A: kr o. IL 114JBELEK. ',loiitilLlC SALE. Fixv rtyo of an °Net the Otphana s c9itrte(Atlatne County, the unt) sexiher, Admicatrator 91 the Eslate of A TAM W:I AN FA, late of Latignore i 04131. • ehip,,A4letaa, , eotiaty. deeexped., will sell, •puttlie.style on the pretnieesoin akturdtry the td7 a day of September next ./11' Ort eloc,ocn, r. 11•4" . 4he'ratm of 4siddeceatien. situate in lad- Mori ,tatenatiip, containing 92 litlal t Incite or leei, of land, and adjoining lands of t E I i *id** Vale, Christian Miller, lea se Mink,' and others. The improve ,mentenve a iwo.itory :STAB. 11011811 1111 Ivitk,lCitclien attached, double ,g ern, a web 'Ol water near the door. About 14 Acres ul this Farm are in that rate Meadow, and the same proportion in ex •cellaqtlimber ; the residue being ender cultivation and good tensing. The Farm 40 well watered ; the Bermudian Creek running through it near die dwelling, and :Spriggs being scattered over the whole of it. There is slap on the premises, An Orchard of choice-Fruit. ,0:7 ; Thli Farm is. located about one mile gram York Sulphur Springs, and will be qoUnd I desirable property. OtrPersons wishing to see the premises •can do so by calling on the widow residing thereon. -. K7' Attendance uhf he given and terms 'made known on day of pale by PETER U. IiAFFENSPERGI'3% 4dministrator. Sy the Court—H. DISNWIDO , K, Clk. Aug. 22, 1831.—ts PUBLIC SALE. BY virtee of an order of the Orphans' Court, of Adams comity, the subseri. tietii, Administrators of the Estate of JA COB HOWARD, lite of Mounapleasant township, Adams county, deceased, will •Oupoae to Puhlic Sale, on rritlayelhe 24111 day of October next, at 2 o'clock, P. M., on the premises, the VA k LIME MR A - Amid deceased, containing 60 ACRES, more or less, situate in Mountpleasant ip.. and adjoining lands of Benjamin Wilder. Abraham Lot, and others. The gt improvements are a two-story LOG DWELLING, with a one-story kitchen and a Shop at• iarlied, a log Stable, and other ouf-build- Altout 15 acres are covered with g I thriving timber, the balance being cleared and under good cultivation.— There is a well of good water ..ouvenient to the dwelling, and the property has a number of excellent fruit :tees on it. It lies near the Bonaughtown road. about 4 miles from Gettysburg. Attendance will be given and terms made 'known on day tot bale by IV Nl. HOW Mt D. t Exra. GEORGE EIOWARD, By the Court—n. Dignwitala, Clerk. Aug. 1, 1851—ta PUBLIC SALE OF Kati: VILE rtittEILTIG b T 11Fundersigned, Assignee of GBORCIE A. henna, Sr., will offer at public sale, tiu Thursday the 9th of October next, al 12 o'clock, M., on the premise., a 2P.LRM, situate in Mountpleasant township, Adams x.-outity. about. 5 miles from Gettysburg, bounded. by lands of John Al Hier. sr., John Eclienroth, John Felix and others. The Orin contains 54 Acres and some Perches. The improvements are a 2-story 3.ffi Log Dwelling House, a good Log Barn, and other out lbuildings. a well of water near the dwel ling.'a good Orchard, bearing choice fruit. There is a good meadow, and more can easily be made. There is a good proper tioikil thriving Timber. The land is in a high state of cultivation, part of it having , been well limed, and iv laid oti in conve ' %dent fields, with good. fences. &e. ALSO,—A Tractor Land. adjoining the above; el:obtaining 6 about the half being covered: with thriving young Timber. Persons wishing to view the property :tan do so.by ,calling en George Jacobi re • siding (Walton. Zehewiie, on Sattirday,the 11th of Oda - •. • • ber neap ' • ' tst 1 o'olook, P. M., on• the .premises, a ' ,, lloutle . Bt Lot of Ground, ti 'lying - in -'the town of East li adjoinitig_4, 8, iliklebrana's "-t -4 • igh Wehetry, and borinded by a '4.41 'Me house it two•etorY, -4110001,411tebed,urith a , large back build. Jmk. Flerrasi of tale will be ;Made given by • • ''!" • ''" •'• 7 JOSEPH - J. KUHN, , •i•:•l3ept. 4:181110.4. Assignee.: 'WAS. FOIND opt the, t ith,g ) ,‘, on the crossing be , treen Fahneetnetea, Sint° and the re 'lititlitin of Inhti Dairen, a aunt of money. "Vitiehtir thinrmatibncan be hatrby inqui sit ritrauttie (Are; , )kph 120881. " ILOTICE TO GUARDIANS kir , 'Guardians whose appointments '?) l • 4 l l,, hayttebtteii made for three years and l'Allpiossrds. ire required to render an account ~tuitturs property under . their care. ,f9l l ofijed in. the Orphans' Court (or the infarneaticin of the Court and all parties ANrdillier •thed f ,WU or 'gore 1 8th _oy o, agreeably to 'lie Act of Lir4 jrt, spelt canes made and provi , sled. H. DENWIDDIE. . Sept. Ist, 1831. . • • ," INTLSIERRY MIA& By ALIOi • • 0, sweet tree the eve when'! mime *Dm the mill, dowis the green winding* of illhalbetry Hill; • My heed like a bird with Me throat all in hum, l'lmt slop in the beaudfOl bdiont or Jane. For them, at her spinning, bimeatti 'broad tree, By a rivulet 'bitting and blbe as-the ma, Mail* I my Aehg--her tiny feet bate, • had We pada of the sumach Among her black hilt • They celled me a bold enough youth, add I would Hive kept the name honestly* earned, if I could Bet, amehow; the song I had whistled was hush.. sod, And, spite of my manhood, I blushed, deeply blushed. I would tell you, but words cannot print my de- light, • When she gave the red buds for • gallium] of white= r When her cheek with soft bloshee—bot 00, %is in vain Enough that I loved bar, and she !eyed me again. Thee summery haw" coma and gone by with their Ci kid a cherub of purity smiles in my arms, With lips like the rosebud, end lulu softly bright', Ns the tar which my Mary wu spinning that night. And in the dark shadowy of Mulberry Hill. By the giaircovered reed when I came trop the mill, And the rivulet shining and blue as the ma, My Mary lies Bleeping beneath the broad tree. (Home Journal The First Baby. In a new novel, "The Glenns l " recently published, occurs the following striking picture of domestic felicity, which crusty old bachelors will read with much interest : "It'the baby' was asleep, no one was al lowed to speak except in a whisper, on pain of instant banishment , the piano was clo sed, the guitar was tabood, boots were in terdicted, and the bell was muffled. If Mr. Vincent wished to enjoy a quiet cigar, ho must go out of the house, lest the smoke might hurt 'the baby'; and, lest the street door might disturb its slumbers, he must make his exit by the back way, and reach the street by the garden-gate. The Doo tor was scarcely ever out of the house; not because 'the baby' was ill—for indeed it was most alarmingly healthy—but bemuse she was 'afraid it might be taken with some dreadful.discase, and no doctor near.' If coal was placed in the grate, either Mr. Vincent must put it in lump by lump with his fingers, or Thomas must come•in on tip toe, leaving Lis boots below, lest the noise should disturb 'the baby.' And yet he must not take a bed in another part of the house, because 'the baby' might be attack ed by the croup, or might cry to have some one walk up and down the floor with it in its arms, and then ho would not be within call.• In short, when 'the baby' slept, the whole house was under a spell, whose en chantment consisted io profund silence and unbroken stillness, and all who came with in the magic circle were at once laid under its influence." A °OLDEN THOTTOUT.—Nature will be reported. All things are engaged in wri ting her history. The planet, the pebble. goes attended by its shadow. The rol ling rock leaves its scratches on the moun tain, the river its channels in the soil, the animal its hones in the stratum, the fern and leaf their modest epitaph in the coal. The falling drop makes its sculpture in the sand or the stone ; not a foot steps in• to tfie snow, or along the ground, but prints in characters more or less lasting a map of its march ; eiery act of the man in scribes itself in the memories of his fel lows, and in his own face. The air is full of sounds, the sky of tokens ; the ground is all memoranda and signatures, and ev ery object is covered over with hints, which speak to the intelligent. When you see the wifeof a man in mod erate circumstances, loading herself with jewelry, and promenading the streets, on Monday morning, look to it, whether her husband is in your debt; in case he is, collect at once, or make -up your mind to take a per ventage. There is a good time coming, boys! And many a one has pasted— For each has had his own good time, And will hire to the bug. Then tarry not, oh eager youth. For fairer plea to blow, But bear in mind this best of truths— The best of limn is mow ! WHAT IS LIFE I—The Demoomtio pa rrs of New Hampshire only a Diu , days ago, hid at the head of ;heir columns, the name of Levi Woodbury for President of the United States, and that of his coltsin, Luke Woodbury, for Governor of New Hampshire. Now both are withdrawn by death I "What would I give, " said Charles Lamb, "to call my mother back to earth, for one day, to ask her pardon upon my knees fit all those sots by which I gave her Ontle spirit pain." A Western Editor, who is an old bach elor', ea' never oared a farthing a bout getting married, u'ntil'we attended un old bachelor/1k funeral'.' --- en lain. atlas Tkaked More , 4 o ton why, ke did not drink witio, he honestly and •wisely said, because if I drink atilt% I obeli drink too much. Abstinence iS as easy out itioderatlon is difficult. " A. Temperance pledge issued by Father Matheit at Cleveland, Aug. 8, bears the number of six million, stxtyjour thous• and, two hundred andktrone. A LOH, INTO ETERNITY.—When Stun morfield was on his loath-bed, he exclaimed, "Oh, if I might be raised again, how could I preach! I could preach as I have never preached before; I have had a look into eternity." LONDON.-If the streets of Istridon Were put together, they would extend 8000 miles in length ; 'the main thoroughfares aro traversed by 3000 omnibuses and 8500 cabs, employing 40,000 horses. , When•the heart is pure, there ia holly, , thin 4 . which eau mislead the under standing in Matters of irnfmidiate *renal • concernment. - • GETTYSIURG; -PA. FRIDAY EVENING,,SEPTEM.I3 R"s6, 1851. The following narrative, glimpse it the missy 'which strong drink Inuieceas ioned, is extracted `from "The Lights of Tempenmee,P u new work published. in Louisville,. Kentucky : 'I witnessed,enoe a scene which comes appropriately in placo here.. During the commencement 'exercises of Emory IJollege, upon ono occasion the Governor of the State of Georgia, and hie lady, with. a goodly number ottier friendsiwore stay ing with me, All were light-hearted, cheerful and happy, when a female form, plainly but neatly attired, entered my gate and advanced to my door. I received her, and, upon her request tome the Governor, I conducted her to his room. 'Governor{ said she, 'I an, the mother of the man who is to be executed, four days hence, at Columbus,' for murder.— Hearing of his sentence, in Maryland, where I live, I hastened with all speed to Milledgeville, to beg of you a respite of his sentence, till tho meeting of the • Legisla tare. There my money gave out, ; but not finding you there, 1 have followed you hither, having walked most of the way (six ty-five miles) to make the request. Gover nor, will you not suspend the sentence?" 'Madam,' said the Governor, his eyes already filled with tears, for no Governor ever had a kinder heart, 'if I were to grant the respite, you could not possibly reach him with i4itt.your. feeble _and exhausted , situation, in time to save him." I will; Governor; give it to me, and I will have it in Columbus before the hour of execution arrives.' 'Then you will have to travel night and day, for four nights, and three days and a . 'Only give me the respite, and it shall reaoh him in time. I shall see him any how, before he dies; but I haye no time to lose.'. 'Madam,' said the Governor, 'I most deeply sympathise with you, and it pains me to tell you, that I should violate my official duty to grant you the respite. I have examined the case, and I cannot find S. single mitigating circumstance in it, in your son's favor.' 'Oh, Governor I my son is not a murder. Brat heart. His disposition is peaceable. He was not himself when he committed the deed. He drink—and Alcohol was the murderer. Oh, Governor ! here on my knees before you, I pray you have pity upon a peer heart-broken widcrwed mother!' Our wives sobbed aloud, and the Gover nor and myself mingled our tears over the bending suppliant. There was but one of the group that could speak, and that one bore the burden of mg all, multiplied a thousand fold. The Governor raised her from her knees, and repeated, by a•shake of the head, what be had already said. And now went forth from that poor woman's hedrt—what shall I call it? A sigh P It was not that. A sob P It was not that. A groan P It was not that ; but an indescribable out-breathing of all that is eloquent in grief, and melting in sorrow. Her accents had caught the ears of the group in the adjoining porch, and produced a death-like silence there; and my habitation, so lately the scene of mirth, was like the court of death. • At length she broke silence : 'lf there is no hope, I must hasten to my child before ho dies.' She rose, and trembling advanced to the porch, followed by the aympathiling friend, but unyielding Chief Magistrate. She pas sed the crowd without seeming to notice them ; and, as her foot fell upon the stop that was to conduct her away from the habitation of hope, she cast back a melting look, and commenced her last appeal, with ! Governor ! for God's sake'—when she sunk to the floor. At length, rising, as if moved by the thought that she was losing the time which alone would eueble her to see her son alive, she retired. The Governor disappeared with her his carriage soon followed, and though no questions acre asked on his return, 'doubt not dud he offered her the boat solace that he could, in her extremity, without a breach of duty. Now I ask, what is all the good that ar dent spirits have ever done, compared with the pangs which this one poor widow has suffered 1' But her's was no unoommon ease. Multiply her afflictions by ten thous and, and you will get the exponent of what one claas, and that the beet of our race, have suffered from the use of inebrist: ing drinks. Ah ! God bless you, men, I fear we shall have a dread account to ren der at the court of heaven, for our dealings with this class of the human family. The nearer young men approaCh man. hood, the less liberty they allow their necks. On "entering the world." a dan dy submits to &lomat as much choking as felons wben going out of it. queer .that there Should be such, a connegioo between : gentility and strangulation. k tempenince_ paper extending its views into the region ''of, tobacoo, exelaimis 4.Whit it'etrange figure the spools Paul would have made had he gone, about 4o proclaim the sublime troth of Christianity - With alitid of tobacco, and a long nine in his month I" In the City of Augusta, Me., not a drop of intoxicating liquors can now he purchas ed. All former venders have abandoned the sare. voluntarily end the 'drinkers take milk, water, tea, coffee, and so, forth—the laet article iv rather scarce. There are a thousand pretty, engaging little ways which every person may put on without beoing deemed either affeetini or foppish. Guard against reading too much or too rapidly. ltead'rather with attention ; lay the ' book often down ; impress cm your mind what you have read, and reflect up pon it. • Unjtist riches curse tbo owner in getting, in keeping, tad in titutonitting. They enrsei his ettildtwa iatheirs►ther', memory.. Slandeinra ar likalliea that inaly-oran all sram►'agoon parts , ito , ll4lo , upima *a.m. aFEARLESS AND FREE." .. , 211.1seltdatr , 00 • ,414 1 1•Fian. There i s A Mauna* Podotrunx of L ondint streets well knoin todiro9 are aeqaplilb ed with' their nbtabilitioa Ile ii a Ifiorti stout, sturdy, :entirgetitstinan. Ile has a big round tace, and,liugthltltriUfb and very bright hazel eye*, Ilia hair is cut short, and his hat .is flung beet on the crown of his head: His gait is' firm and decided, with ti little touch Of ponmotaty. He is ever provided - with an• umbrells, which he swingf and flourishes, and batters on the pavement with mighty primps. Ile seems generally absorbed in- in bxciting and im pulsive thought, the traces of which he takes no pains-to conceal.; ,, His face works, his lips move and matter, his eyes' gleam and flash. Squat es is l'iis, flgure,and not particularly line his leaturee, there' is an unznistelteable air of ineitiel power and en- i orgy appoaching'.to grialdeur,:abont the man. He is evidently under the influence • of the strong'excitement of fiery thought. People gaze curiously at him, and atop to stare when be is passtsd. But he'hedibi no 1 one--scems, indeed, to have utterly for gotten that he is not doge in his privacy, and pushes aloiig, unwitting of the many 1 who stem and etude, or pf the few who. step respectfully aside, and look with curi osity and regard upon prates Babington Macaulay. Occasinnally, however, the historian and the poet still gives freer'vent to the men tal impulses which appear.to be continual ly working within him. ~ A friend of ndne i _ ' lately recognised him dititng in a &free room of the Trafalgar - Itiirtel at Grieffirieh —a fashionable -whitebait house which, it appears, ho frequently patronises.— He was alone, as he generally is, and the attention of more than one of tho' com pany was attracted bfhil ;peculiar mutter ing and fidgettineee, - and try the mute ges tures with which he ever and, anon illnstra ted his mental dreamings. 411 at once— it must have been towards the climax of the prose or verse which her, WWI working i up in his mind—Mr. Macauley seised u massive decanter, held it a moment sus pended in the air, and thin dashed it down nisei the table with such hearty good will that the solid clarystal flea" about in- frag ments, while the' mmteroter parties dining uromid instinctively :started up and.stared at tbii - eirrious ietumehlat. ',Vet a whit put about, however, Mr. blicauley, Who was well known te the waiters, called loudly for his bill to be Made' at st-4he'bar,-and ' then, pulliq, with's. oink& of jerks, his hat and midwelha from the stand, clapped the one careleessly on his head, and strode out flourishing the other.-- - --/nverneas Cow rier. • ~ Capital .41tos,,Ik.ory. . , That aristritions do S 9 lowVs,Yraoller about without stiftlelerecti*le preyedh the well attested fact which we give *jai the endorsement of the Montreal Transcript. :Last Tuesday fortnight, iui_ (a lady of literary taste and rather studious habits) sat reading in her drawing room, the clock ou the mantel piece struck twelve;. as the last Stroke reverberated through the departments, the door was suddenly flung open. In the net of raising her head to reprove the intrusion (uornng for) of her servant, her ef es rested ort• the form of her late husband; she screamed Slid fell sense less on the floor. This brought up such' members of the family as had . not yet reti red to rest ' • restoratives were administer ed, and when Mrs. M. had regained pos session of her suspended faculties, being a woman of, strong mind and strongly culti vated-intellect, she felt disposed to ()mild er the whole distress she bad undergone as the result of certain associations between the melancholy tale she had been perusing and her lute loss, on a partially deranged nervous system. She, hoirever, considered it advisable that her maid servant A hirdil repose in her chamber, lot a return of what she .considered a nervous' affection should distress herself and alarm the family. Last • Tuesd m i ght, feeling stringer and in bet ter spirits thtut she had men for several Months past, Mrs. 31. difpensed with the presenee Of her attendant, retiring alone to her chamber, and went is beds little be fore ten o'clock. Exactly es the clock, struck twelve she was awaited, mid distinct- ly' beheld the 'apparition she had before seen advancing from the itable (on which stood her night lamp,) till it stood opposite to, and drew aside the curtain of her bed. A sense of snffteating oppression 'deprived her of all power to screen aloud. She de scribes her very blood regurgitating with icy chillness to her beret front every vein.— The countenance of her loved.cri life wore not its benevolent aspect i , the eyes, once beaming with affection, were now fixed with stern regard on the trembling, half-dissolv ed being, who, with the courage of despe ration, thus abjured him :" "Charles I dear Charleel • why are You•CoP 3 . Win r "Jessie," ,slowly end solinunlY replied the shadowy form, - waving in its ,hand a small tell ofpiper; . "Jessie; ptiy Tar bens- Paper accounts, and . let me rut in pesce you ever see Si" "i4No." - 4 . How do .0u know she is handsome then ?" *ißeestwe the women •re rtmotting her down soi" said he. 9, the spsipp! "John . 'Adatin, being Odle& upon 'fora 4nOribution for foreign missionos.remark od, "there are here, in this vicinity, six mil l . icier'. not one of whom will preach in . the, otheN pulpit; now I will give as' much and more than any one else, to civilize these clergymen ! " The greatest pleasure . of life is love ;the grealpst treasure, erntentment ; the greatest posiession, health; the greatest ease, sleep; and the greatest medicine, a true friend. There is a eertaiii softnesa of manner which, in either nun or womani :was a charm that almost entirely oinapousates for luck of beauty. Debt II n hnrse bat is alwaye thrdwing its rider. Fuels ikfe him bare-back. and Without bridle. Some bigntemati4 Megii r, Oar, a men 'essuktinn,ri4kioat :,44N41101P. ,r? Sian Speak buildpiiikiiir,Pwit494oWinct• Nome at the %trauma noose: Ibuibts. *wpm .-I:ankrie la fable soling gaup.), • ' Yankee,—f Jia-ny. *shin ! l'his 'ere soop an't - so clean as I hev seen ! I Ireilter.--Sir! I 'don't know wot you meanie by such an insiniteration. I must speak to Mr. Carvinknife about that! (Wailej• rung to Bead Waiter and brings that' Ocial to Yankee's chair.] ikad Waiter. L-lie• pardon, Sir! Did .you liti've , th e , a honor df makin' reinark. ry spectine the soup - 1' rahtiee,--frall'itilid. Ther -*in% nb deny,hi• that. ' ' - ' '', Head Waiter [Making red in , thelesell. —tilt, shall l have the .pleasure of saying t• the Seperinteralant .thstyun remarked dad the soup .is dirty 1., ' . I Yankee [tAnsusing„la'nsself, ,backus, the 'chter,) Look bertirryeuxanyeport to the Sewporintsn,dittl. of, yeier3 WA such, an officer oaer,yer-riseenOged t hey hot: I ° 4 ' iPerotteniiiiiite in Sunday Schoulii, but I never Itesin of one iii a tavern before--- yew kin jest ley tow him . whitt'l said to that *hien jacket feller there—and mind, now, Of yew ,pervart the truth, l'!l' teach ,ye that'the Oda- of the heinhing are a vain:thing in lest no ihne acid, I. Tell the aewp what 1 - itaid,`but don't , yer lie ! Agreriniendant [coating, , foravard] , --- Anything the mama hers, Thome' ! Anything wrong Sir ? , Weeitorer-HP sags the soup ain't OW ) Sir„, Yankee.— chat', yetotal lie. 1 didn'e iniv %was dirty'--I didn't esi7twan't clean -1 Shot74aq - Use - 11 - isid - anything 'Motif yeirionik at all, el that jacket feller hidn't potted a bill for the dietner In my fiMit a fore i begun ter eat.. I shan't pay in 'ed. mate. lid had motet) forty things ober ged on it—moven tdoukt eat id - tete fort nights. Had a lot of winecharged, when, I belonglo the Sons. What I hey...ril pay for, when the work's dun. This here was rec..unnutended to me, for a Inerrant. tavern, . , _ Superintenderit.—Mydeir 0..4 Sri; only. our bill ()flare, designed simply to , indicate what titlieq May be called po,.. 7 . Our prices are uniform. iitakee.