PAINTED AND PUBLISHED BY GEORGE BERGNER. VOL. IX.--NO. 39.1 NOTICE TO BRIDGE BUILDERS. ,SEALED proposals will be received by the Commissioners of Adams County, at the house of 111iss llapkee's, in Nlenallen 'l(w/nship, on Saturday the sth day of Jan 4.4ary next, between the hours of 9 o'clock 'A M. and 2 o'clock P. M. tar the erection ~,of a gaud and substantial, -"WOODEN BRIDGE, „Across great Cenewago Creek, where the road leading from Gettysburg to Newville crosses the same, and about five miles from -4.1.0 former place, of the following dimen .sions, to wit:—To contain in length from one .pobui went to the other ?0 feet span, and of jangle arch, and It , feet wide in the clear, the abutments to be 8 Met thick each, and 21 wide, and 6 feet 6 inches high from the 'Jed of the creek, where the Bridge is to cross the stream: Wulff walls on the South East side to be 30 feet long each, exclusive of the abutments, on the North %Vest side 20 feet long each, exclusive of the abutments, the wing walls to'be 34 . feet thick at the bot tom and 2 feet on the top, wing walls to be • a Iliet higher than the filling up; the wing ''walls to be undei a good parapet covering, ,Ayith white pine boards of at least 1 inch .:hick, and well painted with red paint; the -Abutments and wing walls to be built on rocks or otherwise on good foundations; the Bridge - abe 16 feet wide in the clear; 12 feet ti inches high from the-our to the square: the sides and part of the: ds, to be weatber• boarded with white ph e boards, planed and 1 well painted, the sides a good venetian rcd, and the gables a good white; the arch to be planked with white nine plank,2 inches thick and on top with 2 inch oak plunk, to extend the full breadth of the Bridge; lower plank to' be pinned, and the whole to be' covered with white pine shingles;_ the wood work to be built of good and substantial timber; the stone work of large and good stone, lime ' and sand molter, and well pointed; the roof ., ing of the Bridge to extend over both abut meios, the Bridge to be built on the same plan as Cie Bridge over great Conowago creek (near Henry Myers Mill) on the road lording from Oxford to Carlisle; tho space between the Wing walls and abutments to be well filled up, so as to haven gradual ascent rising on to said Bridge, nut exceeding five degrees elevation from the road to said r~3ridg the Bridgein the insicloActlia weath ,.terboarded 2i feet high from the floor of the 'Bridge, with boards 1 inch thick. The party contracting for building said r Bridge to give security to double the amount of the contract, for the faithful performance of the workmanship and permanency ofsaid Bridge By order of the Commie , ionors, KING, Clerk. td-37 December 11, 1^3.9 VALUABLE PROPERTY 'FOR. SALE. ITIEIE Subscriber will sell, at private sale, the FARM, on which he now resides, containing 330 ~• Acres. 'rho improvements, on this farm, arc a large arid connimiieus • BRICK DWELLING , r 4 .1;" - ' 4 •-• HOUSE, log Barn and stables, smoke - - house, a stone Spring-house and other ne cessary out-buildings, an excellent and never failing spring of pure water within a few rods of the house, and running water in almost every field. The above Eirin is fertile and in good or der, the meadows on the same are excellent, and a lair proportion of the land is vrooded i (about 80 acres;) there are also on the said farm two ap ple ORCHARDS, a peach ORCHARD and other fruit. This form is situated in Fred erick County, Md., on the road leading from Frederick -to Ernmittsburg, about 6 miles from the latter place, and 4 miles from Mt. St. Mary's College. The situation is eli gible in every point of view. 10 The above farm was originally in two tracts; the one containing 143 . acres, the other 187 acres; on the latter are the Buildings, dr.c.; the termer is without build ings. Thia property will be sold together or separately, as will best suit the conve nience of any one desirous of purchasing. K 7 -11 the above property is riot sold at private sale, before the lst day if January next, it will on that day be ofiered nt public sale, on the premises, at 12 o'clock, M. For Terms, apply to the subscriber on the premises, or JAMES COOPER, in Gettysburg, Perinly I r ante. JAMES COOPER, Sea luvvortout to Atly extis s ,PERSONS wishing to advertise Proper ty-••• in a paper out of Adams county, would do well to send them to the Lancaster Ex..l3luvEn HERALD." It has a week• ly circulation of about FIFTEEN HUN- I,":ED, and is read 4 by the business men of all parties. Tim undersigned would also be pleased to send the "Examiner 4. Herald" to those of his o1:1 friends in Adams county and else. where who &sire to subscribe fora Lancets. ter piper. The terms aro $2 per annum. RORER %V. AHDDLETON. Laleaster, 183t.4. . St-39 GETV.VSBI3 . 44N- :STAII —"With sweetest flowers enrich% Frain various gardens with care " WILL YE REMEMBER ME. Will ye remember me, 11y old familiar friends, when shall be hush'il Then once glad voice, and the bruised spirit free That bath so loft been crush'd Will ye at evening hour, When gather'd round the old domestic hearth Think of her love, who like n broken flower Sleeps in the cold, cold earth ! And when ye bend the ear To some old melody that floats along Will ye not shed one sad, ono silent. tear, Waked by its plaintive song It mny he come soft strain We've sung together at the fireside sent, Till echoe's airy tongue gave back again ILA numbers low and swcct Oh ! if it such should be, As its low murmurs linger loath to die, "Chick that amid its postings minstrelsy, 18 breathed my farewell sigh. Well do you know my friends, How I have loved sweet music's magic spells, E'en as tha Swan, whose very being ends In its melodious swells. Yes. ye will think of me, When the long buried things we used to prize, Before the walking spoils of memory, Once more shall dimly rise. Perchance the lone night wind When whispering dirge-like music ti:ro' the leaves Sh ill seem with old remembrances ciitwin'il, 'With fancy fondly weaves. I've been with ye so oft, Have followed the same footsteps, sad or gay, Have watch'il with ye the dawn, and the cairn soft Decline of Summer's day. And in the angry storm We've track'd pathway thro' the Winter snow, Together bent o'er many a thAvret's !Urn), Crush') whoro It uacil to blow Noted the early breath Of the first Spring wind, when it softly crept To the voung blossern's bed, and when in the death Upon the blast is swept. Will ye not think of mo When gathering round the hearth in prayer, Will not only sigh be breath'd on tended knee, For her who is not there I VU.IM Q/EI2,I)CJIIVOI22Co From Frientlehips Offrring for 1839. THE OLD GENTLED:Mit IVe were studded in the calm waters of the Baltic. Not a speck of land was in sight; and the sun, by this time almost level with the sea, rolled a tide of mellowed light along its bosom, from horizon to horizon. The idea of loneliness was complete. We were nut in the midst of an expanse limited inure ly by the powers of vision; beyond which the imagination may seek, and find, a thousand objects of relief. The edges of the circle, on the contrary,were even and•crtsp. There was no getting beyond them. The sensa tion at first was delicious; because new; but this gradually melted away into languor; the soft tones of the few remarks we interchang ed became down-right sleepy; and at length the young lady —(the other passengers, a n d all the crew had gone below)—starting sud- denly, let her parasol fall, with malice prt. pease, against my face. 'Caine,' said she, laughing at the jump with which I returned to consciousness, 'what are we about? I shall fancy in anoth er minuie that you and I are enchanted,and that we shall continue motionless on this crystal sea till doomsday!' 'That is just what 1 was thinking,' said !, soberly. 'Really! I should not have guessed that You were thinking at all. Come, let us tell stories to pass the time, and you shall tell the first. Begin.' 1 never could refuse a young lady in all my life. 'The first time I nay.the old gen tleman,' said I, commencing---" , What old gentleman?' 'What old gentleman! Why, the old gen. tleman 1 am going to tell you about, to be sure. And the first time 1 saw him was on ,an occasion which 1 considered of no small importance 1 was then twelve years of ago, and yet had never been in the nearest town, althoughthat was only eighteen miles from my father's house. My father, you must know, was a lord.' 'A lord!' 'Yes: in Scotland we call it laird—but the •pronunciation of a word is no great matter. Luis estate was very extensive; comprehend• tog nn entire mountain, covered with stones enough to build all the cities in Europe,had they been of the proper kind;•pesides two • lakes,and a morass.. 1 was carefully educa. tad under the superintendence of a maiden aunt, (my mother being dend) assisted after. TIRE GARLAND. N trer . le. e -.. .. , - .14 , 1 . 1 .‘.‘1 .' : ; A:C " T'l .r4 . A l o, l4 ''', a • - _ ,, -- , ii . I ;. 4 1 'tom` '.-.. --, -- V BY LEITCH RITCHIE CIIAPTEII I ANID REPUBLICAA BANNER. Q.T.V.I.PWIraZI.VIP2I%.O B titwzaaLOQUlr zwegoawairatill 269 viola% wards by the eon of a neighbouring cotter. Had it not been fur the necessity of preach; ing, this gentleman would have been a strik ing ornament ‘,I the profession fur which he was intended,t he church; but when the thing came to be tried, it was found thatadtbough on ever% other occasion u very intelhgent person, ho could not speak two words of common sense in the pulpit.' 'Poor man!' said the young lady. 'ls that very uncommon in Scotland?' 'O, very! But at any rate the individual in question came back upon his father's hands a •stickit minister;' and showing speed ily that he was in the same degree a ‘stickit ploughman,' he was obliged to be satisfied with such jobs ofeducation as lie couldget j in the neighbourhood. Poor Willie! I think I see his lack a-daisicul face at this moment!' ) 1 he young lady jerked away her head, to let the look at the image beyond without in terruption, and 1 pursued my story. 'For many years the town of Auldclatters had been the Mecca of my imagination. It was the mart from which we drew our sup plies of grocery atAl haberdashery, and was associated, in my mind, with the cities of bazaars I read of in the Arabian Nights' Entertainments. I looked upon Saunders the packmau with interest,and almost rever ence, merely on account of his frequent jour neys to and from this distinguished spot; and I ut last began to think that there was some mystery connected with the extinguisher my father invariably put upon my request to ac company him to the annual fair. Still yout.g er boys, thought (,have visited Auldclatters, and why should I be condemned all my life to slumber, like Prince Bateman, on the mountain ofetones? You may conceive what were my feelings when, in the midst of this rebellious discontent, I was one day inform ed by my father that I was to go with him the following week to the annual fair at Auld clutters! Imagine the interval of expecta tion!—but ut length the day came, and we sat out. My futher,mounted on a stout nag'— 'Was your father the old gentleman?' in terrupted the young lady, suppressing a yawn. 'Not at all; we were just coming to him. My father rode before, with one or two far mers of the neighbourhood; and Willie and I followed, both of us careering on ragged shelties, so low that my preceptor's legs, if not held up by the stirrups, would have trail ed on the ground. After a hard ride of near ly eighteen miles, the town of Auldelatters came in sight. "T h e river Lora, n dark and rapid stream, was in front,sweeping round it like the ditch of a fortress. Beyond,t he building rose one over the other, till their heads seemed to pierce the sky. Those vast piles of archi• lecture in their aspect, which chilled my blood, and yet, at the same time, piqued me to the adventure. The approach to the town was by a bridge of only a single arch; but whose prodigious span, bestriding the! black torrent far below, presented a fitting avenue into what might have appeared a city of giants,' `Hey-day!' cried the young lady, opening her eyes, 'where ore we now, in the name of goodness? In the capital of the king of the Indies, or in a dirty, little, Scottish coup• try town?' •In the town of Auldclatters,' replied I qui etly, `as it appeared to the a quarter of a cen tury ago. A description, I admit, founded upon my present percept ionsovuuld be some what de:trent.. flowever,as we passed over the bridge, I . saw the old gentleman for the first time.' Wein' 'He was an old gentleman well on to seven ty years of age. Ile was dressed in a brown coat of an old gentlemanly cut, and wore a wig very handsomely powdered, and sur• mounted by a three•cornered hat, such as I had seen my grandfather wear on great oc• casions. His small•cloihes end stockings were of black silk, and his shoes were coy- cred, rather than lagtened, by an enormous pair of silver buckles• He was mounted on a horse of that colour,rather pale than white, by which you can tell that the animal in its youth was grey. 'When I saw this figure coming gradually into sight, as it rode slowly upone side of the steep arch of the bridge, while I was walk ing my sheltie up the other, it occurred to me, all on a sudden, that the old gentleman was the baillie of the town coming forth to meet us. This threw me ihto a flutter, for I had never seen so great a man as a baillie in my life; and so I edged my sheltie away to give the Old gentleman the crown of the causeway, keeiiing as near as possible to the long, ragged tail of my tutor's steed. 'lt was a grand sight to see ihe'old gentle. man come deism the steep arch, turning , neither to the right nor left, but walking his stately old horse straight on. He looked,in truth,like the master of the whole town; and had it not been for an expression of good humour and bonhomie in his face, my respect ; would have deepened into awe. When at length, as we were just passing each other, be turned his head suddenly and fixed his .eye on me, 1 thought, in my confusion,. I should have fallen from the saddle. He Smiled, however; nodded graciously—with . a kind of significance, too, as if we had been old acqtiaintances—and rode on. My eyes dazzled, my cheeks tingled; and I followed the tail of my tutor's sheltie, in a strange cPnfusion of mind, in:which surprise, vanity, and self.gratulation mingled with the shame and awkwardness of a hotne•brcd. scottish boy. Icrreaßl;ESS .111.4-70 W ha's you?' said I inn whisper to Willie, when the arch of the bridge was fairly be tween us and the object of my curiosity. 'You?' repeated he vacantly. Theduited !creature had not oven seen the old gentle• man! An application to my father was e qually unsuccessful; although the time that elapsed before 1 had an opportunity of speak ' mg to him rendered it somewhat less surpris ing that he had received no impression from so remarkable a figure. 1 questioned two • or three limners with whom 1 was acquain• ted; and ono answered that it was probably the minister—although, indeed, it could on no account be he without his black coat; and another, that he was quite sure it was Laird j Sheepshanks—at least lie swathl have said it was,lfilie I orse had been a brown gene. i way, the powdered wig his own grey hair, and the.cocked•hat a round beaver, in short I could obtain no information whatever res pecting the old gentleman. 1 went through the fair like a person inn dream; receiving only vague impressions of interest and gran deur, from the surrounding objects, and starting every now and then as 1 fancied that caught a glimpse of the three.cornered hat among the crowd. 'A II this, however,was nothing more than imagination., Had 1 been told that the old gentleman was actually Laird Sheepshanks, and that I had seen him on his way home, the thing would have been at an end. As was,he haunted ern, for months after—nay, for years, for nfter I returned borne from college, the mere sight of the bridge recall ed suddenly the images which seemed to have been buried for ever under the wreck of time, and the fair of Auldclatters swept like an enchanted pageant before my mind's eye--with the old gentleman in the midst.' 'And is that all?' asked the young lady sharply,as I paused to take breath —'is your story at an end?' 'So tar,' answered I, 'but the sequel is to 'Did 3'ou ever see the old gentleman again? Who did he turn out to be?' 'Why, lam just going to tell you. We do not relate stories in question and answer, like interrogatory lessons for,youth.' 'How then do you relate stories? Good ness gracious! will it never have an end? You have taken an hour to toll the that you once met an old gentleman, and could not learn his name.' 'lt was at your own option to listen or not,' said I, in some dudgeon: can tell you 1 nm thA a..very good hand at short stories; and, moreover, few persons suppose me to be capable of telling a long One, were I to try ever so such. However, if your opin ion be different—' W ill you tell me at once who the old gen tleman was?' 'lt is impossible.' 'Good evening,then,'—and the young holy flounced away, and decended to the cabin. CHAPTER 11. ,There is nothing so like enchantment as the gradual, yet surprising transformation of a calm evening into a calm night at sea. The last rave of the sun melt slowly away upon the bosom attie expanse, and leave a Putmisty shadow brooding over the deep. Put harcpy have we time to mark the change, when the comparative darkness around us becomes transparent. It is light • ed up with 'a more delicate and beautiful il• himination than that which has steeped the dying daylight in crimson and gold. Star after star comes forth from the profound of heaven ; and the hitherto veiled moon, throwing away fold after fold from her lus trous face, looks joyously around, in the sol itude of the sky—with the virgin freedom (as the poets have so often remarked,) of Dinn, in her own lonely haunts, surrounded by her attendant nymphs. On the present occasion, an interesting but very common variety took place in this charming scene. Although there was hardly a breath of wind below, the spirits of nature began to stir in upper air. A few light, fleecy clouds, stealing above the horizon, hurried glidingly across the sky ; and these were followed more slowly by some darker masses. The latter passed occasionally over the face of the moon; and the instsntaneons shadow, which swept down upon the world, was startling from the suddenness both of its approach and disap pearance. While watching these alters- Lions, my thoughts strayed on other locali ties, and other years, and 1 repeated in a low voice a stanza of poor Wilfred's ad dress to the pale pilgrim of the troubled , 'Tait queen! I will not blame thee now, As onco by Lora's fairy side, Each littlo cloud that dimmed thy brow Did then an anitel's beauty hide ; And of the'slade's I then could chide, Still are the thoughts to memory dear, For, while a•softer strain I tried, They hid my blush, end calmed my fear." .At this moment, a hand was laid gently upon my shoulder e and a Voice addressed tne, in tones 'as soft as lovers' lutes by • Did you aay Lora? Goodness grncibus! I thought there had been nothing there but an old gentleman 1' Would you have all at once?' said I somewhat sternly. But could you not have said that a young lady was to f011ow? Did you fall' in love with the old gentleman's daughter?', 'Heaven forbid I' Well, don't be alarmed- If you will promise not to be so tedious, I shall give you ten minutes more. Come, begin!' MIEN At Edinburgh,' said 1, 'while pursuing my studies, I made acquaintance with a youth whose family lived beyond Au!Mat ters, on the other side of the Lora. 1 Was at that time of life when acquaintiii.ce friend, and confidant, are convertible terms; and Hugh Montgomery and 1 were soon in separable. The intimacy continued till we were seventeen (for we were nearly of an age,) and at that epoch Hugh signalized his friendship by a proposal—which I can• nut smile at even now. He who treats it with ridicule is incapable of comprehending the feelings of generous, trusting, high hearted youth. ' Your father is comparatively poor,' said he. 'Granted: but then mine is rich. Why should you go to the West Indies, to toil and broil away the best years of your Ito in pursuit of fortune, and when you have attained it, come home as yellow and lusionless as a withered leaf?• What you must do, my dearest friend, is this. I have a little sister at home, 'nearly your own age, and us bonny a lassie as ever grew on the bank of the Lora. You are made for each other; she is exactly of that turn of mind which will enable her to appreciate you; and, ►n short, you will hardly have become acquainted before you both will fall deeper. ately in love. She has a fortune of a thou. sand pounds at her own disposal; you will marry her—lay out the money on a farm in the neighborhood—and we shall alt live happy together for the rest of our lives!' ' The dear, sensible creature I' exclaimed die young lady in delight. 'And you of course assented I' 'Of course.' 'That is something like a story!' and, gliding round, she seated herself so near me, that I was glad that there was nobody at hand tocriticise our position., ''Through the influence of my friend,' I continued, 'l. was invited to spend the next vacation at Gowanbrae ; and being now a groat, tall, gawky, shapeless follow, like other lads of seventeen, I was no longer set to straddle on a sheltie, but mounted in prodigious pomp upon my father's nag. I set forth upon my visit with a beating heart. The enterprise was an important—nay, an awful one; and to me, afflicted as 1 was with a constitutional bashfulness, it increas ed in terrors every step I rode. Often 1 was on the point of turning back ; but as often 1 was goaded on by—what do you think I' 'Pride 7' 'No—love.' 'And you had never seen the lady 1' 'A thousand times—in my. mind's eye. 'Cho features which I had drawn, one by one, from my friend's memory, had been moulded in my imagination into a portrait of surpassing loveliness. This was the compassion of my waking hours, and the inspirer of my dreams. Do you call it a shadow—a phantom of the mind? When do we love any thing else? Is our mistress a mere piece of mortality, composed of bones and viscera, flesh and blood—subject to error and passion, to disease and death ? Is she not rather the spirit with which our idolatrous fancy endues the statue, and which melts away from our corporeal touch, leaving only lifeless stone in our arms? It was the idea of Miss Montgomery I loved. The love of her identical self ie quite anoth• er thing.' TO DE CONTINUED. A BRIDR AND Gnoon.—The N. Y. Her aid of Monday sayst—"A very interesting event took place on Saturday morning last before the culd set in. A highly respecta ble and venerable financier. of Wall street, an ex• Bank President tit boot, only over sixty•seven years, led to the . holy alter a beautifill c..eature of sweet seventeen. As soon as the clergyman 'finished the busi ness, the happy pair set out for the south in order to enjoy the honey moon in Phila delphia, Baltimore or Washington. Thr• young bride is about as old as a grand daughter of her happy husband." LIAPPINESS —An eminent modern writer beautifully says :—The foundation of do mestic happiness ) ie a !Mill in the virtue of woman ; the foundation of political happi nees, a confidence of ull happiness, tempo• ral and external, reliance on the goodness of God.' Wo find the following truisms in one of our exchange papers: An economical man, is one who files a way a newspaper for future references. A parsimonious man, is one that stop his paper, to keep from paying a small pit tance lOr it. SMALL MISTAKES.—As a minister and a lawyer were riding together, says the min biter to the lawyer, ",sir, do you ever make mistakes in pkading." "I do," said the lawyer. "And what dck you do with mis takes'?" inquired the . minister . "Why, .sir, if large ones, 1 mend them; if small ones, I let them go," said the lawyer. "And pray, onr," continued he, "do you ever make mistakes in preaching?" "Yes, -sir, I have." "And what do you do with mistakes ?" "Why, sir, I dispense with them in the same manner as you"do—recti fy' the large and neglect the mai: ones." 'Not long siqce," continued ho. "as I Wilt , preaching, I ineant to observe that the devil was the father of all liars; but made a mistake, and said "the father of lawyers." Mlitnko Was .50 strut th'il j WI If ';'7"•" COOPER, 811 Y SER . & C0., - Editors and Proprietors. r A On Saturday last Mr. John AyrenstrAn, a very reepeetahl.t gentleman. a sti : zar rrfi ner, in this city, lad to the hymeninl altar hiss Rho 'a Grayson, after a continued cour!Shin of rittarr NINR YE.1129 The parties are both over ,-eventv yearn of ago ....Mr. A. seventy five ! Nliss Ithr:da about two years his junior. • They have been.ac. , quainter' from childhood. and when the gentlemen was in his twenty-fifth year. he essayed to woo his fair one. and was lent a patient liearinu fir some loar three years, when a country lass of some seventeen or eighteen years, a village coquette, crossed his path, and led Inm a merry dance for few months, And then—left him for n newer face. After a lapse oftt few years, like the prodigal petiitent, and in sorrow, he return ed to his Not love, and a more attentive, faithful swain. Ne'cr cro- Iced the pliant hinges of the knee. Were thrift did follow fawning— Having visited her upon no average more than five evenings of every week during 'the entire thirtynine venrs. Some disagree• meat upon a point oft rifling consequence in their future domestic arrnogements, was the cause of the long deterred nupiials. In o. pectininry point of view, he was made a handsome speculatinn—she possessing solid charms to the amount of $40,000. The point in disagreement he was compelled to yield—the fair ono vowing she would die first. We learn that an active agent of ono of the Cars. running on the Colunibia and Philadelphia Rail• Road, on Monday last, in Broad Street, Philadelphia, had one of hia feet very badly injured in conaeqtience of some little imprudence whilst getting upon the Car. On the same day, as the train or Cars weroon the point of leaving the Water•tatk near Leman Place, and were in motion, an Agent, in assisting a woman into one of the Care, was thrown down and the wheels passing over his thigh cut it completely wr On Tuesday the afternoon train on the Lancaster and Harrisburg Rail-road was thrown off the track ne•nr Big Chiques Creek—the Engine upset—and the Fire man and Engineer dreadfully scalded. The Fireman, Mr. Yeager, died, and was buried on Wednesdav—the Engineer, Mr. Reif- Schneider, still lives, but his situation is considered very critical. The injury SUS tained by these men did not emanate to much from the fall, as from the position in which it placer) them—being immediately under the "Water Chest," as we are infor med, and receiving the full bath from the scalding water without the power of mov, ing. We know not the immediate cause of this terrible affair, but have been told• it proceeded from some defect in the road. O n Wednesday the train of Cars from Harrisburg ran off the track at about twen. ty yards from the place at which the above• mentioned train ran off—fortunately, how. ' ever, without causing injury to any. Here, then, are four dreadful accidents occurring in one week. There may be some discrepancies in our statement of them but we think they are but slight.- Some of these accidents occurred in consequence of • carelessness in intlividualsothers from the had condition of the road% Congresi in its wisdom, and after much petitioning and so licitation, has prisl.ed a humane law lOr the regulation of Steamboat navigation - and tho security of steamboat pyssengers,—could not.—should•not Goegress, also, pass a law for the regulation of Rail• Roads, rail road Cars, and the security from danger of Passengers upon Rail roads? We think it. should; and we think. too, that every Stale .i►ould second the exertions of Congress,by respectively passing and enforcing laws tif protection and security on this important 4abject. If the sentiment which we ex.. press is just and proper, will some of our able brethren of the press mice it up and enlarge upon it ? We trust they will. ' [Co.. Spy.] A trr•.w PATENT RIFLE,—We have seen a Rifle invented by Mr. Bevley of Portl.intl (Me.) which when loaded, Infinite of 15 hisiinct discharges. The loading takes place in the breech of the gun through eilindrical conducting tube, passing into a receiving chamber, and in the tube are 16 sliding chambers loaded with powder and ball. In the receiving chamber the lock acts upon the eliding chambers. striking through with thu gientest precision and perfect safety. The lock is of very simple construction on the guard of the gun more simple and not more cumbersome than to a common gun. The rifle we have seen is a beautiful one:—and though not much versed in these matters, vet we feel at liberty to Say that whoever omits io do killing by the platoon, or gunning by the flock, cannot find, at least as• we thinic,nny instrument so wonderfully adapted to their purpose. A noon REAsoa.—A yolang Amoroso, et 4 po. litieel festive), gave the following toast: - Tint LADIES....—We' ilththe ifitm t ht.. cause of their beauty-- resperi them,. be. come of tLeir virtue—adorn thaw, bscauso rf their intelligenee--and love them became we can't help IL—Bolton Times. MOBILE AND TEXAB...—A' Ifiteel, hoe el steam packets is nhcut to beeltiblieloxt •r -s RY2-10.1.45. , 1 455. Don't despair Girls. slccidents.