The star. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1831-1831, July 12, 1831, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    OFFICE OF THE
'Clt44Ritßsilffn 6 :
STREET, 4 FE* DOORS
'WEST Or MR. FORRY'B TAVERN.
AI)VERTISIEMENTS..
Conspicuously inserted 'rem times for omr
no:Amt. per square—over lbw times, TwENTy.rivE
'*fines per square will he charged.
Printed and Published, ut GETTYSIIVRG, PA,
111( It( muirr W. inti)lnwroN.
A Dv 14 - Nurts 1 . 4; m
MARYLAND A
*T.A.TVA LOTTERY,
No.. 5, Ton 1831.
Ry which the holder of two Tickets most draw
wog Prize, and may draw THREE!!!
To be drawn in Baltimore on T7IURS . -
1) AY, the 281 h instant.
HIGHEST PRIZE, 10,410 DOLLARS!
SCR EM E:
1 prize of $10,0004 prizes of $lOll
1 I
2,000 8 ~50
1 1,0001 - f? 0 20
500 2r
500
300
200 ,
Half Ticket 9, Ono Dollar—Quarters 50 cts
..
2 *
TO BE HAi► AT
CLARK'S,
N: W. corner of Baltimore and raleort,
N. W. corner nf Baltimore and (.ay, N. E. cor
ner of Baltimore and Chaele ß .sbr.
LLY'Where the highest prize in the recent State
Lotteries has been oftener sold than atany other
offices ! ! !
LrOrders, either by mail (postpaid) or private
conveyance, enclosing the' cash . for prizes, will
meet the same prompt and punctual attention, as
if personal application. Address to
PAIN CAARK,
Lottery Vendor, Baltimore.
td-13
July 5, 1831
LIST OF LETTERS
REMAINING tho Post Office at
York spring, Adams county I'a. on
the first of July, 13:11.
Win. R. Baker Richard Hammitt('
Elizabeth Beals Jonathan
John Duyie/d
Anthony Deardorff
George Diem
Margery Donahay
Christian Deardorff'
David Eieker
Philip Group
Phebe Griest
•c r its , en. am
Rebaca Griest Samuel Zeigler
HERMAN WIERMAN. P. M.
July 5 . , 18:31 4t-13
Aritt3 Gt. W ORE.
. -a:
DR. GILBERT,
!logo, leave to inform his friends and the public
generally, that he
HAfl ALWAYS ON HAND A RIPPLY OP TIM
FOLLOWING AII.TICLE.ti: VIZ.
Acid Muriatic do Ctiliebs
do Nitric do Juniper
do Oxalic do Pennyroyal
do Sulphuric do Sassafras
' do Tartaric do Amber
, /Ether • - do Sallad
Alcohol do Sweet
Alum do Wormseed
• • Annatto Pon' Ashes -
,
Antimony do Barley
Arsenic Pepper
Balsam ropaiva . Precipitato Red
do Sulphur Priissian_Bluo
- do - DO Milli a Plitiiiro .Ston e
Barks - • Patent Medicines
Bitter Ingredients • Anderson's Pills
Black Load ' Bateman's Drops
Blacking British Oil •
Blue Vitriol Fisher's l'ills
Borax • l loimor's Pills
Boxes Pill I)yott's Pills
Brimstono Loo's -Pills
Brusbes Paint Lyon's Pills
Calomel Goilfroy's Cordial
Camphor ••.. Opodeldoc,
Castor Potter's Catholicoa
Chalk • ' GOlden Tiiictiiie •
Chronic, Green stotigliton's Bitters
do Red • Rail Lead
do Yellow do Saunders
Cinnamon it oot:,A rrow
Cloves • do ( 7olombo
Cochineal - .. (l4,Cent ian *
Cologne Wider "'••• - AO• Rhubarb
Conlimtionary - -do Simko ..
Copperas do Squills
Corks Rnsn Pink
Dragons Blood . Rosin •
Emery Rotten Stone
-Eisonce Bergamot Sal .zEratus
do Lemon
ti t. FIN:fn . TI
do Cinnamon "'' Glauber ~.
do Pepporiniiit do Tarim',
Flair of Sidpliiir . • Sash tools assorted
Flowersof Chainnui• Sands Anis •
mile do Caraway
.Fol Digitalis o • .do Coriamter
do Senna do Fennell
. .
Glue • do Felinitgrook
Gum Aloes - do Mustard White
• do .Arabic ' Soap Shaving -
do . Assafietidii. ' do Castile • '
do Copal Spanish Brown
. do Gnaincum SpOngo - -
do Myrrh • Spirits Nitre
do Opium do Hartshorn •
do Shell Lan do Xurpentine
' do. Tragacanth Starch - • '
Hive Syrup Tartar Emetic
ink - Powder ... Theriac r
dtt Liquid -•-• Tr lISSOR '
do Durable Umber ' -
_.
fmjigo _ , ( Varnish Black Oil - ,
Lamp-DNA - - do Copal _
Lithargo , Wafers " •
Madder !. Whito. Vitriol
' , Magneeia , 1 ' 1 ilb Load
. , ,
. Manna _ ',. • •- - mei . A_ntimonial . -
Mineral Green pt. . 10 Bitters. --
Nutmegs - . . Wood Brazil • •
pal • Aniseed - • . • - irlo Fitatio
do COMA!. • . - , do . f.og '.. ~
' 'do Nicaragna 1' .
do Cloves
Together with a variety of articles ' not men
4ionlia &hove; Which-he will mill on .REASON A
OLV TARMS`- 1 ;- • ' - .:---.-
_' '
lialtityliire,streot4Gettphirg, May 18—eow3m.
JOO
10000
EEO
Charles Mitman
Henry Mondorf
David. Myers, Esq.
Jane A,niz Neely
Hon. Richard Rush
John B. Stidth •
Amy Wierman
Burkhart Warner
M
....
.........m....m,0.......................
.—.----,.---....
. •
. . .
. .
~. . .
. . ./1 .
. .
. . • ..
. .
: ... .
. , .. . . . ....
. .
-. . .
'
•
. . , . . .
. ,
~ . . . ..,
. .
. ~
. . .
.....-,.. .
.. .. .
...
.
1 ..
r.
MIC IT AMOR P A TIM? PRODRSSE GIVIBUS—"Tur .ovr nI MY Coovrnv LEA DA MK TO ne. OY mivANTAon To MY I.7i.Low.CiTizErqs."
Tlll4l GARLAND.
. "With suwetest /lowers enrich'd
Flom various
. 4railleus cull'd with ram"
From Ow Boston ".Athenourn."
13
0 pledge 1110 not in sparkling wino,
In cups with roso's bound;
0 hail mo at no festive shrine,
In mirth and music's sound.
Or if you pledge, me, let it bo
When 11000 urn by to hoar, •
And in the wino you drink to me,
For mu let fall a tear.
Forbear - to breathe in pleasure's hall,
A name you should forget,
Lest echo's lhintest whisper fall
hor who lot'os. thee yet.
Oi,if you name no, lot it he
When none urn by .to bear;
And fts my name is sigh:4 by thee,
- For me let full u tear.
0 think not, when the harp shall sound
The notes we loved again,
And gentle voices breathe around,
I mingle in the strain.
Oh! only think you hear me when
The night breeze whispers near;
In hours of thought, and quiet, then
For me lot lidl a tear.
Senk me not in the mazy dance,
Nor - let 'your Ewes trace
Resemblance in a timid glance,
Or distant fornis and Bice.
But if you seek me, he it when
No other forms aro near;
And while iu thought we meet again,
For me let fall a tear.
E 11 IQ
Reflecting \Vollian's fowl turd-pure devotion
r = 7.7 . 1 2:1
I have been with thee in thy hour
Of glory aritl'orbliss—
Doubt not this nioniory'sliviq power.
To strengthen nib through this.—llemans.
Sho was n heautifill when I first saw
her. She was stalldn►, u at the side of
her lover at the marriagestatar. She was
slightly pale—yet-L-ever and anon, as the
ceremony proceeded, a faint tinge .of crim
son crossed her beautiful cheek, like the
reflection of a sunset cloud upon the clear
waters of a quiet lake.- tier lover, as he
clasped her delicate hand within his own,
gazed on her for a moment with umningled
admiration, and the warm and eloquent
blood played upon his cheek, shadowing at
intervals his manly forehead and "melting
into beauty on his lip:"
"lie stood in the prime of his youth—La fair form
With bin feelings yet motile, his spirits yet wurtn;
An Eagle to shelter the dove with his wing,
An elm whore the light twining tendrils might
cling."
And they gave themselves to one anoth
er, in the presence of Heaven; and every
heart blessed them as they went their way
rejoicitirli their love.
Years passed on, and again I saw those
lovers. They were seated together where
the light of a summer sunset stole through
the half closed and crimson curtains, lend
ing_nricherAint-to-tho-dolioate---earpetingi"
and the exquiSite embellishments of the rich
and gorgeous apartment. Time had slight
ly changed thetn in outward appearance.
The girlish buoyancy of the young wife had
indeed given -place to the grace ofperfocted
womanhood, and her lip was some - What pa
ler, and a faint line of care was slightly
perceptible upon her beautiful brow. Her
husband's brow too was marked somewhat
more deeply than his years might warrant
and-pritte--kiiirgestiO
over it, and left their traces upon
it—a .sil
ver. hue was mingling with the darkness of
the hair, which had become thinned around
his temples almost. to baldnesS. He was
reclining on the splendid ottoman with his
fitce halihidden by his hand, as it' ho thared
that the'deep and troubled thoughts which
- oppressed hun were Visible upon his features.
"Edward, you ate ill to-night"-said
wife in a low, sweet and half inquiring voice
as she laid her hand--upon his own.
The husbind rouSed him Self from his at
titude slowly, ttrid a slight frown knit his
brow. "I am not ill," he said somewhat
abruptly, and he folded his arms upon his
bosom as if he wished no interruption of his'
evidently bitter thoughts.
Indifferenv from those ‘Ve_love
tithe sensitive bosom. , It is as if the
sun of heaven refused his wonted.cheerful
ness, and glared down upon us with a cold,
Aim, and forbidding glance. It is dreadful
to feel that the only being of our love refuses
to ask our sympathy—that he-broods over
feelings which lie scorns, or fears to reveal,
dreadful to watch the convulsing feature,
the gloonty brow—the indefinable shadows
of hidden emotions—the inVolentary signs
of sorrow in -which we are, forbidden to par
ticipate, and Whose' .character we cannot
know., .
.• •
The wife ekayed once more: "Edward," ,
she said slowly; and afrectiOnately,'
"the..thne.has been,,,When you were. willing'
to confide your secret joys and sorrows to,
;one, Who. has .nevCr,, I - trust, betrayed ,otir
onfidenee.- 'Whence -'flier, my. dear !Ed
ward; is this
. cruel r9serve.. You are trout
'Wed,. and yet you re:fusel() tell trio thocanse.'7
• Soinet hino *ofreturning telnderuessidften: -
Cdtfor the-
.cold
.
instant , told severity. of. the
CAE'IIrYSISURCI., TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1831.
Effl
of a hubbant dearer than de itself.' --
"But Margaret" said the husband, "you
look sadly ill. - You cannot breathe the air
of this dreadful cell."
"Oh, speak' not of me, my dearest FA
ward," said the devoted woman. can
endure every thing for your sake. Haste,
Edward-haste, and all will be well,"—and
then aided with a trembling hand to dis
guise the proud - form of her husband in a
female garb. -
"Farewell My love, my preserver"—
whispered the husband in the_ ear of his dis
guised-wife, as the officer sternly reminded
the supposed lady that the tune allotted for
her visit had expired. " Farewell—we
shall meet again," responded his wife—and
the husband passed out unsuspected and
escaped the enemies of his life.
They did meet again—that wife Ind
husband—but only as the dead may meet--..
in the awful commumngs of another world.
Affection had borne up her exhiiusted spirit,
until the last great purpose of her exertions
was acconnidishectin the safe y of_hav_hu.s.
band, and when the bell tolled on the morrow
and the prisoner's cell was opened, the
guards found wrapped in the habiliments of
their destined victim, the pale but still beau
tiful curse of the devoilsll WIFE.
Tan Sw . minra's Mee.—'. Who_ eemes then?"
said a sentinel to it portion Coming -- near his post.
"A'friend," softly said a timid voice. "Advance
and give the'parolo." The. same soft, timid voice
- said,"fAinC"'
the parole, and you cannot pass. It is more, than
my life is worth to permit you to'pass. l "In
deed, thin is cruel indeed, not to allow..a. sergeant's
.wife to puss, to take, perhaps, her last farewell.
I beseech you to lot inc pass ere the morning's
battle takes place; lot me spend this night in his
company. I have travelled 40 miles to seelini."
"fuss, friend: all's well." It proved her lust
farewell. _
A fellow not much acquainted with the
tricks of Dame Fortune, came into a lottery
office in- I3road.way.a few days since, and
wished to purchase tho highest prize,'whieli
was exhibited before , the door in glaring fi
.gures, "$20,000 !" lie was askedifhe would
have a half ticket or a whole eiko.
A whole ono, to he sure, said Hodge;
there's no use in plaguing one's self with half
a prize; give'us the whole or-none—tvgenty
thousand dollars.gays I. -
lie paid the cash,, took his ticket and went
away. During the interval between the
purchase and the drawin g, con
lineally on the twenty thousand flol lars. He
could . not sleep o'nights ; or if he :stele, it was
only to dream of iiioneyof gold, and silver
'by the buithel, or bank by .the acre—
and to talk in his sleep of the wealth he was l
about, to posses. fps reveriesr 7 his (lay
divainsi . as well as his 'Unerrin g 9 r weer n'
of riehes. -Hespeculated.on vtlin - pleasure
he would enjoy—Milk figerelie would cut
im the. worca. various plans of em.
husband's features, but it passed aVay and
a bitter smile Was his only reply.
Time passed - on, and
, tii(7 'wain were sep
arated from each other. The husband sat
gloomily and alone in-the damp cell of a
dungeon. Ile ball folltnyed al lila ion as his
Cod and Ihiled in his career. Ile had
m i ng l e d w ith Inert whoM his bract loathed,
he had sought out the tierce and wronged
spirits of his land, and had breathed into
them the madness of revenge. Ile had
drawn his sword against his country—he
had fanned rel►ellion to a tlame, which had
been quenched ii► human blood. lie had
fallen—miserably fallen, and ho had been
doomed to die the death ofa traitor. •
It .was his last night The morrow
was the day appointed his eXecutioni
Ile saw the sun sink !whilst the green hills
of tha-West, as he sat by the dim grate of
his dungeon, with a feeling of unutterable
horror. lie felt that it was the last sun that
would set to him. It would cast its next
level and sunset rays upon his grave—upon
the grave of a dishonored traitor!
The door , of his. dungeon opened, and a
light form entered and threw herself into
his arms. The softened light of sunset fell
upon - the pate brow.and wasted cheek of his
once-beautiful wife.
"Edward- . --my dear Edward," she said,
"I have come' to save you.. 1 have reached
you after a thousand difficulties, and I thank
trod - my- purpose is - nearly accomplished."
Misfortune had softened the proud heart
of manhood, and as the husband pressed his
pale wife to his bosom, a tear-tren►bled on
his eye lash. have not deserved this
kindness," he murmered in the.chokedione
of convulsive agony.
"Edward," said his wife in an earnest,
but taint and low voice, which indicated ex.-
tremo and fearful° debility ."we have not a
moment' to lose. By an exchange of gar
ments you will be enable to pass out unno
ticed Haste, or we may be too late. Fear
nothing tbr me, I am a woman, and they
will not inure mo for m efforts in -behalf
0
Variote4 ;
That the mind of destilito man,At 'idiot:3 of change
And pleased with norelly E may hc
1:377:110. pr„zzli.
=I
ploving rod enjoying his wealth. He would
purchase houses, carriages; he would 'live
in fifty
,stylp,; lie would have servants to
tend to ; and alw►ve all, he would cat as
much gingerbread and lick as much 'lasses
as he had a mind to. He would also get
hin► a handsome wile. The haugl►ty Ta
bitha Tallboy', who haul so long baffled his
gallant -endeavors, would no mare turn up
her nose at Mr. Hodge—the rich Mr. I lodge
--Peter Hodge, Esquire. Ile would bring
th.- prowl hussy to terms, if he didn't l►e
would eat a live ram cat, that's all!
The drawing took place, and !lodge, af
ter a sleepless night, called at the lottery
Oleo for his prize. Walking in with the
gait and dignity of a man who comes to
receive money and not to pay it, he laid his
ticket on the counter an►l said—
NOW, Mister, 1 will take that little change
if it's convenient.
Change!
Ay, that prize.
Rut, sir, you'vellrawn a blank.
I've drawn a blank! I wonder if I have?
I tell you what it is, Mister, I hadn't noth
ing to do with the drawing—l didn't touch
a linger to it. Put I purchased a prize
t'other day of twenty thousand dollarS; and
that's what I'm come after--so none ofyour
fooling.
Rut I tell you sir, that your ticket .has
drawn a blank.
%Veil, I don't care if it has drawn a Wan=
ket—that's no cons:u•n oftnine. All I want
is the twenty thou.and dollars that 1 bought
and paid for not a week ago.
But consider, dear sir--
Consider! I tell you that I wont consider
UM none of you considering ehaps—l always
go straight ahead--no quirps for me--none
of vour ramfoozling.
I tell you, si r, TrOlf
)1 istaktni! 'So I am deucedly mistaken—
!. thought you . was an. honest man. But
you see there's no us in trpieg with me—
I'M a man after my own btart. I pUrchased
the highest rim and I'll have it h the hol •
po er. ve got a cart sere at tio oor. ere
you whipper snapper, bring in that'are large
trunk.
But I repeat, sir, that you have no money
to receive ; I am sorry to say it..
So am I bloody sorry you Should say it.
But tell mei Mister, will you count out that
'are money, or not?
I cannot. •
Do you_ see_this sledge hammer? raising
his brawny list.
I see it.
Do you calculate to pay it in gold, silver
or bank bilk?
Hero is some strange mistake, sir? and it
you will allow line to explain, I can convince
you—
Very well--but Wynn don't convince me;
you see this d'eath•rnaul, again elevating his
The lotteryman entered into an_explant
tion of the fr eaks Fortune, and at
length succeeded in convincing his customer
that his expected prize was actually a blank,
Still the_ disappointiMint-was-i4o-gfeat-,- that
he could not hear it with a calm mind, and
ha exclaimed—
Well, if this doesn't beat all•
- my great
grandmother's relations, then thers:s no
snakes—to pay the sum of ten dollars for
the highest_prize,and-not got acent at-last!-
Such a thing will happen sometimes. •
jofired hard though, I'll be hanged if
it aint. ... At least, Mister, you ought to,cir
.
curalund the money.
--tcant-afford•-that..L---
Well just pay the cart/min, then.
I'ni sorry to say that I cant do it; but if
you'll purcha3e another ticket I think I can
promise you better lack next time-the high
est prize is thirty thousandshillars.
Thirty thousand dog' tails! don't dell mo
any of your pelaver; I've been cheated onc't
and that's enough for me—l'll never get
cached a second tinic , . !fere, you cart man
you may loud iip this 'ere trunk again. I'll
never trust these Lotter}' sellers any more,
if I do hang
my gizzard,, that's all. Then
giving the broker a look of irreconcilable
hatred, lie left the office. He however pret ,
ty soon accommodated. his mind again his
'umble proSpects-declared that houses, hor
ses, nor those Sort of things were only a
plague to a man—and as to Tabitha Tallboy
she may go to old Old-Nick for all him—
he'd never think of her again as long as he
lived.-never.—:lVetn York Constellation.
Devtruetion of the Capitol of North Car:
olinu.--=l'his splendid edifice was consumed
by .fire on the .. 23d ult. together with its cost
ly furniture; a valnable library and Canova's
-Statue of Washington, a monuwent erected
by the public spirit of the citizens of North
Carolina, in honor of the father of Ins coun
try, at •an expense of 30;000 dollars, and
said to be the best speeimen of sculpt re in
the world. A thlt length portrait of Wash
ington,wh ich hung near the Speakers Chair
was, however, rescued from the de'vouring
element without injury. The -firefit . iS said
originated in the Carelessness of; the Work
men engagesl in covering 'the building with
.zinc. It has been suggested - thatAho . loss
of the statue is nolirreparable, as the on
al model', is still at Iteme wine!' a competent
art ist-trii,glit make one. inferioronly tO the
first:-- 7 - Butt/mare /'a riot.
•
1!121
. _
TrIAN or TIIIS PAFFIR:—Two Daai;Aar
per :1111111/11—payrihlelnif yearly. in advance. No
subscriptions taken for,lvss than six inonthi,lirid - 7
none discontinned until all arrearuges are paid, '
unless at the opt' of the Editor—anti,a failures
to notify a discontinuance 1 / 4 will he considered a
new engagement, and the paper forwarded ac.
eord ingly. •
TEIC PER A NNCM.
- ( >L. 2.--NO. 14.
M t. Rush's LErFER.
The letter of the lion. RICHARD RITSII
against frentasotiry is worthy ot"76—it is
worthy of himself nod his Patriotic Father,
who signed t he I ileelarat ion oil talependence.
To anti masons it is more than ''ustification
for the past; it is mere than ample, _full re.
cempence for the future. Coining, as it does,
from the purest, the most disinterested—
from a man highly distinguished through
out the nation fir virtue and learning,—who
can read it and not say; ."Freemasonry,
thou bast been weighed and found wanting."
The p'atriots of the land, unawed by the
scoff, this sneers and the systematic slan
ders •propagated by the advocates of a.sg
cret combination, cannot prevent men who
lippreciate the value of freedom, fro . pa . corn
ing out on this great subject, which so deep.
ly agitates time American People. Anti
masons hope, with the blessing of an-over
ruling Providence, to . transmit the liberties
and laws of the land as pure to posterity as
they received them from the -heroes-of
SEVENTY
The politeness of. the Long.lslanders,
and their in makingknown their re
quests in a manner the least oll'ensive possible ! is
illustrated by - the - following: -When-s- traveller
w something to drink, a supper and lodu
logs for the night, he introduces his request
follows:--"W ill you have the goodness to give me'
a draught of - cold - water; and if you Please - put
a gill of spirits in it, ti.r I am soliungry that I
don't know whore I skull lodge to-night."
Some facts, interesting and encouragtag
to - the - e - friends --- of the American System, in
relation to the great increase of sales of
domestic goods in the Now York Market,
are given in the Frkman's Advocate. In
1814, the amount of domestics sold at auc
lii)ii;lifiiclulitEr•TnlTlOlsslB7;ol7llllBl7
to $726,165, and in 1830 to $10,300,705
making an incre,po in sixteen- -yeara-of2r
-600 per cent. In 1629, the excess ofsales
offoraign over domestic goods -waA-7,1
802, and in 1830 it was reduced to fo
.-- -
he comp er_o tie 'ow ork Annual
Register estimates the value of domestic
goods sold at private sale in the city in•lB3o'
at full 815,000,000. A business's° very
extensive, which feeds and clothes and em.
ploys so large a number of our fellow citi
zens, deserve the fostering hand of govern
menet° protect it against foreign competition.
Our manufactures are yet in their infancy;
and it is not difficult to foresee what they
will be, when in the progressof a few year* -
they reach their maturity. Then we shall.
want no tariff tbr protection, for we shall be
able not only to enter thefists with I.ngland
in our own country, but will force ler to
yield to us seine large proportion of the
profits of her foreign trade.—Previd. Jour.
• A metaphorical gentleman at a public
dinner, in the course of his oration observ
ed, that the 'clouds dropped_fatnessPLAlL
indiVidiiii rinitimtly rose from the table,
ex
claiming that he must hasten home, as he
was unfortunatelvif a Inlous temperament.
Sam Rogers was dining a short time ago
at a table where what was served for real,
was rather too elderly to be allowed that
delicate name. " Why is this meat," in
qUired Sam, "like a secret which you have
forgotten?--'-D'ye give it up? Becituse_y.
cannot re-veal it.' •
It has been estimated that the
tion of ardent spirits line been reduced, in
the State of New-llumpshire,
inAucncoof the pro
por t ion. of about nine•tenths, making an an
nual saving of-expenditure in this article - , of
$268,000. The present consumption is
computed to•be two and a half' gallons to
each individual of the State ' at an amnial
expenso of 0:33,000.
The keeper ofa road-side public•house,
Called The Ass, when the Duke Of Welling
ton came into adminiitration, substituted the
sign of his!grace's.head.' Ait opposition house
was shortly after opened, the landlord - of
which adopted the other's rejected
The latter, however, indignant at the cir
cunistatice, painted in large fetters over hie
picture of the duke's head, "This is the
ORIGINAL Ass."
A player, when Price, the American
manager first took - possession of Drury Lane
stopped the band that had struck up God
save the King,,upon the manager's entry...
"This is not the most appropriate. tune; _
cried the wag. "WI - att .- then should we play
Mr. Harley," inquired the astonished leader,
"Play," exclaimed Harley, "why Yankee..
Doodle's come tq tom nOo be sure."
Lord Kenyon,- who has just resigned his
game, was-in, the. habit, some years 40,.0t~
wearing it toa considerable, length! having_ .
'•4.
- sh
- omitted to y something particular to his
steward orio day, he rode after him, and
meeting a countryman, enquired whether
he had soon a stoat gentlemanupon a 1001,,
.tailed jiorse; "Nor, zur,"•reiilied the , won..
Berin g btrailik in, "but Ido tmea lanergaikitt ' •
APentionan on a stout horse.
, • . .. •
ticntly endure all . the attacks or_titoset
that envy•louyour will 11' that mal l
conquer th s Atit
.- •
Frimi the Nlirristmvn Free Prose
EU
I!
L~.~