. . , , .1N ...x.,,,X....C. -.1...7,F rt".•;.••••0••• -.. ..ftn - +•• - • , ••••••••2 . •" •••",'" . .. , . .., . ...._. ~ . ~ , . .. ••*;• •1. ','n'i,' : :'• ' '''' *' ' • . • ' ... ' ' . ~.• • • • :e' • f I I - . ' . . c..A . ".. t• —'• • ..; 9 ' I'. ..., , . . , . ok _ •• . . ..... ~....:. \.. VP? * s • • - . • _. . , . ..,t .. •----. ,i -.,..-- r ...-- .., , • • - ' .-• • . , . , . --. . I _, , -...- ./ • 0 ~•-• . . . , _, • - 7 , . E _....__.., .4,,,....t.,,...,,,......,,, - 4, L . 1. - : - . ... . .... V _ _ ,00 L . ~. . „.....5. x i.... ~..,.. -~•~{ • 1,,,,,,,,,...,:ii,..,....,eria0..., 4, ... , : ,-* .p.,, , ,,irryk-i-', -.• t 2.1.,,, tia • •_.:^ • • T:%---.. - 2a.''' . , --- ''''n • ''.•'•'''''! •-'-`•-: ,--,,. .."": " . ' . 1.• ; 1 3:7;i:', ' , "::' ' ' ,r) .,.:, E • ~........„. ~. ...... , .......,, ...,-.'t , , 11.1111111111.111 1.111.11.1.111 . .., 33y W. 331etir. VOLUME XXII. 4 Wr i e 5- 4 190`41131 "NIL ISO Bit Il77j:lo..o,oittilliatal 4131 X. AEA gW -PGAIIII7S, dee, &c., Go to Fourtliman s rDUM.WiCZI. Waynesboro', May 24, 1867 NEW SPRING. AND SUMMER GOODS, AT THE FIRAI OF STOVER & WOLFF' (SUCCESSORS TO GEO. STOVER) DRY GOODS, CARPETS, NOTIONS, QIIEENSIVAIRE, GROCERIES, BOOTS AND SEE DES, CIITLE RY, CEDERWA ai E, OIL CLOTHES, f&C., driC. To which we invite the attention of all who want to buy cheap goods, May 1. MR. NEW MILLINERY GOODS ; MRS. C. L. ROLLINBERGE HAS just returned from Philadelphia and is now opeumg out the largest and most varied as% sortment of SPRING AND SUJIMER AI7LLIN XXV' GOODS she. has over &nought to Way hes bore'. The ladies are invited to call and examine her goods. Residence on Uhutch Street, East aide. April 10 —tt. JOSEPII DOGGLA.S, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Real Estate and Insurance Agent, Office in Walker's Building, Waynesburro', Perna Idly B—R.' 0 yes, these hours when memory " Fans gently on the breast, Are litte - a summer evening, Which lulls the soul to rest, They waft the soul f•ern sorrow To scenes of I:ire t Wow); ; STOVER St Wt iLFP. WAYNESBI I NP, FRA. r i It'' , ' A, 0 , AUGUST 11, 18Gg. X"C,X3'Z'Z'CIZI.I.A. , • fA... • •• Sp. '= „0 ? 11m CUILDIIOOD'S 1101111.3. My childhood ! 0, my childhood Where are those happy hours I spent in joy and gladness, Within thy fairy horrors"! - Where are the friends that sported With me in life's young day, • -And danced in youthful pleasure Those sunny hours away Long dreary hours of sorrow Ilsye slowly glided by, eneatli thy genial gliy f And yet, in dreams, I see thee, Fnr down the Silent past ; As fair, and e'en as lovely, As when I saw thee last. Anti those I loved in childhood Come thronging round me 1101,1: ; Which strals away the sadness That sits tip- n my :row, Once more ice juin in playing, Upon the luvcl plain ; White our young hearts are beating With love ar a bore 13esido time's early tumb. ' THE FLIGHT OF TIME Faintly Row thou falling river, Like a dream that dics avvay; DoWu to acean gliding over; Keep thy cum unruffled way ; Time, with such a silent motion, Floats along, on winge_of_air,_ To eternity's dark ocean, Buying ail its treasures there. Roses bloom, and then they wither; - pheeks are bright, then fade and die, Shades of light are watted hither— Then, like vizions hurry by; Quick as clouds at evening driven O'er the many.color'd west, Years are bearing us to heaven Home of happiness and rest. MXISCIMIAM:BALIZ - ir. An Allegory . We commend the fuliewing beautiful Al legory, from 'The Vision oflitza' by Ad &sou, to Our readers. the bridge of human how ma ny Lit through its three score and ten arch eB j how very tesv live CO pass eutirciy over it. 'The bridge than srest,' said he, 'is /In man ; consider it attentively.' Upon a mute leisurely survey of it, I tound that, it consisted-of three score and tea !wire ar( with several broken arches, %chidh tidt?ed to those that were entire made up the number aLout a hundred, As I Ml!' enintia,g, the atelios, the Genius told me that this bridge consisted at first of a tiav:and arches, but that a great hood suept away the tut, and left the bridge in the ruinous condition I now beheld IL 'But tell me further.' "said he, 'what thou discoverest on it ? —.I see multitudes of peot,le passing over it,' said I, 'anti a black cloud banging on each end ot• it." As Flo , / ,several of the passengers eiroppim.; through the bridge into the great tide that flowed underneath it; and upon further examioa dun I perceived that there were innumera ble trap doors that lay concealed in the I .;rldge which the passengers no sooner 'trod upon, than they fell through into the tide, and in). ruediately disappeared. These hidden pit falls were set-very thick at •the entrance of .the bridge, so that throngs of people no soo• ner break through the el•aod than many of ' them fall into them. They grew .thinner towards th,: middle • but ruuttiplied and lay closer together• towards the end of the arch es that were entire. There were, indeed, some persons, but their number was very i small,that continued a kind of hobbling march over the tiro / ken arches, but - fell through one after another, being quite tired - mid spent after so long a walk. CHRISTIAN WOMANHOOD.—IIeory Ward Beecher, in a recent .11; 1:two, tlisuouise.i thus in regard to the lair sex : 'Maidens, lack to the God of your lathers. It there be any one in this world who cannot afford to be a Christian, it is a woman'. If there be any one whose beauty fades as a flower and wlaosu grace needs the ru ten,Luco ut the ineffable; if there be any cue whose power is in be.au• ty, in purity, goodness,. it is a. woman. - If there be any one more than another upon whom blight tails more rudely,; it there be any one more than another who is more bur. dened with grief or more wrung witiisoriow, it is a woman. I marvel to see a woman that is not u Christian. Toe ladder between her soul and God is not half so long as that be tweeu our souls and Gud. God made Igo man to be yetter_thau ,man ; and thepervcr. don is in Frroportiou when one is worse.' DON'T BE IDLE.—Kather do nothing to the purpose that, be idle, that the devil may find thee doing. The bird that site is easily shut, when tilers -eseape the Eerier. Idle nese is the dead sea that swallows virtues. and the self-made sepulchre of a living tu.o A. 13. Xxit.clolpe•raclaitxt .1E 6 eziorial - sr .744.1"ow.er>a,it, A THRILLING SKETCH. In the year lVibs theinhabit:ints liVing in a district bordering on Reek River, in the northern part uf the State of Illinois, were much incensed by the depredations of a band of horse thieves who infested that portion of the country. Every exertion had been made to discover the men engaged hi the nefarious business, but hitherto in vain, and valuable animals were 'stolen, nod lost to their owners, in defiance of the utmost vigilance and care. Darieg such a state of affairs the citizens residing in the region of the thieves beanie thoroughly excited, and were wound up to such a pitch of indignation that a body of men were formed styled Rengers., whose ex plicit duty was to expunge the district of all suspicious characters, and endeavor to put a stop to their depredations. shortly after this band commence( • tIII a• War 4.127-.... e ot le leuder.of the Raugers that a valuable horse, which had been stolen the 'tight previous,-could then be feund on the premises ot* a man Bart. , locked up in the stable. Although Burt hall heretofore been hoked upon aq as honest man and an upright citizen, yet the captain deem ait hi duty to at least examine h tam an , :t leartitho truthor 6,l3ity_of die roporc Accordingly ho s.uannoned some half a dozen of his Ringers to meet him at a spot not far from Burt's house, and before morn• ing set out for the same place :himself. Day fight was hardly discernable in the east, and ' the hazy light of coming dawn had not yet -peGetreted-the-bottom wherestvpected rnau resided, as the Rangers, charged with the fearful mission of life or death, silently approached and surrounded the dWeiling..— Leaving three of the band to guard the en trance, tho captain opened the door and found he .in sing horse, as had been stated,_safety Not a lingering doubt now remained of Burt's guilt, and with a stern deterininatiou trytualse !." --7T- -- ,te of ism that, would deter grip others-From - a like transaction, the Rangers returned to the Louse. In the meantime Bait had thee!), and upon coming to the doer was seized by-those in waiting, awl on de manding the reason was informed by them that a stt•len animal was found in his stable, and that he was considered a thief. Mut teringisomething-about the knew it would come to this at last,' he quietly_subu3itted to whatever his captors had in sure for him. A short consultation was held, and it was resolved to hang the criminal upon a la rgo elm tree that grew iu front of his own house, it being thtvght that such an act would strike terror and dismay into the ianks of the horse thieves. Burt had asked half an hour to prepare for his death, and the sun had risen in all its gulden majesty, ere the fatal momeat had ar• rired which would launch him into eternity. In vain hisT7,raThended father t.,nd mother pleaded for his life with trembling tongues —they tottering_ forth from the dwelling, and kneeling in suppliant mond to his ap parcutly merciless captors. In vain had the wife of his bosom knelt in tears of agony, and cotteatcd them as husbands to spate his life, for each flinger had suffered wore or less in persen, natfthey teemed the example absolutely necessary to dealer others, and it secined ac though Burt must die. The dreadf.o prnpratiou9 %ve le compl e ,: e 4 —the I al hour had expired—and the erhoh nal \l'a arranged under the limb of a strut e!:o, OVtr whioh a yore Wl3 thrOVSI3, one curl being noot.d around the joisoner':. 0,21., and the other held II tlueo of the Eaogol,+. TIICu vz, 010 a 132 , /new Gr t;t l '"doe,--- that an Int which To el atdes the latkar:h lug ul a fc:ivw being into uternlty, tho three stron,.; uien who held the rope's end (;anal fixoilly upon the captain fur the sig - nal. It Iva:: given by ruining the right a!ni; and: already the ni.io3n tints tightening around the doolued tnan'n neek, N,v,then the Ivit'a cf Burt forth front the house 1)1,14:hw, an in th-tirtrtliirlii LIU re n—h arme. Rushing forward she fell on her knees di rectly in It . ont of the erptain, and raising the child, with arms outstretched ton•atds him, she cxcl.tin.;,l, in tones thz...c would have viereed a heart of steel : qt"you not spre him for the sake his gray haired sire, or the wife of his b , sow, spate him in the name of God for tl Salto of his iufaut boy !' Auothcr dead silence reigned like a pa over the spot, then, an though inspired heaven itee:l 3 the child also stretched out i little alms toward its father, and exclsitne, in a voice, heard by all, the tingle wut‘i , l'apa:' And thon,ns though despairing of success, huldhd into its mother's bosun, and bur. intoa sobbing cry. It was more than the rangers could stand, and after a short consultation. the rope wa taken from the criminal's neck, and the bar left the spo'i and Burt became- a reform, wan through the pnwerful eff,:ets of hia 'Io feu t'a Appeal.'— Great West. LIVING 'WITHOUT SLEEP.--Fi V 0 yot., men io Berlln lately made an agreement a wager, to see who of them could keep wake for a whole week. They all held for about five days and a half, by drink' largely of strung coffe, and keeping up constant round of active exercises and exci ting arnusemeurs At the cod of that time two of !hem yielded to drowsiness. - A third soon after mei asleep while riding, timble'cl from his saddle. and broke-his arm. A fourth WAS attacked by severe sic-Imes:3 and comp ell. ed w retire from the list. The fifth held out to the end, bat lost twenty-five pounds of flash in winning the wager. Long ago, Frederick the Great and Voltaire made a similar experiment, making use of the same stimulant of, stroog coffee, but they ; did., not succeed in driving away sleep for more than four 'days. 'Tired nature' obstinately refu ses'to accept any substitute for tier 'sweet restorer.' A Wife Whipper Mobbed by Wo- • men. From the lifilleaulele Wisconsin, July 20. Last evening ono Mr. Downer preferred a °barge of asnalt with intent to kill against' a number of his neighbors. 'Downer was a Sorry looking object— his looks giving the truth to the assertion that he, had suffered eente hard usage. llis clothes were torn pad thorough ly soaked with water, his face wio scratChed, and held in his hand bundles of his hair and whiskers which he said had been pulled out, Ile was sitting in hia hcmc down on the beach, quietly, deiug nothing at all to bred; the peace, when who sheuid core in bat all the women that lived about there, and before he said a word, they as;tiled hint with clubs, and sticks, guns cud brickbats, and beak him to a 'ell % .; . 11—e1= wantedthew arrested tunlpunis A. veil known citizen (mute in. and tald.the story iu a manner which Aid not add much ; to the credit of Downer. The gr‘uticruart had becti on the beach for an evening; protnauatic_, when his attention ( was attracted fiy loud cries, which catne crew a-knot of dr:atics 601.1n2 irlStnnee nW'dy. _Up on 'going to them, he found that Downer was indulging in his usual alnlttzernalt, Whipping I his wife, and the woman, suffering from the l law was uttering west heart-rendiug cries. The gentleman, we'll aware of the danger of interfering between husband end wife when _quarrelieg,_te vertheless-was-abou t-to—interz rare, when his attention was attracted to the ftutions of a woman, who looted as though she had-the strength of-a young Sampson, in her limps. She ran from shanty to shanty calling out the women,_ who promptly re. spudded, and unt_seern-to-boanore-than -teirKedoieforo a dozen were assembled, each armed with a mop, a broom, a fire shov e!, or a pair of tongs. The bad marched dit'eotly-t-o-t-h-c-hßueo from WhnIVIO Came the cries, arid, without the ceremony of knock entered. The gentleman followed, deep /y interested. Thera was a sound of yokes, as if somebody were ordering somebody else out of his house in ,very coarse language, sadly mixed up with oaths. Then there was a gehoral on-slaught upon the wife-whipper. -Mops that had beera - soak - e - d --- in — dtrfy wafe - r swabbed his face,—brows from brooms came thick and fast upon his head. The astonish ed wile whipper dropped the suhjeet of his blows and looked to his own safety. Ile struck at 003 of the women with Lis fist, and this brought up the rearguard of lire-shov els and tongs. On his Ittad came the clews thick and fasts lie grappled with one of the women. The rest immediately dropped their weapons and grappled with him.— Strongthey were, their union perfect and theirCaU3o just. i They fairly scratched Down er upon the flool, and scratched him up a gain. They left the imprints of their nail, upon his face, and hands, and neck. They pulled out his hair. Resist: - lir tried to, but', he was as a child in the hands of the strong armed women, and lie soon found it out: Cowed, beaten, dew dished, Ire bellowed like a mad bull, and beg6ed that they would not kill hint. • A parley .I , ?l,irrcid—a truce they call it iu war situ's. Tho prostrate, thurou,Ahly cowed individual IT:28 told that hia abuse of his W,13 a poor eleltly g; 0 Ivo to l a tiairance v, hie!' could no lripg, er ba sn'otbittctl to. li le y had cowl - di:iced if him, but his wife iii n rt-1 to' appear a gainst !dm, and he ( he would promise novo:. to htidio tits wileaniti, they would lei him go—if not, they would punish him il tht. a WAS but a breath of life left in Ilia body: Downer ready for anything ~—he was already the worst whipped man tp bo found. lie protuised—promiseat faitliftilly Ito a man could vromisc, but they brought a OI'OSS mid made him lie relic:Lod at, ibis; bill. the upitmseil otrip9, Laid rooLu3, and — tTlio7l . is, ttie choking of a pair of rouge, brought bin) to his senses, and never did wan tako an oath wore ewnestly- Josh Billings objects to Shanghai hens. 'lt costs as snitch 'to board one as It does a stage horse, and you- usight as well undertake to _fatten a tantriug-uutl by running oats thlough it." Rilliegs ealys ho cover will patron 'ze a I , )ttery•eo long as he eon bile anybody Liss to rob him at reaboodblo waged. ox, What is the difference between a girl and night cap? One is born to wed,. the other a worn to bed. AlpglitStart _ . A good conanietreetuent is everything to a young mat!. Many young men begin .file with the roost brilliant prospects of eminence and wealth before them. They are surround by friends and have ao lick of the neces sary capital to enable them to p - roiiecute a paying business, they have talents far Au perier to there predecessors who have grown Wealthy and faired', in fact all'that is requir ed for suecefls seems to he in their possession. Yet they fail after a few years, nod the fond hopes of their friends Are buried in sorrow ~just hecause they did not start right. The serious,kid s.tristit's and discreet boys; no matter how humble their 'circumstances, generally make useful aud honorable men. They aro rarely beguilad in after life from the paths of et rightness. - Tao e ;-v rave or,' addiiioa to their owq intrinsic po , .ver, will be sure to draw around them a thuus'and kindly influences, all stinogliciaiog the bonds of virtue. But what can be expected from an idle, intemperate, disorder I)' young man soina lucid mo ment of alicr lite, he way resolve upon re- foroottiocrrirut - iris - bliblite — ., IC6e so many ropes ol_betop,-fasten-him-to - the - ways - inw has lotig b,.err welkiud. It seemsimpossible for Liu] DOW to be anything different from "wkltt ha lilts bueu. . triitid, too, suffers froth bad habits as well as the body. Let a persun once lose his delicacy of feeling, and a wound is inflicted wiiich many_ a (by of sorrow cannot beat. —The bast book he allows liimedi to rcud, the obiecce talk it/ which lieioaulgea.,_and_ the impure-0— j•_icts on which he-fasteus hia thoughts, will be sure to make blots bard to "be effaced. Even true repenlance nastio power-to wash a tray the stein. Itugret it as he may, the i ittlegjoationa cute loved and will nut now clepri at his bidding, roon ; to4-i-tntro ve—ta-thry - ? - - the evil too( bante it grows into a tree of iniquity ! Check the disease ore it seizes upon tit vitals! Meet the openly at your door and suffer him not, to enter into the house Start out wrong with bait habits, and your friends may well tremble !or your future With a right start protected by _good _habits and God's blessing, you Will be safe everywhere. -Reader, how have you started ? Think earnestly en this subject. If you are be ginning your career by idulgence-in sin and the practice of vices which will ruin . yotir manhood, what will be your reward ? The Condemnation of your fellow men and an eternity of unhappiness If.you strive to live so as to win the ap proval of God, and fur the benefit of those around you, what awaits you The joys of heaven and life everlasting ! Voice )I Truth. Salt For Peach trees Downing, in his valuable work on Fruits and Fruit Trees, speaks os the application of salt to peach trees as a very effectual agent for the destruction of the peach-worm. He says:—'ln a neighborhood where the peach worm usually destroys one-half the peach trees we have seen them preserved in the healthiest condition by the annual applica slim of a handful of coarse salt, about the collar of the tree at the surface of the ground,' . This tallies with my experience exactly. A few years since, having some young peach trees much did not pie , ent as healthful an appearanco as desiiabio, and having, a small 41n.intity ef . reih.se i-,111 on hand, I resolved zo apply it to some of the unthrifty trees. The chauge wrought in the appearance and condi tion of the trees to which salt was applied was very remarkable. The foliage assumed a dark green color, and the growth that fol lowe:i was very gratitying. Without being aware until recently of the suggestion of Mr. Downing, 1 continued tire use of the salr,.and with the same happy result, and am confident iu the OhirtEat peach-growers wiff — fiTrierit to their ad vaategc to adopt the method which 1 have found to operate so Whether the vigor of the tide is duo to the destruo• Lion of the worms, or whether to the action of the salt., which experienced horticulturists tell us promotes rho verdue rnd luxuriance of trees, Lam not prepared to say.—G'or. F, nit Ca/lathe. At West Bl)onificl i, New York, during a violent thunder sterol one night of last week, five Cows were killed by lightning. The re workable feature in the case is the cows wore a ravine, with a high hill thirty rods or HO the went of them, and not a tree of any id within eighty rods of where they wore. le cows all laj iu a row facing one way out eight or ten feet apart. Mr. Wager, of the owners, went for thou) in the ruing, and on arriving at the top of the 1, being tired, sat down to 'rest and com . ;need calling, ihem—they naturally paid no dention—so r' ho concluded he would co and dr them up. On reaehing thew he found tent ail dead. The cows were intiared for rty dollaro each. Thcre'is a difference between happiness and widow—lie ihat thinks himself the happiest matt really is so, but he that thinks himself the wisest roan, is thost generally foUod to be the biggest fool.. An exchange eays that a hen has a capacity of laying 11011 eggs and no more. As most of these aro laid during the first - four years of her life, it is thought to be economy to cut off her head wheu she is four years old and sell her to a boarding housekeeper for a spring chicken. young lay at Monroe, lowa, Who but probably beet* sitting up too late at night, recently dislocated her jaw by gaping too severely. - She got it fixed, and is now ready for another provided he don't stay too late. - . 111S1.00 Poi% 'Year ----- TEIE - LATi - I.IOLETitCTEti . zDAY.Ati (Ma - change sale of the )itt. iodine Chiefte6 a 'llole-in-tbe•Day was one of the wealthio est men in Mionesota,tis property bein,g.es timated at, about 82,000,000. His duties. as, Chief frequently called him to Washington, and upon one of his visitii to that 'city about' two years ago, while. stoppitig, ~at Wilfard's 4n"tel, be became facinated With - ono Of , the pretty waiter . girls of that establishment, and strange to say his passion was reciprocated, To nfal b a long story Short, a 'gay Wedding was the result, and When he returned to his 'Minnesota home she west with him as his bride; They took-up their residence at Crow Wing, where they have since lived in fine rural style, surrounded by At the , eo,talarri; and luxuries - Which money could procure. mitutrisorminriumsiTe. 1-7.•;1 • •za. on y a,calamity to his, own people, but to those, of the whole State. 1-iis influente has always been !toed, and like that of ithgan, the fa.= mous thief of the iliogoes, it will live lung alter he shall have returned to dust. 'llls wile,. the waiter girl of two years ago and who inherits one.b.alf of her hueband_'s_ no* do worth lookiut• a property, wil Mirk Twain says that when women frame the laws the first thing they do will be. to 1. That all men - should be at home by tea P. IC WithOUtt.,fail. Ta:That - niaTria:fniii should bestow con siderable atrention on their own wives. 3. That it should be a banLfutsr_aLre_froe— to ~ eil- W hisky in saloons, and that fine 'and disfranchiseutent should 101 l iw drinking it in such planes, 4. That the smoking of cigars to excess should lie forbidden, and the smoking of pipes utterly abolished. her own property when she married a wan who hadn't any. 'Such tyranny as this,' says Mark, 'we could sever stand. Our free souls could never - endure su'h degrading thraldom,— Women go your way! Seek not to beguile us of our imperial privileges Content your selves with your little Feminine trifles—your babies, your Venevolest spcietios• and your knitting—and let your 'natural boSses de the voting. Stand back 1 irksU will be wutt• tug to go to- war neY,t.' We Will let you teach school as touch as you want to, and we will pay you halt wa ges for it, too; but beware—we don't 'want you to crowd us too much.' A GREAT SINNER.—An °Li negro named Pee was very much troubled about his sins. Perceiving him one day with a very down cast look, his — master asked-him the eause. *Oh, mass°, I'm such a great sinner 'Hut, Pete,' said hie master, 'you are fool ish to take it so amok to heart. You never see me troubled about my sins.' 'I know the reason mesa,' said Pete 'when you go duck shooting and kill ,one dank and wound another, don t you run at ter the wounded duck ?' 'Yes Pete.' And the waster wondered what was coin ing next. •Well, massa, dat is 4:Te wayvrid yo'. and me; do (Ishii has got you sure; but as he is not so sure of me, ho chases dis chile all de THE An OF PRINTINIT —Mr. 8., a well- nown metropolitao priater, told us that on one occasion an old woman from the country came into his printing office vnt.ti au oid Bible in her hand. want,' slid ;he 'that you should print this over sgia. it's gittio a little hinter!, sort of, and my eyes is not what they was. flow wuch du you. ask 'l' • 'Fifty cents.' 'Can you have it done in half an hour ? Wish-you-would —wan t-to-he,g ttia-Itoma live a long way out of town.' 'Certainly.' When the old lady went out, he sent a• round to the office of the American 13iblo Society, and purchased a copy4or fifty cents. 'l,or' sakes amassg ex iattned the old la dy, when she came to look az it, 'how goo:I you've fixed it I' It's e'en almost ae good as new I .1 never saw nothing fit) catiuus as what printers is r 'Did I understand you to 'say that I was lousy, sir ?' 'Oh, no, I merely told my friend that r!:on it rained lice in Egypt, I thought pu mu have been walking about there Iv!thoht hat, or an umbrella—that's all' It is said that the new stylo nf streamers woro by the ladies 5ipi 1 . 3 2,13 • lkoe c fall in love with we, young mau,' L'od yul2. ever to Louisa county, Vs, a ❑cgro Nvnarin gavo birth to three boys, one very whits, e at ; gioger.eake color, and the other as black. as the ace of spades. 'fah; for a thousand tongues,' as -o arch o remarked, when insiue of a aiola6scss liogshead. ' • The Superintendent of a. Sunday School , recently made his annual report, in which *he recommended that the adult, members shou4i go to work and do all iu their power to increase the infant class in his schaol dar ing the coming:year. To• morrow is the deg cm which idle men work and foo reform. r ,_ y 0912E14y-I'e-flmi Fi ts' alit` bre not fat:ii 'to actors —b4ste • 6. 4 a' NUMBER 8
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers