BY DAVID OYER. r £. ©Jf SPM D3NT I S T , Bedford, Pa. Ornrr. on Pht Street, nearly opposite th- ••B/lford Hotel." Tecthplugg d, reg ulated, &C., anil artificial teeth inserted, t'rotn •,e t.i an ent'resct. Charges moderate, and ail op Tdions warranted. "TTe.uis.r-I'osiTiTEi.r CASH. .T.ia, Vi, 1831. ' IWll'ORE! ' Oprnct! Cul fu a ftew Plnce ! rjlifE cr.ber Ins just opened oat a New JL and Cheap Dry uaol3 and Fancy Store, I:; the West end f tli building formerly in tht eccnpiacy of !>■*. John ii. lioiius, liwc'd, and : .v occupied by lr. B. K. Hurry. !1. a..;i LIK pocket handkerchiefs at frcm 12 i ■I-- up to Si; undr'r-leev.'a Iron, 10 cents ta . ; mit* from ii to 75 cts; cott..n hose •..'ii dj up to 37 £ cetifs; good 1,1-e calico fm 1 * ; _■ i's per yar l; eoil.ira from 3 cent* tip t "ii 1.-ii'i pocket handiier chief from 6* cents to -.'.it; bonnet nob. ns from CJ to 31 cents: is from 31 cents to $1.25; bonnets F IU'JJ c-ta up; Rlooiners from cents up .. 11 it itlit-t a ltd ftcnilenicus' 3) ear rf'TV .1 seription, usually found in Dry i-.i- ill Fancy St'-res; also table linens ai , . .ie boots And shoes; carpets; a genera! n? "f Queenswarr and £ro- Cfi. Je*; as 1 a great ir.my small articles to.. , i ..-r crj. ioLctr thaa can be procured • ■ are in this place. . r M-, .."fuly re [ *.**t* ail to cillndex s.Tßiae hi. stock and ju ijre for themi dves. ELI AS FISHER. Apr"! G, .1 >-idf{e oi Jcieucf. Dr. C. Kr'bo.z of Mechauicsbftrg, Cumberland C i. Fa., iuiia.mcos to those atiii<-tcd witu iu 1.-I .V j i j. C i.ic.rs, i'oiypus, Lupus Moie.- o: .M ir .s Scrotals or Ling's L.'i! and si! disease! ' . ;t :ii.va oceo usually treated with Caustic oi K. .i!b, .i." : ri remove them by an entirely npw u.:.;>i. walkout cutting, burning, or pain". Net * tsr uhiorofortn or Lthcfis administered, to th ; itie it. It is t > raittrr on whit p irt of the body '.in-' may be bo can remove them with perfect satcty. •it -i ir: o .rk t.>. •Sb >rt tide, No At inert, oi ■ 'og'tt he ;• jjs oi, ia .ippliod, ana no money rt .■ In it.l I cure is perfected. : - >'J teri. iem .le coiap'"iut. Chronic, Yon •. .1 hi .our diseases treated ni:hp,i. •ive <•>. • • :u. ill pirtir.stars ctn be obtained to ■i i irossiiiji i let English oil German; est pa Patients t ib-- aScOmmodatod with Boaiu o: :e i>-nli.io terms. M :"c*t nics'iurg is one of the prettiest ant: li-t!thi.j.f tow.is in ihis or any other State. Iti, 5 miles f.- i n *1 .rrisburg on theC. V. K.li.anu an : .is;ole from all parts of the Union. r;ie *>T. v.;t irsii, i_ae m uj pari oi tin I Stile when desired". Kin 1 rea l -r if you know any afflicted fellow creature. t -.'.ay ■: totcllfheni ofchistreatnient. Feb. 15. 18"..l -7.2 ©YKYiuYTuss LOOKS, roi THE AIXJPTIOJI or iDrtUiliip 2Di:d3 of Education and Union Schools. tjp.'fF r .Urn-Tig excellent School Books have A u'ccti ad •: : by nowe than OSF. THOISSHI: ' li'trls <•!' ii.iur Tien, in the last eighteen! nooths— i i ,/. Wentse of their unsurpassed j na ;t; > ;aese they are, also, the most j **CUCOI.| Cdl ! i.f ItMlTjcT. r.r.ADI.V.I AND SPELLING. McG'alf.'v'a Eclectic Pictorial Primer, Ic bud' s i Eclectic Spelling-B'ieit, McG *s Eclec'ic First Header, Mc iud'.v's Eclectic Second Header, M-.-G :T ' s Eclectic Third Header, blclruifrv's L 1 ctic Fourth Healer, McUad'yV Eoiect.c Pitch Header, or F.hetori- c il trui li. Tbe IK-aiui.