1 1 I'll 1 11 II IB fl IB IB 9 IB H L IB IB- V " f&BS&Mm' , - Bl i ' iW1 The Whole ?art op Government consists in- the ar'OF" beIro honest. Jefferson. -.'jH STKG UDSBURGr, MONROE. COUNTY, PA.i THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1848. rQL 9. No: ro. ' - T V published by 'rihdadbve Sciiocli. .rc Ttco dollars per annuiri in ndyrc5 Two dollais TERMS-TWO UOiiar F beflie fcnd of ud a quae.r' 'VlVioVt and a half. Tuosfe who icceiTe thfcir the e CT. , airier or stage drivers employee oy me propne "SCSSS 37 1-2 cenis, per ybW, fcxtra. r, will be cnargt . . arrearages are paid, except litc.S??m?5f Soterecding one square (sixteen lines) .nr! II SIJUIH""- '.VT. inserted three weeks for one dollar, ana iwenyrme 'I1 ro cvcSsuequent insertion. .T.e charge for one and ree insertions Lie sane. A UDerai uucoi-ih iuau- Cdvertisc'S- . lho v.litormnstbe nost-naid. jrjAllieiic,s,,u 1 - L.nnr a scners.l assortment of 'aige, elejant. plain and oina U" nenlal Type, we we preoaied lo execute eVerj ucscnptjo"" is I an k licccipiN, 1IIST1CES. LEGAL AND OTHER PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on'reysonrible terms,1 AT THE OFFICE OF THE Jcffei-soutan Ificpnblican. An Excellent I.ltcr. We take cieat pleasure in laying before ouf readers the following letter from John Coope, 2sq., who was an active and influential suppor ter of Polk and Dallas in 1844. The letter, it will be perceived, is in reply to an invitation to ad- dress the meeting which was held on the 2d mst. at the Chinese Museum, Philadelphia. Danville, August 29, 1848. Gtntlemcn : have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the 26th inst., invit ing me to address you on the 2d of September next, at the Chinese Museum. To say that a compliment emanating from a source at once so intelligent and respectable, is merited by any claims I possess to consideration so distinguished, would be an excess of vanity of which it is not in my nature to be. guilty. Eut of this be as sured, that if motives for exertion in a cause, on the success of which so much of ihe happiness and prosperity of the population and the Union, and of our State in particular, depends,' youf let ter is calculated to stimulate services, which how ever deficient they may be in talent and power, are not, neither shall they be lacking in zeal and devotion, i have ever been a Democratic repub lican, and, so far as my knowledge extended, dtf- voted to our republican institutions, when cairiec out n theory -and practice according to then true politician, whose whole life has illustrated the intent and racking, as prescribed and construed chancier of " The Vicar of Bray," and whose by the grealtaen who framed them with almost j appetite for war is so great, that if elected he superhuman wisdom and patriotism. But when I Would consider it our manifest destiny to quarrel clearly discern that the weakness and wickedness j with all creation who said at Cleveland," that of the present incumbent of the presidential chair lhe conduct of this administration should, if he has seized perhaps the only aristocratic feature in was elected;direct and guide himself and1 his ad our admirable constitution, to wit: the qualified ministration. Let the people understand that by negative of the executive," so as to prevent the official speculations, peculations,, and an adroit- i- I'll ll 1 . T.I- . . . passage oi any out wnicn aoes not square wmi , that abortion of ignorance and slavish submission to the one man power, called the Baltimore plat form when 1 see it more than intimated that nd law ought to lake effect unless it can obtain a" vote of two-thirds of both houses of Congress when 1 see that executive patronage and influence has been incalculably multiplied by James IC Polk's seizing upon, by a gross perversion of the powers delegated to the Executive by 'the Consti tution, the only means in his power to nurse and foster his own meretricious aggrandizement, to wit: the propulsion of measures which had a di rect tendency to plunge" us into a war, iirst with threat Britain, and inevitably with Mexicp; to ve lo him, although otherwise insignificant and jinbecile, a command of the purse and the sword, a.id not only a participation in the law-making power, but, moreover, such a controlling influ ence in ordinary legislation as to reduce to a sha dow both houses of Congress, by his sic volo, sic juebo, his stel pro rdlione Voluntas. 