Settler And Pennon (Newspaper) - September 23, 1841, Smethport, Pennsylvania SETTLER AND POTTER COUNTY VOLUME 2. SEPTEMBER 28, 1841. BE It THE SETTLER AND IS PUBLISHED BY W. doHar five Two if not within three Two fifty not paid within the Advertisements will One dollar per Long for the fint three and twenty-five for each subsequent Figure work double A discount wilt be made to those who advertise by the paper or advertisement will be discontinued until all arrearages are unless at the option of tbe must be to receive BAMX TIN AND THE EXCHANGE AGENT FOR Olean and is now open for on the South aide of the Public in the atore for- merly occupied by D. where may be found the most beat latest and cheapest atock of GOODS East of the Rocky Among which are the following Super Cadet Mixed and Blue Pilot Buffalo and bian Sheep's grey fulled Kentucky Cloth trimmings of all check and pram and printed Cotton and nen Velvet and other and Crape Green and scarlet linen and gingham do packet beaver and horse skin Ladies H. thread and cotton plain and printed do inserting aod mourning and long ML De and broache Ribbons and of all Orleans De plain and printed M. De and fancy dress lace fancy Bilk figured and plain silk dress and NE T S a large of the latest CAPS and H A T S horn and palm 7000 and shirtings from to Is. per 6000 from to 2s. 6d. per 5s. to per Sugar 9d. White anil red cream si and black LIQUORS and WI a superior article for Mill and of the very Dest Shelf and other Ware too to A splendid assortment of p ain and printed BOOTS AND 88023 600 pair of and Boots aod not a for the of which we would chang Kinds of country produce by Ohio and all other solvent Bank and specie not wish it fairly understood we intend to sell goods cheaper and that we wish to do a cash and barter but we credit those that we may con- are and pay when they B. We intend to make it strict to sue every man that not up to Irs We take pleasure in sho- wing our all whether e or not Call and IPO CH p. 9UOTE, A CO. ex- AND STOVE E. M. W. respectfully inform I their friends and the public that have entered into copartnership in the at the store for- merly of C- W. Blake Co. site the public Where can be found the of Stoves ever offered in this VIE ing Together with alt the furnishing apparatus suitable for all kinds of Also Copper Copper Sap Sheet Sheet Russia and English Stove constantly on Caldron Sled and Sleigh a ge- neral assortment of the celebrated A general assortment of wholesale and Butania Brass HARDWARE and A general assortment of ware and 07-JOB done with ness and We will sell cheap for or approved Patronage of the public ie respectfully N. Y. 1841. SMETHPORT CLEAN STAGE leave Wednesday at 81 clock and leave Olean at tbe same hour the next dayr Passengers from or to or by the at four cents per Any person who wishes to send errands must make a plain of the articles and indorse on the back of the tbe amount of money And when the articles ate vered they shall be accompanied with a from the Merchant of whom they are the same that be and in tion to tbe weight of the articles trans- 03-rjTone need apply unless they comply with the NATHANIEL April 1841.__________i3] THE Subscriber would respectfully inform the inhabitants of and its that he has left the Old Stand of J. H. Rosa he has been engaged nearly three and com- the manufacture of and on his own door North of Penfield's Union where he will be happy to wait on all his old and all others who favor him with a He hopes by and strict attention to to merit a share of public JOSEPH 03-N. B. All kinds of Job and Stove Work done to order at short in the best and on the most reasonable 03-Old Lead and most kinds of country Produce taken In exchange for J. N. Y. June FOR ONE hundred and eleven acres of first rate and TIMBER KB in Eulalia in Potter about two a half miles North West from there has been a small im- provement made on first-rate house frame ty by thirty The soil is well a- the cultivation of grain and add is well supplied springs of There is also a good water privilege for a or other which been approved by an experienced aod a quantity of and other valuable for For farther enquire of in From the Southern Literary THE DRUNKARD'S ar LEARNED There are new of man like the light of distant yet to visit the eye of man and operate upon human Ever since the image of the Godhead was first sketched in its great Author and angels have been painting upon men have tried their hands upon like the incessant breath of have left each its line upon the still the finishing stroke of the pencil will not be until the lingering survivor of wreck of matter and the crush of in the twinkling of an The hemisphere of the present age is studded all over with snch of bright as never shone before in the heavens of the In these latter the waves of time have washed up from depths that angels never of pure than were ever wont before in the crown of We are now but halt way advanced mi a new cycle of human The race is but just emerging from the of an iron and into the starlight and light of new PS we are scores of new stars have taken rank with tbe heavenly during tbe last two stars brighter than in the same kindled up new lights in the moral Among these new one a little lower than that of had appeared above the It is the i Star of Woman's Influential Woman is a being of ly two up to that and almost her influences have fallen open human character and like feeble rays of a rising winter's sun upon polar fields of ice. But her sun is reaching There is a glorious meridian to which she shall as as rising sun shall reach his in our natural What man she shall shine upon him then and we are ble to but we can found an an- from the influences of her dawning Her morning light gilded the human and silvered over the night shadows of There has been no depth of human misery beyond the reach of hey ameliorating nor any of human which she has not raised still Whoever has touched at either of these or at any of their ing attest that height nor nor principalities nod nor things present or to could divert or vitiate the accents and anodynes of her Whether we trace the of her character in the mitt twilight of her morning or in the living beams of her risen we that she has touched man society like an It would be irreverent to her worth to in what walks of life she has walked most like an It would be irreverent to her worth to in what joys or in what situations or circum- she has most signally ed the heavenly ministrations of her what ordeals best brought out the radiance of her hidden what fruitions of tartly furnaces pf have best ed the fineness of her Still is which has escaped 'the and almost every other where she has cast forth her costliest and shown such qualities of native character as almost merit oar This scene has been ted to the drunkard's How she has filled this most desperate of wiU be revealed when the secrets of human life shall be disclosed more than When the history of hovels and of garrets be given when the of the enslaved inebriate shall be from the first to the lowest degree of his will be a made of woman worthy of being toht and heard in From the first ment she gave up her young and ping and all its into the hands of him sbe to the less hour whea the tened around that loved all the serpent spells of its ail the crushing jf her young years of ment and strange harsh unkindness bit at her with DP down through successive depth of disgrace and I until she bent over l ail these a hato of divinity haa gathered and stirred her to angel deeds When the maddened victim tried to cut himself sympathy and society of bod and man she has clung to him and held him to her hooks qf And when he was cast out defiled with his leprous lie was re- to such a thing beasts of the field would bellow was one who still kept him throned in har heart of who could say over the you are nothing to the are When the awful insanity of the drunkard i upon with all its fiendish shapes of while he lay writhing beneath the scorpion stings of the fiery delirium there was woman by enslaved with all the attributes of her There was her that never dimmed but with tears when the black spirits were at There she and in lone hours of to watch his with her heart up with the of her he not a tie which her young heart had thrown around him in his bright had ever given but had grown stronger as he approached the nadir of his And if he sank iniG that hopeless she enswathed him in her broken and laid it in his some mighty an- gel's arm cr voice brought him up from the grave of the deepest ever dug for he came forth bound fast and forever in the cerements of her deathless Such is her such are the cords which she throws around the way ward and and leads back to virtue and t0 as she gives him am I and he whom thou gavest WIT AND ITS There are many good-natured who have paid the forfeit of their lives to their love of bantering and No they have had much but have purchased it too their wit and their brilliancy may have often been extolled yet it has at last been extinguished for and by a who had neither the one nor the but who found it easier to point a sword than a I have heard of a man in the province of who had been a longtime very successful in hunting the His skill gained him great and insured him much at length he narrowly escaped with his he then the with this hunting is very fine so long as we hunt the but it is rather awkward when the tiger takes it into his head to hunt this skill in small wit like skill in small is very apt to beget a confidence which may prove fatal in the We may either take the for even ards have their fighting or we may mistake the proper tain Savoyard got his livelihood by ex- a monkey and a he ed so much from his tricks with the that be was encouraged to practice some of them upon the he and on be- ing rescued with great difficulty from the gripe of he What a was I not to distinguish the ference between a monkey and a a my ft is a very grave kind of personage as you plainly not understand a joke LADIES AND Females are naturally Defective education renders them still more so. When they escape from the schools they have a slight acquaintance with and As to know nothing of it to their They can paint a ouid make a noise with the but in one hundred should jn de- practice are a few from this but it were bold to deny that the general rule above What is to hinder such with tempers purely from ting themselves to the perusal of love The stupid novelist oat destitute of literary and of the merit of for generations of such to corrupt their hearts and render enough spend whole days ami lessor the sacred duties of wife to feast on these The understanding is thereby and reduced almost to by this self-destroying process. But the sions arc the becomes all sentiment and Lm e reciting painful and tragic cesses or the music of the heart and and one born to be an angel is into a silly attractive only hsla and Think many of the forms of levity and f throng oup and our attach themselves to novel reading as the great business of their Is it not a prospect for the that s so full of sentiment and romance to train the future generations of THE AT says the National something so extraordinary m the circumstance of the late hon id at where thirty man souls have been blown into by the explosion of gunpowder in carpenter's shop on the bank of the as to attract more than nn nary share of the public It is in one of the that bout twenty-five barrels was the tity of gunpowder The ex- istence of such a deposite of powder m that place was a or the people with their the women and would not have crowded around the as they but on the have run from How came a de- posit of twenty-five of der to be made in such a Wo have had for a week or of secret preparations Northern frontier for another patriotic invasion of the British ten and of deposits of munitions and means for these incendiary and ry movements being made at different and some by factual as in the case of the State's non Was quantity of concealed in a 's shop one of those deposites This is a point well worth looking it turn out to be as we it is hoped that every real patriot in that part of the mtm the peace and welfare of his own and abhors ruffianism in any form of will be on the alert to de- tect and defeat the plans of the against their country's IK nor and against the peace of the Papers are sold at In cents a two cents of which is an excise duty paid to sheet before being printed is at the government A dent of the Boston Times says the i o- of the London Times for papers is one million and for ments about the same per an- num. Each advertisement also pays duty to government of about whether it be long or The charge of this London journal for a umn for Is A few years the Carlton composed of some of the worthiest of the purchased the right to cupy its editorial which confined to one of the eight pages of the for which they paid JO 000. THE COINERS AT The Pittsburg American seems that the city authorities iliad ly information that coiners were ing to the That the with life had made repeated through this city and but could find no evidence of their until information was last that machinery of that was at the infirmary or old at It also ed that the house had been bic Dr. though occupied by Upon searching the two presses were one Jbr cutting the and the other for a ety One room appeared to bj principally by Dr. con- a variety of dies for and about the with and other of other part