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(I ' Mite .tl0 COLUMBUS, OHIO, WEDNESDAY MAY 22, 1839. VOLUME 29. NUMBER 50. " " THE WIFE. . " She Hung her white arm round him Thou art all That this poor heart can cling to." I could have atemm'd misfortune's tide, ' ' And borne the rich one's sneer, Have braved the haughty glance of pride, Nor shed a single tear. I could have smiled on every hlow From Life's full quiver thrown, While I might gazo on thee, and know - I should not be " alone." I could I think I could have brooked, E'en for a time, that thou Upon my fading face had'st looked With less of love than now For then I should at least have felt The sweet hope still my own, To win thco back, and, whilst I dwelt On earth, not be " alone." But thus to'sec, from day to day, Thy brightening eye and cheek, And watch thy life-sands waste away, Unnumbered, slowly, meek ( To meet thy smiles of tenderness, And catch the feeble tone Of kindneBS, ever breathed to bless, And feel, I'll be " alone " To mark thy strength each hour decay, And yet thy hopes grow stronger, As, filled with heaven-ward trust, they say,, ' Earth may not claim thee longer " Nay, dearest, 'tis too much this heart Must break, when thou art gono It must not be we may not part I could not livo " alone ! " Moiha. SACRED LITERATURE. BY EDMUND FLIU. The sacred page a page, Where triumphs iminortalityl a pngo Which not the whole creation could nroduce. Which not the conflagration shall destroy. Young. well remarked hv a distinguished scholar of our land, that the two cardinal princi- i i i. .i i . l u il.a ........1. PIUS WHICH ll A II1U CUiirilUlUI HU Utuuo me "uim nf nil litnmtnrn. nro diilu and usefulness duty, in all its various relations to God; usefulness, throueh all tho endless diversity of its connection ., " . r .1. ' .: :. I. wunman. Apart irom mese cuimturjiuiiuun, n i TvnrB tlinn vnlimlf-sn. Thn test. then, of its ex- cellcnce, should ever bo, tho extent to which it has honored find and imnroved the human race. With sentiments such as these, are we to believe that literature has no community of interest, no svmnathv of fcclinff. no identity of ourDose, witli Heligion or its sacred source? The eiror of those who imagine thus, must lio in the low tsti- mntr thnv Wn nlaum! unnn nnlitn literature, and the iudirment thev have formed from the features and spirit it has hitherto assumed, rather than from those of which it is susceptible. God has not, indeed, mado to us an immediate revelation upon the truths of philosophy, the abstrusities of science, or the elegances of art. But litcraturo, rence, and art, m their legitimate design, are surely instruments each ofg them, subordinate tliAiinh ll.n.r tin in the. a.linmn nf Prnvulnni-a In the moral improvement of man; and tho melan- peasant to the ploughman and the philosopher choly fact, that they have long exercised an in- to the learned and the laborer to the infidel and fluence far from their original purpose, is to be the saint. Genius, the gift of God like the discounted for. to a great extent, throueh the no- vino fire of the seers, not less than that solemn elect of scriptural precepts. 1 he liillucnco ot the Uibie unon nolito litcraturo has hitherto been slieht. and vet it is nri-emincntlv a store-house of thought, a treasury of material, and presents that errand desideratum in tho renublic of letters, an ultimate standard of taste. In the beautiful lan- guage of another, " The record of sacred litera- tare is the book of life, spotless and eternal; its penmen are prophets, apostles, and martyrs; its ministering servants aro cherubim anil seraphim, the angel and archangel." If we cast a glance over the history of poetry In Its carllOSt era, mat 01 IIIO ancicm Israelites is the first which arrests the attention. Indeed, wo hazard little in tho assertion, that, as this peculiar people were the eldest of tho nations of antiqui- ty whoso annals have como down to us, in like were never intended as a basis or a model ol lite-manner their expression of Doetical feclinir, and raturo, and that to invito to their perusal as a col- their attempts at poetical arrangement, wcro the earliest. But bo this as it may, Hebrew Pootry is undo- niablv the most ancient which has reached tho ago in which we live; and tho earliest specimen ol versification which all literature can produce, is ble sonir of Lamcch, in the Book of Genesis, When wo consider, too, such poetry as is cun- taincd in the Pentateuch, almost six centuries be- fore the era of Homer; and annals, such as were chronicled by tho Lawgiver, one thousand years before tho pagan Herodotus, it is not difficult to believe, that the Hebrews wero equally the fatli- era of Iliatort and of Song. Tho sacred records closo whero those of classic antiquity begin. 1 he seven books of Moses had been read anil ponder- ed upon more than ten centuries, wucn tho father of Profane History was bom; and tho last of the acred chroniclers, Malaclu the prophot, was his cotemporary. Ages before the author of the Iliad had touched his harp strings upon tho banks of the lllyssus, and bcloro tho remotest period when tho Egyptian Mcmnon had introduced the knowl- edgo of letters into Greece, the prophct-pocls ol Israel had scaled tho hiirhts of Song! This circumstance, wo are lolil, is ot itscll ono of tho most resptondent proofs of tho divine ori- orin nf thn Sorintnron. In everv other nntinn. measured Poetry has ever, by many an ago, pro- ceded the stylo of Prose; but in tho history of Hebrew literature, we witness them at ono and the samo era, composed with skill and beauty equal and unrivaled. What but a draught from that Fount which Mows fast by the oracles of Uod,'- in the sublime language of tho Paradise Lost of their temple. Again, by tho rivers of Baby-could have occasioned this! Ion, (hey sing their country lost their city with in our estiinnto of the character and tho excel- lonco of sacred literature, we mav not. ncrhans resort to a criterion mora impartial, than the utu- versal wclcomo which tho Old Scrititurcs in everv ago, and among ovcry pcoplo, have received. As pricolcss treasure have they been held by the simpio and the wise by tho ignorant and the enlightened by the uncultivated and tho refined by tho Christian, tho Mohammedan, and the Jew. They have gladdened tho peasant in his cottage, and tho monarch upon Ins throne; they have proved a comforter to tho desolate, and a sion of a peculiar people, than tho gill of Provi-balsam to tho broken-hearted; they havo lighted dunce to the race of man. up tho prison-house of tho convict, and havo flung "tho bow of tho covenant over tho couch ol tho dying! Infidels have dwelt with astonishment iipon tho lolly grandeur of their sentiments, and tho sublimity of their stylu; and tho nr.ttor, the philosopher, and tho hard, have quailed deep of their inspiration. Tho venerable Chatham, of KnglandHinrufffii et vtntrabile nomtn loved often to ponder over their sacred pages; ami, with a distino-uished statesman of our own lund, made them his fountain of eloquence, before ho roso 111 tno august arena ol lus country s councils, Barrow, and Locke, and Boyle, and Bacon, and Burko, regarded the old poems of the Bible as the sublimest productions ever traced by the pen of man. Indeed, there can scarce a great mind in the records of literature be named, which owed not a portion of its power to this venerable trea sure-house ol inspiration. " I he Uiuie is tne only work too hard for the teeth of time, and cannot perish but in the general flame, when all things Bhall contess their ashes." 1 nus writes the old English Prose author, Sir Thomas Browne, in his celebrated licligio Medici; and the force of the declaration can but be appreciated. The declaration of Sir William Jones relative to the Scriptures, is too familiar for repetition. Tho immortal Scott regarded them with admiration and wonder, as the celebrated lines in his romance, "The Abbot," " Within this awful volume lies The mystery of mysteries," etc. etc. alone would demonstrate; and tho same verses found upon the fly-leaf of Lord Byron s Biblo, prove that they embodied his sentiments, and were not uncongenial to lus teclings. INot a little of that sublimity which breathes through his productions, was derived directly from this source. A remarkable instance of this, among numerous others which might be pointed out in his poems, is mentioned in Miss Jewsbury's "Letters to the Young. It is found in the opening of that splendid production, the " Odo to Napoleon": " Tis past but yesterday a king, And armed with kings to strive i And now thou art a nameless thing So abject yet alive! Is this the man of thousand thrones, Who strewed the earth with hostile bones? And can he thus survive? Since he, miscalled the Morning Star, Nor man nor fiend hath fallen so far." This may bo traced directly to the prophet Isaiah's Odo on the fall of Sennacherib, tho Napo leon of Babylon: " Ho who smote the people in his wrath with a continual stroke, is persecuted and hindereth. How art thou fallen, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How art thou cut down to tin, irrmmrl. wltir-li ilwlut wpaken nations! Thnv " - 6---..-f j that seo thee narrowly look upon thco, and con- sider thee, saying, ' Is this tho man that made the earth to tremble that did shake kingdoms it,! ll.n ,.,nrl,l an a u.iMnrnnaa?' " .n .................. The ercat Enirlish dramatist exhibits through- out his productions a familiar acquaintance with tho Scriptures, and tho same may be said of almost every standard author, whether poet or philoso- phcr, historian, romancer, statesman, or divine, who has composed in our language. Ptolemy of Egypt beliovcd his library incomplete without a copy of tho Bible; and Alphonso X. at his doath had read it completely fourteen times. To tho refined and elegant tasto of the infidel, theso writings aro beautiful and sublime. His mind approves them, though his heart feel them not. To him they are the graceful frost-work of a wintry morning, brilliant, but how cold 1 while to the glowing soul of devotion they seem passionately ucar, tnotign tne taste to Bppreciara fZt III IHfinV rPRnHCUl lllfi flame! tO tllfi DrinCfl antl IUQ irmn which suitresses lisen aiiKC to me ignorant anil tne tcarneu, beams lorin irom every page, Tho causo of this admiration for tho sacred writings Dy 1110 prouu nnu tne numuic, mo simpio and the wise, is not difficult of detection. Many have admired them for that excellence which, as literary productions, they most justly claim; and more, for the inspired truths they promulgate That thcro is literary excellence of a distinguish- ea oruer in me uiu ompiures, wiu noi oe con- trovcrtcd; and the position is one which has of lata been advanced, that their cxccllcnco is of unit peculiar ciiiiniuu:r, us iireeiiiuiuiuiy to iiuuu- ly them for a text-book ol literature. 1 o this pro- position tho objection at once arises, and with no inconsidcrablo plausibility, that the Scriptures lection ol orations, and poems, and essays, and antiais, urgraucs mat iiiguiiy, wuicn mcir cnarac- tcr as a mission from Deity lor tho moral govern- ance of his creatures, demands. All this would be true, were the grand object ol their origin lor- gotten in tins minor, though important considera lion. Tho fact, too, is lost sight of, that tho natu- ral, il not inovitamo conscqucnco ol a courso or sacred literature, and of that admiration which every cultivated mind must, upon investigation, grant tho Scriptures, would bo an appreciation of the principles they inculcate. Many would thus, in lime, view them as a rule of conduct, wlig would olhcrwiso remain in ignorance of their character, or regard them with contemptuous in diflVrcnco. Allusion has been made, in theso cursory ro marks upon sacred literature, to tho Poetry of the Hebrews; and ll, in conclusion, we lor a moment dwell upon those peculiarities which dis- linguish it from all other poetry, we shall find the most sinking, apart Irom its peculiar parallelism of versification, to be, that deep traco of locality which is everywhere to bo lound. l ho iiallilcan lulls wero not more clearly rcllccted Irom tho quiet bosom ol their own blue, Dcaulilul lake, than was tho aspect nf their country mirrored in tho nnrtrv of the Jews. Thev loved their nntivn land their own glorious Palestine her green lulls ami gcnllo valleys not with a calm, sub- ducd allcction: it was a wild, iingovnrnablo pas- lion tameless untamed. They tell us of their battles and triumphs, witli Jehovah a namo hal- lowed to Jewish lips as their leader; and the strung harps ring out clear as tho silver clarions out inhabitant "that holy and beautiful houso where their fathers worshincd." siiikinir in flames and their strains nso up sad as tho evening song of Autumn, touchinir as tho wail of a broken heart. In tho g-tlling captivity of a strango and distant land, Jerusalem, the " holy city," is still their theme; and their harps unstrung hang upon the willows. In these poems they give us their cnliro history as a people; yet, local as they aro in do- scription, in allusion, and in style, they havo been welcomed by every ago, and seem less the posses- Tho distinguishing characteristics of Jewish Poetry aro loo numerous now to bo noticed; they aro perhaps too palpable to demand it. Its cx- clusively religious character, its peculiar strue- lure, its ancient date, its mysterious sublimity, and tho solemn shudtts orerywhero flung over it by tho lofty themo it professes, aro features promt- nenlly distinctive. It commences with the world's creation: at a later period it assumes a wild and warlike character: in tho era of David it takes the form of sacred lyrics, in tho magnificent reign ol Solomon, it allium its loflicst elevation) and when all is lost, it is heard in the deep tuues ill propneuc ucnuneiauuu, ur tuu wuu ui lament. Literary News-Letter. PECULIARITIES OF STEELE. Steele, like Goldsmith, was fond of dressing in the utmost point of fashion. Old Richard Nott, the first printer of tho Tatlcr, related that Steele paid 50 per annum to his barber, and never rode out, which ho often did, but in a full-bot tomed dress periwig, which, at that time, cost as much as he paid the barber. There are various and curious records of tho shifts to which Steele had recourse to appeaso his creditors, one of whom was an occasional associate witli him at the tavern one Mat Pineher, a tailor in Cheap-side, who was charmed with Steele's wit and humor; and Steele's partiality for Pineher was considerable, for the tailor wrote long verses, and gave long ciedits for " black cloaks." But verses, how long soever, will have an end, and debts must be sometimes paid. Pineher could get no money from Steele, and Steele ceased to get verses from Pineher, who commenced prosaic com position, and, in the stylo dictatorial, wrote to Steele, reminding him of his "bill for black cloaks had at divers times." Steele at tho time was out of pocket, botli right and left; not a shilling in possession, nor a sixpence in expectation! " Mis fortunes come not singly, but in battalions." 1 he tailor waited on Steele, whose servants were unwilling to admit Pineher into tho study; but a tailor is a man, when put to his last shut, and Pineher resolutely insisted on seeing Steele. A sculllo ensued, which attracted the attention of Addison, who was then with Steele, arranging for tho Tatlers of the week; and on inquiring the cause ot the noise without, Steele said : " It is only Pineher in quest of Growler, Mr. Addison; I bclievo it is my tailor coming to tako moasure ot my ability to pay oil an old score; he is clam orous, aim in trutii noi wuuoui cause; out i gave him an order on Tonson this morning for twenty guineas, which, I am airaid, is unpaid, by Ins re turning so suddenly." By this time, Mr. Pineher lorccd his way into the study, and warmly rebuked Steele for sending him on an April mes sage. " lonson, said he, "will not pay you a penny for a fortnight to come, having already advanced for the next six Tatlers." " Indeed, Pineher, replied Steele, " I am sorry for Ton- son, I am sorry for you, and I am exceedingly sorry lor mysell; but 1 onson owes me more than that sum; however, he is a good ft How, when things take well with tho town. " I wroto you threo times, Mr. Steele, respecting this aflair," said 1'inclicr. " 1 know you did, good Pineh er," rejoinder Steele, " and there aro your let ters unopened. I know the contents of the letters of many of my correspondents from tho mere su perscription; it is a branch of the occult sciences known to nie from my youth upwards 1 Dir. Pineher begged lor ten guineas, then for five, then for three, but he might have begged lorever, lor not a stiver had Steele, who, at last. ,,;: ,i, .' .,,i i,.n,i tX&ZKZ sf vcr Sotmd bo 0 . 1 requested Pineher to get five guineas on them until next week. Addison, who calmly lookci on during tho curious scone, paid Pinchcr's bill getting Steele's acknowledgment and promise to pay ready money lor tho next black cloak. Steele was overcome with Addison s kindness and insisted on having " wine andcako" brought in. J'inchcr was requested to 10m them. In few minutes the whole sccno was changed; and Pineher, who had somo pretensions to literary converse, was happy and proud in this little circle. During this hour of joyous hilarity, Steele said, " well Pineher, is there any thing in this world more wonderful than a poetical tailor"' " Only one," rejoined Pineher. " Declare it, rinchcr; good 1'iiichcr, declare it, replied Steele "A poetical tinker," said the other; " and me-thinks John Ilunyan wrote prose, too, equal to any m our day." " Uivo me your hand, 1'itichcr; you are one of the best fellows within the bills of mortality; hut tho muses are a dangerous family, and your illicit connection with these ladies will bring you into trouhlo," replied Steolo. " They may be cruel parents, rejoined the tailor; " but you, Mr. Steele, assist to starve their children." Addison was greatly pleased with his companions; and said to Tickcll afterwards, that Steele knew better than any man in town whero wit and broad humor wcro planted by nature; and that no man should think himself above being taughtmore by the class beneath, than the class above, him in society. This was a just appreciation of Steele's discrimination. Ho mingled equally in high and low society, and knew his part in cither. Dr. Johnson calls hun "tho most agrecahlo rake that ever trod tho round of indul gence;" but, like many more striking expressions of the doctor, it is not his own. Ilis amnnuesis, Robert Cibbcr's Life of it from transcribed Shiels, the Poets, and Libber borrowed it from Shak- speare. Few readers know that some of tho best passages in Johnson's Lives of tho Poets were cither transcribed by Shiels from other works, or were Ai own suggestions to the doctor. INTERCOMMUNICATION. It is impossible for an American to look abroad over his native land, and not feel an honest pride whilst ho compares its present condition, as ro gards facilities of intercommunication, with that which it presented twenty or thirty years since. 1'crsons have not yet passed tho meridian ol lilc who cun remember tho wearisome journeys be tween our Atlantic cities, not to mention the dread with which a trip to tho interior was regarded. 1 0 pass between Philadelphia and llalumoro in winter, and not to bo on the road more than two days, was looked upon as great good fortune, whilst tho intercourse botween I'liilutlclphia and New-York was oven moro dilhcult and laborious Well do we recollect when the first post-coach carrying six insido passengers, was placed upon tho rout between this city and Washington, at a I chargo of fivo dollars, leaving at eight in the morning, and slopping to dine on tho road. At tho timo to which wo refer, it was as much as a traveler's comfort was worllt to journey up- on any but tho few rough turnpikes which whero then in existence, and even did his good fortune make it his lot to pass along tho best of these highways, tho battered condition of lus limbs at- 1 stcd for a fortnight afterwards tho jolting he had undergone. At present, how nro manors altered Tho wayfarer leaves tho scat of the National Gov ernment at six a. m. 1 is wluskod along at a prod gious speed in two hours and a quarter to Haiti-more; thcro ho lakes another lino of vehicles. reaches Philadelphia without fatigue, in lime for a lato dinner; or, should his business or pleasure rwituro 11, nnds himscii snug 111 his hotel at Now York at midnight of the samo day. Nor is he obliged to undergo the slightest privation as regards his meals in the mean while. lie takes breakfast at Baltimore; dines at Wilmington, or on board a Delaware steamer at seasonable hours; finds his cup of hot coffee awaiting his arrival at New-Brunswick; and, should he be fond of a sub- tantial supper, he may take it at his ease be fore retiring to bed in New-York. Similar facilities attend an extension of a journey to the South, or the East, the North, or the West. There are soma who will talk of the romance of tray- ling, and expatiate with delight on tho socia bility of an old-fashioned stage-coach; but we confess that, to us, the delights of upsets and sleepless nights, spent in dragging through mud and mire, have nothing in them very captivating. Sucn, then, are the ellects ot canals and rail roads, steamboats and McAdamizcd turnpikes; such are the products ot internal improvements. It is not long since wo heard a person regrelting the ruin, caused by throwing coachmen out of cm-ploy, and causing taverns by the way-side to fall into decay tor want of patronage. In descanting upon these grievous encroachments, the party to wnom wo reler seemed to lorget that other occu pations were open to the classes of tho people SO pitied; and that horses might be employed - quite as benefichlly in tilling the earth as in pul- ; ling travelers over bad roads, whilst the worthies, whose hours had been devoted to lounging in at tendance on bar-rooms, might earn just as good a livelihood in somo mechanical or agricultural em ployment. Ior aro we among those who think that these facilities aro mischievous, by enabling people to travel on without stopping a day or two for better roads or spending their precious time in the hotels o' the cities through which thev mav Pass. It IS true, that a few dollars mav be lost to this or Uia. city in oneway, but they . . 3 .... ,J win oe more man naue up oy ine multitudes of persons leaving some to travel, merely because traveling has rowadays no annoyances. Wliero eight or tcnlormcrly traveled, eighty or a hundred are now induced to do so; and we question very muck whether ten out of evoiy hundred are not quite as profitable, as the whole that used to be going from point to point. 1 no moral and political effects attending these facilities aro particularly worthy of notice. Sectional feelings aro lessened by every yard of railroad or canal constructed, and old distinctions, such as Southcrnor and Northern man, are fast ! falling into disuse. Tho citizen of Maine ot i New-Hampshire, who is enabled to sec the lovely ' savannas of the South, soon forgets the long-cherished distinction of " Yankee," whilo tin Southerner loses sight of early antipathies by be- - . , 1 1 . .1 1 . it 1 , ing introduced to tho hearty, well-ordered hospi talities of the North, and is led to think that, aftel all, the only distinctive appellation that should be tolerated is the proud name of Jlmencan. I M Western man, who has been taught to scoff a the bargaining propensities of his Northern brethren, when he becomes accustomed to them, is ready to confess that thrift and industry are, in fact, the only true elements to constitute tho good citizen. Let us, then, join heart and hand in pressing forward a system fraught with such universal good effects; and when a railroad or a canal is demanded by public convenience, let nothing be said about its being calculated to carry trade elsewhere, under the assurance that, in proportion as business is extended everywhere, so is every portion of the Union benefited. When wo hear that a railroad will enablt people to go to New-York or to Philadelphia, and thus deprive 11s of a puttiul benefit, let us sear in mind that the action is reciprocal, and that the same intercommunication will bringfrom those cities to us advantages which, wilt out them, must have remained forever bcytnd our reach. Baltimore Jlmencan. STATE OV THE FRANKMX BANK OF CO LU.MHLM. 30th April, 1839. Specie Due from Eastern Hanks, Including Stocks and Agency Due from Western Hanks Ksatnrn Hank P.iparand Drafts rrombeuous Bank fopcr Hills and Notes Discounted Real and rerional Estate Expenses, Salaries, etc 9143,015 43.082 15.4115 17,'Jtll 411,431 660,ttl3 H,H;i5 4,217 ' , -llli,fil',0 MMtil . K7.0.-.4 40.018 139.4(19 Capital Stock paid In .. Fronts, Discounts, die. . Ke.ee In circulation ... line to Hank Due to Depositors 944.402 rWY, Ca.h'r. Certified by J. H TnBArno. TUB subserlhrrs keep on band for sale, e isnersl assortment of every ankle In the Tobacco line. Heine, agents for the Isre;. eat manufacturers In Vlrilnlaand kentucky, wholesale merchants will and It (really to tbelr Inlereet to lire us a eall before pun chasing. We pkdie ourpalves to sell at the lowest prices, and on the most secnmmndalinf terms. Our present slock consists of 300 keee Kit 1 6 twist, various brands; lml do 2 8 do and half pounds: 200 bases " I Kentucky Cavendish; 40 do h 1 t piU Nonsy I lew; 1M) do 1 Virginia Csrendlsh Honey Dew. various hrandr; 10,000 lbs old Kentucky Leaf, superlorior article. Srgirt S.'O.OOO American Eesars, varioue qunlltlesj I0H.IKH) half Snnnlnh dw 1.000 Imiea Melte do; Drown, LlKht llrown, Yellow, Cuha, Havana, Principe, Trabueo, llcjalia, and other kinds or Spanish Began. Amilk 7.c 30 bates Cuba Tobacco. g.kft Rom seemed, Msceoboy. Rappee, Scotch, French and Dutch BnuOs, In barrels, sans, Jara and bladders Fit Cat Cslrfa asa Snsliae TVSeccs T.t hoses lum'd elBssand kinds Chewing and Smoking Tobacco; ou bote loose Dnioiing Tobacco. Toeether wtla Qsrman While and Stone Fines. Tohaceo and Snuff Doles, Bcgar Llglllers, Tonarcn Knlvee, Fancy Pipes, ate. tvl l llf.KH a CARPENTER, No 4R, Main street, between Columbia and Lower Merketsts. Hny 3-. 31 ( In. (I.,.) YKIXOW RI'RIXiN, O. fTMIE public are reKctfully lulorrued that this place will bo J. npen u r ins reception or visiters on tne Dm of June. ApnUrl..47 5irJ WM. MILLS. VAI.IIAIILH FARM FOR SALE. rPHR suhicrllier oifrra for aals iha FA Hal upon which he re- X si'lea containing 107 scree of first rate land, nearly two miles from Columbus, eastwnrdly; himllng on the road and be tween the farms of Messra Fraukniiliergs snd Ueo, White. Near. ly two-llilrils of the farm la cleared and under a high slate of cul tivation; the balance well timbered, and nearly the whole under good fenre. The hulldlnea are a log drwlhng, a aneektus frsino barn, an excellent frame corn and waggon home, a brkk smoke house, a horse power mill for grinding wheat and corn in order, and a home formerly ned aa a distillery, In which there Isa nay. er-fnlllng sttenui of cold water, eulllrlent for stock or ilhttllug purpfrtei; slm, a stone spring house end granary, a fine orchard of graOed fruit. The anil being well adapted for titer rittterent kinds of grsln and grnea, togrllier with lie nearness lo Hie rlty, makes it very eeairable properly. jllim DUTLEIt April 30--47 wtf. 001 NF.WH AND NEW UOOI1K! TUB subscribers have Just received a general aaeorlment of KI.IT AXIt UUUII SUM.Vt.R GOODS, conelatlng of llry uotiua, iiooia.niioes. Hardware, cutlery, Tinware, Oincerlcs, fte. Ac. sll of wltkh will be sold very low for faah, or exchanged for Whest. Corn.Osts, Hncnn-hams, Itultsr, Kgsi, Feslhers, Rags, Ac. Ae. Being convinced of the many evils sltendlng the credit system, we are determined lo sell our goods for nothing else but ceah or produce) and those wishing to purrhaoa goode at low ptkee wo solid to call and examine ours before they buy elsewhere. MELVIN ft FOSTER. West leffrion. April 20,. 47 w. BKHT llmwn Flail Oil, tor sale hy the barrel or gallon, at the DftiSloreof JulIN FRENCH, LAND AGKNCV--IOVVA TERRITORY. MATTHEW MATTHEWS. HAVINO left Columbus for the west sldo of the MlMhsippl river, will eslallnh a Land Agency at BLOOMIJfQTOJt, MUSCJIT1XE OOUJfTr, where he will mend to the purcliaie and sale of LANDS In the above Territory, and also la Bock Island, Mercer and Warren counties, Illinois. !fernett.. Bullies, L, Goodale, I. N. Whiting, L. Blarllnl, Colunib-isi Ohio; Governor Lnr.os,V. P. Van Antwerp, Recorder, Burlington, Iowa; Judge Williams, 0. A. WurficlJ, Blooruloglon, Iowa. Uolumlm,, May 14,ltt39...w3m. REMOVAL. Drt. WOLFf.EV has removed liii residence to No. 93, High-street, one door louth or Judge Hoyl'a Hotel. May 14. ATTENTION BATTALION. THE 1st Battalion of Light Infantry, 3d Brigade, and Seventh Division, are hereby ordered to parade In front of the Military Hall In the city of Columbus, on the 8lh day of June, at 10 o'clock, A. M. MILES FINNEY, Lt. Col. WotUilngton, May 14, 1839. Com't. of said Bat. BALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. MILLS. IN pursuance of an order of the Court of Common Fleas of Clark county, uiifo, made at Hie April term thereof. In the I year 11139, In e eaune pending in said court, wherein the under J signed, Administrator of the estate of Oliver Armstrong, der'd., I Is demandant, ani llie widow and heirs of said Oliver Armstrong S are defendants, on petition for the sale of real estate for the pay ment of dobts, I will sell at public outcry to the highest bidder, on Saturday, the' 26th day of May next, o'clock, A. M., and 4 o'clock, ?. m between the hours or 111 on the premises, 31 miles east of Springfield, the one equal undivided half of the following real estate, to wit : one Orl Mill and one Baw Mill, and 160 acres of land, known as the Beaver Mill Property, and described as follows, vis : a part of the southeast quarter of seetloti number 18, township 6, range of 9, MHS, containing ninety scles of land, beginning at a stoke, S. R. corner of ssld section; thence running south 911) deg., west 120 poles, along the south line of said section; thence north S5J deg., east 120 poles, to a stake on the north bank of Beaver creek; thence south 89 deg. 45 mtn., east HO poles, to a hickory in the east line of said section; thence south 65 deg., west 120 poles, along the east line, to the beginning. Also a part of the same section, being 40 poles In breadth from ensi to west, V40 poles In length from north to soulh.tionna. ed north by land of B. II. Wnrder.east bv Ilia above described ea norm by land of u. !,?i7H','Th,bJ '"''."J'"' "nd"" ,!",,WMt naif of said section 18, eonlahimg 30 acres. Also, a part of see tlon number 17, In the same township and range, beginning at a stake, northeast corner of said section; thence south 30 mln., west 80 poles, along the east line of ssld section; thence north 89 deg. 45. mln., west 80 poles; thsnce north 30 mln., east BO poles; thence south 89 deg 45 mtn., east 89 poles, te the beginning, con-tslnlng 40 acres of land. Terms of sate one-third of tho purchase money to be psid in hand, one-third in six, and tho remainder in twelve months. The deferred peyments to bear interest, and to be secured by a mort. gage on the premises. Possession of the property wal be glren on the 15lll day of August next. CVU US ARMSTRONG, Adm'r. of Oliver Armstrong, dee'd. Springfield, May 14, 1839. .49 2t. Pioneer. LatUritt under the management of D. S. GREGORY & CO. 15 YEARS RESIDENCE IN NEW YORK! AT TUB OLD STAND, 130 It road way, k 12 Wall-atreeU Lmft well to the lHa (if June. Ty"0 a residence of ; rrs in this city, s. j.Syl U vcslsr can assert without fear of contradiction, that lielthet Ithout fear of contradiction, that neither lalKir nor expense has been spared to afford the public the beat and earliest Information of every thins connected Willi his business. Ever grateful for the patronage received, J. 0. Syivestsr refers with honest pride to the aaaay Thtiaanit of his Correspondents throughout the United Steles and Canndas, as to the punctuality in forwarding their orders, slid to the prswjrt vat msai of alt Prises on demand, winch during mis time haa amounted to MII.MUNS. Supfartti y the Munaffr,inA encouraged by a liberal public, 8. J. Sylvester Is determined to merit a eontlnunnce of their favors, br persevering In the same upright course which has been se well rewarded. Attention la requested to the following list of BRILLIANT SCHEMES for the ensuing meals Junt, arid frticlmrll fe lei Miirnifitint Sekmi tkt 151k ,eas in which ordera an respectfully solicited with si little delay as may bo convenient, toensure a supply. ll w again necessary to caution iha puplie to he partkatar bn adlrceslng 8. I. SYLVESTER, 130 Brndwf, If 22 IfaH-.l., Jf. Y. The holder of the Capital will receive 30,0O0 Nott. Virj-'liiin Norfolk Lottery, Clrss 3, for 1839 To be drswn at Alesaudria, Va., June 1 75 Numbers 12 Usllots. BI'LF.NDID SCHEMA. 1311,204s 10.000, 6.000, 4.000, 3300. 3,292, 3,000, 40 of 2,000, 50 of 200, 60 of 150, Ac. Tickets 110, shares In proportion A certificate of a package 25 Wholes will be sent ror SUO sharea In proportion. Vn Monnnarnlin Lottery, Class 3 for lH.i9. To be drawn at Alexandria, Vs., June S, 1839 75 Numlicra 12 nallola. CAPITALS 30,00O, 10.000, 6,000,6,000,4,000,2,500, I.0WI, 1 ,747, tb 01 I .ISIU. 25 01 sun, 2S ot 3U0, ZOU 01 iluUI Tickets only 810 A carllScateof Package of 25 Wholes will be sent for $130 shares In proportion. 75,000 Dollars I AI.KXANDHIA LOTTERY, CUn 4 fit 1839 To he drawn at Alexandria, D. C, June 15th. 84 Numbers 14 Dal loll. flftAND CAPITALS. 7.1,0001 25,00(11 15,0001 10,00111 (1,000! 5,000! 4,1100, 3.S0B, 3,500, 3,260, 2 of 2,750, 2 of 2,500, 20 of 21)00, 20 of 1,000, 20 of 800, 40 or 600, CO of 400, 100 of 300, 100 of 200, etc As. Tickets only 120 A Certificates of Packages of 20 Tickets will be sent for S280 Halves and Uuerrara In proportion. Mtnte of New Jernetr Lottnrv. Clsas 22 for 18.19. To he drawn at Jcrae City. M the 17lh of June 75 noa. 12 nrawn llalloM. CAPITALS $25,000, 6,000, 5,000, 3.000A 2.K4, 2,000, 60 of 1.000. 