Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, April 17, 1844, Image 2

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    N
M
WOOER :
Oday,:, April ' ,17,1.. 1844 .
for Pnsiarat in . IS
_• :TIN VAN 11 UttEN
- OF NEW: YORK. b•
For tee Preside . at l • .
COI.
OF - I (ENTreKir- ,
to decision of a Nitiontil Convention.]
IMI
ffircto4 for: Malik
wriso*-
AtIA DINOCY,
1. EvOrge F. Lehman.
2. Christian. Kneasa.
3. William H. Id
4. John Hill, (Phila.)
s.SMltnel E. Leeih.
6:Samnel Camp.
7. Jesse Sharpe.
'B. N. W. Sample.
9. Wm. Heider:inch. ,
10. Conrad Shinier.
11. Stephen
12. Jonah Brewster.
"sr , ,
13. George Schnahet'
14. Nath"l B. Eklre&
15. M. N. Irvine. •
16. James Woodburn.
17. Hugh Montgomey
18. Isaac Ankney. •
10. John Matthews.
20, William Patterson:
21. Andrew Burke.
22, John AVGill.
23.. Christian Mejeni.
24.-Robert Orr, '
DEMOCRATIC.
• , aurnor,. •
TioN.-HEMWO-SiIIIILENBURG,
For Candi Commissioner,
HARSHONNE,
.F" CHESTER. •
l& As the Senior Editor' must necessarily
be ibsput for several weeks, the entire charge
and : pig:rot of the Once will devolve upon his
son, E. 0. °impale/44hp is equally interested
in the publiattion/ and to whom all payments,
communications, Ice., can be made;
Whig Ecorionly—Whig Honesty.
We call upon every -honest, candid
man.to consider the folloWing statement,
which we can Palm by documentary
et;idence..( Ik shows
. .the falsity, the
base and hollow pretenSions of the
Whigs. If they will lie about one
thing, they will haie no scruples to do
it on every occasion, or in reference to'
any matter.
In 1819 the prices of Congress prin
ting were fixo by a joint resolution of
both House/ of Congress, and remained
without change until 1840.
At the Session of 1839-40, there Was
a democratic ,majority in the Rouse.-
- ,
, .demo cratic committee of that session,.
to sihoat_the subject of printing was
referred, recommended a reduction of
prices equivalent to 15 per cent. ; This
reforni . iwas4adopfed, which resulied in
4
a saving of $17,720. .
Two of this committee were whigs,
George Evans, now a Senator from
Maine, and Rice Garland, df Louisiana.
these gentlemen made a minority re-
port recominending a reduction or 25
per cent.—boasted of Whig reform,
economy and retrenchment, and said
that Gales,& Seaton would do the prin
ting 20 per cent. less than former prices.
We will quote theillanguage verbatim:
,‘ The undersigned are , compelled to be
lieve, that the profits on public printing
at this time cannot be less than SEVEN
TY 10 EIGHTY per Gent. ; and making a
deduction of 25 per cent., will still
leave as high a rate of profit as instated,
to be proper by any of the witnesses.".
In the same report is-a communica
tion from Gales Std.Seaton (Whigs) in
the following wards We should be
willing to undertake the execution of
the printing of the House (finding all
materials) at a, reduction of TWENTY
PER. CENT:, from the pricesfixed by the
joint resolution of March 3, 1819."
this Was to be part of the whig re--
form promised in. 1840. We whigs
they said, wanted tosave 25 per cent.,
' the democrats only 15. A whig Con
gress was elected and met. Thomas
Allen and Gales & Seaton were elected
printers at prices 20 per cent. -less than
those established by the joint resolution
of 1819. .Thus a saving was made. of
5 per cent. by the whigs over the De
mocrats. But now sea the fraud, the
gross and palpable imposition. On the
2d day of March, 1843, an apOropria
lion bill was under cotoideratiou,swheu
Mr. Woodbridge made a motion to
' amend by inserting the fallowing:—
Provided, 4. That nothing in any reso
lution of either HenseolCongress shall
prevent the settlement and payment of
the bills for the.; ivo Bowles of Congress
agreeably to the prices established by
the sorsa' Itzsourrinz Muck 3d,
1819:" ye.as` . 24, nays 19.". See
•Senate 'Oncost., page 271, This aims
Mr. Evans who said the profits of the
printing under,the resolution of 1819;
waslO to 80 Per cent. and ought to be
reduced 25 per cent., voted in the atEr
cuative, as Aid also, every whip, and
every detiocsat voting in the negative:
The bill was sent to the House, reject&
ed, persisted in by the Senate., sent back
to the Rouse attic agreed to ; 80 votes, in
the affinnativir. all whtgs but
,Thus a wbitcougiess added to , die
prir.es,2s percent. more'than the prin
lers had offered and cOntrieted to-print
.
for ; by, which. means ' the enormous
sum of Foal-sr-ism Tnonsanit, nits
romans and thirteen cents wan taken
from the Treasury.,
To Gales & Se-ati1t:4339,324 41
• To Thomas Allen, 1,680,72
• '49,005,13
Instead of saving 50,000 as they might',
they voted to give it to' th4rinters.—
il should be borne in mind that .this
vote was taken only two days before
the Whig Congress adjourned and bad re
lation to the printing which commenced
in 1841,
aid lite President.
Let, these facts be read by the peo
ple.;- remember the premises made in
1840 of retrenchment. Aliese meirare
.not, less lavish in their, promises new ;
they have deceived you oncegrossly
•
ifetrayed you ; :YOU - trust them
again ?
OMINATIONS.
GEN. MARKLE 9 8POPULARITY.—The
Argus, published in the county where
Gen. Markle resides, has in it an article
on his popularity fiom which we
make the following extract. It seems
that Gen. Markle has several times
been before the people•of his own coun
ty for their suffragis, but without suc
cess. •'On one occasion lid rim far be
hind Joseph Itlyier, ad never has yet
got a majority in his own township.
We will give the Intelligencer
something snore to explain about Mar
kle's popularity. Gen. Markle ran in
in 1820 or 1821 on the •federal ticket
for assembly, 44 ran behind Mr. Cool
whn was on the same ticket, both in
the county, and in. his (larkle's) own
township'. It in the faie of this fact,
and•elso of the fact thatin - 1838 Gen.
Markle was beaten by Mr. Marchand
2500 in the county, and some 60 or 70
in his (Markle's) own township, and
ran behind Mr. Coulter and Mr: Gra
barn who were on the same ticket on
both occasions—if in the face of these
recta, the Whigs can prate any more
about Gen. Markle's popularity, they
will place themselves in the ridiculous
position of the hen that cackles without
having lain an egg.'
ACCIDENTS.—We extract from the
Wyoming Patrol, the following list of
casualties :—A most shocking accident
happened to a young man named James
Place, in Washington township, on
Thursday the° '2Bth' ult. Re was en- -
gaged in a thrashing machine, when by
some means his leg was . caught in the
machinery, and dreadfully mangled
.
as high up as the knee—the bone in
some places being crushed to splinters.
Mi. Fitzpatrick of Tunkhannock
township, vihilst working in a saw-mill
recently, had his ankle dislocated, and
his foot otherwise seriously.injured.
A son of Mr ! Sharp, living about a
mile from this village whilst out with
a patty of boys on Sunday last, fell
from the rocks on the canal, and was
severely injuredbreaking an arm and
a leg. ,A caution to boys not to break
the sabbath.
DARING OUTRAGE.—The Bucks
County lntelligencer says that a color
ed man, known' as Big Black Ben,"
whohad been living there for 10 or 12
years, and who. it is supposed, was
formerly a slave, was recently seized
and carried off, by , a party of men, one
of whom claimed to be his master. r —
The perpetrators of this outrage met
the poor negro in a field, and by force
compelled him to get into a carriage,
when they drove drove off, and have
not since been heard of. These officers
(whether pretendedrir not,) showed no
paper or authority, but seized the old
man abruptly and riotously.
A PaizE.-4 old building,; about to
be pulled down, in the Bowery, New.
York, was sold fois3o to two Irishmen
on condition they removed - it. They
went to work at it, and tearing open
come of the wamscoating.' found a jug.
which on examination proved to be a
money jug, containing $9,000 in old
coin, it is said. • .
CINCINNATI AND TExes.—Ata meet
ing of citizens of Cincinllati, held on the
28th ult., ,to consider!the sibject of the
annexation of Texas, the following rea
-elution was
,adopted : , —Resolved, as the
eoletpn and' settled 'opinion of • •this.
Jneeting,. that Texas' ought _not to be
anatnted 44, the United . States.
TYLER DINNEIL—The Sth auniver
pf the birtb4rPresident Tyler: was est
rebrated at New York on the 28th
Itpay
The whig., cisme; ibiui * itiorqetiaii
Or no protection. aitheissne before the
people. is .211 moonshine, a Mete bait
an d gall trap to gain Powers, whia
when , secured will be:exemeed4o ear
ryihelavorite measure offieniielay,
the resurrection of the Manimoth Bank.
For the truth of what we say, we give
In extract from a epeech recently made
_by Mi. Clay in Georgia.
enlarged somiivbat hrion the'ne
cessity of a national link. Go into
-Wall street, in Nei York, where
British capital is that abundant, and
you will find the strongest opponents
of a bank, because its exisience would
jeopard their interests. The large em
poriums of the North did not want a
bank. but it was wanted by • the South
and West. If rzchangee were , new ID
a good condition, experience had shown
that. they would not' continue so. If
the State banks now paid specie, faits
had 'shown that, with a revival of pros
perity:Abe Inflation of paper"eurrency
would recommence, because there was
no national regulator tcrelieck , these
spurious issues. The State banks, as
we- all; were -also powerless to furnish
a national currency with which a citi
zen of this great country can travel from
one end of it ,to the other. The prat=
tice of the mileil'etilightened European
governments hai shosin that a nitional
currency was necessary, the national
goVernment could! alone 'ordain- it, and
it was just as important to the national
interests to have it, as it was to regulate
commerce, to provide a navy' or an
army."
Trope cOUNTE. N. Y.—The. unhap
py division which has existed for some
time amongst the democratic party in our
neighboring county of Tioga, N. Y. we
are happy to say has been overcome, and.
the causes of the difficulty removed. A
meeting' was held at Owego on the 2d
inst., at which the Hon. STEPHEN
&mos°, presided, the proceedings i. of
which display the utmost harmony and a
spirit of mutual concession. The meet
ing was addreised by the chairman and
the Hon. S.B. I,eonard, G. 0. Chase,
John J. Taylor, and. Thos. Pearsall, late
of Alabama. Resolutions were, passed.
in favor of VAN BUREN and JOHNSON.
NEW Yonx Crry Etsk-rms,—The
ele ) rld in New York city on Tues.
da e 914 inst. resulted in the election
of Harper, the candidate of the Native
Amdricans, by a majority over all the
candidates, of 860. The Natives also
have a large majority pf the council.
Albany city has elected a whig may
or by about 523 'majority.
6 Brooklyn city has elected a democrat
ic 'mayor by 500 majority.
'Film IN Taov.- 7 A iarge barn belong=
ing to 0. P. Ballard at Troy, in this coun
ty was totally destroyed by fire on Sun
day morning last. About six thousand
bushels of vats, eight horses, carriages
and a large amount of other property,
were destroyed, The fire was
_discov
ered about 4 o'clock in the morning
and is supposed to have , been the work
of an incendiary. ,
MURDER IN PITTSBURGL-A man nam
ed Charles Diehl, at Pittsburg ! murder
ed his Wife and one child, inflicted severe
wounds upon another child, and then at
tempted to cut his owwthroat. Diehl
who a confirmed drunkard, and gave as a
reason for the comm' on of the crime,
that his wife bad told liiro that the chil
dren did not all belong a the same lath
,
er.
CONGRESB.-Frpm preseni appear
ances, the great national questions now
before Congress, will not be acted up
on until after the Presidential canvass.
Both parties appear to be afraid of 'los
ing capital by their legislation.
FOTIND.—The': body of Evitts
drowned- on .Sunday evening Bth inst.,
waslountion Saturday morning last,
on the bar opposite, town. and,but a
kw rods from the place where the cas
ualty happened.
RIOT AT Bitoorcr.vx.--A riotoccurred
at Brooklyn; between the Irish and the
natives," i on Thursday evening 2d
inst. A collision took place, tut with
out injurious consequences--owing to
the speedy retreat of the natives."
RAILROAD ACCIDENT.—CharIes Van
dervort, a lad 12 years of age, had his
lerso badly hurt on Wednesday. on
the Harlem Railroad, that his life is de
spaired of. , He was returning from
school when the accident happened.
SENTBNCEDe..-G. Williams. convic
ted of
. involuntary manslaughter, has
been sentenced to four years iniprisok
meat, in the PhiladelOtia county jail.—
He:killed Peter Doescher in a quarrel
some foir Weeks since:
Ihosire or Lana: Henry Clay
the friend of A.metican.l4lo4#
Mill boy of the Stahl. Who is reln! 1 1
s,ented goinr - ,7: to mill ith, hieshirktail
streaming I ‘:in the' `iii,... ever :sieke, hiS
sl )
sentiaientsimore . truly aniin..the - de-,
bate on ; the' .Missotiri 'bill; -- when he
said gslf gentlemen , ill not allow us
to have.Butcx Sutvzs, they must let
us have Witrrz oszs l i foe -we cannot
cut our fire wood, - an black our shoes,
and SAVE OUR WIVES -AND • DADORTEB9
wonst* TICE turcuss." (This is the
man you are told is the champion of
American Industry ; itlays he, , will
have, if he cannot: get black, he Will
have white Slaves. • . •
. DREADFUL RAILIKIADO
melancholy accident occur !
son, Indiana, op the 28th (
It is Usual in descending
plane, to detach the wood
cars, and bring them just to
the p)ane, to wait till the
have gone down. In this
way was slippery, and, wh
car was brought to the head
and the passenger car des
former accidentally got until
and running with great Telt
`the passenger car' and dc l i
pieces,!--leaving four per
and five very badly wounds
CHEAP PAPERS.-Mr; Small Capital
4 ! T." of the Susquehann a Register,
says 6 , that ihive campaign papers are
not! published at Harrisburg, vi± :
The Old ff arrior, 'The Clay Bugle,
and , The Democratic Union,Extra.—
The. two first named are Whig papers,
the latter Locoloco ; all are ably con
ducted, and go into the contest like
't --)
cham ns determined to conquer.—
The pr➢ce of each we -believe is 50 cts.
from the first of May till after the elec
tion—of Mr. Clay." We presume our
friends of the Demociatie 'Union would
have little relish to be included in such
a dilemma.
AFFRAY IN WILKESBARRE.—On Sun
day, the 24th ult., a quarrel 'sprung up
.between two colored men, residents of
the borough of Wilkesbarre, Pa., which,
ended in a fight. One struck the other
with a dirk several times in the face,
and finally plunged it into the side of
hit breast forcing it through. in the re
gion of the shoulde; blade. A portion
of the dirk broke off, and; was taken out
of the back side of the shoulder oppo-'
site the place where it entered. Some
doubts are entertained of the recovery of
the injured one. The other is now in'
Jail.
DESPERATE STRUGHLH WITH Ron-
BERS.—An attempt was made to rob
the store of Mr. C. Whittaker, of
Cleaveland, Ohio, on the 25th ult. A
young man named ViasSon, lodging in,
a room above, hearing the robbers be
low, descended and attacked them, hav-
Ang a desperate struggle,' with each at
the imminent risk of t his life. His
mark was left on each of them, but they
succeeded in escaping, without hoWev
er procuring any booty.
BACK DIIES.—The colored citizens
of * * Syne county, N. ,Y., have sent
in a petition to the legislature, praying
that the services of the, black citizens
while in a state of slavl, up to 1827,
may be paid, amounting to twenty-five
millions of dollars - I Mr. Youngs pro.
posed to refer the petiti
mime on ventilation.
er g laid on the table.
TERRIBLE EVENT.-
near Green Castle, Inc .
disen Chappell and bi
short distance from the'
ering.a small beef, whe
fire, =and all they had;
ding, and provisions —J
and worse than all, the
had, a. fine little boy al
old; was-consumed anii
titny.mic.—The A, erican Sentinel
sags ,that an epidemic,l which has for
its symptons an intense pain in one side
of the face and in the head, attended
with soreness.of the throat, .has been
prevailing in PhiladeWtia, for a,few
weeks past. The nu ber of persons
afflicted has been very great, almost
every family having ad one or more
of its members complaining.
Sz4vEs CAPTuRED. 7 —News from the
coast of Africa infonts us ,ihat the
British steamer Thunderbolt, Sixteen
guns, arrived , in Tabqt Bay, January
20,1r0m a cruise in which she had
captuied:threo slave Vessels, baiting on
b0ard,1223 negroes.
-' • .
' - News an' Naliesstw
The silk f l actory . in DedlisM,Maii.,
contisizes - to I spemte in a - nourishing
- Smatter. Me AMY ar fifty hands. are
employed, d the agent advertises for
fifty Mere girls:, , •,, -.-- - 'if ,
The balatloitia, '. at Bosten, brought
$150,000 in specie. . ,
• A machihe has been invented in
France,to Midiesboes by which fifty pair
can beiggsligencs day. It is said there
4.
are twenty 4lliorearitialortilif Trail
without oh , not being able to obtairi
C
any:
ontributions have been made in New .
Orleans for the aid of 'the children of
the late SinUner Lincoln Fairfield, the
-k.r. , .. o — v .,l, mwar _
, - , - An ol ) , arbartutert-Attett
.
sia cents, at oughkeepsie, for swilling
with bis cane a married lady who'made
an assault uPon his. modesty. • , '
d at Medi
. f March.—
the inclined
and freight
the head of
The Delhi (N. Y.) Gazette of the
27th ult., records the death of two
young women, cousins, aged about four-,
teen years, one a daughter; of the late
David Robinson, and the other a daugh
ter of Henry Beers. They ventured
loon the margin of a small pond, frozen
at the edgeise but open in the centre,
the ice forming asort of amphitheatre.
It is supposed they stepped ppon the
ice to slide, - and' fell in the open space,
wherntheirbodies were found the next
day.
The Richmond Enquirer"announ Ces
John C. Wise, of Accomack, as a can
didate to represent the York district in
the Senate of Virginia.' He is a brother
to the Hon. H. A. Wise, and entertains
similar political principles.
Generatlackson has written to Pres
ident Santa Anna, urging- the release of
the Texan prisoners on their parole of
honor. He grounds his request on the
improved 'owe of humanity, in the treat
mentof prisoners of war in this age, &c.
passengers
instance the
en the wood
of the plane.
;pending, the
ler headway,
.
Lowy, struck
idled it into
icons killed,
e d.! •
The Rochester Democrat notices a
new horsepower for threshing, which
ciould Thresh with ease 200 bushels of
wheat per day.
Eight acres in the town of Portland,
was leased 105 iyeam ago 99 years.—
The heirs are hunting up the documents
to prove property, the lease having ex
pired, and the ground , occupied by val
uable-buildings.
The tavern signs in Burlington, New
Jersey . , were taken down on Monday
by order of the authorities. ,
• 1'1 ; 1837, seventeen thousand persons
were convicted in England of crimes,
or about one in 1,000.
The export of tobaccp from the U.
States since 1821, has.oearly doubled,
but that increase has bee mostly to the
\of Europe, - say Holland and
Germany, 'while to Gre t Britain the
export has scarcely in,ireased at all
notwithstanding that the population has
increased some 7,000,000 souls.
Steven Turridl, a soldier and patriot
of the revolution, died recently in Char
lotte, Vt., at the advanced age of one
hundred and one years and four months.
A school boy, at a recent examina
tion is an English academy, was asked
by his instructor ,who discovered Anier
ica ? I wish I may die," says a cor
respondent of the Banner of Truth, “ - if
he didn't say Yankee Doodle !)",
Senator Niles, of Connectieut, said
to have entirely recover with the excep
tion Of a rheumatic affection. which at
present detains him from Washington.
The Nashville Union states that Gen.'
Jackson was too feeble to attend the
funeral of his old veteran in arms, Gen.
Carroll; which took place at Nashville,
on Sunday 24th ult. „-
John H.'Steele, the Governor elect
of New Hamishire, was born in North
Carolina, and was a carriage maker by
trade. He einigyated to New Hamp
shire,' and was' distinguished for his
mechanical ingenuity, and set in motion
the first power looms in the town of
Peterboro. •
on to the com
It was, howev
I n the . 18th ult.
~ one Mr. Ad.
is wife were- a
'
r house, batch
. the house took
—clothing, lothing, bed=
were burned
only child they
bout lg• months
dst the flames.
Considerable sport was had by some .
of the Citizens of BurlingtoN Wiscon
sin, on the 4th instant, in . witnessing a
race between a deer and a steam ferry
boat at that place.' The deeT'had ven
tured into the river 'oppositef the city,
and the ferry boat with two , or three,
hunters on board "gave chase." '= The
boat speedily came up, and the antler
by two or three shots from those on
board', was so disabled as to render his
capture easy.-
The Jail in §omerset, Perry county,
Ohio, was consumed by fire l ime night
last - week. Micholas Riggin, a crimi
nal who escaped from the Jail, .by mak. ,
jog a hole in the door, it is , stipposed
set the_building -on .fire.`
CotTe,spondente
itallataleae, dran.'lo
Mike the adoption of du) , te rc h ax
Baa s of Representative s , m a t
net adjourn notililte Re'se aue bili
firr the sale of the main line, wa r
or rejected," that .body ton.hten
engaged in the considers of “A l
dace the . State debt," being Oa for
the public works, and fortlte a
The bill l .rati reported by 11 . dr.9 0 " ,
That patiofit relating , to tber"
pretty: Witch the woe as Mr,
Bill, reported some time 'Mend
same bill with some slight nuslir mit i ou
bill is now on second mailin g ,
relating to the of the mainline,,
ed by a vote of 56 to 33—apreit
cation that it will fatally pass the
ga la O f the Mein Line, eti
it,' and 15 against it ; tat I ipitte)
paggql the Rowe by a pretty •••
it andeubtedly will--a mid
tamed in the &Mar..
The rouse now devotee coeds,
to the consideration of privat e
and the way they are put duota
10 ste a m POW"-
The' odus ojitraitdi by which th ey
after this wise. The House goa t ;
tee of the whole in thoi-monting
bills are taken up in their order wai l
time ; if objections are road° to a
ed 'aver, if not it passei committeeof
and in this manner the mornin t
slimed: In the afternoon, they ,
coed and third time, and passed.
inst., upwards of thirty hill. were I
manner, and on yesterday, seventy.
finally disposed of. The Senate it ,
the House in the private bill calend a l,
might also add, in the spirit of '
Grave and staid Senator's view
step in the art of legislation,
Slaymaker's bull did the locomoth
sion upon civilization, and yet they
clined to pitch into it ! They are in ,
bewildered astonishment at the mind'
made under this new imprcrwtment,no,
When the " ignorant fumes that mantle
clearer reason" shall have cleared why,
will see the necessity of adopting the e'
tem, in order to „keep pace with the
Mr. Kidder's bill relative to impr,
debt said for other purpose% was befo
nate the other day. The first maim,
repeals the non-imprisonment law so r
late; to debts contracted before its:
voted down by a decided majority, and
was postponed.
Mr. Crabb has introduced a bill to ,
snaiSerf women the use and enjoyment
own property. This hill prevents the i
of the wife firm being taken in mender
debts of their husbands,'svas called up'
day, and the consequence was a pit.
between " the regulars" and the hart%
the . Senate, (several unfortunate indiridur
the latter class having seats in this body.)
engagement was Combiner! until Mr. b 1
a crusty " unfortunate," brain Montgomer
posed a compromise, which was, that the
committed to the committee on Estates'
cheats, which committee is composedoff
dowers, two bachelor!, and . one mania
This was thought to be a - good idea far
tor, and the suggestions was accordingly*.
On Friday last, - in the Senate, Sint
net's, from the committee on Finance,
a bill to, provide for the ordinary expels
government, repair , of canals and railroad',
other claims upon the State, in dys
amendments to the bill previously pace
House of Representatives. For the,
the interes t
, on the funded debt of the St
February 1, and to become due August',
authority is conferred on the Governor.
certificates of stock, transferable oh tbetoii,
the Auditor General, bearing five pereesti*
rest, redeemable August l f 1846: Pngided,'
That in all "cases when the amount of inures
claimed is less than $2O, the same s hallbe pal
id Money at the Treasury, if the enema and.
cute was issued prior to February 1,1844.
this lattei purpose the sum of $14,000 is sir>
printed. The act repeals the appropti , anon
of September 29th last, from and alter the bit
day of June next. •
The bill bas passed committee of the ati#
and is now on second reading. •
Pam
Yours, &c., -
Fke_re Es.p.—Onyhursday 110
of last week, a lady in Fair HaveniN
became alarmed -during her slob °
and leaped out of the second rIOI ISI.
dotir of her sleeping room! . Stn
as it may appear, not a limb mob
ken,. nor was she Seriously injured!
How. A. H. READ.—We regret I
learn that our member in Coagrer
bo
been obliged; to abandon his seat it
consequence of ill-health. The demo'
cratic UniOn says that he passed through
Harrisburg . on Thursday week, being
able to travel only a few miles a day.
_
FIRE.—The dwelling house of
Nr
H. B. Wright of Celumbia ,
s PP. ,l°°k i
fire on Thursday, 4th inst., c° 4se.
quence of sparks from the 100 00
falling on the. roof, and was, alao
wholly consumed.
iy
- ---------
M. C. DEA D ..—Gen. Ilona A,
•
Moore, member ot Congress from IP
Columbus district, Ohio, died a; C 4 '
iambus on tite,2il instant.