- . - - IF II 15 P 1 1 It li I C1A THE WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN THE ART OF BEING HONESTJEFFERSON STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. THURSDAY, JUNeIT VOL. 11. " No. 38. Published by Theodore .ffcleocli. TERMS-Two dollars per annnum u. Td vancc-Ttvo t Sl cents, per year, extra. , ., wOTSHiSir . trxpi ai ine opuon oi c . ID Advertisements not cxcccsins : - - teen lines) will be inserted mrce weens nnri t.vontx-.firr. cents fcr every subsequent insertion. The Charge for one and three instrtions the same. A liberal discount made to yearly ndveruscrs. IT? All letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid. JOB PKlSTIJiG. Uaring'a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, we are prepared to execute cverv description of cards. CircuHrs. Dill Heads. Notes, Blank Receipts, SedSutfLcd o'SSS terms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE -Jcffcronniaii licpublicaw. The Pare Spot in the Heart. BY G. V. It. JAMLS. There is within the heart of man Corrupt as it may be A touch of that which Eden knew Ere Eve profaned the tree. A love of guileless innocence Forever lost, yet dear, Which makes the first words of a child All music to his car. One time, in a fair sunny land, ; And years long, long ago A land of love, and tale, and song, " "v I saw a scene of woe. - ? I stood within four noisome. 'walls t That formed a felon's cell; I listened to his dark cold words, I marked his visage fell. Kind I bespoke him; for I ne'er Could trample on a worm, And fain would raise each flower again That's broken by the storm. After a sort, his bosom warmed; He spoke of his past life; ' J And many an awful deed he own'd; Told talcs of bloody strife. He was a man without remorse, Who feared not God nor fiend ; Pleasure, not happiness, he'd found, Companions, but no friend. And there he was, next day to die For his worst deed of all, He'd murdered one who trusted him, 1 For pittance bare and small. .; , Yet no companion he betray 'd, No hope, no fear, no grief: lie seemed a man without a soul, And hard beyond relief. Yet as we talk'd, the sounds of life Cauie upward from the street, And merry laughs, and joyous tones, And children's voices sweet. At that last sound, a pleasant smile ; Passed o'er his iron face, Which seemed to give each haggard line A 6trangc redeeming grace. "I love to hear a child's dear tongue," That man of horrors 6aid: "It brings back days when I was young And- by my mother play'd. "And gather'd flowers and foolish things, And chased the butterfly, And little thought I thus should live Still less, I thus should die." He fell into a fit of thought, His face grew cold and grey, No further converse would be hear, I turned and went my way. Galls on iSorsc. More than twenty years ago, when, our large ferry boats were propelled by horse tar on their heads, marshalled by overseers, laWyer, or anything else for it is the book power, and the horses, by moving round in a j who direct their movements with a stick. ' 0f books to Mahomcdans must be passed o circle, were exceedingly liable to be galled i They pour down the contents on the top of vcr. So also the way and manner of hear by the collar, I learned from the ferrymen the , the uprising work. A mason plumps a stone j jng and deciding suits of the various courts use of alum and whiskey. They bathed the j into it with his hands, trowls rarely being in ' 0f law, must have the go by at present. A neck and back, wherever the harness rubbed, ; requisition in ordinary undertakings. Wo-' courbash a whip from the hide of the hippo with whiskey into which pounded alum had '. men are seen mixing mortar with their hands tamus is the chief instrument for settling been put until no more could be dissolved. ! in sufficient quantity to keep the workmen difficulties between contending parties. The When a gall had occured, constant bathing j liberally supplied. One straight street had head of the police in Alexandria equivalent would secure the continued use of the horse, j been commenced in Ciaro before Mahommed to our city marshal carries one of them and aotuly heal the wound while in service. Ali's death, no one knows when it will be ' mounted with silver, the emblem of his au 1 resorted to this remedy, carrying it with me finished. Alexandria was re-laid out by some ! thority. A blow from it is comprenended by when I journeyed, and have contimied its use master-spirit, and from its excellent harbor, 1 an Arab. They listen to no proposition, nor with undiminished approval, for more than j fine commercial advantages, and the only sea- i are they restrained from evil acts by any oth twenty years. I apply no other remedy. 'port worth having in Egypt, I imagine it will j er punishment. When Christianity takes the When a horse has been put out for the win- , t i , .. , j ter.and has not been used, Ins breast and back will be tender. A single hour's use of, saddle or cholar, in a hot day, wjll then scald the breast so as to produce serious injury. My uniform practice, therefore, has been, for a week before beginning to use the harness, to harden the breast and back by bathing them resnilarlv two nr thro tl No in- O y - " -.w. viiiiv.0 a. uuj. iiu in i .... jury has then resulted from the application of the colar. And .when a bad gull has actual ly occurod, a frequent And persevering use of this.xeraDdy ias secured. the constant use of the animal, md :heapd the .wound while, in cpnUnuedtseryice. . -Jlurpl'Jfyio Yorjicr. A man must ask his wife's leave to thrive, j Three Months in EgypS. ON THE WAY fuoji ALEXANDRIA TO BAYROOT. Fcbruary 14' 1851-Ono paper only, is Egypt-at Cairo, in Arabic,- ' which appears m a small sheet, monthly, at ' four dollars a year, which every one in the ) j. j - omnlovmnnt nr tlm pnc!1n , v-j - """b iv for. A sunrcon of the hosoital informed me that although charged for it, a copy rarely came to hand, and when one did arrive, he could not read a word of it. It is a her ald in praise of the powers that be ; with scraps of orders for one party and another. The amount of wheat, beans, peas and flaxseed raised in Egypt is truly amazing. i Mounds of thcsG S"3 arc t0 be sccn m the open air near uouiac, uiat must contain ran- without a further interruption. Alexandria, lions of bushels. Rain never falls to injure j js walled, but the streets within are not con ; it, however long exposed. At Alexandria, trolled by separate gates. A few soldiers are boats are continually arriving from up the J p0sted in different parts of Cairo, when the Nile, laden m bulk with breadstuff, which is . daylight disappears; but there is no patrol as conveyed into a granary of vast size by pour- hn Alexandria, in which watchmen areas ing it through the roof. Prom there it is con- , thick as grasshoppers. In the centre of the vcyed in cars, moveing on a railway track to Consular square one of them cries out once the end of the wharf, stretching out into the( m i,aif an hour at the top of his voice asig harbor. By raising a valve, they are empt- nai for an the rest a terrible noise follows icd into scows, to be carried into vessels lying ! simultaneously over the whole length and near, which float it principally to England, j breath of the city. These two cities, the Seed is furnished the farmer for sowing the f,rst with a presumed population of over 200, land every inch of which is the property of 000, and the latter 100,000, have neiter May the government. He must pay for the use of: orSj Boards of Aldermen, Common Council, a the soil, not what he could voluntarily, but debt or any of the municipal machinery with the price fixed by the Pasha. When the crop ' which we arc famiijar. a military officer in is harvested, the rent, the seed and the inter-! command of a fortress is the medium through est whatever it may be, or the value of it ! wh;ch communication is held with a home de while in the service of the cultivator, must ' partment near the Pasha, from whence yes be handed over to a receiving officer; what- or no comes. a police Court takes coirniz- ever remains he is farther compelled to sell to the Pasha at his price, and not his own. rogUCS; but the crimes are comparatively few, Thus every kernel runs into the magazine at 1 bearing no sort of relation to many which ap Alexandria. About 30 cents is allowed him j pertain to Christian settlements. for every twelve bushels transportation mon-. ey. AVhcn weighed and measured, laborers admiration of public fountains, and they eith obtaia not far from 10 to 30 cents a day for cr wilfully or jgnorantly misrepresent them, carrying it in bags from the canal to the All the water in Egypt raised above the lev storehouse. All in all, the government pays ' ei 0fthe ile, is in an eartnen pot on the somewhere near three dollars for eight bush-' r;m 0f a wheel, or by a pole and bucket els of wheat for which it receives of the for- us elevated, there are throughs in mosks, eign merchant an advance that brings 1 prof- rareiv any where else, to which it is conduct it without precedent anywhere else. There , cd imless the sakias near the gardens are being no part ot the year when the news are uui hi uuiiiij; w.v- minuet u.uuu... 0I ne sums into laiiKs within very many ot Egypt under a generous system of encour-; the mosks, with which two small tubes com agement, and improved agricultural instru- ' mimicate that jut through the wall. These ment5, as in the days of her pristine glory, ' contrivances are the gift of pious Mahome might feed" the whole world. ! dans, who looked-for favors in return from the Grand Cairo, the capital so called to dis- propiet, for such charities on earth, tinguish it from Old Cairo, or Fastat, which j r0 statistics of the population are collect or some centuries was the capital, is.made cd by the government consequently nothing up of a singular mass of odd-looking and more, is certainiy kn0Wn of the resources of the oddly contrived half stone, brick and mud country or of individuals. Parents, ordinari houscs. Some rather fine edifices are met' yf arc jgnorant 0f their own ages, and their with, however, but they are novelties. The children inherit a 'dislike to all records. If streets rarely. exceed five feet in width. In the taxes are forthcoming which have been the thickest of the town, dwellings by jut- aS3essed, very well, if not the delinquent is ting-out stories as they ascend, touch the top, ' flogged till the money is paid. An English "almost to the exclusion of the sun's rays." ; gentleman related the case of a fellow who Whatever is new there, is fabricated out of i,ad been repeatedly punished and released, something old. Thus a new house is made ( because his inability was declared over and out of stone, brick and mortar, that may ! over nga jnj till the collectors were on the have figured a hundred times before. Wher-!wh0le convicted of his hopeless poverty. ever there has been a town in Egypt, hov-l p,1mnr. i,n.OTrr i,rmtP,i it nhnnt tw i, ever remote the epoch of its existence, there ! is from one to several mounds of great size ' was again subjected to a cruel beating as varying from 10 to 150 feet in height, which ' 0"n alI forrner occasions, he plead inability appear to be wholly formed of broken bricks, After allowing breathing time a few minutes, pieces of dressed and other kinds of stone, tjle minions of despotism resumed the lash, fragments of pillars, cornices and smashed ! givjng hm a i,undred stripes. In rising from red earthen vessels. Whoever wishes to e- J the ocjr) a Bma g0Id coin fell from his rect an edifice, has only to tap one of those mouth, where it had been concealed. The anomalous piles of rubbish to procure materi-' tormentors instantly applied another hundred, als. Thus the wall of a modern stable may and he was told to go. With a chuckle of have been walls in the palace of Menee, the ' seif satisfaction he was afterward overheard first King; next in Shishak's and by and by j telling his wife they did not get all the mon they will be liberated from their present ig- ev tiH they were obliged to give him all those noble durance to take a new position, in a stripes. luture cycle. 'Hundreds ot small boys and girls are employed in carrying trays of mor- again become the capital, as it once was to nn-innt fr.:m .i,;i, ; the neglect of Cairo, nhich is in a waning old age. Still, Cairo is a curiosity from be- in the focus of manners and customs which nre the antioodes of Christian communities. It is a queer sight to see mighty multituds of, . .... I men dressed in some respects so nearly like the females, that were it not for their turbans, it wouid be difficult to determine to which sex they belonged. Through the 3cy the stranger finds enough that is strange and .new to him, to make the time pass off pleasantly; but night comes with a dreariness. At the nd,ofvery little dark alley, or street or lane, there is" a heavy wooden gate to cutoff all communication with' the next, so that the in- Inbitants ar? absolutely