Jus A MP 11 S i ll w l 3 THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE, UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND I HE IOOR. 0 SERIES. EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1863. VOL. 10 NO. 35 P r MOCK AT & SENTINEL" published every Wednesday . .,mKe Poi.lar and Fifty Cents tJ;'.n p;iy:iUc iii advance ; One Dol- "svkntt Five Cents, if not paid ?Yi months ; and Two Doli.au if until tlie termination of the year, rm.tion will bo received for a j.eriml than months, and no i'rwiUbuat nuaiy to discontinue iiK hushed, if I especially rejoice with you in the nomination of Mr. Pugh as your can didate for lieutenant Governor and Presi dent of the Senate. A scholar and a gentlemen, a soldier in a foreign war, and always a patriot ; eminent as a lawer, and distinguished as an orator and a statesman, I hail his acceptance as an omen of the return of the better and more virtuous days of the Republic. I endorse your noble platform elegant in style, admirable in sentiment. You present the true issue, and commit your- IdvertlKln? Rates. to tne great mission jus now oi i Oif insert' it. Two do. 'Three do Democratic partv to restore and make i 50 $ 75 $1,00 kikst the rights . and liberties declared ! UU"l "il " " " "iv- .ie,.pt;on of the editor. Any per, -vriliusf- s months wil be char Pollak, unless the money i :n a-lvance. . re, f 12 lints .24 lines '-.r.U'j lines 1 1 00 1 50 3 months. t - 1 12 lives 1 50 ti, 24 lin-s 4 00 'rt., 3. lines 0 00 ,...iurvi, 10 00 . -.A.. is oo i 9 00 2 00 00 3 00 lo. 12 do $5 00 9 00 12 00 14 00 20 0C 35 01 $3 00 4 50 7 00 9 00 12 00 22 00 St-coiid Address or i;n, c L. VALLANDIGHAM. , nil- PEOPLE OF OHIO. ictfiil (he Nomination for Gover nor ml Define" H I'oiltloii. N:m. w; U.!. C.VNVPA WEST) duly 17. ) T,.i..d :iad routined for three weeks Pniied States, a prisoner of State ; :;.!-,! thence to the Confederate States, lu-lil as an alien enemy anl i . i . . war, tnourn on paroio nl.iv dealt with and given leave tnnv MliT tn 1 1. rt. au act possible only by running hUlvA- at the h:izard ot being nreu a Vv n.'i riving the flag of my own j aitw. I louivl myself first a freeman v-p . V.vV.VV. foil. And to-Iay under utectieu (,'.' W Ur.'.i.-h llag, I am here i enjv ari l in p:;rt to exercise the privi- and rights which usurpers insolently :w me at fio:no. The shallow contri ,'icc of tin- weak despots at Washington, . ! rln-ir a lvL- i- has been defeated, iv i: ha h'eii turned against them; i!I uho. win) t.vo rears was ma-a.- in --e!-.-t le-i'iie with the Con ': t.j ii'; ti fu.-ed when in their -U nii'ier i-iremiistanees the most fa-r;;':- liila-r t indentit'v mysi'lf with -ir atiN- or even s much as to remain, t'lTin niiher exile m a toivign iani, : ;:n now wiih luleejanee to my own Jo and (loseiTiment, unbroken in word, .'ht oi-'l 'eii, and with every :i ainl ii'.e !-e t von at home. yours by your constitutions. It is vain to invite the States and people of the South to return to a Union without a Constitution, and dishonored and poluted by repeated and most agravated exactions of tyranic power. It is base in your selves, and treasonable in your posteriry, to surrender these liberties and rights to the creatures whom your own breath created and can destroy. Shall there be free speech, a free press, peaceable as semblage of the people, and a free ballot any longer in Ohio? shall the people here after, as hitherto, have the right to dis cuss and condemn the principles and policy of the party the ministry the men who, for the time, conduct the Gov ernment to demand of their public ser vants a reckoning of their stewardship, and to place other men and another party in power at their supreme will and pleasure? Shall Order Thirty-eight or the Constitu t'u n be the supreme law of the laud? And shall the. citizen any more Le ar reted by an armed soldiery at midnight, dragged from wife and child and home to a military prison"; thence to a mock mili tary trial ; thence condemned, and incn banished as a felon for the exercise of his deed be unwelcome truths, - but they are addressed only to honest and candid men. Neither, however, let me add, did I meet any one, whatever his opinions or his sta tion, political or piivate, who did not de clare his readiness, tvlien the ivai- shall have ceadcd ami utviuliiuj ariities been withdrawn, to consider and discuss the question 6f re union. And who shall doubt the