4%;* ' e ,l "* , •A;ii',* 4 .l4! T - " •** 11111 ; ; ')V- rr • . .1.• . 1 `• • • r, '`:"' -*- 4 1 .': - • 11111 1 ti II •4: • .:! • + ;Yre . P t i• . .# ' • • * _ I •, \ ::?.F • -N. 1.04 e I . nt ,r +y s `on. • , tV It 4 " . " • 6 - R. S. PAXTO.7I , 11° VOL. X.--NO. 38.] ADVERTISEMENTS Notice is 11.er eby Given, To the Heirs and Legal Representa- tires of James Monroe OPllvaiii, jATE of Germany township, Adams co. deceased, that an INQUEST will be held on 'Thursday the 19th day of Decem Zer inst. on a Tract of Land situate in G er limy township, Adams county, iirljoining lands of Dr. J. A. Shorb, the Widow Da vis, George Will, Esq. and others, contain ing about 27 Acres, more or less ; also, at House and Lot of Ground in the town of Liulestown, containing about ono acre, more or less, with a two.story .weather boarded House, small Barn, and other im provements thereon erected ; to make parti tion thereof to and among all the Heirs and Legal Representatives of said deceased, ij the same will admit of such partition, with out prejudice to or spoiling the whole ; but if the same will not admit oleuch partition, then to part and divide the same to and a mong as many of them as the same will ac commodate ; but if the same will not admit of division at all, without prejudice to or spoiling the whole thereof, then to value and appraise the whole undivided. G. W. M'CLELLAN, Sheri". Sheriff's Office, Gettysburg, Dec. 2, 1839. 5 LIST or RET.IILERS Of Foreign Merchandize, within the County of Adams, GREEABLY to a certificate of the same furnished to me by the Clerk of Quarter Sessions of said county, desig slating those who have taken out their Li censes for one year from the Ist of May, 1839. Beta Hera. - Glees. Siimuel Fahnestock,' , 6 Thomas J Cooper, . - 8 George Arnold, 7 R G M'Creary, , 8 Jacob A Winrott, .8 Samuel ‘Vitherow, . . 11 Samuel El Buehler, '8 William Gillespie. '8 William Hamill, j - !I3 G. R. &J. Gilbert, ' 6 David Sheets, Abraham King, 11 Jacob Brinkerhoff', •s Adam Epley, . John Picking, .. , --. , ....-'''s Philip Miller,• '.. i. ' . lB . George. Beck 7 William Hildebrand; • B ' ' Jacob Brown, . . ' 8 David Beecher; . ' . ~ 8.: Thomas *Knight, ' --. '6 • Peter Mickley, • ' -• . ' ~'' '8 Nicholas Mark, 'B Albert Vandyke, . " 8 ASE Duncan. -- . , 8 John Miller, • • I X` •Henry Stouter, ' . . . .4•, r 8 . John H Deingir, , '' ''-'' '8 David White, . . ' 1 " -'-• As ,. John H Myers, 8 Gideon Griest, - 8 William Ickes 8 Wm li . . II ati j Gardner, 7 Jacob Myers,. . , 8 Enoch Simpson, • 8- Simon Becker: 8 . George Mitinigh, 8 John M'Knight, • ' 8 Jesse Houck, • 8 John Conrad, • 8 George Wilson, S Henry Schriver, 7 James S Davis, 8 Moritz. Budie, 6 . Blythe & *Cleary,. • . 8 W,n Johnston, 8 Benj R Robinson, 8 Jacob Hoeflich, . 8 Eli Smith & Co. S Pr Wrn Johnston, 8 D H Swope, 8 • Cook & Tudor, 8 Abraham Scott, 8 Henry Wasmus, 8 Wm Alexander, 8 David Myers, 8 Conrad Weaver, - ' 8 John Jenkins, ~ 8 Alexander M'Cosh, - ' 8 Michael Lawyer, ' ' 8 Alexander R Stevenson, 8 Henry W Slagle, 8 . George Range, 8 Joseph Curl, 7 Eusobius J Owings, . 8 John Aulehaugh, . 8 Wampler & M'Farland, 8 asList of those who have not taken out their License since the Ist of May : John M Stevenson, ag't. 8 Peter Sheets, ~ 8, thigh M'Sherry, 8 Henry Bittinger, 7 William Arnold, ... 8 Lawyer & Robinson, - 8 Hamilton Longwell & Co. - 8 S B Mead, 8 ~. . James A Thompson, 8 „„ :':....,9„,NWard & Hamit, 8 Aillyi e s, FlJohnston, 8 1 3 ; H. ' MoCLELLAN, Treas'r. i . : T ., I ressurer's Office. Z `oettysburg, Nov. 18, 1839. S LAW' NOTICE. C. BAKER V . , ILL practice Law in the several V Cour's of Adaius county.—Office in Cliarnbersburg street, ono door west of Mr. Rtielder's Store. Gettysburg, April 510, 114519. }v-5 lazeduailrazatinalie aIa?kiPLIEDAX aziviznanzaurp e zomezataarti ad 9 ADVERTISEMENTS LVEIDISTons , IVIEETZNG. EIE undersigned, Auditors, appointed by the Orphans' Court of Adams co. to audit, adjust and proportion the balances remaining in the hands of C. F. KEENER and Jour( MEALS, Executors of IIEIVItY RIFE, Jun. deceased, to and among the respective creditors of said deceased, will meet for that purpose at the house of James A. Thompson, in Gettysburg, on Saturday the 14th o/ December next, nt 10 o'clock, A. m. of fluid day. WM. N. IRVINE, J. F. MACFARLANE, GEO. SEIRYOCK, Nov. 18. tin ORPHANS' COURT SALE. IN pursuance of an order of the Orphans' Court of Adams county, there will be sold at Public Vendue or Outcry, on Sat• urday the 14th day of December next, on the premiies, the following described Real Estate, late tho property of DENNIS Mc GUIRE, deceased, situate in Franklin township, Adams county, adjoining lands of David Chamberlain, John Robinson, Peter Heck and others, containing about 43 aCRES, more or lead, on which are erected a TWC.STORY ', LOC? IT:AIWA ;;;:g. and log Stable, with other out- 5 4 baildings. About one half of the land is covered with good TIMBER. KrSale to commence at 10 o'clock of said day, when duo attendance will be given and .terms made known by DAVID CHAMBERLAIN, Adm'r of said deceased. Nov. 4.* is NEW ESTABLISHMENT. 3 1 AOTOVT. HE Subscribers begs leave, respectful ly to inform-the citizens of Gettys burg, and surrounding country, that he has ommenced, the above business, together with HOUSE PAINTING, AND TUR NING, &c. dm, in Chamhersburg street, nearly opposite the Apothecary and Book store of Mr. S Buehler, where he will at all times be prepared to execute all orders in the above bustnels tllith neatness and de spatch; he will also kedp a supply ofChairs of every description .constantly on hand, which for neatness and durability cannot be rpassed by any manufactured in this sec tion of country. He hopes by strict talon tied to business and a desire to please, to meta and receive a share of public patron age. ADAM KITZMILLER. Gettysburg, Aug. 13, 18:39. Gouley's Vegetable Medicines UNPRECEDENTED SUCCESS! No medicine has, perhaps, ever mot with such decided and general success as Gioialey's Vegetable Bitters. Tms medicine has been but a few years before the public, and the demand for it has already become so great, that the sub scril,er finds it difficult to supply the numer ous orders which he is constantly receiving. Innumerable Certificates in his possession bear testimony to its medicinal virtues and attest the fact of its having preserved the lives of hundreds bdth in this city and else where. His VEGETABLE COUGH DROPS, a new article, are also getting into general use, having been productive of the most be. neficial effects in hundreds of families of the first respectability in this city and vicinity I and although they have in one instance, but without any foundation or truth, been pro nounced poisonous, HUNDREDS of certificates can be produced of their having performed positive and effectual cures in the most obsti nate cases, both on young and old, and he now challenges any one to produce satisfac tory evidence that there is one particle of any ingredient in their composition that can injure a person in the lowest stage of any disease. Having administered his medicines in al most all diseases to which the human fami ly are subjected, he never, in a single in stance, found them to produce any injurious effects, but, on the contrary,they have been attended with the most complete success. N. B.—As the Fever and Ague is very prevalent at this season of the year, he can confidently recommend his VEGETABLE BITTERS as a CERTAIN founE,and invites all who tray be afflicted with this dreadful disease to make trial of them. The attention of Masters and Owners of Vessels Is called to this medicine; it will be found of great benefit nmong their crews, and a sure preventative of many of the di seases to which the mariner is subject during long and tempekuous voyages. LOUIS GOULkiY, No, 21i Baltimore street, " near the Centre Market, between Harrison end Frodeerick streets. Nov. 25. / y Office of the Star 454 Banner: Chambersburg Street, a few doors West of I. The Sr►a & RF:CUBLICAN BANNER is pub fished at 'l' WO DOLLARS per annum (or Vol ume of 52 numbers,) payable half-yearly in ad vance: or TWO DOLLARS & FIFTY CENTS, if not paid until after the expiration of the year. 11. No subscription will be received for a shorter period than six months; nor will the paper be dis continued until all arrearages aro paid, unless at the option of the Editor. A failure to'notify a dis continuance will be considered a new engagement and the paper forwarded accordingly. 111. AD VELITIBEMENTB not exceeding a square will ho inserted TIInEE times for $l, and '25 cents for each subsequent insertion—the number of in sertion to be marked, or they will be published till forbid and charged accordingly; longer ones in the same proportion. A reasonablededuction will be made to those who advertise by the year. IV. All Lettersand Communications addressed to the Editor by mail must be post-paid, or they will not be attended to THE GARLAND Vl* ikt t r. " 7- "s; —"With sweetest flowerienrich'il, From variousgardenscull'd with core." TO WHAT SHALL WE BUILD ? "It is a good thing for us to ho horo : if thou wilt, lot us horn make three Tabernacles, one for Thco, ono for Mosos, and one for Elias." [illarrucw, xvlr. 4. Methinks it is good to be here ; If thou wilt, let us build—but fur whom ? Nor Elias nor Moses appear, But the shadows of evo that encompass the gloom Tho abode of the dead and the place of the tomb Shall we build for Ambition ? Oh, no! Affrighted he shrinketh away : For see, they would pin him below, In a small narrow cove, and begirt with cold clay, To the meanest of reptiles a peer and a prey. To Beauty ? Ah, no ! Shn forgets The charms which she wielded before ; Nor knows the foul worm that he frets The skin which but yesterday fools could adore, For the smoothness it held, of the tint which it wore. Shall we build to the purple of Pride, The trappings which dizen tho proud Alas ! they are all laid aside ; - And here's neither dress nor abandonment al- lowed. But the long winding-shoot, and tho hinge of the shroud. To Riches Z Alas ! 'tis in vain Who hid, in their turn, have been hid : The treasures are squandered again . ; And hero, in the grave, are all metals forbid But the tinsel that shone on the dark coffin-lid To the pleasures 'which Mirth can afford Tho revel, the laugh, and the jest Ah ! hero is a plentiful board, But the guests uro all mute as their pitiful cheer, And nonu but tho worm is a reveller here. 61'120. Shall we build to Allection and Love Ah, no ! they have withered and died, Or fled with the spirit above, Friends, brothers, and sisters, are laid side by side, Yet none have saluted, and none have replied• Unto Sorrow 1 The dead cannot grieve Not a sob, not a sigh, meets mine ear, Which compassion itself cnn relieve. Ah, sweetly they slumber, nor hope, lore, nor fear ; Peace, peace, is the watch-word, the only one here ! - Unto Death, to whom monarchs must bow 1 Ah, no ! for his empire is known, And here there are trophies enow. Beneath the cold dead, and around the dark stone, Are signs of a sceptre that none may disown. The first tabernacle to Hors we will build, And look for the sleepers around us to rise ! The second to F&iru, which ensures it ful. fil I'd ; And the third to the Lams of the groat sacrifice, Who bequeathed us them both when ho rose to the skies. BY MAJOR CALDER CAMPBELL. I lov ' d her with the purest love, That ever human bosom knew ; The green leaf to the vernal grove Was never half so true ! For, oh ! she was the sweetest flower That over graced a Highland glen ; And proudly did I own her power, For she was artless then. Sho left her home amongst the hills, And in the world she grew A worldly, flaunting thing of pride, Unsteady and untrue; Gay robes and jewels deck her now, She seeks the gaze of men, And is no more tho flower I loved, For she was artless then ! When Eva brought woe to all mankind, Old Adam call'd her woe•man ; But when she woo'd with love so kind, He then pronounced it woo-man ! And now with folly and with prido Their husbands' pockets trimming, These ladies are so full of whims, Thet people call them whim•men ! "FEARLESS AND FREE." the CourWouse. SONG. WOMAN. ma'aTollaaVS-33 From the Literary Sorxreuir fcr I SUL TIM CANAL BOAT. 11 V W 32. E. 11 CIITO:t. Reader! are you a traveller? do not allude to a few hours transit between the chief cities of the northern States, in a well appointed steamboat or a cushion•seated, stove-warmed railroad car, with sufficiency of opportunity afforded for obtaining regular meals. 1 speak of trav elling, not of pleasure jaunts or business trips. Have you ever crossed the Atlantic in a short-handed, ill-funded, crazy brigantine? have you descended the Mibmissipot in a broad-horn, or ascended the Ottawa in n bateau manned by Canadian voyagers!— have you encountered an "oxe-eye" off the Cape of Good Hope? have you traversed the Pampas of La Plate, or battled with a sand spout on the banks of the Ucayali.? have you ever topped Mount Blanc, or the Cordilleras, or tho Himalaya mountains? have you wintered in an Esquimau: hut, or summered in a Florida swamp? have you beet, bug-bitten in a London inn, flea-bitten at a Parisian hotel, mosquitto bitten at Al giers, or chigo-bitten in Patagonia? have you felt the breaking-up of the monsoons in the Indian ocean, in the lungs-compressing khamseen of the Persian gull, the withering harmattan in the interior of Africa, or the hot simoom on the borders of Arabia? have you ever journeyed over a corduroy road in a Kalamazoo stage coach? and, to give the climax, have yen ever travelled in a packet-boat on the New York or Pennsyl . - vania canals? You indignantly repel the insinuation! 1 am aware that such a means of progress is now voted slow and low. but before the gen eral use ofsteatn,t he canal boat was a choice infliction upon wayfdrerv. 1 have jan-nuy ed many a weary mile in tha long coffin shaped - floats, and as they are almost among the things that were, I shall record my ex periences for the benefit of the next genera tion. Let us imagine ourselves on bond a crock boat on either canal; a machine from eight to ten feet in width, and between 1E ixty and evenly feet in length. You can almost stand upright in the cabin, which extends about four fifths of the length of the boat. Settees or cushioned seats rim round the sides of the cabin, and a liquor tar, a kitch. en, and the sleeping apa.tments of the cap• lain and mate occupy the stemmost portion of the remaining space. The extra hand, or spare drive, sleeps in the kitchen with the male cook. A portion of the forward part of tho boat is divided off by a curtain, and is supposed, in courtesy, to be the la dies' cabin. The bridges across the whole lines of the canals are built with the most exact regard to the minimum height of the decks of the boats passing underneath. The close-fitted proceeding compels the passengers who aie bravo enough to walk the deck, or cabin roof, to bob down one half their persons whenever the helmsman calls "bridge."— This is an amusement of censiderable niter ! est, varied occasionally by _the absolute ne cessity of dumping your whole carcass flat upon the deck wherever a democratic far mer has built tits pons asinoram a foot or two lower than the usual standard, as if re solved to abridge the pride of the stiffueck ed. The captain of the canal-boat is general ly a down-easter, and, like other captains, occasionally accommodating, but most fre quently very surly. He has an immense idea of his own authority, and loves to show his power over the passengers and the dn- Vera, although he is "hail fellow well met" with the locksmen and storekeepers by the canal side. I have seen a captain mad with rage because an unfortunate horao sat down at the dinner table before the bell had been rung, or his mightiness bad taken his seat. The drivers, helmsmen, and boat hands are an amphibious race, delighting in pea jackets, surlines, and strong cigars. The cooks, like all other floating blacking cuis iniers, are universally the ugliest specimens of niggerosity extant. I never saw Gne,on ocean, river, or canal,who was not as fright Jul as a half-shaved ofd bilious baboon—and in all canal craft the cunning of the simeous tribe must be exerted to be able to cook a dinner in the smallest space devottl to the culinary arrangements. I have seen one hundred persons fed, aboard a canal boat, wherein the whole cuisine was not much bigger than one of the boilers in a hovel kitchen, and yet we were provided with the necessary joints of meat, exceedingly well cooked % with the customary vegetables and attendant tarts. The uniform and easy motion of the ca nal boat generally sends one half of the pas sengers to sleep within a few minutes of the removal of the dinnercloth. The ladies retire behind the curtain dividing their =b in from the gentlemen's room, and the male nappers steal forty winks upon the aide seats or cushions on the locker's tops, despite the printed injunctions to the contrary which hang upon the cabin's side. Some few be gin to read, but eventually drop to sleep over their books, and nod in mandarin solemnity from opposite sides, or 'lean their cheeks upon their hands," and dose deceitfully till awakened by their, own deep snore. Dull ness reigns supreme—,-occasionally disturb ed by the smokers on the cabin top, who are prevented from sleeping by the nips of their naughtinesses the mosquitoes, and the necessity of noticing the constant recur rence of the bridge' nuisance with the una voidable bending and bobbing attic b.xly. The supper table cleared. the cheqaer board is in ri quisujou, and a crowd flukes over the adversaries, and partakes of the interest of the game. Occasionally, a wan dering gambler exhibits a pack of cards,nnd proposes a harmless game at poker, or a cut- in at 100. This nuisance is rather scarce aboard the canal boats, and appears only when the gamblers are actual passengers— the sporting fraternity never resort to such places in pursuit of their prey, although such practices aro habitual aboard the Wes- tern steamboats. "flow arc we all to find sleeping room • aboard this little boat?" I agreed with the speaker, a young man of inexperienced manner, and regarded the proceedings of the captain and his attendant nigger with some attention, while they fixed the berths and arranged the order and location of the speakers. The first name upon the way bill has the choice of beds—if a strip of can vass, scarcely six feet long, and barely two feet wide, with a mattress hailer' inch thick, and one coverlet deserves the name of a bed. The locker seat forms the lower berth; lines are suspended from the cabin ceiling,‘ at taeLed to hooks that seem hardly strong enough to hold a bird cage; to these cords are affixed two rows of berths, hooked en II o inner side to some pegs in the cabin wall or partition, about eighteen inches apart from each other. Three persons are thus compelled to lie on shelves within the attitude of four feet, for no boat exceeds six feet in height, and the lock or cabin seat is at least a foot and a half from the ground, and the upper passenger must have six in• ches between his nose and the roof of the boat. The calculation is beyond the usual average of space. have seen upwards of one hundred man beings compelled to pig together in one of these canal hosts when the accommo dations provided wore but for forty persons. Mattresses were spread upon tables and stools; and coverlets and blankets, placed Aron the floor, received the willing incum bents. !► decent man fedi disgust at the idea of being compelled to bleep in a low, close ea bin, with a triple corpuscular row suspended on each aide, and the Boer strewed with snoozers—all of them, in the - midst of the dog Cava, breathing the same air over and ' over again. But, yvhile travelling, you feel jaded, fatigued, and imagine that you mint sleep. With considerable difficulty, you get into your berth—an action more per plexing than pleasing, particularly it you are compelled to a middle or garret station. Your fellow voyagers begin to snore around you ; and just as you are coaxing yetir acn• sea into a dreamy sort of quiescence, your undermost neighbor turns in his bed, and in bending his knee hits you a tremendous plug in the small of you: back. It is no use to quarrel, the man could not help it. You endeavor to turn yourself round, and see if sleep will take the other side of the question ; it is an impossible act ; the weight of the gentlemen in. the top story has brought his sacking within an inch of your nose. A friend berthed opposite, com plains of the want of eleop—you extend your crm, and with the utmost ease shake hands with him across the cabin. The man a head of you, but on the same level, scratch es the top of your head with the tip of his toe. What can you do 1 You have no resource but the revenge of the nigger coachman, who, in a clash of carriages, was told by his :Mitre:es that the end of the pole of the following carriage had been driven through the back of her coach : "Nebor mind, missee," was the answer, "1 shub do eend ob our pole right frou de back of de carriage afore us, and dat, you know, make us eben." In the setae way, you receive a kick from your predecessor, and in the agony of the time you transmit it to poster• ny—that is, to those who came after you. Every canal boat carries its own colony of mosquitoes. In general, you see noth ing of them in the day time, but in the mor ning you invariably find six or enven bumps on your forehead that would puzzle a phre. nologist, with an occasional lump on the end of your proboc is, and a core place just under your eye. The Montezuma Swamp, cn the Erie canal, thirtyeadd miles from Syra- cuse, has a choice breed of these pretty vampreys ; they are fierce and ravenous in an unparallelled degree, and visit the vari ous packet boats with an untiring assiduity and never-failing appetite, "wondrous to be hold." The Kentucky story, about witnes sing the gallinippers sit on a pine stump by the road side, waiting for the mail, and shar• pening their teeth with a brickbat, in readi ness for the attack on the passengers, is no longer apocryphal. I heard a packet boat captain assert that he once saw a cloud of the real swamp-bred out-and-outers absolutely carry offs child, three years of age, from the roof of his boat, across the canal into the recesses of the Montezuma. Some two hours elapsed before the exact place where she had alighted, could be found ; but, when the spot was ascertained, the dear little ab ducted was discovered, picked to a perfect skeleton I Several of the passengers were so hardened as to dispute the evident truth of this story, and laughed heartily at the credulity of those who confessed their be lief; in the course of the night the mosqui- , toes avenged themselves upon the scoffers : I and in the morning every syllable of the captain's narrative was avouched to be most gospel-like and true. Well, you scratch Writhe mosquitoes, and hiding your head in your only sheet, again essay to sleep. The boat bumps through the lock, and the water rushes in at the bro ken pane or half closed window. The inor phine quality is again predominant ; you sleep despite excessive - thtriit and heat.—, i You dream that you are a roll of dry goods on a shelf; or that you aro walking on deck of the boat, and, hearing the ominous,' G. I , IIIIII4IAPS, Editors.' [WHOLE N43!.500. call of"bricign," you attempt to throw your self flit upon the deck, but in reality, pitch itig off your perch, you dump your carcass on the stomach of some sleeper on the floor. If you have any luck, you got into a fight— if not, you get into your berth, and again essay to rest. The man in the layer above you snores. Gods I what a blast I You dig your head into your six by twelve straw pillow, and try to force oblivion—but the infernal auspiration comes in at your star board ear like a huge corkscrew, and seems to extract your brain. You forget the ame nities of life, and again borrow the philoso. phy of the nigger coachman—bet:ding your knee, you give the snoring incumbent a polthonge in the small ribs—ho wakes and snores 1,13 more I There is an infinite variety in the differ ent drapasons Gf the nasal organ ; they per. forni a perfect scale, from the roaring of the bull of 13ashan to the nothingeess of ihe grass-hopper's. chirp. Listen! Ono gentle man draws.out his diatonic in a long cres. condo, terminating abruptly at the height of his nasality. Another, at long interyals, gives a loud and vigorous york, like the short, quick bark of an enraged whelp.— That gurgling sound, speaking of liquor, is the voice of a proboscis with mulberry car. buncles. Do you not hear a still, small snore, that comes from that long thin man opposite 7 flow it sneaks into the world, as if ashamed of its ext;ity I It is dying gre. dually away, like the death-moan of n pul monary flea. Other snouts emulate the snort ore pig—the spirit of n high pressure steam.pipe—the gentle purrings of an an• dent tabby. flow. that stout gentleman snores 1 His nasal blast possesses a rutrib ling sound, like the tolling of the pebbles in the whirls of the retiring tide. The val iance of the window curtain feels its powers, and waves to arid fro in the current Of the agitated air I He has aroused himself from his sleep liy the violence of his hwn snore. Hark 1 "he swears a prayer or two—und then he snores again.", Shakespeare causes one of the monarchs of England to inquire why sleep fOrsakes the perfumed chambers of the great, to lie in smoky cribs, end -rest upon uneasy pallet,. The smokiest cabin of the poorest. bog. burner iiF l lreland is u seventh heaven in_ comparison with the steamy and stinking Cabin of a Crowded canal boat • The last time that I travelled by the slow certainty of „the fast line," I selected my six feet of slung sleep as close to the floor ae possi hte ; arid, as nearly, onn,hundred passengers were to pass tho.night in the floating nui sance, I considered myself fortunate in ob taining a resting place when the berths were apportioned. I consumed several-of the dull hours of early night in burning my tobacco on deck—iii fact, it was near mid night before I entered the cabin, intending to turn in—but a single sniffer the odor of that apai tment compelled me to turn out, and I had some difficulty in restraining the contents of my stomach from following lily example. It was impossible to respire the thick and fetid breathings of a century of snoarers. I returned to the deck, and un buttoning my cloak from-the top of, my trunk, I "camped out," on the deck.boards, between a row of boxes, and by covering myself well up, with a carpet bag for my pillow, slept pretty comfortably till day. break, notwithstanding a Jew flying visits from the marsh gallinippers, and the heavy dews of a summer's night. ..r*Q 0 e••••••• • AN ENVENTION—Mr.Thomas Trench, of Hanover,New Jersey,is now engaged in ma king a machine which will print two common bibles in one minute. The machinery is said not to be complicated. The N. York Amer ican states that there is now in operation at Hanover, the invention of the same gentle• man, a printing and paper machine, in which the rags are taken to the mill and made in. to paper, the paper is then run on a .wheel and taken to the printing machine, which prints six spelling books in one minute. and three hundred books in an hour. The sheets are printed on both sides at ono oper ation. Tho types are sot on an iron cyl inder, and one revolution prints a book.— The ink is supplied by a roller moved by machinery. A GREAT MAN.—A New Hampshire paper published more than filly years ago, cooteins an account of Dependence Bint fiird, of Newington, who died in 1780, aged 40. Ile measured seven and a half feet across the breast, and weighed seven hun dred pounds. He was drawn to his graves on a sled by four oxen, and it required 12 men to put him on. • From the Now York Mirror. TRANSLATED FROM THE FARMER. THE BEES AND THE WASP.--"W hat generous creature man must bee!" said a young bee; "he Leeds us, gives tit, a shelter, and spares us ever, when we du him harm. I mybelf saw the other day, that some ofus stung him, when he was giving us fliod, aid yet he did not pause in his act of gencrosi. ty. NVhat a noble creature he is!" • o What a selfish one, rather," replied au older neighbor. "Ile' knows very well that ho gets his honey back from us with 1100/:‘ ; that is the only reason why he feeds us in winter, and forgives our stinging him." "That is very well," rejoined a wasp,whii happened to fly past; "man is but a selfish minimal, after all. I should like to know it any body ever heard of his feeding tall" "If he did, he would Amy greater (1.11y,' than I suppOsed him capab!e of. Noun. but a spendthrift is ever liberal tol.dronatt guid idlers." Tim health of St. Augustine was fultymre• stewed at this last advic-s.