IfllirMllHHI V IKU I.I IICIl 1 IU1 tllU uuuiwav i nainitii nHfuininuiin. aim ui uuuluiu- itig tho imptesslon of which they wore ns nuch ashamed as grieved that any trace M ."I.-. 11 I 1M.M,1'a r. t.tr 'i -.Ml tt il .! t I 1 , TUrtiirr . Ji -i U.1.H..t.M .l I.i.lali in At. UlllllVfll III III" IBI'KA 1MW LI -f ."iir. ,U.a ..flmf ruth, n lint k shadow rested still evidently II kill' w iiuiu a no wi H'liiR L - . .J l..i it I nani lit In It I d . . I . .Ml I. ... t,,. lliAnn. InOrS 01 IHS reCUIH uuirajtju, iiiuugu mojr MAm dar Tdthotp nnd Iihf lirnlhcr. in sonic nrn man iiiii;e3 uusovu uon unw ClrlUU iUHM 1UVU Ml tuc waooiuu mv mu1 .... - .1.. I . IIIUI ilia ucan nan ujuiu vatuwuj w.. l V OKU UI w . ........ v I hAvac i trip nnrRRii n nnp. ii is in ttiEaiaiiw tit 'VD.SMIIPfMI nT. nilil'll Hfl LIICV were by the trusting impulses of her own -sweet and generous nature; and they ut lenirih nsrtod. not to meet again till the appointed hour on tho morning oT the day whnn she was to he received in a chaise which should await Iter in this very spot anrt nnnvev them to a church in a parish about twenty miles distant.where he would have ever arrangtimeiu complete to take her. hv the hiehest law of God and man, under the protection of that relation para mount So any right or claim of parent or iimlfpH. In the meantime he was to ab- np.nt himself from the country, ootn to avoiu the chance of any reencounter with Sir VViU mot pr George, and also to, prcciuue me formation of anv suspicion, and to favor the r.nurse she herself pursued at the Hall, of simple silence, in relation to him. And so thev narted. She was wrong perhaps;bui if so, she was, or at least believed herse right 1 hurry over tne oonciuumg mciucuis my story, The appointed time came round, onJ trrantl nreoaralions were made at the Hall for its celebration bv all tho tenantry All wai in readiness also for the intended departure of the family on the folio wing day , . ,? i ii' . :t -.1 arrangements in wnicn .nce, wiuuv anu nassive. had borne no personal part, -every ihinffbeiner directed by Ann Edith. She reo nested that she might not be disturbed. in her rnmn. beTore the hour at which Iter nria(nni would he reonired to -greet the . - . . f A TT excitement, she left he Hall, in her simple bonnet, and shawl, accompanied by tier raaiir; and making iher way -quickly through the puk, was in season to meet the chaise which drew np it the sprit -of her former meeting at '(he exact hour of the ap pointment, ten in the morning, -Startled and distressed not to 'find her lover in it, she would "hastily -withdraw had not a 'note been handed 'her by the driver, in Edward's handwriting stating that a cause -which need not then be explained, compel led him -to send the chaise empty for her end her maid; but that the driver was en irely to be ttusted, and would convey her othe church where the marriage ceremony 'twould be immediately performed,for -which lie had procured license and -engaged -the attendance of tho minister. Itetreat was now too late, even if it' had been her -own desire. Stepping hastily into the chaise and closing its blinds, they -were whirled rapidly off, After a ride of a couplo -of hours, and a single stoppage -to change hor ses, the chaise drew up at the gate of an old church yard, from -which a pathway led to the open door of the church; one of the prettiest of those old Gothic structures, email, half covered with ivy, and embo somed in -the solemn shade of venerable trees, of which there are so many scattered about in the most retired places in England Embarrassed at remaining in the chaise at the gate.and uncertain what to do, while un nblc to conquer a certain reeling ol vague uneasiness in Iter surprise at not seeing Edward ready to receive her, she elitirom the vehicle, and raising the lateh of the old Avorn decayed gate, they passed up the path and Alice presently found herself within the shadoW'of -the deep and low arched entrance or portico that opens into tiie main :aisle of the building- when she was startled at the sound of a voice-front within. Look- in hastily 'in. she perceived group of -persons collected around the alleiuat which a minister was standing -in his while bands and surplice, -evidently, as a glanoe -reveal-ed performing some mairiage ceremony, which had just been -commenced. Not -without some apprehension that a mistake -iind been committed as to the place, -end and concluding that if such was not the case, some other couple must be destined -nearly the same hour to the purpose, she -drew back behind the massive colums of the arched doorway, greatly distressed and a larmed nl her position, yet supposing that the nosilian by an undue speed had antici -nated the -moment calculated by her lover 3or her arrival.and expecting him momently relieve her by his appearance, Under the circumstances, retreat was out of uhe oueslion. Before this time her absence must have been discovered, and tho letter alie had left in bet worn -for her father must liave disclosed the purpose though not the direction of her flight. It ws conceived in a beautiful spirit, explaining all the crounda and motivesof (he step she had taken, and appealing carnally for their f withdrawing Alice ;from the scene ot so forgiveness and reconciliation, (hough she knew H was vita to implore 'their corisenbTThey can procure their candidate to pledge ( c onawaea in our ntxrj 'TltBTft W1TH0CT TEAll S.lTVJtDJty, SEFTJK.VBEn 4, 1842, FOR PRESIDENT, JAMES BUCHANAN. (Sultfect to tht decision of tht Nationa Remember THE WATCHWOUB, Removal AND No Division. DEMOCRATIC BEMOYAL AND ANTI-DIVISIOiV TICKET. ASSEMBLY, COMMISSIONER, AUDITOR, -JOSETVSTORf K. IKEFiER. PROTIIONOTARY, JACOB EYERIiY. REGISTER AND 21EC0RDER. CHARLES CONNER. THE TRUE ISSUE. Do tho people of tho county understand "tllectiuiir IS U tiutetToMk4TM,.tP,e October daily, and the only answer wo can give is, thafwe fear not by" all, though we are satisfied that a largo proportion do, and will act accordingly. But what is the true Tind only real issue.! Wo answer, a re moval or division.1 But wo are asked, can not -we prevent a division without a remo val! No. The upper portion of the county are determined to have one or the other, and if the removal is killed, a union will be had upon the division, and then the county will be distracted not by the 'removal' but "by the 'division question.' The Danville faction may throw around it, all the false coloring that their inventative imagination can 'conceive, and it will not change the true issue. They may ay that they aro oppos ed to division, -that they want to keep the county together that they are opposed to removal on account oT the expense tliey may make false issues by attacking tho private character of Daniel Snyder, and imrwgn his -votes in the Legislature ihey may denounce every removal man as a knave' and 'stool pigeon' and shout 'pirate- ism1 until their throatshecome hoarse, and yet me TKUIS lSSUr; tviII do the flame REMOVAL or DIVISION.1 And will not the Danville faction prefer the latter? would it nofbe natural! By removal they lose the courts, by -division they retain fliera, and of course of two -evils to them, they -will choose the least. Indeed, they have repeatedly declared, (hat before a re to oval should (ako -place, they -could and would effect a division. But having been defeated in their division project of last winter, they now Taise a hypocritical cry against a division in the ounty,thinking,hy that means to stifle the cry for a removal Are they any the less friends of division now than they were last winter! will they be any the less ready to assist Senator Hoadley at the next session than they were at the last!-that they did so, we have post live prooT in their acts at Harrisburg. So well was their course understood there, lhat Senator Kidder,whi!e opposing (he passage tif Mr. Headley's new county bill, publicly declared in debate, that the division Avas ad vocated by the gonilemen then present from Danvihc. Bid Mr. Headley deny it t No, Did the gentlomen themselves deny it! No Has the Algenne uniou it in Ins paper, though often charged npon them by us t No, They know that proof is at ha.id, and they dare not. But they can skulk around the tousty, and deny jl to the private ear iimrlf nrrainst it. nficr he finds that the people have become aroused, and tjiat noth ing else will save him. A year ago their candidate professed friendship for the remo val, at least until that iime, ho had always acted with the removal parly. Sinco that ho has asserted lhai a division was prefera ble to a removal- And now, to induce the Danville faction, who have always hero tofore been his open and avowed enemies, to take him as a candidate for the Legisla ture, he pledges himself against both. Can such pledges be wort any thingi will ihn neonlc trust to a man their dearest rights as citizens, who can so quickly turn i , against his best friends regardless of all formet pledges to them, and the obligations under which thev have laid him by their acts of friendship to him, when he and his particular friend was beset by tho very men into whose hands he has now thrown him self. No thev cannot, and will not. It is not, hnwever,whelhet this or that man shall be elected to the Legislature, but whether the removal or division shall take placo. One or the ollmr must take place, and lhat too shortly. Choose ye between them ' If vou PREFER A REMOVAL VOTE FOR DANIEL SNYDER If you PREFER A DIVISION VOTE FOR RICHARD FRUIT, For upon the icsult of the election on the 11th of October uext depends the fula ol Columbia county. Remember then the walch word, 'Kemoval and no Division.' Our friends throughout the county should bear in mir.d thai tho approaching election, is of far more thao ordinary importance. II is not whethdr this or that man shall bo elected to the Legislature it is not whether ihis or lhat political party shall triumph No. But whether the county of Columbia shall be destroyed by a division, or the distracted state of the people be forever put at rest, by a removal. Remember that you aro voting not for tl'e man only, but for the question for or against division for or against a temovaI,at!d thai the result of this eection decides the fate of the county either for weal or for woe. Let not then the vile 31 HtlTITTT- our interest, anu il you tare pressing business on the second Tuesday of October put il aside for one day and cast your voto lor him whom you Know win watch over your rights, and protect the county from dismemberment. PIPE LAYING. y?e ate taken to do by the Algerine, for saying that the Danville faction had threat ened to import votes into Danville, to be used at the October election. v e repeat what we have said upon the subject, and the Algerine virtually admits the fact, when e says that they v ill poll more than seven hundred votes in Mahoning and Valley, as it is well known that they have not now over five hundred legal voters in the two townships, and all ihey poll over that, are the effect of "pipe laying." It is easy enough to insert on the list some two or three hundred ficticious names; and, if they can get men base enough to assume them, increase their vote thus much. It has been done under less desperate circtimstan ees than that in which the Danville faction is now placed. Men who will use corrupt and dishonorable means in the beginning of an act will not stop at any thing, however base to consumate it. ROARING CREEK MEETING. In another column we publish the pro ceedings of a meeting of a largo number of the friends of removal iield in Roaring Creeh, on Saturday last. Wo seldom have attended a meeting where more union and harmony of feeling pervaded than was manifested there, notwithstanding some fivo and twenty of the Danville people were on the ground endeavoring to CTealo a disturb ance and break np the meeting. But being foiled at the outset, in their attempt to get eontrol of the meeting by appointing a president of their kidney, they relrated into one corner of the baTrnom, where they held a meeting, including about a dozen men, from Roaring Creek, whom John Rhodes, John Fruit, and Richard Fruit had spent three days in drumming up for the contest, & passed some flaming resolutions, written by John3. Montgomery, all for the love of the dear people. Their resold tions no doubt, will bo ushered forth, ai the voice of Roaring Creek, and spread before ihe people as the unanimous senti ments of tho inhabitants of that township, hut wo -can assure our friends that the peo pie ofthsi lownship tindersYaad thelf inter est too well to beguiled into the support of man, who has linked himself with the Danville faction, and turned traitor to his former.friends for tho purpose of destroying ihobcst interest of iho county. Roaring Cteek is good for three lo one against Fruit, aay our friends in tho district. THE SUPERVISOR. For several weeks the Danville faction, have been secrelcly and insiduous'.y endea voring to injure John McReynolds, tho supervisor on tho North Blanch Canal, both at home and abroad, for the purposo of ere ating an influence against tho removal ques tion and Daniel Snyder, but finding their secret operations had no effect, thoy aie now attempting to destroy him, with their base and scandalous falsehoods through the columns of the Algerine. In tho last Intel ligencer they intimate lhat John McRey nolds offered lo.bolray (he removal party if they would slop their opposition to him. A more foul and malicious falsehood never was uttered by man, and he who wrote lhat aiticle in question knows it to bo so. This course, however, is in character, with their usual operations, first flatter and coax Mnd promise office, then persecute slander and abuse then, by baseless chaiges, attempt to destroy the confidence of the friends of removal in every prominent man who takes an active part in tho cause. I'his game has been of some advantage to them herotoforo.and knowing tho hopeless ncss of their present situation, and despair ing of electing Richard Fruit imloss they can create division and jealousy in our ranks, their personal arrows .are hurled at everyone whom they have the least pos sible chance of affecting. As it respects Mr. McRcynolde, by his leltor which fol lows, thev have a chance to lire upon him their charge, if they have it in their power He asks them to publish any letter of his, whether it was diiectcd to one who had always professed friendship for him, & who. to sav the least, had been laid under obligation by the acts of.McReynolds whicl would have induced an honoruble man. not to have joined in the unholy crusade against himQrTLjUllcsitpposedp&rsonal bent;ut to another, uui it seems arrrre vapors of the political region of Danville destroys all sense of honorable feelings of gratitude for past favors ot friendship in tho breast of every man who removes with in its bounds, or inhales its blighting breeze. Buck Horn, Sept. 10, 1842. Webb, Mr. Sir, in Ihe Danville intelligencer, of the ICth inst. V.Besl says that I wrote a letter to an individual of Danville telling what had dono; and intimating (hat I would d nioro hereafter, if required, thereby mti mating that I was willing to go against th removal party in this county. Now Sir, it Mr. ucdt, or any ol his lriends, lias any such letter, it will be an easy matter to sat isfy the public of my willingness to betray the party, by a publication of the letter in the columns of the Danville Intelligencer, which would be much more to the point than his comments; as an intelligent com munity will be altogether as competont to judge as ho is. You will oblige me by giving the above a place in the Columbia Demo crat. Yours, &c. JOHN McREYNOLDS. We learn from Roaring Creek, that the course pursued by the Danville faction, in attempting to prevent a fiee expression of the citizens of tho township in a matter which deeply interests themselves, at the late removal meeting held at Mr. Kerns, is recoiling upon their own heads with ten loid lorce. J ho people indignantly reject the idea, that they are not qualified to ju'dge of their own interost and wishes, and that ihey can bo brow beaten to abandon a mea sure for which thev have fought for thirty years, by the Danville faction. They aro too intelligent and understand their interests loo well to be duped and forced to go against their well known interest and that of the county. It has spread a spirit abroad in, that township, which will leach the wire work ers of Danville a lesson on the sccondTues day of October which they will not soon forgel. The Danville faction have issued hand bills, rnnifcining the proceedings of a meet ing which ihey calLthe voico of Roaring Creek. Wo will handle it next week without gloves AND J1NT1 DIVISION MEETW& AT a meeting held by a large number of citizens of the township of Roaring CreCkj at the houso of Elijah Price in Numidia, on the 21st of Sept. 1842, Solomon FcN tcrman, presided, Michael R. Hower and Joseph Dengler, Vice Presidents, Lewis Bidding Secretary, it was Resolved That it Avas -expedient to hold a. meeting of the - . . FRIENDS OF REMOVAL. AND OPPONENTS TO DIVISION. at the House of Elijah Price, in Numidia Saturday, October, 1st 1842, at two o'clock P. M. to adopt mcasuresto secure union of action among the friends of Removal and Opponents to Division, at the approaching election. Il is hoped lhat all will at'.cnd without distinction of party. Several strong adddrcsses.will be deliver cd. The Algerine asks us (o pubfish what ho' calls a correspondence between certain men in Orange and Gieenwood townships, and Richard Fruit. Wo would havo no hesita tion in publishing it, did we not know that it is not what it purports lo be. The sigoera were merely instruments in the hands of some Danville men to blind the people an to the true issue before them. The corres pondence was written in Danville, and a young lawyer despatched with orders to procure as many names to be attached to it as could be found willing in those towliships to be used blind-folded, and we will bet a grain of honesty with any man in Danvilb if that much can be found (here (o bo slak ed, lhat neither of those who signed the letter to Richard Fruit, saw the reply of Fruit, after his signature ww at tached until i( was published by (ho Alge rine. By (he way, has the Berwick Sentinel, the Danville Intelligencer, or the Danvilla Democrat heard that a Democratic Removal Convention was held atJBloomsbiirg, on tho 29lh of August. If they have.their patroni :-iW..moiol interest, wctuld like to know the result of that convention. They in entitled lo some little notite from them for the aid they render towards their support. Tho obligation must be all one side, one. would think from their united opposition to the interest of the friends of removal. WiH they brook it.! The Danville Democrat is out against Charles Conner as a candidato for Register and Recorder, because he is ajemoval man, thus showing their preference forP.Uilmeyor becauso he is opposed to removal.The (wo tickets aro now fairly before the public in (heir (rue character, pledged for.andgaiait removal, then let lhat bo the lest vole, Philip Bilmuycr has heretofore insulted the friends of removal by refusing to give thorn any information as to the business of his office, and now, notwithstanding his secret electioneering, among the removal parly to persuade them not to let that ques tion interfere with his election, is endeavor ing to injure Charles Conner, among tha opponents of removal, upon the local ques tion. This is a species of faUo election eering truly. Let oar friends remember him. Tho Algerine speaks in high pr'aiae of Richaid Fruit, the division candidate for "Assembly.and lauds his political integrity to the skies. What, Iho people of Columbia counly place confidence in Richard Fruit the man who four years sinco abandoned his political party and voted against their favorito candidato for governor, and who ha now abandoned the removal party with whom ho has acted for seycral years, and with whose assistance his brother was eleeleil sheriff, and flung himself inlo the keeping of Us enemies, upon conditions lhat they would take him as their candidate for the Legislature This is Ihe man in whqm tho people are called upon lo place confidenco and abandon the removal to sustain! The Algerine must, call on hi immediate serfs, they aro dutiful subjects and will obey, none others will answer. A HAPPY CHANGE. The N. Y. Express is of the opinion that the Revenue Bill, just passed, will give employment to at least a quarter of a million persons.' and the means of -a com fortable livelihood to quadruple that ber, aura