issue of the argument t I return, therefore, with my opinions and convictions as to war. or cace, and my faith as to final results froni sound policy and wise statesmanship, not onlv unchanged, but confirmed and tmnrtlniiod. And mav the God of - j heaven and earth so rule the hearts and minds of Americans everywhere, that a Constitution maintained, a Union restored and liberty henceforth made secure, a grander and nobler destiny shall yet be ours than that even which blessed our fathers in the first two ages of the lie public. C. I... VvrxAxniGiiAM. A Dastardly Outrage. n-lits f Thi US Id the issue, and nobly hae you met it. It is the very question of free, popular Government itself. It is the whole question ; upon the cue side liberty, on the other despotism. The President, as the recognized, head of his party, accepts the issue. "Whatever he wills, that is law. Constitutions, State and Federal, are nothing ; acts of legisla tion nothing; the judiciary less than Iu time ot war, there is but his will ; but one law (From the Huntingdon Monitor, July SO.) On last Saturday morning, about three o'clock in our absence from town, the olliee of the Month n was forcibly en tered by some cowardly scoundrels, by knocking out the panels of one of the ,1 t!irpr cases of tvne were car- V V -' 1 . .v ....w - I v nml destroved. and seven col- umns of matter were thrown into rit A piece of a bayonet was found in front of the office in the morning, and the win dow shutters bore numerous marks which proved that an effort had been made to enter by forcing them open. The dam age done to the office amounts to about two hundred dollars, and will be repaired in a few days. This most wicked, cowardly and un- provoked act of brutality was witnessed by two or three person, ironi aujuojui buildings, who had been awakened from their sleep by the oaths which the rioters uttered. There was a military guard patrolin" the streets at the time, and the treason to the Constitution and laws to desert its principles and bow before the mad spirit of drunken mobs! ?eveu Mi v Eu ! Firmer and stronger shall grow our f;uth-and more determined shall be our efforts under all this persecution and brutality. God is just, and a day of re tiUnuvJi, js coming.", We must have the the right to think, and speakj and print, linhimnr ourselves at all times subn et to the written law of the land. If thi ri"ht is to be denied us if we are to be made the slaves of a despotism, more cruel and hellish than ever disgraced the earth if our property is to held at the license of the mob and our persons con stantly threatened with violence and bru tm'itv let it le so nroelaimed to the j world let the portals of justice be closed and uion their arches be written the in scription, " UliXliATlI THIS TEMPLE CIVIL I.IUEUI Y is bi iueu" and then we shall be prepared to resist one usurpation with another and prove that the blood of the Democracy is able to detenu lLsen. Courage is a vital virtue and the lever of our political faith but we have always taught obedience to the law. Uut is our obedience to be taken for cowardice if our love of order is to be eonstrued into a relinquishment of our rights as citizens we give warning to mobs and i .,..n r.ii-r. that, a time mav come when VJK U w - ----- J civil war will desolate our State, and the most fearful horrors sadden every house hold. Every hour the danger thickens and deepens, and the only hope of escape, is a return to the laws, and to a respect, for the rights and property of all our citizens. ... 411 r.,.W l.r. cr "1 hat no ClOttlCS. xVll Icivili, ' ' J - rite ! I tells my old voman una sue senus him shirts, and stockms, und drawers, una baper-kollers, more as two men can lift. Veil, I vait a little, una aen uuuuei comes: "My dear fader," he ses "1 haf no money." Dat is all le news l got from him so far. LJut I can sec uieuy veil how dings goes on inyseit, und j. U tell you how I dinkdis war is maniged. Some feller shuvnps'up und vants to be Sheneral. All rite! ' Veil; he goes round on his friends. Congressmen, und contrac tors, und some oder dieves, und ses : " I r,oS in to be Sheneral." All rite ! Very well. " Now you shust go und sheak mit Olt Abe, und tell him vot I vants." All rite again, und den dcy goes to Olt Abe und ses : " Olt Abe, here is a mity slumirt man, you shall make him for a Sheneral " " I haf more Shencrals as I know vot to do mit," ses Olt Abe. I An Infaut Phenomenon." CHILD TWO YEA US OLl "WITH A GIANT 3 HEAD. A nutcliman'! Opinion. 11 war, made declara- and be- good in v 1 was sto! r.t and V the wry letter. n weeks aiio when iut coin" into ;.:-lane:it brause .an audacious but t c.jwan'.lv despotism caused it I ad--ul you as a fellow-citizen. To-day, 1 frt.ini the very place then selected by -.but after uvarisomo and most peri- j mrueyiiitis for more than four thous 1 miles, by land and upon the sea, still x !' , though almost in sight of my M.,tr. 1 ereet you as vour repre- w. Crateful certainly I nni ''viti'l-iie.' j,, mv integrity and ii' ini!,'..'.l bv the unanimous nomina .is candidate for Governor of Ohio, V y.vi '.'-we while I was yet in - eoIi:"-i!iT:i!. St:'t-P. It WHS not llllS' ....1 nothing. one will supreme military necessity, and he the soie iud'e. Military orders supersede the Constitution, and military commissions uurp the place of the ordinary -courts of justice in the land. Nor are these mere :.u , Vor two rears and more l.v anus, they have been eioovced w'as the mission ot the weak cmnt,iii T.ornside a name forever in the ears of all lovers of consti tutional lilH i-tv to try tho experiment in It but pre-iufamous Ohio, aided by a ju d" whom I name not, because be has brought foul dishonor upon the judiciary of my country. In your h-mds now, men of Ohio, is the final issue of the exeriment. 1 he party ot the Administration have accepted it. ly i.l.Hl.niv sunport to the i resiaem, uu y have justified his outrages upon and the Constitution ; hljerty uid whoever gives for ' his vote to the candidates of that party, vltri.i commits himself to every act of violence n 1 ! and wrong on the part of the Admnus- ?oldier nearest the office, ran to the Court j . , p i. I House for assistance, but oeiore ih; k- , turned supported by a number ot bayo nets, the miscreants had taken warning and fled. This is a brief and true history of the second attempt to destroy the only paper which" speaks for twenty-five iutsIked of the voters of Huntingdon county. This is the second attempt, made by vio lence and brute force, to close the voice of freemen, and destroy the property of pri vate cilizens, some of w hom are at this hour, serving the State in the ranks as gallant soldiers, while others are mourn ing the loss of brave sons killed in bloody battle for the flag. It is enough ,t i r r..ii..l " To tir a fever m tne r.iooo. oi .i L,... And make the infants smews strong as tration which he upholds ; and the law of retaliation, which is thus by the law riirht to We are here enabled to lay before our readers a novel and comprehensive criti que on the " whole conduct of the war," from the pen of a fat but respectable German gentleman, which will not only be found highly relishable, from the pecu liar humor it contains, but instructive to the last degree to those who may desire to understand how generals are made, and how they make themselves. Mynheer Klobberyoss will ever be welcome to our columns. ulLA. Editoh T. T. I sposc I hef so much rite to say sometings as some udder men vat pays "his taxes and shticks up by the i Conshtitution. I goes in fur de, l.mon I nluvedder. und I don't haf r.otings to do mit dem tarn gopper beds dat goes roundt humbusruiii de beenle. Dat is not my cLtt-i.. " O no 1 T tells vou vat I do. Yen cm 7 ' - j dis'war first .begins to broke out I calls to my son Shorge. " Come here, you Shorge," I ses. He corned. "Shorge," ses I, " ven you vas a leetle- poy I gifs vou de names from Shorge Vashington, mi "Nefer mind," dey ses, " dis teller is shmarter den all of dem," und dey bodder, und bodder. und bodder, till Olt Abe, he ses : " (Jo to de tuyvel, und make him a cji..! " All rl.Tht Jirrnill. Nell. SO iiiiuiie-! til- - " ------ soon as he "cts to be Sheneral, he puts on some new clothes, mit a couple of pounds of gilted brass on de shoulders, und omo more fellers mit new clothes ink.il l.rass. dem is de shtaff, und dey all wl. Lvu-n too-ll( h r. und take coinmandt i iv. x v " - - - j t of do armv. Den. as de next ting is, men has to pack up derc dings an of dey .Lt- m:irshes lid deV COlllCS jwa. i '"-j - r i-l t.i n T.lace where dere is plenty of whisky An Khoneinl ses: "Halt. Idiuk vvp shtons here till all de whisky is gone ,L..i A.v ni.ule. jinuder move, und so Sheneral hears dat, he sends out some men to look vhere the are, und how menny dere is of clem. So von man goes a nine vav, and comes back, und ses dere s bout a hundred thousand ; den anuuer oU03 a little nearder, und he ses . about fifty tou sand ; and anuder goes nearder an dem, .in,J ses swanzich tousand ; den ven dey all come back de Sheneral counts all up togedder vat dey haf seen, und if de whisky is nearly all gone, he ses : "De enemy is in great force. I dink we shanges our base ;" but if de whisky is bretty blenty, he ses: "Got tarn! ve lick dose lew raskels a.i to uieces ; mm den he prints his sogers all in von pile ; We find the following in the Cincinnati KnquirtT : " Eliza Sitzes, a child two years old, bom in Hamilton county, about eight jniles from Cincinnati, presents one of the most curious developments in the natural world that has ever fallen under our ol servation. This child is olecrVant and intelligent, notwithstanding the extraordi nary phenomenon which she presents in ine iniijicuieius, jj1"" growth which has distended the cerebrum to an enormous size, giving wonderful capacity and breadth to the anterior, while the posterior region especially in us upper register, is by no means negiecu u. " The head measures fully three ami a- in circumference the loreliead und den iey uiaue; umuci iw, -dey goes bobbin round, till by und by dey conies near de enemy. Veil, so soon as de t seven and a-half inches in ei-ht, and some fourteen to sixteen inches ,readth. The hair, which is very fine und tells dem ; " Come along my po)s vp mfs dem Kebels hell :" and den he put some men mit dere pig guns on a hill, und orders dem: "l ire oft like ae iuyei, i .L.,r t,tl l.innr! all anions de LUI' t 7 ' ' " ' ? r - treos. Veil, bresentlv de Kebcls hear d- noise, and doy come up ami fire o!f, bang! too- ?in,l v.-n de Sheneral sees lie Ses: l oys, jj;o iii uui. Den de Pebels lir oifin some oder place, und de Sneneral " l'oys, so m dere," und dey go in ,. ly.ii l.v mid !'V de m'liO idt de corn. r, und de Mienei dere un hmoke 1 .liv fro in .lore. ses : dere come aroun Poys, go in dere," und den r- t ifjiiil. I lorteil Ills oiu .!. !.! Sli:t,F. It was nut mis-j ! ra'K'", ' ' ,:.:..., n-ln-nw- Hie :,.t ot al considerations in .t. il... ,..n- I:,skn personal sym-!h.Ui the rwer " , 1" not. i ... . .1. ...t.ii? , hitn u' ir. . 'v.i-. t ao : it is : luuaw . .1 .1 ! entreat you, to evade the issue ; :.ersoiial wrong. :.-r th (if ,.,in..;t,itmn.,l r.rtv and nrivatc entreat you, Ivoutra-ed Uyoiid example in , the judgement o And now, finally, let me as couairv, bv the President and his .I'.tts. wiiieh inves public sisnificancy ' acii ju of your convention. "lours I Vm.kv.l, an act of justice to a citizen I " ,J, ti.r his devotion to the rights of the :uid the lilx'rties of the people, had nmrked for desti notion by the hand. arbitrary power. Put it was much It was an example of courage tjr-by of the heroic aires of the world ; it was a spectacle and a rebuke to the tyrants who, having broken up : union would now strike down the o-titmion, subvert your present Gov " "at, and establish u formal and pro- ! despotism in its stead. You are j ristoreri and defenders ot constitu- 1 lilx-rtv. and bv that proud title his- j h'eV Will :.1mI I I congratulate vou upon your nomina- u.. 'Hiou vvi.om vou have placed Ji"Jii the ticket with me arc gentlemen ' i.:r.., ;i,r.rintv. and tried. to the Constitution, the Union, 'l to liberty. Their moral and poht courage a quality always rare, and Duw tlw luost valuable of public virtues Wond cmosi'ion. Everv way all these filiations were fit to be made. And f tho p.-ople and by we will Those who witnessed this liellisn ati, , i. twmtry ow, here is anuder say that the party consisted of four or J musw .-e.n Uncle Sam und some more five men, in citizens dress, and were led t.im r:iskals, und I vant you to put your l,v a c i-t iin The most careful effort gun on your back and shoulder your knap by a capi.im. xi.- jo anj 0 and f,lt too und be so goot have been made to discover the guilty per- . -ck and , c otF he goes, ;and s, ami we believe that they have been j br(ity (ley nmkes him a goqwral, On Monday a warraui j unj now he Writes a letter on me, unu set C, Wagoner, llios. 31. j tut he hat a goot shance to be maue cap Mi Conipropst, Altrcnl lynursi, uu - un l 1 ' ' . scLnvm w no rrowaril. I ..l.J. sons . 1 success: ui. issued for W fiilht so as ufml Tvhurst. and one JiillVV. J ' 1,-r 1 - ! Cant W 11. Hughes, from nmoic-, , . . ' 1 ' .. Tv. wliai is i f'.,inLri:i cwnnty. orupioosi j hurst were arrested, and gave bail in $o00 but the other two, boing absent, have not Itof if. inle'd all these be yet been ia..en. L.otles dev fi-ht, und how menny Rebels . ... . ii.nn K- forliwir to comment uponiue uoum - - ,W A,'t .lemanded by military ueccssoj, I.-.. - i aev Km, unu nun mumj ; U- IIlllloe yjj j - , -y LniiLef mail - . l t.lll, .1 r.l....-f sire none, anu i - , ioc ol ine num. i 1. .m,l now mcnuv lieoeis Kins ueiu, For if this civil war ! . scenes around us without is ihe pretext for all the monstrous acts and ,.!..;,. f arbitrarv power which you i'.' nol.lv denounwd? "Military uu .- J . . , I necessity." Put it, md.vd an i lieve me your liberties are gone, and ty- j rcalities of the .-.vu.tiial. For if this civil war j . . j I t , , . r,i,;,1JTaii,iri or i . fri I A i . ci .,k. ,i..-.,,t .n,l vot le. a ir- . , , ...v,n.ii.i on v ov arc riiuj'v"""" . , , tiirnre. Alio puui i vm uu liuiuums w uwui, e-- .. :.....r .1..." South to force anl;lr vii and men norals is about, uml vat Uncle Sam is uiiussiu.i "I miiia nas w-w" turn comes. iy I tell you, he vill s de tuvvcl. Onee 1 see him lick a poy more as haf so pig as himselfs. Veil ven he goes off mit de sojers I tell him he shall write home on me und let . 1 1 . . 1 1..... .-.i.-.i-.r me know vai ne uues, unu now kill, und how menuy und how menny men tie lebel. haf, und is arms, the infant of to-day win not uve w the end of it. 'o, iu another way only can it be brought to a close. 1 rav elin" a thousand miles and more, through nearly one-half of the Confederate States, and sojourning for a time at widely dif ferent points, I met not one man, woman, or child who was not resolved to perish rather than yield to the pressure oi even in the most desperate extremity. And whatever may ana must . virvin" fortune ot tnc war, in ui ... I'rJco "nie the liand of Providence point m visibly to the- ultimate issue of this .n-eat trial of the States and people of America they arc better prepared now A.m uta, t icy inexorable every way to ke gu purpose man ai j r""", These may in- 1 - ... . 1 . 1 about, und vat Mielt uavis is auom, unu how long de war shall last, und all about cfery ting ; of course I reads some of dese tin-is in de baliers, but de Labors is all lies. I believe not von tarn word from de whole of dem. I see dem make it all down in dere cellar. I tiuks dey don't know no more about it as I do. My Shorge is right dere on de shpot und sees it mit his own eyes, dat is petter as bein Oh ! what a withering, ! in a cellar, und if he writes me some tings, upou I swear its shust so. ell, by ana oy ne 1 . , ..... a nr.. f...l..r " itp nip. von letter. jo uvu .h., he ses. " I haf notings to eat." All rite ! I sends him a box so pig as a parn, mit souer krout, und bolonies, und pretzels, mind has become uisorueivu, who have sworn solemn oaths to obey the law to maintain and do justice under the cover of darkness, delileratcly destroy the property of private citizens threaten . .!... tlins.' WHO OTpose men lo snooL uuii" i fiendish work and disgrace themselves j and their race by the most indecent and vulvar utterances and most diabolical and brutal conduct. burning shame upon our country, the great cause of public order and per sonal security ! And is it by these means that the Democratic party is to Le Wen into submission to worship at the altar of jl.r nino fimnrii It de oder corner, und it dere any more poys left, dey go in derc, und so dey go on fighting till it gets dark, und if they licks the Rebels dey call it victory, und if the llebels licks dem, dey call it shtrategy. iut it tne lveoeis mm out dat deyCarc gettin licked, dey sen.ls out a man mit a utile nag, un i oo uuiiv..- , shtop. I want to see your Shenerai ; und den dey shtop, und bring him mit de Sheneral, und lie specks mit him und gifs him Shetf Davis' gompliments, und hopes he is veil, und his mutter is veil, und his grandmutter is veil, und all de oder family, und asks him if he will be so goot und to shtop fighting a little till he hurries some .lend men. den dey can po on again. Und den de Sheneral sos : " Oh, yes !" und .lev takes a drinks a'! round, und he sends ....... -i - 1 I !. his gomphments to Mien uaus, unu m mutter, und giandmutter, und der rest ol dem. Und bv und by de Rebels leaves his dead men bury deniselfs, und goes off mit his pack und baggage, und