—The Mice it is—well, The feet 1 anything aeit'yek-atior. What l was wits Sgrilii 'ter sly' vise she*: the the soup wsen't so eleinas t had seem, for, yer see, whed 1 watt treseUitt* in Penn• sylvan's; they betl'io i nj k s o t i :zsittline (aware, SO elean'tkat ger *. dip, white cam.ttrielc. handkereher. Troeuidn't great it I , • [Exit Superintendent and "liners jack et leilere" amid great laughter.fram Me company.] Aristocrady. The hand blow" at aria Ariel-ace, is trans site pint of ant -nohhe'ailtd . gifted Rogers. He is deed but his %Pint livid' in the following extracts : • Let me gore it _en off hand blow. ltere, hateful, hairdos* aristocracy ;r I detest it above all things. I was subieeted to Its : bloated frown, when ,was hoy,_and,.l have a very early, if no; a native, inborn abhorrence of it. It beam) idea Abet you have any rights or any. feelings. You do not belong to the same ra c e with your pal „ • try, upp ish sri.tnerat. He odes not asso ciate with you when you are" with hird.-- He makes use of yoti. Hellnes itot'ree ognise von as a party in intereit 'of ivirat is going on. Yon are no more 3 compan ion to him thawhiii horse or' his dog—and you are no more than a horse or a:alog. if you condeacend.tn be of his association.— Ile belongs to the first families. But first here is meant last and least of everyslung honorable to humanity. Aristocracy has none of the lion in it—but it liels„bigger then a ilea•of Hons.—You must ;ware of it. It regards , everything allowed to you, as an allowance—a . favor., You h ave 11 0 rights. 11 you do receive arrything, you must do honisge for It alma by birth. It comes by mosey., It comes by 'idleness *veg.., It is .engen dered by trade. and by office. Old weel,th, however, breeds it timmititt of a generation or two ofhernageltaid pay* erty to bleated opulence,. will bread the worst kind. It will turn up the nose of the third or fourth generation along— so that it eau herdly,smell common (olks as they go on the *rouhd. You can kill its nose and upper hp as fsr as you can see . them. And there is a dreadful dumpsy daisy look about the eyebrow.. As snitch as to say. .4 care considerably less than no thitig about yds." Arid' tha.imite too—it is amazing peculiar. • I havn't any siiperfluitrof sense—but' --too much to be an aristocrat. Filially, it doesn't take much to bir tin aristocrat. I guess eristocracy is lack oriental, as much as anything.' , Sense of a certain sort, may accompa ny it, or, be in the same creature. But it is a senselesi tosser% mid moreover super lative hateful. • ON A vIOLENT'BOOLD. Beneath tide loinp of thy. I,iaa:Anibella Young. . e , Who no Um twenty-nioth of May Bergin to hold her tongue' Since custom Le tha powerful magistrate 'of man's life, let men, by all means, endeav- Or to obtain goad customs. Ile that follows his recreation instead of his business, shall in a little time have no business to font*. The laboring man in the present age, if be does but rem', has more helps 'to wis dom than Solomon had. If you can bo, well withoUt health, you can be happy liAthout virtue.--hurke. term thi4 theatre of human life, none bnt God and tingebt eltould be "lookers on." • ALLIROORICAL...--• 1 h pa IR a. man who holds your twat Whilst'You fight. •A 4nttiL vo RsL rr 1-•-•--The Pennty/va nian has discovered that all the Whig cautli dater for the t3uprento Bench are .11Iva tioniolf I ~ ge.Eilvvip : Pineal, the Trap4i!ul, hzus returpe4:to 1,10 Mao. , , Whir7ll( eetahrayeh,rttentbi e The Elopement. Oh ! is it JOY Or morro*, hope or fear, 1 Awakes thistremor in my timid breast ? I I bong commune In lalcret. Come not near, Aught that my solernn musings may molest. Hr wedded and umeeddril—ecstscy ! The trefoil of Fate Is then, at last, revealed, Which hid froin hove a deeper mystery Thad ever tlphing thorn adipos concealed ! Virtue. Chime Hciaven ! that duet the chattest love In 4 spire," Temper the heart, which sudden hops slates, And veins to rer.san ev'ry rash desire, 'Ai purest gold all dross precipitates. Oh t kirsch me! In life'S most refulgent hour, L2 , Clutida still may overshade serenest skies ; That, vitae Stich , storms appear, I may have , power Tories their darknese with unquailieg eyes ! A Judge Puzzled A Western Justice oldie Peace was re cently thus bothered by one of the hell• wild vagrants olthe hack woods. who was. brought up with en empty whiskey bottle in his own personal custody. "So, sir. yOu're there 1" said the Jes "Polon always come'as near the truth as !hair' was the reply. "Silence, sir ! where do you come from 1" °You'll' be smart if I keep silence and you find out "Don't he impudent, sir !'what is your . OCCUpation "Look here, Judge, I'll tell you one thing. and I went to do it respectfiilly."' sir." very impudent yourself." .* 'This will not answer.; whore do you 'come, from I" "This side of of sundown." "liaill--p4l-1111-000U Jation I" "Reckon." "What is it ?" . "Bet you n pint of whiskey, Ljnma_lell you what yours is. "Do Au mean tongue)! me ?" "Certainly, &rime. what'll you have r "It is neeessary that you should under etand that 'order and . peace . are necesatiry in lociety. Whatever wild freedom you may field in the woods, you are now here In t community of law antrorder, and quiet will evince wisdom on your par t." "Squire. I should like to understand you, but you aro too big for me. Joet tiny no More about it, and let's go and • take a drink." "I never drink." • , !.4 What A" • "Never, sir." "You ' don't A" "No o . itin never." "Sir. I bid you good morning. I . have 'no desire for any other acquaintance with voe: !nook! I'm touting !" and the i►aekwoodeman- broke out of the Court.— iilT..o4!ioubrose. POLITICA. Goy. Johtioton & the Veto Power. In'histipiteoh at Philadelphia last week Gov: : Joiliciron alluded to the charge with which the 4,(KOrQCO Press of the State has been, continually:assailing hint.--of an a 'burn of -the .Veto Power. We annex a feet atracts from the speech to which the resider), ettettikin is invited: Ileftire entering at large on the discus ;don of these Questions, he ,w °old beg leave . to advert for aerie( period, to seine charges' that 411 a heeu made against him by those .who are politically opposed to . him. He Was glad to know that the people of this country Niter condemn a man • without a 'hearing, for they knew that under our in stitutions,both sides of all ifuestious must be heard.. Vlte first charge against the present executive was, unfaithlultiess in 16..disaltergirel . his duty, as the Chief Magisttele..in regard to two prerogatives 1--the granting of pardons and the remit- Isamu! &tee, in . thin he is charged with basing filled to perform his duty to the citizens. " - The exercise of the pardoning power, idvested in the Supreme . Attgia two! stay. be *Wood, and, doubtless is a bused;by him who holds the power. and al so by, those who seek to have it used. lie had //tinted some pardons, but he could honestly say that Ito never granted one from poliikal prejudice ; lie never granted one, without having had the best reasons ' , given,' such as would be sustained by jus tice and truth. • He had granted pardons Opon•lnfbrmation which, in his judgment, was reliable. He might have granted some that ought cotta hikvi beans but the public records will idiow, by what means and on whose sofici taUon lie hid always granted them. As we grow older.'ouritiopulation increases ; crime consequently increases, and yet he had granted fewer, pardons than any of his immediate predecessors in the same space of time. His political opponents say that whether the pardoning power has been a bused or not, he has violated his pledge made to the people before hie last election. This charge is unjust mid untrue. He had declared against the too frequent use of of the pardoning or veto power, the abusing of that privilege ; he said so before his elec tion and he says so now. An undue exer cise of this privilege is dangerous tp the general welfare of the people. The veto power is a right guaranteed to the Gover nor by the Constitution, and too much care cannot be exercised in using it. For the purpose of putting himself right before the 'people on this great question, he had pro. vided himself with a law statistics by way of comparison. During the administration of Governor Porter, a period of 6 years, he vetoed 57 bills, being at least an average of 9 bills per year. During the administration of the late Governor Shenk, a period of three yearai he vented 60 bille..making 24 each year. At that time he (the speaker) was in the Senate of the State of Pennsylvania, and it was. then contended that such an exercise of veto power was anti•republicau and a great abase. lie ((761i. Johnston) had been in prover thrt;e peers, and during the whole of that lime, he , lotieerelsed the veto potter only 7 times. Cheers.] , •Tiall Arm wax 'dee veto of a kill id teke. TWO , DOI hA sus PIER lASN YI4I I NIJNBEII Ir.' • • ; Gun to a street in Brook ville.'and for vetoing it, wad because the preyintid; Legislathrd ' had padded the ianie ''• word fur word exatitly. [Roars of lasightet, nod applauhe.] The next was a bill, pm; vid ing for the coustructihn of ii radroattier theinterior azil the State. After it hall bdept. passed, 22 members out of 30 in the Sen., , ate, sent !nth a written retineat, to veto Old .-#: in!! assinging as their reason, that hitt *.' absolutely passed the bill; lint they diandti really know what they hdti voted for. [ltencwd hiughter.] ;! f The next till he *as that ildrtion of the apportionment bill Which eti r the right of the people; Aar ti to ttem, but formidable to detringoiPts. Ile had ,dso vetoed ;he hill passed giving the cburitt the power to grant license fee the retail o f liquor. for he believed that no Cotiit that held the rights and liberty til the Citizens under their aimed should have thi power to grant a license. . The next was the veto _of a bill that re.; quired in the rural districts that lawyers alone should be entitled to bo eleCtell As auciate Judges. lie believed that tlepeo4 pie had the itglit to elem. whom they. pleas ed. and to abridge that right was in direct violation of the Constitution of ''the State: On this question there was hot , a °Ogle man in the Leislaiuret after reading the Veto Message, that Would duet it vote az •gaiust it. For tots exereise cif the veld power, the charge is made against 'me. of violating a pledge given to the people.--; Ile did not knob► that any Other charge lied been made against him dining his o 1 finial term of three , years." The Governor closed by adverting to to hie course in reference mthe lsw, its*: aed at the closet of the last session, repeal ing a section of the law of 1847. All can did and honerable wen will approire of the Governor's action untie? the eiretim 7 stances, however much they .may: differ-as' , to the propriety or the expedieng of the taw itself. W e extract a few paragraphs "He did not Wish to defend himsalf,lot that - Was not necessary. On the 3d of • March of the year, 1847, an„aut Was Neil uh which.was a section relusitici jails for the custody of runaway slattes. Ii was signed by the late Ouveroor Shenk; Oil remained the. law oh , Me State .lot' :Am! "years: On the 27th of March hist, the ; Senate passed an mit repeUling this chi : l,B'o;4 l i' and the but was sent the House of Rep. resentattives, where it was permitted to lay thpost the table. ounolieed, until Withiii ,one hour of the adjouromen. • A emeinittee hail already been oppoiw ted to wail on the (ht -I Alogistrate„ , ut a 04 .; notince that the Legislature was ready to adjunct-1. A commtnee was also appoint ' ted to wait on the oilier branch of , the 'Legislature. The eustutuary resolutitini“. of thanks were passed. Lllll4 alter all Mis t , and in direct violation of the joint ales they suddenly took tip the sectiohi and passed it through, and in so short a note benne their adjournmentas entire:ye-a', vent a message being remitted. Swint" members were already on their way down the board walk, . , . tie, as the Chief Magistrate; had, early i in the session. made an urgent request . el., the members to pass all their bills of pub., lic iinporlinee at an early singe, atill if they , believed_ this of an much importance, as . Id now runteniled, the interests of the peopllf shoals have dictated a more proper course. • But what care they Ihr the weltare'of the - . people ? They put the passage of 'this bill off to . the last moment, and tie, as ernor, did not think that he was natter ;my Obligation to them for their courtesy. There is a Consi itutional right iii this, r question whirls was invaded by the a' tiun of the Legislature, that of giving tho'Chief , ; Magistrate ten days to examine ally 'hill that may be passed, and the failure fel guard tt.at right as a sworn officeri would' not . have been conintendahie, ;Mel judgment, he did nut believe that the;44, labour° repealed that clause for any other effect than making political capital thr theif own candidate in the coining couttret.' (Cries of that's it—applausei ' 1;', Read the Cekllficale! The following certificate. embodied In, the Proclamation of Gov Johna Lott, live to the reduction of the State Debit tells its own story. The reader Will see that it is signed by Eidirain Ilatilta, tor General, and John M. 4ltle, 'Stater' . Treasurer—both Loci!focor ! It sikiWa what Coy. Johnston's Sinking Fund lade': ing.--The're is no hurittrug about tide kind of a document : 011ie° of the Comio'rs. of the sliiltitie rand, 1" H •sts la suits, z-eittututter t, lOfii To his Exce Hooey Johnstus t tioveroor4 Penusy tvaui‘ I SIR :-All compliance with the 4tkeeer t , line of the acts entitled "An Act to creVa Sinking Fond and to provide for,the , ual and certain extinguishment tri the debt the Cominintweahlit" appitivel& 1,1142 10th day of April, 1840, the Itionuniseirmk f eta of said fund hereby certify mit the et; mount of the debt of the Cumino.nereatli, purchased since the passage of the laellul Assembly referred to. and now helf.E.4 them, is SIN HUNDRED AN Fir..t` 1 /04 NINE THOUSAND ONE DUNDR I) AND TI4ENTY-4M/ DOLI.A: . AND NINETY EIGHT-CENIS(4IIBS% 12 2,98) consisting of Et per cent, leanaltea gotiated under various acts of Aseetphll t Your obedient servants; A. I. RUS/414144'''' , .E. BANNS, 1 •-• . 4 JNO. Mt , kIICK2I„. Commisteopers I the Sinkinti,4o4, So it Ottes— , Ther Pacific Bteitonikio Which arrived at New Yorkoitaffiaitsitle, tam, frmn Engtandisought the4olkoloriq item of new. "Breatimuffe are greally depPeine44lo4 dittieully experienced in mak Ili . ; sides.-- 0 Flour detlined Id: A rind Wheat fit. * .41.1. Corn Or In limited dement% and Glorioui thit fi the Farr/tete f Wititith IS THE TARIFF OF !MG t `"ttA IXaQpiniiss 4 elpol our s mlM her 1 1 ., re.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers