Plymouth Banner, Volume 2, Number 52, Plymouth, Marshall County, 2 March 1854 — Page 2

THE BANNER.

J. BURKS, Editor & Proprietor. PLYMOUTH 1XD. TharsJay Morning March 2, 1851. Advertisements to insure insertion, must be handed in by Tuesday preced nj the day of publication. Distant Saburibsn. After this number, the names of several persons to whom the Banner has been sent to distant post offices in this and other States, will be erased from our books, if no arrangements an raa Ja for the payment of their subscription before the issue of our next number. "CCpTfie Corporation election takes place on Monday next. Those wishing' tickets should mike application by Sat-J urday noon, as it will be out of our pow f to do an work of the kind on Monday Fatal Accident. On Thursday last Mr. Th-jmis Gibson was thrown from his wagon a few miles south of this place, by his horses taking fright at the rattling of so mi portion of his loading, and his head Mling immediately in front of the wheels, was run over and so mashed as to cause his instant death. Lillic'S little favor is quite complimentary, and its sentiments handsomely expressed. For ourself and the worthy patrons of our feeble efforts, wc tender the author our best wishes. We have preferred postponing its publication until ntxt week, when it will find a bearer more appropriate to its sentiments the big ßjuner and in the meantime we may b? placed in possersiou of the real name of the author. We might vary from our rule in this instance with safety, were it not that another, aa l another would consider themselves equally entitled to rhe same pritiiege. T!i3 naras of authors sub mitte J to U3 are kept in perfect confidence, whin no unlua responsibility rests upon us in the publication of thir production. Lillie, favor us often not, however, at such an expense for postage, as you saw proper to tax yourself on your first. Giv us thine addrext, and time a long tim. may determine how many Banners wr are already indebted to you. r.jrtiil. Our foreign items increase in interest. The time at whicli we may look fjr the commencement of a general engagement, is not far distant. We shall endeavor to kiep our readers fully postcJ. Mj.lical l'üIlcjC The Spring Session of the E.dectic Medical Institute of Cincinnati commences on Monday next. This institution is in a prosperous condition at present, and 13 rapidly winning for itSelf an enviable reputation. Particulars miy be found in the advertisement in this piper. Fork Ut. Fresh pork Waj st Hing in our streets on Situr lay last at 635,23. Deer .t. Flour is now selling in this market at S3.75i4.03 per cwt ; and we believe as high as SI, 43 per bush, has been paid for whsat. Potatoes from wagons, 3lc. Tli tymMn Sitllsl Mr. Peltit made a speech, in the. U. S. Samte in favor of the Nebraska bill, on the 20lh ult. We guppose Dr. Filch will ac'htfre to his former expressed views on this subject, and as there will no doubt be a majority in the next legislature favorable to the principles of the Nebraska bill, his case is rather a hopjlesj one. The "old brass piece" is hard to head. John Peitit in the U. S. Semis, is uot John Pettit a M. C. from the 8t!i Congressional district. That constituency generally sustained a Free Sjil deaiocnt such a3 is now their Itpresentave and such as Pettit used to be but in thd election of an U. S. Senator, the Democratic voice of the whole State it to ba expressed. ' Drowned. On Friday the. 17th ult., two boy, tons of Dr. Blanchard and Mr. G. W. Pigraaa, ventured too far upon the ice on Deer Creek at - Delphi, when it gave way with them, and both were drowned. Their bodies were recovered one on the same evening and the other on the Sabbath following. Ohio. Tha Democratic members of tbe Ohio Legislature are again trying to agree upon a caucus nominee for TJ7 S- Senator. They have already agreed upon one thingthat bat little other business caa be transacted until that election is disposed of. We wonder that the f.aksi truth never hocked Mrs. Partington's modesty.

Hargittof the Rushville Jaclrsonian. and Rev. T. A. Goodwin of the" Brook ville American, we beliere are the only Editors in this State who fancy Solon Robinson's Hot Corn stories. Well, we suppose it is all riht, as one is a preacher and the other ain'X.

Gov. Wright of this State iecently took his knitting and spent the afternoon, taking tea &c, with Got. Powell of Ky. We don't see anything extraordinär in this, yet the papers are having a great deal of talk about it. Thty certainly don't understand the fashions. J. L. Foster Esq,, of South Bend, has been appointed Prosecuting Attorney for this Common Pleas Circuit, in the place of II. Corhin, resigned. toll fOI. Our Ohio eichanges notice the prevalence of small pox in several parts of that State. A Democratic paper in Detroit, the Times, edited by Hon. J. W. Ingersoll, says that Gen. Cass deel ares that "owing to his peculiar position, he must support the Nebraska bill, but advises the Michigan Representatives to oppose it. Heg ist er, A very "peculiar position" indeed. It must be amidst much "noiss and confusion. Portlier F-jreijn Advices. London, Tuesday. Feb. 7, 1S54. We are precisely in thatstata in which Mahomet's coflin is said to be in suspense between heaven and hell for though we are now in actual rupture with Russia, and Brunow and Kisseleff are eating together cotelettc aux Dardanelles, at the Hotel de Russle at Brussels, we are still informed that there is a chance still left a very small chance, however of peace. Count Orlilfs mission has, 1 am happy to say, proved a dead failure at Vienna and Berlin. Why he still keeps lingering at Vienna, and why the linelish and ' French government do not at one resent the insult put upon them by the fact of the mission itself for the object is no secret is a matter to be explained by themselves. The terms of the Russian proposal, or rather counter proposal, brought by Count OrliflT, were, it is understood, as follows: First, it was demanded that a Turkish plenipotentiary should be sent either to the headquarters of the army of occupation, or to St. Petersburg, to treat directly with R U3sia, without seeing or advising with the Ministers of the Four Powers. Secondly, the former treaties between Russia and the Porte were to be renewed. Thirdly, Turkey was to enter into an! engagement with respect to political refugees, to the effect, it is supposed, that they should not henceforth be harbored in the Ottoman dominions. A.nd lastly tha Czar insisted on a declaration from the Porte, couched in similar terms to the Menchikoff ultimatum, with reference to the protection of the Greek Christians. The project was communicated to the Conference by Count Buol, and was at once rejected as totally inadmissible. All negotiations are, therefore, brought to a close, and there i3 no probability that they will be renewed. To the above I may add that Count Orloff offered to sign a treaty with Austria and Prussia, in the name of Russia, offensive and defensive, against England and France, to send a ileet to protect the Prussian coast, &c. The young Emperor of Austria has formally declined all the Czar's propositions. How far the instinct of self preservation may have induced him to do so. little matters. Both Austria and Prussia have also refused to promise neutrality. In fact, neutrality by them would be nothing less than to act as a barrier or shield against the Wes tern Powers in favor of Russia. The last advices from Constantinople, of the 25th ult,, announce the return of the fleets to their old anchorage at Beycos, in the Eosphorus. This return has caused great astonishment; but it is presumed that they will be out again in a day or two. It is said that they never once got a glimpse of the Russians the whole time they were out. The Fury, an English war steamer, has been sent to Sabastopol on a mission similar to that of the Retribution. After the feat of the Retribution, her mission is an awkard one. There lias been no more fighting on tbe Danube. Preparations for war are going on, on an immense scale, both here ctin France. A body of troops were shortly to be sent to Turkay. " . Q. New Yobk. Feb. 24. Yesterday, the steward of the steam ship Africa was arrested on charge of smuggling large quantities of lace goods. which were seized in the store of an im porting firm in this city. A dispatch from Washington states that Gen. Armstrong, proprietor of the Union, died last evening. Letters from San Francisco report the failure of Otis & Farnham. grain & flour dealers, and Ogden ot Haynes. The ha bilities of each are 820G000. A meeting last night of the German democrats, called to endorse the Nebras ka bill, broke up in a row. The ship Cornelius Grinncll, from Liverpool, btought the officers and crew of tbe ship Columbian, of New York.

which was fallen in with Jan. 2Gth. with deck? swept, masts gone, and men lashed 10 the pumps. The sa was running so high that it was impossible to board her then. Th? Cornelius Grinntll lai.l bv until-the next day, when all the suffer--rs were rescued, and the ship abwidoned. In the Senate yesterday,- Mr. Ciss spoke brirfly in reference to securing to American citizens abroad full enjoyment of the religious privileges they enjoy at home. In the course of bis remarks, he intimated an intention to reply to some animadversions of Archbishop Hughes on the same subject. The Nebraska bill was afterwards taken up, and advocated by Mr. Toombs, of Ga. BosTox.Feb. 24. A large and influential meeting was held at Faneuil Hall last evening, in opposition to Judge Douglass Nebraska bill. Hon Saml. A. Elliott presiled. The speakers were I. Thomas Stevens. Geo. S. Milliard, Hon. R. C. Winthrop. Abbott Ltwrence, and others. A series of resolutions hostile to the bill, were unanimously adopted. A large meeting was held yesterday at Concord, N. II., in opposition to the Nebraska bill. Speeches were made by several influential gentlemen, aud resolutions adopted opposing the bill. Washington, Feb. 22. The Naval committee of the Senate will recommend three sloops of-war in addition to the six frigaie. all to bo provided as auxiliary screw steamer. Tho Senate spoci.il committee on the Pacific Railroad, met this morning, and are prepared to report a bill immediateCincinnati, Esb. 23. Tho Martha Washington conspira'.ors, includig Kissano, Cumrnings, OJo. nnd Chapin, were arrested on a requisition from the Governor of Arkansas, and taken away immediately, heavily ironed. A destructive firo occurred last ught on Fourth street, between Miine and Syracuse. Loss 875,000. Kevcr'fj furniture establishment, Meek in 6c Pickering's fancy goods store, and Pierson. stor were desiroyod.

Washington, Fob. 24. Mouse The Committee on Elections made a report deol.nringJo.se Manuel tJil legos en:itled to tha contested scat of delegale from New Mexico. Adopted. Senate. Several petitions and remonstrances rgainst tho Nebraska bill were pre?nted, including resolutions of the Massachusetts legislature. The Nebraska bill was subsequently taken up. Mr. Hunter is now sneaking in its fiver. There is a rumor eurrotU thai Mr. Bjchannn will return home soon, disgusted bv British official- in the mailer of hi refusal to appear in court costume. New Yortc, Feb. 3. Flo-ir Prices stiffer, but nut qu jtably higher, sales at 8 33a8 75; wher.t quiet: com opened heavy, but improved at close, with sales at 92j91; pork prices easier, but notqtiotabiy lower, with sales nt 13 37al5 37; beel firm a: 14 00; lard firm at 1 01 ; prison whiskey easier at 31o; sugar dull at 5J, molasses; iron firm. CON N E CTICUT DKMOC II AT I C STATE CONVENTION. Hartford, Feb. 23. The Democratic State convention. Assembled hero yestcrd:iy. Hon. Joel W. White, of Norwich, presided, assisted by eight vice Presidentsaud three Secretaries. The following Siato ticket was nominated: For Governor, Samuel Ingham; Lieut. Governor, John T. Waite; Treasurer, Roger Averill; Secretary, Talcott Busby; Comptroller, Julius llotchkiss. After a lenglhy discussion, tho Convention rassed resolutions ogainst the Missouri compromise tho vote being nearly unanimous. W ashington. Feb. 23. Ex Senator Clemens and M. T. Harris had a very serious fiht here yesterday. Harris was badly beaten. Nothing of importance was done in the House. In the Senate, Mr. Fessenden. the new Senator from Maine, was sworn in. BURGLARY AND MURDER. Syracuse, Feb. 23. The house of Alfred Tyler, ot Onon daga West, was entered this morning, and while Mr. Tyler was gone out to obtain help to secure the thieves, his wife was shot dead, and $100 carried off. A dis charged hired man is suspected, and our police have gone out to arrest him. A violent storm was raging all night, and covered the flight of the escaping burglars. Washington, Feb. 20. Senate. -Petitions against the Nebraska bill were presented by Messrs. Seward. Everett, Wade, Chase, and Foote from New York. Ohio, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Illinois and Vermont. Mr. Fish presented resolutions of a meeting held in Duchess county, New York, on the same subject. Wheat at Two Dollar a Bushel. Three times in tho present century has wheat reached the high figure of two dollars a bushel in tho valley of Genesee n 1816, by reason of a remarkably cold summer and a very short corn crop; in 1836 by a somewhat unpropitious soason, and neglect of agriculture lor the purposes of trado and sneculation comnellinir tha'lar?oi importation of breadstuff's from Europe; and in 1834. by reason ol short crops in Western and Central Eurot.o and the war hctween Russia and Tuikev. Rockitter. j nfnVin. "

FX!

The IT&r Question. The details of the foreign advices by the last steamer, which we publish today, must be regarded as setllfug the questiou of war. There can be no doubt '.bat the Ctar his replied to the note of the Four Powers, and that the substance of the reply was that he could uot permit of no interference between himself and Turkey, and that if Turkey wishes to negotiate, she must do so directly with his representatives. Still, it was asserted that "the Emperor who is fully aware of the position in which he is placed. will endeavor to avoid a general conflagration, if he can only preserve his honor and his rights." And it was further reported that he would write an autograph letter to the Queen of England. and show that he had not acted aggressively! The only possible chance of peace is an entire change of tactics on the part of Russia. Bagland and France are apparently acting not ouly vigorously, but earnestly. The sketch of a debate iu the House of Lords, which we give, reveals this much in regard to England, aud the disposition of Louts Napoleon has at no time been doubtful. Both governments are preparing for wau. We have no expectation that an accommodation will take place. The ultimatum of Turkey and the Four Powers is the unconditional evacuation by the Russian troops of th Danubian principalities. There is no likelihood that it will be complied with; and if insisted on. as it must of course be, general hostilities immediately ensue as the inevitable consequence. The recall of the Plenipotentiaries of the several Powers from the Capitols of each, is of itself decisive. The official refusal of the Cur to evacuate the Provinces, requires of England and France at once a declaration of war, which doubtless before this has been promulged Thenceforth the cannon must be the arbiter of events. Russia has now no allies, and the present complexion of things is that she will have none. The question then occurs, whether she can prevail against the immense combination opposed to her: for a solution of which, we must be content to wait. Detroit Fret Press. Tha foil wing point was submitted by the Post Master at this place to tha Post Office Department for decision: A paper sent frem the publication office to a subscriber, his name being written upon it, is re-mailed to another person, the name as written in the publication office remiitiin on tbe paper. Is lha paper subjret to letter postage? The reply is as follows. Democratic Pharos. P. O. Department, Appointment Office, Jan. 25, 1854. Sir In answer to yoars of the 13th insL, I have to say that you do right to charge letter postage on newspapers which contain a name in manascript it b.Mng immaterial whose name; or by whom written excepting of course, the name of the person to whom it is last directed. The 2d section of the Act of August 30, 1852. covers the' case. Respectfully, your ob't servant, St. Jno. B. L SKINNER. For 1st Assistant P. M. G. Post Master, Logansporti Cass Co., lud. Another Kossta Case. Our Vienna correspondent in another column brings to public notice th.case of an unoffending man. travelling under the protection vofa United States passport, who is now incarcerated in an Austrian Prison. Hie name is Simon Taussig, and he his a wife in New Jersey, where he has been settled as a shoemaker, aud where he had taken the necessary steps to become an American citizen. He returned to Aus tria on business the present year, an I was on the point of leaviug the country to return hither, when he was arrested, by the Austrian police, his passport taken from him, and he sent to prison. The American Minister has interfered in his case, but the Austrian authorities refused his liberation. After the Saranac shall have landed Messrs. Spence and McLane. will not our"hero Secretary" of the Navy order her up to Trieste? iY, Y. Tribune. Bsuial Octbage. The Port Gibson Revielle learns that a few days ago. the steamer Huntsville put a man off at Yucatan wood-yard, about six miles above Grand Gulf, and after he was landed, the mate and some of the deck hands fell upon him, and beat him in such a manner that he died in a few hours after. The Revielle tays: "The officers and passahgers of the Huutsvillc were witnesses to this brutality. An inquest was held over tha body and the jury returned a verdict of "Died of violence on the part of tha officers of the ateamet Huntiville. Tbe poor msn had, no doubt, by some petty offence incurred the wrath of the mate, and was hurried into eternity as a penalty. Brutality may be a virtue on the Western waters, but the strong arm of the law should interfere, and drag the perpetrators of the outrage we record, to the bar of justice. Iron Woars. We learn that a com pany with a heavy capital has been form ed, to establish heavy iron works on Rich land Creek. Grafen county, on the line of the- fivaosville and Indianapolis Straight Lint Railroad. ' The ore is said to be in exhaustible, and of tha bast quality, and the coal abundant. Trier, are already 'ton Works on the same deposit, upon b small cate, that are making fine iron and doing well. ' The completion of the road will give great value to these extensive iron and coal mines. located about sixty j miles from cur city Stitt Senti-tl

We heard yesterday of a mjst singular ftiSKS nature. A lady residing near New burg, in this couOi, was delivered of r. bicephalous male child of a most singular formation. It had two heads, three anns and four hand. The child was i.ot alivf when ushered into existence. Th two f ice wer almost precisoly alike in features The Dtjmoirat says, its feet and legs were natural ana perfect. - The b-Kly was divi ded in such a manner ns o leavo no daa . t that it was composeu of two bodies, which had, by some cause become u.td. It is probable that it has two hearts, to stom achs in truth all the internal aLratus of two complete bodies. Ii is muC?k to b regretted, that measures were not at pner

taken to rem )vo every doubt in regar.f !! this muter. There were attached to the body two heads, two perfect arm, and one arm with two perfect hftn'.it. One of?ho( heads was connected with the body by n neck which grew directly behind the righi j should-; ihe other oecupiod iu natural ! position. The third arm wrs attached 10 j the body just Lrlow the two necks. It had j two hands, which wore united immediately above tho wrist by a sort of web, the palms facing inwards, and nil the finger boing perfect. In the entiro nnga of medic.il science, this caso stands without a parellel. It has already excited a deep i curiosity in the midst ol many scientific j gentlemen; and , numerous onuses have bet n assigned for this remarkable freak of nature; but our limited space prevents us! from giving any, of the learned conjectures J which have been ottered. We shall merely add, that the mothnr is past all danger, and she posslively refused to allow tho child to ba dissected. Clcavcland Plain Dealer. "Hot Corn." ß-fore the appearance of this work, we spoke favorably of it. on the strength of some unexceptionable sketches contained in it, which we found in the New York Tribune. We now wish to do away, as much as lies in our power, with the false impressions of the book our commendations may have given our readers. It is a work that should by 1 no means be admitted into respectable I families one calculated to workinronceivable mischief among the young, and a book that every good parent will resolutely deny to his children. Its ohscenitv and vulsaritv ara a renroarh tu mir - CT I " I literature, and deserve the severest con-1 demnation at the hands of the public and ! the press. Buffalo Nala. Election of Postmasters. We notice that a bill has been introduced in Congress, inquiring into the expediency of electing postmasters by popular vote at! the ballot box. An arrangement of this : kind is very desirable, not only with view of relieving the President of the on erous duty of removals and appointments, but for the better accommodation of the p iblic. Every village, tow.iship and city ought to select its own officer subject to the Department at-Washington in all things he now is, except appointment. i me convenience 01 tne people 50 mucn i 1- - - f - depends upon the local postmaster, that j by them ought to be chosen, and hy them ' retained in or reappointed to office, if I they see proper, when his term expires. : Such an alteration would gr.atiy relieve! the Government, emd would give unirer-: sal satisfaction to the people, while itj would ensure greater attention to th du-, ties of the office, vhi:h latter would be 1 no small reform. Mt. Carmd Rezitier. w Discovery or Mineral Riches in Tlr key. A diocoverv has been undo in Turkey in the course of the rnilwav suricy. which will probably increis ihn f!zir's avidity for that country. Messrs. Leahy the engineers of the contemplnted railway have returned to Constantinople, bringing wilh them large quantities of almost every kind of metalliferous ore, namely gold, silver, niarcury, opper, Ica, tniiiuo:iy. arsenic and iton, and rilso oxil, alum, saltpeter and sulphur. It is calculated that the annual produce of the Holds may be 520,000.000. Tho gold has bn found near Adrianople. in tho plains formed bv sands of the river Arda, anl nl-?o mi ihej slopes of Mount Pelion and Vuun: 0;.sn, j in Thess'ily, intermixed with ex;cnivc dcposites of lignite. The sil?er - and lead mines appear to bo of most value, and of mvnensa exten', paruonlarlv those ol Mount Pelion, where in. ire than 230 differ ent galleries have already been opened, showing an amount of richness in mineral deposits almost fabuhms The load mines of Mount Pelion nie only throe or four luilrs from tho harbors cf Ziroa and Volo, and have an abundanco cf water power and fuel. EXTBAORUIK ART DEVOTION or A MoTH eh To two IstsaneChildres. The llagarstown (Md) Herald records the death of Mrs. Nourse, an old lady in the almshouse in that town, and adds: About forty years ago, a son and daughter of that old lady, both insane or idiotic, were brought to the almshouse ol this county. Soon after wards the mother left her home, and those of her children who were able to take rare of themselves, took ua har residence at the almshouse with her ntlLcied and helpless offspring, and watched over them and ministered to their wants as a mother only can do, until the bodily and mental infirmities attending the aged disqualified her for longer discharge ol this noble duty. She was worth about ten thousand dollars in her own right, and she thus immured herself in this unattractive building, but she cheerfully surrendered nil the .comfort and enjoyments ' which such I pecuniary competency afforded severed tha" tics of friendship, and gave up; tha pleasures' ol society, that she might bestow a mothor's love upon those who most needed it. What a proof of tha intensity ' of that love "v7hat a fact for ht recoil hca?a'

The Senate of Pennsylvania by a vote of 17 to 10, has refused to pass resolutions protesting against the Nebraska bill.

The Vernon Btnijersays th.' Ohi.) nni Mississippi RiiUoad wi! be finished from Vernon to Cincinnati by the first of April next, if not soonf r. The Crystal PaW is sjid to have bten 1 failure, financially. The StockhoMi. are out of pocket 3125 030. Zi-er. A Fro v r.h Co n den sed. Moon 1 i Ht night shady grovetwo Iotc.-s cti'rtUl fidelity you:;g lady rich vounn- mn,. pX-r grf at obrilBcIeyoung man prcuJ vn'ljaalioma very am in sura toumko a fri.-iuoe young lady's fuber very angry '.n'f can-2:;t m'hcr intercedos no go rü"b r'val very tig'y vTry hard hearted loMrs nt .t ba J t wcn'i par! dio fir.st mnonüs'H tpiin uiriet windaw oan ropp it'id?r nig'ii ur.sjiitoo lato mir nago old man in a rajr? won't forivo them d:owns them--o!d man gels siik sends for his diughicr all forgiven nil mida up young mm g3li rich old mm dies young cnu;df. eli nil the money liv in tho old mansion quito comfortable have little children much hapines fink. Of the newspapers of Indiini, there arc nine Journals, eight Ilsnners, sr van Democrats, fivo GnzMts, five Times, four Sen:?iiels, and four Couriers. Indiana, sae knows no N'orlb, no Somn, nothing but tho Uuion. La me! i.claimp.d Mrs. Purlin&ton, (ns she li'led ber spectacles.) how ignorant people are ont then I don't wonder our people tend missionaries among them. A friond of ours, w;io ws a few milfs in tho country. C5terdiy, relates the following: A mi!o or two fron, town, h met a bov on horseback, crying with cold. "Why rl.uit you get duvn and lead him,' saiJ cur friand: that's tho way to kee warm." "It's a b b borryod horse, and I'll rije him if I freeze!" 'oil u i v s Dir.o oa the morning of the 18th inst. after a short illness of pneumonia, Kn wabd Mars:i. aged 23 years. Eclectic Medical Institute, CINCINNATI, OHIO. rpHE Spring Session of this Medical College, will corr.nence onthe first Monday of March 1-51, anl cortmre fourteen weeks, with the iollowinj: faculty: rrof. ct Anatomy, Um. S.-fF.p.vyooo; Physiology nrd InstUu'es. J. R. B-v.uws; Ma'.eria Meiüca; etc. Q. W. L. D:cki.i:y; Medical Practice, etc., !!. S. Nswto.i: Obstetrics, etc.,Jo:iv Kins; Surgery, etc.Z FitEEMA ; Chemistiy, etc., J. Y. IIovt. The course will be full an ! complete ir. each depari:r.?:it, aal comprises much practical knowle L'e. not u'iilly imparled ia Me Si-? a! Pehco;-. The dactrnes of the school are literal tnd eo nprchen ire, and much of its instruction i original. T.ie Iu?:iiuie hi teeath-? a il iaoi ruc:is ul ileal SsLool ever '.-.tai.ii.-be;l ia C.:ici.tnati, ani its F.icul y have ryceatly adopted the liberal rneaiure of rihpeasir.,? v. jtlj all fees except t'ieiuurticukt.on 12?, Y.l.ihL? $'-U, and the eraluation 1'te, wLk h is A coure of Clinical ::ij-t! ic:ba w.li alro l e iven : 1 II e Clir;;ei.I as:i;ut ..s "c-c .0: v!,i... ei."i.on!ior.sI) ii 5. frvluate3 of respacliihie schools area-i-n.ittcl by a n;ar:;cular:on 'eeciMJ. S'tiui.ts on arrivfiijT ia the city, will call at the cC;e of Prof. R. S. Xeta, o. seveath sirf et, betweea Viae stid Ka?e. Tha lall stMiiou u-lil aain oa the flrzt Moaday of November, 135. J. R. D1JC1IANAN, JI. D , Dux. Ilarch2, 1S51. 52tf. Partition Sale. CN Pursuance of an orJer of the Common J. Picas court of Marshall county, Indiana, I will o.Ter at private sale, the sou'h patt of the south west quarter of section tuhty-six, to-.va 3i, raiu;e one east, lyia about three miles west of Plymouth in said county on such terms as may seem ; et for tnose interested not execeinj a credit of five years. The purchase money to be secured, and the no:es to drew interest and waive appraisment. Dec! to be ni Je oa final payment. Sold as the estate of the heirs ol Hnrlo Hard deceased, ca crier of partition. -All improved, half in clover, house, orchard, ccc- Beautifully loea'.el and worthy cf notice. C II. HESYE, Commisiicaer. March 3, 1S4. State of lm!i:tit:i, Z?arh.xlI Contiiy 53: In the Mirhall Ciruit court. TTHlilREAS Michael K4er and JosepK t V y fall h iv.i procured an order of siid court for a writ of asse-sme't of da-uaes, by retoi of a dam acrosi Tippecanoe river ia this county, to raise water for a cri and Raw mill. n-I it appears that John l;y, William Da j, Elizabeth Puitt, Asi Coplin, and so.n persoa or persaas unkno vn, are owaers of land likely to te effected by the backM-ater from sail darn, a ad that they are r.oa residents of said county, and have no a?eut or Attorney therein, they are hereby notified that a jury, summoned oa said writ, will meet oa the land iathe pe.it ion mentioned, at Tippecaiue to Va in said county, on Tuesday the 1th day ot April 1851. and proceed to view the preia.ses likely to Le injured, and make their report and assessment of damages, adjourning from day to day if necessary. JOHN L. THOMPSON Sheriff MC March 2, 1S51. 5.'U. Don't Forget it! A LL those indebted to N. R. Packard &. f Co, either by note or book account, are earnestly requested to call at the old stand and settle, as the business ol the firm munt be ch-i.- - N. R. PACKAKD&CoFeb 3, IS51. Sltf "election notice. r I UEHE will be aa elcctu-n held at the X. Court Uoase on the tin Monday in March next, within the legal hours of said day, for the purpose - of electing five Trustees, one Cl- rk. one Treasurer ,oat Street coa;aisio:ier, one Slarsbal, aad one Assessor for tae Iowa ct' Piyo-itL. Dv ordc: ct tic Board. Fae2?, 15ft. -Sit?.