Indiana American, Volume 20, Number 51, Brookville, Franklin County, 10 December 1852 — Page 1
(, F. ILIRKSOX. BROOKVILLE. FRANKLIN COUNTY, INDIANA, FRIDAY, DEC. 10, 1352. VOL. XX. NO. 5f.
1 M '"fin 'Sain, top. ' s . in ! tffl -
Srtf
-!, , " It
-dr,)f.lTlC A L
jticcouuts there'll bo a squabble that will , make more trouble for you than ever old j Hickory had. When the old line Dimjoerats. North and South, and the Hunk- ' e's, and the Barnburners, and the Free-
soilers, and the States Rights Dimoorats, and the Union Whigs, and the Secessionist, and the Carolina Xullifiers, and the Old Fogies and Young Amerea. all get you by the throat, and every one crying out "pay me that thou owest,'" I almost tremble "to think w hat will become ot you, unless you have a good deal of the old Hickory grit. You must put on the stillest kind of uprer lio and
S.inromit Joel Dow- ; tlie responsibility, or it 11 be crone
,.rr;h tor li moral cott s - V 1JU u"-ll-'
the election he 1 lem su "' ana advertise that you
e .:i- and v'r!it ' wont pay no uebts ot their contracting
r , !':1 tilt- tt'r.e-.'r. -iVior Jack lo ninj. j' !.I ".!r.TF. OF Maisk.) Nov. l.i, ISjl' s & Skatox: My dear old ,as happy as happy can be, j viua i -Treat deal happier. - ;:;! Ke:-iah. about the second .v.. ehvtion. when New York, a::i-i a m! Ohio came rolling -Kinsr. she was so com--V wYil with oceans ofhappii:Wl inU conniption fits and
cverv dav since
ore cr
-Li:i e Tien
. - ;j be so hearse he can't s v. :ir-;' ". You remember . . !:-; letter, how uncle -: 1 i'-ua.i S.irgoant Joel, some -,;';. i lection, out behind the on a stump, and swinging ih 'iieiin hurrah tor U literal his niicht. Arter that he -V. ;;:!! said he didn't care who .-u! he kept it up till the day ei.v'ion, when the telegraph in the the thunder and lightr that a'.I creation had gone for f ree, raid then cousin Joel n i quicker than ever you see a : :c-r f :t in arter a south-east 0; usin Jeel is a cunnin dog: he xch side his bread is buttered, :v: Jt.HMui he will be on hand .',:! xt winter, and if Penniv. r.-.r iton't ring from one end rv'i hi hurrahs for (lineral
juess a fin. I don't know . lVro wiil do for cousin
;::;t.mrt conies. mil he wni be something pretty handsome nj man has hurrah'd louder him than cousin Joel has, the election. :l: unci Joshua, he seems to kinciotu-come. It does my ! t 1j :k at him. he seems to
ri-.i. He savs the sro od old
ion must remeirber that the Whior
party is dead and buried, so you hain't got to tight agin that no more." And you must remember, too, that the Whig party , has left considerable valuable property, and that the Dimocratie nartv is the nat- '
"Marrlnyp by Surprise In Italy The Florence correspondent of the London News, says: I met in society, a few days ago, an English lady, who had just been released from prison, where she had undergone two months of solitary confinement for
I having contracted marriage with a Tus- ! can officer, in the manner termed matrij moni di sorpresa, which may be considjered equivalent to a Gretna Green 'match in England. The parties being ' much attached to each other, although ; family obstacles prevented them from marrying in form; they resolved to adopt the plan above mentioned, which consists in the couple presenting themselves before the curate of the parish ; and stating to him in the presence of two witnesses, that they are man and wife. This forms a valid marriage according to the law of thediurchol Rome. T lie lady in the present case, being a Roman Catholic , sent to the curate to
inform him that she wished to confess
Indiana. Indianapolis akd Bellefoutaike Railroad. We have already noticed that this important road is completed to Wine1 ester, 74 miles, north east from Indianapolis, and that it is completed to Union, at the Ohio valley, by the first of December, where it will" connect at once with the Greenville and Miami road to Cincinnati, and over that road with all the railroads of Ohio, but important as this connexion will be, this road has other, and still more important connexions to the travelling and business public, it is a link of 33 miles in the great chain of railroads stretching west from the cities of Boston, New" York, Philadelphia and Baltimore, through Cleaveland, Sanduskv. Pittsburir. Wheeling.
and Columbus, uniting at Union, on the ' Lovely Laura, one and twenty,
west line of Ohio, with this important ; apa dead, ana cash in plenty; road, which is to extend all these to the I Lovers now in crowds are pouring,
capuolof the State of Indiana there to ignting some, and all adoring;
From the Southern Ladies' Book. The Coquette. BY RICHARD VAGRAKT, ESQ. Lively Laura, young and pretty, Belle of country, belle of city, Prettier charmer ne'er was seen, Rich, and fair, and seventeen; Mamma's darling, papa's pride, Who shall win this blooming bride! Soon by love of conquest fired, All her aim's to be admired, Soon, as swells her captive train, Proud she grows, and very vain; Soon she find her triumphs over, Many a beau, but ne'r a lover.
ifal heir to it. So vou can "take un the ! a,ul requested him to name the hour that Bank, and the Tariff, the Internal Im- : "'ould suit him to hear her. At the provements, and such kind of notions, hour named she repaired to the confesand use'em.quietlv for the benefit of the 'onal, and had fully gained the priest's Dimccratic partv and sar nothin about attention, when her lover, attended by it. Onlv von m'nst tnkp V-hpo tn vVm two witnesses, suddenly presented him-
over into Dimocratic Bank.and Dimocrat- sclf- 1 he lady arose, and gave him her , complete, by the most direct ic Tariff, and Dimocratic lutei n:,! i hand, the fatal werds were pronounced, ! railwavs adopted bv their low
provements, and then nobody won't sav ; word aoin'em.