1 feel myself Mund by the ;cals of common honesty, in so lar s lies in my power, to .remedy an evil brought on the country in ,1844, by giving our support to one who has proved himself to be so totally unworthy and unfit to hold any office of honor or trust -among the citizens of a free republic'. Independ ent of the honor and dignity which tbef office of President of the United States conferred on them, nur earlier presidents were, and would have ranked among the great and good the world oyer, in any sge, in any country, under all and every circum stances ; but nature decreed James K. Polk to be narjow-minded, of contracted "views, tniilignarft, jealous ana envius' ant f capacity more suited to the meriol'an har-room, or a ward meeting, liian to rule the estiuies oftwenty millions of -free- Ben. I write in pt rnaP miiU XU4 .-nMueireu language indicative of excitement, but I deeply feel what 1 say. AJr. Polk z:'11 ln P&seni situa tion bv W nnri nnnonln nable .treachery, by a trick, a prevarication, a flatter.5" jn ,!0"ubl1e sLeUi!C' with those who most honorable believed that ; jf elected he would have taken the sastand -which General Taylor has assumed In his "Allison let- ci, io let tne people oe iainy rep. Congress and to permit them to carry out 1'te P-rin c-iple of self-government, .by .non-intercour '- w'lu legislation on matters of dfomestic .policy, u 'i?58 in cases of encroachment by the "Legislature on the constitutional powers and rights of the execV- tive; lor m all other case's 6f unconstitutional laws. of palpably corrupt enactments, the courts and ballot-boxes furnished araple -and abundant remedies. I cannot, in the compass' :of a letter like this, go into .detail; or an eaminatjon of the twenty instances-of flagrant usurpauou of the pre sent executive, by placing hrmself in a situation j as the invader, spoliator and subjugator of a jbrj reign country, and that' country a sfster republic, j who had copied their' institutions' from a pattern which wo are in a fair"' way o spoil. A stateof j things never contemplated by'.thoses whoiframedj; our republican forfiv.0f-gpye.rnmeut, .apdj, there-' 4bre, they never" wooded sinigfrclau constitution suited to cucunistance3r the occur rence of which never darkened their imagina tions. The Oregon controversy was equally ludicrous and disgraceful. The Mexican war was uncalled for, improvident, unconstitutional, unwise and un necessary. But here let tab say that the victories achieved by Scott and Taylor have conferred im perishable renown to ouf national flari : and this is tne only redeeming point iti a series of admin istrative acts on the part, of Mr. Polk rid his ca binet, resulting in an immense debt, ail arrest of industrial pursuits, a retrogression in agriculture, commerce and manufactures, which a half cen tury of peace and prosperity will not suffice to atone for ; besides a deBOlatibn of domestic' hap piness, by an effusion of American blood, which ought to weigh heavy on the consciences of those who caused it. I live, as you know, in an iron manufacturing district, and have daily and hourly to,witness the destruction of business the wide spread desolation occasioned by the ruinous and devastating policy of this administration. T)an ville is comparatively depopulated ; the families of hundreds of our laborers and operatives are in a state of uttet destitution ! Instead of the exhi lerating sounds and brilliant fires of our furnaces, foundries and forges, silence pervades our streets and neighborhood. Ouf stores are deserted. Our agriculturalists can no 'longer find in Danville or its vicinity a market for their horticultural or agri cultural products. Our houses, built by industri ous men, who hoped tb pay for them by their fu ture economy and exertions, are deserted, and those who hoped to own them will lose them by in ability to discharge their remaining liabilities from want of employment, becasioned by the ruinous tariff of 184G Our Opponents are endeavoring to exclude the tariff question aS one of the issues to be tried in this campaign. Our endeavors ought, therefore, to be most strenuously directed to this all-abSorbing question in this state ; in their speeches they treat it as a subject on which honest differences of opinion may be entertained without incurring denunciation for a departure fiom progressive, retrogressive, aggressive Loco foco party ties' and obligations. It is for us then to show conclusively that Lewis Cass is chained by his own pledges and the platform of Baltimore to the Juggernaut car of free trade. The masses want information to separate them from the bor ders of cringing," creeping, crawling, plodding knaves and party tobls office-holders, office-seekers, minions of the renumeratihg power, and sy cophants and parasites of place, those who "crook the pregnant hinges of the knee that thrift may follow fawning." Let this be done, and the peo ple are upright s'nd honest. Let us show them in their true colors. Lewis Cass, an old hacknied ness ,n fabricating charges for official services; he has amassed immense wealth. That, if elect ed, he will so construe hfs own powers as to'giv them illimitable extent 7 and that four years' Tnbre of continued usurpations will convert us from' a' representative republic, to an elective despotism', and himself into an eledfive king, lfke that of Po land ; who however, unlike ours, ha'd no unqiaii' fied veto on acts, of legislation, but every separate' member of the Polish Diet had the? power oi veto-ing,-anj and all bills therein preferred. ( - Let us contrast this selfish', arrogant in d fa rub ber liKe candidate, with the plain, modest conduct arid go6d sound sense and judgment of ZachV- ry Tavlory Buena Yistas1 hero', who a 'plain re publican hirfrself, with a thorough under'stahdihg of -ihe nature of the government he may be cabled on to ad minister, .and of the people who select him an their juler, will enable us by restoring our pristine ,purity and, pntrjotism, to sing, " Hail Co lurnbia happy Land, uner whose rule Truth wiil prevail, delusion be past, , And wisdom and, virtue will triumph aVlast. ,1 have intruded on you a long and unimportant letter, and inasmuch as vou had honored me by your invitation, 1 was desirous ifet you should, in some measure, know him whom you were thus disposed to encourage, and now fet me say. that in this quarler the friends of freedom, of equal fights, equal laws, the friends of the country's prosperity and happiness will leav no stone un tqrncd to1 break Tiiose fancy formed chains that enslave the . free mind," and ,to emancipate our fellow citizens from . the demon and delusion of sophistry and falsehood. I am compelled, in conclusion, to decline your j.nyiiation, my engagement,' comomeo wmi me .siokness which afflicts somef of my family at pre senf.'compel the to forego the gratification which an: opportunity such as you have' presented would hav'enafforded to me. With unbounded' respect, Yours', &c., JOHN COOPE& Competition in Travel I i off, A letter from, New York says '? What a glori opportunity the people of this city have at the present time of visitin'g the country. The expen ses of doing so are literally ridthihg. By one line of boats you can reach Albahy for fifty cents, by n6th'er'for twenty-five cents; "by 'another for j'vyjelve and a half cents, a'nd'in another Ifne, if you condescend to extend your patrpjiage to it, the Captain.? will land you all jight and light in the papital of the Empire State, for .the very small ;sum, of six arid a quarter cents, and while you are paying :that demand, they will take off their hats,' thank you in. the most polite manner,, telLyou that there arp plenty offwai,ters. on board, ,f.hat,.suppor willbe ready, aeveri wuhoutacl From the Bosthn Atlas. Senf. 1st. Daniei Webster for General Taylor. Agreeable 10 notice given, a-Whig meeting was held yealorday afternoon, at Matlifield, on a piece of land belonging to Mr. Webster, near ihe old Gov. Winalow house. At the place where the speakifig was to be, a stage was erected, suitable id accommodate forty or fifty persons. jSarlyinhe affernodn earriges were seen, filled with men and women, bending their Way from all quarters to the plane assigned fur the meeting. Al three o'clock, (he lime appointed for the orator, to speak,) there were from dtie thousand' 10 fifteen hundred people present. - At tlie appointed iime, M,r. Web'sier, accompan ied by Hon. Hiiam Ketchum, of N. York, lion. George Ashmun, of Springfield, Hon. A.rieman Hale, of Bridge water, and several. others, whom we did not know appeared upon ihe stand, .and were most heaitly welcomed by ihe people. Mr. Webster sdon after commenced hlakmg his speech, a' Yerbatum report of which we shall publish on Monday. He spoke about an hour and a half in a manner iruly Websieriati. We never heard him when he was more interesting, or when he appeared 10 feel more fully the im portance of the question now at issue before the people of the Union. His speech was devoted exclusively 16 the considerat(bh of ihe Presi dential question. He avowed h'jrriseif fully and unequivocally in favor of electing General Tay lor. He said he believed him to be ah honest man one whose conduct had ever been marked by high principles. He said he was a mail of linle pretension a modest, Unassuming man. He had been made a candidate for lhe Presi dency, a year before lhe Philadelphia Conven tion mel. He was fairly nominated at ihe Con vention. He believed him to be a true Whig. Our opponents said General Taylor was a Whig, and they tried to disgrace him ana the other Whig General, Scott, for ft, by putting a Democratic civilian in command over them.4 He did not believe thai the slavery question had any thing to do whh his nomination. The convention believed him to be a Whig ; they thought him lo be the man who would, under existing circumstances, be ihe easiest to elect," and therefore they nominated him. Mr. Web ster spoke in this si rain for some time, vindi cating' the Whigs of the Convention, and speak ing ftighly of ihe character of Gen. Taylor. He denied the correctness of that part of the Buffalo "platform" which said that the nomina tion of Gen. Taylor was induced by a desire oh the part of the Whigs to extend slave ter ritory. Nor'were the Whigs of the Souih'io fre held accountable for the nomfnaiion, wheth er it be good or bad.' The free States Had some six'ty majority in inat Convention, ah'd could have nominated whomsoever they pleased. Mi1. Webster went on to' say, , that in his judgment, ihe question of whoshall be our.next President lay between Gen'.' Cass anil Greri. Taylor. One of them will be elected. , WhoV thehy should Whigs vote for ? We all cohld not nave our personal- preferences gratified. The skies' were 1161 about to fall', so that we c6ud caich laiksv It was idel to' talk abcrut t.hiVtf candidates". We had enough' of tHem1 in '4. Every vote given for Birney, in tha'i elec tion, was half a vole for Pollt and the ahexafiqn of Texas. Arid every vote given this year by Wk'lgs,for Van Buren, or any oilier third can didate1, was frahichllij half a vole fdi Caid. 4 He'Hail warned lhe people against this ifiird party folly iff '44, and he would' again1' warn them of its consequences. He ?poke of the Buffalo platform'. He said w"hat was good in it,' was what the Whigs had always advocated, and' Van Buret) and' fiis' friendsf al'waya had gone" a!gainsi,'tand What there was new itr it ws unsound.' He hVd' no confidence (in Van' Buren. If he was to ex press confi'dence in Van Biiren's "Free Soil principles," ft would appear ludicrous; for he hadbpposed every thirig that Ibok'ed like frr?o soil' all his fife ; and li'e hacf no doubt', from the knowledge fie had of th'e man, that were' they together, Van Buren" would laugh in his face when the "free dll" question was trd'med ; and were we alone',A s'ajd' Mr. Webster, we should probably both laugh dt the folly that' had made Mr. Van Buren an anti-slavery candidate for 'President. , M'r.'Webster then werft on, at sfrAe length, lrV.ahow up Mr. Van Buren's conduct. He had afreUdy been ihe supple lool of the South, at'nd the' fci'dtfr a'nd abeiior of Slavery. He did more, said Mr. Webster, to deff'at John Quincy Adanif, and elect Geff. Jackson, than any ien men in the country. He was the oul'rfud cen tre of the opposition 10 Mr. Adams ne spke of his conduct while Secretary of Staled his opposition to slave abolition in Cuba. He'tvas the only President wfio ever, in'adVa'nce, i"hrea tened to veto a' bill, if Congres's shoulif pass such a one, to abolish slavery hi lhe FJisfVicl of Columfna. He refered 10 his casting vote to rifle the mails of ahti'-slavvery papers, fre said that no one ever exercised a more control ling influence over his friends than Vun Buren ; and his friends all went with?him. , .:. He was, and so were hi8ffciends,insfavor of annexing'Texas.' Sooiherh' -Whigs. in both houses of CbhresVr 'vdtdvAin1VUtBil.in; riie Van Buren nten. those who now r, fdr purposes d'f private y out for "free soil," we P,ue or revenge, cry ere ine verv men who were lhe most v bciferous for I'exas. Mr. VVebsier had hd conffderice iti any of them. Talk abpuV'-diugh-facea," why, said Mr. Websier, the Van Bureri men tn. Congress h;id nin duly douh face's, but Ihey had dough hearts and dough souls.' They were all dough" He" said that-there were gentleman, Whigs,' at ihti Buffalo Convention, whom he respecter highly; but he thought it would have been proper, before ihey Had taken up Van. Buren, 10 have required of him "fruits meet for repeniance."t He then proceeded to &pedk Of Cass, (He held lii in 10 be the most dangerous man thai could have been put in nomination. He was opposed to the treaty of Washingibri. He wa fdr the whole of Oregon ; and ihe matter would never have been settled by peaceful negotiation, if he could have had his way.. He was for fcontinumg the Mexican war, and he could have stopped it at any moment he chose to. He is all war. Now, said Mr. Webster, we are to chose.be iween a man like Cass and one like Gen! Tay lor. One or the oihef is to be elected and no one else. It is Taylof or Cass. Gen. Taylor has beet fairly nomitfe'ted by a Whig Conven tion. m He is ar Whig. ;lf I believed hfm, (said Mr. W.)' to be in fatvor of war, of of emending slavery, 1 should have opposed his elnctioit. believe him to hi irifabor of neither. That is my opinion." Mr. Webster proceeded 10 spealt o'p various topics connected with the Presidency, but which we have neither lime nor room 16 refer to-day. Ho concluded in an eloquent peroration. After lie concluded he introduced to the meeting Mr. Ketchum, who was making a strong, manly argument in favor of Gen. Tay lor," .wnen we left the grourid to ride 33 miles to Boston. The meeting was" an excellent one, in. every sense of the wordi and we can assute ouf friends at. home and abroad, ,ihat ihe speech made yes terday at Marshfield, will cheer the hekn of every true Whig. It is the great speech of ike campaign', and will strengthen tfc'e ca'ute of Gen. Taylor everywhere. expect to hear next a response, from iho great Siaiesmen, of Kentuky, Henry Clay,. It is due to the cause and his own hpnor. We therefore confidently fely on Mr. Cja'y ( giving his une WebaW--one who has never fal'tefed, when duty id; Whig printfpfes and" lhe goo'ddf lhe country riq'uife'd his suppor'i.' Greii TCa wind Black. Tea'. - . There are two'oi" three opinions common' in the ilnited States about gWn tea, w'hinh1 are great mistakes: One is, that' the Chinese ihemselves do not use green tea f this is a misValie, But they don't use sVchgreen tea as is used" in England and America. Tfiey rn6rst commonly pick out' the fine and dried parts, arid separate them, calling one gunpowder, and another hyson, and another hyson skin. The second mistake is that the green tea' is made by roasting it on copper plates, which turns it green and gives" it its sharp arid astrfrigent quali ties'. All the tea" made ' about Zeeto'ng (a good rMny thousand pounds) is fried in iron pans. But if the Chinese do not maike green tea on co'pper pans they do what is a gteat deal worse They mix Pussian blue with what is sold to for eignerswhich gives it the greenish blue color it so often has", and something of its a's'tringent quail tVes. Prussian blue is poison ; and the only rea son why gfeeri tea' does those who use it at ho'm'S so little harm is that it requires but a shial'l quan tity to' color a large ambuWt of the tea. But still, small the quafnlfty is1 ft does harrii j and the people' not accustomed to the use of gfeen tea, can hardly sleep after drfnkmg it. You may almost always tell' whether there is" any Prussian blue in t'h6'tekVDdrawfng off tne inftisibri' ahd' placing ft iri1 a white cup. II the infti'sion is perfectly clear, and of a slightly saffron green color", f it is all right; but if it" has af dirty appearance," as" if there was' coloring matter suspended' in it',' tltfen there is some of th6 Prussiaii blue or1 sorWet'hihg else l',ere 1 The Chhiese put' the Prussian' bltie, and such stuffs in the' tea, as foreigner's" haVe fakena'Uotion thai green tea' is rt6f green tea unless" it' is very green. People jri'EngiEmd and Ameri'ca'dn't like green t'da, such as1 the Chinese useari'd won't buy it. Well, the Chi'riese are very dcc'Ommodating peopleyand' they laugh In their big sleeves, and say, " Since foreigners' want very green tea, we'll' give jt to them, but they must pay us a little' m'br for maktngdt $p green?" f Little green' tea' g6es to the Utiined .StatbsiUhat.has ndtVmbre or les Prus sian blue or somelotKefldrUfi-added- to' iv it a hiffh color.' j.IU) lla t . . V .. Texas into the Union. Now, ihen, that Mr. Webster has boldly en- terea tne lists lor uen, xayiwr, wucre is ui Whiff fn the Union who will hes'itatej We quivocal and open aonesion to ine nonnnauon of GerY. Taylor. At any rate,'ihe thank? of the. Whiss' of th'6 whole TJn'ion are due to Daniel n iUki ried Folks new Lclicr Writer. The Philadelphia Sunday Despatch thinks the new laiv to secure to married women their rights to property is destined to revolutionize the hvme neal relations ill that State. , The old-fashioned idea that the interests of wedded couple? should be one and indivisible will sodn become absolete. In. the State of New York, as" well as Pennsylva nia, ihe Legislature has trietl its liantl at doing the agreeable in the way of guarding the rights of the weaker sex .A Women's Cdnvention wasrecentf ly held at Waterloo, New Ybrk, which put forth a solemn declaratinri of independence, much iti the phra'seolog of that rif 'f 6 arid ciairn'ed to exer cise the right of suffrage, legislate, and be the e quals of men in all political and civil matters.