Vincennes Gazette, Volume 3, Number 27, Vincennes, Knox County, 14 December 1833 — Page 1
VOLUME 3. VINCEJrNE& IJTDMJVMi DECEMBER 14, 1833. NUMBER Z7
TflK VINCBITNIiS GAZETTE Will be Published ctcry Saturday, 3j a a a sacs "?;! a
and every hill of corn to which his indus-1 otherwise regarded. How many females
$2 50. if paid dcrina: the year. ,S CO. il paid in advance. S'.i 00, if not paid during the year. ?l 25, for sax month.
are there in the world, who never did any
thing but gossip about from "post to pil
lar, ' with poor laboring parents, that are
publisher while arrearas'a.c due. ?K -'"M 13 alphabeted, to the ac-U-rAdvertisemmtsmBkin-nneFqnareorlesadennc? and colleges, mid semtnanes
T7.it be inserted three times fnr one doliar, anu : vtiicil vie wtiri mose oi any omer coun
t I
try has given use, is nis own; out when he looks abroad upon the institutions of the land, and compares them with those
of other countries, then a feeling ot pride j shining daily in their unpaid for decora
yea honest, . unostentatious pride rises tions. The factory girl earns money with in him at the reflection that he is an she dresses with modesty and in becoming American husbandman. Institutions ol manner lays up money and takes plealearning are scattered throughout the sure in her avocations. She has leisure
land. From the common scboolsn which after performing her duties, to iass the
Autumn eve in storing her mind with useful knowledge she improves her time
I she has learned to be industrious she
twenty-five cents for eviry subseq'irnt insertion ; try jt) usefulness, are advantages held out j becomes at the age of twenty years, Let
nui-iirciuruiiiM..i - - . j0p extending me ground wont ol true inBach articles of produce, as are used in a & fc.JL 1 i h Jriived in payment for sh- dependence-useful and even liberal edu-
fcriptions, at the market price, delivered in Vin- catio,) He is convinced that it is iu the cenues. jpowerof bis children to make themselves
1 I'M' II ik. .'.vvit..' i. tit. .V' i y . 1 . M M k
SB
t their own character is entirely in their
ter informed, belter qualified to hold social converse with the wise and intelligent has acquired a better portion of the 4rf ady dosh,v and is in every respect superior to the street yarnspiuster or those
who speak ot her m terms ol disrespect
own hani, and that by pursuing a couiselThey are in fact an honest, industrious
of industry, economy and punctuality, no j and happy portion of community.
Ladie s Mirror.
From the Aex W.r farmer
HINTS AMi ii n,U'l? i.i iiuawiii, w.Mpr what mav I.p their station-thev
. - ..!.., u . '"ill be able to secure tor themselves a
EjiljOymPni IS lll inuuu iuhhi ill iuiorious as in simple dishes. Fried apples are better and more wholesome than ex pensive preserveIn striving for the comforts of life, seek those that aie least expensive. It is better to have 3 our house furnished with corn to 1 table than with costly things. Exert v outsell to overcome the difficulties attending your present business rather than enter into other pur uit-. i'ut new earthen ware in cold water and lei it beat gradually, until it boils, then cue! again. Brown earthen ware, in particular, may be toughead to this way. A handful of rye, or wheat bran thrown in while it is boiling will preserve the glazing, so that it will uotLe destroyed by acid or salt.
New England lum constantly ujed
ped of every article. A relation was kept Messrs Maiendic and Flourens. GuiUotin, tha going after her as she danced, to pick up inventor of the 5u.ll.dine, as well s several fL ..ft..........,ia iother distinguished physiologists, wasofopinioo
name which the utTspring of untitled arti- i Strange Disorder of the Abyssinian JVctnen. zans or agriculturalists ot other countries j 'plm IS a very 8trange disorder, w hich would Urive for in vain, fie looks abroad ; tannot pass over m silence, though the upon the country every thing is prosper readermay think it fabulous and lidicuous He looks at his garners anil his fields. jous. et w e j,ave aCCOunts of something they yield an abundant reward for his!0f the tMQ)e kind iu the New Testament, labor he turns lo the firmly circle and bicb the priests and learned of Ahvswitnesses the tinge of health upon the l0lti i,eiexe to be the same. This com check of each, and he is happy. tfu6urii jjIaint cale(j tigretier; it is more comJournal. moD among the women than ihe men. The tiretier seizes the body as if with rious Result in Potatoes Williamia violent lever, and from that turns to a Augustus Finchin, Eq of liellville, coun-i lingering sickness, which reduces the paty of Dublin, has left ta our othre, tor in-t,euts to skelletons, and olten kills them, spect.on ol the cunou in such matters, 1 1- the relations cannot procure ihti i.roi.er
ioui poiiuues. giv..,K inmiuue common : remedy. During this sickness their speech
iiaut, iwo 01 wimu Hie uuge rm appies, l9 changed to a km
and the other two large pink eye, each
eshibiting their original characteristic ap.
pearance, though derived from one com. rnon parent. Captain Minchin endeavors
changed lo a kmd d stuttering, which
no one can understand but those afflicted with the same disorder. When the relations fJod the malady to be the re.d tigre
tier, they join together to defray the ex
clean.!10 account tor 1,16 teai,"g phenomenon p( :ises ot- cur ing; the first remedy they in
IV .ISII wan, Bcrp ix v.j v....., , , . ... . . " ' J J .
and free from di-ease, and promotes Us iy Cl"1 " ' ' . jgeueral attempt, is to procure the assist
than Macassar. i -Y u iance ot a teamed Doctor, who reads ll
the ornaments and afterwards deliver
them to the owners from whom they were borrowed. As the sun went down, she made a start with such switlne&s that the fastest runner could not come up with her, and when at the distance of about two hundred yards, she dropped on a sudden as if shot. Soon afterwards, a young man on coming up with her, tired a match-lock, over her body, aod struck her upon the back with the broad side of his large knife, and asked her name, to which she an eweted as when in her common sense, a sure proof of her being cured,- for, during the time of this malady, in afflicted with it never answer to their christian name. She was now taken up in a very weak condition and carried home, and a Priest Came and baptized her again in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, which ceremony concluded here cure. Fearse's Adventures in Abyssinia.
n.r.wth ,p:.t .IpM m.,rn h;m Alarassar. -rt . ,.-vv,dI1,e U( a ,earneu doctor, who reads tue
oil. Iiiandv is very Stre.theDing to T1, J'1'"" "ha " ' N SH of St. John, and drenches the pa
V .,un3 7 ,uc " r' 1 ran r.gnt through the centre of both, in drying tendency, which iN. E. mm has , , .
loniirot another, dv means 01 a skewer nent uii.i mhi aor .i.iu ii,n
v-vivs V'Ckiiv lj k llll, CintV,V
not
of seven days an application that very
often proves fatal. The most efiectual
MODES OF SALUTATION. An author has observed in contrasting the haughty Spaniard with the frivolous Frenchma.., that the proud, steady gait, and inflext !e solemnity of the former, were expie .-ed in his mode of salutation ''Come cota?--"How do you stand?" whilst the "Comment vous pmtez vous?" How do you carry yourself? was equaly xpressive of the gay uiwtion and incessant action of the other. The Dutch, who are considered great eaters, hae a morning salutation common amongst all ranks "Smaokelyk eetenr' May you eat a hearty dinner!1' Another,
probably adopted in the eaily periods ot the republic, when the people were mosflv nav igators and fishermen, is "Hue vuart iove?" "How do you sail?" The common salutation in the southern provinces of China, amongst the lower order, is Ya, fan? Have you eaten your rice! When the Chinese meet, after a long separation, they tall on their knees, bend their faces to the earth two or three times and use many other affected modes
They have also a kind of ritual, or "acade
'iv .1.! tt :..ii,t ..i.oar fht.r hir ii.: .. .1 .. ! m v o 1 com id i men ts. ' u v which thev reau
ifvn,.h.rpniprnn;.niiflni,fl ... "j cure, luougn inv more expensive Uian me r . ' . ; . " "
II 1 V'J IJLII I. II .1 VUtl I U I w v.iv.. . , . . . . I l .
.j i n ii -I r m ii i i o ol finrrrittfrirr lha ..it. It a
. . , i i i . i i diurnal luviii. v., iiuuhi i'uia I IT lu the house ihan is likely to be soon used, , . . . . .. . , rmcht have ieen tirsl Of rived from a mix cover them carefully with paper, fastened , ,i , , , , k. , . ., ... J r ' ' ture ot the ai:de am! while, but tnat the
OQ wiln U'Ur paste, so as to ex. uae me air. . , . , . , . ; , ' . , A , 'character ot each shoutd be prt served Iu thiswaj they may be kept from insects -n ,)resent case seems a litfur years. I hey should be kept in a dry eztTil0ldiaMy cool place. , Dublin Evening Mail Woolens should he washed in very hot; L a uds and hot ringed. JLukewarm water tbiinksthem. i To prepare cold PotatoesSome i of Suet and lard keep better in tin than your .eade.s may start and ask, "Who , t vessels 'don't know how to wairn cold potatoes Ca3ueTkelpse n'ood all the ear round, it Why, a great .many don't know how to do Chopped and packed down m a stone jar, it as it should be done lo travelling, ' , ,, have lartly met with potatoes prepared covered with molasses. . J m-, .
When molasses is used in cooking, it is Q tne rouowmg u, . amodig.ousimp.ovementtoboiiandsk.m any that were half as good. Tastes d.tit'hetcreyouuseit It takes out theu,. , 1 admit, but experiment is easily pleasant raw taste, and makes it almost as maHe- , ,,r, 1 Slice them into a frying pan, and over gLune puVveuzcd, sifted through course i" q'rt of potaioe-, poGr halt a teacup of mu.lmmdstirreduptole.ably thick in the g-" cream, but no water) first spunk .og hile of eg-s, makes a strong cement for ; a l.ule Halt. Cove. ,t closely; and att,c an,i cVo, Plater of Pans is still ter ,t begins to boil, stir them a tew times,
i Thendi.h them. Genesee Farmer.
u-in man nit - , , ... .1
former, is as follows. I tie relations hire . , . ' r . c i a . i and words to be "ijoken uon any occasion or ll f pr Min sum fit innnpv .1 li:ini nl rum. u 1 '
peters, drummers, and titers, and buy aj
quantity of liquor; then all the youogmeu and women ol the place, assemble at the
patient's house, to perform the most extra
ordinary ceremony I once was called iu by a neighbor to see his wife, a very young woman, and of
Ambassadois practise lueir ceremonies forty days before they appear at court. The Japanese take of! a slipper, and the people of Arracan their sandals iu the street, and their stockings in the houae, when they salute. In Otaheite they rub their noses to-
- ' j j & Vether whom he was very fond, who had the mis-j rp '
J that no physical sufferinK attends the act of de-
' .. . 1 . . 1 .
capitation bue, bomuiermg, ana casiet, emetuin different views. Kxptrinients have been made by Sue on turkey?, sht cp, and calve, when the head antj body having been severed by a sharp instrument, pave M vemlly evidence of suffering. Tha body of a turkey thus decapitated, alter remaining motionless a whole nuoute, rose on its legs flapping its wings, and raieing it claw towards the throat. The hodj of a decapitated sheep was convulsed with so much violence, that thre men were obliged to hold it. The head of a calf after decollation, opened its eyes, and moved its mouth and nostrits, for six minutes.AlJioi, who tried h'm galvauic experiment iB 1803, in Italy on a guillotined person, in London upon a body executed by hanging, states tht muscular contractions took place during two hours alter death in the hanged, and three quarters of an hour in the decapitatod man. ."viajno,, Profesaor of Physiology at Geno9, having produced at Paris a system of investigation of tha results of the guillotine, states that having exposed two heads, a quarter of an hutir after decollation, to a strong light, the eyelids closed) suddenly. The tongue which protruded fror the lips, bein pricked with a needle wa3 drawQ back into the mouth and the countenance rs pressed sudden pain. The head of a criminal named 1 illier being submitted to examination after ihe guillotine, the head turned in every direction lYuin whence h was called by uame.A report, hitherto treated as fabulous, may therefore be believed: that, when the executioner gave a blow on the face to Charlotc Corday's head, the countenance expressed violent indignation. Fontenelle asserts that he has frequently seen the heads of guillotined person move their lips. Siveliag declares that by touching the spinal marrow, the most horribli demonstrations of agony succeed. Many animals retain the power of locomotion after decapitation. tortoise will live for six months, executing its orainary functions, after the extraction of the brain ; ;ind twelve days
after the head has been cut e.omplettlv ff Charras. an operator at the Janiin de PJ antes, having cut off the head of a viper, two of th pupils were dangerously Btung by it, sixty hour afterwards CJalien records, that the Euipercj Comiuodus was 30 skilful in th decapitation of ostriches, that thee birds did not at firtt paus in their speed, after the loss of their heads. Boerhaave cutoff the head of acockwfcich was runniug toward a trough, at the distance of 2 feet, and the body fulfilled its intention. Perranit decapitated a serpent, and the body crawled toward its usual retreat. Beetles advance cautiously, examining the ground first with the right leg, thsjn with the left, after losing their heads. The heart of a frog palpitates two hour afterwards; and flies and butterflies fiy about for many minutes Monsieur de Fonte.nelle's memoir contains many other apparently incredicle, but equally well authenticatej facts; and the further investigation of Magendie, and his learned coi league, will be la id forth-" with hefore the French government It appears on the present showing, that the gudlotire isth mjst cruel mode of destruction ever yet devised since no limit can he placed to the agnail
ot death alter its operation.
fortune to be billicted rvuh this disorder ;
ami the mau being an eld acquaintance of,
The inhabitants ofCarmene when they
would show a particular attachment.
FACTORY GIltLS.
"Whit ray daughter, are you going to
.it.. rou t.rr.larlv for meudiusr images ofi le P ' neariy .ry , ..ui
I - J u w the same material. Leef tea, for the sick, is made by broiling a tender stake nicely, seasoning it with
iientiorjuiil snlt r 11 1 1 inP' 1 1 U O. atlU lOUrili?
IiVV'I'Vl w . ui. O I ' . - . . , . at . . t .... . 4.. .f-.r.. 77cil Aire Milt uvea f nr
.vater over it not quite honing, rut m a( vnn y VC1 little water at a time, and let it stand to ! daughter Zilphioa Angelina Matilda, a tew euak the goodness out. ! evenings since, as she was , uttmg on her rarsni should be kept down cellar, bonnet to walk. " 1 be factory girls are mvpred .. in Band e u t ireU excluded from not respectable they are not intelligent,
.
mine, and atwavs a close comrade ot the: , " , i""1'" M,WUIU camp, I went every day, when at home io!lh"r fn(1 a9 vcrage see her, but 1 could not be of any service! . o JNg- Kings on the coast of At to her, though she never refused my med-j r'CM' su!ute b Wg 'h middle finger irin.s Al llu lirno I .-.lul l unl n.i.tpr-. ! l'iree HmCS.
stand a word she said, allnoueh she Ulk-I A? h0Pa tae9 the robe, off the per-
ed very freely, nor could anv of her rela-l801? ,,e el?.U0l l'e9 ,l abul ,"tfl so as hm1SI1,lpr; nH t,Pr Shn r'r.r.1,1 ,,,t hr t0,PlVe "end almost naked.
the sieht of a book, or a nne,t. for at the! e inhabilanls of the Philippines bend
o;i., ;,.,, cK. ... very low, placing their hands on their
plreatly seized with acute agony, and aj0' am rafie fooS,ln w,th 1 i,i..,Mn.i,,i.,i ,h10J1he kriee befJt. They also take a per
euu a nauus ui iuui, auu iuu ii over iueir face
the air
eprmg.
They are good only ia the
they are not agreeable they ate an ig
norant and debased compound ot ignor
ance and misery,' continued she, "and I
ter, would pour down her face from her eyes. She had lain tbiee mouths in this lingering state, living on so little that it ttocnifi.t lint pnnnirh I ri L-n llio hnmun tin.
611 I III. IIIV IJUUIUU J I ,
dy alive: at last her husband agreed to , , J . . .... i . if. . . I the straits ot I
tTLupioy iuc usual icmcii), iiuu un.ee pic
Greenlander have none. Laplanders apply their noses atraightly against the
the Sound, they raise
Apailiul uflje, with a piece ot copper- ance him mine y cuoi.uue.. ne anu i , half as biK m a hen's egg boiled it. it, would not visit them.' "My Mother," '1 color a fine knapkin color, which : replied ttie daughter, "you are prejudiced
Wi
will never wash
. i i- i:. t.o.l ntult.'. comf m Ip. I chat JTCd
fill nil lilt iiuiuu v..- 7 ' . w
...i pj. u
&C.
out. This is very u?e-
agaiutst ttiose whom you have talsely
ibuo you are mistaken in the
character ot those whom you denominate
Legs of mutton are very good, ruie.i in an ignorant and debased part of the come same way as hams Six pound, ol alt, munity,'- I bus the conversation passed
th
eight ounce?
J t. . . ni ivilh ihp (IniKrlttdP onl fka
of saltpetre, aIuJ ve PmJS 01 u r' u aiJ . 0..- wU ' 1 - . . ' . . t..ivisji mnf Vvr unfit t ri' r n,, n
moHs3P will make pickle euoiign tor iuu,piouM yw u.w.v., JUU6
weight. Small
kle twelve or fift
live weeks are not too much
leg-should be kept in pic-:"d beautiful girls entered the room. g teen dave; if large four or! Their forms, therr dress, their conversa- s
iMU rlw .1.., tr, ft r,i. ,..1 1 ,...., ;
ii;irincr tor Ihp m nn ennum it tha ri:inrl ' r
during the time it would take to effect the' fDtl over tLe riSht and over the cure, he borrowed from his neighbors ' their s.lver ornaments, and loaded her Ffgmthe XaUonal Ga3ette. legs, arms and neck with them. Ihe o'CONNLhL'S LETTER. . . . . . . . l ft aL. i 1 L a 1 . I
eve.mig iuai uie uauu uegau 10 piay, a; Mr . O'Connell has written the firdofasesealed myself close by hei side as she Jay j rie3 of letters to his constituents, in which he delipon the couch, and aoout two mmutes af- mands an examination of his conduct during ter the trumpets had begun to sound, 1 the past Session, and offers to resign if they are i,D,..,o,l i . . - ..i. i u.,..: dissatisfied with him. lie then proceeds to
, 5 , review his parliafDCutHry career, and takes credit
.tuu suoii unciwaius uei neaa uu u:eabi, : to himsell lor havint; been the principal cause acd in less than a quarter of au hour she ofall the measures for the benefit of Ireland which
sat upon her couch. i where passed. The regulation of the Soap The wild look she had, though some-! D,lt ! h ab?,iIt1io" of the most grievous provi.
times she smiled, made me draw oQ to aot ,he Veslry Ccs9 ae ineH,ures which he atgrealer distance, being almost alarmed to ; tributes mainly to his individual exertions. He see one nearly a skeleton move wrth SUCh' also claims merit for havng nearly succeeded
A YOUNG ItASCAL. Last evening, a hoy took it into bta head, from a mere love of mischief, to raise a mob. He went, about 7 oVlock, to a wharf near Warren bridge, put his head info a barrel, and with his feet kicked stones and dirt imo the water, crying piteously, "Save me! ave me! Tin drown ing!1' His cries being heard by persona passing, a large body of people wax sooo collected, who proceeded with lantherns and commenced a search, as they uppn ed, for some unfortunate who was in the
water. They soon found the boy, amu ing himself as above described. Boston Transcript.
Extraordinary Fortitcde A entlemna came from Camhome,Corn wall, two years pince, and consulted the medical officer of th Plymouth Lye Infirmary, on account of a shot which entered his left eyeball four years and it half hefore, viz: in Feb. 1827, from a gun iei at a woodcock by another person, producing instant blindness in the left eye, and unceasing pain from that time. Ia exploring the eye for the shot, through a fistulous opening in tha sclerotica, a bony and crystallized lens was extracted, and with it the supposed cause of hig suffering, then attributed to the picul of bore. In Febuary, 1833, the same gen'lem in returned to Plymouth, and said that the shot inu t still h lodged in the eye, as his pain was most acute.
J and his fear of losing the other eye from symp-i-
iny very great, n scconn operation was ptr-
tormcd, at bis particular request, and the anterior part of his left eje removed, and tha
vitreous humour scooped out. Tha eye sup
purated aud sunk, but still no shot was found.
t .... . .... . t;i.,.o ii.. k ., i
r.v shnhl t.on and conduct throughout, were of the strength; her head, neck, shoulders, hands ."7 V . 7-1 7,
. , . . . . II .. . ll.. iliuamiuiuu mi.
. . .i Im.i.t I .triujIiniT nn pr i o iraru -jml auu ICLi, dii ujiuc ;i SIIUIIL' II1JUU1I IU IUC i . i :...u"
,n h.mo- nn a dav or two oeiore uiey aie & , , . juijiiuuwsudieiiK-)
cmoked.
The Salter meat is, the longf r it ought to he boiled. If very salt it is well to put it in soak over night, change the water while cooking. It you want a common rich pudding to retain its flavor, do not oak it, or put it in to boil w hen the water is cold. Wa-h it, tie it in a hag, leave plenty of room lor it to ewel!, throw it in when the water boils, a-id
let it boil an hour and a halt
i .......mu ui.uuguv,ut, clCu, uie --o- ---i-.Inland are on the point of victory , and if they fascinating order, delicacy and aod ,eet' ail o'ue a strong motion to the; . lll(t hesitatR th. ,nII sllPrrpV' ii ,.nm.
atrreeableties. The evening was passed S0Ulia OI lue music, and in tins manner sue mends every parish in Ireland, without delay,
and the ladies retired, after improving! veul on hy degrees until she stood upon to propare I'etitions to Parliament for the total ihe u-uil compliments' of the eve, and i her ,eSs uPorj Ar. Afterwards she-a.' Mr- le,,gee Jonmadedi.igentenquirieslbegantodance andattimest
respecting the two prepossessing girls. mu anasi as uie mu?ic anu noine oi ineltijs fonr columos in the Duhlm I'apers, the The daughter intormed her that they smgers incr eased, often sprang three feet. Honorable and Learned Member alludes to the
were factory girls. Well, said the lady, there is some exception to the terms generally applied to them 1 am well pleased with them, and in future shall have no
objection in having you visit giris ol so
r -imt.s will have a less disagreeable I good minds as our evening visitors. This
er;ell, if you flip your w ick yarn m stroug
hot vinegar and dry it. THt FAiUIER. If there be a being upon earth who
has every reason to be contented, and even to "rejoice at his situation, it is the Aorican Farmer- . UnUU the vawals ot Europe, he is emphatically his on m-ister. He tills his own grJU.ul-reaps the bene fU of Ins own la'or and improvements; und a he witnee a young and healthy fHUiiiv around him, feels assured thai with
......... .u i fierseveraiice tnev can se
nium' i . "
jni
cuie
to" themselves the same inestimable
l.lesMCig-
Nor this all; not ony is
is a fragment ot what passed between an
"out town family," just moved into this manufacturing region. It i even so, there is a prejudice by nroud and assuming uersons, clothed in
i - . .
'little btiel authority, that a young lady w ho wo i ks in a Cotton Mill, is an abject and almost despisable being. Should (he employment that a person is devoted lo, it
il be an honorable and laudable calling, erase their names and characters trom the banner of re-pectabiiitv ? No! and the bfty and assuming spirit that dwells within a bsom l -u h an one, is only fit, as Shak9pe ire h i - ud, f;r treason, stratagems and -pod. A laboring class ol the
Ihe community, who have orougtit meal
ni aprnred to him: not onlv has tie
a co'isctousiic.39 that every spear of gra?,1 cutable houor to our Country ehoald be
f rom the ground. When the music slack
ened, she would appear quite out of tem per, but when it became louder, she would 6mtJe and be delighted. During this exercise, she uever showed the least symptom of being tired, though the musicians were thoroughly exhausted, aud when
they stopped to refresh themselves by drinking aud resting a little, she would
discover signs of disconsert. Next day, according lo custom in the cure of this disorder, she was taken into the market place, where jars of maize or isug were set in order by the relation;), to give drink to
the musicians and dancers. When the
crowd had assembled, and the music was
ready, she was brought forth and began
to dance and throw herself into the mad
dest posture imaginable, and in this manner she kept on the whole day.
Towards evening she hep-ati to let fall
her silver ornaments from her neck, arms, and legs, oue at a time, so that in the
cou rse cf three or four houisshe wa9 strip
King's Speech, on the Prorogation of Parliament, which he characterizes in the following manner: 4"It is impossible to treat it with all the con tempt in merits it sinks beneath the dignity of vituperation, and is readily consigned to the manufactory whence it sprung a plagiary a
flat plagiary, extracted from the brain of one of
the hired pullers ot Warren's jet blacking it
covers with ridicule those it praises, and gives a triumph to tha o'jiect of its futilo attack.'' In
conclusion, he observes ".My plan of agitation
is this 1 will go thruugh the details or the cruet measures of the late Session, illustrating, as
mot of them do, the absolute necessary of a domestic legislature in Ireland. I will then commence in each county the organization of
petitions for the repeal, and with the aid of more activity as we approach the Session, and with
the increasing claims on Protestant sympathy
and support, 1 trust we will be aide to place our risrht to a resident Parliament beyond doubt, aud its restoration beyond danger."'
A freak of Nature. A medical gentleman of Cincinnati informs us, that a pair of twins, like the Si imece, were born a few days since io that city. It was found necessary, at their birth, to separate them; and both died in consequence of the operation. They were females. Had they lived, they might have beeq given in marriage to the boys of Siara, and thus have become the mothers of hipeds or rather quadrupeds. Journal ami Focus .
SUFFERINGS OF (U ILLOTINED PERSONS. A memoir has recently been presented to the Academy of Science0, on the subject of death by decollation, which will cause an investiga
tion to tako place, under tha authority of
A young lady of Philadelphia, who far some time received the a'tentions of a young man, but had been slighted within a few days he declaring a change had taken place in his affection towards her was so far aCected in consequence thereof, that he became a confirmed lunatic and wandered from home, and for day9 traversed the woods, void of subsistence.
ami when f mod was in a state of perfect
exhaustiou. Host. Transcript. IJow to catch cn Owl. A western pnper mentions the folio v in as an easy method of taking owls. When you discover one ou a tree, and find that it is liokinn at you, all you have U do is to move quickly round the tree several times, when the owl in the mean time, whose attention will be firmly fixed, for getting the necessity of turning its body with its head, follow your botiocs ritu iu eyes, it wriogs its bca-i off.
