Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1845-06-18 page 1 |
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WEEKLY 0 0 i JL o AT ii n vi i u ii i 1 1 Ji-JLJO VOLUME XXXV. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1845. NUMBER 47. I'UHrlMHI'.l) KVKItV WKDNKdlUV MOKNINU, fiY CHARLES SCOTT & CO. Oflicc in lliu Journal lluibtiiijr, south-east comer uf High stn-el and tiifir alley, T K H M rt. Two Dki.urk mn annum, which must invariably 1 i!itil iu fltlvmiro, I'ri'u of postage, or of pur cuiilugu lu A gniis nr (Nilli't lorn. Tln Journal n aUo pnhlidii;d daily during Iho m'stiuti of Iho 1.1'ginl.itnre, iiiul ilincii a wook llm reiiiaimli ol lliu yunr, lur $' uml throo liiiit'H a week, yearly, lor Jjf4. THURSDAY EVKNING, JUNE 12, 1815. ( Miscrrri Msln Nciriy. The fimt Concert of the society f.r lh improva-ncnt of inrn.nl music, ill Colnmlui, will hu Riven in Trinity Church, (Kpiscopnl) on Thursday evening, th Win mil. l'erforiiiinjf mill uim performing member will ho supplied with tickots. particular will lie given in bill ami ndverlisiimiil. mpF.xtiuHfir Rank. Ii will he seen hy a notice in our advertising column llml llm Exf linnpu Rank lint commenced business under lliu new law. Thin is the firsl, w believe. It awaiti only a supply of uoies for circulation to be in the ox-trcio of alt iu function. Tint Kaii. Road. It will l een. by the following from the Xeiiin Torrh L fihl, of yesterday, that the preliminary survey of the route of Itiu Columbus and Xonta Hail Hoed, hdi been completed to the latter point, and that the Commissioners and Surveyor are now on their return, re-iurveying to this point: fjolombtsa nnil Xvnin Bnll Bonsl. The preliminary survey of this road, ihu commencement of whir It wc mentioned last week, was compli-ltd to thin plare on Haturday lai. (ien Hiorklon, the eiiR-inm-r iu roare of thx parly, and Messrs. Kljr,way and Johnson, directors ac-riniiimnyini;, spvak in highly favorable trrini of ihe practicability of lliu route. There is nothing dillicull hut the passage of ihu l,ir!yi ihe plnins bviwecu ttu-m find Xcnia, prcsenl mi nhnost level surface, lliero Ixmiibt b" 2 fid fall lo ihu mile, in 11 miles of that part of die route. The distance ran is 61 link's. The ire nl lei uen in charge of thu work, are confident it can In made in lilty. The iti-survey to Columbus, ttliith is intended, will obnntu most of I he lew diUicullit-s to Ihj met wilh in l he fare of the cnuiilry. It ) I he opinion of the Engineer llml if I ho rnad was formed, it could be finished and ready lor the cars in twelve months. We trust llm people a It in K ihu mule will seu the propru-iy of ndopling a liberal conrMi toward tin enterprising company, and by subsrrip lions of Nlnrk, and yielding ihu right of way, show that the) ore disposed lo astil iu the great enterprise, which will open up to tlicm the niarhuls of the whole country. AixtsHMKNTs u.f ukr tub Tax L,w. The Hillsborough Oho News tins bvun furnished by the Auditor of High-liuid county, with tho assessment on murcliaiils' rnpilul and money at interest in that county, l'ho totalis S.r),'Jil. Last year it w is $111,536 ; showing au increase of jjfM'vWO, lo whirh is lo be added .',fii) cslimnlcd on tavern lots and new buildings. At this rate, the Tux of Highland will re duecd. Wc have found but one case beiides this, in whirh the miTrhiinls' capital and money at interest failed lo double the old aneimncnl. Huw it has happenud in Hiuhland, wo cannot tell, unless the merchnnti and money lenders there have Ik-cii a liille nearer the mark in rrmknijr, I heir ruporls htTetofore than those of some other roomies. It will be r. collected that, under the new law, the tax is only on half (be amount furnished. Within ihu rurporato limits of Gnllipolis, as we Icam from the Jt urn.il of lhat place, the value of taiable property relumed is $ib,lS! AO. Last year, ihe am mini returned was gm$ OU makiuicadiirerenceor $2,M SO. I The Vttrvium eomparrd with Ihe Uouie Nnrkcl. The National Intelluri-ncer, of a recent dat. contained a valuable table showing ihe value of the lea dins; articles of Domestic produce exported during Ihe year enuing tno sum June, IK 15. The table is compiled with great care from "the annual statement of llie navigation and commcrrs1 of the United 3'ates." Its facts are all important, showing as they do lo what extent wo depend upon and arc biiicfitlt d by fr' eign market, and enabling us la make a companion between its advantages and those of Iho home market, loniaso & complete comparison, we should have Ihe value of imports and exports for a series of years, ror our present purpose, however, llmsu statistics are not necessary. 'l'ho peoplo of the Weil are more direrlly interested in knowing, the amount of their hrcml-slulft, etc., consumed hy ihe foreign market. We find that Ihe total value of our exports during lha year ending June .10, 1(1 was $Dt,7lb,l79. The totals ranking this aggregate, including exports to all foreign ports, may be stated thus : Cotton 5ftt,nfi.1,n0 Tobacco bViW'ft Hire, S.llt-2. H Vegetable food and bread- lull's y.OAi.ilt AmuiHl foml and live animal G,l W,.WJ Derived from Uie sea 3.;i4J,Wi Derived from thHoresl fi,HIHI.7l2 Maiiufueliiresnt Cotton, 2,IIH'l.7t)0 Oilwr iiMnutHriures &,liW.ai All other articles not eiiuuinruttd,.... S,7li,7bO Total, yj,715,17a Tut Wobk r Hkmovai.. under this administration "of the people not of a party," is progressing ferociously at Washington, a well a at olhvr points. Home extremely hard cases are mentioned. That of Mr. Hanson, in the Treasury Department hns excited deep feeling. He is lame and incapacitated for labor oihermwi than as a clerk. He lias boen deeply alllirled by sickness and deaths in his family. His father was a Revolutionary soldier and his son acquitted himself with grrwl bravery in the Florida War. Itul nil would not do. (ltd and lame as he was.ullirienl as all ackuowludg-ed him to bo, he must give place to a hungry cormorant, who wanted his thouiand dollar salary. It is conceded that this administration, thus far, has been more sweeping!) proscrip- live lli.ist any of its predecessors, since the establishment of the Uoverumi'iit. Cni.t.KrTnn AT Nkw YoliK. The long threatened, long looked for, long deprecated find frequently denounced change in the Colleclorslup of New ork, has not yet been made. The iNew York pnpvrs, however, declare upon good authority as I hey Ihmk. that Court kmui W. I.awhknik, Prcsi-ideiit of (he Hank of the Hmie of New York, is to suiwr ede Mr. Vak Nks, on Ihe 11 of July. Uetitrul V. N.has a host of friends, and his removal will make a commotion among iho faithful. Tho "IL M. Journal," the organ of the "Young De mocracy"! Washington, warns the adminiitralion against the step. We stltpvcl ihu "Young Democracy" will have to grin ami bear Ihe removal of one of their favorite. Q f Wr have ait iuteresliug letter from our correspondent "I'liinkeye," ilakil at New York, receivnl alloolalean hour fur this paNr. Hy it we learn that Mr. Van Nesi, Ihe rollec-lor of New York, has been forced lo resign hi place in obc dtence lo the will ul liieublerranean "democracy," which in Die days of tho Krrurh lie volution was recognised under the ri.inte of Jacobinism. The name of his successor hud not Irainpircd, bol wnssaid to In: a merchant. Anttihrr locofc Atlvswnlo ! ihe Tni Lsiw U stkrd I ! A (K'oplc iK'gin lo see the ellecl of the Tax l.nw and re-oluc lhat tliey have been most sliamulully imposed ujion as to its character by a set uf locufoco demagogues, who were Iihi iguoraiil lo appreciate or too diihoiaisl to explain correctly ils toil urc and design, we liud an unusual degree ol cantlor uiitl cimrat devtlnping iUelf among those locoforo nuinbers uf Ihu l.n I Legitlaluru who voted for il. In various directions wu hear of lht:m mniuig out at last and acknowledging that n law that hu been ihu mljecl of misrcpresenlnliiin ever since thv ndjoiirninenl of the l.cgiilaluro, received ihuir a probation under a rouviclion, yet unrhauged, that il ii much belter iliau tho old low asunfoiced by the Slate. They have heard llicir couniy presses week nflvr week denoimring it as a Whig measure nnd seeking lo hcnpudiuin on ihu Whig pur-ly on arcounl of ils adoption, yet they have remained silent for months. Much the largest proportion of those locofoco memlers who voted lor il, ate still silent, not daring to avow Ihu Iruth, becH(ie a set of dmiMgngues have raised a cry against ihe law. ( bin man, and ho the one who secured a reconsideration of the bill in the House afieril had lecn voted down by a Whig nwjrily, has (ten so utterly insensible to truih and decency, as lo deHare lhl he resuci luted the bill in order lo play a inrk on the Whigi ! ! Our renders w ill un-ilertland us as alluding to one ol the Pair field Locofoco mem- Ihts. Tluti meanly did ho wish in ikulk the rcMmiihiltiy of an honest act, Itccuuse it did not happen to square with Ihe miserable designs of a rerklcis squad of party leaders, who wuhrd lo take ndvnutagu of a tciiiHrnry feeling among their opponents. They were willing that the Whigs should bear Ihe odium, if the hi w should prove obnoxious; but no sooner do we find h change taking place in public feeling, than some of ihein are seen ictiii)g lurlh and proclaiming most valiantly llml i hey voted for the law, and view with lurpriM) ihe attacks that havo Ix-en made upon it by their own parly preises, fol lowing the lead of the Mlaleirtmn. I teller lale, however, than uevvr. Our position is still unchanged a lo tho law. Il is teiiHHirary in ils mil nre, and must give plare lo a system bas t'd on more correct prinriples than tho old law, and ono llml will be H?rinnnent iu its character. We aro Ihe belter pleased with the movement of Disney, Arrhbold and other Ir.cnfocos nl iho late Legislature, because ol the iHisilion in which a great iHirliou of iho press of thai parly n placed. The issue is now between locofocl in the Legislature and locofocos out of il. It is dearly made, and there is no csrapo from il. The locofoco press has lied most shamelully or the locofoco members aro guilty of falsi hood. On Ihe ouc hand il is asictled that the Tax Law is a Whig measure, on the oiher it is unequivocally denied. On the one hand it is aieried that the "democratic" memlwrs volud almost to a man iig-jinsl lliu law, on the other il is affirmed that "a largo portion" uf them voted fur it. On Ike one hand tho law is denounriil as iniquitous, unequal and oppressive "rAictcn lax' of ihe must odious nature "worse than the stamp act" and on Ihe other it is affirmed that none but brokers, capitalists and wvatiliy merchants are opposed lo il; and llul this ought in commend it lu Ihe support of "dein' crau!" I'ndvr such eireiimtanrfs it is not lu bo wondered that lha clamor at nut 'Cltirkm 7'iir," like thntfurthe"J jt.if" if lh Hank Law, is softening down so wonder lu I ly and almoat ceases to greet our ears. Never has demngoguvistn been so completely unmasked, eiiKMcd and driven from it refuges of lies, in Ohio, as during a few months past. OuriiMtcial object, tnwcver,in commencing this article, was In announce the fact that another locofoco advocate of Ihe Tux Law has been wnked up ! Another pure, wool-dyed. Unsophisticated democrat," whose "democracy" is beyond evvn suspicion, comes out in the Cothoctrn UemiKrat in vin dicatiuii aul only of his rote, but of the law itself, against the Attacks that li.ive been made on it by the presses of his own parlv. We allude lo (leu. Mr.iiKinTii, Ihe locofoco Kcpre- seitliitivrfrom Coshocton, in the lust Legislature. 1'ass round his iinme, along with those of Duney, Arrhbold k. Co., and thus give him hi due, although by hi tardiness ha has impaired somewhat his claim to erudit for honesty and indepun- dvuee. Of cViumc, lien. Mi iiuhtii r annul get a hearing in the Hiaiciman, niter the course pursued inward Akcii mil. ii. The lolloping is a single sentence from ihe lengthy coininuuiralinn of (irn. M. "1 have looked on with deep regret at the wholesale denun ciation whirh have hi-rii thundered nut without reserve ihrough your paper as well as several others, against Ihe new lax law, ami ajamsl timse won voleu lor ii. More than lifty-eighl millions of the ninrly-nino exported arc consumed by Grvst Britain and hut dependencies. A table uf imports would show the same extraordinary ratio in fa vor ol llritih trade. It must be rccolluclrd, however, by Iho western farmer, that nearly forty million out of the fifty -eight exported lo Great Hrilnin is Cotton, the raw material, taken from necessity, and fur whirh slic makes u pay well after it is manufactured. Our trade with Franca is absolutely insignificant, being but little over thirteen miliums uf dollars. The Hanse Towns, Holland and dependencies and llelgium togcther, consume of our export, less ihau eight millions of dollars. It would be of some interest to get at the items of Wheat and Flour alone, consumed by Ureal Hntain, the main con turner of our domestic produce. Of vegetable and nniinul food exported, amounting in all to IA,0UU,(Mr, England consume nearly 9,0Ui,l)(H). Of vegetable food and bread-slull's alone, she consumes 0,31 Wlmu wu compiiro these csulli with those presented by the Home Market ta unties, we cuiuioi but be aslmiistiud at lliu importance- attached lathe foreign market, by a visionary class of free traders, who arc inresinul in lliiiir clamors against a system calculated lo build up the home market. It is now estimated, from the moil reliable data, lhat the New Kngland Hiales are consumers of the products of oilier Slates, to the amount of one hundred million of dllar$; an amount greater than our aggregate exports lo all the rest uf the world. In MaiarhinuUs alone, according to slaliiliea adduced in iho halls of Congress, several years since, over forty millions of the products of other State are consumed. This amount, it may be safely estimated, in viiw of the extraordinary increase of manufacturing establish men is and ttie increased consumption of domestic good', ha increased lo fifty millions of dollars. While England consumes 'J,IK0,- 000 of our bread-stuffs, and vegelablu food, Manuchuselt consumes in bread-stuff ahmo, including Flour, Com, 4c, about $7,0(X,000. Add lo this the animal and vegetable food, and the nggrcgaia will be swelled to ut least twttt e million uf iollin, or more than $.1,000,000 over Ihe whole amount con sumed by (ireat Britain, and between one and two millions more than is consumed by Lnglnud, France and all ihe German States ! Ki-(iov. ISaiitlkt estimated, in hi message last winter, from what he pronounced reliable data, the exports of Ohio at twenty-five millions of dollar. Three- fourth ol this nmount, at least, may bu clashed u Agricultural products; showing thai Ohio export morv than dunhit the amouul consumed by (ireat lliilain and her dependencies! Governor .Shannon it whs, wc believe, who estimated the surplus wheal of Ohio at U,UU0,(X of buihuts, in the year IHU. If wu suppose this to he worth 7cts. por bushel, wo find that the surpliti Whtal of Ohio nloue, is worth more than all ihu agricultural products uf tliij country consumed by Great Britain ! ! Much facts as these appeal lo the understanding of the agricultural population uf the West. They scalier to Ihe winds whole volume! of theorim, and tell us in a language not 10 be misunderstood, that the home market is our only dependence, our only salvation a a nnlmn. The foreign market is and always will be limited and precarious. If the Corn duties of Kngland were reealud to-day, she would not furnish a market for an) more limn ihu surplus grain of Ohio alono. And il i nut certain thai cum pili lion from the oilier wheal growing sections of the world, would allow u tmy more control of Ihu Hruiih markul than wo have now. We inusl look In onriclves. Wo must buy at home nnd sell at home; and if we have any thing tti export 1st us cxiorl our owu manufacture and reap the profits of the labor cipi'tiilcd in working up Ihu raw initio-rial. Wo have a vast cmiulry and vast resources. Wu can rnise enough in a few year lo feed the whole-uf Kunqw, but let us bring ihem here and feed them, and Ihu savu the ei ponse of iMtispurUliun and reap in our own country the profits of their labor. The Teine PrHs4. There ar several (minis in this business whirh excite our attention. First, Iho clear determination manifested al nn early day by some of our leading in en, who trade in human llvsh and politics with equal gusto, lo (xisiess Texas as a counterpoise to the growth and power of the North. This was claimed by the Ghlv, iucu l Ik adjournment of Congress, lo ihe credit of Gen. Jai-ksou and (ieu. Ham. Ilouslun, the late President of Terns. It wns declared that they were Ihe originators of the fraud, and that to litem were the Suulh and Hlavery indebted fur the advantages about lu be secured to them by iho Annexation of lex.is, 1 Ins claim (of ques-liunablu patriotism 1) brought lo mind Ihe disclosures tnado by Doctor llohcrl Mayo, of Virginia, formerly of Iho War Department, in his publirulion of lt37. in which he givos a copy of a letter transmitted to Gen. J ark son, in I II JO, unclo sing certain farts in relation to Houston s movement and Ins endeavour to organizo nn exn-dilion secretly against Texas, No use was made by Gen. Jackson ol iho information thus seasonally com mu mealed, and Ihe letter was returned In Mnyo in 111.1b. 1 he boast of Ihe Globe shows why General Jsekson did not avail himself of iho information thus impartedAc tens a eopftderate of lltmtton'i. Then in the second plncu it is amusing lo ire the easy im- pudenre of the philters in this iniquity, now lh.it lhy think they have got lliu North tied hand and fool. Thai with Iho fartlier reflection that the free Stales have been led thus far by pretences llml could have deceived none but fool or iboso willing lo be humbugged f tilts the subject of all claim lo be considered in Ihe lihl of statesmanship, or as a mailer of national interest. 1 hey sink it at once into a great fraud practised by one section against another. Those who doubt this, will cease lo doubt nfler reading the following report uf 8am. Houston's speech recently al New -Orleans, ou this point. The llee gives tho following versiou of hit ojniung temarks on Annexation. He said ii li;V he voted fur the mrasuro when il was before iho pcopr,- thai ihe tint act of his admuiiflraiion (being the first eonsliiuliooai rreiilenl) was In ileioalrh an areut lo Ihis Government, followed shortly bv nnotbvr. with extraordinary powers, cuiiveying ihe wishes of lliu jn-niile, and empowered I. si be Harbours) A I'hnnwe of Prois. We find the fullowine: paragraphs in iho Albany Argus, llm organ of Locofocoism in New-York and the champion of ihe auii-improvemant parly iu that Plate and the Union. This is nn entire changu of front on these grenl questions, nnd to whal shall wo atiribulc it 1 Gov. VgM hns recently vetoed n bill lur the gradual progress of the Canal improvements in his Htale, passed by A Legislature composed of his political friend by large majorities in both houses and last winter by Iho aid of Cnpl. Tyler nothing was done by the Texas m-ijority in Congress, for harbor nnd river improve ments. Hut now something must bo done for the diftnct of the country nothing for commerce. 1 he maxim usea lo be, " iu peace prepare for war "it would seem that Locofocoism neither understands the aril of peace or war if il did, it would not make war on harbor improvements and facilities of transportation. Hero is ilio Argu extract, which we shall expect to see copied by ihe faithful, and pronounced correct doctrine, in which wu shall rejoice, because il it good Whig doctrine. From ihe Albany (Locoforo) Argus. It is undoubtedly true lhat huuld diiliriilues at any lime occur let ween Holland and Iho United .Slates, the great lakes of Ontario, Krie, Huron, Michigan, and even Cham-plain, will be the principal theatre upon whirh ihu contest is lo lie decided. Tliese lakes are not inaptly termed inland seas, and iherc is a population and weulih growing up an mad ihcfii, und a ciimmerr floating upon their waters, which render them still more like the Ocenii. It mcy iheti be asked, can Congress do any ihing to en-courage it growth, and particularly fur surh vessels as aro calculated for war steamers and how T It is simply by ihe improvement of such harbors and rivers as may be needed, nnd such as will allow shelter and passage fur boati of the larrett clan. Theie are best cideuluted lot war steamers, but it is known lhat owners are now deterred from building boats as large as they otherwise would, because the water on the Hi. t'lmr llm (the verv important strait whirh rouuects llie upper wuh the lower fakes) is loo shallow. The same obaiarle exists in most of Ihe oilier harbors on the lakes, even in surh imKiriaui ones a Dunkirk, ( .luvelaiul, Chicago, Mil' wnukie, tit. Josephs and Grand river. The "Hnppr I'umilr." The Albany Kveiiing Journal furnishes the following items of the harmony thai exuts omuug the 1 exa plunderers: The liotton fott, a paper that represents a larire tdiare of llieTexatism of New-Kiiglaud, qur tinned the justice of turning men who shouted lustily for I'olk nnd Texas, nut of ihe Huston Custom Hon. Tho If. N. Journal, one of the or- gun of the Administration, in referring to the same subject, : " Wlien the lenders oi inn party can dispense with (ho services of those who elected them, the voters ran di peine with their service at lulure olerlinii. There will come a day of relributioii, nud then wo shall jn who are independent ot ihu people, and who are roll tiik. vtnvt.v.." 'I In is plainly spoken, llul the language of the I'rnniyl-vania K'tfitoH, h paper whirh, a ihe Mmning JVetri intimate, upejtk for V iit'-fresidi-nt D.iilas, is far mure pregnant sud ominous. Fee w hat the Kevstone a: The olftco of Vice President docs nol appear lo lie under stood: ils incumbent ha no duties exrepl presiding over the Senate during its se-siou, and with the Lxetulive a'lmmislra-lioti ul Government he has nothing whatever lodo. Tho utlice was created so lhat the deal Ii or resignation of a President should leave nn interruption iu government, and upon the officer, whose duty depended soleiy upon a remote couluiirciicy, llie 1 oiiveiiliuii which made llie L oinlitulnn, ilevolveil Ihu dulic of ihe Prenideury nf ihu Hen ate. When, therefore, our i oii1emprnrie- speak of ihe administration ol Polk and Dal lar, they cuinmil an egregious blunder." A Bmai.l Sim mot to hi Mistaken. 'The Whigs elected their whole ticket at a charier election iu Canandai- gua, N. Y. on ihe 4th iml. by a majority of 40. This town has been Locufoco for a good number uf years. The lown of Liverpool, in Onondngo county, Wat redeemed from Lo- eofiieo rule at ils lale chaiter election. This shows ihe set dl the euirent. Gov, Wrsiihi' l nonl Veto. Most of the Texas papers, says the Albany I'v. Journal, havu endorsed, though ibey generally nk lo Ite esriiH.il from pul it 11 inn, llie Governor's Velouf the I'liml lull Tho Urnne titntinet is, however, nu cxreption. Tuat paper says : Thr Vrio. We have heretofore eipresed q-nie folly our opinion in regard lo the Governor's Veto ou ihe Canal bill, and upon tlill lunlier cuinideraiioii of Ihu subject, wu have no desire to alter lliu opinion w havu expre-sed. On ihu contrary, a careful p-riii'd of the inetaairu u second lime, convinces us lhat the veto is not only unie and injurious in ihe lntt interest ot tne H-opm oi the rtnte, nut mat ino prominent reason as-signed by ttie tiovernor lor taking ihis slep, are ipiiie tucou-siileut with many coieinporary acts of his sice henry. We cannot regard Gov, Wriglil's veto in any oilier light Uiaa n total Hliniiilorim,ul ot our enlire svsiem ol Internal Jin provements, and this feature of llm veto is so apparent, lhat many pajH-rs have alriMily laken a decided stand ihal way in ilieir at tempts toiustam it thus virtually saving that lourleen million ol dollars ol Ihr people's money tlrill lie llirown nwny, nil lor the want of a small appropriation lo preserve and com plete the untiiiished works wliirh nre already far advanced, and whirh, if they were completed, would enhance ihe value of prujieriy iu different lornliues, and extensively develops the resourecu of the entire Huii. A Noni.r SriutT. Philadelphia County and Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, have determined lo put al Ihe disposal of the Nlnie ihrir respective quotas of taiei, in advance of ihe usnal lime of payment, lo meet the interest duo in August. 4o say odr exchange pHers, md we pot the fart ou record as more creditable than any thing Ihal has met our observation for years. What more sublime sight than lo see whole roinimtmtu moveil by a common impulse rising In protect their pledged faith f Hat lies and victories cannot N compared lu il. Anti-Si. vr.ar Ciftvi,isriiu. Them i a Convention of Ami-Slavery men, or Liberty Party men, or Attoliliomsli, now iu MeHion m Cuieiiiniiti. We nre not advised oftlw ob- jei-u of ils meeting. Mr. Hiruey ia among limn, and this leti Is us louppoe lhat Us intents arc political. A friend ho sent u a rcHri of a Speech delivered by Mr. Iliraey, at Handusky, a'Kiul the first of ihis nmnih. He there staled in sul'Slaure that Annexation was a Whig measure, and vat coiisuinniaied by Whigs: It wa recommended by a W hig Prcsidrnt, and p.used umih hy a W lug Seiiatei and, tardier, ihu Whig noinuiuti-d Mr. CUy 10 thai Liberty men iliould not vuiu for their eandnlale therefore, lug were rep.milde for Auiicsalion. How much will thoiagaciiy or monthly uf such a man advanco any good cause f We would publish the report of the speech at furnished lo ut, did wc mil think il would lie attaching loo much importance to ihu sayings and doings of Ihe man. Wa may possibly make some use of it herealler. For Ihe Ohio Hlate Journal. Comme-n Rrhool Keporta stna" Ihrir Reviewer. Mr-.ssits, KlilToiil : Your correspondent is hard to please. He is not satislied with iho Legislative CommiUee's retiorl, because it did not embrace statistic for reference hereafter. Like all our public documents, it was written lor display. He dislikes still more the report of the Secretary of Stale. His facts are incorrect hi recomnienditlions " visionary," nud, above hII, his ilylt hi figures of speech nnd Dowers of rhetoric vtiy find. Indeed, hu is exceedingly peevish ul the Eierretary, uml loses no oppnriouily lu show il. llul, however these things may bu, lliu writer has evidently a very couifuriaKlu opinion of himttlfh veritable sir ornele who hns much lo say much fault to find, but uulhiug lo oiler him 'elf. Like all lelfconsliliilcd censors, with a dash he demolishes ihe plnns which have been considerately proposed here and esinblikhed by lliu wisdom and experience- of other Stales, as "vtnivnary" and "tjiti rottc," an another crusade uf fanaticism wiinhy the age of "Peter Ihu Hermit." It is forluiiate nl leasl thai thoe who soberly and honcilly thought our srhout sysiem iu r.ilher a bud wttjui needed some effort lo infuse a little moral and inlcll;cltial vigor into iu dry bones, have been so very mndetttij and ntnlevmly aituionidied They will leel their way mure cuuliuusly here alter. The writer gravely introduces his rninplaitit with some original general remark ou the ' upenilUiulniif e ol legislation" and ihe evil of looking lu the Legislature for a remedy for "all ihe ills of the body poll tie," All this mny lie correct, and yet hnvc nothing to do with the present proposition. The objection will equally apply lu every general act of legislation, and will hardly help the wri ler's'pairmlisin in raising Ins "standard" agaimt any improvement in ihe common schools. If ihe objection be good, lei our laws ! declared unchangeable. Bui what does experience in school legislation else where teach us 1 It is nol many year since Pennsyl vania mode a radirnl change in her school lows, Ttiis was oluii-nately resisted by the counties and district themselves, ihio' ignorance and indisposition lu change. Bui now ils general benefits are manifest.- Hut a very few yuar since, each of the R00 township in New Yulk hud three Krhool commi-tiuner and three school iii-peclors, or near IiOOO school officers, bemdus the conniy and township clerks who received and transmitted the returns. Thu rclums indeed were regularly made, The muihiuery seemed In work, and there were munv who, tike vouriiueru- lous corrc'pundeiil, llinughi the school were as good ut vctUd be f.Tjttct'a, 1'erhnp they were. And undoubte.lly so are the common school of Ohiu at this lime. This is not saying much. But those who looked vithm the machinery, found the N. York ichool Jar from tieinir what ibey vuvht to As iusl as some "rifiotttir" and "ijiiisoic" people think of ours. They found thnl this army of srhoul ollirers, hku our county nud lowiiiliip officer, did nn more ihnn they were absolutely re quired ny iuw io no. iu oilier worn, me sciiooi were rnreiy nr never visited by ilium. They knew nothing per-oniilly of their condition and wnnl. There was nn mural iiitluei're nor intellectual itilluencv thrown into these districts ur, (if your correspondent will permit.) "breathing its iuipirnliuu over every important proem" of Ihe ichool syitem. Alu-r years uf exjierieuce and the application of n shrewd and intelligent sagacity, the authorities ol that Hlate, uotwilli inndiitif the stale crv of " suiienilxitidaiil kiislaitoti, " (lor they hud croakers also,) determined lo change ilieir school in-. Now, what UTtts doncT Himrdy, as was proposed in pari lie , ihe creation of county and town tiuprrinimdrtilt, whose exclusive public ibnies were lu infuse tlml 'pint'1 of improve meiil conlinqilnted liy Ihe ineinl ul Ihe meatiire ill tJluo. it whs precisely what your correspondent so superciliously condemn in Ihu ieMirl of the Herniary ol ttale, Il wnS what beforo was left undone, und pruhuhly otherwise never Would have iHTiidnne, How f.ir ihal change has realised the hopes of its friend and whether we may expert miy imprnt euiuiil from a similar law here, will t coii-ideied lu rentier. It may 3iso be well lu look a Utile into the classir and historic illustrations ol Ihe reviewer his palriolir df feurc of 'llm H.ople" against the ntgre-nom ul the learned Goih und Vnmltils llie windmill he has himself muted ami routed with the quixotic rhivnlry nud whether lii by)erciiticism on the nerrrtaiy ol statu " smell ' most ut tne " siumii mortality. Statutes were ordered lo be dittributtd gratis, amnug the sev eral counties oi ineaiaie, lur tne use oi various puolic ollicurs, and I would refer the reader lo a Report mado by ttie ttee'ly of Sitatt (J aiuune) dated Feb. 17, IHU, in which he rive a tabular statement of the number of copies, Ihal were distributed lo each county, nud the suiplus in each county ; showing the aggregate iimntwr diilnbuted to be 1 1 volumes, and a surplus of 'J'Jl volumes, over and above lliu wauls of the several comities. This Keimri of the Hec'ty uf Htale will at once prove that only bImiuI linlf Ihu 'i0,00lj volume were wanted ih rough the rttate, and that Iheref'ure the publication of the remaining 10,000 voluuio was an exlravuguul and improvident locofoco triiuaaciion. Medury well knew thai "these were the records," and vol Ihis li uih lovinir, innocent Editor, endeavor to palm off as truth, a deliberately false statement "thai 12 or 13,000 of these slaliiies had liecn told by the Htale al .'1,00 per copy, and that thu Htale has received for the sale of the same. Was over a more baso and fraudulent nllemnt made lo a- buseeven public gullibility ,thnn this? fciuch cunduel however is perfectly iucharaeler with the " Statesman," nud accounts for the go:al loss uf coulideuce in the editorial article of ils several Kdiiors. u now affirm that the Hlate of Ohio, wc believe Am rwrr realised 1,000 in money from sales of the Revised .Statutes. To prove thu, I would refer thu reader lo the annual He-port ul ill i) Treasurer of Stale fur 1111:1-4 and tilU-d. By these it appears, ihal oulv g.WJ.lb was received in 1R43 from the sales, and iu IUU, i-U,00 making in all the sum only of iM2,75 lhat has ever been received, "by Ihu reeords" from the sales uf these book. How doe this comjarc with Mednry's statement "tliat 12 or 13,000 volumes had been sold al .1,00 per copy" made lo cover up the iniquitous and swindling arts of a Loco foro legislature, in combination with the .Stale printer lo plunder the pcoplu's pockets of somu jU't.OOO Inn i ihcHiale in ihis operation, besides llie probable loss of several thousand more ou the 7 or 0000 volumes yel on hand, and which caunot readily lie sold. With regard lo ihe 12lh vol. Ohio Reports, Ihe Editor in vain Irics lo escape by equivocation, from the onu of having eh.vgml the Hialu fur binding said volume SAmnre than the bookbinders in Columbus would have done the job for indeed onu of whom ariually ilid exeruie n pari of said binding al lOcenl per volume, when thu "Hlate Printer" churged anil received pay at 50 per volume for ihe same book. The Stale ha nothing lo do with pnvale dealing between Medury and Mr. Derby of Cincimrali, (by whirh an old debt due Medary w a expected to be secured at the exeute or the Stale). Medary it accountable to the Siate for the binilintr uflhtfse Imuks He has received hi pay (5750) one year ago. The bunk arc nol yet bound the State has lusl the i n oi tneni, nnd ineir value is now depreciated in consequence ihe Stale now cells for Medary lo fulfill his engage ment (hy which he put in his porkel 51.ri0 more than other good men would have rhnrged fur Ihu binding) and it is a pitiol, contemptible ciuil.ldu in tlctnry, iu trying to creep out of ii by throwing the bldine oo Mr. Derby and saying it was a " t lii-r" defalcation, Aj c. The fads are there untied to ihu counter the Stale Printer cannot pscbimi from them ihal the Stale was plundered out of $ 1&0 in the binding of mis mil vol. Bini AAr uf ' Z. pen negotiation on Ihu subject. 'I heir reccptiuii and treatment was somewhat cool nnd envaher, ami ihey rrlurned lo l'exns wuhiHit olitauung any sati-laciiiiii. Another appeal was made with similar results Ihe impression going abfond thai nuiv-leiiihs ul the Texan were annexationist. Then polity dictated a reserved course, und ht thought a lutlt tnoo cent trickery voitht lumnt the cjim am h-iji un lit mtiurt tii a final irtllrmmt. He had olleii h nid thai when a Invrr had hc?n kept in atayam-a by his mint rest for some I tne, unable lo obtain a "yes" ur "no," sumo sudden IiuIiIiiik off ur lelil praise ol some neighbor Ih'auiv wuuhl srarn ly tail lu elicit an answer. Prompted by this idea, ilsetlirncv was immediniely put to lrl. Fiimdly mttrci'ttttetrnt courted irith other i'otrtri,and, airart of the mutu tl frultmty exitUtig brttrten tmr Country and that of Hm'land, htr hamt ira tint tvltcttiit hi ii partner in the dnce, wlucli he readily qi anted) but laiiulinriiy was nder iueh in Ihe giillnpude as iu unglova with her. The bait sris takm, and ihe u ha altraui dearly Ivvtd m linking alfftttd merit made a direct prtpwat. II lo have voted fur annexation, lo have ntiroiiati-d lor il. lo have courted il, and lo hate evun coquetted lor it, hr op-iHisiltun, then he supHed be was whal he had somwiiuiea iteen termed ou ihal head. With leifard to public sentiment on the sublerl in 1'eXn. nearly every man was of one mind. He had hern at many meeting, and a net; alive voire wa a rare thing when mines ntiuu was Hil. Presidetil Jo firs was IK tAoH of the mens urc, anil w.Hild tin every thing in his power lu satisly lha wiine oi tne efpic." IT The Patlcison N. Jersey Rcenl Association has dissolved ils organization, and adopted resoluliun denouncing Daniel O'l'onnell for his recent course against this country. After declaring ilieir ailaelunenl lo ihoir adopted country, ihey say in their resolutions that it is the duty of mem lers of Iho Association "as American cititrn, and as sincere friends nf the Irish people, lo make know n lo ihe world our disapprobation of such language, and as far as in hi lies, publicly in protest agaiml and repudiate such seniimciils res ec ling tins country." Unci.r. Ban Pats thr Pi run. Senator Baghy, according to a correspondent of thu New York Tribune, is "Bag-bvitiug," or rattier playing Benton' old game al a great rale. He has had his residence, enrriage, Ace., at Washington for a long tune nnd makes his honu there, yet draw his mtlta just a if ho actually travelled in and from Alabama. Not cunlcat with this he drew nine hundred and sixty dollars for siippo-iiimis traveling un the llh of March ! And Ihis is nut all. He is actually prosecuting a claim against the government, w hilu as Chairman of thu Comimlleu un Claim, be w ill have In pass on this very claim. 0 T Nothing fould more completely demonstrate the mrn-dactiy of llie Statesman than H course on Ihe Tai law. It has been making a great fuss because mcrrhnni' capital and nmnty al inlercsl tr-ii made liable in taxation under die taw of Inst winter, it is now whining bee auto "all household furniture, gold and silver, Jewelry, Atr." is m4 taxable under llie same law ! What will In' the nest sliiA ( Home- nnnttfnrliiri" Their Kflrrfi The iliei I of encouraging Hon if Masui ai Tuns., is happily illustrated by the following brief reference lo a manufacturing village in Greene couniy, N. Y. We attract it from an article in Ihe Hud ion Uepuidican, in which Ihe editor urges iho importance of Manufactures upon ihe cilneii nf ihal town, with great force and propriety. It I impossible to give one's attention In such spectacle as the wnicr adduces in support of bis argument, without being forced to acknowledge the great bench Is whiea the Tariff is conferring on the country: The beautiful and flouiishtni! vdhrn of Pratttville, Gteene couniy. Situated some thirty live miles from the Hud-ion nvcr, wiihnoothur mean of communication thin the ordinary land carriage, audlhit over iho summits of the (.'auk ills, is another instance ol the salutary influence of the manufacturing business upon the pro ciuy of the place in which surh business is earned on. In addition to the very extensive leather manufactory of the Hun. Z. Prall, (said to the moil ftiicntiva in ttie world,) there are various oiher species ul manufacturing carried on, including lhoe of It nih-er milieus and cloves, India rublK-r eloth, oil elolh, Inchon matches, iVc , whirh gives steady and profitable employment lo n large number of laborers and oeraiives, and allords a handmme, and in some cases a inonilircul return lur ihe capital invested, and furnishes to iho larmer of Hint vicinity a ready market for their prmlure, al belter prices than they can obtain in New ork, leaving the traniorlaiiun out ul the question. From a plare ul some hall a dozen houses, bas sprung up in a few years, a village containing sumo two hundred dwellings, wuh new ones cuiistanily going up. The prnjpelity, and ilid ed ihe eitltcurc of this vilbige, is chirlly nilribulnlde in the exertions, combined with the business tart and taleuis of our late Kepreseiitalive iu Congress, Col. Pratl. One such man in ihu rily ol Hudson would creniw quite a different aspect of things in live years, from whal we now see." Tin II I K Ouhi-r I.KTTr-it. So much in the shape of Inters ran lm sent .11 mile lur live rents, weighing unit half nn uuuru, that we apprcnemt, savs inu iew i oik nim, tne new law wdl have finally lu lie altered, and nverenla taken lor n smile letter, ll you please, with an envelope, and ten rent tor a double leiier, or we fear thai the lallmg oil of ihe tcwuiue will I greater than is now ruiileiiiplaled. A writer in the Dovleslowu Olive Branch ha leeh al great pain lo nscertam now inurn ran e irniisuniicd ior nve rents An avoirdupois half ounce is grams. W afers one Rratil. Sealing was, usual qtianlilv, live grams. A sheet uf luobi-Kp weighs 172 f rains. Leiier wN'r, M. Small envelopes, li grams large ji. ou cau send Jta) milus a letter fur five emits, containing, vis: tins sheet of letter paper eurlosing seven bank notas seated wuh wax; or the letter and three bank note in an envelupo. Hall a sheet ol letter pa per Willi hall' taelo cncli'Siil under wai. A sheet with a dune and a half eurluM-d sucure-l by wafers. One sheet of leiier pniicr with a quarter vngie enclimeil secured y was. A sheet of loulscap m an eiiveluiK1 sealed with a wafer. One and a half sheet ol letter paix'r sealed wilh wax or wafer. Il is aid to have lieeii Ihu intention of 1'oiigresi lo charge five cents fur asiugh' letter timlcr aides and Ivn cents for a Hoiilde teller, rto greater deduction couni ov imtanieti m tno lirsl experiment. So ihe wo pic said lake ten cents or live cents lor smxje or double letters, ike hall ounce is therefore saul lo be an innovation on Ihe intentions and wishes of Ihe iwople, and must ta-uclil an exclustte class who iraimnil mo. ney by mail. We do not think so. Under the old law a letter containing seven bank note transmitted lo New Orleans wa charged i postage! under llie new law and according lo ihe hall ounce syitem, il will Ihj rained lor ten rents, be ing but a hall ounce to Ho transmuted tieyond .Xf miles. Tlir. Stats: pHiimnn. Allhc instance of Sam Molar. the Supreme Court have grant ml a writ uf injunction to stay proceedings under the law ul ibe last Legislature, which au-ihorixca the hilling of ihe Stale Pruning in iIhi lowest bidder. Il appears ihal this recipient of the -puili hit no noliun ol ro luiqiii-lnug his Imld upon ihe pubbr treasury, wutmui a struggle. He ha enjoyed the Siatr Printing so long ilint he seem lu think it should lie given to him for hie, and he has prevailed u Hiii Messrs. Wood and 11 orchard, (tioth Loco-,) iu gram the writ of inpinciiun, thinking thai he will be railed uhhi to do the public pium.ig until adi cismn is had as to the legaluv of the lale law, winch dec it ion may not take plare until ihe c due ol ihu iienl session nf the Legislature. This contemptible method of selling aside the will ol the jieople, for llie unlv pur-mis ol pulling ihe public money into the already wll filled puckvts u( Medary. rannot but rcroil iion the party that upholds such proceedings. Hurim KHctor, Low Watrr Hrr-AMrHs Aohoi'KP. We are Informed thai there are at I-' reach Ulaud sixteen Steamboats aground and ahore, ImiuiuI up and down. The lloais hn vu w rul up the rhaunel, in rudvaiuring to force their way through il, thai there are only i leel of WHler on Ihe b.ir, while Iherc arc ,1 feel oiilheolhrr bur. Vinannatt Atlai. Tiif. Htatf PniKTiNd Two Loroniro Juhaxs A I WT TIIK lO'.r HKSERTATI V I'.S OI'THK PkoP I t.. JuilgeS HVwiaud tiurchard of lha Supremo Cuurl of Ohio, have granted nu iiijuncttuii, lo slay proceeding under ihe law of the late Legulaiurc, providing tor llie execution of the printing of the State by contract with the lowext bidder. Tin in n characterise piece of Luroloco assurance, and a shameleNS attempt to oveiridu thu will of the people as expressed at ihu ballot-boxes last full. Snm Medary hates inosj confoundedly to let go hi hold upon llie liitciou Ireal thai has so long yielded him ils sweets the " spoil " of " blank puces," "caste quires," Ate., and his friends, the Loco loco Judges alxive iiameil, have got bun by Iho shoulders, and are holding In rn up lo ihu templing reservoir, while he lakes a rrcsn sura, neterinined mm ne shau l be tcrarwu, jet awlule. Well, we shall see. Marion r.aglc. Fur the Olro State Journal. Messrs. Editoii : I perceive lhat the State man of the fi'.h is in an agony, Sain Medary is in a uplutler, und the "dapper lawyer" is ellurvesccing like & vial of fermented mi beer. Verily has Syntax sent a few shafts from hi quiver whirh have transfixed the loughcnod pericardium of "honcsl Sam's" conscience; and hn writhing nnd contortions under Iho smart, are alike laughable and pitiable. The quiver is by no menus yet exhausted ; and ibis notable spoilsman will receive hi merited Mirlioii " I is due seaiou." In noticing me vuponnug oi me onpprr lawyer," syntax is al a loss, whelliur lo deal in the grave and serious, nud thcrebv hazard a compromise of good sense nnd self-respect, or adopt the far el uu and romplimentar ( (a slyle always llatlering lo ihu nuireiied and inhaled mind.) 'I'lic luilcr, jierhaps, would lie Ihu mil judiciotmcoue in ihis cne. The name of author caines with H quite n charm, whirh is truly fasrinnling ; and n you up man of ardent and iinngma live mind, ( which we intend a a complum-nt lu ihe promising youm: gentleman in nitestiun.) ran re ei in the pleasure and sell graiiliralioii ul seeing himself displayed in the columns of a uewipater. Whether these urn Ihe young gentleman' npi-rations 1 cannot tell. bill certain it n, that great emergencies call great gminiei into action. (Lid il not been lor tliesirgu of Toulon, there perhaps never would have been a Napoleon ilonnpnrlc ami who Know iiui Ihu " Adven'Ures oi nuug, the Monkey,'' (in w ich lie seems lo take surh an abiding interest) nastieeii scttcd upon by llie "dapH-r lawyer" as a lurk v instrument ur means of displaying in ihe astonished world ihe hidden capacities of his gigantic mind. If these be Ihu voting gentleman s desires, far 10 II from fyutai lo throw any obiriiciions in his way, Charily would dictate lhat we should leave htm In pursue, unheeded and uudisturleda iho golden image uf his mental plnnlasmagora; and enjoy nil the ecsiary of imagining himself a very great wnfipiipcr scribbler. Il is proper, however. Ihal Svtilas should evpnif die alo- Inlet fahehaod, periielrntcd by Itn 'umll-fn-er lawyer, this renegade whig, 'hi arram pimp, wnu ponoer lur uiu Statesman, by riinuuif round luwn, ami collerluig iho small mateiials," which arc then boded down in that slew-Hii uf calumny. Truly this n au enviable vocnho.i lur a "county court lawrer." Heir him. in llie Statesman of the fiih. He says. "Will lliu Libr-rv Committee, ur their lured defender, deny lhat llie Statutes were given lo lh agent at 7 cents wr volume f h ill tltey deny that the ".llemoir oi niepneii nurrougns" or Sling the Mo'ukev" were purchased Willi the pruivcrly of the Stale f Will Ihey deny lhat nn odd volume of "Lillell's Living Age' nnd n great quantity uf duplirnlu votuma ol Imoks alremTy in llie Library, wure purchased with the pncriy of llie Stale? Now these inquiries he wihe to palm oil ns truths. Mark now, how plain a lale shall put you down " The following ceriitirale of Iho Librarian, nud a reference in the Agent' receipt nnd bills, on file in the Library desk, will convince any man of the utter falsehood uf bis statement : fiir In replv in your iniluiry. I would Hate thai ihe Agcrl sent out lorirhaiigfi Revised Statutes. old Laws Journals, Aie., for oiher book, was not furnished Ihe Revised Statutes al lb rents per volume , no hook bearing the title of "Adveniurcs ol Ming im- ni-uikcv." ".Memoirs or oiennen Hurruuifhs." ir odd vuluinenf "Lillell's Living Age,'' havo been returned by said agent UHit the 'helve ol the Stale Library, nntilier are there many duplicate copies of book pnl into the Library by laid Agent. Yours, Ate., 4, 'im.l.ir-ll, M.inraruin, Hem ihen we leave iho young gentleman nl tho "marc's nest" which he disroverrd, wuh a he in hi mnuih, and tmt idea in his head. We trust, however, the reader will eiru-e Syiimi for wasting ammunition on surh small gnmcf his deoro is' only lo act in oU'dieuce to that sen plural in jane lion which av "civ a siMirrrne shall nol fall lo the grmind uimoliced." Hut wuh ihu redoiitunble imilsmaii uf Ihe ' Slaletmau" Syntax has a word of grave inqMirl: mid in what he ha to say, he wuhe to Senk of and to Mr. Medary as a public man. The attempt in ibn-r censure lur public mailer.-ance, or public derebcimn of duty, by casting umdum allu sion to prtritfr hje, are ever llie unerring iiiuiccs oi a weak and depraved mind. The Statesman is wrlrome lo profit by all the glory he can acquire tiy such a name ol habitual aspirstoti. This notable personage has bad so long a lease upon the ireaiury iloinaiu, thai he has grown bloated nnd insolent upon Ins espionage and cries out " treason and rrlwlhun " if w but hint al ihu " way and menu " by which hu hns become swollen. We havu two objerls in view in this cunimomcn-mn. One is lo establish, by indisputable rvidenrc beyond the cat il of a doubt, the liuih of our statement, as published in Ibe Journal of the Ath inst., and llie oilier is, lo eipoie tho unrigbletMi perveiston ol truth, the misrepresentation nnd contemptible shuttling and falsehoo I (characteristic, however, of die Statesman Ldilor) by whirh he endeavour- to esrn. In the firl plare ho represt nt me a saying "that ihe Statu of Ohio paid him (Snm Medan ) I6,1H for the priafiftg- of the 211,000 Itevned StaliHe. A relereure lu my eumnnuii ration of the .'nh in which 1 nv " the publication of then MatnUs cost Ihe Mate of tHiv some l.'i.HOO," will convince, ihu reuder of hi deception in ibis pnrticular. These staiuius did runt the Stale abuui a' P.') (including p-qN-r, printing, binding, eVc.) as apear Irom a rrpurt of the standing eoiu mil lee un public printing. (et' append. s to H. Journal of IHUM) but ihu " Sinte Printer " wuhes lo raise a lale issue, under which he may escape. Hi statement with regard In the "clear pnibi" which he derived from this job, mat gu for whal il i worth, when we statu thai from the Repurt h-t re-lerred lo, as presented by Mr. Clark, in llie set urn of HlWI 1, il appenra. thai a resoiiil'lc and energetic printer inl-olum-bin (Mr. Chas. Scott) was alo a bidder for tins jubt and his written proposal apix ars, nth ring bond wuh ample ecuriiy, lo execute Itie work foi a fr sum by mnie 5d,:iKt than lha amount oaid in Samuel Medary. This unwarranted nr rease or esces in rompeimUnirt, nlhiwed Medary more ihau auoiher responsible printer otimd la do the icor tor ; together with his arlual pron's in i'hfi lob, we might well conclude, would swell the "rlrar profit of iho Stale Printer, iu this job, lo nearly the sum firt stated by Syntax. Tim extra compensation w ns allowed lo Medary by Gov, Shannon and Audiiur trough, without the cone o ire are of the Treasurer of Stsle. Our object was in show llml ihe-e Staluies co-t ihe Sin to soma g k'l.OlNl, that a Lwoloco I .egislalure of llt.W ordered ihem to lie puliliihcd, lhat Samuel Medary, as wu verily le buv, w as mainly instrumental, by dictation and management, in gelling Ihr mentor pnsied fur llie purjiota nl terurmg a fat job lo humelf, by which hi managed lo receive tome iUi) more for excculing the job than was offered by anollmr rvsinusible printer. and ihal one half the number published would have Wen abundant m supply the whole Stale. Who but ibe Stair Printer himself will d. nv Ihe force of these fnit-elusion-F Medary huiiscll does iol deny them wuh anv rri- iible et idence. but lakes cover under n stibterlugu, and gives only hi own ipse dint, instead of proof lo Ihe contrary. But tin veritable sHiilsmaii niusi remcmoer inai mi insr irnid in reference- to In iiwudubiiqii- neiei, nre like "Red Dog" money in tins market, at least Wi tier cent under par cannot bo taken for their face, because the "iitaividuai liability" is w or ill nothing. '1 lie next falsehood which ho perjietrales Is found in ihc following quutalioii, Ihnn hi editiuial of llie tilh. "Tho writer (meaning Svntax) nexl say there Im alrvadv been M or I.I, Ota) sold. 'Ac sale of 1.1,0011 by Ihe Utile at J.I.HO per e-'. Mm, the price set npo them, would b jf.l'.i.OOO.teilain 'f.,0H0 of oil thry cast, and 7 ( II OHO volumtt ttill on hand,' Now here the reader will perceive thai "holiest" Sam Mrda rv "dehln-ratrl v and Willi malice aloretliought" trie lo impo ihis mol glaring and premeditated laUelHioil upxHi the pubb a mull' a relerencein ihe lirsl number ot Symat willthow thai he never biotf la tl ll vr I.I.IHSI roiitmt of these Siat-HttsliaJ been sold by the Stale, On ihenmlrnry Syntax well knew nud the veritable Nam Medarv well know, ihal, by iiMih'iiiui of ihe Lcgiduturr pa-vl March 'ii, lolo, tlivse AssissMK5T. The amount of merchants' rapilal and money at interest relurned for taxation in Springfield lown hip last year, w as j'li7,870. The amount returned ihis year ii "i,b)IJ, Taking one half of ihis a the amount under Iho new Iuw subject lo taxation 1 1 1 ,311 nnd ihu increase of taxable property in Ihelown-hip is .1.1,171. The amouul "n w u inseo in uiu rouniry luwusiiips, (wnn ine excei- tion olMonrliehl,) will Iw less than Inst year. Moor lie Id is increased by a large additional amount of money al interest. The iimou it uf money al interest alone in Springfield tuwu-ship, is JpJ.t.no. A small bank would nol be amiss. I Ihj l.uculiMu demagogues will hud n a regular rowing up stream lo emmurr Iho farmers and laborer dial this law is ihu burned monster ihey pretend il is. fyririgjirld liepub. Crape let the Ueiola Vntlrr. A rood in dire, viiitinir lately this v alio v. writes us as follows : Gt n tltincn: In ffninff from Columlms to Ports mouth, I wns much plcaflud to find lhat all portions of our Hue valiby Imvc not sullcrud ns much from thu enects of cold and drotiirht as llm region about Columbus. I'VoinCtrcluville south I found very manifest improvement in theappenranco of the corn crop only a few ileitis being cut oil by frost, and although brick ward the fine showers of lato will doubt-leas briii them on, no that a fair yield may reasonably be expected, l'ho wheat too, aionp; the valley firomiacft fair; it islilit in straw, hut will be leas like-y to suifrr from rust than if of strong prontlt as last year. Onta arovory backward, and must be li'lit crop. Graas, nlso, is almont pant hopo of a fair yield. t Hi too whole, tho crops of this recton look vastly better than I expected lo see ihem after witm'Sning ino and prnnnecta in tho upland portions of Lickin and Franklin counties. Anotliurcorrctiionlent writes us as follows: In travelling last week from Cincinnati to Richmond, Indiana, via. Hamilton, Somorvillo, Camden nnd halon, 1 took some pmns to n certain ttio nros pect of the crops, and I lind Hint farmers pent; rally agree tint should tho weather contiuuo favorable, there will be moro than nn average crop, except hay, which will be short. Wheat, corn, and oata look well. Cm. tJuzelle. Fire. A firo occurred about 2 o'clock on Sunday morning in the frame buildings on the north west corner of Alnin and Court ntreeK Although the buildings were nearly as combustiblo as tinder, the I lu i ieu wcro arrested .beforo they had much extended ouverni persons, uowevur, sulk' red considerable in jury by tho tiro and water. Messrs. Kavmond cV allctte hnttera suttercd Ions to extent of about $100 covered by insurance; S. II. Parvin 6V Co. hatters, about $ 100 insured ; Sainuol Burdsal, druggist, about V4000 insured for 1,500; Mr. McClosky, sandier, v-tuu msurauco uncertain; Mr. ltnidwin, pit titer, 3 to aV 100 no insarnnce; Jacobs, tailor, 2 lo jfclOO no in.uraiico. A colored confectioner and shoemaker alsosullercd some loss. The fire originated in tho tailor sin in. We understand that Mr. I Hnrns, fust Director of tho Hope Company, fell when returning with tho hose carnnge from the lire and tho wheels paused over nis uuuy, injuring him severely, whether dan- goroiwiy wenavo nol learned. cncirmui thniu From ibe Uhio Cultivator. Pnllsare) fCrwpa-Articles thai mny jrt ke Plnnl-d Wlsitrr Fn tmr Cnlile. Through a large portion of Ohio the grass crop will evidently be an almost entire failure, owing to the severity of the drought, and there is reason to apprehend lhat most uf tho other productions of the farm will be very light crops. In view of theso prospects, what is the duty of the farmers of this region? Certainly not to settle down in despondency, and spend their time in utelcss complaints at the dio-pensations of Providence, as we regret to find many are inclined to do. On the contrary, every sonsible man ivill cusl about in his mind to discover what plan he can devise, and articles of culture he can still adopt with rennonuble hope of succecs, for supplying the deficiency that will occur, and furnishing food next winter for his domestic animals, and pusflibly for his family. Fortunately it is not yet so late in the season but that tits grounds can be replanted with seeds of some kinds, that with ordinary summer wcathei, it mny bo hoped will produce a vtiluuble crop; and therefore no time should be lust in setting about the work of putting them in, where land is unoccupied or crops have lit i led. Here we can see the necessity there is that farmers should read more, and obtain a knowledge of a greater variety of productions than arc ordinarily cultivated in this country. As an evidence of this need, how few ot the fanners in central Ohio know any thing about the nature or value of Mangle Worlzel, Kola Ilagn, Millet, and many other crops that might be tuund of value at a time like the present? We will briefly mention a few articles that may yet be sown with success, if the season should from this time prove favorable, and give a few bints that muy aid farmers in selecting such as are best adapted to their land or other circumstances. Sowi.no Co hn ron Fodder. When it is apprehended there will be a scarcity of fodder for cattle, a few acres of good corn ground should be prepared, after it has been well moistened by rain, and sown with corn for fodder. If the ground is rich and clean, it mny be sown broadcast like oats, at the rate of three or four pecks per acre, and ploughed in lightly; if not too wet or clayey it would be the better for being rolled after sowing. Or a better method is to furrow out the ground and drop the corn in rows, any two and n hull leet apart, ami six to eight inches in tho rows, then going over it once or twice with a harrow ufiertheplunts appear, and with a small plow between tho rows at a Inter period. In this way a heavy crop of fodder may bo obtained at a trilling expense. It should bo cut before it begins to ripen or turn brown, and after wilting a duy or two, be stucked in such a manner as to sweat withoutspoiling. Common I urhips. buoulu the season continue dry for a month or so longer, and other resources gen erally fail, it will still be in time to sow common turnips, and the prospect of a moist fall will be in favor of sowing this crop. Now land, with a good proportion of suud and muck, is the best tor turnips ; next to this, any good bottom land, or rich moist soil. that is not otherwise appropriated. The seed should not be sown earlier than the last week in July, in this climate, as the hot sun of mid -summer is unfavorable to their growth. Potatoes. Farmers who have plenty of potatoes ou hand fit for planting and good land for the purpose, should immediately put in several acres. We found one of the best farmers of Licking county ploughing land for this purpose a day or two since, and he assured us that he generally found the lirst week in June, the most suitable season lor planting potatoes for winter uso and even the middle of June he considered a good time. The potatoe crop mny prove a very good one this year, and every body knows it enn be made a substitute fur almost every olhur, both for tho sustenance of man and beast. Let us have plenty of potatoes, then, next winter, if there should be a scarcity of whoat, onts, and corn, and they will provo ut great value to the farmer. Huck-W hk at, This, wo believe, is the latest article th it can be sown for producing a crop the same year ; and it occupies less time in coming to maturity than any other. Tho heat of summer being unfavorable to its growth, it ia commonly sown in the month of Augtwt and harvested in October. We aro not sure whether it is generally found to succeed well in tho south part of this Htate, but we pre-sumo it is a pretty certain crop, if the fall is not too dry and hot. It will be well to sow this, if other tilings lail. Thr Mammoth or Ilr.FTii.Es. In the county of Washington, Alabama, not far from Mobile the fossil remains of a monster in the animal creation havo been discovered by Dr. Ai.rkrt C. Koch. We find nn account of it in Dr. K.'s words in the Mobtlo Daily Advertiser; it hns been railed by him ZtiUo-don isUlimnniif in honor of Professor sSillimam of Vale College. Hero follows a description of the monster: "I have succeeded in bringing to light the very nearly complete skclton of a moat colossal and terrible replilo, that may be justly termed the king of the kings of reptiles. Its fenilh is one hundred nnd four fret the solid portions of the vertebra are from H to lo inches in length, and Irom o to 14 inches in diameter, each averaging 75 pounds in weight Its greatly clongnted jaws are armed wttli not less than forty incisor or cutting teeih, four canine teeth or fangs, and eight molars or grinders. Theso teeth all fit into each other when the jaws are closed, and it is clear that tho animal was of the carnivorous nature. The eyes were evidently large, and were prominently ait im tod on the forehead, giving the animal tho power of keeping a constant and vigorous watch for ils prey. The body hod members attached resembling paddles or fins, which in proportion to Ihe size of Ihe animal wore small, and were doubtless intended to propel the body of this enormous creature through the wntcrs ot those large rivers or seas, which it inhabited or frequented. Each of these paddles or fins is composed of UL bones, which form in union, seven freely articulating joints. Tho ribs are of n very peculiar shape and execedinrz- ly numerous. They are three times the thickness at the ttitiirotid frHS l.sske Krl I fjamrlMioa am Ma vast ita h. The distance from Sandusky via Cincinnati. Louis ville, and Knoxville in Tennessee, to Charleston, it 1U;K) miles. J he Cincinnati Chronicle states the dis tances along the route us follows: Charleston to Augusta, ... l.PJ miles. Augusta to Mac i ii I Circle, - - VS4 u Remainder to Ross's Landing, about, - 100 HiwasieeRnil Roanl, - - - JW Knoxville to Kentucky river. - - J!7 M rteuiucrty river to tne uino, - - J00 " Thence to Cincinnati, . . - HO " Cincinnati to Sandusky, ... f&0 " Total, 1,05(1 It will be seen that it proDnsed to uso in Ihe lino 80 miles of the Ohio river, and 100 of the Kentucky. Including this river navigation and the rail ways soon to bo completed on the route, from Handuskv to Cin cinnati, from Savannah and Charleston to the northern bounds of Georgia, and the Hiwassec railroad from Georgia line to Knoxville in rennessco, two-thirds or three-fourths of the whole work will short ly be in successful operation. The only material obstacle iu the way ia the making of a road from rvnoxvuie to tnu fientucKy river. J he distnnco is 1117 miles, and the pass is through the Cumberland Gap. A tunnel will have to bo made about one mile through a sand rock formation which could ho easily pcnoraica. w mi this exception, tho whole route from Knoxville lo Slack Water navigation on the Kentucky is very favorable to tho construction of a railroad. The cost of completing this p-rcat, and tnilv na tional work fro. n lake Hrio to the Atlantic seaboard in Georgia and South Carolina, is thus estimated by the Chronicle: On the Hiwasseo about, ... $1,000,000 rrom Knoxville to the Kentucky river, ID7 miles, at $'..'5,000 per mile, with heavy T or II ruils. ... 4,925,000 F..mosKii St. Clair Papf.r. The Ohio Dem ocrat unwittingly shows up the worse than humbLi legislation uf its own partv on tho subject of Umil Retonn. It gives as "a sutlicient reason" why the .Mniins aro not ootina uy their endorsement ol ttt, Limr money, tho tollowinir: "No person can be expressly or impliedly bound in tho performances of an illegal act if tho con tract be such that its performance necessarily causes a violation of the taw, tho contract is void, and of nu encct. in IM& tf the Lcirialatura parsed a law, making it a penal oil u tic e, for any citizen of Ohio, lo act as ino agent ot any foreign Hanking Company, or in any utunucr tu give credit and circulation to foreign paper. And the penalty for becoming such agent was one thousand dollars. This law was re pealed last winlor;bul ninety-nine hundredths ol tho lied 1'og paper, hears date prior to its reneal. And tho Smiths being tho aireuts of said ilank. in viola- linn of the statute, are fur that reason nut hub lu as endursors." A correspondent of tho Now York Journal of Com tncrce, gives a vory interesting description of a visit iu rarnguay, a country which waa tor many years under tho dominion of the celebrated Dr. Francis who exercised au atithuhtv as riennulie as ever wns nni...u...l ku X'-.v..l.... 'I... C 11. .1.. .. i. j t-niniiviii. ii" niiiuwiiifj pruBiiu uu scribes tho splendid cactuses which irrow wild in that country without exciting any admiration in the inuantianis : Tho hills wo passed woro verv drv. arid soil, with a few low thorn bushes and a groat variety of cactuses, beautiful to look at, a hoc ling to touch. We conclude that one that we saw, with ils hundred bright straw colored Dowers, would inako a man's fortuuo ns a show, with a decent hand organ, in any of our cities. Another, that shot up a single stalk, about four feet high, and then put out hnlt a dozen brat chn as much lunger, standing singly and alone on tho top of a hill, covered with pink (lowers at least five inches across. Tell me, ye botanists, why tho most beautiful of tho world of llowers come from such ugly, prickly, thorny plants, that filled our fin. gers with thorns, when wo could not help cull ir the flowers and pulling them in our hat bands.' OitKR.t.i.t. The first improvements in this place were commenced in April. 1KW. Till that period it had remained a wildernoss, uncultivated, and from the nature of the ground almost inaccessible, except by the pedestrian. Tho first families which emigrated hither woro obliged to transport their effects by hand for about two miles, over a yiHdinir, swhiiii" soil, covered with a denno forest. Now (he place contains at lenst ,.rHfU inhnnitants, taking into account the students in attendance at the Institution. Hy refer once to the laid year's catalogue, it will bo aeon lhat the number of students connected wilh the Institution wasM); VAp2 tit ales, lr femntcs. There nrn said to bo more in attendance the present year. The Faculty consul of the President, tho ten Pro-feasors, nnd one Tutor, in the (Allege department; in tho Preparatory depnrtmeiit there are a Principal, Aaaislnnl Tutor, ami nix Assistant Teachers. Uriv-land UrntUL lower that Ihey are at the superior extremity." Slav a Cask. An interesting decision on what ia called the "slave case," was made in tho U. S. Cir cuit Court, in session on the l:hh ult., at the capital of Indiana. The cose involved the following points, as sinicu in tuc mate acnunei ; lst. That slavery was only a State or local insti tution: That Slavery is batted on local laws, not sustained or supported by either moral, natural, or national law: 3. That if a slave escape from the State in which ho is hold in slavery, either by accident, consent or, nis mnntcr, or ngainn mat consent, ne is foruver free: 4. That the ordinance of 1787 orcan- ixing iho North Weslcrn Territory, only guarantees the delivering up ot fugitives from labor to citizens of the original States, and thttt as Missouri (from whence tho slaves escaped,) was not one of tho orig-nal States, Ihe citizens ol Indiana were not bound to dclivor up to M ifsfiii r i her runaway slaves." The opinion of tho Court wns delivered by Judge McLean. Ho admittod tho correctness of tho propositions 1, M and -'t, but overruled Ihe demurrer to tho declaration, decided that if Indiana had remain-ed a territory, under the ordinance, alio would not havo been bound to deliver up the slaves; but having adopted a constitution, which in part nbrogntes tho law oi me ordinance, she is bound by tho constitution of the United Slates; and Missouri being one of tho great sister family of States, is entitled to all the rights and privileges of tho original Slates, from an outer oiaies in ihe union. From lale Kinlih Papers. Tho distanco between London and Binninirliam (110 inilesj wus Into performed in 105 minutes. Dr. Ctuilmers, in consequence of increasing infir mities, nas retired irom the public business o! the Free Church. Few persons aro awaru that from 1700 lo 1814 there aro on record 101 shocks of earthquakes in Kngland, P18 in Scotland, and 17 in Wales. It is ascertained that no fowor than 110,000 American cheap Clack havo been imported and sold iu Fnirland within one year. Tho founder of a "iruo" and new religion has advertised, in the Paris papers, fur a supply of priests, bards, &c. Tho docprst mining shaft in tho world is one in tho Tyrol, which is 4K fathoms, or 27t!0 feet deep. Of tho population of Ireland eighty-one in the hundred aro Roman Catholics, eleven Imndrethi Fpisco pa linns, and tho remainder Dissenters. According to tho Revue do Paris, the Sovereigns of Fiitgland, Spain, Naples, and Holland, will bo guests uf thu King of tho French in July next Fatal Arcmi.ST. On tho !Vth ult. near Franklin, in this county, sn individual bv tho naino of Da vid Ferry, wns crushed tu deuth tinder the wheel of a heavily loaded wagon. He.incompany wilhsomo other teamsters, was hauling logs to a saw-null, and being intoxicated, attempted to pass the wagons in advance of htm. In doing so he brought his own in contact wuh the one iiniuediatrly in front, which collision broke tho fore wheel of his wnggmi and threw him Irom his position, on the log, under the wheel of his competitor's wagon, which masid over his htuly. Hu died in an hour and a half, Ihirrtn Co. Star, Total cost, - - - $5,!K5,000 Or in round numbers, $G,000,000, as the Georgia Railroad mi (r lit need some aid. This is certainly a very moderate sum for a work of such vast importance. All of the iron can be made on tho route; and it can be inndo there cheaper than in Wales. II the dimculties to be encountered in Dassintr tho Cumberland mountains have not been under estimat ed, we doubt not the work will bo undertaken and completed. Tennessee is now the most insulated State in the Union. This road would soon double her wealth ami population, and develops her vast mineral resources. To create a cnenen in feeling and interest between the North and the South, noth ing will contribute more than the construction of an iron way from lake hne to Savannah and Charleston. llvjfato Com. Jldvertiter. Th Uwnisisice of luaect l.lfn. We take the following beautiful oxlract from an Historical Lecture by Judge Charlton of Georgia: "The earth teems with mysteries the sky .-dunes with them they float in the air they swim in the deep they flash from the dark-robed clouds they whisper in the ger(tle tones of the summer wind they speak in trumpet tongues in the voice of thft teiiipdst and the thunder. Ceaae th v Ion rn nas for the ancient days, oh, dreamer! Close thy book and. look about ihee, upon the volume uf Nature. See there, before thee, is a tiny insect that thuu canst scarce dintinguish from the grains of sand that sur- rotinu u waicn it it moves on with an energy and an instinct that enables it to overcome or avoid all obstacles. See it hus seized some object larier lhan itself, and still it goes bravely on notlnnc daunts it nothing slops it tread it under foot, (if inou canst nave ine neart to attempt such a murder) nud it will riso up again beneath the ocean of Bam) and turn once more to its labor. Doft thou know it? It is the ant, that lion-hearted ant. toilimr amid (he heat of summer; and though the season's brightness and its warmth are bringing up nnd producing ten thousand enjoyments for the little traveler, he is busy gathering together his provender for the long winter nine, wneu irosi ana snow, eua cold shall have locked up tho granaries of nature. Thou wilt tell me, that I sin mucking thee; lhat thou canst see this daily and hourly; and is Uiis a mystery therefore? If thou hadit read in those ancient legends before thee. of an insect so courageous, lhat it would attack an animal ot len thousand times its magnitude; of Industry so indefatigable, that it would climb house tops and mountains to pursue its course; of perseverance so unflagging, lhat though repulsed a thousand times, it would still return and overcome the obstacle that impeded it thy eyes would have sparkled with interest and amazement; it is because it is constantly belure thee because it be ones to the present time that thou lookcst so disdainfully upon it When did tho Knight tirranttof thy heart do half so much? When did their bosoms bent as high with valor and determination as this poor insect? Rut it hns no loves no burning jealousies no blood stained victories! How It no west thou lhat? I warrant thee, even that tiny breast has grown gentler for some fond ono that lived within its litllo world; that its blood hns flowed ipiickor when some Adonis ant has Mined around tho little citiuette: that its path has been stained by ihe Irophies of it mimic Daiucs. jsuiihou wilt say why dost thou luru mo from my glowing page, to point me tu tins moving atom ? Why not show me tho majestic mysteries of nature? Why waslo my time with a topic so uiniKiiiiicniiir i answer oecause ll tl insignificant. I point thee there tu out of the smallest of earth's creatures, to ask thee if the atoms contain such wonders how much mora the noblo and lofty works of nature? Follow mo, if thou wilt Let us dive into the caverns of tho earth, and mark the sculptured halls the rocky avenues stretching miles ar.d in ilea below the busy haunts of men. Let us plunge into the deep, and see the huge leviathan sporting amid the waters; ur, the rainbow-hucd dolphin, as she flings back bright rnys of the glorious sun. Let us climb into the air, and behold ihe eagle with his untiring wing, and his unflinching eyes, the noble image of indomitable perseversiice and of brilliant genius, soaring proudly and gazing fixedly toward heaven's brightest luminary! Oh, dreamer! if the momenta of thy life were multiplied by tho sands of tho desert they would be all too short to unravel these mysteries that are around thco and above thee," Ma. CamioiiVs Farm. Mr. Calhoun, like Mr. Clny and Mr. Webster, n fond of agricultural life; and, when not engaged in professional duties, he occupies himself on his estate at Fort Hill. About forty cultivated acres surround his mansion, and other sections of his grounds, according to the Express, aro occupied wuh cotton, corn, peas, end various other crops. He has drained his grounds, and introduced rotation of crops according to the report of a Com mitleo who visited it with an unexampled degree of success. The stock on his farm consisted of hogs, horses, aud cattle of good blood, and in excollent condition. His negro house ia a spacious stono building 200 feet long, divided into spacious and comfortable apartments. In nil parts of ins estate ha has blended the useful and ornamental, introducing admirable tillage with groat horticultural taste and benuty. The Agricultural Committee who examined this plantation, report that Fort Hill has been undor cultivation thirty or forty years. There waa a very heavy crop of corn upon it, and a largo number of pea-vines, and tho conclusion was lhat, by the enre bestowed upon it, its production wan unlimited. In Iho uplands of the farm, the Committee fi und cotton growing abundantly upon land which had not been a great while in cultivation. How to Prevent thk Diseases whm:h arise rrtoM the tSK or Leid in Cebtsin 'I'm.i..- This treatment is extremely simple, and only n quires the workmen to submit the following precautions; s ne j Brv iii lane iwo oauis oi snap and water every week, occasionally adding a liltln snlnhnr. and carefully to wtn tho uncovored parts of the body wnu soap ann water nt every interval between their working hours. They are to drink one or two i-Usm. oa of lemonade, made with sulphuric acid, every day. uv.vui.iiuK iu uiu grvnmr or less quaniliy Ol dust or poisonous vapor wilh which tne surrounding atmosphere may be charged. At the same lime thev should be more careful than the followers of any other trade to abstain from the uso of spirituous liquors. The efficacy of this preventive Ireattnent ia easily explained by the fuel, that the mineral poison absorbed is thus converted into a soluble, and therefore in-noxious salt, (sulphate of lead,) nnd the satiiriuc particles deposited on the surface of the body are ink on away,--7o;ji(7r Iteconl o AWriirr. Little Miami Rail RoAn. The Directors of this roud are now (Wednesday evening) in session for the purposo of determining which route shall be adopted between horo and Springfield. Wo regret him in consequence ol the early hour lhat our paper goes to press, we are unable 0 gjvo the result uf iheir deliberations. Xrnwi Torch Light, Wo wore told yosterday of a young lady from the interior of tins Stale who has just been married la her second husband; she is now I ."4 years old, and niairied hor first husband when she was II. At K. 7 Vi fen nr.
Object Description
Title | Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1845-06-18 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1845-06-18 |
Searchable Date | 1845-06-18 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025897 |
Reel Number | 00000000023 |
Description
Title | Weekly Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1841), 1845-06-18 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1845-06-18 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
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Full Text | WEEKLY 0 0 i JL o AT ii n vi i u ii i 1 1 Ji-JLJO VOLUME XXXV. COLUMBUS, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1845. NUMBER 47. I'UHrlMHI'.l) KVKItV WKDNKdlUV MOKNINU, fiY CHARLES SCOTT & CO. Oflicc in lliu Journal lluibtiiijr, south-east comer uf High stn-el and tiifir alley, T K H M rt. Two Dki.urk mn annum, which must invariably 1 i!itil iu fltlvmiro, I'ri'u of postage, or of pur cuiilugu lu A gniis nr (Nilli't lorn. Tln Journal n aUo pnhlidii;d daily during Iho m'stiuti of Iho 1.1'ginl.itnre, iiiul ilincii a wook llm reiiiaimli ol lliu yunr, lur $' uml throo liiiit'H a week, yearly, lor Jjf4. THURSDAY EVKNING, JUNE 12, 1815. ( Miscrrri Msln Nciriy. The fimt Concert of the society f.r lh improva-ncnt of inrn.nl music, ill Colnmlui, will hu Riven in Trinity Church, (Kpiscopnl) on Thursday evening, th Win mil. l'erforiiiinjf mill uim performing member will ho supplied with tickots. particular will lie given in bill ami ndverlisiimiil. mpF.xtiuHfir Rank. Ii will he seen hy a notice in our advertising column llml llm Exf linnpu Rank lint commenced business under lliu new law. Thin is the firsl, w believe. It awaiti only a supply of uoies for circulation to be in the ox-trcio of alt iu function. Tint Kaii. Road. It will l een. by the following from the Xeiiin Torrh L fihl, of yesterday, that the preliminary survey of the route of Itiu Columbus and Xonta Hail Hoed, hdi been completed to the latter point, and that the Commissioners and Surveyor are now on their return, re-iurveying to this point: fjolombtsa nnil Xvnin Bnll Bonsl. The preliminary survey of this road, ihu commencement of whir It wc mentioned last week, was compli-ltd to thin plare on Haturday lai. (ien Hiorklon, the eiiR-inm-r iu roare of thx parly, and Messrs. Kljr,way and Johnson, directors ac-riniiimnyini;, spvak in highly favorable trrini of ihe practicability of lliu route. There is nothing dillicull hut the passage of ihu l,ir!yi ihe plnins bviwecu ttu-m find Xcnia, prcsenl mi nhnost level surface, lliero Ixmiibt b" 2 fid fall lo ihu mile, in 11 miles of that part of die route. The distance ran is 61 link's. The ire nl lei uen in charge of thu work, are confident it can In made in lilty. The iti-survey to Columbus, ttliith is intended, will obnntu most of I he lew diUicullit-s to Ihj met wilh in l he fare of the cnuiilry. It ) I he opinion of the Engineer llml if I ho rnad was formed, it could be finished and ready lor the cars in twelve months. We trust llm people a It in K ihu mule will seu the propru-iy of ndopling a liberal conrMi toward tin enterprising company, and by subsrrip lions of Nlnrk, and yielding ihu right of way, show that the) ore disposed lo astil iu the great enterprise, which will open up to tlicm the niarhuls of the whole country. AixtsHMKNTs u.f ukr tub Tax L,w. The Hillsborough Oho News tins bvun furnished by the Auditor of High-liuid county, with tho assessment on murcliaiils' rnpilul and money at interest in that county, l'ho totalis S.r),'Jil. Last year it w is $111,536 ; showing au increase of jjfM'vWO, lo whirh is lo be added .',fii) cslimnlcd on tavern lots and new buildings. At this rate, the Tux of Highland will re duecd. Wc have found but one case beiides this, in whirh the miTrhiinls' capital and money at interest failed lo double the old aneimncnl. Huw it has happenud in Hiuhland, wo cannot tell, unless the merchnnti and money lenders there have Ik-cii a liille nearer the mark in rrmknijr, I heir ruporls htTetofore than those of some other roomies. It will be r. collected that, under the new law, the tax is only on half (be amount furnished. Within ihu rurporato limits of Gnllipolis, as we Icam from the Jt urn.il of lhat place, the value of taiable property relumed is $ib,lS! AO. Last year, ihe am mini returned was gm$ OU makiuicadiirerenceor $2,M SO. I The Vttrvium eomparrd with Ihe Uouie Nnrkcl. The National Intelluri-ncer, of a recent dat. contained a valuable table showing ihe value of the lea dins; articles of Domestic produce exported during Ihe year enuing tno sum June, IK 15. The table is compiled with great care from "the annual statement of llie navigation and commcrrs1 of the United 3'ates." Its facts are all important, showing as they do lo what extent wo depend upon and arc biiicfitlt d by fr' eign market, and enabling us la make a companion between its advantages and those of Iho home market, loniaso & complete comparison, we should have Ihe value of imports and exports for a series of years, ror our present purpose, however, llmsu statistics are not necessary. 