Indiana Palladium, Volume 10, Number 21, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 7 June 1834 — Page 1
Tr iff Dy David V. Ciillcy. TcrniS-$3 PER YEAR SSU'ER CEXT. DISCOVXT MADE OX ADVAXCE, OR 103 OX HALF YEARLY VAYMEXTS. V0IL. X. ILAWRENCEBIJIIGII, (IA.) SATURDAY, JUNE 7, 1S34.
TP A
X.5ZIfS? OF TIKE IT. ST.1TJE8. BY AUTHORITY. LAWS OF THE UNITED STATES, PASSED AT THE FIRST SESSION OF THE TWENTY-THIRD CONGRESS. Public, j"o. 5.) AX ACT to change the time for commencing the sessions of the Court of the United States in the district of Delaware. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the sessions of the Circuit court and District court of the United States in tho District of Delaware, shall commence at the times hereafter mentioned, instead of the limes now appointed by law; that is to say: the sessions of the said Circuit court shall commence at Newcastle, on the Tuesday next following the fourth Monday of May, and at Dover on the Tuesday next following the third Monday of October, annually; and the sessions of the said District court shall
commence at Newcastle on the third Tuesday of
june, ana secona luesday oi .December; and at Dover on the Tuesday next following the third Monday of March, and the Tuesday next following the fourth Monday of September, annually; and that no process, recognizance, or bail bond, returnable to the next term of either of said courts, shall be avoided, or impaired, or effected, by
this chmge as to the commencement of said term; but that all process, bail bonds, and recog
nizances, returnable to the next term of cither of
said courts shall be returnable and returned to the
said court next held, accordingly to this act; in
tno same manner as it so made returnable on the
faco thereof, and shall have full eflect accordingly: -i.i.n . ., . J '
ana mai an continuances in either ot said courts
shall be from the last term to the day appointed
by this act for the commencement of the next ses
sion thereof. A. STEVENSON, Speaker of the House of Representatives. M. VAN BUREN,
Vice President of the United States and
President of the Senate. ArrnovED, March 24th, 1834. ANDREW JACKSON.
Public, JVb. 6.) AN ACT to a authorize the issuing of a Register to the Brig American, of Savannah. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That there be issued under the direction of tho Secretary of the Treasury, a register to the brig American, a French vessel, which vessel was stranded on the coast of the Uni
ted States, and purchased by James Taylor, of Savannah, Georgia, and by him repaired. " Provi
ded, 11 shall be proved to the satisfaction of the Secretary of the Treasury, that the cost of the re- - pairs made in the United States, after the purchase of snid vessel, by the present owner, exceeds three
fourths of the original cost of building a vessel of
the same tonnago in the United States. Aitkoved, May 1st, 1S31.
the horses and equipments which may be required to keep the establishment of a regiment of dragoons complete, three hundred and forty-four thousand dollars. For transportation of clothing from tho depot at Philadelphia, to the stations of the troops; of subsistence from the places of purchase and the points
ot delivery under contract, to the posts where they , arc required to be used; of ordnance from the foun-1
dries and arsenals to the fortifications and frontier
posts, and lead from the western mines to the
several arsenals; for transportation of the army, including officers when removing with troops, either
by land or water, freights and ferriages; the pur
chase or hire of horses, oxen, mules, carls, wagons, and boats, for transportation of troops and sup
plies, and lor garrison purposes; drayage and cartage at the several posts, hire of teamsters, trans
portation of funds for the pay department, and the
expenses of sailing a public transport between the
several posts on the Gulf of Mexico, one hundred and forty-five thousand dollars.
For the allowance to officers for tho transporta
tion of their baggage, when travelling on duty, without troops, and for the per diem to offices on topographical duty, fifty-three thousand dollars.
ror contingencies of the army, ten thousand dol
lars.
For carrying on tho works in the city of Savan
nah, Georgia, twenty-five thousand dollars.
ror continuing the repairs and alterations of the
barracks and quarters at Baton Rouge, Louisiana
ten thousand dollars.
For erecting oft'icers' quarters at Fort Severn,
Annapolis, Maryland, five thousand dollars. For carrying on the works at Gieen Bay, Michi gan, ten thousand dollars.
For temporary repairs of the barracks at Fort
Gibson, Arkansas, five thousand dollars. For the purchase of land adjoining Fort Sullivan, Eastpost, Maine, three thousand three hundred dollars. For national armories, three hundred and sixty thousand dollars. For the armament of fortification, one hundred thousand dollars. For the current expenses of the ordinanco service, sixty thousand four hundred dollars. For arsenals, ono hundred and fifty thousand dollars. For the arsenal at St. Louis, in addition to the sum embraced in the general appropriation for arsenals, eight thousand five hundred dollars. For the purchase of five thousand sets of accou
trements for tho artillery and infantry regiments,
fourteen thousand two hundred and fifty dollars.
For the recruiting service in addition to twenty-
nine thousand three hundred and eighty-eight dol-
WHIGS AND TORIES. As those terms have been frequently applied (or misapplied) of late, and as one of them has been adopted by several Senators in their speeches, we trust that a short account of their origin will not be deemed a violation of neutrality. It appears that there is a difference of opinion among the learned as to the derivation of both words.
A celebrated British historian (Bishop Burnet) ex
plains the etymology of the word Whig in this way:
1 he south west counties of Scotland havo seldom corn enough to serve them through the year; and
the northern part producing more than they need, those in tho west como in the summer to buy at
Leith the stores that come irom the north; and from
a word whiggam, used in driving their horses, the drivers were called whiggamors by abbreviation,
whigs. ISow in the year previous to Duke Hamilton defeat, the ministers animated their people to rise and march to Edinburg; and they came up marching at the head of their parishioners with an
unheard ol tury, praying and preaching all the way as they came. The Marquis of Argyle and his party came and headed them, they being about six thousand. This was called the whissamor s inroad, and
' w r ever after that, all that opposed the Court, came in contempt, to be called whigs; and from Scotland
the word was brought into England. The foregoing seems a probable account of the origin of tho term; but tho more generally received definition is that given by Defoe and others, who derive it from a Saxon term, signifying whey, and which in Scotland is culled whig or wigg. This was the most ordinary beverage of those in the Highlands who were first called whigs, and this
spectacles, or walk with their crutches. "But they should remember that these wary adviscM were once young and romantic like thenelvcd, ami that it is from a knowledge of the errors into w hich such feelings are apt to betray us, that they caution u to be "on our iruard againt their influence. Wo
are no prejudices peon
would not assert that there
i.- - ... .... .. !.- iMimif nr.- rwvr in d n"erot
being misled by their seniors and instructors tin blown two or three bundled yard. Mrs.Jincy
equally destructive Mr. Curtis writes us, MhaJ every houje on Mr. Helbcrt Reese's plantation! except his dwelling house, 5s blown to atoms; Mr. Frank Keeso, the overseer, and three negroes:, lost their lives ; several other in groes, badly ciipplcd; hid wagon, which was nearly ncv, hurled to atoms.
even the wheels hroken to lragments, and the hubj
would ha savins too much. It is sulhcient to artirm
that the instance in which the old are apt to feel biassed, are precisely those in which the prejudices of the young run strongest in a contrary direction and th'it.atall events;" there is infinitely more danger to be apprehended from their paying too little, than too much, deference to the opinions of others. A DAY BEHIND THE FAIR. A somewhat ludicrous scene occurred yesterday morning, about S o'clock, at a boarding house in the Bowery. Two young men arrived there the day prcviousi, (one of whom was the nephew of tho lady who keeps the house,) and engaged a private sitting room, and a bed room for two or three weeks. The nephew introduced his companion as a fellow clerk with him in a mercantile house at Hartford, Conn., (which since turns out to bo the fact,) and stated that they had come to Now York merely for tho purpose of seeing the place and paving their respects
to the aunt. The old lady pleased with this mark of affection on the part of the nephew, prepared the best room in the house for their reception, set before them the best fare she had, and did all in her power to make them comfort able. Being fatigued as they said, with their journey, they retired to re si very'early and did not rise till nearly ;? next morning. They had just set down to breakfast, when a hasty knock was heard at the door, at which the younger of t he two was observed to betray no slight uneasi-
peculiarity according to some, obtained them tho I ness. In a minute or two afterwards the room door
was entered somewhat abruptly uy an eiueuy gentleman, evidently in a violent passion, who advanced towards the eldest of the two, after applying divers undignified epithets to him was about to try the elfects
of his cane upon the shoulders of the young man when the noise brought up the aunt, who tlew at the old gentleman like a tigress defending one of her cubs. On the arrival of three or four of the boarders, sonicthing like order was restored; when tho youngest of the two strangers was discovered to have fainted away. The youth was lilted o:i to a sulfa, his slock was removed, and the collar of his shirt unbuttoned to facilitate his breathing, when, (oh,'shade of Diuna tell it not in (lath!) there was revealed to sight the snowy bosom of aa pretty a luso us e'er "brushed dew from lawn." "The lovely stranger lay eonfoss'd, A wive in all her charms."
It Fccms that the young lady was the daughter of
lara unexpended of a former appropriation, six
thousand dollars.
For contingent expenses of the recruiting ser
vice, in addition to six thousand and forty three dollars, unexpended of a former appropriation,
fourteen thousand dollars.
For arrearages prior to the first of July, eighteen
A 1 . . 1 1 1 t
name. According 10 otners, wuey Doing the weauest or most insignificant part of the milk, the name whig was first applied by the tories in contempt to their opponents, meaning that they were nmilk-and water set. The word tory is of Irish origin though the thing, forj7,h'js always been so rare in that country. The name, it is said, was first given to a set of banditti in Ireland rajparccsti3 they were also called whose summons to surrender was expressed by the Irish word Torec, i.e. Give me. It was thence transferred to the adherents, Charles I. by his enemies, under the pretence that he favored the rebels in Ireland. Others derive the term from tho Irish word' toruighim to pursue for purposes of violence. The terms whig and tory, as party designations did not come into general use in England until about tho middle of the reign of Charles the H.
It was in the year 1078 that the whole nation wa3 first observed to be divided into irtrgsand Tories.
During the trials of the persons accused of conspiracy by the famous (or infamous) Titus Oatcs, the appellation whig was given to such as believed the plot real, and tory to those who held it fictitious. Since that time the term Tory has been applied in England to the party in favor of an cxtcntion,or opposed to the diminution, of the powers of the Government and its head, and Whig to those who
espouse the cause of the people, their right and hb-
Crowder had every houe on her firm, dwelling
house and all, t( rn to piece. Old firmer Itoanu lost every house except his dwelling house-. No lives lost at either of tho two list named places. I understand from a gentleman traveller, that it passed on ia the ne ighborhood of Col. Jeter's. -S vend lives lost in tint neighborhood. I also hear that it lias done considerddo damage in tho neighborhood of Thus. Jordm's, with tho loss cf lives, cVc. It appears that it passed from we?t to cast, near on tho north sido and nearly parallel with Cos Hoid.' Wo have no certain accounts of tho ravages of tho tornado after it passed the neighborhood of Curtis, until it reached the plantition of Mr. Win. E. Boisscau, about four miles from town. The scene at this place batiks every attempt at do-
scuption. Hero Us tlesiatmg lury spared nothing. The dwelling house, kitchen, barn, vSic. scperattd into fragments and scattered over tho firm in every direction. Nothing is left to mark . tho site of the dwelling house, but a small portion of tho brick foundation. The family escaped from the house, and attempted to take refugo in the garden, but were overtaken by tho whirlwind and knocked down by the Hying wreck of their former dwelling. Mr. Bs brother, a fine youth of about 11 years of age, was killed ; r.nd Mr. B. his wife, and four other inmates of his family, wcro wounded, though not dangerously, la tho negro quarters the injury was equally severe one woman was killed, and six or eight olhcis w ere wounded, ono very dangerously. The loss sustained by Mr. B. is very great. The persons who have subsequently visited the place desciibc it though tho genius of destruction had made it his temporary abode. From Mr. Boisjeau's it passed along near tho I Southern bouud irv lino of this town, without doinir
much injury until it reached the plantation of Mr. Augustine Burge, in lYuico George. A friend
las given us the followingccount of its devastations in that direction. 4kAt Mr. Augustine Burgu's it blew down his stable, and almost all his ncgro houses; fortunately no person was killed, but several were slmhtlv hurt. At Hall's Field. thi
the old gentleman, who with a" view to economy, had j plantation of Mr. Wm.'Baiid, every hoiuo wr.a caused her to assist his clerk to keep his books; the i blow u down except tho dwelling, a two storied
hundred and fifteen, payable through the ofiice of ertics. Neither designation, there is considered the Third Auditor, in addition to an unexpended odius, or is applied, than the terms Federalist and
young couple, thus thrown; nothing loth, into each house near it, u kitchcn'cr two, and the inachino others way, made such good use of their time, that house. The wagoner," John, a faithful servant, the old gentleman, on entering the counting room was killed in the woods by tho Jallin" of a treerathcrimexpectedly inthe rnoriunglouiulthein larp- the Uva!l()r,, in i0 u ,jk . m ing tally with their hps instead or their pens; upon . n;-!, ... i imi ,i , ? n u- '" 'vm1u c ' t.. ... At Hickory Hill, the residence Mr. n ilham S hands.
which iiu iii, iu3uau"im;r iu h'muu u uer iir.wiii- i
mother, at NYcthertfield.
She contrived, however, to send to nnd receive let
Public, jXo. 7.)
AN ACT making appropriations for tho support of
. the army, for the year one thousand eight hundred
and thirty-lour.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Con
gress Assembled, J hat the following sums be, and the sarao are hereby, appropriated, to bo paid out
ol any money in the 1 reasury not otherwise appropriated, for the support of tho army for the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-four, that is to say : For pay of the army and subsistence of officers, ono million three hundred and eighty-one thousand seven hundred and seventy-two dollars, including the sum of ninety-four thousand seven hundred and eighty-six dollars, arrearages of pny and subsistence, for the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-three. For forage of officers, fifiy-nine thousand ono hundred and seventy-nine dollars. For clothing Tor servants of officers, twenty-four thousand four hundred and fifty dollars. For subsistence exclusive of that of officers, in
addition to an unexpended balanco of fifty-five thousand dollars, the sum of three hundred and sixty-one thousand nine hundred dollars. For clothing of the army, camp, and garrison equipage, cooking utensils, and hospital furniture, two hundred and eighty thousand seven hundred and forty-eight dollars. Forpaymentsin lieu of clothing for discharged soldiers for the year eighteen hundred and thirtyfour, including an arrearage in eighteen hundred and thirty-three, estimated for bythe pay department, forty-five thousand dollars. For the medical and hospital department, thirtysix thousand five hundred dollars. For various expenses in the Quartemnstcr's de
partment, viz: fuel,forage, straw, stationavy,blanks, and printing; repairing and enlarging barracks, quarters, store-houses, and hospitals at the various posts in the Union; erecting temporary catoncinents at such posts as shall be occupied during . the year, including huts fur the dragoons; materfals for the authorized furniture of the rooms of
non-commissioned officers and soldiers, rent of
m quarters, barracks, ana store-houses, postage on public letters; expenses of courts martial and
. courts of injury, including tho compensation of
Judge advocates, members, and witnesses; extra pay to soldiers employed in the erection of barracks . and quarters and the construction of roads and other constant laborers, under an act of Congress of the 2d March, eighteen hundred and nineteen; expenses of expresses from the frontier posts, of escorts . to paymasters, hire of laborers, and the interment of deceased non-commissioned officers and soldiers;
, compensation to extra clerks in the office of the . Quartermaster General, and in the office of the quartermasters and assistants at the severa opsts, and compensation to temporary Agents; also for
balance in the Treasury, three thousand dollars
To enable the Second Auditor to close the accounts under the act of third March, eighteen hundred and twenty-one, allowing three months1 gratuitous pay to disbanded officers and soldiers, one thousand dollars. For tho payment of the general and staff officers and six companies of Missouri militia, ordered into service by tho Governor of that State, in the year eighteen hundred and thirty-two thirty-five thousand dollars. For paying any balance which may be due for militia services in tho Territory of Michigan, in the lato war against Black Hawk and his followers, two thousaad dollars. For the payment of Captain McGcorge's compa
ny of Indiana militia, for services performed in the
year ono thousand eight hundred and thirty-two, provided the Secretary of War shall be satisfied that the saiil company is entitled thereto, tho sum of seven hundred dollars. For finishing gun racks and making window' shutters to the new arsenal, rebuilding middle water shop, one hundred and ten by fifty feet, and for building a house for steam engine, including a store room for iron, fifty-two by forty-six feet, at the national armory, Springfield, Massachusetts, twelve thousand two hundred dollars. For additional machinery and fixtures at t he same armory, viz. three water wheels for grinding musket barrels, six water wheels and twenty-two forges required in the middle water shop, blast ma
chinery for eleven double forges, and for the purchase of new and improved labor-saving machinery, seventeen thousand eight hundred dollars.
For slating roof and rebuilding water wheel of upper workshop, renewing and repairing fences on the public ground, and for painting public build
ings at the same armory, threo thousand live hundred dollars. For repairing darn, (and removing obstructions in way of,) supplying the water to tho rifle factory on the Shenandoaiver, at the national armory, Harper's Ferry, Virginia, two thousand dollars. For the completion of tho machinery in the three shops for turning, boring, and stocking muskets; tho completion of the canal, furnishing the water
power; erecting anu annealing soup mm pmu house: erecting two shops for tempering springs
and polishing barrels; erecting two engine houses
ment. How successful it was put in execution, our readers are already aware. They left Hartford s as toget several hours start of the father, who did not
! reach New York until ( o'clock veerdav morning
Democrat, formerly were in this country. The j and suspecting that they would put up at the aunt's
lories would be more irritated at being called whigs,
than tories; as many of our federalists would have been more offended at being called democrats than federalists. But in this country, the manner in which4the terms whig and tory were applied during the revolution, has given them a somewhat different import, nnd tory is considered nearly synonymous with traitor, and equally offensive. Baltimore Gazette.
and making addition to stocking shops; and for
erecting a carpenter's and machine shop, at the same
armory, thirty-six thousand one hundred and lourtcen dollars and eighty-six cents. For erecting storehouses for iron and pit coal;
repairing paymasters', and clerks' quarters; con-j
structmg a river wall, sinking three wells on Camp hill, mading and pavin:? the open spaces between
the public shops and for painting some of the public buildings at the same armory,eight thousand five hundred and eighty-nine dollars and eighty-seven cents. For the payment of the taxes assessed by the State of Pennsylvania on the United States arsenal on the Schuylkill river, five hundred and sixtyeight dollars and fifty-nine cents. For the purchase of three acres of land on the Alabama river, and building a warehouse and dock at the Mount Vernon arsenal, in the State of Alabama, one thousand eight hundred dollars and fifty cents. Aitboved, May 1 1th 1S3 1,
THE TRUE SYSTEM. Every man the architect of his own fortune. "Fortune a Goddess is to fools alone, The wiso are always master of their own." Pope. It cannot be too early or deeply instilled into the minds of the young and inexperienced, that the means of happiness and riches are, in a great de
gree in every man's power. A blind belief in des- j tiny or fortune acts as a powerful stimulus to indolence and indecision, and makes men sit down and fold their hands in apathy. Nothing is more common in tho world, than for people to excuse their own indolence by referring the prosperity of others to the rapice of fortune. Success, every experienced man knows, is as generally a consequence of
industry and good conduct, as disappointment is the consequence of indolence and indecision. The difference of the progress which men make in in life, who eetout with the same prospects and opportunities, is a proof that more depends upon conduct than fortune, and if a man instead of envying his neighbor's fortune, and deploring his own, should inquire what means he has employed that he has neglected, he would secure a result to his wishes. But the great misfortune is, few have courage to undertake, and fewer candor to excuse such a system of self-examination. Thousands thus pass thro life, angry with fate, when they ought to be angry
with themselves too fond of the enjoyments which riches procure, ever to be happy without them, and
too indolent and unsteady ever to pursue theligiti-
mate means by which alone they are attainable.
hue the progress of learning and education confer upon the present race a polish unknown to their fathers, they are apt to magnify this merit, and regard their elders as being of an inferior capacity. They forget the difference between such attainments, and tastes differ widly from that sober and experimental knowledge, bearing upon the real business of life. Even a man of very ordinary parts who has lived long in the world, and perhaps, after a thousand blunders, learnt to conduct himself with ability and prudence, is better qualified to impart instructions to others, than those more remarkable for other talents and attainments. If men were guided by the counsel of experience instead of their own imagination, there would be a mighty diminution of
that misery with which ignorance and obstinacy are constantly filling the world. False confidence in
jr. a cotton gin, a stable and a Kitchen were blown down. There were two negro men in the Kitchen.
tors from her lover in which they planed the elowo- li0lu of bom were badly hurt, ono cf them waa
carueu wan tho wreck ot tho hou?o at least fifty yards. So tremendouj was the storm, that from Walnut Hill, Mr. J. Wilcox's country residence, tu Preston, the re sidence of Mrs-. Ann TJiwt att, you havo a vista scarcely iuteiruptcd by ri Military tree, a distanco of four or five miies. The forests, too, through which" tho tornado passed, were wooded with as tmjestic a growth as can be found probably in Virginia."' At Preston the residence of Mr?. Ann Thwcatt, thero U not a house except the dwelling nnd ono small out house left standing. One negro wr.a Killed and ten or twelve wounded: A gentleman who has s en tho effects of the btorin on this tdan-
tation says, that it presents the appcaranco of having been visited by a heavy freshet. We hivo no further particulars of its progress to the East, but we learn that it crossed the James Uiver, between Tarbay and Cogginj Point.
house, made his wav there immediately on arriviivm
the city. He washowever too late the young couple had contrived to havo the hymeneal knot tied in tho afternoon of their arrival. We presume this step was taken to avoid risk ineured in publishing their intention to marry, which mode of procedure h required by the laws of the state of Connecticut. How the affair will terminate we know not as tho parties all left New York for Hartford yesterday afternoon, but as the father w as in a double sense, ";t j.iy It haul the fair " we would advise him to pocket the affront and put the best face that he can put on the matter. .V. F. Transcript.
terrific roRXAno ix yirgixia. The Petersburg, Va. Intelligencer of May Stli, says: The most terrific tornado ever witnessed in this part of Virginia, occurred on Monday list. The destruction of human life and properly of every kind is truly appalling. It would be impossible to give more than a faint outline of its desolating fury.
I no scene is represented Ly tl.oso wiio hud an opportunity of witnessing it, as one of surpassing and inexpressible grandeur and sublimity. Every thing in its range, was laid prostrate; the largest trees were torn up by tho roots and carried coniderble distance; dwelling r.nd out houses were levelled with the earth and their fragments scattered in everv direction. The dav had been cloudy with
occasional showers. About U o'clock the clouds assumed a black and lowering aspect; in a few minutes after, the whirlwind commenced iti nravages. A correspondent who witnessed il3 violence, says, 'It was in the form of an inverted cone, and every cloud near seemed to rush into the vortex. As it approached, you might see the limbs of tho forest careering through the darkened air. Its duration at any point, was not more than one or two minutes.' Its general course wa from Wesi
to East, its width varied from two hundred yards to live
to half a mile; and, from what we havo already gcther.
heard of its destructive inarch, its extent could not havo been less th in seventy miles. Tho following details will, wo fear, present but a very imperfect sketch of its devastations. A gentleman writes U3 that the tornado 'appears to havo commenced in tho county of Luccnberg, near Hungry Town, where almost all tho heavy timber was torn up by the roots, and where it proved fatal. Near this 'place it seems that the poorwho live in log houses,) where the principal sufferer?, several negroes and children were Killed. Hence it passed by the Nottaway Court House, where the storm instead of abating, increase d tho pub-
lLa gnat a .Mild r a UttU f,r kindle'fi Lately on board a steamboat oa the Mississippi, one of the crew by accident dropped a caudle; his companion, who was left in the dark, gave him a mil' for hi carelessness; a passei.ger exprejsed n wiVh to whip one like the latter; he was overheard, nnd the challenge being accepted by tho nggroor, a KUil!!e ensued, whieh ended in the death of the nggressor and Mibsequently the passenger was hhot by a companion of the deceased. The murderer was confined ly the captain of the boat: this enraged a part of t ho crew, who hid a plot to blow up the boat, on board of
winra wcro hetuteutwo and t'reo hundred passengers. Ju timely deocry saved many livej. Jir u n icJ; J i07; ccr.
At Now York one John It. Cowan has been sentenced to the Stale Prison for two years, for bigamy having three wive in that city." lleiiig sent to the Penitentiary" for two years, in tho above ease, is jiut no punishment at rill. Indeed wo think that the fellow owed thecOuit a debt ofgratitudo for so mild a sentence. We Know 4'lio punihiuent sufficiently severe for such a monopoly, unless, indeed
he hail been sentenced and compelled hv tho rneit-
under the tamo roof with all of his wives to-
1 here would have been some senre in tuch
a sentence. J't stern Sh U Id. Ciocir Among Corn. A friend of mino sowed red clover among his corn after going through with the cultivator tho hut time, the seed was protected from the heat of tho sua by the com, it consequently vegetated very soon, and after tho corn was cut oil", there w as a luxuriant growth of clover, which afforded fine pasture for pcvcral succcssivo seasons. The red clover ii an excellent manure: I hivo raided a line crop of wheat, by ploughing iu tho sccoud growth after harvest, .tw. Farmer.
lie road being utterly impassable. From Nottaway court house, or near that place, the w ind pas
sed in a northeast direction, roached the plantation
, 1 !i t 1 1 .1 1. '
.idi- acuyauu .oWcrf,udS runit-u iuouiki. uf Mr R M rdzgcrald, where great injury was 1 he mind of man, like his body, is m a constant i , ,,, nn v,.. v,.. i- -i o, c , i ..- it i .u done, but no lics lost. iNear Ins residence was stated revolution. A newly discovered truth or . i .AT T i i - , omnionTn.ivrhnn.ro his vIpivr Pntirplvnn,l (rivfl a that ot .Mr. John, 1 ltz, who sutlercd immensely,
x 3 B II ' I .Ml 1
uavtng unu uegtu uineu,
new turn to his most ordinary action. 1 his error he perceives and feels, but never anticipates. He overrates his knowledge and attainments, and although "at every new addition to them he discovers his former deficiency, he still flatters himself that he has reached perfection. Like the torrent that rushes from the mountains, he begins his course, filled with a thousand impurities, and it is not until his knowledge has passed through the filters of the world, that error and prejudice sink to the bottom, and truth assumes its native transparency. The young, generally, find it as difficult to enter into the feeling of tho old, as to read with their
another's arm broken,
and various others injured. Hence it pursued the same course to the house of Mr. Justice, where great injury was likewise sustained, several persons severely jnjured, and the life of ono despaired of. The next death was that of Mr. Joshua Haws, an honest upright citizen, who was literally crushed, his wife at the same time receiving injury so severe, as to leave but little hopes of recovery. The next place from whence we havo any authentic particulars, is Curtis' formerly KccWs on
llox Koad, where tho storm appears to Lave been
Look out. Judge (ireen, of New Hampshire, Ins decided, 'that if a gentleman for aconsiderablo length of time pays particular attention to a lady of tho same nnk and standing in lifo with himself, such 33 to visit with her, take her to visit at his fathers, fricmb'cvc. that from these facts the jury have a right to presume a promise of marriage." Curiou Jgrney. A letter published in the Journal of Commerce, from on emigrant from the Tinted States, now residing in Texas, describes the country as a Paradise, and urges hid friends to como and enjoy with him the fat cf tho land, llo writes, 'llo sure to bring out all tho hook you have or can get hold of. ltring out all tho vegetable., garden and fruit seeds you can. Also, e vifv for mc, handsome, c. mother know what will suit me." Verily this is a dutiful ton, and putteth much more confidence in his mother' choice than uiQt ti.ou n:o willing- to dw .V. .'. C;.'i.;.iy.
