• . . •/•••• •_, _ - .... . . • - , • . • . ... . , , f ' ."`," '!. ' l''' • ~''''' 1 , • `,7 i i .•t f,,-.,.pt .. , ~ .. : , r ; ' . '-', •':. - a a i 1.! 4.., ',' , -r_... --1 t . _ -.0. • , ,- - 21177. -17;r,•• . L. , „ ,_ ~ , In - " ' " " • .. t . .. • .. . • r , , ',))70, # ' f 7 ''' :• f • ' . .-1. ' ,:•". . -- • _, . , % 'I e • ..1.• ••• ' .. - . _ , . _ , __, . 1 •: • -, 1 • • • . , • *l ' ',k ... ^ thi° 7 .r• '' I:: : :t,, i ~ .: .kr. f• ~: T, .:, -.. - - 111• .: . : Ails., .. 4441 , . '-, _• , . , .. , ..,.y.7:,. _•.,, . • ; , • ~ . . rs i t, • 4 04 ,- .•• - Ao • , : . ,• .., ,,, ,44t1...i,1-0.17,-4 , .. • , .., ii. .• , . - - . -• . .._. . _ . ___ _. , _._.... . . Sp W. 331 stir. % OLUMI lIENCIDWIL 11PD1C7KILICII DRUGS(, MEDICINES - PLI[INITS, doe. &e., Go to Fourthmans zivaxu..rza EiZ3I232DIIIM-10 Waynestmro• , May 24, 1867 J. BKAVE It 9 • DEALER IN Ladies, Misses, Children, Mete and Boys • BOOTS & SHOES, ,Hats, Caps, Trunks, etc. Sams. Tobacco, the very same old kind of Ttnp.. pee Snuff, Unndies, Nuts, Cloves. Nritiatoon, Pep per. Basing e.tidn, Ginger, 'taking Nlollo-es, :Shoe •ral htove Blacking, ro-nenco of Colll.o, P,.per Col lars vnd Culta, eluvenders, ilore, Paper, Ink and Ilifeel pens - 'I'HI. METALIC SIIOE SOLE Soaps, faffy Whitt+, flair t ii, Perfumeries, Mutt:hes, Kerosene, fko &c. Governm.mt Ltlatikets. Aka Initik - ele. - Mai.y Wore saleeirreTsded and ti,c , l by everybody Room on the north-east Corner in the Diamond, WAYNEti BO Ito'. Citizens and persons living in the Country will and a large and well selected h toe k 01 first class ;onus at as low &preens can be sold in the cyan z,. • Sept. 20 1867. PlN'Fbi for FA BM ERS and others.—The Graf. ton Mineral Pamt Co., are now rminufactuting the Best, Cheapest, and tnoet Durable Paint in use; two coats well put on, mixed with pure Lioseed Oil, will bat 10 or 15 yents• it is of a light brown or beautiful chocolate color, and can be thatigtd to green, lead, atone. drab, olive or cream, to Butt the consumer. It is valuable for Houses, Barna, eli tes, Carriage at d Car makers, Pails, and Wonelen- Ware, Agrieultural Implements. Canal floats, Ves eels, anti Ships' Bottoms, Canvas, Metal nod :quit 'le Roofs, (it being t' ire and Water proof), Floor Oil Cloths, (one Manufacturer hiving used Fi(tat bbls. the part vear,) and as a paint for any purpose is unsurp owed - for body, durability, elasticity, and adhesive nese. Warranted in all cases as native. Send for a circular which gives full partacuiars. ?one genuine unless branded in a trade mark Graf ton Mineral Paint Adress DANIEL BIDW ELIA. 264 Pearl St. N. Y, For sale at the Hardwire store of GEIsEIt & RII IN E H ART, who are also agents for Bidwell's Carriage Grease. • Oct, 4-6 m. LUMBER WANTED. THE subscribers will pay the hilzhest cash price for Istiniber, to be delivered this season, and will also want a large lot for next season. l He I 6-tf, EISEN, PHttJI & COG rillik; largest assoltment of CAIt I' T ie .1, trap at the store 4 Amnesties, DRUMM & Co RIME N.'o. Molasses at the store of .sunegans. BICIUDIOT & 0-. rOBALE% Seamless Grain Bap in mere are fur sale cheap by WALKER. \ILI at Co TIM RED HAI: Main street, Chambershurg, ) Ps, is a sure sign that y . O aro near the Champ sod Fooldombi Hoe llooportam of DECRIER?, Hapistewn. WAYNESBORO, FRANKLIN COVNTI, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY HORNING, MARC/I 13 , 1868. QOF~'l'~=a.AL. 1 THINK OF VIES think of thee at evening's calm, And in night's soul-voiced hour, When all around is softly huaL'd, As by a spell of power; When gleams of childhpod's joyous days. Come thronging round my heart; And drenms of love and hope are there That will not stx depart. I think of thee et morn, end 'midst The world's bewildering throng; Where plutoure woken her every wile, And hope her Byrum song; And de'eming thi u welt still the some As once thuu wen to me, • My heart• from mirth's cold mockery Bruiting turns to tlkee Oh ! every word or kindly look Thou e'er to me halt given, Is n my heart's "unvarying page" A a 'twere with diamonds graven. • nut 1B OU ART Cite NO RIA the flowers of Hope plea k_w Atcd earth has but one j.ty for me— FASIIION ON TIIE BRIIN. It seems to me the women now bru,s up must In titan w eAbtx and little hoops Bow tunny they •ppeor ! Th. it hair thiy Ira in fancy shapes, latAgi lauglkd again, To see !Jew queer the women look W ith chign or, on the bruin- ' Last night I met a little miss Rigged up in wonirous sty to, She had a little bunnet on That really matte inf. smile. 'Twits smaller than a c...bbage leaf Dried up ter want of ran Bow very queer the women look With bonnets on the brain. Oh, well, this is a curious world, False teeth, false calve s, and, oh! They speak of polpiiators, but —. The tiuth I do hot know; But let them weer whale et they will, Remonstrance is in vain, And they are rally charming with The fashion ort-ch-whrtnn. MI SS CIM IJOLL.A.IOT . Wonderful The Bucyrus Jortiiini states that during the great snow, A lad near that place, sent out tirthe potato wuuud to get potatoes: aftei clearing away the irnow and breaking into the monad, he found a kind of a nest in the straw, in which was a compact ball of what he took to be a large bull of string, such as our women use; he brought this to with the potatoes and laid it on the buy 8 (1111l1:0 near the stove. Alia mother just then sent him tiff to a neighbor and con toiled about hut work. tie was gone about au hour, aim when he retitrued, upon look ing for his ball, he loud it had resolved it s:III tutu a ime of squirming young' . suakes, wavy of which were seeking the warmth of the inlimes body, auu one had actually 'en tered its mouth. A cry of alarm troth the buy attracted the attention of the mother toward the cradle, and, set,zing the child, she sought to extlicate the reptile, but she wits too lute, and it actually drew itself with in the babe's 1.11011111_81.111- -t-101111 - 1 - 18 - 111roat Dr ; 10 - g lialf - was sent tor, but he recognized the snake as being the common s mop tiro of Audubon, and therefore perfectly harmless. the declined worrying the baby with medicine, and the child seems unhurt 'by its singular, accident The mother de. (Mires, however, that irs appetite is much increased, and that in 118 sleep it frequently hiss3s loudly We believe this is much in imagination, as that species of serpent or snake dues not bias. A WORD TO YOUNG MEN.—My friend, did you ever know, can you call to mind a single instance; of a person who, having his own to make in the world, spend his tune in the streets, in billiard saloons, around hotels, or in any form . of die,ipatioc, to succeed in a great degree in any enterprise Look o: ver your list of friends and negiiiiintancom, and note their course. D.. you not find on examination that those who to-day are men of influence and honor were the youth who made the most of valuable time, turning it to good account; and, on the other baud, don't you find that those who stood at the corners, with a cigar or pipe in hie mouth, went from had to worse, and finally to tutu ? Sadly must the auswor be wade—oh, that it were nut so—they have failed 1 Will you not profit by the experience of ()there? Go not that way. Never be idln. Every mo ment of . your•time is a golden one; uom it as such. improve the mind. _Fix put - eyes upon some noblo stitijOot. Be won. The call is fir men. Will you not be one of alai number who can say, '1 sun a man r A Inerahant on his loath bed sent for a Free Church clergyman. Having some fears regarding his future prospect, Ile abkod the reverend gentleman 'Do you thiok if I were to leave £lO,OOO to the Free Kirk that my soul woulu be saved ?' Well,' answered the cautious minister, 'I couldn't just 'promise you that, bat ink the experiumat worth trying.' Ilactapeza cterit Family NiervOkstoeit,t,eiz. IMPEACHMENT IS PEACE • Impeachment has gone beyond newspaper discussion. Nothing we may say can have any influence on the decision, for that de-, vision rests with grave and impartial judges, who will decide according to the law and ev idence. Although impeachment is an ad journed question, it is new to the people.— They mutably understand it. It has been hovering over them like a 'bad, revolting star,' with evil omen, and forebodings of DR= tional calamity. It into d ispel . these feel ings, and endeavor in a small way to.edueate the people to the proper appreciation of the solemn duty that we continue to discuss a question that now rests with the high court of the nation. Impeachment is peace. The thousand ru more of war are of no wore consequence than the snow flakes which darken the air. We shall have no fighting. Here in New-York, some dour Five Points denizens, deep iu their cups, and fresh from the last prize 'fight, are threateuing to go to Washington and assist the President in dispersing Con 'teas We have uettain heroes of toe JU- S • ly note - the murderers - rot-fug-,itiv-e—negrees r and the burners of 'orphan assylunis-'-whu would'be delighted, to aid the President iu sacking the Sub •Ireasury. We liaio_se_en_ no one really animus to fight but Mr. Brooks, and no one really expecting a fight but \lr. Raymond. The Wail st. people are quick to scent trouble ltloney is the first influ ence to feel a panto. 'Yet WT11174. main tains surprising equanimity. Amid the ag itation of_the_last-hve_tt'apTiiord=h - a - tzFin - ertny ranged from 140 to 143. Thu danger of war, therefore. has the mercantile vane of three per cent This, is• the feeling among the moneyed elleises. 1.1 the were at liberty to print ar.surauces which have coine.to the of this paper, it would be seen that the Wealthitsti the must -eonseivative, the must timid ii our cIIiZ•.:GS ate strenuously to la - our - el — i - urpeannut. Men who control millions, Hod whose inteieste are widely spread over land and sea, unite with u.' in the prayer that Congress may speedily give ua peace, by removing an unfaithful Presi dent. Impeachment is reeonstruction. A large part of the Union is in a condition of anarchy and unrest. The plow restsia the furrow— the hummer rusts_un the anvil—loyal men steal thinagh highways and forests, like thieves in the night—Rebels triumphantly defy the law There is no safety in the South. uu security of property, no assurance of personal liberty There is nothing active but the sheriff cud the !How's% marshal Lands are shrinking in value. The owners have no many to cultivate them, and peo ple who have money, and who would gladly go into the South, and make its dreary and forsaken fiekis to blossom like the roie du not care to accept the enmity that awaits thetn,social ositamstn, military law, the sharp arid quick rifle-shot of au ambushed runnier er. No-one cares to he a party to another Memphis and New Or.eans massacre, e.pto• hilly when be finds assassination applauded by-the President. The South wants money, men, order, _reconstruetiou. Thus far she bus been the victim of Presidential caprice and tit restless demagogism 'r ake'Alubauni,' for instance But for ,31r. Johnson, Ala nawu would now be in the Union, side by sine with Main and Illtuois, with loyal men to thee, the wheels of government moving smoothly, the coutts in session, and every incentive to capital and tudustty. Yet now by the direct and" persistent interfestratise of the President, Alabama verges upon unar• city. the Liebel looks to the Ptentdent fur help,.autl wars upon the loyalist; the loyal• ist resists the interference, and lean upuu Uongiess. The struggle of war its continued in peace—the strife of the bullet is succee ded by the atrile of the, bailor. Impeach ment will end this. The Rebel will see that nothing is left but obedience, the States will ITT/Tbrought back to the Union;and loyal men will be confiitned in their sights by the pow er of the United States, Impencleme nt merins . the triumph of Repul)- 'icas, inBtituttons Our Itepumicati govern ment has stood mbuy eine! testa. It has sustained Slavery and destroyed Slavery; it has warred upon foreign governments, and suppressed domestic insurrectlou, it has passed throm e ili the mightiest war of modern times, and survived a social revolution, 'it has answered every form of govotuweut, and now it proposes to depose al tieacherous Chief Magistrate- France removed her tyruuts by a bloody and maddening revolu tion only to see uew•born.llberty torn from her ewbnace, and stifled by the gaudy mid dazzling despotism of au empire. England only succeeded an destroying the. tyranny of the Stuarts by revolution which brought with thane wars, and social tumuli'', mud rebellious repeated by three generations.— Mexico,,has seen twenty revolutions uud enervating wars, commerce destroyed, in dus y paralyzed,—traitors iu cou null, thieves in office,—bauditti on the lligh•way and, finally, a foreign army on her shores, a foreign prince io her palace, her noblest bons meant:led and in exile. Freedom still re mains au experinient with her. Free America will show the world that by the gentle opera tion of law, her chosen Chief blagistrate, and the Uommander•in Met of her armies and navies can be speedily punished for his crimes, and reduced to obscurtty, and nu appiceiabic aft tit un society but a new tavern loungers' gasconade, and au advance of three per cent. in gold ! America was noble in her management el the war. mud the nations stood in wonder. But. there Is something sublime in her acceptance of impeachment. Men will say no wore that republican insti tutions aro a failure, for republican America, answering every condition, and accoptiug every tesponsibitlity of government, titauth to-day proud, t , aeure, peaceful— the law supreme, and the public virtue- •untrnpAir. • ed. . , . Therefore, it is wise to say that impeach ment is peace. Some of our, people may rave, and swear, and gnash their teeibThiif we shalt have no war—no clisturbanse—no arresting the wheels 'of Glovernoient—not the shimmer of a bayonet, nor the click of the trigger—nothing but the ordinary town constable, with his clumsy baton. There is something grand to us in this spectacle of a great nation changing an incompetent ruler by the gentle and easy process of law. The poor little three per cent that the gold-gam biers have made will melt tike the falling snow. Impeachment is peace, because the common reuse and the loyalty of the nation demand it.—N. Y. Tribune Feb. the 26th. 11111=1 Young Men—Business Men. It Is easier to be a good busiuess wan than a poor one. Half of the energy displayed in keeping ahead, that is required to catch up when behind, will save credit, give• more time to atteud to business, and add to the profit and reputation of those who work for gain. Be prompt. Keep your-work. kl on or your engagement. If you promise to meet a man or do a certain thiug at a certain lument,-be—ready at the appoiuted-tium—lf you have work to do, do it at once, cheerful ly, and therefore more speedily nod correct : . lt_you go out on bustuess„ utteud prompt ly to the wetter. Do nut stop to toll stories in busioe4s hours. If you have a place of business, be found there wheu wanted. Nu wan eau : et rich by sitting aroued stores and salmis. Never `Nor ou busiuess u3atters. If you have to litb - a - fornt - ItYingot - tnemtrer - thut — ons - - in the morning is better than two at night. If . you employ milers ' be on baud to see that they united to their duties, and to direct work to advantage. [lave order, system, regularity, prumptue9s; liberality. Du nut rueddie with buAness yhu know nothing of. Never buy an article simply because the wan who'seils will take it out le trade Traue is rotreirrrn - e - rmati ey. Ag - Ttid — b — lfflTl - OrS hubtwnd lepUlittlVll is always money. Make your plane tit hu-loess pleasant aul attract ive, then stay there to. wait on customers. Help yourself mid others will help you. Be faithful over the iuterests couiided to your keeping, and all iu good time your re spunsitiiiities will be inemased. Du nut be iu great baste to get rich, Do riot build you have urraugued and laid a good 101111- dituuo. Do nut— as you hope or wont fur su.mess—epeud time iu idleness Puy as you go. A man of honor respects his word us he dues his bond. Ask, but Dever beg Help others when you can, but never give wheu you cannot stroll to,*sunply because it is fashionable. Leant to say no. No ue ceseity of snapping It out, bat say it firmly stud respectfuity, have but few outdid:tura —and the fewer the better. Use your own bruins lather than otuers. Learn to think awl act fur yourself. Be honest. Be vigil. Rut Keep ahead rather than behind the times. Yuuug men, note this, and it there is fully iu the argument, le:, us know. You must test it thoroughly, as, sooner or later practical repeats its experiences. A STORY ABOUT URN. HOWattfit —A wri ter in the Puttlaud Prebs tolls the lolluwtog; Tor a time donut; (Jun Sherman id tuarob to' tlanta, lieu. lluward had command of the Fourth Corps. Jost before the advance on Daiwa, and while the cm pa was in bivouac near lieu.thay, two of the boys of an Olio regitovut molt it tutu their heads to gu out un a tittle torah g exodttiou. It was not lung before the IngileSc ambition, just at that time, was g allied by the captuie of a 'grunted.' Wti lc to the act of killing the animal the owner discovered thaw, and tru tneulately made conaplatut to Gen Howard, who happened to be tiding letsurelf along near the seeno of slaughter. fie told the lieueral it was the only hug be bud, and he thought the boys bhuutd either lot him have iho pork or pay him fur it. The lieueral said he thout,lit BO too. lie TOO to where the buys, were, and the foiliniqug dialogue eusuca lieueral- 1 1Iave you Any money, boys 7 It you Luke away inn; bog you ought 1.0 pay nun tor It! boidiel'—.No, General, we halm no money —bavn't boon pain for tour or ONO IlluU (16, and we stand in groat need.of the pork.' lieuetal='ll tiai. du pa, call, Air, a fair prio . o tor your hug ClllZen—` ',V en, L should think about nine would Generai—:lioys, what tire your liatriCB, and what reguueut uu suu befoul; to 7 ril put yuur !winch to fay tuetuutamluut aatt pay tut, luau tur ilia hog. Next put•ddy 1 expuet yuti mu cull at my ,henthit.i.htutts and buttle the uccuUut." `Suwwr—• thank you ; General. We'll du it il It Inked the Lint cunt.' 'I he buys wete beard al:erwards to do• clew liuqueutiy that, tt►cy luoked upuu that inati oi their houost debts, and that. it Bhuuld be laid it they lived. lieu the best pay day eatue, however, they cud the hientnal were (pupil separated. Thu kuurth Corps, nutter Ueueral Was hi. Thu eubtroutiug thoun, MLitt General now'. and war to ouo►tuaed of the Arluy ul the reutie.wieu, cud uu'tbo watch with 61►etwau to 6aVituauh. war was eluseti, the members of tho regitueut scattered, auti there Itl uu report yet whether the punt bill has beou bet Iletl ur No man can go (lima into the dungeon 'of hts expunotion, anti hold the Lurch to all ifs data oittuulicts and bidden tatvit.es arid alialy recesses, and nut up with a I , llutitier and will', and an earuest ery to heaveu tor mercy and eleatistag. A lady edked a 'Moister •if shenlight pay sitsutiou to dress and - fashion without boaug proud T. •Modam,' replied the ',moister, '►rnegever you bee toe tail of a lox vut of a hole yvo taAj be sure ilia ihere The Indians 'Of Michigan. One who bee read the Illation , of the In dittos of North America, of their proVess io war, their hospitality iu peace, then charac ter before tainted by the evils ,and intrigue of the White man, is stink with Wonder at the present state of the race ihrit mien roam% ed with proud and numolesteCiteps the wilds of Michigan. The•remnant:of many tribes still live near the northern and western bona dry of the State, ntrinbering perhaps some eight thousand; a feW of them haie learned' an - example of their white brothers, and NI. low the vocation of farming in a small • way; but by far the greater part of them eke • out a living in whatever way . causes the least ex. ertion, and can be seen loitering along the streets of villages,,dirty and ragged, and in their setni-etvilize costume'the•meteresein blanee oflhe;race we read of in history. and poetry. • True, they still have the dark brown skin, the straight black hair, the high Cheek bones, but miital , y how degraded. The eaglet.-eye, from whisk in days gone by flashed the, thoughts of the noble heart, is blurred by fire water, and the festures that once were stampe with truth and honor, note only bear the impressof - loiv canning and . deceit. And these are the descendents of the proud and broken-hearted Logan of the Juniata, of Pocahontas, whose deeds are renowned in song and story, and of many other noble its. But their number glows every year staallerTmed-as-civilize!ion-advanees it press es them back, back towards their lust testing place andthe few wlfirta42ifiT - the Pacific will exclaim, " e eau go no further; wo have reached our j4urney's end,'' and ore too glad to lie down and be forever free from perse• oution, and posterity will never know of their existence save only iu history. The Marriage of Cousins. Dr 6. Cr liowe, - Yrinciple of the lustitu _tion_fer_the_B,lttl u_t_B st n ,_o u must active philanthropists Americo, buys: 'There can be nu mistake at all about thu fact, that the tendency to.have defective off•iprtug is greater where parents are detect. Live, than with others. ' But here is u point that leads people into error. It does nut lut low because a person is defective in his hear. iug the defeat will take that form iu his off spring, it ruay strike somewhere else The child may be detective iu physical strength or mental capacity. But tlitte is the de fective germ, and it will manifest itself It may skip one generation and manliest itself' io the next. know of thirteen blind chil dren, in a neighboring cuuuty, the descen• dauts of one blind man who married his cousin In the first generation there — were no blind children. You would look around and see these children all happy, all enjoy lug the blessing of sight, and say, 'it is all woorishipe, this idea about defective people !marrying.' In the second and third geneia fme came thirteen blind 'children (from the intermarriage of a blind man with his coils in,) 1 think, of Clause have been .iu our hi •etitutiou.' 3118ERY AND MERCY.- It was Isaac Wtil. ton who said, '•liv.:ry tnirery that I miss is a new mercy ;''a saying worthy of the pro• loneliest philosopher. It is only too true that inigfortunea come to us OH wings, but tettre with a limping pace; and yet one half the world are ready to meet calamities half way and inoliectly to welcome thew. There is seaieely uud evil in lite that we cannot double by pondering upon it; a scratch will thus become a•serious wound, and a slight illness even be wade to end in death, by the brooiing appieheusion uf the stek; while on the other hand a iniud - accustomed to look on the bright side of ad things will repel the mildew and dampness of cure by its genial sunshine. A ehecitui heart paints two world us it sues it like a sunny landscape, the morbid mind depicts it like a sterile wilderness. Wur NOT.—(Of all sad words of tongue Or pen Ole saddest Are thee'', 11 tati,:ila have bccii II all parents Lad banished liquor from their Immo as some •did, as thousands did to the early history of the temperance re form, many of them would have been spared sorrow over lost sons—morrow that knows no allovialion. Hall Ministers had been as latthlul to temperance as sortie have boon, a great multitude of precious youth now forever lost might have been raved, to be pillars in the uhuich of God and lahurt.ru for all good enterprises, and heads of long lines or' hotter and goodly descendants. 'lt mignt ht vu been.' •soi— No DANON.H. FitoNt TOO MUCH -- Thu ChlitilllCUtut a colored pleuetier on the text, 'at is wore bleyccd tu give than receive,' 18 inimitable lur its point us well as Its rare beauty and eloquence:. '1 vs known twiny a chuiela to dip *cause it didn't give enough; but I never, knowed a church to die ' CL it g.tve too much. bey don't die dat way.— Bredren, hits any oou of you knowed a church that died 'cause it give too IllUeil II you do j lot we know, uud 111 wake dat oh zilch, and e 11411.) by de Nutt tight ul du infiuu to its moss covored roof, and I'll stand dar and lift toy hands to heav en, and say, 4 131e:.sed are do dead illtat in de butd. . 1 7i s ptain, what's Ow fare to Saint Lou,la ?' 1 % Y x mat putt of Ibe buat du you wish_to:go oti—e hie or deck 't.' • „ . , , 'Haig your ,eabin,'. said .tile gentleman from todtmua., .1 live i n a : Cabin Lit 110111 g; gin ,I/10 i N. 1105 t ,you've . 6ot.' In !Ireland (be clergymen kisses his Coo grew/two all arouuti before preiehiag. Whime hnok:keeper , like chicken, ? ii!• e.ttibe lney buns to f for asi.,oo roar "seciek.r STRANGE DREAM—ITS FULFILLMENT. Arneng,the_victitus of the horrible Angol& disaaterwri ---- Line, a young man of enterprise and decided protniteliri the employ of this railroad corn•_ puny as their agent at that, place. The Painsville Advertiser gives an account, the ~,porrectnoss of which is vouched for, of a peculiar dream which Mr. 11. had just six months previous to the calamity iu which he lost his hfe. It says: 'lie dreamed - that he was away from.home; in. a desert, when suddenly he heard a terrible crash, and'upon looking in the direction horn which the sound proceeded ho saw a bright light, which seemed to reach to the very heavens, and he hoard screams anJ Foals of the most fright ful and ,heart rot:ling character. On look ing about him he saw an august personage "Irionk,' he thought 2 ---sitting in high estate, and he inquired whole all the noise came brow. 'From Hell 1' imswi'red rho Monk. The dreamer asked, 'What dues it mean ?' , The niJuk'replied, 'lt ruedus _that you must iustantty die !' Mr. 11. then told the monk that'he was not prepared t 9 die, and begged for further 'time. The monk finally said , p_r_a_yer_is_g_riultedo4t-- may live upon the earth six months longer, at the expiration of that time you shall die I' At' this juncture Mr. Llaywaid was awakened by his wite, , who was atulinel by her hus band's action, he sitting up in bed and being I,,rently agitated. The dream Made a great impression upon his mud, and was the sub ject of much thought and frrqueut conver nations-wiTh—lrb Imnd4 — fora time, but—at 1 - engtir-lre-eamt-tcrl bequenee. Ua precisely the fait day of tha eia mouths ho purchased it life tusur.wee ticket fur $3,00U, took rosagc uu the ill fated train fur Buffalo, and was numbered mut% the victims at Angola. SHE WOULDN'T MARV( A MECHANIC.-___ A young mu - began voating a young wo• -- tuanranti - lippeared telie well pleaeo . Ono evening he called when it was quite late, which led the young girl to inqtrite where he had been. '1 had to work to-nialiC 'What ! do you work for a living ?' mho inquired, in astouieitnent. •Cetrainly, replied the young wan, am a ineehatne ' 'I dislike the name of a nrehanie,' and she turned up ker pretty misc. Tnat was the last time the young man vis ited the young 'comfit). fle 18 new a wealthy ma 9, and hap one or the best women in the country for his wife. The lady who dbliked the nun!) of me chanic is now the wile of a miserable fool, a regular vagrant about grog shops, and the soli, verdant and miserable girl is ()bilged to tutu in washing in order to support herself and children. Y‘iti,. dislike the name of mechanic, eh ? You, whore brothers pre but well dressed loafers. We pity any girl who ha; so little brains, who is su verdant, so soft, as is think less so of a young MU/ kr being a mechanic—one of Cluct's uublernen—the must dignified and honorable personage of 11 cavern's creatures. Beware, young lady, how you treat young men who work lot a livinK, for you may one day be menial to one of them yourself. • Far better discharge the well fed pauper, with all his rings, jewelry, brazenness and pomposity, atm take to your affections the callous-handed, intelligent and industrious . meet wile. Thousands have bitterly regretted their folly who have turned their hacks to [lotto ty. A few years have taught them a severe lemon. A Western fieosier called on a boat cap tain to sell him a saddle of mutton : 'Si',s Captain, don't you want to buy a nice a addle of mutton today r .Nu; 1. would as soon eat dirt,' replied 'Se • Captain. IVeil,' said the Hoosier, 'tis according to how a man has been raised. Nuw rather eat multm 'Did-any of you over see an elephant skin?' asked tlie master ul an infant FCIIOOI in a fast neighborhood •I have lillOUted a rix• year old at the loot of the class. 'Where?' ihquired the old man, amused by his earn estness. 'On an elephant,' was the reply. say, boy, is •there anything to shoot a bout 'lesser molted a sportmwan of a buy he titer. !Ilicll,' replied the boy, 'nothing , just bout hero, but our gehoolumeter jut over the iull thole cutting buck rods; you alight walk up and pop h im over.' REA DY No old Now En4laud iiiino.ters were ridie:4 by ligallowt, when the Cider vue apled the tither, "11 bete woual you be if that tree brie its rropor Iruit r liitliug uluue, sir,' w.is the tionieilwe re ply, ItimANTIC We knew a rich man in the ►West, who called toiti niausion 'Wen:nary,' out oi reppeet to l - eis wife Aldry, who Dud died. Ono of his netglaborsr, not to be uut ',toile in cuunutn,4lall,..e.ten, built u new cnb it and called 'Du you keep tuatcht a?' a4kcil a would bc ut a retailer. •Oli, yes, was the reply. . 6 Wco,thet guoN) 111 take a trotting tuateh.! , . The retails itnrrwiliatoly handed him a boa. of I.3tautiteth's A . 13.1f or 'married recently., and tittriuttilo pr. , grcss oh 'tile ceremony, when t he re1,,,,pie.1 nfiirMiiiirely to the Auu take this woo to lutvfel :"' eto., she iiotta u,,.„ lirinti:— 4 . 411. Blind, of cmixas.j.. NUMBER 86
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers