Bradford reporter. (Towanda, Pa.) 1844-1884, November 06, 1844, Image 2

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    EZZ
tooRTER:
TedOidgYi . =t 4 liy.entbor-6;:1844.
'fib "lElectioii.
, The struggle is over - in - Peimsylva
. The (rick battle forthe Presiden
cy, so terasi this ' Stuq is concerl,
has been, foUght, , The - greatest, and
most impoilant, in its - bearings upon
the destinies; and liberties tof this coun
trY, that h - ascver agitated the Republic.
Never before_ ' were the elements of
I Federalism combined in so formidable
att'armv. . N ever before was the'MON-
E'Y POWER, sq clea r rly and boldly
arrayed agalUit the peciple. The con
test -has in v=ery_ truth, been : between the
dernocracy,tand the monied interests of
the - eountry i the former struggling -to
1
upholu A the great and futdamentatdoc
it
trines upo . - tYhieh rests the veil ,
foundation of, liberty,, Epcirity.bf
Rigid:; tb latter-fighting for the per
peniation4 a system fo Monopolyiand
special priyileges. it war ‘with 7 repub
lican institptions, and fatally subversive
Of the rights and libertiei of the people.
We know not to' which, side victory
, inclines, but we trust that. the issue is
favorable to the hopes of the patriot
am! philanthropist. We trusyhat the ,
ark of our liberties, is _yet, safe from
the Philistine hands of the ruthless,
and corrupt Money Power, a power
more insatiate in its demands, and- mo re
1,
i the m
_1
unsparing in-its tyranny, than mos t i
-hateful tyrant , that ever bore sway over
an Oppressed and enslaved people. If
the days of the Repbblic are numbered,
and this fair land is to become 4 like the
rest of the earth, the spoil and prey of
the-oppressor, may God in .his mercy,
spare its from the tyranny of the mon
ey power. Of all the forms of tyranny,
it is the most hateful, most oppressive,
the most accurst. - The despot, who
rules with a rod of iron, may become
satiated with blood; yeti can surfeit his
appetite with gold; he sleeps, and for a
time the work of oppression is stayed.
The ntoney power is never satisfied; its
voracious jaws are ever open, and its
appetitel increases with what it feeds
on. May Heaven preserve the chil
dren of this Republic from the fires of
the Money Molock,
Di*.
The majority inAis county has been
greatly reduced from what it was on the
Bth of October. We scruple not to say,
that &tins been done by the most vile
and accursed- influences, that were ever
brbught into requisition by unscrupulous
men. Our voters have been made to
feel the tyranny of money and its unholy
and wicked exactions. The rich have
forced the poor to retire from the polls,
or cast their ballots for the candidate of
the Money Power. We know what we
say, and we intend to follow up the sub
ject hereafter with the names of the men
(humanity blushe( to own them)--that
have thus trampled upon the most sac
red and holy right of freemen. We
wish our friends in every election dis-'
trict, to collect accurate information of
every case in which influences of the
character such as we have alluded to,
have been employed, and we will hold
up the men to the scorn and and con
tempt of the honest of all patties.
MELANCHOLY ACCIDENT.—We learn
from the Wilkes-Barre Farmer, that
Mr. George W. Carmer,ilately of this
place, came to his death in a inelancho
ly.manner. He was engaged in hunt
ing with Mr. 'Jacob Rutz, of Wilkes-
Barre, and, while resting on a fence, a
.rail biiike and precipitated Mr. Kutz to
the ~ g roond—ihe shock 'breaking his
The pain of the ?mature being
intense and disabling Mr..K. from walk
ing home, Mr. Canner proceeded to a
neighboring heuse and 'procured a wag
on in which to carry him. After plac
ing. Mr. K., in , the wagon, Mr: Cermer,
- itCraising his gun by the muzzle, caught
the lock .in some part of the iron Work
of the vehicle, by which it was dischar
ged and the whole contents,entered his
head beneath the chin, Itilline,him
study. Mr. Canner' was the son-in
law of Mr: kiltz, recently Married, and ,
in every respect a most worthy, esti
mable and amiable citizen. 'His death
order the eiriumstances., has fallen,'
with q grieVous affliction upon. two
families. and upon , a large circle of
Mewls, to whom he was endeared hv
themodesty, uprightness and manli
ness of his eharacser. I
Dieadta Stealxibout Actleleat.l.
- Ezgo:sion of the Lucy , Walker t
Sixty in Eighty_ Tilled and- Wounded !
...;--It iswitt(feelings the most isett4 and
pitiful that we .copy, from the -Lents
vine Courier,. Oct 23d, the , following
fearful disaster, and the loss of so rhany
.
valuib e -lives. , The steamboat Lucy
Walker, Capt. Vann, lett this place for
New Orleans yeeterday, crowded with
passengers::' When about four or five
miles :ielovi New Albany, and ,j ust be
fore suset, some part of her machinery
silt,got of ortteryind the engine was
stopprf . . in .While
to repair it. . hile
engag d in etnaktOf.r,
_the . necessary re
pairs, the water 'lin the , boilers. got too
low; and about iikiiitutes after the en-.
gine ad ceased i working, her three
boile i s exploded With tremendous vio•
lencef and hon.' le and terrific effect.
"The-explosion % as. 'upwards, and that.
- part lef the boat above-the boilers was
blown into thonsands of pieces: The
ILSi. l ' snag' boat laopher; Captain L. B.
Dunham, was about two hundred yards
distakt at the . tirne of the explosion.
Capain Dunliiin was immediately on
ihe spot, rescui4 thoskin , the water,
and with his crew•mdering all the aid
in his.power: To him we are indelAd
for most •of our particulars. H*psin
forms us that the Lucy Walker was in
the middle of the 'river, and inch; was
the force of theexplosion, that parts of
the boilers and! th 9 boat were thrown
on shore. , Just 0110 the explosion, the
air was filled viith,i human beings and
fragments of human beings.
.one man
was
,blown up fifty yards, and fell with
Such force as to go entirely through-the
deck of the boat. Another was cut en
tirely in two by a piece of th e boiler.
pe have heard many Of such heart
rending and ,sickening incidents.
Before Captain Dunham reached the.
place where. the Lacy :Walker was, he
saw a number of persons who had been
I thrown, into the river, drown. He
however"saved the lives of alarge nem
\ .
ber of persons bY throwing them boards
and rope& and pulling them on his boat
with hooks. Immediately after the ex
plosion,ihe ladies' cabin took 'Ere, and
before it had been consumed, sh sunk
in 12 or. 15 feet water. Tlius is pre
sented the remarkable circumstance of
a boat exploding, burning, and sinking,
all , in the space of a few minutes. The
screams:and exclamations of the females
and those who were not killed, is repl.
repented as having beekdistressing and
awful. We believe none of , the females
of board were injured—some however
may have been drowned. The books
of the boat were destroyed, and of
course it' will be, impossible ever to
ascertain the names of or the number
of those killed. There were at least,
fifty or, sixty persons killed and missing, '
and fifteen or twenty wounded—some
-seriously. Captain Dunham left the
wounded at New Albany, all of whom' ,
were kindly and well cared for by the
hospitable and humane citizens of that
I town, ,
ANOTHER LOCOMOTIVE EXPLOSION..--
The Readira Gazette states that anoth
er explosion occurred on 'the Railroad,
near Port Clinton, a few days ago, un
der precisely similar circumstances with
the one which occasioned the disastrous
loss Wife on the 2d of September last,
and which Dr. Lankier, in a very la
borious report, attributed to the effect
of lightning.
,The engine had taken in
its 'supply of water, and; had a very
heavy pressure of steam, when the en
gineer dise t overed, by a peculiar hissing,
that an explosion was abbut to take
place, and at unce leaped from_ it and
passed down the embankment. He
bad scarcely done so, when the engine
exploded, scattering the machinery in
all directions. Very fortunately, no
one-was injured. An examination , of
the 'cause, attributes the explosion to
the weakness of the stays' across the
fire box being too light to bear the pres
sure of steam required. The engine
was built by Mr. Baldwiu ' and had,pre
viorisly worke:d well. The company
hive taken measures to examine all
kheir engines, and guard against future
accident from the same'cause.
THE LEGISLATURE—The political
complexion of Pensylvania Legislature
is as follows: .'.
• Dem Whig Natives
Senate . 21 !1 1
Housoofßep. 52 . . 8
Total ' 73 .51
Dew. xnaj. over whigs 22-
.. 4 • " All opposition' ' ` 13
y:fcT..94,Y-1.,,,;;.y1pT04y,! : 1,
The fifittre thiretaina receiv
ed:up to the erne of our going to press.
Nillbe:seen 'that Polk will probably
have a LARGER majority that !!
, May: Polk.
Philad'a city'and ee.; '4380
Lancaster ; 4300
.Chester • ' ,497
Dauphin • - 871
Franklin 638 -
Lebanon 862
Delaware:: - -, 634
UniOn 1035 -
Adams / • 9OO
Cumberlgrid • 37
Berks
Montgomery
Bncks,-
York
Northumberland
Columbia
Perry
IRcoming
Clinton
Susquehanna
Wyoming
Luzerne
Wayne
Northampton
Schuylkill
Monroe
Carbon
Wioga - ' 1130
Ilradford
U. S. - SENATE .- 7 , The terms of seven
teen U. S. Senators expire , onflie 4th
of March next; thirteen of yvliieh are
Whigs and four Democrats, The
Whigs in the recent'eleritionilave se
cured the Senators in Yermont,, New
Jersey, Maryland-, Virginia. Indiana,
and Ohio, by the election of einajority
of the Legislatures Of these States. In
ConnecticUt a Whig Senator p.sos alrea
dy be,en chosen for the - n4t six years,
and there is no doubt that Whigs .will
7 be chosen in Massachusetts and -Rhode
Island: The whigs 'are sure of nine
out ofihe seventeen Senators einbraced
in the class of 1845, and have a chance
in some of the other States. Of the
Senators who hold over, sixteen are
whigs; to which add nine, as above,
and the whigs have twenty-five, being
only onqibort of half the whole num
ber. Two more will give them a ma
jority. The other States in which
Se nators are yet to be chosen are Maine,
Pennsylvania and Missouri.-(each of
. which have elected Demociatic Legis
latures,) New York, Delaware, Missis
sippi, Tennessee and Michigan.
A FEMALE Eimerie.—iin the Mid
night Cry of Thursday 'last, is an ac
count of - Sister*Matthewson, an extatic
who lives in South Conventry, Con
necticut,,and is visited daily by multi
tudes, and who died one day of linger
ing disease (her physician, it is said in
a parenthesis, being an infidel.")—
Previous to her death her spirit was
caught up into Heaven, and then a
voice, which she supposed to be that
of the Savior," told her she must_ re
turn to earth. - She then died—revived
in about half an hour, and has ever
since—about eighteen weeks—been
proclaiming to all who will heat% that
the time is.short." She takes no food
whatsoever, except two cups of tea
with milk and . sugar daily !—exhorts
sinners all day; and at night. converses
and sings, as she says, with the angels,
whose forms encompassing her bed she
beholds !
ONE THE GOOD EFFECTS OF MILLER
1531.—The Secretary of the TreasurY
acknowledges the receipt of five' dollars
from some unknown person, with the
Sir : am indebted to the revenue
of the ' United States the amount' en
closed, $ . 5. I wish you to understand
the reason of my doing this, is to make
me at peace with God, and my fellow
men. The Lord is coming this month,
and on the 22d day of it I think, to
"Judge between him that serveth.God,
an,d him who kerveth, him not, and to
lay: righteousness to the line,and.Judg
rtient to: the plummet." The Lord
help Vs to be prepared to stand the . fie
ry when the Lord ariseth to
shake terrible the earth."
Yeas, &c.
EARTIIQUARE 1N WESTERN NEW
YORK.—On Tuesday morning last, a
very percepttble shock of an earthquake
was experienced in the towns of Alden,
Albion, Almada, Attica, Bethany,
Darien ,and Elba. It Came' from the
south-west.
FATAL OCCURItiNeE.-...011 Friday,
Mr. George Hoke k of Paradise Town
ship, York County; was killed by be
coming entwined in a rope which he
had: unfortunately in placing
over the hiqui,ef a stall-fed . steer: for
the, purpose of securing him for idaUgh-
News,lrpm,'
Samuel y. Atwell, ' , Esq.. )a
,diatin
guished °minket. of the . Rhodelaland
Bar, died at ibis iesiden4e, at Ohiciatch
et, at 12 n'elock,ffridel night, lin his
49th year
There is a curiosity at tke Newl York
Fair well werth seeing-4. boat 'contain
ingthe original S"'ngine and 1101er of
thefirs4bbat;that: ever navigated, the
Hudson river..:
A project is on foot atliew Orleans
to, build iron steamers, to run between
that port and New York, at an estima
ted expense of . $119,000 each:
A young-mart supposed to be named'
AndrelMCDilley, hung himself In.a.
barn in ColUmbus township, 014 the
other day. • , '
The Hong Hong,Gazetteassetie that
the lower :clesieszbf the Chitlol3o at
Canton are' hostile to Americans and
all others. foreigners. -
Sidney Bigiltfn now . sayli
‘ l,lle Nau
vooites are ; Ferse than Sodoffiltes.i,
Indians / from' the United States have
made,an incursion into Northert Tek.:
as,,on the .T.ouisiana -border: The mil=
itary. around Natchitoches have -been
ordered out to defend the neighberhood„
The Connectieut Courant, PUblish
ed at Hartford, Conn., the old est pa
per in . the Union with . one exCeption,
completedlitS 80th year'', Oct. 29. .
An election for pongressinen to fill
1,
4600
1090
400
8 42
, `! 950
' .1658
' loop
600
70
900
90
1283
96
1094
870
1405
375
vacancies in. the Ist, 4th and Sth dis
tricts of Maine, is to take placc on the
I Ith November; the day of the Presi
dential election. I
Joel B. Sutherland, Esq., talked
of as the successor of` Mr. Janifer at
the- court 'of Vienna, and . Mr..
Walker, Sewer frem Mississippi, as'
a Judge of the U. , S. Court.
It is new ascertained that the present
Senators in Congress from'Soth Car.
olina,'the Hon. Messrs. Geo ff. Duffle
and D. E. Huger, will continue tahold
the seats they filljin the Senate.
The steamer I James L. Day has
made the' passage from Mobile to New
Orleans in 12 hours and 20-minutes.
She is the mess rapid boat that ever ran.
between the two cities. '
On the lath of thismenth, ripe straw.
berries were gathered - in the garden of
Dr. Stryker, oliSomerset, N. 4 . .
Louis Philippe accomplished his
71st year on the sth of this Month.
William F. Coming*-, undersentence
of death, at Haverhill, N. H., 1 for mur
der, has by proclamation of Gov. Steele,
had the execution of his sentence post
poned
to the 25th of December next.
At Cork, latelY the brother#a young
lady publicly horsewhipped! an officer
of a regiment stationed there til i r having.
after paying the , most marked attention
to his sister, ahruptly disconinned his
his visits.
Dr. Arnott, of England, liSs
invent
ed an air pump, with %ditch 'it is pro
posed to supply a draught to {furnaces,
superseding the necessity iOif funnels
in steamboats and costly chimneys in
engine houses.
If you bathe in the Dead! Sea, the
evaporation .eaused by the, sun will
leave your b ody encrusted' with sul
phate of magnesia (Epsom Salts) in a
few moments after coming''ont the wa
ter. • .
The, Barnstable Patriot says a man
at Edgartown, d short time since shot
a peck of cow-birds at one, shoottng.
The Maryland electiop takes place
on ihe l 4th, and not on the 11th, as has
been'erroneously stated.
James C. crook, Esti., a respectable :
citizen of Columbus, Geo.,; . was killed
a few days since, by his horse taking
fright,, and throwing him violently
against a tree. ,
A survey is now being Made made
for' a rail Way through &Mai Wales,
from east ,to west, with steamers to
run from the termination at! Fishgnard
and Pembroke, to join other railways
projeCted iiilreland. English capital
invested in !her soil would be produc
tive of vastibene fi t to Ireland.. I
The Government DepoSite 13Snks.in
N. '.York, now hold a balance of about
six Millions of dollars. This lnotint
will probably continue lolinere4e un
til January; when the GoVernment will
have t o paY oftfive reali g ns of dollars.
TheGat;eshead Obser7 publishes
the details iof eight collie eiplosions
in Perham. and - NerthuMberland since
1842. by4hich 453' liv4s were lost I
ThiS is exclusive 'of Ambit.'dcidenie
in which the :number of, victi ths was
udder 50. each, . I •;,
U N Uons.
Presidential. Election-441'10a'.
Bradford go„ Nov.),
Townihips. • Polk. Oleg.' Birn.
'Athens, . 220 , 195 1
Albany, 101. 87- 1
Asylum, . 90 16
Armenia, 28 ' 22
Burlington, 114 179 .
Canton, 126 134
Columbia, 149 166
Durell, 104 63 2
Franklin, . :75. 34
Granville, . 68 97
Leroy, - 72
Herrick, •81 3O 14
196' 64
Menton, :113 lOO
pri s e% ' ' 80' 136
Pike;- • 145: - 180 12
R ome , , . ' 199 106 ,
Ridgberry,- ' ' 189 5l) •
Smithfield, !. 181 156 "": '
Springfield, 1 - 197 'l2l
Shesbeguin, ' 1 09 1 59
Souttl- •60 , •
44. : ,,
Springhill, • •• 48 ' 79 ; ,
Standing Stone, • 62 • 58% 2
Duwaada bitrOugh, 86' 97
tp.,; 7i• ' 70
Troy, ' 133 200. " 3
Ulster, . . B6
.43
Windham, 127 64
Warren, .154 . .98
Viryalnsing, 1- , 109 96, 10
Wells,
' , 73 ' 122 1
Wells, • 155 ' 25
=MEI
Total,
' GOVERNOR'S ELECTION.
Counties,j .V. B. Har. ShnnL, ' Markle.
Adaras, 4 1628 '2453 1848. , 2484
:Allegheny, j 4573 - 7620 5863 • 8105
) Armstrong; 1744 - 1260 • 1086 - • 1407
Seaver, . 11710 3t43 ; 2093 2730
Bedford, 2446- 2910 2884 3045
Barks, 7425 3582 8316 384 b
Bucks, . 4488. 4705 .. .W 6 4804
Bradford, - 2844 2631 • 3525 2967
Butler, • , 1804,1 ' 2160 2054 2107'
Crawford,- j 2908 • 2469' 2920: 2410
Chester, 4882 5643 - 5475 .6139
Columbia, 2829. , 1325 3199 1693
Cumberlapd, 2695:' '2799 . 3008, .2971
Cambria,' k . 920 811 1129 969.
Centre, ) 2242 -A447 .2384 1786
Clinton, 649. -637 925 807
Clearfield, -• . 812 : j • .499 1009 611
Clarion, 1366,•4,- .648. :1889 793 .
Carbon, (from Noitherapton,) 784 453
Dauphin, , 2187 3124 2352 3213
Delaware, 1335 2031 1493 2069
Erie, 2061 3636 2207 3501
Elk, (new county,) • 132 103
'Fayette, 3055 2755 33.04 • 2836
Franklin, 2892 3686 ';3211 3797
Greene, . 2010 1350 2255 1425
'Huntingdon.- 2266 3826 .2630 4022'
Indiana, 1209 1953 1417 2098
jefflerson; • 592 476 727 ' 617
Juniata,: 1043 ° 966 1188 IQBS
Luzeme,, 4119 2774 3649 2561
Lancaster, ,6472 9678 5522 .9513
Lebanon,. 1492 2369 1748 • 2478
Lehigh, 2451 2405 2680 2443
Lycombag, • . 2181 '1504 2600 1945
Montgomery, , 4869 4068 5394 4341,
Mercer, . 2336 3249 2744 • 2705
Monroe, • 1447 345 • 1601 377-,
Mifflin, . 1269 1326 ,1585 1506
M'Kean, 267 263 416 307
Northampton, 3836 2846 3466 2455
Northumber'd, 2187 1351 . f 2384 - 1498
'Perry, 1970 1072 2246 • 1316
"Philad'a co. 12303. 10189 12200 14138
Philad'a city, .4774 7655 5265 9282
Pike, 524, 135 • • 643 - 142
Potter, • 365 180 527 .202
Somerset, • 765 2501 922 .2450
Schuylkill, 2184 • 1881 3327 2399
Susquehanna, 2023 1560 2468 1595 •
. . 1721 895 1975 _ 1049
Union, , . 1518 2423 .1777 2721
.1 1 'enango,'• 1275 855 ' 1230 873
Washington, 3611. 4147 • 3958 3901
Wayne, 1188 - 675 1553 • 811
Wyoming, (from Luzerne,) , 808 754
Warren, - 929 • 827 • 1107 . 843
Westmoreland, 4704 . 2778 4704 2778
York, • 4382 3792 - 4691 3802
14367.6 144019 160403 156114
•Addfsth ward Northern Li.
beities, not reburied, - 108
UZZA FOR ATHENS !—Athens has
nobly won the . banner, and she certain
ly deserves it. Her vote shows an in !
crease of ,SEVENTEEN. And this
too in a township where the , most im
-1 -
portant And numerous changes were,
and where no money or exertions:were
spared to make it give a federal majori
ty.. We know that certain men, under
a belief in their own consequence, had
pledged - 20 mairity for Clay. Her
noble and true-hearted democracy de
serve the thanks of the , whole party.
DISTRESSING AccinEif.-4ohn Sto
1-
ry,. residing a short distance from New
town Borough. f i lucks Connty, -was ou
Tuesday afternoon, last, burned so bad
Iy' as to cause his death in a few hours
Mr. Story had been , confuted to his
bed for some dine by sickness, and on
the afternoon alluded to, the bedclothes
caught are, and were ;not discovered
until too like to savehim from his own
unhappy end. - •
A HORRIBLE FATE:--Tschech, the
man who fired a pistoVat the Kling of
Prussia, a short ,titne mace,' has been
sentenced to be broken upon the wheel.
KlLLER.—=.lampoi K. Cook, a
highly respectable citizen of Columbus,
Georgia, 'tikes killed on the 22d inst.,
by being dashed 'out of his carriage
against a tree.' . • .
3568 3235 63
(pFficia..)
President, 1840. Governor . , 1844.
160811
-- - - -- Arrival Of the -Acadia,
~.. The steamer Acadia has at len g th
...' • , ‘s .
-—, • ,
riven.. She left Liverpool on
, the{hist:, and arrived at i
Boston a
o'clock ,
on • Sunday ' afternoo. 4
have, through.the attention of file
i;
Adams & Co's Express agent, a
of ,Wilmer &Shiniest; European T'.'
up to the day of sailing. '
The intelligence 1 appears to
little general interest, , if we nee ,
rumor of a treaty having been net ,
ted by'the -Atherton, minister wit h
Chinese, said to be 'of a most ad,
geoub character.
~
Stocks sand Securities were i see
lag in England. Particularly A' tl i
calfstOcke Were lop tied for b y ' •
eat %
I bite forinvestitent.
.r
,
There was a de4ession in the
ton 'market, 'but noactual decline.
Rumored Treaty Uyith Brazil...,
more have been current for mune d
that a new treaty has been recently
tered into - between Brazil and the 1
tish. Government. Nothing 046
known as , the- terms,!and in the lb w ,
of definite information, speculation
been very rife,. I •
Dreadful loss of lite near Sunder!,
.—Accounts Um Snderland giv e
account of in explo ion in a coal pi
Haswell colliery, abut ten miles I
Sunderland, which as caused the
.. 1
struction of - ninety-six human bent
I t i s said, that at the time of the accid
there were , a hundred persons in
pit and that only, three or four ,
been saved. 1I: -
The Queen's, ivisit to Scotl„ ,
Since our last the ( Queen _ has bu s
joying, in rude heblih, the pleasure s
her mountain read n ee in thelli
lands of. Scotland . 'l he splendid us
ry, the bracing air, the invigorating
ereise, and the ear ly rising at B
Athol, can be traced, we are told
the sturdy chroniclers , for the d
press,-in her Majesty's pepen and
of her consort. The Avowal-40pm
went is marked and„ palpable. E.
movement she has made in her rota
tic retirement appears not only to h
been witnessed, but minutely record
by the prying and -indefatigable m
hers of the ."fourth escape:" Ti
accounts, of' her personal habits
creditable to the tastes and feelings
the woman and the sovereign. Ind.
the facility with which she can dir
herself of the stiffness and trammels
royalty. appears to have won thell
of the unsophisticated people amts
whom she has been thrown.
In exploring the scenes• in theft:
lands, frequent opportunities hitt
curred' for, eliciting traits of oh
that the atmosphere of a courtorith
accompanying pageantry, could
have drawn forth ; and, in all th.
the good humor, the kindly feeling,
self•possession,and the practical slut
ness of the 'young.and buoyant fem
appear to more adv'antage than even
glare and splendor of the sovereign.
No crowned head of recent days
shown• • the same satisfaction in be ,
at home amongst the people, and
result is that the feeling is reciproca
for while there is no sacrifice, no d .
inution of dignity, on the one
there is an increased amount of res ,
and attachment on the other. But
Queen's doings in the north have
escaped observation in London.
cause she attended the Fig of Scot)
on two succeeding Sabbaths, has b
attacked with, some acrimony by a d
servative paper—the Morning Pos
that represents the feelings and in
eats of the exclusively aristocratic
tion of society. Whether to tile
cavilior to" prevent a repetition of so
annoyance to which she was EAt`
on her second attendance at the
church of Blair Athol, we know
but. her devotions, on the third San ,
.were confined to the walls, ,it is s
oCthe Castle, and the' service was
of the Church of England.
america and China.—The
prominent featine in the intetlige
from China is. that a .treaty had
concluded between the United,S
and the Celestial Empire, based,
the same principle as dictated that
tween England and China—in
America will enjoy all Alie advan ,
which Great Britain, by her arms ,
cured, after an immense outlaw of bl
and treasure. This can hardly hi
be gratifying in America. Every
interested in the United States, will
delighted at the result. The com ,
nication between the United Soo
China, will doubtless, from Mist
forward, be more direct and continu
and the success which has acconopri
American diplomacy, must stir
our
. transatlantic neighbors to fret
ergy, and,. necessarily, to future Se
mews. The substance of this:
has been received, we ought tor
through the medium of a private
to which we have had access.
.4 's Leg amputated while
Mesmeric State.—Last week, 2
who was affected with a surellio
her knee, had her leg taken
surgeon while in a mesmericg ee
There is no icoubt about the fact.
surgeons were present•=oli e °P er
one assisted, and one watched the
They all Ame as to the fart, bill
of them assert that she sotleted
as there- were twitchings of the n'
&c. She. , herself, is imq,en sciv
having sufrereil any pain.
IREIdANDe.•.• The, Great rapea l
ql" to ( r COrniell and the otilo
0