I It I 'I 9 jfcffcvsonian Republican. Thursday, Aiii;st J2, 1852. .For President, GEN. WINFIELD SCOTT OF NEW-JEUSEY. For Vice-President, WILLIAM A. GRAHAM OF NOUTH-CAKOLIXA. For Judge of Supreme Court, JOSEPH BUFFINGTON OF ARMSTRONG COUNTY. For Canal Commissioner, JACOB HOFFMAN OF BERKS COUNTY. FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTORS. SENATORIAL, . E. Rrown, James Pollock. Samuel A. Pnrviance. REPRESENTATIVE. i. William F. Hughes, 13. Ner Middlosuarth. 'i. James Traquair, 3, John V. Siokos, 4. John P. Verrec, 5. Spencer Mcllrainc, 6. James V. Fuller, 7. James I'enrose, Jf. John Shacflttr, y, Jacob .MarMiall. 10. diaries P. Waller, 1 1. Davis Alton, 1 2. M. C. Mercur, 14. James II. Campbell, 15. James D. Paxton, 1C. James K. Davidson, 17. Dr. John McCullock, 18. Ralph Drake, 19. Sohn Linton, 20. Archibald Robcitson, 21. Thomas J. Uigham, 22. Lewis L. Lord 23. Christian Mcyets, 24. Donnan Phelps, The Hon. Robert Rantoul, Jr. member of Congress from the Second District of Massachusetts, died in "Washington, on Sunday morning last, about 3 o'clock, af ter three days illness, of erysipelas". Elections. "Wlie have as yet but partial returns of the August elections. In ybrtJi Carolina, it is certain that Gov. Heid, Locofoco, is re-elected ; and it is believed that the Locofocos will have a marjority in the Senate, and the Whigs a majorit' in the House. Last year both houses were Locofoco. There is a report that Iowa has elec ted two Whigs to Congress, and a Whig Legislature. Missouri. The whole democratic county ticket of St. Louis county is elec ted. Col. Benton is elected to Congress. There was another democratic and a Whig candtdate in the district. The Delegation will stand two Whigs to three Locofocos. Who tells the Truth? Aloco-foco paper says that 'Gen. Jack son always had a poor opinion of General Scott:" Gen. Cass, whom that paper supported for the Presidency, says in a letter ad dressed by him as Secretary of war to Gen. Scott, when the latter was about to proceed to Charleston for the purpose of setling the nullification difficulties that "the President (General Jackson) has I'ULL confidence in j-our (Gen. Scott's) judgment and discretion." Which is most likely to tell the truth the loco-foco editor, or Gen. Cass! At Willisburg, Washington County, Kentucky, a terrible affray occurred a few day since. Some eight or ten per sons were playing cards when a dispute arose, and they soon proceeded to a free use of knives and pistols. James Vest was shot through, his brains knocked out, and rumor says his throat cut. lie died instantly. J. L. Seay was shot and stabbed, and lies in a critical condi tion. Kelly had a bullet glanced off his forehead, doing nothing more than stun ning him. Tom Parriss had the skin which covers the windpipe cut by a ball. Twenty shots, at least, are said to have been fired. We obtain these particulars from the Lebanon Post. TTr'The Salem (Mass.) Register savs that hay will command good prices the coming winter, the crop being short in New England generally. Old hay brings ; by the load, in Boston, 20 a ton, and Eastern pressed, glG to 817. New Hay is selling readily, at the latter rates, by ' an Ohio paper, a thousand miles from the thus beyond its jurisdiction. By a smi the load, and before the next spring will j residence of Mr. Hubbard, is sufficient to lar process the Granite-ribbed common- undoubtedly command a large advance.- condemn it; but in addition to this, it is f wealth has not unfrequently extended aid These high prices are owing, not merely ! well known that Mr. Hubbard's early po- j and comfort to the lineal outsiders of to the dificiency of the crop, but also to litical associations were such as to pre- j Maine. We have understood that a num the old stock, of which in ordinary years , elude the idea of Jackson's addressing ber of liquor dealers in the vicinity of a portion is kept over for sale, being con- him familiarly upon the subject of Dcm- ' Lowell have recently taken up their a sumcd during the past long and severe ocracy. Hubbard was a rabid anti-war bode in Polham, and other places in New winter: Rufus Porter, who is building a fly ing ship at Washington, in his semi mon- thly report to the stockholders, says:- 1 nu. r. n'. ' mmxuuo xuiiai xur tu uuul uuu ms saloon has been all varnished, and the sewing and making up the float arc now in progress, and we may have it ready for inflation in two weeksi The frame work of the the salooti, and the longi tudinal rods for the float, are ready to be set up. The engine and boilers are only waiting for the furnace." Keep l before Hie People, That General Pierce is bitterly opposed to ltiver and Harbor improvements, and invariably voted against them when in Congress. That he is opposed to Amcri- can Industry and American Labor, and J ' in favor of a tariff designed to advance the interests of English capitalists. That though liviug in a State where his influence is claimed to be omnipotent, Catholiccs arc not allowed to hold office. That he is opposed to the appropria tion of public lands towards building Wcs- tern Bailroads, Canals, and Plank Roads, That he voted against an appropria - tion to the widow of General Harrison. ,. i rv aizl.i.. -l .i . i:...-i , ,,,,, , . , ucuiu vi uvi uuauanu, uuu. iuu xiuuvj v;.- penses incurred by his election to the of fice of President and removal to Washing ton. That he voted against granting pen sions to the widows of Revolutionary sol diers. G. W. Crawford, of Georgia, the Sec retary of War under Gen. Taylor, who 1 t 1 i T .1 ...-. r Drougiit oaium upon mo administration by his connection with the Galphin claims, has come out for Pierce and Kin"-. It is presumed the Democratic press will , . 1 .. now Keep sueuc on mis suDjcct, as they have got the Cheif of the Galphins. Tennessee The Whig Candidates. The following letter from lion. Wil liam T. Haskell, of Tennessee, was writ ten in reply to one from the Whig Cen tral Committee for Middle Tennessee, communicating the result of the corres pondence with the Whig Central Commit tees for each of the other divisions of the State, and requesting him to accept the position of candiddate for Elector for the State at large: Jackson, Monday, July 19, 1852. We have an invincible leader. Winfield Scott! Whose heart does not throb at the sound of that name? A statesman, not a politician as the dis charge of every delicate trust with which he has been charged demonstrates a man without fear and without reproach a soldier whose "Fame folds in This orb o' the Earth" his name is the harbinger of victory, and he has never known defeat. A Whig, true, known, and trustworthy; thorougly sound on the slavery issues; he knows "no North, no South, no East, no West, nothing but his country." Born in the South, the North by virtue of his ac cidental residence claims with us an equal pride in his greatness and an equal share I in liic iiflnvr A trl in VnmvilinT nnvf Vi ' in his glory. And in November next, the North and the fcouth, the Last and the West, will accord to him the chief honor of the nation, giving the lie to the libel that Republics are ungrateful, and prov ing to the world that in this great country great men are properly appreciated and properly rewarded for great public ser vices. Mr. Graham, our candidate for the Yice-Presidency, stands approved by the general concession of all parties and sec tions. Eminent as a Whig, distinguished for his talents, devoted to the country and his party Tennessee, the daughter of North-Carolina, claims him as a kins man, and will evidence to him, and to the Mother State, that she is not wanting in fraternal or filial affections, or unworthy her illustrious lineage. Gentlemen, we have an old-fashioned victory before us in Tennessee a victo ry not more to be won than wished for. Yet let every Whig put on his armor, and go manfully into the fight, so that when the battle is won, he may say with every brother Whig: "Yictory sits on our helms." WM. T. nASKELL. B. H. Siieppard, F. K. Zollicoffer, E. P. McGinty, Committee. Electioneering Lies. Among the absurd stories going the rounds of the opposition press at this time, is the following " When Gen. Jackson was President, he made the following remark to Hon. nenry iiuooaru xou nave a young man srrowincr un in vour State, the vounr TT TT" 1 1 ft T Franklin Pierce, who will be, before he js sixty years of age, a man for the Dcm ocracy without the demagogue." The veryfact that this story originatedin ' Federalistin Madison's time, and attended a meeting to appoint Delegates to the , ' Hartford Convention the leaders of which lfi wlllM unrft mn m mW fllft ' J 1 ' , .7 r , 0nd section." ! "Go for Webster, and save the Whig party," as Mr. Fillmore telegraphed to Baltimore. Loco Foco jiajier. Mr. Fillmore never telegraphed any such thing. It is a weak invention of the j enemy, without even the semblance of j truth. Scott on the Rivers. One of the editors of the Salem (N. J.) Standard, returned on Saturday from a trip to New Ydrk, and says he every- where discovered evidence of the unboun- ded popularity of General Scott. For instance on the John Potter" one of ' flinflftHKlATi mill A mhnvl nllinnnv'S Rt.Oillll- the Camden and Amboy Company's steam ers between New York and Amboy, a test ' vote disclosed the following state of af fairs : Scott, Pierce G8 21 Majority for Scott, 47 were included, and the latter all voted '. Scott ! The three officers were for Pierce, On his way between Philadelphia and a. hi; steerage passengers ana lianas Salem, the same afternoon, another vote . was taken on the steamer " impress, as t fojOWg . Scott, Pierce, 37 20 Majority for Scott, 17 The officers and hands voted as follows: Scott, Pierce, Refusing to vote, 8 o Several on the " John Potter" stated that they had never missed voting the Democratic Ticket, but this year thev j were going for Scott. Others stated they ! could mention the names of large num i , r Ueft bers of friends and neighbors who had the opposite party and who would vote for Scott. The above is but a fair evidence of the feeling throughout the country. Off with his Head ! So much for ESEickiugliaiii. The harmonious Democracy in the sec ond Ward, N. L. at their meeting on Thursday last, read out of their party the following named persons: Charles F. Ma guire, J. Downs, N. B. Malone, Patrick Guin and Geo. Cusick. Cause: suspicion that they intend to vote for Scott and Graham. Its no use, gentlemen. When people become convinced, as they now do, that Democracy is but another name for for humbug, they don't need to be read out they will go fast enough. Daily News. Still They Come. The Hightstown, N. J., Record states that John Brown, Esq., of Sharon, in that count', a staunch Democrat, has gone over to the AVhigs. The cause of this change lies in General Scott's military achievements. It should be remembered, that Scott received his first commission from Jeffer son; was frequently promoted and final ly offered the post of Secretary of War by Madison ; enjoyed the confidence of Adams, was commissioned to allav the st0rm of Nullification by Jackson, and - - - was deputed by an JjUREN to quell the tempest on our Canada frontier, and to a vert the threatened War on our North-Eastern border. The most important servi ces which Gen. Scott has rendered his country have not been rendered on the battle-field. ITJ a 1 practice of an Attorney. John Percy, attorney-at-law, has been suspended from practice in the Albany Court of Sessions. He was emploed for the defence of Jane O'Donnell, charged with stealing goods from a hotel ; and on the trial he so repeatedly abused and in sulted the counsel and witnesses for the people, and so often addressed improper and impertinent remarks to the Court, that Judge Robinson declared he had for feited all respect as a counsellor. It fur ther appeared that Percy had tampered with one of the jurors named Lake. The Evening Journal says that : "In addition to this, the father and mother of the prisoner, and one or two others of the witnesses for the defence, have been arrested for perjury and are now in jail. There has probably never been, on any trial in this country, a great er amount of false swearing. The action of the Court in the matter meets very general approval." A Potential Dodge. Those who hap pen to live just this side of the line, which j for miles divides Massachusetts from New i Hampshire, escape the rigorous operation of the Liquor Law, by stepping over and Hampshire, within half an hour's ride. One individual has bought apiece of land m Uiat btat0 ana Put UP on lfc a building, so contrivea mac nis uar stanas exactly nn rn rno. inn in 'fv H nmnQhivA - -1, 1 m3 customers, as tney noia tne glass to the mouth drink in Masschusetts ! This ; is a dodge potential, which the law can f not touah.-r-Lowell Courier. A girl has been fined 85, by Recorder Genois, at New Orleans, for voluntarily kissing a man in that city. Over 880.000 ho's will be marketed from the State of Kentucky alone, dur- ing the coming-winter. Destructive fire in ritourg. Pittsbicrg, Aug. 7. A fire broke out this afternoon in a nest of small buildings, in Prospect street, which raged for near ly two hours, and threatened the destruc tion of a large portion of the surrounding property. About twenty-five buildings were consumed. The loss will cause distress among a number of poor families, who have lost all they were worth in the world. The loss is estimated at from 10,000 to 12,000, upon which there is little or no insurance. Treasure" in New Hfew Jersey. The Mt. Holly Mirror tells an almost incredible story, that some of Captain Kidd's treasure -had been found among the Pines, and that occupants of that re gion are in a state of intense excitement. A man dreamed for several nights succes sively that he should find this treasure, the place to be indicated by four iron bars projecting from the earth. He went and found hi3 dream realized. Two hundred and forty thousand dollars had been dis covered up to Monday night, buried in iron chests, and the people have turned out with their pickaxes in farther search for the treasure. XSWe rejoice to hear that there is good reason to believe that Capt. Marcy and the men under his command, have not been massacred on the Plains, as has been announced. The Little Rock Whig contradicts the report of the massacre on the authority of an Express from Fort Arbuckle. Somebody has recently invented a ma- chine for picking stones, one of the most laborious duties of the tarmer. The ma chince is described as a large cylinder, on a common axle and cart wheels, con taining tour rows ot teeth or Utters. Uear - ing on the hubs of the wheels and on the ends of the cylinder gives the latter a rotary motion, when the teeth pick up the stones and deposit them in a box. When 1 the box is full the cylinder is raised and the load carried on and upset as irom a common cart. What next? -. -t , r , - -r-vi In the Boston Court ot Common Pleas, u ir v j-v v w the jury on a certain case had agreed up- on a verdict on Saturday, and separated. Upon coming into Court on Monday, one of the inrv rofnsod to vsonfc to the vor of the jurj refused to assent to the vor- diet. Judge Merrick asked him it he tQ kp tb(Jm there and rcturn men of ing an education. They were bred togcth had agreed and assented to the verdict temperate habits and sentiments who will er ln the fjiraib nature has never sepa before the jury separated? He replied do some good." - ! rated them and the establishment of i.ii- i i! ! separate schools for the sexes is produc- that he had done so, but had since chanced ,. L c . mi r -i i i - . -j mi t i -j , . 1 The Hog Crop. A Quincey (111.) cor-, tlve of great evils. The family is th, his mind. The Judge said it was in his ndcn of te Cincinnati Price Cur- first form of society, and all other forms power to defeat the verdict; that it could TCnt, says that that district of country is are perfect in proportion as they conform not be recorded, and that it must be tried deficient in stock hos, for which S3 50 a t0 tlie order of fchc family. The union of a-ain. The Court then dismissed the dis- 84 are freely paid. Beef cattle are plen- the sexes would promote order m th x- r e i x. j tv slot) fed ellino- at S4l i?ross weight schools, and stimulate exertion, lor the senting juryman from further attendance. respect'of the sexes for each other would j go cents for wheat. Full crops corn and impose beautiful moral restraints, and m- Progrcss of the Cholera. i0ats;hav thin ; ' fruit almost an entire cite to excellence. He attributed man) Rochester, August 7. The board of faiiur0. "ln Madison county, Ind., the of the hasiJ and unhappy marriages t Health report thirteen new cases of chol- hog crop will be large, but hogs are most- the divorce of the sexes m school ; lor J .. Li ,lx.l. P-xl. i. x V Itt hr 'A 90 o es ctrni- their union would moderate the inconsiu- ,in,' pmil of a p m nvo of tho hours ending at 4 P M Iwo of the inn riio r tt r ttat cnrvnui t n nonn rn ported yesterday. The weather to-day has bcen warm and pleasant. Chamber slurs. Aug. 7. The cholera broke out in this place yesterday, and to day much alarm prevails. ' jGgylt is said to appear from the re turns of the United States census of 1850, that New Hampshire has a greater num ber of idiots in proportion to her popula tion than any other State in the Union. UjA German Beformed Congrega tion is building a church in New York, to cost $100,000. JJjpThe Supreme Court has rendered a decision favorable to Stroud township in the suit with Covington township, Lu zurne co., in regard to the residence of a pauper. Eighty-one perspns were lost by the burning of the Henry Clay. All concer ned in managing the boat have been pro secuted. School warrants. Those School Dtstricts which have made their reports to the Superiutendant according to law, will receive warrants for their respective shares of the State ap propriation early in August. They will be sent by mail, directed to the district Treasurers. A considerable number of districts have not pet reported, particulary in the northern and central portions of the State. It is hoped these delinquents will not delay further in complying with the re quirements of the law. It important that the reports notyctreturned to the Superin tendent should be made at the earliest possible period. UgT The shipments of lead from Poto- si, Wisconsin, since March, 1852, amount to 2,083,550 lbs. The total amount of lead shipped from Dubuque, in 1851, was about 5,000,000 lbs. almost the entire product of the Iowa mines. More than three fourths of the lead produced from the Wisconsin mines is shipped at Galena. What are the Democrats in fa - We have gleaned the following 'princi-1 ' Majthias SkupinsHfone of the murder pies and pohcy' of the 'great Democratic' ' ers of ?TS at P liladelPUa party,fromits'confessionoffaith' and 'rules ;iomnis exeted on Friday t J 1 . , . tho hrh mot If ml ho -rmnnmW i .. J of practice' written and unwnten and i1! ...... n.i a.-i submit them, in a collected form, for the benefit or the present generation and pos terity : We are in favor of opposition to the Ghost of the United States Bank; because there's no money in it.' uiere s no money m iu ' We are m favor of snags and sawyers in the Ohio and Mississppi ; light houses and breakwater on the Atlantic ; at the expense of Uncle Sam.' We are in favor oppostwn to paper money, promissory notes, split cents, roast beef and two dollars and a quarter a day.' We are m favor of a stringent Gag Law to put down the people's right of Petition. Vide Pierce's vote m Congress, ' We are in favor of opposilio?i to all physicians who prescribe soup for the sick.' 1 We are in favor of sending off the , . -n T e country to Jjjurope for Iron juouey oi uic couuujr to xmiupu ii xiuu and other merchandise, while our Amen- can furnaces and manufactories are turn- ed out to 'grass' for the want of protection an4uPP01 ri . We are m favor of long sessions, eight dollars a day, extra mileage, new men and CSilwJ' n i ip , Woven in favor of making a fuss' about Hungary and Kossuth, and helping them 'fight their battles over again; but now we oppose fusses, generally and . . . . . , T e are in favor of a candydate made out or a nttie oi tue military, a mtie ot . the civil, with a small sprinkling of cam Pnor ana smelling salts.' 'We are in favor of opposition to the assumption of State debts by the gener- al government; detest the third day Ague and have no affection for Fits.1 Upon this platform ' Democracy, is se- , cureiy resting, and thereon is destined immovably to repose until 'the cows come home.' So mote it be. 1 jjrl0 tjic Locofoco Canal Commission ; er Candidate ? Wm. Searight, a self-ac I, till It "ll , T1 ; knowledge forger, with the Pemtiary staring him in the face, as he says in his TT , c t " i , j Honest men of Pennsylvania, we ask yQU can y0U yoj.c for ? BSrBev. E. G. Wood, in the opening nraver of services at Fairfield. Indiana. i after praying for the General Government uiLui i;iu y iiJi; iui vilk uiiuiui uutbiiiuibiiu S ,? n e d i. i nraved for the Governor of the State.and tbus for tbe Legislature, which is largely ! Democratic: "And the Lord have mercy on our legislators, bpare tueir lives un til theJ raaJ rcturn to their homes and J i "ogs, S3 a 84. Wheat good ; corn short; i - ' Col. Sam. Black, of Pittsburgh, has drawn a prize of 835,000 in a lottery. The Easton (Maryland) Star says that Colonel Edward Lk3d, of that county. JKjf The Mountain Scntinl says "the 'with his own servants numbering near present position of the Bedford Gazette four hundred, some nine or ten farms, a will be sustained by all honorable, high- bout 0,000 acres of land, including tim minded men," in opposition to Searight. ber-land raises annually between 30, Right for once. ! 000 bushels of wheat, and a much larger quantity of corn, besides various other Arago, the astronomer, has pre- vinW nrnilnnta. E vorvthino1 throufdl- dieted a storm in Paris, which will last twenty-lour uays. EST Land warrants have advanced in Cincinnati. Dye quotes 1G0 acres at $138; 80 acres at $GG, and 40 acres at 835. riedoninthe State of Mississippi, worth flf O0,!"6 8n note,s 0,1 hc ,Clty several hundred thousand dollars, and hi. Bank, of Hartford, Conn., have just been annual income from his estate here, ami Put lllt0 circulation in Cincinnati. hfe plantation ju the south, cannot fall m, i . n ' short of 8150.000 aix times as much as jp The wheat crop m Germany is President of the United better than it has been before in twenty .g onc of lbc most yCarS ! splendid in this country, being the honie- Money is so scarce in the West that stead of the Lloyd family since their first when two dollars meet they are such settlement in Maryland, strangers to each other that their owners " have to introduce them. Death of a Circus Performer. ; An extra from The Woolcott Stand- TTj It is said there are about twenty- . w n . vr r i. ,.,. W r i en i x e t ard, Wayne County, N. lork, states tuai five members of Congress, heretofore Lo- t ' J J' . ' , i cofocos, who are opposed to Pierce and 011 Saturday afternoon it; was advertiseu King. that Mr. R. Sands, circus performer, ' would walk across the ceiling with his JOSaTUpwards of a thousand emigrants ueatl downward, by means of a scientific recently left London, in a single week, for apparatus appended to his feet. The ex Australia, j pcriment was performed to the satisfac- tion of the audience, excepting one imli- JKaT Spurious quarter eagles arc in ' vjduai who said Mr. Sands could not circulation at New Orleans; they are mado porf0rni the feat out of the circus. Mr. of steel, covered with gold. : g at once offered to exhibit the same per- formance in any place where a ceiling On Saturday last, Mrs. Davis, of Hoi- " having a smooth surface, and of sufficieut den, Mass., died in consequence of the ap- strength to sustain his weight, could be plication ot chloroform while having a tooth extracted. The Marion, Ga., Citizen, an influen- i,au anti commenced his antipodean pro tial Union Democratic paper, declares its menade over the ceiling, at'an elevation of preference for General Scott over the i8 feet from the floor. He had proceed nominee of the Democrats. ed several steps, and was in the act ot returning, when a large portion of the The man with the Penitentiary staring plastex gave way, precipitating him to tao Vii'm ; i-Ur. ,a ni-notlnrr n m-Anf mnSS in the ranks of tho Locofocos. They are begining to sec right. I Thi Pnlicfc Mm.,1 , " "M- "7 -"-rcu that be made a confession to a countrvm named Skawinski, to whom he admitted that he with his party had killed no les than eighty persons and burned thirty houses. Matthias subsequently denied iu.it ue uau maue tne statements, but ho , com; more suMucd ag j - vnnnt rl 1A fll1w rormnA "our The Mc areJscarcel ablc ' , Qr tQ apprcciate the fuif enormit ! confession made by Matthias, compr s , ag ifc do a iong Jcaialo J of JJnfi and robberics committed iu various IZ't i f thfl CQunt too terribe f And fc no rcason g0M of the wretchcd ma 'Jj the Wink 0f a felon's grave. There U every reason to believe that he and his guilty associates were the authors of the Bartle murder, near Phila.; and it is aho , U- n., OUIJlJUaUU tlliVll 111CY UlUlUliltU IUU VjUSIIP ti c i i faniily in Delware for which three unhap. nrr ' , nao ' nfpfl fll en py men, Avho asseverated their innocence fllo ,' , Qffornf1 ihn nj(c nf t. gcaffoltL ;Ihe reflection tuafc thJQ law punished the wrong men in this.and, ner- h -n other c ig frau bt' much horror to bc calmly cJnsidere(1: Ifc is to latG to remedy the awful wron done to the wretched sufferers but not too latc to t mcasnrcs inst possible repetition of a similar wr?ng. The piniitjiiment of death should be whol- ly obliterated from our civil code, for in this one instance niore cvU bas bcen done tban can be remcdied. Fisr.rd Affairs. The rnnmnta nf tin. cnvKrnm(mt from Ar,ri1 1st to .Timo 30t1, excmsive 0f the trust .funds, were 174 31G 07 and the expenditures 8,(10:5.. 1 r.-yi oi The Chambersburgh Whig, says, Dr Carl of Grecncastle, has a horse 0 years old hitherto of a beautiful dun col, with a whitish mane and tail. On cas ting his coat this spring he came out an iron gray, mane and tail and so chang U J U11U HtUll VI " u- beeiJ-,stolc tlie Doctor could not now deutify lliulCall this be explained? ed by this ireak ot nature that had b- J85TWhat is joy? To have a conscience void of offence toward God and man, and to ad when you count your mo- IUUL 1U uuua llut uulullo w ulu vreui- tors: Sefisible. Prof. Fairchild, of Oherlin. read a paper before the Teachers' Conven tion, on the education of boys and girls in . smcno- comenaca tnat thej sIl0ud nofc bc divorced while obtain- erate passion which is often enkindled by at distance which lends enchantment. ' A Maryland Farmer. 0llt bis cxtensive operations is conducted in the most systematic manner, and tbe greatest care is taken to keep everything in the most perfect order each farm be ins: under the charc-e of an intelligent overseer. Besides these extensive opera tions in Talbot, he has a plantation car- obtained. The larrre room in the Town Hall Wft3 selected, fwhen Mr. Sands repaired to the flnnr Mr SnnriS Was taken UP SeUSclt uuui . xix. i . uuxxv. "- x: j Hianeck was broken by, the fall. nrt "death ensued instantly. i