Do you really think he did? I waited till tho twilight. And yet he did not come: I strayed along the brook-side, And slowly wandered home; When who should coma behind me, But him I would have chid; lie said he came to find me Do you roully think he did' He said, since last we parted, He'd thought of naught so ewoet, Asof this very moment Tho moment we should meet. He showed me where, half shaded, A cottage home lay hid; He said for me he made it Do you really think he did? He said when first ho saw ma Life seemed at once divine; Each night he dreamt of angels, And every face was mine; Sometimes a voice, in sleeping, Would all his hopes forbiJ; And then ho wakened weeping Do you really think he did? I Love r Laugli. BY A VOUNQ LADY. I love a laugh a wild, gay laugh. Fresh from the fount of feeling That speaks a heart enshrined within, Its joys revealing. I love a laugh a wild! gy zh'. O, who would always sorrow' And wear a sad and mournful face, And fear the morrow? I love a laugh it cheers the heart Of age bow'd down by sadness. To hear the music in the tones Of childhood's gladness, I lore a la ugh this world would be At best dreary dwelling. If heart could never speak to heirt, Its pleasures telling. 7 hen frown not at a gay, wild laugh, Nor chide tho merry-hearted A cheerful heart and merry face Can ne'er bo parted. Just Seventeen. Juftt seventeen! the sweetest age That's entered on fair beauty's pago. Lip like the rose bud cleft in twain, With pearly gems the cleft to stain; Eyes like twin stars beneath some cloud. That comes their sparkling light to shroud; Rich tresses of the auburn glow, Frco wavingo'er a brow of snow; And then the bosom, heaving, swelling, Where trickling Cupid holds his dwelling Of woman's life, no year I ween, Like toft, sweet, pouting seventeen'. Gcnnine Modern Miracle. One Strang, a professor of the Mormon church, promised to endow his followers with the Holy Ghost, if they would build a house for the purpose. He took three or four of them at a time to a room above, and performed the Mormon rite of wash ing their feet. He then anointed the crown of each head with a mixture of oil and phosphorus, and conducted them to a dark hall. All being there assembled, each saw on the heads of all the rest the phos phoric illumination, which some fools took for the Holy Ghost, while others smelling a rat, to wit, the phosphorus, took it for an impudent imposition. The meeting then dispersed, one half believing Strang to be a phrophet, and the rest an imposter. Pantaloons, theiu gender and n comingxess. Mrs. Swisshelm, the edi tress of the Pittsburg Saturday I'isitor, thinks that the wide skirts of women are impediments in rural exercises, as she has often felt in walking through wet grass, getting over fences, and clambering round rocks. She does not, however, approve of her sex wearing the pantaloons, and says, very emphatically, "It wauld be too humiliating to be met and mistaken for a man! We should a great deal rather be arrested as a sheep-thief. We shall use all our influence to preserve man's rights to his pantaloons inviolate. They ought to be his, and his only; for they are too ugly for anybody else to wear." G?John, do you really love my daugh- tor 4You know I do, Mr. Snipkins.' 'How much do you lovelier?' 'I love her as hard as a hnwp ran L-ir.L- ' Mr Snipkins was perfectly satisfied of L -. i i , . uie sirengm 01 ins allcction. Correct View. Mankind might do without nil vsicians. if ihf v VVOlll.l the laws of health; without lawyers, if thev would kef n thrir imnrrc- - j i" -j, OIUIUUI soldiers if thev would observe the laws of r I. j i ... . niiuiiiu , aau pernaps wunout preach ers, if each one would take care of his own conscience; but there is no dispensing with a newspaper. " It is pretty certain that no organized hostilities have been projected bv the lorida Indians. It is ihc intentiou how cvr, of the government to prevent future iiarm by removing them from the Ntntc. Dickens. He is a very gay dresser eschews col lars rejoiceth in bright scarlet facings to his waistcoat is as fond of rings and gold chains as a Mosaic Jew. Indeed he dresses in a manner which, if indulged in bv another would inevitably call forth some of his trenial banter. He is fond of country dances and similar amusements. By his own fireside he is as pleasant and companionable as his warmest admirer could wish: his conversation, however, is not what might oe expected from a man so justly celebrated: he telLsastory well, and with-every fresh variations and nu morous exagerations. He is a strong ad nirer of Tennyson and Bi owning; we have heard him declare that lie would rather written the 'Blot in the Scutcheon' than any work of modern times. We heard similar high admiration expressed on the other side of the Atlantic. Ta king this for what it is worth, it still shows how highly that unpoplur poet, is esteemed by some of the leading intellects of England and America. Mr. Dickens lives in good style in the Regent's Park, and is reported to live 'not too wisely, but too well.' Men of quick feelings and ardant sympathies are not expected to be Cocker's Arithmetic in the flesh, or to have the calculating mind of a London or a New York merchant. lie abominates argument; delights in walking the crowded thoroughfares of life and noting the humors of his fellow-crea tures. lie has a strong sympathy with all the oppressed classes, and has no tol eration for the misanthrope or the cold hearted aristocrat. He now and then ad ministers a little gentle rebuke to affecta tion, in a pleasant, but unmistakeable manner. We remember an instance where he silenced a bilious young writer who was inveighing against the world in a very 'forciable feeble manner.' During a pause in this philippic against the hu man race, Dickens said across the table in the most self congratulatory of tones; 'I say, , what a lucky thing it is you and I don't belong to it. It reminds me continued the author of Pickwick, 'of two men, who a raised scaffold were awaiting the final delicate attention of the hangman the notice of one was aroused by ob serving that a bull had got into the crowd of spectators, and was busily engaged in tossing one here and another there; whereupon he said to the other: I say Biil, how lucky it is for us we are up here: ' In general however, his remarks are not happy. Notwithstanding his theoret ical sympathy with the lower classes, he pays an absurb difference to men of rank and thinks no dinner table cempiete with out a lord, or a very rich merchant cr tanker. This has been decidedly in jurious to bis writings: it has cramped his hand and checked the thunder in mid vol lev.' Untutored Eloquence- A Catawba warrior, m 1822, named Peter Harris, made known his wants to the Legislature of South Carolina, in the following language: 'I am one of the lingering survivors of an almost extinguished race. Our graves win soon oe our only habitations. 1 am one of the few slocks that stili remain in the field where the tempest of the revo lution passed. I have fought against the British for your sake. The British have disappeared, and you arc free; yet from me the British have taken nothing, nor have I gained any thing by their defeat. 1 have pursued the deer for substence the deer are disappearing and I must starve. God ordained me for the forest, and my ambition is the shade. But the strength of my arm delay, and my feet fail me in the chase. The hand which fought for your liberties is now open for vour relief. In my youth I bled in battle" that you might be independent let not my heart in my old age bleed for want of your commiseration. Printer's Ink. Printer's ink, Wonderful conpound! Now a balsam, and now a poison; now conveying, sustaining comfort, sweetest health, and sympathetic love to outraged man and now devouring with f he hun ger of flame the heart of tyrannous wrong. Priceless unguent! The salve of suffer ing and the bane of. crime. Beautiful is a renew very glorious are thousands of j bayonets, the impartial sun kissing the murderous steel. Inspiriting the trumnet hearts pulsating to its brassy breath! Terrible the cannon! their silent homici dal mouths gaping, stupidly cruel. Nev erthele&sall dull all dumb all dust when touched and touched by John Gutten burgh's ointment Printer's Ink. Lay it on well, and wisely, and in good time the bayonets shall break like autumn reeds the trumpet be choked to silence and the cannon crack and crumble like sun split clay. Punch. She's one of 'em. In St. Louis, lan-lv a Mrs. Johnson was fined $10 for whip ping her husband. She paid the fine with a smiling look, saying sotto roce, 'Never mind the money; I wear the breeches, I do I'm some when I'm at home, and won't I have it out of his bones; well, if I don't you can kill me.' M. Poticr, Catholic Bishop of Mobile, has returned to Pans, from Gaeta, where he has submitted for the sanction of the Pope, the acts of the Catholic Convention at Baltimore. A mountain is made up of atoms, and friendship of little matters; and if the atoms hold not together, the mountain is crum bled into dust. About Orchards. Management of Youkg Apple Or chards. The following mode of treatment of a young apple orchard, transplanted in the spring of 1818, by which all lived and made a vigorous growth, has been furnish ed by J. Talcott, of Rome, N. Y. Last year the ground was planted with potatoes; in the fall, after the crop was off it had a heavy top-dressing of horse ma nure, drawn from the village and plowed under. The trees were earthed up to pro tect them from mice. This spring, the ground was crossed plowed, and it is now sown to carrots, parsnips, onions and some beans planted among them; the ground has been forked around the trees for a circle of about five feet. They are making a fine growth. The stems have been -washed with diluted soft soap. A Profitable Orchard. The Amer ican Agriculturist says: 'A gentleman within our knowledge has a small orchard on the Hudsn river, of less than seven acres, which produces from $500 to $750 worth of ipj)les annually. This is not one year of plenty, and another or two of famine, but is a regular, steady average yield. All th is is secured by the simplest process, viz: good management. Another. in old orchard of four acres had not been plowed for nearly thirty years, and was regarded by the neighbors as worthless. It did not yield more thar eight barrels a year. It was well plowed, and thoroughly manured for three succes sive years, and cultivated with crops. It then produced two hundred and eighty barrels of apples. Somcthins to Think Of. At West Point, our government long ago established ajmilitary school. Young men are selected from different States ev ery year, sent there, costs the United States government from four to five thousand dollars. More than 6 1,000,000 have been bes towed bv the U. States upon that institu tion; and all for what? Well, what then? Before Washington left the Presidency, he earnestly recom mended Congress to establish a Board of Agriculture, or to take some other meas ures to foster that peaceful but leading and important interest. They have been since repeatedly urged to lend the strong arm of government to the elevation and encour agement of that neglected calling. What have they done? Nothing. Millions and millions have been expended r lo learn young men how to fight; not the 'first red cent'' to teach the noble, bread-giving, world sustaining service and art of agriculture! Maine Farmer. Weeds. 'One year's seeding makes seven year's weeding.' Old Adage. The farmer, and indeed every one who cultivates the soil, should wage an unceas ing warfare against weeds. They should never be tolerated, and never permitted to mature their seeds, even in uncultivated soils. A single thistle will often be the means of fouling a whole field and of ren dering its cultivation difficult for years. It is not unfrequently that we see the cor ners of lots and unoccupied by the fences overgrown with thistles, mullens, nef.les and the like; and very often the soil around stone steps, that cannot be got at convent ently by the plough, is abandoned to their usurpation. This, however, is bad policy and should never be countenanced on any farm, no matter what may be the dimen sions, or the uses to which it is applied. Set Your Fence Posts Right. A practical farmer informs the Hartford Times, that in taking up a fence that had been set fourteen years, he noticed that some of the posts remained nearly sound, while others were rotted off at the bottom. On looking for the cause, he fouud that those posts that were set limb part down, or inverted from the way they grew, were ay tney gr sound. Those that were set as they grew, were rotted off. The fact is worthy of the notice of farmers. San Francisco Post Office. The Californians are loud in their de nunciations of the present management of the Post Otlice of San Francisco. The following is an extract from a letter dated Francisco, July 18, received by a gentle man in Boston: "I am satisfied there is no honesty in the Post Office here, and shall not pre-pay any more letters. I heard a man at the Post office window this afternoon ask for letters the address being handed into the window on a slip of paper, and was an swered, 'we cannot attend to it.' 'Can you let me know to-morrow?' 'No! We can not promise.' 'I will satisfy you for your trouble.' The answer was. IIow much will you give?' He replied, 'I will give $10,' and was answered, 'call in the morn ing and you shall have them.' "I am also credibly informed by men I hnow, that they have called for letters re peatedly, and were answered there were none, and by making another call they succeeded in getting them." The White mountains an? already coV' crcd with snow. - Thc-IIappy Valley. The persecuted Mormons have found a refuge in an isolated valley on the western slope of the rocky Mountains, in which we rather hope than expect that they will be permitted to remain unmolested. If the following description, said to have been communicated by a Mormon resident in the new settlement at the opening of the valley, near the shore of the Great Salt Lake, to a friend in Ohio, is correct, this singular people have at length found an abode rivalling in its attractions Mr. Mel ville's Vale of Typee: "There is an extensive gold mine here, from which many of my neighbors are en gaged in digging gold. Those who work the mines make from $30 to S750 per day, each. If a man wants gold, all he has to do is to go and dig it. In fact, Miles, mon ey is as plenty heie as pine slabs used to be at Schroou, Vt. We have gold dust, gold and silver coin, and a paper currency for our own convenience, paper being bet ter to handle than gold dust. "Pure salt abounds here to an' extent. I can shovel up a wagon load of salt here as soon as you can a load of sand on your lake shore. There are hot springs here that are very useful. Within four miles of the city there is a hot spring, the water of which is sufheiently hot to scald a hog in. There is another spring within one mile of the city, the water of which is about blood warm there we bathe for health; also, an oil spring, a soda spring, and an alkali spring near the lake, at which place it requires but a few minutes to load a wagon with as good saleratus as ever we used in fact, we use no other. Theire is not much timber in this country. Game is very plenty, such as buffaloes, antelopes, deer, bear, kc. Fowls and fishes of all kinds in abundance. "Cattle can live hear the whole year without either hay or corn, and be fat enough for beef at any time. There has been one crop raised in the vallev, and there is a large crop of wheat in the ground. There is a canal being construct ed here, for the purpose of watering our fields, as there is very little or no rain in the summer season." JVis. Moses's Ninepcncc BY CVMON. Well .Moses,' interrogated the mother of a country youth, just returned from a short visit to the metropolis, did yon have a good time down to Bosting; and how did you spend your money 'Cute, ma am, a cute time, 1 tell you, replied the stripling 'and as to the money, didn't I tell you I'd blow it right eout straight, ma'am?' 'I hope Moses, you didn't get into any dissipation,' retorted the good la dy a little alarmed. 'Wal, no not ex actly dissipation as you might call it; but I treated up the galls somet I can tell ye.' 'Well, let me hear all about it,' asked the mother anxiously. 'You see,' continued the son, 'I stopped! in a little shop at the Iorth li.nu, to get me a drink of spruce beer, and whilst I was drinking on't a couple of gals comes up and axes me totreat.' 'And you wern't fool enough to treat them 'ere strange wo men, I hope, exclaimed the matron, 'you have to work too plaguy hard for your money, Mose, to fool it away upon sich folks.' 'Wal I did tho' any how,' retort ed the sprig; I was on a 'time,' and didn't care a darn whether school kept or not, as the bovs say.' 'Hush don t swear Moses 'As I was saving,' continued Mose, 'the gals asked me to treat, and I did that 'ere thing, and don't care who knows it. 1 paid for their two glasses of spruce beer, which with mine cost four pence; then I bought two cents worth of raisins for them; and by golly!' exclaimed our hero, bringing his hard fist down upon the kitch en table with a sledge hammer force, 'I'd have spent the whole ninepence, rather than have gone off Aurora Borer.lis. sneaking!' Boston Caution to Travellers. The follow ing notice in a country paper might be use fully applied on board some of the hurry ing steamboats: 'Travellers should be careful to deliver their choice articles to proper persons, asa gentleman, a few days since, on alighting from a stage coach, en trusted his icife to a stranger, and he has not heard of her since.' Being Sure. 'Look out Patrick, and if you see any rocks ahead of the boat let us know. Keep a sharp eye.' 'Yes, your honor.' The next moment bang goes the boat on a reef. You blunderhead didn't I tell you to sing out when you saw a rock.' 'Och plase sir, I wasn't quite sure it was a rock 1 saw so I waited till it struck be fore I tole yc' !B m 3t 3 o The ,lMorNTAiM Sentinel" is published ov cry Thursday morning at Two Dollars pe annum, payable halt yearly. No subscription will be taken for a shorter period than tix months; and no paper will be discontinued until all arrearages ate paid. A ailure to notify a discontinuance at the expira tic not the term subscribed for, will be consider ed as a new engagement. ADVERTISEMENTS will bo inserted at the following rates: 50 cents per sqaare for the first insertion; 75 cenls for tho second; $1 for three insertions, and 25 cents per square for every subsequent insertion. A liberal de- duclion made to those who advertise by the year. All advertisement handed in must have tho proper number of insertions marked there on , or they will be published till foibid and charged in accordance with tho above terms. LrAll letters and communications, to insure attention mast bo post paid. A General . assortment of Taints and Oils of everv description for sale at red need nrir?n bv MURRAY .V ZAHM. FARMERS LOOK HERE! SADDLE & HARNESS MANUFACTORY. fniIE undersigned having purchased the in JL tcrcst of C. G. Cramer in the firm of Cramer J- M"Coy, respectfully begsleavo to in form his friends and thefublic generally that he is now carrying1 on the Saddlery Business on his ' own hook," in the building formerly oc cupied as a Printing Office, where he will keep constantly on hand u large and splendid assort, ment of Saddles, Bridles, Harness, Col lars, Wuifs, &c, &c. All of which he will sell as low for caih or country produce as any other ettablishment in nun tuumj. Any oruers n nis i;ne 01 busi ness will be promptly executed at the shortest notice. Fa rmers and others desiring cheap bargain will find it to their interest lo call at No. 6, and examine the block before purchasing jc's,iv,1re T he h ighest market prices will bo riven for Lumber and Hides in exchange for harness. HUGH A. M'COY. May 16, 1849. 27-6m. CABINET MANUFACTORY! Til R undersigned having associated them selves in the Cabinet Making Busines, under the firm of" Lloyd $ lAtzingtr,bcs leave 6 j to inform the citizens of Ebensburg snd vicin - ity. that they intend manufacturing to order and keeping constintlv on haad cverv variety of BUHEAUS, TABLES, STANDS, SET. TEES, BEDSTEADS, fc, $c, A-hich they will sell very low for cash or ap proved Country Produce. All orders in their line of business will be thankfully received and promptly attended to. Persons ocs iring cheap furniture sro assured that they will hud it to their ii.teresi to call at their Ware Room, oppo site xiizinger l oca s aiore, and examine their stock before pu rchasing elsewhere. Thoy hope by a close attention tu business to merit a liberal abaro of public patronage. All kinds of Lumber taken in exchange for Furniture. STEPHEN LLOYD, Jr. D. A LITZINGER. April 12, 1849 27-6m. "CHEAPER THAN EVER!" MURRAY & ZAHM. FTJlHANKFUL for paet favors, would respect EL fully inform their friend?, and the public generally, that they have juel received the largest, handsomest and best selected assort ment of that has been brought to Ebensburg this sea. son, and which they are determined to dispoae of at the lowest prices imaginable. They think it unnecessary to enumerate all the articles ti.ey have on hand, but request the public to call and examine for themselves, when they will find most every articlo usually kept in a country store, and at prices equally as low as goods can be bought cast or west of the Allegheny mountains. LUMBER, GRAIN, WOOL, and all kinds of Country Produce, taken in exchange for Goods. M.&Z. Ebensburjr, May JG, 1843. THE HOME JOURNAL Edited by George P. Morris and X. P. Willis; PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY. The first number of a new series of thii widefy. circulated and universally popular FAMILY NEWSPAPER will, for the accommodat ion of new scbscri bers, be issued on Saturday, the seventh day of uiy next, wiui several new, original and at tractive features. THE HOME JOURNAL is wholly a peculiar paper, abounding in every variety 01 literature ana ies; and, besides being one of the most elegantly printed and interesting sheets extant, it is by far the ch-ap. est ine terms ueing enly I wo Dollars a Year (in advance) or three copies for five dollars. NOW IS THE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE. Address MORRIS & WILLIS, Editors and Proprietors, at the Orfice of publication, Ho. 107 Fulton Street, New-Fork. BY EXPRESS. ANOTHER lot of those cheap Dry Goods, among which are Super French Lawns, New style Linen Lustre, - Satin stripe Linen Mode Lustre. Plaid and Earlston Ginghams, Cloth, Cassimere, Prints, &c. Have just been received and now opening by LITZINGER A TODD. June 7, 1849. V fe&frgr'ri --'3? SH-Mi. . I ; I NOTICE. TT ETTERS of Administration having been SLi granted to the undersigned by the Regis, ter of Caoibtia county, on tho estate of Thorn, as Crossman, dee'd., notice is hereby given to all persona indebted to said estate to make pay. ment, and those having claim3 against it to present them to the undersigned duly authen ticated for settlement. MARY ANN CROSSMAN, DAVID SOMMERVILLE. Susquehanna tp., ) Aug 23. 1849. $46-6t NOTICE. THE Pamphlet Laws of the last Session of the Legislature have been received at tho Fro. thonotary's Office in Ebensburg, and are ready for delivery lo those who by law are entitled to receive them. Win. KITTELL, rrothonotary. August lfi, 119. ' IVew; Arrival of CHOICE AND FASHIONABLE SPRING AND SUMMER LITZINGER &. TODD, TAKE pleasure I. DnooncIne to J. fronds end the public jenerallj that th,, hare jast received from the eastern CiUei ?t their Store Room in Ebensburg, a Jarre 'and splendid assortment of NEW FASHIONABLE GOODS, selected with great care and at the lowest jr, cet, w hich enables them to dispose of thera n the most reasonable terms. The stock comprises the usual assortment ,f STAPLE AND FANCY Consisting in part of Black and Brown Aciw. ican and French Cloths, plain and fancy Ca. simeres and Cashmcrets, plain and fa0r Tweeds, blue, bluck. Cadet and fancy Sattta. ets, red, white and yellow Flannels, plain and plaid Alpacas, French, Domestic and Earlstoa (iinghams, brown and bleached ShirtinM. Irish Linens. Russia Diapers, Cotton Diaper, Linen Napains, Ticking, Crash. A ricUss! tortment of embroidered, cassimere, silk and fancy Vtstings; new style of Linen Lustrsr Printed, black and plain Lawns; mode silk 1 issue; patin stripes Barageg Muslin de Lain black Gro de Rhine, Barsge Scarfs, aod plain.' and fancy De Laine Shawls; fancy dress But tons. Fringes and Flowers. A comp!ete t sortment of Bonnet and Fancy Ribbons- fafter Combs, Brushes fitc, &.. ' 1 oofs and Shoes. of every description, moleskhur, pearl, ! horn and braid Hats; Ladies and .Misses peiVl braid, silk, and pearl gimp Bonnets. A spies, did assortment of Quecntware, (new st vie ) Hardware. Drugs. Umbrellas, Parasols. Books and Stationary, Groceries, Fish, Salt, Nails ike, fcc. Ail of which they are determined to sell ss low for cafli or countrv nroduea a ar. nth ..i.l j i j -i v- Ushment west of the Allegheny mountains. Ladies will find it to their adrantairo tacit! nnd examine this spleudid stock of roods befor purchasing elsewhere. May 3, 1849 30-tf. PLEASE TO READ THIS! SEARS 3 Vcjp Pictorial Works. For 1849. Great Chance for Book Agents to clear from S500 to S1000 a year! Books of Universal Utility! gj EARS new and DODular Pictorial UnrL.- hj luosi spicncioiy iwosirated Volumes for families ever issued on the American Con. tinent, containing more than Four Thoustad Engravings, designed and executed by tb most eminent artists of England and America. The extraordinary popularity of the a bo re volumes in every section of the Union, rendsrs an agency desirable in each one of our princl. pal towns and village. Just published. Sears' new and popular PICTORIAL DESCRIPTION OF THE UNITED Sl'ATES, Containing an account of the Topograph, Settlement, History, Revolutionary and thar interesting Events, Statistics, Piogreuu ia Ag. riculture. Manufactures, and population, Ate., of each State in the Union, illustrated with TWO HUNDRED ENGRAVINGS, of the principal Cities, Places, Buildings, Sce nery, Curiosities, Seals of the Stales; &.o., &.. Complete in one octavo volume of ROD !! elegantly bound in guilt, pictorial muslin. Rt tail price. 2 50. , riCTORlAL FAMILY ANNUAL, 100 pages octavo, and illustrated with 212 Engravings: designed as a valuable and cheap present for parents and teacher to place in the hands of young people, in attractive binding. THE HISTORY OF PALESFINE, from the Patriarchial age to the Present Urns. By John Kilto, editor of tho Loadon Pictorial Bible, &c. ALSO, NEW EDITION OF SEARS' Pie tonal History of the Bible; Pictorial Sunday. Book; Description of Great Britain and Irs. land; Bible Biography; Scenes and Sketches in continental Europe, Information for th pao. pie; Pictorial Family Library; Pictorial Histo. ry of the American Revolution; an entirel new volume on the Wonders of the World. " PICTORIAL FAMILY BIBLE. Eeach volume is illustrated with several hundred Engravings, and the Bible with Oat Thousand. SEA RS PICTORIA L FAMILY MAO A ZINE, (or 1849, published monthly in parts 'of 41 large octavo pages, at one dollar per year ia advance. Specimen copies of the Magazine, tu procar subscribers with, will be furnished to ail whe wtsb to engage in its circulation, if reouested. post paid, at the rate of twelvn Kr for one dollar or ten cents for single copies. AGENTS WANTED, in every Town and County throughout the Union, to sell S.ark' Aew and Popular Pictorial Wnrlr, -.n. acknowledged to be the beet and cheapest ever published, as they certainly are the most sales, ble. Any active arent mav i1r fmm or $1000 a year. A cash emitnl r .t u..t $35 or S50 will bo necessary. Full partieUr of the principles and profits of the sgency will be given on application either personally or by letter. The postage in all cum ma.t ba paid. Please to address. ROBERT SEARS. Publisher, 123 Nassau street. New York. Newspapers copvinp' this aAvarf,,: ment entire, well displayed as ibn. ariit,i any alteration or abridgement, including this notice, and giving six inside insertions sbtll oenn9 CODy of any dd of our 2,50 or 3,00 works, subject to thair order h Andin direct to the publisher. ISo letter will be taken from th off,., nnlaii post paid. - Pure iMixed White Lead, Linseed Oil, Nails and Spikes, Glass, Candles, &,c. &,c. And for sale by LITZINGER & TODD. jt N excellent lot of Loeust Posts uitabl for iH. fencing ou hand and for sal by MURRAY 4t ZAFIM. Aptil 1?I9 12,