**4**. .-•.* ..' lEtiiittlfittt4st .."i'44ot.',.' VOL. 5--NO. 41.1 .1(11T itieMeisfs. W'teibtlic Aair. Ij ILL be sold at public sale, on the premises, on Monday the 2611, iuet. at 12 o'clock 3r. The one-third of 54 Acres of Unpatented Land, Situate in Franklin township, Adams coun ty, adjoining lands of Hugh Scott, William M'Clellan and others--to be sold as the Es tate of NA AC Nortxs, deceased. The im provemcins on said property are ;;;;IVa one and a half story G II OIT SF , stab e, &c. with water quite convenient.— Terms made known on day of sale, and at tendance given by _ _ JOS! AII FEJUtEE, Adrit'r. • J:ltmary 6, 16i:35. te*-40 vutatt - r aatt+ •pursdance of an order of the Orphans' Court of Admits county, to rte directed, I will expose to public stile, at the Court house, in the Borough of Gettysburg, on Tuesday the 27th (lay of January inst. at 1 o'clock r. !it., a certain TRACT ®r LAND, Containing 31,0 Acres, more or less, adjoin ing land of James APAllister, Peter .Frey, and others--on which are erected a two. • story WEATHMBOARDED lif 0 s s Log Stable, two springs of water, and an excellent orchard—late the Estate of JouN W. HAGEN, deceased. WILLIAM LAUII, January 6, 1835. is-40 G A.UWEN WEEDS. Blood Beet, White Head Lettuce, Sugar do. Early curled do. do. White Onion, Specled do. do. Yellow do. Long Scarlet Ruilibli, Red do. Savoy Cabbage, Orange Carrot, Early York do. Early Horn do. Cayenne Pepper, Red do. Double Peppergrass, Long Cucumber, Summer Savory, Early'lViishington Peas. For sole at the Drug store of Dr. J. GILBERT, Gettysburg. • January 6, 1835. tf-40 Estate of Thomas Griest, dec'd. ALL persons indebted to the Estate o THOMAS GRIEST, late of Lati more township, Adams county, deceased, will make payment to the subscribers without delay. And all persons having claims or demands against the Estate of said deceased, are hereby notified to make known the same to the subscribers without delay. . The Executors both reside in Latimore township, Adams county. ISAAC TIJDOR, "" E , GIDEON GRIEST, x rs. December 16, 18:34 NOTICE. ALL persons indebted to the Estate of PETER MARSHALL, late of Ber- wick township, Adams county, deceased, will make payment to the subscriber with. out delay. And all persons 'having claims or demands against the Estate of said de ceased, are hereby notified to make known the seine to the subscriber, without delay. The Administrator resides in Conowago township, Adams County, Pa. JOHN MARSHALL, Adm'r. Dec. 0, 1834. 6t-36 ROWAND'S TONIC MIXTURE, OR VEGETABLE FEBRIFUGE. A Cure for the Fever and Ague. THIS article is offered by the proprietor as a certain and lasting cure for the Fever and Ague, having been thoroughly tested in the cure adult harassing disease. It contains neither Arsenic, Barks, or Mer cury, or any article unfriendly to I he human constitution. It acts as a gentle laxative, useful also in cases of debility of stomach and bowels, &c. For further particulars see bills and certificates accompanying each bottle. For sale at the Drug Store of Dr. J. GILBERT. Gettysburg, Nov. 25, 1834. 4t-34 SNII A I M'S PANACEA—For the cure of scrorula, or. king's evil, syphilitic and mercurial diseases, rheumatism, ulcerous sores, white swellings, diseases of the liver and skin, general debility, &c. Also, SWAIM'S VERMIPUGE—an excellent article for worms. For sale at the Drug *Aare of DR. J. GILBERT, Gettysburg. December 9, 1834. if—;36 in ACASSAR OlL.—Rowland's Mame. IT -la sar Oil to beautify and promote the growth of the hair. For sale at the Drug Store of • Dr. J. GI LB E RT. Gettysburg, Dec.. 9; 1834. ' tf-36 IWORM TEA—For sale at the Drug store of DR. J. GILBER'F. Gettysburg, Dec.,9, 1834. tf-36 E IER4TLIS—A largo - quantity re " • ceived and for sale at the Drug store of DR. J. GILBERT, Gettysburg. December 9,1834. - tf—:36 a(6211 Wfra Expeditiously executed at the Star Office. THE GARLANn. -"With sweetest flowers enricli'd. From various gardens cull'd with care." God and the Bible every where the same. How sweet to rest the weary soul, When labor bows our feeble frame; And find, in lands remote and near, God and tin. Bible stilt the ElOallea I launch upon the ocean wave, And view the wonders of the deep— old its surges mountain high, As o'er its breast fierce tempests sweep I view its billows calm to rest, ' And gently sleeping, quiet; tame,— And midst these changes, joy to find God and the Ilible still the same. On shores remote in other climes, 'Tenth other skies and stars I roam, When strangers only greet my eyes, Far distant from my native home. But yet, though new each scene appears, And men of different tongue and name; One thing is sweet, and 'Bs to rind God and the Bible still the Sall/C. Though nature wears a diffbrent form, And shows a difli.rent drapery too— And every , bird, and fish, and head, Presents a form peculiar, new: Still, midst this ever constant change That runs throughout all nature's frame, One thing is sweet, and 'tis to find God and the Bible still the same. Yes, sweet to think, that, though I roam 'Neath burning slum, Crpolar snows, In lands where night and darkness reign, Or where truth's lamp with clearness glows Midst all the change that nature knows, And change of men of different name-- The soul can upward look and find God and the Bible still the same. Stern winter comet'', with his frozen breath, And brow all lowering, and black with storm; Re shaketh from his locks the blights of death, And darkness mantled' round his awful form fie walks, in terror, on the deep, dark sea, And with him go his ministers of wrath, Which sweeping onward, uncontrolled, and free, Fling fearful ruin round their rapid path. lie sitteth, enow.robod, on an icy throne, That rises beetling o'er the northern pole;— He looked': lo! the world is all his own, And joy shoots wildly through his horrid soul. But the spring will come, And the glad young year, And the soft green fields Fresh flowers shall wear. And the blue skies laugh, And the earth be gay, And the sun go forth, On his joyous way. And the redbreast chirp, And the skylark sing, And the soul of the world Shall be glad in the spring. THE REPOSITORY. DYING FOR LOVE. To turn stark-fools and subjects fit For sport of boys and rabble wit.—/ludibras. Dying for love is a very silly thing. It answers no one good end whatsoever. It is poetical—romantic, perhaps immortalizing; but, nevertheless, it is silly, and oftentimes exceedingly inconvenient. I have been pretty near it six or seven times, but, thanks to my obstinacy!—(for which, indeed, I ought to be thankful, seeing I possess a very considerable portion of that unyielding es sence,) 1 have contrived to keep death from the door, and despair from the sanctuary of my thoughts. I cannot, in fact, believe that half of those who have the credit (/ should say dis-credit) of dying for love have really deserved it. .A man fixes his affections on a piece of cold beauty—a morsel of stony perfection—or on one far above him in rank and fortune—or on an equal, who has unfor tunately a lover whom she prefers. Well ! he becomes melancholy; takes cold upon it,' and dies. But this proves noThing; lie might have died if his passion had been returned, or if he had never loved at all. The fate of my friend is a case in point. He was deeply enatnoured of a very beautiful, bid adamantine lady, and, as a matter of course, grew, very low-spirited and very miserable. He did not long survive; and as nnother matter of course, it was given out that he died for love. As the world seemed to think it sounded 6t-37 better than saying that his death was occa sioned by drinking cold water immediately after walking ten miles under a burning sun, I did not contradict the report, although I had good grounds for so doing, and it be came very generally believed. Some aver that Leander died of love, "because, (they say) if that Hero had not been on the other side of the Hellespont, he would not have been drowned—argal, ho died ;or love."— These are your. .primary-causemen I Now am a plain•spolten fellow, and am more apt to draw natural than romantic conclusions —argot, I say he died of the cramp, or from being carried away by the rapidity of the stream: although I know at the same time, that is not the current opinion. I am no poet, and therefore take no poetic licences: the romantic do; and I am quite willing to let Common Sense decide between us. Let me, however," not be misundersteod; I argue not on the impossibility, but on the folly and inconsistency of dying for love. That it has occasionally happened, I am well aware. I remember Marian when she was as lovely and lively a girl as ever laid a blush ing cheek on a snowy pillow, and sank' into dreams of innocence and joy. I remember her too, when the rose wa., fading from her cheek, and solace and happiness had vanish ed forever from her forsaken heart. There was the impress of blighted hope upon her brow—the record of a villain's faithlessness upon her sunken cheek. Her eye told of long suffering, and her constant but melan choly smile evinced how patiently she en dured it. Pay by day the hue of mortality 'waxed fainter and fainter; her beautiful form wasted away, she became at lust like a spi rit of heaven dwelling among, but scarcely holding communion with, the sons and daughters of the earth. The tatter part of EY mozzinfr WRITE LEIDIDLIITON, EZzaion. ruzzamEnn, AND 15.7.0P7.1ET0P.. "I WISH NO OTHER HERALD, NO OTHER SPEAKER OF MY LIVING ACTIONS, TO KEEP MINE HONOR FROM CORRUPTION."-SHAHS. WINTER. aawwlraMPLICU 9 2: 4 ciftQ w tetipaimalr e a,, , aQwwkaatx aaaaa% her life seemed an abstraction—n dream— an unconsciousness of what was passing a• round her. The sister of S—, (of him who had broken the vows that wore pledged with such seeming fidelity to (llanan,) ab horred her brother's infidelity, and was finid er than ever of the poor heart•brokon gift• She sincerely pitied her, Fur pitcc renbuil, .uro in gentil berte; and sought, by every means in her power, to revive her past energies, and recall her to lost happiness and peace. But it was too late; although she complained not, her spirit was broken forever; and in the efliat of rais ing herself to give a last kiss to her friend, she sank back and died without a struggle or a sigh. There were some lines in u pe riodical work, shortly atter her death, evi dently written by a person acquainted with the parties, which I think, may nut impro. perly be inserted here. There's a stain on thee that can never fade, _ Though bathed in the mists of future years, And this world will be but a world of shade, Of sorrow, and anguish, and bitter tears. Thou last seen a flow'ret pine away, That loVed by thee, would have blossom'd fair, And thou shalt meet with a worse decay, And wither and die in thy soul's despair. Like the summer's breath was the gentle tale With which thou told'st of thy love awl truth, But thy falsehood came like the wintry gale, And blighted the llow'ret in its youth. It ham sunk to earth; but no tear nor sigh Has e'er betrayed thy bosom's pain. Yet a day will come when thou woold'st dio To call it back from the grave again. litul'st thou cherish'd it with the smile that won lts fadeless love in Spring's bloaming hours; lisul thy love beamed o'er it like the sun, Whose rays are life to the drooping llow'rs;— It had still been fair, awl thou had'st uow Been calm as the lake that sleeps in rest; But the ray of joy shall ne'er light thy brow, Nor pleasure dwell in thy lonely breast. For the lovely one whom thou Iciest forlorn, A deep lament shall be; But no heart shall sigh, and no bosom mourn, And no eye e'er weep for thee. Thou wilt pass away to the realms of death In solitude and gloom; And a curse will cling to thy parting breath, As awful us thy doom. But this, and a few other extreme cases, I consider as mere exceptions to my general rule. Now, supposing, as I have said be fore, that a man dotes upon a beauty with. out a heart:—What in the name of reason should induce him to die for one who does not care a rush for him? There may be others who would have more feeling and less coquetry, with quite as many personal charms. Or, Stiriprip 7 tH-* !• • !,,:d to one far above rank, or both. ih• fore, waste away S. dow of himself? A ch;!ti • a star as he does a I , utt,•l-i(v, f•. 1., sun.round as he does his hoop, but' his non. success would not, as nurses call it, "be the death of him." Again: let us imagine that a man places his affections on an equal, and that she has a stronger yearning towards another. Still 1 say, there is no harm done. Let him think (as I should do) that there may he other females with quite as many outward attractions, and more discernment. have no notion of dying to please any one I have had too much trouble to support ex istence to think of laying it down upon such grounds. I should deem it quite enough to perish for the sake of one who really loved me: for one who did not, I should be sorry to suffer a twinge of rheumatism in my ear, or the lumbago. "have read of a man who actually fancied he was fading away—"a victim to the tender passion:"—but who af terwards discovered that his complaint was caused by abstaining too low , r' from his ne cessary food. This was a sad full from the drawing-room window of romance into the area of common sense and real life; but h., was forced to make the best of it; so he took his meals oftener and tliought no more about it. He actually became a suitor to another, was married, and now, I have no doubt, thinks just as I do on the subject of dying fir love. Ere I part with you, "my renders all !" take notice of these my last words, and fare well directions, which I give in sincerity of .heart, and out of anxiety for your welfare. Ye who have never been in love, but who are approaching insensibly towards it—Co rydons of sixteen !—"A ppolines imberbes" come home for the holidays! take heed! Ye are entering on a little-known and perilous sea. Look to your bark lest she founder. Bring her head round, and scud away belore the wind into the port of IndifTerenee. There is danger in the very serenity that sleeps up on the waves; there is faithlessness in the lightest breath that curls them. Ye who are in love—ye who are already on the de ceitful ocean—listen to me! Look out for squalls! Beware of hurricanes! Have a care of approaching storms! There may be an enemy's ship nearer than you wot of. Just give a salute, and sheer off to Bachelor's harbor. And ye, the last and most pitiable class of all, keep plenty of good wine aboard; so that when a sigh is rising in the throat you may choak it with a bumpei; and in case of tears flowing, depend upon it that port will prove ,the best oye.water. yrr***-. Whenever, (said Dr. Johnson,) chance bringswithin my observation a knot ofyoung ladies busy at their needles, I consider my. self as in the school of virtue, and thou'gh I have no extraordinary skill in plain-work or embroidery, I look upon their operations with as much satisfaction as their governess, because F regard them as providing a sane "teary itizitiust the most dangerous ensnarers of the soul, by enabling them to exclude idleness from their solitary moments, and, with idleness her attendant train of passions, fancies, chimera% fears, sorrows and desires. A young man idle, an old man needy. wilght dilventowe in Paris. "Ha! ha! Aro you still at your post?" "Hero we are, both of us. Have you seen m ?" • "Yes the rt.e! , edrel. I have made a last attempt to get from him -ortieles we seek, but with no more success than before. Now, since violent measures have become indispensable, let us carry our plan into of Kirkmann, courage, my lad! Twelve o'clock will strike directly, and then for our Mall. Follow him till he reaches some ob scure and dark street, and then with your fingers on your triggers, wrest from him his ill gotten property. No relenting now! swear to have no pity on him. "We swear!" 'Tut well. I shall watch your opera tions from the neighborhood. The three individuals who thus convers ed together had not the appearance of ordi nary ruffians. The one who directed the enterprise seemed to be one of those stout built, fresh looking, well clad citizens, that one meets so oflen on 'Change, with a hand• kerchief full tinder his arm, or empty in his hand. Something ungainly in his attitude, and a twist in his shoulder, seemed to point him out as following some mean occupation, but which tor fear of error, we shall not yet uttempt to designate. Ki/kMILIIII, the smallest of the two others, had a figure of the most grotesque charac ter. A very prominent nose curving up wards towards the eyes an I apparently made for the purpose of supporting a pair of spec taeles,was guarded below by a mouth flanked by a row o f large and thinly scattered teeth —while his back was ornamented by a bawl) of large dimensions. It could be see- uy the light of a street lamp, which bwo.ig to and fro in the evening breeze, that the short sighted dwarf was gazing eagerly at the pistol in his right hand, with an expression that seemed to say, "Now, let him come on, and we shall settle our account with him." s_. The third member of the group of a striking contrast to both the others:— Long, lank and pale, with his lett arm rais• ed as if to point his weapot. at the breast of some giant, he was a perfect lac simile of a gibbet, a ijight tremor could be seen to run through Itheframe from ham to time, bu ‘ , 1••:' r or cold, %ccan . I.i railer St. Martin, slowly issued a dozen individuals. As each one made his appearance our two acquain (micas stepped from the alley in which they had ensconced themselves but as often dis appointed, were obliged again to betake themselves to their hiding place. • At length their eager eyes lighted on the man they were in search of. He seemed to be a young buck of the first order, frizzled and perfumed, and his throat embellished with a cravat of great amplitude. He plan ted himself in the middle of the pavement, and humming, a fashionable air, was soon lost in one of the thousand streets that branch out from la rue Grenetat. lie pushed forward at first at a quick pace, as if wishing to avoid hem" overtaken by the footsteps which sounded behind him; but soon.. changing this appearance of fear to ()oldness, he stopped suddenly. and gave those following him an opportunity to conic up with him. "Stand!" cried one of the voices; "your money or your life!" "What—what!" "Your money or your life!" and the bar• rely of two pistols glistened under his nose. "One word and you are a dead nian," added both the voices. "On the honor of a gentleman, I have nothing to-give you. I hate nothing about me but this watch, and it IS only pinchback." We don't want your trinkets, genuine or fidse. Your money or your Mu, what we seek " "But unfortunately I have just lost my three last francs at an ecarte." "Off with your coat, then!" "Content yourselves with my hat, gentle men, for 1 have lately made the most enor mous sacrifices to clothe myself like a gen tleman. My good mother-has drained her. self of all her little savings to pay my tailor's bill." "Liar! off with your coat immediately, or else—Down with-that cane in the first dace!" "Gentlemen, for mercy's aike—" "Do you hesitate?" "There it is, gentlemen—my exquisite black coat, if my tailor speaks truth you can get a hundred and twenty-five francs for it any where." "Now your waistcoat!" "Do you' mean then to send me home en chemese?'? "Precisely. Off now with your panta- loons, and quickly too!" '.oh, gentlemen, they are my last pair— have some mercy, for heaven's sake!" "Now that you are plucked of your fine feathers, on . with you, and don't dare to look behind you!" The poor wretch so strangely misused, did not wait fora repetition of the injunction. instantly took. up his march, aided in his course •by the fresh air of the morning, and a smart . blow from a switch , which made his flesh tingle'as ho turned the cornet of the next street. He arrived at home, bathed in perspira tion, from the vtolence of his exertions.— How he slept that night is not known, but A "it EPRISAIM-.ItAIIIER! . • l ied twelve ••ti U. guard!' repeated . i.-.'.l'(. on his rising the next morning a note was put into his hand, couched in the following terms. "Convinced that you were as great a cow ard as swindler, I last night posted my two apprentices, Paul and Kirkmann, in the street through which you were to pass, each armed with a pistol, cut out of a cake of chocolate. "Ica catail casily.bave crushed to pieces their weapons, which I had Caused previously to be inspected by my friend the commissary of police 7 ---you have preferred returning me the clothes winch I had fur. nished yeu, and the payment for which you had till then evaded. You have done well, and our accounts are now squared. "Keep yourself warm if you can, and ac cept the assurances oftho respect with which I have the honor to be, , Your very humble servant, BALEMARD, MIS C E L LAN EOUR. THE SNOW. The silvery snow!—the silvery snow!— Like a glory it falls on the fields below ; And the trees with their diamond branches appear Like the fairy growth of some magical sphere; soft as music, and wild and white, It glitters and floats in the pale moonlight, And spimgles the river and fount as they flow, Oh! who has not loved the bright, beautiful snow? The silvery snow, and the crinkling frost— . How merry we go when the earth seems lost; Like spirits that rise from the dust of time, To live in a purer and holier clime!— A new creation without a stain— Lovely as Heaven's own pure domain! But ah! like the many fair hopes of onr years, It glitters awhile—and then melts into tears! TUE IVORTD OF A Goon EDUCATION.— Of tho dying Monarch, Don Pedro, the Lon. dou Chronicle says,, that he has to the last maintained his high and decided character. In a conversation with the physician in at tendance on him, shortly before his resigna tion, he inquired whether he had any fami ly. The physician having answered that he had a large family, "then," said Pedro, "above all things take care that they re• ceive a good education. As a dying man; whose words ought to hatie some weight, I entreat you to attend to this. For myself -and brother Miguel, our education was iso thoroughly neglected, that on reaching man hood, we were in a state of brutish ignor ance. Having been, by the incidents of my life thrown among men of cultivated minds and experience, I discovered my own defi ciencies, and endeavored, as far as was in my power, to avail myself of such opportu nitiesttsisiaered for my improvement. But after itikticltal etrumnstatices led me to discover my defects, 1 was still obliged to nct according to my imperfect information 'and under th influence oferroneous impres. sions. Mature age brings with it corres ponding duties, and a man finds to his cost that it is too late to gain much that might have been acquired with ease in youth."— This anecdote we have' received from a some° which may he relied, on, and it hi strongly characteristic of the man, and proves bpi* much Portugal will lose by his death. IGNORANCE AND PRIDE GO TOGETHER.- It is with nations as with individuals; those who itnow.the least of others,think the high est of themselves. The Chinese pretend to despise European ingenuity, but they can not mend a common watch. When it is out of order they say it is dead, and barter it away for a living one. The PerSians think that European and American mer chants, who come to them to trade, live on a small harren island in the northern waters; for why should ffrey come to us, say they, to buy things, if they can get thernat home? RECEIPT FOR A WIFE. 7 —Good temper, health, good understanding, agreeable phy siognomy, figure, good connexions, domestic habits, resources of amusement, good spirits, conversation, talents, elegant manners— Money! A TRUE STORY.—There lived some yenrs ago, in the town of —, in Connecticut, a man who was much addicted to the practice of converting his neighbors property to hits own use and benefit without if or and. The clergyman of the town auspectinghim of making too free with his hey, had one night concealed himself in his burn with his dark lanthern. The thief soon appeared and ty ing up a large bundle, had just left the pre mises when the Reverend owner, instead of bawling out, "You scoundrel you! what do you mean by stealing my hay!' disengaged the candle from the !anthem and dexterious ly applied it to the combustible load. The bundle was soon in a light blaze, and the unlucky fellow, suspecting that he was pur sued by some person with a light, laid his feet to the ground with uncommon agility. But it was in vain to escape the pursuing fire. The blaze increased brighter as he ran; seemed to his terrified imagination to come nearer; till venturing to look around to dis cover the extent of his danger, he perceived to his aStonishment,.that the stolen hay was on fire. How it came so puzzled him not a little. But as conscious guilt assisted his natural credulity, he settled down upon the conclusion that the fire wns sent from hea ven to admonish him of his transgression. Full of this alarming notion he gave himself no rest until he had gone to the parson, and made' confession of his crime, and related the supposed extraordinary and terrible warning from heaven. The Reverend gen'. tlemao humored . his credulity, under the idea that it might reform his life. .He was not mistaken; for the blazing hay had made so deep an impression on the fellow's mind that from henceforth he forsook his evil course, became a valuable member of socie ty, and was united to the flock of the judi cious clergyman who had assisted so mater [WHOLE NO. 240. rially•in his reformation. He finally dill& an honest man, in the firm belief of the tn.; terposition •of Providence in setting fire le the stolen hay. The parson kept the secret till the poor man was laid in the dust,hut then even the clerical tongue could ng long.. er resist the desire of communicatino.ea Sc. rious an incident. , JEFFERSON ALSO THE 51r. JetMrs= was President of the United States his simplicity was oritreqv,atlrl3-19t . : his economy. The diplomatic agents or, foreign governments, on their introductiOtt to him, were often embarrassed, and some, times mortified, at the entire absence of elk. quette with which they were received:- His . . arrivals at the seat of government, and de partures therefrom, were so timed and con? ducted as to be unobserved and unattended. His inflexibility on this point could never be` overcome, and he was finally permitted to pursue his own course in this respect,undis. turbed by any manifestations of popular feel- ing. His uniform mode of riding was on horse back, which was daily and always un... attended. In one of these solitary excur. - sums, while passing a stream of water, he was accosted by a feeble beggar, who im. plored his assistance to transport him and his baggage. He immediately mounted the . beggar behind him, and carried him over—! on perceiving he had neglected his wallet, he as good Immoredly re•crossed the stream and brought it over:to him. This act of kindness, which was indeed no more than Christian charity enjoins; at though much more than most onus practice, was exactly conformable to the um:talent*. t ions benevolence of the whole life of Thom. as Jefferson. No man bad warmer friends or deserved them better. The civilized world paid him homage, as a stateemaistal philosopher; but it gratified him more, !ohs loved as a man.-Rayner's Life of jeffersow PIMENTO TREE.---One of the most ut ble trees of Jamaica is the pimento, wbieb flourishes spontaneously and in greatidam. dance on the north side of the island; its tar morons white blossoms, mixing with the dark green foliage, and with the slightest breeze di ff using ar ound the most delicious fragrance, give a beauty and charm in ne. ture rarely equalled, and of which he who has not' visited the shady arbors and perfuta. ed groves of the tropics can have bide coo. ception: This lovely tree, the very leaf of which bruised,emita a fine aromatic odour, nearly as powerful as that of the spice itself, has been known to grow to the height of from thirty to forty feet,exceedtogly straight and having for its base the spinous ridge of a rock, eight or ten feet above the surface of the hill or mountain. A single tree will produce 150 of the raw, or 100 pounds of the dried fruit. The indigenous forest and even exotic trees ofJamaica, grow to a pro. d;gious height; the palmetto royal is fie. quently found one hundred and forty the vast trunks of the cuba, (wild cotton tree) and fig trees, often measure ninety feet from the base to the limbs, and the thank of the former, when hallowed out, has tr unk a boat capable of holding one hundred per sons. Thera is a great variety of timber for agricultural and household purposes, 'aad some exquisitely beautiful cabinet woods. A NOVEL CAsE.---A young girl by the name of Catharine Dingwall, wag, tried be fore- the Quarter Sessions in NeW:Brime. wick, on Saturday last, for stealing a horse. The history of the transaction is briefly as follows. The. girl is from Yorkshire, Eng- . land; where she became attached to a young Man named-Charles Stewart, who was dri ven from the house by her father. She absconded in search of her lover, assumed men's clothes, and arrived at New York an a common sailor. From thence she travel led to Boston, then to Philadelphia, and a way to New Orleans. She twain returned . to New York—came over to N ow . jersey—. and being wearied, heart-broken, and dejec ted, she stopped at a barn with the intention of committing suicide; but the appearance 'of a horse suggested to her the idea of steal ing it, that she might thereby incur the pen alty of death, which was the law for that of fence in her own country. She was taken up with the horse near New Brunswick. W hen put upon her trial, she pleaded guil ty, and refused to retract it, but her. coun sel was permitted by the, court to enter a plea of not guilty, and the case went to a jury, who brought m a verdictof not guilty. Such was the sympathy eicited in her case, and so strong was the belief that the act was one of frenzy,' and not of deliberate in tention, that no one appeared against her. DESPERATE REMEDY FOB A DESPERATE DISRASE.—They tell a good story of old Dr. Rand. He was called to visit a hypo chondriac patient, who fancied she had swal lowed a mouse. On entering the room, the lady exclaimed, "Dear Doctor! lam so glad to see you-1 am in such distress—such pain! Oh, Doctor! Doctor! I've swalloWeil a mouse!" "Swallowed—nonsense," replied the doctor, in hi mild and plea Sent manner. "Oh, no! doctor!" said the patient, "It is not nonsense, it is a mouse—a live mouse - - he ran down my threat when I was asleep with my mouth open, and I feel him now, creeping about my stomach, and trying to gnaw out. Oh! doctor, do prescribe some thing quick, or I shall die." "Prescribe," said the doctor, "yes, I'll prescribe some. thing that will cure you in a minute, ~W hat is it, doctor? what is it? take any thing you order." "Well, then; my dear , madam, swallow a cat—if that don't cms you, nothing wal." It was efeettolr,