"TT JJL "Thai (;o( i nniint i the let which Krn Ieat. V V V II II J J JLJ I'llUTEl) I.VII piJULISHtin BIT LEVI L. TATE. Jtofu G'em.-We find the NLjoiud beautilul nd touchimj itanxw in a Ue Fennsylvanian. They .re from the prolific p f oUr M,"'fd democratic triend, L. Elliot, Ksq , lt tlie Pittibiwg Morning P.l, now associate W'tr ' the Philadelphia l'ennsilvanian. Mr. F.., ,s "le Sonin-La" ol V,n. RohUm, Vp, of thin place nil Mine production refrm to that relation, it ii,ay be presumed they will be perused with Ken eral interest by the numerous friends of that L- dyinBlooinslmis-W''''-('u From the Pi-nnsyivanian To My uifr. ON THC ANNmCRS OK OUR WEDDING. I'm thinking of the time, Jane; the time when first we liml ; , nu i i ,..n When thou wert not mine own,Janc,-un . lean When rtherSMwere prais'd, Jane ; when other hands were uiesa'd : But then those hands and eye, Jane, could ne er have made me idess'd. And I think upon thy smile, Jane j and the soft Klance of thine eye ; . And the gentle tones I heard, Jane ; and the laugh IthougM?hShen,a merry sprite, unheeding ForIsa!vnot!midtthy mirthfulness, thy truly woman's soul. Yet often, as we'd part,Jane, and Thought to thee I'd treasure up'in memory .some sweetly precious Some nobltien'rous idea, call'd iorth by human RevealinlTthy pure loveliness, in kindly feelings' Ih.w. And I wixh'd th-.it thou wert mine, Jane, my way ward lot to bless; 'bat Ihoii and I together Jane .might .etkfor nap id tlleTl'rove to win thee, while doubt w..ix on my soul : ,. r hard is deemed the race, Jane, where all POJiTJRY. EOOMSBUIIG, COLUMBIA CO. , SATURDAY, COLUMBIA HEl, Canal Com. r A. 2 Z3 A ? o W m c r ANTHONY, -HI.OOM, BEAVER, -BRIARCUEEK, CENT HE, CATAWISSA, DERRY, -DANVILLE, Boro' FISI1INCCKEEK, FRANKLIN, GREENWOOD, HEMLOCK, -JACKSON, LIBERTY, -LIMESTONE, MAHONING, -MONTOUR, MIFFLIN, -MADISON, MAINE. 128 16!) 67 07 (51 59 101 200 113 45 08 141 47 131 DO 20 . 51 83 - 108 - 53 277 5 90 41 119 25 235 13 03 87 53 4 50 37 09 37 41 58 27 37 01 100 25 70 110 185 3 100 71 50 8 0 81 27 01 159 38 83 00 4 27 72 171 33 40 00 110 105 8 MOUNT PLEASANT, 53 ORANGE, - ROARINGCREEK, - W 8UGARLOAF, - 127 VALLEY, - 38 2123 1640 1040 I ... . nr oTclel::, NZerican, Family Circll. Lost Time. I threw a bauble to the sea, A billow caught it hastily ; Another billow quickly came Successfully the prize to claim ; From wave lo wave, unchecked, it pasert, 'Till tossed upon the strand at last, Thus glide unto the unknown shore, Tho-e golden moments we deplore : Those moments which not thrown away, Might win for us eternal day. Autumn- "Thou art bearing hence the (lowers. Sweet summer, fare thee well." The first chilling blast of autumn has come and gone! The beautiful verdure of the fields; the grand foliage of the forest; the sweet fragrance of sweeter flowers ; all, all give symptom, ol de cay! How brief theirexistenco; how sudden their decline '. Scarcely hare the solt breezes and in- i . 1 I..,, L.inir vignrating daysof spring warmeii men. nuu -..,b, till they have done their work, and the worU is left to the solitude and consolation of winter. and none forever ! Its lollies and its crimes, its joys and its miseries, can only be found in the chequered canvass ol the past, or in the unerring record on high. Willi some of us it may have h it tender regrets and crcd recollections. It may have been the last to bloom n all that is mortal . some one whose hopes and so.rows we have shared. Among the ., i.. ii. .t liavn Ulleii durinir its fleet- ! couniiesa nu.uuci .. I ing existence, may be the lor w horn in our fond S .,, we had laid out years of aity and uselull j ne. But they have gone. That decree whose will cannot be staved by the weak petition of man, has completed its mission, and their forms repose in the cheerless tomb, while their spirits have gone lo try the unknown. Like the laded leaves that came at the bidding of spring tospread fresh ness over the earth, they were given to us lor a season; but they now moulder with the with ered garb of summer o'er their graves. They have filled their allotment, and I heir fresh tombs jrtin with the desolatin of the reason to U-arh us that we are mortal. At every step in life we are uu.t with the melaiieholly whisper, but when na ture yields her loveliness to our common destiny huw forcibly it is attested, how impressively it is taught. The Time lo Itcad. Hw often do we hear men excuse themselves from subscribing to a paper or periodical, by ,y they have no time to read. When we hear a ..Ithuscxrose himself, we conclude he has M.T,r found lime to enter any substantial a, Ivan tVu.her upon his family, hi. country, or lum- U To hear a freeman thus r.pn himself, is Humiliating and wecantorm no other ,.,,- M 1 &s$n ELEOTMDM KETURWS, OdJT&BSm, 1849. Jhsembly Sheriff. A-. Treasurer . A. r ir1 W O n "3 x O H W a P it X 3 5' r o 31 248 00 80 28 124 120 431 31 71 83 38 11 03 38 95 57 44 52 47 37 84 171 30 07 92 172 51 105 01 40 80 302 109 44 41 138 33 131 82 93 43 70 138 41 38 107 02 123 02 55 252 4 79 30 107 40 48 8 M 91 58 II 41 38 7 37 31 92 23 40 53 73 18 37 3 1 14 0 0 29 2 1 4 2 0 0 0 2 0 1 4 14 0 12 10 0 m 7 7 119 142 4 93 50 17 110 318 77 28 50 137 40 120 79 85 31 74 100 43 49 75 89 119 45 1732 1345 481 1024 1705 453 If7nVs in Unman. had esforCan The WilV. She sits in her chair from morning to night, 'Tis sew, work, sew ; She rises at dawn with her heart so light, Goes sewing and sewing with all her might, Till the hour of rest. 'Ti.s her delight To work and sew, and sew. The needle goes in ai.d the thread comes out, 'lis sew, sew, sew ; Now she sings to the baby a merry song, Ami cheers the hearts of the happy thiong, While her fingers nimbly fly along To sew, sew, sew. The Husband He sits in his chair trom morning to night. 'Tis smoke, chew, smoke. Ho rises ut dawn his rigar to light, Goes puffing and chewing with all his might, l'ill tbe hour of sleep. 'Tin his delight To smoke, chew, smoke. The quid goes in when the cigar goes out, 'Tis chew, chew, chew, Now a cloud of smoke poms fiom his throat, Then his mouth sends a constant stream atloal, Sufficient to carry a mill or a boat, 'Tis chew, chew, chew. An Ode lo Woman. AVho, in this world ol care and strife, Doth kindlycheer and sweeten life, . As friend, companion, and as wife? 'Tis Woman. Who, of a nature more refined, Doth s iftcii man's rude, stubborn mind, And make him gentle mild, and kind: 'Tis Woman. Who, in a word, a touch, a sigh. The simplest glancing of her eye, Can (ill the soul with ecslacy 'Tis Woman Whet, hours of absence pa-wd, - mei"', Say w ho curapinrert, roni. to sum I bur glad return with kisses sw. el ! 'Tis Won. an. Who by a thousand tender wiles, Jt y fond endearments, anil by uniles, Our bosom of its griet biuili-s .' ! l is Woman. Who hraws the scurpion stun' f woe, ' And makes the heart with raphnej glow -Who add to every joy I., low' :Ji- V .. Kdcn she lost when ensn.ii Put uv'i! his .she lepa.d It , .Vr crib h. b'-r,. ti,.r a I' Auditor. Coroner i O SO o a-4 O a o tl 3 u 3 w H m 71 O p c m Commis. 28 121 35 1-M 25 110 25 291 109 204 Mil 219 100 257 "SS 00 3 01 5 00 4 Qt 101 80 01 77 105 78 41 02 32 55 32 58 39 HiH 71 100 10 0!) 43 03 15 07 20 101 19 101 18 77 133 222 121 182 111 181 32 02 10 81 9 75 10 75 f2 57 43 53 42 59 90 61 85 01 83 01 81 50 150 48 145 47 117 47 11 43 5 40 4 47 4 52 130 39 121 24 121 35 47 ()l 30 H3 29 85 20 12 31 54 20 51 22 52 ,19 44 35 118 31 34 29 51 67 53 00 38 81 31 70 102 51 170 41 103 40 30 03 . 0 51 12 W8 14 40 51 30 50 33 52 37 90 101 50 94 51 72 70 185 110 140 118 98 00 04 31 120 20 108 20 110 34 62 38 07 31 01 37 07 1703 2218 1550 2075 1110 2102 1470 i;)50 1410 1470 80 62G Volunteer in Italic. I'rcseri insr .Vtivipapers. Oie of the many things which I have to regret, ays a correspondent of the British Banner, w hen I review my past lite, is that I did not, from ear liest youth, at least as soon as ever 1 was able lo do it, lake and preserve some good new. paper. How interesting would it be now to a sexagenari an to look into the papers which he read when he was twelve or sixteen, or twenty years old ! How many events would this call to mind which he has entirely forgotten! How many interesting associations and feelings would it revive! What a view would it give of past years ! What knowl edge would it pieserve by assisting the memory! And how many valuable purposes of even a liter ary kind, might it be rendered subservient to ! How much do I wish that 1 could look into such a record when composing this short article ! But newspapers are quite dillereut things now from what they were sixty, or twenty years ago. They are unspeakably more interesting and valu able ; in this respect, at least, (I believe in many others,) these times are better thao the former. Formerly the editors of newspapers wele obliged to strain their wits and exhaiisl their means in or der to obtain matter to fill their pages. Now the great difficulty is, to iiosert all the valuable, inter esting material that are poured upon them from every part of the wsild, and from every grade and phase of society. Now, newspapers contain many of the best thoughts of the most highly gif ted men, on the most momentous subjects, and their reports of current events are among the most reliable, and will furnish an inexhaustible fund of entertainment to the end of lite. Inllmiicc of .Yticspajnrs. Small is the sum that is required to patronize a news.Mpcr, and amply rewarded is its patron, I care not how humble and unpretending I he ga zette which hu takes. It is next lo impossible to fill a shei't wnh piinted inaiter without pulling into it something I bat is woi'.h the suhsc. iplion pi ice. I'.verv parent whose .-inn is away Irom him at nciMinl, should supply bin. w ith a newspaper 1 wi II uuieii l-i i what a marked dlllen ucc theie a- Im w. . ,i I Lose ot my schoolmates who lud, I .!.. -e wli' lud not access lo n. wsp.ipeis ( ill., i liiinus being equal, the first were always ilecnlediy superior to Ihe last , in il, bale compo site, n ...id general ml. liigenee. ISiNtory, Wha'ever instruction is reaped li urn hi.-tory m iv be reaped trom a newspaper, which h Ihe hi-l i! v ot ih" world for one uiy It i.s ihe hislo iv o! ih.il woi id in which we now live, and with which we are, i-i.ti-. t y, cure immediately (!.,(', ncl than w'.h I : which l...ve passed ;,w,.v, and exist only i . I einemlji arce. . p . rlv i o, ,i "I rri'. v.t--v '.b ' -' 1 OCT. 20, J 849. Tlmnhxzii Bishop Potter has put Imth the I'nllnwii.K forn ol Thanksgiving, to be u.-ed in tbu churches ol the Dioce.se ol Pennsylvania, until the first Sun day in Advent ; Spjjcial Thanksgiving. Aliiiijrlily Clod, in whom wo live, and move, uiiil have our n.l and through whom our sina are most justly punished, we render to lime our hearty praises that in the midst of thy judgments thou hast remembered mercy Ve bless time that thou intst been pleased to withdraw from us the greivous pestilence which has visited and inflicted our land; and we should ofl'er unto lliuc as a living sscriliee the souls and bodies whicli thou hast delivered, earnestly beseeching thee to gram that this thy falheily correction may have its due influence upon us, and may cause us ever to remember how frail and uncertain our life is, thai so we may I'pply our hearts unto that heavenly wisdom which mny in the end bring us l eve rlasib -g life, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. tldvcrtising. V. B Palmer, Esq , who has received the appointment of Agent lor most, it not all the best newspapers of the United Slates, and whose con stant and increasing eliorls for the past several veau, have been devoted lo the mutual advantage of the country press and Ihe business public, we are glad lo learn is likely to be fairly rewarded for all his toil, by the growth, extension and proa pcrity of the business which he originated, and which his indomitable energy has budl up, in the face of all Ihe doubts, sneers and ridicule which he has encountered on the part of the thoughtless. The business public and the press of the country we are glad to learn, are more than beginning to understand the truth ol Palmer's business philos ophy, as plainly indicated in his advertisement, and to appreciate the value of his services, Palmer's enterprize, accompanied as it is with his untiring industry, cle.r nightodneM, indomit able energy, and unwavering perseverance, de serves the reward which we have never doubted he would eventually receive. Public Ledirir. fjr-It was the saying of a great divine, b. sed on long observation, thai he had found more g..od in bad people, and more bad in good people, than ever ho expected. ri'RH. iw.Tn pmning: n you run nuainsl a snowbank or a rail fence, don't go back, but pmh foi ward, or lo one side, and go on. b is of no use to cry and lament ; il will not help the matter in the least. Tears never leaped a btrenm or dug through a mountain. Push ever, and keep push ing, and your tortunu is half made, and your im mortality secured. (tC- At ihe present late ol inert ace, the popula tion of the United Statts, in Ihe year lOoo, will be 101 ,.151,753 persons. 0"- The editor of an exchange paper s;.ys he never saw hut one ghost, and that was the ghost of a sinner, who died without paying for his pa per. "'Twas horrible to look upon tl.t ghost ol Hamlet was no circumstance to it. SA movement has been commenced ir. Lon don to abolish all taxes on knowledge. lion, James ISuchauan. The delegates ol the Democrat ii; Convention of Allegheny County, together with a number ct I lie citizens, invited this distinguished Statesman to visit Pittsburg while on his way lo Meadville, Pa. The following is Mr. Buchanan's answer, and is one that will lie ri ad with much interest by the people in general : Wheatland, ni:ak Lancasteu, Siptintlir 2ih, 1819. (Jknim mkn : An absence from home of several weeks has prevented me from sooner acknowledging the receipt of your very kind invitation to visit Pittsburg, on my way to Meadville, where it is my pur pose to go, immediately after the election. This invitation, proceeding as it does from the delegates to 1 lie late Democratic Con. venlion of Allegheny County, as well as from a numbpr of my other Democratic frn-nds and fellow-ciliens, I most cheer fully and gratefully accept. I .shall esteem it a great privilege once more to enjoy ihe opportunity of meeting and cordially greet ing those good and steadfast fritinds, to whose efficient and uniform support, amidst all the trying scenes of my political life, I have been so much indebted. I feel that you do ine no more than jus tice in attributing to nie " constancy, and devotion to the cause of pure and radical Democracy." This devotion has been inspired by a deep conviction, coiifnnied by long observation and experience, thai ihe prosperity of tin; people of ihe States, ,; it.,, yi i p.- tuiiv o i!ic Vni"n 'ir nil un oi.n s i:h i i:s i ol. t ve. VOL73)7TU2BEn31. tied with the ascMidency of Democratic principles. Indeed, our political oppo nents themselves have, by their conduct, !'orne ample, ih ugh tardy testimony to the excellence 0f ,u! Democratic measures which they, at the first opposed. It is a ''"'""I historical fa,;,, we worlly of am. pie developemcnt, that the whig parly have lll . 'hough s'owly and reluctantly, yiel ded their acquiescence, one by one, to nearly a ,ll(.aiureSi anj lh(,y ,1;lve now bo-come the established policy of the country. When we review the many im portant political questions which, since the commencement of Mr. Jellerson's admin istration, have, in their day, agitated the nation and ever ihreaiened "the Union, and reflect that these have all, with scarcely an exception, been satisfactory settled by the Democratic party, we must be deeply im pressed with this high tribute to the 'Dem ocratic principles, our political opponents themselves being the judges. Fro i the very nam re of things, ;!S well as from the peculiar character of our insti tutions, two great parties must always ex ist, and I may add, always ought to exist, in this country ; ihe one conservative the. other progressive. T,L. one c'iiiginjr t the pasl, the other intent upon advancing gradually with the spirit of ihe age. The one claiming power for the Government, the other for the people. Tho one acting as a clog to the oilier, and sometimes pur haps impeding it.s t00 progress. The one is the great Whig, and the oilier the great Democratic parly of the country. It is our pride and our glory to belong to the party which, whilst bidding fast to ihe good, entertains no such slavish reverence for antiquity as to prevent it from advoca ting and adopting all new measures, consis tent with liberty an J order, calculated 1 1 benefit the great mass of mankind. Holding these principles, W(; cease to be Democrats if we did not ardent ly and actively sympathize with the patriots o( all nations in their struggle to free them selves from the hi,cLles of despotism, and to regain the lost rights of man. M'e have witnessed with intense anxiety, the nianv heroic efforts, within the past anil present year, of the downtrodden people through out Europe, lo achieve liberty and indepei; dence, and have had to deplore their diat Irons termination. Brute force now rules iu that quarter of the globe; but yet Eu rope is not ilesiino,! to become Cossack. It is true that the braie Hungarians ami Cermaiis am! Romans have bene conoiier- ed ; but their blood has not yet been shed in vain. In the Providence of Cod, it will sooner or later rise from the earth and claim a just retribution. The Spartan band at Thermopyhe were sacrificed by treachery and overwhelmed by numbers ; but ibis srerilicc was both ihe prelude and tbu in centive tD ihli triumph of liberty over tho innumerable bos'! of a barbarions and des potic invader. Man's destiny is tu be free to worship his Cod according to the dic tates ol his own conscience, and to estab lish the form of Government best adapted to secure bis rights and liberties. Kcason has long since exploded the slavish doc trine of the divine right of Kings. In the meantime, we ought to be aware that our Government is an object of inex tinguishable hale to the despots of the en-il. The existence of a free Democratic Repub lic any where is a standing reproach to the in; and il lliey had the power to immo late our insiiiu'.ions they would eagerly rush to the sacrifice, h ls our example which has disturbed the dismal and oppres sive calm ol despotism throughout the world, and encouraged mankind to assert their rights. No unworthy compliance on the part of our govcriiii;eni t fmpn pots,-no ti tickling to th(.,,,jf! evcr c neiliate their favor, h. wever it mv pur chase iheii-cmtempt. To act an inde pendent pari, yielding ihein jii.e 1t nothing more, is our true cur.-.e, and the only policy wm thx "f a great, fltT, ..djj,',. dependent natim,. It is power, and power alone, which commands their re. "spftt: and thank (.of. ! we possess this )ow.cr f we did not, il.e fate which now threatens die ancient and renowned federal Republic of Switzerland, might soon be ours. Von, fiiend and fellow-ciliZPri JAMES riTHANAIY.