. ---i i inii in niaMiim illrfi fftiwtt v (Mil 'i-- "U ;t- !" The whole art of Government consists in the art of being honest. Jefferson. '1 VOL. 11. STRO UDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1851. No. 25. I. i.i. Published Iy Theodore Scliocli. TPrT-oTloirars per annum in advanceTwo dollars thL w?r Tivo dollars and a half. Those who receive their trie jciw, r;nr.rtr steiire drivers omnlovcd bvlhA nronrip- ...t. nnimn oi inc sailor, ' I . T1 1 rr-y Advertisements not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) will he inserted three weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five cents tor every suusltjucih uimmiuh. mucniirge lor oneanu three insertions tne same, nuerai -uiscouiu made to yearly advertisers. , , , ., ,. BAU letters addressed to the Editor must be post-paid Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and orna menial Type, we arc prepared to execute every description of in J Cards, Circulars Bill Heads, IVoies Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER V BLANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on leasonablc terms AT THE OFFICE OF THE Jefferson iau Republican. The Toothache. BY D. BATES. Yes, yes it aches that rotten tooth; I'll try no longer to conceal it; My. face alone would tell the truth, And heavens knows full well I feel it. 1 Gods, how it' tingles ! Don't you laugh I'd just as soon laugh at the dead ; ' Each' nerve is now a telegraph, ? And sends despatches through my head. What did you say 1 Cold water salt Hop-poultice, with some opiate drugged 3 O yes, I "know it is my fault ; f should have had the puncture plugged. Here, shut that door confound the noisi bV Yelp, yelp!" Well, keep from under feet: It'scems as though those devilish hoys Are mocking me, out in the street. I'd rather have all sorts of ills With fever burn, or ague shake ; . . Take physic, drugs and patent pills, ' Than have this prince of ills toothache. Afraid to have it pulled, you say ! A trifle, and I'd pull your nose : ' . Can get a better ! Where, 1 pray ! "They make them at Jones, White & Co's" I'll not endure this longer, no: T Jf there's a dentist to be had .Tp, ease me of this bitter woe, I'll have it out I will I'm mad ! Is Mr.- th a dentist in 1 JJut something seems tQ lull the pain; Ierhaps,rsir,,you can save.it yet.. Too long neglected must come out; t"' ' A mere unhealthy, useless shell ; 1 'Twill hurt a little there's no doubt, JBut .when 'tis over you'll be well." :r ' Well, pull it easy,. Doctor, do 'Twill not hurt much, I think you said ; The gum ) why you are cutting through ! Oh! ugh! you re pulling oft my head ! itijLM .Dear reader, one word let me sar, . . You've often, doubtles, been humbugged, But iiever worse, if you delay " ' ; ' To liave your crumbling teetli well plugged. Hreakiit; Old Parson B a Bat Habit. -, who presided over a little flock in one of the back towns of the State of M ' , was, without any exception, the most ec centric divine w ever linew. His eccentricities : were carried as far in the pulpit as out of it. An instance we will relate. Among his church members Avas one who inva riably made a practice of leaving the church ere the parson was two thirds through his sermon. . I'liis was practiced so long, that after a while it became a matter of course, and no one, save the divine, seemed to take notice of it. And he at length notified Brother P. that such a thing must, he felt assured, be needless, but P. said that at that hour his family needed his services at home, and he must do it; neverthless on leaving church he always took a round-about course, which by . .some mysterious means, always brouglit him in - close proximity with the village tavern which he - would enter, and thereby hangs a tale.' Parson B. ascertained from some source that'P's object in leaving church was to obtain a 4 dram,' . and he determined to stop his leading and disturb ing the congregation in future, if such a thing was possible. r. The next Sabbath Brother P. left liis seat at the v .usual time and started for .the dopr, when Parson -.B.-exclaimed, . , r ... - -Brother4 Pi' - -r -P.'ori being thus addressed, stopped short and t) gazed towards the pulpit. .V 'Brother; P. continued the parson 'there is no meed of-your leaving church at .this time. As I passed the tavern thismorhing I made arrange- jjments with the landlord to keep your toddy hot till church Was out.' V The-jEurprise and moxtiS cation of the Brother ftcan' hardly be imagined He shrank back to his 'seat and for the rest of the dav was the 'observed of all observers.' IJe did't" -visit the. tavern af jf tfer church, -neither did liejagain leav&.cuur&h, ere the services were concluded. ! T . T T 1 J f T..' nu, m vaermany, is said to have discovered a me- Utiod of making deatlier out of certain refuse animal - substance: A manufactory has been established by him near Viena. A remarkable feature of the' nanprs 1'V i o - - - - - t.fr Mil be charged 37 1-2 cents, per year, extra. No papers discontinued until all ancarages are paid, except . ,pipce68attat,one stage, ,the -substance is in ai g;state.for nuiaity:aiiQ mayinqn., cat?t,.tmto boots, shoes, &c. ThisiSiBL emgnlardificocrv.; -J, VJ The Discoveries of the last Century. There has been no period since the commence ment of the world, in which so many important discoveries, tending to the benefit of mankind, were the globe and the internal fires of the earth. He made as in the last half century. Some of the said that for a space extending over one third of most wonderful results of human intellect have ( the earth a volcanic chain could be traced from been witnessed in the last fifty years. Some of, Mount Hecla in Iceland, over Scandinavia, though the grandest conceptions of genious have been per- x Great Britian, on the courses of the Rhine and fected. It is remarkable how the mind of the : Ithome, through the Mediterranean Islands, the world has run into scientific investigation, and j southern part of Asia, along the islands of Sumat what achievements it has affected in that short pe- ra and Java and up to the Northwestern part of riod. Before the year 1800, there was not a sin- the continet of America, and thence to the volca gle steamboat in existence, and the application of nic Islands of Lower California and Mexico, and steam to machinery was unknown. Fulton launch- along the coast of South America to the Antarctic cd the first steamboat in 1807. Now there are ' zone, as last discovered by Captain Wilkes. three thousand steamboats traversing the waters of Capt. W., it was said, had just received an ele America, and the time saved, in travel is equal to gant Gold Medal from the British Government, as seventy per cent The rivers of ever- country in an acknowledgement that he was the true discov- the world, nearly, are traversed by steamboats. In 1800, there was not a single railroad in the world. In the United States alone there are now 8,797 miles of railroad, costing 286,000,000 to build about 22,000 miles of railroad in England and America. The locomotive will now travel in as many hours, a distance which, in 1800, required ed. It was argued, too, that the countries of Swe as many days to effect. In 1800, it took two weeks den and Norway were gradually rising, in conse- to convey intelligence between Philadelphia and New Orleans; now it can be accomplished, in min- utes through the electric telegraph, which only had its beginning in 1843. Voltaism was discov- ered in March, 1800. The electro magnet in 1821. Electrotyping was discovered only a few years aero. Hoe's printinsr press, capable of printitinsr ' 1 O flflft nnnioc n n linnr tc n vnrv meruit 1 Jcr-t'rrv but of a most important character. Gas lisrht was unknown in 1800 ; now even' city and town of any pretences are lighted with it, and we have the an- esc exiremuy mr me want, oi mcir naiurai eiemeiu. it possible for any European to sit in one of them nouncementofa still greater discovery by which In some cases, they managed to preserve life ly , for any length of time without getting bruised or light, heat, and motive power may be all produced : PlunSinff themselves to a considerable depth in the j eyen having bones broken guch abslute want of from water with scarcely any cost. Daguerre mud at the bottom of their ponds, and there re- J luxury renders the acquisition of fortunes of little communicated to the world his "beautiful invention gaining until a copious shower of rain relieves moment Thc habitual carelessness of the Turk in 1839. Gun cotton and chloroform are discov- their wants- This expedient, though not always ( has often been accountcd for by his bel5ef in fatal. eries but of a few years old. Astronomy has added successful, nevertheless suffices to keep certain ism But I do not think an v philosophical doctrine a number of new planets to the solar system. Ag- races from becoming extinct. Other species, have wiH make man indifferent "to the loss or the ac ricultural chemistry has enlarged the domain 0f been furnished by their Creator with the instinct quisition or rii5hee, if his own temper does not in knowledge in that important branch of scientific and the Powcr when so circumstanced, of desert-, fluence him in that dircction The truth j research, and mechanics have increased the facili- ties for production, and the means of accomplish ing an amount of labor which far transcends the abilitv of united manuel effort to accomplish. The trinmnhs nchmvnd in this Inst hrP.nr.h of discovnrv and invention are enough to work the last half cen- turv as that which has most contributed to au. ment personel comforts, enlarge the enjoyments, and add to the blessings of man. We may look for still greater discoveries, for the intellect of man is awake, exploring every mine of knowledge, and searching for useful information in every depart-1 ment-of art and industry. Groaning and Crying A French surgeon has just published a treatise on the good effects on the nervous system of dies are shcated in very strong plates, which, it is of operations, one originally engraved block is made groaning and crying, when a person is hi pain. conjectured, aid them in their progress like those to suffice for an almost endless number of engra According to his observation, those patients who under the bodies of serpents, which partially per- vings. The mode in which the writing, the em give way to their naturral feelings recover more form the office of feet. The Indians affirm that blems, and the ornaments are combined in a bank speedily from hurts and operations, than others , they are furnished with an interior supply of water note, is so planned as to render forgery difficult, who think it manly to restrain any utterance of ( sufficient for their journey an assertion which j The numbering is a remarkible process, as now anguish. He cites an instance of a man whose seems to be confirmed by the fact that their bodies, ' performed. Four wheels, each divided by ten pulse being at one hundred and twenty-six, redu- when taken from the water, even if wiped dry with notches, leaving a facet between each pair, en ced it to sixty in the space of two hours, by crying a cloth, instantly become moist again. Mr. Camp-' graved with consecutive numbers from 1 to 0, are and bawling. Hypochondrical subjects, he says, bell, a friend of Dr. Hancock, and a resident of placed on the shaft; a portion of their breadth being cannot do better than groan all night and cry all . Essequibo, once met with a flock of these animals turned down about one half of their depth, having day a very comfortable doctrine for them, but not for their friends and neighbors. The theory, however, is more ancient than the French surgeon; j -tuI it W W n nrPtf v aonnrnl holinf. in nil . ' that people, would not groan and cry unless nature ; had ordained them to do so, and they found some . use or satisfaction in it. (KrA .machine recently invented, is said to be ; in operation in Albany, which, it, is thought, will soon produce a revolution in all stationary motive ior wheel, and tank for water, and with a pint of wa-, tdr, and with a pint of steam does as much work as. other engines do with a barrel. Natural Barometer. The spider, says an eminent naturalist, is al most universally regarded with disgust rence; yet, after all, it is one of the ing, if not tlie most useful of the Since the days of Robert Bruce, it has been cele- brated as a model of perseverance, while in indus- these monsters ; and on one. occasion, a negro d.is- and aro printed with different inks, the one with 1 individual when a man, there is no room at all to try and ingenuity, it lias no rival among insects coved a crockodile seven feet long, asleep, among ' d the other invisibie ink. Both the inks question. That he will have abundance of resour- ,. c . . . some bushes at the foot of a tree near the banks ot i i Pj will admit as little doubt What else he has But the most extraordinary fact m the natural his- Th - steiirh.il v crnnt nn mil in- nre de ble or removeable by chemical means; and ces, uu aumit asuuie aouot. wnat eibe ne nas L - i ui me nve J-ne negro stealthily crept up, aim m-, j grown to be, we shall probably not live to see.-- tory of this insect, is the remarkable presentment flicted a deep wound on the side of the reptile's , the usual engraving of a bank-note is printed on he sequel somebody eise must write. Perhaps it appears to have of an approaching change in tlie deck. The crocodile with one sweep of his tail paper so prepared. The rationale of the suggc- j the Coroner will do it, perhaps the State's attorney, weather. Barometers, at best, only foretell the knocked the negro oft" his legs; but he rose instant-, tion Js thistiiat whatever means a forger might We hope that neither will ; but that his own ind'e state of the weather for about twenty-four hours, iS take to alter, by chemical' agency, the letters or j pendent germ of character may be ; epancled tilla and they are frequently very fallible guides, par- ble tail. Then AdanPson Ieaped on the crocodiles nglires, or to transfer them by lithographic or an- , STf ttcularly when they point to settled fair. But we back, and kept it down while the negro drew out ' astic processes, the state of the paper would betray may be sure that the weather will be fine twelve tne knife which he. had left sticking in the wound bnn . forie Would remove some part of the de or fourteen days when the spider makes the prin-' and f.ut off his antagonist's head Another author , - j and fail t0 transfer it in the .,, , r. mentions one of the garrison of Fort St. Louis who. D,o" . w ' , ,s . cipai threads ot its web very long, lhis msect wnicn is one oi the most economical animals, does and always with success; till at last he was so ter not commence a work, rpnuirino- such a rreat ribly wounded in one of those combats, that he length of threads, which it draws out of its body, . ,nuat le been kiUed outright if s01 of hfecom r i u P4. i. , . ,. . rades had not come to the rescue. rrascr. uiuusb owite vi ch aimospnere indicates wiui ceruiuii.y uiau wo fjca.i, xpenaitura win not ue i made in yain. Let the weather be ever so bad, vc may conclude with certainty that it will soon change-to settled fair when we see the spider re pair the damages which his web has received. It is obvious how important this infalliable indication, of.thcjstate of the weather, must be in many in-. stances, particularly tto the agriculturajistAIcMJf-, paper Paragraph. -oU tit , rfc?s i-ii Mi The Fires of the Xlarth. In a lecture delivered in New York the other evening, Prof. Stillman treated of the structure of ( erer of a disputed continent, from which he saw the volcanic fires bursting from a land of ice and snow, and pouring its lava down the eternal bar- ries of the frozen mountains. ! The hot Springs and Artesian wells were also. offered as proofs of the truth of the theory advanc- quence of this internal commotion, and not that the waters of the Baltic had fallen, as some had argued. Examples were cited, in the Southern part of Italy where the land had once fallen and risen again in consequence of the "volcanic action of the earth. i Val!iilJ2 FlSll - ln ver)' Ury seasons, the fish inhabiting small Pondb or Pools of water are reduced to the great - mS eir nauve ponas, aim oi tuning ier m land in search of new homes, (711. 1 T 1 ' Knn 01 eeis DUt giv an atuuum of a sPecies offish called b thc Indlans thc Flathead 1 f . t-.-i TV TT 1- -"ssar, wnicn, wnen mu pouis wuerem uiujr uau-, all-v reside are dep"ved of water, march in droves by night in quest of other ponds, from which that necessary eminent hub hul uuuh uvaporaiuu. fish Srow t0 about a foot in lenSth- A stron b- ny arm edSed uPon the lower extremity like a saw, Proiects from the breast of the fish ncar thc Pect0 ral fin' of which forms the first ra Thls arm tbe anmas use s a kmd 0I fot pushing them- selves forward by means of their tail, which is very i j. i i i i 'Pi., elastic. In this way they will travel over the land as fast as a man can leisurely walk, Their bo- so numerous, that his Indian attendants were en abled to fill several baskets with them, TIlC CrOCity Off Alligators. . P,0 ra enous and ferocious dispositions there " - ' conducted .a horse to drink was fiercely attactcd by an enormous one, and if the latter had not sudden- V sprung away, both man and horse, would have been m danger of their live3- Acosta rccords the bravery of an Indian father, whose little son had at plunged wiU, his VTCY inu ulc aepiub oi ini river. i.jie iauitr, a The father, a stromr and skilful swimmer, armed with a short 0w, i-" . i, ii and by a succession of vigorous stabs in the belly, compelled the monster to make for the bank, where it deposited the child half dead. Mr. Waterton is sword, leaped in after the reptile, dived under it, neighborhood of the river Senegal boldly attack used frequently to amuse himself with, these dnels, ! Ctr- It should be irondrallv known, that a small quantity of vinegar will" generally destroy immedi ately any insect that may find its way into the stomach, and a little salad oil will kill any insect that may enter the ear.' ' An Exchange p.ap.er:.say3 the. girls in some,.paj-ts pfthis State are so hard up ibr. husban.ds,!4.hatLtPy( sometimes ta kc up with printers and. lawyers. and abhor- not tne oniy naer wno has oestriden one or these ta intended to obviate the liabilitv to forgery. I with an imnersonalitv. He appears to mos interest- "vr xmcuyuaii. xic-niu mtuu un anigaiur. umii- . -tU twn ,lns;mis. one ' friend of his verv much as a seeing child - II I II II." A. I I A A I . - ' w " -I - J . insect tribe.- : u ;,nii w,lr. .ml th nther verv irreirulan - reflection of hunseii m a ponu or water- r enn wttnncaari om ohni-oH in nn anrrn irnmant trit i n. ouimyo V"" ..-v.. 0 , i , UUU UIUUUUIIU. J.11U IlUiriTUUa, IL UU JUUlb, ill UW . o'-"llls":,'-'lK"J o""'J Turkish Customs. The ways used by the Turks in saddling, brid ling and shoeing their horses, as well as in arrang- ing the loads on the backs of their beasts, are quite ludicrous, from their oddity and inconvenience. Their cloaks and habiliments are of their coarsest woollen, made in the roughest way. Notwithstand ing their frequent bathing, they have no distinct idea of cleanliness, as their habits and manners are quite in opposition with it. They eat with their fingers, drink out of a common cup, blow their no- scs with their fingers, never undress at night, scl- dom change their linen and garments, never sweep their rooms, nor wash their plates, dishes or culi nary utensils, and deem it not in the least shame- ful or disgusting to be devoured by the most horri - ble vermin, such as bugs, fleas, lice, &c. The white necks and arms of the Turkish ladies are constantly bestrewed with black and red spots, which are the consequence of such unbecoming company; and to mention a trifling circumstance, I will add, that the custom of ironing washed linen is quite unknown in tlie East. I had some ironing utensils in my house, which were looked at by the natives as either instruments of torture or as chir urgical implements. It is true, it would require many pounds' weight of iron and a Herculean wrist to stretch out, and make even, the coarse, rough linen which they wear. The furniture of a Turk ish house consists of a divan, or ottoman, around the room and adjacent to the walls, and some bits of carpet irregularly strewn upon the wooden floor. These ottomans serve for beds, for seats, and for tables, as they are often encumbered with the scan ty utensils of Turkish housewifery. Turkish car- . ria are thc same as BomQ centuric3 nor - Turk Js as careless about making. his fortune, as .. , W V. ...u... leaving his entire property to his children, as little short of inconceivable among them. manufacturing Bank Notes. A block of thick plate steel is softened on the . u : i .- a. j uin,vi wu, mu uuvwu ib ui.grnvuu uu uiissoueneu , surface the block is hardened by a careful process ( after the engraving, the device is transferred from I the hardened block to the convex surface of a small , sofl steel roller' b)' inteil5C Pressure ; the roller is hardened, and the device is transferred from it to any number of softened steel plates ; these plates are hardened after the transfer, and are then in a state to be printed from. By this beautifnl train a boss or collar between every two. Upon these bosses, and filling up the spacs, rest latches ; and over each wheel is a pall, the width of the firs I being equal to that of the unit wheel, and the breath , others equalling that of thc wheel and latch . Thc Is are drivcn by a crank . by each reVolu rtion of which thc first wheel is moved through a ! nnnnifrtftlln.tnnt.hnf!tRmitirofiirRiimfcrencn. , I When thc figure 0 is reached, the latch of the se- conJ whee, is (leprcsse(lj und the whcel moves for. ' ward one division, making the tens. The same ' ,.,, f,i ,,.:t, ynm-rA ttm ntimr it'V.roio . Mld &as any anlout orumbors may be rogi3tere(l, , aimply increasing, the number of wheels in pro - portion. Machines or this, kind are extensively r t 1 t- 1 I ? -nlontpd in the Bank of England with, of course, . fPted in the JJank ot J,n land , n itn, or course inking apparatus to apply to the types. A patent was taken out in 1844 for a mode of printing bank- the two designs are engraved on rfr i tl, dinerent plates, other, ' My wife tells the truth three times a day- re mark-ea a juuuou ulu C"UH(W ulc oa...c UU.B mg a very mischievous glance at her. --; ' Before rising in the morning she says 0 dear, I must get up, but I don't want to. '? After breakfast, she adds " Well, I suppose I must go to work, but I don't want to," and she croes to bed saving ! : ' " There, I have been passing all the, day, and hkyn't'dBiie anything." ' " ' ' ; 'TofcbprtheVa man's 'good looks in jlie.'pres.enco.of your fc-, . ! What vc Eat. Mr Soyer, the celebrated cook, has made out the following list, as the average consumption of a j " gentleman who dines well," for twenty years. It is almost enough to make a man think seriously of. living on the Graham principle : " By closely calculating, he would be surround ed and gazed at by the following number of quad- t rupeds, birds, fishes, etc.; By no less than 30 ox- en, 200 sheep, 100 calves,200 lambs, 50 pigs; in j poultry, 1200 fowls, 300 turkeys, 150 geese, 400 ducklings, 263 pigeons; 1400 partridges, pheasants, and grouse ; 600 woodcocks and snipes : 600 wild ducks, widgeon and teal; 450 plovers, ruffes, reeves; 800 quails, ortolans, and dotterels, and a few guil- ! lemots and other foreign birds ; also, 500 hares and rabbits, 40 deer, 120 Guinea fowl, 10 peacocks, and 360 wild fowl. In the way of fish, 120 tur- bot, 140 salmon, 120 cod, 260 trout, 400 mackeral, 300 whitings, 800 sole and slips, 400 flounders, 400 red mullets, 200 eels, 150 haddock, 400 her rings, 5000 smelts, and some hundred thousands of those delicious silvery whitebait, besides a few hundred species of fresh-water fishes. In shell-fish 20 turtle, 30,000 oysters, 1500 lobsters or crabs, 300,000 prawns, shrimps, sardines, and ancho vies ! ! !" Fruit, vegetables, spices, eggs and grain, would " bring up the rear" in the following or der ; " In the way of fruit, about 500 lbs. of grapes, 360 lbs. of pine-apple, 600 peaches, 1400 appricots, 240 melons, some hundred thousand plums, green gages, apples, pears, and some millions of cherries, strawberries, raspberries, currants, mulberries, and an abundance of other small fruit, viz., walnuts, chestnuts, dry figs and plums. In vegetables of all kinds, 5475 pounds weight, and about 2434 5 pounds of butter, 646 pounds of cheese, 21,000 eggs, 800 do. plovers. Of bread, four and a half tons, half a ton of salt and pepper, ncar two and a half tons of sugar, etc." Reliance on Oneself for Happiness. There is no want of self esteem among us, yet there is little power of self entertainment. Almost all appear fonder of anybody's company than their own. One's own society, indeed, to a great many, is no company at all. They can never be more completely abandoned than to be left to themselves. One is as uneasy on being left alone, as if he had seen a ghost of somebody, when he is only in troduced to a communion with his own spirit. How is this strange phenomenon to be accounted for 1 From herding together, more especially in cities, from youth to age. In this way, a person becomes much better acquainted with others than himself, and grows dependent on them for the means of happiness. Thus educated, he leans on some one for support; when that is taken away, he falls or withers. What is needed for happiness, as well as usefulness, is more self reliance, and ability to stand alone. A habit of doing this gives efficiency to talent, and happiness to life. Where people stand thick together, this cannot be expect ed. A tree growing in a pasture by itself strikes its roots deep, sends up a strong stem, throws out sturdy branches on every side. Place it in a dense forest and it dwindles almost to a vine. There is a boy five years of age in the next garden. He runs and rides and talks and sings there all the day long, without a soul to help him to be happy. Nobody is ever seen near him, but some elderly members of the family, and they but rarely. Yet t ' ces have grown to be immense. Another child would probably be an obstacle in his way at first. No real comrade could equal the reflections of him self with which he is forever holding dialogues. He is not one of your sedate, quiet boys but he is as great a talker as a thinker. Such a boy can never want amusement ; he is an entertainment to himself ; at once author, actor and audience com bined ; and all his exhibitions arc certain to be crowned with unanimous applause. We cannot learn that he ever had a playmate ; but latterly , enjoyed sueh at blind child it 1 a flt$e ffjrj on tie otier sjde 0f a ten-feet fence.- possess, lie converses without seems, wiui TTl 1 1 . Jl.. When he does so, he is seen looking-upwards to ine 1 sky, as it he supposed the voice ot his cnim com- w ft oyer top of the i -nt hP lnnk white he is talking as if conversing rcjrard this does the neither I surprised at his absence nor wondering at his pres- t Thn t such a bov so trained, will become an hood. Newark Advcrtser. In Favor with the Wojieav A drunken man falling asleep by the road-side, was discovred by a pig, who commenced rooting his face. 4 Who's kissino- me now V said he,, 'bee what it is to be . fayor with the women ;i -Pete, my darling i . tiir& ci k What, inarm 1' , v fc. , Where is your father !' ,r Don't know, marm: 'Spect he's gonepntoPthe htickelbarry pasture arter the sheep; cbzlseecHhe . Widder- mg Lteen minutes ldder- Higgms gom that way with herbasket fif- ago. r One of-.'em. A sign in South Bpston is said to read as follows : ,1'eaners Tuned uud Tort Iloar.'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers