TERMS OP publication: * ®2 00 per annum! in advance—or g 2 50, if not paid'within the yean Do subscription taken for a less term than six. months, and/no discontinuance permitted until dll arrearages are paid. -A failure to, notify a ■ ' discontinuance at the Expiration of a term, will ’be Considered anew engagement. * r Advertisements—*sToo per 'square for" the’ first three insertions, and-twenty five cents for CVery subsequent one. LIST OF LETTERS Remaining in the Post Office at SlecTiantaiurg, Fa. Jv/y Ist, 1841. ■' ■ ’Sathl -Addams Jno Krumlauff P F Alii Jafcoli Leidig" Sami Brenizcr . • Michael Longsdorf Margaret Boor ,’ , Michael Lance Mr Beuley, Trustee' W H Leas Thomas Brodrick A G Llbhart S Beclitold. David Lclm David Chriswcll. . Emanuel Lauman Danl Coffman Michael Mishler G A J Cunningham ‘ Mary Martin ■ John Dill Jane D Matcer S Dresbach.- Mrs Manly W Dean Jacob Miller . Sarah B Dayis - John Miller Mary Everly George Mater Elizabeth. Emmingcr Danl Miller 'Jacob Ewig , Miss E Nighswandcr John Franklin* David No/ ’George Forney Sarah Phillips Martin Fry Henry Piphcr - George Goodman . Catherine Ploath Dr JJ Given Charles Pray 'Beni Gcibl'er' Martin J Rupp Will iant Hays George Slirodcc John Kerman Thus Strayer ■ Sami Hemps'end John Saxon Mrs S A Hoover? James Williamson. . William Hoagy Joseph Whitcume" SamljKline MrYonge ~ B F Knidig Susan Yeager ' ‘ Jno S Kunkle * S F' Williams GEO. F. CAIN, P. M. LIST OP LETTERS - .Remaining in the Post Office' Carlisle, ■ . June 50th, 1841. <■ Enquirers will 'please say advertised. ~ A Her Elizabeth Inky'Jacob ■ ■ Arnast .1 (j 1 1 ,T i - r Lmnon'Samuel *t£&- Bowler Redid , .Lbgitc Ann . UarM Mnriah .. ~ . I-amtscn Thomas r‘ - lvnmle.l bTfrifratA 'TifoSPJohtf Black William Alitiri'Ciitherino ," •Blackson Phcl, ' . ‘Matson Peter ** • Bjitler Samuel - - - McCord Alexander — • Brehhaimm M ."McCabe Jane Arm Bradley Thomas McKinley D Rev ■ ''Brubaker George McCrannan William ! ~— Berlin Joct'ph ■ - -"Medan James■-' Branch Hafdin Esq -McNutt Mr Barbour David "Newman Jos' Brenneman-Henry Oyster Geo Esq BloScr John O’Brien Laurence Bulk Win M Rhodes William Baer B enjamin Ralston Leacy , Unidler Jacob Shilling Catbrino Bond Abner D Esq Smith Elizabeth Belkwith Allqn W' SypeJohn Bond Thomas J Sicily Amos * Bound Thomas H Smith Geo (miller) Orabb Blanket A 2 Simpson Elias . Oook Joseph Hoards John W Coffey William Sloufer Samuel "Cost Michael Smith George 2 Connely Joseph Steret Robert C Germany John - Sellers Solomon Gorrister P M Shorter Wesley Cams Sarah Sylvester MariaS Deviny John Shislcr Pliilip Devon William Stubbs George Dawsonr William 11' Smiley George Ege, Elizabeth Siller John Evass Joseph Spencer John C Ehach John S Rev- Scoby David (tanner) Gibb Henry Sen Swisher Andrew Gusewiler Dannial Trough Adam Gorgas Jacob A Taylor A W Ksq . Graham John 2 Thomn'sJohn ■ ■ Galeber James Turley Dr Glenn David Wallace I Gebbohs David , Westhelfor John • ; jGraham Charles , Warden William G Gibbons Michael . Wynecoop J ‘ Gipo Jacob- Ways William Gleim Samuel Warden Priscila . Hois'Elizabeth Woodward’Leonard G , Haverstick David , Wynecoop Jacob 2 -Headort-’llhomas- Wright-Jonathan , Hanshcw-Jotm Wheeler Nehcmiah’ Hits Charles • Wilson Joseph Darkness Jane M . Wert Peter Hultdn David Wertz James Hull Levi Witmar Joseph ' Kent Richard Wise Leonard Sen ; Jones Ellis . - Bearing John II 2 - Koontie George Zug Elizabeth W : -Keer Elizabeth. Miss Zerman John Kinert Christian Zell Peter ’, Kline Reabeca ■ Zcigler Samnel B. LAMBERTON, P. M, CARLISLE SPRINGS, T HE proprietor respectfully informs the pub lic in general,’ that he is now ready to ac- CdmmocLtte a large number of boarders and vl ’ sitbrs. yi’he Springs, 4£ymiles north ' of CarUslevand 2$ miles'south of St errett’s Gap, 1 on the s road leading fnpm Carlisle to Bloomfield „ iiv Perry C0,,-.in 3 fine, healthy and romantic , P‘ ace * . Thu ’Conodoguim t creek and North ♦ * Mountain, which,tfre each about, two miles tils tant* w VI afford amusement to.such visitors as are fond of angling and gunning. In addition to the most ample, accommodations, there is also an extensive bathing establishment, both warm apd cold; * i ■ * • y ■ ■ : D. CORNMAN. IT”A Barouche'will be run from Carlisle to the Springs during the season, for the accom —modation.of.v.ihitora*.,' : ; :'July„l, 1341. ■ > ‘ •■■■ -*=i- IEWISBURY HOTEL B Y H. HAMMQND, SI.TUATE.ih the borough of liewisbiiry, York County, Pa"., 17 milesrfrom Carlisle and 13 from York. Xhe rnad fietw^rn Lewisbury and Yorkhas lately been considerably improved and now in good order, • . ' *■- The subscnber thankful for past favors re solicitsadontimiance of patronage', & 1 tVMId inform : TheB. granted" for .a period ofHtwedty five yearspdircctljfih the face of tlfe/Coii btitution 'and although it'contained ’no re servation of powerto the legislature to al ter, revoke or annul it, as is .required in ex-* press terms; yet tbe Tederal'ipajority in the legislature, by a stnct pUrty yplci passed, the bill and presented lf to the Governor for his‘•'approbations -And becffose the (Boyer o'qf,,in .the faithful diadßargebf his duty, re fused ib signip bill in which wetjj emhoclicd these tbonatroßs and glaring inlractiona tlfe Gonajitu tion. the federal members of the degjalatbre, ip ; thcir address • to tHe people; Carlisle, Pa. Thursday JTuly 2SB, 1841. announce that the journals of the session are disfigured by this Veto —and this ad dress.is signed by .every federal member of bote brandies of the legislature. As evidence that the' Bank itself believes a-notice necessary, we find in the papers of Philadelphia and Harrisburg, a-notice that the Bank will apply to the next legislature for nearly the same alterations in its charter, which were embodied in tlie bill referred to. We have thus presented to the indepen dent freemen of the State, for their consid eration and decision, the facts .and circum stances connected with the attempt on- the part of the’federal majority in the legisla ture, to RECHARTER THE BANK OF THE UNITED STATES, and the reasons assigned by, the Governor fpr withholding from it his signature. As Pennsylvanians, we have just rtason to be proud of a written ■Constitution, and reason as just to be proud of a Chief Magistrate who has the wisdom and firmness to sustain it. In future numbers, we shall examine the veto of that bundle of inconsistencies, called by its federal authors, “Tin; Relief Bill” —abill that could only have been concoct ed and .passed by the votes of legislators,.a majority, of whoftf were .either stockholders or. borrowers, and;‘of course;'servants of the UNITED STATES BANK. * That message, alone, places Govl Porter in the foremost rank as,a patriot and states man, and will recciye'the approbation of.e very honest, disinterested and unprejudiced, man,, as long ,as the vices of our banking .system,, and the folly of the federal legisla tures of 1836 and 1841 shall cause.it to be remembered; . • , ~ -HENRY HUEIILEp., Chainnpi. ' Sec’ly. • * I awoke as. from a. par;yrtmce,.:yr ; hslee p, -or deadv-tvkmjiv' not; I neither did I seek to. enquire. With that j inconsistency that may - otteii be ieniarkecl lilt drouths,. I took tli 6 whole- ns a - in utter of and awoke avith the full persuasion that the long trance in which I had.been liiid, hud nothing in it.cither.ncw or appall-, iogl- That it had bedn'ofdohg'continuiincc I doubtejl not; indeed I thought that I knew that months and years had rolled- Over my head while I was wrapped in mysterious slumbers. Yet my recollection of .the oc currences that had taken place before Iliad been lulled to sleep was perfect; and I had the most accurate remembrance,of the spot on which I lay, and the plants and flowers that had'.been budding around me. Still there was all the mistiness of- a vision cast over the time, and the cause of my havinv laid myself down. It was one of the vaga'- rics of a dream, and I thought on it without wondering. ' 1 he.spot on which I was lying was just at the entrance of a cave,' that I fancied had been the scene of some of my brightest joys and my deepest sorrows. It was known to none save me, and to me it had been a place of refuge and a defence, for in the wildness of my dream I thought that 1 had been per secuted and hunted from the society of man; and that in that lone cav'd, and that roman tic valley, I had.-tound peace and'security. I lay with my back on the ground, and my head resting ortmy arm; so that when, I opened my eyes, the first objects,that 1 ga zed op.vgerethe stars and the full moon; and tlig appearance that the heavens pre sented to me was so extraordinary, and at the sariftsdime so awful, because “sd unlike. the silvery brightness of the sky on which I hud Jast gazed, that I raised my head on my hand, and, leaning on my elbow, looked with a long and idiot stare on moon and the stars, and the black expanse (if ether- , : There was a dimness jn the air—an,un- natural dimness—not a haze or a thin man tle of clouds stretching over and obscuring the atmosphere—but a darkness—a broad shadow—spreading oyer, yet obscuring no thing, as it above the heavenly bodies had been spread an immense covering of clouds, that hid from them the light in- which they moved and had their being. \ . ■ The'moon was large and dark. It secm ,ed to have approached' so near the earth,, that had it shone with its usual lustre, the seas, and the lands, and the forests, that I believed to exist in it. would have been all distinctly visible. As it was, it had no lon ger the-fair round shape that I had so' often gazed on with wonder. The few ravs of light that -it emitted seemed thrown from hollow and highland—fnim-rocks-and from rugged declivities. It glared on me like a monstrous inhabitant of the air, and, as I shuddered beneath its broken light, I fanci ed that it was descending nearer and nearer to the.earth,.until itseemed about, to, settle, down and crush (tie slowly and heavily to nothing, 1. turned from that terrible moon, arid my eyes rested on stars & planets, stud ded more thickly than imagination can con ceive. They too were and redder,” and darker limit they had been,! and. they shone nyore steadily through the cicar dark ness of dip mysterious sky. -They did not twinkle.with, varying arid silvery beams— (hey were rather like little, balls of smoul dering fire, Struggling with a suffocating at mosphere for existence; - .-1 started up with a loud cry of despair,— I saw the whole reeling around me,—l felt as if I had been delirious,—-mad,—l threw myself again on the flat rock; and ngain elo ped my eyes fo shut out the dark fancies' that on ever£ side seemed to assail me,—a thousand wjjd ideas! whirled through my brain,—l was dying, I was dead,—l had 'perilled at the mouth of that’mossy cave,— I ’wns in tljp land of spirits,—l myself a spi-' fit, and waiting for final doom in r bne of the worlds, that I had seen sparkling around me. No, no,—l had not felt the pairgs*of disso lution, and my reason seemed to recall unto me all that I had suffered, and all that Iliad! endured,—l repeated the list of my miser ies,—it was perfect, but .’Oeath was not there. ‘ ' ■ “OUR COUNTRY —RIGHT OR WRONG.'” I was delirious —in -a inad'-fover,—lfelt helpless and weak, and the thought flashed across my mind that there,. I was left to die alone, and to struggle add' fight with death irijitter desolation, —the cave was known to none save me,, and—as I imagined in my delirium—to one fair being whom I had lo ved, arid who had visited my lonely'cave as Die messenger of jojr and gladness. Then all the unconnected iinaginations.of adream .came rushing into'my mind*and ovcrwlielin ing me with.thoughts of guilt and sorrow— indistinctly drawn out, and ’ partly under stood, but pressing into my soul with all the freshness of a recent fact, and I- shrieked in agony; for I thought that I had murdered her, my meek anil innocent love,’ and that .now with my madness I was - expiating the foulness of my crime. No, no, no,—these visions passed away, and I knew that I had not bee.)}' guilty—but I thought—and I shook with a strong convulsion as I believed it to be true—l thbught llnft 1 had sunk to sleep ’ in her arms, and,that,the last sounds that I heard were the sweet murmurs of her voice. Merciful heavens! she, too is dead—or she too has deserted me—my'shrieks, lay con vulsive agony* would else have aroused her. .But no —l shook off these fancies with- a strong effort, and again I hoped. I prayed that I might-still be asleep, and still only suflcring frpin the pressure of an agonized dream. I roused myself—l called forth all my energies, and .regain opened, my eyes, and again saw the.moon and the stars,-and the unnatural heaven glaring on me through the' darknessrof-the-nighV-and-agaih-over-' powered with the strong emotions that shook my reason, I fell'to .the ground in a swoon.- -When I recovered, flic scene was new.— Thc.mooa.and .the stars had sujiit: ■phbre, arid the -same- mysterious sky. As n S*- riiy.facp vvaa.oot .was; however, revived, and I began to hope that all had been hut one of the visions of the night. But when I raised my head, and luokmhavowdrl^aTnWazeO’-^disTracteil— I had laid down in a’woody and romantic glen—riooked around for the copse and ha zel,that had sheltered me—l looked for the ■blearwilif stream that fell in-"many' a -cas cade from the rocks—l listened for the song of birds, and strained my ear to catch 'one sound ol lite or animation; no tree reared its' green boughs to the morriing sun—all was silent, and lone, and gloomy—nothing'was there but grey rocks;; that seemed; fast has-1 tening to decay, and 'the‘old roots of some] immense trees, fhat seemed to have grown, and flourished, arid died, there. I raised myself until I sat upright. Hor rible was the palsy-that fell on my senses when I, saw the cave that I had seen covered with moss, and the wild shrubs of the forest, standing as griip aftd as dark as the, grave, without one leaf of verdure to'adorn it, with out one single bush to hide it; there it was; 1 grey and mouldering; and there lay the beau tiful vale, one dreadful mass of rocky deso lation, with a wide, dry channel winding a long what had once been the foot of a green valley. I looked'around on that inclosed glen as : far as my eye could reach, but all was dark and dreary, all seemed alike hastening to 'decay. The rocks had fallen in huge frag ments, and-nmong these fragments appeared" I argd roots aiukdecnyed "trunks of trees', not* clothed with moss,or with muslmions.spring ing up from the moist wood, but dry, and old,' ami wasted.' T well remember, .that in that valley no tree of larger growth than the hazel, or tlie wild rose, had found room or nourishment, yet there lay large trees am'ong (he black masses of rock, and ifwas evident that there they had grown and died. , Some dreadful convulsion must have ta ken place—yet it was not the’ ; rapid devas tation of an earthquake. The. .slow finger of time ,wa% tli.erc, and-every'object bore ■narks of the lapse of years—ay,' of centu ries. Rocks had mouldered away—young trees and bushes had ,grown up. tand come to maturity; and perished While I was wrana ped in And yet, how that I’sawi and : knew thitt'ibwas only flirbligh many a, year having passed by, that all these chanr gesr-had 'been effected, even ndW -my senses recovered in s6me measure from the dclirir otls excitement of the, first, surprise, and, such Is tlie inconsistency of, a dream, : I al most fancied that all this desolation had been a thing to be looked for .and 'expected,' for then, lor thp first-time, I-remembered that during my long sleep I thought that I knew -thaWayS years were roll* ingAfver me in rapid and noiseless succes sion^ • No sooner had this idea seized my mind —no sooner did I’conceive that I had in deed slept—that' I- had indeed laid iii silent insensibility, until wood, and rock, and rive er.'had dried up, or fallen.beneath'the hand of time—that the moon and the stars—and,, prepared,as I was for wonders,'! started, as at that instant I instinctively turned to Wards' that fiart of the heavens in’ which the sun was to make Iris appearance; prepared as ! was, ! started when I belield his huge round bulk' heaving slowly above-the barrier of rocks that surrounded me. His was hb lon ger the. piercing ray, (be dazzling, the pure and colorless light, (hat had shed glory and radiance on the world on which I had closed my eyes—lie was now a dark round orb of reddish* flame. : He had sunk nearer the earth -ns he approached- nearer the close of his'eareer, anu'he.too seemed to share with the heaven and the earth 'the" symptoms of decay and dissolution. - When t 'saw universal . nature thus :Wprn onf and exhausted—thus perishing from old age.lSnd expiring from the sficec waht-of re-, newing materials, then I thought that surely my frail body must likewise have waked old and, infirm—surely I too must be bowed down with age and weariness. V I raised myself slowly .and fearfully from thc catth. and at length ! stood upright.— There I stood unscathed by time—freehand [AT TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM, Nctft Series— Vol. 6,N0. .q vigorous as when last I'walked oh flic sur lacq of a green and beautiful world—my frame as'firmly knit, a,nd my every limb as active ah if a few brief hours, instead of ma ny and lung years, had Witnessed nieexten ueu on thatbroad platform of rock. At first a sudden gleam of, joy broke on my soul, when I thought that.here, I stood unharmed by time—that lat IcAst had 1 Ipst nothing of life by the wonderful visitation that had befallen nvc. - I felt asjf I could fly away from this scene of devastation, and jn other climes seek for fresher skies and more verdant voles. Alas! alas! I soon and easily gained the top of the rising bank, and fixed my eyes on the wide landscape of a desolate and unpeopled world. * « » ' » Desolation! Desolation! I knew that it was to be dreaded as a fearful and terrible [thing, and I had felt the sorrows of a lone and helpless spirit—but never, never had I conceived the full misery that is contained iii that ope awful word, until I stood oh the brow of that hill; arid looked on the, wide and wasted world that liiy stretched in one vast desert before mis. , ’llien dcspajvand dread indeed laid hold of ,me—then dark visions of woe and’of loneliness rose indistinctly" before pie—, thoughts of nights and days of hevei'-ending darkness and cold—and then: the miseries of hiinger t and of slow decay ami starvation, and hopeless destitution—and then the hairl struggle to live, and the still hanJef sfrugglc of youth and strength to‘ die——Dark visV ions of woe, ’where fled yc? before vvhat an gel of light hid ye your diminished heads?— The sum of my miserics ; ’seemed to qyer whelmme—-a lotid supniji •wo. wiTuPltiH^^ sivc.,' struggle—and: oroo&c-—-and*, there’ *lp.pd Johhvavitli -mV shaying-i«g in the other—lii’s-'mout'h open, arid y hisTcyes rolling hideously at thus witnessing the frojr, iSA£o\iAJ^aiiLglid.quietnutU S. Bank devoted, its funds to fatten its favorites with,—nobody now doubts it; - " , , Jackson believed that Biddle was a- great hum-, bug;—fcw.caU nbw be found bold enough to de ny it. ' Jackson'believed that the Bank was corruptly endeavdring-to buy Influence by loans to political' favorites; it is now'generally acknowledged. “ Jackson believed that tlie extravagant conduct of the Bank jeopardised the interests of tlie-stock holders;—tliostockboldcrs now fed it to bo true. .Jackson foretold tlie insolvency of tho Bank; docs.any.body dpubt that? , ' Who then, wore right. General Jackson and the Democrats, or Nicholas .Biddle and. the whigsl —SalemAdvertiser. .... . .. GIVE THE PEOPLE LIGHT.4.\Vhen Kcn dallwas -PostmaslorGcnoral, be gave a weekly summary doings in his office—new post offices es tablished—old ones discontinued—lines for neglect of duty—appointments; removals;-&*v.: ■ Wtiy~are they kepirin the Mr.' Granger afraid of the people that'ho keeps them; fn the dark?— Come Me. Granger, you are a full blooded Antimip mason, opposed tonll secret societies:' why then hot give us light? Are yonigoihg to turn the Gen era? Post dffimj af-WtsMngton into a Free lita son’sLodge'T .That-will not satisfy the people. " ~ ■I , From the Raleigh (if. C) Register, ■ , ■' ' MyRDER/MosT Foui.,—One of the moat horrible and' diabolical Murders over perpetrated in any ootnmunityiWascnmmitted in tfiis cityv, ori Friday last, by a ahoemaker narned James Tarry, i nis unoffending victim ..was a fino little boy about 18 years of age, the son of Terry’s present.wife, by a former husband.—With a heavy stone, in broad daylight,he so batteredtheekulf andmanglcdthe head of the child, survived but a short time! ' What adds tqftitytflrror df tlie deed, is the fact rs ago, Tarry murdered .. AGENTS* -. JoHN*]MoonE, Esq. NewviU '.. Josbph c m. lyiEANsVEsq. Hopewell township. John WuNpEfiticH, Esq. SnipperrsbuVgi ’ Willjabi M. Matee-r, Esq. Lee's X Hoads. . John Mehaity, Dickinson township. John CLEwDENiit, Jr,-Esq., Hogestowh. _.s^ o^- G ?'?j , .^, A^i-Esq..Mcthanicsl)Ut, g J '} rREDERICK WOND'EULICII, do. ‘ / vJorn Sloughstowo. -• DanieT/ KnvsHKa, Esq. Churchtown. m koNONECKfin, Esq.’AVormleysburg, < J/B. DrAvvdaugij, Cedar Springt Allen,tpV MAtiriN G. Hupp, Esq. Shiremanstown. his lirst wife, under circumstances equally cruel anq royoUin'T. Ho was tried for his life, and ac quitted by the jfury on tho ground of- insanity—a pica which wo have observed ingenious 'counsel always urge, When they hata ihe management of a desperate.case.: - . ' r ■ . & . Droifi ihs American Sentinel* ■ i t.desirous, to.taste some of-the fresh and I early fruits of-the Revolution; I have been looking fT9^', som ® volumes of old Newspapers. I rom the Philadelphia Library 1 Obtained a file JjEnglish Newspapers* for'l77G. ; In it \ ckintl a very beautiful and highly complimentary description of the then American Standard of the struggling'Colonies. Reading the article to a tow 1 riends, I found it to bo as notv and. interests mg to them, as to myself; and ft was determined to publish it. One of the gentlemen said; ‘*l now recollect that the first troop.of Philadelphia Conn* ty Cavalry, which was organized in 1794, and was commanded by a Revolutionary Officer, the late Col. Arrest, and which I afterwards had the honor to.tsbramand,/had a Rattlesnake on its stan dard,* with the motto li Don’t tread, on-me after many years use was laid aside; blit I think I cah find it,.and as il has such glorious associations, we must look it up and present it to the thiladel phia Museum,” since it is probably the*only flag of the kind now in the Country. 'fhesc gentlemen as well as many others td whom I have spoken on tho subject, had no know*-’ ledge,that the raltlesntfke and its motto, had been | boro high and victorious in may a hard , fight in'the [.early days of the Revolution. 1 have no Where j any account of thls>Btandard having been carried on land, biit on the many a gal* lant fight it braved the “baflle.andJlbe. breeze J*— In some of the English accounts of -the rebel-flags we are told that in addition to the rattlesnake “it had. th irteen. strokes,L* nowhere do they—mention ll»e colours used in painting.the -flags. ’ ' . Youts, &c 3. . Extract from Ole London C/tfonictc, from 'Thurs*- $W»Jsm £s on l, 'e land of Jnliti> athan Nfijdig, 2 miles east ot Carlisle,- to com* ; mence oii’the 2d oHSeptember. No Hucksters : will befpermiued to cbme-within the Jimitsweie' Scribed by law. / • ■ ; :• JOHN Pi'K ' * July 15; 1841. ;t Av-V- = Notice to Creditors.