army, und all he can shteal. Den de Sheneral writes home a long U tter on Olt Abe und sus : " Dunder und IV.ixen ! Got for tarn o-oot! We lick de Kebels shust now, und cut dem all to bieccs, und taKcs ue oilers for brisoners. Hurray de Consh titution und de Union 1" Put if dey don't lick de Kebels. he ses : " Yesterday de enemy come in front of me, about two w T 1. -.1 . millions more as l was,-i ngm mit nun half feet is at leas heiiil lir. and of a flaxen hue, is not luxuriantly spread over the crown, but quite as much so as in most children of the same age. The skin is very fair, and wears a healthy appearance, and the face is by no means ungainly in expression the features be low the forehead arc regular, only the eves are somewhat expanded, and the delicately pencilled brow seems to be warped, and wears a hard expression through the expansion of the forehead, which here commences. " Prom the crown 'of the head to the car is about eighteen inches. The head is not regularly shaped, but is broader on the forehead, save that the region ueiimu the cars is enormously enlarged. The history of this child and the singular growth of its head are striking. At its birth nothing remarkable was presented. About two weeks after, without any ap parent or known cause, the head began to irrow. and continues to increase in size, C - - j . I - 1 presenting one of those phenomena w uicii issures us that what we uecmeu impossi ble may be realized. "This child presents a most interesting subject of inquiry and investigation to the scientific, and is -worthy their attention. It is a curious spectacle, and by no means revolting; and can only be appreciated when seen, because description cannot convey a fair impression of the animate curiosity. There has been a large reward offered "for any natural curiosity that can exceed this, but no one has tendered com petition. It is understood that in a short time it is the intention to exhibit this phe nomenon to the curious iu the larger towns of Southern Ohio, and it is well worth the inquiries and investigation of the naturalist and scientific. The child is easily moved about by its mother, and rarely expresses discontent. It is gene rally kept in a recumbent state, and sooth ed by gentle "rocking. It receives its fiod readdv and is affcetedTike other children, presenting no other unnatural appearance than its enormous and constantly enlarged head." fathers mada of grievances C2 Our Revolutionary the following statement against the British King. He taxed tea. He had a stamp tax. He incited the negro to insurrection. lie made the military above the civil power. lie sent men into banishment ana exue without the authority of law. I le paid no respect to our constitutions and laws. He was a tyrant generally. Those grievances read singularly now, in view of the action of the present Re publican Administration. A Pri.cociol-s Infant. A stupid rumor was recently put afloat that some days ago " a -child was born in Greens burg, with full . grown whiskers, double " teeth all round, and informed those pres ent that this war would close in three months, and then would follow three years of famine," after which this extraordinary child died. No wouler the poor thing died, after such an exliibition of precocity ! und drive him away, und now I go off und get behindt him, und lick so as never was." Und so he goes und get a goot vays behindt him in ele front. Veil, now I shtop. 1 haf tell vat I dinks about war, und braps I am so much rite as some oder becple. GoTi.iur, IvIjOIUiekyoss. und alles' vot is goot. Veil, hretty soon, he rites me anuder letter: "My dear F3 A Western editor having published a lona leader on ''Hoes," a rival paper in ding his family matters on the public imder them. sr A French paicr says that a New ; Zealand chief has just taken up his resi dence upon a piece of land, ins ngiu 10 which was contested. " I have an un doubted title to the property," he observed, " as 1 ate the preceding owner." " Well what next !" said Mrs." Partington, as she interrupted Ike, who was reading the war news " The pickets were driven in five miles! Bless my poor soul, but that will make a strong fence. I suppose they hail to be anven in uecp 10 nTvi4ei sesiouaders from digging out - f V.r nnVli I nn.lpr them." i "-n it'iiloiisr- I nm BnrO. will now be Einnir.p; of the struggle.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers