Plymouth Banner, Volume 2, Number 4, Plymouth, Marshall County, 24 March 1853 — Page 2
RICHAR3 t'OSBALEY, Editor.
Thnrsday, March 24, ISJ3. Advertisements to insure insertion, must be handed Jn by Tuesday preceding the day of publication. We invite attention to the new Adtertibements to be found in this paper. CC5Several original articles appear on the first page of iliis number. A TEMPERANCE CONVENTION At the Methodist Church on Salurdav next. Rev. D. R. Mansfield and Lady will commence their 6eries of meetings this (Thursday) evening, at the Court House, there being no other public building here which could be obtained for them to sptak in. Persons cowinjz from the country to hear them, will understand where to fco. Messrs. Vauhoru & Westervelt have entered into partnership in the management of the Steam Saw-Mill in the east part of town, and say in their advertisement in another column, that they do not expect to make thtir living by puffing. Can't do it, gentlemen you can't make a tiring on a steam sawmill without pufling! The Dollar Weekly Tines, published by C. W. Starbuck, at Cincinnati, Ohio, is a paper of which we can speak in high terms. It has b.-en published nearly ten years, and during that time it has received a liberal supporl. and considering the quantity and quality of its coalents. and low price, it is undoubtedly one of the cheapest papers in the west. Livingston's Law Magazine. We have had the pleasure of an examination ol this excellent publication, and from the estimate we very readily placed upon it we are at a loss to see how any practitioner can be well posted without it. Independent of an early publication of all the late decisions in England and the principal States, the valuable suggestions of the Evlitor upon law points, are sufficient to commend it to the desk cf every practicing lawyer. Th'u Magazine is published monthly at 83. per ann. in advance, by John Liviqsto:i Esq. at No. 107 Broadway NewYork. We have not heard the result of the Rochester Railroad Meeting. Will some one tell us what was Jone? Don't build the road before we know it. The new Liquor Law on the first page will doubtless be read with interest. By it a man is rendered incapable of making a contract when intoxicated. Better keep sober, for when drunk, the min is considered insane. Township Business. By anactofthe last Legislature, the Secretary of State is requited, immediately after the adjournment of the General Assembly, to publish and distribute to the several counties in this State, in proportion to the number of Civil Townships therein, a sufficient number of copies of the "act for the more uniform mode of doing Township busißess," approved May ö 1852, together with euch amendments (hereto as may have been enacted at the last session. The April Election is a very important one. Three Trustees and a Clerk and Treasurer are tob elected in each Judicial Township. The very best men in the Townships should be chosen to fill these places. Much of the business heretofore transacted by the county Commissioners, will hereafter be done by the Trustees of the Townships. It is high time the people should be acting in this matter. At the same time, the voters are required to say through the Ballot box whether there shall be any licensed "Grog Shops in the several Townships or nt. It is the duty of every one to vote his sentiments, for neutral votesdo not count pro or con. We tre prepared to print Tickets on fair terms, and those of the several Town ships who wish any would do well to call soon. The Statute of 1852 have not made their apptarance here yet. They will probably get along sometime during this springor summer. They have been sent to St. Joseph and many other counties, bu in Marshall county we have such a law abiding community that it may be conceded by those at distance, that we have as much law already as is needed here, and that those most needing its ex cution may be Aril supplied.
The isricnltnralist His Positoin. The position occupied by the farmer and husbandman twenty years ago, was so different to what it is at the present day, that the contrast presents such radical changes and different scenery as to render what is really true, almost incredible. As far and even farther back than 1S33, many of us well recollect that in the crude estimation of a large number of those living in towns and cities, the country man and country woman were supposed to be little better than the heathen possessing none of the requisite qualifications to entitle them to the most remote places in society, or in the affections of the possessors of this ill begotten aristocracy. It is true, to some extent, that the farmer in this country did not possess. twenty yearsago, that means of intellectual improvement which he now does, nor does he now avail himself of all the advantages within his reach. His idle
hours were "few and far between"' all devoted n removing the forest tree, fitting and preparing his fields which were to yield him his daily bread, and devel oping the rich resources of the country 1 which he had adopted as his future home, was the pride and ambition of his heart. II . ?. cr. i . i. I uc iuum ii u uijii.: uu tuatc among uic literati, nor to officiate as a leading spirit in society; hence he thought no prepara tion for those positions necessary. To his own lonely and almost solitary fireside, his associations were almost exclusively confined; but even here, the great est and best men have found the most fruitful source of true and genuine enjoyment. A father's deep anxiety for thhealth and cora'urt of his dependent family, and a mother's care and affection for her confiding offspring, a sister's affection j and a brother s kindness, the parents right to govern and the child's duty to obey all may bt as clearly evinced in the wood- j land cottage fs in tlx city palace. No matter how warm and generous beat the hearts of the members of this family, when they sought or were accidentally thrown into the society of those apparently in higher circumstances, their backwardness and timidity and mildness of disposition were construed into ignorance and cowardice, and thev were laughed at for their awkwardness and shunned as unfit associates for the more forward and presumptuous "fops" and flirts." Should a country Miss be seen in the streets of the town or city the doors of the residences by which she might pass, would almost involuntarily fly open not for her reception but to be filled with the haughty scoffing faces of impudent and shan; city bfils. "See what a walk she has.' "La, look at those great shoes." "She's a pretty girl, if sli? was only drsed, &c, &c. A similar inhuman want of courtesy and fellow-feeling was olteo manifested by older heads, indirectly sanctioning such conduct by those under their direction and teaching. But how different. tlUow have the mighty fallen!" A different scenery is presented. The ambition of the country lad to get into some mechanic's shop, or to enjoy the noble and lofty appellation of "counter hopper," "sugfcr monkey," &c. is giving place to more commendable notions as the farmer's avocation increases in respectability and profit. The anxiety of young gentlemen to become the pampered lacquey boy?, or clerks and tools in the hands of others, is becoming a secondary consideration, especially with those who have sufficient brains to fit them for the discharge of such duties, The college graduate is now more apt to think of a farmer's life and enjoyment, than of the pill bags, the lawyer's desk or the pulpit. The increasing wealth and prosperity of the farming class have doubtless tended much to effect this change, and the consequence has been and will continue to raise and elevate to a proper standard of excellence the cultivator and tiller of the soil and thus we shall be able to fully develop our resources as a people and as a nation. Intellectual lights have been kept in total obscurity, partly by the difficulties alluded to, and partly by the neglect of those having the means of improvement within their reach. Many farmers look upon the education of their children as a secondary matter, and their own mental improvement and elevation as of no con sequence at all. Some are too old to learn, others have not time to read, and if they had, they cennot readwell enough to be much interested; then there are oth ers (not anomalies either) who are posi lively too penurious to pay for reading matter thus depriving themselves and their families of the means of informa tion. Such men place themselves in a
lower scale of bring than those who are driven to such inconvenience by poverty and want for the latter finds an excuse, whilst the former remains in an inexcuble ignorance M nisei f, and chargeable with the ignorance of those dependent upon him.
For the Banner. THE SUICIDE, Poor White, thou art dead and gone from whence none return! Wast thou pitied! Heaven knows that one, at least, besides thy heart-broken mother and sorrow sick sister, pitied. Did any try to stay thy suicidal arrc? The benignant smiles of a gently setting sabbath's sun, alone witnessed tne sympathetic countenance of thy friend, as he, from the deepest recerses of his soul, plead thee, prayed thee to desist from perpetrating the lieinious crime cf self murder. All was in vain. The poor mm was possessed with a demon: at times he knew and acknowledged it. He felt it eroding his vitals, and imploringly cast about for help, to rid himself of the monster by which he was unmanned. His eye, bloed injected as it was, brightened with hope at sight of Christ's minister; but the divine was just then loo deeply absorbed in schemes of universal philanthropy, to unglove a hand for the humble purpose of raising ne, fallen, polluted creature. The suicide then turned to his acquaintances former friends and neighbors with a look borderiug on despair, but they rejected and drove him away from their presence, as a pest to society and a disgrace to mankind: fur ihey all sa w certain signs in his countenance, foreboding the awful death that awaited him; yet, dear reader, few feared the pointed dagger he carried. Indeed, many handled it inflicted slight flesh wounds on Iheir own persons through mere wantonness, and laughing gave it back to him. Tuor man, he might have been saved. Too late now. His lifeless form has lost its symmetry in death; worms are burrowing into his once manly cheek. LTnmcntioned, uupitied, forgotten, save by few, h. lies in a grave, dug by strangers for the bacchanalian. Had other mania siezed him. legalized benevolence would hare furnished an asylum where restoration, or at least mittigation, might have gladdened the heart of his human keeper. But for the sin of inducing the disease, he was cesi out beyond the pale of mercy, lie was condemned because, unawares, a point stole into kis downward pathway, once parted, he was powerless to repass. This is the secret of his untimely death. Temptation stalked abroad the Devil wore an angel's garb the poles of Safety's magnet were reversed. Where sympathy and philanthropy on other occasions attracted, on this they repelled. But I would not write unwarranted condemnation to his memory. H's crime speaks in thunder tones to the thinking; and would to God that my feeble pen could subserve the object illtended, that of impressing the horror ol such a death on others, without arousing in my own mind the palsying conviction that many are following his footsteps. J. V. D. Mechanicsburg. Feb. 15th, 1853. For the Banner; The following is taken by permission from the unpublished manuscripts of T. Greenbrier of Mechanicsburg, Ind. It speaks for itself: The other night when all was still, No sound came hence from wood or rill; I lay me down to dream and moan, That I was one entirely lone. No tender sister near my side, No loving ma, or witching bride, To cool my tongue or fan my brow, Nor listen to repeated vow. Then one came up in image fair I looked saw Miss. J. P. there. To soothe my sorrows, calm my fearsNo stranger to sweet pity's tears. Let giiel and sorrow fill my heart, f Je er from thatimage part; E'en though it lose to me on earth. The soul that gave its being birth. That soul of origin divine would not, dare not, call it mine. Though it be gold, the other dross, It Llubltr8 Jor another host! Dec. 185 . T. G. Santa Anna A late telegraphic despatch states that Mexicans have determined to recall this noted personage and have despatched a vessel of war for that purpose. Baltimore, March 18. The Baltimore mechanics held an immense meeting this afternoon. The Baltimore and Ohio railroad opratives threaten to stop woV again, if the company grants an extension of time to lioss Winans ana Ausmead. on their contracts which would enable them to resist the demands of their workmen. The Virginia House of Delegates yesterday passed a resolution directing the Attorney General to prosecute the appeal in the Lemmon case before the Supereme court of the United States. The announcement of the passage of the bill to bridge the Sucqnehanna river i prcmilure.
Peices in Florence. A correspondent 1
of the Boston Traveler gives the follow ing account of the cost f living in Florence. "I have already written to you of the cost ot living in palaces. Since then I have learned that a fine palace, as large as the Tremont House, with a large garden, stables, &c, can be bought for 835,000. The Richardi, one of the finest pri vate palaces in Europe, sold for only
$45.000. A beautiful villa and estate, rant l0 seCure jou a safe journey through under a high state of cultivation, can be , Bnd a passage when you reach Baltimore. had for 819,000; a good one with fifty oxprovidei you get there in time.
more acres, ior i.uuu; bh'.i larms in proportion. A friend of mine has this year from his estate, which is cultivated on halves, 1.500 barrels of wine, besides wool, olives, silk, cattle, cheese, milk, butler, and poultry. The Tuscan government ire vary liberal to foreigners, allowing them to hold land in fee simple, without restrictions of any kind, and their heirs abroad to inherit from them." The Chicago Tribune slates that 840 per 1,008 lbs were paid at Shullsburg. Wis., last week, for 200.000 lbs of mineral lead. This is the highest point ever before reached in thi3 country. . Bemark. able Case of Bigamy. Chas. T. Geib, having pleaded guilty of bigamv, says a Brooklyn paper, was sentenced to imprisonment in the State prison for to years and six months. Gcib is a native of New York city. 26 years of age, a paint er by trade, and had never been in any prison before. He supported both his wives. His first wife was Miss Sarah C. Chandler, whom he married in the city of Williamsburgh, in the year 1815. and by whom he became the father of several children. For some cause not stated, he married last spring, at East Brooklyn. Miss Mary A Bedell. His practice was to live first about a weak with one wife, then live with the other about the same length of time, and so went on oand fro between Brooklyn and Williamsburg his business being of such a nature that he easily deceived them by stating that he was engaged in painting a church in Connecticut; in this way he accounted for his absence from each. Charleston, March I'J. The oath of office was not administered to the Vice-President on the 4th. Mr. Rodney, United States Counsel, visited Mr. King, but he considered the ceremony unnecessary, as he feared he could never return to Washington to assume the dutit-s of the office. If he should, the oath might be administered then. His friends encourage the hope, however, that the salubrity of his present location may yet restore him to health. Washington, March 12. Oar city yesterday was quiet, owing to the absence of the President. He returned last evening. Secretary Marcy has announced that none of the clerks who have faithfully performed their duties ib his departmnnt will be removed. The Editor of the Rochester Advertiser, J. H. Hoyt, will it is certain, be appointed U. S. Counsul at Turin. Schaumberg has been admitted to bail at S5.000. President Fillmore Hoes not leave town till Monday. Rochester, March 2. The extensive works for kyanizing timbea, &c., owned by Parsons fc Child, of Rochester, were burned tnis morning. Loss 810,000. In India the entre Bible has ba.en translated into ten languages, the New Testament into five others, and separate Gospels into fur others, Besibes numerous works for Christians, thirty, forty, and even seventy tracts, have been prepared i:. these different languages. Toacomplish this work, the missionaries maintain 25 printing establishments. It is impossible to contemplate the results which have already been produced in this extensive field of missionary operation, without indulging the strongest expectations of its future success. The wilderness and the solitary places shall break forth into singing V Witchcraft in Pennsylvania. The Chambersbur Pa., Whig relates a singular instance of superstition, which proves that the belief in witchcraft is not yet done away with. It appears that recently a female member of a denminalion called the Christain church, in Fulton county. Pa., was taken sick, and finally immagined she was bewitched by a sister in the the curch. A meetingof the session was called in due season, at which the minister presided, and the charge of wichcraft was formally preferred against the lady, Being a new case, and, we presume, not provided for in the discipline, the session was puzzled as to the proper manner to proceed in the case. At length it was proposed that she should be usked to sten over a broomstick, as it had been said that a witch could not do so; but the accused got over it without apparent difficulty. After a consultation it was then agreed that she should be tried in a pair of weigh-scales with a bible to balance her, and if she was a witch the bible would be too heavy for her. Accordingly she was laken to a mill, and the experiment tried, but she proved Ho heavy for the bible. It was then intimated that probably her clothing prevented a fair test, and half a bushel of corn was put on the scales with the bible, to balance the clothing, but still the lady was too heavy, and the charge was formally dismissed. It was reported about town on Saturday that the Woodbury Bank, the Bink f North America, and the Eastern Punk, 11 of Connecticut, hd fiilrd.
NOTICE TO THE COLORED PEOPLE
OL INDIANA The next regular packet that will sail ssil for Liberia will start from Baltimore on the 25th of April, and we heve been requested tosay lhatall colored persensin Indiana who desire a passage can be accommodated with one. If you will take a certiCcate of residence from the clerk of the countv where you live, it will be sufficient war ; jm MITCHELL Indianapolis March 22, 1853. T. S. The papers will please puplish this information. The Baltimore Argus says it appears that the farmers in Berks county, Pa., are opposed to the erection of the new county ol Madison, proposed at the late general assemblv of that State, because I they had already far enough to go to Philade.phia market, without going through another county. THE PACIFIC LATER FROM MEXICO. New York, March 19. The steamship Pacific sailed at noon to day, for Liverpool, with 102 passengers. By the brig Brazilaro, we have dates from Vera Cruz to March 4th. Alarming rumors were in circulation at Tacubaya. It is sad Senor LomarMina, the President, had ben sent to prison. and Gen. Bljncarte was murdered. j Durango and Aguas Calientes hnd voted forSiHta Anna, which makes ieven ; stales in his favor. The sentiment of Vera Cruz was also in his favor. Other rumors state that there was disagreement at the capital be ween th? Prrsidrnt and h:s chiefs of division; that resistance was met with from the troops, who were in favor of the plan of his Ii vision; also, that Gen. Blanrarte had !elt Mexico with 1500 men. and six pieces of artillery to bring to terms the stales of Guanaxuito, which had refused to adopt the revolution. It is stated that the Commissioners of Franklin county. Ohio, have fold thrir stoci. in the Cincinnati anl Cleveland road at 30 per cent, above par. By this t!ie county renlizes from 815,000 to 820 000 clear profit; no money was ever paid over the couty merely loaned htrcrrdii The farmers of several counties in Missouri are relinquishing tobacco growing, and turning their attention o stork raising. The extremely fiucinating prices of manufactured tobaco, aud the stock, are the causes of the change. The New York Dutchman 8Vs that 'Fevers are like Indiana thav both 11 if- , e. , . oelore civilization. Since oiomo ivf . were introduced in Michigan, agues have decreased fifty per cent. On the 20th inst., by Rev. Mr. Palmir Mr. Calvin Buess, of Rushville Indiana, to Miss Eliza E. Pumfhrey, of thiscoun ty. The.happy couple took stage the same day for home. Iiushvillc Jackbor.ian please copy. DIEDOn the 31st of February. William W. son of Jv.hu W. and Permelia A. CleaveIaud; aged 4 months and 10 days. "His sufferings ended with the day, Yet lived he at its close; And breathed the long, long niht away In statue-like ronose. But when the sun in all his state. Illumed the western skies, He passed through glory's evening gate. And walked in Paradise." Till? HOOK OF XII U SKA SO Ml fjfjfifL 8100 to 6200 per month! fazW Wanted Immediate! j, A large number of Agents to engage in tl.e sale of a new and very popular work just publi.hed. It is a book that will ell to almost every family in the west, and any active man can clear lrom five to eight dollars per day. Our other publications are very saleable, and we offer extraordinary inducements for agents. Full particulars given by addressing postpaid, TOOKEK& GATCHEL, Publishers, Cleveland. O. March 21, 1353. ltJ. The State of Indiana, Marshall County, S ss. Marshall Common Pleas Court, April Term, IS53. Anizi L. Wheeler, J vs. Foreign Attachment. Heniamm Shoemaker WHEREAS, upon the affidavit of the plaintilT, a writ of Forei.i Attachment wasdulyJisMied in this behalf, (here insert.) And whereas said attachment was this day returned by tl.e Sheriff of said aounty, by which it appears that the following real e.statc has been attached as the property of the said defendant, to-wit: one undivided tenth part of Lot number thirty-four, (31) in Plymouth appraised at sixty dollars the entire lot appraised at $G0U ul); and it having been made to appear to my satisfalion, byaftiJavil, that said defendant is a non-resident of of the State, of Indiana. The üaid Ilenjamin Shoemaker is therefore hereby notified of the pendency of said writ, and that unless he appear and answer thereto on or before the calling of said cauc on the second day of the next term of the Marshall Common Pleas court, to be held at the court house in Plymouth in said county, on the third Monday in April next, the same will be heard and determined in hi absence. Attest: RICHARD CORBALEY. Clrk m. o. r. oC. H. ReeTe. rifffs. At?v. March Q2, l-M. iwl.
Navigation is open on lakes Erie an4 Michigan. Vessels and steamers ha ve alrerdy commenced running on poth lakes.
Corrected by J. URQWNLEE. - ' fc , V.-' -r X V, Thursday Harch 31, IStf. Apples Hreen i 00! Laid pr lb. 10 Dry Si 00 Oats pr buh. 37 Butler pr lb. 10al 4 Peaches Dry, 82.50 Beeswax pr lb. . 20i Potatoes, 25 Brooms pr doz. 81.50 j lVheat prbush.70a7ö Beans pr bush. S 1, 00 1 Wood pr cord, Sl.OO Cranberies bus. S2 00'; Flour bbl. S" CO Chickens pr doz. 3 1,0? c-.vt. 2,50 Cheese. lOj OensenDrj. 25 randies Sperm. s 37 J Hay Tame, 6,ncj Eitfs pr doz. ID! Wild, 34,00 Cum, slicüe l, 40 Corn in ear, 37 Another scientific Woiider! Important to Dyspeptics Dr. J. S. HOL'UUTON S Pepsin The true Diges'Jre fÄvJ, or Gastric Juice, pre pared lro:n the Rennet, or the "ourth storaach of tlie Ox, a tcr directions of Caron Libiif, the great Phy.vio!o: il Chemist, by J. S. Houton, M. D., JMjiladelphia. This is truly a wonderful remeJy or Indigestion. Dyspepsia. Jaundice, I.ivercoiuplaiut, Constipation, and Debility, curing ater Nature's own methou, by Njture's own Äeent, theVOvstxic Juice'arnphlets, containing scienti ffc evidence o its value, furnished by agents yratis. A'ce notice among Medical Advertisements. no 3D ly. CC3Thf Quincy Whig, of ISih March. 1S51, one of the largest and most popular papers in Illinois, says: "See tt.e advertisement of W. Ii. Farrell's Arabian Liniment. This Liniment is the genuine cure-ail, and m mistake. 4ml. FIRE, FIRE! FIRE! THE NEW YOTilv INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY, of Broalalbin. N. Y. Capital' gl 50.000 uilh a surplus, 21 tender their pitr jmsje to Äv).aJL the insuring pubi;c, and v.ilh 21s3$ ti e folliÄ-in? boxrJ of Directors, and Oili'.crs, (wh s - kno'vn integrity and well tried business capacities, area sufficient guarantee for vs future svece?, p rwneney nl w'ety,) they can confidently .tep forward with an optn Land fur t!e relief of tLe rncrcJ.ant, tLo larmcr and mechanic: Directors: .Toreph libir, Laban C.ipron, H. T. Mn:pxon, A. II. Van Neat, Lucius Itice, Sherman liatchelior, John McXab. Fay Sihi I, Themas Low, John Stewart, William A. Smith. Daniel Ptt er. OJHci'i: Joseph Tilnir. Pre 't. j A. 13. Van Ns ,Se2. Juhn McXab. Y. Pre. j L. Capron, Treas. KHVrciici's: Hon. I!raslu3 Corning, Ali any, N. Y. Messrs. il-o;i, Montieth & Co., Hon. John Welts, Johnson, Win. 11. 11 dl K,q., buffalo, Mt-ssr.. Ford ä. fJran!. Albany, Hon. John It. Kcliojt, Allegan, M en. Me.Nfers. '1 et btll, Jenuiiur, &. Co. N. Y. city. " .Matison, Ishani iSc Co. " " Robertson &. Levnolds, Any satisfactory vouchers in reV.ion to the j soltenry of tLe company the integrity and trg-c business capacities of the Director.! I and OfH-.iTS, tl.e r manner ot noinc l.UMnksr. " .. , . . v- , ., 1 anu the .ounJaiiun upon whuh the contpany ; tared, can le had at any time, by callin? ion II. Corbm, who !ias gut the d-icunjentji. 1 ana is a :uiy a.uhunzcu .nteni 10 a :i 101 li.Q company; T hetelore yo-i ue'id not leap in lh dark, nor trust ti e treichtraug efct.ieni; but come to Horace Corbm, and know the truft. i ami you ceitainly will Insure in the N. York udemn'n v. .March '2J, yl. t the ptesfiit day wi'h thousand around us who hae frutiVred looses by lite, hating no insurance, and as many more who tidve sutler-it like losses, ami been ma le whole, by the fostering hand of Insurance companies. Il is wholiy unnt-ccpsiry to say or.e word, of its wholesome iTeits, or of the ready relief it proffr-rs; but only to satisfy the injuring public of thfir utility and pirmarrtncy. This I will do by &8yiii that l!i New York Indemnity, (over most other companies) hnvc adopu-d the fallowing j liberal provisions, to-wit: They hoLl (heinselvts r.-ponsibie for the correct- ! ness of survey made by tho authoiized j agents, to take fiVct on till approvable applications, the day the application IB made to be responsible- for property burned by lightning, to paj its looses in sixty d.ijs Mfttrrtlue proof thereof, and to allow additional stovt s ?o be sst up and removed from one room to another; als." the erection of out builiiiugs of the same class of hazard, if over forty feet froin the building insured, without giving notice to the company; and to allow all matters of difference in th adjustment of losses, (at the option of the insured) to be settled by arbitrators mutually chosen by the insured and the company, in the county where the loss occuts. whose award in writing shall be binding on the parties. Said action tan be commenced by service on the agent. All at first glance will see the advantage of having such matters adjusted at home, where the facts are before the people who are to judge, without any inducement to do aught but wholesome justice. The foundation upon which the company is based, is too lengthy for detail here, but those who have any doubts on this matter. can see the papers by calling at the "Captain's office." I will briefly fay, however, that the Legislature of the State of New York, seeing the imposition that had been and might still be practiced, (unless some restriction was put upon them) in their wisdom, saw fit to impose some severe restitutions upon such companies to have a certain amount of actual stock before organizing, and many other requirements, all subject to the inspection of certain State officers, (acting under oath) to sec whether all the requirements of the law have been com" plied with. It is safe, it is permanent, it will secure you a life interest in your property it will secure you peac of mind, an-" ia warranted to banish dream offirr. HORACE COKBJN.
