Indiana American, Volume 11, Number 26, Brookville, Franklin County, 23 June 1843 — Page 2
A Catrat b!wei the ilimato ol , England and Indiaua, Wira rsfefeck to tk rccruiR adtaivt irroaota or each cr tiikm to tbs Farmer. The I.IanJ of Ore at Britain tear he from SO to 89 X. Lit., and Diovkiilie is south cf 40. The atmosphere beflomes regularly more
We may add there are several production of the southern State that arc so imperfectly worked in the hands of nature here that ihey are neither very palatable nor wholesome. These are sweet potatoes, melons and cucumber. They are prolific causes of disease here, nnd raw turnips ought not to be eaten freely by men in any country. They contain very li.tie iK.uiikl.ment even for cattle. Our farmers wou'd have "easier times" in
dsns a it lengthens its distance lnrn the
Equator; hence it is considerably more ran in spite of vetoes, if they would only depend les
Indiana than ia Enzland. .A the latter Is en
tirely si-girl its winters and summers vary les iu tamperature than if it were pitt of a orttinent. Besides ns their winds must ever oms from the sea, th atmosphere 1 loaded with moisture. These are faevs that should invariably be
on "word pasture." and be more strenuous to prccutc manure, futile ought to be confined in the lot or shed every night in the year, and except i:i hard frost they should lie there all day in winter. The w titer of this pot 1P0 loais rf good manure just now spread on 12 acres of corn ground. This will yield more
before the farmer when he proposes to adopt durable and plentiful nutriment than two or improvements from that country, These pro-' three ci ops of clover plow ed in. And it saves pertlcs of the atmosphere exert an iiupor-; the loss f time for the ground. Our d tant influence on both vegetable and animal ! neighbor advised us to put off the hauling of
. it to another season, bccr.rse the planting is so late this year the corn will sutler loss by de- ' lay. Hut do they r.ot know the manure in this cue xou'd ferment in the lot during summer;!'. gases would ily off like those from the distillers tubs. Hut should the VlnntinB be de-
lamea a lew caysiorger ts me ue.ay noi jus- Blandard or iike those Ayrshire agricultuliLalnetrom.the fact that the whole mass i . tel to-Woik, and impiove their own now spread and covered in, when as it decern- ) frve(.$ ' CRAIG.
poses i:ie soil win gradually lecorr.e more; v aim. !o se and rich. Were, li e ngrioultur-j
VtlllU A.D LOCO rWt-U 1'Ul.lCl LU.-
ai.sts tn I.ngland as hecdiess of economy in respect to manure as InJianians usually -re, I there would he a "datk look out for their taxes i and tithes. You will not likelr see the cattle i
TRASTED. The arrivals of spieie since the fnst of last l i - . y - . : r .
of an Irishman sr.tTcred to tread in his soft 'V , opt iauou , our ,,.-...
stubble fields i:i winter: the season when r.a-
life. The rarity an J dryness of our climate tn connexion with th? ditference i:i temperature must lend considerable additional cianieity to th? various Uw to which organic I eInjs are subjected. Few person seem to be aware of the near affinity between th laws that regulate the various principles of life throughout live animal and vegetable(kingdoins. The laws of absorption and exhalation appear to be ani'"ng the most important in both. And
it i to the respective activity wiili which; these laws move that we ought to ascribe that j diversity of constitution that distinguishes froth animals and plants in lire two countries, j We shall i:i the first p'ace direct our atten-j
tion to the physiology of plants. A plant is fixed, and can retain and promote
life only si bn;; as nutriment is convoyed to ture is striving by kindly frosts to separate all : it. Its 'subsistence is thu? far passive. M- re j the panicles of soil that a free passage may! earth is not soli. This teq itsite so much ia j thrs be opened to admit lite dissolving qualities ! dentin J am in farmers is i:i a great measure ; of air. that there may be a free tlow of dissolveomp.Tsel of soluble substances, the products j e l elements during the ensuing spring and ; of animal and vegetable decomposition inter- i summer to nourish the crop. j mingle! with earth; an 1 these are in their com- j Observation warrants us to say the tliversi-!
position r.lapted ?o the nourishment of vegeta-jty of constitution in animals is no leys striking blei. When dissolved by rain, dew, or ovy-j and important, than it is in vegetables. Pensigen from the air. if the cnrm l be so loose as i ly. humidity and cold, is each a quality ofseto permit its entrance, the liquid finds its way j dativ cdess in the animal system, and is more through the small s:v.in io'.es at the extrcmi- favorable to absorption than to exhalation.
ties of the fibres. There are no absorbing or- J By absorption we understand that pr inciple by i sans in the roots except these. Immerse a' which nutriment is received l y the proper; e . - . ' . , 1 r ... .1 1 11 i - :
parsnip in water and keep the root Cry and it j vesseis; nnu innn un m comevcu an pans will die. Irani? rse the point only and it will of tl.e body. These are derived from sriitaItveanJsrtw. Toe pores through which the j hie materials that enter by the stomach and dissolved nttritir? salts pass are so minute that ltmg. Exhalation is the vital process by n tree vt ill perish for want of sustenance be-1 which coram moleculas that ought never to side a dmg'ii"; bepan-e the water is so gin-j have been received by the absorbents are elimtinous it cannot enter their orifiees. Were it j ina'ed. These are frequently very abundant otherwise plants w ould be in continual danger after the body has undergone w aste from hard
1.1..... n. . I . . U . . . . I . . .- 1. nrvt. Ha nna i n
! may l ecome! There are others that have entered for useful purposes of w hich a proper ! disposition is thus made after they have served i their purpose. Their farther detention in J the system w ould be injurious. In pnlmonaj ry consumption, and during hard labor the ex-
vo.n surface till it becomes elaborated. Onaihalants overact their part, and speedny re;:r s emulation it has now parted with two- j duee strength. The most impoitant outlets
tor impurities are tlie skin, w hicli emits a con-
sta!it-flow of vapor, nnd when the e.nantity of
eliminated moisture exceeds a certain point.
the exhaled heat can no longer maintain it m solution or steam, that lorm of it that makes one feel so comfortable Mtider the blankets in a cold morning, then it settles in the form of liquid on the surface of the skin. This i sweat. The next outlet is the lungs, by breathing. Those that have large lungs receive more advantages by this depurator than those whose breasts are compressed; and theieforc breathe only wiih feeble motion. The third course i of emission is by the kidneys. The vital main-
itTercnee in the wood, spring is burdened, and its elasticity leduced
ions kinds of trees is! in England. Man becomes more corpulent
day absent from school, and it had not visited that neighborhood for 25 year previous to this. But at the formar v isitation it was more evere for the country via then urw and uncleared. And when our slock are properly treated with regular supplies of wholesome food; and suitable khelter; they are perhaps three times told, less liable to disease than in Ayrshire, in Scotland. And this healthy and fertile shire is the home of the famous breed cattle lstely iccommended by traveller. I fancy these deputed agents that travel by authority of our agricultural societies, go ahead in many cases with feelings similar to those agents thLt went out the victims of credulity, and made such a ludicrous disposition of our State bonds. We state these things from some id-nervations nnd rxpei i-nce. If any be disposed to question v hat has here been affirmed of the liability of these far famed cattle to dise se. vie advise him to 'enquire how many
horse and cow doctors," as they are there called, are supported by the incomes of their pro
fession in that Shire.
: I he condition i stock will lnvanaliiv cor
respond to the climate an J mode of treatment. ; Indiana fanners can choose whether to import
from that country and let them come down to
Mi. Carmel, Jure 1SJ3.
of death from dense sab! voces choking their
pasaes. The inclosed fluid ascends in the tree along the openings in the alburnum or sopwood, by contraction and dilatation like the Mood iu our veins. When it enters the leaves it conies into contact with lieht. heat and air. i remains spreal throughout that thin po-
of i!s former volume by evaporation: living absorbed the proper gaes to suit
t r.v nl
tV niHire of the tree it descends chiefly along r innermost layer of bark, conveying nour-
iV it rf . - '
Jan. 1. steamer from I.ivorpool, " " from Vera Cruz, " 27; :l from Liverpool, Ftb.21 " from " ' " from Vera Cruz March 12. pertireat Western April 10, from St. Thomas, " ships from Liverpool, " from Vera Cruz, " I'd, from London, 20, steamer from Liverpool, " 27, ships from Liverpool and Havre, May 2, steamer fri.m Liverpool, " ships "
1 1. Great Western, " 19. Caledonia i! from Liverpool and Havre, Smaller turns at various times,
Sl.0W.00t3
75.0W Coo.Po.l 1.07G.S10 ' G0.0W L000.0W 50.000 150.000 00,000 i at. ooo 1,200:0W 350.000 2.300.000 150.0W 1,000, 000 1.500.01.0 500.000 1.000.000
MATTERS IN ENGLAND
The condition of ten millions of the popula- lfCICw Sl'.TIJIEI ft(Min tion of Great Britain is a disgrace to a nation Just from VUihulrhil ' ' f calline itself civilized, and these tenmillions, if; .ii-kt , . iuriP"l(l'
7. k ,. . -' tu ailU
iiruiMi siuiemeuis De iiue, uie viucji iui meal and potatoes. Brougham, in one of his speeches, affirmed that there are instances known where seven or len persons had remained whole days without a morsel of food, lying on their beds of straw tw o days in succession, tinder the impression that a recumbent posture lightened the pangs of hunger. A coroner af-
t:rms tnat m one district ne lias recently au- A ful as50rtn)Pnt of Fur aml - . ministered in sixty-three cases where death Bfjr n0(U w and SJ VmlrJ
telligent observer, lately puhiislieJ a lour through the Manufacturing Districts." At Colne, he visited eighty-three dwellings at haz-. ard. The furniture was boxes and stones for tables and chairs straw and shavings for beds The meals vvere oatmeal and water for breaklas!; oatmeal with a little kirn smilk for dinner;) oatmeal and water for supper. But one an-j swer to en inquiry was an affecting one. At' Bolton, he entered the dwelling of a young i couple six years married. On a clean table of; coarse wood was the only meal that they had lasted for the last twenty-fours the only one they had in prospect for twenty-four hours to come. It was meal porridge, an oaten cake.
nr -l.i 7. r.. i
s,lend assortment of n,;C uutl. Jeans. I trW,e,-,,. Snimer a'f f tlatnet,, CM., PHnU of l.ombazims. Frances, .Uvsline-de-Lairc' Aliens, .SiA, Hating, C.inshamg. Jaconelt' Camlrut, Hhairls. Ilaudkavhifff'c Sc dc ALSO ' '
'. A-c. tf-C. if-C.
BANES vt BURTON May 10, IS 13. no. 20-1 v.
CIXCIAWATI PUICKSi:
ANES BURTON have now receive their full and general assortment f
Dry-Gootlt, Groceries, Ilardirart, Queensirare, $c. $c. $t. And having adopted the Cash System do offer them to the public at unexampled low prices. The extreme cheapness of Goods ai the Eastern Cities, w here they have selected their stock, will enable them fn r.ll ni rv-;,.,
11 1 :l : 1.. 1 ' . . " '"'uu
ica uuuiea unm h was i.fuuv numirw, nun a prices ihey would request of one and all to little coarse sugar in a broken bowl. Their fur- ca a,i examine for themelve niture had been sold piece meal, and their j Produce of all kinds taken in erchan-t for clothes mostly paw ned for food. 'I he husband ( (,00l, " '
might have emigrated, out lie wouia noi leave ; m;u- Jl.jjsjj. his w ife to die. The inquiry was, whether he1
no 20-1 y.
$12,517,801 flow into this
did not repent his early marriage? He paused- GKO. DICKINSON",
looked loudly at his w ne. who returned nis liUOK BINDER. No. 10 West Third Street gare with a melancholy smile of enduring af-; W9 EH SONS wishing to have their libiaricsor feclion he dashed the tear aside, and with files of Tapers or Periodicals or old valuacalm firmness replied: 'Never! We hai e been ' Mc Books rebound, will do well to call on the happy, and have suffered together she has subscriber w ho pledges himself to give atisbeen the same to me all through.' Such is a, faction for neatness, despatch bjiJ durable specimenof nature's noblemen thatarecrushed work. by the hoary oligarchy that rules Great Bril-j tCj'Prices to suit the Times. Jgg ain. Thousands of them, to sustain life, says! Book Bindery on No. 10, West Third Street. Brougham, work for less than a penny a day.jone door from the Lafayette Bank, betweca j and Walnut Streets, Cincinnati, Ohio. .4 Sleepless .lim. V e noticed recently ibat j April 12ih. 1S13. jq tf a Mr. Gourlay, of Boston, had commenced a Ind.Telegraph copy Gin. and charge Dickinson, war against too much indulgence in sleep. j
showing from his own case, that an individual
it as if gos till what is left. if any, when lies the extremities of the fibres, is exuthe earth, and all the impurities that
tmy inve mingled with the sap are in this way thrown out. Much that is impurity in the if of one plant is not so to one of another .?;; h-nee appears the propriety of a rotaof crops. For if m my crops of the samo Vi.i 1 sneceeJ ix the same? field this fetal mat-t-r will become overabundant. It is the com
mon opinion that the ditf
fruit, vie. among the vario
owing to the different composition or the de- there. Beasts c.f all descriptions are more trending sap. and that the different confijura- likely to be fat. Owing to the want of energy
tio l an I texture of the leaves is the source of ! in the exhalants certain impurities are not on-
all t'i ditference that exists in sip. ! The seeieting and excreting processes proceed with a rapidity torTcspondinsr to the height of temperature and dryness of the atmosphere. II nice the suitableness of tropical clinntes for producing the high wrought aromatic, such as ginger, pepper. &e. And to this principle we ascribe ibe abundance of saccharine nutter in southern wines abeve thoe of toe n -rth. The latter kind possess more ofth tannin and other astringent princi
ples. I:i southern grasses exhala in goes to
such an extent as to make it of little use except for broom straw. For the same reason England has an advantage over Indiana for producing those stale fruits, that cannot bear high elaboration a id re.piire abundant humidity; such a? turnips, corrots. potatoes, gooseberries and cabbaees. The Indiana farmer
i exposed to disadvantages in growing any of
these. It admits of doubt whether their pras
ly tolerated in toe system but seem to enter
into 'combinations by winch ihey promote
strength. It is unquestionable that animals are nencrallv larcer and belter fitted to en
dure fatigue in that country than in this. But
if the emigrants from that country especially when bound for a southern port; only neglect?
lo deposite 'systematical! v bv cathartics, he
will likelv fall a prey to disease soon affrr he
leaches shore. When he becomes acclimated
we may judce his system has got rid of its for
rner superfluities and his exhalants are now
braced up to a degree of action consistent
with a state of health amidst his altered cir
cumstances. This defect in the purifying law
is certainly an imperfection in the operations
of nature in that country. See how much more highly nature finishes all color both in
ibirds and tlo.vcrs here! How much more
power has 'the'domestic law here! . We sel
dom or never hear bf a f irmer or advirv-wo
be pre!erab!e to wrhat grows on our flat black man beinc gored to death in this State acci
oils. Perhaps it exceeds ours in quantilyjn.i dents of frequent occurrence in that country, is inferior in qvah'fy. On the authority of the How few stallions there hav e at any time been best chemists in London, we are warranted to backed! The pork raised here is strikincly
say a gallon of cream in this Slate produces at least twice the butter that a gallon yields there. But England rnnnot raise Indian com, pumpkins, nor any kind of our kitchen beans and peas. That climate can ripen but very few seed. They are entirely dependant on other nations for their flax seed." clover seed and nearly all the garden seeds. But their greatest misfortune arises from the inferior quality of their wheat. What is called "home flour" is never used by the bakers for fine bread. The higher classes eat little else than breaJ mide of American flour, and the thousand of muslin weavers; throughout the west of Scotland are exposed to serious disadvanta
ges if deprived of it for dressing or sizing. Durini the l.it war they had lo buy it at the vat of eighteen or t wenty cents a pound. Between ISltJ and iS'Jt the writer of this sold many barrels of it, nnd during that period it rmje! fro n six to twelve cents. Thev cannot dispense with the use of Philadelphia flour, as the merchants term it. If it tl0e not nter legally, it will set there by some means. Their own wheat is a large grain, dard colored and is unfit for use where good flour is required. Bound policy call on our fatmer to lend their attention most effectually to the cultiva
tion of those nut and fruits that best suit their circumstance considered in the aggtegnle.
ve will from Jihis see the proprie'y of confining ourselves mostly to Indian corn, wheat, gr and pumpkin., " Our oat are inferior.
better prepared for both the gratification of the palate and the promotion of health. Were the English to become pork raters, I question if their own hog meat would not soon be as universally undervalued as their own flour now is. As soon as one from that country lands he feels sensibly the advantages for free breathing here. He feels the inspirations to be full and unimpeded. After careful observation of w hat passes in both countries for above 20 years, we hesitate not to say that by proper treatment the systems of all domestic animals, as well as the human system, are much more easily preserved free from disease in Indiana. However, if
once the lancet of disease get admittance here
in form ol fevers it cuts w iih keener edge, and old people will usually issue in decrepitude at an earlier period. The heavier weight increases the friction oti the wheels of our clock work. Those fvrnilies that are located at a
Should specie continue to
country for the teinainder of the year, at the same rate which it has, during the last five months, our balance sheet on the first of January 1841 will show a clear gain of over 27,0W.0W. This is the natural result of Whig policy, which checks the excessive impor'ation
of foreign goods, w hich encourages home production, and thereby creates the wherewith to
sustain a large export trade. We wish to place this momentous subject in the simplest possible form before the mind of the reader; and we appeal lo his candor to say. if the large agri
cultural manufaciuiing and commericial firm
of Jonathan if Co. are not, when taken in the
aggregate, bttlcr and cheaper clothed, housed and fed at this time, while laying up twenty-
even millions.! year in gold and silver by their
foreign trade alone, than they were in 1S41,
when instead of lav ing up a commercial profit
of twenty-seven millions, they actually run in debt over and above all, the exports thirty-sev
en millions, for gew gaws? Do not these undeniable facts show a d fierence, a balance of
account, iu favor of Jonathan if- Co. under
Whig policy, of si.rty-Jvr millions?
The Locofoco policV ran the Firm in debt
thirty-seven millions a year, while its authors
gloried in the encouragement thereby given lo
foreign industry, to the manifest injury of
home labor and home production. To pay this needless foieien Locofoco debt, it has taken
more than two dollars' worth of the property
of the Firm to oav one of the debt, owing to
the scarcity of a sound circulating medium
which never fails to afflict an individual, or a
nation, that buys more Uian be or it s?Us or
earns. If we add the interest and cost of col
lection tothedebt of thirty-seven millions, and
to that the enormous sacrifice of piopeity to bring itdown to its value in gold in foreign mai-
kels. after paying a duty for the support of foreicn covcrnmeiits. averanin: RIU, on evcrv
fill worth of exports, the loss of the firm can
not be less than one hundred millions, lo 6ay
nothing of the create r loss from the idleness
and unproductive labor of so large a portion of
the partners
Under theprotective policy, instead of selling
pioperty to the amount of one hundred mill ions to pay a foreign debt of thirty-seven mill
ions, the Firm will be out of debt, and have
twenty-seven millions of foreign gold which it
w ill have paid for this year, over and above
what it consumed of foreign products. Hence
it w ill be able to put nine millions more than
usual into the pocket of the Commercial bank of the firm; nine millions more than usual into
the Agricultural branch of the firm; and nine
millions more than usual into the pocket of
the Manufacturing branch of the great firm
of Jonathan $ Co. Over twelve millions of dol
lars of this sum as the figures at the heal of
this article demonstrate, have already been di
vided. Its auspicious influence is manifest in
the building of many ships at New York and
other seaports in the increased price of flour
pork. lard, and all agricultural products to the
joy and much needed relief of the husband
man and in the astonishing improvement of
every branch of domestic manufactures, many
I of which are now for the first lime exported to
Great Britain, and sold at a profit. Reader,
: which is the true system? The free trade rtn
can do without it for months at a time, if he only would. This case is one of the most extraordinary, perhaps, that has ever occurred, and he has recently given an account of it to the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal. According to ibis statement itseems thathe was born with
as many natural wants as other persons, and that rest by sleep was one of them. He grew up indulging himself in the enjoyment of this generally supposed requirement of nature, until he was forty years of age, or long enough one would suppose, to have acquired a habit of sleeping too invetate to be easily dispensed with. Not so; it was just at that late period of life, that Mr. Gourlay discovered the astonish
ing capabilities ol ins pnysicai powers- aim found that he had been wasting marry precious hours in unconscious sleep. He was confined in London 'by British tyranny," he says, for three years and eight months, and it was during this period, he thinks, that a habit of liv ing
without sleep began to form. He, soon after
his liberation, came to America, and, trough
forty-two days upon the Atlantic, did not sleep
a wink. This was pretty well for a beginning.
but after taking a warm bath and a good snooze
he made a second trial, and did not sleep from
that time forward for three years. He took
laudanum, but that had no effect; he drunk
hiskey in the hope that it would induce sleep
ut it only made him sick. In the early part
of 1837, while in Ohio, he was attacked with
erysipelas in the leg, and during five months
was without sleep. Subsequently, on the death of some of his family, he lay two weeks
in great agony, and from that time to this, a pe-
iod vif four jenrs una six months, lie has been
entirely deprived of sleep. The last six months
of his life have been spent in Boston. His
health has much improved, and he entertains a hope that as soon as he is able to take exercise,
he will recover. On various occasions, of late,
he has been almost asleep
FAK3IKHS, LOOK IIEHF.
HIE subscriber having erected a SMUT
MACHINE, is prepared lo clean din
Wheat of his customers of all smut w hite capami din of every description. Farmei ? resirous oT having pure wheat flour, will find it rr , 1 1 1 . . , .- 1 ...... . ft. .,
Kiiuiij n Mini mi iiiiiuye to nave au uieir Wheal run through the machine.
J. II. SPEER. T Breokville Mill.', Scr 1.12. 1F-12. 2f
I
LOAFER'S SOLILOQUY.
due distance from a larte body of stagnating ,of-bt. money-rnrniwr, money taring policy of
water, and prohibited nent me use oi uasny ; (i,e Whigs? Isvjf. Lour. food; can .be raised exempt from small ail- j
ments, and serious diseases to a degree un
known there. Small rox and measle. disea
ses that seem to make the impurities under ! v'10 !!lea,s ,n? PrS steals trash; the first red
consideration their choice element, are of com- i rent paratively trilling importance here. And mea-! Ain't in it, and I don't know when it will be; sles are so easily conquered in latitude 34 that Bt ho ho robs me of my cavendish, when we tavtohi school there, out of above 20 ) Particularly if he doesn't chew.
scholars that ratirht the disease not more than ! Bobs me of that he don't know what to do with
two or three remained above two or three ' An"l braves me in a devilish bad fix!
GEO. HOLLAND, Attorney at Law. Bkookvili e, Ind.
Office on Main si.,nearly opposite D.Price'sster
iXniAXA STATE SCRIP. THE Subscriber will take NCICIP AT 1AR
For WRAPPING AND TEA PAPER.
J. II. SPF.ER. Rrovkville Mills. Mty Ot'i 1312.
JOIIX I J. 1IOWLAM), Attorney and Counsel lor at Lav. Brookville, Indiana. March 1st, 1842. SOLE and upper leather for sale bv II. & S.TYNER Brook vile Fb. 17. la41. SECOND OU UK ll F T II V. .71 A U A K T .
Dsvoirn to tiik iNvrsno atios or HUMAN PHYSIOLOGY,, CM BR A ft "tti CEIMIOLOGY, 1'HKENOLOGY, ELECTRICITY, PATHETOLOGY. PHVSIOGNOMV. RALVNISM, PSVCIIOLOGY. MAGNETISM, LIGHT, NEUROL
OGY, CALORIC AM) LIFE. BY LA ROY SUNDERLAND. The design of this popular and intcrcftinj work is the investigation of all the laws nLicb
ThU i the account - appertain to human life, and w hich arc con-
he givcsoriiimsclf.anditisoneoftliestrangestl1'"",011 i""'e .'reduction of tl.oe, states of tie
mind . caPed
SOMNAMBULISM. INSANITY. DREAMING, SF.COND-SIGHT, SOMMPAT11Y, TR ANCE, CLAIRVOYANCE. And various other Mental Phenomena, w hica have hitherto remained shrouded in my tery.
John Mo tchaGerman wasvesterday brought! Its pages are enriched with Essays and Cnir.-
before Esq. Brooks, charged with an attempt mur.ications. detailing facts, illuetrat rg lis
to kill Barbary Barphead. It appeared from 1 science of Ccpholegy. which teaches the mthe examination that Ihe parties latelv crossed jflueiicc and susccpt.bihty of the Human lira, r, the Atlantic in company-amused themselves and l.l,.of "ntr" 1,nA.."
mation as may assist in the most su-cmM application of this wonderful agent tn Diapat the delineation of Character and tbe Re
lief of Huraan Suffering. The Second Volume will be comincncrd : June, 1S4M, in large octavo form, and ieisutti monthly at the following TERMS. I. Tw ollars in advance, will py fer"9 copy for the year; or sixteen copies of ny ct number. (i:. r-i .ii a r.t n or
oi oeing marr.ea to anotner. Jonn rcmonstra-AnJmbrt or four cppie9 for'one yci-r
tu, I'lvicaitru, uuiuii in liiin. uarunry w as inflexible. The license was taken out. John
cases on record. If it is true, and we see no!
reason for making a misstatement, the city of
Boston ought to engage him immediately in their service. He would make a capital captain of ihe vvatch.
WOMAN'S LOVE.
company
on the voyage with love making, formed an
engagement to marry upon their arrival in this country, reached New Orleans, from whence
John sent up Barbary to Cincinnati, she taking
charge of John's clothes, and lie furnishing
money to pay her expens-s vows of eternal
constancy beingexchanged, they parted John
left New Orleans some ten days after and arlived here on Monday last. On finding his lovely Barbary, alas, he found her faithless
her plighted troth broken, and she on the point
became desperate, called for the last time upon
Uaruary, again remonstrated, but in vain. In a fit of insanity, he drew an old knife, the companion of his voyage, and inflicted some slight
scratches upon Barbary 's person,she screamed,
oi course, John fled and when overtaken, like a fool, plunged the knife into his own body. Owing, however, to the bluntncss of the knife, no serious injury was done cither party.
John was committed in default of bail, to
await coming events, and lament the inconsistency of woman. It may be added, that German womenhave discovered the value of wealth as well as others, the new swain being in rather comfortable circumstances, while poor John has nought! Cin. Gaz.
HLAXKSr
3. For Ten Hollars, ninetv ioiCS 01
one number, or seven copies for one year. 4. For Fifteen Dollars, one hundred an ty copies of any one number, or twelve c , ' or one year. " ' 5 To the th ade, Hey will be put at Dollars per hundred, when one hundred r ' arc ordered at one time, with Ibe cash v vance. G-r-Agrnts must state distinctly wj ' ' money sent is designed te pay for; wheth euti re volume, or for so many single copn ' one number. . As thcte terms are low. the Publisher canrrt doubt but Agents will see the justice of g"vir B-irrinl ntlnnCnn lo the Csll FVStem,
All payments must be remitted free of petage, Safety fund money, or its equivalent in this city, Agents must give particular instructions "
' . i . i . ... . r. k earn
tnlU m.nnfr in WHICH IQCY UlttY wiw
I I-? ha.nV fonrtant'y the Amer.can officej VV" . . B. . thi. proepectU. (i";
Uk l.ftlln...n l-.ft. .-1 m.w. ......
nL "u" eluding this paragr
Deeds,
Mortgages, Quit-Claim Deeds, Telit Bonds, Kotos of laaad-
Summonses,
Subpfenas, Executions. Constables' Bond ConsUblt'Sale.
paragraph) six insertions,
fliii
(icceivethe Magnet for one .year, from Jan 1 !! :J:. il.. n.nari rnnltininlf this TO
1:10, iruviuii i"w , " r - -" -7 vrk tice be forwa'ded. marked, to "New lo Card." and pr.-vided, also, that these corfiitioos bv complied with before January Id