Gay gallants, tip top of fashion, Withered beaus with youthful passion.
meet on the Union track, lines of rail
road to St. Louis, through Terre Haute, La Fayette, Peru, M adison, Lawrenceburg, Richmond Jeffersonville.New Al-
I banv. and Evansville. With the com-
j plet'ion, these roads, the connection be- i Spendthrift heir that makes a dash, 1 tween the East and the Interior of the j Rich in everything but cash; (State of Indiana, and St. Louis, will ; A11 come wooing, all come suing,
lines of asi and beauty hot pursuing.
Frenchman brisk that loves a froff.
Uierman prince, or count incog,
OUR CHIP BASKET. Ct5" It is a curious fact that children are the best judges of character, at first sight, in the world. There is an old Scotch proverb, "They are never cannie that dogs and bairns dinna like;" and there is not a more true one in the whole collection. A .1' T 1 .
i ainer jL.amson was taken in
a few d.-,- nnL hi. nmM,;n Ma,v) of September
Circuit Court. Times of holding Circnit Courts in the several counties of the Fourth Judicial Circuit, State of Indiana, for the year 1853: Frasklis (term 3 weeks) 1st Monday (7th day) of February; 1st Monday (1st day) of August. Unios (term 2 weeks) 4th Monday
(23 th day) of February; 1st Monday (4th
grades,
times is c v;r,i'iir back agin, an
saultie 1 : an 1 Internal Im- !
. Vs has cot t ) s'jr.i 1 from mder, ."siys I. "t::io!e J-hii, we han't 3i:;k n .v, s it can't ?tanJ from - ! s.vT'.i v. nether." , t'ij ain't n ithinj at all to th---.C s-y h ; "s:ipp.sin we h d a v u:i htve to stin i from under,
"Well, now.about the Cabinet. That is a ticklish kind of business, and I feel uneasy to know how you'll get along with it. Uncle Joshua thinks you'd better take one of each party that went for you, and give'em all a fair chance. But you can't have but seven members in the Cabinet, unless you conclude to have Kitchen Cabinet too, and I don't suppose you'll do t'.iat. for they ain't apt to work very well. Old Hickory himsclt got rather tired of his before 'twas over. So if you haven't but seven members, there won't be enough to give one to each party, and them that's loft to suck their lingers will always be biting their thumbs at vou. And then vou know the rule is.
j j that the Cabinet should be a unit. But
i I m a. raid it vou ret one in Irom each
party, it will be a viry quarrelsome kind of unit, aii'' you will hive coin fort of
V'our lite. And then it von was to srive the
e to one or two parties, yMi would ol
the witnesses attested, and the curate ; and straight lines to rapid and cheap ! Lovely Laura, hard to please, became the unwilling instrument of a ; transportation of freighs and passengers. ! Hates all those, and loves not these; "marriage by surprise.' But, although The distance from Indianapolis to St. : That's a fopling, this a brute, the marriage contracted in this manner j Louis is only about 225 miles, while that Suitors all yet none will suit, is perfectly valid, it is punishable in ; from St. Louis to Cincinnati is 335, ma- i Tuscany as a civil misdemeanor; so that ; king this line much the shortest between L.idy Laura, nine and thirty the law condemns what the church sane- ; Cleavcland and St. Louis, that has yet ; Tha'iks to paint, she still is prctlv:
ago his preaching; havinsrt
caiieu together a disorderly set oil "scalawags." On refusing to walk.he was conveyed upon the shoulders of four men. On arriving at the watch-house some one asking if he was hurt any, he replied, 'Not much some wrenched, riding on so many asses at the same time." 07" The passions are never so easily subdued, as when checked by a generous, disinterested, sublime purpose, with which the soul is filled. Channing. 07" The only uniform and perpetual cause of public happines is pub lie virtue. The effects of all other things which are considered as advantages will be found casual and transitory . Without virtue
nothing can be securely possessed or properly enjoyed. ft5The worst of all heresies, is a bad heart and an uncharitable tongue.
OCT A subscriber to one of the dailies
Fayette (term 12 weeks) 2d Monday
(14th day) of March 1st Monday, (5th day) of September. Rrsii (term 2 weeks) 4th Monday (28th day) of March; 3rd Monday (19t"h day) of September. Shelby (term 2 weeks) 31 Monday (14th day) of April; 1st Monday (3d day) of October. Decatur (term 2 weeks) 4th Monday (25th day) of April;3d Monday (14th
day) ot October.
DEAunoRs (term 4 wceks)2d Mon
day (9th day) of May; 5th Monday (31st j by the plaintiff, mid no judgement
day) ol wctooer. Co in in on Plra Court. Times of holding the Court of Com
nion Pleas in the District composed
The Civil CoIt. We gave last week a synopsdu of tha most etriking new features ot the Criminal Code,a prepa.-ed by the Law Reform Commisioners.and adopted by the Legislature. The Civil Code, is far larjjer.etending to 170 printed pages and we can only allude to a few of its most prominent points. 'The distinction between law and equity is abolished, as required by tha Constitution; and hereafter there ia to be (instead of the different kinds of action as heretofore) but one form of action for the enforcement or protection of private rights, and the redress of privatt wrongs, which is to be termed 'a civil action.' The rejoinders and sur-rejoinders, the rebutters and sur-rebutters &.C. &C. which have come down to us from antiquity, are abolished. The only pleadings
hereafter are to be, 1st, a complaint vj I the plaintiff,2nd. a demurreror an answer
by the delendent 3rd,a demurrer or reply
can
be reversed lor error committed in sustaining or overruling a demurrer for misjoinder of causes of action. All fictions in
io J-jehr a fines
R-ITS I. ts'Bil'i
'you ask Johnson
v.
sat
' vs h.
iys I. "you know ring every body it s. So hi cvne v 1 savs he, M li Says I.Mr. wut.-h. Says ho
. ,"'e- n vou n:.t
Bill is alii c- sets to s up to me r how'd " Johnson I , no mailer
ore, how'd
I c.-uM l-ve A Bill J.d;n m ' 1 - v . And it weotily .Bk.ni iv be I e-.ii: 1 answer vour to-. for ii it w; a Whig Bai.k,
pr.-t'y .i.v..i.-.t:y it would
i'r;ii unW or be utisct.