-- This country will soon be as famous for its con 1- ventions of both sexes and all shades of color as it is fot aggressive wars and universal annexation' But we are keeping the reader from seeing sam-r pies of" Married .Folk's' New Letter Writer,"- is sued under the new law. Here they are : Letter 1. From a husband to his wife, ashing 'for a cool fifty. ' " Fro'C the Store, Market st. 1 1-2 o'clock. "Dear,Jane: l'trt confoundedly ' shqrt to-day,1 having Jenkins's ndte to take up, rind aWdeuced ly afraid of a protest. Please send me a check for $50 by bearer. I expect money from Muddle's draft next week, and will hen refund" it. 1 wait. ... . " Your dearest, CHARLES.wg Letter 2. From, a wife', who knows her rights, to' a delinquent husband. ' At Home Quarter before two.' " DeXb Charles : I am astonished that y?u should come to me for moriev, after the manner yo'u have acted. I lent you ten dollars last,wee,kr which you were to return next day. I did hot hear a word from you for three days afterwards Be sides that, 1 gave you fifty cents yesterday to get tobacco, which you promised to repay at even ing I. have not seen it y et. I should judge fro-ii these facts that you are 4 hard up,"7 and not to be. trustedi If you are in failing circumstances, I've no disposition to lose by you. If you are muchjn want of money, I'll shave your note with a good endorser at three per cent, a month. If you like this proposition,' send up the note with an endorse ment say Snooks's ; I suppose he'll endorse Sot joi ; you're always together; Let it be done right away, for I've got my barikk-book ready, and .want to make a deposit.' . "Yours, Jane." Letter 3. The husband's reply. " From t'he Store 2 o'clock. " Dear Jane : This is no time for jesting. Jf T do not get the $50 to-day I shall be ruined ; my credit will' be gonej'and every thing brought to the hamrner. The very house will be sold over our heads. Please send me the money immediately. This is a' poor fulfilrnent of the love yb'u pledged at! the alter. . ( "Yours, . Charles." Letter 4. The Wife's answer. " At Home Quarter past twoV "Dear Charles: As a friend, I am heartily sorry to heat of your troubles. However, it's noth ing more than I expected. If you do fail, my ad vice to you is to bea'r up under your sorrows; there is nothing like a stout heart to buoy one up in af fliction. If the house is sold by the sheriff, I have one consolation, that I can remove to' my own. In' regard to your unkind insinuation about the love which I pledged at the alter, I beg. to remind you . t - .that I promised to love you according to law, and the law allows' me to manage my own property in rny own way. However, as you can't get an en dorser, I won't be. hard upon' you Send me your notes for $50 at sixty days and 6100 worth of silks as collateral, and I'll send you. the $50. Hurry hom'er dinner's waiting. Yours Jane." Letter S. From a " responsible" wife to a tailor." " Saturday, May 27. ,: Mr. Shears: Sir: The bearer of this is my husband, who wants tw'b'pair of spring pantaloons. Please let him nave f'nem,-' atfrf charge' the same; to mV account'.' , . Svsis SttfW' N. BV ril'riot pay higher1 than $12 for tH'e two. ff you allow him. to exceed that amount' you do so' on yotiV own risk. f " S.?' Wliirlwind in' Virsiivia. A few days since" a whirlwind passed through the meadow at the White Sulphur Springs too up a stack of hay, and carried it pearly to fhe top of the mountain, some distance from' the Springs. What is riibst remarkable in the affafr is, that the hay was not separated, but continued together, arid in that condition.' it Was deposhVd oiV the mountain. Whiskey a Cure foV Peisou. Ah Austrian journal says',' that an Irishman suc ceeded in curing his'-wife, whose log.had beehibit-; ten by a venomous" serpent, through the" applied ion of a whisfeey bottle mouth downward; to ' the wound. The whiskey gradually became darker, and the discoloration rouud- the' bite' dimihislfo, until at last, the "whole of the poison appearedtb havVbeen abiorbsd'by the kpirttv" u 1 it IT ' III tMmm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers