Vincennes Gazette, Volume 6, Number 45, Vincennes, Knox County, 8 April 1837 — Page 1

"tkutii without fear."

VOLUME VI.

tmm iuu.1ji . .iliij. M;nH nm i M --

From the Cincinnati Daily Gczttte. ROTATION. Remember March the Fourth of March reaicinbcr; Did not great AlJrac go, for Martin's sake'? He ?oes tho great Responsible, The famed colossus of Il.'form, Rotation's chanipi-m ol'iiv full And 'Inushiiiu; honors' round lii.n swarmItotHtion, 'as I understand it, The magic circle roiarv None but magi.-ians can command it, Who deem 'Mr' service 'eaoi. -h ;!orv. lie wort not as the g tlke went When Kome paid h .'i;u"' to the plough. When men, firm as their idoutrhhares, Lent To form no paity tools as now. They resd their history in the e es That flashed not yet a nation's curse. While his, a in ore substantial prize, Is petted in a nation's purs?. lie goes and future times shall say, I this the man who nobly spoke, And drew even noble hearts a-trav. Vet every word of promise broke? Who freedom won and freedom sold, And dared Uod's 'noblest works" to ilimn, That w.' uld not sn allow power or cold, When baited by this great -I AM"! II cors the beacon of the aj'. One of the meteors Fate bestowi When sleep the patriot and the sarre. And Freedom's watchlire faintly clows. There is a voice whose thunder comes Hepuk hral from earth's far-otf caves From our own battle fields and tombs Arouse! or be forever slaves! LOVERIGHT. Where is the Authority. Ornrni. "p Head m inrtm or the armt, Ceral Order, J Adjutant ( icneral's Oilioe. No. o. j Washincton.. March 7, IS37. 1. The Major General Commanding-in-Chief has received from the War Department the following order: "General Andrew Jackson, ex-Presi-cent of the United, Stales, being about to depart from this city lor ins home in Tennessee, and the state of his health rendering it important that he should he accompanied by a medical attendant, the President directs that the Surgeon Genet;l of the Armv accompanying the exPresident to Wheeling, in the State of Virginia, there to he relieved, in case .he s-Pres;dents health shail be sucli as allow it, by some ollicer, of the nvdi. to al deparimon:. who will attend the ex-President from t'aat place to his residence. In giving this order, the President feels insured that this mark of attention to the venerable soldier, patriot and Statesman, now retiring in infirm health, from the cares of office to the repose of private life, vr ill he as grateful to trie feelings of the American People, as it appears to the President to he suitable in itself. M. VAN HP REN. Washington, March Oth, 18.17. The Major General ( 'omma:i.Iing-in-Chicf will carry into effect the foreooing directions of the President of the United States. R. F. BUTLER. Secretary of War ad interim." This is the First act of the Usurper. He was inaugurated on Saturday, and on Monday issued this order. We presume it is an earnest of what we are to expect. The thiner is, in ins opinion, "grateful to the American people, axs smtapi.e in itski.f." All this may may be true; but where is the constitutional authority? Does he derive his powers from the Constitution, or from that unfathomable abvss his opinions of what may be "GUVrEFULTO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE, Oil SUITABLE IN ITSELF"? Is this ins constitution? Does he mean to act upon the principle that he has the right to do whatsoever he thinks will be "GRATEFUL TO TIIF. AMTRICAN PEOPLE and sriTABLT in lrsri.F?" Is this the only restriction on his power? Is he aware that there is a Constitution of the United States? Does he regard that Constitution? If so, where, and in what clause, does he give them the power to issue this order? Can Mr. Ritchie put his "finger upon it?" Gen. Jackson, on the 0th of March, was a private citizen. Will this Usurper issue an order to the Surgeons of the Army and Navy to follow all private citizens through the Country with their bags of nameless incomprehensions? Whv not? We have no privileged orders the Constitution makes no dilference between private citizens. How is it, then, that the Surgeons are thus commanded to follow after Gen. Jackson? What is to be their extra-allowance? Who pays it? Surely with a salary of $25,000 a year, for eiht vears in succession, Gen. Jackeon could'have paid his own doctor's bills. Aye the thing speaks for itself the man and his master. It pains us to speak thM!"; but it is our duty to speak. Had an honest planter or farmer come here and been taken ill, he might have died; and worse than that he would never have gotten one pill from the medicine ehe?t of the Uusurper. To this complexion have we come. Rrformcr.

From the Xtw l'vrk Express.

The last act cf Gen. Jackson Tho Cur rency niii. A week has not gone by since tho merchants of New York, and probably nine tenths of all classes of our citizens, were congratulating each other upon the passage of the Ci kkkncy Dili.. "The. Treasury Order is repealed." "The last 'Specie humbug i.i at fin aid." "Both Houses of Congress have passed '.the Currency "HUi"1 "Business will be better, were the enthusiastic expressions of almost every man who has heard the news of the day. A day passed, and the prospect darkened; rumor upon rumor came from Washington that the President would veto the? Hill, or if ho did unt vctn it. thnt ho would Docket it c.r ,!,.c.mv it

Forgetting for a moment the character of roun;1 hil" 1101 as the.v dul o!d hickory, the ex-President, we were at first hardly'!"1 Vlcl,r kncof "uh, ll,t;ir ,mts in th(lr vvdl.n r .TP.r.t ll,P rPnnrt A vtc r.I. bilt WItll tllCir llCluU and both lists

peal the obnoxious Treasury Order had passcd the Senate by a large majority, and . i , .- nll I had received tiie warmest support irom the most zealous of our friends of the ad ministration. The United States Senate,! a body more immediately renrescntintr the !

interests of the Several States than thel"' l'le

TI,mw., f l)..rnC,t.,.l,:M l,.! the Treasury Order in all its hearings, and h:nl nmo 1c lto dol ihnr-ilo nod -.linntt

unanimous conclusion, that the Order wasKckinS l!lf ',Ll,C0' a'.,d,.oul; Sr?l'"

unequal and unjust in ail its operation, and unnecessary and oppressive in all its demands. The Bill went to the House, a body more immediately representing the intere.-ts of the great body of the people than the Senate, and a large majority of whose members were warm friends of th Executive; here the Repeal met with the same support that it had received in the Senate, and finally passed hy a large and constitutional majority. J he National Representatives of the States the Kepre sentatives of the People men of business all over the country friends and foes of the Administration had all begged, de manded that a burden should be taken from the country, which the country was una ble to bear. Merchants and traders, me chanics and their implovers, were rccin roealiy rejoicing with each other the North was about to congratulate the South, and the South the North. New life ami new vigor was about to ro from the East to the West, and to return again from the est to the East. The paper circulation ot the country, withdrawn at a time most necessary for its continuation, and a period of unusual prosperity, seemed to be again almost in the hands of those who for months had barely sustained themselves, at the expense of personal credit and personal reputation. The days of two, three and four per cent, a month were almost gone. The burdens of domestic exchange were about to be taken off protests were to be relieved by early and unquestionable remittance dishonored notes were to be met and paid. This was cheering news for the New York merchants, who had large amounts, due them at the South and West especially when the banking operations were to have been made easy between all of the city and State banking institutions, far and near. Such we venture to afiirm would have been the effect of the signature of the Executive to a hill which he held in the iron grasp of despotism, and to which to the last moment he refused his signature. In proof of our position we appealed to the commercial men, the merchants, the grocers and the mechanics of our city. We have before us a statement from one of our traders, who assures us in the most positive terms, that since the Treasury Order was rnfotccd ho has had protested hills returned from his customers in the Southwest and West ;'all of them in ordinary times able to meet their payments) to an amount exceeding seventy thousand dollars. His, is but the situation of thousands of others, who hav e been driven, harrasscd and tormented almost beyond endurance, to meet their payments. In Philadelphia, the first news of the passage of the Currency Bill was received with almost universal demonstration of joy. Its effect there was to raise the price of stocks, and to spread a spirit of confidence and contentment among all classes of men. The same feeling prevailed in Baltimore, in Boston, and to a greater or less extent everywhere, where the glad tidings were announced. And at such an hour as this, when it was in the power of the Chief Magistrate to do an act of justice and mercy to the people over horn he presided an act that would have received the commendation and hearty thanks of all, that would have relieved distress and benefitted his country, it is at such a moment we find the Executive, in the tine spirit of tyranny and usurpation, and merely to gratify his own will, plundering the people of their rights, hy robbing them of the benefits of an act which, through their Representatives in both halls of legislation, they had preserved for themselves. In reference to this subject, the National Gazette has the following paragraph, which exhibits this act of the Executive in its true light: The conduct of that extraordinary person relative to the currency bill, exhibits his usual contumacy without his usual manliness. Afraid to send it back, lest it might be constitutionally passed in spite of the rc.'o, he availed himself of the advanced prriod of the ression silently to

VLC1LAES, SATURDAY

jsmother it, resolving to the last that even lin a case (under the most extreme con struction of the act of 1810) of doubtful prerogative, the opinions if the representatives of the people should have no weight against his individual ordinance, and that he would take advantage of an accidental contingency to prevent their ultimate action upon a subject in which their constituents are deeply interested, and with which they are fully acquainted. Office Seeders ia Vashinsrton. Washington is yet full of oiiice seekers who are here after foreign Missions, old clothes, collcctorships and cold victuals. They hover about Van Huren for the spoils like so many birds of prev. Van Hu1X11 he.eiged night and day: ami they surj j" J", CfL tclin . hi,n. Jvhat ,,lC s;1"'1 i 'UlU KiMUUdia" llllil l 1 iU OU III. Ull Huron is in a sad dilema. There is a great battle now going on between the j Van Huren outs and ins. The outs are icrc in squadrons demanding' the places ins. The ins threaten, if Van iurcn man.es mem oit;s. van imrcn Dure a ''sons tlnis: "if I make an i an out 1 oneuu au uie insappoinieu who nat e ueen tne out, who is made an in. But there is much fallacy in this reasoning. Old Hickory carried all before him by paving bis troops. Van Huren is a successful General at the head of starving, ragged regiments of office seekers, who have come in here from Eastport, in Maine, on one side, to the wilds of -Arkansas on the other all clamorous for par. He has nothing to pay them with. The offices are filled. Now and then he can bivonac a hungry New Hampshire man upon the PostOllice, or quarter a Missouri squatter upon the Land Ollice and now and then he disposes of "a genteel loafer," like Dallas, in a forage upon Russia but the ojjl'-es are filed. The lean, lank, long and haggard crew that Isaac Hill led on to Washington in 1S2D, are all fat, full and plump in ls:i7. They have leeched us for eight years, and 1 hope we shail not be leeched by any new crew. But Van Huren has nothing wherewith to pay his troops: and no General can sustain himself on Van Huren principles, without the wherewith to pay, clothe and feed his troops. Ragged, hungry, starving regiments will mutiny. A Connecticut regiment has, therefore, just gone home in a rage, and threaten desertion. More will follow. Improvement ia Corn. It is now a tact resting upon t: ldjuhtcd experience that every production ol the vegetable kingdom is capable ot great lm ill t , iirovement, in cultivation, by a constant attention to the selection of seeds, roots, slips, and other means of propogation. In fruits this lias long been understood generally a few have comprehended its advantages in grains and bulbs. Attention is now fast awakening to improvements, in these latter productions. Thomas N. Baden, a Mankind planter, has for many years succcsshiUv devoted his attention to improving the quality of corn. His sue cess having excited attention, Mr. Ells worm, v. omniissioner ol i'atents.m asiiington, addressed to him a letter of inqui ry, wlncli elicited the suojoined repiv explaining Ins process, success, and man ner of planting. Mr. Storcr. our late Representative in Congress, obtained a small quantity of Mr. Baden's seed corn. which he placed in the hands of the Sec retary of the Hamilton County Agricultural Society, which the Secretary will fur-nL-di in small quantities to those, who will engage to cultivate it according to the instructions, and furnish to him the results of their experiments. In making this exexperiment, the seed should not be planted m company with common corn but in a spot by it.cif, as remote as convenient roni other corn. Cm. (ia:. Copy. Near Nottingham, Princ e Gf.oroe's Co. January 20, 1 837. Sir: I received yours of the 1 1th, innking inquiry respecting me ".Maryland corn," which you understand I had raised. I have the pleasure to say that I have brought this corn to its high stale of perfection by carefully selecting the best seed in the field for a long course of years, having special reference to those stalks which produce the most ears. When the corn was husked, 1 then made a re-selection, taking only that which appeared sound and fully ripe, having regard to the deepest and best color, as well as the size of the cob. In the spring, before shelling the corn, I examined it again, and selected that which was the best in all respects. In shelling the corn, I omitted to take the irregular ktrnals at both the large and the small ends. I have carefully followed this mode of selecting seed corn for twenty-two or twenty-three years, and still continue to do so. When I first commenced, it was with a common kind of corn, for there was none other in this" part of the country. If any other person undertook the same experiment, 1 did not hear of it; I do not believe others ever exercised the same patience to bring the experiment to the present stale of perfection. At first, I was troubled to find stalks with even tu o good can on them, perhaps one good ear and one small one, i. , . .

MOLtNIKG, APRIL, 8, 18LJ7.

or one good ear and a "nubbin." It was several years before I could discover much benefit resulting from my efforts; however,the quality and quantity began to im prove, and the improvement then was

very rapid. At present, I do not pretend ; legality of such an anticipatory issue, but to lay iij) any seed w ithout it comes fiomj1 have'none as to the necessities of those,

stalks which bear lour, live, or six ears. I have seen stalks hearing eight ears. One of my neighbors informed me that he had a single Stock with fen perfect cars on it, and that lie intended to send the same to the museum at Baltimore. In addition to the number of ears, and of course the greater increase in quantity unshelled, it may be mentioned, that it yields much more than common corn

v. ii.-ii mu'i.cu. .-on!!.' gentlemen, in wnom men, we called upon Messrs. Davenport I have full confidence, informed me they! and Cook, of this illage, on Saturday, shelled a barrel (ten bushels of ears) of j with a v iew of examining the Electro Magmy kind ol corn, which measured a little I nctic Engine, invented by the senior partmore than six bu-hels The common ' nor. i . i .1- .... ii t . i ,i .

ivn.u oi corn win measure anon: live utisii- -J-Jic lngcr.mty, yet simplicity cf its els only. I believe I rae dou'Ae or u'r-!constructiin, the rapidity of Us motion, to- ''.' so what I could with am ot!i r corn I: aether with the grandeur of the thought have ever seen. I generally plant the j that we are witnessing the operation of corn about the first of May, and place the j machinery propelled bv that subtle and a'l-

hills five feet apart each way, and nave two stalks in a hill. I can sun ly you with all the seeil vou may need, and I sup pose I have now in my corn-house li.v. and perhaps more, stalks with the com Oil them as it grew in the field, and none with less than four, and some sir or sever, ears on them. I will with pleasure send you some of these stalks, and also some seed corn, if I can get an opportunity. Early last spring I let George Law, Esq. of Baltimore city, have some of this seed corn: he sent it to his friend in Illinois, with instructions how to manage it A few weeks since he informed me that the increase was one hundred an, I twenty tiushets to the acre; that there was no corn in Illinois like it; and that it produced more fodder than any other kind. I have supplied many friends with seed corn, but some of them have planted it with other corn, ami will, I icar, find it degenerate. 1 have lately been inquired of if thi corn was not later than other kinds? It is rather earlier; certainly not later.v.orn pianieu in rn.Oi.st or wet soils win not ripen so quick as that which is plant ed on a dry soil. In the former there will be found more dampness in the cob, although the l--ernal may appaar equally ripe in both. In the two last years, the wet easons have injured much corn that was : too cany "loficd or housed. I believe I have answered most of your inquiries. 1 hope I have not exaggerated I have no motive for doing so. I raise but httie corn to sell, as tobacco is mv principal crop. Should I fail to send you sume seed tins spring, I will next summer gather some stalks with the corn, fodder, and tassels, as they grow, and send to vou, that yen may judge yourself of the superiority of this over the common kii of corn. Yours, eve, 'I'lIO'S. N. BADEN. Hon. II. L. Ellsworth, CoinuusMO'ior of I'p.tonts Washington Citv. The Water r.Sark on Taper. it is commonly Known ttir.t paper writing paper particularly generally hears what is called a wafer mail:, which is distinctly visible when t lie sheet is held between the eye and the light. This mark is sometimes the name, or the initials ol the name of the manufacturer, or some device, with the date of the year when the paper was made. To the .lano Domino mark, much importance has been attached in Courts of Justice in England especially, as "documentary links'' in the chain of circumstantial evidence. A recent writer on this subject in a London paper, relates several of many instances of judicial decisions, founded on this mark. In the year 1822, the immediate relatives of a Thomas Taylor, of Hudderslield, contested the will of the testator, by which the property was bequeathed to some distant branches of the family. Affidavits were put in that at the near approach of death., but at the same time in the possession of his faculties, he made a laconic will on a sheet of "foolscap." Judge Stowell. regretted that he was obliged to deny the correctness of the depositions of the subscribing witnesses to the will and testament of the defunct gentleman, because the testator, who was said to have made the will, "revoking all others," subscribed it the middle of No vember, 1820, whereas the very sheet of paper bore the water-mark of 1821! During the time that Surgeon Remington presided in the Insolvent Debtor's Court, Moses Marcus applied for his discharge. As a London agent to several foreign houses, he, in the latter end of 1830 became the consignee of considerable property, and speedily became an inmate of the Fleet. In order to prove the manner in which he had disposed of the consigners' property during the last three months of the preceding year, he put in a book, and swore positively that the entries were made on the dav therein stated. The sergent took a transparent view of one of the leaves of the ledger, which he inmgnantly hurled to the floor of the court, observing, "Your petition, is dismissed; for the paper was made in the year after the entries bear date." The writer, however, mentions s p. ingular circumstance, that he had obtained j

from au'otriceYoY that very court, a docu- and many causes combine to justify th ment which contains the w'atcr-mark of the ,; expectation that we are on the era of mefirm of an extensive paper maker, and to'ehanical discoveries still greater than any which is appended the date "1S37." j which have yet appeared; and that th "I have some doubt, savs he, as to the ' steam engine itself, with the gigantic pow-

in whose hands are the issues of life, lib erty, and property, being in future, extremrlv minions beforfi "l'ipv deride r,n prima facie evidence.' Boston Transcript. From the Saratoga Sentinel, .Ta x. 3. Ilig-hly Important Invention. Electro Magnetic Engine. In company with Dr. Steel and several other gentlepervading principle, electricity eombin- ; cd to render it the most interesting exhibiturn we have ever witnessed Although we shall say something on the subject, it is perhaps impossible to describe this machine by words alone, so as to give more than a faint idea of it to the reader. It consists of a stationary magnetic circle, formed of disconnected segments. These segments are permanently charged magnets, the repelling poles of which are placed contiguous to each other. Within the circle stands the motive wheel, having nrojeetinggalvanic. magnets which revolves as near the circle as thev can be brought without actual contact. The galvanic magnets are charged by a battery, and when so charged, magnetic attraction and repulsion are both brought into requisition in giving motion to the wheel the poles of the galvanic magnets being changed more than a thousand times per minute. Having in its construction hut one wheel, revolving with no friction except from its own shaft and from the wires connecting it with the galvanic battery, the latter of which can scarcely be said to impede the motion in any degree, the durability of this engine must be almost without limit. There is no danger to be apprehended from fire or explosion; and we understand it is the opinion of scientific gentlemen who have examined it, that the expense of running this machine will not amount to one fourth as much as that of a steam engine of the same power From the time when the Greek philos opher supposed the magnet had a soul, its mysterious power has been regarded with increasing interest and attention to the present day. In addition to its utility in the compass, thousands have labored in vain attempts to obtain through its agency a rotary motion. So intense has been the application of some to this subject, that in the attempt they have even lost that elevating attribute of the soul, reason. It was resen cd for Mr. Davenport to succeed where so manv had failed. He commenced his ahors more than three vears ago, and pros ecuted them under the most discouraging mil unfavorable circumstances, sustained hy a constitutional perseverance and a clear conviction cd" ultimate success. He obtained his rotary motion in July, 1831, iuec which lime he has devoted his whole attention to improvements in his mahine. During this period it has passed through five different modifications, and is now brought to such a state of simplicity md perfection, i'ha ing apparently tluj ft west pos.-ihle number of parts.) that the proprietors consider no farther important alter ations oesirabic. except m the due propor tions oi the uiflerent magnets, m which thev are daily improving. We were shown a model in which the moiive wheel was 5 1-2 inches in diameter, which elei ated aweightof twelve pounds. nd in illustrating the faculties for increas ing the power of this engine, another mo del was exhibited tons with a motive wheel of 11 inches diameter, which elevated a weight of eighty eight pounds. Although these models have been for some time in progress, and we have occasionally been permitted to examine them, we waited till the present time, when the practicability of obtaining a rapid and unlimited increase of power secins to be placed beyond a doubt, before expressing an opinion, call ing the public attention to the suoiect. If this engine answers the expectations of the inventor, (and we believe no one can issign a reason why it should not.) it is des tined to produce the greatest revolution in the commercial and mechanical interest the world has ever witnessed. Wc may con sider the period as commencing wnen ma chinery in general wih lie propeiied bypower concentrated upon the plan of this engine; when the vessels of all commer cial nations will be guided to their point of destination and urged forward in their course by the same agent, triumphantly contending against winds and tides, with the silent sublimity of unseen but irresis tible power. I hi prophetic ken of science is Happily exhibited tiy IJr. Jaruner, in ins i rcau.se on the Steam Engine. His far seeing ge nius sjems to have anticipated the invention of which we are speaking. 'Philosophy,' said he, 'already directs her finger at sources of inexhaustible power in the phenomena of electricity and magnetism.

INU3IBER 45

ers conlerred upon it by Vie immortal j Watt, will dwindle into insignificance ia - ' comparison with the hidden powers ol nature still to be revealed; and the day will come W hen that machine, which is now extending the Messing of civilization to the most remote skirls of the globe, will cease to have existence except in the page of history. From the integrity, perseverance onJ mechanical skill of Ransom Cook, Esq. who has himself made an important improvement in this engine, and has under taken to bring the same into use, we anticipate a rpecdv introduction of its merits to the public. It is hoped that he majr prove a second Livingston to another Fulton. He is about to depart for our largo cities, in some of which he contemplate! the the erection of powers for mechanical purposes. Several individuals, agents of Messn. Davenport and Cook, are also departing with models to secure letters patent in ths diffcrant countries of Europe and eculh America. Is the V.'halo rish or Flesh. This important question is thus summarily disposed of, in the following article in the Liverpool Mercury, (Eng.) "On the 3d of November, 1S27, an immense species of the Greenland whal (Behena mysticctus) was found on th coast cf Belgium, dead, about 12 mile distant from Ostend, by a crew of fishermop; their boat being ol too small a tonnage to move so enormous a mass, they hailed two other boats to their assistance, and the three together towed the whale toward Ostend harbor, on entering which, tha warps by which it was towed, snapped and it was cast on the sands east of the harbor, where it was dissected and. afterwards exhibited in Paris and London. I believe, Cuvicr and the Professors of the Jardin des Plantes, estimated its age from y:H) to 1000 years; and one proof of its great age, is in the cartilages of tha hands or side fins, which arc completely ossified, or converted into bone. Tha limensions, weight, fcc. of this animal were as follows: I'otal length 01 feet. Breadth 18 Length of the head 22 Height of cranium 4 1-2 Length of the vertebral column GO 1-3 Number of ribs, 28, length 0 Length of the fins 12 1-1 Length of the fingers 4 1-4 Widih of the tail 22 1-2 Length of ditto 3 Weight when found 2-10 tons. Weight after dissecton, 33 tons. 2'ian!ity of oil extracted, 4000 ga's. teig;a of rotten flesh buried, 85 tons, A single glance at this stupendous skel eton would convince any one of the vulgar error of terming the whale a fish. Upon this distinction, a judicious writer observes (vide Edinburgh Library) speaking of cttacea, to which class of animal whales belong "Although their home bo entirely in the depth of the waters, they have several leatares in common yvith the larger ouadru; eds. They belong t the LiimTan (diss of mammalia, or suckgiving animals; they produce their young alive, their skin is smooth and without scales, their blood is warm, and their flesh lathes somewhat like coar -c beef; they have a heart with two ventricles, and lungs through which liiey respire, and being unable to separate the air from the water, a fishes do by means of their gills, they inuit come to the surface in order to breathe. is thus by no means itric'ly scientific I foil the whtilc a fih, yet he is entirely an inhabitant of the sea, having a tail though jdaced in a dilTerant position from that of other fishes, while his front limb much more resemble fins than legs, and arc soltlv used fr pawing the deep; hence the vulgar, following a natural and descriptive classification, obstinately continue to give the name of fish to then watery monstrrr." Spring in Moliile. The Mobile Advertiser of the 20th Feb. says: "Wo have received a very fine bunch of Radishes from the garden of Mr. Joseph Goodman. He says they are his "firt attempt in this country." .Y. J'. Express. The Court of Inquiry at Frederick, have sent back the officious veto of thn Executive, and have rea finned all their ojnnions in the case of Gen. Scott, and adjourned sine dir. "'I'll is is as it should be. A few such lessons from honorable men would long since have taught Andrew Jackson that ha was not the master but the servant of the people. A". F. Express. A Yermonler lately arrived in Detroit, and having calculated to remain here, offered his horse for sale. He took the animal up to the public stand, and after describing his qualities in the most glowing terms, concluded the recommendation by saying that "he could drive him so far in one day that it would take him two days to get him back again." " Detroit Spr-tator.

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