.. . . , . t,' 1. rii ;.:. iTtUriai: l ;ll,ll,ol • . I'. -c-4! ;141', ~P.IT 1 • fii .1. if '" 1 fl ~.. ) : .. ' • . .„,- . . ,! - ;lf:' . ( , ?''''ir:l‘kr;.) . * F l , r c) • ri....E glr;i it\ • D. ~, , • , DT D. A. is C. H. BUEHLER. VOLUME XXII. INSURE YOUR PROPERTY! Yr HE ~ A darna County Mutual Are In surance Company" located at Get tysburg, is now in successful operation, and for lowness of rates, economical manage ment of its affairs, and safety in Insurances, challenges comparison with any other similar company. All its operations are conducted under the personal supervision of Managers selected by the Stockholders. Tha Books of the Company are at all times open to the inspection of those insuring in it. As no travelling agents are employed, persons desiring to insure can make ap plication to either of the Managers, from whom all requisite information can be gained. 11:7■The Managers are : Samuel Mil ler, A. R. Stevenson, Geo. Swope, and 1), A. Buehler, Gettysburg Wrn. B. Wil son, Menallen ; Robert M'Utirtly, Cum ber/and; Jacob King, Stratum ; Andrew Heinizelman, ; A. W. Maginly, Hamiltonban ; J. L. Noel, Oxford ; J. Musselman, jr., Liberty; H. A. Picking, Reading; Jacob Griest, Lalimore. WE DAVE THE GOOD 'OW, ARID NC NIOSTAKIE. WM. W. PAXTON hasjuilit returned from the city with by far the larg. eat assortment of BOOTS, SHOES, HATS, & CAPS, he has ever had on hand, embracing every variety of style, material, workmanship, &e, mann Ladies. Gentlemen. Boys and Girls, and children of every age. Ladies' Gaiters, " Jenny Linds, " Buskins, &Lc Gentlemen's Kip, " Calf, " Morocco, " Monroes, " Boots, &c. He has among his assortment the fine Fall style of Moleskin Hat, a beautiful ar ticle of Philadelphia make; ,also, the new style Black Soft Hats, just coining into fashion ; Slouch Hats, of every variety of color, A.:c. ; also, every variety of cloth, silk, and Linen Cape, of the newest style and bust make ; all of which he will sell very low for ready pay. He has made arrangements to manufac ture any article called for that he has not on hand. gLIT Call and examine the goods. IV. W. PA xTON Gettysburg, Oct. 31, 1851 MORE NEW GOODS. GEORGE el RAVED HAS just received from Philadelphia an additional supply of those cheap Long Shawls, Cloths, Cassinetts, Lawns, Poplins, Alpacca !Asters, Flannels, Do mestics, Fresh Groceries die., &c.. all o which will be sold at very reduced prices. Pleash call. N- B.—l would inform my customers and the public generally that I will remove my Store to Sell's Corner in the spring. where I will be pleased w se all who may favor me with a call. GEORGE ARNOLD. Nov. 28. 185I—tf NOTICE. riptiE partnership heretofore existing he tween the undersigned under the name and firm of S. FA HNES'COCK Ar. SONS is this day dissolved by limitation. All persons knowing themselves to he indebt ed will plesee call and settle as the Books most be closed. The Business will be continued by ue under the name and firm of S. FAHN ES TOOK & SONS, who, grateful for former patronage, hope for a continuance of it. SAMUEL. FAHNEATOCK, JAMES F. FAIINESTOCK, HENRY J. FAIINESTOCK. Jan. I, 1852 NOTICE. THE subscriber is desirous of closing up his Books connected with the Register's Office, and requests all who know themselves to be indebted to him fur unpaid FEES to call and make settle ment as early as possible. WM. W. HAMERSLY, Late Register and Recorder. Getty'sborg, Jast.2, 1852. MONEY AND WOOD WANTED. THE subscriberearnestly requests those indebted to him on accounts of long standing to call and pay him; slid those persons 'who have contracted to deliver WOOD, 'ire notified to bring it in as speedily as possible. Now is the Halloo prepare for Winter. W. W. PAXTON. Oct. 81. SKELLY & HOLLEBAUGII, T H ANKFUL for pest favors,respect fully inform their friends and the public, that they continue , the 'TAILOR ING business, at the old stand, and 'click a continuanee of the public patronage.— Germania made in the shortest time poe. o:7•Tbe in. and Philadel phia ibilf and Winter Fashion* have just peen reoeiv,ed. WHAT IS TREASON ? PrIIIIS is the quetition now.a.daya which has swallowed up all others, even'' 4 llfill saltpetre explodn 1" "Who threw that last brick ri eltd ' , Who struck Silly Patterson t" It is a hard question to answer but there is no question whatever, thin thelirmist and best selected stook of ET R,IRBONSist the county is tn%e founts! KURTZ'S CHEAP CO& NEIL - Oct. 1g 2==TME!! [From the lietionel Ere.] Left Alone. MY MISS PHOIBL CAREY She's left me hers ohms again 'Twill be • weary lot, Through all this cheerless white thus To live where she is not : To sit, where once we used to sit, With smileless lip and dumb, To count the moments since she went, And know not when she'll come We talked all through the summer time, We'd talk through all the spring, Of bow about the winter hearth We'd make a pleasant ring ; Of how with loving words and leeks The time should all be sped ; The Sre-light's glow is moumfal now, The books are all unread. We never were together long, We have not been se blest; I might have known this hope of ours Would perish like the rest : And half I trembled all the while, And feared it would be so— The hand of lite would press me beck From where her feet must go. If there shall ever be • time, When, as In days that were, My soul can whisper all its dreams And ails thouirhts to her : When I can shore her heart's sweet hopes, Or soothe its bitter pain— t would the bouts were past till then, And that were come spin ! Rise ha your Native Strength . BY JOSEI'II H. BUTLER Rise in your native strength, . Mechanics of the land, And dash the iron rule From rude oppression's hand ! By all the might or MIND, Assume the place of Disa— ffecd not the scoff of thu•e Who scorn the artisan. Ye sinews of a state, Your nation's pride and boast, Whose glory crowns her hills. And guards your native cost. You are her wa•LTN In eruct, Her vital breath ye are; And, when the bolts at death are hurl'd, Ye are her shield in war By the eternal sword, To stern browed Juatice given By freedom's holy eel& The might of wrong is riven Strong niunumects arise, In record of your praise, Transmitting down your names, To men of other days— Proclaim to all the world Your usefulness and worth, Speak nut with trumpet tongue, Ye mighty men of earth ! Was nor the soil ye tread Won by your fathers' blood I Then on Oppression's self Roll back oppression's flood ! Seize with determined band The standard almost of BIGHT, And let not even death Turn your resolves to flight. By Him who gave to man The soul's ethereal fire, That glorious day is NO W Our motto, onward—a Dula ! EMMI 0 rt !•*, ct g ou, THE FOLLY OF PRID E.—The Rev. Sidney Smith, for many years one of the contrib utors to the great English Reviews, thus discourses on the folly of pride, in such a creature as man : "After all, take some quiet, sober mo tnent of life and add to together the two ideas of pride in man, behold him, a creature of a span high, stalking through infinite space in all the granduer of littleness.— Perched on a spec of universe, every wind strikes into his blood the coldness of death; his soul floats from his body like melody from the string ; day and night, as the dust on the wind, he is rolling along the heav ens, through a labyrinth of worlds, and all the creations of Cod are floating above and beneath. Is this a creature to make for himself a crown of glory, to deny his own flesh, to mock at his fellow sprung from the dust to which both will soon return ? Does the proud man not err ? Does ho not suffer ? Does ho die ? When ho reasons, is he never stopped bldifficulties? When be acts is he never tempted by pleas ure ? When he dies, can ho escape the common grave 1 Pride is not the heritage of man ; humility should dwell with frail ty, and atone for ignorance, error and im perfection." Sterne, who used his wife very ill, was one day talking to Garrick, in a fine senti mental manner, in praise of conjugal love and fidelity. "The husband," said Sterne, "who behaves unkindly to his wife do serves to have his house burnt over his head." "If you think so," said Garrick, "I hope your house is insured." Horace Mann thus sums up a few of the advantages of modern invention :—"One boy, with a fourdrinier wall:rake more paper in a twelve month than all Egypt could have made in a hundred years during the reign of the Ptolemies. Ono girl with a power•press, will strike off books faster than a million rarities could copy them before the invention of printing.— One man, with an iron foundry, will turn out more utensils in a day than Tubal Cain could have forgod had be worked diligently to this time." A CERTAIN TEST.-A cobler at Leyden, who used to attend the public disputations held at the Academy, was once asked if he unftxml•Latin. "No," replied the me chanic, "but I know what is wrong in the argument." "How ?" replied his friend.' "why, by seeing whole angry first." Inattameono.-A Pawtucket paper had thin :—"A man made application a few dile since, far itumranee on &building bit. . : noted hi a riikile whore there is ,Ao iire4l.ll - ln answer to the quoit*, "ming are the facilities for extinguishing fires rt ho wrote, "It ruin sometimes." GETTYSBUBG, PA. FRIDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY V I 1851. Love thy Neighbor. When Mary and I were married, (says Grant Thornburn,) we were young and foolish, for we had nothing to be married with; but Mary was delicate, and I thought I could take care of her best. I knew I had a strong arm and a bravo heart to depend upon. We rented a chamber and wenEto house keeping. We got together a little furni ture—a table, bedstead, dishes ; but our money failed us before we bought the chairs. I told Mary she must turn up a tub; for I could not run in debt. No, no. It was not long before our rich neighbor, Mrs. M—, found us out ; and very kindly, she supplied um half a dosim of chairs, ad ded to our store. They wore old ones, to be sure, but answered just as well for us. I shall -never forget the new face those Chairs put upon our snug quarters; they never looked just right before. Tho tables have turned with Mrs. M— and me.— Now she has become a poor widow. "But 'I I I she shall never want while I have anything —never," cried the old man, with a beam ing face ; "I shall never forget those old chairs." Ah, now the secret was out 1 It was the inlerul of the old chairs which main tained the poor widow. She was living on the interest and compound interest of a little friendly act done years before ; and it sufficed for herself and for her daughter. How beautiful it is to see how God bless es the operation of his great moral law--- 'Love thy neighbor :" and we should often er see it, could we look into the hidden paths of life, and find that it is not self-in terest, nor riches, nor fame, that binds heart to heart. The simple power of a friendly act can do far more than they.— It is these—the friendly acts, the neigh borly kindness, the Christian sympathy of one towards another, which rob wealth of its power to curse, extract the bitter from sorrow, and open wells of gladness in deso late homes. We do not ilways see the golden links shining in the chain of hu man events, but they are there ; and hap py is he who feels their gentle but irresis tible influence. A Woan to YOUNG MEN.—Wishing and sighing, imagining and dreaming of great ness, said William Wirt, will not make you great. But cannot a young man command his energies T Read Foster, on "Decision of Character." That book will tell you what is in your power to accomplish; you must gird up your loins, and go to work with all the indomitable energy of Hanni bal scaling the Alps. It is your duty to make the most of time, talents, and oppor tunities. Alfred, King of England, though he per formed more business than any one of his subjects, found time to study. Frederick the,Great, with an Empire at his direction, in the midst of war and on the eve of battle, found time to revel in the charms of philosophy, and feast on the luxuries of science. Napoleon, with Enrose at his disposal, with kings in his auto-Chamber, and at the head of thousands of men whose destinies wore suspended on his arbitrary pleasure, found time to converse with books. The following pretty lines, by ANNis Kirs.so, are from the Frankford "Hama :" Friendship. Alas! we know not who are friends, Till in the dark and trying hour When fortune fails, and slander lends Her tongue, and tries her power. True friendship is but seldom fumed • Yet many claim the name of frien d, Who when the 'binderies tongue doth sound Will try to injure, not defend. He who the name of friend deserves, Though fortune fail, remains the MUDS ; The same affection still preserves ; Regan!, net riches nor yet fame. Then call not him your faithful friend Who would not point your erring ways, Who would not care and and counsel lend And comfort your declining days. Ah me! friendship's chiefly but a name ; A charm that lulls the heart forlorn ; It always follows wealth and fame, But leaves the poor Unknown to mourn. An old clergyman, preaching before some of the American army at Corpus- Christi, made use of these remarks : "Ten thousand dollars is a sum large to most of us ; yet what would it profit P You can not carry it out of the world. Then what, would you do with it, or you, or you, or you ,1F" pointing with an oratorical flourish at each repetition to different individuals befoe him. At length an old stager, well known to the Corpus Christi army as Judge 11—ys, could contain himself no longer. When the finger pointed at him, and in I the momentary pause succeeding the searching question, the Judge broke the solemn anew* by answering, in a load, shrill tone, 11 .1.ay it out in mules ?" "Shall I attempt," says a narrator "to portray the effect 1 The audience were convuleed. The holy man niaintained himeolf witk becoming gravity and self possessitin for' a roOmint; And made * a feeble attempt to proceed, but soon gave up in,,!iiippair."—liiiickerbeit4tr: Vg) t.in one 4in bewl °ool Dui UM* rieke la everrhieg ; • the tausitiou is not iliiitapt,, croak the fee** which t a ll 44 PM we AO* lima to no ntan,lto that which will , toll us that we should do good to all mon. „ FDARLSBB AND FREE.” Extraordinary Novelties. We are hardly aupprised by the intelli ' genre that Mr. Barnum is now in treaty for the following additions to the attrao done of his American .Museum. Whenev er he shall be able to announce them as on hand, the rush to that popular establish ment must surpass all past, experience.— They are 1. A Burnieller who isn't afraid the pas sage of the Maine Lew will "injure the Temperance cause." 2. An Office-Holder who thinks he has been kept in long enough, sind ia now wil ling to stand back and give otbdiraohanee. 8. A partisan of despoOsm iibo doesn't intensely halo Louis Kossuth, and do his utmost to parry the force of, his eloquent appeals for American sympathy for the' down-trodden Millions of Europe. --4. A bitter, rabid Loce-Foco who isn't anxious that the Whigs should run some body—anybody—olso than thn. Scott for next President. 5. A politician out of office who doesn't think Republies , ungratefuL. and his own merits very inadequately appreciated. 6. A good-for-nothing loafer, who never accomplished and never will accomplish anything, who doesn't suppose he could make an ample fortune if somebody would only lend him the means of getting to-Cal ifornia. 7. An Editor who 4 likes a Esocial glass' who isn't down upon all stringent anti-Liq uor Isegislation on grounds of print ipk. Owing tto the enormous expense of pro curing these wonders, the Free List, in chiding the Press, will inevitably be sus pended during their exhibition.—/F. Trib toe. The following is certanly the beat anti bacchanal song we have ever seen. Some of the best lyrics in the language are on the other side, and the efforts of temperance song writers, however truthful and sound in their philosophy, have been anything but songs. We think, however, the ene my has been fairly met in this instance, and we hope the author will adapt his vers es to_ one of his own beautiful melodies. SONG. Oh ! Comrades gill no Glass Pr Me. BY STEPHEN C. FOSTER Oh ! comrades, fill no glass for ins To drown my soul in liquid flame; For if 1 drank, the toast should be— To blighted fortune, health; and fame. Yet, though I long to quell the Wife 'I het passion holds against my Ws. Still boon companions may ye be; But, comrades, fill no eau for me ! I know a breast that once was light, Whose patient sufferings need soy care— t knows hearth that once was bright ; Bul drooping hopes have nestled there. Then, while the tear drops slightly steal From wounded hearts that I should heal, Though boon companions ye may be, Oh! comrades, fill no glass For rue! When I was young, I telt the tide Of aspirations undefiled : But manhood's years have wronged the pride My parents centered in their child. Then by a mother's sacred tear, By all thqt memory should revere, Though boon companions ye may be, ,Oh ! comrades, fill no glass for me ! A Goon ItyAsoN.—A country pedago gue had two pupils, to one of whom be was very partial, god to the other Nevem One morning it happened that these two boys were late, and were called out to account for it. "You must have beard the bell, boys ; why did you not come ?", "Please, sir," Ladd the favorite. "I was dreamin' that I was goin' to Californy and I thought the sehool-bell was the steam-boat bell, as I was goin' in." "Very well," said the master, glad of any pretext to excuse his favorite ; "and now, air, turning to the other, what have you to say ?" "Please, sir," said the puzzled boy—"l I! was a wailing lo s ssee Tom of!" Esterigio-What It 45)es. We love your upright energetic men.— Pull them this way,!and then that way, and the other. and they only bend but never reak. Trip them down, and Ma trice they are on their feet. Bury them in the mud, and in an hour they will bent add bright. They are not ever yawning away exis tence, or walking about the world as if they had come into it with only half their soul ; you cannot ketp them dowit--You destroy them. But for these, the world would soon degenerate. They are the salt of the earth. Who but they man any noble project i They build: our cities, and rear our manufactories. They whiten the ocean with their sails, and blacken the heaven, with the smoke of their steam vessels and furnace fires.; They draw their treasure from the mine. They plough the , earth. filessingi pn them I Look at them young men, and take'cuurajje • imitate their example, catch the spirit 61 1 their Nieto , . Without life, what are you good for, tit is passed idly away f We should ever 'measure thus life's employment; ' A cheerful face .ie nearly si food for an invalid u healthy weather. fo make s nick man think he to dying. all that is• ne• oessiu7 is to look half , (Mod yourself,— Hope and ; despair are as catching as cum neous complaints. Always look sunshiny whether you feel so or fiot. Wag Palirrev—A. German ptiest.,,wai 'flaking in procession st the head of his parishoneni over oultivated'tialda l in order to procure a tingeing upon the orOpe,— When he'eanse to one of unprltnitrinop• purisw ha would pass on: 11 0iinik"nor• prayers and singing will avail nothing; 41tit must bse manure.", Tnn MAN'S Kai greal..t 'rick natlid ft iipresied hi France at Louis Na poli's*** deleredisedon tip - settle itooltion ahe elopol emoted , by Louis Philippe tip on the spot where . lye eon and lump IN d'Orleans, was killed. LECTORS ON WONAN.—Hert. Horace Mann delivered a lecture on Woman on Monday night, in die New YOrk Taber nacici which was listened to by as large a number of men and woman, principally the latter, as could get within the building. The Sun says--The whole snbjeet of the sexes—their relative duties, positions, properties, qualittes,—..alike, but oh, how different r. *as opened up, in a way t, convince the female line,—man of course entertaining no doubt about the matter,-- that woman is barely "a little lower than ; the angels." The authorities of the pos. tulate, in addition to the ipse thxlt of the lecturer, were—Mtiore, Byron, Shalt ,speak., and lastly Burns ; whose unequall ' ell cottliliment was quoted : 'His 'prentiee hen' be tried on man, And then he made the Lamm 01" A school has arisen, in our day, observed the lecturer, that the sexes are equal in faculties, and adapted alike for all the pin.: [titbit of life. Full of this, a Miss Maria Weaver, whom he would call Maria Wea ver, Esq. (laughter) had dressed herself in the garb of man, blue coat, vest, . and continuations, (great, laughter, in which the ladies most heartily joined !) realizing in a manner, the oldetying,..theAsilorinak the man.", According to this notion any knight of the shears might transform wo man into ma'amd mawinto woman; but the anatomical construction of both was opposed to the thereory, for from thiferown of the head to the sole of the foot no single 1 organ is alike ►n the two, but diversified. In the divine economy of creation, the human heart was created male and female ; and albeit it might be alleged that Woman was made out of one of the TWO 7 - hundred and fifty bones in man, it Must be coulees- ed that one bone was a very different thing from a bone with a live woman about it. (I,aughter.)• It had been' thus suggested by those engaged in physiological pursuits that woman being make from one of the most crooked bones would - account for certain little infirmities of temper, but on the other hand ft must be confessed that what was desigued to mate and be a match for man, must be somewhat crooked. (Great laughter.) There were innate and cognate distinc bone - between male and female, which tut lure never lost sight of, unless in the for mation of a :monster. Man surpassed in stature and strength ; woman excelled him in grace and beauty and affection, Ile was distinguished by Doric strength, she by Corinthian beauty--God's noblest work I He the Arboretum, elle the Flora of the material world. The lecturer glanced at the position of women in different countries. establishing the fact by experience that where placed on an equality with man, their fine abili lies and gifts of nature rapidly developed themselves. For this equality he earnest ly and convincingly pleaded. An Interesting Incident Mr. Joseph Leavitt, one of our citizens. returned from California, in speaking of bights and scenes in California, mentioned the following incident, which speaks elo quently of the true humanity of hearts in California, where selfishness and passions are supposed to reign with unwonted force : During the raging of the cholera in Cal. Worm, a young man from the State of Mississippi, Jesse Cook, about twenty three years of age, who was engaged in the laborious work of mining. Chanced to meet with a family irom Missouri, con sisting of husband, wile, and .two children, one of them , au infant. Disease had at tacked one of the children, a little boy, and he was soon stricken down by chol era, and 'laid by the sorrowing parents in a little grave dug in the bank of the river.— Soon alter, the father of the child died, leaving only the mother and her infant daughter. ..Her grief weagreat. She was in a strange land. The husband of her youth and the first born son of her hopes had departed to the land of spirits, and their remains were lying 'in their graves in the quiet vale of a river. Her earthly support had failed, and yet she clung to life for the sake of her infant daughter.— Strangers proved kind, and the hand of benevolence ' provided for her wants, and the voice of kindness greeted her ears.— .But disease preyed upon her, and dipith tore her away from her tender infaut, , altd by strange bands slab was buried.- The sweet loving eyes of 'in ' 'infant looked up cohfidingly into the face ul young Cook, and a emibs wreathed its beautiful lace, and its delicate little hands stretched' forth confidingly. No female was there to careseadd care far it, and the young miner, with a swelling 'heart, and widra grist in God, and hie own resour ces; took the nameless infant, then only seven months old, in charge, and provi ded for it with a father's care, and a ltdOlh er's love. He daily fed and Washed and dreised it,' and gave it-the flind Minns his mother,'Mary by day- he cradled lit niter biMiti hie toils, and at digtOltudilled it as angel to his bosom... After a white he WOO ,appliiation to various families at Saniainefiki citylo hare The - abilottikan Care 'Cif; and edited to' pay 'ere 'thillare 'a weekV hut none were willing 'to , undertalte the two( ft.. , end . he abandoned mining and raeolcpti to proceed to Gregen,,aud there take upland for a farm, and Maki a finale fib'' the little orphan; tha'ainirde Unadorned 'Wm -in 'WO Ease are sufficient ly , -tonehint ;and- suggestive without any CotowelAlstkin ,Chris than 44trowe, . . , AO leireatiAaT TRIAL.-,A trial *boat the' right' of titofterttin a'ealf, lately took plaiut IA Burlitigtbn, foes. , 'f he diladellY lay iii the molar of the calf'. tail i,the Np i Opaopte IA htplaimiff ?wore the tail,, e; was V , ,white t Out ef lha defendant that it w •biaisk. ' kitt Court wasOcieupiad two days Asitts the.istail the Jury staid out till mid- Aisle tad deuU not aftee. Ited a naw Wig is tab! had i ibe coats already amount to 11360. • [From She N. Ark BPINO*. The Fugitive Agave ♦ ICIIXE IX RXIITOX, A colored girl, eighteen years of age, 1 a few years ago escaped from. Slavery at the South. Through scenes of adventure and peril, almost more strange than Oceion can create, ihe found her any to Boston, She obtained am ployment,- secured, frieed 6, and became a' consistent member of the Methodist church. She became intereet, ted ha a very worthy young.-man,other own complexion, who wee a member of the same church. They were aeon Mar.: rind. Their home, though' hurnble, was d th u e sutu d al ° ee l ni Pi per illY ate an . dl M7lrfrat C TartiCtlieti; wants were supplied. Seven rears pile- eat away. ' Thy 'had two litifi'lloYei. l WO sit, the other four 'years of s ir . trhelie children, the cons cif a free faelisrAut of a mother who had been a slave, by the laws of our Southern States were denoted. Xi their mother's fate. These Bostod , boye, born beneath the shadow of Fanenil Hall, the sons or a free citizen of Boston, and educated in the Boston free schools, went by the compromise,- of-the -Coustimelen admitted to be slaves, the property of e South Carolinian planter. The Boston father had No right to his own sone.— The law, however, had long been consid ered a dead letter. The Christian moth er. as she, morning and evening.'leved with her children to prayer, felt that they were safe from the slayer hunter, surroun ded aa they wereby churches, ;he schools, and Melees institutions of Maioachuiette. The Fugitive Slave law was-enactetl f -,' It revived the hopes of the slave owners...-. A young, healthy, end energetic mother, with two fine ERIN, was a rich prize:— She would make an excellent breed er. Good men been to say "we moat enforce this law, it is one of the eompro mists of the Constitution." Christian ministers began to preach, “the voice of law is the voice of God. There' is nu" Idglier rule of duty. ; We moat send back the fugitive and her children, even though we take our sister from tlso sacramental table of our common Saviour." The pour woman was panic stricken.— Her friends gathered round her and trem bled for her. Her husband was absent from home, a seaman on board, one of our Liverpool packets. She was afraid to go out of doors, lest some one from shif'South should see her, and recognise her. One day, us she was going to die grocery fur some provisions, her quick and anxious eye eiviglit a glimpse of a man prowling amend, whom she immediately recognised as Trim the vicinity of her old home of Slavery. Almost fainting with terror, she hastened home, end taking her twolithil• dram by . the hand. fled to the house of a friend. She mid her trembling children were hid in a garret. In lees than an hour after her escape, the officer with a writ, tame for her arrest. It was a dark and stormy Jay. -The rain, freezing as it fall, swept in floods through the streets of Boston. • Nighteame, cold, black, and tempestuous. At midnight her friends took her in a hack, and con veyed, her, with her children, to the house of her pastor. A prayer-meeting bad been appointed there, at that hour,. in be half of their suffering sister. A small group of stricken hearts were there assem bled. They kneeled in prayer. The poor mother, thus hunted from her home, her husband far away, sobbed, in the bitter ness of her anguish, as though her heart would break. Her little children, trem bling before a doom the enormity of which they were incapable of appreciating, cried loudly and uncontrollably. The humble minister caught the contagion. His voice became inarticulate through emotion.= Bowing hie head he ceased to pray, and yielded himself to the /Ribbings of sympa thy and grief. The floods of anguish were unloosed. -Groaningit andlamenta l tions filled the room. Nu one could pray. Before the Lord they could only weep.— Other fugitives were there, trembling in view of a doom more dreadful to them than death. After an hour of weeping, for the voice of prayer had passed away into die sub limity of unutterable anguish, they took this Christian mother and her children, in Chack, and conveyed them to one 01 the unard steamers, which tormincely wee to sail for Halifax, the next day. They took them in thegloom of midnight; through the tempest swept streets; lest the slave hunter should meet them. Her brethren and tuatara of the church raised a little mon ey from their scanty means to pay her passage, and- to save.her, fur a law days, 'from starving, after her first arrival in the cold lind of strangers. ' Her husband aeon returned to Boston to Ind his home, gate late, his wife and his children exiles in foreign land. ( rbese facts need no word. painting. .1 think that this narrative nay he relied upon as accurate. 1 received the facts from the liju bf one, a mother of the church, whir was present at that "weeping ,meeting," before the: Lord., Such is sla very in Boston, in the year 1852, Shade Of Calhoun ! Has the North 'Milling to with Slavery ? Joni( 8. O. BanNowitc. Me.. Jan. 1852. A itlowtso hle,cutes.--The ['ough t eepste Y.i Eagle, says that a ma- Chine for. mowing, 'ma nufactured in the western part of thattline, hoe iscentlylbeen introduced IRO Dindbe“ eountyvvritiob •wiII•PFP44 I Y great advantage to fernaers r , , ti l ls xr *wonted to gut andipread an acre an hoar oral , Kind of gplos with . I Pair of 49P041,0n el lauds fmtjtlo) 0 1 1- 14411Ctignio and 40 1 101 4 well al! ft com, done with isiytheby the best of mowers. The machine is simple in iticonstruetion, and can be r rbanigod' by' any kiwi 'Capable of driving a pair of lhotiteih. , It is highly recommended by a igrgenumber,of farm era 'who Mee' tulett.ll with 'tweets* in-the , ereatern and control Oart'of the State. • 4 gtxfd Belot" it a oonforentie meeting in ink town irstb:4-.-4 about Unity miles i north of Boston, addressedlilfaud i ow s.une Sabbath eireningas followq "My friends, I there id anew neatrine going about now-a- I,daye. -. We ant ,old Ott all mankind are going to Heaven. But, my bralltran and. sisters, we hope for better things, ' • '4f` ,11.701811 TWO DOS LARS AU• ANNUM INIJIBEff 50., Imi lihruket your tionmew.- ►) Men and horses. only. sweat. ' Se dirt the medicsl men whose Weimer It ii , IM investigate the wonderful living - naelehiltd lam of both. The oz cools.ofrhyweetehth (rated respiration ; if heated in fire fortiliof he partially opens his mouth, drop,' htil '_loops, and by rapid respiration, or brestihrd ing, , throws o ff the excess of heat whiellti has accumulated in the system:- Tiredly *hit rens at the ride ofthe earriagelhibmgki the intense heat of a July sun, dasher 'ht* the, cold spring with impunity andthitollll.. refreshed, having no perspiration soithetik f "when men or horses tuhmergetiier shawl ilar manner would suddenly atria , terw apiration, and it they survived the",sherias it would be but to die with acuterotakviimii ' is inflammation."'in violent motidn'llim respiration of both men and tiniieshie in. creased, but not sufficiently so as Melo*. otrthe heat that is generated--they'persfarer through the skin, the pores of whletti'helt cone opened or enlarged, and it is"WhSitt in this condition they are osceetlingir Bei hie tale injured, and when great eitretis necessary to rreserve the health of either; . We saw a noble lookincanimalthe nth ; er day standing, by the road stile, with perspiration, dotted with white torm4 end apparently highly heatbd. TitiM tili. stood, unclieckell by rein or halter, fait , fully . waiting his master's return. li - aokrrartit - inters - the *smell lAA" ' ~., A -- slowb zero I Impatiently he Imii I th ice.under. his feet, ritampisd tho'bil, Mat wiiilly flung hilt Dead from ' side' tirtillN while'hle lips were contracted iiiii'vhtitrai epllapsed,griving him a fierce en,d•diMASO ii appearances. No blanket/. 04 4 04411'Ni w e t and ITMed l'intlY• Vfhtle,,,,,moir ing Mr froze stiff the Moist 04,1tilii.' etood nut front the Skin': ' lid War atitaiiiii sufferhigly severely. Anti tide 1 laird ) common siglftrilblittliiii ifilrOhilob of the, physiology and funetions Ofithilp% that men who *mild i rldusifait'AiiiMAthl price car a favorite animal auffeif,liite, lid' *avid in the condition iftleli'vre'lltikistle scribed .' - ' 's a "'"f r q . ..:. ...4 .....01 , , t,1211.P141 If the horse, 1PP.niTn.,W9v4m1,,, ,, t• 'tack of Me ellidini*lFfne*lnqllKTlFl some-shape, it was hie good ono Nit not from wiStiOnt ur h*ttuttlitY fittlAtrin ufltirowner. , , • ,•...-,. ~,-; 3 ,51 hc,c, ,Icisteil Even in mild WenthorvsthOtie4B . ellfitill summer, neither man not...short* 41.01110110' • main quiet "inns cool.dravght ridistr and wet with perspiratio n .;,., Mi Mi the colds . complained of wouldle pnitti tltttr ed by observing this 'aimplotslo.lo..Mbli - thoueands bf valuable lives , prIMMIWINI which are now, annually estingsm x But you, who value the abblosnalltieill which you Mlntrsili' , Wheltyolo 4 Milar ibt'bnsiffies" or *.ti t rlettheoteilikair charity noble over you steed litthifirkzges ofa good warm blanket. - Degmindwprierie. you will find it cheaper BMW pli.fsitre4rem elling on foot, or 'drawing YournikWiluti- selvev.—N. B. Farmer." , '' , z; i" ?eil 9,11 Lice Go Catiki..."'' . -. ✓ ' During the winter season.6'filirjilei sheep are oftentimes (dieted eileiiicthin, such as lice and, tick*, ilv 7 :" 4 111.100. generally happens to thosiiliineffi and the vermin preveritAlieli iiiiliilik r id4 sometimes have been - knows tO ilitliegMr death qf the auimal itself 6YWhirßity and prostration ,o 1 Ineingtfi'`Wliilf ... 3 Decision. We have' fried ail IMO ffMblit washes and lotion' app s oiptnumti le it re have been cointitendettibrdelig t these p ests. Miity cifihieli`iiifes 1 v if i but it is a 'trouble * itpl. ' tan l cti _ lit weather. 'it ii id small ` Ili 'OW' oji,a calf er row ell;orei' t era 1 '. Mid-Winier, end itit he ntiet4lior the job will U 44 balo'hil'iliik l _ espied and,atoot agtonaplionethwlitlsajtoy. ~.. ing these Itatinto hlittA 0110 **l l l,oolloolo ' death by lobelia° iimiukvic • 4014..1400110 large tube or km. mitik* Inhilltli, ,It!!****9" into which tobacco istay'bcput intlf4l.l4l. fire, one end i of the tube mar be .01red,sni to the nose ors hellovir, andsthicother,eigrw plied among the i biir, of Me ordf....Mistittni of the sheep, and the smoke Istleit*kipitY the bellows. The•destruetimr,e(*.imire min is sore, A blanket. tury4alf **WM * the over the creature. whielZMillstensi,MAttep entoke in contact, with thelekinviellid thus render the MAW moreispeekkes.is. operation. , By, having it mlillablisittiONV menu made. a Isle stock, of,M , ltie Mail* of sheep my, be geetessitielk skiestibies Hens, and other fowls .thelt.:o4ll hiG with Rego tory be freed from itmilagliesliNf same way,—Maine.Flarwter. il i a Hamm Revives mai eitiiteml4l. l L , On the 14th ultimo Dr `' .- if 5611101" 1' Gorhitin I n this conitiY: (114' I' ea the Mn' delimatir opera+, ill 1 or Chauttique cotinty'dilitstien 'n ey tent is often subject to. li &Mil Thlll. moving two tumors fioM'b6nesitr(hdfitia pectoral intliMli of the right bre!st l and die entire grotty' of lyMplithiollandi fititzter arin.pii. ' The latiee'nOtifisine4tl'ii ri arid 'were 'much . diseitied; Prsiducisiginaelt entering to the patithiet "'Fits Ohltiloqfoent was administered by Dr. 11. H. Deelki, as A l illell !IY Dr. , Itheile s ,ant) Ohms. An ex, tensire incision bias made, with the may( the Pa‘ient VUffldid. The entire ?POW Lion opittpted Joliet tar,amy-five musitpt ; duringihe distillation of tomato from,iivive and Iteneath, the blood-smell and ,itecrlaiu which are numerous in this sectigN irKot a Moseular,fibre Mai seen to more. %line fixlo 3f inutest Oriq• the operation was.thipi the patient opened her eyes end Inlid;.-4- , ~ 1 am yet conscious ; do not operept i ple I stn more affected with t h e choloTorm. Whin told the operation'was orer. she/wag atTeeted with joy, and said ohs' was .not codicious of hating experienced' , pain.-4 Geneva (lax. ' A SthouLAa HAUL or tertown News, says ihut a Meeilll#e ago, Mr. John Hedgerow laid'eut•hiwNiiga of Contegye' Point, in ineetr , rirunenedo strenge'to soy, 14 caught filly buticlNN/ jaf fish. which' were already''stning:upV ttirtl Prepared ft?r, maq‘et•• • , ~..7.1F V.311 ,;.1 , Yv At t u ecta from Uppitil 0 11111 ;ic n o r, t. Kcesuih with 200 , ri► achieving Holistic" iodependinen. r 11 ; . ,tit nvitt , ` islitisorot ;poi' -,,'t .1r4.11
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