JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN Thursday, August 29, 1S50. FOR CANAL COMxUlSSIONER, JOSHUA DUNGAK, OF BUCKS COUNTY. FOR AUDITOR GENERAL, HENRY W. SNYDER, I OF UNION COUNTY. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, JOSEPH G. HENDERSON, OF WASHINGTON COUNTY When the Wicked Rule, the People ITJourat. The law prohibiting the circulation of small notes went into operation on the 21st inst. The following article upon the subject, which we copy from the Susquenana Register, of the 22d inst. we commend to the attention of our readers. "' . Previous to the existence of this law, or rather enactment, no man in Pennsylvania or out of it was obliged to take a bank note, a bushel of potatoes, a pound of butter, or in fact any thing else but the hard, precious specie, in payment for labor or ser vices performed, a note, or for any demand what ever, unless he of his own free will chose to do so. A man could woik for his fe'low, or trade with his merchant with a perfect freedom ; taking in pay ment his note, a batik note, the specie, or anything else as the parties could agree ; enjoying all those rights and liberties guaranteed and secured by con stitutions and laws, and which the declaration of Independence says are inalienable. Where then the necessity of a change 1 Not a petition for the law entered the capitol ; the Gov ernor told the Legislature, the previous similar law was not obeyed and it was very impolitic to have statutes that popular sentiment disapproved. The fact is, Locofoism, that mock guardian of the rights and liberties of the "dear people," which al- 07-We are informed there will be preaching wiihrnfinlarPnvihiBhnninpH9A,nnHnpnpnn. on the Camp Giound, (on the Island belonging to Accustomed to straddle the people's back and ride Franklin Starbird, Esq., near this place,) on Sun- them in harness in party discipline, it must also dav next, at 10 a. m. and 3 p. m.. and that there on the spur and leading strings in legislation ,,;n h or; ,h0 M.hJc, Tr.! The kree musl bow, and the rights of freemen " w" " 1 r yield to the demands of patent Democracy unurcii on aaDDaw morning. But we have houe. Repeal is soundimr the leneth and breadth of the State. Another Legislature they will have, in this Borough, full houses. 07" Rev. Dr. Castle, Rev. Robert Gerry, and cannot sit out its session without striking the odi- Rev. Mr. Hurn, of Philadelphia : also Rev. John ous enactment from the statute book ; and we a p u nr cmnr, roi,r r,A nth.r Aia. mucn misiaKe n u win not oe us nisi act. me ... . . , ,, ,. , ,. p . . Supreme Court however may do the work for them uubu.9i.cu m...3lri3 u, u.c MuV. juupa, jf s0 we shall like it the better. The voice which Church, are expected to be in attendance at the demands this is not the voice of faction, but of the Champ Meeting to be held near this place, next people not of violent excitement, but of dispas- vppL- sionate reason it is the voice ol the btate. He who would represent that dissatistaction is con i- - f t . 1 .i S tinnt F'Ttiiikitimis nea 10 'ne nortnern counueB aione, euner is ig , ,,. , ...... , . .i j norant or means to deceive. 'Our exchanges bear e can ,ne auenuon oi our reaaers 10 me aa- lestjmony 0 lhe fact . and some even of fa dem. verusemenioi mese exnioiuons, l ne periorman- 0Cratic papers not content to be silent, are de ces will consist of a great variety ol dialogues and nouncin? the law in no measured terms. If the single pieces; besides which, the Brass Band will reader wishes to see what democratic journals say . ri, p. u u of it, we refer him to the Tioga Banner, and a be in attendance. 1 he rupils have taken much ;. , r.i, .,.,u-.. ' practical, common sense view ol the subject in an pains to make tne entertainment as pleasing as arljcie in the last Democrat signed "Citizen." possible to their parents and friends. We learn It is in sentiment the same as that your hear from that the exhibitions of this kind, in the Institutions e mouths of almost every democrat in the coun- formerly under the charge of Mr. Post, gave oen- . u .u . n t l , a a J b fa b YVe are told that Gov. Johntson recommended era! satisfaction: and operating as they do, as in- the law in his annual message. A greater false- centives for scholars to study and excel, we trust hood never vap,invented. So far from advising its passage hejjRjgested the expediency of repeal ing a similar law then in existence. The Gov- ornnr cave mt r t i .- i . 1 i j ine iiassacnuseus eiecuon nas lerminaiea in The Iaws jntended l0 prevent the circulation the election of but one member Elliot (Whig,) in of notes of a less denomination than five dollars, the 1st district. In the other two, the 3d and 4th, are practically disreparded by the citizens. In a there is no choice. This is the tenth unsuccess- government founded on popular opinion, experi ence would teach tne impolicy ol continuing in force, statutory provisions which are generally in operative. The violation, with impunity, of laws however unimportant, will lead to a disregard of The Marshal of Massachusetts has completed others, indispensable to the security of Society. the census of that State, and it is said that the in- The fact is, as any one can see by reading his crease in the population in the last ten years has message, the Governor thought it better to allow . . . .. j;,. . our own banks, over which the laws of our State been at least a quarter of a million. This is an had contto t0 issue smau noleSj and lhey possesa- unexampled rate of progress for an old State, and ing a more uniform value through the Stale would affords eood evidence of the prosperity of that be safer and better currency, and supersede the great manufacturing Commonwealth. useA 0 ,orc.n nol.es- " no QOUm.8 11 .f,01 one- 'vuuuuU lia uiciiua aic auuiui d iiiuuci tuna Over twelve hundred persons have recently ana oeseeenmg tne people to g ve it a support as been thrown out of employment at Allegheny . op- disasiouslv tcalIb f its reDeaL ,ve lhfnk lhe posite Pittsburgh, by.tlie stoppage ofsix of the most people will spare them the humiliation of repeal extensive cotton factories of that place. This is ing their own acts. The members of the Leeisla- owing to the enormous quantity of imported goods tnre had ,lh,e experience of other States before h..i ,-n,n ti,a mn,b0, lhem; and they well know the opinion of the peo ple of their own ; but alike regardless of all past experience and public sentiment, they persisted to ful tiial to elect a Congressman in the fourih dis trict. A Voice from Home. A Locofoco meeting of Crawford county, Pa., Which is the place of residence of J. Porter Braw tey, the Locofoco candidate for Surveyor Gener al, recently passed the following resolutions. They hardly need comment. Resolved, That the Democratic party of Craw ford county have heard of the nomination, by the Williarnsport Convention, of J. Porter Brawley, of this county, for the office of Surveyor General, with feellinga of the most profound regret and in mass meeting assembled on the anniversary of, the day that gave birth to a nation of freemen, declare that we will not vote for him. Resolved, That this man's nomination has been urged in a vindictive spirit, and procured by a system of management, upon the part of a low set of political cut throats, in this Congressional district, who glory in defeating the wishes of the party in this county, who are ready to embrace any "black leg," practically and politically, whom they can use for disorganization in high places, and who will talk Indian to procure for them plun der. Resolved, That we will go into the convention and make one more effort to save Crawford from going into a permanent minority, and we appeal to our friends to send their best men. If that con vention attempts to endorse Brawley, we will not be held accountable for the result in October. Resolved, That under the distatorship of James E. McFarlaud, the Democratic party can never Arrival ol the Etiropa at Halifax- ONE WEEK LATER FROM EUROPE. The steamship Eurupa arrived at half-past ten on the 19th inst. with news from Liverpool to' the llth. The cotton market has been quiet during the week, and all American descriptions below fair, have reduced one-eighth. Total sales, 59,000 bales, of which speculators have taken 27,000 and exporters about 1,000 bales. Flour and Corn Gardiner & Co's., Circular, of Aug. 9th, says : " The weather has been showery and variable, retarding harvest operations. Along with this, we have large arrivals of wheat, from the North of Europe. The natural upward ten dency thus caused on the one hand, has been counterbalanced on the other, and prices remain pretty nearly as before for wheat and flour. Enolxnd. The question relative to Baron Rothschild's taking his seat in the House of Com mons, has been postponed till next session, when Ministers are to introduce a new bill upon the sub ject. Harvest operations have commenced, and the crops promise extremely well. France. 1 he corn harvest is now about halt over, and it is said will not be so plentiful as was expected. Wednesday. A terrible storm broke over Paris to-day, and did great damage. The rain fell in such torrents that for an hour the streets were im passable. The heavens were completely obscur ed, and in some houses candles were lighted. Denmark and the Duchies. A protocal, which resognizes substantially all the leading views of JJj3 When Boots first came into fashion, a pair was presented to a worthy mayor in some part of England. He examined them atten tively, and concluded they were a new kind of banket. Accordingly, when he went to church ihe next Sunday, he slung one round his neck, and put hi prayer book into it. His wife used the other to bring home hej market ing in. triumph. Had he represented public sentiment the Danish Government, was signed in London on , , . r i ii . Saturday, by nearly every foreign Minister at the ... j , , rjourl of St. James. A telegraphic despatch da- have been nominated ; but in order to gratify a ted Hamburg, Aug. 7, ttates that Gen. Willesen heart naturallv malignant and constitutionally sel- has declared that he will hold the Danish Provm fish, this heavv calamity had fallen uoon the ?. for whatever may happen to those of the , , . Schleswig-Holstein party. ISTo change had taken Democratic party ; the continued eulogy in the piace in ,lie position of the armies Gen. Wille organ of men known by the whole cuonty to be sen has issued another proclamation, praising his corrupt, and the constant defamation of those troops, and declaring that they cannot be driven whom he can in no other wav whfn. is calculated from the soil of Schlewig, except by a second and t mi j i e . third battle, and they will be bloodier than the to chill and repulse from active service our most Tne'Danisll f(Jce is estimaled at 42000 l0 nonest democrats and useiui partizan. 44,000. The ardor for the Holetein cause is said Resolved, That any man who has barely es- to be abated, at and near Plamburg. caDed conviction, and that totally UDon technical Advices from Altonia, of the 5th, state that a col j : , .r :i.: r.i i Iision between the Danish and Holstein armies , , , took place on r nday, near Mohlde, which resulted Hon laws, to procure lor nimseit an election to a jn the defeat of the Danes, with inconsiderable lucrative office, at the expense of one honestly loss on either side. Little doubt exists among nominated and running upon the same ticket, and well informed parties, that higher powers will be f : . r j i . , i invoivea in me aajusimeni oi mis aispuie, oeiore Inr ennsnir no with n Ipflprnl pniinr to spll. nnrlpr I ... r I r 6 anything decisive or satisfactory will be done. a wriuen comraci, eraocrauc patronage, years in Should diplomacy not succeed, should Gen. Wil- advance, if he gets knocked down by a decent lesen be victorious in the next battle, and recross man. should take it as a comnliment rather than the Jkyder, Russia and England will piobably in otherwise ; and the Democratic party, in order to !"fer,er :, n? sl)ul lheDafles and RU8h ' . into Holstein, the Prussians and the Hanoverians be successful, must not, through their organ, be wiu be likev to altack lhem. Should it so occur. made a party to his personal fights. Should they that either Russia or England shall be compelled not disown them, thev too will be whiooed. to interfere, there is reason to apprehend a revolu Resolved, That we respectfully, yet earnestly uon. ln erny, wmcn tne present ruiers may oe demand an insertion ol our grievances in tne uem Singular Phenomenon. On Friday afternoon last, in common with a number of our fellow townsmen, our atten tion was directed to a collection of small worms, which had made their appearence in countless numbers in a field belonging to Mr. Levi Wood ring, below the " old Jordan bridge," at this place. They were of the caterpillar species, black color, and varied from thtee-fourtha loan inch and a half in Iengih. The most singular thing connected with their appearence was the fact that they were only seen in this one field in the vicinity, and there in such myriads as to defy any attempt to count them. The whole surface was literally covered with them and in walking over the field it was impossible to step without crushing large numbers beneath the feet. Where did these worms come from ; and what caused their simultaneous appearence at this spot ? were questions universally asked. The field alluded to is one that was completely flooded by the high water during the late fresh et. Will some ol our learned naturalists inform the public whether the existence of the worms has any connexion with this event ? It is a subject well worthy iheir investigation. Al lentown Democrat . ocratic papers of the county. If they continue to exercise a censorship over our voices, they shall not over our votes ; and if the Democratic conven tion which shall assemble in August, will not con demn the wrong inflicted upon us by our common Danville Tragedy. Considerable excitement prevailed in Danville last week, in consequence of the death of a young and beautiful girl, named Miss Smith, from Lu zerne county. Circumstances that have since been brought to light give rise to very dark suspi- leaders, we will condemn them ourselves at the cions of foul play somewhere. Her death bed dis brought into the market. The New York Tribune gives some particulars j jjs adoption of a gambling case at Saratoga. The first story Viewing the subject in all its aspects which we was that a gentleman of the Commercial Empori- are capable of, we can come to but one conclusion, urn lost the large sum of $100,000 in a single night. and lhaul is' lhe, legislature has endeavored lo force . . . , , . f upon the people a measure they had condemned, It is now said the loss was nearer $200,000 than aJd under a mllder form wouid not regard-thus $100,000, and it 13 staled by some as exceeding intending, by fines and imprisonment, to coerce the former sum. He offered to settle by paying them to submission. If this is not Tyranny we each of the two winners $5,000 down, and giving have not ri8hl conceptions of the-meaning of the his notes for $50,000. This they refused, and af- leIr ousef we mend t0 offer ro resistance t0 ter some discussion it was finally agreed to leave the law, or in any way obstruct its execution. It the . matter to the arbitration of a furuth parly, who is a bantling of the Locofocos and as such we decided that $2,000 was as much as any gentle- ruea.n they shall father it. We join issue upon its . , . . . i . ... , merits in the approaching contest. We unfurl the man had a right to lose at one sitting, and that the banner Qf rep and sh fighl under it for the winners, therefore, were each entitled to no more rjghts and liberties of the people. If the prece than that sum. The victim immediately forked dent or principle becomes established in the leg over the amount, well content, no doubt to escape islation of our State that a man shall not exchange ruin so easily. I . r . ... J I invocmn chnrl nl 9 Inln vnrranHar . onH Ina iHaa flint u'P finrmcrlv irirlitlnorl fhot tha nonnlo horl 421Ar Crnlf nmiti n tfaniliiltniiB I . " s rJghts, is but a phantom, a shadow, an illusion. ilARRISBURG, AUgSt 25. The hearing of an habeas corpus case of three A Kind Husband and Good Provider. Alex negroes, brought on a charge of horse stealing, oc- ander Vroman, of Duram, N. Y. was committed to cupied the attention of the court the entire day, lne Catskill jail last week for attempting to poison and a decision was rendered this morning, it ap- his wife. He had dug her grave in his cellar, and peared in evidence that the negroes are runaway slaves, who stole the horses to effect their escape with. The Court derided this morning that the stealing of a horse by a slave to make his escape with, was not a criminal offence under the law for reclaiming fugitive slaves, and ordered that the prisoners be discharged. About a dozen men from Winchester, Va. assembled in front of the prison, where a large number of whites and blacks of this place had previously assembled. On the negroes being released, the Virginians attempted to arrest and hand-cuff them, when a general riot ensued. One of the slaves effected his escape, pelted with stones and clubs. The other two their masters and friends succeeded in arresting and hand cuffing despite the desperate resistance made by the bystanders. Several negroes were stabbed and otherwise wounded. The owners of the slaves were slightly injured. The Court immediately issued warrants for the arrest of the owners and all engaged in the affray, on the charge of assault and battery, with intent to incite a riot. The slaves and their mas ters are now in jail, and a number of arrests have since been made, which the Court is now engaged in disposing of. The Court also ordered a posse to be immedi ately employed to disperse, at all hazard, the mob, as&mbled in front of the. jail, which they succeed ed in doing without much resistance. The town at present, Jias comparatively resumed its quietness Ballot box. The Meadville (Crawford county) Gazette, in noticing the above proceedings, says " Well may the Democracy of other portions of the State fall back and repudiate a candidate who is repudiated by those who know him best ! closures caused the arrest of a lawyer named Ran kin, and Willaim H. Crandall, a physician of the town in which she formerly lived. Crandall has been committed to the Bloomsburg jail. New Scientific Developments. Before the American Scientific Association, " If the Whigs of Washington county or any now in session at New Haven, Prof. Loomis. respectable portion of them, had, in county and of IMew York, late Professor of Natural Phi township meetings, denounced the nomination of Josophy, at Princeton College, delivered an Joseph Henderson, the WhiV candidate for Sur- mieresung lecture on jLiectrici-y, anu maae Mayor Barker, of Pnihburg. is a whole team. He was elected while in jail, ha car ried on a warm crusade against the rum hhop ever since he ha been in office ; abated all sorts of nuisance ; and a week or ten days ago arrested the Sheriff of Allegheny county, for not proceeding in a certain case aa his Honor desired. His last feat caps the climax of offi cial authority, being nothing less than the ar rest of the Catholic Bishop, Rev. iMr. O'Con nor, for an offensive odor arising from the sew er of Mercy Hopi'al, of which the Rev. Bish op is the head. His honor fined tho BUhop 820' and ordered him to be sent to jail if ho did not pay ii. We need not say that ihe mon ey was speedily forthcoming. veyor General, as the democrats of this county have the nomination of Mr. Brawley, we would either haul down his name from the head of our columns or abdicate our position as an editor. several new developments on the subject He says many houses are highly charged with the fluid, so much so as under favorable circum stances to give very sensible shocks. He gives an instance of a little girl who ran away, A wealthy banker of Cincinnati loetin the street jn that city, a few days ago, a pocket book- con taining from two to three "thousand dollars. A small Boy picked it up, arid resjor it to the own er, Wfien tha'banker drew out his purse and hand-' ed him fifty centshe did. was engaged in making her coffin, in which he compelled her to assist him. Wanting a board which was in the chamber, he sent her for it, when she escaped to a neighbor's house and entered her complaint. A Strange Metamorphosis. The Erening Post says that Barnum, whose peculiar abilities as a curiosity hunter, has gained for him a world-wide notoriety, has pro cured one of the strangest cases of metamor phosis ever presented for public exhibition- It is that of a colored man, who is undergoing a complete change of color, produced, accor ding to his own statement, by ihe outward ap plication of the juice extracted from a weed, the name of which he will not disclose. It appears that while a slave in the south, he dis covered this weed, and on further investigation found that it possessed the peculiar property of completely changing the color of his skm from black to white. When applied to any part of the body it causes much pain, and gives the flesh a scaly appearence; so says the man himself. His arms, legs, and portions of his face and neck are of a pure, natural white, presenting no per ceptible difference in appearence to the skin of a white man. fie will not teveal the name of his master or what part of the sojth he made his escape from, alleging as a reason that he is liable, ii discovered, to be retaken and carried back into blavery. The story he tells of him self is strange, and, if true, be should receive the attention of the scientific. He exnects to be completely changed in color in the cnursa of a year. 14 The organs, in this county, however, still bear qujt0 frightned, on touching the door handle of aloft the tatered flag of their damaged candidate one of these ElectVical dwellings. Sparks may in silence daring neither to defend his reputation, be drawn from various articles of furniture, and or altackthose of their party who have publicly sometimes considerable shocks received, on abandoned his standard. The county meeting, strangers shaking hands with the inmates of held in this place prior to the nomination, abjured tne house. If we were in the punning humor, him as destitute of " moral and political worth and we would add thai this phenomenon is often competency," and instructed their delegates to produced wnhout .he agency of Electricity- vote for another. At the mass meeting held at J1!" ffessor accounts for these freaks of the n ... . . , , , , fluid from the friction of the feet on the carpet, Conneautville on the 4th ult., the democracy sol- ann.,m.,.t,. ...: . r . i , , ' , r , . accumulated under circumstances of partial m- emnly affirm that they have heard of the nomi- suialion professor Olmstead of Yale, has nation of J. Porter Brawley with profound regret," discovered some singular results from the mix- and declare that they "will not vote for him." ture of lard and rosin. The best proportions Hundreds of signatures, in support of these senti- for combination are lard 3 parts, rosin 1 part, ments, have been published. This is all done by by weight The lard acquires an additional men who have hitherto been the most active, and fluidity, and loses its acidifying properties, formed the most vigorous portion of the democracy which corrode the metals, copper aud bras, for in this county. Who will dare deny this ? If it example. It may be used with equai advan is not so, why have not Mr. Brawley's fiiends, if in Panting rust on stoves and stove- he has any, shown publicly the spurious charac- P'f68.' &nd lh" aM1C,eB ?fJh ,amI8 .ma,erifj- uutumg oudji is iihjmuvou vy ii, auu us appii The-parents of a daughter born on the Fourth &y Rnd whose former daughters had ex hausted the vocabulary of female names, bad the " baby" named" Ann ao Folith. ter of the democracy who oppose him ? Why have the presses here maintained a studied silence, in the midst of this open and undisguised opposition in their own ranks ? The reason i3 too obvious. The enemies of Mr. Brawley are too ffcrfierous too powerful too active ! They are a formida ble host who haTe determined to hurl to obscurity the would-be-Surveyor General and his friends. " Such is the state of our political atmosphere in Crawford county and such, to a greater or less extent is the state of feeling in the whole Northwestern portion of the State. If all who de sire that " honesty, capacity, and moral worth" shall constitute the passports to office, will but do their duty, Joseph Henderson, of Washington county, will be elected by an overwhelming major ity Curing Facts. A very fine young horse, belonging to Mr. Meyers, living on the Grey's Ferry Road, week before last was missed from his pasture, on the bank of the Schuylkill, below the Arsenal. It was supposed the horse was stolen, and the owner offered $10 for his return. A woman passing along the ri er on Thusday last, a week after the occurrence, heard a horse winnow, and looking down a well twenty feel deep, which had been used as an ice-house, discov ered the horse landing at t tie boitom, with his head leaning against the aide of the well. The lop of the well had been covered with boards, which have been decayed, gave way beneath ihe weight of the horse as he trod upon it. It sustained scarcely any injury by the fall : and an inclined way: having been dug in the side of the well, the horse came out, suffering on!y: Irom a week s confinement in the 'well without either food or drink -Phil. Ledger, Vote yorself a Farm. It is said that there are thousands of acred of fine land in ihe State of Tennessee, beauti fully located, well watered and heavilycorored with timber which can be had at from 30 to 40 cents per acre. At such prices there is scarce ly any one but ran vole themselves a good farm, without ihe trouble of attaching them selves to any party, or blustering about the rights of every man to hi portion of the soil. The fact is, those who advocate the agrarian system of seizing any portion of the land they choose to fancy, and claim the ownership there of because they fancy it, are usually too lazy to work. They want Congress to pass an act to give them land, free gratis, and then they will want another act passed to have it tilled for them. If thousands of acres of soil remains unemployed in such a Slate as Tennessee for want of purchasers at 25 cents an acre, docs any body suppose that ii would be employed if it were given away ? No, not an acre. Tennessee is a Slave S'tate, and hence the low price of its lands. The eastern part of the slate is raountaneotis, but the western part is level, and very productive. Two large rivers, the Cumberland and the Tennessee, pass through the State, smaller branches extending in every direction. Tennessee contains an a rea of over 40,000 square miles neatly the' same size as the Stae of New York. The average value of all ihe lands, city grounds; included, in the State of South Caro lina, is stated to be only 69 cents. N. York Svn. A Good Appetite. 44 My dear," said an affectionate wife to her husband, who had been sick for several days, 44 when you were well, ynu were in the habit of eating twelve apple-dumplings now that you are sick how many shall 1 make you ?" 44 Well," replied the husband, 44 I reckon you may make eleven to-day ; but be particular and make them a Utile larger than usual." The wife obeyed. When the husband had eaten eleven, with the expectation of half a one, his little son, a lad of home six summer, came up to him and said ,4 Daddy, give me a little piece." 44 Go away, sonny," replied the father, 44 your poor dad's sick." cation renders leather water-proof. Professor 0 failed in his experiments to improve the il luminating power of lard lamps, by a similar mixture, but hopes the difficulties he encoun tered may yet be overcome. The discovery is considered an important one, and productive of many practical advantages. Congressional Wit. This article is of such rare development it should be well preserved, when it does appear. Th following, we think, will pass : 44 During the discussion on mileage in the House last week, Mr. Cobb, of Alabama, sug gested that it be computed by a Bee-Wne. Mr. Chandler, of Philadelphia, objectod, aa he re garded it a hum-bug. Apples on a Grape-Vine The Cumber land (Md.) Civilian mentions a case of fruit growing, similar to that of our friend Mr. Nice, of this Borough. It occurs in the garden of Mr. Hoffman, of that place. There are two diatinct and well formed Apples growing upon a grape-vine as healthy as other young apples upon a tree in the immediate vicinity of the Vine. There is a fellow in Albany, who has great passion for singing. He was found asleep a few nights since under a stoop. On being roused up, he said be was only sleeping out to catch a little cold that ho might be belter able to sing bass. 44 None but the brave deserve the fair," is a true maxim, well' exemplified in arecent caset n Albany : one of the Justiceo united Mr. WmV Bold to Misa Sarah Fair. 44 Smart weed," which grows in abundanc by the road side, and along the margin of ditch es, clay pits, &c, is said to be worth $5 per hundred fur a stock of cattle, if cut and well cured when in bloom. One lb. per week to a cow, ox, or horse, when up to hay, will keep their bowels from constipation, and their hide loose. It is alio said to bo a sure remedy for choltc, in which case it is to be steeped and drank as any other herb tea. .HARRIED, On the 26th inst., by the Rev. M. H. Sisty, Mr. Robert S. Demund, of Warren county, N. J. and Miss Mary Ann Wise, of Lower Smithfield, Mon roe county, Pa. On the 26th inst., by Daniel Jayne, Esq. Mr. Joseph Swartwood. of Hamilton township, and Mis3 Mary Ann McNeley, of Middle Smithfield. JICI, In Lower Smithfield township, on the 26th int. Mr. John Myers, aged abQUt 72 years. To the Voters of Monroe county. Friends and Fellow Citizens:"-Through the solicitations of many of you, I am induced to offer myself as a candidate for the office of COUNTY COMMISSIONER, , at the ensuing general election. Should ,y.oijw deem my capacity and claims to ihe office wor-. thy by of your suffrages, my most anxious object nd unceasing efforts shall be to merit y6i app robation, by a prompt, faithful and imMrti discharge of its duties. gm JACOB SPRAGLEf Hamilton, August 29, 1850. '' 'iw tf-LjANK MORTGAGES T For sale at this Offip.o, - mj
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