been built by the Bomans,!ncss of the whole place, the miserable
acwirdinir to other accounts it was the
palace of Charlemagne.
It contains the room, in which the Em
perors of Germany were elected, also the
Kaisenaal, when the banquet was held
after the downing in the Dome. This
LEWISBURG, UNION
mom has around its walk the twi-traita of
all th F.n,nrors from Conrad the First,
I
and by a prophetic accident the last niche
was occupied by the last Emperor por
trait.
. a ..j
1 iarriuurni is a lower couuccvcu v ""-i
Dome, or Cathedral, two hundred and
sixty feet high. One hundred years were
employed in building it and then it re-
maiued unfinished, as it is at tue present
. .... ..... .
.time, unginauy it was uw.guc .
armed with a pyramid which would have
tI a.
mail it .iltw feet 111 flier. The expense.
- j o
however, prevented its completion. A
rnnnd tnn was nlaced in its stead, which
is divided into rooms, and the bell-ringer
and his family occupy them as their habi-
tation. Although the tower is aiwcueu,
jyet it docs not belong to the Dome, and
it is said, "The church is Catholic, but
the tower and its bell are not." The Dome
for a lone time after the reformation be-
longed to the Lutherans and when tbey
were obliged to return it to tue iamoi.es,
they retained possession of the tower, on
the ground that it was not the church.
From the gallery which surrounds the top
'of the tower, one enjoys a view which
-
amply repays the trouble of ascending.
We find here a panorama that not only
. -nti. . ! - . V..
embraces i ranKiun ana us eimruun, uu
the whole of the lower Mayne yalh-y.while
:in the distance the picturesque Taunus
mountains skirt the horizon. Innumcra-
ble villages and villas are scattered overj
the scene. AH around the I ree tity are
. 1 1 I.....J -vtiii.li mrlr it.
nrrnrA id (lint ui. the time of the buildio"
0f the bridge, two days were wanting of,
j
having been conceded, the bridge, on the
uc iraiiuer tuureij tum.ioaau. ... .
mediately drove a Chicken across, but the
inimaaaa-iv uiuic a vuia.v. .. . v , i
. '
n...;l ...ireil human BOul. in
, - 9 .
l.:a...nl4 ti lia allinml Itnfl t h Warted. lnCenSCd .
. . , . , a I i t 1 ,J :Ma.J 1
ni.nlf th.ia alimnii and thwarted, lncensca ,
.u,u. ..... , - , . '
7 .i. '"il'i-.n , it : n ,on and '
sen
brew it through the abridge Two
- - v
is said can not be closed, for the work
j... j...:.. A, :. Jmlitr.rl r an '
Uuue uui.uu at ...j .w......
1 1
unseen hand at night!
.l,.n..rjt Tlnmr, Tnsti.
.u , a,.....-.
vliiAl iimlur liia ftftrt ftt Ail pari V ftffO. ana
r.uvu " j at
are tautrht first to describe the principal!
o .. .
features of familiar objects with their
hand, in the air, then to produce sounds,
to pronounce words, and finally to speak
lia. tnonna nf iniitatintr the nositions of the
iLr" ".. . ';A t thJdelbur-. I took the coach for Aschaffcn-
muuiu, '"t BUt '"ub v..-. .vr.
various sounds. The degree of proficiency
. 11 j i
in. Questions which were addressed to
. .. . . i i t r
.them were easily unacrsiooa oy ooseniog
the movements of the mouth, and their
replies were perfectly intelligible. The;
.expense, of boarding, tuition Sc. are two
hundred a year.
I rial . P . J 1 a i- .a
j ine rain 01 to-uaj axe uuv reinuau.B t
, their ancient greatness and importance,
j The necessity of their existence has passed
away, and force of custom alone sustains
j them. Those at Lcipsic and Frankfurt arc
the most important in Germany. That at
jthe latter place is principally noted for its
i leather market, and this year I have been
InfrtamAil at la.. Iwiaaft lt lpB. a.r.neJiainfniaA
ims ckj era iuc uuiu-ui.hi u. uutmc,
and the citizens have honored him by giv-
to his memory. On this Square is the
Episcopal Church, in which there is Eog
lish preaching, the first I have heard since
laaavinrr laiverDooi.
a ..... T ; I
o
Before closing my account of Frank-
a . T a av! it.. T ? , I. f.. .. a
tun, x must mcuuuu tuc Cw.u v""tr,
a street to wnicn in eany times ine jews
were limited. The houses, emnc five or
six centuries old, are situated cu each'side
of n exceedingly narrow passage, which
can hardly be dignified by the nume of
street The old, dirty, dingy, smoked
shops nilea wun secona-nanaeo oooiu,
pictures, clothes, and second-banded eve-
avtbine formed a marked contrast to
the streets, buildings and shops around it
Bnt those sooty, dilapidated windows,thro'
, which a ray of sunthine never passes, with
COUNTY, PENN., FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1854.
! . . i . p i p il...
ail laeir am km duujwi
charm one by tne ocauiuui .acca j "
. . .1 W.... il.mn.
tain.
. V ... ....
euchanunfr, wuu ueir iuwi- s- j ,
hair black as the raven's wing, their dark,
i l:l
Ti'icrinir. larpe. expressive, oiamoua-iifco
rm o - .
eyes, their white teeth and clear complex-
2 their fine round Bgure. and graceful
moyements-I tell ,o, sir, I have seen
many Kebeccas.
l...t 1 k I van hoe I am
wedded to the Saxoo.
Frankfurt is said to hare been founded
by Charlemagne, and called Frank furt,
(Ford-of-the-Franks) in honor of his ford
ing the river Mayne at that place. For a
long time it was an imperiakcity, and has
been and is one of the principal commer
cial cities in Germany. During the Rev
olution in 1848, l'arliamcnt held its mee
tings in St. Paul's Lutheran Church. It
is one of those few cities in Germany in
which the Construotive principle has kept
paoe with the Destructive, where the New
has risen upon the rums of the Autique,
h,re the Has Been is minded with the
r i .1.- t. t it. i:..i.,
19, BUI! IUO XV io avuo aaaagta.
ous.
-w . i : ..a. i
r Mmmii!. nne ill uiaur iuctia u.
r 1
an American city : the hum and hurry or.
hniiini-ss are there, and one invol
lunUrily
i. .1. tr.. liaanrv '
1 '
stroke of the forge-hammer, and the clear I
. . . ... I
-..n..i-'r cainnj. nt tliA I 1 1 1 1 n 11 Til ft 111. i
.i,.:t, 1,-fr Vrankfnrt '
tr. visit an Kxhibition of Flowers by the!
. VUl. a..;.... a.".fa, ,
Duke of Nassau, to be held at Bieberieh, !
distant 25 miles, on the Rhine, where the J
it..!,. I... I.:. , tM n t.h l.:mt !
of the river, nearly opposite Mavence. A j
description of its old chesnuts and weeping j
willow's, its glassy lakes and sparkling
fountains belongs to the province of to
painter. In the park are the rums of an ,
old Robber's Castle, partly repaired.
The
.. . !
VieW IrOm US lUrretS IS nne.aUUai. prCSCUl
. . .... - i :
,t Has anouier attraction in me sarcopaa-,
gus of the late Duchcss-a Russian prin- j
f T'l
. to hcr h d
career on earth at the age of 21. The
sarcophagua is a beautiful production of
art. She is represented as lying at full
length on the upper slab, while the sides
are adorned with figures of tbo ApomtUm.
It is to be placed in Greek Chapel (he
Duke is building in honor of his wife on
a high knob of Taunus Mountain, near to
the watering-place of Wiesbaden, the seat
of the Court of the Duke of Nassau.
It is utterly impossible for me to make
. . . .. ... i
. dMPTlDtlOn Of tUC falUlDlUOn. Jliy ima-
" aeSOTPUOU " 1 J .!
irtUailWUIUIlBeHUVaa Uliailiailivi.l uiv.m.v.;
b u
. ..B.1,l..,.l aa.,..aa naia... lllTlirll
6 aUalHWU til g f j
anything half so beautiful. Every zone
.nvthini-
represcnutives, and then the
' had its
" allcyi of
plants, archways covered with vines, jct-
r t . . ,...'...
ting fountains, miniature lakes filled with
golden fishes, rustic summer houses, old
' . . .
moss-covered oaks with luxuriant ivies
. . . , , ... .
twininir around their branches, artificial
,"'"'" '
hills, rocky precipices, groves of palm trees,
Jr r b r '
gay-plumaged birds, and the fragrant air,
"'o
. . . . . -
"g returned to iranliturt, attcr
few day. we a.l took tne cars lor mnn.n,
where I bade my friend, farewell hoping
to meet them again on the shores of Ame-
rica-
They intended proceeding to Hei-
0
nurg, wei - w
viair mitM Pi.mTwmm. whose nrome-
de grounds are inferior to any I have yet
.Aaiaa Tliaa malqaaaa ia . iinanranimlar hml.
t - -i c
ding,which looks best at a distance. Pom-
peium is s villa, not quite uuisacu, uu.it
by the King of Bavaria in exact imitation
of that of Castor & Pollux, excavated at
Pompei. It has no windows, according to
the style of the 1st and 2d centuries, and
is lighted entirely from the open halls.
At my hotel, I saw a number of emig
rants for America. The governments of
Germany, feeling tho effects of the vast
emigration which is yearly taking place,
have enacted a law by which every father
desirous of leaving the country and having
sons over ten years, give bail or pay six
hundred dollars, which sum is returned,
provided his son returns and performs mi
litary duty. This must to a great extent
prevent the poorer classes from leaving.
At four o'clock I seated myself on the
outsido of the coach, and two o'clock the
next morning found me quietly preparing
for a night's rest at the Krom Prinz
Wurzburg. B.
Advaktage or Pacing fob a News
paper is Advance. One of the facts
put in evidence at the trial in the supreme
court, to sustain the will of the late Wm.
Russell, was. that only a few days before
he made his will, he called at the office of
the Democrat and paid for his paper a year
in advance thereby saving fifty cents. This
fact was dwelt npon at length, by counsel,
and commented npon by the judge in his
charge, as one of great importance. The
verdict of the jury would seem to sustain
the position, that a man who has mind
and memory enough to pay for his news
paper in advance, is competent to make hi?
will. Franklin Democrat
r.r . Lrutf chr.i..
SToteS by the Wayside.
Mna.'.V4u in Union county is
Lv ii..J...u...,l,.;A,fW,
"""h - i
mountain, extending from Centerville into
Mifflin county. Iu soil is rather thin at
the east end, but the limestone appears a.)
you go westward, and the Beavers offer a j
better reward for .cultural labor h ,,
the Vallev. lumDenns. coopenujt, cm-,
' . .
Shade mountain, but it .3 more broken
than Buffalo Valley, and not so produc
tive. The western extremity West Bea-
ver township is nearer Lewistown than
New Berlin, and does most of iu trading
business in that direction.
n nart of Uniou county is so tbor
0u2hly German as this extremity. Fru-;
r i
n.l imlustrv. honest v and stability,
j "J Jl J ..
. A....nAntitf i innrTrrnii . ii Ti 11 uiai .
Kru vuiiikuu. v . .
' ....
these virtues, imposeu upon trauu -u-, (
falsehood, have demagogues mauo enemies ,
to. tho Railroad and to Division. " They
. fir aT.A . T. ....
will double your i" ;
f... a.ff..hin v. Hut the
riai-.i;u. .UVi iui a. ...aau -
same sterlin" honesty and strong commoo :
........ . . ... '
sense which distinguisu tno uermans, iu .
the long run will bring the whole Button j
properly before them.
On one occasion we stopped at a widow :
I . . .
much carried on. The people w, 1 never j as a name in p ace o, K.appcra A mt tUt U about to ex-
grow rich by raising pork, until the, get an admirer o ue euphonious a, we a , g J
a better breed of porkers, for such lank, the beautiful, we protest. " Pleasant Pinu ur u '
S ongUed land-sharks as met Valley" is so common that it is just M f we act together b, treaty can
our view n velay on W to advanU ! desig'.tiun at ail, while -Kl.rpcHalo" is Pe Jonestv vrM, but we can ue
Z -There Je gW farmers and rich ' rare and significant. -Klapp i, the ! fj tie P-cr the world. .4 firmne
lis in the regir between Jacks and German U raUU, and or M is well tZtZ
woman's, whose fears were soou aroused o.a "tv.rene on toe u,p u , . . .
to the highest pitch by seeing my eompa- had careful, tenu.tr j laid the renuitu . beamt men,ory. ThS time
uion engaged with his sketching -;'';0;U-
but toeing atred J- J l.il"-
making a Map ah. Wt rehcted Uh , P , ciUcri cant and whining morality of the
sam sue, " 1 tuougui tie was oue ut mc ,
i ...k. ,l.,.,nUl"anl cverv evo wet w til svmnulhv furi"w-' -"
UUU a.U v. aaaaaiaa. ,
who puts the taxes on the peoples : f
tr nJ ui,. 4f.A-..-.trr.p ii
jr . ;
wnJ 4tiAa..fvtrr.p ii
bo, or girl could express more gratilica tion ;
than she did when announcing inai -jai-,
Ulion was coming ! '-They were going
v. . ifti. 1,, nr.n tl,
aw aaaaii. aa A...-. vyt . . -11
Dcrrstown Railroad, but she liked this,
because it would make her richer good
honest soul ! A little negro boy came
avlaaaaa. aaw.a.4 taaa. fafiininaay. .Hfl alalia
- . . 1.1
smartness on one side of hcr mouth while
x pi
lamenting her loss on the other; onej
hated the English becaoso she could not,
i . i i a a. " ni.. a... n he.
UnUerataUU UlCIU, laaav HUD aviaaawaa, aaj-
. . a .7 a . i ...I
1 11 11-11 V" HIT ill UIIL1 U. LUC UatliCU W laaill. .a
. . . ., , , -
. ..... a 1
love mat exists in me nnman oosout iu
And sho wanted to
very many cases. And she wanted to
hca'r sometuing ulked about beside berj
O
... a . . 1 a. .
own neigubornoou. iut sue uiun . want
any of these new religions that were get-
I ... . mat-
. ting about : the old was good enough. v e
f ... . a a . .
dollars : ihe might have had bim caugnt, ; j
but she "pitied the poor little nigger so" j neighborhood do, and it thus seems neees
.i... t.t I.! -and laughed at his I "7 in connection with their oih-r mer-
prescribed good school-teachers and news-;.""
for more enlarged knowledge-but that;Of him. And tne meuow eartn ana resit ,
awoke the "laid' ghost of TAXATION, and r were not ic aSreeaoie ,u girt, , - - ;
we made no further progress in thatqu- whom we saw scores of different 'f'iLt islands and regions suited to
tcr.-In the same place we met a man who, work most .ndustrioauly, Slavery, between us and Bn.il.
in reply to our "broken" German, JtI, but all, apparent.,, ue .shted wtth the, ;
Bill nidtf BftStclje itV Dtnt.fl,," was.empoymcnt. let while we think ha.; nlnfomesh apc or other. either
very greatly exercised on our Delialt, ana
1
repeatedly expressed ins astonisnment
. . a .
that a man or mature years ana apparent,
intellicence couldn't "make a Dutch
speech in the German language 1" Me;
could n t understand it there was some-
thing wrong about it : and we exchanged
fi.na.o11. with an additional hope on his
part that we might yet live to talk Dutch
;t : ,t ir. iurr. file .hould
take a trip to Paris, and travel with the ;
Yankee who wrote home that "Faris is a;
pretty large village : bnt, only think ! half j
a million people who can't talk a word of!
English I")
Working on the roads in Center and
Franklin townships. Schools in operation
atBcavertown and Mt. Pleasant Grain!
uniformly backward, an immense surface
covered with
killed, especia'
best field was
anntri iMat.dpn Itcavertown and Middle-
K. Pmit nrnmises extremely welL
o' r ......... .
The old Centerville election district is
, , . . . - , tv
now Center townsh p unn
mountain to near Middle creek. Tho re -
maindcr of old Center township-thc south
avnifipnintr MidJUhnriT and Beaver
D , a.aaea.a..e Q
Furnace is in the new township of
Franklin. Middlebcbo appears just
now to be the most lively of any of our
inland towns.
" KiaAPPERDALE Valley" we had never
visited nntil this trip. It is narrow, but
extremely fertile, and stretches from Sel
inegrove along the south sida of Shade
mnn ntain tn the Juniata. Some of the
. i i
best farms and most attractive booses aud
l. ; th. rn..nt. are here to
CaillViVIM aara Mk mt iaw wv -jj : a
be found. Freebcbg, the only town in
. . . . .
its borders, we should judge is the fourth
in size in the county, and contains many
intelligent and enterprising citizcDS. The
Academy recently erected by them is a
noble edifice of brick, three-and-a-half
stories high, and Us neatly 100 pupils in
it and but slightly winter- "" uru ".. jf i..uai glu.a ouuet tun. . ....
' . I irliitia.arnchi.iiTa rl.a.iinrvcnii. and nthpr i ra i I !a.f t. . . al.aa I-!..
lly of that dr 1 cd n. The 7 .' -V c 71 '. , . : 1 "aauurj ujiua., vj...s .........
,i. ui .ua. uiu. afflictions and mfl'.ctiiins. which but hfrc . t. t..j t,;, ..j
on a side-hill fronting the ... k .erl.aM safl.st , take brea,u. w. rrf" ... . . .T rC.
.ttcndance.under the charge of Prof. Whit-
man and assistant. Some pupil, arc from
a disUnce, but the best Whence of the
In.titatlon .ill h in .nducins the risin;-
.... ,.
i wo au a" .. - - o
generation in it, immedUo -T
seek a higher standard or education, luej
means are so near at hand, that all should
feel stimulated to be ben, ted there y
Ly-J e way, sonic of
;.. ... ...... j
. . . ... , a .
enough for a narrow valley. lietner as
at till . . :
xnmn bv t!in nntnat tlfllllipr W;i4 elven :
by an early i.-ttler in the fulness of his
joy upon hearing the tingle-ling of a lo,t
cow, when his family were f.mUbing for
her milk or whether there were notable
IUttie-;rp(0?s that bequeatcd their name
-or whether some peculiarity in the into-
nations or reverberations of the thunder
. i . .J-.
-whate-
.iMt imw ... . ... wa.. - -
u .
.
. , -e-
-
nn.inim.iiia tntfl rt linvt llivisiflll laat fall, t
are many who retrird Division :s a thiua
- -
ccrtain in the future ; but as long as the !
I a , I. . .-..a a,..,f..t
o.u v.u..r. -
without any change.
Met a funer, rroccss,m-all the inha-
itants of a ncighboihood had gone to the
.I'll fiT. ... Ika ..t r.f lii:Tfha.v
imuiitu a.j ..v. ..v ... e b ,
uu every cj
rf v . -
ine rjproaveu. now mueu iuore iLait-ress-
ine rjproaveu.
. .... , , .,.
c aeau . .u tue country.
iuu m w.o va.j ui iuwu .
j Judging from the number who s.ll.there
I is double the nuantity of Liuuur drank in
I a - a
tbo .South part of the county-Suy j. r
that is to be thin in the North part. A
nnmber of these dealers, however, frankly
at.Im Ann.-... e 1 1 . n W rai.s itllapr Ifl ItlA
j itac business-but they w:il m.ufull, ,
1 at.un.l avat .ml enl. Trip tn la Vlninia ap I'riiLl- I
r
"71 -""". "
tiaiu
It inm.i, nel ne Minn li.it. late
traincn may im extermiuateu.
'.nt
. - .
and Tii:ariiv hnrria'd. vtt wtt saw nr.
, - --- w "
"corn-plauters eieept men auu women,
' "corn-plautew'
boys aud girls.
This having the gir's
'...La?ll Ja.L
'. aetrL-ini. in thai n.l.l 14 ail.aa arlvr.Titnll thi
. - ' - "o" "
Dutch boys have over the ian.ees It
! aa. t . V p. am O (ar. -vim I . m n I- f, K a. Il ! 1 d
Vl ' - " -
' hnaa timltv r.nid in ciiVRriniT un rum. it a
I"-J r- -r -
, o - 1
1 rrtnnrrt inmrttr tlitsiP jntif ittfn ,m. mt nrf
" "l? :", " . , ' .
lannrtiliint t!i:at. tiira.hpavv h.irilina arp trvu
- j -- ;
c"cn. ,00-';n? uPpa fwwiinn.
- " I
ahni.Mpra l ha liprmxn mpn nit nut ant.
a . . . ...
i ficiectly study to promote the comfort acJ
(.. i j .i
, "t." " 6 ; .
. iiivninn rni art irra nw w nui a- nri aaf v nin'n.irj
I lslersi wives, uauguu-j., uireu gins.
! ttis triP we saw a woman pat middle a;
i l;f'inS of grain into a wagon, whi
'c 1
W " - ' ? her stood bj the
tp a wL'P 'a his hand which oujrht
to hlve bcen oni out uPon L" latk- ll
notli6 Meojumo. to see men resting
UU1! tu.l auvt aaaaiaJg a pui'.r.r( fiaaaic auc
female members of the family are strug
gling with labor unsuited to their strength
and beyond the range of household duties.
i And then these same women will impose
aM f South.
' rri., r.n. ..i..;a. cini-,n ...,:..!. ft.,,.,.
! """"'"f l""." , ' ,
! the wtficrn blrnrfard, of t har.'e.'ton, b.
C., frankly reveals s;m, of the day-dream,
, wLkh j; ,lt up tUe future ,,f suutiiern ul-
j tras. It is a remarkable development and
! will wsll renay perusal. I
a .
"A svnrral runture in aturope WOUia
force upon ns the undisputed sway of the
Gulf of Mexico aud the West Indie, with
all their rich aud mighty productions,
Guided by our genius and enterprise, anew
world would rise there, as it did before un -
dcr the genius of Columbus. Wiih Cuba
-.J Ca It..: VI ....1 al
, .. , .. . . , . .,
ductions of tha tropica, aud, with them, the
at it 3 i .i . .: .
commerce of the world, and, ir..A ih.it, the
power of the world. Our true poli-y is to
I I . Ti 'I .1
look toBrazil as the next great slave power,
,.' .
and as the government that is to direct or
license the development of the country
drained by "the Amazon. Instead of court -
ine England, we should look to Brazil aud
th; Wt Indies. The time wilt cm. when
a tr-j cf commerce and a-Unc with Br
1 1 1 . 1 ..... 1 . . 1. .....l...l I a. a a aa . ' 1 T H't. .4 a k
I : searched I.'f tue nuaiet in Tiio, ine tau
VOLUMK XI NO. 8.
Wholi Number, 528.
" g'" - ' - -
of Mco and to border countr.es, together
h .Ands, and th convene, of
.i. . t . l . i i m
win Fe a.r.a
.. . i r 1 1 . T.
..... v
1. -a r , ...... ... . . h ii m a aaaa . h.na.l
" "
o r .
r j
7
!a:tinK tocher ia stnet harmony and W-
nrt i :nnsi(ifrini7 our nst resuuroea si.&
. 1
-a --- i "- --
no" repion oi me iropics. it e can duiui j
fc a
defend this upon the most enlarged system
of philanthropy. It ia far better fur the
wi!d races of Africa themselves. Look at
the 3,OuO,000 ia the United States who
have had the blessings, not only of civili
zation but of Christianity. Can any man
pretend to say that tuey would have been
better off in the barbarian state of their
native wtiuerBCtfy- luauuuiKiuciawi
native wiiuernes, ; and has not the attempt
w Bupprs by totXt tLi3 emigration
in.
c(tt;!j the horrors of the 'middle pas..
pasaag'
Las Casas, ia
1519, was first U advise Spain to import
i ' . . . . . '
. v r.-
; tue poor luuiau-", woo, trout uietr jrtruuuat-
natur-', were totally ununited to beat
the labor of slavery. Experience hi
slio-a that this schema was founded in
wise, and Christian rbilautlirf r,y. Mil
.,. ,
m.-.W. f.f CfirnniPraV. anl th T..-.r .f
'
i tho. rat traductions wbieh ar to rain
' -
,
I m.ghty Uop.cal reg.ons our own
i hemisphere. If it be mercy to give the
, r,ow,c se"0D3 01
T. - ; . a. . .1
. P,Jor " """ "J ' PP
I nP the j" t0 thf Pr AiricMir Tta
a tetnon is aa enunept'v suifivf tn.jlTii
tas iue 6taer is to tue white race. in
ere
is as much philanthropy in one as the other.
We have been too long governed by psalm
sinjiri" school masters truin the 3ortb. It
is time to think for ourselves. The full?
; coEineneed in our own governtnnt uniting
j wlth Gret Britain to declare slave impor-
. . . . .
tlitlOn timCV
"l'U" l'7'
. aatai. a aaa . vaaaaa. waa J
U H!U SCU. iUUlUE UU'ilT IUU iSH Ut UUUU9a
o o
, anJ it U as well defined by those laws as
: -
UliOU3 Itf atltVUIIit tt IU...C tuab UllaaVV
I '
! wbich is not so, under the law of nations,
a
i cIar it burg,ary or ari00i or
: JJ J
:eke
And we haTc
e ever s.nec, ry a j .tnt
iritaiu on the coast of
, ly treaty or actual possession if the one
I
! government or the oth.r.
) c
And the sta'es-
man who closes bis eyes to these results,
o i 1 1 . . . it : .a. .l. .
0
uaa uu. a Terr nuiait a. if w .ue irrr.b
questions and interests that are loominfi
! op in
the future. In a few years, tbcra
; wiU he no investment for the two hnadre-l
millions, in the annual increase of gold on
a large scale, so profitable and so oece vy,
as the development and cultivation of the
tropical regions now slumbering in rank
and wild luxuriance. If the slavebolding
race in these States are true to thens:lvea
they h.ve a great destiny before them."
A Relic op Patkiotism General
Wooster, to whose memcry a mobnment
has recently been erected in Panbury,
' Mass., was killed at R'ulgefieM by an En-
still remained in the body
' .t. cjnin
. " r -" -
, .. ,ars afterwards, as we learn from the New
; Javen ; 1S3 wL,n ;t
j t.
; VuSht ,0 Kru0Ta "f te'.
I uc p t
of his infcrin int tn ua-
. "at,"
'inir near tue place wuere i
' aSi Ta Pd he g"
have b.-en, soou the skull and larger bones
j"' were foun. Then two bunches
t of mit,e,i "ue WCre ' , j
: thc.epaulctts of the dead. Next wa found
J a pertioa "f a ph.me, and final. a lump
!Of CV WSS l-TOStU V,
tossed up, which on being
! kpnlen fct the laborer, was discovered to
pn)ra "-J , ..
pmt-iia tea leaaen runei. ibw.-
eon. am". tl..TemainB.
elusive proof of the idtnt.ty of the remains.
..... It. a. 1 V nf FflarTlflln
; 1 w en.... w.a "" "e
: ruanufucture frnm its extraordinary sue
. Thj0 t.u03e nd hy
, m;,,.. 01C little ihe soldier who
; tt,e fatat messcngrv of death imagined
,hst it weald be held t- the gnze of a great
course, and hocored J Am-m
o, wrenty-Mven yar. a