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Gettysburg Republican Compiler
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Gettysburg Republican Compiler

   Republican Compiler, The (Newspaper) - April 14, 1851, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania                                By 1 S TRUTH IS MIGHTY AND WILL PREVAIL TWO 51 tn null YEAR GETTYSBURG MONDAY WORKING APRIL 14 1851 NO 28 Republican Compiler IS EVERY STABLE a Year if paid in Advance Or it in Advance No subscription discontinued except at the Ion of the publisher until all arrearages are paid RATES OF ADVERTISING One square one insertion S 50 One square two insertions 75 One square three insertions 1 00 E very subsequent insertion per square 25 A liberal discount will be made to those who advertise by the year or six months intended for the Com- piler must be attention Kr The office of the Compiler is on SOUTH STREET East side ONE SQUARE AND A HALF FROM rH E 0 0 a H 0 U S E MEETING ripHE following persons who arp named in JL the Act to incorporate the Gettysburg as Commissioners to open books receive and organize said Company to Robert Benner Henry Myers John Samuel George Basehoar John Busbey Joseph Kepner Jacob Diehl Bernard Hildebrand Charles William B Wilson John Musselman Sen Abraham Krise John Musselman jr William R ler George DeardorfF Jacob Y Bushey seph Hill Jacob Feiser Tempest Samuel David nf f BY C- MACKAY Bear lightly on their foreheads Time Strew roses on their way The young in heart however old That prize the present day And wiser than the pompous proud Are wise enough to play I love to see a man o His blood is growing cold And leap or sv itn or gather flowers Oblivious ol his gold And mix with children in their sport think that he is old All sports that spare the humblest pain That neither maim nor That lead us to the quiet field Or to the wholesome hilJ Are duties which the pure cff heart Religiously fulfil The road of life is hard enough Bestrewn with slag and thorn I would not mock the simplest joy That made it loss forlorn But fill iis evening path with flowers As fresh as those of morn Give us but health and peace of mind our cliine or clan We'll take delight in simple things Nor deem the sports unman And let the proud who liy no Kites Despise us if they runner's Department It was about two months before we left York minglo in a wilh lho of tf Sick and while we were at Brooklyn Heights as I Ioved and lost on L Let tho in giving heard our Captain lell that ore evening thero aild rough I account of himself to the came to his quarters hand in hand a little boy of we was j o Make it a point of conscience to follow and a girl larger but not much older than the j 0 an of warf my nl is boy lie was about fourteen years old and but wc her dill and a in not the nurse she was not yet sixteen and both looked sad from a we in llis aims to know best and almost It appears that they c i i i i glass 1 lie expense will not be 11 tlie remains ol our poor little ANNIE 3 wear a countenance and be 1 r had known or heard uf the Captain before 1 1 the cost of slate and he so in their distress they made bold to inquire for him Tin brave little fellow had come to A A few ago there was a member of th permission in our company but that Legislature from Hucks county who acquired couldn't be and so Captain told the sobriquet of The name was But he was curious to know the reason of the acquired because of his presenting numerous Barn Roofs A gentleman in England intends to cover a large barn 110 fuel long and 23 leet wide with a glass roof after the model of the palace of glass The expense will not be above two- anticipates T several advantages from the novel roof among burden the sick with unnecessary t others it may be applied to attentions him to sutler ior want of during a catching J he grain can be placed in the barn immediately upon care y Attend strictly 10 and prevent every little J reaped by winch means it will have the annoyance which a well person not r and benign litile too every lor and the nt ol tlie sun when it shines be protected from 11 T J b c heed as slamming doois treading heavily and seeing they were in great lie division ol township He was r t tlie showers anil also druKl by artificial heat if thought he might do something for their good mostly know n by the and even his is said about the LI i c So he told them to sit down and tell u by they her was known to him I One pleasant when tho members t r came to him for such a purpose The j I vantages such as the breaking of the glass roof and the difficulty of repairing it and the injury which the sun and would havo boy began his story and his sister begun had and were in the full of fun j p but when the youngster mentioned his Mr then a member from Centre i Pon tho quality of hay to say nothing of what shawl round the when un in t c r father's name the Captain remembered bun county and now a lawyer of celebrity moved i become at tlic crop a toot or two flora the bod the pillows straighten the bed n n and the joy inquired after him that the House he called to order and that a lol telegraph clothes and keep neat lie is dead sir answered Lid Col take the chair The motion ir and refreshing as possible to the weary his head as the tears flowed from his was agreed tiie over ready J milch robs the land l I was killed sir at Sullivan's took the speaker's i hair I Our Captain confessed that he fell like crying j too when he heard this for ho knew that The member from Centre rose in his seal and nn elaborate statement that the 7 During let the nurse keep well annually of much phosphate of lime 7 vV Z 51 H Dili Homer Andrew Heintzleman Samuel Miller Alexander R David Gilbert ses McClean Daniel M S S j Schmucker David McConaughy Win James D the county of -t OF Til Adams Abner H BenJer Daniel ger Daniel Kraber of the county of York j We take the following extract from an George W Ellis Lewis of the jn the March number of the Republic a county of John 1 homason of AT T and Tohn M Stevenson jr of ot American Literature more are requested to the Politics and Arts in Gettysburg on Saturday the of April I shan't forget it said the old man with a And a general Railroad Meeting will be held the daJ I You have on the following Tuesday Ike at L o'clock heard my boy how General P M at the same place to take steps u peace to his memory obliged to quit secute the work with i Keep up the spirit that is abroad through the Y by a and to man forget that he when the British General Howe ested in this project and we CAX and will J who commanded the red coats was just about Q order j ln I wish we-d a sta d loot to But no matter with the main OJ j body of his army went up to the Heights and Remaining in the Post Office in j General Putnam our was ordered burg on of April to camp outside the ant as Arndt bi- now we stopped 5 C Benner Hook and This was nome Marin Mrs Henrietta j along about the middle of September in Becker Franklin Border t John CuIP David Declaration of Independence WHS Lee Campbell Peter Comfort j signed There e stayed about half a day and T Durr Cii.ules j one and tint was enough John 11 i 1 i i- t i 71 1 could we do there 1 n hair full against army Old Put was proud at left there lie was no 1 coward my I tell you and we all used except their mother they other member from by a i i i i i c- i -i n n that little or noise live and must be helpless So he inquired spirit m that usually quiet township why they had left their mother At among the i he they seemed to choke could not So he asked again formed that several cases of sickness mental i is your mother dead too T They bowed and he suicide occurred j their in reply but neither could utter a consequence of the active part Hie word Poor said the Captain J member from on the subject of the di- i as possible to tlie air will see what can be done for yon I vision of this township Hi therefore moved The little fellow told him that his that the be subject to thn bacl been perstnded to join tlie army under a of the This motion was promise that his family would be taken care of unanimously carried and Col in the hut they had received nothing but what came chair directed HIP member to rise from his pay and their own labor with which i was fresh and unused to the j they managed to live pretty comfortably till i and he rose in his seat And such they heard of their father's death Then a reprimand With all the solemnity of a tlian mother grew sick and in a few days she died countenance naturally grave hearted I suppose j after alluding with tears in his eyes to the wrapped in warm food as a as is contained in eighty pounds of bone tme for place everything handy so From this Lhc Cheshire pastures needed I deteriorated but were restored 8 Feverish patients greatly refreshed to bJ well boned by a sponging in tepid water in must be fed women and children and he was credibly in- with thn nf J which a little has been dissolved ny uie ol which tends to soften the skin soil Descriptions of In dressing a blister have everything contain phosphates in sufficient quantity ready may be exposed ab timo hut not In Verm on i 10 Give fresh air on every practical growers of wool in Vermont are im- sion j into that Stale the full-blooded Merino 11 Let dishes medicine sheep and have already found es and all else be kepi clean ol enterprise A Mr Jesse Hinds 12 Bear patiently every infirmity of the imported lately two eyes atan ex- remember that it is much better to They will yield it is said an average of twelve pounds of wool on Onn of the most easy common and perfectly To make my story short our good hearted painful duty imposed upon him recited the foolish things in the world is to quarrel no g which proves troublesome ping on the fire may be rendered harmless by Captain spoke to the Colonel and it was enormity of the case the distress produced in matter with whom man woman or child or the the when agreed between them that they would make a the community by the conduct of the member pon what pretence provocation or occasion i a oe towards of of the lad for he was not too small to and with extraordinary caution as to his future necessity ie e carry a gun and then it puzzled them to Know conduct in respect to the vices and virtues of or degree of benefit to be gained by it And to do with his sister But she soon his position he pronounced the member from yet strange as the fact may be theologians tied that question by telling them that she go with him and never part from him one of the last balls which Louis Napoleon attended we remarked a woman who quarrel politicians lawyers doctors and was besieged by a throng adorers She was The gravity uf the until the roars of CPS quarrel churches quarrel and Slates a stranger either Saxon Bavarian or German She was not afraid she said and she knew laughter it the end passes all belief and Mr rel nations and tribes arid corporations men i She had been twice a widow hut never once a shc would be useful in camp or any Crittenden the present Attorney General of the women and children birds and beasts quarrel wife She married first an officer of her brother went So at last they quartered United States at the time was a spectator in about all manner of things and upon all her with the wife and in less than a j the lobby He has been heard to say that it ner of occasions Me lias been heard lo say week we all loved ponr Annie as though she i was the richest farce he had ever seen and had been our own child for except a that until the end and the drop himsell make a man feel bad it is unquestionably a the spot ensued and the bridegroom now and then that would steal from her eyes and thought ii was a regular quarrel No man ever fails to think less of ed The widow next married officer of dragoons who quarrelled on his wedding captain of on the subject of perfecting If there is anything in the world that wiil muskets in the Prussian service A in memory of her and mother she session ed to be the loveliest little I know she put on sometimes though to s a kind A Story himself after than he did before one it the happy husband swallowed grades him in his own eyes and in the eyes of a stone which choked him arid he ex- is worse blunes his between the beautiful bride and a yet there was a 2 Peter Firestone Abraham Fisher A Glass Jacob J Hall I is to think he'd a little rather than eai any But when the red coats came on us on three sides and two of them was betwixt ui and the Heights I tell il looked squally There one wav and t i was to our wny through Our Hurt Daniel 2 Cornelius Jacob 2 day Jacobs 2 Latta Cornelius O Little M Millan John or Muntz Caroline Victor K eral wasn t of Satan himself hut he I knew then we were in a bat condition Thomas and ve lo of Jane Annie Anthony cri Paxton Miss M PM fro ilex Catharine Christopher Sauni H Fr John C Co Jas Tho nps n of rod coats will coining towards us from the cm m 3 Hivor landed our WHS to three tunes as as we did but wust go al or the drums to in than five melancholy in her manner Besides wasn't a very stole she a she P him to stop Ho of one who had laid down his life i our cause his it bul k and Bruin and wasn't it our duty to love her I lurn Her brother fast at his drum in a lhc his he could handle sticks with so thal il drummer in the find by the l lie lo knock red coat Howe with his to lhc bin with he attack us he was and fit ior as of llis every moment clever a as ever beat a reveille or a roll he C to cave in A in the armies of ling followed ami rolled over battle was to York v hh lhc of in a Old he lo il any women h-n was fighting so t r Ills do and went over she joined with soon the after we fought our to the l took U ii i i sn bull all the At limn wu were surprise so i j f to no for low nose a3 cf sn a s s ins from lino On the power of irritability on the other i why people quarrel about religi is they have so little of it and the harder quarrel the more abundantly they prove il A man has a right to fast by his religious right lo insist upon a right to present it respectfully on all proper candidates for her favor ji y J cats cur for l in the lhc lli at of drum OH than five iis Bsv v ri f ln on o us v mod the of v t o nir -.1 a r 1 n d- I t j i c j too I or 3 Tsri 33 u r v 13 Corn CORN -i I it for be I v -j 11 v a and a THOMAS O-t li 1350 ral rc Now in- S r w njr his V it ri iji ivn 11 it w-o mfi tl o on -A a 11 v If b t 1 a- J of n cr a of MI men rind any that will quarrel about these things in my opinion has not much to quarrel about Politicians need not quarrels with a man for his political opinions is himself tin first principle of liberty out which there is nothing in politics worth a it is therefore wrong upon have on this subject a right to vour own opinions so have others You a right Jo convince them if they have a to do tiie but J tS J 1 say do not Tlic is and we nil net on the for s and Jn n v a nan if ht is abusive YOU A Years A hundred years ago a stupid German arch reigned over these United colonies of Great on the earth with the exception of Switzerland there i was not n republic of any A hundred years ago the French lilies floated over Quebec and New A hundred years ago the old French monarchy reared its accursed Louis XV dallied with infamous tons squandered his and in his own person name of man Fifty years ago the name of Napoleon was still comparatively unknown Fifty years ago ton mills had as il were just been invented and magnetic tele- graphs were unknown Fifty ngo there were scarcely five millions of people in the United and Ohio was almost as much of a wilderness as Oregon is now iy years had living Cass Webster and Calhoun were names ns yet in Alarm W lie is way 5s to alone for K Thin lisas OJ v ct v ly inr of to r the only at a not long on tlic Sabbath He prepared church bast a and lo cut a dash to the for of one h j 3 v h- you Contrive lo t -.1 rr a is nf the in lhc a 6 lo one of he difficult tins rut only lo may o mourn Jill revenge an injury abim lhc of slie first The lo he arose of stood playing vory with borrowed seals when denly he as if he had discovered of of she alarm Ind The people dandy walch wish packet o it bui in vnin at up ils and h seemed as if it would never The sweat off poor low lie ins making an fnr tho he off wiil his preset in one his lint in suppressed of the   

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