The Weekly Mariettian. (Marietta, Pa.) 1860-1861, March 16, 1861, Image 1

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Pcboteb• to 'politics, Yittraturr, lAticulturt, yjorthlturt, Ofy Useful Arti, Ovum! naps of the Paz 'Kuf ! ahifirmatin, ax., h
L_ Halsor, H icaltc)r end PecDpristc>r_
SEVENTH YEAR.
( L')ld,e 'cratti4 Variettian.
Eapeufeh eotAi /00p/i
AT ONE DOLLAR. A-YEAR,
12=1
OFFICE
ON FRONT STREET,
ZEIOOND STORY Or CRULL'S ROW,
Five doa,a East of Mrs. Flury's Hotel.
IF subscriptions be not paid within 6 months
0.25 will be charged, arid if delayed until the
expiration of the year, $1.50 will be charged.
No subscription received for a less period than
six months, and no paper will be discontin
ued Until all arrearages are paid, unless at
the option of the publisher. A failure to nO
tify a discontinuance at the expiration of the
term subscribed for, will be considered a new
engagement.
Any personsending us FIVE new subsdiibers
shall have a sixth copy for his trouble.
ADVERTISING RATES : One square (12 lines,
or less) 50 cents for the first insertion and 25
cents for each subsequent insertion. Profes
sional and Business cards, of six lineaor less
'at $3 per annum. Notices in the reading
columns, five cents a-line. Marriages and
Deaths, the simple announcement, FREE;
but for any additional lines, five cents a-line.
square 3 months, $2.00; 6 months, $3:50;
1 year, $5. Two squares, 3 months, $3 :
6 months, $5; 1 year, $7. Half-a-column,
3 months, $8 ; 6 months, $l2; 1 year,s2o.
One column, 6 months, $2O ; 1 year, 30.•
Haying recently added a large lot of new JOB
AND CARD TYPE, we are prepared to do all
kinds of PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL PRINT
ING, at short notice and reasonable prices.
Nan* plating.
Chief Burgess, Samuel D. Miller,
Assistant Burgess, Peter Baker,
Town Council ; Barr Spangler, (President)
John Crull, .Thomas Stance, Ed. P. , Trainer,
Henry' S. Libhart.
Town Clerk, Theo: Hiestand.
Treasurer, John Auxer.
.Assessot of Taxes, William Child, Jun.,
Collector of Taxes, Frederick L. Baker.
Justice of the Peace, Emanuel D. Roath.
Rig* Constable, Absalem Emawiler.
Assistant Constable, Franklin K. Mosey.
Regulators, John H. Goodman, E. D. Roath.
Supervisor, Samuel 'Hippie, Sen.
School Directors, John Jay Libhart, Presi
dent, E.V. Reath, Treasurer, C. A. Schaffner,
Secretary, John K. Fidler, Aaron IS. Grosh,
Jonathan M. Larzelere.
Post Office Hours: The .Post Office vAll
be open from 7 o'clock in the morning until
Bin the evening. Chas. Kelly, Postmaster. '
Beneficial Societies: 7:41. Hattinoirv, A. N.
Cassel, President;"John Ifiy"Libltart; Treftsnr
c r Barr Spangler, Secretary. Tut: PIONEE,R . ,
John Jay Libhart, President; Abrtn Cassel,
Treasurer; Wm. Child, jr., Secretary.
SUPPLEE &
IRON AND BRASS
FOUNDERS,,
And General Machinists, Second ereet
Below Union, Columbia, Pa.
They are prepared to make all kinds of Iron
Castings for Rolling Mills and Blast Furnaces,
Pipes, for Steam, Water and Gas ; Columns,
Fronts, Cellar Doors, Weights, &c., for Buil
dings, and castings of every description ;
STEAM ENGINES, AND BOILERS',
IN TILE MOST MODERN AND IMPROVED
Manner; Pumps, Brick Presses, Shafting , alnd
Pulleys, Mill Gearing,, Taps, Dies,Machinery
for Mining and Tanning ; Bras Bearings,
Steam & Blast Gauges, Lubricators, Oil Cocks,
Valves for Steam. Gas, and Water; Brass Fit
tings in all their 17 ariety; Boilers, Tanks, Flues,
Heaterd, Stacks, Bolts, Nuts, Vault Doors,
Washers, &c.
BLACKSMITHING in GENERAL.
From long experience inlmilding machinery we
flatter ourselves that we can give ge•ieral satis
faction to those why may favor us with their
orders. Irrßepairing promptly attended to.
Orders by mail addressed as above, will meet
with prompt attention. Prices to suit the times.
Z. SUPPLER,
7'. R. SUPPLEE.
Columbia, October 20 1860. 14-it
( 45;"\ SDDE, HARMSS , St qe,i-
Trunk Manunsctory,
Between Spangle?. 4 Patterson's Store
and Wolfe's Notion House,
Market Street.
S. L. DELLINGER
IaTO UL D most respectfully inform the
V V public that he continues the above bus.-
Less in all its branches. Anything not on
hand will be manufactured at' hort notice and
warranted to give satisfaction in workmanship
and price. He will always - endeavor to keep
on hand an assortment of _
SADDLES, BRIDLES, HARNESS,
Wagon, Carriage and .Ridnig Whips, Fly-nets
Horse Covets, Collars, Trunks, Valieces,
Carpet Bags and in fact everything in his line
of business, all of which will be of the best
material and workmanship, and at prices in
keeping with the times. Corns and see.
REPAIRING NEATLY AND'CUEAPLY DONE.
Marietta, August 25, 1860. [ju 11'56
r*, 11. L. Sr. E. J. ZAHN
* D, ESPECTFULLY inform their
11friends and the public that they
- .2 4! t , still continue the WATCH, CLOCK
n AND JEWELRY busines at the old
stand, North-west Corner of North
Queen street and Center Square, Lancaster, Pa
A full assortment of goods in our line of busi
ness always on hand and for sale at the lowest
cash. rates. Repairing attended to per
sonally by the proprietors.
SPECTACLES to' suit all who
can be aided with glasses,
can be bought at H. L. $• E. T. ZAILIPS, Cor
ner of North Queen-st.„ and Center Square,
Lancaster. New glasses refitted in old frames,
at short notice. [v6-ly
0 A General Assortment of all kinds of
BUILDING HARDWARE, LOCKS,
Hinges, Screws, Bolts, Cellar Grates,
Paints, Oils, Glass and Putty, very cheap.
STERRETT S. CO,
CNEW BRASS
LOOKS—Good Time
Keepers, for One Dollar.
Clocks„ Watches and Jewelry carefully re
paired and charges moderate, at WOLFE'S.
CHASE'S CONCENTRATED L YE, su
perior to any now in use, can be had at,the
Cheap Store of Difenbach.
fit) N STA N TLY on hued, Mono ngabeht, rcc-
IL) tilled , 4.• Co.
SABBATH SONG
Sweet is the time of spring',
When nature's charms appear;
The birds with ceaseless pleasure sing,
And hail the opening year;
But sweeter far the spring,
Of wisdom and of grace, , [King,
When children bless and liraiso their
Who loves the youthful race.
Sweet is the dawn of day,
When light just streaks the sky ;
When shades and darkness pass away,
And morning's beams are nigh ;
But sweeter far the dawn
Of piety in youth ;
When doubt and darkness are withdrawn
Before the light of truth.
Come join our Sabbath song,
On this the holy day ;
We know that angel harps above
Unite to' swell the lay:
And in the house above,
Not made with human hand,
We'll sing at last the Sabbath song,
In one unbroken band !
Saviour, do thou appear,
Our sabbath school to bless;
Give to our youthful hearts thy fear,
And perfect righteousness.
Call us each one by name,
Receive each child as thine;
And 0, regard our youthful claim,
With benefits divine.
THE SABBATH BELL
The bells have rung, I cannot stay ; •
I'll haste to school without delay ;
I would be there to sing and pray,
And seek God's blessing through the day
These happy hours will soon be o'er,
When we shall meet in school no more;
But eon earth we do God's will,
In heaven above - we'll praise him still.
Oh that the Lord would gently move
Upon my heart, that I may love
His holy word and heavenly ways,
And learn to sing ou high his praise !
A incur Pu.oz.—ln Liverpool re
cently, while a lion-tamer named Mac
como was going through his performance
with Bengal tigers, at the Menagerie, a
tigress caught his hand in her mouth.—
Planting his knee in the small of the
tigress's back, and pressing her against
the bars of the cage, then siezing her
lower jaw with the right hand, he held
her powerless to do more than retain the
left band in her mouth. So cool was
Maccomo in this trying position that
lookers ou thought it part of the per
formance; but when he, called to one of
the keepers, "She has got my hand fast
in her mouth ; get a bar of hot iron, the
truth of his dangerous, position flashed
through the minds of those present, and
created the greatest excitement—one
lady fainted away, others running from
the, painful sight. Four or five minutes
elapsed before the iron was ready, dur
ing which time Maccomo stood as a piece
of statuary; not a quiver of lip to show
the pain he was enduring. When ready,
the hot iron was applied quickly and
surely by one of the keepers to one of the
large teeth in the tigress's upper jaw,
and, as though she had been electrified,
her mouth sprang open, Idaccomo, quick
as lightning, drew his hand away, caught
hold of a thick stick, Aruck the animal
a terrific blow on the skull, brought :her
down, and forced her to finish her per
formance before he left the cage. When
Maccomo came out of the cage, his bleed
ing hand testified to the frightful strug
gle which had been going on between
man and beast.
ta-Mr. Thaddeus Hyatt publishes a
card, defending himself from the charges
made against him by individuals in Law
rence, K. T., of having exaggerated the
amount of suffering in the Territory.—
He says that his assailants are moved to
their efforts because of jealousy of a rival
city, and of a Senatorial candidate, and
on account of a stupid idea that to tell
the whole truth about this if ansas fam
ine will destroy land values and trade,
and prevent immigration to the new
State.
IE3 - While the boys were out at "re
cess," recently, at one of the village
schools in South Adams, Itlass., a gen
tleman riding by stopped and inquired
of a bright looking lad, "What they did
in there ?" The urchin looked up, scan
ning his interrogator's face a moment,
and then with a wicked leer and knowing
wink replied, "They tan hides, sir l"
That boy had probably received his share
of smart in the aforesaid school house.
MARIETTA, PA., SATITRDAY, MARCH 16, 1861.
KENTUCKY LOOMING up : Kentucky
seems to be prominently on the carpet
just now,'as it has given birth to many
of the characters figuring in the drama
of the second American Revolution.—
President Davis was born in Todd coun
ty, Kentucky, in 1808. President. Lin
coln was born in Hardin county, in 1809.
Vice President Breckinridge was born
in Fayette county, in 1821. Senator
Crittenden, the great pacificator was
born in Woodford county, in 1786. Jas.
Guthrie, the Chairman on Compromise
Resolutions in the. Peace Conference,,
was born in Nelson county, in 1795.
Joseph 11olt,ithe warlike Secretary of
War, is a native of Breckinridge county.
Major Anderson was born in Kentucky,
in 1805. General Barney is also a Ken
tuckian, and Cassius M. Clay, both of
whom are somewhat connected with the
current crisis.
gir A lady writes from Washington
that Mrs. Lincoln is somewhat young
looking for the wife of a man of 52. She
is richly dressed, wearing a rose-colored
silk, and is otherwise handsomely deco
rated. She has a very fair complexion,
dark hair and a pleasant eye and voice.
Mrs. Hamlin is quite, young--far below
thirty—a lady of small figure, and like .
the President's wife, apparently highly
accomplished.
erHon. Horatio King, late Post
master General, entered the Department
over which
.he presided, when twen,
ty-five or six years of age, with .an ap
pointment as copying clerk, and a salary,
of $l,OOO per annum. He was called to.
the First Assistant Postmaster General,
ship on the death of Gen. Robbie. He
began his public career as condubter of
a newspaper at Paris, Me., having Hon.,
Hannibal Hamlin, now Vice President
elect, as his partner in the business,
farTw9 hundyed_ thousand sords of
pine wood, are annually brought to the
New York market, of whichl fifty thou
sand cords are used by kindling-wood
companies. In the transportation of
this materiab. about a hundred schooners
are employed. The number has fallen
off somewhat lately through a contrac
tion of the business. Of this immense
supply of pine wood, New Jersey fur
nishes one-eighth, and Virginia the re
mainder.
110-A plain, hard-fisted old man called
upon Gov. Curtin, of Pennsylvania,,the
other day. The Governor, supposing, of
course, that the man wanted a place
somewhere, expressed his appreciation
of his past services, and said he was sorry
he could not reward him with an office.
"But I don't want an office," said • the
old man, "I merely called to see if ,you
didn't want, to buy a good dog I"
c...r"Electing" Postmasters is becom
ing quite common in the towns of Ohio
and Indiana. The Republicans vote for
the respective candidates, and the one
receiving the largest number Of votes
applies for the place without fear of op
position. The plan whether good or
bad will at all events save the President
and Postmaster General a vast amount
of trouble and vexation.
The other evening a lady entered
a store in New York, for the purpose of
making some purchases, and while flier°
trod upon a match, which ignited, and
the flames communicatidg to her light
under-clothes, they were soon on fire.=
She thought she was over a furnace.—
Some one screamed and a dog ran V, her.
She was slightly burned and had a ner
vous attack that nearly killed her. •
trA_ woman named Margaret prett,
convicted of forgery and larceny, at Har
risburg, escaped from prison a day or
two since, by dressing herself in the
bonnet, veil, and shawl of the mother-in
law of the jailor, and rapping at fie jail
door just like the lady she represented,
The jailor - hardly looked at her as he let
her out. She is still at liberty,
arA somewhat novel wedding has oc
cared at the Church of the Holy Trinity,
in Brooklyn, on Tuesday evening, March
5. Ten married sisters appeared with
their ten husbands, and a small army of
children, to celebrate the marriage of
the eleventh sister:
Cozzens' hotel, at West Point, a
well-known and popular Summer resort,
was on Friday of last week burnt to the
ground together with the out-buildings.
The fire caught from a kettle of burning
charcoal, carelessly left on the - rnof by a
man who was at work repairina"it.'
Half a million packs of cards iire.made
annually in London. ;•-•
THAT LIBERAL JEW : It Will be rec
ollected by our readers that:Air. Morde
cai, orCharleston, South Carolina, pre
sented the empire with $lO,OOO, •to aid
in organizing and arming a new Govern
ment. The act was trumpeted aloud as
one of great liberality.and.patriotism.--
The Knoxville Whig, however, gives
some additional particulars, not much
to the credit of the "patriot."
Arordecai is a. Wholesale Druggist in
Charleston. He visited• New York,
Philadelphia, and Boston, just before he
did this act, and represented to his cred
itors that he *as insolvent, and settled
wrth:them by payibg 50 cents on a
dol
lar!`Such acts make Secession a glori
ous code of morals ! It is in • keeping
with the mo . rals of the Southern leaders,
with whom it is patriotic to rob the Gov
ernment, and religious to repudiate hon
est debts, we have the proof.
*FAlrs.'R,yves, the niece of George
has obtained a recognition of her
legitimacy from the - matrimonial causes
court in London, and thereby comes into
possession of the revenues of the Duchy
of Lancaster, amounting to £1,004,643
sterling, and also £105,520 as bequeSts
from the royal family, and is "Princess
of Cumberland and Duchess of Lancas
ter, as the- grand-daughter and lineal
representative, in -the female line, of his
late Royal Highness, Henry Frederick,
Duke of Cumberland, who died instate
in the year 1790." Like-the• Gaines and
Bonaparte cases, this hinged on a ques
tion.of legitimacy.
0 0-A grand tri-centennial anniversary
of the birthdaY of Shakspeare is proposed
to be held in England, in April, 1864.
An enthusiastic writer Proposes that a
temple be dedicated to him on that day,
in London, to be filled, with,the choicest
editions of his works, and adorned with
statues•of the great authors and artists
who have illustrated his genins.
A wild - cat,
,that eseuped from a
menagerie -in Gincinnati, took " up its
abode - in the basement of a building gad
proceeded to free it from rats. A Ger
man, living near by, supposing the new
comer would like congenial company,
013'0 morning put liis own cat, much to
the disgust•of the German.
CJersey City paper says that a little
girl living in that place dropped a ker
nel of corn iu her ear several weeks ago
which sprouted a few days since, when a
surgeon was called in to remove it. -He
succeeded in doing, so, without much
hurting: the child, but she has since been
e, little deaf. . • .
CreJohn Quincy Adams asserted that
the '"abandonment of tobacco would add
five year t& the dierage 'of huinan life."
The Indians formerly yoisoned their ar
rows with a decoction of tobacco ; and
soldiers in the U. S. army . shirk duty by
.Wearing tobacco under their arms, thUs
causing symptoms of illness.
U - eel:lan, the Benicia Boy, has gone
into some sort of business in New Or
leans, and hopes to make his fortune
thereby. He has nothing to say just
now about fighting Hurst for the Ghana
pionship of England.
The New York correspondent of
the Charleston Courier says that Mad
ame Anna. Bishop was dffered $6,500 by
one of the Broadway concert saloons to
sing one song each night, exclusive of
Sundays, for six months, but she refused.
437.11uch has been said about feats of
strength but it is an actual fact that a
few days ago a man of but ordinary stat
ure knocked down an elephant. The
I . k performer was an auctioneer.
.tir An Arkansas planter was fatally
shot `by a gambler, on the steamboat
Uncle Sam, below Memphis, on the 9th
ult. The affray grew out of a game of
cards.
ga'The. Terre Haute Express says :
We are informed by some of the fanners
of the country that the wheat looks well
at this time, and that the prospects for
a good crop are now very favorable.
Two women, dead drunk, locked
in each other's arms, were discovered in
a grocery on fire at Cincinnati, on Wed
nesday. They were both nearly suffoca
ted.
Two young, cotton factors in New
Orleans had a difficulty upon a point of
veracity last week—one used a cowhide,
and the other a pistol, and the cowhider
was. shot dead.
Wine, Called I Vitlerio, two thousand
years old,bas been" dug out of the ruins
of Ponapei.
A FIEND IN PETTICOATS.-It is said of
Mrs. Mitchell, now under prrest at New
port, It. 1., for murdering her husband,
that a few days before the murder she
floured a man with a bottle, and she told
the officer whO arrested:her for the mur
der, if he would give her time to kill two
more men, he might hang her, to the
nearest tree.
MRS. DOUGLAS. A FIX.-A newspa
per contemporary says that the beautiful
and accomplished wife of Judge Douglas
made a wager of $lOO, prior to the late
election, that she would sleep With the
next President of the. United States.—
We think the Judge will prefer to ad
vance the money, and pay the wager.
Law.—The law is the standard and
guardian of our liberty ; it circumscribes
and defendk it; but to imagine liberty
without . law:kis to imagine every man
with his sword in his hand to destroy
him who "is weaker than himself : and
that would be no pleasant prospect to
those who cry out mast for liberty.
At a ball recently given in a fashiona
ble manner in Hyde Park, London, five
ladies had their dressed burned in conse
quence of one of them catching fire as
the wearer was performing on the piano.
The room being .stripped of its furniture
to accommodate the dancers; there was
nothing at hand to extinguish the flames.
One of the ladies- died of her injuries,
another is expected to die, and the others
were badly burned.
A student in the Charity Hospital, at
New Orleans, Gilmore by name, was fa
tally wounded, a few days since, by the
accidental discharge of a pistol, which
fell from the pocket of a fellow-student,
A. H. Givan,,as he stoopml to pick up a
penknife, which he had dropped. The
ball struck young Gilmore in the abdo
men..
Formal applications -have been made
to the government of Honduras to per
mit the remains of the late Gen. Walker
to be removed to the United States.—
The reply was that the Minister of the
Republic, in Washington, had been fully
instructed on the subject and applica•
tions should be made to him.
The 'Royal Academicians are about to
abrogate the silly Salm law which has
banished female students from their
schools. It has lately been discovered
that . the very best of the competition
drawings sent into the Academy w ere
the work of female hands.
Mr. Edwin R. Lamoureaux, lawyer,
lately residing at 232 West Twenty
eighth street, New York, who, it is said
was violently assaulted and beaten by an
"injured husband," about ten days ago,
died from the effects of his wounds on
Wednesday morning.
There are in England and Wales 39,-
333 known thieves and depredators ;
4,407 receivers of stolen goods; 30,780
fallen women ; 37,688 suspected per
; 23,353 vagrants—all preying on
the public and known to the police,
The "Old Water Power Mill," on Mill
street, Germantown, Pa., is among, the
oldest edifices in the country. It was
built in 1683, about the - time of the land
ing of William Penn, for a grist mill,
and is still in operation, being capable
of making fifteen barrels of flour per day.
In the Pacific Mills, Lawrence, one of
the machines ,for printing delaines,
stamps the piece with sixteen different
colors and shades of colors in passing
through once. There is only one other
like it in the world.
The Emperor Napoleen has decided
that a moveable photographic•e§tablish
ment shall be attached to each regiment
in the French army, under the directions
of an officer to be perfectly versed in all
the technical details of the art.
Vantile Mack, the fat boy - recently ex
hibiting at Barnum's Museum, died on
Wednesday of last week. The boy, was
seven years old, weighed 240 pounds, and
died of excessive fatness.
Mrs. Skinner, relict of the late Pea
con Skinner, and the oldest, woman in
that place, died suddenly on Thursday
evening week in Williamstown, Mass.,
at the advanced age of ninety-seven
years. She was retiring for the night
when she suddenly fell down dead.
A man named James Taunton, about
fifty-two years of age, died from au over
dose of morphine 'fre the Niagara Sus
pension bridge. .
Greek coins have Ikeen found in Eng
land within a short period—supposed to
have been , brought there by the Rowans.
Ter3a)_---CDlae, Dollar a -v-ear
THE COOLEST TBING ON RECORD
As General Scott's army was march
ing triumphantly into the city of Mexico,
a procession of monks emerged from the
gate of a convent situated:on .the emi
nence at the right, and advanced, with
slow and measured tread until they met
the army at right angles. The guide or
leader of the processon was a venerable
priest whose hair was whitened with the
frost of many winters. He held in both
hands a contribution ,box, upon 'which
there was a lighted candle, and when
within a few feet of the army,the proces
sion halted. As: the army opropeeded,;
many a true believer in,SL Patrick.drop:t
ped some small coin or other, into the,
old priest's box.. And, when it was •ob
served that a soldier was searching in :
his pockets for something to bestow, the\
old priest would step ;ferward.and hold;
his box to receive the donation:. :Ulti
mately there came along a, tall, gaunt,,
limber-sided, grander-looking Irankaei-.
who, on seeing the poor: priest, thrust
his hands into the very depths of ;hie ;
breeches pockets, as if in search for a
dime, or something of the kind. The,
priest, observing this movement, advano4
ed, as usual, while Jonathan, holding
forth a greasy-looking roll of palm, coin,
menced unfolding-.:it. The old Airiest
anticipated a liberal donation,;and ;puts
on au air of the most exquisite satisfac4
tion. Jonathan continued to unroll
piece after piece of dirty paper, until•at
length he found a piece of tri-twisted
smoling tobacco. He next thrust.tos,
hands into another pocket, and ;drew
forth a clay pipe, which, with the utmost
deliberation, he proceeded ,to , 1111 .by•
pinching ell' small partiel4 of the tobac,
co. When this was done, having re
placed his tobaco in his breeches pock
et, he, stooped forward, and lighted his
pipe by the old prieet's_candle,amtmak
ing an awkward inclination of,.theliead-,
(intended, perhaps, for a bow 3 ) i he, said,
'Much obleeged to ye, 'Squire,!' and pro
ceede'd on. -
cr"Antelope," the New York ..eort
respondent or the New Orleans Picket
yune, had a look at President Lingblri
while he was there, aid cencindee that
"while there is geniality it'd merited
worth speaking from that face, there is.
at the same time, an iron cast presented;
and an indomitable will. Indeed, at a
first glance, he reminded me of one ()rimy
sledge-hammers, with which I break
rocks at home—his bOdy -Slender, like
the handle,liut topped off with a head
all solidity, all firm endurance, all iron.
Ms bands, too, are all muscle, and a
strong grip from them must be like the
grasp of a vice."
The New York Tribune says
Mr. Black recently addressed a cirenlar
letter to all foreign Governments, pro
testing in decided terms against the rec
ognition of the Confederated. States as
an independent Government, .'and• as
signed the reason at length which in
duced the remonstrance. The protest
will, of course, be renewed, and,'perliaps,
emphasised by the present Administra
tion, so that when Mr. Yancey and his
diplomatic colleagues get abroad, they
may discover that recognition by the
Great Powers is less easy than was sup
posed at Montgomery. . '
er Solomon Willard, a highly esteem
ed citizen of Quincy, Mass., cli.e4 on
Wednesday last, aged 77 years. liemas
one of the earliest projectors of Bunker
Hill Monument, and contributed largely
toward its erection. The original mod
els of the_monument are still in his office.
In 1826, with the advice and aid of the
late Hon. Thomas H. Perkins and others
he designed and surveyed, with his own
hands, the Quincy Granite Railway, the
first ever built in the Unite& S tate&
Bouligny, the New Orleans ljniv
member of Congress" when in the senior
class at Tran Sylvania tritivergity, Lex
ington, Kentucky, in April, 1824,,ras
selected to make a speech of congrApt
lation, in French, to Lafa;yette. The el
oquent oration so carried aWay,tlie hero
that hq„ threw his arms round the young
orator end held him in a long.enibri9e.
•
We learn from WillianispOrt,thalnlte ,
body of a married woman .of 'that ,phide
was found on Sunday horribly mangled
and cut up, and' that the huslYadd — OPthe
woman has been arrested at the imird'er
er. The Wuhan had been rnissingvfdr
some days, and her husband saiaqslnithtill
gone , to Philadelphia. We are
names and particulars. '' : • r
Mr. Spurgeon's -new tabernacle is now
very nearly finished in Londnn, At a cost
or £30.000, of which about X 20,000 have
been raised by 2ulyierivltiNi.
NO. 35.