Marshall County Democrat, Volume 2, Number 49, Plymouth, Marshall County, 22 October 1857 — Page 1

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75. 3V-C THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD FALL ALIKE UPON THE RICH AND THE POOR.-J ACKS O N. VOL. S. NO. 48.) PLYMOUTH, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1857. (WHOLE NO. 101.

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DEMOCRAT.

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THE MARSHALL DEMOCRAT, rVBUSHED EVERT THURSDAY MORNING, BT a. c. Thompson & p. Mcdonald TERMS: If paid in advance 1 0 At the end of six months, 2 00 delayed until the cnl of the rear, 2 50 ADVERTISING: One square (ten lines or less,) three vreets,. 1 00 Each additional insertion, 25 Column three months.. 00 tV Column six months,. . 8 00 Column one year, 12 00 Column three months, 00 i- Column six months, 00 l.f!oliimn one Year 25 00 1" Column three months ..' 14 00 j 1 Column six months, u" 1 Column one vcar 45 00 Yearly advertisers have Uie privilege oi one hanjrc free of charge Democrat Job Office! CUTS, Our Job Department is now supplied ttith an extensive and well selected assortment of new styles plain and fancy Which enables us to execute, on short notice ami reasonable terms, all kinds of Plain and OrnamenJOB PRINTING ! NEAT. FAST AND CHEAP; SUCH AS CIRCULARS, HANDBILLS, LABELS, FAMfHLETS, BUSINESS CARDS, BLANK DEEDS mortgages; And in short, Blank? of every variety and description. Call and see specimens. CATALOGUES, H B. DICKSON k Co., dealers .'n Hardware, . Stoves etc. Plyn-onth, Ind. VTTEKSON ä: CLEAVELAND, dealers 'in Groceries, etc., Plymouth, IiuL LESBEE, SH IR LEY & ROE, dealers in I VjDry Geods, riymontn, um J. BROWNLEE, dealer in Dry Goods, Gro ceries, etc., Hymoutn, inu. B DARLING, manufacturer and dealer in . Boot aml Shoes Plymoujh.Jnd. PALMER, DEALER IN DRY GOODS & Groceries, south comer La Porte and Michn 'streets Plymouth, Ind. ' R M.BROWN, DEALEK i uauu aivi. . Stoves, Tinware, Sc. Fly mouth, Ind DAM VINNfTdGE, WHOLESALE and Retail Grocer, Plymouth, Ind. w M. L. PIATT, MANUFACTURER OF Cabinet Ware, nymoutn, inu. AIT H. SMITH, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, jYX, Wert de Michigan ft., Plymouth, Ind. LLIOTT k Co., MANUFACTURERS OF Wagons, Carriages .V Plows, Plymouth, Ind. A X- BRIGGS, BLACKSMITH, Plymouth, Ind, EDWARDS HOUSE by G. B. Stedmn Michigan street, PlymoutK;,Ind. DR. SAMPLE, Attorney at WW, aim no- . tary Public, Plymouth, Ind. G. OSBORNE, Attorney k Counsellor at jaw Plymouth,Ind. -WAS. II. REEVE, ATTORNEY AT LAW k Notary Public, nymoum, inu. j ORACECORB1N, ATTORNEY AT LAW j H rlvinoutn, imi. R. J. E. BROOKE, PHYSICIAN & SUR jrCon, Plymouth, Ind. m"EO.A. LEMON, PHYSICIAN, SURX GEON & Dmjrgist,. . . ..Plymouth, Ind. R UFUS BROWN, PHYSICIAN k SUR GEON nvmontn, inu. Ulli, IIKI. s HIGGINBOTIIAM, PHYSICIAN & SURr.pnv Plvmouth, Ind .11. I n-fl . J OUN H. SHOEMAKER, WATUIlMAhfcK an 1 Jeweler Plymouth, Ind. K LINGER k BRO. DEALERS IN LUMBER etc, riymouin, inu. TI E N R Y PI E RCE, DEALER IN CLOthing k Furnishing Goods, Plymouth, Ind. HENRY M. LOGAN k Co., DEALERS IN Lumber, kc Plymouth, Ind. LEAYELAND k HEWETT, DEALERS in Dry Goods, etc Plymouth, Ind. H. CASE, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE. Plymouth, Ind. D R. J. J VINALL, HOMEOPATIIIST, Office ovet Palmer's store, Plymouth, inu. A C.STALEY. MANUFACTURER AND dealer in Boots k Shoes, Plymouth, Ind. ALDWIN HOUSE by Atbe Baldwin south of the river bridge,, .riymoutn, luu CWIIITMORE, manufacturer and dealer in . Boots and Shoes, Plymouth, lud. inAVjr of rTsWrotiTiw, PLYMOUTH, IND., ist sin trtot north of WesterveU'.) Collections made and promptly remitted for at current rates of Exchange, uncurrem wum7 bought and sold. , . J. II. KNICKERBOCKER, Cashier. May 21.157 27 tf. HTnsttal iustnuntnts! -r- .T, c53 J AOOBO, FORT WAYNE. Keep con itantly on hand a splendid stock of IPüsnmap IFoirites. . : MELODEONS. ' GUITARS, ' VIOLINS, and all other Musical Instruments k Music Books?.

PLAIN RULES j iI.TYFljE HUMS.

THE PERPLEXED HOUSEHOLD. BT URS. F. D. CAGE. I wish I had a dozen pairs Of hands, this very minute; I'd soon put all things to right3 The very duce is in it. Here's a big washing to be done, One pair of hands to do it, Sheets, shirts and stockings, coats and pants, How will I e'er get through it? Dinner to get for six more, No loaf left o'r from Sunday ; And baby cross as he can lireHe's always so on Monday. And there,s the cream, 'tis getting sour, And forthwith must be churning, And here's Bob wants a button on Which way shall I be turning? 'Tis time the meat was in the pot, The bread was worked for baking, The clothes were taken from the boil 0 dear ! the baby's waking. Hush, baby dear! there, hush sh sbJ 1 wish he'd sleep a little, Till I could run and get some wood, To hurry up the kettle.

Oh dear! if P--comes home, And finds things in this pother, He'll just begin and tell me all About his tidy mother . How nice her kitchen used to bef Her dinner always ready Exactlv when the noon bell rung Hush, hush! dear little Freddy. And then will come some nasty word, Right out before I'm thinking They say that hasty words from wives Set sober men to drinking.Now, isn't th it rreit idea, Tli it men -hould take to snn:ng, Pecaüse a wearv, h ilf-sick wife, Can't ahvavs smile so winning? When I was young I used to" earn My living without trouble Had clothes an ! pocket-money, too, And hours of leisure double. I nver dreamed of such a fate, When I, alass! was courted Wife, mother, nurse, se.im-tres-s, cook, housekeeper, chambermaid, laundress, dairy woman and scrubb generally doing work for eix For the sake of being supported! The following lines came to us without any author's name, and from the easy and natural manner in which they ran, we are almost persuaded that theyyrwc This world is not so bad a world As some wou!d try to make it; Though whether good or whethdr bad Depends- on how you take it. For if we scold and fret all day From dewy morn till even, This world will ne'er afford to men A foretaste here of heaven. This world is quite a clever world. In rain or pleasant weather, I f people would but learn to live In harmony together; Notsecktobnrst the kindly bond. By love and peace cemented, And learn the best of lessons yet, To always be contented. Then were the world a ploasant world, And pleasant folks were in it; The day would pass most pleasantly, To those who thus begin it; And ail the nameless grievances Brought on by borrowed troubles, Would prove, as certainly they are, A mass of empty bubbles. From the Cosmopolitan Ai t Journal. The Stolen Miniature; . OH WHAT llAPl'KNLD UV "COIXU To t'UURT." j All wü3 bustle in the house of Jacob Flz-! simmons. His ward, the beautiful Louise, j was in tears, and old Jacob was mumbluifr over some pretty hard words for a civilian. May the scoundrel bo burnt!' he exclaimed. lhis, Louise, is what comes oil T -V . vour haviti? anvthinir to do with these scalawa"s, whose pallets liav nt color enough to pamt their own sins 1 said the old fallow as he strtde up and down the parlor. I had nothing to do with the artist,' said Louise, except to watch his work closely, and to give ospecitil directions for th? restoration of the back-ground of the group.' Well, well.Jl know it; but after all, you did talk freely to the- rascal yu gavo him a chance to talk you finally hl.oued I im tin lckei. a:i.l :nd riow . U jn ; ani tliere is an end of it, responded Jaeob. Louise siiJ nothing, but i;uve way to her tears. ' There, my dear, don't ciybaiJ the somewhat tender-hearted old man; I shall hunt up the rascal, depend npon it, and bring him to iustice the rorue, the impudent puppy '.' And with this Jacob strod out of the rooia, took his carriage, and was soon down street, in close converse with ' Old Hays,' thatonco terror of all 'light-lingered sons of adverse circumstances.'. Old Jack Hays was a genius in his way. No mere talent could have scanned heaven and earth, and the hamau heart, as he did it was the intuition of genius for his profession which moved him and gave him such success. Was a murder committed? Jack Hays was placed on the scent,' which, no matter how faint, he waa sure to follow into hot quarters, and eventually to drag the blood-stained wretch into court. Or a forger to be discovered? The old fox was sure of his game. Or a burglar to lw entrapped ? Hays was the fearless officer for the emergency. His name eched in police annals along with that of Vidocq a very Nemesis of terror and retribution to evil-doers. "Wer he now alive, the Burdell mystery vrodld soon find its solution. Jacob Fitzsimmons felt easier as he drove home, for 'Old Hays would smell out the varlet,' he said.

And he guessed truly. A few days afterward, Jacob and his ward were 'duly summoned before the Recorder to appear against Lefranc Bitellou, charged with theft of one gold-cased mineatuie oh ivory, abstract-id from the parlor of said Fitzsimmons, on Tuesday, the 10th ins: Jacob laughed heartily at the prospect of convicting the rogue; but Louise shrank from appearing in court against the poor artist, who, she knew, must have been sorely tempted to have taken the miniature. She recalled his gentlemanly address, his tine appreciation of his art, his exquisit skill in restoring the old group from the faded miniature; and she found it hard, very hard, to believe that he had actually sto en the miniature of herself, which her good uncle Jacob prized so highly. But there was no putting off the supbeena; and so the carriage whirled the old gentlerasn and his niece away to court.'

Call in the accused!' said the Judge, as the witnesses appeared. Lefranc was led in, having spent the night in the Tombs. He looked pale indeed, and was very weak; but old Jacob was not to be moved by compassion. 'That's the rogue !' he exclaimed. 'And is this the miniature?' said Old Hays. 'It is I swear to it !' said Jacob. Louise did not speak. That pale face sent a sense of pain through her heart, and sh would have given ten times the price of the precious painting if the artist could be dismissed. There Lefranc stood, with downcast eyes, which plainly said he had never before been arraigned as a culprit. Old Hays was at his side, as cold and hard faced as the Tombs, whose very outlines seemed to be reproduced in his features. Louise could see no more, ilea eyes' filled with tears and she sank into a chair for support. The Recorder ordered the witnesses to be qualified ; but Lefranc spoke up : 'I confess the theft I took the .miniature that is all.' There was that in his bearing whndi showed plainly it was not a case of theft for the value of the thing. Thv Recorder was not th? mai, to allow such a case to pass without investigation, and proceeded to question thtf artisi upon the m'otive which prompted him to take the ivory, lie simply replied, I should have returned it again the next day after I took it ; but was too ill to paint;' and refused to answer further questions. But the Recorder was not to be foiled.- Old Hays was sworn and testified that ho found Lefranc in his studio, stretched out upon an old lounge, sick with the fever that the miniature lay open upon the stand be fore the easel that on the easel was a face half done, which lu bilicved was a copy of he mmealure that -Lefranc pleaded not to be arrested, for that his illness had prevented him from restoring the picture that ho was not to be fooled by any such representations, and had seen him safely in the Toombs, the previous night. The Recorder looked straight at Louise. She arose calmly, looked the prisoner in the face ; and, turning to the Judge, said: I believe him, sir, that he did mean to return the miniature; and I will forgive him if he will rsturn to me the half finished face which he has.' Old Jacob was astonished. 'What ! he exclaimed, 'hst the rascal go ! Never !' But Louiso, with au unusual degree of decision, said : Uncle, would you punish that poor man, who has already lain in a cell all night, and who now restores to us our own ?' Sho laid her hand upon his arm. 'Why, my dear, this is strange. I will let him go if you say so; but I tell you ho is a rogue how dared he to steal your picture?' Lefranc rose up to his full height, and his face gleamed in its whiteness. Sir !' said he, ' I am no thief if I did take that miniature. Neither you nor any other person shall repeat tho charge after I say 1 am no thief!' His eyes gleamed like stars, and all around felt that there was truth in his words. Lady, continued Lefranc, 'I have deserved this by my misconduct; I thank you sincerely for your kindness and forbearance I promise to restore you the picture as you command.' A sad expression grew into his face, as he said this, which the deeply stirred heart of Louiso did not fail to respond to with a sigh. The case was dismissed. Louise commanded her Uncle to pay tho costs, in her usual way of giving orders : 'Uncle, I shall be unhappy if that poor man is permitted to sutler any more for this;' and with another look of wonder at his ward, Old Jacob arranged all with Old Hays and tho Court, and Lefranc was release I from the dock. He bowed coldly, and passed out. The papers' did not report the affair, Since Louise herself asked the repor.er 1 forbear nifiitioning it. How could they refuse when she asked? CHAPTER- II. How that calm, p le face haunted the heart of the maiden ! A woman's soul has many depths in it, which are only stirred by mysterious impulse. Few ot the sex guess the power that is within them, until circumstances awaken it, and move them to feeling. Then, what mountain too high for them to scale what valley too deep for them to span, in the pursuit of the realization of their hopes, or in the effort to confirm or dissipate' their fears? Louise Weiland was no creature of an hour. If the centre of a fashionable coterie the cynosure of tho Avenues, she yet was a noble woman, having , a heart open to noble impulses,, and a mind susceptible of much accomplishment. Conventionalism might compel her actions to certain formula ; but the hours which found her alone, or in the seciety of her really noble old uncle, when the hearty spoke out in its truthfulness, showed how much there was in her nature of. kindnessand charity and love for what was worthy and good. It was not strange, then, that the face of Lefranc haunted her. There was suffering there, tenderness there, endurance there, nobility there: his voice was ringing. as the chiming if silver bells his words were ex quisilcly chosen, and dropped into tho

stream of conversation like music his hand was skilled in his profession, for how well it had executed the commission to reStore the old family group his dress was genteel, if it was worn and darned and carefull v preserved. These, her pity threw into form, and her sympathy nourished them until the face of the artist would not leave her. A month had passed since he promised to restore the half finished face, yet it did not come ; was he, then, going to betray his vord ? Her heart said ' No,' most firmly; for Lefranc, to her vision, was the impersonation of honor. Poor, deluded woman ! Was he suffering ill?' she said to her-

self. The thought had haunted her long: and Louise was not the timid creature to shrink from investigation. She had no other interest in him than to save him from suffering, if it were possible she woulJ mako ither duty to hunt him up and then she would know why the picture was not returned according to promise. Such were the reasons which led her to the studio, one day, when Uncle Jacob was gone to his farm up the river. Dressed in simple attire, as il on an errand of mercy, she sallied out, and, after a long time, found the house, in the upp.ir rooms of which, Hays said the artist's studio was. She ascended, and on the fifih tloor, saw, by the dim light, 'Lefranc Bi:e!lou, Artist.' written over the door at the end of the long hall. She knocked lightly, yet no answer. Again, and a louder knock. The door was softly opened, nnd a woman asked Louise in. There lay Lefranc, on the old lounge spoken of by Old Hays there the stand of colors and the easel, and on it the unfinished picture. He is very ih,' said the woman,' 'and has been so for a month or more; but God is merciful; I know he will not take my dear brother from me!' This was said in low words. The sufferer moaned, and the two women were at his side in a moment. 'Valine,' his low voice said; 'is it dark?' 'No, my brother, it is yet day-time. You have slept but two hours since the doctor left Give me a drink, darling; then draw the curtain, and move the picture where I can see it Louise grew pale and flushed by turns; her heart beat more w ildly than it had done; her breath grew hot and her -teps unstea dy so powerless was she before that sick man, who lay there with unclosed eyes, and a face so palid and wan. that an infant would have known the Angl of Leath had passed very near. Why ihould she be so moved? Valine drew aside the curtain from the darkened window, then placed the easel at the foot of the bed. The invaliü slowly unclosed his eyes, and Louise stood there before him bathed in tears ! Louise ! ' Lefranc !' She bent down and kissed the white forhead she laid her had in his a radiance shot over his faco like the thrill of morning over the East his eyes closed, and his lips murmured words too faint to hear. Valine looked on in wonder, for a moment ; and then came and leaned upon the neck of Louise and wept. What would old Jacob Fitzsimmons have said, had he looked in upon the trio? It was late that afternoon ere Louise returned home, and it is needless to say her heart was full of resolves, not the last of which was to reconcile Uncle Jacob with Lefranc ; nay, more to reconcile him to her love of the poor artist; nay, it was her purpose to get the old man's hearty consent to her marriage with the man whom he had arrested for theft ! When a woman wills, she floats over difficulties as easily as a balloon over a mountain. Uncle Jacob was a mountain of prejudice and aristocratic cxclusiveness ; but Louise had the balloon of her love to buoy her there, for Uncle Jacob swore by his r.iece he believed in her 'before all the preachers ' he gave up not only his house, bnt his whole heart to the daughter of his only, but long dead sister, whom the maiden of twenty so perfectly resembled. It was not strange then, that Louise counted upon a conquest, though she well knew what 'storms and darkness awaited the charge. Alas ! poor Louise ! CHAPTER III. Scene: Little cottage on the Hudson, buried in shrubbery and overshadowed by old trees lawn stretching down the early creek ivhich soon hit itself in the great river--on the lawn, a maiden and lovely child, two years of age. Hour, eveniny, 'Lefranc, I am very sad at Uncle Jacob's persistent obstinancy. I have exhausted every means to induce him to come here and make up with you. He is very happy when I visit him, but never mentions your name, nor bpeaks of our child, n.r refers to our home. And if something is not done, he will die in that house of his without ever once seeing our child, or being reconciled to you.' This Louise sail, as if it were a weight upon her heart. I am sorry at it all,' was tho answer ; hut would you have mo compromise myself by making overtures to the man whose taunts aie yet ringing in my ears? I have no desire but to have his forgiveness and his respect, for I know I merit both, and I want him to love our boy; but, for all that, I shall not go to him, nor enter his doors until ho bids me come, in kindness. ' This Lefranc said earnestly, yet kindly ; and Louise well knew his words would govern his ways. It devolved upon her to devise 6om6 ways aud means for. a meeting and reconciliation. Uuclo Jacob must bo enticed, by some art, to that home on the Hudson whero Louise had been born, where her mother had died, and where tho boy Jacob first saw the light, two years before. Alas! the occasion was not long in offering. Uncle Jacob paid a visit to hia up-the-river plaeo every few days. Ho took the ill -fated steamer Henry Clay, on the day of its disaster, and was on b.ard when the

disaster occurred. It happened that the steamer was not a mile ditdant from the spot vhere the house of Louise stood. At the moment of disaster Lefranc was out on the hills, sketching elms, and rushed to

the scene to offer w hat aid was possible to the drowning and burning passengers. Fearless as a lion, he was in tho water in a moment, dragging to the shore the half drowning victims of that horrible sacrifice. I Swimminir with a woman and child in his arms, he was seized by an old man, whose head was already sinking below the water, and it was in vain that he tried to release himself from the death-like grasp. The four would have g-ne down together had not a strong arm relinved him from the woman and child Then, lifting th? old man up before him, he pushed his way to shore, and dragged out old Uncle Jacob ! Louise and Valine were already there, and together they soon brought the half-strangled man to his senses. Lefranc continued his exertions in the water, and rescued manv who yet live to bless him. Uncle Jacob set up in a moment, beholding the fearful scene. His eves followed Lefranc and Louise, who waded far out into the stream, to receive the precious burthens which her husband brought to the beach. Ere long, the last victim, struggling for life, was rescued, though many had ceased from their struggles, beneath the blue and trecherous waters. Ah! it was a melancholy sight. indeed, to look upon that seen?. No words may paint its horrors, its agonies, its prayers, its tearful thankfulness, its shriek of woe, its meetings and its partings. Angels of mercy, indeed, were those whose arms came to the rescue whose care caught the spark of life as it was just ready to go out, and blew it into full life again. Uncle Jacob saw all this, and wept like a child. When all was over, lie submitted to be led by Louise and Valine, up the beach and over the lawn to the house. As he approached the door he stopped, and said : 'Louise, I shall never enter this house of vours until I have vour forgiveness and Lefranc's. for the wrong I have so long done him : may God bless him aa he deserves.' Lefranc was not there to here those cob nestling clown by his side. ! Need we say that the house on the Avenue was closed that Uncle Jacob gave up his old haunts 'down town,' and quartered himself at the cottage with Lefranc? So o . .i i . f.... Tt ii- i:;tnm 10 jj.is, :mo m una u;iy iiwii lain- j ily circle is unbroken happy as it is vouch - j safed that any on this earth shall be. Two other children have been added to the idols of the hearth-stone two loving spirituelle irir-s. A picture at the Academy Exhibition, of an old man and three little ones, told not more of tho skill of the ar:ist who once stole the miniature of Louise, than of the touching tenderness and love w hich bound the old and the young together. TIic Slate Fair. The weather durimr tho weck h.is hon fin A mellow October sun smiled on the as - smhled thousands by day. an d the harvest moon lighted them by night. It was comfortably warm just enough to be pleasant Wo "ive tho following xumuer or LXTItirjS. 1S57 1C5G Number of horses entered, Jacks, mules and je mets, Cattle, Sheep, Hogs, Farming implements, d8J 42 I 140 y 222 j 123 J 217 noo 195 Mechanical and chemical productions and machinery, Tabic Cam forts, Vegetables, Grain and seed, Field Crops, Poultry, 123 2G3 370 Needle-work and domestic manufacture. 347 Fruits and flowers, 313 Premiums for articles made by girls under 18 years of age, 470 Premiums for articles made by boj's under 21 years old, 35 Miscellaneous and unenumeratcd articles, 419 375 142 275 52 503 3713 3100 This shows an increase of G30 entries over last year, but a great many of the premiums this year are ' constructive ' that is ai tides were entered with no intention of competing for prizes, merely for the purpose of getting badges .ind the right of entry and exit. Perhaps there never was a finer exhibition of horses in this State. In oil dosses the competition was strong and interesting. There were several splended Morgan stallions on exhibition, but tho premium was awarded to "Halcom," of Hendricks, and Iroud America," of Wayne. In carriage and saddle horses there was a fine display, some as beautiful and well trained horses as wo ever saw, and soma very fast, particularly pacers and rackers. We found in this, os in all other Fairs, that the horse ring was the great point of attractionthousands wer collected raond it. all dav untilllate in the evening, canvassing the merits of each horse as it appeared, and tho audience were much excited over the races, cheering aud urging on the fast nags. In CHttlo there was lino stock exhibited. Somo thoroughbred animals, and lino large beeves. In this department wo thought pioviou Fairsjrather excelled. The six beeves of Mr. George Bruce of this county were the admiration of all beholders. The 6hoep excelled any previous year, both in number and excellence. There m onu Hock that particularly took our attention, and they wero the real French Marino, some of them imported. There were n number of imported hp on the ground.

words, for he was still among the most lire- j wire-working, some of the committees were ; - a uuthiu.i, . r less in his efforts to gather the dead bodies stocked, and the consequence was unjust 11 'tcI' ? 11)''lnou,1V, '"'l11' from the deep. Long after, when he did awards. We have heard of several pro-i 'n . Bates. Uoy ' j. oome in, it was to find the old man sweetly tests that would be put in, but of this more ! rokesi lS.-lU ti, f...;i i Kmu t hm fur Fp th. credit of the Fair. g. n il Canton Bank oi China, Me., is woiih in

U II ill IIIVJ t-l 111 I I I , IlLtlV Ul - - w I I

123 270 2531 12G i 52 ( G5

The exhibition of hogs was good, but not in as large "umbers as at previous exhibiiions. The pure stock was there, however, atid the owners felt a strong interest

in the competition, The Tegetable Hall wa3 literally loaded . with the finest and best specimens. There wnra iiiirn 1-irrro nmnnLlii sn 11 n illf r0- i

tatoes, cabbages, water-mellons, corn, and B.aik FaiU'd Discredited, all other farm and garden products than ! Miarai Valley Bank, Dayton, Ohio.ever before. j Iank of the South County, R. I. In Agricultural Implements there was a! X-jT These two Banks arc quoted .-is large number of entries, and thev attracted! usual in the Reporter. The former we shall

a gveat deal of attention there was the usual competition between the corn and cob mills and tho Threshing Machines. We had intended, in this report to particularize, and specify articles that we iho't of superior merit, but an attempt at that would exclude all else from the paper there was much that was justly entitled to special notice that we have concluded not to undertake it. The Independent National Guards paraded through the Fair Grounds on Thursdav afternoon. There anDcarance attracted general attention, and there thorough drill was generally admired. Porliinc tlior upvpr w3 fir mi'iv r.fr - sons in this city at one time as on Thursday last. All the streetsthe space and! onrnmrmc l4u-n th. itv nnd ihn F.ii r i commons between the city and the Fair ground, rnd the streets around :he ground were one living, moving mass of hum inity, while the inside of the ground was swarming with people. RverjT seat, and there were seats for 5,000, was full ; the ground was covered with nersons. and the snaces all crowded. Tho figures will tell exactly, but we should estimate that there was not less than 60,000 persons in this city on Thursday. So far as attendance is concerned, it was a complete success larger than ever before, and double what we expected would be here. The receipts were l-iivro PYcoi'dinir S2J.000. which we will give exactly next week, affording ample surplus to enlarge and improve the grounds for tho future Fairs In our next, or as soon as we can geti them, we shall publish the list of premium. .,wd.l in full. TliPt woro. declared on Fiieav afternoon, from'the stand. It was boldlv asserted that by some underhand and exact justice should be meted to ail j competitors by competent committees any j other course will operate against the Fair, J Ind. Locomotive. j -' " 4' 7 i oici .uw s. i New 1 ORK, Oct. lo. The Steamship Vandeibilt, from Havre and Southampton.. Cd inst., arrived at 9

o'clock this morning. The Arago, from The above quotations .e.e made in BosNew York, arrived out on the evening of lion, Sept. b the 3d. ; These figures uive u a fair i la of ihThe Calcutta letters and pipers, giv ing value uf Nt-w Eisgl.i: d Bank Not -s ;:f..-r full deiaiis of the intelligence previously j they h?.vo failed. at hand, had reached England, but nothing ; -"-" new. : Kit t'ar ;. The Bombay Government had received ' A correspondent of 1 1 Washington a dispatch from Pegua.datcd Aug. 31, slat- Union, wriiiug from Shim Fe, gives t:i.-inj-that news from Cawnnore .vas to the t following of this rem irkable man.

13th. Lh. Gen. Havel jck engaged the rebels the 18;h, about twelve miles from that 0,1 1 Plai'and took lwoSuna- uLMigiisii were : killed, out Lapt. jicivenzio ana nueen men

were wounded. j 5USpect hjnl 0f having 1-1 the life of daring The troops were hard worked and the j :lIKi ajVoniure which distinguish hinr. cholera bad ; fourteen men and Lieutenant ; ne js ,-0t.,..J i:, hi-, mani,-r, iind vei v po!i;-. Campbell of the 78th Highlanders hive ! j,, his intercom so; his convert ion is markdied of it. . ! ej hv great er.i Jiestl:css, nnd his language The List accounts from Lucknow, tiie nppi orifiato well chs?n, though not 14th, reported all well. 'pronounced with .vrtvc:i.es. He h.ts a News from China was not favorable. The j stro mind, and everything l.o says U French Ambassador says the Count of Pe- j p0iatJj an(j practn-nl, except when inllulgkin will not agree to any arrangement of ;jn, Jna Vci:i f humor, whu-h is noi

! difficulties.

The Emperors of Russia and Austria j an juvjr yuhout being favorably impressed; were at Weimer, Oct. 1. , j,0 l1;is aovid, hunesT, open countenance. It is reported in Paris that the Isle Bour- j ard a tjnjn,.ss cf hrt almost feminine bon is to resume the name Isle Buonaparte, ' js uuiversal!y beloved here, and a f iwhich i' bore under the first Empire. voritc with all cies, Indians included.

The English Government lias given noticc to the Prussian manufacturers of tiro-

arms that no more of the said articles will j Althonli he is free .miV.isy i;r hi Ambe allowed to enter the East Indies without j versation, everything he says in regard t special permission. . himself partakes of a degree of modesty The expulsion of refugees from Genoa is a.nosl incredible i:i one whose lifc has confirmed by publication of their names. een rn U!lüroke:i suecesbn of hardship The Gree'k government has authorized ' ami j;lncr:5. You miy have seen a small the exportation of cereals in consequence j jierj0dica! ibathg abeu! Whing.io:i called of the abundance of the harvest. i ..t (riraoilf theGoId Hunter." 1 ha 1 read Advices from Constantinople announce !jt j the course of uur conversation I asked an approaching arrangement of the diplo-1;ni if jt W3, true. lie sail it was net;

matic quarrel in Turkey

tic quarrel in Lurkey. every statement made is fils?. lie n ivp?rinco Callamaki is to relinquish the 1 scztc j tj.;4 rnrnp'f.e: a a o! ssi! tigbassy at Vienna. ure, when he is u)t ov tie feet eight

1 embassy Schmayl had made prisoner of Uovern-

or Khannats, and a revolution had broken j weih9 houT 170 p juads. H? is fjriyout in that district. ! eitrht rears old, bui d x:s not look l bs

A lieW Complication iwaauseii ai v-ou-stantinopla concerning Montenegro, a dis tuet of Albania, having revolted. The Pasha of Lcutaria, had taken measu res to chastise the rebels, and had sent 3,000 men against them, meanwhile intelligence was received that the Montenegro's meditated a descent into the plains to succor the insurgents. The English money market was more animated. On the 2d consols closed at 90$ Since the reduction in the rates ot discount in July, bullion iu tho bank of Eirggland has decreased 60,000,000 sterling. The intensity of the panic in New Vork, has induced an almost total suspension of remittences from that side, but with the return of confidence not only will the usual shipments be resumed but tho old arreais ;n Vu mnt. It mar bo hoped, therefore, ... j , ,, .d"i .nV.

uie receipts irum u.--. . . with the supply from Australia, to keep the " cujiic. stock in the Bank cf England from any fur- j PoflE,y ..Tllo,0 (:l.i!v d:, Ä'v market. to.dav.vMich.jr .' 'r ..-n- Hxi

Southern. N. Y. Central and Pa. Central showed an increased firmness. ;. The representatives of France. England and Austria, held a conference- with the minister of foreign affairs, and rcc?mmMid-T-fc

ed him to instruct the Pasha of Scutari Vj j suspend his measures for the present. J The M. 8. Consul, at Southampton, had ; officially visited the United States ship Ply-

mouth. Lapt. Dal.lrceti and his officers i . i i m m j were to auena a banquet at :ir. u Anj drews un tie Cd. buy at 75 cents ; the lair-.T vA at all a: present. Bmk of New Jersey, Burlington. Reciprocity B'L, (late Sack. Harb.) Buffalo, August 2? Hollister " "31 Mechanics' Banking Assocutiu, N. V. Citv, Sept. " " f I Bergen Co. Bank, N. J., thrown out in N. ., August ' :u Bank of Kenawha, Va.. failed Aug. Cllh. Oliver Lcc k Co Bk, Buffalo, failed .September " " -th Mount Vcmon Bank, Providence, R. 1 j Warwick Bank, Warwick. ; Rhode Island Central. Bank of Hallowell, Maine. booster bank, Dunbury, Unu. Merchan t's Exchau ire B k. B;id -ei-ort. Jt. Darov Bank, Vermont. Warren County Bank, Pa. Ontario Co. B:i:ik, I'tic", N. Y. B ank of Orleans. Bank of Tecum seh, Mich. Niagara River Bank, To.vauda, N. V. j Chemung County Hank, Bank of West Tennessee, Memphis. Citizens' Bank . f Memphis and Nashville. Bank of America. Tenn. Bank of Paris, Paris, i Ocoee Bank, Shelbyville Bank, Private Hankers. j bb Lif-Insurance A' Trust Co., of N. V. ! August " " 2t i Brewster k Co. Rochester, N. ., Aug. 2 1 Jon!' Jnomp&on, jn. i Tirl-i -Vl- . Uelany. Islm Ar U:trL-. iJames J;. iVCii, JJOiroll, 27 j Atwood ä Co., N. Y. ; oeeoee x lo. .. l Sept. 1. Bos o't t'J cts, Exchange Bank, Bang, r. Ells worth Bank. Exeter Bank, N. II. Farmers Bank, Wickford, R. I Tiverton Bank, R. 1., 10 " 2.j 25 25 Bank of Republic, ' 25 to -i'J ' oJ cts. .South Royallou Bank, Vi. i Danbv Bank. " 50 cts. I this dav ha 1 the pie ic iro of seeing j and conversing vi:h the fai-fanv- Kit Ctrson He is a mil l, pleisanl ran in tlu ;0Xpre5Sioll of XDression ot ins lace, ana one wouia iicht r I f 1 11..... unfrequent. No one can convert j with him j i3 never anaJes to his career as an adventurer unless questioned relative to it. ;,.iul-:,, i,.l-rht. Iii 'u hew y frame 1, an 1 morft tfiAii ihirtv-live. H scann t thli country in 1C27, having run otl from his ! employer, near ljonevill Missouri, t whom he v.v: apprenticed io learn me Sadler's trade. The facts of his life are now in possession of Washington Irving, and will doubtless be thrown into the fjrm of h book during the coming wi iter, lie is a strong State-rights Demociat. A Pavthkk in- Inpiana. A pnrtther w.n killed recently nar Elliotts i!le,,. Monroe county, Ind. " He measured, from tip to tip, neany seven feet, a:id weighed up-, wards of a hundred pounds. it-fT Tho Albany Knickerbocker phf s the follow ing recipe to destroy fli-s: TaV a boardinghouse pie, cut it int- thi i iec. and lav it where the flies c.thvo fr e act-. cess to it. in less man i iana inmui? in-' -bole cobood. ol h in..,, a,. cess to it. In less than httsen minutes lh to adorn it ; they only are dependent upon it who possess no mental re&ourcv ; for though they bring nothing to ihe geneial mart, like beggars thoy arc t. poor to 6tay at home.

' t