::v
ie H .! i;. 1T1 1 kiiVd th? been vour
pr-.n ile is ' around
'-.1 Jiu koi k,;i. ! ti li'.'v'ra! Pierce his :-'y. fr has a! v.us "ti.tr the I) Miieeratie
n th N"hi'-.i. P.ii? now there
iWhigpar-y. ti.-.r n o Bank. I don't riy p-irt whit G inoral Pierce 3Md-;for of nil the hard things v :M th 're ain't nothing harder i,.'k .-'m nothin. An I. uncle 1 tt ! at all surprised if (Jineral ' ii 1 g t- work now and bniid :.-!h:r-: a:i ! I djn't know but I h- would." iS -Imrul!.! uu h;s oves. an I
who!
course nave about a dozen parties up in arms agin you. and squalls an l harrvcancs blowing from all ipiavters. Jest see how .t would work. If von should pick out
a ou!id. wise Old Fogy to take hold with you to help cook matters up. the Dimocratic Review would be down upon yon like a thousand of brick, and blackguard yon like a pickoocket for trvingto hobble along ou the "mere beaten horse." An 1 then if you was to look 'te'her w iy and st Voung America to h-Mm. the Ol.i Fogies would be afraid some of the madcaps would run us on to the hro;:k-Ts and send ns all to the hot- ' torn. In that case pretty likely there'd be j a prater unit out the Cabinet than there i was in it. an 1 there would Vv danger of mutiny all around. So there, you are. You K-H-m to be in a snarl, any w;y you : can tix it. j Vow. if y v,i will tike my advice. Ginoral, vou will shet vour eves, and stop
tions. The officer was first confined in a military fortress, deprived of his rank, ! and dismissed lrom service, and then j sent to expiate his guilt, in a civil point of view, by two months solitary confinemeut in the Muratte Cellular Prisons, and his wife had undergone a simiiiar term in another prison. Another instance of this kind occured here recently, wherein the priest was sent for as if to attend a dying person; but one of the witnesses getting alarmed before the curate arrived, went down stairs and warned his reverence that a snare was prepared for him. The curate very indignantly sent lor a couple of gendarms, and with them presented himself to arrest the culpable parties. The other witness pjt out of an upper window and escaped over the tiles, but the briJegroom. nothing daunted by the priest and his posse conunitatus, resolved not to miss marriage for want of witnesses, addressed the curate in the usual formu
la: "This is mv wile,"' said he, "And .,
this is my husband," responded the lady; j "And these two gentlemen" resumed j the bridegroom, pointing to the two as-:
tound'd gendarms, "are witnesses." The priest was done and the marriage was vaiid.
bee contemplated. American Railroad Growing prime as growing older,
Journal.
NEW Pierce,
Scott,
JERSEY OFFICIAL. .,.44.303 3G.551
Hale,. , . ,
344
DELA A" ARE OFFICIAL. Pierce, 6,319 Scott, 6.294 Hale, 62 Pierce's majority, 25.
CONNECTICUT OFFICIAL. Pierce, 33.249 Scott, 30.359 Hal?, .....3,100 Majority lor Pierce, 2,890.
I Lovers few and these ore colder;
j V idowers that want a mate, : bachelors of ancient date,
Country pumpkins from the plough These are Laura's lovers now. Lonely Laura charms no more, Her age she owns at just two score;
I Peevish, though, and ever Iretting, i Flirting still, and still coquetting , Talks of every former flame, 'Tried to hope she's still the same; ! But alack! the glas to true, Odi us wrinkles brings too view; ' Truth is truth, and must be said, Lonely Laura dies a maid.
0f j ploading(John Doe, Richard Roe and Co.
the counties of i ranklm, iuvette and,, .... , , r . , . . . I lorbidden. Lrror?, and defects in L iron, for the year 1S5 3: I pleading, not affecting the substantial Franklin term 3 weeks 1st Mon- rights of a party, are to be disregarded dav I 2d djvl of January: 1st Mondav i bv the Court, and no indiriiipnt ran af-
an admirer of Kossuth recently stop- 4th day ot April; 1st Monday 4th day ! terwards be reversed or affected thereby, ped his paper, because it contained "no of July; 1st Monday, 3d dav of Octo- i The old rule of excluding interested new European revolutions." He ought her. witnesses is abolished, whi. h is an exto be yoked to the man who stopped his Fayette term 2 weeks 4th Mon- poriment, in regard to which a cmd deal paper because he "didn't like some of the ' day 24th day of Jan. 4th Mondav might be said on both sides. Witnesses late appointments to office by the Presi- 2 jth day of April; 4th M nday 25th ' are not hereafter iiicapaciated from givdont"" day ol July ; 4th Monday 24th'day ot i ing evidence by reason of interest in tho Phillips' Fire Annihilator, in Lon- October. ! result ofthe trial, with the exception of a don, has been totally destroyed by fire, ' Union term 1 week 1st Monday ; party to aa action or the husband or wiie originating accidentally. " ; 7th day of February; 2d Monday 9th of a "party. The interest may be proved
OCT The difference between satire, ' uavJ 01 ,la-v; -d UoI,i,y 1 5,111 "VJ .o1 , however, to ailect the witness croU.bili-
auuh, isi .uonuay i uu uayi oi io- , ty.
vemuer.
couched in delicate I nguage, and coarse,
' vulgar invective, is the same as between the rough cutting of a saw and the smooth i but deeper incisions of the surgeon's j knife. The one exasperates and creates
j contempt, tha other produces reflection that ofho ,.robdIC( au Executors
uuu uui'ii ft t un.
PEN N S Y LV A N I A O F FI C I A L. Pierce 19S.583
Scott,. .
Hale,
Broom
........j
(Native,)
79,183 .8.580 .l,t' 10
Popping tlie Qui slsnn. The Boston Journal says the following letters did actually pass betwen a lady and a gentleman of that city. Apart from their novelty, they w ill afford our readtrs considerable amusement, and will also teach those w ho are loving, to
your rar, and take the responsibility, j Up the delicate matter upon scriptural and when they come pulling and hauling principles-
you. test sav to the linn-icrats,
,,.! 1, llt.l l.n-i. ,,) ,-.,...v A r!.... i LETTER OF GENTLEMAN TO THE LADY.
and th Hunkers, and the Barnburners,' and Fceos nl r. and the Abolitionist, and the Secessionists, and the Nullifiers, that ' yon don't know none of 'em. and that you ain't their President, but that ycu are the President of these thirty-one
Lntted States, and vou mean "to so for
VOTE OF OHIO. The vote ofthe State of Ohio at the late Presidential Election was as follows: Pierce 169160, Scott, 154,526
Tin- ltirlt in p n of nrrnttir Co. j The following list, selected at random from the tax duplicate, exhibit a few of
i the martyrs to high taxes,:n consequence crujjte
oi naviug too mucn oi itus "world s i gear.' Poor follows, we feel sorrv for , em. ! V Sefton $150 84 ; J Freeman 91 48 i J B Foley 86 56 A R Forsvth 69 03
0Irish Advertisements. Patrick Kelly announces in one ofthe daily papers that he "will climb a pole 40 feet high feet foremost with the bark oil' on a wager." ft"?" Roscoe records that, in the fif-
Motice to t.xcrnti , Itlmliilatrntorw ami U iiitrtl'uu.
;s me common Fleas Court supercedes
and
Administrators, intending to make a final settlement of th.-ir estates , must file the same in vacation with the Clerk, at least ten days prior to the first day of the term, us it is the duy of the Clerk to publish in some newspaper, in tiu-coun-
Majority for Pierce, John P. Hale received ..
...16.533 . . .31,782
MASSACIIUSETTSSeott, Pierce Hale,
Webster,
-OFFlCIL. 52,683 ... : 44,569 28,028 1,670
Broome, 165 Majority for Scott, 8,114.
.54 .71 .94 .89 .87 .62 .81 .37 .41
Romans 1 ch. from the 9th to the 12th versds inclusive. For God is my witness, ; whom I serve with my spirit in the
srospel of his son, that without ceasing I make mention of you always in my prayers, making request if by any means now nt lenoth 1 mio-ht have a prosperous
the .vhole or nne." That is, 1 mean journey by the will of God to come un
St..
"V -Mr.jer you ought to be the last ; ; - y tint rtr workin as hard as -;to hMp funeral Jackson kill the -Ksitiot'.fter." ' s rv tint," says I, "but eiroutuMitors cas-s. " It is being a Whig ; ' .t makes a R?nk bad and does all j -''vi. A Democratic Bank might T 1 j?? " .! thing, and I hope Gineral j "?-.dt'y the rxnerimeiit. The'
'.rnglaiul hs worked well for "a a hundred vears, and why
. ' 1- !"!tk of America, if there j U li gg. ry mixed up with ,v ' t'iinr;;! Pierce will go in for
Krare National Hank. Maj.r." sai.l mwlrt I.!,, .r 1
deeper into statesmanship ' . c:,ll dont know but you're I think Gen. Pierce ought ; 'f one of his cabine it he abuigsafe: and I think if -'iMt down and write a letter 'yril fiving him soms? of your jut things, it might be a help I think. Major, it's your duty y't Itolp thinking about this last '-'Uncl,! Jeshui all day, and fi1 -:roa to feel as though 'twas mv ' Vt.) the Ginerr.l. But "t
'U the rnners aVont
rg'.:a r,r .,vn,w-t.xrrt .xT
. K.en. Un.uvwnere mv letter r . - 11 But 1 spos,, Mf tiAt.Es V..-"u kci'; t'o run of him, so t -"' ' t,w ''? ' t0 J'1 and p't you .. 0;1- so d.ung voa will "'' r-s- '.d iriend. " i, M a or Jax Dowmn ...
j ' r"i,f l riprrr. ' 'lX iv-at.E, Sr.TsoF M aine. r Nov. 16. 1S.)2. ; ' Nr.rtu.: t guess vou little v ,'on VV wa,? havin? t!:lt scratch U:t I was going to make a 0i you. lUit time and chance ."l-,;d tu n. a,,d Why shouldn't ..... well as anv body else' '4 ;A', rio-t dear old ; Jsson.that I should ever have Nov , xv:i;e, B'l iier Gineralin . -ionel,and somehow it didn't
-"V. s natural for me to say "dear u ii', U ,!lJ tj sav"dear tJi'neral." , :. v . ,J ""od to it in old Hickorv's ?tW,Icri't holp thinkiug that K,1,an Amoral ever ought to But that's neither here m'J0 Uiar JVsident and have, 'i te n make the best of it J ,?00,,''';llof experience in
j t:te whole ot these United Mates that is ' fairly ours, and not the whole of creation, i for this last business is one that needs to be looked at and thought on considerable before goin into it. I know some folks ' sav there is to be a srrcat deal of
annexin done during your administration. Now I don't know w hat your notions is on this subject, but if annexin is to be the main business of your term .the next question is. what is the best way to do it! Uncle Joshua always says, in nine cases out of ten it costs more to rob an orchard than it would to buy the apples. If that's true, may be that tillibusterin wouldn't be the cheapest way to annex. But
to you; for 1 long to see you; that 1 may impart unto you some spiritual gift to to the end ye may be established. That is. that I may be comforted together with you, by the mutual faith both of you and me.' Please to give me an answer as soon as convenient. Most affectionately yours, &c. TO W HICH THELAPV BV LETTER KErHEP. Luke 15th chapter, and part of the ISth verse. 'I pray thee have me excused.'
NEW YORK OFFICIAL. & Pierce, 262.239 l Scott,... 234,918 Hale, 20,000 Majority for Pierce,27.231.
VERM ON T O FFI C I A L. The official vote of Vermont is: Scott 22,173 Pierce, 13.044 Hale, 8,629 Majority for Scott, 9.129.
R Hamilton R M Hamilton. . J E Hamilton . . . L A Donnel....
D Lovett G McLaughlin A R Meek R Braden N Swnils J R Donnel R C Foster E Critser
J D Pleak 28 C Miller 29 G & W Woofill 54 J A Graham 25 T Hamilton 36 H. Je ett .33 W Hillis 30
J Smalley. . C Hnzelrigg
W Butcher. . I Davidson . . G XV Snyder
J Braden
J Meek....
.65 31
52 77 11 43 00 89 40 74 00
.32 .27 .56 .64 .63 .57 .64
Itltrtion run. It appears that the Whigs of Gettvs-
some folks have a great fancy for fillibus- burg. (.Pa..) were determined not to lose terin. let it cost what'twill. If you the opportunity for a jollification on acshould think of branching out strong that count of their late defeat at the Presiway, I don't spose vou could do better dential election. Resolved to have a
V,
than to to take Kossuth for Secretary of State. For he is Governor of Hungary, yon know, and could hitch that fine country right on our team without the trouble of any tillibusterin about it. D could be ono so quick the Russian Bear wouldn't hardly have time to growl. And then a small tillibusterin army could bring in Cuba, and Canada, and Mexico, and the rest as fast as we should know what to do with'em. Good by, Gineral, sro alidad, and keep a Miff upper lip, and any thing I csn do fr yon iost let me know. Sol remain renr true friend. MAJOR JACK DOWNING.
Thp U?vprpni I.irn Hrawnlow. This queer, conceited, cock-fighting parson. (!) has moved his office and newspaper to lvnoxvilie. Tennessee. The j p ir-on took it t int. h;s head t abuse i Gen Seott. an I refused to vote for him or 't support his nomination. A baker's doz- ; en of discontented spirits in Tennessee, not liking cither ofthe great parties, got nu a new concern and called it the Wehter ticket. Brown low blew and struck for thi ticket thro' the ctmnaKm.
When the voting was done and the votes counted out. the city of Ivnoxville had given the Webster ticket one vote! It is not diilicult to guess whose vote that was. The new party ran afford to have a harmonious time of it in Knoxville.
procession, they started in a body on Monday night (of last week) for Salt river. Before their final leave, they moved in procession through the streets, and amid the grief, which was loud and even boisterous on the part of some emigrants, there was something rather funny iu the fixtures they were taking with, them to render their now abode comfortable. They had their roasters, their jugs, meat, flour, onions, net. knapsacks, in short, everything in the eating and cLuhing line that could be thought of, and some of them had their w ives and little ones. The whole affair was w ell ; got up. and produced a great deal of good tiding on all sides, and was quite a damper on the Pierce "jollification"' w hich came oil' on Tuesday night. So we learn from the Gettvsburgh Sentinel.
T!te Abolition Vote. ' The annexed is a mere approximation to the Abolition vote in ti c United
States at the recent Presidential election 1 compered with 1848. I i 1852. 1848. Maine 8,000 12,174 j New Hampshire, ..... .6,666 7,560 Vermont, 7,529 13.8371 Maasachusetts, 28.023 38.058 ! , IM,..K, Kl.,.l KO I Tin!
j Conneticut .3,160 5,005 New York 20,000 120.519
New Jersey, 344 828 ! Pennsylvania, 9,524 ll,2ti3j Delaware, 62 80 Ohio 25.000 35.347 j Indiana 5.000 8.642 ' Illinois 10.000 15.804 ' Michigan, 6.000 10,3S9 j Wisconsin,.. 7.500 10,418 j Iowa 1,600 1.26; Maryland, 125 I Virginia. 9
D Jewett 57 E Lathrop 46 J Morgan ............. 37 A Carter' 90 S A Donnell 35 T Hamilton 36 T Donnel 35 C Hamilton 30
L Snider . . . , J W Collins D Boyer
S Sharp..
P Martin J Goddare. J Hillis S Hood P Hopkins P Ewing E Marshall C Starks S Lowe.
49 63 31 68
52 00 32 81 33 94 96 68 78 80 07 33 40 00 50 69 98 00 08 32 00 04 63 02 33 00 40 23 30 00 00 43 00 70 19
as John-
son says, by the mass ol character. I A block of tin may have a grain of sill ver, but still it is tin: and a block of silver ! may have an alloy of tin, but still it is sil- ; ver. 07 The word London is of Sclavonic ' origin.and signified a town upon water, i Lon is the Sclavonic for water, and Don i city.
Count Pulsky has written to the Cologne Gazette, indignantly denying that he had sought a reconciliation with Austria. He says," Austria does not treat with rebels, and I do not treat with despots." - The Correctiox of a Vulgar Idea. It is not literary men quarrel
more than any other class of men; it is that they have greater means of making their quarrels known to the public. Punch. j As defect of strength in us makes l some weights to be unmovable, so likewise delect of understanding makes some truths to be mysterious. Bishop ; Sherlock. j
Jurors to try civil action! shall not b?
more than twelve nor less than three in number. The parties may agree on a jury of small iiuinbL'rs.uud ulso, it they ch.oos.1 upon thj persons who shall compose itAnd if one parly is willing to a small jury, and the other is njt, the larger jury are empannclled and the costs of tiio jurors, exceeding the smaller number taxed tj tlu party demanding the in. Property is to be sold, under execution at two tiiirds its appraised value. Stay of execution, under ;6, one mouth. Between Jjji'i and &12, two months. Between 520 and 40,four mouths. Between ; 10 and yiOO live mouths. Over 100, I six months.
As provided in the New Constitution
tv, a notice ol the presentment unJ sct-
teenth century, women distinguished Moment of each estate, and we underthemselves among the most active and stand that the same rule will be adjptcd
in learning, and in translating in tha settlement ofGuardian's acouuts
the classics, and helpingou the happy re- by the Court. Democrat. viva! of literature. . , .. .. . . Curup torn ('ran.
IC-J- .Ueil are 10 DO estimated, as Jolin- Tl. firtl. ...,,... io, cro:, of com was anv voter of ..o.l moral rl.ararter. shall.
awarded by the Crawford County, Ohio on application, be admitted to act as un
Agricultural fejciety, to Mr. Lin.is Ross; 126 bushels per acre being the amount raised by bint. It was raised on new, plain lands, pastured the last 25 years, strong blue srrass sward, plowed
the 8th o! June, planted the 9th of June with a spade, without harrowing the grounds; planted three feet o:u way, and twelve inches tho other, three to six
grains to a hill. Expense of slated to be Plowing one acre, Planting, 75 cents; Cutting up Total cost per acr?, 4,85. crop at trilling cost. Herald.
culture S3, 00; $100. G reut
Singular Coincident. The vote in Morgan county, Va., last year, for Governor, stood: Democrat 288, Whig 253. Tuis year, for President, it stauds; Pierce 291, Scott 231.
Charles G. Atherton has been elected U. S. Senator from New Hampshire, in place of John P. Hale whose term expires the 4th of March next.
attorney in anv of the Courts of the
Slate. He shall then swear to support the National and State Constitutions, ' and 'Uitii.ully and honestly to discharge th-. duties oi au attorney.'- Th'J suns chapter ofthe Code lays down his dtities' specifically as follows: To counsel or maintain such actions and proceedings onlv as appear to be legal an I just, (except that he may defend criminals in any case) to employ no means except such ; as arc conistent with truth never to j seek to mislead a Court or jury by artifice or by a false statement of fact or j law to ubstain from al' offensive erl sonality, and not to attack the honor or ; reputation of a party or a witness except j ustice to his case requires it never to entourage actions through passion or in- ; terest or reject, from any persoual considerations, the cause of the defenceless or the oppressed, &.a. Lc. A party to an action may be examined ' under oath by the adverse party, and ! this maybe done before the trial upon due notice being served upon him, and one thus examined may testify in his
owii beha't in respect to any pertinent matter, but if he testify to any new mit-
l,lvll- .1. ;r.
The Hilsboro' railroad is doing! We learn from a corrcspont ofthe fine business this fall. More wheat has Evanesville Journal, that there arc now
been shipped from Highland, this year 1 seven hundred hands at work raising and
i than in the last ten years, put together, widening the levees around t airo lor , Pr n .tj esnonsivo to ennuiries of tho on
It is expected that nearly S7000 will the better protection of the town Hat posit c jle, the adverse party is nriv
...unuauoii. a n.- ..: " leged to testify under oath in respect to
readied ly tlie Hood ot '44, and 80 leet
1S7.432
292.823 137,432
Abolition loss in four years, ..155,396 and should not wear night-caps
New York Journal ot Commerce. j
CiI wonder what has become ofthe snuffers! said Mrs. Johnson. "I have been looking for them all tlu evening.and can't find them high nor low.' Nobody could ffive her any satisfa c-
tion. Alter while the hired Dutchman . getting slocp .commenced pulling off his boots preparatory to going to bed.
"All dis dav.' said he, I dink I jrot some
little grabble stones in my poot. I tret era out now.' He turned
boot and poured out the snuff'- rs
We find the follow ew mums paragraft in the Detroit Free Press, headed "dead letters." It is an extract from a letter addressed to Captain Willongby of the steamer May flower. We do not regard it as a very "dead letter." I Here is one from "your affectionately 1 ann lagan' who has lost a "valuable box, ' tied with a rope that cost 75 cent," and intimating if ' that same isn't sent by tclagrall before navigation stops." the unending torments ofthe law will be ap- ' plied to the Captain aforesaid.
be realized from the road this month
I The population of the town
Hilsboro' has increased 35 percent, withj in the last two years, and now numbers over 1900. I Sixty persons have joined the : Methodist E. Church, at Hilsboro,' withi in the last fortnight, j They boast of corn 1 1 feet 1 1 I inches tall," in Chester county Pa. i Stalks of maize frequently attain the height 15 or 18 feet, in this neighbor- : hood. Scioto Gazette. Qr7"Kossuth says that nothing short of ! an extraordinary emergency, promising ! some practical result, shall ever induce ; him to deviate from his rule, never to ! speak any more in England publicly. i Probably he is tired ot ull talk and no ci
der. 0i7It is stated by a traveller, that there is a gentleman living i:i Jamaica, whose father was the duke of Kent, (father of Queen Victoria.) and whose w ife is a daughter of George the 4th.
! rv.-mT'. f ' I .).. l.l . 1..
rl.:i l. .,.. 11 II i 1 llv vj I tl, v - ll iiij liuiv: ill lliv."
VllllUll'll UUUVI rA-CII liaio ettvuivi I , t I I . t not be confined over six or seven hours ground winch lovers and poets very ofin the house, and that time should be .w but tl,,e 6an,f
broken hv freemen t recesses. . "V"- v l'rel,uu Sl,"u alv KVi' "ut
..57 ..40 ..32 ..31 ..37 . .51 . 29 ..26 ..26 . .27 ..30 ..37 ..23
Press.
Iav of Health. Children should be taught to
left hand as well as the right. Coarse bread is much better for
dren than fine.
Children should sleep inseperate beds
use the
chil-
wide on the top. The Central Railroad is to run around the city and probably one th top of the levee. The rush for the few spoils to be distributed by tho Sham-Democracy at the next session of the Legislature, will be so great, that we advise the hotel keepers of the c ity to make arrangements for the occasion ofthe assembling of that bod-. i The People's Friend, at Covington, 1 onnounces, that Messrs. Restine, Puit, Nollsinger, and B. R. Edmunson, will be candidates for Trustee of the Wabash Canal, and that among the prominent candidates for U. S. Senator, will be John Pettit. John XV. Davis, R. D. Owen, XV. J. Brown, Henry Secrest, J. L. Robinson, and last, Col. Wi'iis A. Gorman, and "ethers too tedious to mention,' it might have added. In J ana Journal.
said new matter, fcither party may in any case, propound interrogatories to bo tiled with the pleadings, and require the opposite party to answer them under oath. The old Latin titles of the special writs such as ad quod damnum arc all anglicised, except in the single instance of that time honored writ of habeas corpus. South Bend Reg.
I
up
A few weeks since, Mr. Stone, a conductor on the Central Railroad , while
ftVFIour, from Northern Indiana
heat, groun
lers, is in high lavor at Chicago, as
learn from the follow ing remark in
t'tnliuwllh the Inrtlan.
The Austin Southwestern American,! of the 20th ultimo, has an official account of Captain Owen Shaw, of the ,
loss Texas Hangers, ol a severe nirui uciw ei-u )us his company and a party of Indians, the . dispatch is dated "Camn Bee, 15 miles! j above U-iredo, Sep. 22J,' and the fight
took place on the 17th. t apt- mw states that the Indians consisted of nine-
men and two woman, oi wnom
the
the ; perately
...i . iu v t,l;,n. Mil
w m. n , j;i vuiiu im .imuum itiviiuin teen
vc i nihe w ere killed, and
.1. ' . .1 .1.-1 rrV.Mntw.llirr.
collecting fare, come to a man aittinsr ' WUVS !emWK m. F " ,.t.." ' X.
muffled up in aclaok, and demanded his Chicago Tnbuee'a Weekly report ..V'
..." , their mantei. Wee. the mail carrier, had also
.,., , . .n 10 JMRSon! "?h01 lne "Flour is in active revest, at the ad-1 witU' lho Indians, of whom
i" v 111 11
' ;n f
u s time, and vou are
Twenty-five cents.-
Ah! that's more money than I've got;
.d.r, i una u , uviu i ou sjmeiuncs carry lolfcs lor I ess to you and try to en- ; when thev aie poor, or sick, or unfortu-
tv,. "roior t uoti t expect vou nate! 'HMnl k?mj "vl trying time ! 'Yes.' frn tKm?rough the IVesidencv, j "Well,
rio.j. ? ',a- ii is necossarv is t., nno
1 vannced rates, and w e notice the receipt ! killed, near Romance Springs.
! of small lots or best oranus oi .nicingan and Northern Indiana, which find a ready market, as they are held in high es
teem for family use."
then, you had better take half
from me; vou see I've lost the use
:--r fn ,i.er P" 'l vvas keepin a ' Dth my hands'.' holding them up cn.''h, carried eral Jack-' circled with handcuff's.
many hard trials i Stone looked round and observed the
preat
so i
What l man. A thing to waltz w ith, to flirt with, to take vou to the theaters, to laugh at, to
's bills, and to
,:Siivma-ny h,n 10 the hellow Sheriff sitting behii s ,rr'4 -h Xtl tWe 1rC!!'ionT that 1 a quiet smile at hi
. vm-y come to settle
up Advertiser.
be married, to nay one
keep one comfortably. We are sorry to be be obliged to say
behind hien. induljTinsr in 'that m.nr v.niti.r la.l!.s nf the nresent
s expense. ueiroti dav. consider this a true definition. ?ew in tlie esi. Known as uie
' Yr Reveille. ' Cave." Cin. Commercial.
Itiar Speenlntten. Mr. David White, of Mudison, Indiana, "Old Enterprise," has made a handsome thing by the cxtiaordinary rise in hogs. He cleared l50,S00 on Friday by one sale, and it is thought that his profits will reach 200,000 before the season closes. The price of hogs has risen to 6 per hundred,and stubbornly demanded. Mr. White is the proprietor of the largest
slaughtering and packing establishment
Mammoth
cle on the cost of materials for building houses.savsthatahouse near Fishkiil.
Children and vounsr People must be 01 , has been constructed, the walls ol which
made to to hold their heads up and their GO" A Bio MountFt l! Mrs. Duncan are prepared of gravel. Walls two hunshoulders back while, sitting, standing, in "America asl found it" gives the fol- dred and filty-si.x leet in circumference or walking. The best beds for children lowing in cident: "One day, being at leis- and eleven leet four inehes high, cost are ol hair, or, in winter, orhair or cotton, ure to observe the proceedings of my 79 to put up, and amounts to as ma1 Young persons should walk at least neighbors, I saw a very respectable look- ny feet aa are embraced in a house fortwo hours a dav in the open air. ing lady reduce one hall of an oval slice ty-live feet long, t e.ity-five feet wide, Yoiin-r ladies should be prevented ol bread to the shape of a horse shoe by and twenty-one feet high two sUriea from bandaging the chest. We have on goodly bite thst she took out of the and a half. The materials ol which the known three cases of insanity termi- middle. This lady introduced herself to walls are made, are cumpounded ' natinsr in death, which becan in this me in tne saloon, and oh, Dickens! oh, of eight bushels ol slacked lime; six- ! t ii . i. i .....li . i i...i - I .1 .:,).
i practice. rui opt . can vou near me uisiuai iruur ici-u uuiuna ui rauu, unu auuui. o.jvij
! Every person, great and small, should , she told me she was a Londoner!" wash ail over in cold water every morn- (t-The Rev. Dr. Craig's new Mcing. scope, at Wandsworth Common, Eng- ! The more clothing we wear, other land, is the largest in the world; the tube - . . . . ..i.i t- i i . . . .
tilings oeing equal, uie iess ioou we nveu. H eighty-hve leet in length. It magniFrom one to one pound and a half of ( fies the moon forty thousand times! and of solid food is sufficient for a person in j lenses are so perfectly achromatic the ordinary vocations of business. lnat the planet Saturn appears of milky
rersons in seuantry employments euuum drop one-third of their food, and they
rest des-! w'" escape dyspepsia.
Younir people and otners cannot siu-
dy much by lamplight with impunity.
The best remedy tor eyes, weanenea
. . 1 1 . .... : . f. n n .frAnm ftl f.f.lH
a tight y nigni use, is a . "-
three were i water applied lrequentiy to mem.
i i.nnntiu .niii.r'i.
I I ,, J
fjrrLord Nelson was the eighteenth in
Wheat Irom r.gypt. With the following letter we received a sample of wheat grown on the banks of the Nile, which for size and plumpness of kernel, we have never seen excelled by any variety. We shall be pleased to learn of the success of th experiments in growing the wheat in this country. The great difference of the seasons here, from those in its native climate, may prevent the perfect maturing ofthe seed, still it should have a fair trial. The don-
materJol for nuildinztloutea. ! or will please accept our thanks for his The Scientific American, in an arti- i,;nj attention:
frtrBy a law of Congress, and & late treaty ratified with the Indians on the 10th of September, all the country south of St. Paul, west ofthe Mississippi, and north of Iowa, has been ceded to M ine-eota.
(rAmong those who voted in Newport, Rhode Island on Tuesday, was Nathan Munro, who is one hundred years old. He voted for George Washington at hit first election.
bush, of fine ai d coarse gravel. This
wall has stood summer heats and winter frosts, and gets better every day. When stone, wood and brick, are high, this is considered a very economical material, especially for the conEtruition of cottages around the neighboruood of a large city.
whiteness
Qr5Wm C Bryant, the poet.and editor ofthe New York Evening Post, has sailed for Europe, and w ill visit Spain, Por
tugal, Greece, Ejn'Pt, and the Holy Land lishero a paper in Indiana and Stato
returning home about next May. i Printer, sailed for China in 1843, iu th
rt-J-Martininne contains 9.000 whites. ' service ofthe Presbyterian Board of Mis- abundantly say from 30 to 60
nont. nJT'i (innht.rt. sions. He has ever since resided at per acre. 1 he soil is alluvial, very simi-
' . ' ; II . TT J : .1 : ,U . n up ;,. ,r,,.r.r.ini-. tfl ttl.-lt rr, th XT . a r-;
IlOllg-lVOng, UHU is cngjjjcu ui mr unu- mi i.i .- ufacture of nrintinrr types, an K under the sippi, though containing more sand. The
An Ainrriran Printer in Ciilnn. Richard Cole, twenty years ago a compositor in the office of the Natiunil
Intelligencer, and more recently pub-
3Ir. Ti cker Enclosed I send you a few grains of Egvptian wheat, grown on the bunks ofthe Nile which I purchased at Alexandria. I imported about five bu-hcls of it, and drilled a small quantity of it in the spring, ut which time it came to hand. It grew vigorously, and in appearance surpassed any wheat I ever saw; but was seized with a blight and rust about ten days before it was ripe, and was very much injured. I have now growing about J an acre of it drilled, and 1 J acres sown broadcast, which I put in some three weeks ago. It looks remarkably well, and has attracted the uttention oi all who have seen it, by its very rieh and luxuriant growth. Tho name ofthe wheat in Egypt ia 'Hedjari, from 'Hedjar,' the Holy Land, from whence it was introduced by Mohamed Aii. a few years since. It is certainly ' the finest wheat in Egypt, and I think ' much the best I have ever seen in my travels through various parts of the world. Whether it will succeed in this climate, and whether our soil ia adapted ' t j its growth remains to be tested by experience. On the Nile it vielJs most
bushels
"" i- T .. VL.n. tin, I'nf tiU'lIM nn the Si c vmi .1 k. .
, - . t-. i , . , . , auspices ui uic utu iw n laiuua. , .-. : . - . " . a - descent from K,ng Edward I., and the J . nllhli,.ion ftf hooka rthi- : crite.-ioa for us in this latitude, as thr.
T . - 1. F . 11 . J I 1 I I " f "
Vue ui , eumgion as uescenueu .ruia - . - f . . fnn,l,. ! ,lie onlv change of climate is
o y i -
and is doing well.
the samo monarch.
irora wet
t dry. During the latter season the
rrn:,e all iindprtro frpnnent irriarntinn
Honest Trutli. 1 T ii j-.-u-.j' n
Tilly," said a mother to her daugh- The moU lastuonabiC colors tor x naveu-.-triu,. uiu su.q. i oi
ter, who had seen but three summers, nonneis in rans, are oiacs, oiue, gruuu, 4 "-"J
"what should you do without your moth-; &nd light reu currant a new snaae. ace iarmer,imu n iair ; and velvet arc the ma;rrials most used j trial, the result of which I may acquaint "I should put on every day, just such i for bonnets. For some time it was fear-1 you with. Yours &c, Jos. A. Humb dress as I wanted to," was the prompt i ed that short waists would be resumsd I pprets. Versailles, Kantuclry, Oct. r-ply. i but this ii, hsppily, not th! caa. ' 22, 1S52.
