TAT A JEjlCXSLlxEHjl'toprictor.] JEjlCXSLlxEHjl'toprictor.] NEW SERIES, A weekly Democratic paper, devoted to Pol icS, News, the Art J% HKL and Siicees Ac. Pub tlshed every Wednes d y, at Tunkhannoek, tVyoming County, Pa. /' * 3Y HARVEY SICKLER. Terms—l copy 1 year, (in advance) *2 01. I Pot pain within six months, %2.50 will be charged atdcvehtising. 10 line< or J fas, m ike threl ( four . two three' sir tons i one -"ju ire week: weeks mo'(ft nio'lh mo'lit year j ISj utro l.Oifl l,2>< 2,25 2,37 3.00 5,0 2 lo 2 001 200 325 3.50 4,50; 6,0 3 to. 3,a-)i 3.7 V 1.75 5,50> 7.00: 0.0 i 0 jlama. 4.0 ); 4,5U> 6,50; 8,00! 10,1.Uj 15,0 Jo. 6,00 ",00J 10,00: 12.00.; 17.00; 25.0 do. 300 9.50 11.01; 13,00 25,00.. 35.0 1 <fc). 10,00 12,03: 17,005 22,00 '24,00 10,0 lluslness Cards uf one square, with paper, S3, i ffou wonis: at all kinds noatly executed, and at prices to the times. fusinuss .iioHrfS. Rlt.&s, \\ % iTITTI.E ATTORNEY'S A LAW, Office on Tioga street, Tnnkhar.no Pa. Ha. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A SURGEON • New-ton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. 10011* v£UX 'H-' O UI 31U51 s.v'lS ui onqjo '''J 'q-iouuoqqimx XT AWT XV A3XHOI.LV 'AOIKII *!S OSkJ \irj|. >l. PIATT. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Of \ > Gee in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga St., Tunk fc.iiinf'k, Pa. I|{. .1 C,. II KiU. K 16*1 . I'll YSICTAN ** SCVGEGN, Would respectful! v announce to ilia ciii/.- n- ' Wy tho ha* loca e - J •vt khannock i* h<> will promptly attend to *ll caii.- in the line of profession. Will be found at home on Saturday.* o j wee WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE, TI'MviIAXNOCi, WYOMING CO., PA. I *IIIS establi>htnent has recently teen refitted an i furnished in the latest style Every attention i *iii he given to the comfort and convenience of those w.io patronize the lloti=e. T. B. WALL, Owner and Proprietor . Tunkb'xnnock, September 11, 1861. HOBTH BRANCH HOTEL, AILSHOPPKN, WVti.MINU COUNTY, PA Wm. 11. COKTItKiIIT, Fiop'r f TAVING resumed the pp. prietership of '.lre il.ove [1 Hotel, the un K>■ igned w ill c.re no effort to rondor thcJitVu.se :m .._rr< e dde phn eot - j 'urn for ail who m;%f.ivur it with their rust m. Wm. II CCKTKIIIIIT. Jn, 3rJ, 1563 iKihi, TP.A- . D. B- BARTLET, I [Late of the Bbii\inai:t> lloi sk, Elmira, X. Y. ! I* IK/I'M 11'lTUR, The MEAN'S HOTEL, i otwofine LARHEST ! and BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country--It i is fitted up in the inos' modern and improved style, i and no pains are spired to make it a pleasant and j agreeable stopping-place hr alt, v 3, n2l, ly. M. OILMAN, j DENTIST. - o .JK J—• -W=A Yt.araiY.A-' ' .$ -vsr.-• ,jp >W- - A T OILMAN, has permanently located in Tunk i\l. hannock Borough, and respectfully tenders las , f>rofcsio A services to the cit'neus of this pla:e and ! ur-ounding country. ALL WORK WARRANTED, TO GlY£ SATES- j FACTION. |.gf" Office over Tutton's Law Ofiiee, near th e Pos | Office. Dec. 11, IS6i. A HHNTT7FIMAN cured of Nervous DchßPv.Tn- ! competency, Premature Decay and Youthful Error actuatee by a desire to benefit others, will be happy i o furnish "to all who need il, (free of charge ), tho re ipc and directions for making the simple remedy iel in hisfase. Those wishing to profit by his, and , o scss a Valuable Kerned*, wll roieive the came, ly return mail, (carefully sealed,) by addressing JOHN B. OH DEN No* 60 Nassau street, New York. *3-r.40-3mo U~ SB ItO^OTHBR!—BUCHAN'S SPECIFIC PILLS are the only Reliable Revieely for all Diseasrs of the Seminal, T'riiiary and Ninons Sytf-. ems. Try one box, and bo cured. ONE DOLLAR A B<OX. One box will perfect a cure, or money re loded- Sent by mail on receipt of price. • JAMES S. IfUTLER, Station D Bible Pouse New York, General Agent v3-n3l-3m. M. XCo MT'IOIAICUII AEEI&Y. CONDUCTED BY HARVY AND COLLINS, WASRfNtiTON, D, C* In order to faciliate the pr jnaimeut of Bouuty, arrears of pay, Pensions and other Claims, due sosdiers and other persons from siheGovemmsnt of the United States. The under- has mode arrangements with the above firm honse experience and close proximity to, and daily n ereourse with the department; as well as the car reknowledge, acquired by tbem, of the decisions tij quently being raa<le, enables tkeio to prosecute Ituuis luore efficiantly than Atmrucvs at a distance, Inpossibly du All parsons culiilei to claims oftbo favedescription can have tk*m prnMy attemiol hinobbyliajj on me uud entrusting tbem to my care lIAKVEY SICKLER, f;"* . ur ßarvy A Collins, kuannook t P. SUKPIUSED. "Ticket, Sir, if ycu please 7 dusk and daylight—the warm gold of the sunset sky just fading into crim son, and the train thundered t vtr the iron track, like srune Rtroriz, furious demon.— Carl Silver became dimly conscious ot these things as he started from a brief, restless slumber, wherein his knapsack had served as a pillow, and s'ared vaguely into the sharp Y'ankee face of the obdurate conductor. "Ticket ! I suppose I've such a thing about me." he muttered drowsily, searching first one poeftet and then the other. "Oil here it is! I say, conductor, are we near New York?" "Twenty minutes or so wilTbring us into Jemy City—we arc making pretty good time." And the sh*rrp fuccd official passed on to harrass the next unfortunate man who had neglected to put Ids ticket in his hat-band ; while Captain Silver dragged himself into a sitting posture, putting his two hands back of his head with a portensious yawn, and smiled to remember the famatic dreams that had chased one another through his brain during the half hour of cramped, un easy slumber from which the conductor's challenge had roused him—dreams in which bloody battle-fields and lonely night-march es had blended only with sweet home voices, and the sulphutous breath of artillery had mingled with violet scents from the twilight woods gusts of sweetness from the tossing clouds of peach blooms through which the flying train shot remorselessly. And then Carl Silver began to think of other things. "Conductor I" whispered the fat old lady i pp .site, in the bombazine bonnet and snuiT c.dured ahaw I. "Yes'in said the man of tickets, stopping in his transit through the c.u, and iuchning his '•Tiiat 3'oung mm in the military cap, con duct >r—l hope he hain't an escaped lunatic dressed up in soldiers clothes. I've heercd ' sich tilings, .And I don't, a bit like the iv;iy he keeps grinning to himself and rub- ; hiiig his hands together. He's acted queer ail day. and t in trav'iiti alone, conductor !" i i Ti c Conductor laughed and passed on 1 Toe old lady brindled in oiLmied dignity, i files* her anxious heart! how was she to j know thut Captain Silver was only rejoicing) in die glorious '"surprise" he had in store for i iiis mother and dimpled faced sis'er that n yht ? Was it not a year—twelve long, j !<ng months since he had looked upon their 1 fac - I it ? And r.ow , i Oh, speed on 3'< ur "ay, express train, j through quiet villages w here daff >dtls sprink | le all the garden with gold! Speed over i the sloping hills, where springing grass! send* up a laint, debet us -nu-il, and brok> J babble umler sweeping willows—past lonely )' church yards, where the hands' of in j numerable grave stones beckon through the I gathering 'w,light and are gone; for every J M rob of your iron pule brings one true j heart nearer home ! Shot and shell have | spared him for this hour; fever and pc6ti- | lenccd an foul malaria have passed him by . I and now Suppose there shonhl he an accident! He j had heard of such things on lightning routes •Suppose he should be carried home a dead, | mangle 1 copse, the words of greeting fr< zen into eternal sile ice on his lips, the glad sight sealed fotvver under the heavy eyelids ! Strange that such morbid fancies shou'd nev i pr have assailed him in the lire and smoke of Gettysburg, yet come to him now, hke j guests that would not be given when he was within twenty minutes of home ? Would it break his mother's heart ; or would she live on ? And would Kate Maria m care ? Kate Mariatn, the blue eyed, shy, littly fairy who won! ! never look at him save through her | brown lashes, and whose coy mouth always made him think of scarlet cherries and roses dashed in dew. "To think !"' ejaculated Carl Silver, bring ing down his bronzed fist on the window j ledge that ma le the glass rattle ominously and struck a chill to the heart of the old lady in the bombazine bonnet—."to think that I, who would knock down the man who ven. tured to itII me I was a coward, should be afraid to say frankly to a sicnder girl that I lore lutr !" "To think that the very touch of her glove, the sound of her footstep, the rustle of her ribbons, can frighten her self possession away and m ike a staring, silent idiot of me !" I After all, what is a man's c mrage worth ? j There's n > use of thinning of it ! I shall die | an old bachelor, fori will never marry any j woman bui Kaie Marium, and 1 never shall dare to plead tny ca*e with Kate : I wish I hadu t such an absurd streak of cowardice through tne." Yet Captain Sdver's men had told a differ ent tale when ho led them over the bridge in that dieadful charge at / ntietam. Coward ice ! there are several interpretations to that word. lt Carnage ! carriage ! No, I won't have any carriage !Get awny from me, yos fellowi! You are worse than the locusts of Egypt, and ten time 6 as noisy," cried Captain Silver, en ergetically elbowing his way through the •warm of WKMTS rho oaklnj "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS FS EVERY FREEMAN'S RIGHT. "—Thomas Jeflersou. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOV. 16 1864. night hideous at the fool of Cortland street Do you suppose that lam going to spoil my precious surprise with a carriage ?" Broad wav by gaslight ! How strange yet how familiar, it seems to the returning exile, with its stately facade of freestone and rnarr h!e, seeming literally to rest on foundations of living fire, and its throng 6 of people, com ing and going in everlasting succssion, like the tides of a never resting sea. Carl Sil ver's heart leaped up in his breast with a quick, joyous throb a' the old accustomed sight and sounds. It was good to hear his footsteps ringing on Manhat'aness ground. N<. light in the house ! His heart stood still a moment. This was strange—ominous But then he remembered that his mother was fond of sitting in the twilight, and dis missed the lingering doubes from his mind. How loruy the door was on the latch, and swung noiselessly open. Hush ! not a creaking chsr or clanking spur must betray him ; through tho old fa miliar hall he passed and into his mother s room lighted only by the ruddy glimmer of a bright coal fire. "Where the mischief are they all ?" ejac ulated Captain Silver under his breath, "No matter—they'll be along 6oon ; meantime I'll wheel up this big chair and take a bask, forhlie air is chilly, rf ft is the first week in May. Won't they be astonished, though when tin y cume ? Upon my word, things couldn't have happened nicer ! Faugh ! what a smell of paint--Whitewash, too, aa I'm a living sinner! Confound it—l've kicked over a pail of stuff! 11 the women folks aren't cleaning house!" The Captain gave an indignant sniff as he surveyed the desolate scene. "What comfort a f-tnile can find in turn ing things upside down, and deluging the house with soap and water twice a year, 1 can't imagine. Carpets all up—floor damp— curtains torn down—not one familiar object to greet a fellow's eyes after a twelve moot h absencs Irutn homo, Ileigho! I think 111 light a cigar." Which he did, and began to smoke and meditate. There was ajrustle and tripping foot-fall ou the stair*. Trie Captain took out his cigar niid listened. *' That's Minny," said hn to himself— Mother doesu'l dance upstairs like that." lie rose and leaned against the door casing is t'l ■ di *c. lg feet cnue nearer and nearer How his heart beat as the firelight shown on ihe crimson merino dress and the ldtle. white apron "ii the threshboid ! And the in xi mono-ill he had caught the slight form hi his arms, and was showering kisses on cheek, and brew and lips. " Caught fur once, Miss Minny !" he cx claim* d. That's to pay you for presuming to clean In use without mj* pet mission ! No -you're not going to escape," Such a piercing scream as she rewarded his Iral c-rmil demonstrations with ! Carl Silver let go her waist and retreated against the wall with a faint idea of breaking through (he la'h and plaster, and hiding himself in the general ruin. Fur as truly as ho stood there, quaking in Ins regimentals, the voice was nc t that of his sister Minnv, but—Kale Mariam ! " How dare you !" sho ejaculated, with crimson cheek and quivering hp*. I'll ring the bell cn l caii the servants if you don't leave the house this minute." " Upon my wor,d I'm neither a burglcr or an assassin, pleaded Carl, recovering his self possession, in a measure, as he saw Kate's breathless terror. " Don't you know me, Miss Mariam—Captain Silver!" " You are an imposter, said Kate with spirit. Captain Silver is in tho army of the Pc tomac!" "No, he's not; he's here," urged Carl.— How shall I pruvc that I'm myself ? Kate ! Miss Mariain— For she had sUnk in the chair and began to cry. lie knelt beside her with a rough at tempt at comfcrt. " No, she sobbed, only—only I was so frightened. The little, trembling, thing ! CarlSilaer had never seen her in tear 6 before. No silly assumption of dignity now—no roy al airs,only brown disheveled hair and cheeks like red clover blossoms in a shower. He was the strong one now—how natural it seemed to clasp the tiny palms in his strong hand. " Kate, dearest,! love you! with my whole heart. Nay, do not be so frightened;- I would die to save yon one moment's terror. Only tell me that your heart is mine." And when the tears were dried, leaving the eyes like drenched violets,and the cheek* flushed brightly, Carl Silver had license to keep one little fluttering hand In his, and he knew that he was an accepted lover. " But where is ray mother and sister?— he a>ked at length. And what i the solu tion of this strange riddle ?" " Don't you know," laughed Kate, " they do not live here any more?" " Not live here !" "No ; have you forgotten that yesterday terday was the first of May 1 ? We occupy this house now— papc, aunt Millicent and T." "Oh ! quoth Oarl, "So they've moved. And I never heard of it. Upon my word they treat me very coolly." " Ah, but you would hare heard of it> said Kate, if you had staid quietly in camp to get your letter, instead of rovinjf over the country without a word of warning to your friends. " Give me one more kiss. Katie, and I'm off to see them. Ono more, my betrothed wife. Does it not seem like a dream ?" ''And you are my soldier now,!' whispered Kate, playing with the gold buttons on his coat with tremulous fingers. " Mint to ei nd out into the battle field to dream and pray for. Carl, I have always repined that I had no gift for my country, now I can give my best and dearest to aid her cause." " Spoken like a soldiers wife, Kate," said Silver, with kindling eyes. If you but knew how much better wo men fight for knowing that woman's love and woman's prayers en shrine us with a golden, unseen armor—non sense ! I'm getting sentimental. Good night." So there were three surprises that May evening—one for Kaie Marriam, (wouldn't you have been surprised, Mademoiselle, to be caught and kissed in the dark and not know who the kisser was?) one for Captain S'lver (a very agreeable one though,) and the old original surprise, if we may bo term it, for his mother and sister. And Carl has not yet left i ff congratulating himself that his "leave of absence" occured in the flowery and mig r.rorv month of May. For if he hadn't blun dered into Miss Mariam's house, and kissed her by mistake, thereby bringing matters precipitately to a focus, the probabilities are that to this day he never would have mus tered courage to tell her of his love. And when the golden armadas of tTlb au tumn leaves float down the forest brooks, and the blue mist of Indian summer wraps the hills in dreamy light, Carl Silver is com ing hack to seal Kate Mariam's destiny with wedding ring. FIFTEEN GREAT MISTAKES It is a great mistake to set up our own standard of right and of wrong, and judge people accordingly. It is a gr.-at mistake to measure the enjoymept of others by our own;; to expect uniformity of opinion in thi3 world' to look for Judgment and experience in youth to endeavor to *nould all dispositions alike ; not to yield in immaterial trifles ; fo look for perfection in our actmns ; to worry ourselves and others with what Mnnot be remedied ; not to alleviate all that needs alleviation a-; i far as lies in our power ; not to make allow, j mice* fur the infirmities of others ; to Consid- j er everything impossible which we cannot ; perform, to believe only what our finite minds j can grasp ; to expect to he able to under-* stand everything. The greatest of all mis takes is to live only for Time, and that when any moment may launch us into Eternity, j -4*b- There is a man in Totness so witty that his wife manufactures all the butter that j f ' ' the family uses from the cream of his jokes. CLtC The fellow who gel intoxicated with 1 delight, has been turned out of the temper*- ance society. car exchange says lovers, like ar mies, get along'quietly enough until they are engaged. Water isn't a fashionabie beverage for drinking j*our friends health, but it is a capi tal one for drinking your own. Let a woman bedecked with all the em bellishment of art and nature, yet if bold ness be read in her face, it blots out all the lines of beauty, It has been said that a clattering little soul In a larze body is like a swallow in a barn— the twitter takes up more room than the bird. Some mischievous wags, one night, pulled down a turner's sign; and put it over a law yer's door; in tb e morning it read, "All sorts of turning and twisting done here." A genins named Flaherty, of Washington city, has the following posted on his window •' Eggs newly lata here on the shortest no tice" • • I•• A Western Editor says that in tho town where his paper is published, 1 a rattlesnake was killed a few days ago by a man with thirteen rattles." A doctor returned a coat to a tailor be cause it did not fit him. The tailor seeing the dooior at tha funeral of one of his pa tients, said, " Ah, doctor you are a happy man,' " Why so ?" " Because, replied the tailor, you never have any of your bad work leturnpd on your hands." Have you a sister ? Then bve and cher ish her syith a holy friendship. And if you have none, why love somebody else's sister. A Greenhorn desires to know why crock ery ware dealers re unlike all other shop keeers j And *dd%,very imoceotly. " Because it wont do for them to crack up their goode." I) ASH FUG NESS IN YOUTH Young people, on their first admission to this outer world, are especially afflicted with false shame ; so that it inay be regarded s one of the moral diseases of the mine's infan cy. It is at the bottom of a great deal of their shyness. They cannot feel at ease, be cause they mistrust something about them* selves or their belonging*, and bare that feel ing ot bareness und exposure in the presence of unfamiliar eyes which attaches to sensi tiveness under untried circumstances. Every thing then assumes a magnified, exaggerated characiet, the place they occupy on the one hand, and the importance uf the occasiou on the oilier. The present company is ihe woild the universe, a convention uf men and gods all forming a deliberate and u reversible judg ment upon them, and deciding to their disad vantage on account of some oddness, or awk wardness, or pa&sin, slip m iheui selves or in the access *ries about them. But irj must per*ons, time and experience bring so much humility as teaches them their insignificance. It is not, we soon learn, very lively that at any given time a mixed assemblage is think ing very much about us ; and then the hotror ola consp cuous position loses its main stuig ! This on the one Land ; on the other, we are not as dependent on the award ol socitiy as we were. Even a roomful comprises, to out enlarged imagination, by no means the whole citation. There is something worth caring for outside those wails. And aleo we have cume to form a sort of estimate ol ourselves There is now a third pariy IU tbe question, in ihe shape of relf-respect. We realize thai we are t< ourselves of immeasurably more conse quence thariany one else can be to us. Thus, either by reason or thenatuial hardening and strengthening process of the outer air, most people overcome any couspicuous di&play ol the weakness. By the time youth is over, they have either accepted their position or set about in a business-like way to meud it. He who waits to do a great deal ol good at once will never do anything. Life i# ma le up of little things. It is very rartly, au occasion is offered for doing a great deal at once. True greatness consists in being great in little things, D.ops make the ocean, and the greatest works are done by littles li we would do much good in 'he world, we must be willing to do good in little things. A Lady, whose style of piety was more af fected than attractive, once took a friend to task Lr wearing feathers. -'But," said the friend, wh} are my feathers any more objec tionable than the brilliant artificial flowers in your own bonnet ? "Oh," replied the censo rious lady. "Christians must draw the line somewhere, and I draw it at feathers. your child tubed happy - Whatever cares press give it a warm good night Kiss as it goes to its pillow. The mem-ry of this in the stormy years which fate msy have in store for the htt'e one, will ! be like Bcthleheui'a star to bewi'dvred shep herds. A SOFTENER. —A woman's teats softens a man'.* heart ; her flatteries his head. Tom presented his bill to relghbor i Joe for service rendered. The latter looked at it. and expressed much surprise at the amount. Why Tom it strikes me you have made out a pretty round bill here, eh ? "I'm sensible its a round one, quoth Tom, and I've come for the purpose of having it tquaied, llow is your husband this after- i noon, Mrs. Squiggs ?" "Why, the doctor says as how as has, if he lives till the inorniu' be shall have some hopes of him, but if he don't he must give him up." . J.p MARRIED, at Detroit, Michigan, by the Rev. Mr. Cnot, Mr. Thomas Hum to Miss Ella Bug. Who will, after this, say marri age is a Humbug ? To be ahead of time—carry your watch behind you. — flpySomc wag has thus defined marriage —two nod 3 and a five dollai prayer. cur If yon cannot please without being ; false to yourself, you had better displease. rar What part of speech is a kiss ? A i conjunction. And what form ? A lip tick le. C3T The roost curious thing in tho world j is a woman who is not curious. • Qmlls are things that are taken from the pinions of one goose to spread the opin ions of another. C3T The man who never says nothing to nobody, was married last week to the lady who never speaks ill of no one. - EST The worst feature of a man's face is bis nose—when stuck in other people's bu4i* <• - V now. , r . , ptf "ajfr . VSfI.AXS: 52.00 rER A.I9XtT J TUK RULING PASSION, An eminent French artist posaerseaa tedfl ey, very intelligent, ugly, but an im-~ roense, pet of her owner's. Madeinoitillff Nouniqe, however, possesses all the defect* which the cynic considers to be particularly feminine. She is lazy, inqiisitve, excess ively addicted to sugar plums, fruit cake, Ac., fidgety, disorderly, touching everything breaking everything she touches, daubing * h< r master's pictures, twisting the neclta of his wife's canaries, and one upon a time, pulled eve"}' feather out of a splendid parrot' m imitation of the cook, who she had seen day before picking a fowl. A Sh<rt titna since, the arlist, having to go out, and dread ing lest Nouine sum 1 perform sitor na# ' piece of mischief during his absence, betbo't himself of a method of furnishing her #tth something to do until I%is return. He ac coadingty took the monkey in his lap, dress ed her in a gay gown which had served M * model in one of his pictures, in which figuftf a marquis < f the time of Lotus XiV, painted her cheeks white and red, with a black under on# eve, powdered her heatV tiung a huge string o beads aroundher neck,' mid then having seated her on the floor, in a crrer of the atilier, with a small lookiog glass in her hand, left her, not without soma misgiving, and promising himself ndf toTii longrway. But instead of returning early, the artist was unexpectedly detained, and only got home the next morn ng. He at; the atelier went in terror, expecting to find everything upside down, and half his pictures spoiled. "I ready must got rid of Noume," said the artist to himself, as he anxiously unlocked ; the dt or of his studio, "for I cannot let my work remain at the little wretch's mercy % | But to his surprise and relief he found her asleep, exactly where he had placed her, and I holding the looking glass in her hands. Not a thing had been touched by her in the ar' list's absence, j "The fact is," continued the cynic, "that the ugly little beast, as vain as her sex enti tius her to be, had been so enraptured with heJ own beauty ar.d that of her finery, that she had remained through the entire day, ab sorbed in the contemplation of her charming | self in the little hand-glass. Now tell ma," he added triumphantly appealing to His lis— teners, "does anybody believe that a mate monkey would have passed a whole after noon in gjzing at himself in a mirror, and can anybody doubt, after such a proof to the contrary, that vanity is the ruling passion o the female 6ex ?" — At the Brady House, Ilarrisburg, a fa# days since, two friends were cinrersing, and one of them asked: 'By the way S———, what are your politics ?" "A Democrat, ir, because my father was a Democrat," an swered the person addressed. "And what ia ' your religion 2" "A Protestant, sir, because y father was a protestaot." "And why *re ® you a bacheler r" "Because my father wal# a—" At this moment S happened to think what he was saving, so he turned away "Oh, darn! whats the use talking ? Ton't bother me with your silly questions." In early youth, while yet we live among those we love, we love without restrains, and 1 our hearts overflow in every look, word and " action. But when we enter into the world, and are repulsed by strangers, and forgotten by friends, we grow more and timid in our approaches, eveu to those we love best. Hovr delightful to us then, are the caresses of ' J children. All 6mccjity, all affection, they ' fly into our irms; and then only, wo feel the renewal of our first confidence and firrt pleasure. ... -eiD L. Ilavo you ever thought of ii 1 The mem- .\ cry of an eye is the most deathless of memo- J ries. because there, if anywhere, you catch a ghmpse of the viable soul as jt sila by the window. King George of Greece, during his lata tour through' his kingdom, requested on hia arjival at Missoloughi, to be shown Byron'# tomb. His majesty wai greatly shocked at its dilapidated condition, and gaqe orders for the immediate repair of the poets last resting: place. i' to® -a- Punch savs that the reason why ed itors are so apt to have their manners spot J ed, is b cause they receive from one aorre#- pondent and another such a vast amount of evil communications, . t • i A member of the luzy Society was com- t plained of for running. His defence waa that he was going down hill, and that it was more , lebor to walk than to ruu. Complaint sras dismissed with expenses. In Chester county, Pa., it is stated that not less than thirty mills are now at work manufacturing sorghan syrup The price# , cluirged is 25 to 30 ceuls per gallon. COST Why is dancing like new milk ?-* * * Beca use it strengthens the calyes own Early rising in the country I# not an ia- 4 •tinct; it ts a sentiment #ud rauit be cu'ti ' vmted. • , < m- s TOL. 4 NO. 15
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers