Mail, The (Newspaper) - June 27, 1834, Hagers-Town, Maryland POETICAL rot TUB To CMM let iw Our to when I be ike lilrer it And lir In the blM wire Cms thai b braia irt to to tbe At brow of yon mountain And there we'll fell of At pure M bright it that abore Of and joy alloy Of that ne'er will on mon y fide watch the bright waten elide And think and feel how bleit it from path to err through life With rife then meet and uut denir D WORLD'S DELUSIVE FIGURE FLIES C D D The figure fliri The wing of death o'er Ami all ill at my from before So melt lovely That by in all thit lately charmed Forever iu when youth in arrayed Came forth with pleasure Thm joyful round ray surveyed The fastly waning Ami when appeared Mid them slumbered for the bright illusion feared Hot my were numbered Too oft I heard that mortal life but a shade of Anil blest from mortal Wan only found in Heaven But while the youthful of blin Around my were 1 told iny sou I that truths like Were hardly But now evening's rainbow Luo Which twilight covert The is fading from view And death around me Farewell ihou cheating earth below Thou mily i to sorrow Thy that brightly now Shall set in to-morrow MISCELLANEOUS THE WIFE WITH TWO BANDS Some of our readers will recollect that some fifteen eighteen months since we a notice of the marriage of a liss Phelps to a Mr M Field of and also to a Mr J H Clark of The was the subject of considerable remark at the time but the cause of this singular de- parture from the ordinary rules of monial etiquette was not at the time public My the following which we train the Montreal Gazette the of these almost simultaneous marriages is and a satisfactory reason as signed for what in different circumstances would be considered unjustifiable and un- Matrimonial conduct It seems that Miss P possessed an ple fortune besides every chain that could make a young lady lovely h the ryes rsf a she was betrothed to Mr C with the consent of all be- ing a gentleman of medium es and a merchant of Boston In the meantime in steps Auld Robin Gray in the form of a Mr F a rich gen from the south rather advanced in years but having ample store of the dy The parents were charmed with the glittering of of course used all their endeavors to break lady's engage- ment with Mr C but she true to her first love resisted all their efforts wrote to her lover concerning htr situation and ned ar elopement ere the dreadful day nf lier union Mr F should arrive The sordid parents suspect ing by the ness uf their victim that things were rot right ordered the marriage rites one day earlier than anticipated at first The poor girl was consequently hurried to the altar more like a statue than any thing and the ceremony was The Boston lover in the meanwhile had not been he stationed a relay of mi the road and arrived at jus in time to be too late the rites had just been said Not the be put liis wits to and soon found cut that not been and Miss P was not a wife in the eyi of tbe Uw He consequently stole interview with her and had an tion of affairs The hour for retiring had not yet and the groom began to be in the fidgets about his she was sent for hut could nowhere found ant so poor was left to make the best of it was made but the lovers were too fleet for pursuer reached Boston and were lawfully wedded Thus the myMery is explained it is said they frequently joke laugh must be at the expense of VOL II NO Series WN MB JUNE 1834 WHOLE NO 313 NEW YORK POLICE SCENES William Waterman was charged with disturbing tbe African church in Allen street The prisoner in company with ten or twelve other young men went into the church last evening and during er stamped on the Hour to the annoyance of who had assembled for of worship Reprimanded and discharged Mary Ann Blackson 101 Anthony was next called up She was charged with assault battery on a young gentleman whom she met in the street insulted me sir did he insult you Madam sir I had been at church and when I was going home he caught hold of me and says he to me do you want a half And I go along yen scoundrel Then you see he took hold of me and him in the face and the watchman brought me up and that's all about it Mary Ann was advised to behave herself in future and discharged Three lads were brought in from a cellar in John street where they were found secreted by a watchman at a late hour last night No complainant ed were discharged Mary Bryan a real was charged with drunkenness I don't see as there is any prospect of your ever reforming from what drunkenness get drunk just when I please I'll you to prison me to prison as much as you please sir Committed Julia Ann Briscoe said she lived at home but didn't stay any where just now She was brought in on a charge of intoxication you were once a re- spec table girl and might be so again if you would You now stand charged with intoxication and you must pay a fine of gl or go to prison caie nothing about going to I don't like to see my name ye see it will hurt my reputation should suppose would fear that your reputation will be injured You should have thought of that before Pi I was so tipsy that 1 didn't think of any thing John Morris 18 Willet worked along shote The prisoner was charged with picking the pockets of Mr Committed John said he belonged to the ship John last night be- cause he had not been ashore for a good Discharged Edward corner of Pitt and ton streets Edward said he had no home no wife but with the blessings of Providence he meant to possess both in the course of a short time Committed Bridget Roach was with im- modest conduct in the street Committed Michael Davis was intoxicated Is it me you would be after slandering said Michael as he daggered up to the ROSEMARY Rosemary hai been held in great esteem as a of the memory and on thin account an emblem of Formerly it was worn at weddings and in some parts of England it used to be tomary to distribute it among the company at a funeral who frequently threw sprigs of it into the grave It was planted near tombs like mallow and asphodel MOORE alludes to its character as a in the following passage tin humble Whose To scent the mid tlie duad Shakspeare and others of the old poets repeatedly speak of rosemary at an em- blem of remembrance and as being worn weddings to signify the fidelity of the lovers Thus Ophelia There's rosemary for you that's for pray you love remember Rosemary is used by many us a tea for and nervous disorders Giraffe or Camelo Leopard one of the most rare and extra- ordinary quadrupeds of the animal dom both in its form and habits is shortly expected in New York The Star in speaking of the character of this singular animal says its head is like that of the deer its eyes large and as those of the gazelle and its neck ful as that of an Arab steed but of pro length as also its fore legs which are twice as long as the hind this respect the reverse of the When it stands up as it does for hours gether without moving limb or muscle or even winking the eyelids its neck back form nearly a line and the head reaches to the astonishing height of near twenty feet The tail is short like the deer and the fur a beautiful fawn lor dotted with large white spots Every body however must be familiar with his appearance from the accurate lithographs of th in London K1 giraffes that were lately nnd The latter nearly Mr real mammon war- Daniel whose wife is a kindred with Daniel's that the times were haul that he could scarcely get enough In eat znA many a night he to bed so hungry that wife had and watch him for few he might die before he woke cold girl with her basket on hrr arm to servant whom her had summoned to the door What do do with IJ my Hide the servant as he pul meat and bread into the child's Father the reply nth tjic took shelter nne tree shower some them complaining thai he time to the rain the there are when is wet we will go to another A young senile lalety to a little that imitation Juan clear march disfranchise f evacuate disperse disgorge part cut stick be off A1 the his meaning if port want me here why re ii A S of SO Division street had a very valuable small gold French watch from him HI Tuesday and suspicion falling upon a Spaniard who slept the same room with Mr officer sent for and was with his trunks which operation about an hour which he cheerfully submitted to During all this time he was of the officer's being found tn justify suspicion Sparks was about leaving the and Spaniard very politely opened the o let him nut when just ss he was ng he fancied he a 15 and turning suddenly round he looked he Spaniard in face and observing suspicions in the of he pulled open and there discovered the watch stands Y was distinguished through of principle for his integrity and for Ins scrupulous adherence to He once explained the rule nf his conduct which ought to be generally known nnd adopted It ought to be deeply engraven on heart He was the fim com- mand and counsel of my youth always to do what my conscience told tnc to be a ty anil to rave the nces to God 1 shall carry me the memory and I trust the practice nf his paternal lesson to grave 1 have followed h have nn reason to complain that my tn it hss been a temporal iaci I have found it the contrary tlic road to prosperity and wraith and 1 shall point it out as such lo my children Tears agn a captain ol a corsair carried elf live wije of a poor wood man in the environs ef Messina Having kept her for months on board his tlie htr wi one of the and abandoned her lo her fair The vage Monarch of the Island to whom she was brought so enamored of her that he married her I the torn of his her fey his side on Hie whew he died left her the sovereignly of dominions A vessel lately arrived art Messina a voyage to Sroth has brought to the woodman this in- the faJe his wife has from her to make him nne of thr richest private ia Sicily antil such lime as it shall please his royal to call him to her coart set the Parisians crazy such is their for something strange or dis- tingue The garden of plants was for years crowded every Sunday with chiefly to look at and watch the and his black keeper in liis turban who came from with not to tion the little runts of cows with horns and not than sheep scarcely that were brought with Mm to feed hini for the giraffe was too dc licate to eat thing but milk and that native milk Bonks were written upon this even and sonnets him cafes and restaurateurs were named after him and entremets were la and and waltzes baptised his cognomen tho he is the most docile and immovable of all living things Such is the fertile and invention of the French We it the giraffe among us will bi- as grent a curiosity the sra serpent and wonder almost I have small Beer made of and fermented with hops in the usual manner and t find my hands are much more and more able to en- dure the labours of the Harvest fields than formerly They drink beer at dinner and at 4 o'clock P M The whole expense of the beer is but trifling as we make it in our family I em convinced no Farmer can give the experiment a fair trial out being pleased and greatly benefited by the remits I am happy to add that for the last three years both myself and ily have entirely abandoned the use of ar- dent spirits not only upon ordinary sions but likewise extraordinary such as Corn Hilling ot Hogs at which periods we formerly made of a considerable quantity from the idea that it was necessary in order to prevent the effect of cold this business generally occurring when the weather was severely cold With great truth I can add that my experience teaches me thut my family much better health titan when we made of ardent I am now abnut to burn a kiln of Lime and every one acquainted with the oper aware that the labour and expense are very great it being necessary to give unremitting attention for at least four and nights and yet this will be effected without allowing any ardent PAUL SUMMERS P S I omitted to mention agreeably to your request whether I belong to a Temperance Society or not at present 1 do not but intend very soon to give my ble influence to the good cause in raising a society in our neighborhood Sept 6th 1833 Being among the number of those To tlie farmers of tun County The following letters were pended to the annual of Washington County Temperance Society ate by direction of the ing Committee of n The object of again presenting them to the public at this period is to attract the at- tention of farming more to of excluding ardent from at the The high respectability uf the gentlemen whose names are appended to the subjoined letti rs and the interesting which they testify to as the result of tht ir experience last harvest cannot fail to produce a impression to prompt to similar trials by others The inters ate respectfully submitted under this hope and expectation Let the tried The of shows that there are no difficulties in the way If the ocean can be navigated the Army and tho Naval operation the conducted and vast systems ot internal improvement carried on without the use of ardent spirits it ought not a moment to be questioned but that the ming operations of the Country and in- deed all laborious occupations where can be d in Itee manner and with far greater facility and The earnestly to the cf And it is ail those who shall adopt the plan whether of any Temperance Society or hot to cate the result lo tlic undersigned at as early a period after hat vest as may be convenient and to state the number of a- cres of hands employed of spent the satisfaction of the hands during the time their general health and appetite the quantity of water daily consumed with the comparison cf these with the experience of former years whea Afrits were used daring Grove Co 1 I take the liberty to state through you to the meeting that my own experience is decidedly favorable My last Grain and Hay crops consisting of nearly Three Hundred Acres were taken off without the use of ardent spirits and I can most conscientiously say that I have never had my work done in a more satisfactory ner nor a company of hands which sometimes last harvest of as ninny as thirty and never less than twenty-five at a among whom order and mony and attention to their business pre- so great an extent And I do noi to add that I have never ob- served less manifestations of fatigue and exhaustion among my hands in harvest Apprehensions were entertained by some and myself among others that some be experienced ing in harvest without ting tho of ardent spirits as was but sn far from those anticipations being realized in my own case my supply of hands was never more abundant so much so that I was under the necessity of the assistance of many hands who offered their services I have been so much thus far in my harvest operations without the use ardent spirits that I am mined to pursue the same practice respectfully suggest to the of Washington to make a trial of which I cannot doubt result in a similar determination on men who secured their hut and not the last only but also the three preceding without the uie of ardent we comply with your re- quest in the notice in the newspapers of the county to you to the meeting at the row afternoon the result of our experience in relation to that subject Among the be- result ing therefrom are ing The Farmer has his work ed in a more careful and consequently in a better decorum and good feelings prevail among the company of workmen in the harvest field in place of that noise and bustle and profanity and contention which were so often heard sind witnessed under the old practice of dispensing among them the stimulating soti have a better appetite for their food and endure with less weariness the labours of harvest this Is the first harvest field I was in where liquor was not and I must say I never felt so well in a harvest field in my was the emphatic language of one of the hands of one nf the undersigned four harvests ago and the remark has very often been made by others in in pur pre- sence since that time both by those whn were then termed the temperate and in- temperate how is the very common impression that it is not safe for confirmed drunkards or en for persons who have long indulged themselves in the use of ardent spirits to relinquish it it once We have also noticed that not near so much water is used by the labourer which is so well adapted produce an Another evil resulting from old practice is also in a great measure dial by the Temperance bourer leaving the more or less under the influence of ardent would not stop at the tavern and expend his wages in he canies it home and appropriates it to its proper use in providing food and clothing for his family have only adverted tn the benefits we have seen and felt resulting from the banishment of ardent spirits from the others might be we trust relation of those ready alluded to induce some other of our agricultural brethren who have not yet adopted the practice to make a trial of it Very respectfully yours CHRISTOPHER ADAM The following Utter was communicated to the President of the society a be- fore the preceding correspondence and being the same subject is presented in connection with it 4 PET HANKS the by M of I he lic retent tu the Mow tuHe by Mr CLAV in of to Bute the to Stilt Awe Mr for clear and ort they well strengthen the it ill Air Claj nV in it in favor of it the Whole better Lit However Mr Clir iv a fwd and bi from of the linii HESHT CUr 17 S Built in IM 1 This vagrant power to erect a Bank afi ter wandered throughout the in of some spot on which to fasten has been by the gentleman from Georgia cri that provision which Congress to lay taxes In I'M the power is re- ferred to one part of In 1811 sometimes it is alleged to be ble from the power to regulate commerce Hard pressed it disappears itself under the grant to coin money Tho sagacious secretary of the treasury in pursued the wisest course He has taken a shelter behind high imposing terms He has declared in the preamble to the act establishing the bant that it will be to the conducting of the national jWo will tend to give the of Ivans and will of ble advantage to irade ip No lection of taxes Whit is the of this It is ft with powers for general purposes fiy existing retained what s not concerted Itf pait Respectfully Yours DANIEL HUVETT n Co Sept 5th We have for several successive seasons taken off grain and hay without the use of ardent spirits by ourselves nnd have found it quite as to procure help as before No injury has re- tn any in our employ from use of water as a on the contrary they have rather manifested fatigue than when tlic practice of ing liquor prevailed with us In short so entirely arc we convinced of the ges in the employer anil employed in banishing it from the that no would induce us to return In the old ol a it and supplying it to our hands Very respectfully JACOB TRITLE JOSEPH F PETER MONO Observing ih the different newspapers of the county a call on those farmers who excluded the iise strong drink from their fields during the Lite harvest and feeling fully sensible of the good resulting the of the institution over which you being ohe cf those called on by your notice I deem it a duly due your invaluable institution as well as the interest of society at large to state the result of my experience Having always entertained the opinion ardent spit its has a most deleterious influence in cur harvest fields and trates the physical energies of the ing part cf the com m unity and having upwards of five and thirty years in my harvest fields the injurious of hard drink I though having a harvest or quite 300 a- nf small grain to secure tn make a fair experiment having previously made small trials My orders were accordingly a dram was taken ih or out nf the field to my knowledge by any of my was my experiment disgraced j by a subsequent harvest frolic The re- my most hands with the exception of two or three from cholera ed uninterrupted employed a- forty hands appetite i is said that there are cases m which it act on implied This is Implication must be and flow the with which it is allied power to charter companies is not ed in the grant j and I contend is not of a nature to be transferable by mere tion It is one cf of Is it to be that a power so Would have been left by the wisdom of the constitution to doubtful It hat been alleged that there are many in the where powers in their incidental and which would hard necessarily vested along with principal power are and the power 16 make rules and regulations for tlie ment of the bHd and naval forces which it is said is incidental to the power to raise armies and provide is given as mi What does this How extremely cautious the convention leave as little as possible to In alt where incidental powers are acted upon the principal and incidental ought nbt to be congenial with each other and partake of a common nature Tho incidental power ought to be strictly and limited to the end propose jl to be attained by the specified power In other words tinder the name of one object which in specified the implied ought not to be made to em- brace other objects hut Sec U If a woman Is for a that is fir witt For twe last three years I have secured my harvests the ase of one drop ardent Spirits anil I can with truth say that my grain has never been so well saved in so snort a time and with M on- pleasant among the labourers Formerly I experienced mach and indeed often dreaded the approach of Harvest the many renees were likely to take place a- mone my hands M Harvest field I have abandoned the ase of ardent instead of discord and contention among spirits now presents a scene of will together with Co Tt gives us pleasure to to you that our in the nou use of hy nui selves and hands id is favourable to this plan It was feared by many in section of the county before the experiment was marie that hands could be but a trial of it has entirely the of those Indeed so ent is the that many of the most hands go with into a field where ate used and even some of who may be called intemperate knowing their to drink ia excess when tht tempting bottle is presented to them and by which are unfitted for labor and lost the of earning the high wages of harvest time have preferred working for whn did not permit ardent spirits tn be drank in their fields And the advantages hie therefrom arc that work is better done time is not wasted in foolish talking and wrangling as was not the case under the oM and eai plover h saved tbe duty of discharging for or by it the lime when he need nf their kelp We thereat recommend to oar brother to make a trial of the plan at least in the harvest field assured as we are that experience will arcnrd with oar own in a conviction af iu to tne employer t unusually meals always enjoyed and their food give additional strength and vigor to the as was apparent to nil and most clearly evinced the happy cf Temperance Though sir f am Dot numbered the members nf your highly respectable and useful stiH 1 take pleasure in thus my teal for the ment of the principles you are ing to disseminate the hippy of which will be mnst apparent to those who shall have firmness to resist the evil and thereby aid in rendering lo an estimable blessing With sincere respect Your F a honest and worthy neighbor of was to us t few days since thai trade had become had been idle for some or j til tke fault ef JACOB HUYETT said Wf We roa d help it we bor we expressed oar sorrow H was we coald cooM Dot promise him we eader lie was Soit in the constitution If then you establish a bank to collect and the it ought to be to the purpose of sUch and distribution It is mockery than usurpation to establish it for a lawful object nnd then extend it to other which are lawful Ih deducing the power to create corporations such ail have described it from the power to collect taxes the relation and of pal incidental are prostrated and de- The necessity is exalted above the principal As well it be said that the great luminary of the day is aH a to the star that twinkles forth its feeble light in the Armament of Heaven Air CUr Ibm to of the M le M with m He The delusion Bas consisted in the ase of certain hich sounding phrases dexterously The collection of the i administration ef the conducting of the affairs of tbe of the of the lUnk extort express or awe into acquiescence without inquiry or examination into its necessity Abnut the commencement of this year 1811 there appears by the report of the tary of the Treasury of the 7th of to have been ft little upwards of in the treasury ef the U marc than one-third of this whole mm was in vaults of the local banks several instances where an existed of selecting the a hat bren given to the state banks or a a of the hat been with them In New fw there was with the bank a branch bank ft that In district Bank ef aU though abn H a branch bank and yet the banks are It the Monty after are Collected it placed with 1 there ran be no ty in placing toads if be drjWicd with bank which I dent the of arc far all U hi more simple than of t and 1 net deny lo the blame tke digger's bankes dalU How M In if net j It tnt w any el and anil the ia it the Made ewca in ease of the tank rta Ion will be M Ac