'l' -,-"•• '4).: "; .-, •i ~,,,, 3 ,1%. 4; i , ir 4 %7V: .3310,11 c v otott COW ODDS COME ANS SEE THE LARGE STOOK .AT it IL 1110TORTON1. His customers and the publie'generally are invted to call and examine for thiamine. HIS GOODS IS GOODS ARE OF THE BEST QUALI TY. . , - L 001!. TO YOUR INTEREST BY EXAMINING MT STOCK I A LARGE LOT Of/ CUTIIRY, Cedarware, Gatail alit) mean,„, - MiiirX 4 lll3ll - 11[7311MSIMPap WOE ikINDLIWCiSi, , 110111 ID GLASS--OIL CLOTHS HOLLOW WARE, &C. larny stook is largo and complete and at "oes that will defy competition. November 7, 1862. _ PHOTOGRAPHIC ' ICTURE GALERY! HE undersigned hes fitted up the room over Fourtbman'a Drug store. Main street, Wayne's .% suitably for Photographing purposes, where citizens can be accommodated with all kinds of urerfrom the price of 35 cents upward. Phot phs at 'the regabur .CITY PR,I.CE-S . cards or fulluize pictures, &smoker on card.— pictures copied ot photographstles ineyiedeair treasonable A fine steckuf Fancy and n Cases on boa. The public, and especially ladies, are most respectfully invited to call anal specimen,. . A. B. MuCAtidLAN D. v. 28—tf. • NAME AGAIN' TRE,OLD 131181NR/04 ITE,subadiber respectfully announces to Mr old creamers and the public' generally that u leased the.Biacksmith eihop at the.; Eut end g i n orient, Waynesboro', Pa., formerly occupied sub linonfr.' where .he • purposes carrying on Blacksmithing builnessin all its branches: All will be froes at short • ander laid impost raa• ble terms. hro Buggustand Spins JOHN CLINet gen 2—tf.] . • : . • . :r.4.1 /*: A „ 'ftl" .. ' `..= ':,}4j /.4. ! ; . ' r ;. -.s ,1P A t,r G it g.t i.,'•,„ 4, ;' , ' P * Ai . * " 1 '.. '' I .- ', • - ' t .;.,.. +1.„, ', ,7•1 * ls,`/Frle ~,,,i; SV;:r r , . • . ' ."•4. 1 7 4 . '' ,:. 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', . `.., Pe,. p. ' "1.1 - 4" ' , ' ''.. , ',I .• ' ' 4 'l,' -".. ,' ' V'' ' 7 1, ' t r I .. , • ,' 1 , ~ ' i, • , i'l 1 , , lb • • .' I , • ' r ' 4 " 1.,.. t.,,... .. . :. ~ .. . ~.. 1., ~ 1 %. . :. ' 't , ~ „. ' r „, . • , ..8. ..,.. , •- . • ..2:1 ~ , .. , . ,* I ,4 ! ?,' ' ,* - - 1 1 1. *,. ~. ..1.,, , ,r,i;* 1 ;',1..", - ''.• . ..t . , . . • . ,* • * . , , . . , . . * ... ..:r1 ~ . ' 1 • ' . .11 ;; ..,•"'*' S * 4 i1. * ::: 1 ' 1 s • V,l , l ielry, ' r ~ 7 Pr ‘ ,,,i. , . .., , I . - .'4 • - :. ~ ... .„ „....,,,... , ~.. , , ~ , , .., , , ... ..., ~ , . ): J ., • / .1 .' , 1 , .. 1 :I ~' .ci '''', 1.11 ;, „;.A —Jo .',,C..:1 1 4:12,. , ,, , ' 4_ , .4. 4,4,11•;.,; 4 • ' f„. ,it. ~,,,-,.,:,•,;', . ' . i ' , .1.. WAYNISBOIO'; PRAN,4O '. -;C:Oji.Nri PgNNOYLI I ,4,...Ik,,S,IDki: toolso';'Pkilititiqk Mi:;;,:.:,;:''''":. ND al 113 M" X Ci FIND AND GM :at. 8. J. c. innrimasEr. Faded and tune ere the Summer's sweet flowers, Strewn by the wintry winds o'er the dark mould! Smilers, when sunlight stole through the soft hours, Down from you azure their leaves to unfold. Bright where their beauties when breezes iteept on Or the blue waters to gather perfume ; Whisperers lovely, no* , faded and gone ! Slumbers lonely 'mid chillness and gloom ! Oh ! but the Spring-dale will come o'er the plain Wooing the whispering blossoms again, , • With its soft tread oitir thee merald lawn Then we'll not mourn for the faded and gone ! Faded and gone are theories that we cherished, Fondly and true. in our hosems of yore ! Slumbering buds may wake o'er the perished.. Their faded hearts shall unfold here no more ! Sweet is the music that Memory flings, O'er the oasis of Life's early love. Where flew the Angel on-fluttering wings, • Besting our lost throngh the starlight above; Oh! there's a land whe re the perished ones bloom, Where cometh never a shadow of gloom ! Fadeless and fair is that glorious dawn— Then we'll not mourn for the faded and•gone I Faded and gone are the sweet dreams of childhood, When the young wings of the Spirit were free, Folded or furled 'mid tho shadowy wildwood— Sweeping the surface of life's sunny sea. Time's fading anger bath sullied the leaf, ;Stainless and testily - ifl cliildhd's — p — ure years; Pager of beauty once brilliant, yet brief. Wear its deep impress of changes and tears ! Oh ! but the blossoms of childhood will bloom Brightly again, o'er the shadowy Tomb ! Infinite gladness flow endlessly on— Then we'll not mnrmur for the faded and gone ! PARTING. When fond affecticii's spell bath east Its web around the heart, How truly sad it is at last To be obliged to part. How sad to catch the smother'd sigh, To see the starting hiar, Thit dims the tender loving eye • Of those we hold most dear. What, when the head in friendship knits,, Can be more keenly felt Than some rude stroke of Fate which splits The link, Time ne'er can melt Alas ! of every earthly woe Felt by the humeh heart, Methinks it is the greatest blow From those we love to part. _ ~ ~ -. ~ - A Fragment. Swiftly glide our years—they follow each other like the waves of the ocean. Memory' calls up the persons wo once know, the scenes in which we once were actork—they appear before the mind'like the phantomsof a night vision. Behold the boy rejlciy in• the gaiety of his soul—the wheels time cannot move too rapidly for him—the light of hope dances in his eye—the smile of expec tation plays upon his lip=l - loCk farward to long years of joy •to come—his spirit burns within him when he hears of great men, and mighty deeds—he wants to 01 man—longs to mount the hill of ambition; to tread the path of honor, to hear the shout of applause. Look at him again—he is now in the meridian of life—care has stamped its wrinkle upon his brow—disappointment has dimmed the lustre of his eye—sorrow has thrown a gloom over his countenance—he looks back upon the walking dreams of his youth, and sighs for their futility—each re volvingyear seems to diminisl; something froffli fiis little stock of happiness, and ho discov yrs that the season of youth—when the pulse of anticipation beats high—is the only season of enjoyment. Who is he of the aged locks ? His form is bent and totters—his footsteps move more rapidly towards the tomb—he looks back upon the past—his days appear to have been few, and he confesses they were evil r —the magnificence of the great is to him vanity—the hilarity of' youth, folly ;—he considers how soon the gloom of death must overshadow the one, and disappointment end the other; the world presents little to attract, and nothing to delight him.; still, however, he would linger in it, still he would lengthen out his days; though, of 'beauty's bloom,' of 'fancy's flash,' of 'music's breath,' he is for ced to exclaim, have no pleasure in them.' A few years of infirmit , Inanity, and in must consigii him • • or t grave-- yet a:islet's-the gay, the ge re the high -tiled boy, who behold his ascending path of life strewed with lowers; without a thorn. Such is human life—but such cannot be the, ultimate destinies of man. C:=1111=M=1 Expressive Thoughts. How musically and beautifully some peo ple express their thoughts. Are not the following definition in quaint, curious and pleasant style Religious. -A key which opens wide the gates of -Heaven. Death. A knife by which the ties of Earth are riven. Earth: A desert through.which pilgrims wend their way. Resurrection. A sudden wake from a quiet dream. Heaven. A land of joy, of light, and love; supreme. . Faith. An anchor droPped - beyond the vale of death- Hops. A lone star beaming - e'er abarren health.' Make the of yOurself r your Welsh, and opportunities, etwithig no idle breath or pty sighs on w h at. you miOt have been under kinder auspices. If your.,lllaker. had thought any.other talents ,or opportunities bitter for you-, he iiroukl have $44113 them to you. • (7 t:-• , ' AL. inia zzi ii 3 r - "yr - pier i trievtz : *6lO - j / chisi,.44ei.: NiLelitrickzu -r; t , „ F The editor of the'eltester County Demo -crat. himself an old' Democrat, thus writes from Washington ' A great many p'eople ' have - been led to believe that Mr. Jefferson Davis ; although a little misguided 'on the subject •of was man of great integrity and of a high chivalric sense of honor. Lot me give a fact in his history, which L can lelly' e stablish