Weekly Reveille, Volume 38, Number 20, Vevay, Switzerland County, 7 November 1855 — Page 2
Funerals
[From the St. Louis News, Kansas Filling Up. FRO'bLiVEIlY AND FREE EOH, EUlCIlANTa,
,£|f
Utah
Wo Icaiji from our exchanges, what wo so often j&e with our own, eyes, that in nothing docs tbo conduct of a certain . class of oqi* people need ye formation'more than, their at'funerals. Ip* tcmperanceV quarreling, even bloodshed and murder, continue to'disgrace those occasions which should be sacred to grief, to seriousness, and to religion. Tho last this kind occurred in onr neighborhood, at tho door of St. Augustine's; Churw,'whcre a carriage driver very propcrly refused'to admit a quarrelBomc.ifomon into his carriage, after the services in the church; until she gave op tho bottle of whiskey which she had just taken, from her pocket, ’ [Need wo remind all such that the malediction of* Heaven Has been invoked—that it is invoked by iheir very conduct—on tho . heads. of all those who drink at funerals; on tho road to and from.tho grdycyardsjpr withinthe consecrated grounds. - Some of the wont of those scandal-givers cannot afford to pay for a gravit, while ,'lhcy find plenty ofSioncy 1 for the liquhr and.broken buggies. ' . V. 1 V .1 We hope what wp arc going to say may not be true, bat we are credibly informed that it is, that a house 'just ■ erected near tho gate, or entrance, of .tho road St. Joseph's Ccnictery. is intended for a drink-ing-1) o use. If it bo so, and tho law cannot protect us, wo pray Ilcavpn to avenge tho cause of order, morality and religion, by making victims of all who buy or sell strong drink it that establishment.— Catholic . Telegraph, Cincinnalt. ;■
- A letter, from Provo City, Utah county. Utah about fifty ’ihrlesf front tho Great Salt Lake,) contains the .-following items i ■_ ‘ f] • Wo tf ve in light 'of show 'the'year round. Wo can, as it were, pick flowers with one hand and gather show with the other; * It is worm in i tho yalloys, healthy, pleasant and fruitful, with seldom any rain, but \vo have. plenty of mountain streams fa irrigate par fidJ9 v and so'lWt lire latter do not buffer for want of moisture. ~ Wo- have no fever aud agu6; there are always, mountain breezes that aflord us.Vcry puro atmosphon). .Groceries, artveryhigh;' coflee and sugar sell at 50 cents per pound; calico from’ 20 to. 80 coots per, yard, ahd olher things In' proportion.*Wp.have been very busily engagol in makingjEujgar, which U mode from a honey- dew or sugar-casting, which falls upon tho-lcaves of the cotton-wood trees, which resembles the frosting on cake; Thera have been several thousand pounds of sugar made from this substance within a few days; which sells readily'at 40 cents per pomid. ;
Last Saturday wo saw ten wagons, drawn by well fed,'good looking horses, loaded with women and children, blocks arid while, pnd followed by a lot of likely negroes on foot, .pending fthoir way to Kansaa. The eroigrahls wpre from Vir-. ginia, and seemed to bo. persons of substance. In the crowd, were ak many na - twenty negroes. This is a considerable addition to the pfo^layory.population. Per conirai The - Voals from tbo Ohio river aro daily .bringing from Ohio, Pennhylvanlai Indiana and Illinois, crowds of emigrants on their way ’to the Territory', besides which Tio * inconsiderable number of settlers aro amyfng from the Easfc f by rail, arid sinking' for'lbc same region.- . . Thus, between the emigration from tbo free and slave States, Kansas is Vapidly filling up, notwithstanding tbo deplorable! condition of things that has .for so longa time retarded her progress. The population of tbo Territory will bo nearly doubled by.the accessions made this fall, and the Territory will bo ;soon prepared to make a strike for Statehood, ■. Wo wish her success. She bos, been made n hobby long enough, and it is time that she. should bo controlled and-governed ly prudent and sober; citizens, who bavo the whole’’interest'of the Territory at' heart,. •. •
VKVAV;
'IVcdueidnj-. i > i i Noreraber 7, M55.
?SBIttS $1 PER ANNUM. 05r btci cn,y is advance, -CO
JOB PRISTINO. .
Wo arc prepared to do *C aid and Job Printing of all kinds at 1 the eh or lest no; tico,in the neatest’ manner, and on the 'most reasonable terms. Oor assortment of Job Typo is 'complete, .and- mostly new; from Johnson’s Foundry,- Phila.
Notice to citizens «nd Stronger*.
1 Lawyers and strangers, and from tho country, who may bo‘ in town ■ during! tlio session of tho Circuit Court, uro I invited to call up at this office and gotnlopy of tho Reveille, fru of charge —and they ’can also,.if desirable to them, ‘Vpend Ibeirjidlcf time in looking over our liiitmerous exchanges. ;■
; ';. : . ■ fFor.tha Weekly BeretUe. = . Compelled to Tell the t’rnlh.'.. F' Mb. numerous rcadqff will scd-W reading tfil following affidqgt that ! tj| ,*Jftw.has at'fiat, been ’compiled'© tefr the troth, therwy exhonorating an honest and upright man. The following appeared' in tho ; Weekly iV%* bf 81,1855' * Many of the readers of the Weekly Nows doubtless rpmember tbatriatho-.issaOjQf Scp -2Gth, 38m, i VWmuaicalion appearedpyer, the.Bignature.^f•“^l ,, ,P^ r .:. potting lb hava been written at .Rising Sub ’oii'fhe '22dbf tbo same 1 mbplh.';In smddrticld there was a.parograph stating that'Mr. J. O.i Power.had issued for. publication a jjbcl. .1 lake :tbir. method of explaining Wliy that article appeared. At the'time T received: It! was of a hritty. arid 1 merely glanccd’at tho article'boforo handing it’to my'coup o si tors —coil althoubh no'.namej appeared with it extept tho signature ovCr which it was I thought it all-righi, os I had only the week before published m 'article over the same signatnre, being in possession of thename of the author The hand writing and stylo of composition being similar, 1 suspected no deception.; After that j, 'received ; a. communication from Rising Son written by another, man, over the signature of “II.".which I declined publishing. . The' annonymous article being destroyed, and neither of tho. jWrifors acknowledging himself as tho author of .it, 1- cannot slate: upon both who iHc author* I do. not know. ‘ ; L exceedingly regret tho publication* of tho; article, and ackoowledgo myself to have been deceived as-to who the real author was. . : And from what I .can learn o I am satisfied that so tnnch ; bf the [article published in the News of tho 20lb nit., as|jrcfciTed Ip the .private character bf J. C.’Powor, is withou t Mr, P. art ypprereuted .to , us, and wb. still believe him to be,-an honest man.*-- ‘ . . ' | • ’: ' Chas. .0; Scott. ; ■ &\vornto arid subscribed before mo this 23tl*day o.f .Oct., ; 1855f ; \ ; ’ ' : ' - • ' j’ RoDEUT DriUMHOSDJ : ;
S3T On the 1st inst., a ceremony, os rare as it was interresting, took place at the house of Jesse Chapman, Esq., of Waterford, Ookland Michigan. Ilis tour sorts, of ages between twenty and thirty,'and living in difTercpt parts of tbo State, all made their the paternal mansion with a lady accompaniment,‘and were followed by it clergyman who wont to wor)c arid ( joined the whole quantrain in the bonds of matrimony, betho : oldest and leaving off at tho feast of age, j After a friendly .chat with tho "old folks at ho'raoi” the boys arid girls started off bn their wedding tour. Such proceedings are rare.
tar'ti. trael American paper is npcdedj at Indianapolis— on^tbat^ilbradvocalo boldly and fcafelyrtho principles of tho I National American party, and;Jck Aboli* ' »l. j Indiana idurt Teach Hbcsc agitatprs. fl son that. will ; bring them to There are but few Abolitionists m this 1 State, when they are cot adrift from other 1 particsi-jr Vtoay ; We heartily; endorse iho above.; The American party ofj requires at the sent of government,jaf found, reliable American paper—=-one that will advocate American nationality;"and''Americans to role America,'in preference, to. the over* lasting' agitation of Slavery, andj other sectional issues. Let ua hayoji that will advocate the. adjustment of our boinc affairs iho .'amendment Of , our State Constitution. and other and we feel Confident J the country will get along quite, as, well,.as if we spend all oorlime.in ibo discussion of tjhat kiqd jof “Itepublicanifira”- advocated by Chase and. Jut ian.i— Rising 'Sun Viiitor. '; : | . The'Madison: CouUer copies llio above paragraph from tbc BsVeilie, and remarks as follows: ' What's - wrong Here? Wo have been taught' to tiling that the JttpuUiean, published at the Capitol; Was the. organ, of tlio American^party.;'-What .tnuM has been kicked nji now in thi camp of, the faithful ?. DidtlmAfcm/kinan oyer read: the resolutions of Ibe last Stetepouncil of tiio Amendin' party? ; : , ; ■.... v, Wc woulil ioform ournclghborofthe Courier dial jive read the resolutions, be speaks of,-whin first published, and .were ' * fernenst’ ’ them ever' since; Tho members of the American party in Indiana are still working under the rules and ccircmonics; of tlio National Conncil—for |t has never dismissed; them, and berowo contend- that'the action of Orth-&,Co;, at Philadelphia and Indianapolis was unauthorized, unaqyisablo and. wrong;, arid in acting as--they did, assumed a power with winch they were not dplcgnted, anil basely tlio American party -jn trying.[to scll tbem to the,Abolioriists pf the ■ Kprth—and the V people * repudiated Orth for it at tho OctoPcr election. . Tho Indianapolis JitpuUican is h good paper, and advocates Americanism; bnt it also advocates[; “black republicanism,” nnli-Ncbraskaisra, and several other isms, and dries to tack them on and make them part and parcel of the American platforml It matters not whether a man is* Nebraska or-ontl-Nebraska, to belong to the American party. We stand just where the Democrats do on that point. ■ piio of tho ablest Demo'cratic papers in Indiana has from the first been 'opposed to ! this Nebraska basincss, as have, thousands’ pf the best democrats in the State and Union. It is’not a 1 test question at all; bpt thcse.' , republican” sheets would have every member of tho American party to bo at least anti-Nebraska and anti-slavery, if‘not a "nigger stealer.” Tho people of Indiana will repudiate this spirit of sectionalism at tho next election; an'd if the'American party even attempt to carry any such isms; North or South, tho popplciwill repudiate it, *
To TIioii|ilrcelylnjf thl« ; Paper* \ : Every ‘person into whoso hands-this number of tbfc Reveille may happen to
ome.ris earnestly requested, to'esanjino its contents closely, and then.ask himself the question, Can’t. I‘afford to late -this paper,-for the amusement and instruc.tion of myself and family,'when :|t only costs OS*E DOLLAR A VEAK ?- It W Sent tO
Hons.—Tho Terra Haute Express says the market for hogs in that city is “ready at 85,50 —some as high as 85,60; buyers are anxious; sellers holding o0‘. ,r ' ThoMadison Courier says. ."Soles of two thousand were mode* on Saturday—one thousand at'86,25, and oiio thousand at 80,50.Market closed firm, with an upward tendency."
Kansas and the Abolitionists,
' the Ahbliltipn "republicans’.* commenced the contest the present'year by a yiploot appeal for the restoration of the Missouri compromise. * That is'sne they abandoned on the evo of their; State convention- The next -step '.-was to assert the rights of Congress to legislate! for the Territories, aha to denounce the popular sovereignly in Kansas, and to fiercely assault nil those who aided to'give the peen pie the right' to decide they wonld or would not ,havc slavery. It is still two, weeks to the. election, and they already abandon their last issne, and appeal to the result of the election in Kansas oh.the let nmlOth as a triumph of - What that result is wo do not know; bnt if it’is true that the peopled of Kansas have decided against the intro'’ dnetion r of slavery into that Territory, what are the abolitionists fighting for?— How can they longer]attach the KnnsasNobraska bills. If their fruits arc free-, dom, why arc they -complaining?' jt?pt to their acts, not -from their policy,'not from their measures—bnt iirspitoof tlieir acts, their policy and their mcasures. has this result-been effected.; The truth is, os will bo jsccn, that they ore now working (o abolish'slavery every where;,and this will bo ‘seen Jn their course hereafter.-— Nothing short of the destruction of the government will answer their; purpose.- , That is their aim.—X Y. Herald. ’ *
-every post-office in. Switzerland .‘county .ficc.of postage,)
(Kr Wo were pleased to sco an article •upon the Missouri Compromise question, which appeared in this paper a couple of weejes since, copied info several of tho* leading American papers in the-State. That article certainly embodied the right view of that vSfed question. The events ■of each sepfrTto comfirm t lie correctness of taken. Tho spirit of sectional!: ra and fanaticism- is crowing Wild infmahy por-
SST Sortie of the millers in -Canada put ns much as a half bushel of plaster in a barrel,of flour.* j '
iGheat Pnonr os'WnisRv.—The pres-' erft price; of raw, whi sky. is 34 cents per gallon, - wlucli'yields an enormous profit to' thc distillerVHo pays 30 cpnts per bushel for Ins com—hew corn—grinds out abont 400 bushels per diem, which makes upwards.of gallons of new.whisky, or father more- than -foils gollonr to tho bnshcl.- Thus a 'hash'd of com costing SO cents, yields to the manufacturer upwards of four gallons of whisky, which at 34 cents per gallon,: amounts to the snug sum of S544 per day. The net profit on this single day’s work'of converting corn into whisky is fully: 8250, or upwards of Si,500 per week, provided rhe work is suspended on Sunday.
COMMERCIAL.
TlicPInln TrutU—Wliy lied Id so
: fcol; Kewe s, a'pfonlihen t.m emho r ;pf the American jrhrty, and whoso father was nn ( Irish refugee, lias,' since hiV connection with'-the*"American qrganizatiqni been most.violently abused'and vallificd by tho organs of llio Old Lino'pariy, from which ho withdrew.' We. give- below his reasons, as delivered by'him mrolale speech, sKowing 'conclnsivcly : whyliVactcd with tho'American, party. Let 1 , every intelligent them; , They are as fol lows: ■ V.C61 Kewen’s father was obliged to flee from.Ireland, after* haying been jjor two years immured in • prison ctr account of his. conncctibhwilli ah’ 1 'effort to .achieve the;! emancipation, of that dbwn-li odden cdimby. v ;Ho cnmotp 'the.Pnitcd Stales, end was-Wturalized, and on this account ninny have denounebd 'Kewen for becoming a member of thatpoHy. ‘ Col.* Kcuron answered tiiese'dehunciattons byj paining the thrilling history oP Ireland; jiy representing the long; ■conUnued struggle " of Ireland’s patriotic ' and ‘pops to free- her from Brifish-doiubion 'and oppression, by exhibiting'the feet‘that tho people been invitedbylbe hospitality of Ireland : to tho country which they are now keeping in slavery, that they had aqpoptcd Jheirbospitality until bylopg cou tinned and insidious approaches; they achieved : sufficient strength to «ji|»y thei government and control of tho very people whoso h os pi lality ihbyfe d ‘ upoij /"* • :,. ‘.'And 1 fwhat/ says’ me Colomd.'aro the ■results? elpqnentspns arc pleading m vain at tho iraporyibus pi. the (Sngh’sb tlirand far a reiteration of Ireland’s ! rights. >' That flic yoiM -pf'Curran/pud Gratan, ’ and y Shicl,. and Einmet,* • O’Conucl, nndMitchclK and O'Bryatl/aud Dougherty, and-Meagher,,had'.been consfimtly ringing in the Britipti Barliament, in her courts and,.castles; iterating and reiterating tbo swine' unanswered and. unheard'praycri that England‘should govern ’ Englishmen,-abd that 'Irelaiid 'ghotijd' be 1 governed Iff »■ ; • •’ i.
naticisnr is growing wild infmany portions of the North, East.find tbo extreme %South: This spirit hnshecomo *eo biller And vindictive, (bat it seems already bo-j-ond the power of human reason of fore: ■ .*.12111 to quench it. Between the extreme North and tbo extreme South there seems
to to an impassable gulf; -there exists no sympathy or mutual feeling between them—each scctiLn stands prepared for the' conflict, not filling to concede a single point. The great West must step in •between-these'two conflicting elements, ami act os mediator.. Wo are disinter-
Low Lands.— As many persons' arc coming from the East, preparing to erect cabins and dwellings in the territory for tlieir recidcncc, it would bo well for them to avoid the folly of'earlier settlers, and build on high grounds; and on the open prariei away from the fogs and miasmas of, the . streams and forests.. Whole vet 'sickness there'Jias been in the Territory, during the last season, owed, its existence to'sctUirig iti the edge .of tho^timber; or the bottom lands. We have hardly hqanl of a case 'of sickness among those who werq settled" on.' the high .prarie, whilst few, have, escaped, who disregahfed onr advice m the winter .and settled in the margin. ,of!woodg. Pioneers from Missouri have been'the greatest sufferers.— Kansas Herald of. Ftewom, ■ ‘ y -
Clue! linn t.l ProdneeJInrktN . • November jG, : 1855. Flour.— Tho market, under..tho inilgenco of tho news from Englapd, is 10(5' . belter,-wilh an active demand. The sales, comprise 1 33, 145, ninl ofi brk' M 88; GO, 50, 500' and 80 1 .410 do. at and 50 do extra,. at8fj,15; tho market clbtiing buoyant at S8,10@15. In 'Buckwheat, wo noticesales of 1*27 hags at 84,25, and 50 do at 84,50 $ cwl v • Grain;—Wheat is scarce and in demand, at 81,70 for red, ’and . 81,80 for white. ■ * , ' : * j,■ CiiREsn.—Tho demand .continues good with calcs of 450 boxes at'0£e.' j. - j Butter.—1 ho sales compiise I2 Lb In,'* roll at 20@2I<\, add 20 firkins .summer packed at 14@I5c, : ’, f : On,.—Sales of ■ CO hrls Linseed at 93e., dnd 15'doat-81. V i . . ; Aithes.—A sale of, 05 hbls. russets at $1,30. .Tho market™ dull, • : Broom a. — A sale of 1801 dozen extra largo,fancy at,82,45, t . .1 Fish.—A sale of 25 -bblsj new Herring at87,50.- , • ■ '• Coffer.— Tho.demand is moderate at - steady prices. : The snlefr&nslstof 150. bags common Rip-at life?, and" 50* do good at 12e. •„ ' j. .—A/snlc Pf.StOihhls at 57e.
ested looters oni and can exercise a great s influence over each of the contending powers. The West bolds tho balance;of power, and rightglad wo are to sec ter -‘•tateimen and her presses coming boldly to the rescue. Hero reason and mutual ■friendship sit embalmed upon the throne, around which the people, cluster in time -uf difficulty and danger. —The cry of tho advocates of the restoration of the MissonrrCompromise, is losing its power .every day; tho Anti-Ne-braska crusade 1ms passed its cnlnmirialing point. . The jnsincerily of these anti-slavery agitators, is every day Irecoming more madifest—they do hot want the com prom iso. restored,, for that would deprive them ol the greater part'of their stock ■ in politics; their very ■ existence as a party, depends upon the agitation of the slavery question, ‘ /To become satisfied . of those facts,’itis only necessary to road .. carefillly the leading papers in tho interest of the ''Republican” parly. Every man who loves tho principles of the. American party (should comb out from, the foul party immediately,. anti - place himself alongside of tho friends .of this glorious country, - ■' _ V : , ; ; Tho National Platform of thq American is tho'Ncw Covenant,for;the healing of.tho States and Nation; Its principles are broad, plain, and just apd and true to all parts if the_ Union, pit takes tbc strongest gronnd id favor of tho ' Constitution and the Union.' Standing on. that platform, and haying an abiding 'faith in tho justness, of those principles, the man of the North can battle manfully hy the side of hisj brother of the South; for the supremacy of American)aid, 1 which is of more importance, than allthe other . questions combined, r Oun Treasurer rcports tho net amount of money subject to draft jit tho different depositories up to October 22d, to bo upward of twenty-two millions of; dollars. Of this sum Boston ■ has upward of three millions; the assistant treasurer at New York near "six, and tho Assay office there three million seven hundred thousand; Philadelphia mintaud treasurer about nineteen hundred thousand; New Orleans upward of three millions two hundred thousand; San Francisco mint about one million dollars; tho treasurer at St. Louis near one and. a Half million of dollars.
Sin Eekect ok P. 0. Dishonesty*.— Tlie Boston Port.in-noticing a terrible instahcc of' suffering at S.L Louis) canscd by post-office mismanagement or robbery, says: ,1 ■; ' , A mau who jwerit thence to Texas, .to return immidiatejy, found some profitable’ business winch ‘would detain him several months, and therefore wrote] to his wife enclosing 8150 for her present wants.— The letter never reached her, And being with her five chi&rcn, turned one of her boms for' non-payment of rent, and driven to despair by the idea that her husband had deserted her, she drowned herself and youngest child in tho Mississippi. - The unhappy husband and father, receiving no answer to his letter, returned .to St. Lo,iiis to find himself, a* widower, and his children supported by public charity. The postmaster who stole that 8150 will have a fearful; account to settle with a department, thollcad 'pf . which it is impossible to cheat or, deceive,. r ’ *■ „
Tjonlivltle Produce Market* : ■ NovEUBth 5,'1855. - ■ Sugar.— Sales of N, 0.* Sugar at-7® Tic.. ' ‘ . • ' ‘ .• vi . * • '
. ‘S3T. On Sunday last;. sopo, children, playing,in the house of; G, W, Angel, of. Bedford, Mich., discovered; Bprae smoko coming up,through the boards, add; gave the alarm, when the boards were removed, and a monso's nest dUcovcrcd,into which the lUtio’ammal. had’d a .friction match,• .Tbe)match‘; had probably ;becn igniied by ibp’movemcnts of the, .moose anu |mtforita limply discoveiy, must have caosouftfienous•,\ ■
Bask of tug State of IsbiASA.rrThe Commissioners from the different branches' of bant, met at Indianapolis on Wednesday last, and organized tbe Slate Board by the election of Hbgh Me* Cullocli, of Fort Wayne, president; Jas. M. Ray, 'of Indianapolis, Cashier; and Thomas L. Smith‘of New Albany, At*.
Fwun.—Salas of 200 : aiid 325- blm. at 37,75 in lots. • '' ■ ■ r; Coffee.—Sales of 25 bags OoiToo at and 30 bags at 12c..,' I .
iloUssEB.—rSalb of SngarijonsoatdOc. Hay.—Sales 74 bales from levee at 314 —4 tons'from storo at ,315/ - ,
torncy. / “ ; : It is said that Gov. .Wright is opposed to . thb. and intends to : test tijo constitutionality of the tio w ; bant law. ;
Wheat,—Sales of 300 bnslicls V/lisat at 81,25; 250 bnsbels at 31,50/ * Itvn.— 1000 imshela Bye at 73c; 700 do nt 70c. to dealers; 500 bushels at 80j from store. Dealers are paying 70 cents for round parcels, . Barley—Sales of a crop of 500 tusli-it-jjrfmo' Barlep’to go nut of market at 31,30. ' ? .
JC5T-A note of: a Virginia jva? recently shown* to the'Washing (D.’O. j Star, bearing'tho following inscriptionon its .back:!,, ibis is tie last of $6,000, which was left me fotr ysara ago by ; a deceased relative. Owing to going security add dissipation.; my estate,, earned by indQ6try>nd cconqrayi is noW'all squandered.; ‘ Let the bottle atone, is.the last advice of ono wHo! inashort time, will commit i.i; v\;. ■ ■- ■■■ sniciao. ' \ - .• . .
Qmb Electiox—Omcial Result,— Columbian phblishcs a taifr* ie’: yBra dcclioD,' which’ loots.up as/ollQbK*; / , ' -
A JcrpoMEKT.—Jas. W. Crofibrtli, wljo was formcrly a Phi|adeljihia printer, info Democratic spcMch delivered at .Benicia, Caiiforaia,* said: ‘‘It l ever desert the Democratic party, may. ray right firm Ikmv liberal 1” In the course, of time he bccorao-a Knpw Nothing, and at,the election in- California:'last; month' .was elected to tboSlato Seb'ato by: a J majority of about one hnndjred) votes, and' on' very;day of Ho fdl- from ,1m hot«;and'hrote-his right atm! ' rVi %
Y The naturalized epos of Ireland, whom , t]io troit^qrous’demagogues of .our country 'would fuse. tq.seqme.;, them, ofthe stealings of qfficq, !if oppose ;-tho propoMtipn of Americans; tbftt Amencans most- ralbAtn erica; mnirt l oppMO' thoyery principle the losa'of whicli cansc4'‘thera tbeitvnational .existence and en tniled np on Jhem. the yoke •ofboir dago which .has^dnvcp them"from itib hal 1 o sanetudries native; honi&i dative lies;'andnatioimlglory, ’V 5 .j>'-■
Chase. • icfi»106
Mcdill, - • r , - - ; 13p>8S7Trimble.. - -‘ - . - 24,227
Chase's man over MediU; - T5,2I . ft*' . ■ The majority * for ‘ the balance 1 of the ticket is about 35,000.' .
V?vay prices current, ’ Confuted Weekly for the Reveille. Apple), dried? 1.00 Cnln—wheal l.jj Dried Peaches. V—■ - . tom ,103.10 ]Iuan« - . ®— • . no ' • ,3 £3) • •; 1«3- oats . Signo Jhrrob, Boar ®40 Hay p ton - Ssio.cn “ potaloe S0®24 Lard, p ft . IS 1 *®(4 Uniter ra sogas moUmo.-n. o, , * @n Baton him*. ; @i3>i ** s,.n. 50^00. ' - Shoulder* J U®13 Onions p bnahet 3j£tJ0 .'•Sides J3Ji@l5 Potatoes- do 40gyj Coffee, O aatk. • 11313 Seeds—Ctorer ■ ■ ■ . P ;fc-15 blne yrau Cbcuc, p box • ®10 flav.eeil - do P a 131i«00 UmoUir ■ 2a3,31/ Chlclcns p doi l,5p®3,00 Sugar per Mil • oA Eqr* P rfoieu ■ J ■ aio - do rrlail in -Floor p barrel ■ 8/10 Salt per bushel - 44a00 Pea then P :* ®40 Tallow; ■ •' SatO Col Jen Syrup: j , ( 7538p Wo$d, * . . ■' 5,00a3,00
A Fnm—A. German named. Ruder, in Cleveland,- Ohio, recently departed from his second wile,ranA locked bis house, chaining, inside a savage dog. : The .offisuspecting oil;. was not right; troke inlo tho house; and there found two of JbU chiidrcn, by-his first wife,.who had been there three days without food, ' j ;
l> ; J^Watios.’-—The -crossing teains at our ferryTsr a-month ■past : rcimnds ns of the Israelites- crossing tno .Eed. Sea.:- The fod of Jb Gales, like that of Moses, Semites the paters, which jparted - north and south, aiid the countless thfbng pass oyer dry shod. Bat in this case, there ih no ,40 years .’sojourn in the wiiderncss.— Tho -Eecl Sea and Jordan are in juitapositiod, and fairly; oyer the Father of. Waters, they arc stance in the land of jmd honey.-J-iJurrinyftm (Jowa) ■ Cmz‘. ‘
AdfTho four British ; Reviews; -and Blackwood’s Edinburg Magazine, areregnlarlyrcccivedat {hisoffice. ; These are all standahl ‘periodicals.. Terras;—Any, one Review' or Blackwood,' #3 a.year.; Blackwood and one Review—or any two Re views, $5, The four Reviewe“and Blackwood, BIO, Four copies tojiono address, ®30. L, Scott dk Co., Publishers, Now York City.
■ --w ’ i !' ' * j { -y ■. .■■■; ScrttVEYB.- nt in'Nebraska bare boon interraptdq and brought -to a stand-still by tho hostility of thei Pawnee Indians* h On the morning r cf thJ 3d ult. ’some chiefs.ofthatlribo came (to lho camp of the surveyors, and orderwk then*,' in tho . most .peremptory manner,^to-leave—backing their orders with repeated threats that eweryinan who did ; not leave the survey before'the sun should arrive at meridian, shouhLbo shot They then proceeded to destroy all’the landmarks made in the ,¥icinity. r; The survey-wag consequently abandoned.
MAKUIAGES. v •> i. <57 ■ :
’ -K. N. Stoesotii ik New Yobk.— Th/i Ncw'Y oxV Suiiday DiiptdeK iayathat the Kpour Nothings have 'oyer * 20,000: members inthat city, jndndin'g, the O/U-A’s; It is , stated .that above;' three-fourths of these have'hitherto identified themselves with the Whig parfy, and’ thp.balanco with the Deraocratic party; Jl> ' ‘ ;
At'Ebehcrer M. B, Church, November <lh, by. Rev. J. - B. Sparks—Silas E, Smith and Martha L Cotton, ‘ ,i ( :;)r- 1 ";i ■* May Forture strew (ficir path' with joys—. :~Andfill theirlaps wilhglrlsand boys! . 'bn Tapp’s Pidge. Noremher 1, by the same, Sevall;R. : tyc)}b J and Mary j. Miller.;',
A SoGCESTiOH.Wqnfn Thintkixo Of.— The Louisville Journal says: 'j.Wd understand’ that : G t oV; Crittenden) of Kentucky, htts bron' invited and has accepted the invitation of ‘the Bostoir Committee, to* deliver a lecture upon’slavery in that city. Like Senator Butler, .of Sooth Carolina, and Tombs, of Georgia, and Mr. Hillard, of Alabama, Mr, Crittenden has accepted the invitation in the same spirit ii which it was given.” . . ‘ '
■ r On tbs 3d\Oqlober, b/ Rev. > J.D,Griflilb, Wopd and Mary Jennings. " Ori ihVai'st tfcldber/Sy the ’same, John W, Eodaand ; MonUi*Griipes, : : ' j:' On the 30ih Octobeiyby lha M. Mfofofd^iniA^f^ft ■ ( the nth .October, bxR.Derry, Em., •WiUiam podson, and Eve Houze; ■ ■ • 1 ■ if,- t /:*■ ,1 ■ ■ 1. ■ - ■ . ,: Oh Uie.JSth October, by the Game, Charles Edmond 1 and ; Manah Fippe. r- '' OillhoiSth T bclhber. by GeO, Land, Esq., £tep he ii Sourer and Eliza Elstod. . OdJtho 9l»t ( October, by the same. Earnest Hue and .Caroline Wolf.
Strosa w the Faith. — A negro preacher was holding forth to his. congregation on the subject of - obeying the commands of God, Says he:“Bredren/ whateber God tells mo to do in dis book (holding uplhc Bible,) dat Pm gwino to do. If I see’in dat l most jump troo a stun wall, I’m. gwine to' jump pit it.' - Going troo it 'lopgp to"-God, jumpin’at it 'longs to me/* •• . :
JCST Judge Williams, of Union co,, Ohio, at one tlmo Associate Judge of that coonty, while in a state qf.Intoxicatian a few. dayp jhimMlf on tho railroad 1 iracj;' run- over 1 by, a freight train."' His foot was*amputated) hnt his injuries wore so great that hedied,
(Kr The great comet ~of 185G, which was expected in 1848, and on -acronot of the non-appearance of which Sir John Hersh'el pnt ft crape on his telescope, Mr. Bomme, a distinguished Qormun Astronomer, finds not to bo duo until 18$8.— With immense labor he has gone over all tbo intricate calculations,. and estimates thattho comet would bo retardto'that extent by tbo influence of tbo planhets.— The periods ol -the return have ranged from 280;lo 293 years, and |f it shall not retdra beforo*l858, its present period will ho longer by mno years than over before.
Boubeut— 87.000 Stoles.— In Cincinnati on Thursday night last, the Store of Alexander and John Cameron, No. 58 West Pift street,- was broken open, and robbed .of silks and other costly goods, to the amount of seven or eight thousand dollars,- No clam haa as yet been discovered by which to Garret out the rascals,
Sgr Jas. P, Walker, late United Stales Senator from Wisconsin/ out from tbo regular Locofocos, add is running for the State Senate on tbp Independent Beform ticket.,: - . ■ ‘
, (fc*r During the past Season,- pp. ( to the 14th October, the total number of, deaths [in New Orleans, by yellow fever, was 2,584. ' '
fSTJiy the Patent Office Report of, 1853, it appears that too value of the | whaca... produced in the United Slates amounted to two millions of dollars—ten thousand dollars more than the value of the tobacco clop. ’ ■
1 deatMs.T;
Gov. Johnson, of. wcbmmenda in bib massage, -the' amendment of the’ Pedral’ Constitution, so that the people cap. vdth: directly for the President.
: In this place, onlhe 4th November, after a * long illness, Mta. Lydia Jennings. ' . In this placJe, October r 29, Sarah/ infant daughter of Sarah s ud Willktn Hall, ■
.'t3T Circuit Court is in sesaion—but I * no cases of much importance have been tried, as yet. ' ■ • - ’
