Gettysburg Peoples Press (Newspaper) - May 1, 1835, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania by Printed and by J. L. OBLIGED TO SWEAR IN THE WORDS OF ANY PA. MAY 1, 15. press will be every on a sheet of on at TWO DOLLARS per in or TWO DOLLARS AND if not paid within the subscription will bo taken fbr and no paper discontinued until all are except at the option of the done on the usual letters addressed to the editors on business must be or they will not be attended NIGHT AND MORNING AT a fair sky and ocean met like bosom not a single cloud their The glorious sun had a shadow in his azure his vacant royal edged with And oW his nightly spread His purple in many a mazy fold That and as then came with all Uie sparkling in the Tropics centinel her the blue sea reflected back scarce less from the heaving on every wayward and swiftly through the waters With wings by hM in her course length tlie East to morning lit her in the the not a orb on or blue from his ocean the god of day Came like a smiling the waves that to woo his And cm their who was the son of the jailer of had come to Paris without ther clothes or and had subsisted on or by masses at St. by which he hardly gained enough lo keep when the Count de Montgomery took It was sible that what he got in his as could enrich yet after quitting he was seen clothed neatly In his clerical his expenses for his entertainments were he had plenty of money in his and had taken a woman out of the whom he had established in handsome and clothed with the greatest prolusion of These the Causes MONSIEUR had been dead only a few when several who had known received anonymous the letters that the person who wrote was on the point of hiding himself IB a convent for the rest of his but he did his conscience obliged mill to inform whom it might concern that the Sieur was innocent of the robbery committed in the apartments of the Count de that the perpetrators were one Vincent the son of a tanner of and priest named m native also of who had been the The letters that a woman of the name of De la Comble could give light into the whole One of these letters was sent to the Countess de who however had not generosity enough to show but the Sieur and tome others who had received at the same time the same kind of determined to enquire into the while of the Count de who began to apprehend that he would be disagreeably if his prosecution of should be found pretended to discover that these letters were dictated by Madame who hoped by this artifice to deliver her memory from the odium which rested on and herself and her child from tho dungeon in were still An enquiry was set on foot after Belestre who had sometime before quitted the It was found that Belestre was a consummate who had in the early part lire been engaged In an for which he was obliged to fly from his native that he had been a had killed his serjeant in a and then returning to his own had been a wandering vaga going by different and practising every species of that he had sometimes been a and sometimes a about the streets of but always much acquainted and connected with his and that from the lowest he had appeared to be in had bought himself rich various sums of and purchased Ian estate near for which he had paid between nine and ten had they been made in were to have opened the way to a which might have saved the and redeemed the honor of the unfortunate Late as it justice was now ready to overtake and the hand of Providence itself seemed to being in a tavern in the street St. Andre des was present at a quarrel wherein a man was he was sent to with the rest of the people in the and bout the same a man who had robbed and cheated by near three years met watched him to his and put him into the hands of the These two wretches being thus in the hands of for other underwent an examination to the robbery of the Count de they betrayed themselves by inconsistent answers Their accomplices were and the whole affair now appeared so that it was only astonishing how the criminals could ever have been The guardians of Constantia the daughter of now desired to be admitted parties in the on behalf of their that the guilt of Belestre and Gagnard might be and the memory of Monsieur and the character as well as that she by fixing the guilt on those who were really obtain restitution of her and amends from the Count de She through her prosecutrix of the the principal against whom was a mao called the Abbe de who had to the association of thieves of which Belestre was a This man that he had written the anonymous letters which led to the lor after the death of his conscience reproached him with being privy to so enormous a He swore that Belestre had obtained from Gagnard the Impressions of the keys In by which means he had others made that opened the He that soon after the condemnation of glade to the he was In a adjoining to one where Belestre and Gagnard were drinking and that he heard the former say to the my let us drink and enjoy our while this fine this Marquis is at the To which Gagnard with a man I cannot help being sorry for he was a good kind of and was always very civil and obliging to Belestre then exclaimed with a sorry for a man who has secured us from and made our for Much other discourse of the same kind he And De la Comble de that Belestre had shown her great sums of and a and when she asked him where he got all this he that he had won it at These and many Other circumstances related by this wo confirmed the guilt beyond a doubt In his pocket were found a Gazette o In which he had was caused it to be inserted that the men who had been guilty of the robbery for which the Sieur had been were executed for some oth er crime at by this means to stop any farther letter was also found on him from Gag which advised him of the rumours which were spread from the anonymous and desiring him to find some means to quiet or get rid of the Abbe proof of the criminality of these two men being fully they were bein previously made to undergo the question ordinary and they confess Gagnard upon the and Beles treat the place of that they had the Gagnard that if the lieutenant Qf the po lice had pressed him with the day that and his wife were he was in such he should have confessed infamous men having suffered the punishment of their tia Guillemot Continued to the suit the Count de for the accusation e had who by the chicane which his fortune gave him the to avade the at after a very long the court the Count de Montgomery should restore to the widow and daughter of the sum which their and all property that was had he should farther pay them a certain as amends for damages and ies they had and that their should be and their honours though it was all the reparation that could now be made could not bind up the incurable wounds they had suffered in this unjust and cruel whose destiny excited universal was taken Into the protection of some generous persons about the who raised for her a which at amounted to an hundred thousand together with the restitution of her made a handsome provision for was married to Monsieur des a counselor of lo the shop of mar voyage around the were highly gratified with a visit a navy which was expressly fitted up some years since with a spar as a discovery on the then projected to the South She this and sails in a few cays for the East home via China and the the South ports of the and Cape Her is Commodore one among the oldest and most experienced seamen of our captain Messrs. Hoi Doctor with a body of as fine a company of officers as we have ever met She is n every respect well and In that order and discipline which our Her which it is expected will occupy near three must necessary be one of great interest and She will visit the Red and probably the Persian Gulf and British possessions in during ler In the Indian Ocean she will be joined by smaller We anticipate a rich treat from the journals will be kept by her who are amply qualified to furnish a scientific as well as a account of all that From Rushenberger already so favorably known by his admirable work entitled years in the we confidently look for another and still more extended work on this which will add we are from our knowledge of a stiP more enduring plume to his enviable re God speed them on their and may none but favoring gales smile on the star-spangled that waves over them and their gallant K. to you a fact relative to the planting of cucumbers which came under my and which is worthy of being I shall at least give a further trial myself of its Though I cannot conceive there is a doubt remaining on the Last spring a friend of and myself were planting cucumbers at the same I was planting mine as is usual In by mixing a small portion of stable manure with the and raising the hill an Inch or two above the surface of the Observing he jocosely me show you how to raise Never having much luck in raising I cheerfully agreed to his He commenced by making holes in the at the distance intended for the that would hold avout a then filled them with dry leached covering the ashes with a very small quantity of The seed were then planted on a level with the surface of the I was willing to see the ex periment hut had no expectation of any thing but a loss of labor and But imagine my a drier was and almost a universal failure of when I beheld vines and as fine a crop of cucumbers as any one need wish to and continued to bear for a very long unusually so in I will not or moralize on but say to all try instead of ashes in a useless heap to Over near the put It to its proper reap your rich is no wire or mother who wil not tail in love with the Major in reading the following description of his which he gives in a late number of his Evening that ruddy cheeked on the employee In cutting out ships and houses from ole Is my he designs him self to be an for he contends that nothing is it is he cut ting ships from one paper and putting them into That little who struts about In a paper cocked hat and with which ever and anon he pokes at my while deeply engaged in considering how the nation is to be is my second he is a Jack son Jackson men he goes for a if there be That little golden-haired urchin who ia sure to ask me for candy while am describing in bitter terms the tyranny of the Albany is and with a basket of stockings near sits better there is the sparkling and here my clear head 8e warm heart devoted to a great cause will never want the tongue of GRASS AND THE a held it and pulled thel the ball pierced the and let the contents into the Mary gtii was walking through the gaiden with she was much an imp who was king some foolish observation to Qn c ing to one of the over which there an she took advantage of this to expose his aid put him to said kind enough plain that inscription to really do not know what it for 1 it is very extraordinary said do not their said a tie boy the other as he was classical and chaste country the meaning of in the Hi being a learned artd withal despiser of good It is high and when Interpreted conveys i and 0 a methodist meeting held at k vate one 6f the light fingered genl try to be whoie tion was arrested more by a of sagel hanging up in the room than by thi Words of the During the dir he hao filled his with when his wal drawn to the preacher who was his hearers give up their particularly their bosom The J. K. lovely rose stood blooming on a bush t was the admiration of but most of % unveiled its painted leaves to the it with the dew of and breathed pleasant upon the Throned amid the green which sheltered as could be more charming and passer by what beautiful this pretty and creation of there spread a green here swelling into gentle and here till it fringed the bank df a running flower looked down upon the lomy and with a sneering air and haughty tone gave utterance to her this insolent what does it so close to mel how How different in appearance and destiny from does it hear the admiring murmurs which No rainbow views streak its plain Jt remits no fragrant but remains to be trodden under foot by all who unvalued and I like to know fbr what it was and conceited replied tho question might be better asked of for thou art as as thou art the scent which arises from thy silken leaves is but where will it be The gleaming of the soft colors amid thv verdant is but how soon wiu it fade on the Evanescent child of I have witnessed the brief existence and death of a thousand such as living unvalued and perishing and dost thou sneer at me because my stem is not so slender and so my blade so fair as thinel know that the regard me even for my more than they do I spread over the earth a carpet of I clothe the uplifted hills in a mantlet of I furnish food to hundreds of who derive from me the power to gratify nmn with the most delicious The wind blows over me and hurts me not The sunshine falls on me and I am yet the snows of winter cover and I rev dy to beautify the earliest Even the steps of man who tread upon do not prevent my bright and and heaven has me with color of all others the most grateful to human saucy flower was about to reply when a passer by plucked admired its pretty and threw it man immediately take your d 1 if you are going to make a about of Chancery last Mr Woulfe tl by some extraordinary mistal took up the brief of the opposing and advocated the cause opposed own As as the the court was convulsed when the Lord Chancellor ' served that he committed mistake in and case against his client so thi he lost his A his also of Lord that having stated a case very for a and when about discovering that he was speaking wrong he niy Is the case that no doubts on the other but now let 8cc* counti who was required to tary had honor of being ted to the office of fourth returning home with a high merry he hsd scarcely when he commenced thi hll ry of his After conversation on the overheard by the a to his mother and arc we all corporals fool none but your father and 1/* 3wer.------------ short time as the mail stage was going on a very dark night from Boston to the driver was alarmed by the cry of we are kilt every soul of The driver off his and found that he had driven into a demolished and an Irishman and two The somewhat enraged that the gallant Hibernian should keep the middle of the gave him a pretty severe and concluded by asking him if he did not see the lights on tho stagel and to be sure and I and I right Adv. Long stated Dr. In the a wheel was made before the marriage one and five pal to a pound the thread of which wis that it was In length two fourteen miles aii furlongs and A within three milea of eath i ' and i amount to 415. four have the same years in the same was never from it a week said to be of the of 45 is the venerable RUM of North said ata temperance meeting in New-York last that the lovers of rum are distinguished for of it In be said a roan in came home with a keg of but summoned to attend court as a and was greatly puzzled to know what to do with his for his being an intemperate would find it though he hide finally lashed a strap around and it high above tlie good being lame was to get at After he was she the and took a gun these Cambrian young of has nearly which he thinks f other it Is so that turning a dme it will discharge sixty that with a force or on each which is tlie a the balls in a on the top of the frem run in aa fast 1 ilie TOul