before a jury of Mississippi Rebels. Just after he made his farewell speech in the Senate, all dripping, as it was, with treaton —when he threw off the entire authority of the 'United States, denounced, repudiated, and even shook the dfist &ism hisshoes it; gainst us—then as he Strutted • frinii 'the Senate Chamber, ho deliberately ordered the Carpenter of 'the Senate into his enlist presence, directed him to pre e fifty chests or boxes to carry off his oks and other congressional plunder,lnid t 'e chests were made and paid for out of the Treasury of the Unitect States, each one costing about three d3llars. This me* thievipg act is on record here against the immaculate Jeff. Da vis, whom northern degredationist rej Ace to hurrah as the high-toned, chivalric south ern gentleman ! A more mercenary set of imps never appeared out of Jewry than these same southern nabobs. I. know them well, for it has been my lot to come in close con• tad with them in small money operations with the government, and they have always taken the last cent and in wore cases than one they have taken money from Uncle Sam that the • were ' - •= • • a au , which they might claim by 'custom. I re metuber well that old skin-flint, Barksdale of ts •:sissippi, hesitating around the newspaper desk in the House, us to whether he should curry off the twenty-five, dollars which he might claim, but which ho had no moral right to receive. In acrd out of my room he came, time and again, until at last ho took the money, and then went into Dixie and hired himself to Davis to fight against the vt -- fryrg rnment on which he had been a pensioner. And then another instanee : I remember a eing ' piled up on the side walk 0-1/ opposite Adam's Express Office in this city just abourthu time - the traitor Senators prom the seceded states were spitting out their venomous farewell speeches, some forty of these same government chests, such as Da vis_ stole, all labelled in staring capitals, "J. P. Benjamin, Montgomery, Alabama. - This , convicted thief was also bearing off his part of the national plunder at the expense of a nation be had, with silvery tongue, just been repudiating. And not content with the thieving act, be rose tin a higher 'degree of infamy by insolently directing his boxes, not to his home in Now Orleans, but to the then Rebel Capital at Montgomery. Alabama ! And these are the kind - of cattle the free men of the North are to be sold to by Val-, landigham here, by William 13. Reed in Philadelphia, and these lesser lights, Brinton, Strickland & C 0.., in our own town. - These, the assassins of the Constitution and public liberty—the incarceration of all that is trea sonable and vile—are the men to whom our miserable_conspiratorg-and—denw , '' oguee—are h c wling down to like base slaves , begging of em "for Peace on any terms!" And what for? To add to the glory of their country? No; but simply to bring back a sufficient political support to enable them to obtain once more that power which they in the past so fearfully abused. These home traitors would sell their souls to regain that which they have lost. They are at this moment working with all the fiendishness of their satanic father to create civil war in the North. The French Revolution did not produce wickeder men, and if our people will consent to let them ride on the popular wave, they will engulpii them in the most fright ful anarchy. . The following resolution was offered and referred, in the Senate of the Kenttfeky Legislature, on the 26th, and was'ineeived with much favor cud a fair—prcipect of its immediate passage,t--- --- RehmWed by th General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, That the Fed eral Government-othe_United States being engaged in a terrible war for the suppres sion of a wicked and causeless Rebellion, which aims to sunder the Union and destroy the Government, - Kentueky, being antegral lr .1 State ated her he sup titration )f all the States; That, not... _ soltig o-* pinions adverse to the policy -and constitu- , lional power of some of the war _measures of the Chief Executive of the nation--041 un wavering in her devotion and attaeb*iint to the Government of her illustrious ancestors and Revolutionary sires—she again reiterates her pledges of fidelity to the great common clause, and with all her energies, with all her power, and with all her means, will' advance steadily forwar3 in the persecution of the war, to the crushing of the .Robollion and the restoration 'of the Union'and the Consti tution. Imagination. A. contented citizen of Milan, who had never paesod,beyond the walli during the course of sixty years, beingordered by the gover nor not to stir beyond its gates, became im mediately miserable, and felt so powerful an inclination to do thii‘whieh he had so long contentedly neglected / that, on his .applica tion for a release from. this restraint being: infused; he becaine quit iinelancholy, andlit list died'of grief. The piiins of :imprison ment, also, like,those•cr Servitude, .are' thole in.conception 'than in' reality.' We' are ~e prisoners. What is life but the prison of the - ; Fabius &Alla fllfi r tnolth so much qwd of toSscoo—kmeopi impure words. Truths about Rebel Leaders. Loyalty of Kent u oky 1:==1 e• Inpident Otii'ebiri3putitlent T., Writing from the Niiiih Ariay . Coilis, apposite Fredoriaksbuig tiarritei the Tolloviing, Whir% oceuriticl - on Chrihimas daY, While the writer was Oft oh picket svitii-his Atter parinkOk; of it Chilititis 'dinkier of salt junk atidliVidl tack,' tint attention was attracted b a rebel picke t 'Who hailed' 'is from the op 'pogite side a • "I say, Yank, if a %Ho* OE4 over there will you let him Conk back again 4' Receiving an affirmatiVe auStier, ho pro:- eeeded to test theirutlt Of • it by paddling himself across ihn'river. He was decided:. ly the cleanest stmoiiaiia of ". rebel hid seen. le answer 'to a 111'63110n, he Said be belonged to• the Georgia Legion. Ohe df the boys remarkid, "I met quite a number of your boys at South Mountain." "Yes, I suppose so— if you were there," said the rebel, while hi's face grai very , sad. "Wti left very many of our boys there. My bro.; ther, poor Will, was killed there. It was a hot place for a while, and we' had to leave it in a hurry." "That's so, Georgia, your fel'. lows fought Weil there, and had all the ad' , vantage, but the old Keystone hogs were pressing you hard. By the way , I have .a likeness here (taking it out of his pootet) that I Picked up on the battle field the next' morning and 1 have carried it ever since:" He handed it to the rebel; who, on Woking at it, pressed it to his lips, exclaiming "my ufother! my Mother I" He exhibited con siderable emotion at the recovery of the pie ture-,--but—to--regitinhig—his—composure, said, that his brother bad it in his possession, and mist have lost it; in the fight. He then asked the mini' Of the one to whoin_he_warandebted_for_thelost_likeness_ of his mother, remarking; "There - may be better times soon, and we may know each other better." He had taken from his t)bo ket a small pocket bible iii which to write, the address, When Alex—, who had taken no part in the conversation, fairly yelled, "I know that book ! 1 lost it at Bull Run !" Thar's Flier I got it, Mr. Yank," said the rebel— and he handed it to Alex. "I am much obliged to you, Georgia Legion, for I wouldn't part with it Mr all the Southern Confederacy." J. was a little • mintier; to know something further of the book, so I asked Alex. to let me see it. He pissed it to me. I opened it, and on the fly lent' saw, written in a neat lady's hand: "My Christ mas Gift to Alei.----, Dec 25th; 1860. Ella?' "Well, Alex," said I, "it is 'not of ten one has the same gift presented to him a second tithe." "True, Captain; and if I could but see the giver of that to-day,, there's but one'other gift . that 'I would "What's that, Alet ?" "This rOellion play-' ed out, and my discharge in my pocket.' The boys had all been busily talking to our rebel friend, who, seeing a horseman ap proaching in ,the direction of his post, bid us a hasty good-bye, and made as quick a trip as possible Across the Rappahannock.— Night came on, and those not en duty lay down on the frozen ground, to dream of other Christmas nights, when we knewa nor "An Wrong!" A Jew, in a tavern in the town of, En dingen, saw a merchant whom seemed to recognize. "Are you one of the good ine 111 whom I had the pleasure to travel Wow Balsa! to Strasburg, on the Rhine?" The merchant assented/ and asked: "Have you fellow traveller, since we met, done much trade?" The jew, instead of answering, asked: "Did you make a spgenlation at the fair? Liao, I would like to propose to bet - with you; that is, I bet that you cannot repeat three words after me as I say them." The merchant thinking that a few pence more or less; would. make no difference 'to him replied; "Say on.', The Jew said: "Cut ler; the merchant replied: "Cutler." Next Bagpipe;" the bagpipe was responded to. The Jew smiled, and said, "Wrong." The merchant, puzzled, bethought him- , self where the mistakcr oonld be, tint. the Jew, taking a piece of chalk out ,Of. , his pocket, made a stroke, and laid: "OliVe oil." • The Jew said: "Tanner." -The Jett, dissem bling, smiled again, %lid said, "Wrong." And so on to the sixth time, "Now I will pay you if you show hew I was wrong."' The .I Jew said: "You never . repeated' 'the, Hurd word "wrong" and acoordiegly weirlhe bet." The merchant paid, and .4kulliew made money as he went along. - J.• 0 '''... • We heard aig‘od ouritt Bartish4 .the Other day; in which a former, Benakti,trom Berks county was the hero, , A few!. Winters ago, while the Legislature was ininoriiiton; the small-pox became unpleasantly ptesideat' at the capital, causing considerableslaiin among the Selena. One moraing ? , the -84 later UN ferred to, came to a friend to astatikpfgreat eteitement, and said— .. 'l'.''t'i ' "I tink-i will get my dogs illadind go homestAtion't want de small ' pax iNind he started for his room at 4, brisk. paeo:‘ It the. course of an hour' he agaltiiietAiii- .friend,— and , hia.excitement • bad , evldentiy.i 'subsided: On Astonislituont being expressed'i , at'' , seeing him still uliarritiburg. , he said, ,, with great compb.ce .' , y,, "Olt since I, Some itor- Hutt t., a..- bout it, , ha .. small pox , once, .-and we don't git h . ~ twice." , ~... : '''' .; ' .. '- f t " MAP 4i . the 'gentleman . resent, , "I.- knew a.. , .ave it thieefr.tinnts;• , and be , died.from it....:...4);.% 0, • : , .. . "Ish it possible I".ozolaimet Oki' Senator; his-. st lurrni...4redutaingvi 414tici.:- totthibk; tibia did-he die r and thesSenatorcrepaoked• his ;prank, and went home te . tßetet. 1 ":'.': e, , '‘i • ' .. r Solna' 01* , 105 "Theo witef Shit Bois fthifi goisoliti *in tevilind3hdie t illnaiteriti 031 *Me i noir (monJo) • irozeu in atl**iiy." • ,` a febiTnePrititerie , the vocation irsithipredotio browny' : •,711c Editor,;' moo that is capeotetl to ,, know everything,, tell all, he knows, and guess at the rent; to makelinOttivhfs 'hhitiager, the'reptitatiebef hie neighbor, and elect ennilidateslo office; to blowtiii'_ove: rybody , and reform the world to lite for, the benefit of otherS,. and this_ opita It- off his tomb stone, "Here he LIES atJast ;" short ho is a looomtitive:mnningJon the 'truck of: , public notoriety ; his lever is his pen yl hislotleris filled with - - ink ; his tender pis 'his scissors; his driving-wine) is public opinion; when 'ever it explodes it.is caused by nonpayment of subscription." ' • - .• , 2; ' A QUAKER WOMAI43: kiER3IOR dear friends, there are three Ailing& I :very much wonder at.. The first is, that children ohould be so foolish as to .throw up .atones, elubs and brickbats into.fruit trees, to knock limn fruit ; if they would let it alone, it would NU itself... The second is, that . wen should be so foolish,, and even so wicked, "ogs to go to war and kill ouch other; &lot alone, they, would die of themselves. . And "the third and last thing I wonder at is, that your; men should ,be so unwise as to go. af ter the young women; if they would stay at home the young women would come after them.' The "State of Matrimony" is -one of the United States. It is bounded by a ring on one side and a cradle on the other.' The housekeeping, when aqua ly weather sots in with Bud; power es to keep all hands as'eopl as cucumbers. For the prinelpal roads lea ding to this interesting state, epusult the first pailTSCblue oyes you .run against. An amusing incident transpired a few eve= ning since at Manchester, „New Hampshire in the Huntington Street Baptist Church On the occasion of thb magic lantern exhibition. The scene of the children pflaritel crossing the Red Sea was exhibited and the small children were asked it they could ,tell what it represented. One little, fetlow immediately sang out, "Burnet* crossitig the Rujapahan neck W , HOLDFAST ROSECItANELL—A: Richmond paper. commenting on Gen. Br 's defeat and flight after boasting -of a „Victory over Rosecrans, quotes the proveib '•Bragg is a good clog, but Hohlfast is-a better." • The same happy application of the saying has been mall() pretty generally id the Artily of the Cumberland, and Roam:rens is now call ed by his soldiers, "Ohl. Holdfast." The daiignittion4lll stick tO him as that of "Old Hickory" did to Gen Jackson, and that of "Old Rough and Ready" to Gen. Taylor. THE BEAUTlEUL.—Beautiful things aro suggestive of a purer and a higher life, and fill us with a mingled love and fear. They have a graciousness that wins us, and an ex cellence to which we involuntarily do rever ence. If you are poor, yet modestly tapir ing,keep_a_vase-of-flowers-on-your-tablerund they will help to maintain your dignity, and secure lot you, consideration and delicacy of behavior. Many persons have our best society in their own hearts and souls—the purest 9em °ries of . earth and the sweetest hope .of heaven; their loneliness is not solitude. Of. one thing we may all be certain, , that friends departed, whenever we listen to them speak in deeper, richer .tonee,, than When they were with us. Whatev3r the peace societies may, y, a brave soldier is a noble man, and our hearts nod instinctively with the nodding plume of the hero. Courage is a power which strengthen's in proportion to th• jeopardy, as tho tree-root clings in the swaying hurricane:•, The' poet says, "full many a flower is born to blush unseen"-=and so is manta maiden, so far•as our observation extends- A lover must have his clothes handsome 1y out out,„Os. be may be handsomely out out himself./ • The words of the widow of Helvetii* to Napoleon are worth remembering : "Yon cannot conceive how much happiness 08D be feeedon three acres of land." A traitor to our. country may "read his history in a nation's • eyes," but it Will be ve ry,poor reading. Tho Earth, with its scarred face r is - the• symbol oflhe Fast; the Air and:lleavent Futurity. Marriage must be favorable Lo longevity; an illd maid never lives to be more than thir ty. There is no fiercer hell than a gbilare a great object. A man of maxims only is likes Cyclops. frith one eye, and that one is is the , back of his head. =Mill We sigh for. the Pai3t 'and ilong fai 'the l'utdre; the 'is a child, add this 'lda* is an angel.' ),, , Words, like the `rest of the air,oese,' . eapso hie of great oondeosatiimi:* . ~ ,triptcp Bays, ipmet; first resorted to tight, pßvi hoaDoansquicezing. • •"1 . - tehooliamestiris 4 iiiteitaWto'r "twit the genuine tree of knowledge - lip ,l -sgit • 1 iroh.. . • • M. .311211 4 •r •,hp,.-vcroabodraoiervoa.witgaosisk 71rA . 1 " .1 . 74r V t 't .4611ivicaft # , 2,1 • =ll oatie*llresta , , ' - - 7 Nth' Or 0.004,4 lir:trittik A i rnoca an old Inviter " 4"gie115'5"14449"77- or. Why 10 priatirrg poper like au infintoti hat;: Ping , ; .I` l ' itcvn h ' end wife. ,1! (.1 : . . (7*lo lie a apodlo;hr a,barstnek, liko,glao? 23 Beeapsoion pan easilyilnd tt horn. : -Tie largest mbm Therviorlii—the °foam for improventent.".o : : e :ar Thentanst not joke nil enemy iotq frietxl; but Arils klajit,t a The'tnan und er the,gallows, about ,to be swungwinild like to have "the last. tie" severed. Trirtriz=4l3. man ra diate:his board, because ho'baittsio teeth ox traotad and could not ent-ao.nptoh. If an tineni3i suite- iheei on'otaii•Eihniik'thin round and hit him a thundering elapifcir 'his ti_nu . tunerly kindness. 7AMiohigin sioldipi who iiiiit'Ariist6 ter stealingwrebers ' 'The bird hissing at the Nhierican .fizegr and: ho arros od it For treasoh. IVlnit is the difference between a boy rift -.A a boy nunliaz - nfLer carriage ri line chases the mist' the .other 'misses the chaiee. We aliitya like to Nee gentitinien'aita (lies with beautiful gold .ringa- on theirlin gers, and long dirty finger nailo---it 1004 so neat and genteel. Jew* who prided himself On kw . Oaphy, asked a friend the: other day if the Sent—of war, of which we heard so pluch e ; wasn't iu the Notherlailds 2 An hotiest ddipe itandink lby the loipSe of her hushind,beiviti li ng pitsoui his untimely , de parture; observed, "It'S ty he's dead, ,for his, teeth oribas gdod as ever they were."' _ „ . Datehmen ,eannot live without' ealtrAtotie. A Now Brunawiekor aaked.a Alamo farmer if he 114 arty for sale P., 'NO' said he, ; ‘coe lie Stilly-Made two - barrelg die year for eiek nese e A gentleman wile ,was determined...to iTci . t ! ho hortioult.e,riar.he ..r#iscdv. : Sitioketie thin egg plants, bail awiefieded in , iirodueiag a bolt Frain a liOtai-ehesinut situi a calf tkOm a • eow-ard. ,"the SOutherner, thO Southl exelainied a ehi4alrib F. F. Y," long as he can crawl," NO dont as long as he oau , run"' quietly Northerner. VirwAvis -11Ltw-T--Chnmi °ally - speaking, , at man is forty-five pounds of carbon and nitro gen diffused through five find' a half path full of water. WHAT IS WOMAN ?- 14 WOrrniil if+ mei Mina Bred pounds ..tskon T . of man, twe poumki ear silk, ton pounds of cotton and one pouti4 whalebone, with an , indefinite amount of flaw, and feathers, and the riiiiiinder in hOops., A POLITE MA.?i.- g Ary, deeeatted anale, says a humorous Writer, wts the most po lite gentleman in the world—tie was , ma kiag'a voyage.on the Danube; and the boat sunk. My undo was just on, the point of drowning.—Efe,got his head above Abe. wa ter for once, took off his hat,. and, said: 'La dies and gentlemeny. Will you please 'Mouse me?' and down; he went.' At sup per, in Albany, - tlSere were present —one father, thtee daughtersi,„' one sod; one' mother, ne brother three graid daughters, three sisters 1644, ono- brother three aunts, four cousins, 6n6 *ife; One neph ow, ono grand 61)1601ft:4i stieoct i one husband' and three sisters. And yet there were, only four persons preinuttv ,DEdIDEDLT .ot*li.-- , - , Akt ;Arkansas , vtioluoln. teer in the, Mexican war, . riding •on • horse - book, came across T'lm llhim:Oahu told him where he Was wounded,. and asked to be. taken up and conveyed eta .0 f anger. Az lenses placed him behind his saddle,. aad fastened him to himself pith a leather.strap. While they,were hastening. from., danger, a grapeshot toekllliaois! head off but Arkan sas thought he had ci* fainted' from: fa tigue and papa ^ When's safe, place wink at. rived at, the ho,rs,etnan. zelaxed ; . chargei. and seeing his head was, gam; exclaimed,. "Wolk these Illinoisians are the greatest liars. Here's a rascal' with, hie beau. ,ens off, when he told me he Wesionlyehotlit the leg. You emethslieve a, wostt. these &look Bair . ' • itrooldp doctor "Ouches for the , feats lea% fellgoiew . • ' • , ' anzioogfether - U* Wig ines diseyr- • era iiiikf!PP l 7, .igiOitheir,', ,e, :•enageg pitching pennies witn , n nnin: l )PN, of ragged. - word* *he hid pig fu the inyaterieritfgur Evn littinsanneeteeqi ktileajosoo.4ni O. Str." l 4. . 944A 1 41:Ppiallek.ky... , trei :hint th at if ever. zight. hi p _ Ole ea ".hty l ieerk "cAltritOhitit pennies nice r or gag Ince he Votiddlivehhu . 4 fit N om „ eoe„ ; the younger- atood:"-' y~'t his " r reneily, jing ll*' ' gees co.PM hew b ad , w,oulan4 - at, t ethurfitheri reinarkii, litthollob , drew; oeigifroub b s Oahe; ands' " .auleriampitas s t the:thumb :itzulti'edox 14 0 1 ror „tx. deneeen ' ' • • • • , _ 4,),tWiekafr-ial ,4.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers