, . • ' ''''•;=' ,- ' l , 7 - • . ........ . - . • . ' * *St i r" • el i t 4111 lit .-- lb- 1 1 7 Ad" . - a - • ! . ti• - ..;;.:.:,.-7„.5.,...:...: , SY p.ommnr: v.rzzfrzi MIZZLETONJ PUBLICIi NOTICES, &e-. NEW CI OODS UST received and 14. r sole by the sub scriber, a very LARGE -rear C-CO.DS, embracing almost every article in Iris line ul bw.inetis, CONI.,ITIISG OF ltry,Coods, Groceries, liar ware, I follow-ware, Queens ware, Bar 1 roil, Zse. I.*!. An of which will be sold on the mostpleas ing terms, and at prices to suit the times. (e-The public are invited to cull and judge for themselves. GEORGE ARNOLD. Gettysburgh, Sept. 26,1836. 4t-26 TR USTI; ES' SALE. W v ILL be sold . at public sale, on Safer day the 15th day of October next at 12 o'clock, M. on the pretniSes, the fol lowing real Estate of ROBERT McIL WAIN, Esq.—consisting of A - YAR ' , Situate in Huntington township, Adams County, Pa. adjoining Jacob Fiches, Her man Wierinan and others—containing 403 .icres, more or less, PATENTED LAND. The provoments are Two GOOD . • • DWELLING ZOITZES Two BARNS arid Two TENANT HOUSES_ and other necessary buildings. The farm is a first-rate grazing farm and is situated within 24 miles of limestone,witli an abundance of IA onnwm. The property will bp sold all together, or in TWO FARMS Of about - 50 Acres each, and the balance in Lors to suit purchasers-- a Plot of the whole will be exhibapd on the day or sale, or can be seen sooner by calling on the Tenant. -A LSO- Lot of Ground, Situate in Hamilton township, adjoining Andrew Mllvain and others containing 3 Acres, having erected thereon a STILL-!I USE. -ALSO The undividedfifth part of 300 .fleres with appurtenances. ) . . Situate in Hamilton township, adjoining Geo. limes and miters. OrTerms mado known on the day of solo JAS. A. THONIPSON, Trustees THOS. J. COOPER, September 5, 18:36 TO PRINTEM. aEIIE sobsclibers offer for sale, two catt iron "Wahhington" Ir - 111i:111g Presses, manufactur, d b) Rust & Turney, of New York, one of them being the press upon which this paper is now printedoind the other calculated to print an imperial sheet of the ordinary size.— Also, one RANIAGE .PRESS, large enough to print a super-royal sheet, and one PORTABLE PRESS, Well calculated for light job work. These presses are all in excellent order, hay. ing been in use but a short timeond are offer,' for sale 'solely on account of the desire of the subscribers to procure a press suitable to the Contemplated enkrgemi.ot of their paper. They also offer fur s de: Cases, Stands, Cal leys, Column and Head Rules, Leads, Composing. Sticks, Chases, Banks, Watering- Troußhs, Roller Moulds, Frames an d Rollers, complisiog almost every a , (idle necessary in a printing office, with the exception of the type. Th e subscribers lately purchased an entire printing establishment with a view to obtain the type uione, and having no use for the balance of, the materials, they are now offered fur 8.41 e. Any person disposed to eng4ge in the printing business, will find it greatli to their advantage to cull upon them as they will dispose of the whole or any portion of the above articles upon very accnmmodsting terms. • For further particuhrti apply (if by letter,post raid) to H A NIEIISLY & RICHARDS, Editors Examiner 4- Herald, Lancaster, Pa Sept. 26, 1836. C0.1C11,. S.IDDLE axis, TRUNK FACTORY. T HE Subscriber returns his thanks to the Public for the very liberal support extended to him, and would respectfully state that ho is at all times prepared, at his old Stand in Chambersburg Street, a few doors West of the Court• House, to Make, Trinu and Repair AM of-- ~,,-.,..- _ ...... ~-3 , , - ..,,_,...: Bakineches ..p ~-.:.;-,_ • P :: , ::%-:..--: , .,-.S -..- CARRIAGES atilt kinds, in a neat, flishionable and sub stantial manner, of coop MATERIALS and ut the shortest notice. In is also prepared to manufacture, and has now on hand, , SADDLES, 13113EDLES, \, MARTINGALES • Saddle-bags, Portmanteaus, Trunks, Harness, AND EVERY OTHER ARTICLE IN MA LINE UP nusitirsa The Public are respectfully invited to give him a call before purchasing elsewhortt. All kinds of Marketing taken, in ex change for work at fair prices. EDWIN A. ATLEE. Getty-bin-I, May 2, 1886. CVE.Tr4VZ CONVIELF.ITZOiI w WHEREAS the Democratic Anti• Ma. sonic County Convention that as• sembled iu Gettysburgh ou the 29th ultimo, • to settle a County Ticket, did adjourn ti; meet again on the 3londall ensuing the next General Election, for the purpose of 'tionii• tutting Delegates to the State Convention to amend the Constitution. And whereas it is held and believed by ai portion of the Anti• Masonic party in the County that that body had no such power delegated to them, but that a new Convention should have been called for that purpose—Therelbre, in order that the people, the legitimate sources and safe depositories of all power, may have an opportunity ofexpressing their opinion touch. iug the sumo in their primary meetings, notice is hereby given to the Democratic Anti-Masons of Adams county to meet at their respective places of holding Township Elections on Saturday the 1514 of October inst., for the purpose either of electing new Delegates to meet in Convention at Gettys burg!' on the Monday , following to nominate Delegates to the Convention to amend the State Constitution,or to re elect and confirm the power Oil he present to•.vnahip Delegittvs, as ut majority of the Anti- llitsoilic vat CS in each District, shall determine. DANIEL NI. SAIYSER, ROBERT SIIITII, W NI. McCLEA N, J. D. PAXTON, ALLEN ROBINETTE, R. McILFIENNY, .1. L. NEELY, G. L. EAUSS, NI. D. G. PFEIFFER ; Count!) Committee. td-2 October 3, 18:36 PUBLIC. SILE. frEIE subscriber will sell at public 'silk AL on Saturday the 22d of October inst. on the premises, the lidlowing Estate of /A VID and ELIZABETH DEMARREE,deccused— CONSISTING OF 1.1/40 A VALUABLE FARM, Situate in Strnban township, Adams county, Pa. adjoining lands of Isaac Monfort and others, containing 100 Aerms first rate Lund—The improvements are A „ .. • 0001) TWO STORY STONE sr.. IP HOUSE, DOUBLE Loa BARS, and a well of excellent water near the house—with a sufficiency of tine MEADow add a due proportion of WOOD LAND. ta r. ,9Rle to commence at 1 o'clock, P. M. when the terms will be made known and at- tendance given by HENRY BRINKERHOFF, Ex'r. October 3, 1886. is-27 ADJOURNED SALE. irN pursuance ofan Order of t he Orphans Court of Adams county, will be exposed to sale, by public vendue or outcry, on the premises, on Saturday the 22d of October inst. at 12 o'clock, M. as part of the Real Estate of ..I.Jus CowNovuu, dec'd. A "1 ract of Patented Land, situate in Mountpleasant township, Adams county ,adjoining lands of John Ilornberger, Abraham Spangler, George Milford, the heirs of Cornelius Lutt and others, contain. ing 160 ACRES, or thereabouts, with a oNE•sronv Loo Ti () Li E , ...tit F- M • Iv. a never•failing Spring of good wa• I ter near the door, a STABLE,an ORM A RD, a large quantity of MEAnow and about 20 Acres of WOOD LAIND. Ilt - To be sold on the terms of one third of the ptimhase money to be. paid on the Ist of A oril next, and the residue in thtee equal annual payments. An undisputable title will be given. WI LL ANI COW NOVER Administrator ofJohn Cownover, deed By the Court, James .4. Thompson, Clerk October :, 1836. PVI3I;tC 6AAIAVA. ',ILL be offered at publick sale, on Friday the 21st ..)f October next, at v 1 o'clock, r. at. on the premises, A rARIC : containing about 170 ACRES, situated in Latimore township, Adams county, Pa. about ti miles from Petersbu (Y. S.) and 2 fi•oin Demi:tears mill, adjoining lands of John Croniiter, Valentine Beiges and oth ers. The improvements are, A STONE DWELLING - • eas HOUSE, 7.4 a Spauso•lionsE with a never Eliding spring of water; SToNt; BANK - BARN and other out-buililings, with an excellent , ORCHARD. The Farm is in excellent order, and will suit any person wishing to carry on the farming businesS. About 130 Acres are CLEAnun, 20 in MEADOW, the balance excellent WOOD LAND; with running water through it. Persons desirous of 'purchasing. are re quested to call and examine the premises at any time before the day of sale. Also, at the same time and p!ace, will be o(f•red,llOltSESSa HORN E OCATTLE. SA MUEL BU RKHOLDER. September 19, 1836. ts*-25 Wood. o:TTltose•ofour subscribers who promis ed us Wood, will oblige us by delivering it soon. . . Gettysburgh, Sept. 5, I&3U. "I MUSH NO OTHER HERALD, NO OTHER, SPEAKER OF MY LIVING ACTIONS, TO KEEP MINE HONOR FROM CORRUPTION ."- SHAHS' V21, 4 221.raLT1 4 222).:12. 4Pct3.4 0 arEDYP a / I .lro WR1 1 C0.1221,.72 alh aaQ(3. of performing a complete cure—and shine of these were through neg:ect on their part; and others to the long standing of the dis : ease, so that no perfect cure could he expec ted. He would, therefore, invite those af flicted with Rheumatic pains to give him a call, and satisfy themselves. Not desiring those who are unacquainted with hart to re ly on his statement, but to come into his neighborhood and enquire of those who know, and satisfy themselves before they employ him. Dr. Carpenter still continues to reside at his former residence in Liberty township, two miles North of Emmiltsburgh, and two miles iron, Rhodes Mill, on Middle-creek. October 3, 1936. tf-27 STOVES. A PAR LOUR STOVE,elegantly finish. ed, °fa new pattern, Suitable for eith er Coal or Wood—also—a second hand Coot:trio STOVE, with all necessary appa ratus, for sale nt ANDREW POLLI"S shop. Gettysburg!), Oct. 3, 1836. :it-27 ITALIAN MULBERRY TREES. THE Stibscritw is prepared to furnish Italian Mulberry Trees,raised from the seed imported from the plantation of one of the most expetienced cultivators of Italy, at 'rom Slo to 840 per thousand according to Anv person ordering to the amount one hundred dollars, shall have them de- livered to any nart of Pennsylvania, (free of charge,) in time for transplanting this fall. All are insured to grow with proper care; any do not, they will be replaced without charee. The Chinese Morus Multi Cuu• will he furnished at a reasonable price. piAddress Black Horse l'ust Office, Chester co. Penn. Carpenter's Compound Fluid Elif o t of UV IC WA 1. arOlt diseases of the bladder, obstructions of urine, &c. &c. The Hoehn leaves have been highly recommended for diseases of the Madder, by some of the must distinguished ow. biCIUTIS of Europe. " - A variety of remedies have been :olvised (says DOctor Xl'Dowell,) tor chtom is inflammation of the bladder: most of theta I hate repeatedly tried with little or no effecl,be %and that of being in some degree 'palliative.— The Compound Rueful having been lately strongly recommended, L was induced to make lust of it, and my experiments have resulted iu the satisfactory manner, having succeeded in saving the most inveterate cases, in IA kith I had nu hope of success." The above medicine has been frequently pre scribed by, and found to answer the fullest ex pectations of the principal phji,icians of the Just received from the ware-house of G. W. Carpenter, and for sato at the Drug &meter Dr. J. MLBERT. May 9, 1536. tf-6 TIM ,Superier advatituges of this Syrut nre that is u compound exclusively vege uhle,•nnd contains tio alcoholic or narcotic ngredients. For sale at the Drug Store of Dr. J. GI LBERT, Gettysburg. Experimchtal Lie tures -011 Chemistry. JAN ff S WY MA 1V ESPECTFULLY announces to the Ladws and Gentlemen of Gettysburg, that he in tends deli re fin a short course Experimental. Lectures on ?Lieu matic Chemistry, commencing on THIS EVENING, at 7 ~'clock, w Ir. Clarkson's Stone Building. ;:rrTickets of admission may be had :llr. W. at the lecture room. Monday, October a, 1836. DEN'IPISIL'Et li p R. PARSONS, Surgeon Dentist, from New York, respectfully informs the Ladies and Gentlemen of Gettyshurgh and vicinity, that he may be seen at Mrs. MIL LER'S opposite the ,Bank, for a short time, and will ho happy to wait on those who may desire any operation in the line ()flits .pro. fssion. Teeth Inserted, plugged, filed and cleans• ed, in a style n o t suron.sed; painful Teeth cured, and the most difficult Teeth plugged, immaterial what size or situation the cavity may lie; the !mist difficult Teeth and Roots cmecl in the hest Manner. To regulate Children's Te th,in due sea• son, IS vastly important, for the completion ofthe second dentition. From 2 5 years con stint practice, he trusts to give entire satis faction. Tim most celebrated Tooth powder may be had, that' will cure tho scurvy in the N. B. He will attend at the dwelling of those who may request it. Reference to Valentine Mott, M. D. rhomas Boyd, M. D., New York; Jarr.es M'Naughton, M. D., Albany; Dr. Linsey, Washimrton; and Dr. Dorsey, Hagerstown. tc.7- Nitneral, natural and sea horse teeth or sale. October 3, 1836 DR. J. CARPENTER, BOTANIC PHYSICIAN. R ESPECTFULLY invites those who are troubled with Rheumatic pains, either chronic or intlarnatorv, to give him a call, having had very good succez.s in cur ing Rheumatism; and having within the short space Of time that he has been here had upwards of forty cases of Rheumatism under treatment, and having given relief in every ease. and failed in but five or six cases JASON M. MAHAN. Now Italy, Aug. 2:2, 1836. st-21 COMPOUND Carrageeu Cough Syrup. ~ ..i.LiIYA wawl.Jait...),.. N A: ~..1--v - P::•; . ,,r -- ;- s ' / • ' --!: --- •-'l. .t=r;_.... ', ..;,-...-. , C" - y ;. . z --,a. ~.., 25.; ? ' p, _ : 7 . , /, r ,_ - .. , .1 1 'r ___,zz_-_ , y/ 1,, ...4 t it.),::;,t,i) 14.1rjr..-z-1:-.-//2 ' * * . #i , ,, --,.:: k . ' ...-,,i i•: _.> ,77,7.....:::::.,,, ' r" . " r . 7 q - -,:,'..; : - -..c.r.-,_ ::/:. ;4: . "'''' - '"'Xi.4.l:74;* 4# aweetept flowers corich'it, From various cuill'd with care," flul Ly ifitsT Thou FLLIL Brightly, brightly haat thou fled; Ere grief had buiv'd thy head, diihit thou mart; With thy youn g thought free from spot, With the final love wasted cwt, thy buuudiug heart! • Ne'er by sorrow to be wet, Calmly smiles thy pale cheek yet, Ere by dust n'erspread. IdHies, ne'er by tempest blown'. White rose, which no stalls bath known, 13e about thee shed! So ws• give thee to tho earth; And the violet shall have birth, O'er thy gentle head. Thou, that, like a dew-drop boruo On a sudden wind of morn, Brightly thou Mud fled! Laid a)..YP:)c":I34:2'DMUo Fllo3f THE NEW-yang mlnitort Passages from IThomestic Life BY SIRS. JANE K. KAMP:II9ON. The Separation. "Young love, which on their bridal eve !lad promised long to stay; Forgot his promise, took French Aud bore his Iniup away." "It is in the power of %Oman" to alienate the aflbetions of the most adoring husband to poison his feelings, to embitter the kind hest emotions of his heart, and, in short, to make him hate her," said Charles Procter, as he rose to leave his once quiet and curn• fortable home. "You tin Innzer love me, Charles," said his wife, with much asperity of tow, as a Bush passed over her beautiful and expres sive face. "Not so," said he, "it hos not yet arrived at that point, and I dread lo think that there is a possibility that it tray." “Why, what have I done to bring nbou snob a.change in your feelings?” and slit mirst into tears. Charles was about to re ply, but the sobs of his once dear and still beautitel Kate quite unmanned him, and he sank into the chair he was on the point ol• quitting, without utrering a syllable. They sat long and sullenly apart without speaking, each occupied in different r•eflec• teens, although tending to the same result-- he, wondering what demon could have im• planted the ever-fretting. thorn oldiscentent in a heart which he had fondly anticipated would always swell with no other sensations than those of love and domestic Peuee—and she, repining that her hard fate should have linked her indissolubly to such a monster. Why was this? Charles Proctor was a noble, generous fellow; he was endowed with qualities that elevated him above his fellow-men in the scale of intellect, and to a prepossessing and attractive person were united the blundest and most engaging !wa iters. Every body admired him and envied his easy temper, and the equanimity with which he endured the inevitable cares and disappointments from which the most fc.rtu• nate lot is not exempt. And Kate, too, be !bre her marriaire,was a bright and buoyant being,singing like a lurk from very lightness of heart, and with features, form,and motion, giving evidence of a disposition mild, gentle, and affectionate us that of the sweet bird she tended with so much care. For beauty, grace, and accomplishments, both natural and acquired, she had but few rivals, and she was thought to be an angel by all who knew her. Then why was this, I repeat? Let me answer, gentle and courteous reader, and be not vexed with me for telling you the secrets of my friends. Kate never loved her hus- band. She married him because it was the best offer she had; uud, as a woman's heart is an enigma, Charles was not aware of the fact until their hands were united. It is true, that her friends opposed the match, but that wits an incentive rather than an impediment to its conclusion. The gentle man, however, persevered, and as the lady had made up her mind to the matter, all objections were waved, and the most fiivora• blo auguries were entertained at the pros pective felicity of the wedded pair. The honey. moon passed us most honey-moons do—sweet and joyous at its rise, rapturous at its full, and verging to insipidity at its decline. But happiness, to be enduring, must proceed from a mutual attachment; and,as in a mercantile concern,its prosperity cannot be permanent when one partner is constantly drawing upon the resources of the other, without supplying his fair portion of the capital, and promoting the interests of the firm: so in the matrimenieLventure, the house must stop payment if divided against itself. Charles was u merchant, thence our metaphor They had been married three years. Had they been happy ones? No, to neither.— At first they went tolerably well. To be sure,the lady was generully to an ill-humour; little bickerings ensued, penitent remarks were bandied, and smart answers returned; a keen encounter oft he wits would ever and anon arise; domestic neglects would be magnified into grievances, and- occasional disputes degenerate into habitual; u quarrel succeeded•thom, and at length an open rup ture was the position of the belligerent parties, which led to the remarks recorded at the commencement oft his veritable lstory. Need we go on through all the changes, vexations, annoyances. recriminations, and squabbles that ensued? how mutual dissatis• factions took possession of their minds; how they separated; and how the meddling world blamed, first one and then the other, and how they turned almost heartbroken away from what they once valued so highly? The Re-Union. .0h woman! in our hours of ease, Uncertain, cop, and hsrd to please; flat when affliction ‘vrinrit the brow, A tniuistering angel thou." It wi!.l autumn: the foliage had put ott its variegated mantle, like time patriarch's coat of many colors; and hill, grove, field, and plain flashed hack upon the declining beams of the sun the thousand reflections his splen dors had lent them. It was that gentle season of quiet melancholy, that tender and saddened time of the year when •the heart is in unison with the gorgeous mournings of nature; when the sensibilities are the must vivid in their emotion,and the wailing breeze sweeds a chord in every soft and buffering bosom. Proctor was in his library and alone, a book was in his hand, but its cot tents could not banish the busy thoughts that possessed a counter•spell to the poet's imaginings.— Ills retrospective glance travelled '- back through the pensive vista of twelve solitary years, since the gordian knot ofthis nuptial chord had buen severed by the relentlesS hand of destirv, whose shears had been sharpened by human passions, and the wretched cayillings of lailiblu and yet un.. forgiving creatures. His mind was dwelling upon the days of his yOuth: he recalled the hour, the scene, when he first saw Kate; . arid all the fresh feelings Of that hour, nod ' the associations of that spot, were renewed within him. He dwelt upon all the . fond endearments that then agitated his bosom; and, ho know not wherefore, a flush came upon his cheek, a pang shot through his heart, his lip trembled, and, why he knew not, but he could have wept, like a child! It is true, he was no longer young; but the world had gone prosperously with him, and wealth had crowned his exertions: he had outlived all the slanderS and of those who hod misjudged his feelings, and know nothing of his motives; and all his early impressions had been mellowed by the sooth ing hand ol time. Solitude wits uncongenial to his nature, and olthotigh it gave quiet to his mind, yet it did not bring happiness to his heart. • A knock disturbed his reverie, and an nounced a visitor. Ho was glad to be inter. rupted, and the door was immediately open. ed,when his daughter,now a blooming, light hearted, joyous and lovely giithetween that' uncertain, but interesting, age . orgirl and womanhood, hounded into his arms like a fawn, and, as she covered hint with her kisses, the Words •'dear father" broke front her rosy lips. She had just returned From school for the season, and had conic to speur. few weeks with her father; Whom she loved with all the fondness of her. innocent heart. In Kate's character there was one con spicuous feature: she had educated her child to love and respect her father, and, notwith standing the obloquy that was heaped upon him by her own relations, She never gave vent to one single remark that implied a censure of hie conduct, nor allowed any one, to do it in her presence, and least of all, in her daughter's hearing. tier husband had been very liberal teller; she had uever known a want since her separation from him, and her days of reflection, which bud glided on in tranquility, had the efFect of showing her the folly of her former rush undertaking, While her present lonely condition daily demonstrated its discomfort. What all who knew them had in vain en• deavored to effbct, t'leir mutual reconcilia tion, which they both proudly and steadily declined; accident at length brought about. Proctor was suddenly seized with a malig nant fever, and v% hen th e hirelings of hi s establishment shrunk from the performancti of their duty, the daughter, perceiving her parent's imminent peril, made her mother acquainted with the fact. Strange , and inscrutable feeling of the female bosom, which opposition prompts, and which difficulties excite, to the noblest and most devoted efrorts! This woman,who in the very wantonness of prosperity, when the swelling waves of happiness had invited her-to launch her bark afire upon their tide, had madly dashed it upon the nicks and quicksands of adversity, now that the with• eriug blast was raging and the sirocco breath ing poison around,discovercd in the recesses of her heart, a fibre which now first vibrated to love and all the fond endearments of our nature, and came, like a ministering angel, bringing balm and comtbrt to the disiut bed and yes les-i couch. Her lung and assiduous vigils i% ere at length recompensed by the restmution of perception and consciousness of the chastened and affliettd father of her child, the being to whom she evtir after wards clung with a devotion no foes could alienate, no misconstruction impair; mi time could change. They had 616 discovered that, as in all similar cases, both had been in error, and had learned that most important of all secrets, that mutual forbearance is the taliSman of human content,end that a desire to promote the happiness of another i 3 the surest wuy of securhig . otir own. There can be little doubt that hot and stiMulating food and thinks,' have a g reat influence in lacing the foundation of d ecay ' ' in the. human Opterm The teeth of the Indians are seldom known to decay, save in a slight degree by age--and the cause may undoubtedly be referred to the pure and simple nature of their food, as they seldom eat any thing which can injure their teeth; or indulge in what may be called the luxu ries alit - e. For the same reason, the hair of Indians, or individuals driven by pover ty, or induced - by choice, to partake only of thin and nparing diet, seldom' comes off---- PoJon Tolima& [VOL. 7--NO. 26. VA It I E 'F Y . ORIGINAL OCCUPATION 01' unm Nu men 1;71 E.NOUSH Acrens.--Ga rrick "Little navy," as Johnson familiar designates him, was Or iginally a wine merchant in the city. The great Mrs. Sioldons was for a short time iii early life a bodr-titting lo u lady of fortune, who patronized her talented fainilv• John Kemble woks educated for a Catholic priest. but preferred MelPemena to-the Vir gin—Charles Keniblo was once a "man of letters" in the general Post Office, where ho had been placed by the elder members of his family. Charles Young, for a short tune;assistod his father as a surgeon. The comic John Liston once held the office of school-Master to the little urchins of the parish of St Martm's-m-the-Fields. Kean, Macready, and James Wallach - , geniuSes of the first order, were bred to the stage. ' • Q..... A rusty old bat:helm' on the wrong aide of fifty who had just grit married, wrote hs friend as follows:—"If you love the Creator, you ought to marry, to raise more worship pers—if you love the ladies you ought to marry, to malto them happy —if you love mankind, you ought to marry, to perpetuate the glorious race—if you loVe your country, to raise up soldiers to' defend it—in fine; if you Wish well °fourth or heaven, you ought to marry, to give good citizens to cne, and glorious angels to the tither." if he dcs'nt sing.a different tune at the end of a twelve month, we are not a judge in such matters that's. all.—N. 0. 1,1ce.. A DIALOGUE ON HOGS.--A Providence aper gives the following adroit . dialogue: Friend" said a shrewd quaker, to a man with a drove of hogs---'hast any hogs in thy drove with large honest' . Yes, replied 'tho drover the all have;' Hast any with long ears, like those of tho elephant, hanging; down over his eyes?" 'Yes, all my drove aro of that description, and will suit you ex:. actly,' '1 rather think they would not suit me, friend, if they are such as thou descri best them. Thou may'st drive on.' STOr Tilt Pic.—We notice an adver- Fement in an exchange paper, wherein one 1.. Pig speaks of his wife's having eloped trom his bed and board. We sincerely hope 'Mrs. Pig will go back to her liege lord, and Make the sty comfortable for old grunter and their littlo porkers. When woman marries a hog she ought to make up her mind to go the entire swine.—Pcur/. BnE.ten OF Pitoursu cAsE.----Josiah dart (cold heart) has been muleted in $l5O damages and costs. at Pineltheysville, 111., for promising to marry an amiable young woman na:Aed Mary Davenport, and after- . wards refusing. The cold-hearted hiver, forked over the cash, and declared that '"it was cheap enough - at double the moneyl 4 , He was about to join himself for life to a propriotresS of $20,000 acres. - 4 k3- THE EIGHT MILLION LOAN.—The execu tive of Maryland have concluded that it is in-expedient in our present awe to appoint Commissioners to negotiate the loans authorized by the Act of the last Gen eral Assembly. A man had both feet cut off by the rail mail cars at Patterson. Ile attempted to jump from the car, and unfortunately fell with his feet across the track. FROM TEXAS.—Tho arrival Of the Tex inn armed schr. Terrible, from Galveston, at . New-Orleims, brinks the following intel ligence: the elections in Texas took place on the first of September,—GEN. HOUSTON was elected PRODDENT, and MiLtutu.ku B. LAMAR, VICE PRESIDENT. General Houston had on the 29th ultimo issued a proclamation from Nacogdoches, declaring that. he conceived there was no danger of on attack upon that part of the settlements from a combined force of Indi ans and Mexicans, (he relies on accounts brought him by Cherokees who had return ed from Metamoras) and thereupon he makes a requisition on the militia of four counties for about 200 men, "to sustain the U• S. troops at Nacogdoches," his own words. till reinforcements could be received from Gen. Gaines.—Belt. Trans. _ A GoLn MINE has been discovered • on: the La Marche branch of the Illinois river., Very rare chances for making fortunes pre sent themselves. ''The Rev. Mark Hopkins was inaugura. ted as President of Williams College, Muss. on the 15th ult. 'TEETOTALERS.—The Origin of this con venient word, (as convenient - almost, al though not so general in its application as loafer) is, we imagine, a man yarned Tar. ner, a member of the . Preston Teloperancit Society, who having no impediment of speech, in addressing a meeting remarked, that partiaal abstinence from intoxicating liquors would not do;lhey must insist upon tee•tee (stammering) teu•tee total "absti nence. Hence, total abstainers have been called Teetotalers.— Salem" Landmark. General JA.cxsori arrived at the White House in Washington on Satktrilay week last, much discomfited from the'"Onsuccess fill result'ot his olictioneering tour in fuvoi of Al r. 'Van Buren. Judge Jusse BLEDS:OE IS dead. lie e•asi at one lime Senator in Congress tfoir Kentucky. 'He-died at Naeogdoehes,,Toat as, on the 251 b June' last, and. meeivezt. every attention in Ins last laments which the citizens of that place could Bost. Post.
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