mi. D. A. & (TA. BUEHLER VOLUME XXV. 90 YOU WANT A WELL MADE AND CHEAP SPIT OP WINTER CLOTIIING? I:nto, you can he accommodated by calling on MARCUS SAMSON, who has just opened and is now selling rapidly at his 'Store York street, opposite the flank, a 'yery large choice and cheap as. r oortment of • FALL lad WINTER GOODS, ,o which he invites the .atiention of the They have been selected with great care in the Eastern cities. have been bought ihaP for Cash, and will be sold cheap fur 'cash , -cheaper than di any other establiilimini Gettysburg. His itock consists in part of Black. Bine, Olive, and Green CLOTH COATS, with Irock.dress I and sack coats ; also Tweed._Cashnseret, and Italian cloth; also, a large mock of OVERCOATS. which can't be . heat in variety. quality or price, out of the cities ; also a very superior stock of PANTA LOONS, conoisting in part of excellent and well made French Black Doe•ekin Cassimere Fancy Cassimere, Satinet% Velvets, (lord,. Linen, anti Cotionads.— The stock of VESTS comprises every variety of manufacture—fine black Satin. Silk,• Velvet. Italian Silk, white; fancy and buff Marseilles. Summer cloth. Ste.., Also constantly on hand a largo lot of TRUNKS. Hats, Carpet Bags, Umbrellae, Boots and Shoes. Window Shades, Vio lins, Aecordeons, Guitars. Flutes, Fifes, Melodeons, Mirrors. Razors, Spectacles. Spoons. Watches and Watch Guards, silk and cotter! 'Handkerchiefs, Cravats, fine painters, Gloves, Stockings, Spring Storks, ,Shirte,,,tind shirt Collars, and a splendid assortment of JEW ELRY—in fact every thing in the way of Boy's and Men's furnishing line. j' First-rate chewing Tobacco always on hand—a t are article which chewers are requested to try. MARCUS SAMSON. Nov.lo, 1854.—tf MONEY . LOST ! TT . is an ESTABLISHED FACT, that .A - nutny persons lost money, by not pur elisaing Goods elate well known CHEAP - S SOREAhinin — Artiold,.at his old stand, on the South East corner of the Diamond, where he is now receiving the cheapest, prettieht and best selected Stock of Fall and Winter Goods, •everhefore offered to the citizens of Ad sins county, consisting in part—as fol !Nick, Blue. and Brown;Frencli Cloths, Fatiey. Felt. -and Beaver Cloths for Over (-Sonivalt,filtylea.). , filarkAuti , Espey Casisseres. Tweeds. Jeans. C,aeittet is, &e.. &c.olor Men's ware, Silks. Mous de Lame. Alpacas, Merinoes, Plain and Fancy Sack Flannels, 'also a besiniful assortment of 'Manus and Silks for Boonets, Bonnet Rib bon anti, a emu variety of other articles, all al which the public are respectfully re quested to call and examine forthemselves, believing Ow it, is only necessary to see our goods, ?rice them, and examine, to in sauce parsons to purchase. A large lot of Trunks aleo received which will he sold low. ABM. ARNOLD. Septembette, FARMS TOR SA LE) NEU CIETTYSBUIRC. No, . 1-4 60 AcrestgoodStone , House, and Barn, with other out-buildings plenty 01, good timber, meadow, and never. isiht water. N0..2-175 Acres: large Stone House, large new Barn. Shops. Sheds. earn-cribs, water, in nearly every field ; plenty good fruit, sufficient timber and good meadow. No. 3-125 ' Acres : first rate , House and Barn, end out-buildings, excel lent meadow. good running water. choice fimbee. &n. ; nenr the turnpike. No. 4.;-180 Acres: g ood large Brick House, whit out-buil ingi, plenty never failing water, at the house and in , the fieldo ; 80 Aeres excellent timber, plenty pod meadow, first rate Orchard, of all blur( of fruit, good tenant-linnet.. &c. No. 5-200 Acres : large brick /tune, with backbuildinga., large stone Bank Barn. with sheds and cribs, and all ether nut-buildings. such as dry-bonsai smoke-house. droc.,; between 50 and 00 Acres in good meadow, plenty good tim ber. good:fencing,Orchard of all kinds .of choice fruit. several wells of water. &c. No. 6-247 Acres , : near Pipe titiek. - Frederick cotintY, Isige Sfone Hone,. Bern,Brnoke•house;lspring-house. ihede, pens. 'oribs.''plenty , of water and fraiti`from 50 to -60 acres good timber— can be bought cheap,' 'No. 7.-.105 Acres: adjoining the abosiii good Mona' House, Bwiss Barn, out builtltnge ; good water, &AThese ttin Faints are handsomely situated onthe Oldie *M.] • . No. B=A Mill 'with 30 Acres of land, gnod buildings, shops, sheds, other out•buildings,A:c. Any ; wean dAsirous of buying or Bell i% properly ,will please call uron F..-E.VANDERSI.OOT, Agent. Atyelung, Pa., Feb. I7—eow forr. F. E. VANDEROLOOT, SUR OE. tUnprcrsT, will be at home here. 044 1 .1',*,Pipt two w •eks in every month. MONEY WANTED. .110,1N9 purchaaed the property I R . rfWotieupy, I will want money to pay frtr E it.in the spring. 'Chose therefore that are indebted to me either by note or book armant of long standing, will please call *Ad piy the,samts on nr before the first day Of Match _next, and oblige. Very respectfully, GEO. . _ _ - nr, Blanks of all We fur i 11001514 ,1 10114., • • • • [From (be Aibitry Alla. • • Peen' for the "BONIABOOLA GILA." A stranger preached last Sunday, A rul crowds of people came, To hear a two-hnur sermon , With a barbarous sounding name; . "Fwae all about coins heathen., Thousands of miles afar, Who lire In a land ofdarknews, Called .13orroboola Ohs." $o well their wants he pictured, That when the plates were passed, Fisch list'ner tell his pockets, And goodie sums ,were cut; . For all must lend s shoulder " To push the rolling car That carries light and comfort To "Borroboolstlha." That night their wants and sorrows loty heavy on my soul, And deep in meditation ' I took my morning stroll ; Till something caught my mantle With eager grasp and wild. And looking dm% n with wonder, I saw a little Child. A pale and ponyereature, In rage and dirt forlorn : Whet could she want, I questioned. 'lmpatient to be gone. With'trembling voice she answered, 4•We livejust down the street, And mammy she's a,4e'n! And we've nothing IA to est." Down in a wretched basement, 'With mould upon th Throe whose hull buried windows God's sunshine never fulls ; Whole cold, slid want, and hunger, Crouched near her hush. lay, I round a felling creature, Gasping her life sway A disk, a bniken table, A bed of ditty straw. A hearth all dark and cheerless— But these I scarcely saw ; Fur the muurnful a;ght before me, The sad and sick'ohl snow— Oh, newer had I pictured A scenes() full of woe—. The famished end the naked, The babies that pine for bread, 'The squalid group th,st huddled. Around the dying bed ; All this distress and sorrow Should be in lands afar ; Was 1 suddenly transplanted To "Borroboola (Asa 1" Ah, lo Lthe poor and wretched Were close behind the door. And,Lhed passed them heedleu A. thousand times before. Abu tor the cold end hungry That met me every day, While all my team were given To the puttering far sway ! There!s work enough for Uhristians In distant lands, we know; Our Lord commends hie Remota Through all the world to go, Not only , for the heathen; This was hio charge to them— .oo prea c h th e word. beginning First et Jettillitdefik." . , .God. tproulried.. , , W boieer to thee ties given A cup of pure cold water, shall find reward in Heaven. Would you moire the blessing. You need not uk it far; Go find in yonder hovel . A "Et orroboola Oswego, Decemuer, 5, 1854. A Graphic, Picture. Iles 'not God connected with all lawful avocations the welfare of the life that now and that Income ; and can we. lawfully amass property by.a course of irede which fills the land with beguats and widows, and orphans, acd crimes; which people the grava,vard with premature mortality, and the world 'of woo with victims of des pair 1 Could all the forms of evil pro duced in the land by intemperance, come upon us in one'horrid array, it would pall the nation, and put an end to me traffic. If in every dwelling built by blood, the stone in the wall should utter all the cries which the bloody traffic extorts, and the beam of the timber should echo them back, who would build such a hone° sod who would dwell in it t What if tn' every part of the dwelling, 'from the teller upward, through all the halls and chambers, babbling - and contentions, and vice, and groans, and shrieks, and ,wailing were heard by day end by night 1 What if the cold blood oozed out and atomd upon the walla ; and by preternattuar art, sit the skulls and bones 'of the rictims.tles troyed by intemperance, should stand up on' the walls, in horrid sculpture, 'within and, without . the building who wool) rear sitelt a building 1 What,' if at even litle and at nsidnight, the airy forms, of Men destroyed by intemperance, were seen haunting the distilleries and stores' where' they received the bane i followed the • trade of the ship engaged. in coin.' coerce r, walking on the • waves ; fl itting athwart the deck ; sitting upon the rigging • and sending up froirttlie hold within, and from the waves without, grOinis and lona laments, and wailinge I who would Wend such store. t , whir would tuber in such dis tilleries t who wield navigete•stich.altips? Oh, when the bky over - our .. .headt9: One great whispering gallery, brings dOwn upon us all the lamentations and woe which intempersnce'creaute, and the firm earth, one • sonorous medium of sound, sends up . from beneath the wailing's' of those the commerce of ardent spirit, had sent thither ;. these tremendous realities assailing our sense, would invigorate our conscience, and give decision to our Or: pose of reformation. But these evils are real, as if the atones did cry out of the Wall, and the beam answered it; as real as if, day and night, %railings were heard : in every part of the dwelling, end blood and skeletons were seen upon every wall; as real as if the ghortly torment the depar ted victims flitted about the ship as 31161 passed over the billows, and showed them. ' selves nightly about stores and distilleries (and we may add breweries), and with I unearthly voices screamed it, our ears their loud lament. They aro as real as if the sky. over our heads collected and brought i down about us all the notes of sorrow in the land, and the firm earth should open a passage for the wailing of despair to colts up from beneath.-11. W. Beecher. • Iy is a law which fiod Willowlike' made that ibo arrow which is slim from iha pet secotor's, biw; sloal rebciund, nod pioroit tb4.Eofoooqior's,hesrl. GETTYSBURG, PA., FRIDAY EVENING, EBRUARY 9, 1855. . , Tne 13.0.--:-The French romancer. Clemence R4bert, expresses thus warm ly' an apprecintion of one of these every day (night) comforts, 'which in the fre quency they are enjoyed ; are some times leas highly valued than they deserve , to be: bed is cetteinly the most precious: and the moat favorable asylum. to be found here below. In fact, when I look at it and' when I think, as I step into it, how one_.ia euddenly,aa if by enchantment,, rid of fatigue, cold, wind, dust, rain, importu- note nailer.; tedious conversations, cam'. mon plate remark., pompous - assertions, bragging, putting. forth head.strong opin ions, contraductinua, discussinne, travelling stories, confidential - readings of a poem or a whole tragedy...explanations- ol bystems in long words, interminable 'monologues, and that.in. place of all there one Lis pit , tures„ thoughts, memories to be called lip, that he is in the'llii4st of a chosen society of phantoins and just to his mind, and all thine •dreami. which a fereign wri ter calls "moonlight 'of the brain;" , when I think of all this, eel look at a bed, I know not what words to make urn of to express ,m' enthusiasm and veneration. and I am almoa" ready to bow in adoration before A RIMY SCEIVE.—The fohowing rich scene (occurred in one of our 'courts of justice, between the Judge and a Dutch witness, all the way from Rotterdam : Judge.--." What's ycur native lan guage 1" Witness.—"l pe no native; l's a Notch man." Judge.--" What is your Mother's tongue?" Witneae.—‘6o, fader says she pe all tongue." Judge—(ln an irritihle tone.)--..!W hat language did you'apeak in the cradle t" Wittiess.--“I tid not speak no language in .the cradle at all; I only cried in Dnotcli." Then there wre a general laugh, in which judge, jury,, and audience . joined. The witness was interrogated no fu . rther about his natty° language. A, PUZZLED of told a good story of a M4lll on the Mississippi steamer, who was questioned by a Yen. kee. The gentleman, to humor the fellow, answered all his questions etraighifor: wardly, until the Downeastcr was lairly puzzled for an interrogatory. At last he inquired, "Look here, Squire, where was Yeou born 1" "I was born," said the victim, "in Bos ton. Tremont street, No. 44, on the Ist day of August, 1820, at five o'clock in the afternoon." Yankee was answered completely,— For an instant he was smirk. Soon. however. his face brightened, and he trickly . said : 4 .Yrtato =Wall I cailtitate yob don't I:moi ler' whether 'twee a frame house or 'a brick house. dn 1" A very green sprig' from . the Emerald Isle mitered a boot and shoe' bhnp to pur chase himself a pair of "biogans. After overhauling his stock in trade without be. ing able to suit bib customer, the shop. keeper hinted that he would make him a pthr to order. "And whai will yer az to make u good pair iv 'eni ?" was time quar ry. The price was named ; the Irishman demurred, but, after a "bating down," the thing was* trade. Paddy was about leaving the thop, when the other called af ter him, asking, "but what size shall I make them, sir t" "0.. th." cried Paddy. "'Over Mind about the size, at all 7 -rnake them as large as ye convaniently con for the money." HOW TO INCOIN AN A aIEttIOANT.—A na tive and an adopted citizen ' were dis puting the other day about their respective patriotism. Said . the adopted citizen : "I love America as much as zou du I" "Granted." said the native. • "1 love liberty. with a fervor - you cannot eacell." • *.Agreed." "1 vole conscientiously. pay my taxes before. they are due, rosier education both private and public, cherish the Constitu tion and Taws. ." 4 .1Ve11, and what else 1" asked the na• Live . pointedly.: oWhai avOidtl-o 'h m ore" Yn 'have 1 de. mandi ii the adopted eitiarn. - 6. & f i r e our , patiOna! prejulicei I and dien I you an American." A learned clergyman . in.-Maine waof ae coated in the following' manner by . an illiterate preacher; who'" despised educa tion : , • , "Sir. you have been to college, I sup. pover.. _ • ' . . "Yes, sir,". was the reply.. "I• Agit thankful,l. replied the other, Kthat die .I'mo' hits opeuled •my mouth w Winn' any- teeming," • . ~ ,J 1 similar event.", replied the latter. "occurred in Baslant's time., but, such things steed' rare occurrence at the present day." • . . . . nsrLionrins.—There are very few of God's people who have not some open or secret affliction ; lor the words, *in the world ye shall have tribulation," are not a figure of speech, but n literal•lftnii.. A mail may hare hidden troubles, air well as hidden treasures, in his 'etrong.hoi, that co one knows of but himself. We con. ceal our infirmities and our afflictions, oftentimes, more jealiiusly than wo hide our moneybags.. Whatever may be your troubles, whether afflicted in mind, body. or estate, take courage. It will not be so always. . , oLa. !". said Mrs. Partington, .4here I've. been - sollering the Inagoties of detth for, three. mortal weeks. Fir2,t. I was seized with a bleeding phrenology in the ni. left Si. o sphere of the brain, which : was, suc eceded by a stoppage of the left ventelator of the !tears. This gave me an informa tion in the hem and now siek• with the ehlornfortn niorbas.. There is ntrbles: Sing like thai of health; partieularitirhisti ..• you:arialioit:" iIItARLESS AND MB." AvrtacTiosa.—There are veryfew of God's people who have not some open or secret affliction; for the words. “In the world ye shall have tribulation," ere not a figure of speet;h, but a literal truth. A man may have hidden troublei. as well as hidden treasures. in his strong.boa, that no one knows of but • himself. Wo oonceal our infiriOitiee and our afflictions; often times, more jealously than we hide our :noney4bags. Whatever maybe yonr troubles, whether efflicted in mina, body; or estate, take courage. If wal'Oot be to a/ways. '• • • ' FOUR LIMOD 11 - lARlT4.—Theiet.are four good habits a wise and , good mail , earnest- Ix recommended in his counsels; and also by hie , o vn example, and which he consid• ered essentially necessary for management of temporal'concerns ; these are Punctu. ality, Accuracy, Steadiness and. Despatch. Without the first of these. time is wasted; without the second, mistakes the most hurtful to our own credit and interest and that of others may be committed '• without the third, nothing can be well alma ; and without the fourth, opporttinides of great advantage are lost, 'which it ii impossible to recall. • , . The•Annerletan Wllllar Tllol4l*B ClAMPBtitii: Mr ITU, STATU, your benne, tri F. . Two emblems: one or F Ame r . . Ili s Alas! the other that it wears, :, ' • ' Proclaims your nation's sham • Your high renown in glorious tws: le blazoned by your stars: ": ' • - - ' Hut what the meaning of your, ipso? They mean your nekroes' illsawl. - - !. . Reply.loe Abo v e.• , . • By GEORGE Llltly, GY MAN& EMMA lIID. whence comes verb glowing hue That tints you fitgof ..mrteer',! light; The streaming red, the deeper blue. ' Crossett with the moonbeitine pearly white I The blood end bruire--the Ors and-reti— Let Asia'a groaniug Millions speak ; The white--it lON the senior fed nom starring Erin'i naiiii cheek. ABSENT Mlitozu.—We believe there is another anecdote told of Lessipg, the cel ebrated German poet, and the same one whose absent mindedness. the .following story commemorates, wlthsh marks quite am strongly his puro sin4licity of mind. When on one o'ccasiort he returned to his own house after a briA'ab,seace, apd find ing the door .tioeured,' knocked to obtain admittance, the servant-giiteried from the window. without looking. to see who' was there, that '