p'..-1.4t. - .'..',..'0.40.:..''....;.0-uo::tic.4 . u - ....,. -. .:..,04 - ...':',. ID. A. BUEHLER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. VOL. XVI.-3 I. H. J. SCHREINER, Magistrate & Scrivener. Office: Li Chambersburg Street, directly of polite to Mr. Craig's hotel. gi A VING disposed elfin! "Star & Ban JRJ R tier," the subscriber wou'd. respectful ly inform his friends and the'public, that he can always be found in his JUSTICE 'OF FICE, where he' will be ready at all times to attend to any business entrusted to his care. Besidealhe duties incumbent upon him as a Justice of the Peace, be will at tend to other Collections, as ulso the draw ing of deeds, instruments of writing, &c. Forcapatity, prompin'ess and faithful= ness-in therKlisejiarge of those duties, he re fers the public to the lion. JA3tes VORPER, DANIEI, M. SMYSER, A. It. SzuvElvso:l, St • IV ILLIAtai 51 'Su E BY, Esq's. H. J. SCHREINER. September 26,1845. " 3in-28 CALVIN BLYTIIE I . aTTORMEIN .51T. La TT ILL practice in the several Courts V of tiro City and County of .Phila• dolphin. Hie Office Is at No. 35, South FOURTH Street, between Chrumut and Walnut streets. Phila. Oct. 3, 1845: ' 3m TO. COXTR4CTORS. SEALED PROPOSALS will he receiv ed for the erection of an Edifice for the use of the Preparatory Department of Pennsylvania College and the Linitehti As sociation, until the Ist Of November next. The building is to be of thick, 45 feet. front, 50 feet back, and 34Ieet to the eaves, with a portico. Plans and specifications maybe seen, and—terms made known, at the Drug Lind E nd Book Store S, H. BUH LER; where Proposals may be left. S. 'H. BUEHLER, S. FAHNESTOCKI— Corn. for I). GILBF.RT, Penn College IL HAUPT, , ; M. JACOBS, Corn. for F. BENED - ICT," L Association Gettysburg, Sept 20. T E•7111P ER.IX C E. A.. Meetin g of the "Hunterstown. Total Abstinence Society" will be he held in the llunterstown. School-house, on Wed nesday evening the 29th inst. • It is hoped that there will be a full and prompt alien • dance of the friends of the cause. - The Rev. Mr. M'Mut.t..m will deliv . er an Address, " --- €l , et. 10. tm W.,ITER MEETING. • N adjourned meeting of the citizens of 40,- of the Borough will assemble in the Court-house on Friday evening the 17th inst., to hear the Report of the Committee appointed at the meeting on the•26th ult., and to transact such businessa as may be deemed proper. . Oct.lo. t m Exectitor's Xolice. TAETTERS TESTAMENTARY un der the last will and testament of Jane Bonner, deceaseklate of Latimore town ship, Adams county, having been granted to the subscriber, residing in said township,— he hereby gives notice to all those indebt ed-. jo said daceased, to make immediate payment, and those, who having, claiins to present them pr Telly authenpcated, for settleme • . VM. F.' BONNER, Executor. Se . '2O, 1845. 27-01 11jI TIC'E. JETTERS Testamentary on the Estate P of Annt n Ast KELLAR, deceased, late of Germany Township, Adams County, Pa. having been granted to the subscribers, they hereby give riotice to all thoso indebted, to make immediate payment, and those hay. ing claims An present them, preperli, thenticated" for settlement, to, the subscri- . hers, residing in Germany Township. - 'OEORGE WILL, E X'rit. MARY KELLAR. 5 October 3, 1845. 6t NOTVVIE• LETTERS Testamentary on the Estate . of FREDIMICK BOYER, deceased, late pfStraban township, Adams county, having been granted to the subscriber, he hereby gives notice to all those indebted, to make tmmediate payment,and these havingclaims to present them, properly authenticated eettlentimt,. to the subscribe!, residing in ptrabsti Township.. ' • JOSEPII WIBLE, Dx'r. October Q, 1845. fat PI AT CEt T HE Subscriber, appointed Trustee for ELIZABETH CROSS, of Straban township, Adapts county, hereby gives no, lice to all persona not to bust th,e.4aid.glii pbeth Cross on his — account, -- fasTIO - ifaii or For contractina•will.he paid by him. -IV 111. VA NORSDEL, • i•rusicejoi Elizabeth Cram,. October 4, 1843. - at POETRY., TILE PEASANT KING. 113= There is a man of prouder - heart, Anil nobler Inr, I weer, Than Sceptered king, or laureled chief, (Jr warior in his sheen ! Who would notgi ve to prince or peer The splendor of his name, Though hosts ran shouting at his heels - The heralds of his fame. See! yonder in his palace high, 11 is kingdom firm and wide; His throne the cot, his sword th4lough, His realm the valley side! his only host his flocks and herds, And fields of nodding grain, . The subjects ollis.royal rule, The lordsof his domain! • He wants no helms nor iron hang, Nor pomp of waving plumes, Nor vassal knee, nor courtier tread, Nor India's soft perfume! He holds his rein, he drives his steed, And bares his shining ~ladle:, And herds are thinned, and tieids are strewn, And not with ruin laid ! What, ho ! in court or castle hall, Where kings in revel shout, Are not the words his royal lips . Right royally ring out! But on the breeze, the mountain breeze, That shakes the giant rocks, He fling defiance to the foes That threat his fields and flocks There is no bribe'of wealth or line, Nor sound of trumpet horn, But he would trample to the dust, Or hail them backwith scorn ! His only boast an honest heart, His freedom and a rod, To battle for his kit] and home, His altar and his God! *TUE SEASONS. I lovelbe laughifg, blooming SertiNG ; 'file lively month of-May; When woods, and fields, and mountains ring 'Tis nature's gala day. I love the withering ArTt3IN, too, )Vith its sere and yellow leaf; 1 1 .'hen all around us wears the hue (if nipping, Chilling death. I love, too. stern old WINTER time. With his cheerful blazing hearth— The laughing song and merry rhyme; • 'Tit the time for social mirth. Bitt the lovely, calm, long St mr.res day, With the buzz: of the humming bee, As from flower to flower she wends her way— The SUMMER, the SUMMER for me! MISCELLANEOUS. An Infidel and his Family. The New York Evening Mirror of the 13th ult., contains an interesting communication from Grant Thomhum, a, distinguished New Yorker—being his — ieminisences of New York fifly-onc years ago. "We mike the folfowing extract, relative to an Infi del, which conveys its own moral—and an excel. lent one too, for all who choose to profit by it: There came a man to work in . our shop by the name of Williams. Ho brought with him from England, a nice little wo man 'for a wife, and also two young children. Williams was a genuine radical of the "new school"— could talk long and loud about the "perrectibility of human nature"—the "pow er of the mind,"—and the sound senses of the people," who had tl,e capacity to con vert this world of ours to a paradise. He was soon taken up by the pure republicans of that day, an - d. honored with a seat in the wigwam, by the side of Burr, Fellows and other philosophers of the French school.— Such an 'honor heaped upon the head of an English Manchester journeyman blacksmith nearly tuned his brain. . • Soon'atter this event there appeared 'in our streets a blind man, who was either born so, or who hal. lost hue sight _by the visitation Divine Providence. His name was Palmer. He was a preacher of infidel ity. His church - was the Assembly.room in Walnut street, which stood where Cedar street was opened a few years ago. • When Williams' sailed from England he brought with him a large quantity of anti baptist divinity, both in his head and chest of books. For some monthsite__ece.med act in accordance - Willi - his professions; - v dry Sabbath he went to hear that eminent divine, the Rev. Dr. Foster, in Gold street; but he was soon led away by the hoary headed philosophers ta i the "Temple of Rea. son" to hear the preaching of Palmer—that blind loader of the blind. He drank deeply of the cold and cheerless waters of that well of. despair—and shortly after proclaimed him& f a thorobgh deist. Now the church hell chimed no more for him and his wile s His wife sat at • home like the mother ol desolation on the mount of misery—his chil dren wandered through the by-ways of the town like sheep without a shepherd / whilst he himself descended into some wretched tavern to deal out, undo; the sacred name' of liberty, death and deisntto his gaping companins. Williams wee an excellent workman, and he was the first man who_made* a coach spring, in New York: Previously to enter mg the den of death in Walnut street,- he had commenced business on his own ac count, aria was in a thriving way. Now ev ery thing went wrong with him. In his eagerness to propogato his new doctrines, he nrglected his belluol and busitictq--his GETTYSBURG, PA., FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 17, 1845. iifrairs went to decay, and he removed le the upper partof the tits, penn)less and friendless. .• 1 bad not seen him for game years, when 006 morning ho came in my store about eleven o'clock. Ile asked me tarp quar ter of a dollar to purchase something to eat. ",‘. l .. illiarns,“ said I, .-has it come to this with you ? Have you no friend—no child 7" have neither friend nor child to help Me," was the sad . reply. This occurred in the early part of Juno. I was then doing business in the Friends i (late) meeting house in Liberty street.— ' The appearance of the . place, and the season made every thing look Irks h garden which the Lurd had blessed. My three sons were behind 'the counter waititig on the ciisto 7 mers. I naked Williams about hie children, and called them all by name. Same Here dead—some were gone away,.hc knew not where, end all, boys and girls, had turned out gond for nothing. ,- Williains,".said I, "here are my three children ; they have-never given me a pang in all their lives.' Nn neighbor has ever brought a complaint against him ; .and I have nothing to reproach them with. They are the staff of my age. We are old ac quaintances, and your children and mine grow up together; they were next door neighbors. Why should your children be su different from mine ?" "flow can I tell," replied lie; . "Do you remember, Williams," said I, "the day you brought your... Bible, your Gospel Magazines arid your huge volumes of Baptist Divinity into our workshops, that you laid them on the-fire and began to blow this bellows. _1 interposed and bought them all from you for three dollars, to save them 'from the, flames. I told you, then that - you would ruin your children in . this world, whether there was another world or not. You remember this?" “I do," was the reply. "Wail not right ? You sent your chil dren forth into the streets where they were expoSed to every evil. I led mine to church where - , if the sermon did them no gilled, it kept them from mischief, you eposed your children to evil example.. I kept mine un der mine own eye until they were old e nough to judge for themselves." ,He confessed that the event had shown that 1 was right, and that he was wrong. "But,'" said lic, "it is now too late to re tract. Had I adhered to the religious-prin ciples I brought with me from England, I- be lieve Chas 1, this day, would have been in as comfortable circumstances as any mechan ic iii New York. I believe so, too. Williams, hoWever, continued steadfast, in his deistical opinions to the lust. He sheltered Thomas Paine, when, on, account of dissipated habits and blovenly,thess, but few persons would allow the philosopher to enter their doors. Williams continued to live through poverty.and pain, sometimes out of the alms house—sometimes in. At . length, however, both philosophers slept with their fathers, leaving their example of the "perfectability of human natute" to speak for itself. A WORD TO MOTHERS Each mother is a historian. She writes not the history of empires or of nations on paper, but she - writes her own history on the imperishable mind of her child. That tablet and that history will remain indelible when time shall be no more. That history each mother will meet again, and read with eternal joy or unutterable woe in the far ages of eternity. This thought should weigh on the mind of . every mother, and render her deeply circumspect and prayer ful, and faithful in her solemn work of train. I ing up her children fur heaven and immor• tality. The minds of children are very susceptible and easily impressed: - ii..-word, a look, a frown may engrave an impression on .the mind of a child which no lapse of time can efface or wash out. You Walk a long the seashore when the tide is out, and you pr form. characters, or' write -words or names in the smooth white sand, which lies I. B ... - 1 readout so clear and beautilul at your feet; arcordin-as-your fancy may dictate, but the returning tide shall in a few hours wash out and efface forever all that you have written. Not so the lines and char acters of truth, cr error, which your con- . duct imprints on -the mind of your child. There you write impressions for the ever. lasting ood or ill of your child, which neithe the floods nor the storms of earth can ash out, nor death's cold fingers can eras ,nor the slow moving agee of eternity obliter tQ..► How careful, then, shonid each mother be of herself in her treatment of her child. How prayerful, and how serious, and how earnest to. write the eternal truths of God on his mind—those truths which shall be his guide and teacher when her .voice shall he silent in death, and her lips no longer move in prayer in hie behalf, in commending her dear child to her covenant • Aim -TOBACCO. -The Allegheny Meth. oclist conference lately required "that no minister, shall be admitted into this confer, once who usos tobaeco in any of its forms except as a medicine, and in that case sat isfactory evidencit shell be "FEARLESS AND FREE." NO EFFORTS TO DO GOOD ARE•LOSI' I have heard of some seeds which will sleep in the 'each for ages, and I have read of the young of certain insects , which lie in a state like death for eighty years together, I and yet when the hand that cd the seed had been long mingled with the dust, and when the:lnsect that has deposited its young bud ended' its flight -forgegerations, the seed woad come forth a forest of mighty trees, and the slumbering insects, would a wake to life, and become the .mothers of an endless..multitude. • 'And su it may be with us. We are scattering the seeds of know ledge; and piety, and immortality, but we see not the 'seed spring Col ill. Our instruc tions seem to be forgotten; the fruits of our -liberality seem' to' have perished; and' Our labors appear to have been in vain. But be of good courage; the sued is still in the earth underayod, and the ,time will come when it shall spring foith, and yield a plen. teotis harvest. It is watched over by the God of Heaven, and not . a:serd shall perish. The hand that scattered the seed may be' 'Withered, but the seed itself shall swell and send forth its gdrin, and become a mighty ti•eo• The- voice that uttered the sermon may be silent ; but others that received the truth,-shall Caine forth and declare - it afresh to thegeherations'that are yiff unborn. Did you ever hear a person of upright , nees and integrity, speak againeanother If you have we have not. It is the vile and unprincipled who arc giving to backbiting and detraction—villains, we hod almost said —meo . who are notoriously bad. Wo be lieve with the poet 7—.. "Who steals my name would stab my person toe, Did not the liangman's axe lie in the way.!:' A distinguished — person once listeiied to another who..wastevere in his remarks upon a neighbor after he was through the hear er remarked--"Is here not a fair side also to the character of the person of whom you are speaking 7 Ccne, tell mo what good qualities . you-have remarked about him." Thereraie few men so bad, even in the esti matioWof their bitorest•eneroies, who have nat,potne god qualities to recommend them; which they are always seen to keep Ipok; when . slandering. them.--[Portland Tribune. . .1V good character is to a young man wha a firm foundation is to the artist,' who pro. poses to erect a building upon it ; he can build with. safety, 'and ull who behold, it' will have confidruce in its solidity ; a help= ing hand will never be wanted. But let a single part of this be defective, and you go or, at hazard, amid doubting and distrust, and ten to one,. it will tumble down at last, and mingle all that was built in its ruins.— Without a good character, poverty is a curse —with it, scarcely an evil. Happi ness cannot exist where a good character is mit ;. where it is, always a frequent visitor if not a constant guest. All that is bright in the hopes of youth, and calm and blissful in sober scenes of life, all that is soothing in the vale of tears; centres in, and is deri ved from, a good character, l'herefore, acquire this as the first and most valuable good. ANECDOTE OF JOHN RANDOLPH PRIIVEDiTIVE OF INFIDELITY. --John Randolph, in his best years, alwa.ys gave the weight of his influence to Revealed Re ligion. But it is well known, that about the time when hie character, was forming, the atheism and materialism avowed by certain politicians, were Making extensive havoc of the principles of young men in many parts of the land. Mr. Randolph, (as stated by the Rev. Dr. Alexander,) was once speaking lin this subject, to a distinguished Southern gentleman, and used this remar kable language : "1 believe 1 should have been swept away by the-flood of French in fidelity, if it had not been for one thing— the remembrance of the lime when my sainted mother used to make me kneel by her side, take nly - trute hands folded in hers, and cause met 6 repe. the Lord's Prayer." Du. FRANKLIN, it is said, being once in the company of several ladies of_ thezzEng;H lish nobility, after hearing their criticisms on various authors, proposed to read the translation of a pastoral, for their amuse. ment. le read, with a few verbal altera tions, the brink of Ruth. They were en. raptured with the pastoral, and pronounced I it the finest that they had ever heard. l'h,e Doctor then gravely told them he had read it from the BIBLE-that oft despised hook ! 81RD9. - Il is extreme bad policy to coun tenance or permit the havoc which is made of the sparrows and other small birds— the innumerable insects which they destroy, should render it an object with every farmer to encourage them about their orchards and fields, as for every cherry or grain of corn * they appropriate to their own use, they preserve - to 'the farmer thousands frotn..th's ravages of the caterpiller, the cot-worm, iStc; l'hen•don't permit them to be md. tested or shot, merely for the sport of idle and incensiderate boys, "I'm taking down the-cpnsus of a dense. v popul ated -lielitl!borhoo4," as the foltosy aid wh e n he awal!owed'the bkimery clMede, EVIL SPEAKING A GOOD CHARACTER AIORAL INFLUENCE. OF SHADE TREES Nothing prez:ents to the e 3 e more delight ful evidenee.of good moral sentiment, as well as refinement, in the city or country,_ . then streets or dwellings shaded with orna mental trees. It is indeed questionable: whether a few dollars,can be expended in any other way, to contribute so much to the improvement of the taste, as well as fur the , satisfiict ion and comfort of the whole com• munity, as in planting such trees. How !grateful to the eye and soothing to the Spit. it in a bright sunny day, if, instead of the glare Ole constant succession of brick walls, the side walks of our eits streets wore all lined byte rich variety of beautiful foliage. And what an amount of innocent and health fel pleasure, newel! as elevation of moral feeling, must the exhibition of such foliage afford to the tenant el every ,:peaceful home in the country, and to the thousand passing travellers. How much.of the- unpleasant ' nese of summer'travel might be relieved, and what an impress of hentity and moral grandeur might be given to A moriciiit see. nery and 'American character, by leaving and planting such rows of uleful and orna mental trees, along the ten thousand ave,', noes of the nation. This ihen, is the sea son, swiftly passing away, fur securing from the forest abundant supplies of these: orna ments and comforts ; which, like the flow ers of the tield,,,,;Wilberforce would very properly reckon among the benignant "smiles of Heaven ;" and which cannot' be slighted or unervalued by any, without evi dence of stupidity, indolence, covetousness, or ingratitude to the Giver ofall gool? • THE - DEATH LAMP. - A persorywritingTrom - France rniintions the following curious scene which present. ed itself on his visit to the vaults 'of the church of St. Denis, in which. the..-French_ kings aro entombed:—"But the mast sin gular of all other things is a lamp, which is kept burning on the coffin of Louis the 18th, and which, it said, is to continue burning.tint il Lours Philippe . dies--he being ale next A.4og,„(if:hc.,dies on-his throne.) to whom the lamp Will pass, Until hie Succee sor dies. , Napoleon did not die on th e throne,throne, neither .did Charles 10th ; conse quently Louis 18th has not been buried, neither hat, he lamp ever been allowed to go out. It looks dreary and dark as mid night ,in that vault, - and I involuntarjly shuddered as I looked through the iron grating into the chamber of death and view -ad the dark pall upon the tomb. The light .of the lamp wfurmorii like a star flickering through a dark cloud. It was indeed the chamber of death."- AFRICAN CANDOR "Did you attend church to-day, as . . 1 charged-you ?" inquired an old .planter of one of his E1111;08, as he returned to his dwelling. • "Salm, mosso," was Cudjo's reply ; "an' what two . mighty big stories dat preacher did tell." "Hush, Cudjo, you mustn't talk that way—what stories were they 7" "Why, he tell de people •no man can sarve two massas—now dis is de rubs Story, 'case yoti see old Cudjo sarves you, my old massa, and also young masse John. Den de preacher says "he will lub do one and hate de ,other"--whilef-de-Lord-knowir,-1 haft you bof " - kyoung lady returning late frome a con cell, as it was raining, ordered the coach man to drive close to the sidewalk, but was Still unable to step across the gutter. "I can lift you over," said the coaches. "Oh, no," said she, "I'm so heavy." "Lord, marm," replied John, "I'm used to lifting. barrels of sugar I" A petulant old lady having refused a suitor to her niece,. he expostulated with, and . requested her to giye him a reason. "1 see the villainy] your face,"said she : "that's a personal reflection," retorted he. PLEASURE OF*GOOD ACTIONS.—AIter WO have practiced good actions (Or awhile, they become easy ; and when they are easy we be- IT-tti- - takilpreasu I please us, Wedo them frequently lrequency of acts, a thing grows into habit, and, confirmed, is a kind of second nature ; and so far as a thing is natural, so far it is• necessary, and we can hardly do otherwise —nay, we do it many times when we do not think of it. An honest_man is believed without an oath, for his reputation swears , for him.— Xenocrates was a man of so much truth and fidelity, that the Athenians gave him alone the privilege that his evidence eliciuld be lawful without swearing. It is said of Fab ricus, that a man rightist well attempt to turn the sun out of his course, as to bring him to a base or dishonest Wien. .TEmenitANciirr; PRUASIA..—The soldiers serving in the Prussian dominious have been allowed by.the government. to receive. in- stead of - their daily rations pf brandy, the value or the same-in-al' oneyA , --This step is calculated to promote the rifinciples.6l the temperance societies, which, through their otheers c havef Connally ieturned thanks to the•Kin6 rot the ptivile4e thug courerrect. TERMS-$2 00 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE ) WHOLE NO. 811. DEEP P,LODGiftiNg. A close observer of men and thlngli, says ;hp Ohio CH lti vator, told us the following little histoky which we hope will plough very deeply ip,to, attention...a all who, plough very shalli ip, lhgir soils: .Two brothers tiled together county. One 4 of t em dna cald v ugly 4 cloy soil, covered with lila jack oak, not num of which was large enoug'lrlo mike - . a half dozen rails, This man would never.drivit any but large, powerful Conastrigkborses, some seventeen hands high, put three horses id a large ,ployith-,- ant( plunged it in Borne ten inchei dedp, deep plou - glling he invariably. piacticerfatuj cultivated thoroughly allerwards. rail', od his severity bushels of carn to the acre, This man had a brother about sirf Mil9ti off,'sottled on a rich• White river bottom ! land farm, ands - while a block-ja4 clay snit yiehled seventy bushels to the aoreohis 1i bottom land would not average hrather was steadily growing. rich .pk,putit land, and the oilier steadily .growing poge nn rich land. ' • One dqy the bottornTJand oroln!r puplgt down to 6,e0 the blackijitk oak farmer, an they began to'talk about their crppe ttn, farms, as farmers are very apt to do, "How is it," said the. firel, "that yoU manage on this poor :Nil 14 b9l4t crops r ~,, ~,, The reply was t 0 1 WORK my lapd." • That was it, exactly. Some men have such rich land that they won't work it and they never get - a step beyond where they began, They rely on the soil, not an labor or care. Some men ezpecf la work ; and some men ex",to WORK TIMM LA NTIS that is just the difference hetweet! a good And a bad (turner. TO .MAKE'..4 GOLD COLORED VARNISH, TOR TIN. To half a pint of alcohol in a flask, add one ouuce of gum shellac, half an ounce turmei ic, and one-fourth•ofan confab - of red sounders; set the flask in a warm plaos,fre, (molly shaking it, for twelve houriror more; then filter or _strain off the -liquor, which may he occasionally diluted With alcohol. , [fa color is required resembling Dutch saki or copper, a large proportion..or,fite .10 " sounders may be used. When this varnish is.used, it must be applied to'the work free - , ly ao flowing, and must , not be brushed or ru od hile it is drying. One oi per? coats of this varnish, or lacquer, as it in sometimes called, may be laid on the work as the color is required to be deeper or lighter. To make arose colored tarnish, proceed as above• directed, only substitute one•fourth of an ounce of the best lake, floe. ly ground, in the place of turmeric. A: traner parent blue varnish may also be made by means of Prussian - blue ;' and puiplelind green by adding a little blue to 'th9 gold or rose colored varnishes. These lacquers are frequently employed for washiqusii , ver bronzed ornaments, to> give them' the appearance of gold or copper...-,. STEAM MANIA OF GREAT BMA - IN.-AN American ahipmaater, writing from Liver., pool, under date of the 19th informithe editors of the N. York Courier of the exi ertions now •Making by Great Britain' to add a powerful and efficient steam mink) to_ its_pavy,_Thatgoveimment_o_ b tfficing— seventeen-steam frigates, each of which-will carry from 20 toto guns on two. decks; It is also - the intention of the government to cut down some twelve or sixteen of 74 gun ships, and affix to them screw , propel. leis I they are to carry a battery of teen, tv-four 42 pounders and four 56 pouqdets. Ten or.twelve frigates are - to be turned in. to steamships, and are to carry a battery of thirty 32 pounders and four 56 pounders. ~ ENLIORTENED PEOPLE.—The people, , of Oregon are already ithtiad of us in linlights ened civilization. We see tt stated on: the 2d. of September last, in - one of the courts of law in that far west territory, one °Kali- nal was fined $5OO for sending a challengi, was rendered ineligible to any office . of trust or profit, and was deprived of the piivilege of voting at any election. He was drawn as_a_jutor-beforeibel„Larniprx_breUght _____ the bill againaLtim,_and by orderAkcouti his name was erased from the het.' r ear the right way to establish law and'order fit a new country. - A Gooe JOKE —[t is said that theAlty on which Mr. Clay arrived at the White Sulphur, Cot Stngleton of -S. Carolina, Wad invited Mr• Andrew Stephenson, Judge Pe. ter V. Daniel, and John Tyler, to lakb tea,. in his cabin. Mr. Clay being unaware -' of the fact. determined about twilight,io visit the Colonel. The three worthimi abtwe mentionad; had already arrived; hermit-the eandleewere lighted; Col, , S.' , Waii titan& ion in JIM door, as Mr. Cliy approiehakth-4,' .tliow-do•you do, Mr. Clay'?" taid Art Cu). iii a loud voice. Tyler sprang, oulAlif;the I . window, - dttto-Peterir7Stevensna:fal wad - ,• emu .. When the lighti ware 4rfittl Colonel was, surprised; to Suitt . Lltsik„,,, ~.. had sloped,-Riansond , Whio• kr.l#4.; j' . .i . - -- - , - - - - --- ~ N r -4 , r, /4•?..:* :. COpllAGE:—lloiv'saincievit. eatiratet speak tosa - poorlriend, •mienib lii'Nn. and when a rielkinii;it bigli,i , wp*Nriffsa ~ not so groat aeresny peep% *ail Initig 4 and the act is wry( ght t ot-lk -AL - xt....._ _ ....... n. ~ ~; ~t ,f,44 r•^J_+ '
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers