v. w,. mom, atit . H . zwo„... A.l'. 'RE31141114,4 , II El I INEM eimitziez Emmtmeam, A Tirtekly Paper, avail be ,published at th following lcnb V . F../5.13. 1N ADV ANCP. %II 00 J YEA:it: IN 2. - 2,10N7:11.9 1 25. 1 YV.AIt G: D(1: 150 I V ilAti; 1 N 9 1)0 1 75 I`V EAII; IN 12 . : DO, • 200 Irr - 11" . 0 paper trill be sent to those who, i . tay in nth:once after the exp&Otion of the • time paid fin . :' .0:1111' litters 'wit business connected :ioith the of if F 4 t to receive attention, mist be estpffid. : . ' . t =2 Peom • the Sunchty ,1 inzes. PETER CARTRIGIIT; The Jocose Preacher. A OENUINE PORTRAIT FROM LIFE IN Immense was the gathering at the Aleth odist camp ground near Springfield, on the 2d Sunday of September,_ 1832. A powerful magnet had attracted this great 'Mass afpeople from their homes in many counties a hundred miles round. The 'new presiding elder, a late arrival . from Kentucky, an orator of wide-spread and wonderful renown, it was known, would thunder on that day. The glittering pres tige of his fame had lightened far before him, and hence the universal eagerness to hear one concerning whom rumor's trum .pet-tongue discoursed so loudly. Morning broke in the azure east, bright and beautiful as a dream of heaven; but 'the ex-prodigy had not made his advent. Elei•en o'clock came—the regular hour for the detonation of the heavy gun of or thodox—rind still there was no news of the clerical lion. A common circuit preacher took his place, and, sensible of the popular disap. pointment, iftreased it by mouthing a mis erable failure. The vexed and restless crowd began to disperse, when an event hapened to excite afresh, their curiosity, and concentrate them again denser than ever. A messenger rushed to the pulpit in hot haste, and presented a note, which Vitl3 immediately read out to prevent the people from scattering. The following is a literal copy of that singular epistle: 1121 Dr-Ait Br:Emits:v.—The Devil has foun• dered my horse, which will detain me from reaching yctr tabernacle till evening. I might have performed the journey on loot, but I could not leave poor Paul, especial ly as he has never left Peter. Horses have no souls to save, and therefore it is all the more the duty of Christians to take care of their bodies. Watch and pray, and don't let the Devil get among you on the sly, before candlelight, when I shall be at my post. Your Brother, 1 In fashient,ble phraf-e, the reading of this "produced qt.ite a sensation." Bowe thought the man mad; others deemed the letter a hoax. But still the effect as to one particular was unquestionable; it heighten ed and interested the public curiosity; such, very likely, was the precise result intended by the writer. At length the day closed. The purple .curtain of night fell over the earth from the darkening sky. God's golden fire flashed out in heaven, and men kindled their rale candles. The encampment, a village of snowy tents, was illuminated with a brilliancy that caused-every leaf to shine and sparkle as if all the trees were burnished with phosphorescent flame. It; was like a theatre. It was a theatre in the open air, on the green sward, benea , h the starry blue, incomparably more pie-, turesque and gorgeous than any stagai scenery prepared within walls of br'clt or marble, where the elite of s throng to feast their eyes on beauty, and their cars' on the music of silvery sounds. Presently a form rose in the pulpit, and commenced giving out a hymn, prelimi nary to the main exercises, and every eye I became riveted to the person of the strut- , ger. Indeed as some one said of Burke,' "a single flash of the gazer's vision was enough to re‘eal the extraordinary man," although, in• the present cnse it must, for' the sake of truth, be acknowledged that the first impression was ambiguous, if not enigmatical and disagreeable. His figure was tall, burly, massive, and scorned even more gigantic than. the reality from its crowning foliage of luxuriant coal black I hair, wreathed into long, curling ringlets. Add a head that looked largo as half a bushel; beetling brows, rough arid craggy as fragmentary granite, irradiated at thej base by eyes of dark fire, small & twink ling.like diamonds in a sea—(they wore diamonds of the sou', shining in a meas.! ureless sea.of humor;) n swarthy com-1 plexion, us it' embrowned 'I.IY the kisses of! sunheamsl,,rich, rosy lipS, always slightly parted, as if wearing , perpetual merry , smile, and you have a life-like portrait of , Peter Cartwright, 'the fur-fumed jocose preacher. Though I heard it. all, from the text to Ile - amen, I urn forced to despair of any! attempt to convey, an accurate idea of ei ther the substance. or manner of the ser mon which followed.. There are different; sorts of sermons; the .argumentary, the .degmatic, - the poStulary, the persuasive, the panatiVe, the combative,'"in orthodox. blew§ „and ltriocks,' , ' the logical and the; poetic; but this specimen belonged to none of these categories. was sui gowris, and of a now spedies. It might be term ed properly „the waggish. - • 130, began w;ith . u. loud, beautifully mod. ultited tone, in a voice that rolled 'on the ' ,tioteti&riiiA air like 'incceSsive peals of rand thunder.. MethodiSt. ministers: are celebrated. for , sonorous voices, but •:hia was matchless sWeetri6s as well as pow '.cr. , For the first ten minutes, his rema*sj 'being :pretiaratory; were common place d unmterestink ; but then ell of tt sudden ' is face reddened, his eye lightened, bis 1~ it us k 'ld: • 'r :fioe~ Lillla FOO and IEIO one, ening . OE W W.lO ellent \ uPI6 lea of ' WC. are 14 able telt. !IC:T.les: ILLIIIOIB PETER CAIITRIG IIT ................. . .. .... • TH lt - . ..,,, ... •,_.....,....,. ........,.....„.....„..„_......,............„.....„..........„...„.•_:...„,...._......,..„..„„ ...... ;...,,... ..,,...,....„,,, ~ :.. •., . .•t ~, . • .. ..,,,.. ~. , „.,),•••...;,, ; A 4.... ..,, I .. .„ 41 . . . . ...... . -.. • I I • ..,...:;.-• S. .., r, i ' ail I)I• ' -‘ . " . . P . ... 1 i . .i•' ' . i .. 2. ." . ...:. 'l"' ,__ . 'f-- 4 ;" 'I s. l-7 ' _\ :'---,_ 'l' . 'r- - 'li_A\ i'=": -- :. i ; 1 14 ...•., A - - fa-_ - _fl. :,..., \ I -1 , 7 2 3 - ' - _,J, i ! , •-,•.•:.-• -.-- ' l- ' l / 4 : - . •,-'' • 7 , r •'''' k .:4 1 : -. ."i\ " , ....i? . • _; - . - 1.-.1 , t , reeligAN,4 , ,: r .. • ?. • . -:' • ‘ k i l ' ; t':' • . , • .-L .• 1 / 4 \ k' 4 , ./ . 1::4;g 1 / 4 1 : • . 1 ' .. -: . ' . • ' '% I t l / 4 „\ .. .,-•2', t f l A 7 ''.:l (Z S. ' '.. - 1 - 31 7. / i , (4 L . ..,, ..1 1 / 4 4 1 / 4 - 11 / 4 1 I l a 4 ' ,S.f 07. )08 If. :!,_,- 7,1,,E1yk- -_,-„,, ,, n 1 .:, ,•. 1 f .". F: !i r .1 _ %, ii fr" , xy . t• 4- el • - ....! , •cfr-attrtl... --' . e . 1 ) Z7-,' .A .! to t A WEEKLY PAPER Volume II gestures grew animated as the waftures ofi a fierce torch, and his whole countenance! changed into an expression of inimitable humor; and now his wild, waggish, pecu liar eloquence, poured like a mountain tor rent. Glancing arrows of wit, shafts, of, ridicule s bon mots, puns, and side splitting anecdotes, sparkled, flashed, and flew like hail, till the vast auditory was convulsed with laughter. For awhile the more as cetics strove to resist the current of their own spontaneous emotions; the sour-faced clergy frowned and hung their heads; and all the maidenly saints groaned as with unspeakable anguish at such desecration of the evangelic desk. These, however, soon discovered that they had undertaken an impossible achievement in th . nking to withstand the . facaiae of Cartright. His every sentence was like a warm finger, tickling the ribs of the hearer. Ills very leeks incited to mirth far more than other people's jokes, so that the eflbrt to m4,in tain one's equilibrium only increased the dispositions to burst into loud explosions, ns every schoolboy has verified in similar cases At length the encampment was in a roar, the sternest features relaxed into smiles, and the coldest eyes melted into tears of irrepressible merriment. Ntolie re's best comedy on Sheridan's funniest larce was not half so suceess!ul. This confirm ed thirty minutes, while the orator pa.nu d the folly of the sinner, which was his theme. I looked on and laughed with the rest, but finally began to fear the result as to the speaker. now, I exclaimed mentally, will he ev er be able to extricate his audienee from that deep whirlpool of humor? if he ends thus, when the merry mood subsides and calm , reflection supervenes, will not the revulsion of feeling be deadly to his fume? Will not%very hearer realize that he has been trifled with in matters of sacred and eternal interest? At all events there is no prospect °fa revival to-night, for were the oratora magician, he could not change his subject now and stem the torrent of headlong laughter. But the shaft of my inference fell short of the mark; and even then he commen ced to change, not all at once, but gradu ally as the wind of u thunder cloud. His features lost their comical tinge of pleas antry; his voice grew first earnest, and then solemn, and soon wailed out in tones of the deepest pathos; his eye was shorn of its mild light, and• yielded streams of water, as the fOuntaill ()I' the hill yielded water. The effect was indescribable; and the r •bound of tbieling beyond all revela tion. He descanted on the horrors of hell till evqry• shuddering face was turned downwards, as ifexpecting to see the solid globe rent asunder, and the fathomless fi ery gulf yawn from beneath. Brave men moaned like sick infants, and fair fashion able WOIIICII, covered with silken drapery, and bedight wiih gems, shrieked as it a knife were working among their heart stria s. Again he changed the theme and sketch ed the joys of a righteous death—its litith, its hope, its v,inged raptures, and what beautiful angels attended the spirit to its starry home—with such force, fire and ev ident belief that all eyes were raised tow ards heaven, as the entire congrega ti-)n started to their feet, as if to hail the vision of angels at which the linger of the preach er seemed to lie pointed, elevated as it was on high to the fUll extent of his arm. . „He then made a call fur the mourners into the altar, and ft% a hundred, and many of them until that night infidels, rushed forward and prostrated themselves on their knees. The meeting was continued fur two weeks, and more than a thousand converts added to the church. From that time the success of Peter Cartright was unparalleled, and the Ilia is chiefly due to his inimitable wit and masterly elo quence that Methodism is now the prevail ing religion in Illinois. "In what college did ho graduatel— Surely it must have been a mighty alma mate, to develop° such a son." You are more than half right, my good questioner. Peter Cartright, like most preachers of his sect, received his educa tion in the great universal university, the same that produced Homer, Plato, Shaks peare, Moses, Mendelssohn, Franklin,— that weaver of garlands from the light ning's wing—Washington and Patrick Henry. High up on the highestmountain top, deep down in the lowest valleys, fir out away on the rolling billow, there he studied and toiled together in the most glorious. of all , schools—the free vhool of selfstructurel ."But did he graduate?"— Ayo, and nature's own L i and wrote his 'di- - plume. with 'a pencil' otiving light, and stamped it with., aseid o/ f' e—tho immor tal fire of true genius. 4. . . f e, . Callright I.)ticatike,an 1 ifierant at eigh teen, with no 'learning' from books save what ho derived from the pages of the Bi ble and 'a colleCticin of. hymns. Year af ter year .ho continued to travel, the wild circuits of tho frontier, earning annually but a !Mildred dollars for labors painful us a slave at,the - dars.. But his vocation af forded him an'. excellent opportunity for meditation and even reading. In,llislOng journeys ,from . one appointment :. anoth er he was alsone,ywrith,nothingnround him but woods and waterer birds,' ineuritains, DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, AND FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE sun, moon, and stars There he might and did ponder well. Aye, did he more, he bought him a boolc, of literature and sci ence, and poured over them as he rode a long, with an ardor and perseverance such as perhaps \aver \vas witnessed within the / stone walls of a college. Thus he mas tered mathematics, logic, physics, law, &I several languages ancient and modern.— Oh! believe me, believe all human histo ry—there is no teacher like the student's own hard working intellect urged on to action and bided in its efforts by the om nipotence of an unconquered will! Why did not this western prodigy a chieve for himself* a more extended re• nown? Why did he not climb to the loft iest stations in the church? If his narra tive be true, he ought before now to have been a Bishop, at least. The statement of a few facts will solve the problem. Let it be remembered, then that the Methodist Epi..eopal Church is a hicrachy, in NVIli ell the dispensation ofeler ierd honors rests exclusively with the Bish ops and general Conference of ;liner:Ants, where the laity and local preachers are unrepresenced, and consequently had no voice. Hence, in that sect popolarity, el oquence, and other showy qualities, have never been fotind suffici nt passports to the per-eminent distinctions M . authority and office, Lot ellen to the reverse. The Bishop's goe n must be worn by steady austere devotion, not brilliant oratory or prolbund and varied learning. I On this perilous rock Peter Cartright's lofty vessel was shivered into the atoms of n hopeless wreck. He made no preten sions to superior sanctity, nor was it inan ilitsted in his conduct and demeanor wheth er in the pulpit or in private Ii e. Indeed he was distinguished by one very uncleri cal peculiarity—combativeness in the su perlative degree. His battles, though al ways apparently on the defi•nsive, were as numerous as the celebrated Bowie.— The only difference was this, that Bowie fought tvith deadly weapons, while Cart right used but his enormous fist, which was as effective, however, in the speedy settlement of beligerent—issues- as, any knife or pistol ever forged out of steel.— Let the reader judge from the following anecdote . At the camp meeting held at Alton in the autumn of 1838, the worshippers were annoyed by a set of desperadoes from St. Louis, under the control o r Mike Fink, a notorious bully, the triumi hint hero of countl_ss lights in none of which he had ever met an equal or even second. The coiase, drunken milieus carried it with a high hand—outraged the men and insul ted the women, so as to threaten the disso lution of all pious exercises; and yet such was the terror the name of their leader, Fink, inspired, that no one individual could be Mutat brave enough to face his prowess. At last, one day, when Cartright ascen ded the pulpit to hold forth, the despera does on the outskirts of the encaripment raised a yell so deafening as to d,,,vn ut terly every a her sound. dark e) es shot lightning. lie d his Bible, drew off his coat, and renli:ked "Wait a 1 . 1;w minutes my brethern, while I go end make the Devil pray." lie then proceeded, with a smile on his lip to the i6eus of tha tumult, and udress cd the bully, "Mr. Fiuk, 1 have come to make you pray". The desperado raked back the tangled festoons of his blood red hair, arched his huge brows with a comical expression, and replied : "By golly I'd like to see you do it old snorter U' "Very well;" said Cartright. "Will these gentlemen, your courteous friends, agree not to show foul play '1" "Incourse they will. They're rule grit, and won't do nuthen but the clean thing, they won't," rejoined Fink indignantly "Are you ruady 1" asked Cartright. "Ready as a race horse with a light rider," answered Fink, squaring his pon derous person for the coaittat. But the bully spoke too soon, for scarce ly had the 'Words left his lips, when Cart right made a prodigious bound towards his antagonist, and accompanied it with a quick shooting punch of his herculean fist, which fell 'crushing the other's chin, at hurried him to the earth like lend. T' even his intoxicated comrades filled involuntary admiration of the feat? cheer. But Fink 'was up in a r rushed upon the enemy exelsi "That warn't done liiir, • Heaimed , a ferocious F; right:parried With his ped'hia throat with t) down as if ho h?d• struggled, squire. dust; but all to - muscular film ' the jaws of to turn pu" racist; Clearlield,, Pa., February 22 1 . ISSO. "Repeat after me," commanded Cart. right. 1 "Well if I must, I must," answered ; Fink, "because you're the devil himself."' The preacher said over the Lord's! prayer line by line, and the conquered ! bully responded in the same way, when ! the victor permitted him to rise. At this! consummation the rowdies thundered three boisterous cheers. Fink shook Ca rtright,s hand, declaring : "By golly your'e some beans in a bar fight. I'd rather set to with an old he in dog days. You con pass this 'ere crowd • of nose smashers, blast your picture? Afterwards Fink's party behaved with extreme dccorurn,nnd Cartright resumed , his Bible and pulpit. A thousand other incidents equally ma ! terial and ludicrous are related as to Cart right's adventures in Kentucky and Illi nois. Many of them are probably fictitious but those genuine aluu2, if collected would be suflieient to :-:tock at least two volumes of romantic reality. Such was the jocose preacher, end his biography teaches us the mighty influence of circumstances in ni iublin,4 the charac ters and fixing the destin,i.es of individual men. Ilad that spleilib t l genius bcen cast on the tide of wet', or thrown into the fiery vortex of a revolutionary era, his name might have been a signal of doom to quaking nations; his renown might have been like a comet through all time. But 1w was born in the wildest mountains of Kr 'ducky ; he was taught the spiritual tenets of , and educated to regard the calling, ofn Methodist cirent rider as the liitliest on earth. And so now thq poor •;1“. tch—t his spark of titling fire—sa) dim, flickering and evanescent asr-i--c-11: - A• ow--is the last ray of his glory,t(fl below the stars—an epitaph by antranger's hand written on the sand which the nowt rain shall obliterate wholly—a blasted limb, that the first wind shall blow away into the Lethean sea !brevet. Noiac AcT OF A 6 I I{L.—The e Bal7iinJre Ciipper states that a few evenings since, just after dark, a young ieln.lle residing on the railroad near kesville, observed dui , the rain had eau,ed a part of the em bankment to give ‘ViIV, and entirely cov er up the raiirciad trek. KIIOSS ing that the train of cars would pass along in a short time, she hastily and alone procured a light, and set to work to remove the ob struction. In It 1011 Inlnut s, however, she heard the ti'uin approacliiug at a fear ful rate, and abandoning her humane el fort :o clear the track, she took her station in the middle of the road, and by waving the light to and fro, succeeded in attract ing the attention of the eng,incer, who im. mediately stopped the egging. In a few +non - lents more, had it not been for the great presence of ra in d, courage and thoughtfulness ofthis young girl, the whole train might halie been dashed to pieces. Her noble conduct is deserving of the highest reward. Shocking ftjail at a Triyhling.—A most shucking atlitir occurred on Sunday morning, at the boarding house of a Mrs. Murphy. in 6rey's alley, near Second street. There had been, during the previ ous evening, a wedding, in which all par ties participating were Irish. As usual, much joy and mirth prevailed, which con tinued until near four o'clock in the morn ing when the parties began to separate.— A young lady, Miss Ilrilget Lynch, acting as bridesmaid, accompanied the bride up stui N, and while in tier chamber, was in the act of reaching fOr something, holding in the other hand a fluid lamp, when, shocking to relate, the lamp exploded, and enveloped her entire dress in one sheet of flame. In this dreadful plight, scr,cin ing loudly, the unlortuinte young lady rushed down stairs, when every effort was made to relieve tier front so perilous tt situation. We regret to add, that she was burned in such a shucking manner, about the face, breast, and indeed the whole body, that her life is despaired of- She w e t conveyrd to the l lospital, The ac H , n. was occasi , med in con-,c quenve of th , .. of the lamp ti,,t it i ng ii,;ht, the fluid coming out, and igniting with the blaze REMARKS OF MR. MEEK, OF CENTRE, dal remember the men,:wiih itiOjqd who, with many other:. inr.d.workinykiilo, In the house of Representatives, made on the had settled. upon a. s tilieforswhiii,they:Afo,'t Reading Railroad Bill, Thursday, Jan. IJ. to be vacant land ; after_ years of iliac ' Mr. SPEAKER have watched the rifice and patient entrurance:OrpriFiition ; progress of this bill, now before.' us, with and when they thoilight PerifSektesliii 05- ' mingled lbelings of grief and indignation : session,olhomes for their dealining, years, nor do I rise to address the House in op- a British subject sued upon theni a Writ of position to its progress, with any hope of ejectment. "'They, preferred their cadge - to arresting it. No sir, I ' have seen too much this bodi,. and:asked us to interpOse the 1-L abegislation to hope for any such result.-- shieldilit protection. _Were they heard 1 I have learned, by painful experience, that no sir; the ,constitution was in our way. there is no resisting a measure of this Poor fellows! We could do nothing 'for kind when backed by corporation power. theml they were not a corporation,: "Alasl But I must express my total dissent to its pocir Yorick passage, and representing as Ido a plain Sir, we.hear, with the deepest emotion, unsophisticated democratic constituency, I of the threatened rupture of our holy,Un- I dare not suffer the passage °fa bill so mon- ion ; with disinay portrayed upon every strous in its provisions, without speaking face, the bare possibility of such a cants " out my disapprobation in the most unmig. trophe is spoken .of—one lays his finger ' takable language. upon his mouth, and dumb with'amaza- I cannot discuise the fact, that my own ment, he hears the fearful and portentious heart beats inure faintly—my high expec. word "DISUNION," pronounced as the unions of successful legislation now drag' death-knellof his country's glory. - His •in the dust—all my hopes quail, and I am country : aye, the country of destiny; the wounded for the cause of my best devo- glory of all lands ; the beacon-light of the tions—the triumph of sound democratic benighted, down-trodden, oppressed, 'and rinciples. How is it sir, that we promise injured of all the nations; the country to so much at home, and yet do so little when which we invite the hungry, homeless here, that is really democratic 1 Are we and persecuted of every clime to come, not continually deriding oar whig oppo- find nn asylum in the "land, of the free nests with the meanest subserviency to in- and the home of the bra Ye." And yet sir, corporation privilege—with the most ab- we, by our profligate legislation, are like jest devotion to wealth and its usurped ly soon to make it but an empty name, a prerogatives—wit being the party who shadow—a skeleton only will he left to the are always ready to corner privilege upon people, if we continue thus to, rot them, the few, while we claim to be the devotees for the benefit of soulless corporations. of principles known only by this motto: Sir, we shall hear of this bill againi "equcil ;Ind exact justice to all men--ex.' when we come to elect n goternor or pros elusive privileges to none." I ident. The whbis will'hurl it upon us as I should not have said a word on the the party in the majority, and having the 'subject, but that I wish to bear my 'testi- power to prevent such legislation. We mony to the soundness of our people at profess to hold the best—the ',only good home and their honest adherence to prin- principles on which to administer a recall). ' dicks They send us here with right views, heal) government, and urge men to sustain !but nuns, we do not stay right, and our de—:--us-by--irgutnents addressed-to their hopes iceived and betrayed constituents are still and fears, their rights and- liberties; and left to wonder why it is so—why they elect yet disappoint all hand lietray n majority of the members to this House' In the name, sir, of the democrntiespartv :charged with the cause of their rights and and its principle S—of my constituents , Of principles, and yet, whig principles always Centre and Clearfield counties, and .of the ' prevail. ' constitution which I have sworn to sustain, It is with amazement I see democrats I protest against the passage of this bill. in this House, willing to father a respon- ! sibility near skin to that assumed by those who inflicted upon the abused people of the commonwealth the defunct bank of the' United States—a deep, damning, dark.' deed, that involved millions of money, and brought ruin upon thousands of innocent and confiding people. The same arguments used now wore used to secure the passage of that obnox ious measure—the case of poor widows,' orphans, retired business men in their old days—att cruelty of robbing them of their only hope—their all—by cutting clown the Bunk at a stroke I We were then told of its soundness and utility !--of its solvency —but the need of time to settle up its bu. siness. in vain did the friends of right measures, urge the dangerous magnitude of the mammoth corporation—its unwieldy debts, and corrupting influences—the In., can evinible ruin it wuuld sooner or later bring' upon the state. All Was nothing (wrrit siEN Or LIKE PA.SSIONS NV ITII us' when brought in contact with the means and ap piiances of the Bank—and its friends. But sir, the day of doom ea me—the day of which we had been again and again einonished, and a fearful crash it was ? We heard wailings and ruin through the whole L ngth ur the Lm :l. Then came the hank rolit law and swept away 450 mil lions of debts due by these bank robbers, to a plundered people. Wnsan N O W Is THE ks; w h o dare a‘ow himself a friend of that foul deed of lesislntion, and vet tisk the pto support hint :by any office in their gist? But look at this bill before us. Two years ago this company was here asking us to incorporate eight or ten millions of debts as preferred stock. We rerun s ' that privilege. It now comes, and o • s e siers- , to suspend for 20 whole years tion of our collection lawo %Nl!' knowledges over simeon by How corms all tip years since it in a debt of creased to X (Ifs Gazetlc Nil ID ber 35. fim‘kkmmfioflmnmmrf-fiww fir irracite eyll4l.lj4f.' ar la a 0 1itiglifl ~.7 Atr to i 1., Atli .:. . Ato' . ... do . _2 . 'do, ~.„,X,i) „.„. - kttllcrifitppWtiO!.... 0 :)do :, •• 0- ttloths'., 1-CIC2 1 do-,.-6.months-; • , - • ...,• •-- • 400 1 dti - , l2 , inontirt• '-- •- ..- 700 2 do .3 months - .6,00 -2 'do 6 months -• • ' - 800 . 2 ` do 12 months ,t : ! :.-, - .- .10 7 (10 3 do 3 months.. ..• '6 CO : -9. do 6 nuaitha '' :•• ,• ‘L. '.9:00 3_ do 12 months.. ._ ..• -•, 12 al. 5 do ' - or half a iatenifi, 6 , 'fttotdha' 'l2 00 • 5. do or Mira '0071'1..14 - ifirmay:::.29..9! 10 do or one column. 6 , m onths 20 Oa 10 do or ono coltibili; 12 nioidhi 1 : - 30'150 Books, Jobs anti Blanks Of evcry desCription, printcol in she very . 04 stylo and on the shortest notice, at ,the OqUIVIZI) VOL LA 11. Office Selections For a Newspapei. Must people think the seleCtion of suit , able matter fora newspaper the earliest part of the bMiness, flow great, an,:er ror. It is by all means the most difficult. To look over and over hundreds . of ex change papers every week, from .which to select enough for one, especially when the question is not - what shall, butivbat shall not be selected, is, no easy tusli, If every person who readsu newspaper could have edited it, we should hear less corn-. plaints. Not unfrequently it is the cape , that an editor looks over all his 'exchatlige papers for something interesting, and : can absolutely find nothing. Every paper; is drier than a contribution box ; und..yet something in it, and be does the best .he To an editor who has the letikt .care care us to what he selects, the writing that he has to do is by fur the least part. of his labor. Every subscriber thinks the paper prht ted lur his own benefit, and if t,here.",is nothing ISt that suits hi/it it must be stopped ;Ma good for nothing. Soipo people look ce.er the marriages and deaths, and actually complain of the editor if but a few people in the vicinity have been; so unrortunate as to die, or to get rpiirrioV in the previous week. An editori hove such things in his pagi6 s ,, darer they occur or not. Just no O ne v ia ins hers as 1111 edilur may I n r • abhors all IV! ent tastes has he I , •'` --e a d„ an d pnw ,nts nothing r b Male , 'file pi it64inething smart,24o;e.Si Ontnound. 00 0 like;sl door • now tkt trohc, and wonders thus t!‘ • stuff in CZE MN „ ~:-... MI