1P b 2 1 ,4 ao. Office of the Star "& Banner COUNTY BUILDING, ABOVE THE OFFICE OD • TUB REGISTER AND RECORDER. f. The STIII. & RIV.OIII.IICAS Baxast is pub [shed at -T WO DOLLARS per annum (or Vol ume of 52 numbers,) payable half -yearly in ad vance: or TWO DOLLARS & FIFTY CENTS, if not paid Lentil after the expiration of the'year. IL No subscription will be received for a shorter period then six months; nor will the paper be dis continued until all arrearages are 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. ADVIIIITISIMBINTS not exceeding a square will be inserted vanes 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 reasonabledeductioniwill be made to those who advertise by the year. IV. All Lettersand Communications addressed to the Editor by mail mustbe post-paid, or they will not be attended to. THE GARLAND. •• With sweetest dower earieli'd From various gardens enU'd with tats."; MT INICCITICEit. My mother! bow that sacred name Awakens in my bosom's core Visions of bliss I once could claim, But which I now may claim no more, Bliss, such as mark'd my childhood's years, • When wrapp'd in thy bolo 'd embrace, I knew no cares, nor hopes, nor fears, Beyond that holy resting place. Mother! since those blest How many changes timr - ibas wrought, On all that met my childhood's view, Or occupied my childhood's thought! How many wand'ring steps Tire stray'd— How many anxious fears endured— ' How often monm'd o'er hopes betray'd How often smiled o'er bliss secured! Yet though I've wandered far and wide. Have quaff'd of pleasure's bowl; Have launch'd upon ambition's tide, And yielded to its wild control; Still from the fondest, brightest dream, Thai life and lope can yield to me, Does momoty, with its magic beam Glance back to childhood's hours—and thee. I see thee, as, when by thy side, I knelt in infant hours of peace, And heard thy pray'r, that Heaen would guide My footsteps o'er life's wilderness That He, who dried the widow's tears, Would fondly guard the widow's joy; And through the lapse of future years, Protect, sustain, preserve thy boy. My young heart knew not then how much Would be its need, in after time, Of the strength pray'd for, from the touch Of dark temptation and of crime To save it—but I since have traria Enough of life's bewildering snares. To bless the power which kindly tarn d, And hiten'd to my mother's prayers. Mother! the prayers address'd by thee, Filn with the fervour of thy love, Have been a talisman to me, To guard and shield—protect—reprove. And now, when bending o'er thy tomb, - Thy son affection's tribute pay; Faith breaks triumphant through the gloom, • And sheds abroad its heavenly rsym It whispers that tby sainted soul Frofn its high home beholds me 'WI— And that thy love will yet control. Correct and guide my wayward will! That, at the mercy seat, thy PM" Will fur the earthly loved ascend. Until tberansom'd meets thee than, His praises with thine own to bland. maocamakatDwo From the Philadelphia Betuday Cowie THE GAM= Or Iku.sucurrs. AN AMERICAN TALE. P. Jammu. my dear Sit, you cannot, certainly, be in earnest." "Yes, but 'I am though." "What—gamble your daughter away'!" "You can call it by what mime you choose; it matters not to me. "You must heat me at the game, or her hand cannot be yours," "But that is impossible- You are the beet player within ten miles around,isnd I know little or nothing of draughts, besides having a distaste for ii." to Well, well, that is your own look out," replied the father, with an air of, impati ence. "If you win her, she is yours; but if you do not, my word for it, she makes - . happy th 3 bridal evening of a smarter Man. ,"B ut ,—" aI tell you, it is 'useless to talk, John Graham. My word is passed, and I cannot be moved. If you Comply with my terms, well; if not, there let the matter end." This conversation occurred between a sturdy husbandman.whose gann fringed the romantic Oltillte of the Zusquehanna; near Ott tielightfol village of Marietta, in the itoprior opf Pcnnvitotnia, and a young farmer, living near by. The heart of the latter had been won by Anna, the blooming daughter of the former, and after many days of doubt and painful miegivrogs, John Graham, for that was his name, made hold to speak forth to the father his desire to posseiss her hand. Surprised, mortified, and discouraged at his reception, the young man left the house, without a parting word with Anna, and re. turned to his own home, gloomy and de sponding. For three days, no one saw him beyond the bounds of his owo farm. Anna, who knew, of course, his intention, to ask for her hand, was deeply distressed at his sud den departure from the house, and prolong. ed absence. It was near nightfall of the third day. while sitting at the cottage window that opened towards the road winding up to the house, that she was startled from a painful dreamy state, by , the sound of footsteps a and lifting her head, she perceived that her tru ant lover was again returning. "0, John, why have you staid so long awayr she said earnestly, as she • bounded out of the door to meet him. "And why should I comer he replied, moodily. "Did not My father—" She could ut ter nothing further, but coloring deeply, leaned her head upon his shoulder. "He refused me your. hand, Annul" he said in the excited tone. "0, no, John; he did _not do that, surely!" said the maiden, lifting her head, and look ing him, with a pale countenance, steadily in the face. "It amounts to the same thing, Anna.— I must beat him at draughts, or you never can be mine." • "John Graham! you are sporting with me!" And Anna drew herself up, while her face, from which the color had so suddenly departed, was lighted up with something of indignation. "As I live, and as I love you,Anna, what I say is true." "Then my father but sported with you, in a merry mood," and the maiden tried to smile carelessly. "He was in earnest," said the young man, solemnly. "Then what can he mean?" asked Anna, in a perplexed tone. "Why be means to deny to me your hand. He has, no doubt, other views for his daughter.".. For a moment, Anna stood silent, and then, leaning her bead upon the shoulder of her lover, she sobbed aloud, overcome by feelings which she in vain tried to keep down. Just at that moment, the sound of some one approaching, aroused them, and looking l ap, they perceived it to be Anna's father... "Well, John," he said, in a cheerful tone; "have you come to beat me at draughts?" Young Graham's face colored, and being unable at that moment to speak, from con : fusion, he looked upon the ground, and was silent. But quickly recovering himself,he replied "I hope, sir, that you will not feel it ne cessary to pain either your daughter's, feel ings or my own, longer, by what I cannot believe to be any thing more than a jest." The old man's brow darkened. "I am not used to trifling, sir," he said. "You have heard my. terms. Let me assure you, that they must be fulfded to the letter. If you do not intend trying for her hand in the only way that it can be won, then give place, sir, to some more worthy sui tor." Deeply pained, as well as offended, at what he considered equivalent to an insult, repeated, Graham - turned suddenly away from both father and daughter,and hastened home. It was nearly four weeks before the young couple again met, and, then it was, without concert, at the house of a neighbor. For the first part of the evening, they seem 'ed shy of each other; but, after awhile.were observed to be earnestly engaged in con versation, as they priced the lawn in front of the house, backward and forward, under the love-awakening influences of a bright August moon. "Will you not consent?" said Graham be coming more animated. , "No dobn, I cannot. I love you," and her voice trembled and faltered; "but, leave my father? 0, no; no.:lvey!" "Then you do not lo—" But he pans ed with the word unuttered. There was an embarrassed silence of some moments;at length the young man eaid, in a melanchely tone— " Then Anna, we had better see each other no more." "John, she said, looking him in the face fixedly."will you not try to—'' But she hesitated, and then hung down her bead. "Try to beat your fhther in a garne,of draughts, you would have said? Even, if there was hope, Anna, of doing that, which them is none, I could not give my consent to so humiliating an act. What has the plaYieg of a game skilfully, to do with my making you a good husband?" , But this did not satisfy the ralnd Hof the maiden. She thought that ber lover ought to be willing to do any thing, uo matter how unreasonable it might be, for the bake of gaining her hand. She could not, how ' ever, say more than she had. They parted that evening, gloomingly enough. But the sight of her face, and the sound of her voice, had stirred more deeply in his heart the waters of effettion, "Bbe must be miner he said to- himself, passionately, as he strode homewards. G. V7II.I3HINGTON 1307311, EDITOP. & PROPPIZTOII. 44 The liberty to know, to utter, and to argue, freely, Is above all other llberties.”—Mn.Ton sanneireavvizas. zNa.. ultra/02)4z. 41/ZPJP,2I es. asaas • By degrees, but with great reluctance,he began to entertain thoughts of applying himself to the game at •which her father was so skilful; and such progress had he made by the next evening in his incipient resolutions that he actually went over to a neighbor's, and after sitting a while, propo sed a game of draughts. But, although his antagonist was bat a poor player, John Gra- ham was beaten every. time. 'You would'nt do to play with old Wood ruff," remarked his companion, after win ning for the sixth time. Graham colored deeply, as , he looked up at the remark; but he perceived by his friend's conntenance that it was innocently made. Much discouraged, he went home that night, and dreamed that he had played with Mr. Woodruff, Anna's fatter, and beaten Nth. On the next evening he went over again, and spent two or three hours in play ing. Once he beat his antaganist. This gave him hope, and as he thought of it the next day, ho said to himself, "I have cer tainly Improved a little, and if I keep at it I .will certainly improve more." "And old Woodruff will improve too, and he is far enough ahead," whispered an op posing thought, and his spirits sunk sudden ly to freezing point. That evening he staid mopihg and gloomy at home. But on the next night he tried draughts again, and felt an increasing confidence and sense of corn ing skill. , Three weeks passed aw . e.y.ra practising almost every evening, when John became so much of an adept as to beat his friends at every game. This made him feel quite pplifted, and he determined to haie a trial with Anoa's father. Bo he dressed himself up and went over. • Anna met him at the door, and blushed with joy and nonfusion, The old man ex tended his hand with . a blunt welcome, that had in it some remains of his former cor ' diality. • . Before tea Woodruff talked with Gra ham about the weather, the farm, and the stuck. After tea, at which little was .• said, though many glances were exchanged be tween the levers; the old man pointed sig nificantly at the checker board, and Gra ham, with a face suddenly flushed, , nodded assent. • Anna's heart beat audibly in her bosom, and she felt oppre'ssed with a suffocating sensation, as she saw the two draw silently up to the table and begin to arrange their pieces on the board. It beat quicker still when the moves began,'end sank heavily in her bosom afters brief passage of the pie. ces from square to square—:for her lover had lost the game. The pieces were again replaced, and again the moves commenced. But the genie soon terminated as the first. Twenty games were: played before the parties separated, in all of ,which the old man won. Long before the termination of the evening's, contention,. Anna's pulse had beeome quiet; although a red spot upon her cheek told that she felt none the lees interest. She had not failed to perceive that, with every renewed game, the period occupied in contesting it became longer than that which went before. On the nest. evening Graham came again,, and again the draughtboard was produced. But, some how or other, he could not play oven as well as he did on the evening previous. Anna was disap• pointed, and he could perceiv,o it, and this not only dispirited him, but wounded• his pride. He felt in no pleasant mood as he returned home that night, half determining not to lower himself again so much -in his own estimation as to gamble for the girl he loved• This half ormed resolution he kept for a week, during which time Anna's doubts an] tears all returned upon her, and made her sick at heart. But, much as he disliked draughts, and much as he condemned , and even despised the principal involved in the stipulations o Anna's father, all-powerful love again pre veiled, and he sought the htitne of his lady fair to enter the lists once more for her Wind. But it was with little Vetter success. Still, there was one compensation for the disappointments that followed every even ing's trial—and that was, an hour ' s quiet Communion with Anna; f or, as long as . he would play with the old man, and try, as he of course did, to beat him, he was a wel come visitor, and allowed a fair opportunity to tell over again to the maiden how fondly he loved her. Six months passed in , this way, and 3 oung Graham began-to play with much skill and judgment, and not untrequently a game would last for a whole hour. On such oc casions, the old man would slap him on the shoulder,after he had beat him, with "Well done, my boy! The girl will be yours yell" One day, About this time, it happened that Graham, with his farmer's frock on, was drivng his cart along the road that passed near the cottage of his sweetheart. Woodruff haPPened to meet him just there, and maimed open, his stopping. Graham came in, and after driolting a glass of home brewed beer, made by , the lair hands of ker he loved, the old man reached down the ever-prOsent checker-hoard. "This may be a lucky‘ day,John," he said, looking him archly in he face.— g4Have you a mind to tryl" The first sight of the boaid always an noyed the young man; but he stifled this, feeling, as usual, and sat'down to the table. For a little 'while Anna'stood looking at the game, and then retired to attend to her ordinary duties in the family. „The moth er, too, soon followed, and fhe prayers were left alone. The dog that had partaken of the general feeling of bustle on the entrance of the young man, soon felt the quiet influ ence of the room, and stretching himself out upon the floor, seemed as deeply engaged in thought as were his biped companions. Not a sound was to be heard, except the low noise made in moving the pieces on the board, or the occasional quicker rattling of them when one was taken. Graham never before seemed to have his mind so clear, nor to have so lucid a perception of the principles of the game—and the old man was as much absorbed in what he was doing as ever. About every ten minutesof there had been another observer in tho room, a serious face might have been seen looking in for a few moments at the window, just behind the young man. "Jupiter!" suddenly exclaimed the old man with an uneasy movement' as his an tagonist leaped over two pieces and into the kingdom. The relative position of several pieces in the neighborhood of this newly made and first king on the board, was such as to compel Woodruff in taking care of them, to disarrange entirely his game, and destroy his usual position of advantage.— For a few minutes the flush of excitement destroyed the calm, balanced state of young Graham's mind. But he- perceived this, and confined his moves to unimportant and safe ones, until his pulse , beat more quietly. And uow came the severest struggle yet.— "Now or never!" thought . Graham, who readily acknowledged that it was a happy accident rather than skill to which he was indebted for his present decidedly advanta geous position. For nearly a half an hour both parties continued to play with such caution that but a single piece was taken; but now each seemed determined to bring the game to an issue, and soon the board had on itnothing but four kings—two of each. Just 'at this time Anna came to the window, and seeing the position of affairs, turned pale, and felt a sensation of faintness; but she was rivett. ed to the spot. The mother's interest, too, had become excited, and she- came to the door and stood also looking upon the board. The old man sat with his hand to his mouth, fingering his lips, h:s usual position when deeply interested in his favorite game; and Graham leaned his head upon his hand his countenance, though abstracted, indicating' a sadness of feeling mingled with hope.— The four kings were near together, and each was evidently intent on reducing the number of the other to one, and then block ilia b that. After studying and culculatiog moves for aboUt- five minutes,the old man cautious ly passed one his kings to another square. Quick as thought his antognist made a move, and then with a long inspiration awai ted the result. "Jupiter!" again ejaculated the old man; closing hie fingers tight upon his under lip. A long pause ensued,- and at last the move was made. , "Hurrah!" exclaimed Graham, in a loud voice, lifting his head suddenly from hie hand. He gave a king for a king, and hav ing the last jump, so alighted as to com pletely horn him in, or "block," the old man's only , remaining king,—thus winning the game at the last extremity , . "Hurrah, hurrah, hurrah!" ho cried, and leaned back in an ecstacy of deltght. For a moment or two the old man seem ed chagrined at his defeat, but he recover ed himself quickly, and grasping the hand of Graham, said— " Now my boy, you have fairly won her, and she is yours. Come here, pet," he said to Anna, who apppeared at the door pressing in by her mother, "and name your wedding day." It is needless to tell how Anna blushed, or how her little heart leaped for joy in her [bosom. leis of more 'moment to say, that in one month the "twain were made one flesh." ,After the knot had been tied, and the young folks were full of noisy merriment, Mr. Woodruff said to his new-made., son7,— "And now, can . you tell, John, why I made you'beat me at draughts before I would let you have my little pet there, who looks happier, and I hope is happier than I have ever seen her before'?" "Indeed I do not," said the young man seriously. "I always felt it to be a piece o uncalled for cruelty to us both." "There' you were mistaken, my replied the old man smiling. "You have one defect of character, and I saw it. You distrust your nwo powers. It was but one . week before you asked • me, for `Anna'a hand, that, in a conversation, you told me that you could not do a certain thing. It involved difficulty and application, but still it was necessary that'you should do it, Or trust to some one else to do it for yon, =who would then have it in hie power to deceive you. ,I ,determined then, that as soon as you'asked for my child, 1 would put your love arid your powers of mind both to a test, and prove to you that you could do any thing in the range of human capacity, if you tried. Have I not succeeded in show: log to yOu that` "I can't" are words not to se used in your dictionary!" The young man looked his monitor in the fact) with silent surprise—mid the latter added "And now, my dear boy, 1 trust that you will never 'again doubt your natural ability when brought •in ' comparison' ,with the natural powers of. another. PatienCe and perseverance will , surmount all abate clea. Make these your companions, and you will fast rise to intelligence, influence and usefulness, above .the crowd who ate content to be ignorant."_, IF I WERE LIE If I were a' farmer, I would devote al) whole ,attention to the cultivation of my farm, clothe and feed my family well, take care of my stock, take a fair price for my produce, and never Indulge in idleness and dissipation. If I were a lawyer, 1 would not charge a poor man five dollars for a few words of advice. If I were a physician, I could not have the conscience to charge as much as they do for feeling the pulse, extracting a tooth, taking a little blood, or administering a dose of calomel and jallap. If! were a merchant, I would have an established price for my goods, and not un dersell or injure my neighbors. I would sell at a moderate profit, . and give good *eight and measure, and deal as honest as possible. If 1 were a mechanic, 1 would apply my. self industriously to my business, take care of my business, refrain from visiting taverns and grog.shops, when I promised a man to have hie work done by a time, I would en deavor te be-punctual. If I where a young buck, with long hair, would not cut as many ridiculous capers as some ofthem do, playing with their watch chains, flourishing with their rattans, strut• ling and making a great noise with their high.heeled boots, (probably not paid 160 and making remarks on plain and worthy people. They render themselves contemp• tible in the eyes of the sensible and linos , suming. If I were a young lady, 1 would not be seen spinning *greet yarn every day,ogling thid young fellow, nodding at another, 'and giving sweet smiies to a third--sometimes having three holes in olio stocking and two in t'other. 111 were a lover, 1 would be true to the objcct of my aff'ections, treat her with the greatest tenderness, and never let her con duct towards another excite jealousy in my breast. But should she ever speak of me in terms of disrespect, or coolness, I would be offlike a shot out of a shovel, and all her arts could not again betray me. If I were an old bachelor, I would , make every exertion in my power to get married, and, if I failed, I would buy a rope and hang myself. And, finally, Messrs. Printers, if I were one of your useful and iespectable profes mons, I uevor would refuse publishing pieces like this. • THE WAY ,TO WORK IT. Mr. Drew, the editor of the "Maine Cul. tivator," published, at Hallowell, in that State, gives the following account of his own husbandry. His farm is not a very exten. sive one, but his nett:income from it is grea ter than that of some of.our farmers, who almost starve on .their three or four hundred acres: • "The editor actually, cultivates but a sin. gle acre of land, but that he does cultivate, and makes it yield all that land can yield. Nor, small as , the quantity is, is the amount of subsistence obtained from it unimportant in the support of a large family. One third of as acre he devotes annually to corn—the long.eared, large clevelled, eight rowed yollow corn, that is not very early, and not very late. With him, it has ripened every , year for the last ten years that he has cul tivated it. The soil be makes rich. lie applies to it, before ploughing,at the rate.of eighteen or twenty cords of long manure to the acre, (or six to the third of an acre) and turns it under by the plough. He plants the hills three feet and, a half apart one way and three , the other—remedy by. measure meat with a line. In each hill he deposites' either a shovel full of - old, rotted 'hog man ure, or an Much flight , manure - as will not over stimulate the crop. From this third of an acre he has raised on the average for years, over thirty bushels of sound Corn for grinding, beside/ ,it little pig corn for 'the hogs in the fall of the year. This is an much corn as 110 2 needs in his family, be- sides a sufficient surplus for fattening one , large or two small hogs. , From the same land, he ordinarily obtains some two or three' hundred pumpkins, which serve; important purposes in the family, besides being an ex cellent article for boiling up with the hogs' potatoes, giving cow, arc.. From the same land, too, he has generally obtained. all the dry. _white beans he has needed in hie family to go with his pork-which be raises by the avails of big land, without purchasing of oth ers. ~The fodderis carefully cut and cured, and helps as a subsistence for the cow. So much for one,third of an acre. A, small portion of land is set apart for the cultivation of. onions. Ordinarily, .he has raised from; fifty to seventy five bushels on a .bed, say half a dozen rods square. These he sells, on the average, at one dollar per bushel-r-say for 060 per year. This pur chases his flour and rye at common prices. So that from the first third of an acre,.and in an onion bed. he raises - MI his bread— brown and white. On two other beds, ho grows generally about fifty 'bushels of Mengel Wurtzel and Carrots. These are for the cow's winter provender. They more than pay for them• selves in the milk and butter—to say noth. , mg in the saving of bay and other proven: der. With a very little hay, together with the fodder and roots, a good cow—and he 'finds it econenay always .to , keep the best— may be kept throigh the winter, . , Potatoes for summer and auturnn,ute, are planted on the margins, and wherever ta there is a vacant chance for a hill s aud ' depart , . , , meat is expressly ' devoted to them large*: nough to raise all that - are wanted flu the table, and enough to spare for the hogs, dire. wvitahritcpui 80439 Then the rest of the land iii deiotedto to many things to mention here—heets, - Otre• nips, cabbage, turnips, peen beans,... green corn; cucumbers, melenif;- squasheiir summer and•winter sorts, Arc., besides fruits and flowers of various kinds—mm*4in)- berries, currants, white; red, blaclt ind . yet , low; English and common goeiAeiriett— and a few choice apple, pear, pluin, cherry, peach and quince trees. • Alt' this frOM a single acre; whiCh he cultivates mostly with his own hands. • . NATIVE( CAirrok Ori.—We were' not . aware till very lately of the extent to which this article is manufactured:in Illinois:7- A Thousvid Bairela are annually made in Randolph coonty, -as we have recently been informed. Castor beans are cultiva. led to considerable extent in 'other counties in the southern part of the state, but what quantity of oil ismanufactured'we are to say. Twenty buihets , to the- acre, are considered: anaverage yield; and'bell at from el to 81,25 per bushel. They are thought to be a good preparatory:crop - for the different grains as they leave 'the' iioil in a good state, without in the least exhatist ing it. This article hag one "edVarita - ge, over most other productionsV the', greater pert of the work of harvesting cult be - done by children, without interfering/ with the ordinary operations of a farm.. Great care, however, must be used •iedrying ' and eheds or other outbuildings are reqUiliite for this purpose. The season so far south se 'Ran dolph county, our infer - Mani states, is about two weeks in advance of its coming in this latitude and the cold adutume deleyed , two weeks longer. = 'lie gave it sells opin ion that, in consequence of this, the beans would not hive sUfficient time' to come to [ Maturity here. But if the season what shorter the growtlC•of vegetation is more rapid when if commeeeep) and . " , no doubt is entertained by , those conversant with the subject,lhat our climate is - Well adapted to this production Some people are apprehensive that: if the cultivation of the castor bean were intiodifc ed generally throughout tke state, no Mar ket could be found for the oil, and imagine that a thousand barrels eieri, the produce of a single county, would be sufficient to physic the world. This e: triliteke: Till very lately 'it has been impored ' from -Eu rope for medicinal purposes ) , and we believe is yet to some extent. But•whe,D this want is supplied, large quantities of it Will be'con- Burned as a substitute for sperm oil, `the price Of which is yearly increasing;hiconse quence of the destruction or Aisappearante of the whales from which it is obtained:" To clarify castor oil is e very si mple Progew,/ and then it is said to .give a clearer light' than sperm, and to be entirely' free - from otli3nsive smell. , ,41. , A Lin ON VI OLD AID 110—• lonely old spinster, in one of the.eastern towps,one walked out into a grove to pray . for that which' forty 'years of simpering and smiling had failed to obtaiir forlier, viz: a linsband. Kneeling down with reverence, she began to offer up hor 'petition, that the Lord would send her a helpmate, whetir an Owlqierched upon a tree over: her head,,eried out; "out boo! hoot" She, believing that kir pray ers were about being answered, eiblainied in a voice trembling with emolionsol grati tude and joy. "Any body, good Lord." A Cunnisrric.—ln nothing lave we, for a long time, seen those yankee peculiarities —ingenuity, and skill—so,fully brought, in. to exercise as in the case 'of, the, manyiec- tuxe of an article that btu . ; been exhibited to us this morning. It consists ofa,benuti.. ful handkerchief, of a rich Material, which we take to be silk, upon which is traced a, map 'of the United Stateteall the States,ehe principal rivers, toWns,r4;ct are deeig9eted, and it cannot but be a useful article if brought into general • • To ascertain the length or the diy and night, et tiny time ni the year, double the time of, the sun's rising;.*hich - 41.*es the length of the night; double .the.tirtio i nt his setting, which gives.the lenity of the day. A Spur:inn) Peesza:r.=-;Twopost tilul Rcan horses, with manes and lads ae white as strew, .passed , Wilmington, Del., on Monday, on their way to Washing ton. They were fit* New York; and' in. tended as a present to Predident TYLER Phan. Gasetre. ' -~o,e•►- AN' EVASIVE..-"•:-Well;pcia, did you present that bill ior payment,'Whidh' I gave you this morning? • ' Yea, your boner. Well, what wall the . gentleinan's iniower? Evasive, your honor Evesive! what 'do you inettnl ' • W by, your helper; hesaid ' ''Sc d=d if he would pay it. • ' r'• ~ Lavirite PREAces.9 arta! ramterizi-- Lawirea:—LThe,Retr. David 'U Shattock a Preacher and a Lavtici;' ie a candidate, for the office.Ol Cr,tiveritor' fit oiwrippt*, ny the constituflon:of:Oiel State, end' ire be lieve, by that - . :krtiliiitipiiiii3i, kilinistii . is ineligible t' atif — irtitneo —OutiflAtiCh -0 4: 4 ...r .. ing be an appendage to - lindlhtAimieletion the mauls not; theiitectOiiiiiilitlihitd:'," 'The eligibility then titnve winii tlia;poi At iv:*]ht, is thtf: chief firreiiii*Vtioliii r ' thif.lit*fs t‘' La*yeir•. preacOeir,,iit'ii,:Pr*.aiiir - tiffyor. , ki 1 If hi practice) law , iioisretkillie(6fiff '.'" ''.• Awionall7, then 1* 14 letiNe't • Yip' 9 preaches"iiitory, outroty to.' At eicalienally, then is he ixij'iliga, 4 4 o * Herald , .