American patriot. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1814-1817, January 27, 1817, Image 4

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    POETRY.
els
¢ ' JULIA’S GRAVE.
: CUNNINGHAM.
. Wanc—Lacax \VaTer,
&e briery biclds, whare roses blaw,
Y: duwery fells an’ sunny braes,
Wh ise scrogzie bosoms fuster’da’
The pleasuces 0’ my youthlu’ days;
“A nang you leafy simmer clacs
And blushin’ blooms the z:phyr flies,
Bynes winze awa, and wanton pays
Around the grave were Julia lies
Mae mair your benny birken bowers,
Your streamlets fair and woodlands gay,
Can cheer the weary winged hours,
~ As uptheglenl joyless stray:
Fora’ my hopes hae flown away, )
And, when they veach’d their native
skies,
$.eft me amid the world o” away,
To weet the grave whare Julia liege
$: isua beauty’s fairest bloom,
It isna maiden charms counsign’d,
d hurried to an early tomb,
That wriugs my heart and clouds my
mind ; ;
Put sparkling wit and sense refin dy
And spotless truth without disguise,
akes me with sighs enrich the wind
¥ lat fana the grave whare Julia lies.
er — + S————
STANZAS.
T, MOORE, ESQ.
Yon wenrie | wretches sink to sleep,
How heavenly soft their stumbers he,
ow sweet is death, to those who weep,
To thess, who weep and long to die,
4 ae
Baw yout he soft
Where 8pw’rets
breast ? “
*Tis there T wish to lay my had,
*Tis there I wish to sleep at rests
and grassy bed
deck the green earth’s
Oh ! lot not tears embalm my tomb,
* None but the dews of twilight givens. .
Oh | let not sighs disturb the gicoms
- Nome but whispering winds of keaven.
THE CONTRAST.
Pow lively ave the Roses hues, |,
When men its op’ning bloony-displays,
WW iian spangled with celestial dews,
; It meets the early flovist’y pazes
Put far wove lively are the ii bs that glow,
~ And o'er Maria’s cheeks thelr radiance
throw,
. -
Mow rich the pure nectareous bliss,
The honey siecling pirate tastes,
s macer tor the blushing Kiss,
: From leaf to icaf he trembling hastes
Put far nore pure, more lasting joy he
reaps, SNELL
Who tastes all pleasure on Maria’s lips.
Securely Nature round the Rose,
Has pisc’d a thorn entangled guard,
Whilst Venus gainst Maria’s foes,
An host of Cupids has, prepar’d :
3+ io your hand you fear the thorny smart,
Maria shun—her Cupids wound the heart.
i
FUE REWSPAPER TO ITS READ:
: (ExTRACTED.)
Those who expect me
to march at all times with
e tragedy stride, so measur-
ed and so solemn, are not
yet aequainted with me
It is ‘my business to ge
the rounds of the town ear-
1y every Saturday and to
hid « good morning” to
those who please to make
“me welcome: Now it is
fully to be very formal a-
bout the matter. _ 1. come
to tell you the news wha
has happened abroad and
and if there is
nothing special, I tell you
ef home ;
a pleasant tory; a moral JAMES ROSS.
falc; or give you a relig CONDITIONS.
ous essay ; taking eare aly
ways be laferm you who
|me no man was ever poor-
ge i
Some look a little sour
and pretend that the times
afford to take me.
nonsense! But the same
men will call into a groce-
ry, and spend twelve and
an half cents without think-
ing of it, and that is twice
as much as I cost. Now
it isa pity if I am not of as
much gratification and use
to afamily as two bottle
of beer, or a glass of brand)
which’are gone before you
can say Jack Robison and
the wife and children have
no good of them. Believe
er for taking a newspaper
But [ have many a call
to make ;.good morning, -
Remains of Extinct Anl-
mals.
The region for a hundred miles, oi
thereabout, around Now York city, 1s ons
The fessil remains of eight or nine ani
mals, not tow supposed to be alivey have
been rats d from its soil. Our protesso
of narural histery, Dr. Mitchell, has pro
nounced oa th: extinct mastadon, clephant,
crocodile, and thinocerasy whose teeth, and
bones, and skeletons have been disniteries
in this vicinity within a few ‘years; races
of huge creatures, of whom not 2,1 individ-
ual is known to be alive a: this day. Hu
has given a similar opinion on the belmites
spitulas, oysiers, and other relics of marine
‘animals, raised from the strata decp be-
{neath the surface ; all of ‘hem vesuges of
families that exist no more. In these res
pects New York is more curiously siwat-
ed than Loudon.
Rome does not exceed it. NAT ADY.
ROSYS GREEK GRAMMAR.
rp uihp ‘ 3
N O real proficient in the Greek Lan-
guage Deeds to be intormed of the mmpdr
tance of having the ives of the Greek
Gram rr in Lad.
The student, who can construe, parse,
and write Latin well, enters with peculiar
advantage om the study of the Greek Lan-
guage. Erg s
Not only the rules more concisely ex-
press in the Latin than in the Euglish;
1it the best scholiasts, Commentators and
Grammayinns of the Greek. langudge have
generally writen in Latin’; and the student,
who has become a proficient in Latin, will
acquire the knowledge of the Greek with
much more facility and accuracy than he
who, witliout such a previous knowledge,
applies to it merely with Enghsh ules :
the former, whilst he is studying the Greek
Grammar by Latin rules, is, at the same
tine, improving the knowledge of the lat.
in, the Greck Grammaa in Latin being a
he studies the Greek by an English Greek
Grammar, cannot. ‘possibly do this ;. itis
unnecessary to state how important a
knowledge of both Greek and Latin isto’ a
liberal education. Ew ax
The editor has used in the first edition
snd will continue to use in this, his. best
cideavors to render it both concise amd
comprehensive ; his chief aim being to en»
able the student’ te pronounce, resolve ir
}.. ood Latin, and parsc the Greek with pre-
cision and critical accuracy.
He exalts in the, recoliection that the
first edition has for a considerable time
been used in the Jersey College, the
Chambersburg and New Ark, [Del] Aca
demies, and others reputable seminarii s,
where itis studied with superior appro-
bation. :
Application (post paid) may be had to
‘he editor in Philadelphia, North Fourth
street No. 44.
it will be printed on as good’ type and pa
sac, well
why
“yl
* [has good things to sell, de. Fhe eustamery afewanioe WT be given to
are so hard that they can’t}
What|
of the most remarkable upon the globe =}
It is equal to Pars.
{mos excellent classic book: the latter as
wiper as the former edition of the samo}
Lo SRSaG sd
|
Booksellers and Teachers who subsciib:
for 8,12, 50, 100 or more cepics. Th
wo k will be putto press 8s sovon as i
sutiicient number of subscribers are ob
tained. ?
Subsciiptions wiil be received by Joh
Mont; omery, Ajtorney General jgRober
Milter, merchant ; Col. James Calhoun
John Purviance, attorney at law; the
Revd S. Knox, provost, and Ane Revd
Wm, Sinclair, vice provost of Baltimors
College, Messrs. Coale and Maxwell {
printers Baldmore ; by the Revd DD.
Denny, rector of the Chambersburg
Fisher, Esq: s. Harrisburg 3 Wm. Ham.
ilten, Lancaster, and by Mr. Thomas
Dobson, Mr E. Bronson, and Mu M.
Carcy, Philadelphia.
7Y4SCAPED from the Jail of Centre
~ounty, where he was confined under sen
tence of the Court for a criminal offence, oi:
Fiiday cvening the 13th ofthis inst. a mu:
of the name of
DANIEL CHIP MAN,
abeut five feet ten inches high, thick se
of sullin aspect, fair «complexion, anc
about 27 years of age. He had on whey
he made his escape, a long drab surtout |
O her clothing not remarkable He i
w.pposed to bave made his way toward:
Birmingham, Huntingdon county, having
been employed previously to his imprison
ment, in that place, at the nailing business
The above reward will be paid if brought
to the Jail of the county from which he es
caped, together with all reasonable charges
Wm. Alexander,
o Sheriff
‘Bellefonte, Dec. 18, 18186.
LOST.
Was lost some time in Apri last, a
ven pounds, considerably battered on the
dle. Any person haying possession of the
same, and leaving it at the office of the A
merican Patriot shall be rewarded for his
urouble, and receive the thanks of the own-
or
Lycoming & Potter
TURNPIKE,
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN,
YE IHAT pursuant to the provisions con-
tained in an act passed at the las:
entitled # Anact to enable the governos
to incorporate a company for making an
artificial road trom Jersey Shore, in the
county’ of Lycoming, to- Couderspori
in the county of Potter,” books will be
opened by the undersigned, commissioners
named in the said act, at the office of
George Vaux, No 39 south 4th street i
the city of Philadelphiay on the second day
of December next, at ten o’clock AM.
for the purpose of reciving subscriptions
milar books will be also opened at the
game time and for the same purpose in
Northumberland county at the house of
Thomas Gaskins, in the town of Nor-
thumberland ; and in Lycoming county,
at the house .of James Cummings, in the
borough of Williamsport, :
house of James Collins, in the town of
Jersey Shore.
JOHN KEATING,
THOMAS STEWARDSON
"GEORGE VAUX, !
J.P. De GRUCHY,
- JOHN BOYD,
... HUGH WHITE,
JAMES COLLINS,
THOMAS M: CLINTOCK
SAMUEL STEWART,
MMISSIONERS.
a
cos
~ ROBERT M’CLURE, .
...-.ANDW. D. HEPBURN,"
October 18, 1816+
- is '
Bellefonte Academy.
UBLIC notice is hereby given, that
the: Bellefonte Acadenity in Centre
county is reorganized, and open for the re-
ception of scholars. The trustees have en’
caged Mr. M. Chamberlain, lately from
Dartmouth College, (Newhampshire) as a
teacher; a gentleman of respectability, and
highly qualified. In this seminary will be
taught, the Greek and Latin languages.
English grammar, Geography, and the dif-
feremt branches of the mathematitks
By order of the Board of Trustees.
J. G. Lowrey,
President
for the mulady, in the most sate
offecwual way 3
Academy ; William Graydon and Geo |
PRY a tually
curing near one hundred persons in this
ity, of the most dreadful of all maladies, yo
Fifty Dollars
| REWARD.
hundreds o
ot Philadelphia,
{
t
SMALL AXE, weighing about six or sc |
~2ad, and having but a very indifferent hau- |
ses: ion ‘of the legislatare of Pennsylvania.
for the stock of the said company. Sip
and at the #
Aka
rr “
Interesting Biccavery
Te thoes who &1¢ 30 wifuriunieie
elicited a y »
CANCERS,
panily excite them to mguire and die
cct where they may obtain a perfect cure
» cas y and
3 \ . Y :
Lottor Grigog ;
Eo Wa
No 277 North Second Street Philadelphia,
: . i » ha
Confident tha this re;
J others that- have ever been is :
i others that haye evel been i practice,
hinks it his Guly {o make 0 KD0Wwn to the
sublic, that he has succeeded in effec
Hedy is superior te
he CANCER, within the las
iy of whome had despared of ever oby aininge
a cure, some of whom had been altended
mm the Alms House and Hospital of thig
place,” without success and nowe
tectually ‘curcde—
are ofp
By the afflicted’s Fu ble serwane,
Daniel Griggs.
N. B. Reference can be had of some
£4)
ithe most respectable citizeng
B77 All editors of papers in this state
vill please fnsert the above once a wechy
or three months, and send their acceunts
or payment as above.
All Lditors in the United States wild
susserve the cause of humanity by giving
the above a few insertions in their respeay
live papers. :
September 5, 18186.
STRAY HORSL, :
Y TAS taken up by the subscribe
y: the 12th of September, inst. a BAY
HORSE with a staron his fordhead, supe
posed to be about 14 years of age. The
rwner gs desired to come and prove propegs
vy pay charges and take him away.
JOHN PATTERSOM,
Spring township, Sefit. 20
———— ——
: Caution!
¥ THEREAS my wife Sarak hath Ye
7, ¥ my bed and board without any jusk
caifbe; this is therefore to forewarn all per
sons from trusting her on my acount, as B
am determined not %o ‘pay any debts of hes
contracting after this date, unless compels.
icd by law. As some of my children have
absconded with her; all persons, therelorey
{are hereby forbid harboring them at theie
perilyas I am determined to prosccute ang
who shall do so as far as the limits of the
law will admit. .# pagt eT
ISAAC PARSONR
Aug: 26, 1816. ~~
Dissolutien of Partnership.
The partnership of Patton and Mitchell
kas, by mutual consent, be en this day diss
golved. Those indebted to said firm are
requested to make, immediate payment te
Samuel Patton, who is authorised to reg
ceive ail debts due the same, :
Samuel Patton,
John Mitchell
BrrrrronTr, Oct. 12, 18186,
”
p Be » pH
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP,
s h-| a + 7 4
2 HE partnership of George and Aw
thur Smith is this day dissolved by mutue
al consent, of which: circumstance, all cons’
cerned will please to take notice Those
{indebted to said firm, are requested te
make payment to George Sniith, and these
|naving demands are hereby notified
ment of the same.
GEORG SMITH,
~~ ARTHUR SMITHe
December 6, 1815. a
ANDREW STEWART,
3 sPECTFULLY inform his flondk
and the public ir. general, that he has
commenced the Tailoring business in ene
of the rooms of the house now oceupied by
Joseph Updegraff, Tnkeeper, where all ore
ders in the line of his profession will be
gladly accepted and expeditiously execuw
ed. 4 : r
Having worked in the first shops in this
state, he flatters himself, from hie
experience, to bs able 0 please kis gus
tomers. His work shall be dome in the ,
ook to him for pay
terms.
Deg fame, opt. 2, 1816.
£
$i
Briumeenwa, day a ng
& 3
pL Le
AND to those whose feelings of hag” ;
£2 years mae »
neatest style, and on the most ressenghldr
-
Fork