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Hagers Town Mail Friday, May 06, 1831,
Maryland

Hagers Town Mail Friday, May 06, 1831,
Maryland

Hagers Town Mail Friday, May 13, 1831,
Maryland

Hagers Town Mail Friday, May 13, 1831,
Maryland

Hagers Town Mail Friday, May 20, 1831,
Maryland

Hagers Town Mail Friday, May 20, 1831,
Maryland

Hagers Town Mail Friday, June 03, 1831,
Maryland

Hagers Town Mail Friday, June 03, 1831,
Maryland

Hagers Town Mail Friday, June 10, 1831,
Maryland

Other Editions from Friday, July 25, 1834

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Circular To Bankers Friday, July 25, 1834 ,
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London Morning Post Friday, July 25, 1834 ,
Middlesex

True Sun Friday, July 25, 1834 ,
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Courier Friday, July 25, 1834 ,
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Albion And The Star Friday, July 25, 1834 ,
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Washington Globe Friday, July 25, 1834 ,
District Of Columbia

Connersville Watchman Friday, July 25, 1834 ,
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London Standard Friday, July 25, 1834 ,
Middlesex

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Hagers Town Mail
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Hagers Town Mail

   Mail, The (Newspaper) - July 25, 1834, Hagers-Town, Maryland                               afternoon Mail daily at o'clock and at In the Mail rla anil on oa oT Mail at 4 P and Friday eio at OB the Tlw afturiioon 6 in morning The Shep at 7 in the The Capetown 9 o'clock Tuesday the the Store nil at 6 o'clock in the when until for hour from mid the nf at noon MB JULY WHOLE will cot 1 At to pan your an And leave yon to your I first I tou intolerable it received in former with tinea bat away ami it uow tuc reward of to public sentiment and present h it name world at The late of the House of of handed to with live of the Senate of 34 If you intended to tay thc I the thine to perit And thought you whole I know am That of the from an be any Upon the floor and Aud all I hare to lay you Ii have you lain is now open for the I tot be atone of most del by oilier y A Giltt Me of this Dudal sphere Aud of itt wealth kings to her gates at her feet a Cleopatra's flourish reign es strove the mighty deej to whirled Wines times the of the having M TLoy have the world Ronie taught her camaion her too To f well like on her Mighty name Or to tame v L: ibat it thresh Roman however or low VLo at His Land met portion scant when I will not answer latt at ill jupern in a bundle And haelt by one I'll For by tome to Here take thete pape tell friend I like not He iio to uk me what I'll do Not I'll do it f o you uow may go yon ince have That you the in would explain By you word I've yon twice I will not tsk the third And my honor bidt me to demand That in the laud faithful make So your choice ef sir may AN OLD BACHELOR An bachelor is a thing which never He is a creature owned out of the odds and ends which re- after the great work of creation was concluded when all the finer iats were used for the composition of soch at were intended for social But that he should not be himself and the world dame nature gave him self-love in abundance illegitimate and so mixed with acidity that it tour every thing within its Thus formed and thus without the I of enjoying happiness self essentially the of bachelor is to quM Vr He gets up to lie and lies izp no der M wa- king re ll in he upon table every thing that the Baltimore markets will afford and With fresh entire satisfaction to tlie Visiter ryland the distant from the great Chesapeake and Ohio Canal is now pie ted so as to afford to the Eastern an of an easy Boat and Rail Road conveyance from Baltimore and Washington within two miles of the Springs DANIEL Hacks will constantly be kept mt the Springs for th e of the to and from Springs To fillers Farmers General Conum House ef the subscriber at this place transaction of COMMISSION B continues open and begs leave to tender his services to the Millers and others of the upper country the sale or storage of Grain kind as those who mate consignments he no purchase for his own account In storing great care shall be taken to each trand separate so that each may be sold for account of the person by whom liis is on the lower side of the Canal at its entrance into and it has immediate communication with the Canal on one side and with the River on the Orders for return supplies of every kind will be carefully and made to or elsewhere when required without extra Insurance against fire can be effected on produce in store at the rate of about per cent per r JOHN MASON D C June Sm if insult On lawt a the er nation on wide laid her hand oil all war not her pleasure that the mighty roll in blood a haughty Prince to Nor thai the proud oppressor's ruthless hand Should the her She jio in to place But her from the Aud who fought iu and bled bo to ltd The at'Wtll If dii in coarte Ai if be tumbled from a horse And he that in the battle foremost stood Was lineage or by blood Nor was his by his gain Nor by the he had was hot deed That aloft like some high If cold And t ho princely price gold the ones Cr Honors have ne'er it with A something most foul And to down the soul A petty ia the rules And makes the men most It in Rome and death around And in Ambition's is found jit burnt a arm to sought the blood of Prince richly Whilst with his the Plebian The who in mud and dirt Until blew his shirt Until with blood his gourd Was just as good as he who sword v more genteel bloody dp Aud politely run hii brother just We'll and we'll Tit though before I My exit from the world that I should Make My will and little Then 1 can clotcpn earth my One thing dear cannot pass the bourne none conic back till shall adjourn My in the hall I cannot fight you in And will set foroTer Some how I that we sir Howerer sir with great good will I greet you And I'll you Like v We'll meet tip tlie With thing I'll And may be meet you where the gale Or in tiie that's enough to know I think your last reply Is wade though wish It from your of cull You dont intend my friend at all It is not right that make him wait the tour of the state My i by latest Has left yon altogether in my If in in I'm true lie wants to fight about as much M yon And if you both resolve to call halt Why then I know that it it not my fault If you will make the papers out I'll en Aud will dear sir Bo ended font pad two and so tut natter Stands until it is made something better These mighty men of this most Modern age AM moil when hut ton Upon a ten Waterloo They rant and tare like haughty headed lords They speech it five yards long and paff and But when it to fight O my Bear them talk you'd think they'd quickly But you say fight fy his ever in 16 t the comforts of he serve and he does a other ward or abject awe Against and the charms and is A coffee his sanctum The parties being now favorably sed nought remained but to establish the peace This was no easy would make the first out the penetration of little Rose the re- conciliation would not have taken place She took her father's hand between her own little hands and pressed it to her bo- som she then took fie mother's hand and joined it to her father's as it lay near her heart Human pride could resist no alienated parents rose at the same moment and cordially embraced From that hour Rose was the idol of them both Six years after this Rosanna the ugly was the ornament of every ety to which her mother presented Amiable witty and observing her sation was universally courted One summer evening the sun which du ring the day had shed over nature an in tense heat had just disappeared the horizon covered with long wide band of more and more dark heap ing themselves on the eastern at was suffocating and would seem the earth was returning to the sun the hea she had been receiving from the latter ring the day All was heavy and the air rather to suffocate than nourish A drowsy languor overcame a saloon where every window was open might be seen gliding here Mid there ia the darkened of the e- I think it's said the old Ellen led into the room a beautiful boy about two years old Hit curly hair and sy cheeks could not but make one love Who is said the old man his eyes is said browing one of her arms round her while with the other the child on his child up into his face and out T what makes you cry The old man clasped the child to kissed him again and again After lii emotion had a little subsided the child teli his name Thomas Bonner said tha boy I am named after What do I said the old mint Thomas Bonner your lisped the boy and he lives with ma Get me my laid the old and come Ellen be quick child They slatted off at a quick pace which soon brought them to the poor though of his son There he beheld hit eld friend Thomas in one corner weaving baskets while his swathed limbs showed how unable he was to form the necessary task His daughter the wife of Charles was paring their frugal was seeking employment to support his needy family It's all my sobbed the old as he embraced his friend who was fied with amazement said Mr all of you home with me we will all live together there is plenty of room in my house for us all By this time Charles had asked his father's forgiveness which was freely given and Ellen was almost mad with joy how happy we shall she claimed and father will love our little Thomas so and he'll be pet he said 11 tha old man I think From tht York Mirror ONE But look said Mrs Moore to her husband how ugly that little one is Is And Mr Moore who was sitting in a rocking chair amusing himself with king the fire laid down the tongs he held and gravely answered his wife But my dear you have already said so one hundred times and were you to it one hundred tinies more Rose would net become less ugly for your Rosanna was a little girl of about whispering but it lence took place for here cel Mr fair Second It Home twill ruia other O'er which itt reckless tide degrading the recreant part And burnt in a A pomp a mad pool To cluster round a zenith vii The usual Mercantile of 94 per cent on the sales and the customary rates for on those who prefer fixed rate cents per Storage not charged after the first month on Flour then 4 per bbl per month A from a dish A fair and AND A Lovely tf gcM thf watts the arch that proudly Ftdi forty in tlic stars by Keren sweet sister to in born Begot by sconi A of a tribe stain thn its to I Icare tlec for the wretches that can bow Anil laurels from thy brow And there arc tone who make an idol god Kneel the sway and homily rod Of HIM low wallowing cur half the meanest of Mankind abhor Some has the hydra to tkh if lie to their tank nearest km They're at are The they'd monster seeks to now the of Ue talked of at of FOURTH OF R HAtt EM O LEU CM County 3M Esq Mm County Court July Oa deep flood be IT is ordered by the Court that the Re- lister of notice in the printed in that the Court stands tdcattl Tuesday tkc 5th day of Augusi at which having attend and Ad and who have to ap their accents to Law are to to Test As braid of opinion And when tee the walers roll Down front the and M the folc then my yew think ht j lias ITCH its patent Thw of fitk When every thing a duh Of politics or all like fain Iced on Tbb rf Which M bet three and To keep all hk If lined Macs all Ami worthy m A tent Ito tiaw the the And SMX the of fallen Kiff eMM mjm the Who bent hit bmr one hart iti ph we md call dc CacT ihc battle M NOTICE n hereby given to the holders in the third of gJ m each Share of Stock H required to be paid on the list day of May next j a of each Share or the 1st day of Of ate and Mine in not Say were at well Awl M M ywi wstM Wltm 1 to tome Jw Ike to thr or to at fhc Bank On the 4th to liberty and republican principles the of Philadelphia assembled hundreds in number at the festive board The ration of Independence was and an Oration Henry Esq Among the toasts communicated by ter and drank en the occasion we find the By the of the United Slates of General cond only to the Father of our Country in add enduring affections of its citizens By the Vice of the U The Democracy of An- drew in principle and in can neither be ed cajoled nor driven By Governor Wolf May the same virtue firmness and devotion to country that sustained oar fathers in 1776 animate them in 1834 By R B Taney late Secretary of the people of Their firmness and patriotism may always be relied en in the hour of trial By Leri Secretary of the Treasury That Democracy which con- sist of principles not mere names and is distinguished in A D 1834 and in A D 1798 by advocating the same strict con- of the constitution By John Forty th Secretary of State The Democracy of uncompromising and disinterested tried never wanting By Andrew late Speaker of the of cratic stands the watch tower the fearless and faithful of the Liberty We look to her to it from a Sepulchre By Secretary of The Day and the deed of the day By F Butler Attorney GOP of the U S Universal Suffrage and dooMe more than a match for he Ebony of Aristocracy BM Hugh of the If S Senate The principles and spirit of they always he cherished and maintained by the cy of Pennsylvania By C Senator from The Democracy of The citadel impregnable and an- of strength aad teen She was their only child and to do her mother justice was really very nay almost with her little grey eyet flat nose large mouth thick truding lips red hair aud above all a she was a sweet girt nevertheless Kind and intelligent sue of the highest order Nature seemed to have compensated beauty but that of poor was profoundly hurt as she listened to her mother's ob- servation Oh you little fright you will a husband Mrs Moore was sorely bed the little girl approached mother to give her the kiss of good night useless you little said her mother v A tear roiled from the little one's She hastily wiped it away and turning to her father presented him the yet humid cheek He tenderly Jam she murmured room Retired to her chamber she commenced embroidering a scarf and worked thus part of the night for she desired to be able to present it to her mother when she rose in the morning The clock struck twelve She had just finished and putting it by the little girl calmly resigned to rest Her re- pose was undisturbed melody that a He the angel's with the sweet tones of the and felt an indescribable sensation his The music ceased and the vibrated on Underwood's ear and there was a charm in the witty and original trK fle to which he listened that transfixed him stood How beautiful must that thought Underwood Happy the man on whom may fall her aod he sighed lights are brought in The young woman was the ugly Lord Underwood hit the charm of that voice ed his memory He gazed on her a cond time and be found her less and Rose was indeed less ugly The beauties of her mind seemed transferred to her person and her grey eyes small as they were expressed wonderfully well her internal sensations o O Lord Underwood wedded and became the happiest of men in the session of the kindest and most loving man Beauty deserts nt but virtue and talents the of our lives company us even to the grave THE HECON CI Well 1 think it's likely but dont tease me any more Your brother has married a poor girl one whom I forbade him to marry and I won't forgive him if they all starve This speech was addressed to a lovely A n JVw if May 25 SCENE An apparent melioration had taken in the poor sufferings on Monday but at midnight all the alarming symptoms re turned with redoubled A devouring of the chest treat of breathing with a cough At two o'clock a tite was applied oa the chest What are you applying inquired the tient is a breathed moro freely and then death the The to r connected fn the old and new Utf prevail older hut friends to sUli yet to i tail life Since the of I have seen him a our as I and m my la wlm Of ITf M Thai I and t atow Whit I I min Wwe MtM I 017 On the morrow Rose presented the scarf to her mother What was the pain the littie one experienced when her mother re it coldly and expressed none of those tender sentiments which were been the sweet little one's reward Her eyes by chance glanced over a boring mirror the said am they aro and the sought in her young head to find a remedy for ugliness And then in the pangs wounded the little ugly one's heart A first impression alienated all the voung girls of her owa she was to good so amiable to ed then listened and then loved low indeed our little one was happy One day Mr Moore went home in a olent passion and became it of trifling prevarication highly in- censed against hit wife Their domestic felicity waf troubled for eight far eight toag days Mrs Moore wat Rosanaa in vain racked her young brains tu discover her father still angry and her er Mill At last the reflected ia her how to reconcile them were all three tented ia the Moore was arranging the when wat threw the him snatched a from the mantel and it abruptly oat after a he It agam id a twf By B Senator V The of tht city of Spartan band in defence of liberties and of order of the Board of Managers HORATIO T their firmness m tht present to the of hi other of the Union K King Senator fnm The off f Too lo M wy violent cast a fiery glance at ate trembling wife aad rote from bit chair Moved clasped her hit week at he was about to rite and him He awd rt thinking the hod feit heart took in her handt handkerchief wherewith girl scarcely eighteen beautiful as the lily that hides itself beneath the dark wa- ters She was parting the tU very locks oa her father's high handsome forehead of which her own was a miniature and ing the cause of her delinquent brother who had married m opposition to her er's had consequently been Mr was a rich old gentleman a resident of Boston He wat a fat good-natured oM fellow somewhat given to mirth and sat in his arm chair from morning until night smoking his pipe and reading Sometimes a story of his own exploits ia oar revolutionary battles filled ap a ing hoar He had two children the bedient ton aid the girl before spoken of The fond girl went oa pleading Dear father do forgive him yoa oWt know what a girl ht hat ed and think it's said the old maa Mbat doat teaze me and the door a little thh plaguy room yoa just tee her h to gotd aad the little hoy he looks did yoa the have I a Why Ellen 1 never knew that bat it's likely give me my chocolate aad then go to your tic left him The old heart began to ht went oa wot ways a good boy a littk wwd or so at col- lege hat I indulged him awd ht wat good to his oW father far Ui he me hy this poor girl yet at my old aad Tom ated tony we matt forgive with the I there wits The Ust met Lafayette in on tht of the of a banquet from of course ia Previous to the I had the honor of shaking handt with him and of holding a short on literary and scientific subjects at and hit ideas at philosophical as ever but an indefinable tacit of In his manner it was evident to me that the canker of hope on his inmost soul Several of distinction rank and merit were pier eat Amongst them I remember tha names of Sir Sidney Smith Macgregor G G Bemns 1 W Lake Gorke ftc who all felt tho forebodings I After General rose and attempted to retain thanks for the tier ia which the had drank hia health hot he was unable to go heart wat too was A few days ere hit a British of aay visited him as his tkk room They spoke of America time there and the veteran's eyes sparkled with their wonted fire they alluded to Prance and he mournfully shook his but betrayed he I fear hast yet many terrible struggles ere the goal of liberty is tamed words yoa on at fact According to the desire of the deceased he it to be at tho private or privileged of epos by the tomb of Daring the atom of the fated ther of the a wot teat froal the Court to aftar the Bat aow it likt of ami the papert oj lor UM loot Ia the several at LoweR capital of five a half of Nearly are employed m them W whom art females Two of the witH mWs week and 000 yards of cotton of cords of wood n The total of 07 afl the mills M balm aad the a- cloth made ia the year m I giVe all my old The 1 have kaow whatever of tiM of coat a Itwa of him 1 arc of not 1 coaM owl tod him 1 Hll kaow who this gM that my wot 1 have 111 charcoal cords of   

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