bs EP RA “9 eet 102 3 57 12) c— TO-MORROW. Gr—It may or may uot 6¢ so. WITH what caution to-morrow conceals its aftalrs, Whether big with good fortune or no ; Moo is lu’d by the butterfly aspeet it wears V¥ atic Jt may, or it may not be so. TW cre its secrets unfolded, how soon should we pe But its secrets we never must know ; I'or Faney’s fair paintings are hope’s richest mines While it may or it may not be so. {Vill the poor tar leave his home, and brave, hopeless of gain, lL Seas and tempest, both pregnant with WOE, s He will not---but he will, if a prospect re- HE nin, "That it may or it may not be so. The coy little miss would be free {fom restraint, Were she sure she unmarried must go, WW io can flatter, sigh, ogle, coquet or paint, While it may, or it may not be so. The maiden of forty with bugles would shine, Could she hawk some young fopling or beau : But her dimples, turn’d rinkies compel her to pine, While it may, or it may not be 30, As long as to-morrow keeps onc day a-head, “I Greenland’s a stranger to snow, Tair praspects will hang on as brittle a tiwroad, As it may, or it may net be so GENIUS, WITHOUT MORRALITY. ————Talents, angel bright, If wanting worth, ave shining instruments Ia false, ambitious hands, to finish faults I{iustriovs, and give infamy renown. Brim CHRISTIANITY. "To correct a habit, to control an inclina- tio, to calm the temper, to guard the thew hts, to take up a cross of self-denial, to make sactifices of pleasure to duty ; these, O 1 Christianity | are the trophtes of thy renown ; these the labors thou hast promised to reward. : ee HOW TO PLEASE iN CONVERSA TION. None of the desires dictated by vanity is mote general, or less blameable, than that of being distinguished for the arts of convers sation. Other accomplishments may be possussed without opportunity of exerting "\ them, or wanted without danger thie the defect can often be remarked ; but as no nian ¢an live otherwise than in hermitage, without hourly pleasure or vexation, from "| the fondness or neglect of those about him, the taculiy of giving pleasure is of continual use. Few are more frequently envied than thos: who have the power of forcing atten- tio: wherever they come. whose entrance is cousidered as a promise of felicityyand whose departure is tamented, like the re- cess of the sun from northern climates, as 5 pr. ation of ail that enlivens fancy or in- Spires gaiety. : ; It is apparent that to excellence in this valuzbie art, some, peculiar qualifications are necessary ; for every man's experience will inform him, that the pleasure which men ave able to give in conversation holds no stated proportion to their virtue. ‘Many find their way to the wablesand the parties of tose who never consider them as of the feast importance inany other place; we. have all, at one time or other, been’ content to love those whom we could not esteem, & been persuaded to try the dangerous expe. timent of admitting him for a companion whom we know to be too ignorant lor counsellor, and too friend. He that would picase must rarely aim such excelience as depresses his hearers a treacherous for. at in thelr opinicn, or debars taem fromthe hope of contributing reciprocally to the entertain- ment of the company. Merviment extort- “ed by sallics of imagination, sprightliness of vemark. pr quitkness of reply. is too often what the Lating ei, the Sardingan laugh- 7 aw For this yesson no style of conversation is more extensively acceptable than the nar- rative, He who has ‘storsd his memory with shght anecdotes, private incidents, & personal peculiarities, seldom fails to find his audience fayourable. Almost ewcry man listens with eagerness to extemporary history ; for aimost every man has some re- al or imaginary connection with a ceiebra- ted character, sone desire to advance or oppose a rising name. Vanity often co-op. crates with curiosity. He that is a hearer in one place qualifies himself to become a speaker in another ; for tho’ he cannot com prehend a series of argument, or transporg the volatile spirit of wit without evapora- tion, yet he thinks himself able to ‘treasure up the various incidents of a story, and plea- ses his hopes with the information which he shall give to some inferior society. Narratives are for the most part heard without envy, because they are not suppo- sed to imply any intellectual qualities above the common rate. To be acquainted with facts not yet echoed by plebian mouths, may happen to one man as well as to anoth- er, and to velate them when they are known, has in appearance so verry little difficulty, that every one concludes himself equal to the task: RAMBLER. JUSTICE, ITS NATURE AND REAL IMPORT DEFINED. Mankind in general are not sufficiently aquainted with the import of the word jus- tice : itis commonly believed to consist only 1n a periormance of those duties to which the laws of society can oblige us.— This, I aliow, is sometimes the import of the word, and in tais sense justice is distin- guished from equity ; but there isa justice still more extensive, and which can be shewn to embrace all the virtues united. Justice may be defined, that virtue which impels us to give to every person what is his due: In this extended sense of the word, it comprehends the practice of eve- ry virtue which reason prescribes, or soci- ety should expect. Our duty to our Maker, to each other, and to ourselves, are fully answered, if we give them what we owe them. Thus. justice,properly speaking, is the only virtue : and all the rest have their origin in it. . The qualities of candour, fortitude, chari-: ty, and generosity, for instance, are not ' in their own nature virtues ; and, if ever they deserve the title, it is'owing only to justice, which impels and directs them. \Vithout such - a moderator, candour might become indiscretion, fortitude obstinacy, charity im- prudence, and generosity mistaken profus ion, 3 Ne ¥ oh A disinterested action, if it be not con- ducted by justice; isyat bests, mdifficrent in its nature, and not unfrequently. even turns to vice. The expences of society, of pres. ents, of entertainments, and the other helps to cheerfulness, are actions merely indiffer- ent, when not repug nant to a better method of disposing of our superfluities ; but they become vicious when they obstruct or ex- haust our abilities from a more virtuous dis- position of our circumstances: True generosity is a duty as indispensa- bly necessary as those imposed on us by law. Itis a rule imposed on us by reason, which should be the sovereign law of a ra- tional being. But this generosity does not consistin obeying every impulse of humani- ‘ty, in following blind passion for our guide, ,and impairing our circumstances by pres- ent benefactions, so as to render us incapa- ble of future ones. pe ph iy THE creditors of Thomas Barlow, late - of Philipsburg, i the county of Centre, an insolvent debtor ; and also the creditors of the partnership of « Barlow and Feltwell,” of the same place, are requested to exhibit their accounts and demands against said in- solvent debtor and partnership, to the sub- scriber at Laurel Spring Paper Mill, Hunt- ingdon county, or at the office of William Petriken, Esg. in Bellefonte, on or before the twenty ninth day of November next, as a dividend will be made and @eclared on that day. Ch CHARLES CADWALLADER. ; Assignee of T. Barlow, and Barlow & Feltwell, Insolvent debtor. August 23. : BLANKS FOR'SALE AT THIS OFFICE. CY x rH Nofin TAVERNSTAND Where the subscriber now lives, situate in‘the'town of Newry, Huntingdon county, ‘on which are erected a lage two Story Log Divelling House, 50 by 36 icely neatly eas therboarded and painted white. The house 18 finished in the neatest mabe, a room of ‘which is now occupicd as a Store ; to which ¥ is attached, a good Kitchen, aud a well of excellent water in the yai d Ou the pren- ses there are a neat Qae Story Log building which has been occupied as a Distillery,a good Stable, and a large frame Shed, 50 feet m length. : ws : ALSO, A large two story Log House, 36 by 50 feet, situate in said town, opposite the above property, to which is attached a large frame Kitchen, making a front of nearly 80 feet in length, with good Stabling; this house is also well calculated for public Lusi ness. | : BENJAMIN WRIGHT. July 5, 1814. cn — THOSE Gentlemen who have became sub- scribers to the Work Entitled: « Events of the War” lately published at Harrisburg, are requested to call fortheir books, as they are now at this office ready for delivery. LAND AGENCY. THE subscriber will attend to the busi- ness of a Land Agent in the borough of Har- risburg. Those wishing to procure patents or copies from any of the public offices will find their business -executed with promptness. hd.) ALEXANDER GRAYDON, Junr. HARRISBURG, AUG. 14 1814. — a aa’ DISSOLUTION or PARTNERSHIP. THE partnership of Tho Beatty & co. is thisday dissolved by mutual consent. The Books and Papers belonging to the said firm are left in the care of Elisha Moore, Esq. in Bellefonte, who is authorised to re- ceive all monies due. Persons indebted are requested to call and make payment. ~ WILLIAM BEATTY. THOMAS BEATTY Bellefonte, May 28th, 1814. ann 15n*8we. An Ordinance, to extend ell ordinances here- tofore frassed by the Town Council oj the Borough of Bellcfonte to the town of Smithfield, and other fiurfroses. Sec. I. ‘Be it ordained and enacted by the Town Council of the Borough af Belle~ Jonteyand.it is hereby ordained and enacred’ by the authority of the samey "That from and: after the due promulgation of this Ordi-: nance, all ordinances heretofore passcd by : the Town Council of the said Borough, that: are now in force be, and the same are here-- by extended to the town of Smithfield, and the other parts of Spring creek township, that “were annexed to the said Borough, by an act of the Legislature, at their last ses- sion. 4% © od : Sec. 2. And be it ordained, That, that part of all ordinances heretofore pagsed by the said Town Council, making it the duty of the first named of the Council to act in a-judicial capacity, in the absence ina- bility to act, or otherwise, of the burgess, be and the same is hereby repealed. Passed into anordinance July i5, 1814. 3 ANDREW GREGG, ELISHA MOORE, CONSTANS CURTIN, INO. RANKIN, JOS. MILES, JAS STEEL, EVAN MILES. Attest~=Evrisar Moore, Clk “JI2UNOY " SPECIAL COURT — Agreably to the provisions of an Act of Assembly, passed the 28th March, 1814, entitled, « An Act authorizing the holding ot Special'Courts in the Counties o { Hunting don, Mifflinand Centre,” they reside wo the eight judicial district (the Hon. Sern CuArMAN,) has appointed a Special Court, tobe held in Centre County, on Monday the 10th day of October next, and to: continue one week ; for the trial of all causes, now pending in the Common Pleas of Centre County, in which the Hon. Judoe Walker is concerned in interest, or was of council be- tore his appointment. J. G. LOWREY, Pret. Jellefonte, August 6, 1814, > RB EAS the subscriber gaye ¥ Y avid Storm, two notes of ong han- dred and ninety pounds cach; the first pay~ able 1st of April 1815; the other Ist of April 1816; and eight other notes of one hundred pounds each : the first payable 1st. of April 1817, and one each succeeding | year; and one other note of one hundred TA a ® J ii “ anditwenty five pounds, payuble first of As pril 1825+ ‘Thisis therefore to forewarn all persons from taking an assignment on said notes. said Storm not having complied with his engagements. od 3 HENRY. YOTTER. Beilefonte, Sept. i7 , 1814. Causes for trial at the Special Court o. Common Pleas Centre county, October 10, 1814. yioes? Les. of Lauman’s Ex’is US T. Thomas. Les. of Jos. Lamborn VE. H. Hartzock, Les. Lauman’s Ex’ps. V8. Ramcy & Stratton Les. of M. T. Simpson vs. Jackson'& Kinter, Same Same, Les of James Packer v8, R. Gunsalus Les. of R. Gunsalus v3. Hoover and Beixier, Les of Lauman’s Ex’s vs. Jacob Houser, Les. of John Ashley ; vs. George Reynolds, Jacob Fouser Us. Martin Steel, Same vse Same, Les. of Richard Wistar Vs Ross and M:Kee, . Same vs. Jno. Harbinsgn, Duncan'and Walker CTI Jacob Meese, Les. of D. Harris, jum. iii v8. Wiiliam Monks, Les. of James Potter oe. R. Pennington, Les of Danici Swytzer Ts. J. Meese and al. Philip: Benner ' vs. Jacob Houser and al. Duncan and Tngersel’ V8. Daniel Turner. Same vs. Samey Letitia Nailor and al. Us. J. Hutton and al. G. Robinson, jun. TVS John Neal, vs. Cy § Gs py = ; A TO WOOD CUTTERS. i THE subscriber at Hope . Furnace, in Mifllin County, will five half a doijar (in cash) per cord, for any number of cords any person may put up from this time till the. firstof December next—The cash will be paid as soon as 50 or 100 cords may be put b) up, at the option of the ‘person cutting and. putting it up~The wood is on good ground, stands thick ; and is generally young thriv- ing rock-oak, with a little white-oak and black-oak----Provisions will be furnished at as low rate, if not lower, than at the iron works in Centre County----Any company of wood choppers contr: gos for six or seven hundred cords or any Torther quantity they ‘may pleace, shall receive a handsome com- pensatica : WM. W. LAIRD. Hore 'ur~NACE, Ave. 22, 1814 Hes QM. MILITIA TAKE NOTICE! The Pay-master will attend at Bellefonte on Monday the 17th day ot October next, to day the Militia who served a six mouths “tour of duty under Colonel Rees Hill, the additional pay allowed by the State of Penn- sylvania. Commanding officers of companies are regucsted to present their Rolls certified on Hoocur, and countersigned by the Col, September 1, 1814,