A; Annuli, trite* AND PROPRIETOR VOL. X !'X. PROCLAMATION. "ILIT HEREAS the lion. Wm. N. In visa, Esq. President of the several • Courts of Common Pleas, in the Counties composing the 19th District, and Justice of the Courts of Oyer and Terminer, and - General Jail Delivery, for the trial of all 'capital and other offenders in the said dis trict—and Grottez • Sweatt and Janke ATElrvrrr, Mtgs., Judges of the Courts of •Common Picea, end General Jail Delivery( tor •the irial of all capital' nd other offend era irr the county of Adams--have issued ,their. precept, bearing date the 19th day of January, in the year of our LOYD one thousand eight, hundred and forty.eight, and 1 tome directed, for holding a Court of Com mon ilearand General 'QuarterSessifms ll of the "Peace and General Jail Delivery, tied COOtt ;of co r .. ; and Tenninqr, Get . ,jrilbUrg, on :Von the ilth day of Spril NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN To all the Justices of the Peace, the Coroner and Constablea within the said County of Adams, that they be then and there in their proper persons, with their Rolls, Records, Inquisitions, Examinations and other Re. monibninces, to do those things which to their offices and in that behalf appertain to be done, and also they who will prose cute against the prisoners that are or then shall be in 'the Jail of the said County of Adams, and to be thenjind there to pros ecute against them as shall be just. WiNJAMIN BCHRIVER, Sucairr. fThorilr's Office, Octty4Purg./ td Ahich 17, 1848. Vi:202 1 ,19 NOTICE is hereby given to all Lego 1‘ tees and other persons concerned, that the .9 DMINISTIMTION COUNTS of the deceased persons herein after mentioned will be presented at theOr phans' Court of Adams county, for coptir tnation and allowance, on Monday, the 17th day of hpril next, viz*: The account of John Boblilz and George Itlmumert, Executors of the last will and testament of Samuel Mummert, deceased. The account of George Link, Adminis innor.of the'estate of Charles T. iVelsh, deceased. The account of Jacob Hersh, Guardian of Henry Showalter, Isaac Showalter, and David She: \ ‘ker, minor children of David Showalter., u used. The aC ati Vf John L. Noel, Guardian uC Racherim _lain, minor child of James M'Clain, deceased. The first and final account of David Hollinger, Executor of the last will and testament of Christian Nagle, deceased. The final account of Philip Fleishman, and Michael Beavenour, Executors of the last will and testament of Peter Beavenour, deceased. The first account of John 1.. Taughin baugh, Adnsiuistmtor de bonia non of the estate of Jacob Shank, deceased. The first and final account of John L. Tinglsinbaugh, Executor of the last will and testament of Elizabeth Shank, deceas ed: The account of William C. Seabrooka, Administrator of the estate of Elijah Sea brooks, deceased, The first and final account of John !Too very. Administrator - of the estate &Alexan der Walter, deceased. The first account of Nicholas Bushey, Administrator of the estate of Philip Sny der, deceased. The first and final account , ofJarob Co ver Administrator of the estate of James Rhea, deceased, The first Guardianship Account of Hen ry Overholser, Guardian of Samuel Geisel ininor son of Michael Geiseirnan,sen., deceased. The first and final account of Benjamin Schrirart Administrator of the estate Wil liam fihroetler, deceased. ROBERT COBEAN, Register. Register's Office, GeV/burs. March 20,1848. to biy-'-April Term. Barwick—Jahn C. Ellis, Jacob Diehl, Jacob Mar- tin. , . M0UP00344111 Homer, Joseph Zuck. Motintplessant--Anthony Smith, Peter Smith. I,iberty—Heary'Hordon. Tyrone--Henry Eekeniode, Wen. Yeatts, Ozias Ferree. Union--Santuel .Bhorb, Amos Keports, Enoch lour. Ira( ngtan..—Joseph King, Joreph.Taylor . Hamiltonbam—Hobert Shinunons, Win. Douglus. Proetibmamee Bighorn'. Prankiin—J. Killt Wilson. Msnallen—Samuel Meals, Andrew Bittinger, John Burkholder, Philip Burner. General Jury. Deism—Jacob Sterner, Samuel Diller, William Menditonteen—Jacoh Brinkerhar. HatiltonL—Benthanit Hildebrand, John Mum- Medi; Of G.) Samuel Hollinpr. Latlenoroa-Aaroa.Cox, Ueo. W. Miller, David Cadwallader.. Borough—James F. Fahnestock, J ohn ditriternallt D. Kendlehart. LibertV—Barnabss Belly, John Biker. Berorkk—Bartholoinew Sullivan. Huntington—Alfred Miller, Jacob B. Trostle, 3. B. M'Cleary. Cumberland—Solomon Welty, Joeeph Black, area Black, Jacob Weikert, Tyrone—Denial Fidler. Freedom—John M'Cleary, Abraham Waybright. Menallen—Wm, Harlan. - Johu Latshavr, Adam Gsrdner. Conowago—John G. Morningstar. Fri nklin—Philip Hann, Win. Paxton. Mounolcarant—Andrew Little, John Blair. Strahan—llaniel Heiner, John Cress. NOTICE. - , ETTERS of Administration on the JLA Estate of WILLIAM MUMMEILT, late of Reading township, deed, having been granted to the subscriber, residing in said township—Notice is hereby given to all those indebted to said estate to make payment, and those having elaints upon the estate to present the same, properly ati-. thentinted, for settlement. SA.IIJEI, OVERIIOLTZER, March 17, 1848.—lit' "VAN C Y A wit C LES, Cologne,Soups U Hair Oils, Tooth Brushes. Toilet Brushes, Tooth Powders, ite., &L - c., for sale by S. 11. BUEHLER. THE BOAT OF LIFE. Leta tak6 this world as' some.wide scene, Through which,' In frail but buoyant boat, Whit *les now rods and now serene, Torah& thou and I must float; Beholding oft, on either shore, Bright spots When we should love to stay; But Time plies swift his dying oar, And on we sweep...away, away. Should chilling winds and rain come on, We'll miss our owning 'gainet the shower— . Bit closer till the storm is gone, And smiling wait a sunnier hour; , And if that sunnier hour should shine, We'll know ha brifittness cannot stay, And, happy, while 'tis mine and thine, Complain not when it lades away. ...—Thurs.reseiemelboth,mt.last, that. hill. . Dollen which hte'acurtents aUtowit go— The dark, dm brilliant, destined all To sink into the void below : Not e'en that hour shall want its charms, If side by side still fond we keep, And calmly in each other's arms Together linked go down to sleep. For the "Star and Banner." need of Great Men. Ma. Eni rot :—The recentiliness of 'fa ADD [US Seravans, Esq., coupled with the sudden death °firma' Qorncv An►ats, has induced me to give voice to thoughts which have long dwelt in my bosom ; and if you deem them worthy a place in your columns, they are at your service. I have for many years .mourned over the un scrupulous reckleeidiess of party spirit, in pouring shoes and every specie, of calumny upon th• best and greatest spirits In our land. No sooner is a man named as a candidate fur any high station, however well qualified he may be to dischargelts duties, than this Party Spirit—this base hound of Power and Place—sets oft, yelping upon his track; and, not content with following along the high way of his public career, and shouting over every little deviation that his foot has made, it dives into the bye-ways and shady lines of private life, noses out every stain and spot of dirt, which the neces sities of humanity have forced him to leave behind him. Nor does it stop at this; but clamorously ate tributes to its object every *vile and filthy thing which yt can find, or imagine, in all the ways in which he has left his foot-print. This should not be. Let us for a moment contemplate Mr. Anse,— in his public life. Since the early days of this Re- public, he has been its faithful servant. He learn ed his politics in the days of Washington, under the guidance of his excellent father, aid no less excellent and capable mother ; and, amid all the Labels of political commotion, changes, and amal gamations of party and of party nameri—which have been so many that no modern politician can know to which of the ancent parties his opinions assimilate—Mr. AD•XIS maintained the severe re publican principles of his youth. He was that nobleat work of God—Ys Hoxerr " Mss. In every Station which he filled as a public servant, from his first a p pointment by the unerring Weill ington, to his death in the council chamber of his country, he sought that country's good: Honestly, faithfully, unflinchingly, he walked in the way of hie duty. He sought not the aggrandizement of party —riot to give mom power to the hand of oppression, but to equalize the interests of community, braise up the oppressed, to help the poor and powerless to their right: to enforce justice, according to the true teaching of that Constitution, which, in all its bearings, was familiar a the B C," even to his boyhood. And this great, good, and wise man—wine, by the endowment of his Creator; wise, by the example and teaching of the wisest of men; who., by tho acquired knowledge of a long life, spent amid the very beat opportunities of acquiring wis dom—this man was followed even to the verge of life by party malice, by the base ours of party hate. Mr. ADAMS was brow-beaten and stigmatized as a leader of a fury faction.by the sons of foreigners— by men who were born since he was a patriot and statesman—men who are as ignorant of the true meaning oldie terms Independence—Constitution —Federal Republio—as they are of the toils by which the one was achieved, the wisdom by which the others were framed and sustained—men who, compared with Aim, look like a molehill, at the foot of the Andes. I remember how they assailed him when be eat as the chief-magistrate of a pur blind and ungrateful people. I remembermuch, which the billows of time will never wash kola the tablet of immortal Remembrance. But "He Died." Aimee Dian ! Tba_perae eutoni started back appalled—set up sti - oicf of apparent grief—and, whining pitifully, followed the poor remains to their quiet resting plat*. Yea --now, that the bleated spirit has gone to meet the gracious commendation—" Well done, good and faithful servant; enter thou into the joy of , thy Lor d "—and the venerable age-worn form has ceased to feel the quick pulse of joy, or sorrow; now, that the lacerated heart is_cnvered by the shrewd, and hidden in the bosom of the pitying earth; Party spirit ceases to cry out against him, and joins in the tenant commendation of the pare patriot, who is now beyond the reach of-malice Vile, dastardly spirit! ! Who that has a soul, does not feel prompted to spurn it from the face of the desecrated earth I While the man lived, and labored for the good of his country, the voice of her approval had been sweet to his ear;, it has soothed and cheered him in the arduous paths of duty. His was a high and noble heart ; but wu human. If shrank, pierced and • bleeding, from the shalt, of calumny it was transfixed with ve nomed arrows ; it was covered with wounds ; it went bldg . :ding to the grave. Can the late justice that now admits the excellence of his heart and life, atone for the suffering that.all his life-long he endured 1 Can the late repentance of those who maligned him, end embittered his life, avail any thing, now that he is dead ; or lay the healing bal sans on the noble heart, that feels and heeds no more 1 Is itnot the climax of baseness and by- PoctiS,l the his rntblers, defamers, to put on now the badge " of Mourning, and lamentthe fall of the patriot sage I—The Great, Me Good Jona QUIXOT MIAMI t Oh! shame upon them!— Let them not think thus to atone for the disgrace ful past. There is no atonement now—it is too late. Let them blush, and be forever silent, So of Mr. &raves's. He has been bunted by the base and Servile dogs of faction, defamed, be lied; robbed of hie sacred right; even the-assassin's steel "and the ready ilro-arm has been raised a gainst his precious life—.and for what I Because his soul—truly great; able to grasp, and incline mind and motive; clear in its perceptions oftruth and falsehood; capable of reading at once past, present and future; of perceiving the effect from the cause; the end front the beginning; of seeing the spring and moving power of every political engine ; of detecting the bearing of every measure on the interests of the community ;—because this soul refused to bow to the powers that were; to fol low, blind-fold, in the wake oldie car of political Jug gernaut—because he persisted in standing on the em inence which Inc had gained,and speaking the'l'ruth, as it was revealed to hiseagle eyes. But hisenenties, while they clamored against him, were ready to die of fear. They knew that he read their minds, with all their aims and purposes, like an open book ; they shrunk, and crouched sway. from his searching scrutiny ; and, having obscured the vision bf the time-serving, because ignorant, multitudes, wills the black and noxious vapors of their own base spirits, they hissed then, on, to overcome with brute force, the greatness which no power on earth could intimidate, or force to falsify its own just convictions. lie did not yield to them. But when he saw those for whom lie had labored, fur whom he was suffering, for whom he was wil ling to dare all thiturg; whose rights lie was ready ! to sustain in his giant arms, and carry safely above the turmoil of wrong and robbery ; when he.saw them turning from him, in distrust, and cowardly j servility, he smiled through the tears that pity for them wrung front his noble heart —descended from the heights from which none could thrust him-- and, us title hi, most tirulent opposers stood wrap-' GETTYSBURG, PA. FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 14, 1848. pad In awe, and wondered at the, greatness which was beyethithelr competition/ion, !mired with proud composure to the etudes of rivets life. Here was a victory, pester than ever was sr-biased by Alexander, or the meteor Bonaparte--a victory over the malice of his enemies; e victory mac the wishes of hbi friends; a victory over the aeplratlons of hie own mighty spirit. 4 4 have done with poi tic;"—he said. Hi had learned that it is a wife, In which villainy shuffles the cards; a con test, in which animal force generally prevails; a race lu which the truly great slid sensitive soul ought never to engage. And Mr. Bravura lives quietly, in the retire ment which he chose. And yet there is no man living in Pennsylvania who has deserved so wall at her hands; who so well understands her wants, and her resources; who is half so capable of gui ding her to opulence ind bettor. Bat his soul is 'too noble, too expansive, too ranch above the cern mon lent. _Hs man gtibuilielool:_oti Poity-r. the ellgy of &power behind which they could in trigue, and carry out their schemes An place, and emolument; he would not sacrifice tha interest, of the many for the aggrandisement of the few ; be would not keep the people in ignorance g that their rulers might away them at their will, fatten on their labors, and ride on their shoulders to dome . tiem—that worst of all deponents which makes its slaves believe that they rule themselves, end thus takes from them the common right of complaint, when they feel the iron wheel of ruin crushing them into the earth. Mr. STsvass would none of these things. He would have a world, of educated freemen ; a com munity of men capable ofjudging for themselves, of whom every one should be competent to rule himself, and to educate his children. Witness his herculean efforts in the cause of Education— Witness the Free School 'gleam of Pennsylvania, (mutilated though it be, by unskilful builders upon hie broad and noble foundation.)ls it not aliv ing, speaking honor to his name I Are not thou sands of children now drinking the sweet waters of immortality from the way-side fountains, which his wisdom opened for them, in toil, In strife, in unequal combat, when he bared his broad bosom against a host of foes, and came off a glorious con queror. Aye, glorious, with a glory far outshining all the lustre of military greatness r—inesimuch as Mr. Sr has confireted the highest benefits— even knowledge, which is the light of life—on mil lions of his fellow creatures, while the hero leads passion -blinded men to butchering, rapine, and death; earning, amid toil, and smoke, and blood, at best a horrid glory. Look at Pennsylvania College ! The wits dorn of Mr. STIV las laid its corder stone ; his la bon, in the Legislature of the State, built up its noble walls, and endowed its institutions. It will stand, a monument to the wisdom and intellectual powers of Ts•neaui &revise, when he shall have gone to his reward, and the tongues that ma ligned him shall have been gnawed away by the busy coffin worm. Mr. &reverts is a truly great man. His mind grasps the moral universe, and roads its powere, its weakness, its policY, its aims, its capabilities and its incapacities, at a glance—sees where the aims of national policy will succeed, and where they will fail of success. He knows mankind—their virtues, their faults, their wants, their sorrows— his heart has room for all humanity. He feels for all who suffer, and he relieves, as fax as ho is a ble. In his goodness, in hie mercy towards the erring, in his boundless benevolence towards all— he seems to me a glorious exemplification of the noble man. All these things Mr. &rave:vs hu done—not once, or twice—but habitually. Let those whom he has fed, and clothed, end provided with comfortable homes, answer. Let the prisoners, whom he has released ; the slaves, whom he has set at liberty, hear witness. Let those whom he has educated at his own expense, call to the multitudes who are now reaping the inestimable benefits of his efforts in the cause of Free School education, and let them reply; and the shobt will fill the earth, and go up like the smoke of frankincense into the glori ous presence of God, and bring down blessing and honor on his worthy head. Yet, while he lives—while his feeling heart and sensitive spirit are able to appreciate love, or en mity; to enjoy the consolations of the one, or writhe under the inflictions of the other; (for the greatestsouls aro most keenly alive to these things,) the serpents of envy and malevolence will contin ue to infest his path; and his at his best and no blest deals. This is cruel. This is base, This ,is - beneith the mall& of demonin TO hunt hu man excellence to the grave, and then acknowl edge Its worth and purity. ptit, party spirit wilt do these deeds of malice. It has done so by Mr. Assiut : it is doing so to Mr. &ravines. It id doing so to Mr.•Wsaarse and to 'ffsaai Cc►v--than whom not a greater lives on the face of the earth—it will do so to all the great and good. This is their meed on earth. But the memory of their nobledeeds shall live, and be commended forever ; while their persecutors shell be remembett , ;d only as the dogs, and adders, that infested the paths by which they walked to Immortality. Q. D. ALLICGORICAL.-1 traveller setting out upon a long journey, was assailled on the road by cure, mastiffs, and_half grown pup pies, which came out from their kennels to bark at him as he passed along. He of ten dismounted from his horse to drive them back, with stones and sticks, into their hiding places. This operation was repeated every day, and sometimes as of ten as twenty times a day. The conse quence was, that more than half the travel ler's time was consumed in chasing those dogs and puppies. At last he was overta ken by a neighbor, who was going the same road, but who had set out a long time after him. The latter traveller was very much surprised to find the other no farther on his journey ; and,' on hearing the tea? eon, "Alas 1" said he, “is it possible that you have lost your time and wasted your strength in this idle occupation 1 These same animals have beset me all along,the road, but I have saved my time and my la bor in taking no notice of their barkings, while you hare, lost yours in resenting in sults which did you no harm, and in chasti sing dogs and puppies, whose manners you can never mend. IRASCIBILITY OF TRISPER.The great est plague in life is a bad temper. It is a great waste of time to complain of other people's ; the best thing is to amend our own ; and the next best quality is to learn to bear with what we meet in others. A bad temper will always tire itself out, if it find no one to ressut it: and this very knowledge is worth a trifle. Irascibility is very injurious to health ; and so, in fact, is every morbid indulgence of our inferior nature—low spirits, nielancholy, diffidence, disinclination fur ordinary duties, discon tent, fretfulness, even down to mental las situde, indolence, or despair—are all very inimical to the enjoyment oflife ; and every possible effort should be made to cast them all to' the winds, and look unblush ingly into the truth of the fact. It is as tonishing what a little reflection will do— the fears are mostly imaginary, : and with one dash of resolution may all be •over conic. ir:rAn named John Hoffman, has 'veil arrested in Philadelphia, charged with the rubbery of the Clietter county Dank: ''FEARLESS AND FREE." BURNS AND HIS HIGHLAND MARY We extract the following interesting ar ticle from the Montreal Herald. It will be read with a melancholy pleasure, by many of our subscribers ; few poets have a deeeper hold on the heart of New Eng landers than Robert Burns, whose errors are forgotten in the contemplation of his genius and his works.—Essex Register. We had in our possession on Satur day the identical pair, of Bibles presented by the immortal Bunts to the dearest •ob-, ;act of his affections, Highland Mary, on the banks of the winding Ayr, when he spent with her "one day of parting love." They are in remarkably good preservaticin, and belong to a deseettdant of the family of Mary'', motkerjilio. Owning!, w hose propertY they becamoon the death of tier daughter, and subsequently Mrs. 'Ander son. The circumstance of the bible be ing in two volumes seemed at one time to threaten its dismemberment— , Mrs. Ander son having presented. a volume to each of her two daughters--tibt on the approach ing marriage, their Mother William pre vailed on them to dispose of the sacred vol umes to him. On tht first blank leaf of the first volume istyritten, in the hand-wri ting of the immortal bard, "And ye shall not swear by my name falsely.-4 am the Lord." Levit. 19th chap. 12 verse; and on the corresponding leaf of the emend volume, "Thou shalt hot forswear thyself, but perform unto 'the Lord thine oath, Matth. bth chap. 39 - dveise." Ott die alm ond blank leaf of each volume, there am the remains of "Robert Burns, Mossigial," in his hand-writing, - beneath which is drawn a Masonic emblem. At the end Of the first volume there is a lock of Highland Mary's hair. There is a mournful. interest attached to these sacred volumes—altered from their contents, and sacred fEom having ,been pledge of love from the moat gifted of Scot land's bards to the straps object of his af fections, from whom he was separating, no more to meet on this iiderOf the grave.— The life of Burns was full of romance, but there is not one circumstance in it all so romantic as those which attended and fol lowed the gift of these volumes. Be was young when he.wooed and won , the a gap tious of Mary, whom he describes as "a warm hearted, charming young creature as ever blessed a man with generous love." The attachment was nmltual, and forms the subject of many of his ..earliest lyrics, as well as the productions - of his later years, which - shows that it was very deep-rooted. Before he was known , to fame, steeped iu poverty to the very dregs, and meditating an escape to the West Indies from the re morseless fangs of a hard-hearted creditor, he addrestied to his "deer girl" the song which begins Will ye go the Indies, my Mary, And leave old Scotia's shore 1 Will ye go to the Indies, my Mary, And cross the Atlantic's marl But neither Burns nor his Mary were doomed to "cross the Atlantic's roar," nor to realize those dreams of mutual bliss which passion or enthuriiasin had engen dered in their youthful imagination. Burns was called to Edinburgh, there to com mence his career of fame, which was to terminate in chill poverty's dreary dissp? pointment and despair—while Mary's hapr pier lot, after a transient gleam of the sun shine of life, was to be removed to a better and a happier world. Her death shed a sadness over his whole future life, and a spirit of subdued grief and tenderness was displayed whenever she was the subject of his conversation or writings. Witnets as follows "Ye banks an' braes and streense around The castle o' Moutgornerle, Green be your woods, and fair your flowers, Your waters never drumns. There summer first unfolds her robes, An' there they longest tarry, For there I took my last farewell •O' my sweet Highland Mary I" In a note appended to this song horns says, ' , This was a composition amino in my early life, before I was known at all to the world. My Highland . lassie was.a warm.hearted. chariniug young creature. as ever blessed a man with generous love. After a pretty long trial of the most ardent reciprocal affection, we met by appointtnent ment on the second Sunday of lklay, in a sequestered-spot ou the banks of the Ayr, where we spent a day in taking a farewell before she would embark for the West Highlands, to arrange matters among her friends for our projected change of life.— At the close of the autumn following, oho crowd the sea to meet me at Girenuock. when she was seized with a malignant :fe ver, which hurried my dear girl to the grave in a few days, before I could even hear of her illness." It was at this romantic and interesting meeting on the banks of the Ayrohat the bibles before us were presented to 166 ,- ; and he must have a heart of atone indeed, to gaze on them without his imagination calling up feelings irk his bosom too big for utterance. On that spot they had ex changed bibles and plighted their faith to meet each other, the stream dividing them, and-the sacred book grasped by both over the purling waters. This was the only token of affection each had given the other, and the wealth oldie Indies could not have procured a better or more appropriate one. In Lockhart's Life of Burns, we are in formed that several years after the death of Mary. on the aniversary of the day which brought him the melancholy intelli gence, he appeared, as the twilight advan ced, (in the language of his widow) "very sad about something." and though the eve ning was a cold keen one in September, he wandered into his barn-yard, front •which the entreaties of his wife could not for souse time recall him. To these en treaties he always promised obedience, but these promises were but the lip-kind ness of affection, no sooner made than for gotten ; for his eves were fixed on heaven, and his inereasing strides also indicated that his heart was also there. Mrs, Burns' last approach to the barn-yard found him stretched on a mass of straw, looking ab stractedly on a planet, which, in — a clear starry sky, "shone like anot her moon," and having prevailed on him to return to the house Ito instantly wrote, as they stand, the following sublime verses, "To Mary in Heaven," which have thril led through many breasts, drawn tears from many eyes,and which will live the noblest of the lyrics of Burns, while sublimity and pa thos have a responding charm in the hearts of Scotsmen : TO MARY IN HEAVEN Thou lingering star, with . lasening ray, Who lor'st to greet the early morn, Again then usher'st in the day My Mary from my soul was torn. 0 Mary ! Dear departed shale ! Where is thy place of blissful rear! Sewn thou thy lover lowly laid? Bear'st thou the groans that rend his breast ? That mood hour can I forget ! Can I forget that hallow'd grove, Where by the winding Ayr we met, — To lire ottelayreparting love Mternity will not efface 'Thom records dear of transports past The heap of our lest embrace, Alf!' little thought we 'twee our last! -Ayr iltiriling kilned his pebble shore; O'erhung with wildvrood's'lting green, The fragrant birch end hawthornhoer, 'Twined &stereos round the raptured scene. The flounce sprang wanton to be primed, The birds sang love on every 'piny, Till soon, too soon, the glowlmt crest Proclaimed the speed of the winged day. Still o'er these meow my mem'ry wakes, And fondly broods with miser care ! Time but the impreedon deeper makes. As stream their channels deeper wear. 110 kiary,datr departed shade • Where is thy blissful place of rest Smut thou thy Lover loyly I Ilear'at thou the groans that rend his breast ? RAISIN() THE WIND.—The Spirit of the Times relates the folloiving capital affair: What a- potent charm has money What a . great number of ways there are of raising tt ! Its magic influence will rend asunder the tenderest of humant. i es, anti natter broaddast the fairest genis of affec tion.. Strange and singular are the ways pursued for its accumulation. Some will eatrifiee conscience, dignity, self-respect, and atliertiWill pander to the worst of pas sions,. But the latest and most modern way of "raising the wind," we noticed a few evenings since. Our attention was at. Aracted, in passing the Girard Bank, by a crowd of persons, who were surrounding a nian:on the Bank atepa who appeared to he in great agony, without a person present willing-to console him.- -We were about to undertake the kind office, when a plain looking Man stepped up, and recognized the sufferer as a resident of Kensington.— He-turned to the crowd, and made a pathet ic appeal for sympathy for the prostrate man7rAat.d_he.knew..him, well—that he Was an upright citizen and honest man— that unfortunately he (the speaker) had ex pended his "I SA cent." or be would pro cure a carriage to remove Mtn to his home, but if the persons present would "throw iu" only a dime apiece, it would be sufft cient for that purpose; and although it would be a gross neglect of his business, he would appropriate the • money' to that benevolent object. This appeal was not to be resisted, for all were , pleased with the humane remarks. A. Yankee friend stand. ing near Abe speaker, (whose heart and purse are always opens) was the first step forward with "here's taw shillen," and next a Venerable' looking old quaker hand ed in his Mite. All present gave some thing, amounting probably to three or four dollars, and a carriage was procured. The sick man was soon transferred to it, with hichumane: friend, and away they went. The crowd quietly dispersed, each think ing le had done a very charitable act.— But alas! how soon do the bright pictures of life fade from our view, and present its rough realities ! About an hour after the 'occurrence above related, we went into a restaurant at Chestnut and Eighth street and were astonished to see the sick man and his sympathetic friend cosily swallow ing "a Oxen fried," and laughing heartily' over the adroit artifice by which they had "raised the wind," on the occasion refer -red to. Tim Palm or LIFE,--Why not strew the path of life 'with flowers ?-- . lt requires no ktronger :effort than to plant thorns and ;beers. Is it not strange that we bend all 'our efforts in cultivating those plants which stlbrd' no pleasure, but oa the contrary, abridge our happiness ; while we suffer to spring spontaneously, the few stray flowers that occasionally throw a smile along our way ? It need not be thus. The few happy men around us shotild teach us an important lesson. There is no reason in the world why we should not be as hap py as they. If we must look on the path of life as a road, we must cultivate our selves, and go diligently about it. Less frequently would we have cause to mourn over the bitter past, or tho dark and cloudy present. If our years have run thus far to waste, let us, with care, influence the future, and with all care and attention, cultivate those fruits and flowers that will yield a harvest of agreeable pleasure. YANKEE MANUFACTORV.--Ie the ,vil lage of Birmingham, Conn., there is a ma chine for making brass chains, and works as if endowed with human instinct. By every turn of the driving wheel, the wire for the chain is wound off a reel and pul led forward to its proper place and posi tion, the end running through the last form, ed link, exactly the length for two links cut off, first one end turned over into a link, then the other, the former dropping down through the machine, leaving the lat ter projecting above, so that the wire can be instantly pushed through it, when it is cut off, two more links formed, and so on until a large roll of wire is transformed in to a perfectly-funned chain by the unaided operation of self-acting machinery, hard ly a finger having been lifted during the process. HONORS TO FEDERALISM.—The recent County inecting , ,held in Lancaster, to en dorse Mr. Buchanan, was presided over. by Judge Grosh, one of the old federalists of the oounty. He is still found supper.; ting his old friends and principles. A SIMEWD OLD Gatiri.ustax once said to his daughter, ""De sure, my dear, you never marry a poor man, hut. remember that the poorest man in the world is one that,has money and nothing else." MORMON..—=rile number and move 'news of the Mormons are extraordinary. They have an encampment called wither quarters, on land owned by the Omaha Indians,in the immediate vicinity of Coun cil Bluffs. At this encampment, it is cal culated there are now over twelve thous and, one half of whom intend starting for the valley of the great salt lakes, as soon as the grass on the plains will! permit. The balance will remain and put in a crop, and in turn leave for California when a suf ficient number have arrived to keep up the 'eneAmpment at "winter quarters. It is expected that from eight to ten thousand souls from England, will join the emigrat ing party this season. In addition, large parties are expected from other parts of Europe: The Mormons from Europe will land at New Orl3ans, and proceed by St. Louis to "winter quarters," and thence across the country to the valley of the great salt lakes, where they intend erecting a magnificent temple. What will be the end of Moretionisin, is mystery. Like the de lmendants of Ishmael, their hands appear to be "against every man's hand, and ev ery man's hand against theirs."—Descen ded from the Caucassian race, they ap pear determined to build up a religio-poli ' tico government and policy that will etfee tually separate them (rain all other men. They will stand alone, a monument of 1 what—time alone can determine. THE OLD WORLD .- A London corres pondent of the National lutulligencer, writes under the latest date: •Latest news from Paris, says the Government is in daily ex pectation of receiving news from Belgium of the establishment of a republican form of government in that country. In Ho,- land all is quiet. Not so in Germany, however; fresh disturbances had broken out in Munich: the military were under arms, and great dread existed of a conflict between them and the people. The King of Prussia has made some concessions, and promises more. The Duchess of Or leans arrived on the third inst. at Berlin. Saxony has not yielded to the people's requests so 'far as was expected, but the numerous petitions from all parts of the country, particularly from Leipsic, will, it is hoped, overcome the King's dislike to yield to the march of events. Serious ap prehensions were felt at Frankfort, of in surrectionary movements." LAFAVEITE.-A Paris correspondent of the New York Courier says: "The other day I had a very interesting interview with M. Lafayette, the son of the old general. He was a prominent mem ber of the opposition party, and a particu ar friend of 0. Barrot, who although at present under a cloud, will, he thinks, play a prominent part in politica hereafter. M. Lafayette is an old gentleman of about fif ty-five, I should think, with an exceeding ly benevolent countenance, and he treated my friend, Mr. M ,of Ga., and myself withgreatkindness andcourtesy. Ile con versed with us very freely upon the revo lution and the causes which led to it, and spoke at length of the probable result. I do not feel warranted to commit to paper, all that he said upon this litter point, but I may say that he expressed great hopes from the intelligence and good sense of the French people." WHY DO 9 NT WE GROW—The Louisville Examiner contains the following answer to the question often asked in the Slave States —"Why don't we grow." "Slavery costs us millions. Who had now tilled our fertile lands if the State had been free ? What now would have been ourannual earnings, if slavery had not black cried our soil. All around us, in sight of our lirst settled homes, progress marks and makes everything in the free States—con verting wilderness countries into thick set tlements, swelling villages into towns, towns into cities, and cities into mighty marts of a thriving commerce, and we stand still—stand stock still, as Wan incu bus were upon us, nod we bad no power to heave itotf—as it we were the slaves of a bondsge, as galling as any man can suf fer. Let it be so no more! The world bids us play the part of a man—let us do it. Christianity appeals to us with a trusting, living spirit—let us answer her rightly. Self-interest urges us to set free the slave —let us do it." DEATH FROM SUFFOCATION.—On Sun day last Samuel M. Barnitz Esq. was cal led to hold an inquest over the body of Mr. JOHN BARN, of Spring Garden tp. The deceased was found dead about sunrise, on said morning, in the lime-kiln, and is sup posed to have come to his death by the in haling of thu gas manufactured by the burn ing stone-coal. Front the facts elicited, the Jury returned a verdict of "Death by Suffocation." The deceased was about 30 years of age, and had been married on ly two weeks previous to his death. EXPLOSION AT CUMMILAND, Mo.—A powder Magazine, belonging to a number of merchants in that town, blew up on Sunday night last, about 11 o'clock. It contained, at the time, about seventy or se venty-five kegs of powder. There was, we understand, considerable damage done to the town—many windows were broken, and houses otherwise shattered. Ig_7.•The proprietors of the 4...V.v0L0 SAXON, " announce that some villian has stolen their packet books, and left them without means of forwarding their paper to anberibers. They request all suberi berg who fail to receive the paper to no tify the proprietors immediately. CRAZY INCENDIARY.—On the night of the 20th ult, the barn of Mr. Samuel Rin ehart, two miles from Waynesboro', Pa., was burnt to the ground, with all its eon; tents, ineluding fire horses. The tire was communicated by a crazy sun of Mr. Rin ehart. DECISIVE VDTE.—In Manchester, (N. II.) at the Stale eleetion---Is it expedient that a law be enacted by the General Court; prohitiiiiritthe sale of winds and spirituous liquors, except for chemical, medical, or mechanical purposes'.''.the yeas were 1,000, the nays 30. TWO DOLLARS PER ASSUR. 1 NEW SEIES-NO. 47. THE COURT OF INQUIRY. It is difficult to read the report of the peenreof ings of the Court of Inquiry, at Minim =lend in try Major General Sears, without a deep lieskog of sympathy for his position and its of open a mind so sensitive. He appears in the edisdfatisn of a man encircled and oppressed by pay' NW envy and the decrees of a government, whose poorer he acknowledges, and whose manholes be obeys_ Hut however irksome the momentary It 'insillistion may ho. if Gen. Scott is in the right. and the cos duct of the administration has been tyrannies", et dictated by individual spleen, the result will le glorious one for the accused, end the Unknown" of the people will dignify him beyond the power of oppression to dispute.or censure. . After the Mier ization of the Court, the following stasstfress Gin. Wu sir n , the pet of Executive favor, was wed: &AD.:LI:ANT ICUS OP Taa FINS, Drvtairm, Twirboya, Mexico, Merrill 14. 1848. To Gen. N. TowooN, Pm. Corr of harrirgi Sin: In the matter of my appeal from Major Gen. Scott, Commander-in-chief of the Army, the President has done me full and ample justice. In view of the interest and harmony of the service. I desire to withdraw the accusations which I made in that appeal against Major Gen. Scott. I have the honor to be, Irony' ntweethilly.your obediout servant, W. J. WORTH„ Brevet 3lsi Grea. After the reading of the above, the Vows dater_ mined to suspend proceeding agvarathiarverrr, until the will of the Government should be 11,1101 M. Gen. SCOTT, Ol AC ply, addressed the Court ea follows : Mr. President and Contionea of the Court: lime, in the Capital of Mftien, conquer ed by the American arms, Under my com mand, I find myself but a prisoner at Loge —the chief criminal before this Court.— Deeply wounded, my military ride is east down into the dust—not by the public enemy—hut by the long arm of power front home. All that could be done, in that quarter, to injure, to degrade and bum ble me here and elsewhere, has been ac compli,hed. But sustained by the Al- , mighty arm ; feeling myselfstrong in con-- conscious rectitude, strong in mind and body—strong in all the means of self de fence, I bid defiance to my accusers. I shall not plead the letter withdrawing the appeal against me, in bar of trial. I rhall lenge the writer of that letter to come for ward and do his worst. But no doubt he thinks, and with reason, tha: he has dole hid word!. Here, in view ofthe enemy, he has caused ine tit he struck down from the the high and honorable command of 4 most gallant anti triumphant army. He has caused me first to be prejudged and punished at home, and then to be brought forward to, be tried again. while he, my ju nior, has been pre-acquitted and rewarded. The President has, we are exultingly tokl. done him "full and ample justice"—yes,, sir, in double measure: justice to Itts pride, and justice to his vengeance. Let him, Mr. President, go forth, rejoicing in the plenitude of Executive fay.w. With out envying him his honors, I shalt. at the end of this Court, have done with him for ever. Again, Mr. President, I repen, my attitude is that of defiance. The Court having nest determined to proceed with the charges against Generals Pillow and Duncan, Gen. Scott row, and announced that in view of the ex trtiordi nary conduct of the President in acquitting and restoring to command,one tithe arrested Generals (Worth) without the form of a trial,—his declining to order a Court Martial, es requested by General Scutt, to try the charges against these officerc—and his own degadation. he would decline prosecuting the earns against Gavials l'illow and Duncan, unhati ordered to do so by the Court or President. Gcn. Pillow, however, insisting upon his "ease being disposed of at ance L the Court waned the case to proceed. GEN. SCOTT.—THE FEELING FOR HIM IN MEXICO.—In all the tenets Gam oil ferent correspondents st the city of 3.lexicts„ to the New Orleans pspers, we find great sympathy ex pressed fur Gen. Scott awl a nt,isersad condemn.- tion of the course of treatment he hashecti subject cd to. We publish the following thrilling, haw from the correspondent of the Cnment, ow this subject: CITY or Mexico, March 19, 1813. The Court of Inquiry has been in ses sion here for three days, the proceedings of which accompany this. Scott feels deeply nmrtitied at thee:loom things hate taken, and he does not load: like the same man. He stated in the court. on the second day, in a sort of preface to a paper withdrawing the eltarges,,that he had requested a Court Martial to try the offeu dors ; and that the President, instead of or dering one, reluctantly cozened a Court of Inquiry, and before such a connive thought it useless to waste time. and consequendx„ su far as he was concerned, the trial would end. It is beyond doubt that the President has treated the General badly. A Briga dier General broke open his - dispatches to Taylor. at Monterey. and their importance being buzzed about, the bearer. a gallant officer of the army, was overtaken and kg led at Villa Grande, the dispatches sent to Santa Anna, and he, advised of the with drawal of the regular troops, marched at once front San Luis to Enc.arnacion. and and shortly after fought Taylor at Buena Vista. For this high offence of opening a . public document, General Scott prekared charges :old sent them to the Secretary isi War. But no court was ordered. After the capture of the city, he deemed it nears, sary fur the good of the service, war/est three officers of the army, and again sea} charges to 'Washington. This tune he ho ped a Court Martial would be called. but he was mistaken. One oldie arrested. who had preferred charges against hits, was sr leased without a trial, whilst a Gnus ot Inquiry was ordered um inquire into the charges preferred by the one rehised. Under the cireumitances, can you mew* that Scott feels chagrined ! Cantus! wfilp der that the proud spirit irMilt bow lairs front victory to victory in this Tear ilea been partially broken, and dtrt which was wont to tread the 'IA so proti* ly, has bait changed to the slow putout the disconsolate! I :odes, that nty Item