33 . 5 r VOLUME XX 1g66, FOR SUER 186.6. r---0 ' Hostetteir l Reid WOULD tespectfully announce to their cus tomers end the, public generally that they have just received a new and complete stock of goods in their line, purchased at the last decline, and which they offer at panic - prices. Their stock of lOC Etnbraring in .kart 131 ) 0 COFFEE, P. R. SUGAR, ',..1 7 t1 Alt (c 4 ID, 12, WHITT.: SI - GA il, ruLv_ DO., lIEMMSEMia PRIME BAK. MOLASSES, l'E A-H., DIP., BUK, SUGAR CURED FIATS, CHEESE—MAsoN's CRAcFrt.ss ueensware of the newest and most beautiful 'patterns, Jin frets and otherwise. Common ware, good as_:orttnent• and prices rt asona hie. EPIC ES, &c.—Ground-Ginger,Pepper,-Alspice,_; Cloves, Cinnamon, •Cayenne I Tepper, - Mustard; - &c —These.. are all pure and ground expressly for ourselves. B. Soda. Cr. Tarter, Rsisens, Dried Currants and other Baking articles of best quality- Pepper Sance, Tomato Catsup, Pickets, Cider Vinegar. WOODEN WAlCE.—Buckets, Tubs, boxes, dm. FlSH.—Mackerel; all grades, had, P. Herring. From our connectioc with Market Cars running to the Eastern cities, we receive regularly - VEGETABLES, FRESH FISH, FRUITS, &c. Everything in this line in their proper season. We will ordor gru - els of this class fur parties and deliver them at short est notice. Country Proiluce bought and the highest market price paid .\ Terms.positively Cash. N. 13. Thankful forlithe liberal share of cust'gn we have received, we trust by fair dealing, and earnest efforts to please and accommodate, to in crease our trade still further. ." May 18J HOS'IsETTER, REID & CO. NEW FAH AND .N.TA`ifETI EBBDS 'GEORGE STOVER 11 S itETURNED FROM PIIILADEL l'lnA wall A SUPPLY OF DRY GOODS 31E1r. CLIO dap '3llCg Nig 9E3 13 EX cE) 5E3 a NOTINS, IPUBENSWARO GRO,GERIES, Mir To which be invites the attention of of .his•patrons and the public generally. October 26 1866 I } , Y. 7-114 • . '5O CENTS Glassware I saw a wayside flower, and said, from this 1 will gather instruction. The passer by had not deigned to look upon it, and it had stood unheeded and unappreciated all the day long, wasting its perfume upon :he passing breeze This lesson the little flower taught tile : that, io our daily walk, we may pass uonoticed fair and beautiful beings, who, because they are unobtrusive, are unappreciated. • I resolved to seek far beauty and goodness everywhere, and make my own choice of the beautiful expressions of God's love strewn along life's pathway. The kind Father's hand has left no place desolate. The world is-full of life and beauty. The sky above vies with the earth beneath in splendor and conscious gladness; there is no sight or sound in nature but speaks of - joy and praise—from the birds, the insects, the waving trees, the sunlight spreading a golden mantle over all nature. The sweet sounds that come to the ear, set to the exquisite music of 'stature's own heart, all toll of love, deep and pure,th'at distills on human health as dew upon the wayside flower. The chorus of nature is as a wave on the great ocean of eternity, to he wafted oaward, and break at last before the throne of the Invisible. How strikingly the blight of nature tells, by its fate, the knowl edge it has of human destiny- Surely it was • fashioned for a happier world. saw the bereaved mourner, bending over the form of one she !oven, stricken, smitten by the hand of the spoiler. There was an unutterble anguish on her brow, which no pen can describe; grief, which fie only who sent it knows how to assuligo , As a blos som broken from the supporting stem, the bowed broken-hearted; then were those un accustomed, to weep subdued to tears, and took deep.into my heart this lesson of hu man sympathy. 1 was glad that God bad giv. en us hearts to sorrow with .• rrowibg,to weep with the mourner, an to pia with the brokenhearted. Darkness had settled ore the earth, and I watched the stare as th one by one, reached down their finger lines of light; and, as 1 stood gazing into the immensity, a voice seemed to whisper: what lesson art thou learding ? 1 looked, and Wield worlds upon worlds. reaching oat invisible hands to oth er worlds, flow my soul swayed with ad.. miration and fear !.,A•gaio I soug'it the wayside fl Amer. From mining upon the awry worlds above and the itornoesity of space, I drew .iows . my gaze and heart • to commune with the meek eyed teacher of earth. • It was just dying. Some ruthless foot bad just crushed its modest head and broken itk slender stem; yet, a per:Anne regaled my senses; for, like some pkous saint, it shyi4ke incense of prnyer and forgiveness up heart and bead of its.hcartless destro, WAINE§BORO', FRANKLIN COUNT, PENNSYrtrANIA, FRIDAY 510101NG, JANUARY 18, 1867. 1 21 C30-IECIITICIALL. dills PIPE AND 'CUP. Ven clouds am plack apove, Und mud is plod below, 'Tis den that I do love A cloud 'of smoke to blow; I takes my meersham down, !takes mine lager up, And cares not who do frown Upon my pipe and ,cup! Mine (row, she scolds a bit, When m".e pipe is seen, ,Bee.muse.sometintes I sphit Upon her floor so clean; But Ant is like do rain, It doesn't last alvay, She soon gets pleased again, Und so I smokes away. Oh! Mess mine pipe and Cup, Uric] pleas my scolding frow, Der shmeke goes curling up, Almost as vite as shnow, 'Ca down the logo. slips, Yust like a loving kiss, When lingering on der of bliss. WHAT MAKES A ATM A buthful soul, a loving mind, Full of affection for its kind; ° A spirit firm, erect, and free, That never basely bends the knee; That will not bear a feather's weight - —Ol-slavety's chain for small or-great;-- That truely speaks for God within; That never makes a league with sin; 'That snap's the fetters despots make, And loves the truth fos its own sake; That worships God, and _him_ algae— -- And 'bows no morn than tit his throne; —nil trembles at no tytant's nod; A soul that fears no one but God. And thus can smil - carcitrae — orli , This is the soul that makes a man. LOLO, THE LAUGH OF It MOLD. I love it, I love it, the laugh of a child, . Now iippling ancl_gentre, now merry and wild; It ring!' on the air with its innocent gush, Like the thrill of a bird at the tvvidighting's hush, It floats on the breeze like the tones of a bell, Or the music that dwells in the heart of a shell I love it, I love it, the laugh of a child, New -rippliiiitind gentle, now merry_anebtrilil; O the laugh of a chilld, so wild and so free, the-merriest-sound in_the_vvorld_for 0 the laugh of a child, so wild and so free, Is the merriest sound or me. ="T'WIC - J'IMP - c - EVI The Wayside Flower ±zicle•peritlexrt Poistxra.ll3r Neivinapist, per. lay in the dust meek and submissive to its hapless fate. Ah ! what's heart lesson did its sweet ministry teach me ! Frail wayside flower ! the gentle, the angelie .of spirits -are all around us, as. .we tread with haste the great thoroughfare of life. May we not fear -that-amid-ita-dust - anfl - soil - some - wem o rib:l- - mot tali ty- lies neglected,--unnoticed- and—un loved; or, some child of genius is left to sigh its plautive song,. or perish in forgetful ness ? 'Full many a gem of purest ray serene. The dark unfathomed caves of ocean bear, Full many a flower is born to blush =seen. And waste its sweetness on the desert air." Immortality of Love I never saw a man who did not believe in the immortality of love, when following the body of a lojed one to the grave. I have seen men under other circumstances that did - b - cliffe - itTit, but I never saw a man that, when her he really loved lay streached out for burin:, did not • revolt from saying; "it has all come to that; the hours of sweet com. panionship; the wondrous interlacings o f tropical souls; tlnkkys the hopes, the trusts, the unutterable y rnings—there they all lie." No man can stand and look into a cof fin upon the body of a fellow-creature, and remember the flaming 49telligence, blo•som• ing, love, the whol ,„ divine faculties which so lately nimated that cold clay, and any. "These eve all collapsed and ,one.' No person can witness the last sad -rano _nials..whieb-are-per caned-over-the— ains of a human being—the sealing of unope a. - hie lid; the - following of a rumblin. Ming proces. sion to the place of burial; the letting down of dust into dust; the falling of the earth rr• ei ;, a, WI 080 130111309 that are worse than thunder, and the pled lag of•the green sod over the grave—no per son, unless he be a beast, can witness these things, and then turn away and say, "I have buried my wife; I have - buried - tny - child; I have buried my sister, my brother, my love." God forbid that we should burrauything. There is no.earth that can touch my 1 would fighl niittle breath and strength _away_before I mania permit_any_clodtouch them. The jewel is not in the ground: The jewel has dro-pyed out-of-the—cask-et„-and—l-- have buried the casket, not the jewel. And ou ma , carr the case before the su Ireme court of' my understanding. All that is in me revolts at the decision and spurns it and says_: "You must try heart cases_before the heart," We will not believe but there is not a life somewhereelse; we will not believe that life le' luried here; and the soul goes on and cries like a child lost in the woods, to find itself in this strange world, saying.— "Where am I ? and who shall . guide me that long and yearn and reach upward ?" New Year's Story for Young Men As an incentive to save, and an evidence of how rapidly capital judiciously invested will enerease, w may mention a littleln cident that has just come to our knowledge. A few days ago the circle of aetive business men was she y the announcement of the sudden death of Edward C. Dale, Esq , president of the Norristown Railroad Com pany, and vice-president of the Franklin Fire Insurance Company. In 1850, sixteen years ago, Mr. Dale retired from the office of prothoreitary of the District Court of this city, with, $14,900 as the net proceeds of nis tenure in office, and, as he at the time a vowed about all of his earthly possessions.— This sum he placed in the hands of Amos Phillips, a personal friend and shrewd mana ger of money; without written aeknowleds ment, to be used as his own, and to make re turn to him or to his heirs when called on. The fact of this deposit, thus made sixteen years ago, was known in Mr. D.'s lifetime only to y the parties immediately connected with it, and 11r D. having died. suddenly, leaving no will or other record of this partic ular investment, from which ho had never drawn anything, and which had steadly in creased, his heirs, a son and daughter, on Friday last, were not a little surprised to re ceive from Mr. I'hillips, iu first-class secur ities and cash, the handsome sum of $50,410. Though Mr Dale had subserprotly made and saved since his deposire of $14,900 with Mr. Phillips, in 1850, a very handsome es tate, these unknown securities paged over by Mr. Phillips was a perfect wiudfall. The growth of the deposit was mainly in interest —the securities invested in being entirely of a reliable character. At six per cent the sum would double in about eleven years, making, say, $30.000, and in seven years since, about two fifths more would be added to the $30.000, making , without speculative ventures, the sum paid over - tothe heirs This simple transaction demonstrates,the im. portant fact that fifteen thousand dollars sav ed and invested at thirty year's of age, is worth as much as sixty thousand at fifty two! years. Thus let the yelng remember the important fact of beginning to lay up early Ledat.r. DON'T STAND STILT..-If you yon will be - ran over. Notion, fiction. progress— these are the words which now fill the vault of heaven with their stirring den:sods, and make humanity's heart pulsate with a strong & bound. Advance, or stand asidP; do nor block np the way and hinder tile carcor of oilers; there is too much to do now to allow of inaction anywhere or in any one • There is a nuething for all to do; the world is beco ming, more and more known; wider in manni tude; closer in interegt: more loving and •c -ven:ful than of old Not in deeds of daring, not in the ensanguined field. not in chains and terrors, not in lalood,and tears, and gloom, nut in the leaping, vivifying, exhilarating impulses of a hatter birth of -the soul. Rea de , are yon doing your part iu this work? Gentlemen, don't part your hair behind, for hair parted in that way .reveals a soft place in the head. S - A. PIS° The North lilissouri Courier, published at Hannibal, Mo., thus forcibly and' elo quently speaks of irrepressible Sambo: This is the-most irrepressible - - tots personage in history. Th made-out to be nobody; the-bigger - he - grows. The more he is despised apparently, the more important he becomes. The more he is tram pled doWn, the higher be gets up. Call him filthy, ignortint and disgusting, and he imme diately creeps into our daily thoughts, and becomes a subject of universal interest. Call him a brute, and strange to say, all civilized humanity begins to fight about it. ,Legislate him into a chattel, and Heaven and earth seems to be indignant. .Whip him, scarify him with rawhides and manacles and the branding iron, and his cries penilrate the u niverse. God and man hear them, and the very outposts of creation shiver with his fee ble agony. Sell the bodiemond souls of his children for gold and blunt every humane feeling in the cursed lust of such gains, and the red right arm of Omnipotence is made bare and lays low in death the first born in every household in the land. Persevere on ly two or three generations in denying his manhood and frustrating his elevation, and the thunder and blood and smoke of thou sands of battles, like the loosening of the , ApoCalyptic seals, roll in desolation ores half a continent. Sambo is evidently a being of vast importance, bit not on account of his magnitude, but for the ream!' of his I•±ltt* ness. Sambo, considered in himself and his present attributes, is insignificant, but his rights and his wrongs have made him the most tremendously forcible character in mod. ern-tims,----Strange-that-the-Seu th-lt ae-n seen itr-does not see it even yet. With the better instincts of the human race in hisTa vor—with the innate sense of divine and hu= man justice striving in his behalf, and all the incalculable force: t ililanthropy civiliza tion, and enlight:! . I .P , testr2anship in sym pathy with his cause, is astounding that the fossilized relics of pro-slaveryism, North •nd--Seuth i -have not-been-converted For fif't ears the or' has been f9L•eace_onthi- [subject—Get-Satoh() out-of.politics—out of the cburch—out of the .ale of altitzt social amenities. Cease to agitate—quit thinking of him—talking of him—touching him.— lut - ttrunrare - tve quirtet - Ming the more we didn't. The very effort only freshioned the interest. Just as eachneav batch of politi% - cians - th °Ugh t they had . settled him, he broke out somewhere elie. The South itself swore they would not agitate, and that nobody else should agitate, and, behold, the oath is not cold before the South i s convulsed i n discussing him. Sambo wouldn't "down" at the bidding of any mortal. He was:tnade by God, and like creation seemed to come and go at the beck of some mysterious power.— The effort to suppress him has been as vain as the pride of Canute, who tried to coin mend the ocean ta obey. We wave the Rand imperiously, stamp thefroTat - , - and bid him be gone. But no, Sambo is• still there. His presence, in the representation of his cause, at least, stands before the kings--:is found in cabinets and congresses—sits down at ev ery fireside in this nation—talks in our bed chambers and speaks from the stump, the fo• rum, the pulpit, and the press. Say this is the effect of fanaticism, or what you please, it is nevertheless a fact s It has been an increasing fact for fifty years Ile is irrepressible, and his eLon skin evidently holds within it the element of indestructibil ity, - What then is the difficulty? What is the matter? What need to 'ask after all the past? Is it not evident as sunlight that the difficulty is this—Sont6o is a, man, God made, and gifted with an immortal soul— endowed with the eualienahle rights of bu• man nature—the right to himself, his chil dren, his privileges and his possessions? Is it nut 'plain that "the matter" in this case is that his manhood and his rights have been denied, taken from him by force and injus tice and insult heaped upon him? To cure the agitation is it not as evident we must re move the cause? To get rid of Sambo we have only to do him justice—let him alone in the enjoyment, of his rights. Concede what ought never to have- been denied, his claim to equal rights, and the turmoil ceases forever. It would have ceased years ago on the same conditions. But just so sure as there is justice in the heavens and the sense of it among men, the agitation must contin• ue until the last particle of his God-given rights is made secure. SAY No'..—Are you solicited to engage in any pursuits, or to enter into any engage ments which your consciences rejeets, or which you foresee I'6ll bring a cloud on your' .prospects or honor and usefulness ? hou Pholt say, No Are you ptesed to greet fuvOrs or inual geoces to perso , .s who havo an right to ash: them, or who can only be injured by them favors or indulgences, too, that you ar. not in a condition to bestow. c-onsistoutly •it your engagements? • "Thou shalt say, No." Are you importuned to join 'n any amuse ments, or to consent to aw, a , s • ith you believe sully the •-` of your character, or lesson the • e ( t i ollyour good .influence. or its any wfsy ex , • a InisAtie'vpus . effect on society? _ IThriu alibi say. No " Let the consequences be what they may. ::.Thou shalt say, Nor' • At a recent railroad dinner, in compliment to the fraternity, the toast was given: "An honest laver, the noblest work of God."— But an old farmer in the bsok part of the house rather spoiled the effect by adding' in. a loud voice, "and about the scarcest." \ Punch eaye woman fir9t resorted to tight lacing to prove to men how welt' they could bear squeez;ng. Public Opinion. The necessity of a just public opinion 'is evident to all; at its bar the delinquent should / be rebuked, but in those mild tones of char ity which nliven hope, prompt reform, and which_do_not_discourage_an d_proy_oke reck lessness nor originate scandal. . — A healthy public opinionhas for its mate province a most delicate yet important task. The gossip or the garrulous and self righteous often receives this , name, but how widely does it vary in its office. It aggra vates and Mantes; rather than corrects the tendencies of the erring. For instances, a yeang man takes a mis step. In bow Many instances does an un ehristian.seal ruin where judicious kindness might remedy? If he is one whose aspira tions are confined to the locality where scand alous report has gained currency and is kept alive by the iindictivenetfs of a gossiping, mischief-making community (often the case), he concludes from the merciless rigor with which his name is handled and his churac ter aspersed, that he is'already ruined; that his aspiration. (all that make him manly) must be . abandoned; that in fact, he is desert. ed by the good-will of fellows— at least, those whose influence attract him to virtue —and that he can be no worse In nine cases out of ten he accepts the embrace which is offered by those whose influence is for evil, and seeks to deserve the name which an un jest public opinion has bestowed. how many are thus scourged into vice by the scor e ion_tongue of slander! How mercilessly the self-righteous pursue! And how score fully do they pull aside their skirts when they have fully accomplished their hellish work? "I must bo cruel even to be kind." Yes cruelty horn of kin litiscliaoFt - C --- )r: tare the victim to despair and then desert him (because, forsooth, inventions of cruelty are, exhausted!), but rebukes through love, chastises with tenderness, and punishes with out—vengeance. To the measure that you are willing to be "kind" to yourself, be "kind' to others. Thousands are ruined thus. In One way - rag - such be reclaimed, and is one way may-theybe-unadeffereu t tu this -- attra Lion downward: &et, through an enlighten : • . :tid_charitabler'llthlie is second., ly, by instilling aspiration into the minds which elevate above local prejudice—which seek the broad theatre of the_ world. By no means let the young be too sensitive to evil report, but solace themselves by oiv log it the blush in the beauty of a virtuous life; be not overpowered by the hypocritical self-righteous, but conquer them. To the uncharitable I would say, study thyself; look well for the mote in thine own eye, that thou mayest see clearly to pluck the one from thy brother's ey A BOY CHARMED BY SERPENTS —The Maysville (Ky.) Eagle says that a little boy, four or five years of age, of Irish parentage, in Bracken count . was in tke habit,_durin: the whole of last Summer, of going out in the woods near his home to play with his "pretty things" as be called them. After much persuasion, one day, Lis mother was induced to follow him to his play grounds, to see what attracted him so much•, when, to her horror, she'discovered her little darling boy playing with a trio of huge: black snakes, wholly unconscious of his peril. The Loy was completely fascinated, and would ad vance and retreat, and sport and dully with his hideous comrades as;if he were i❑ the charmed circle of his: brothers and sisters. The mother, in terror, ran to the house crying for help, when the father of the child rushed to the rescue of the boy, ,eod, after some difficulty, killed the snakes. Won• derful to relate—and we have this informs. tion from a gentleman of unquestionable ver• aeity—the little boy soon took to his bed, from• which he never arose. Ile pined away and died, an early:vietirn of the fascination of the .serpeuts., LOVE YOUR ENP.3II - E8 —Someyears since, a clergyman in Litchfield' enmity, Ct, (vas refiroving• au old Indian for .Ids cruel ,and revengeful conduct towar I thew thatll-ad. of fended him. "Yon should love your enemies." observed the parson, "and:preserved an affection for thee who hurt you." "I do love my enemies.; retortekthe Non of nature, "and have a• great affection for them that:liurt me " "No such thing," returned the clergyman; "you don't lore youi enemies." 'I do.' "Who are the enemies pNO " '`Kuril and cider?" LIFF..—We are not sent: into life ns butterfly is sene . linto sunitner, gor k reouily hovering over the ft)wers, ae if,the interior spirits of the minima , had come down to greet these kisses of the season upon the grnoud: but to labor for the world's advance. merit, awl to mould our characters i n to• (; e d , s hkeness, and so, thrOngh toil and achieve ment, to gain happiness. I Would rather h6lak stones nrou the road. if it were not f' IMP do•grace y, t f being in a chain rang, than to he uue of those contvoptible joymongers, who are so rich nod so empty'rhat they are continually going ab..ut to Ana sontethinp, to make thew happy A moan's wife in South 'Bend, Ohio, pre serktr.d heir- hushand-wit h a boy. est morn• log the man stepped into the not is nflice and stated that the night bothr a fellow edmestal "it ,, r' into his house, War naked ; #4 l! that he - here yet. n:p ice olicemen tear red o. .-un to oust the intruder. Whoa - they it to the house they asked to see t, e folio" that had come into the house e night before. The nurse brought out s t , e bat • . CIEIZEI Why is a min with the Doh likes plucky prize-fighterr "Because he's ready for the berritell . fa.. 00 loose 3tea x*, • A Happy Woman 'What are you singing for?' said I to Ma ry Maloney. - 'Oh, I don't know, ma'am, without it is my heart feels so happy.' - 'Happy, are you happy? Why let e (me, you diaiil - o - Vrti - aleatuFland-in-t he-world .' Foot of land is it?' she cried with a loud laugh; 'Oh, what a hand you are after -a joke. Why, sure I've nivtlr a penny, let a lone a foot of land.' 'Your mother is dead" 'Clod rest her cowl, yis,' replied Mary, with a touch of genuine pathos. The Heavens be her bed.' 'Your brother is still a hard ease, I s pose?' 'Ye may well say that. It's nothing but arink,"drink, and bate his wife—poor eray ture.' 'You have to pay your sister's board?' 'Sure, the bit eray,turet and she is a good little girl, is Money, withal . to do what ever .1 axes her. 1 don't grudge the money that goat for that " • 'And you barn't any fashionable dresses, either?' 'Fes'enable, is it? Oh, gis, I pita bit of whalebone in my skirt, and me calico gown spreads as the 'eddies. But then ye say true; I have but two gowns to me back, two shoes to me feet, and no bonnet, barrin' me old hood. Tout hasn't any lover?' 'Oh, be off wit' yezt catch Mary Maloney *id a lover these days when the hard times is come.' 'What on earth have -you to make you happy? A drunken brother, a poor helpless sister, no mother, no love—why where do you get all your happiness?' 'The Lord be praised, Alias, it wowed up in me. Give me a bit of sunshine, a clean flare, plenty of work, and a sup at the right time, and I'm made. That makes me laugh and sing. And thin, if trouble come, I try to keep my heart up, gateitwould-be-a— sad-thitrg-if-I-atriok ItloGuite should take it in his head to as me; but the Lord willing, • I would try to bear up under it.' Samtz.,- , The_past_summer, as a lady mod- , _estly_attired,-was-on_her_way_to the city—of - Newei York, on board one of the II dson riv er night boats, she sat quietly re ing in the ladies' cabin, when a fashions le dressed, dame, mistaking her fora servant, rudely tic• coated bee with— "Do you know:that this cabin is:for .lad les?" "Certainly I do," was the answer, "aod have been wondering for some time why you were here. An Irish stranger, -slightly the worserafor hiskey, got tangled in:a political coutrover. sy,, in a saloon in Trenton,one day last week. He advocated "Democracy," with the same volubility of a skeleton :His antoonist final ly yentured,to remark: You don't know what Democracy is!" "Don't know what DemolLacy is,:ye Black een Republiean:spalp? I've been in Ohio State Prison for five years, served in the ebel army three years, and voted six times the Sixth Ward, New York, at the last election. Divil a man in the United States has served a better apprenticeship to Dome. racy than tneselfr The "Radical" kno/jeci under, and treated the party. - - - - A. Bon .--"r want to see some of your gimlets," said a greet-laorn one day as be en tered a hardware store. The dealer took down several Farce's, nei ther of which suited.j. "Well, then, what kind do you want?— Here is almost every variety." "Why, I want thew what, bbres square holes." "I with I had your bead," said 'a lady one day, to a gentleman who had strived for her a knotty point, "Aod I wish I had'your heart," was the reply. • "Weil," said she, "since yon•r head and my heart can agree, I don't see why :they should not go into partnership." It is said there are not less than one hun• dred females now in tho hands of savages, lately captured from the frontier counties of Texas, and constantly suiject to the:greatest outrages. A New York correspondent of a Boston paper writes :that a merchant who failed twice in fifteen years, was forced to sell his wife's wardrobe to procure the necessaries of life, has just retired from ;business worth a fortune:of five hundred — thousaud dollars.— Never say-die! • "Vegetable Pills!" exclaimed an old lady; don't talk to me 'of fuch bluff. The best vegetable pill ever made is on apple-dump ling; for destroying a gnawing in erhe stomach there's nothing like it; it can always be re lied on," It is delicious to hare a protty girl open - the front door arid mistake you for her cou sin; but still morellelicious to hare her re main deceived until she hag kissed you twice, and hugged the buttons off your clot. No man can ever hee- , mc eminent in any thing, Unless he works at it with an . earnest ness bordering on . enthusiasm.' Charity eoverit n multtrude °rein.; the tai lor a multitude of sinners. Re who -hilartift wining to 6;1 n place be it; fitted for will•fiud nu place fitted fur him. ' hat is handsonier and higher when the vse p 'ad is off? . •A. pillow. Why is a billiard player like a thief io a crowd? Became he aims for the pockets, Why is a dog's tag a great *malty? Be cause no one ever sag it before., NUMBER 29
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers