The mountain sentinel. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1844-1853, November 08, 1849, Image 2

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    MOUNTAIN SENTINEL.
EBENSBURG, PA.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1819.
- - ITTiik Sentinel, has much the largest cir
culation of any paper published in this county
andason advertising sheet offers superior
inducements to merchants and business men
generally. Those desirous of making us of
lAjjr medium for extending their business can
do to by either sending their notices direct, or
through 'the fulloiring agents:
John Ctouse, Esq., Johnstown.
E. W. Carr, Evans' Buildings, Third st.
Philadelphia.
Wm. A. Kinsloe, Pittsburg.
George Pratt, 151, Nassau St., Nlw York.
ES As will be seen by their advertise
ment. Messrs. Murray & Zahm have just
received a very splendid assortment of
New Goods. Those wishing- to procure
good goods aAd cheap goods, can do so
on application to their establishment
Their assortment will oe found complete
;ind excellent.
Mr. George Harncame also notifies the
public that he is prepared to manufacture
all kinds of work in his line cf business
on the shortest notice and on the most
reasonable terms. Read his advertise
ment and give him a call.
Mr. P. Shiels has also just received a
large supply of fall and winter goods at
his Store Room in Loretto. Those wish
ing to purchase cheap goods, will perhaps
find it to their advantage to give him a
call. See his advertisement in another
column.
ill piULUlLU ilUU bldil.il Ui-lUC Oil Cd.ur
day for the perpetrator of the deed, but
without success. On Sunday, however,
the fellow dressed himself in his best
clothes and came boldly to the Summit,
thinking, we presume, that he could not
be arrested because it was Sunday. He
was speedily undeceived in this opinion,
for he no sooner made his appearance than
he was arrested, and escorted to Ebens
burg, and safely lodged in jail to await his
trial at our next Court. We understand
that the indignation of some of the citizers
of the Summit was so great against him
that it was with difficulty they were pre
vented from laying violent hands on him.
ZttMWK wealth wi
1 1
No intelligence has yet been received
cf the whereabouts cf the men, HolTacker
and Ream, who made their escape from
our jail about ten days since. They don't
nppear disposed to give our county any
further trouble cn their accounts.
!arection No. 63, of the Central llail
rcad west of the mountains, has been nl
lotted to Messrs. CovoJe, M'Farla .J an J
Graham. This has been done sine : re
letting of the contracts, a list of w'u e .
published someiime since.
luw York Heme Journal.
We believe this to be decidedly the best
literary paper published in this country.
Thauksgiving.
By the following Proclamation, it will
be seen that Gov. Johnston recommends
the 29th inst. to be set apart and observed
as a day of Thanksgiving. The Gover
nors of several other States have appointed
the same day for the same purpuse, and
we hope the people will duly observe this
long established usage of our country.
A PROCLAMATION.
PEXXSYL VAX LI SS.
In the name and by the authority of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania: by
WILLIAM F. JOIIXStOX Gover
nor of the said Commonwealth.
A beneficent God has blessed
pie of this Common-
th health and abnnd-
ance. 1 he neids nave yielded
bountiful returns to the labors
ot the husbandman. The enterprizes of
the citizens in all branches of industry have
been appropriately rewarded, Peace with
all nations has been vouchsafed to the coun
try. Civil and religious libert', under the
institutions of free government, have been
preserved inviolate, and the largest mea
sure of earthly happiness, has been graci
ously dispensed by an all-wise and merci
ful Providence.
These blessings demand our gratitude
to Him in whose hands are the issues of
life and death who controls and directs
the affairs of man whose will is omnipo
tent to save or destroy; and who mingles
in the justice of His judgments, the attri
butes of His mercy before whose power
nations are exalted or cast down, and they
call upon us as one people to unite in sol
emn Thanksgiving in humble supplica
tion, and praise to the Almighty Author of
every good and perfect gift, for these his
undeserved blessings to his weak and sin
ful creatures. They require the profound
reverence of penitent hearts, sensible of
t'.e unworthiness of humanity and of the
t. during mercy of a righteous God.
Relieving these solemn truths; deeply
nMpTesscu with the duty of devout adora
tLn, and humble prayer; in compliance
with a venerated custom, and the desires
of the great oody of the people; I, Will
iam F. Johnston, Governor of the Com
monwealth cf Pennsylvania, do hereby
appoint and designate, THURSDAY the
t!FTnr: Election in New York Michi
gan and Mississippi tock place rn Tues
day last. At the late elections the dem
ocrats have triumphed in seven States
which gave Taylor a majority, and we
have no doubt New York, Michigan and
Mississsippi will follow suit.
The Pacific Railroad.
The editor of the Chicago Tribune, who
was at the St. Louis Convention, has the
following remarks, among others, upon
letters addressed to the convention.
Mr. Van Burcn"s Notwithstanding
the convention postponed the reading of all
letters, when Mr. Van Buren's was called
for, the "outside pressure," was too great
to resist, and the reading cf it, in connec
tion with one or two others was ordered.
Ms. Clay's. Is decidedly non-committal,
and not much longer than the Cass
letter to the Chicago Convention. He says
"As to the project itself, the means of its
execution and the termini of the road, I
clonal 0rfontl
3iauu J 1 1 1 lil UlJLUIXillllllCUt
Gen. Cass Is somewhat lonsrer than
his Chicago letter, and not so long as the
the one he wrote to Nicholson. He has
avoided the extremes that characterized
those productions. After freely endorsing0f Damascus.
the oojects ot the convention, he savs he
hopes its action "will insure the speedy
completion of the work as soon as circum
stances will permit.
Mr. Calhouns Is very satisfactory.
He advocates the measure in a short letter
and in conclusion says, "I regard the work
to be one of too great magnitude and im
portance to be influenced by local or pri
vate considerations." Further that "the
work should look to the whole union, and
the general commerce of both the Atlantic
and the Pacific oceans."
Gov. Seicards Fully endorses the
scheme. I quote one paragraph: "When
we look upon the full tide of European im
migration beating upon our eastern shores,
and consider the volume that is about to
break upon the Pacific coast, the ultimate
units of the races of men reveals itself to
its, and we are irresislably . impressed
with the conviction that that unity is to
be j)erfected in our oicn country , and un
der our Democratic Institutions. It is
a letter worthy the philanthropic character
of the distinguished Senator.
John G. Palfrey s Covers three close
ly written pages shows he regards the
moral as well as the pecuniary character
of the work. I quote: "It seems as if the
good Providence, which has always had
in its chaige the welfare of this nation, had
by these seasonable inventions, (the engine
and telegraph,) been providing securities
against its greatest danger. No sooner,
by the sudden expansion of our country,
has the question arisen, hrm- so vast a ter
ritory is to be kept united, by the light
bonds of republican government, than it is
solved by the railroad and the telegraph,
which practically established the B relations
of neighborhood between communities on
the opposite shores of a continent.'
Sorts of Paragraphs.
riTThe Albany Knickerbocker pithily
says: 'Three of the most expensive lux
uries that nations can possibly indulge in,
are "wars, base drums and heroes;' and in
proof states that in England the Duke of
Wellington since 1811, has received in
military pay, bounties, grants, &c, about
$14,000,000! or some 400,000 per year
more than we pay Congress, Senate,
President, and thirty-one State Governors.
Why, that great sum would educate some
25,000 of the poor children of the English
peasantry, and yet it is all spent on one
man.
iSP Among the pupils attending the lec
tures of the Medical College recently
opened at Syracuse, N. Y., are Mrs.
Gleason, of the Glen Haven Water Cure,
Mrs. Davis of Mt. Morris, and Miss Mary
M. Taylor, of Buffalo.
ESir Moses Montefiore has founded at
Damascus a large hospital and two prima
ry schools for indigent Jews, among whom
he has also distributed 160,000 Turkish
piastres, (about 40,000 francs. The Jews
of Damascus, in order to testify their grat
itude to Sir Moses Montefiore, for these
acts of benevolence, have bestowed on him
the title of Nassi, (Prince) of the Israelites
FOREIGN NEWS.
Arrival of the
MilS Eli I A!
SEVEN DAYS LATER!
The excellent taste displayed in its columns ! 29th day of NOVEMBER next, asaday
Dom in us selected and original matter,
render it one of the most acceptable visi
tors to our table. Those wishing a high
toned and refined literary paper for their
families, cannot do better than subscribe
for the Home Journal, and the names of
the editors are sufficient guaranty of the
ability with which it is conducted. See
their prospectus in another column.
Arrest.
Two individuals, by the names of Gra
ham and Brown have been arresled and
lodged in our County Jail for passing
counterfeit money. They were arrested
in Pittsburg by Constable Hague, on in
formation of Patrick Regan, and brought
to this place on Thursday last. Several
counterfeit notes on the Ilarrisburg Bank
and the State Bank of Ohio were found on
the person of one of them. As their case
will undergo a judicial investigation at our
n?xt Court, we forbear making any com
ments relative to their guilt or innocence.
Separate and apart from their case, howev
er, we may be permitted to remark that it
is the very general opinion that a regularly
organized band of men arc engaged in the j
business of manufacturing and passing j
counterfeit money. Their agents are dis- j
tnbuted throughout the State, who have
managed to put a large amount of their i
spurious money into circulation. It is the
opinion of Constable Hague that the plates
from which these notes were struck are
concealed cither in Blair or Huntingdon
of 'general Thanksghing throughout the
State, and I hereby recommend and earn
estly invite all the good people of this
Commonwealth to a sincere and prayerful
observance of the same.
Given under my hand and the great seal
ot the State, at Ilarrisburg, this twenty
tmn day ot uctooer, in the year ot our
Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty
nine, and of the Commonwealth the seventy-fourth.
By the Governor.
TOWNSEND HAINES.
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
I if" A democratic mass meeting was
called to be held at St. Paul s Minesota,
on the 20th inst. The objects of the
meeting were to memorialize the Legisla
ture to ask the Congress of the United
States to favor the annexation of Canada.
Party lines are now strongly drawn in that
new territory.
dThe Sunday ordinance at Norfolk,
Va., imposes a fine of 85 for a barber sha
ving on Sunday.
EP'El Siglo, of the 22d ult., states that
the late victory of Gen. Uroga over the
insurgent in the Sierra Gorda, has so dis
pirited them that there are now hopes of a
speedy pacification of that hot bed of re
volt. The hostile indians on the frontiers
have received severe chastisement in sev
eral encounters lately, from American
guerilla parties in the service of Mexico.
EiPGen. Houston, of Texas, has writ
ten a letter declaring his conviction that
but a few fanatics at the north are hostile
to southern right and regarding apprehen
sions of trouble about slavery as idle. The
Texas papers declare Bell, the lately elect
ed Governor, to be a democrat, and say
that not one of the candidates ran as a
whig.
young lady of Boston has accept
ed an offer of 8400 per rrmnth.to act as
book-keeper in a mercantile house in San
Francisco. We also learn that several
young ladies are about leaving Boston for
California,
The Houses in California are to come
from all parts of the world, as well as the
people. They are building houses in
Bordeaux, France, to send to California,
and some have already been shipped from
Editorial Convention.
A convention of the editors of various
journals throughout the State assembles in
Ilarrisburg to-day, in accordance with
a resolution adoi.ted by the editors of
the 17th Congressional District. The
object of this convention is to urge upon
iili3 next Congress a change in the pre;-
; ent postnge system, and the adoption of j bald.
j such reforms as will operate beneficially to
j the interts's of the country pre ss. We
j regret that itwas oi.t of our power to be
present on the occasion, and hope they
will adopt such measures as will enable
them to succeed in their laudable undcr-
Mesmeric Announcement. Sir John
Franklin has been seen by a clairvoyant
of Bolton, England. This discovery was
issued several days before the vessel ar
rived which brought the news which we
have already given our readers of that
unfortunate navigator. 1 he clairvoyant
was uninstructed, and unable to read and
write, but when asked to point to the
place on the map where she had seen
Sir John, she put her fingeron the north
west side of Hudson's Bay. bhe says it
is Sir John's expectation to be in England
in nine and half months. There are
three companies with him. Some cf his
men are frozen in the snow, and parties
of them are following on. She visited
Sir John Ross' ships, and says they are
frozen into the ice, and that he can't turn
his ship lound. When asked to show
where he was on the map, she pointed to
Banke's Land. She expressed great as
tonishment that clo cks varied so much be
tween the points occupied by the two
navigators, and said that a watchmaker
should be sent to repair them. She des
cribed the person of Sir John Franklin,
and mentioned respectfully that he i was
The account cf this mesmeric an
I nouncement is autnenuc, anu uaumuy
before the arrival of the vessel which
brought the news, and occasioned much
speculation, and has lost none of its inter
est since it has ma measure been verified.
Springfield Republican.
taking.
county, and efforts or? being made to fer
ret them out.
Horrible Outrage.
An outrage of the most flagitious charac
ter, was committed on the person of a little
girl of eleven years of age, the daughter of
Mr. George Nagle, residing near the Sum
mit, by a man named Meloy, on Saturday
last. The little girl was passing through
the woods on the way from her father's
house to school, when she was met by
this fiend in human dress, who dragged
her off the road a short distance, where
'he horrible outrage was committed. As
fonrt ns the fact became known warrant
u'Thc last Lebanon Advertiser pre-
i scuts the name of Jacob Weidel, Esq.,
of that county as a democratic candidate
for State Treasurer. Mr. Weidel was the
Cemocratic canuiuate lor :tate senator in
that district in 1845, when he reduced the
usual whig majority of six thousand to
about seven hundred. He is highly rec
ommended as a thorough and energetic
business man, and a sound and ardent democrat.
CP' All the speculations and comments
ot the press both in England and America
relative to a war between Russia and
Turkey, turn out to be entirely gratuitous,
and this prollic theme for leaders can no
longer be used. By the late intelligence
from Europe we learn that the Emperor
of Russia fearful of the consequences, is
disposed to pocket the affront of Turkey,
and thus all the alarms about a
European war have ended in 5inokc.
Correspondence ot the N. Y. Tiibuno.
The Nicaragua Dlspnte.
Washington-, Oct. 25, 1819.
You are aware that Mr. Rives, after he
left this country, proceeded at once to
England, instead of going to Paris and
first nresentin? his credentials. The ob-
iiect of this was to hold a free and full con
versation, under instructions irom mis
Government, with Lord Palmerston upon
the subject of the claims set up by Great
Britain to the exclusive navigation of the
San Juan River, &c. The result of that
interview has been communicated to this
Government, and I have reason to believe
thatit is of a nature as to leave little or no
reasonable doubt of such an adjustment o
the matter as will throw the Nicaragua
route, open to all nations upon the same
terms and footing. All real or imaginary
apprehensions, therefore, as to a serious
difficulty arising between the United States
and ttngiana m tne nnai aujustment o
this question, can at once be dissipated.
CFKnOck-down arguments are often
times productive of evil, as they become
SO-FIST-lcal.
Austrian Atrocities The Turkish Dif
ficulty Riots in Ireland Xew Hun
garian Constitution.
Sackville, Nov. 3.
The Hibernia arrived at Halifax last
evening, after a rough passage.
We are in receipt of dates from Paris
up to the 18, and Liverpool to the 20th
ult.
The Hibernia brings 100 passengers,
among whom is Mr. White and family,
the American Consul at Hamburg.
We learn that Richard Rush, the late
Minister to France; Saunders, Minister to
Spain; Sales, charge in Austria; and Flen
niken, charge to Denmark left South
ampton on the 25th ult., in the steamer
Washington for New York.
From Constantinople or St. Petersburg
we have no additional information, and as
yet have no. solution of the difficulty be
tween the Porte and the Autocrat. The
generalbelicf howeier, among well inform
ed circles, is, that Russia will pocket the
affront rather than provoke a collision
with France and England.
A correspondent, writing from Belgrade,
1st ult., states that the Hungarian refugees
are still at Widden, ready to set out for
any destination they may receive. Prince
Alexander of Servia has behaved well to
wards them, allowing them a free passage
and provisions, through his territory. Bern,
Dembinski, and others, had embraced Is
lamism, and entered the Turkish Army.
Austria.
Haynau, in his administration of milita
ry affairs, loses no opportunity to preserve
the bloody epithet so universally applied
to him. He has murdered, under guize
of court martial, 13 Hungarian generals,
who delivered themselves up at the end of
the war. Count Bateyany, the prime
minister of Hungary had been shot also.
He was to have been hung, but his wife
sent him a dagger, with which he cut his
throat. He did not succeed however in
committing suicide, and fell pierced by
Austrian bullets.
Several Hungarian officers, who were
furnished with passports from Comorn,
have passed through Berlin on their way
to the west. Some are going to America.
Kleppa was said to be among them, and
had embraced the resolution of crossing the
Atlantic, with a hundred others.
Hungary is to be divided into ten dis
tricts, each to have its own provincial
council, yet deputies are to be chosen by
a majority of the votes in the population.
Italy.
The accounts from Rome are the re
verse from satisfactory. The return of the
Pope is still talked about, but, when, is
still a subject of conjecture. Garibaldi
has left the island, Santa Madalina, for
Gibralter, from whence he will sail for
London, and ultimately proceed to Ameri
ca.
France.
The news from France, England and
Ireland is very unimportant. 1 he trials
of the riotors of June 13th, are going on at
Versailles, attended with much excitement
Ireland.
Several anti rent riots have occurred.
raitVi fatal rpcnlt A rint tnnfc nlnP.P on
03rA matrimonial alliance is definitive th , 2th nl, at Kittrhv. Kino-'s countv.
r- i . ..I i i . .k r... " --j o .
V nxea to mse uiuuu unw-en viuw. , ihrPP nf ihfl nn epmen ucre ki w .
r. r r-i I 1 . U T T I . '
l-nnce OI oweuen ana ut l ruiwss iuu- i cpvora others severe! i iniured.
i i . j r u: 1 u:i - ! J J
sa, eiaesi uaugmer oi ins ruyui uium-as
rince Frederick cf the Ncther;ands.
The marriage will take place early in the
ensuing year.
ESPThe Strait of the Dardanelles, upon
which the English fleet has lately moved
divides Europe from Africa, and unites
he sea of Mamora to the Archipelago. It
s 50 miles in length, and its width varies
rom 10 miles to less than 1 mile. It is
very strongly fortified.
tJs 1 he isew York oommerccial un
derstands that an insurance has been ef
fected by one mercantile house in that
c.ty on six hundred thousand dollars to be
received by the three next steamers from
California.
GPThe American (Catholic) Patriarch
at Constantinople, has been commissioned
hv the 1 urkish bultan. to transmit, on
j
ins part to Tope Pius lA, the sum ot 16U,
000 francs for Panel exchequer. Wre re-
.
member that the Sultan contributed Jib
erally towards the relief of the Irish dis
tress.
the
iseiguim.
The sum o fSG.000 has already been
raised at New Orleans to make a prelimi
nary investigation, in relation to the Te-
huantepeRailroad.
A cargo of English iron, arrived at Bos
ton, had to be sold very tow m conse
quence of beinjr chalked by contract with
that article, which prevents it from weld-
inr
general
in vain, for he was allowed to remain in
the Austrian territory until the storm had
blow n over.
It is also a singular fact that, in the P0
hsh revolution, Russia never required Aus
tria or Prussia to render up the exiles that
had taken refuge in those countries; and
the peremptory bearing now assumed to
wards the Porte is more preposterous and
inexcusable. Every thing shows that the
demand of the Czar was hasty and incon
siderate.and that the general voice of Eu
rope will call upon him to desist. Austria
herself cannot heartily second him in . an
obstinate p ersistence upon this point. She
would gain nothing by helping the Mua.
covites to Constantinople. Boston Courier.
Canada.
Quebec is scarcely behind. Montreal in
pressing the question cf annexation.. A
mauifesto in favor of thalproject is now
in circulation in Quebec with 700 names
attached, of men mostly of-high standing
in that city, of both origins,- and . from '
the rank ground taken in the movement,
it lids fair to result in a pretty general -union
amonp- the friends of anexation in
allthat portion of the Province. The re- r
sistence offered to these efforts by tha-
Loyalists cf the upper Province, can!,
scarcely arrest the popular current -
Most of the Press of Toronto, it is true,
are particularly intolerant against th '
7 "
measure, and vindictively denounce it as
the work of evil spirits who seek to ride.
rough-shod, overall the insiitutions of the
government.
But, even in upper Canada, the work'-
of annexation is not with out its warm and
ardent advocates, and this feeling seems
to be a growing one there. Nova Scotia
and New Brunswick a re evincing more
and more of this feeling da ly, and tho
t.tce of the meetings and remonstrances
in some portions of the country the evi
denc?s are rapidly multiplying in favor
of annexation.
The Grand Master of the Orangemen
at By town, has, as we learn, corne. out
w-ith an address to the members of all
British North America, peremptorily de
nouncing annexation as utterly disloyal
and revolutionary, threatening d sastec
and danger to the country, and menancinsf
the peace and safety of the people.-X.
x. Jour, of Com.
Cuba.
The Democratic Review makes the fol
lowing remarks upon Cuban affairs, and
they are pregnant with meaning: 'Under
the inflnence of annexation, the property
of the Cubans would immediately equalize
with that of similar property in the United
States, and the sugar planters of Louisiana
would find in the hitherto i ntDuched sail of
Cuba, the means of underselling the world
in sugar, while the capacity of Cuba to
purchase and consume beef, ham, flour,
and other supplies of the western States,
would develope itself in an almost limitless
degree. The S20,000,000 now dnwn
from thejisland annually, for the remittances
to Madrid, accumulating in the islind, as
a capital in the enployment of its free in
dustry, would draw desirable settlers from
all nations to avail themselves of its limit
less advantages.'
The Three Depots.
It is an old saying'when rogues fall out
honest men come to their rights. The
Muscovite the Austrian and the Ottoman
have done what they could to keep man-
Kind out of their rights, and the general
The Tariff Question Settled.
The result of the election in Pennsylva
nia, (says the Lancaster Intelligencer) has
settled the question of the Tariff, which
was made by the whigs the leading issue
in tne last campaign, J he Democrats
were desirous of keeping that question out
of the canvass but our opponants would
not permit it, and insisted that the destruc
tion or permanency of the Tariff of 1816
depended on the election of Henry M.
ruller, or John A. Gamble. The whigs
made this the great question of the cam
paign, and as Mr. Gamble is elected by an
overwhelming majority, of course the peo
ple have expressed their satisfaction with
impression seems to be that a falling out
out among them might afford a profitable lhe tariff as it is, and do not desire its des
truction, or even any essential modification
verification of the old proverb. There
would be sympathy for Turitey was the
Czar to attacK her in the present conjunc
ture, because so far as right and wrong are
concerned in the special case, the Czar
would be the aggressor. For the 1 utk,
as 1 urk, we have little svmpathv. All
that is not slave in him is tyrant. Much
superfluous laudation has been bestowed
upon the Porte for the stand it has taken
in refusing to give up the exiles of Wid
den. it is a noble, humane, chivilrous
act, as journalists inform us. Let the
m 1 f 1
iuussuiman nave nis aue wnen ne does a
noble deed; but there is nothing to induce
ns tr think that thpr was anxr tallr nf t-iVi i
How the 19th century differs from lanthroDV in the divan whp it W9a f-
17th ded to say "no," to the Czar. The Turks
CPThe accounts from Ireland relative certainly care nothing for Kossuth, nor
to the notnto crop are painfully distres- would they lift a finger to save him from
sin-. Emigration, especially from the the scaffold, were it not that the matter
South, is proceeding at a rapid rate. toucnes tneir political rights and their . na
The class of persons emigrating is very tional dignity. They have thrown their
resnectabie. The clergymen, Pictestant shield over the fugitive not for the reason
and Catholic share in the distress. On that they sympathise with his cause, but Pennsylvania, that the tariff m,ACt;An u.
every side the signs of general ruin are to repel the encroachment of a hated rival, been setMed by the decision at the ballot
accumulating, and the low prices prevail- l ne ouitan nas neretoiore made the same box. The political complextion of the
of its details. Is our neighbor of the Ex
aminer satisfied with the decision of the
sovereigns?
On this subject that spirited paper, the
Guernsey (Ohio) Jeffersonian remarks.
The whigs of Pennsylvania made the re
peal of the Tariff of 1846 a prominent is
sue during the late campaign in that State.
The Democracy met the issue boldlft
and the people have rendered a virdict,
through the ballot-box, against the repeal
of the existing Democratic Tari AT. Penn
sylvania is right side up on the Tana
question.
The Washington correspondent of the
Baltimore Sun, Ion, in his letter of the 15,
says: i nere is some tais about a revision
of the tariff svstem at the comin session.
A great effort is to be made by the iron
and sugar interests, but they will effect
nothing at present.
V e congratulate the people of the Uni
ted States, and especially the citizens of
intr in the Irish market deenen the dis- demands of Austria and Kussia which
tress, and cut off all prospects of future those powers are now making of him.
improvement, and all grounds of future We have already referred io the case of
hope.
next Congress is onother guarantee that
the importunities of the Federal and Con
servative monopolists will not be heeded.
The country can now enjoy quiet.
Nothing important received this morning
Russia at the time of Greek insurection.
In a recent instance of a rebellion in the
Turkish province of Serbia, the Hospodar
iii . u ii-i i 1 1 : i- i
... n. Gov. liamsey s messaee to be nnntei in
neu inio me iiusinan lermorv. i ue i n -
Porte in vain demanded of Metternich's
government either his extradition or dis
missal from the Austrian territories. It is
also well known that the leader of the pre
sent insurrection in Bosnia, having former-
Nota single case of cholera has occurred My been guilty of political offences against
among the Jews of London. This is at- the Porte, took shelter in Croatia. The
tnbuted to their conformity to many sam- Turkish authorities applied to the Austrian is said to be excellent for keeping away
tary rpguiruions ot their own law. J government of the day for his extradition ' these troub'caome insectt.
It is estimated that there are 17,000
persons in paris who get 'beastly drunk
as a habit.
Good nature, like a bee, collects honey
from every herb. Ill nature, like a spi
der, sucks poison from the sweetest flow
ers.
The Minesota Legislature have directed
ov. Ra
j French.
The editor of the Providence Star has
seen the 'man who minds his own bust
No description is given.
i ness:
Gum camphor, laid in the track of ants.