50 of 300, 50 of 200. 64 of 150. Ac. Ac. Tkkete only 10. A Certificate of Package of 25 Whole Tickets will bo seat for $100 Uliaree in proportion. CAPITAL PRIT.K $30,000 JfKTTI I Virginia Richmond Lottery, Clsas 4 for 1H.W. To lie drawn at Alexandria. Va.. on lhM,l June, 1830. 75 Number Lottery 12 Drawn Ballots. RPLEND1D SCHEME. $35,205, 10,515, 5,1100, 4,IKIII, 3.000, 2,500, 2,250, 1,000, W m I ,UUU, W Ol 3JU, Ml 01 uu, ou or 200, 60 of lliO. die. Tickets only $10 A certificate of a Packaieof 25 Tickets will be sent for $3U rJnaree in proportion. 100 Prizes of 1,000 Dollars. Vlmlnla I'eterabiirirh Lottery. Class 4 for 1U19 To ba drswn at Alexandria, Va, June 29, ujv 70 nn warawn. GRAND CAPITALS. $30,000, 8,000,4,000,3.000,2.500,1,017, 100 of 1,000, 10 of 600, 20 of 300. Tickets $10 A certMleeto of a Package of 25 Tickets will ba sent lor fuu Bnarce in proportion. B. 1. BYLVE8TER, 130 Broadway. and 22 Wnll-atroct. May 14. BATTALION OHDKHM. rpilR 1st Rifle Oattatlon of the 2d Brigade and 7th Dlvlilon, X are hereby notified and required to muater for parade, In front of the State Honse In the city of Columbus, on the 8th day of June next, at 10 o'clock, in the forenoon. On thn same day an election will he held in sent city, on the Parade Ground, for a Llet. Col. or said Battalion, In the place of Col. Alex. McCov. wno naa removed out ot tna county. O. RUNVON, Major, May 10.. 48 3w. Coml. of 1st Rifle Hat HEAD Q.U ARTKI1N, 2d H., 7th Div. O. M. KEVNOLDrtUUHu. Mav 8. lata. TUB Squadron of Cavalry and Companies attached thereto, and the Rifle and Light Infantry Battalion, are hereby or. dared to parade in tho city of of Coiutnbuo, on Seterday, the 8th oay or June next, ror etquadren and Usttelleo muster. 1 be Squadron of Cavalry, and 3d and 4th Companiea attached to aald Squadron, are required 10 ba organised Into a Regiment, to be known aa the First Regiment ofcevslry. The csHumlilon. ed officers of said Squadron and Companiea era hereby notified to meet on said day, at ma Mlllltary Hall in Columbus, and alset one lolonol, one Lieutenant Colonel, and a Major, for said Regi ments. JAUES V. HEYNOLIIS, Brg. Oen'l. 2il Org. ATTF.NTION. CAVALRY I rTSHK Flrat Squadron of Cavalry, (and Iha companies attached .g. iltereto.1 zit lirg. Till lire. o. ST., are nereny ordered to pa. rade In front of the Court House In lite city of Columbus, on 8at unlay, the 8ih day of June next, at 10 o'clock, A. M., armed and equipped ssthe law directs, for Squadron mueter, review, and Ininecnnn. lly order of Coml of llrg., O. M. ROBINSON, Cnliiinlinc, May 7, 18:i!f. Lt. Cel.. Coml of Sqd. I'll! KM HOOK rOI'ND. WAS found nssr Blemlon H Roads, a Pocket Book, contain. Ing notes and papsra ofconatdarahla value lolhe ownerj the notes are drawn In favor of o. Hopklna. The owner can get It by calling at tbia ohVo, and describing the notes. April R..44 If. Jl NT KKl I'.IVMI, OlM) kego Caseyt t) twl Tobecco. 20 tlerere Freeh Rh-e. 100 bus, N. O. Molasses. 60 bags Shot. 4000 lbs. Leed. $00 boxee New Herring. HXI boxee Mould Cemllae. M) hbds. New Orleene Sugar. 300 Hie. Indigo. A fill 13. fiR. KOOKY, BURR a) CO. MAMMOTH JACK, TUB Mamma k JKt, lately imported by Capt. Riley from Spain, will stand In Franklinlon, (one mile weal of Columbus,) for jennetta, at ten dollars the season. Good pasturage furnished at fifty ceuls per month. Good attention will he given to jennetts by Thomas Hedley, bat no liability Incurred for accidents, April 16.. 4StAul9. THE PAR WEST. THE PAR WEST ; or, A Tmr fl.yoai Its MtmUint. Embracing Outlines of Western Life end Scenery; Sketches of the Prairies, Rivers, Ancient Mounds, Early Settlements of the French, &e. etc. &e. 2 vols. l?.mo. Just received and for sale at the Bookstore of April 12. ISAAC N. WHITING. HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE. THE subscriber offers at private sale his house and lot, situated on Gay strut, nearly opposite the Jail, In the city of Columbus. The lot is one of the common slse, 624 07 187. The house Is a frame, well calculated for a small family. Application to be made to the subscriber, residing on the property. April 16..45w6w. TRACY BUTLER. STATE OF OHIO, FRANKLIN COUNTY SI. Cneav or Common Plkas. Maacsi Term, 1B39. ELIZABETH HAMILTON, Grandy H. Blackhara, Jane M. King, Jane M. Blackburn, of Macoupin county, Illinois, Mary A. Blackburn, Margaret Blaekburn, and Eugenia Blackburn, of Oldham county, Kentucky, children and grandchildren of Gideon Blackburn, late of said Maconpln county, deceased, and Orl. zelie Blackburn, wklow of said Gideon, also ft resident of said Maconpln county, are hereby notlnod. that at the said March Term, 1839, Anderson M. Blackburn, son an heir of said Gideon, filed In said Court his petition, whereby he demands parlltraa of the following lands, to wit : survey No. 6638, of 300 acres, In the Virginia Military District, entered In the name or William Aylett, and of which said Gideon died seised. Toe above parties era hereby notified, that at the next le rm of ssld Court application will be made by said Anderson Blackburn, for an order that par tltion may be made of said premises. BRUSH fx GILBERT. Haled, March 29, 1839.. 44 tcM22. Ally's for pet'r. M1LLITAR.Y GOOD8. MYERS, FALL la COLLINS, Oft, MaU'Striet, sacsstsr, Okie, HAVB Jnst received, and ofTer sole, a very large assortment of MILLITJRY GOODS. Their slock consists in part of Leather scab, yellow mounted 6abree " white " do Plated straight Swords, engr. scab. Gilt x do u Fisted and gill Epaeiletles J sad 3 Bullions Plated and gilt Sword Knoto " Chains " Claspe Plated and white Clispsau Tassetlg While lineal Algutloltes Yellow " . eV Plated Stars all sizes Ollt do Silvered and Brass Tuline m m m Eagles Cap Scales Tinsel Lace white and yellow Gilt and plated Regulation Laeej White and yellow Tinsel Card " " Braid Plated and yellow Scrolls Brass Bays While and yellow Ball Builone fine plated Inf. Esgle do gut do " SUIT da Btffllt plated Hooks snd Eyes Crimson Woollen, Worsted, and Crape Saeheg tied Moroco Kelts while and yellow clasps Blsck leather Bells fine gtlt clssps Yellow, whita, and scarlet worsted Wlnge Yellow and ecarlet worsted Epaulettes Yellow worsted Hat Bands Whit cotton Hat Banda " Aiguileuea White cott. and worst. Webb, 1) and 2 In. Scarlet and yellow - 1 and U In. Pompons Bell erewn Cape Scarlet and white Vulture Plumes Drooping Plumes red top Black Ostrich Plumes Bun Cloth, Scarlet Cloth Buff Casslmeie, Ac. Ac Irs- OlAcere and others sending their orders, will he Mttienlar in mentioning the quality and color of Uie ankles wanted. April 28. IB39..47 4W Unrsiter Oaa J RAN A WAV. ON the 1st of May, Attftdir Soil, an Indented apprentice aa house servant, lie Is a bright mulatto, about 12 yean out. eente reward-will be given foe his return, but no thanks rendered or charges paid. JolIM WILSON. Hay 10.. at. FOB SAI.R, 00 aeres of the Cherry Bottom Tract in the town of BleU-don, tea miles from Columbus. Interior to lanst m aha Slate. Inquire af the subscriber on the premieee. Blendon, May 3. .48 6w. t. HOLMES. OMAN'S VEGETABLE! PILLS THE EXTRACT Of BOXKSET OR TrrnsimnHirniiT IN offering this valuable medMne lo the public, the aroprteloc haa thought proper to make known one of ibe component parte ' of ate compound, the J-zlract Beassat sv Tkereag kwert. Tho virtuous quantise oi tnm vegstsme waa well known among the nsaire inuea, anu was ntsrr eaeiusive msdlclne la many diseases. It hac been Introduced throughout the United States with no leae aalisfactloo than with the natives. Ha properties art nusseroue. perhapa more so than any other vegetable known. TlHeas pills heve cured numerous dtaeaeee in many lnstsnces,sfter having been given up by skllfail physicians. The pill mey be taken at all limea and agca In perfect aafely, being a harmless, yet powerful asebttaat of nature. This compound Is called with propriety a universal medicine, from the multitude of cores Dial are performed by the last n ii. i no uauy asics, ana numerous lestlmonlale recelrad, art) prooft positive af their virtuous and heneSelal eHests. 1 might publish multiplicity of certificates, and comment amah, bat It Is unices. My only request Is, that all who have occasion to see any medlelae, may call and give Oman's Boneeet Pills a trial, I being eetlefled lo real on the virtue and reputation of my asedl-clna. The directiona accompanying each box should be road with care, and the pille token accordingly. N. a. Agents ara warned la all the principal towns and vll-tagee la the Weel, whereas shirty per cent, will ha given to all agents. Any person In the mercantile business ean have a agency by calling at Oman's Principle Office, on Third strsat, between Plain and Walaul, Cincinnati, Ohle ef by letter, with good ItfcrMCMe- GEO. A. B. LAZELL, Bookssller, onpoette the Stele House. at Iha only aulhorlxed agont for Columbus, when Iha genuine Boneeet pule mey be had. Thirty pllle In a bos, price 26 eenls, with directions. Mo ano. tltecary, druggist, or pedler, la ever author tied lo cell my Fille. npru to.. tool. oeo. H. OMAN. IUAIV AG F.U'S OFFICE, WIIEtLINO, VA., Aran. 10, 1339. arxorsrs or sciirmks issued from CLARKE'S TEMPLE OP FORTUNE. FOR MAY, 1839. Mnmmnth ctsrmrtvlrglnl State Lottery. Class E, for 1830 To be drawn In Wheeling, May SI, 1B39. CAPITALS $40,000. 10.000, 6.000 3.200. Use, tjavi. 1.900. 1,8110, 1,700, 1,600, 2 of 1,500, 3 of UOO, t of 1,250, IUU VI UIU, C. nV. Tickets 10, halvea 5, quarters 2.50. Cortlrleata of wholes eon 140; do. belvce 70; do. quarters 25. tourees your orosrs to JOHN M. CLARKE, April 19..4B. Wheeling, Vs. MANAGERS' OFFICE. No I4aT, Mnln-sfrnt. WHEELING, VIRGINIA, Aran 12, $. Tin following Loner tee ere all seder the managemeet of D. . Gregory et Co. NOTICE There being ether Schemes of Lolterleo advartised to ba draws, al Wheeling, Vs., without having the asms of the manages or tnanegere mentioned, and eoneetvbia pt Broeahka that the nubile may suppose that eueh Sehemea ara andar our management, wa think It proper to gtva notice that all Lottery Bcneruoo iseuea oy as nave our linn anaenea to inem aa mana gere. - D. $. GREGORY A CO. Va, Wheeling Lottery, Class 1. drawe at Wheeling, May 21, 1839. g PRIZm. esel a $10,0001 1 prlxs of. $.1,000 to saeh of $1,000 1 2.000 20 300 1 1.230 Tkkels $5 helvee 2,50 qmrlers t,25. A package of 15 whole tkkela by eerlhlcate, will Ooot $gg pscksge of ehsree, by certificate, in asms proportion. Va, Ltwabeirst Lottery, Ctase 3, draws at Alexend-la, Mey 26, 1839. 78 Number l.ottery14 Drawn Ballots. 1 prise of. $40.0001 1 prise of. $.f.0OA 1 li.lHKI 1 2,000 1 6.000 20 100 Tkkele 10 helvee 6 quarters 2.60. A Package of 28 whole tlrkete by esriltlctte, will coat 130l packages of sharea in proportion. Maryland Mtnta Lottery, Clsss 13, drsws at Baltlmera, May 29, 1039. 66 Number Ullery 12 Drawn Ballma. 1 prise of. $10000 1 1 prise ef fl.tffl 1 $.000 1 I. Ii" 1 2,000 10 seen of. 1,000 Tkkele $5 halvea 2JO quinere 146. A pecksga of 22 whole tickets by eertlflcete, will cost 5fl eherea In proportion. IT All orders for tkkele In D. S. Gregory t) Coa Lotler lee will beeddreeeed lo D. . GREGORY A Co., Managers, AprU16..4S Wheeling, Vs.
Object Description
Title | Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1839 : Weekly), 1839-05-22 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1839-05-22 |
Searchable Date | 1839-05-22 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028625 |
Reel Number | 00000000022 |
Description
Title | Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1839 : Weekly), 1839-05-22 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1839-05-22 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3447.71KB |
Full Text | (I ' Mite .tl0 COLUMBUS, OHIO, WEDNESDAY MAY 22, 1839. VOLUME 29. NUMBER 50. " " THE WIFE. . " She Hung her white arm round him Thou art all That this poor heart can cling to." I could have atemm'd misfortune's tide, ' ' And borne the rich one's sneer, Have braved the haughty glance of pride, Nor shed a single tear. I could have smiled on every hlow From Life's full quiver thrown, While I might gazo on thee, and know - I should not be " alone." I could I think I could have brooked, E'en for a time, that thou Upon my fading face had'st looked With less of love than now For then I should at least have felt The sweet hope still my own, To win thco back, and, whilst I dwelt On earth, not be " alone." But thus to'sec, from day to day, Thy brightening eye and cheek, And watch thy life-sands waste away, Unnumbered, slowly, meek ( To meet thy smiles of tenderness, And catch the feeble tone Of kindneBS, ever breathed to bless, And feel, I'll be " alone " To mark thy strength each hour decay, And yet thy hopes grow stronger, As, filled with heaven-ward trust, they say,, ' Earth may not claim thee longer " Nay, dearest, 'tis too much this heart Must break, when thou art gono It must not be we may not part I could not livo " alone ! " Moiha. SACRED LITERATURE. BY EDMUND FLIU. The sacred page a page, Where triumphs iminortalityl a pngo Which not the whole creation could nroduce. Which not the conflagration shall destroy. Young. well remarked hv a distinguished scholar of our land, that the two cardinal princi- i i i. .i i . l u il.a ........1. PIUS WHICH ll A II1U CUiirilUlUI HU Utuuo me "uim nf nil litnmtnrn. nro diilu and usefulness duty, in all its various relations to God; usefulness, throueh all tho endless diversity of its connection ., " . r .1. ' .: :. I. wunman. Apart irom mese cuimturjiuiiuun, n i TvnrB tlinn vnlimlf-sn. Thn test. then, of its ex- cellcnce, should ever bo, tho extent to which it has honored find and imnroved the human race. With sentiments such as these, are we to believe that literature has no community of interest, no svmnathv of fcclinff. no identity of ourDose, witli Heligion or its sacred source? The eiror of those who imagine thus, must lio in the low tsti- mntr thnv Wn nlaum! unnn nnlitn literature, and the iudirment thev have formed from the features and spirit it has hitherto assumed, rather than from those of which it is susceptible. God has not, indeed, mado to us an immediate revelation upon the truths of philosophy, the abstrusities of science, or the elegances of art. But litcraturo, rence, and art, m their legitimate design, are surely instruments each ofg them, subordinate tliAiinh ll.n.r tin in the. a.linmn nf Prnvulnni-a In the moral improvement of man; and tho melan- peasant to the ploughman and the philosopher choly fact, that they have long exercised an in- to the learned and the laborer to the infidel and fluence far from their original purpose, is to be the saint. Genius, the gift of God like the discounted for. to a great extent, throueh the no- vino fire of the seers, not less than that solemn elect of scriptural precepts. 1 he liillucnco ot the Uibie unon nolito litcraturo has hitherto been slieht. and vet it is nri-emincntlv a store-house of thought, a treasury of material, and presents that errand desideratum in tho renublic of letters, an ultimate standard of taste. In the beautiful lan- guage of another, " The record of sacred litera- tare is the book of life, spotless and eternal; its penmen are prophets, apostles, and martyrs; its ministering servants aro cherubim anil seraphim, the angel and archangel." If we cast a glance over the history of poetry In Its carllOSt era, mat 01 IIIO ancicm Israelites is the first which arrests the attention. Indeed, wo hazard little in tho assertion, that, as this peculiar people were the eldest of tho nations of antiqui- ty whoso annals have como down to us, in like were never intended as a basis or a model ol lite-manner their expression of Doetical feclinir, and raturo, and that to invito to their perusal as a col- their attempts at poetical arrangement, wcro the earliest. But bo this as it may, Hebrew Pootry is undo- niablv the most ancient which has reached tho ago in which we live; and tho earliest specimen ol versification which all literature can produce, is ble sonir of Lamcch, in the Book of Genesis, When wo consider, too, such poetry as is cun- taincd in the Pentateuch, almost six centuries be- fore the era of Homer; and annals, such as were chronicled by tho Lawgiver, one thousand years before tho pagan Herodotus, it is not difficult to believe, that the Hebrews wero equally the fatli- era of Iliatort and of Song. Tho sacred records closo whero those of classic antiquity begin. 1 he seven books of Moses had been read anil ponder- ed upon more than ten centuries, wucn tho father of Profane History was bom; and tho last of the acred chroniclers, Malaclu the prophot, was his cotemporary. Ages before the author of the Iliad had touched his harp strings upon tho banks of the lllyssus, and bcloro tho remotest period when tho Egyptian Mcmnon had introduced the knowl- edgo of letters into Greece, the prophct-pocls ol Israel had scaled tho hiirhts of Song! This circumstance, wo are lolil, is ot itscll ono of tho most resptondent proofs of tho divine ori- orin nf thn Sorintnron. In everv other nntinn. measured Poetry has ever, by many an ago, pro- ceded the stylo of Prose; but in tho history of Hebrew literature, we witness them at ono and the samo era, composed with skill and beauty equal and unrivaled. What but a draught from that Fount which Mows fast by the oracles of Uod,'- in the sublime language of tho Paradise Lost of their temple. Again, by tho rivers of Baby-could have occasioned this! Ion, (hey sing their country lost their city with in our estiinnto of the character and tho excel- lonco of sacred literature, we mav not. ncrhans resort to a criterion mora impartial, than the utu- versal wclcomo which tho Old Scrititurcs in everv ago, and among ovcry pcoplo, have received. As pricolcss treasure have they been held by the simpio and the wise by tho ignorant and the enlightened by the uncultivated and tho refined by tho Christian, tho Mohammedan, and the Jew. They have gladdened tho peasant in his cottage, and tho monarch upon Ins throne; they have proved a comforter to tho desolate, and a sion of a peculiar people, than tho gill of Provi-balsam to tho broken-hearted; they havo lighted dunce to the race of man. up tho prison-house of tho convict, and havo flung "tho bow of tho covenant over tho couch ol tho dying! Infidels have dwelt with astonishment iipon tho lolly grandeur of their sentiments, and tho sublimity of their stylu; and tho nr.ttor, the philosopher, and tho hard, have quailed deep of their inspiration. Tho venerable Chatham, of KnglandHinrufffii et vtntrabile nomtn loved often to ponder over their sacred pages; ami, with a distino-uished statesman of our own lund, made them his fountain of eloquence, before ho roso 111 tno august arena ol lus country s councils, Barrow, and Locke, and Boyle, and Bacon, and Burko, regarded the old poems of the Bible as the sublimest productions ever traced by the pen of man. Indeed, there can scarce a great mind in the records of literature be named, which owed not a portion of its power to this venerable trea sure-house ol inspiration. " I he Uiuie is tne only work too hard for the teeth of time, and cannot perish but in the general flame, when all things Bhall contess their ashes." 1 nus writes the old English Prose author, Sir Thomas Browne, in his celebrated licligio Medici; and the force of the declaration can but be appreciated. The declaration of Sir William Jones relative to the Scriptures, is too familiar for repetition. Tho immortal Scott regarded them with admiration and wonder, as the celebrated lines in his romance, "The Abbot," " Within this awful volume lies The mystery of mysteries," etc. etc. alone would demonstrate; and tho same verses found upon the fly-leaf of Lord Byron s Biblo, prove that they embodied his sentiments, and were not uncongenial to lus teclings. INot a little of that sublimity which breathes through his productions, was derived directly from this source. A remarkable instance of this, among numerous others which might be pointed out in his poems, is mentioned in Miss Jewsbury's "Letters to the Young. It is found in the opening of that splendid production, the " Odo to Napoleon": " Tis past but yesterday a king, And armed with kings to strive i And now thou art a nameless thing So abject yet alive! Is this the man of thousand thrones, Who strewed the earth with hostile bones? And can he thus survive? Since he, miscalled the Morning Star, Nor man nor fiend hath fallen so far." This may bo traced directly to the prophet Isaiah's Odo on the fall of Sennacherib, tho Napo leon of Babylon: " Ho who smote the people in his wrath with a continual stroke, is persecuted and hindereth. How art thou fallen, O Lucifer, son of the morning! How art thou cut down to tin, irrmmrl. wltir-li ilwlut wpaken nations! Thnv " - 6---..-f j that seo thee narrowly look upon thco, and con- sider thee, saying, ' Is this tho man that made the earth to tremble that did shake kingdoms it,! ll.n ,.,nrl,l an a u.iMnrnnaa?' " .n .................. The ercat Enirlish dramatist exhibits through- out his productions a familiar acquaintance with tho Scriptures, and tho same may be said of almost every standard author, whether poet or philoso- phcr, historian, romancer, statesman, or divine, who has composed in our language. Ptolemy of Egypt beliovcd his library incomplete without a copy of tho Bible; and Alphonso X. at his doath had read it completely fourteen times. To tho refined and elegant tasto of the infidel, theso writings aro beautiful and sublime. His mind approves them, though his heart feel them not. To him they are the graceful frost-work of a wintry morning, brilliant, but how cold 1 while to the glowing soul of devotion they seem passionately ucar, tnotign tne taste to Bppreciara fZt III IHfinV rPRnHCUl lllfi flame! tO tllfi DrinCfl antl IUQ irmn which suitresses lisen aiiKC to me ignorant anil tne tcarneu, beams lorin irom every page, Tho causo of this admiration for tho sacred writings Dy 1110 prouu nnu tne numuic, mo simpio and the wise, is not difficult of detection. Many have admired them for that excellence which, as literary productions, they most justly claim; and more, for the inspired truths they promulgate That thcro is literary excellence of a distinguish- ea oruer in me uiu ompiures, wiu noi oe con- trovcrtcd; and the position is one which has of lata been advanced, that their cxccllcnco is of unit peculiar ciiiiniuu:r, us iireeiiiuiuiuiy to iiuuu- ly them for a text-book ol literature. 1 o this pro- position tho objection at once arises, and with no inconsidcrablo plausibility, that the Scriptures lection ol orations, and poems, and essays, and antiais, urgraucs mat iiiguiiy, wuicn mcir cnarac- tcr as a mission from Deity lor tho moral govern- ance of his creatures, demands. All this would be true, were the grand object ol their origin lor- gotten in tins minor, though important considera lion. Tho fact, too, is lost sight of, that tho natu- ral, il not inovitamo conscqucnco ol a courso or sacred literature, and of that admiration which every cultivated mind must, upon investigation, grant tho Scriptures, would bo an appreciation of the principles they inculcate. Many would thus, in lime, view them as a rule of conduct, wlig would olhcrwiso remain in ignorance of their character, or regard them with contemptuous in diflVrcnco. Allusion has been made, in theso cursory ro marks upon sacred literature, to tho Poetry of the Hebrews; and ll, in conclusion, we lor a moment dwell upon those peculiarities which dis- linguish it from all other poetry, we shall find the most sinking, apart Irom its peculiar parallelism of versification, to be, that deep traco of locality which is everywhere to bo lound. l ho iiallilcan lulls wero not more clearly rcllccted Irom tho quiet bosom ol their own blue, Dcaulilul lake, than was tho aspect nf their country mirrored in tho nnrtrv of the Jews. Thev loved their nntivn land their own glorious Palestine her green lulls ami gcnllo valleys not with a calm, sub- ducd allcction: it was a wild, iingovnrnablo pas- lion tameless untamed. They tell us of their battles and triumphs, witli Jehovah a namo hal- lowed to Jewish lips as their leader; and the strung harps ring out clear as tho silver clarions out inhabitant "that holy and beautiful houso where their fathers worshincd." siiikinir in flames and their strains nso up sad as tho evening song of Autumn, touchinir as tho wail of a broken heart. In tho g-tlling captivity of a strango and distant land, Jerusalem, the " holy city," is still their theme; and their harps unstrung hang upon the willows. In these poems they give us their cnliro history as a people; yet, local as they aro in do- scription, in allusion, and in style, they havo been welcomed by every ago, and seem less the posses- Tho distinguishing characteristics of Jewish Poetry aro loo numerous now to bo noticed; they aro perhaps too palpable to demand it. Its cx- clusively religious character, its peculiar strue- lure, its ancient date, its mysterious sublimity, and tho solemn shudtts orerywhero flung over it by tho lofty themo it professes, aro features promt- nenlly distinctive. It commences with the world's creation: at a later period it assumes a wild and warlike character: in tho era of David it takes the form of sacred lyrics, in tho magnificent reign ol Solomon, it allium its loflicst elevation) and when all is lost, it is heard in the deep tuues ill propneuc ucnuneiauuu, ur tuu wuu ui lament. Literary News-Letter. PECULIARITIES OF STEELE. Steele, like Goldsmith, was fond of dressing in the utmost point of fashion. Old Richard Nott, the first printer of tho Tatlcr, related that Steele paid 50 per annum to his barber, and never rode out, which ho often did, but in a full-bot tomed dress periwig, which, at that time, cost as much as he paid the barber. There are various and curious records of tho shifts to which Steele had recourse to appeaso his creditors, one of whom was an occasional associate witli him at the tavern one Mat Pineher, a tailor in Cheap-side, who was charmed with Steele's wit and humor; and Steele's partiality for Pineher was considerable, for the tailor wrote long verses, and gave long ciedits for " black cloaks." But verses, how long soever, will have an end, and debts must be sometimes paid. Pineher could get no money from Steele, and Steele ceased to get verses from Pineher, who commenced prosaic com position, and, in the stylo dictatorial, wrote to Steele, reminding him of his "bill for black cloaks had at divers times." Steele at tho time was out of pocket, botli right and left; not a shilling in possession, nor a sixpence in expectation! " Mis fortunes come not singly, but in battalions." 1 he tailor waited on Steele, whose servants were unwilling to admit Pineher into tho study; but a tailor is a man, when put to his last shut, and Pineher resolutely insisted on seeing Steele. A sculllo ensued, which attracted the attention of Addison, who was then with Steele, arranging for tho Tatlers of the week; and on inquiring the cause ot the noise without, Steele said : " It is only Pineher in quest of Growler, Mr. Addison; I bclievo it is my tailor coming to tako moasure ot my ability to pay oil an old score; he is clam orous, aim in trutii noi wuuoui cause; out i gave him an order on Tonson this morning for twenty guineas, which, I am airaid, is unpaid, by Ins re turning so suddenly." By this time, Mr. Pineher lorccd his way into the study, and warmly rebuked Steele for sending him on an April mes sage. " lonson, said he, "will not pay you a penny for a fortnight to come, having already advanced for the next six Tatlers." " Indeed, Pineher, replied Steele, " I am sorry for Ton- son, I am sorry for you, and I am exceedingly sorry lor mysell; but 1 onson owes me more than that sum; however, he is a good ft How, when things take well with tho town. " I wroto you threo times, Mr. Steele, respecting this aflair," said 1'inclicr. " 1 know you did, good Pineh er," rejoinder Steele, " and there aro your let ters unopened. I know the contents of the letters of many of my correspondents from tho mere su perscription; it is a branch of the occult sciences known to nie from my youth upwards 1 Dir. Pineher begged lor ten guineas, then for five, then for three, but he might have begged lorever, lor not a stiver had Steele, who, at last. ,,;: ,i, .' .,,i i,.n,i tX&ZKZ sf vcr Sotmd bo 0 . 1 requested Pineher to get five guineas on them until next week. Addison, who calmly lookci on during tho curious scone, paid Pinchcr's bill getting Steele's acknowledgment and promise to pay ready money lor tho next black cloak. Steele was overcome with Addison s kindness and insisted on having " wine andcako" brought in. J'inchcr was requested to 10m them. In few minutes the whole sccno was changed; and Pineher, who had somo pretensions to literary converse, was happy and proud in this little circle. During this hour of joyous hilarity, Steele said, " well Pineher, is there any thing in this world more wonderful than a poetical tailor"' " Only one," rejoined Pineher. " Declare it, rinchcr; good 1'iiichcr, declare it, replied Steele "A poetical tinker," said the other; " and me-thinks John Ilunyan wrote prose, too, equal to any m our day." " Uivo me your hand, 1'itichcr; you are one of the best fellows within the bills of mortality; hut tho muses are a dangerous family, and your illicit connection with these ladies will bring you into trouhlo," replied Steolo. " They may be cruel parents, rejoined the tailor; " but you, Mr. Steele, assist to starve their children." Addison was greatly pleased with his companions; and said to Tickcll afterwards, that Steele knew better than any man in town whero wit and broad humor wcro planted by nature; and that no man should think himself above being taughtmore by the class beneath, than the class above, him in society. This was a just appreciation of Steele's discrimination. Ho mingled equally in high and low society, and knew his part in cither. Dr. Johnson calls hun "tho most agrecahlo rake that ever trod tho round of indul gence;" but, like many more striking expressions of the doctor, it is not his own. Ilis amnnuesis, Robert Cibbcr's Life of it from transcribed Shiels, the Poets, and Libber borrowed it from Shak- speare. Few readers know that some of tho best passages in Johnson's Lives of tho Poets were cither transcribed by Shiels from other works, or were Ai own suggestions to the doctor. INTERCOMMUNICATION. It is impossible for an American to look abroad over his native land, and not feel an honest pride whilst ho compares its present condition, as ro gards facilities of intercommunication, with that which it presented twenty or thirty years since. 1'crsons have not yet passed tho meridian ol lilc who cun remember tho wearisome journeys be tween our Atlantic cities, not to mention the dread with which a trip to tho interior was regarded. 1 0 pass between Philadelphia and llalumoro in winter, and not to bo on the road more than two days, was looked upon as great good fortune, whilst tho intercourse botween I'liilutlclphia and New-York was oven moro dilhcult and laborious Well do we recollect when the first post-coach carrying six insido passengers, was placed upon tho rout between this city and Washington, at a I chargo of fivo dollars, leaving at eight in the morning, and slopping to dine on tho road. At tho timo to which wo refer, it was as much as a traveler's comfort was worllt to journey up- on any but tho few rough turnpikes which whero then in existence, and even did his good fortune make it his lot to pass along tho best of these highways, tho battered condition of lus limbs at- 1 stcd for a fortnight afterwards tho jolting he had undergone. At present, how nro manors altered Tho wayfarer leaves tho scat of the National Gov ernment at six a. m. 1 is wluskod along at a prod gious speed in two hours and a quarter to Haiti-more; thcro ho lakes another lino of vehicles. reaches Philadelphia without fatigue, in lime for a lato dinner; or, should his business or pleasure rwituro 11, nnds himscii snug 111 his hotel at Now York at midnight of the samo day. Nor is he obliged to undergo the slightest privation as regards his meals in the mean while. lie takes breakfast at Baltimore; dines at Wilmington, or on board a Delaware steamer at seasonable hours; finds his cup of hot coffee awaiting his arrival at New-Brunswick; and, should he be fond of a sub- tantial supper, he may take it at his ease be fore retiring to bed in New-York. Similar facilities attend an extension of a journey to the South, or the East, the North, or the West. There are soma who will talk of the romance of tray- ling, and expatiate with delight on tho socia bility of an old-fashioned stage-coach; but we confess that, to us, the delights of upsets and sleepless nights, spent in dragging through mud and mire, have nothing in them very captivating. Sucn, then, are the ellects ot canals and rail roads, steamboats and McAdamizcd turnpikes; such are the products ot internal improvements. It is not long since wo heard a person regrelting the ruin, caused by throwing coachmen out of cm-ploy, and causing taverns by the way-side to fall into decay tor want of patronage. In descanting upon these grievous encroachments, the party to wnom wo reler seemed to lorget that other occu pations were open to the classes of tho people SO pitied; and that horses might be employed - quite as benefichlly in tilling the earth as in pul- ; ling travelers over bad roads, whilst the worthies, whose hours had been devoted to lounging in at tendance on bar-rooms, might earn just as good a livelihood in somo mechanical or agricultural em ployment. Ior aro we among those who think that these facilities aro mischievous, by enabling people to travel on without stopping a day or two for better roads or spending their precious time in the hotels o' the cities through which thev mav Pass. It IS true, that a few dollars mav be lost to this or Uia. city in oneway, but they . . 3 .... ,J win oe more man naue up oy ine multitudes of persons leaving some to travel, merely because traveling has rowadays no annoyances. Wliero eight or tcnlormcrly traveled, eighty or a hundred are now induced to do so; and we question very muck whether ten out of evoiy hundred are not quite as profitable, as the whole that used to be going from point to point. 1 no moral and political effects attending these facilities aro particularly worthy of notice. Sectional feelings aro lessened by every yard of railroad or canal constructed, and old distinctions, such as Southcrnor and Northern man, are fast ! falling into disuse. Tho citizen of Maine ot i New-Hampshire, who is enabled to sec the lovely ' savannas of the South, soon forgets the long-cherished distinction of " Yankee," whilo tin Southerner loses sight of early antipathies by be- - . , 1 1 . .1 1 . it 1 , ing introduced to tho hearty, well-ordered hospi talities of the North, and is led to think that, aftel all, the only distinctive appellation that should be tolerated is the proud name of Jlmencan. I M Western man, who has been taught to scoff a the bargaining propensities of his Northern brethren, when he becomes accustomed to them, is ready to confess that thrift and industry are, in fact, the only true elements to constitute tho good citizen. Let us, then, join heart and hand in pressing forward a system fraught with such universal good effects; and when a railroad or a canal is demanded by public convenience, let nothing be said about its being calculated to carry trade elsewhere, under the assurance that, in proportion as business is extended everywhere, so is every portion of the Union benefited. When wo hear that a railroad will enablt people to go to New-York or to Philadelphia, and thus deprive 11s of a puttiul benefit, let us sear in mind that the action is reciprocal, and that the same intercommunication will bringfrom those cities to us advantages which, wilt out them, must have remained forever bcytnd our reach. Baltimore Jlmencan. STATE OV THE FRANKMX BANK OF CO LU.MHLM. 30th April, 1839. Specie Due from Eastern Hanks, Including Stocks and Agency Due from Western Hanks Ksatnrn Hank P.iparand Drafts rrombeuous Bank fopcr Hills and Notes Discounted Real and rerional Estate Expenses, Salaries, etc 9143,015 43.082 15.4115 17,'Jtll 411,431 660,ttl3 H,H;i5 4,217 ' , -llli,fil',0 MMtil . K7.0.-.4 40.018 139.4(19 Capital Stock paid In .. Fronts, Discounts, die. . Ke.ee In circulation ... line to Hank Due to Depositors 944.402 rWY, Ca.h'r. Certified by J. H TnBArno. TUB subserlhrrs keep on band for sale, e isnersl assortment of every ankle In the Tobacco line. Heine, agents for the Isre;. eat manufacturers In Vlrilnlaand kentucky, wholesale merchants will and It (really to tbelr Inlereet to lire us a eall before pun chasing. We pkdie ourpalves to sell at the lowest prices, and on the most secnmmndalinf terms. Our present slock consists of 300 keee Kit 1 6 twist, various brands; lml do 2 8 do and half pounds: 200 bases " I Kentucky Cavendish; 40 do h 1 t piU Nonsy I lew; 1M) do 1 Virginia Csrendlsh Honey Dew. various hrandr; 10,000 lbs old Kentucky Leaf, superlorior article. Srgirt S.'O.OOO American Eesars, varioue qunlltlesj I0H.IKH) half Snnnlnh dw 1.000 Imiea Melte do; Drown, LlKht llrown, Yellow, Cuha, Havana, Principe, Trabueo, llcjalia, and other kinds or Spanish Began. Amilk 7.c 30 bates Cuba Tobacco. g.kft Rom seemed, Msceoboy. Rappee, Scotch, French and Dutch BnuOs, In barrels, sans, Jara and bladders Fit Cat Cslrfa asa Snsliae TVSeccs T.t hoses lum'd elBssand kinds Chewing and Smoking Tobacco; ou bote loose Dnioiing Tobacco. Toeether wtla Qsrman While and Stone Fines. Tohaceo and Snuff Doles, Bcgar Llglllers, Tonarcn Knlvee, Fancy Pipes, ate. tvl l llf.KH a CARPENTER, No 4R, Main street, between Columbia and Lower Merketsts. Hny 3-. 31 ( In. (I.,.) YKIXOW RI'RIXiN, O. fTMIE public are reKctfully lulorrued that this place will bo J. npen u r ins reception or visiters on tne Dm of June. ApnUrl..47 5irJ WM. MILLS. VAI.IIAIILH FARM FOR SALE. rPHR suhicrllier oifrra for aals iha FA Hal upon which he re- X si'lea containing 107 scree of first rate land, nearly two miles from Columbus, eastwnrdly; himllng on the road and be tween the farms of Messra Fraukniiliergs snd Ueo, White. Near. ly two-llilrils of the farm la cleared and under a high slate of cul tivation; the balance well timbered, and nearly the whole under good fenre. The hulldlnea are a log drwlhng, a aneektus frsino barn, an excellent frame corn and waggon home, a brkk smoke house, a horse power mill for grinding wheat and corn in order, and a home formerly ned aa a distillery, In which there Isa nay. er-fnlllng sttenui of cold water, eulllrlent for stock or ilhttllug purpfrtei; slm, a stone spring house end granary, a fine orchard of graOed fruit. The anil being well adapted for titer rittterent kinds of grsln and grnea, togrllier with lie nearness lo Hie rlty, makes it very eeairable properly. jllim DUTLEIt April 30--47 wtf. 001 NF.WH AND NEW UOOI1K! TUB subscribers have Just received a general aaeorlment of KI.IT AXIt UUUII SUM.Vt.R GOODS, conelatlng of llry uotiua, iiooia.niioes. Hardware, cutlery, Tinware, Oincerlcs, fte. Ac. sll of wltkh will be sold very low for faah, or exchanged for Whest. Corn.Osts, Hncnn-hams, Itultsr, Kgsi, Feslhers, Rags, Ac. Ae. Being convinced of the many evils sltendlng the credit system, we are determined lo sell our goods for nothing else but ceah or produce) and those wishing to purrhaoa goode at low ptkee wo solid to call and examine ours before they buy elsewhere. MELVIN ft FOSTER. West leffrion. April 20,. 47 w. BKHT llmwn Flail Oil, tor sale hy the barrel or gallon, at the DftiSloreof JulIN FRENCH, LAND AGKNCV--IOVVA TERRITORY. MATTHEW MATTHEWS. HAVINO left Columbus for the west sldo of the MlMhsippl river, will eslallnh a Land Agency at BLOOMIJfQTOJt, MUSCJIT1XE OOUJfTr, where he will mend to the purcliaie and sale of LANDS In the above Territory, and also la Bock Island, Mercer and Warren counties, Illinois. !fernett.. Bullies, L, Goodale, I. N. Whiting, L. Blarllnl, Colunib-isi Ohio; Governor Lnr.os,V. P. Van Antwerp, Recorder, Burlington, Iowa; Judge Williams, 0. A. WurficlJ, Blooruloglon, Iowa. Uolumlm,, May 14,ltt39...w3m. REMOVAL. Drt. WOLFf.EV has removed liii residence to No. 93, High-street, one door louth or Judge Hoyl'a Hotel. May 14. ATTENTION BATTALION. THE 1st Battalion of Light Infantry, 3d Brigade, and Seventh Division, are hereby ordered to parade In front of the Military Hall In the city of Columbus, on the 8lh day of June, at 10 o'clock, A. M. MILES FINNEY, Lt. Col. WotUilngton, May 14, 1839. Com't. of said Bat. BALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE. MILLS. IN pursuance of an order of the Court of Common Fleas of Clark county, uiifo, made at Hie April term thereof. In the I year 11139, In e eaune pending in said court, wherein the under J signed, Administrator of the estate of Oliver Armstrong, der'd., I Is demandant, ani llie widow and heirs of said Oliver Armstrong S are defendants, on petition for the sale of real estate for the pay ment of dobts, I will sell at public outcry to the highest bidder, on Saturday, the' 26th day of May next, o'clock, A. M., and 4 o'clock, ?. m between the hours or 111 on the premises, 31 miles east of Springfield, the one equal undivided half of the following real estate, to wit : one Orl Mill and one Baw Mill, and 160 acres of land, known as the Beaver Mill Property, and described as follows, vis : a part of the southeast quarter of seetloti number 18, township 6, range of 9, MHS, containing ninety scles of land, beginning at a stoke, S. R. corner of ssld section; thence running south 911) deg., west 120 poles, along the south line of said section; thence north S5J deg., east 120 poles, to a stake on the north bank of Beaver creek; thence south 89 deg. 45 mtn., east HO poles, to a hickory in the east line of said section; thence south 65 deg., west 120 poles, along the east line, to the beginning. Also a part of the same section, being 40 poles In breadth from ensi to west, V40 poles In length from north to soulh.tionna. ed north by land of B. II. Wnrder.east bv Ilia above described ea norm by land of u. !,?i7H','Th,bJ '"''."J'"' "nd"" ,!",,WMt naif of said section 18, eonlahimg 30 acres. Also, a part of see tlon number 17, In the same township and range, beginning at a stake, northeast corner of said section; thence south 30 mln., west 80 poles, along the east line of ssld section; thence north 89 deg. 45. mln., west 80 poles; thsnce north 30 mln., east BO poles; thence south 89 deg 45 mtn., east 89 poles, te the beginning, con-tslnlng 40 acres of land. Terms of sate one-third of tho purchase money to be psid in hand, one-third in six, and tho remainder in twelve months. The deferred peyments to bear interest, and to be secured by a mort. gage on the premises. Possession of the property wal be glren on the 15lll day of August next. CVU US ARMSTRONG, Adm'r. of Oliver Armstrong, dee'd. Springfield, May 14, 1839. .49 2t. Pioneer. LatUritt under the management of D. S. GREGORY & CO. 15 YEARS RESIDENCE IN NEW YORK! AT TUB OLD STAND, 130 It road way, k 12 Wall-atreeU Lmft well to the lHa (if June. Ty"0 a residence of ; rrs in this city, s. j.Syl U vcslsr can assert without fear of contradiction, that lielthet Ithout fear of contradiction, that neither lalKir nor expense has been spared to afford the public the beat and earliest Information of every thins connected Willi his business. Ever grateful for the patronage received, J. 0. Syivestsr refers with honest pride to the aaaay Thtiaanit of his Correspondents throughout the United Steles and Canndas, as to the punctuality in forwarding their orders, slid to the prswjrt vat msai of alt Prises on demand, winch during mis time haa amounted to MII.MUNS. Supfartti y the Munaffr,inA encouraged by a liberal public, 8. J. Sylvester Is determined to merit a eontlnunnce of their favors, br persevering In the same upright course which has been se well rewarded. Attention la requested to the following list of BRILLIANT SCHEMES for the ensuing meals Junt, arid frticlmrll fe lei Miirnifitint Sekmi tkt 151k ,eas in which ordera an respectfully solicited with si little delay as may bo convenient, toensure a supply. ll w again necessary to caution iha puplie to he partkatar bn adlrceslng 8. I. SYLVESTER, 130 Brndwf, If 22 IfaH-.l., Jf. Y. The holder of the Capital will receive 30,0O0 Nott. Virj-'liiin Norfolk Lottery, Clrss 3, for 1839 To be drswn at Alesaudria, Va., June 1 75 Numbers 12 Usllots. BI'LF.NDID SCHEMA. 1311,204s 10.000, 6.000, 4.000, 3300. 3,292, 3,000, 40 of 2,000, 50 of 200, 60 of 150, Ac. Tickets 110, shares In proportion A certificate of a package 25 Wholes will be sent ror SUO sharea In proportion. Vn Monnnarnlin Lottery, Class 3 for lH.i9. To be drawn at Alexandria, Vs., June S, 1839 75 Numlicra 12 nallola. CAPITALS 30,00O, 10.000, 6,000,6,000,4,000,2,500, I.0WI, 1 ,747, tb 01 I .ISIU. 25 01 sun, 2S ot 3U0, ZOU 01 iluUI Tickets only 810 A carllScateof Package of 25 Wholes will be sent for $130 shares In proportion. 75,000 Dollars I AI.KXANDHIA LOTTERY, CUn 4 fit 1839 To he drawn at Alexandria, D. C, June 15th. 84 Numbers 14 Dal loll. flftAND CAPITALS. 7.1,0001 25,00(11 15,0001 10,00111 (1,000! 5,000! 4,1100, 3.S0B, 3,500, 3,260, 2 of 2,750, 2 of 2,500, 20 of 21)00, 20 of 1,000, 20 of 800, 40 or 600, CO of 400, 100 of 300, 100 of 200, etc As. Tickets only 120 A Certificates of Packages of 20 Tickets will be sent for S280 Halves and Uuerrara In proportion. Mtnte of New Jernetr Lottnrv. Clsas 22 for 18.19. To he drawn at Jcrae City. M the 17lh of June 75 noa. 12 nrawn llalloM. CAPITALS $25,000, 6,000, 5,000, 3.000A 2.K4, 2,000, 60 of 1.000. 50 of 300, 50 of 200. 64 of 150. Ac. Ac. Tkkete only 10. A Certificate of Package of 25 Whole Tickets will bo seat for $100 Uliaree in proportion. CAPITAL PRIT.K $30,000 JfKTTI I Virginia Richmond Lottery, Clsas 4 for 1H.W. To lie drawn at Alexandria. Va.. on lhM,l June, 1830. 75 Number Lottery 12 Drawn Ballots. RPLEND1D SCHEME. $35,205, 10,515, 5,1100, 4,IKIII, 3.000, 2,500, 2,250, 1,000, W m I ,UUU, W Ol 3JU, Ml 01 uu, ou or 200, 60 of lliO. die. Tickets only $10 A certificate of a Packaieof 25 Tickets will be sent for $3U rJnaree in proportion. 100 Prizes of 1,000 Dollars. Vlmlnla I'eterabiirirh Lottery. Class 4 for 1U19 To ba drswn at Alexandria, Va, June 29, ujv 70 nn warawn. GRAND CAPITALS. $30,000, 8,000,4,000,3.000,2.500,1,017, 100 of 1,000, 10 of 600, 20 of 300. Tickets $10 A certMleeto of a Package of 25 Tickets will ba sent lor fuu Bnarce in proportion. B. 1. BYLVE8TER, 130 Broadway. and 22 Wnll-atroct. May 14. BATTALION OHDKHM. rpilR 1st Rifle Oattatlon of the 2d Brigade and 7th Dlvlilon, X are hereby notified and required to muater for parade, In front of the State Honse In the city of Columbus, on the 8th day of June next, at 10 o'clock, in the forenoon. On thn same day an election will he held in sent city, on the Parade Ground, for a Llet. Col. or said Battalion, In the place of Col. Alex. McCov. wno naa removed out ot tna county. O. RUNVON, Major, May 10.. 48 3w. Coml. of 1st Rifle Hat HEAD Q.U ARTKI1N, 2d H., 7th Div. O. M. KEVNOLDrtUUHu. Mav 8. lata. TUB Squadron of Cavalry and Companies attached thereto, and the Rifle and Light Infantry Battalion, are hereby or. dared to parade in tho city of of Coiutnbuo, on Seterday, the 8th oay or June next, ror etquadren and Usttelleo muster. 1 be Squadron of Cavalry, and 3d and 4th Companiea attached to aald Squadron, are required 10 ba organised Into a Regiment, to be known aa the First Regiment ofcevslry. The csHumlilon. ed officers of said Squadron and Companiea era hereby notified to meet on said day, at ma Mlllltary Hall in Columbus, and alset one lolonol, one Lieutenant Colonel, and a Major, for said Regi ments. JAUES V. HEYNOLIIS, Brg. Oen'l. 2il Org. ATTF.NTION. CAVALRY I rTSHK Flrat Squadron of Cavalry, (and Iha companies attached .g. iltereto.1 zit lirg. Till lire. o. ST., are nereny ordered to pa. rade In front of the Court House In lite city of Columbus, on 8at unlay, the 8ih day of June next, at 10 o'clock, A. M., armed and equipped ssthe law directs, for Squadron mueter, review, and Ininecnnn. lly order of Coml of llrg., O. M. ROBINSON, Cnliiinlinc, May 7, 18:i!f. Lt. Cel.. Coml of Sqd. I'll! KM HOOK rOI'ND. WAS found nssr Blemlon H Roads, a Pocket Book, contain. Ing notes and papsra ofconatdarahla value lolhe ownerj the notes are drawn In favor of o. Hopklna. The owner can get It by calling at tbia ohVo, and describing the notes. April R..44 If. Jl NT KKl I'.IVMI, OlM) kego Caseyt t) twl Tobecco. 20 tlerere Freeh Rh-e. 100 bus, N. O. Molasses. 60 bags Shot. 4000 lbs. Leed. $00 boxee New Herring. HXI boxee Mould Cemllae. M) hbds. New Orleene Sugar. 300 Hie. Indigo. A fill 13. fiR. KOOKY, BURR a) CO. MAMMOTH JACK, TUB Mamma k JKt, lately imported by Capt. Riley from Spain, will stand In Franklinlon, (one mile weal of Columbus,) for jennetta, at ten dollars the season. Good pasturage furnished at fifty ceuls per month. Good attention will he given to jennetts by Thomas Hedley, bat no liability Incurred for accidents, April 16.. 4StAul9. THE PAR WEST. THE PAR WEST ; or, A Tmr fl.yoai Its MtmUint. Embracing Outlines of Western Life end Scenery; Sketches of the Prairies, Rivers, Ancient Mounds, Early Settlements of the French, &e. etc. &e. 2 vols. l?.mo. Just received and for sale at the Bookstore of April 12. ISAAC N. WHITING. HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE. THE subscriber offers at private sale his house and lot, situated on Gay strut, nearly opposite the Jail, In the city of Columbus. The lot is one of the common slse, 624 07 187. The house Is a frame, well calculated for a small family. Application to be made to the subscriber, residing on the property. April 16..45w6w. TRACY BUTLER. STATE OF OHIO, FRANKLIN COUNTY SI. Cneav or Common Plkas. Maacsi Term, 1B39. ELIZABETH HAMILTON, Grandy H. Blackhara, Jane M. King, Jane M. Blackburn, of Macoupin county, Illinois, Mary A. Blackburn, Margaret Blaekburn, and Eugenia Blackburn, of Oldham county, Kentucky, children and grandchildren of Gideon Blackburn, late of said Maconpln county, deceased, and Orl. zelie Blackburn, wklow of said Gideon, also ft resident of said Maconpln county, are hereby notlnod. that at the said March Term, 1839, Anderson M. Blackburn, son an heir of said Gideon, filed In said Court his petition, whereby he demands parlltraa of the following lands, to wit : survey No. 6638, of 300 acres, In the Virginia Military District, entered In the name or William Aylett, and of which said Gideon died seised. Toe above parties era hereby notified, that at the next le rm of ssld Court application will be made by said Anderson Blackburn, for an order that par tltion may be made of said premises. BRUSH fx GILBERT. Haled, March 29, 1839.. 44 tcM22. Ally's for pet'r. M1LLITAR.Y GOOD8. MYERS, FALL la COLLINS, Oft, MaU'Striet, sacsstsr, Okie, HAVB Jnst received, and ofTer sole, a very large assortment of MILLITJRY GOODS. Their slock consists in part of Leather scab, yellow mounted 6abree " white " do Plated straight Swords, engr. scab. Gilt x do u Fisted and gill Epaeiletles J sad 3 Bullions Plated and gilt Sword Knoto " Chains " Claspe Plated and white Clispsau Tassetlg While lineal Algutloltes Yellow " . eV Plated Stars all sizes Ollt do Silvered and Brass Tuline m m m Eagles Cap Scales Tinsel Lace white and yellow Gilt and plated Regulation Laeej White and yellow Tinsel Card " " Braid Plated and yellow Scrolls Brass Bays While and yellow Ball Builone fine plated Inf. Esgle do gut do " SUIT da Btffllt plated Hooks snd Eyes Crimson Woollen, Worsted, and Crape Saeheg tied Moroco Kelts while and yellow clasps Blsck leather Bells fine gtlt clssps Yellow, whita, and scarlet worsted Wlnge Yellow and ecarlet worsted Epaulettes Yellow worsted Hat Bands Whit cotton Hat Banda " Aiguileuea White cott. and worst. Webb, 1) and 2 In. Scarlet and yellow - 1 and U In. Pompons Bell erewn Cape Scarlet and white Vulture Plumes Drooping Plumes red top Black Ostrich Plumes Bun Cloth, Scarlet Cloth Buff Casslmeie, Ac. Ac Irs- OlAcere and others sending their orders, will he Mttienlar in mentioning the quality and color of Uie ankles wanted. April 28. IB39..47 4W Unrsiter Oaa J RAN A WAV. ON the 1st of May, Attftdir Soil, an Indented apprentice aa house servant, lie Is a bright mulatto, about 12 yean out. eente reward-will be given foe his return, but no thanks rendered or charges paid. JolIM WILSON. Hay 10.. at. FOB SAI.R, 00 aeres of the Cherry Bottom Tract in the town of BleU-don, tea miles from Columbus. Interior to lanst m aha Slate. Inquire af the subscriber on the premieee. Blendon, May 3. .48 6w. t. HOLMES. OMAN'S VEGETABLE! PILLS THE EXTRACT Of BOXKSET OR TrrnsimnHirniiT IN offering this valuable medMne lo the public, the aroprteloc haa thought proper to make known one of ibe component parte ' of ate compound, the J-zlract Beassat sv Tkereag kwert. Tho virtuous quantise oi tnm vegstsme waa well known among the nsaire inuea, anu was ntsrr eaeiusive msdlclne la many diseases. It hac been Introduced throughout the United States with no leae aalisfactloo than with the natives. Ha properties art nusseroue. perhapa more so than any other vegetable known. TlHeas pills heve cured numerous dtaeaeee in many lnstsnces,sfter having been given up by skllfail physicians. The pill mey be taken at all limea and agca In perfect aafely, being a harmless, yet powerful asebttaat of nature. This compound Is called with propriety a universal medicine, from the multitude of cores Dial are performed by the last n ii. i no uauy asics, ana numerous lestlmonlale recelrad, art) prooft positive af their virtuous and heneSelal eHests. 1 might publish multiplicity of certificates, and comment amah, bat It Is unices. My only request Is, that all who have occasion to see any medlelae, may call and give Oman's Boneeet Pills a trial, I being eetlefled lo real on the virtue and reputation of my asedl-clna. The directiona accompanying each box should be road with care, and the pille token accordingly. N. a. Agents ara warned la all the principal towns and vll-tagee la the Weel, whereas shirty per cent, will ha given to all agents. Any person In the mercantile business ean have a agency by calling at Oman's Principle Office, on Third strsat, between Plain and Walaul, Cincinnati, Ohle ef by letter, with good ItfcrMCMe- GEO. A. B. LAZELL, Bookssller, onpoette the Stele House. at Iha only aulhorlxed agont for Columbus, when Iha genuine Boneeet pule mey be had. Thirty pllle In a bos, price 26 eenls, with directions. Mo ano. tltecary, druggist, or pedler, la ever author tied lo cell my Fille. npru to.. tool. oeo. H. OMAN. IUAIV AG F.U'S OFFICE, WIIEtLINO, VA., Aran. 10, 1339. arxorsrs or sciirmks issued from CLARKE'S TEMPLE OP FORTUNE. FOR MAY, 1839. Mnmmnth ctsrmrtvlrglnl State Lottery. Class E, for 1830 To be drawn In Wheeling, May SI, 1B39. CAPITALS $40,000. 10.000, 6.000 3.200. Use, tjavi. 1.900. 1,8110, 1,700, 1,600, 2 of 1,500, 3 of UOO, t of 1,250, IUU VI UIU, C. nV. Tickets 10, halvea 5, quarters 2.50. Cortlrleata of wholes eon 140; do. belvce 70; do. quarters 25. tourees your orosrs to JOHN M. CLARKE, April 19..4B. Wheeling, Vs. MANAGERS' OFFICE. No I4aT, Mnln-sfrnt. WHEELING, VIRGINIA, Aran 12, $. Tin following Loner tee ere all seder the managemeet of D. . Gregory et Co. NOTICE There being ether Schemes of Lolterleo advartised to ba draws, al Wheeling, Vs., without having the asms of the manages or tnanegere mentioned, and eoneetvbia pt Broeahka that the nubile may suppose that eueh Sehemea ara andar our management, wa think It proper to gtva notice that all Lottery Bcneruoo iseuea oy as nave our linn anaenea to inem aa mana gere. - D. $. GREGORY A CO. Va, Wheeling Lottery, Class 1. drawe at Wheeling, May 21, 1839. g PRIZm. esel a $10,0001 1 prlxs of. $.1,000 to saeh of $1,000 1 2.000 20 300 1 1.230 Tkkels $5 helvee 2,50 qmrlers t,25. A package of 15 whole tkkela by eerlhlcate, will Ooot $gg pscksge of ehsree, by certificate, in asms proportion. Va, Ltwabeirst Lottery, Ctase 3, draws at Alexend-la, Mey 26, 1839. 78 Number l.ottery14 Drawn Ballots. 1 prise of. $40.0001 1 prise of. $.f.0OA 1 li.lHKI 1 2,000 1 6.000 20 100 Tkkele 10 helvee 6 quarters 2.60. A Package of 28 whole tlrkete by esriltlctte, will coat 130l packages of sharea in proportion. Maryland Mtnta Lottery, Clsss 13, drsws at Baltlmera, May 29, 1039. 66 Number Ullery 12 Drawn Ballma. 1 prise of. $10000 1 1 prise ef fl.tffl 1 $.000 1 I. Ii" 1 2,000 10 seen of. 1,000 Tkkele $5 halvea 2JO quinere 146. A pecksga of 22 whole tickets by eertlflcete, will cost 5fl eherea In proportion. IT All orders for tkkele In D. S. Gregory t) Coa Lotler lee will beeddreeeed lo D. . GREGORY A Co., Managers, AprU16..4S Wheeling, Vs. |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028625 |
Reel Number | 00000000022 |
File Name | 0436 |