Star And Banner, The (Newspaper) - June 14, 1850, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania u JT UY V. A. C. H. AND VOL. Law Penalties against Passing PA. FRIDAY JUNE 14, 15-50, TWO DOLLARS PBK 1NEW 170. ANNEXED will be found the portion of the Act of Assembly of 1850, tlie circulation of notes under 85 Tlint from and after the twenty-first of one thousand eight hundred nnd it not be for any person or corporation or body directly or in- to pay put in to be paid circulated or any bank or any of indebtedness to be a bank or of the character or appearance of a bank or calculated for circulation a bank or purporting to be issued by any bunk or incorporated com- or association of not located in of a less denomination than five dollars every violation of the of this bv any corporation or body shall such corporation or body corporate to the payment of five hundred dollars and any tion of the provisions of this section by any lie holding any office or appointment of honor or profit under the constitution and laws of this shall subject such officer to payment of one hundred and any violation of this by any other not being a public shall subject such person to the payment of twenty-five one-half of in each case above shall go to the and the other half to the county in which the suit is and may be sued for and recovered us of like amount are now by law recoverable in any action of in the name of the Com- of as well for the use of the proper as for the person Magazine fur Scene oil Hie BY O. D It is n glorious stream Without a murmur passes And on its with softened The sleeping stars so sweetly 'Twould as if the tempest's plume Had swept through woods of tropic And scattered down their blossoms bright To sleep upon the waves And hangs the moon Her beams cume gushing through the air So so beautifully That wood and stream seem stirred with And the pure as it kneels At nature's holy feels Religion's self floating by In every that cleaves the There's glory in each cloud arid There's beauty in each wave and And gentle voices from afar Are home like angel minstrelsy In such a at such an spirit feels a spell of And all Seems earthly bliss and heavenly idol of my My young my soul's sweet Dear of my spirit's I would that thou werl by my And 1 would kneel on this green sod In love to then and praise to gazing in thy gentle Dream but of thee and I sec thy name in yon blue In every sound thy name I All nature paints it to my eye And breathes it in my listening Sing thou and be not I THE WIFE OK in- If a heart be in perfect and a or oilier instrument of music be near and in perfect tune ihou canst not ploy one without wakening an answer in the thou shall hear its sweet echo in the as if played on by the Even so shall other spirits vibrate to the harmony of what God giveth thee to In fluence of this woman over her husband said to have been very She was of low and Yet she inherited from nature those fine and noble traits of her sex to such that her power and fascinations were very Gen. Jackson was at- in early but by some or other the matter was and she married another who proved a and the connection most the Sunny West in gay and Jackson became again interested in c n e TII i i the consequence was a when ful in frozen and the deep i he was married to is said to stillness of the Hindoo thou wilt possessed none of these wake a slumbering to be carried on ments that are supposed to adorn forever through the In word j able life reared in the seeing and act sing thou of united truth and love I alld knowing little of elegant and refined Yel her fine strong another voice shall take up the strain over i r 1 I fection and good the three grent the soon it will become a WOULD Ofa enabled her to take and thou above in and hold with irresistable force ihe passions world of and well wilt of ihe strong and fiery n i hear thy early in sweet bration to the harps of THE ALMOND said a little girl to her as they were walking together in statesman to whom she was It was a lion held in the embrace of a The influence she exercised is said to have bordered on the lie imagined that no power or acts of his could or be averse to The in directing the Attention T jn the moon's sweet of the reader to the foregoing section of the The starlight prints it on the Act of 1850, would inform him that he And wave and breeze and singing bird Speak to my soul the blessed BEAUTIFUL A correspondent of the Baltimore Re- publican thus explains the music of the water spirits several of my voyages on the Spanish in the neighborhood of the do you have so few of j will or in opposition to her fee those double almonds in the garden She seemed his guardian by day You have hardly a bed where there is by holding m her hands his not a of and they are so his his An intimate much What can be the reason dear said the receive the notes thus at PAR in exchange for at cheap and one-price Clothing Variety in nearly opposite the Persons wishing to get rid of these notes without and who at the same time desire to secure BARGAINS in the way of Ready-made Clothing or other in his will do well lo give him aguay and San Juan de from His stock of SUMMER ING is full and embracing tiling to please all from tine and superfine goods down to the cheapest and most serviceable It is useless to enumerate the articles or 10 say My ft lends and customers Know my mode ot I have but the one price and charge one man no more than the for the same I therefore feel confident that those who the nature of the we were ed to anchor at a considerable distance from the shore and every from to late at our ears were ed with that could be heard beneath the counter of our At first I thought it was the ing through the strings of my bridge ol which I had inadvertently left ther me a bunch of Then I will tell you why 1 prefer tlie humble he little girl ran and soon returned with a fine bunch of almond and a few my said her try which is the The child smelled again and and could scarcely believe herself that the ly almond had no while the plain violet had a delightful niy which is the dear it is the litlle you know my why I prefer the plain violet to the beautiful Beauty without in mv something like beauty out gentleness and good temper in little When any of those who speak without may say to you charming blue eves What a fine com was not so. I then placed my ear on the with ma know thai they buy cheaper from me than at any other subscriber has on baud a good Rockaway Buggy also a without which he will dispose of at prices so iow as to astonish the ser. a lot of MARCUS June 5th, 1850. ASSIGNEE'S T HE been pointed under a deed of voluntary Assignee of of Reading Adams no- itice is hereby given to all who are to the said John to call and payment to the residing and to those having claims to present the properly for JOHN May 3. Ot I SETTERS Testamentary on the estate t PETER late of Cumberland having been grant ed to the residing in Mountjoy notice is hereby given to such as are indebted to said estate to make ment without and those having claims are requested to present the property for JOSEPH Mav 30, 1850. Ot I ETTERS Testamentary on the tale of JOSEPH late of Mountjoy Adams having been granted to the sub- residing in said notice is hereby given to those indebted to said estate to make and to those ing claims to present the same properly authenticated for SAMUEL April Estate of George TETTERS Testamentary on the A talc of GEORGE late New Adams having been granted to the is to all who arc indebted to said to make pay men I wi thou and to those having claims to present the game properly to the subscribers residing in New for D. 1I1MES, S. April I EFT the service of the subscriber in on Wednesday THEODORE B. an indented Apprentice to the Coach Trimming All persons are hereby notified not trust him on my or harbor or ploy One yard of hut jio will be paid for his sion and return to the JEROME May 31, T HE Books of original subscription for the building of the have been placed in the hands of A. for Those who have to pay their subscriptions are re- to make immediate F. W. April 26, VII i 11UU v ut T 1.1 1 r N r r i p knowing whether vou examination I found it J f I have any good and without ing of vour defects and which I 1L-LI A. i t born remember my charmed with the most heavenly strains that ever fell upon my They did not sound as close to but were MC I the habit of making their I vessel when 1 was continually little member the almond blossom re- when your mellow and like the soft breathings be le l and good of a thousand touched by lingers of thc decD at an immense dis- per Child S Com- the deep at an immense dis Although I have considerable music in my one night I became tired and de- termined to My luck in half an hour was astonishing I had my et with the finest white catfish I ever saw and it being late and the cook nnd the moon I filled my bucket with and took fish and all into my cabin for ihe 1 had not ycl fallen when the same sweet notes fell upon my ear and THE HARDEST KICK There is nu attorney practising in our who has attained a great notoriety among numerous things for bullying the cases when he is As it would not be polite to give his name right out in the we will morel v call him for There was a horse very common case upon our magistrate's t getting what was my surprise to find j before Lsq one day m 3 a irt lip my discoursing sweet sounds to the sides of my I examined them and ered that there was to each lower lip an divided by wiry By the pressure of the upper lip and by the exhalation and dis- charge of a vibration was similar to that produced by the breath on the tongue of a Jew's So you see the Naiads have a band to dance I should like to hear the ing bird try his skill at imitating this sub- marine You know the which happened to be A slow and easy witness had been called to the stand by the in a straight forward made the other side of the case look rather The plaintiffs attorney being Wayke commenced a regular cross which was cut short in the lowing what do you know about a horse are you a horse tor said the barbarian in his peculiar contemptuous and overbearing 1 dont pretend to be a horse but I know a good deal of the nature of the means to say that you jackass when you link with long j a a a. said in the same stylo drawn At a occupied knowingly at the and 1 y my one of these rich j glancing triumphantly around the crowd perched near and began to imitate the The he very well but when it came to the prolonged trill of gushing at the close of the the imitator stopped in the Again the poured fourth his soul in song the mocking bird hopped and listened most The as if conscious that none could tate his god-given sent forth a richer strain than The evidently felt that his tion was at lie warbled all kinds of notes in quick You would have thought that the house was never take you for a The Supreme court of the United States could not have preserved its gravity through the scene that The lick back produced a regular and the bushel of suspender buttons that stuck to the ceiling above brought a regular shower of plaster upon the heads Every body was that whatever the attorney might the ness was a INT is a very serious say at four o'clock in tho you drive the cows into the where the calves have been penned all the previous in a hutch in one Then you have to commence a chase after the ed by j with a perversity common 1 to Australian expects to be and Having shown off his he again tried his powers on the inimitable The effort he made was prodigious but it mere talent trying to copy He couldn't do it- He gasping .in the midst of the prolonged and flew away in evident like every thing is passing from the few to the The art of printing has laid before the multitude the written wisdom of once locked up in the elaborate manuscripts of the Engraving and daguerreotype spread the productions of the pencil before the whole Music is taught in our common and the cheap accordion brings its delight to the humblest of All these things are full of to the measured sound of the spirit's there goes round the world the golden band of the earth comes So its and makes a chord with sued two or three times around the ankle deep in dust or according to the with loud and a thick This she generally proceeds up to ihe a kind of and mits her neck to be made The cow safe in the her near hind Ipg is ed out to its full and tied to a con- venient post with the universal cordage of a piece of green At this stage in ordinary the milking com- but it was one of the hobbies of Mr. a practice I have never seen followed in any other part of the col- that the tails should be held tight during the This arduous duty I conscientiously performed for some until it happened that one day a heifer slipped her head out of an ill ed upset milkman and ged the Head who was ing the to the serious damage of a pair of and in spite of all my in clearing the lop rail of the yard leaving me flat and says that so long as he lived he wore her minature near his and never to her except in a manner so ed and full of that the listener was deeply impressed with her dant THE PIPE ANK THE habit of smoking we a most injurious as it is one of the most seductive in the Dr. Laycock asserts with that it has a most baneful effect upon the the the the and ihe nervous The tobacco consumed by habitual smokers an ounce to twelve ounces per week the usual quantity from two to thee Inveterate cigar smokers will consume from four to five dozen per The first morbid result is an con- dition of the mucous of the lips and then the tonsils and pharynx the mucous membrane becoming dry and If the thorax be ex- be found slightly with congestive veins meandering o- ver the and here and there a streak of The action of tobacco ing on the heart is and some individuals who in this organ more than complain of an uneasy sensa- tion about the left n distressed not amounting to faintness but allied to it. The action heart is observed to be feeble and An uneasy is also experienced in or beneath the pectoral and on the right side than on the On the brain the use of tobacco appears to diminish the rapidity of cerebral and chock the How of ideas through the It differs from opium and and rather ex- cites to like green than composes to sleep induces a dreaminess which leaves no impression on the leaving a great ted by a trembling of the hands and ity of Such are secondary re- sults of So arc blackness of teeth and There is also a low paleness of the and en- and in constant who do not a tendency to pulmonary Dr. Wright ot in a lo ihe fully corroborates his and both agree that smoking produces gastric in- affections of the larynx and diseases of the and ness of ihe in is very injurious to the and nervous THE this bread is very hard why don't we have cake and nice things as we used lo when we lived in the great house 1 that was such a pretty and such a pleasant filled with flowers and you such sweet music with your and Pa would sing. Pa used to laugh nnd tell me pretty and take me on his and say I was his own dear what makes Pa It makes me the floor and TAXING The Commercial publishes the ing happily conceived It is evidently an involuntary dropping from the heart of a bJy had buffered some from the fickleness but we think that this much abused class deserves better treatment than we will not say lady There is no doubt that ladies have wasted no small portion of their time and means in trying to win but they should rather blame themselves for not being more interesting so we would propose a tax on the young ladies for the losses which bachelors have glittered in pursuing light that lies in woman's Tax tax tax them With an income great or Tax their mortgages and On ench dollar sixty cents That's the toll they ought In wearing out the So they'll cry instead of Mourning for the Tax them for the vows ve TAX them for vows For the drafts they're drawing still On their conscience and their Tax them for the debts they To voung and his For the use of silver darts And the loan of Tat them for the precious time Spent in writing silly To the deluded Lost in and in Tax them for dishonor paid To the sunlight and the Swearing were truer far Than a. sunbeam or a Tar them for their wasted Tax for the bitter tears Drawn from eyes that once were bright With a soft confiding For the cheeks they've made so For the wail Breathed from that most endure What no surgeon's art can Tax them for the hopes they've Tax them for the dollars Buying elixir and to keep the spirits calm When the lady thought The would be And the lover with his Would bestow his house alld Tax them for the wood and Used to warm their soul Tax them for the cakes and pies Made to charm their lover's For sperm candles tax them well the number who can tell 1 That have and burned in To secure a faithless swain Tax them for the countless Made by mothers to their the months would paix And the lover no Tax them for the That was felt about the When the last beau had And the lady weeps I'd tax them one and AVith an great and TJX mortgages and On each dollar sixty cents Till their truant steps should in the Then I would enjoy n laugh With the bachelor's SINGULAR OF THK Berlin paper that there is in Russia a place called where a most singular custom Every ten i years the awful scenes of the crucifixion J are enacted by the Some are dressed to represent soldiers and some as and many men and children stand around as the crowd of while on the three crosses are nailed of and at the feet kneel women who represent the The whole scene is gone through with in all the and lasts all This very singular which has been kept up since the middle is announced to take place again in the month of June this and strangers are invited to witness it. so sick and look go bad afraid when he stamps snys so go off to bed will he gel well and sing me a sweet and love me as he used to do what makes you cry Did I make you cry 1 It makes me ry to see you so sad and you wipe away those tears and smile my George child your father is a drunkard f our industrious and frugal lore it was a maxim that a young man should never be married until she had spun herself a set of bed and table all unmarried women were termed an lation they still retain in all law grated at the foot of the in Life of a To PRESERVE the warm is fast when meal cannot be kept for more than a dav or two in a fresh it will be of no in- considerable benefit to many to be that if fresh meat is rolled up in In- dian corn it will keep fresh three or four and even five The steak should belaid down in pieces from one to three and each covered entirely with the reply of Charles the when importuned to communicate something ofa private deserves to be engraven in in the heart of every man you keep a asked the sub- tle returned the can was the ic and severe answer Drift manners and even are mostly derived from the parental Why is a had dollar like a grog shop How careful ought fathers and Because it is hard to icrs to to set us good drive a nail in a board and clinch it on the other why is it like a sick man Because it is in are doctors like Be- cause the v never draw blood without ning up a is a newly opened dry goods store like a house on Because it starts all the belles of the Why is it better to be burned at the than to have your head cut off at the block Because a hot steak is belter than a cold When a mother puts her child to what twu places near New York does it remind you of. Sing Sing and word is it in the English ihe first two letters of which signify a the three a woman the four a great man and the a great is General Taylor like s stark of wheat Because he has never been is a Broadway dandy like the can army Because they always run at the sight ofa arc butchers the thieves Because they are steeling are pimples on a man's face or like the engravings ofa Because they are illustrations of What is it that is and and red all over A makes more noise than a pig un- der a gate Two Why are hogs the most intelligent mals Because they nose DISCOVERY or A the grand route of in the kingdom of there was a of marble bearing this inscription in the dialect first day of at the rising of the I shall have n en The statue had already stood there two hundred years and no one had yet discovered the meaning of the rious A says Castelani in his passing through the read the inscription and thought that he had divined its but did not communicate to any one his The first of May having ready he but the ing year he arrived in the country on the last day of The next morning he resorted to the spot before and having remarked the spot on which fell the shadow of the head of the at the precise moment when the sun arose above the he dug up the earth and found immense SCHOOL class step close your books John how many kingdoms in na lure Scotland and to the mineral ami kingdom up is meant by the anima kingdom rhinoceroses jack aud but you'll take a licking fo your last is the mineral king clom hull of straight up is the vegetable king dom ing and all kinds o' greens as is good fo what are the can't cook saw logs and give me an apple a piece ant you can have an cept SHORT Swift was asket to preach a short charitable lie The sermon is perhaps the shortest one We quote it that has pity on the un- to the Sermon you like the down with the The el feet was An unusually large collection was taken FOR prudent am well disposed member of the Society o Friends once gave the friendly advice said hear thou art going to be replied replied the have only one little piece of advice to give thee ant that never mary a woman worth more than thou art. When I married my I was worth just fifty and she was worth sixty-two cents and whenever any difference has occurred betwen us since she has always thrown up the odd When a man attempts to tie his cravat around a lamp he may be ina rather came you are three thousand six hundred and sixty-four known ges now in use in the Of nine hundred and thirty-seven are five hundred and eighty-seven European two hundred and seventy-six and one hundred and twenty-four American IT is A known to yet of no small use in toe conduct of that when you fall into a man's the first thing should whether he has a greater to hoar or that you should hear 1 in Christopher says not his having discovered the new but his having gone to search it on the faith of an o- THE us thank God fo the Day of poor man's holiday from world's monitor of It is the interest as well as the duty of every poor keep tlie The institution is a wise and beneficent nnd all should observe it with Let us give with To him who all To him who bids the planets And a Though grief and tears may dim our And care and strife 'Tis too that alloys The lot his Maker While sunshine lights the boundless sky And feed tho stars nnd live on Lut ns sive thanks to LOOK A little boy went to with his lo be a One day his father said to him my you will never be a sailor if you don't learn lo let me see if you can get up the The who was a nimble litlle soon scrambled up but when he got to the and saw at what height he he began to bo and called out I shall I am sure I will fall what am I to do look my said his you look down you will be dy but if you keep looking up at the at the top of the vou will descend The boy followed his father's advice and reached the bottom with Learn Duties of following of. to the duties of Township by request ofa friend who thinks thit public will thus be Extract from Act of 13ih of 1836, Act relating 10 mui Section 0. Public or laid entered on as soon be be effectually opened and constantly kept in and all public highways made or to be shall at all seasons be kept clear of all im- pediments to easy and convenient and at the expense of the re- 27. The supervisors aforesaid shall have and they are hereby enjoined and at the expense of the live to purchase and all other materials necessary for the purpose maintaining and re- pairing the public roads or and to oversee and direct a sufficient number of laborers lo execute promptly and effectually the provisions of the and ihe orders and decrees of the courts concerning such 28. The supervisors aforesaid shall have power and within their respective townships to enter any land or enclosure lying near the said and to gather and carry on said roads any sand or gravel found on the which they may necessary for the purpose of mining or repairing the said when the same cannot conveniently be obtained by contract at reasonable doing unnecessary damage to the owners of the said and repairing any of fences which 29. Whenever the supervisors and the owners of any materials which may be wanted for maintaining ot re- pairing the roads agree upon the price to be paid the ue of such materials shall be estimated bv any two of such three persons as agreed upon by such supervisors and 30. If the supervisors and owners cannot agree upon any persons to estimate the value the owner may apply to a justice of the peace residing near place such materials were or and thereupon such justice i appoint three judicious one the nomination of the one on the nomination of the owner of such and the third upon his own and the decision of the persona so or any two of shall be entered upon the docket of said justice and shall be final if party after due refute glect to nominate as it be the duty of the justice to appoint one person in his 32. The supervisors shall also have power and authority aa a- to enter upon any such or and maintain or re- pair all such drains or ditches through the as they shall judge necessary to ry the water from said 67. If awy shall up or injure any drain or made by any for the purpose of ing ihe waier from any or or shall divert or change course without the authority the supervisors for the time person lor every such for- feit and pay a sum not less than four nor more than twenty 08. If any person shall stop or obstruct any public road or or shall commit any nuisance by ling making turning the or in any other do on notice given by the supervisor of the respective forthwith remove the nuisance and repair the damage done to such a such person for every such Forfeit and pay a sum not less than ten nor mors than forty dollars That nothing in this section shall be deemed to debar an indictment for any such as in case of misdemeanor at common Extract from Act of 15th county and und township rates and 34. That before ug the duplicate and warrant for the col- of road it shall beihe duty of the supervisors ol every township to notice to all persons rated for such by advertisements or to at such time and places as the may so as to give such full opportunity to work out their Extract from Act of 15lh 1834, to counties and and county and 92. If any supervisor shall eci or refuse to perform any duty required f him by he flail forfeit and pay a um not less ihan four dollars nor ug fifty to be recovered in a nary by action of debt in the name if the before any justice f the peace of the to be applied repairing the highways of said hip That such may appeal from the judgment of such to the next court of quarter who shall take such order thereon s to them shall appear just and nd the same shall be final and from this little story to look more to Jesus and less to Christian Treas. The a little paper ed in the Western part ot thus pleasantly introduces the month of June sometimes smiling often through tears in tion yields her and the welcome June with a in her April May is June warm-hearted j is and A fellow stole a wood and in old the Judge that he only took it on far did you carry it tlw answered the is carrying the joke too marked the the commuted for further A NKW it im Indiana to the We should rejoice lo haft an ishment by which we eraM secure payment oW Mi that are not the tint rrJ