prisoners till morn-J A gentleman apolgy for not being- at home to receive his guests at the hour appointed for them to re-assemble; as he had been to procure a permit for us to pass . inrougn me aoors on tne way to our lodgings, . I 1 .11 . l . at tne conclusion or tne entertainment: but being unsuccessful, the table was abandoned at the latest moment, and away we rushed for fear of being locked in. The gate closed ; luckily however the servant who ran before us with a lanthron, declared a doctor must pass through immediately, which the Janitor probably supposed it meant a physician was wanted in a sudden emerrrencv. nushed the , bolt, and we fortunately reached our quarters ' ance of the citjzens while it takes care of Some of the guide books speak in terms of reckoned as fountains. Water is poured out could meet the demand, and consequently he j An account of the manner of conducting schools, studying- the koran to become a priest, I Piace or the taitn which was established uy violence, the cruelties that accompany the .. j. jugti will be fcsirihu. man, but not before. Domestic comfort is unknown to the Egyp tians. There is no family circle of affection- I . f M .1 1 . t 1". fle Iau,iers' mothers, Drainer ami eisters-no hnnnv linnie wlinre nrn r.onf.entmf.en the com- forts and refinements of a Christian family n j - ' lSi.cn and women never visit together, eat at the same table, or associate in a way to improve or create respect for each other. A wife in high life or low, is purchased like any commodity, in the bazaar. She neither knows or sees her husband till she becomes his slave; nor does he know anything of her features, disposition or qualifications beyond the description ofsome one interested to some extent in conducting.a negotiation, till he is clothed with authority to' drown her in ai red sack, or send her out of the door in disgrace, ing, let what may happen, with whom I dined made an without creating a surprise. The abuse of iiit yuwer is so common as to excite no aston ishment whatever. In conversation with a noble specimen of physical develoDcmftnt. n man of about six and thirty, from Ramlah, in 1 tticonuL'. unom l met ill a caravan nn thn T)1' t t . -1 ' j..f , , . desert, who asked a variety of questions about America,-he observed that he had divorced four wives, and had recently taken four new u.,tD. xiu uuu uniy six cnuuren among them J. v. s. TV IZITZ:. Written for South Carolina paper, but sui ted to most meridians. My Deah Sm I have just returned from n tnni tlii-nrrh fi,; cj j a tour through this State, and proceed to lurnisn you with an account of my labors and! theirsuccess. I have been irone for thmn moriChs, and assure you, in all sincerity that ter u'ith tlie Pattrons of the other publications tlon m society are regarded as small things, ir runJ-sa,isf,cd. yra team mZZA&ZT " goodnCESof w jn uuuuiuu uuu Buvuinceu owing subscribers, as you will recollect. I have'monlhs- I have expended in that period two Lp,. w called upon one 'hundred and four of them ! hundrcd anfl ten dollars, travelling, and my vojonr Cliildrona Wowiipapcr. and have the honor of payino- over to your ' c1ommtistns atTt eightr-Uv?1d.1- ,A begm,n t0 rf d bcco"ies delht; , t, , , , J larsand forty-five cents. Iam very willing ; ed with a newspaper, because he reads of order three dollars and twelve and one-half to do my share towards the propagation of , names and things which arc very familiar, and cents, being the amount to which you are en- news, but more than that no reasonable man j jie wjjj maj.e r 1 - titled. I return you the list, numbered 1 to ! co,,ld ask- T,ie business don't exactly suit J p ess accorInff1y- n-r i , o , Ime. I can't stand it A newspaper one year is worth a quarter's 117, and now give you the reply of each. '"- iwiubianun. L,.wi; i-n j at i t tt i . I Please accept mv resignation and strike schooling to a child, and every falher must io. 1-Is a minister. He says in the first my name from your list of agents. I admire ! consider that substantial information is con place, he never got one half of the numbers, ; you paper very much myself, but it would be ! nected whh advancement. Tho mnthpr of u. ut; uccoruing to tne account oi tne rost- ' iuct-1 iuuumy cuit ui a uuiiuum uwi woum r ., , - e. , mnstor. nn,l i tl,o nvt nl., vnn, ' come fully up to the requirements of every-! lam,1i' be,nS onc of lts hcads , " . ' 1 'J .J , . , body. One wants independence in an editor more immediate charge of column was too scurrilous. He can t think JL.another don't want anv. One wants all herself be instrml. A mi of aiding to sustain a paper that advertises horse races and gander pullings. Uesdes, he knows from the tone of your editorials that you drink and paying you would only be the -. .uuiusu. , u, uiB8BU. gei thoughtless young men have spent their eve nel. He wonders at your impudence in sen-1 All kinds of abuse I have to hear, too. I n:nTt. :n t,.orn nr. , . t , ding him his bill after publishing the account ' I ould not mind it.so much if they only ?"f a e n or shop, who ought to nrtt fi i , i, i ft i i i cursed yu and your paper, but they curse me i have been reading. How many parents who of the great prize fight between left-handed too , Windier, rascal? villian, bloodsucker, j never spent twenty dollars for books for their Smoke and Battering Bill. He wants noth- Those are some of thnnnmRathnv think nron--fninnip ivrml,l J,n,.o i.. . I ing to do with you never wants to hear from,' you acrain. - ataiu- i No. 2 Is in jail for debt. no has notscen a half dollar for a year. Says he would pay with the utmost cheerfulness, if he only had the money, but had to borrow a shirt to put ! on last Sunday. Admires your paper won derfully, and hopes you will continue sending it to him. He wishes you to take a bold stand in favor of the abolition of imprisonment for debt, as he thinks it would be a very popu- lar move with gentlemen in his situation. If you send him any more papers he hopes you a great love for studies, but without means will see that the postage is paid, as otherwise , of pursuing thom. Hn was poor and with hc will be unable to enioy your lucubrations. ' out connections. Still he studied on, living Sends his best respects. No. 3 Is a young Doctor. Says your pa- per is beneath the notice of a gentleman. Would'nt ffive a for a cart load. Says you inserted an article reflecting on the pro- fession. Only wishes he could catch you ing with some of them in the great square of here he would make you smell . Is go- ' Upsala, prating away an hour of leisure, when ing to persuade every body that takes your ' the attention of the young men became ar paner to stop it. Cus'd your bill and says ' rested by a very young and elegant lady, who you may collect it in the best way you can. at the side of an elerly onc, walked slowly money is due and unpaid to the Common No. 4 Is an old maid. Says you are al- over the place. It was the daughter of the i wealth of Pennsylvania," and which act has ways taking a fling at single ladies of an un-' Governor of Upland, residing in the city, and ! been extended from time to time by supple certain age. Would'nt pay you if she was ' the lady, with her was her governess. She ! mentary laws, which expire on thefrst day of rolling in wealth, and you had'nt cash enough was generally known for her beauty and for' December next; aftcr which time no abatement to buy a crust of bread. Sent all the papers her goodness and gentleness of character, and j can be made of any interest which may have she had back a month ago, and says now that ' was looked upon with great admiration by j accrued upon the original purchase money. It she has sent them back, she don't owe you ' the students. As the young men now stood ; will therefore be highly important to those in- J i . . .-1. i . Jtl Ci.- anything. Says she is even with you and intends to keep so till the day of judgment. Asked me not to forget to tell you that you are no gentleman, or you would'nt undertake to slander a large and respectable class of the female population of the country. No. 5 Is a gambler a sporting gentle man. Says he got completely cleaned out last week at the races. Could'nt accommo - date his grandmother with a half a dime, if &c ,jsjot at 1" j,e answered; "but I think . out four-fifths of its weight m water. Wa she was starving. Likes your paper tolera- , , . . -f r , i i u ter, therefore, is the first necessary of life. bly-would like it better if you published sbc w0uld kuf .me' Just lf l a6ked , ! And this accounts for the healthiest of those more races and would occasionally giv give an account of a cock-fight. Liked the descrip tion of the prize fight amazingly it redeem ed a multitude of your faults. Hopes you won't think hard of him for not paying you now but he has got a prospect of soon hay - ing some loose change, as he is aftcr a rich young green-horn who arrived here last week. Will pay your bill out of the pluckings ho 0-Is an old drunkard. Has nt got anything and never expects to have. Oath- ered up all the papers he had and sold them for a half a pint of rum, to the doggery keep - cr to wrap groceries in. Wished you would send him a pile, as they cost him no post- age as his lirother-in-law being postmaster and permitting him to take out his papers for nothing Winked at me when I presented your bill, and enquired if I was'nt a distant relatiorf'to the man that butted the bull off No. 7-Is a magistrate. Swore he never owed you a cent, and told me I was alow rascal for trying to swindle him in such a barefaced manner. Advised me to make tracks in little less than no time, or he would get out a warrant against mu uh u uuihihuh cheat, and have me sent to prison. Took his advice. Is by all odds the meanest man I have e seen yet. Never go near mm again i ar- .. . swear. pitjura khSSS Thinks he has seen considerable squinting towards the side he is opposed. Meant to have told you a year ago to stop his paper hnt forrrot it Tells you to do so now, and SSTou egettfnfoff losing any more by him. Believes you to be a rascal, and is too honorable to have any- thing to do with you, as it might compromise fiCljlcd to kiss so. He recvived him with a the State ia mortgaged fdr tho payment h,1aS JpUTaS. The only one. We and ' scrutinizing; brow, Mr ah money borrowed it not lc than iwen Ltkes vour paper first rate, aud'moanVto Wk'e hour's conversation, was so PWkoU with him hve per cent, tnteret. and pay for it as long as you publish it or he lives. Asked me to dinner and treated me like a king. An oasis in the desert! A man fit for heaven ! No. 10 Is a merchant. j "i.n.iiuui. JUAuuuis iu uruaii T.1 1 1 t- 1 clinrflv en mncf c-mn oil n i . -v , v. in oiuun uiioiiiji;. I Offered me a pair of breeches and a cotton j handkerchief for the debt. Refused him with (scorn. Told me to fro to the devil Iono- j jaw- Threatened to break my head. Dared Ihim to do it. Threw a hatchet at me. I rWi PUt"L dodged it and put out. n io in ivieaii as rot. nau no mon- ey-wotot pay-did'nt owe. I swore I'd sue. Said I mirrhtsue and be handed. Cursed all the little ones and .hurried from "'j- Auti yui iHcurst reu cent irom 1 0ne of them. 1 tUa liirt- AT.. . . I. c 4 T a. . The foregoing is a true extract from my! note book. I have not succeeded a whit bet- i j jo u. li ui:: i:al i; i i iiiiiii in v pay. l have said 1 have been away three slang- another would'nt touch a journal that contained an irrevalent line with a ten foot ' One sentimental lackadaiscal Miss in another never reads anything but the marria - j i---r er to bestow upon me. I tried fighting for a while, and thrashed some of your young pat- , , . - ! t j i- I..., ti1Iin.ir mvs.if Oupp t whs nt.t in i.-.;i , for assault and battery, and only ascaped by breaking out. Send me a receipt for the three dollars twclve and half cents, and believe yours in despair, Aaron Sweatwell. Story of a First Kiss. BY FREDERICK BREMER. In the University of Upsala, in Sweden, , lived a young student, a lonely youth, with j in great poverty, but keeping up a cheerful heart, and trying not to look at the future, 'which looked so grimly at him. His good ' humor and good qualities made him beloved by his young comrades. Once he was stand silently gazing at her, as she past on like a . graceful vision, one of them exclaimed: "Well it would be worth something to have a Kiss;inu uuu amnc umwiiiuiuu m mi6 ! from such a mouth 1" The poor young stu dent, the hero of our story, who was looking intently at that pure angelic face, exclaimed as if by inspiration, " Well I think I could ; have it." What !" cried hi friends in a ' chorus, "Are you crazy! Do you know heri" ; m l,uo uwiui a.. WUi s. . " In this place before your eyes." "Freely?" j "Freely." "Well if she vill give you a kiss, v . t it K . , p, AndI,. cricd three or' , dolIars And f And 1 cr,C(J mrec ; four others, for it so happened that several . rich young men were in the group, and bets . i ran high on s0 improbable an event, andihe ; d(j and rcceived -n ,eS limc fa . , , than we take to relate it. j 1 Our hero my authority tells not whether iie was handsome or plain, I have my pecu-! liar reafiong for bolicvina that he was rather j ii.;nirnf thnme P am, but singularly good looking a t osame t.me-our hero walked off to mee thtoung a(y. ne bowed to her and said, al ladj, , (min froleen) my fortune j8 in your hands." She looked at him in astonishment, but arres- ted her steps. He proceeded to state his name nnd coiiditionhis aspirations, and rela- ted sjmpiy and truly what just had passed be- j hfm and hjg com'panions. The young I m that manner, 1 will give you a tnousanu j ,u uauA lady listened a ttentivejy, and when he ha 1 ceased to speak, she said blushing, but with great sweetness : "It by so little a thing so ' much rrood could be effected, it would be very toom n,e ,o refuse your request."- she kissed the young man publicly in the 0pen 6qUare. 4 h gludent sent for iexi uay uie yuuug wiuc . by the governor. He wanted to see he young man v$o had dared to ask aits ot his daughter in that way, aud whom she had con- that he offered him to dine at his table during the course of his studies in Upsala. Our young man now pursued his studies in a manner which soon made him regarded as t. . ... , . 'in1; uiuol uiuuiiaiuif acnoiar at tne Universitv Three years were not msJl , ftL T T r f , I f, 1 n0tSSd aftcr the of ,ie hrst klss' when the 'ouno man was al- I IOU ea 10 lve a second one to the lovely daugh ' ter of the Governor, as his betrothed bride. He became, later, one of the greatest schol- :n q.n.i . . , ,. f " Sucd.C"aS much respected for his f learmn2' as r his character. His works will endure forever among the works of science, and from his happy union sprung a family well known in Sweden in the present day, - i e wcaItn t fortune and high posi- and having a children, should n fl npniinif1 Vr j COmes fortified airainst the ilk nFlifr nA f 1 urn,i v ! b ;Ced f Chlldrenamd ' and more easily governed. "llow many ......t. jhuji inuuoaiiuo iu ru- , ciaim a son or danrJlter who had ,VnoranUv i ... . ?, f : or thouirhtlesslv fallen into temnbition. Bolts. Horses are often troubled with the disease called the " botts." To prevent this, make use of the following recipe : Take of bees-wax, mutton tallow and sugar, each eight ounces, put into a quart of warm milk, and heat till the ingredients are all per fectly melted and mixed. Put the whole in to a large bottle, and just before the wax and tallow begin to harden, give it to the horse. In three hours after administer a physic a j I Jiave often seen the above remedy tried, and j can speak decidedly of Its effects. Unpatented Lands. The Surveyor General has given notice to persons in possession, or owing unpatented lands within this Commonwealth, that the act of Assembly passed the 10th day of April, 1835, ! entitled " An act to graduate lands $n which j tcresieu to secure uieirpaiems ana uiuuenems , or tne saia act, ana ik supplements, aunng uic Water in the human Body. A man weighing 140 pounds, if squeezed under a hy draulic press, 105 pounds of water would run out of him, and only 35 pounds of solid dry matter would remain. A beefsteak pressed between blotting paper under a press, give districts where goou water is snppneu to tne inhabitants. The water of the ocean absorbu two per cent, of air. Scieiitifc American. EST The following is Aunt Betsys dCacriptidn of her milk man. "He is the mjm in the worlJ v 8UC 03cclaim. ((jtq sims 'l3 nijik grst 0n the top and thon turns it ovcr and skirag tlie' j M fc M d uunwui, ' then he divides it into ten parts, careful- ly skimming each part. V&TQ man who first introduced a fanning mill into Scotland was denounced wind when Providonc5 intended a calm. A clerk in a mercantilc establishment tQ hj3 frie ls afc hom p, easy times now-a-days very little work to do our firm don't advertise. - If you make love to a widow who haa a uaugnter twenty ua yuuugui mtui f JeolariSg you th n't werc EjBter3. " YIT There have heen several deaths TrCmor, recently at Jer.eyviUe a0d .Bprmgneldj Illinois, . . There 13 one piece of experimental le- gwlation of which the State of Wisconsin f588idtobo Uear sickj vj?. tho aholi. of Qu rate3 6f intereat It i3 said that not less than one-half of 2 n 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers