Indiana American, Volume 12, Number 50, Brookville, Franklin County, 6 December 1844 — Page 2
A WORD FROM MR. CLAY. We have derided since the Election to pub-
FOREIGN RELATIONS THE UNITED STATES AND GREAT BRITAIN.
Among o'her documents published by the
lish any thing calculated to bring Mr. Clay ,n - . . RnT-rninf11, ani, ...hmitt m h..ih
needle-sly before the poblic-hardly morel ouses of Parliament( i3 lhe Correspondence, from respect to Aufeelmga than to our 3Ti.-duing he Tear 1843 of ,hM GoTernnienl behave never regarded but with contemptthej forejgn piwer9 nol p81ties loTrealjesor Con. illy gossip of those who talked ol 'pitying Mr. ven(jons gjTing a mutual right of search of vesClay.' He stands above any man s pity. " eUPis SUBpected of the slave trade. Part(D) of pity the decieved thousands w ho have cast ; lhi, documenl rnUins lhe Correspondence their votes against him under the influence ofiK tttM Mr i-r' .1.- t
slanders as feul as ever comrfteiuled the hemlock to Socrates or drove Aristides into exile. But we feel that Mr. Clay has now a right to exemption from public 2ossip. We have a
between Mr. Everett, Minister from the United States to the Court of St. James, and Lord Aberdeen, the British Secretary of Foreign Affairs. This Correspondence relates to the
faa r r Iri a roe:l Tr,l,F, k T,IK I I I ai n. I
private letter, however, from an eminent friend , ,Seamp .,toderick Dhn& . WiIIiam & Fran'.
'"Il " UCh - """"B .7 , .icis That pari connecied with the first case ClaVsfnends w.il hear with profound interest, the TeBse, ,John A.Robb. isgivenm the and we therefore extract a fe w rasases: National Intelligencer. Mr. Everett's letters
1. l noune.
Lexington. Ky. Nov. 19, 1S44.
''Last evening I visited Mr. Clay at
sh'and, and passed some hours with him.
are to be commended for thier plain, manly tone, and prove that American interests are well cared for by our Minister. Mr. Everett's first letter is dated September 19, 1842. The
"John A. Robb." as" it seems, on the27tli of
fall: ill ft vtr ttiaovrnta tf tliA I -i 1 fmv mnnttia
and the prospects ahead. I found him alone-j March' lf f wa Fusion of at sea by i !f.rtiM.i it. .i ... f.D. a" armed force from H. R.M. vessel the "W a-
kimself. & to be anxious alone for the Country ft:"' and V. ? V f Au,,one f the -and his friends, whose fidelity and devotion. j'P " company, Peter Hutchinson, was forcihl,!.l PrPL.n rhrrUhiy taken out against the will and in opposi-
u ... n' ,i,r - . m tion to the protest of the master of the 'John A
binations against him-the infamous frauds in iobb " Mr; tE!rreU ca',s on Majesty' T..;itn . r Government, to disavow this proceeding. Lord
&c.-the atrociou calumnies on his 'private! Aberdeen's reply s ates that Lieutenant Ma -eharacter-were all alluded to, and I stated 5on' ,he" atern.tch, considered that Hutchsome facts coming under my own observation i'"50", " Jad,.V " r he Jh" giving yet a darker shade lo'the picture of the! A' J"bb ' and.thal " ,e as a fref ,! V" 8' malignity with which our great Statesman has nd been the vessel, ' and her been hunted down. ' Majesty's Government, as the occurrence was ' 1 not accompanied bv any act of violence or au- ... rr-aay'ilerera?ni re!urn tn r'-.thoriiv, could not "disavow the proceeding.h'e. His career a3 a Statesman is ended. Tk:. u.., r..nA i, r . m. ........
I 1113 H IILI !. IWIIUUt U l' VCII (lit I, l'l Ot 3( I 1 B ; account of the affair, and is in substance w hat
we have given above. Mr. Everett's next let-
The measure of his fame is complete. His life!
will one day be written by an impartial pen, and while the calumnies bv which he has been
ter follows, dated August 31. IS43; he finds
defeated in his last appeal for justice f.om life tna, lhe act of hoarding and taking possession cotemporanes will smk mtoohlivion. every page of,heJohn A. Robb.'had no connection with of our Country s recent history will be illumi- lhe remova, nf Hutchinson. Mr. Everett
natel by his great deeds and glowing patriot
ism.