- Y -nig Ladies* Revier. CLASS HOOK'S IX ARITHMETIC. Hay's Arithmetic, Part First, Kay's Ariclmieiic, Part Second, Ksy's Arfhmeiic. Par; TLiid, Key to lisy's Arithmetic. ALGEBRA. R ;•'* Algebra. Part First, Kay's A:gelif.i, Part Second. Ke. tu K •.' Algebra. Part* First and Second. FOR COMMON SCHOOLS. Piv.eo's PrmiiTT Grammar. Revised and Eu and printeti fruiu new type. Tliis ci ltrg;i editi.m, embraces SVXTAX. which is treat •*i is a ele .r. pricticai aid pleasing mantlet, and i • volume is a full and comylett Cfews t>) v: 'er liivn m Schnois. c nt:iirimg all tlia. is taught on the subject in Public School*. FOR ACADEMIES. Tinneo'a Analytical Grammar, Revised, with j enlarge i typ—designed for aevanc.ed pupi's j who wish t-> study the subject on a more extend j M basis, and with more minuteness in detail. Analysis. Pinneo'a English Teacher, in ! which is taught the structure of sentences by i Ax a t-i.s is and STSTHKS.S. A popular work on the analysis of English sentences. It is believei tint no books ever presented to the public have met with such universal appro bation as tnese em braved in the EcLtcriC Kor ean >sal Sim's. Xot oslv have nearly ail the i eating practic i] teachers in the State, hy heir letters manifested fheir high appreciation of "their merit". and the sati&fucfion they fed in ) using them; but many others, whose aphcra of] Instruction is in the higher Departments of Ed- j ucatiin. but who also earnestly labor for the ; progress and welfare of the Common Schools, j have united in this generol voice of approval, j Pnblished by W. B. SiirrH A Co., Cincinnati, j AOEXTS rc liuoroso COCXTT. —Cr. B. F. j H SHUT'S Drug and Book Store, Bedford; Dr. F. O, KKAXF.S'S Drug and Book Store, Bedford; where these lvoi;s m.tv be had wholesale and n-ti.il, on the most favorable terms. School Boards will be supplied with copies *>r examination, and schools supplied for a ■first int.fodn**tion. at rsxiuecd rates. Sept. 28, 1855-c Fall Millinery Gooda. jfi.3 ESCrnAm JOHN STONE 6c SONS, Bk> 43 Eotttli Hcwnfl Street, FiIIEACZhrE. A, ARE ng* prepared to offer to their custotoers, ■ad to tW trade, (of tbetr own importation.) (tie URfM awd hsndeocioft wwtmeut of MflMweryl Oea.lt In fhi rity—:peu two or three doors ami drawing back a cut tain amid a great waving of inseuse and constant ganuflaction, I saw the lion Crown in its case of crystal sup ported iu the Lands of two bronze cLeru bitti*. At my request, the priest took it from its resting place, and I Lad leisure to exam ine it carefully. I found it to consist of six links ol pure gold, perhaps two incl.es or more iu width, and very thin. Iu it resembled very much a highly ornanien ed ili g cfil.ar. Its outer Surface was beuu tifuliy enamelled with green leaves on a white ground. I* was also set at regulai intervals, with emeralds, garnets ami sap phires. Running n tiu.i the inner cireum- lertiiee jcd i foiled to the gold links is the tro'i Land wnidi gives tiio crown its ii.-itnc. I radition declares it to be one of the nuil> en.plotcd at ot:r Sav< vr's crucifixion, ham mered out imo a thin fillet. Indeed, the Italians call tLe crown II Sacro Chlodo, or the holy r.aii. jo ti.e sanctity of this hi; of iron is due all ti.e decoration and ceremo ny I Lave alluded to. The early history of the Iron Crown is .n vol red in ohseuritv. TLe tradition* >i Mtrza t .n. r . George of Theodidiuda. Queen of the Lom bards. Others say it was made in Con stantinople for the mother of Constantino.— At all events, Henry VII, or Henry of Luxembourg, was the first sovereign of Ger many v. bo was crowned with it, and Charle® V the last. Having adorned the brows of five and forty sovereigns, it was, on the death of Charles V. consigned to the trc-as ury of N'onza Cathedral, and preserved more as a sacred relic than part of the in signia of royalty. Napoleon was the first to disturb it. Always desirous to strength en his power by any prestige the pat might five it, he cansed himself to bo crowned King of Italy with the sacred crown of the Lombards! Disdaining to receive it from the hands of tl.s bishop, he placed it himself npou liis own head, at the saint time pronouncing those memorable words, "Dicu me Pa donne gare a qui In touc : u" To ccmn.eniorato the coronation Xapoieon instituted the Order cf the Iron Crown, now conferred by the Emperor of Austria.- Since Napoleon I, Ferdinand I, who abdi cated the Austrian throne in 1345, i 3 the culy sovereign at whose coronation the Iron Crown has been used. His present npoitilic majesty. Francis Joseph, feels hardly secure enough ia bis Lombardo Venetian possession to place upon bis bead their ancient piedgo of independent sov reigtity. lie visited Milau after the distur bances of 184$, hut as yet has only been crowned in his lawfully inherited capital of Vienna. After the crowd which had gathered round the chapel had fully satisfied their curiosity, the fivp locks, the two doors and the one curtain performed their proper functions, and ihc Iron Crown was restored to its sacred seclusion, only to be disturbed by some equally carious traveller, or by re currence of the annual fete of the sacred nail. POWER OF GENTLENESS, No tad man brought to repent- | ? nco by words, by bitter and scornful re proaches. He fortifies himself against re proof, and hurls back foul charges in the face of bi> accuser. Yet guilty and har dened as be seems, he has a heart io bit voice. Who, therefore, can restrain his disposition to blame and find fault, tad can bring himself down to a fallen brother, will soon uod away to better feelings within. — Fi'y and patience and the two keys which unlock the human heart. They who have been moat euooeaful laborore among the poor and vicious, bare been the most forbearing. Bttii St. Vinoent do Paul: "It has pleased God to employ the most miserable of men for the conversion of some souls, (bey have themselves confessed that it was by the pa tience and sympathy he had for them.— ; Even the convicts among whom 1 Lave lived I caa be gained iu no other way. When I • have kissed their chains, and showed eom i passion for their distress, and keen seusibil i ity for their disgraee, th en liave they list i enc 'd to me; th en have they given glory to . Crod, and placed themselves in the WJV of salvation." A Romantic Incident- A soldier who was present at the capture of Sebastopol, relates, in a letter to his friends, the following romantic story; "A parly of men, belonging to different regi ments, were paroitng from house in se:eh wf plunder. In one of the houses thev came across a beautiful young female, about seventeen or eighteen years of a<>e. Ol course, some igutuuuee was shown amongst the party, who commenced to drag her about and wunld have used violence to her, had not a young man threatened to blow the (iist man's brains out that laid a (ir.ger on Iter, whereupoa the young womau flew to this lain, and clung to him for protection. She fohowed him all the way back to the camp, when, coming in right of his camp he beckoned her to return —but no, she would not leave hiiu. W hetber she Lad fallen in love with him at first sight I don't know, but site came to camp with him. As soon as he got t'aere he was instantly confined for being absent when the regiment was under aruis. She followed hiiu to the guard tent, and cried after lu'in. The colonel of hi® regiment, seeing the affection she bore him, released hint, and sent them botii to 1 G-u. Ilari-s where an interpreter was got, ami she related the whole affair to them.— It turned out that Le was ag< nciai's daughter, with some thousands. She wis beautifully attired and carried a gold watch, and wore a set of bracelets of immense value. The young man is about to be married to Iter. She will no: leave him upon any account whatever, and j#' he is not a lucky dog, 1 cou't know who is.'-" THE CLIMATE OF GREENLAND. T.?->- T at Ksm jEsrfeJitii.il. mentions the singular meUTologicai fact, ihat be has seen the thermometer standing at 8G deg. Fahrenheit iu the sun, wLiie the same instrument, transferred to the shade, would often fall to 28 deg. below the freez ing point. The effe tof cold upon the men was remarkable. The injuries sustained by frost bites are apt to be lasting in their effects. One .man ou board the Advance had his heel so badly frozen ::s to be laid up for 'Oven weeks. The lone of the foot ap peared to have been touched, and the fled came entirely off: the injury causing intense pain. After the lapse of a year, tiie foot is still very tender, ana the heel so sensi tive that it cannot be touched without pain. The Greenland coast is described as roekv, barren, high laud presenting hardly vege tation etiongh to yield tmil>er for a tooth, pick. In toe interior, the rallies present Some little verdure, in the spade of stun ted grasses and a hardy tuoss, but even du ring the summer, tha pickaxe and shape are hardly to be driven more than six inches into the soil. The Esquimaux, and other tribes of those regions, are found to oe rapidly diminishing—one cause being at tributable to tbeir emigration to warmer climes: and the opinion is that th* lapvto of a fi.w years will find those sterile and frigid regions entirely deserted by their hardy in habitants. Turkish Delicacy. The Turkish lady is at tie boot bazaar, II is utterly impossible ihnt- she can be fit. ted without pulling sehalwar (trousers) to a height equal to that of tbe leg of the boot. Except for this she could not draw it on. But it is a necessity; and all delicacy that can be is observed. The shoe-merchant professes to take no notice; so do all others in the bsnar. And if you would like to lest the jruj ieity that you are not expected to enact, do you just go opposite the and look. The lady will say nothing; but she will simply blush, and turn away. l>ut the eagle-eye of the merchant will detect your gaic on the instant. Ae will assail you in a voice so loud, as, probably, you never before heard from the calm, stately, true believer. And it will be well for your self-respect if you do not happen to under i stand the Ostr.anli language. If you do, you will not fell very greatly delighted by his opinions of yourself, but especially of tbe women in your family.— The Cily of the Crescent. A man famous for hunting up enigmas philosophises thus : "What strange creatures girls are: offer one of them wages to work for you and ten chances to one if the o.d woman can spare any of ber girls—but just propose matrimony and sea if tbey don't jump at the chance of working a life tiiuo juat for victuals and clothes. BEDFORD, PA.. FRIDAY DECEMBER U, 1855. AD Auffiou ef Ladies. ; An auction of unmarried ladies used to take pla<*eannually iu Babylon. "In every district," says the historian, "there asseri bled on a certain day of every year, all the virgins of a niarriagable age." Ths meat beautiful was first put up, and the man who bid the largest snm of money gained pos session of tier. The s caoni in per-ona! appearance foiled, and the bidders gratified themselves with handsome wives, according to the depth of their pmses. But alas !it seems there were in Bibylon some ladie* for whom un money was likely to be offered, yet these also were disposed of, so provi dent were the Babylonians. "When all the beautiful virgins," say* the h storian, "were sold, the crier ordered the most de formed to staud up, and after he had openly demanded who would uiarry iier with asusalj sum, she was at length adjudicated to the man who would be satisfied with the least: iu this manuer, the money arising from the sale of the handsome served as a portion to who were either of disagreeable looks or that had any other imperfections." This custom prevailed about 800 yeais before Christ. A PBICLLLSS JEWEL. Hut. Edward Everett, in hi* eulogy on tiie late Abbott Lawrence, remarked : "His business life extended over two or three of those terrible convuslions which shake the pillars of tiie commercial wertd, tint thoy disturbed in no degree the solid foundation of bis prosperity. He built upon the adamantine bt.ii* of probity ; beyond re proacii, ley end suspicion. His life gave a inf'ty meaning to the familiar lines, and you felt in h:s presence, that "An lioiit-st man, is tlu ooblast w >r'r of God.'* Far from being ashamed of his humble beginnings, he was proud of them, as the merchant princes of Florence, at the beigh t of their power, and when they are giving the law to lin'y, preserved upon their paluces the cTane* I-y which bale* of mer ehandise were rai*cd to their attics. A young gent 1 emau told mc at Lawrence took from his waistcoat poeket j and exhibited in Lis presence, a pair of blunt scissors, which had served hiiu for daily use at the bumble cemnienccroent of his business life. A* for his personal in- tegrity, Mr. Chairman, to which yon allu ded, I am persuaded that if the com# of the Btite Iloaso, which tower? over his resi dence in Park street, had been coined into a diamond, and laid at his fet as th# bribe of a dishonest t.-ansaetir.n, I.e would Lav® spurned it like the dust he trod on. Ilia promise was a sacramen'." GAMULrNO FOR a WiFl.—The Hamil ton W.) Banner furnishes the following >ilus'ration of the cvii effect* of gaming: "A military officer, residing at the time o* the occurrence we are about to mefttion, in one of th# small towns on the coast of Ire. land, was passionately fond of pauilliug, and otic night, after toiog all his money and other valuables at the gaming table, of fered to stake hie wif#, a lovely woman, againit a.l that his opponent bsd won from hint. The offer was accepted, the game played, and the officer heaten. The wife, indignant at Iter lord's seeming affection, and little knowing tho iufatualion of gam bling, determined on becoming the property of the winner. The husband's honor being at stake, he could offer no objection: the wife, who had no children, accompanied her new master, and the poor victim to the hel lish passion of gambling became a maniac. Often and often have we met the poor fel low on the sea shore, his hands behind Lis back, gitiing intently across the broad, ex pansive ocean, as if he expected tbs return of her on whom his soul had doated, and still remembered, from it# bosom, wild sud tempestuous as his own, but she never came." A BEACTITTI. Tnocsnt"When I gaze into the stars, they loo* down upon uic | with pity from their serene and silent spaced, liks eyes glistening with tears over the lit tle lot of man. Thousands of generations, alias ncisy as our own have been swallowed by time, and there remains no record of them any more, yet Areturus and Orian, Sirius aud Pleiades are. stiil shining in their courses, clear and young as when the bhop hard first noted thorn from the plains of Shinar. What shadows we are, and what shadows we pursue!"— CarlyU. The following advertisement under the head of a Wife Wanted, is in the liutesville Arkansas News: "Any gal, what's got a bed, coffee-pot, and skillets, knows how to cut her own britch es, can make a buntin' shirt, and knows bow to take care of children, can have iny scr [ vices until death parts both of us." • THE FATE OF A FLIRT.-It is very rarely, indeed, that a confirmed flirt gets married; ninety-nine out of every hundred old maids may attribute tb c ir ancient lone liness to juvenile levity. It is very certain that few men make a selection from ball rooms or any other publie gaiety; and as few are influen cd by what may be called showing off in the streets or any other al* lurements of dress, our conviction is that ninety-nine hundredths of ail the fiuery which women decorate or load their persons go for nothing as far as husband-eat china is concerned. Where, and how then do met! find their wives? In the quiet homes of parents or guardians —firesides where the domestic graces and feelings are demonstra ted. These are the charms which most surely attract the high as well as the low, before which all the finery ami the airs in the world sink into insignificance. A Farmer who lately became a widower, was arror.sed at midnight by the loud bark ing of his dog. On going to it, the animal displayed great terror; whereupon the far mer took his grn and proceeded to un iu >peclion. All at once he saw a phantom clothed in a white sheet six? behni 1 the hedge. The farmer turned deadly pale ami bis limbs shook with di;nmy. He, however, contrived to ejiculatc, "If you courn from God, Kpe.ak, if from tiie devil, vanish!" "Wretch!" exclaimed t'r.e phantom, "] am your deceased wife, come from the grave to Warn you not to merry Maria A. to whom yoa nre making love, the only women to succeed me is Henrietta B. Marry l.er, or persecution and eternal torment shali !■ :■ your doom." This strange address from the gobhug, instead of dismaying the tar.- , res'ored lis courage. He accordingly r- Ed to the gostiy vi.-itor, and stripping tiff 0.- s'leet, discovered the fair Henrietta !?. l:er 'elf, looking ex'reniely fcolish. it is said that the fanner, admiring the girl's triek. has had the bans published for his uiarri.g witb her. DIMENSIONS OF T-IE A:.:R.NICA;R LA VLs. UPtawtf otte fcmfarVaaß?: The greatest length of Lake Snperioi ts 435 tuiles; the greatest breadth is IGO miles, mean depth, 98S feett eievatton, 627 feet; area 32,000 square miles. The greatest length of Like Mic' igan i* 360 miles: its greatest breadth 180 miles; meaudeptlt 900 feet; elevation, 587 feet: and 22,000 square miles. Tin greatest length of Lake Huron is 306 mile-: i's exeatest breath is ICO miles; mean dq'B, Bbo f;et; elevation, 574 feet erea 20,000 suare mile*. The greatest length of Lake Erie is 250, miles: its greatest breadth is 80 titties; its mean depih is 84 feet; elevation 554 feet: area 9,000 square miles. The greatest length of Lake Ontario is 180 miles; its greatest breath is 65 miles: it mean depth 500 test, area 6,000 square miles. The total length of all five lakes is 1585 tuiles; covering an area altogether of upward of 90,000 square miles. Xw-Progtu SS.ve. —A writer in the New England Farmer thus describe* those farmers we sometimes until with, who are continually setting back in the breeching, and trying to prevent ail progress in agri culture:—"They follow in the footsteps of antiquity: and if one suggests a different way of proceeding, they think him non com pos mentis. They contiaje to drain their iHru-ynrds into tue road—twice a year ail the bones r.ad beeves' feet arc collected and thrown into the brook or millpoud They despise new-fashioned corn shellcrs; and say that the old way of shelling corn with the Gre shovel and bread trough are best. They advise their sons to look to some other busi n#vrs, and steal tirotn, end loo!* over his , i Kiwi-! ir to rind bis manuscript. ITeighth jof Justice. To kick such rascals oat with out cettuooy. MIND YVI P. IJoTj. —A KENTUCKY tnere • ber of congress w ;.* c on y,. .arrival at Washington eitv, that be had "formed a connection with i very agreeable .'I >s, ri.iii expected to spend the winter vcvv eisantiy. ' Enfrt!uiia!ely to the Sutpis. j oid iiiortAcaii.-i) or the good bidv to wboirt 'Ding, ho ir ; advertently d"tted the .: the tvoro Ai .. uien never swell. It is on your three cent individuals, who are sulutie - .-t the rate of two hundred a year, and lire . u 1 1. urrei r.ttd dried herring, who put on j airs and fia-hy waistcoat-, sweii, pcff, aau blow and er.dcawpr to give themselves a j ccaserieuul appearance. No disctiiiin a i . tvreen a barrel of vinegar and & bottle of . pare jtise of the grape. taking tlovru the ceYi.-tn of a den-civ populat-1 nr.i.stiboihcod,'' as the i fellow sail when he swallowed Jctrn the ; the skipper- cheese. i t£F"A negro preacher referring to the judguiea t day, in I.is sermon, said, 'Bred eren an.', sisters, eat day, de Bore! will divide 'de sheep from de gotcs, and bress !he Lord, wc know who vents de waoi." Z'Jr" No MOTHER. —'She J* no mother!" TThat a volume of sorrow fcl truth is com prised ir. ihatsir.gle utterance—no mother! Deal g< ut'y with the child. Let not the cup of her sorrows be overflowed by the t harshness of your hearing, or your nnsyni patbiziog eoldnosM. Is she heedless of her doing?—forgetful of her du'y? Is she care less i;t her movements? l-eineuiber, ca re- incuiber, "she liss aotimtuer!" JXF*"In tue year 17St, the L.-gisiaturc of I'ennsylvunia, to abolish the practice then prevaiiin pa-scd tho following resolution after considerable opposition: "That hereafter no member shall come in'.otbe chamber barefooted, nor cat h'. cheese cu tie steps of the Capitol." Zyb horse il-ealer, who !a f c\y effected r. sale, was offered a bottle of porter to con fess the annual's failings. Th" Bottle was drank, and then he sail the horse had but two faults. When turned loose in the field he was "bad to caicb," and bi ''was of no use when caught.'' SCsPECiors Tailor to ScapectedCes tomer. — ''Make you aooats'r? Oii,ye<, sir with tlie greatest pleasure. Tuere just stand in that position p'.ease,and look right upon that s.gti while T take your measure. Jvigu reads "Terms Cas.i. ' "Danc uic it I don't-believe the world is a wccilaarrow,"' said a jaily inebriate, "and I'm the wheel revolving ou its hnsi. Now I'm in she mud," sai I he, as he tell head long iu the gutt ?r,' an l now 1 m oa dry laud." aj he fetelied upon the curb stone. Hij concluding remark w his hooks foue wttt his head down an open cellar way was"Uow too wheel is broken, and the vub.cie is out of repair." tUTt is ratber a earlons incident that when the Americans sent Dr. F-mnkiin, a prto'.er os minister to France, the court of Vcrsallies sent M- O-irard, a book binder, as mmisTer to Congress. Waeu Dr. Franklin heard of it—Vell said he, '1 11 print the indepeodsßoe of America, and M. Guar! will bin ! it.* VOL. 28. NO 50 PlHi.ii SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. BY virtfce ofatt order of the Orphan'® Coart, of Bedford Cbuiitr. tßerc tvifl be exposed to le by petite out-, rr. on the premises oto Fri/hy Utt 28.&, i*y oj i well worthy the itotide Of purchasers. 1 t-il.'iiu made known on oar of sale. CitlAH COMjKI% ISAIAH COSLEY, Ad r.r'.> oT Alien Cotdey, dee'd. F. S. Ay p rsori wishing to exatnine tfcx ptxipenv Udura tus d.y ot'Saie vej'.i pkuao caii • n I 'iali Curly residing on the fartn. December 7. Ui'-d. N BUT m-, or un AfcLE ESTATE, Bl* virtue a! ;>u order < f ;jOrphans' Court f Bedford County, the jl r: • r will es [(-•Ac lu s ale. tiy pabHtf reaSitn or outcrr. it lb. Court House in. the Boroegftof ! on ■ i urdt- jhe 5-i day >f J . ureiirp. D. It(8. ' foil .wing il- --ct:. K I i'.etutt, i >'.e ii < pi ver;;. -7 ;• tnon Fitter, str e> !■". t T*e 8- , 4totil ~prir?. ami is t-ry detorft'ihr ■'•v. — TI-rtieulix ; .oi <•:,) a private Iwsr • ■ i ;,!? tie v. tor v.'Uieb psu p ase. i; us t; •.••> iia-d •or se've-sl years. The t.'.itdiuy ia s..:jeient!y , t.i ocfi.nifii.idite liiCJ' or stxtr !.' > .r4t.is, ,i *: .is !'ir lour p'jis t'mia rue liiii day ■ ol September. u!t. , DAMS—Css'au! ifce eonfcta e.ion oi THE S-ITE. S. L. KtfSSLLL, Eztrn 'ST isst It':!!,■£■:. of ioLmon i'il ; icr, de-'d. Uee* nrher 7th, . v -.-t C' 7, TIY RROTE SIS - IK.O!? aeowau WU NO V.-UI W JURE .!i-.-ai,satticd 1 y the ist ol'Jar-u-.iri lt-38. After THUL LUAE TLIEV WILL W PLACED SR. THE ol* prop. r u flicer lor collection. A.J. SANSMT, Surviving pawner. Dec. Till 1E55. ILLEI&LM )IUJ: A.\;> eliuu-; SE'II.YIRT. rpHE s eorta ses.i:i of this institution will X C '-Viiin:.:e 'ii Monday January 2tst, If-itf. ioe sesslua w;;i U divided into two quarter* of 11 vvcAs • ch withjut a TiCatiop. Kate* l t .i'jon as inflows vis; C'-.nii.i : English per quarter ?S,OD '1 o w.;;eb will be ...i lea k r L uct i.iguer orancb "•> >: : A aird hriguage 1,25 Tim t-iaiic amcuvt ui the above not to Kx;.'!. 1 s'.X dollars EXTRA*!. TG awing and Painting ot ti: uiXTint varia'ls* from 3d to T.rsson on T'i 'T.o, I*.* uO Y • • <1 music i lessons per week J .<'<> Incidentals, s<> K.Mi-J.cg c be secured or, rcuson*M!- term*. By or 1 fH£ i KUSTEES. H i...ijurK, Dec. 7, 18.V5. W IMtil. XTpiEAT, Rye, Cora, Oats and Buckwheat, ia W p.? in it i'ji- sulisor.ptioas, lt übicu the biguut mart -t liTises wiltinj allow vd,and to lie irit at any of Utotnilot ia tito tivt^ttwli.-od. — Ai.v>, a "Hit o'i curls ol guuil v.uol. Mou V sotue o,' our trie,ids l>;,ug ou tuese articles. i he editor. iiov/ara Association, ruiLJLEJ.pmj. KaiporUißt .iiißoußcema TO all persona afti cted with Sexual disease* suca .s \ Uth Glcft, CvO.y 4L.C.^ Ttio itoWAivl Aa."'ic.*iiuQ i! PKi'ddfclpbia, iii ri„woi ikertWfttStl.;s:rictira ofhuhiat hfosLd health. csased y *exa..i dtseiset. u:id the de ception* wuien c:e pr.icnseo uth the tuiiortii nate o, snob diseases tiy Qu&cas, have directed taair Consulting Sutgevn, as a ccri c huarl worthy of their uape, to give mtziccl ■i i r Eeitiii '.) wild apply by letter, with a descrip tion of t .eir condition, (age, occv: atn-n. fctb its ot i fc,) k<:., and io cases of extreme pov erty and autferiug to furnish vudisiiMJ'n* *<<. tihic'.td with ••Virulent ami Epi•! •li.ic lEavi maiiistho iiighost Vcdicaia&iilrif rl>e.ge,cd will furuisli the most ptodt.ni ircatuiont. 7 al ttaWe ilvigc also tef stek and iiTrovaft iui ite*,n'Tllctert wkT, aMomlfiafweaktiCss, otiib ■ comptaiot, Costivener.-. J- •uccrrhoca, Ad ir-ss. :post-paid.) Br. Geo. V.. ( Annorjc. j Cowsnlttng Surge.-n. Howard Association, Nc. 2, South Ninth Street, Bv 0.-ler of the I>;ractors. , K7BA r>. HEARTM-ELL, T r*tiArn { . Oro. FiißCHinn, Se?rttarg. ! June I. !B>>.-ZZ 1 , STRAY HEIFER. r * •, • •, CANE io the premises or tbo subscriber, living in Monroe Township, aborn the n.nt [ dla of November last, a red and white belter, • supposed to he rising in two years old, no I marks. The owner is requested to coma for i ward, prove property pay cbarg 1 ! and take her ' awav. | " LETTIS KOOJTS. j Doc. Ttli, lSoo.