RBPHBlilCAlScE ' ' -.h i.rai- ? -THE. WHOLE ART OFG.RNMET aONSfstKl'HE ART, "'OF BEING- HONEST, JEFFERSON . 't'tf !- Sis R ft- VOL. 12. 'STROUDSBURG, .MONROE COUNTY, FA, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1852. No 19. Published by Theodore Schocli TERMS Two dollars per annnum in advance Tuo dollars and a quarter, half vearly and if not paid be tore the end of Uic yearTwo dollars and a half. Those who receive their papers by a carrier orstage drivers e.nploycd by the proprietor, will be charged 3" 1-2 eents, per year, extra. N'o papers ditconlinucd until all Arrearages are paid, xrtept at thc option of the Editor. t&' Advertisements not exceeding one square (six teen lines) mil be inserted three weeks foronedollar. and twenty-fire :fiiits: for every subsequent insertion. me un.irge ior one auu inree mseriiuiia A liberal dtscouhl made to yearly advertisers. p? All letters addressed to the Editor must be.post paiil. i , " JOB PRINTING. Hiring a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, wc are prepared to executccvcry description of Cards, Circulirs, Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts. Justif.es. Legal and other Blanks, Phamphlets, fcc. printed with neatness and despatch, on leasonable trms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE .fcffcr.otiiau Rcpnblicati. Jnry tijl, February Term 152. GRAND JUROTS SI. Smithfield, Simeon Schoonover. Smithfield, Samuel Dcitrich, Henry Dei trich. Hamilton, Daniel Heller, George Larew. Chesnuthill, James Smith, Charles II Hea ny, Peter S Altcmose Paradise, Andrew L Storm Stroud, Aaron Crosdale, William Smiley, Peter Keller, Jacob Loder, Philip Shafer Polk, Andrew Serfoss, George Gorshimcr Pocono, Robert Mount, Thomas McElha-j ney Ross, Peter Jones Price, Jacob Miller, William Price Jackson John Winters, Michael Miesner Coolbaugh, John Vliet PETIT JURORS. Stroud, George Drake, jr.. Wm Clemens, John S Vanvliet, William Carey, John Mai- Tin, Olis B Gordon, Edward Brown in, Ulis li uordon, riUwara urown Cheshuthill,GeorgeEverett,CharlesShupp, Patrick Daily Smithfield, John Frutchey, Luke Staples, JSm&er Snyder, Joseph IIinklef I Adam Kester. George K SI utter, John Dreher, . 1 .l Tf, I M. Smithfield, Jacob Angle, Henry Over- "TSlk."PeSr S HawiT i Ross, David Smith, Joseph Altemose, vid Gower, Reuben Stevers, Wm. Smith j Price, Charles I'rice, (Eleazer's son) Coolbaugh, George Jvciple, llirara Warner j Charles Transue ' a ' Tobyhanna, Philip Abbot Pocono, Matthias Miller TRIAL LIST FEBRUARY TERM. Diebler v Price township Merwine &. Walp v Greesweig Trainer v Teel Felker v Woodling Tayler to the use of Mosteller v Hoffman Getz et al v Getz Crook to the use of Hueton a Durling Long v Kintz & Dietrich Jonas Greensweig v Joseph Greensweig et al Quigley v Albert Merwine &. Walp v Greensweig Clark v Kemmerer et al Young v School 'Directors of Hamilton tp. Kreege & Correll v Charles Hawk Merwine v Keller Keifer r Heaney et al ARGUMENT LIST. Account of Michael Brown Account of Simeon Schoonover Schoonover v Schoonover King v Teel Hull et al n Miller et al Inquisition on Timothy Vanwhy' estate Sox v Buskirk Yetter v Quijjley et al Road in Stroudsburg and Stroud township REGISTER'S NOTICE.; WOTICE is hereby given to all legatees j Theue wers 2,550 marriages in Cincin 1 and other persons interested in the nti) during 1851. estates of the respective decedents and mi- j ' ' ; nors, that the administration accounts of., The Late storm at Baton Rouge, La,-, de the following estates have been filed in 8troyed S100000 worth of property, the office of thc Register of Monroe coun- j ty, and will be presented for confirmation ' and allowance to the Orphans' Court to ue muu. ai vSirouasDurg, in una ior me a- of February next, at 1 o'clock, P. M. J A i r ti tt , J T .account oi jonn nuston ana j.saac t-.i. i? L i . . -ii of Abraham Marsh, senior, late of Hamil- ' trm omnoMr JonooA i First and final account of Daniel Kel- ler, administrator de bonis non of the es- J tate of Abraham Shafer, late of Ghesnut till township, deceased. First account of F.E. Grattan, adminis trator of the estate of Matthew G. Grat tan, late of Middle Smithfield township, t deceased. SAMUEL REES, jr., Register. Register's Office Stroudsburg, January 29, 1852. X vuuuut Ullll, ln the mailer of the account of MirhsLel "'cisner. aammisiraior oi me Estate olMzra Ba,as, deceased. December-27th, 1851, the '.urn . m uun appoint air. iJarrv. Auditor to resell e i. - the account and make distribution if neres- sarv and report the facts to ihe next Court. 1U rrt - . uC unupujiwuecj Wju auend to UietJuliea n a r M j mi . k Abraham & Simon Barry, in RtmitrloUiim JOB . 'WORK Natlv execute aV this fficCL ' in , y. 1 1 , of fbruar-. 1852, at their removal, and nolcssdecisive-in fa-,u" 0 o i clock A. M., when and where all those , vor of t : w-' fn:, nrefGrflnceito; Qnnnda re. "eled f WSrnf .V !?? PWr' i or the West Indies . ' - - . i tivation, and of thc most . auivviaiu 'jj.-iniv i , ziuauor. ... January 22, 1852. - ! ' ' preserving and restoring : : i 1 JI 1 The OW Man to lias Wife. We are growing very-old, Kate ! I feel it every day ; The hair upon our temples now, . . Is growing thin and gray. Wejare not as. we were, Kate?; And yet our. hearts are young, As. when we roved the sunny chills; And. flow'ry dells among. We arc growing very oldj ilvate,; But it is not age of heart; Though speedily the hour comes on, When thou and I must part. When thou and I must part, Kate, As we have ne'er before, Beside our cottage hearth to meet, With words of love no more. But we're growing very old, Kate, And the parting won't be long, 'Till we meet within a better home, Amid yon heavenly throng ; 'Till we sing the song together, Kate, The angels sing above ; Where ne'er the fear of parting takes The blessedness for love. Keeping Secrets. Mr. Ekscelle's wife was always scolding ll,m for presuming to doubt that a woman ; could keep a secret. He returned home one j night about cloven -o'clock, and Mrs- E. ob-1 served mat ne was very dejected and started ; at eveiy footstep. His actions attracted the attention of his wife, who asked him what ailed him 1 "Nothing," said he gruffly, "go to bed." " Why, what can ail you, Mr. E.! You i, , . .r .,,., , , .. Iook as had killed somebody." started, and turned pale ; Mrs. E entreated him to tell her what had happened. Jl T ZnLL iTJlul " " vu uuu " -u. Mr. E. hesitated a moment, and then said I En lorn niv it VV tfa I r..f .n KfU ...... I 1 ' ZL, x " i Da-1, ""a" aiu T M ie" ou anu ASa , Ul- 1 e word, x nave nad bad l"ck all day, and as I was returning home this evening-I can't go on. Enough, the body T ... , . . , . , " I did not mean to kill him, but I struck him is Liu I il:u nut; i!i 1 1 1 f f i m in T ri o tirvri I Mrs. E. was horrified, but said nothing. Mr. E. was silent, and next morning went out before J breakfast, and did not return. About an hour I aftewads Mrs. Gabble came in to see her dear j friend. "Oh, Mrs. G.," said Mrs. E. "you can't oh, dear me. J didn't mean to tell." "What is it. my dear" said Mrs. G., "tell your dear friend, won't you It shan't go any J further." " Well, don't tell anybody. Mr. E. has killed a man and buried him under the elm." "Good gracious!" said Mrs. G., as she took her departure, " who'd a thought it!" Towards night when Mr. E returned home he found a policeman with a warrant to ar- rest him for murdering eix men, and robbing 1 tw tt .i . . . them. He was taken to the magistrates of-' lice, but after having had a few moment's w . ui . i , , oued a constable to him, and whispered a few wordB in his ear. The constable soon return- I , . , ,, , , , . ... , ffl. nnn hp H tin n linnA Inn. I mtnnk m, U ! -i x ivruu, itiuuM nao inu ; body Mr. E. had killed and buried. Mrs,. E. never said a word after that about women keeping secrets. During the past vear, the, auctioneers in vw vnrir nsttr m sia nnn nn wLr .i estate. TlIE FOLLOWIKG Li.ES Written On an Cn-'nf rnW r ,,n,H .i,;t, r w, pnoavu ?roagh lhe Portlaf , Post Ooe the other dnV. mnW CorVA n C n hint tA nnrPAcnnnfiMin , ut, . ivwiiMpuuTOna w "' -1,c UD a w wpuiiujis w to pay lheir Postafi:e on the score of econo- Thc Post an extra gain has made, Because your last was not prepaid ; The same is true with this reply You've lost two cents, and so have I ! Death of Jaiucs G. Birtscy. James G. Birney, who was, in 1844, thecanndidato of the "Liberty Party" for President, died at Saginaw Mich., a wao loi-mur-. an uncompromising Abolitionist, and I an opponent of the Colonization scheme ; .butit is said that he has lately changed hie piowa anrl flint, fhoro is nnnr in nrnco t a xi.x xt : : ! lM:ai d"u luau 10"U,Y lJ'caa , """"- a pu.F y u, and which coutains-an address to the col-"- ihem mMo oiw ?orJc?vr rnaenna Jn fVjrnr nfl ie. hundred ca stswas parfofthe'fcafgd ofp'soilj and of procuring and- distributing seeds , avessel which' sailed 'from?rBostoh; weekbe-ond; fore last for.Califorhi. From the N. Y. Daily Times. Agriculture--! ts Importance to the Coimiinimly Commencing with the immortal Washing ton, many of our Presidents have recommen ded the formation, of an AgriculturafDepart ment of ciur Government, and as often has that part of the President's Message been re ferred to a Committee whojiaye.ne.verrepor ted a plan for its formation.. While the far- mers have been busvat home, earning and paying nine-tenths of the expenses of Govern a ment, the other- interests have beea busy in securing Government protection in various ways. The manufacturers, under the excuse of their wares being required for, the use of the Army and Navy have, had. various Commis sions organized, for expensive experiments for the settling of doubtful points of practice, and thus millions have been appropriated for the building of Steam Engines, Locomotives, Telescopes, Chronometers and a thousand other things said to be of general public util ity. Every orator in Congress has called Agriculture a noble art, the farmers compos ing more than four fifths.of the whole commu nity are said to be bone tmd sinew of the Re public, and yet the Agricultural Department has not been organised, but the farmers have been insuked by the placing the carc of'their great ;nterest. in thc hands of a s5n le CJerk in a ceilcr room of tho . tent 0ffirp. nm, lln. defthe charge of the Commissioner of Pat ents. While the governments of Europe have been busily engaged in fostering ".this no i. mm ltgaiumg it us science, em- ployi the best fw advancement Kin fn-t1' I. and doubling crops on old and apparently worn out Eoils, WB have continued Qn wUhout amcndmeIlt. untiI the farme of the Atlantic States have been driven west for fresh and UnimnOVGHshnf lnnrls nn1 trite fnn in iha face of thfi rnrt 1hnt whnrnvnr ,ha :'aA . . . 47 Ms culture have been adopted, the crops have readily been doubled. In some States individuals have done much to improve the modes of culture and to arrest ' the continuous waste of fertilising material uius in new Jersey, i'rolessor J.J. iMapes has turned his nttnnf?nn m tl, cMnt .i . t - a consulting agriculturist, has visited over two hundred farms, making analysis of the soils and advising proper modes of culture, a mendments, and founded on these analysis. The result has been that the products of these two hundred farms have been much increased . and it is the opinion of many who have atten ded his lectures and have availed themselves of his advice that he has increased the income of the State more than one hundred thousand dollars per annum. In all -parts of the country we find spirited individuals who have adopted improved meth ods, and thus we find occasional accounts of crops entirely above the average of thc neigh borhoods in which they are grown. One hundred bushels of shelled corn have been ,., - , j r ., raised by many farmers on soils which previ- t , ... ( wuw.j jjun, ii.ua mull vuLjrruuoiiuitj pur acre. (inu v rrnvn lace rnnn T,i,nnt, hnnhA n . , fifty-seven bushels of wheat have been raised to the acre, while the average crop of the o. , r at v T - . , w, , Ar u j . .bushels. Massachusetts does not raise grain ' fa""" enough for her own consumption, while a few of her farmers, by the use of improved pro cesses alone raise double the average crop per ! acre. j President Fillmore has again called the . attention of Congress to thc subject. The President says: " In my last annual communication to Con gress I recommended the establishment of an Agricultural Bureau, and I take thisocasion a2am t0 invoke your favorable consideration of the subiect. " Agriculture may justly be regarded as ' the threat interest of our nnonlo. Fnnr-fififiR nnr nntivn nnnnlnfinn nro nmnlnvp !n fl.o "... .. .. .... ' i. I I - ' cuiuvauon oi uieson.anu tne ranm cxnansion of our settlements over new territory, is daily . . . : adding to mose engaged in tliat vocation. addin? to those enffaped n that vocat on justjce and sound policy, therefore, alike re-J ! quire that the Government should use all the means authorized by the Constitution to pro-1 4, ; . . ' r mote the interests and he weltare pf that , important class of our-fellow citizens. And! yet it a. singular fact that, while the manu- I r : I i r..x t jaciunn ami commercial iiueresis nave en- gaged the attention of Congress during a large portion of every session, and statutes nhniind in nrovisfonR for f l.mr nmtnplinn nnl ' , encouragement, little has yet been done di- recty for the advajicemept of griculturc-r- It is time that this reproach to our Legisla- ture should be removed and Sincerely hope the present Congr,ss wiU not close thL . bors without adopting efficient means tofsup lliout adopting ellicient means toffiup omissions of those who have preceded 4 - , the "An Affricultural Bureau, charcred with 2 duty of coilecting and disseminating cor- :t information as to the best modes of cuj' efiectual means Ul I me. leruiuy oi uie .1 l- plants' and other vcgetuble productions, with iiistructiousin regard'trUic eoil,' climate e J and treatment best adapted to their ' 1 J A. 1 x t . . . 1 V -vwv.u w bUUU gAWtVIl. wMum not iau 10 do, in tiie language of Wash ington, m his last Annual Message to Con-gressa-very cheap instrument of immense national benefit.'" Every interest would be advanced by the formation of such a bureau ; an improvement of one per cent, n the avipunt of our crops, would increase the wealth of the country m9re than the present receipts of the govern , wMJrom all sources ! Our politicians must soon be alive to those truths, or the farmers will arise in their strength and demand what is now withheld. Thc State Legislatures are already busy in devising means for advancing the productive art, and some States have already appointed State Agriculturist to collate information, de liver lectures, &c. Others are about onran- izing other systems for disseminating the re quired knowledge ; but none seems to us more effective than that reported by the Com mittee on Agriculture of thc State of New Jersey last year, and petitioned for by 4,000 farmers of the State. The Bill provided for -the appointment of a State Agriculturalist, and among the duties assigned him were those.of delivering a course of lectures on Agriculture in each countv. each year, to establish County Societies, to make himself acquainted with all improve ments in agriculture, and to make the same known through his lectures, and through his annual Report to the Legislature, which Re port was to be printed for gratuitous circula tion among the farmers. He was also to cause to be cultivated an acre of land or more in each county, in the best manner for the production of the standard crops of the county. Such an organization could not but im prove the products of the State many times the cost proposed, and the peculiar mineral resources of New Jersey render it singularly adapted to such an experiment. Maryland has already made such appoint ment, and the results are highly satisfactory It is impossible to treat this subject fully in a single article, and we shall therefore oc casionally devote a- column to its advocacy. If New York would appoint one or more lecturers to travel among the farmers, and advise modes of culture, they would do more, and at less cost, for the advancement of air. ricullure, than will be accomplished by fruit- less attempts to establish an expensive Agri- cultural Coll j furnish the necessary number of teachers. ... ' - i'r-- " JEaliug and Brinkiug. The Poles seldom eat any breakfast, and are not fond of cold meat. In thc morning, both men and women generally drink ginger, yolks of eggs, and sugar, boiled in beer. Thev are extravaeantlv fond of roast pig ; but their sauces, to foreigners, are far from being agreeable. The great men seldom dine without a dish of peas and sliced bacon. "When the Poles make a feast, the host seldom furnishes the table either with spoons, knives, or forks ; but each guest, or his servant, brings them with him, and after the banquet is over, carries them home. Each one at the table has a nap kin, made of a broad piece of starched linen, which is sewed to the tablecloth, to prevent it from being stolen by the ser vants. After the gucst3 are seated at the table, the gates of the house are im mediately closed, and arc not opened till the table is cleared, and au inventory taken of the plate, as a precaution against the peculiar failings of thc footmen, who are always sure to diminish the number of the plate and other valuable articles, every opportunity. JiiVery person of rank and means has his banquethall in his house, devoted ex clusively to feasts and entertainments. In these halls is found a large table, al ways loaded with victuals and drink, adorned with a great variely of valuable plate, from which the cloth is seldom re moved, until its original color is lost in the accumulated dust of months, equally onensive to sight and smell. The ban quet"ua11 1S furnished with a gallery for ! 1 J - c ' . i i . . V -T ' generally consists 01 7V). Portallc organs J-he invited guests always bring their footmen As soon as the masters are seated at the table, thev im- mediately give half the bread and meat .t . , . ....... to tneir servants, who stand ueluiid tuem eating and drinking over their shoulders, whilp at the same time they waiton their or when Ih'ey Call. "When the master aslcs twice for wine, the servant brings a double quantity, which they both ctrink alternately from tho same glass without ! w., X f ' IKjLhnn !..: . ""H '"' v rinsing. The larere quantities of victuals are seldom re- that the 'servants generally steal what they do npt eat. After the cloth is removed, the Poles retain their seats for a long time, while thpy excessively: indulge in wine. They arC vei7 dexterous at carying, and will cut a . partridge into six parts almost with a single Diow or tne kiuic, noiuing it on ,1 t c f 1 iq enu or a ror.ii. SS hue eating, they n i t, njl hnsiiifias and: wien sent for, they seldom leave the ta- Die until uiy nave miiikiieu ijieir .meat. -Soitoyi '. Fall of Tol'ind, A "Crack Church" in New York. A correspondent of the Knickerbocker, thus describes what is meant by being a member of a " crack church." in New York : ' " Those who can't pay eight hundred or thousand dollars for a pew in a fash ionable crack church are obliged to stay at home, unless they are humble enough to go to some of God's temples where Christianity is not only preached but practised. We found our way into a crack church last Sunday, in the upper part of the city. Casting our left eye as we cnteied, on a magnificent prayer book, we observed in gilt letters the name of a millionare, with whose early history we were perfectly conversant. He start ed in life as a clamboy, and thc old clam boat, to which he belonged, used to be stationed near Washington market until all its cargo of clams were sold out. He first acquired a few dollars capital. This he invested in the fish trade ; speculated in eels, porgies, and other fish : made a large sum of money, and finally succeeded in " cornering shad bought up all the stock of the season, both in and out of the water, and. sold them afterwards at his own prices, and made 850,000. He cut his market associations, bought lots up town, now lives in the Fifth avenue, and is a " big dog." As wealth increased he found himself at the headof the " cod fish aristocracy," to which, of course, he had access, from his former business. Phalon, the barber, was sent for; his daughters had their hair combed out and dressed for thc first time ; teachers of music, drawincr. Italian. reuch. etc.. t-j 1 bired : old Mr. Porgie joined the church, and took a costly pew. Wc hap pened to get into it ; but we no sooner discovered where we were, than we made up our minds to vacate. Wo were too late. Old Mr. Porgie came sailing up the aisle with his wife and daughters, dres - sed as though thoy had known "whati was what" all their, lives. To our aston- ishmcnt. instead of shutting the new door in our face, he asked us to"keeD ... . . r our seat." And didn't we have a time ; of it! The mother looked at us so did . the daughters : and thev snuffer. Smnlt: their salts, and wri?j?led about as thourrh! one of their father's shad was in the slip. gratulated on his good luck, and calcu We felt annovea. Tirovoked. frnvrnf. nnrUated on being placed in comfortable prayers, didn't hear a blessed word of J the sermon, and came away disgusted with hypocritical upstarts, and witlfa de - i lermmaiion next ounuav to jro to a iree church. Our ideas of pure, religion, are drawn from the " - undented, recorded life of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ. He was a living example of humility, charity, love ; in fact, all that was good and lovely. Some of his chosen disciples were very close imitators of their Lord and Master ; and though they were by profession fish catchers, (we were not a- ware tnat tney were clam catcuers ori speculators) like Mr. Porgie, they were; not above other men because of their sue- j cess or money. We wonder whether' ii "11T- 1 1 i .l mere win oe any upper piaccs, nesc seats, private pews, in the great temple above, where thc souls of rich neoDle may be at their ease, and where poor folks can't tiuu n uti u uuui iu:ui vuu u intrude ? Christian churches ! Christian ' f "aAO ,cu " " rr. i ' , w mi ii have been between fifty and sixtv cases rich men 1 H e will say nothing more, , , J , - , , , , J , mi , of murder before me; and if in each of and then we shall have less idle words:., . , T . , ' . . . lt z, , , ; i' i. xi i r- j j. the twelve Judicial Districts in the State to answer tor at the day of judgment. , . ... , rv xi u t en i -?i r:,. there have been a like number, then sort of people, and are no place for the , - J , j i xt . poor Lazarus. ITS. d. timlrn !ttniinr in Riiclnnac. T,r, , . t .. e . j , w, .! sis of them had been found guilty by tho What perturbation of mind? What'. i ,. , , u b. .J. ;Ti. i:..F..4 j .uifx- (jury by which thoy had been tried. It is bo al . . . oj . o ,J ?' , , , J J0 ;,tt, . i x i UIUUUV i IT 1IUU comparison between the unsuccessful ? Of the millions who embark in business to make money, how few succeed ? And why ? Because but few know the secret of success. Most think it chance, or good fortune, but they are sadly mistaken ; and if such as aro now pining to get rich would only strictly mind the following advice and be guided by it, there would be no doubt of their realizing their golden dream . Let the business of everybody else alone and attend to your own; don't buy what vou don't want; use evcrv hour to i advantage, and study to make even j leisurc hours useful : thiuk twice before you throw away a shilling, remember Lvou will have another to make for it; nnu recreation in looking aum- your business ; buy low, sell fair, and take care of the profits ; look over your books regularly, and if you find an error, trace it out ; should a stroke of misfortune come upon you in trade, retrench, work harder, but never fly thc track ; confront difficulties with unfiinching perseverance, and they will disappear at last ; though you should fail in the struggle, you will be honored but shrink from the task and you will be despised. A 3'oiing lad recently ran away from home and went to a tavern, where he was found by a friend with a cigar in his moutlj, a What made you leave home T" saitl, his. friend. . Objcpnfouiid it," said he, ffathqr and niotherwas. s,p Baucy I couldn't stand it any longer, am T quit 'em." Otto Grunxig, who was to have been exe cuted in N. Y. on Friday, Jan. 30, for pois oning his wife, received a respite from Gov. Hunt in a despatch sent to thc Sheriff just before the hour appointed. The Governor stated that Margcretta Lorcnzy, his concu bine, had made a confession that she did tho deed, and the respite was granted for the pur pose of making a further investigation. The girl was arrested in New York, on Friday, though it is said that Grunzig cannot have a new trial, and his release will rest entirely upon a pardon from the Governor. leaving :i Fortune to Lover. A lady of considerable beauty, and still young, died recently in France, leav ing a fortune. The Conslitutionnel thus narrates the troubles as to the heir : "As she had lived alone, the Judge do Pais of the district took possession of her furniture and her efFcts on behalf of the heirs. Amongst other things, was a rather large collection of richly bound books. On opening one of the volumes, the J udge de Pais found a will j in a second there was a second will, and in nearly all the others. Each of these wills was of a different date, and each constituted a different person universal legatee. These legatees were all young men officers of the army, advocates, shopmen, artists, actors, students, archi tects, physicians in short, of every profession, and of almost every class of society. Inquiries havingbeen instituted, it was ascertained that the lady had married eight or ten years before, but, be ing of a romantic disposition, had soon violated her fidelity to her husband, and, having abandoned him, had indulged openly in intrigues with every young man who struck her fancy. Her relations with each were, however, of short dura tion, owing to the fickleness of her dis- ! position ; but having, it appears, a sort ot monomania tor making wills, she reg- u,arly dre UP one ln iavor ot evei7 new lover. Each will thus set aside that which 'preceded it; but the last of all was valid. I MM. T..I .1 T..:.. .1 i.t- J-uc uuuou uu J-aii eu iue penou named in this last one to be sought for, nd he turned out to be a young artist without fortune. He was warmly con- ; circumstances for life the lady having au iconic of 30,000 francs a year. 33ufc 1 a few (la)s ag tne husband presented , "-ju j all the artist s 1 l . T T : "ucuc uj piu"i'i"(; uiuiiiuu vivunaut, ' wbich established him inheritor of all hi wife might leave at her death." Judge Buckley, of the District Court of Galveston, in a recent address to the Grand Jury, said that there was no country inhabited by the Anglo Saxon race in which there was so little regard for law and ordcr as in tbat StateJ wllile her laws were superior to those of her sister States, she was overrun by lawlessness. ' - H continued: "I am still a young man, and a much ounSer Judge ; but during the four 1 , , , r t i , , , ,., I there have been upwards of six hundred cases of murder in four years showing a state of things unequaed in any country j and that of these six hundred cases not . nnfc snnnosed that tn thnsn o.isq flirH i was a deficiency in c , 1 r9 lAiiAlninn rv tt- 1 i r I was a deficiency in evidence, and the on- . rr -v y conclusion to which 1 can arrive is that the juries must have forgotton or disre- TciMperancc--Tho Jlalau Law. A very general movement is made in this State, by the Sons of being Tcm- pcrance and the friends of Temperance generally, in the way of petitioning the Legislature to adopt a law similar to the oue known technically as the 1 Maine JLi- quor JLatv,' which entirely prohibit tnc sale of intoxicating drinks, other than for Mechanical and Medicinal nurnoses. Petitions for this object we learn, are be- ing circulated iu this town, and will wo doubt not, be very extensively digued. That it4is entirely competent tor tho Legislature to enact a 1 prohibitory law,' wc haveonly to refer to the decision oi the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Massachusetts vs. lliomas Thurlow. Chief Justice Taney says in thc above case : Every State may regu late its own internal trofiic, according to it3 own judgment, and upou its own views of the interest and well bein of it. citizens. If any State doems the rt tail and internal traffic in ardent .-pints in jurious to its citizens, and calculated to produce idleness, vice, or debauchery, I see nothing in the Constitution of thy United State.- to prevent it from reui-.r-ing and restraining the traffic, or from prouibiting.it altogether, it .it tluakpr.op cr. :Tunkhannoisk, hi. ,4 Thero 'were 120,184 ilwa in ttiq vcac. United Stales during the cousua