The Garland Letter. - The Forgery Proven. James Birdsall, Artemas Thayer, and Alexander P. Davis, Corresponding Com-
mittee of Genessce county, Michigan, have
"come out" in a certificate, to which they have
considers it very extraordinary, as it most assuredly was. that Lieutenant Matson, on the receipt of a letter from an English seaman on board an English vessel, stating that he had been ill-used, should proceed to detain that vesael and take out the seaman. It is plain that if the bare reception of such a letter gives to a British cruising officer the
riiht tobosrt'an American vessel, there can be
been qualified, denouncing the Garland State
raent and the Birney letter, purporting first to ery few not subject to this exercise of power,
nave seen puniisnea in an r.xira trom tne omce of the Michigan, Genessee County, Democrat,
as a bold and impudent forgery. I hey say Under the circumstances, whether the hand bill referred to, has been issued by the Birney party to charge it upon the Whigs, and thus cover its declarations from the liberty party, or whether it has been issued by 'the democracy' to have the foigery recoil upon the Whig party, and thus rally in their abolition friends to vote for Polk and Birney, or whether it has been issued by some grovelling, corrupt and foolish Whig, in hopes of having it appear in
the Free Press and be used through our two days of election, every candid and intelligent
voter must judge. As for ourselves, we knov
and pron mnce it to be a gross and base forgery;
nJ we rail upon you, fellow-citizens, as well as upon Mi. Cummings and Mr. Page to join us in characterizing the b-xse transaction with all the marks of infamy it deserves, and to aid us in ferreting out and punishing the base scoundrels who are guilty of the many forgeries contained in the handbill.
"As the Whig committee of the county of
tienessee, we disavow all knowledge of the origin of the transaction or its base authors, and look upon it as a base forgery."
The Editor of the Genessee County Demo
crat also avers that the Extra, purporting to
have been published at his office, was not issued there. There can, therefore, be no doubt of the character of the publication in question the
statement of Garland, the letter of Birney. the
inasmuch as one or more untish seamen are
found in a large proportion of the 'merchant
vrgjfls of the U. States.
Fhe sailor, w hether English or American
can find redress for his wrongs in the United
States Courts, by the proper legal mode. One
of Lieutenant Matson's chief reasons for his
procedure, is that the seamen had not shipped in the regular form but it is proved by the A-
meriean Consul, Mr. Slocum, of Rio de Ja
neiro, that Hutchinson w as shipped in the usu
al way, and the consular certificate is given with Hutchinson' name theiein. The reply
of Lord Aberdeen is not given
A Sitrht vnrih Seemer. The locofocos of
Steubenville. Ohio, took it into their heads to
celebrate the election of Polk and Texas, a few
days since. Feeling generous on the occasion
and determined to do things on a large scale
they puichased a wagon load of rockets, to be exploded amid the roarings of the faithful.
The Steubenville Herald tells the test of the
story:
"A wagon load of rockets w as brought to the
public square, and lest thore should be any
mistake as to the ownership, ,;Polk and Dally
was printed in large letters on the wagon.
The faithful crowded around the wagon, chuck
ling at the way in which they would astonish
the whigs, by means of said rockets. The
w hole seemed to be under the management of
the Russia, who exhibited his magnificent per
son on an old horse. At it thev went, a few
rockets were started; and the whigs, not ex
affidavit of the County Clerk and the justice of jnil)ili"? an' particular signs of astonishment,
the peace, were all whole-cloth forgeries; and
some dare-devel of a loco fired the whole wa
gon load at one shot. The rockets flew in e
very direction, knocking the lokies head over
heels, every one trying to make his escape,
uunLimg over eacn otner, wun such roaring
and squalling and screaming as lokies only
know how to make. Ther seemed to think
their patron saint was after them in great wrath
everyone running ten times as far as there
was any occasion for; it is a matter of doul
whether some of them are not running to thi
hour. The wagon took fire; the horses, not be
tTr,r it .rrt-.. k t r f.. , ing useu u sucn i oik ana uany capers, ran
shoes called on a wholesale Whi dealer in '"h fi.rsl " "SP' the" !nt U'e thai r,ini ; . r '.i.. r'ver where the fire was put out. Afier the
lis it t il -i iniu iiieuaiiEFr wasoTPr.
I the Russia was seen sneaking back on his horse
forgeries, too, which did the Whigs much harm for if a few abolitionist may have been induced to abandon Mr. Birney, the majority of cuch went for Polk and not for Clay. So far as the odium and wickedness of the publication are concerned they should attach to the guilty author of the forgery, whoever he may be. Those editors who published it, believing it to be true, should escape without censure. Ditily Sttite Jour.
and after jeering him about the result of the rlertinn nn.l lhr itofooi f l. f,'l :..r 1
. ... vivivtl ,i, VIA,, IIIIDI IIIT-U , .111 . . - . ,
him he had brought him three hundred pairs Vl. !,. .- I" .! T
be alarmed. but logo ahead with the othei ex
ercises of the night."
more shoes. I must decline taking them, re
plied the dealer. But why, enquired the manufacturer with some surprise; you have taken
all my shoes for years. Yes. replied the deal- Missouri and its Commander. The
cr. but now we are going to have a reduction 1 Court Martial have found Cant. John H. New-
orthe Tariff, and I intend to import my shoes, ton, the commander of this Frigate, when she So the manufacturer departed; called on all his was burned in the harbor of Gibraltar, guilty Locofoco dealer through the city, but not one!01" neglect, and suspended him for f ro years. of them would take his shoes. He then came 'This sentence the President has approved, back again to his old Whig customer, and oM It not Tor ns, says the National Intelligenfered them at a reduced price, but he declined to gainsay the justice, or to question the taking them. Such are the fruits of electing, conformity to usage, of the finding of so hieh a free trade man under the pretence of his be- aJ honorable a Court, or the sentence which ing a protectionist. Phil. liaz. it has pronounced, and which the Executive bas ratified. But, adds that Journal, it will SABBATH SCHOOLTEACHERS ix HIGH Probab,Jr be lhe Snoral opinion of civilians.
PLACES. A correspondent of the New York Journal of Commerce makes the following statement or distinguished Sabtiath School Teachers: Chief Justice Marshall and his associate, Judge Washington, were each active in the cause: the
former at the age of 70, walked at the head of
that, however such and even severer punish
ment might be deemed due to wilful neglect.
two years' suspension is a vety harsh measure of punishment awarded to an honorable man
for an accidental omission or oversight in the
discharge of official duty. We must con less that we thought the report
oi me sentence unfounded, so unreasonably ee
THE LAY OF THE LABORER. ' TB0V4S ROOD, A spade! a rake: a hoe! A pickax, or a bill! A hook to reap, or a scythe to mow, A flail, or what y will And here '8 a ready hand To ply the needful tool, And skilled enough, by l?ssoin rough. In Labor's rugged school. To hedge, or dig the ditch, To lop or fell the tree, T lay the swarth ou the sultry field, Or plough the stubborn lea; The harvest stack to bind, The wheated rick tothitch, And never fear in my pouch to find The tinder or the match. To a flaming barn or farm My fancies never roam; The fire I yearn to kindle and bum Is on the hearth of Home; Where children huddle and crnuh
Through dark, long winter days, Where starving children huddle k crouch, To see the cheerful rays, A glowing on the haggurd deck. And not in the haggard's blaze! To Him who sends a draught To parch the fields forlorn, 1 he rain to flood the meadows with mud, The blight to blast the corn. To Him I leave to guide The bolt in its crooked path, To strike the miser's rick, and show The skiea blood red with wrath.
MISSOURI LEGISLATURE. The Legislatureof Missouri assembled on the 18th of November, at Jefferson City, and was organized at 10, A. M. The acting Governor (Mr. Marmemke) sent in his Message on the next day, which w e find in the St. Louis Reporter. It is too long to read, and we
don't mean to say whether it is good or bad
not knowirg.
i wu ocimiuis aie 10 nn e erieii in 1 1 a n irn . .
ofMessrs. Benton and Atchison, whose lermJ?.": ?.7.f.llue w!lh hcli he has been filled h
have expired. It is thought that the demo-j b , uhed "iff. u"c"mPled .. th at ha', crats will be compelled to take Benton up f"0 Ji.t, V10. .,!he Pu,bI-
again, though the pill maybeaha.d one.- disappointments and MtiniZi mft r'1" Gen. Atchison will probably be returned variably follow the eaublihSent! of I Jew without serious opposition. He is a whole-!ria'cKin the production of which there mun soul, noble-minded man, and though differing j be t,ie harmonious, co-operation of many heads with him in many things, hope he has been!"J T"? l"ds- notwithstanding occasional sent again to the Senate. Wabash Express. i8bort lcom,n?. eciilly in the Pictorial De ' ) Dart ment. in-hirl, n r lit-
. , ' ' or uniigence cou d a.
.... ouu.turc prevent, i be Colcm
The Columbian Magazine. FOR 1845. PROSPECTUS FOIITHE SECOND YEAR. A T the close of hi. second Volume, the Msr&. TZm been comnenced on the firsfof January ,il44 the publisher finds himself rre stst.bly called on to express the ,;.r.J.:?
Hanging in Aew Hampshire. The question, gallows or no gallows, has been decided in the Granite State, all hollow in favor of the
noose. In one ofr.he anti hanging districts
fan Masazinr has gone on steadily increasing in support and popularity from the opening number, and if the unbought; unsolicited test,
....... . ,c ,lrcs9 mny oe rece,ved a8 Bn9w.
: . : . T,7 i"J oe received as answav. there was a man, who, on being asked his no-ed by partiality & unbiassed by friendshin ti
iiuiu.u me uiaiicr, iuiin ume 10 consiuer uie 1 v ,a i-":iirtoiuors .v editors have been sat question, and gravely answered that he w as i'factory to the public and accepted as fulfilinj opposed to its abolition until his neighbor , c Pro'nes made for them at the commence
Barnes (with whom he had a controversy) "'t,' l"?,entCrpriS!ewas hanged, and then he should be in favor of ! fi r"bl's,ier ''ndcrtook the work with a
C ' J V I 11 U '
It.
A Hint. The Journal of Commerce repub-
A spade' a rake! a hoe.' A pickax, or a bill! A hook to reap, or a scythe to mow, A flail, or what ye will The corn to thrash, or the hedge to plash, The market team to drive, Or mend the fence by the cover aide,
And leave the game alive Ay, only give me work, And then you need not tear That I shall snare his worship's hare, Or kill bis grace's deer; Break intohia lordship's house, To steal the plate so rich; Or leave the yeoman that had a purse To welter in the ditch. Wherever Nature needs, Wherever Labor calls. No job I'll shirk of the hardest work, I'o shun the workhoue walls; Where savage laws begrudge The pauper babe its breath, And doom a w ife to a w idow's life, Before het partner's death. My only claim is this. With labor stiff and stark. By lawful turn, my living to earn, Between the light and dark; My daily bread, and nightly bed, Mv bacon, and dron of Beer
But all from the hand that holds the land,
And none from the overseer! No parish money, or loaf, No pauper badges for me. A son of the soil, by right of toil, Entitled to my fee. No alms I ask, give me my task; Here are the arm, the leg. The strength, the t-inews of a man, To work, and not to beg. Still one of Adam's heirs, Though doomed by chance of birth To dress so mean, and to cat the lean. Instead of the fat of the earth; To make such humble meala Afl hnnpat lartnr run.
A bone and a cruet, with a grace to God,
And little thanks to man! A spade! a rake! a hoe! A pickax, or a bill! A hook to reap, or a scythe to moT, A flail or what ye will Whatever the tool to play Here is a willintr drmTirp.
t With muscle and limb, and woe to him
Y ho cocs their pay begrudge Who every weekly score Onrk l.lkhnr'a lilflo mita
Bestows on the poor at the temple door,
nut robiied them over night, The very shilling he hoped to save, As health and morals fail. Shall visit me in the New Bastile, The Spital, or the Jail!
York the beat nACZlV,!.?1
r i .- uo "unie lor a iiarazine of general htrature; that notwithstanding the fin lire nf in n . ""a
lishes McKay's Tariff BUI. It declares it to be such a work, there coufd be H
in the main, a good bill, and says il would have success with sufficient capital, perseverence and passed had not the members been so eager a- : 1,10 r'?bt system of management both by pubbout the Presidential contest. It adds very : li6''er and editor; stimulated bv thi n,;,,;.'
innocently that nearly all the members who 1 , emoarkcd in the enterprises and the result
voted for it has been relumed. Ga:
jortlw Lrst year has proved that this judgement 1 tma rftriA O
1.- a vwinti. , . J' Lu 8 ong ceaseJ fo b necessary or reasonThe Albany Journal says: llnVxiVmf ""'l .'Pm k f ?0,.umbi !n n pxP:r.mcnt. At all events.it is now an 'There is no little anxiety among the Locos ;oxPer,menl ""bstantially tried. Ve tee ourwho have accepted and held office under Cap-; , " 0!!cn 89 fir,l a based as any similar jourtain Tyler to know whether Mr. Polk will re-i" , ie worlJ- Our principle cares now cognize them as orthodox, and retain them in !f V . eo mu.'' the ecureing what ground
their places." M
j , i .MiiiMoii oi our spnere of The New York Post, as if soeakinL' from aii- act,on ""d utility not SO mill h. evfn ll.O n,ar
thority, intimates, in reply, if we read rightly, ;enlargccient of our euHscription list, asthemoH
, catering lortlie amusemenf
that not even Mr. Tyler's Cabinent w ill be r'e-
I tamed.
Sagacity of a Horse. The "Edinburgh Wit-
ness" relates a singular demonstration of sagac-
ity, shown by a Horse in that city. A Cartman
... aiiiuseineni and shall we say occasionally for the profit! of our ciiticnrt n . .
, luo present ana tte ruture the many whom we have and the many more w e shall undotibtly have as t:.me rolls on. o have made arr.in.romania ...:n
. s--"-"ii. 1.IHI.U 111 cnahie us to present our friends with enbeliehmcnta
urivnig one uorse ana iari in w hich lie o' rver superior taste, etvle and finisl. In n ;.
was, and leading another Horse, draw ing a respect it is our firm nurnose. if nosaihlp tn
t)ur music and en-
believe, will not be
Cart, a child ran immediately in front of the outvie all competition
lead Horse, which at once refused to proceed. gravjn?s. we confidently
ana Deing pulled, fell on
being drawn forward. Had
child would have been killed
rc-iuseu m proceeu, l" i, . -'"""vimy uent-ve. W ill not De its knees to prevent oqJ?il very certainly they shall not be surad it proceeded, the 'Jv""1 merit by t,,ose of any other ma Hej azinc. e propose to give each mjnth two or
...gitiiig3, independently of two pages
There is a law in Mexico that n, one shall L,Rte , TF:
exercise the right of suffrage, unless he can erarv and o,i;,.;.i . ' . X ? ,.
, , . , T,. ' tuiiuuci oi me io umoian, read and write after ISoO. the publisher doe nm f..ni ..ii.i ..J
more than a few wnrA Tu
Remarkable Presentiment. TUe Dovles-i ment of this department is. as hnrptnfrirp en.
... - . ' , -..
town Democrat records the following remarka-'c . , BKont',man possessing every quali I O Itlitlinn f.il. i. I. ,,. .
i ble fact
"Beniah Holdren. of Nockamixon. died at the
advanced oee of 94 years, mi the l lih nf nnn.
ber, and a correspondent of the Democrat states that, on the Saturday previous to his death, his
i aaugiuer, with other friends, paid a visit to the
old people; found them in good health and
passed a very agreeable evening and morning.
I lie old gentleman was sensible, agreeable, j talkative and happy, and partook of a hearty
oreaniast, alter which he observed 'Now, my
mends, this is the last meal I shall ever cat; I am about to die.' It was in vain that his friemls
endeavored to dissuade him from such an idea
he the more resolutely persisted in it, and said he was called and must obey; but while he yet had breath land the power of speech, he ... ;!.. 1 "... - ...
Iwimicu iu tne some instructions wuu respect to his worldly concerns, his burial, .tc, and im
mediately commenced. Some few moments after he closed his last direction, he was struck down with a paralytic stroke and never spoke more. He lingered, however, on the brink of death until Monday morning, w hen he expired
w itnoui a groan."
Western Eloquence. The follow ing extract
from a speech of a Western lawyer, we find in the Wheelinir Gazette:
The lawyer exnressl v declares, pemlemen
in the beautiful language of Shakspeare, that fJT':;1 ',orter' E rarin,y. H Myers, M C where no doubt exists of the guilt of the oris-1 !!-'.. ,'' .son'.J "oughton.C Mcl.achlan.
oner, it is your duty to lean on the side of in- V V i , V. ;,A"U,or of " V.me ,)oin-;
.4 Conjugal Ilemonstrance.-Our readers aJi", and fotch him in innocent. If you keep HeYdiey. V L IlVcTorn II B II?t ivmnmiupa i.:i. ,ia ii.ni this fact in view in the case of mv client. ipn. w:,i. :. i . .... "...
n.,.., .. ;n i .i u , . . I U1U 01 ultee contriDutora loiwiiom iiLiueii, you win nave the honor or making a it U needless to
hcation fortho task, finit nhn t,;.on .i,.,.,
ant ev.dence, not only of the highest ability to put forth a meritorious Magazine, but of the ability to put forth a magzine exactly adapted to the tastes of our readers. The publisher, thetcfore, has every confidence that what baa a ready done for the literary value of the iourn-
nl I l.n .1 . .
UlllllT 1 ' ' . I 111 IV A . . r. r. r . I r.. Ii. ... I
'.c a i c ciivi.kij ruling that our future rnurcn in il.ia ni c-1,.11
be estimated by our past. The subjoined list
ounose wlio have furnished articles for the Columbian during the bygone year will satisfy we feel assured, the most fastidious that we are resolute to spare in no particular neither
exertion or expense.- Mrs. L II Sigonrnev, Mrs. Kirklaiid, Mrs. Ann 8 Stephens, Mrs. V S Osgood, Mrs. E O Smith, Mrs. A C Mowat, Mrs. K p Kile,, MrsSt Leon Loud. Mrs. Ja. ( Brooks. Mrs Hall. Mr.. M S It nut XTra If
I.iththipe Mrs C H Butler, Mrs E C Embury; xr 8 r,,rV' Mrs , M Slee,c. Mrs M A Ervirg, MrsM L f.awson. Miss Colman, Miss Isabel
.loceiyn. ai,S8 M Kuspell; Miss E E Chubhiick. Miss 1. M Brauner, Miss Fanny Forester, Mies
..i vuinrv, stuhor ol "funinier h rolicking" 1 K Pauldii-g. W C Bryant. Fitz G Halleck, h A Poe, John Neal. II W Herbert. II II Weld Park Benjamin. W Cox, Gen W Kendall, II H Schoolcraft, TS Arthur, H P Grattan, Author of the "Widow of Burgess," H T Tuckennan. J F Otis. R I. Wade X 11 P.t,, l?.l.r
S Gould, Seba Smith, c F Hoffman. T S Fav, llev F C Woodworth. C Donald McLeod. W H Willis. W Whitman. 1 F Shephard, T B Read. W O Bourne. R G White. II A f'lurt. f! V
From the London Satirist 'emonstrance. Our reaib
may remember a paiagraph, which stated that
the Queen Ml the greatest alarm at Prince
Albert's hunting, from his so frequently falling from his horse. The royal remonstrance was
made in terse: w e have been fortunate enough
to obtain a copy.
My dear, I really must insist Upon more prudent courses; You always now are falling off Those horrid pacing horses! I'm sure your sport had belter be In future wholly bounded; To play with those babes so dear By whom w e are surrounded. Let others take the dating leap, And mount the steed majestic, The father of a family Should stick to this domestic. Oh! covet not the coat or red The huntsman's glossy light cap, But be contented, Albert, loveWith your own cotton night cap.
r . , . ,7, , i ii,,,-., i,ay one wora in iiie way oi friend Of him and nil liie rpl.nl uina nn.l -,,.,.!..: i r .. .
j "l" -"uinNi)inuoi numerous ol tiers, per Laps allers look linon Ihia nrrncinn bi1 rcdnni ,,-hI. pntifillv mnriin.:.... :r t i . i . ,
( , UI( . m . ,,,,,, v.p.u.., "i".! inn nu8 ii its! ct iuuraieo,wiio uiic nle.iioire tliat vmi tli1 0.9 -t. .... u 1. - 1 1 mnm ! ooil 11 ti.n: ... ii . . .
pleasure that you did as you would have hern 'promised us their cuppojt.we flatter' ourselves
e other hand, you disre- that, as a literary work, the Columbian need bo j . , . : nnilir tin iiinrnlmnilnn nrii:n.....ii.j
done by; but. if. on the
card thi nrinrmln ,r ln n,l .. ! Under DO aonrehensinn nf'tioinir n-rfaUoA
n I ...... t . w v. miu . Hi IlilUlll tJ v" ' " . v.
my elegant remarks and fotch him in guilty "i we nave aone is already before ti-e
a Sunday School procession in Richmond. Mr. I vere JJ 11 strike us. Capt. Newton is one of
the t est men in the Navy; no less brave ttan
honorable: and characterized by that strict watchfulness which distinguishes our first Naval officeis. We suppose we shall hear more about the "sentence" hereafter.
1VIinfTht,-cA,. 1 1 a tlu:. i; ,
. ,,, .iiiijj canuiaate lor vice
resident, while a Senators of the United S. was, and is now, connected with the teachers of such schools. B. F. Butler, whilst Attorney General of the United States, has and still has a Bible Class of young men. R. II. Vlnnh
S?r"!!,r.!!?!w Yotb h" Bible H i, thought Mr. Webster will return to the
. ..V, ,u ,,oi oe proud to follow such exam- Senate from M...rV.n. a t m r-i...
from Delaware.
pies as these? Cin. Caz.
A WEDDING CARD.
General Santa Anna at his late nuptials sent
round the following note, written on beauti
ful paper: On Thursday, the 3d of the present month.
! at" in the evening, the marriage of his excel
lency ueneral or u-visions, &c. &c., Don Antonia Lope dez Santa Anna, with her excellen
cy Senora Don Dolorose de Tosta, will be celebrated in the principal saloons of the national
palace; and the president interim, &c. &c. Val
entine Canilizo. havins the honor in h ond-
father, supplicates that it will please you to add lusture to such an august ceremony by your personal attendance. Mexico, 3d, of October."
J o ...... ....... .nm ii, KU'llJ, i,' i .,. ' lti iloni iu iil,- f ; ...:i, i public. Who will not fail In itnl m with im-
you all over every fair cornfield, I reckon,' 5! 1 nu u '"refrect t0 hat we intend to
. T I. J , "aimay ue permitted to assuro our frionds in brier, as my cat lights on a sasser of new miik! however, that we have matured numerous plans . ,(for the Third Yolnme) with which we feel The Norfolk Herald contains the announce- no""'l1,,,hfe-vf7i!1 be 9ci' 0UT7a ment. that J.,., m Tv.ru ir i, - Jpose to put forth every energy; and it will be
represent thlit PnnrrP..i n 1 ",,u utc "o fault orour own if the Columbian shall not represent the 1st Congress.onal D.str.ct, now i be found at least eoual to anv ma.rar.ine of any
l r . 1 ' C
Liocnur price in America. DEALERS IN PERIODICALS throughout
COM MISSION FORWARDING Bfilrsi'. w Mates and the Canndas who wish at new Orleans: ' ,'0mci,:.,La?!"!! :r..thc c1,,Tbian M,,?"j,"e
The usual discount will he rnsde to them.
I l-IOIS OF THE COLUMBIAN MAGA-
advance, $;
copies one year, 0: Eicrbt copies
nnf vPRr. t'2ii.
Address, post-paid, ISRAEL POST.3 Astor House, N. Y.
represented by Archibald Atkinson, Esq.
NPHE undersigned having established him
self at New Orleans, for the purpose of !7IVr o"h HE COLUMN acting a General Commission and i'WorYifi-ln'V , eopy Tr in liusiness, would solicit a share of Franco ' iV-"6 W0J'ca"' ' TwJ
adjoining coun.ies I have made advantageous o'ne ,K veniel arrarremenls with n nnn. fno.,.. . ..
---c- iiiguiailli; Ullice here, for Insuring Hay. and all other PrnH
shipped per Flat Boat, which will be effected by waiting to me, if I am acquainted with he
applicant. All business entrusted to me shall be faith fully and promptly attended to. THOMAS GUARD. New Orleans, No. 20, New Levee.
Refer to: C F. Cl.rkbon, Esq., ) Messrs. R. & S. Tte. Srookville Jauiry, 1311. 5
BL.4KS.
kN hand, constantly at the American offic the followini? kint rr i,ia,i
Deeds. I Snmmnco.
Mortgages, Subpoenas, Quit-Claim Deeds, I Executions, March 29, 1844.
GEO. HOLLAND, Attorney AThiw.nnnrtMr r
Office on Main street, opposite D. Price's store