'l'ho peoplo of the Weil are more direrlly interested in knowing, the amount of their hrcml-slulft, etc., consumed hy ihe foreign market. We find that Ihe total value of our exports during lha year ending June .10, 1(1 was $Dt,7lb,l79. The totals ranking this aggregate, including exports to all foreign ports, may be stated thus : Cotton 5ftt,nfi.1,n0 Tobacco bViW'ft Hire, S.llt-2. H Vegetable food and bread- lull's y.OAi.ilt AmuiHl foml and live animal G,l W,.WJ Derived from Uie sea 3.;i4J,Wi Derived from thHoresl fi,HIHI.7l2 Maiiufueliiresnt Cotton, 2,IIH'l.7t)0 Oilwr iiMnutHriures &,liW.ai All other articles not eiiuuinruttd,.... S,7li,7bO Total, yj,715,17a Tut Wobk r Hkmovai.. under this administration "of the people not of a party," is progressing ferociously at Washington, a well a at olhvr points. Home extremely hard cases are mentioned. That of Mr. Hanson, in the Treasury Department hns excited deep feeling. He is lame and incapacitated for labor oihermwi than as a clerk. He lias boen deeply alllirled by sickness and deaths in his family. His father was a Revolutionary soldier and his son acquitted himself with grrwl bravery in the Florida War. Itul nil would not do. (ltd and lame as he was.ullirienl as all ackuowludg-ed him to bo, he must give place to a hungry cormorant, who wanted his thouiand dollar salary. It is conceded that this administration, thus far, has been more sweeping!) proscrip- live lli.ist any of its predecessors, since the establishment of the Uoverumi'iit. Cni.t.KrTnn AT Nkw YoliK. The long threatened, long looked for, long deprecated find frequently denounced change in the Colleclorslup of New ork, has not yet been made. The iNew York pnpvrs, however, declare upon good authority as I hey Ihmk. that Court kmui W. I.awhknik, Prcsi-ideiit of (he Hank of the Hmie of New York, is to suiwr ede Mr. Vak Nks, on Ihe 11 of July. Uetitrul V. N.has a host of friends, and his removal will make a commotion among iho faithful. Tho "IL M. Journal," the organ of the "Young De mocracy"! Washington, warns the adminiitralion against the step. We stltpvcl ihu "Young Democracy" will have to grin ami bear Ihe removal of one of their favorite. Q f Wr have ait iuteresliug letter from our correspondent "I'liinkeye," ilakil at New York, receivnl alloolalean hour fur this paNr. Hy it we learn that Mr. Van Nesi, Ihe rollec-lor of New York, has been forced lo resign hi place in obc dtence lo the will ul liieublerranean "democracy," which in Die days of tho Krrurh lie volution was recognised under the ri.inte of Jacobinism. The name of his successor hud not Irainpircd, bol wnssaid to In: a merchant. Anttihrr locofc Atlvswnlo ! ihe Tni Lsiw U stkrd I ! A (K'oplc iK'gin lo see the ellecl of the Tax l.nw and re-oluc lhat tliey have been most sliamulully imposed ujion as to its character by a set uf locufoco demagogues, who were Iihi iguoraiil lo appreciate or too diihoiaisl to explain correctly ils toil urc and design, we liud an unusual degree ol cantlor uiitl cimrat devtlnping iUelf among those locoforo nuinbers uf Ihu l.n I Legitlaluru who voted for il. In various directions wu hear of lht:m mniuig out at last and acknowledging that n law that hu been ihu mljecl of misrcpresenlnliiin ever since thv ndjoiirninenl of the l.cgiilaluro, received ihuir a probation under a rouviclion, yet unrhauged, that il ii much belter iliau tho old low asunfoiced by the Slate. They have heard llicir couniy presses week nflvr week denoimring it as a Whig measure nnd seeking lo hcnpudiuin on ihu Whig pur-ly on arcounl of ils adoption, yet they have remained silent for months. Much the largest proportion of those locofoco memlers who voted lor il, ate still silent, not daring to avow Ihu Iruth, becH(ie a set of dmiMgngues have raised a cry against ihe law. ( bin man, and ho the one who secured a reconsideration of the bill in the House afieril had lecn voted down by a Whig nwjrily, has (ten so utterly insensible to truih and decency, as lo deHare lhl he resuci luted the bill in order lo play a inrk on the Whigi ! ! Our renders w ill un-ilertland us as alluding to one ol the Pair field Locofoco mem- Ihts. Tluti meanly did ho wish in ikulk the rcMmiihiltiy of an honest act, Itccuuse it did not happen to square with Ihe miserable designs of a rerklcis squad of party leaders, who wuhrd lo take ndvnutagu of a tciiiHrnry feeling among their opponents. They were willing that the Whigs should bear Ihe odium, if the hi w should prove obnoxious; but no sooner do we find h change taking place in public feeling, than some of ihein are seen ictiii)g lurlh and proclaiming most valiantly llml i hey voted for the law, and view with lurpriM) ihe attacks that havo Ix-en made upon it by their own parly preises, fol lowing the lead of the Mlaleirtmn. I teller lale, however, than uevvr. Our position is still unchanged a lo tho law. Il is teiiHHirary in ils mil nre, and must give plare lo a system bas t'd on more correct prinriples than tho old law, and ono llml will be H?rinnnent iu its character. We aro Ihe belter pleased with the movement of Disney, Arrhbold and other Ir.cnfocos nl iho late Legislature, because ol the iHisilion in which a great iHirliou of iho press of thai parly n placed. The issue is now between locofocl in the Legislature and locofocos out of il. It is dearly made, and there is no csrapo from il. The locofoco press has lied most shamelully or the locofoco members aro guilty of falsi hood. On Ihe ouc hand il is asictled that the Tax Law is a Whig measure, on the oiher it is unequivocally denied. On the one hand it is aieried that the "democratic" memlwrs volud almost to a man iig-jinsl lliu law, on the other il is affirmed that "a largo portion" uf them voted fur it. On Ike one hand tho law is denounriil as iniquitous, unequal and oppressive "rAictcn lax' of ihe must odious nature "worse than the stamp act" and on Ihe other it is affirmed that none but brokers, capitalists and wvatiliy merchants are opposed lo il; and llul this ought in commend it lu Ihe support of "dein' crau!" I'ndvr such eireiimtanrfs it is not lu bo wondered that lha clamor at nut 'Cltirkm 7'iir," like thntfurthe"J jt.if" if lh Hank Law, is softening down so wonder lu I ly and almoat ceases to greet our ears. Never has demngoguvistn been so completely unmasked, eiiKMcd and driven from it refuges of lies, in Ohio, as during a few months past. OuriiMtcial object, tnwcver,in commencing this article, was In announce the fact that another locofoco advocate of Ihe Tux Law has been wnked up ! Another pure, wool-dyed. Unsophisticated democrat," whose "democracy" is beyond evvn suspicion, comes out in the Cothoctrn UemiKrat in vin dicatiuii aul only of his rote, but of the law itself, against the Attacks that li.ive been made on it by the presses of his own parlv. We allude lo (leu. Mr.iiKinTii, Ihe locofoco Kcpre- seitliitivrfrom Coshocton, in the lust Legislature. 1'ass round his iinme, along with those of Duney, Arrhbold k. Co., and thus give him hi due, although by hi tardiness ha has impaired somewhat his claim to erudit for honesty and indepun- dvuee. Of cViumc, lien. Mi iiuhtii r annul get a hearing in the Hiaiciman, niter the course pursued inward Akcii mil. ii. The lolloping is a single sentence from ihe lengthy coininuuiralinn of (irn. M. "1 have looked on with deep regret at the wholesale denun ciation whirh have hi-rii thundered nut without reserve ihrough your paper as well as several others, against Ihe new lax law, ami ajamsl timse won voleu lor ii. More than lifty-eighl millions of the ninrly-nino exported arc consumed by Grvst Britain and hut dependencies. A table uf imports would show the same extraordinary ratio in fa vor ol llritih trade. It must be rccolluclrd, however, by Iho western farmer, that nearly forty million out of the fifty -eight exported lo Great Hrilnin is Cotton, the raw material, taken from necessity, and fur whirh slic makes u pay well after it is manufactured. Our trade with Franca is absolutely insignificant, being but little over thirteen miliums uf dollars. The Hanse Towns, Holland and dependencies and llelgium togcther, consume of our export, less ihau eight millions of dollars. It would be of some interest to get at the items of Wheat and Flour alone, consumed by Ureal Hntain, the main con turner of our domestic produce. Of vegetable and nniinul food exported, amounting in all to IA,0UU,(Mr, England consume nearly 9,0Ui,l)(H). Of vegetable food and bread-slull's alone, she consumes 0,31 Wlmu wu compiiro these csulli with those presented by the Home Market ta unties, we cuiuioi but be aslmiistiud at lliu importance- attached lathe foreign market, by a visionary class of free traders, who arc inresinul in lliiiir clamors against a system calculated lo build up the home market. It is now estimated, from the moil reliable data, lhat the New Kngland Hiales are consumers of the products of oilier Slates, to the amount of one hundred million of dllar$; an amount greater than our aggregate exports lo all the rest uf the world. In MaiarhinuUs alone, according to slaliiliea adduced in iho halls of Congress, several years since, over forty millions of the products of other State are consumed. This amount, it may be safely estimated, in viiw of the extraordinary increase of manufacturing establish men is and ttie increased consumption of domestic good', ha increased lo fifty millions of dollars. While England consumes 'J,IK0,- 000 of our bread-stuffs, and vegelablu food, Manuchuselt consumes in bread-stuff ahmo, including Flour, Com, 4c, about $7,0(X,000. Add lo this the animal and vegetable food, and the nggrcgaia will be swelled to ut least twttt e million uf iollin, or more than $.1,000,000 over Ihe whole amount con sumed by (ireat Britain, and between one and two millions more than is consumed by Lnglnud, France and all ihe German States ! Ki-(iov. ISaiitlkt estimated, in hi message last winter, from what he pronounced reliable data, the exports of Ohio at twenty-five millions of dollar. Three- fourth ol this nmount, at least, may bu clashed u Agricultural products; showing thai Ohio export morv than dunhit the amouul consumed by (ireat lliilain and her dependencies! Governor .Shannon it whs, wc believe, who estimated the surplus wheal of Ohio at U,UU0,(X of buihuts, in the year IHU. If wu suppose this to he worth 7cts. por bushel, wo find that the surpliti Whtal of Ohio nloue, is worth more than all ihu agricultural products uf tliij country consumed by Great Britain ! ! Much facts as these appeal lo the understanding of the agricultural population uf the West. They scalier to Ihe winds whole volume! of theorim, and tell us in a language not 10 be misunderstood, that the home market is our only dependence, our only salvation a a nnlmn. The foreign market is and always will be limited and precarious. If the Corn duties of Kngland were reealud to-day, she would not furnish a market for an) more limn ihu surplus grain of Ohio alono. And il i nut certain thai cum pili lion from the oilier wheal growing sections of the world, would allow u tmy more control of Ihu Hruiih markul than wo have now. We inusl look In onriclves. Wo must buy at home nnd sell at home; and if we have any thing tti export 1st us cxiorl our owu manufacture and reap the profits of the labor cipi'tiilcd in working up Ihu raw initio-rial. Wo have a vast cmiulry and vast resources. Wu can rnise enough in a few year lo feed the whole-uf Kunqw, but let us bring ihem here and feed them, and Ihu savu the ei ponse of iMtispurUliun and reap in our own country the profits of their labor. The Teine PrHs4. There ar several (minis in this business whirh excite our attention. First, Iho clear determination manifested al nn early day by some of our leading in en, who trade in human llvsh and politics with equal gusto, lo (xisiess Texas as a counterpoise to the growth and power of the North. This was claimed by the Ghlv, iucu l Ik adjournment of Congress, lo ihe credit of Gen. Jai-ksou and (ieu. Ham. Ilouslun, the late President of Terns. It wns declared that they were Ihe originators of the fraud, and that to litem were the Suulh and Hlavery indebted fur the advantages about lu be secured to them by iho Annexation of lex.is, 1 Ins claim (of ques-liunablu patriotism 1) brought lo mind Ihe disclosures tnado by Doctor llohcrl Mayo, of Virginia, formerly of Iho War Department, in his publirulion of lt37. in which he givos a copy of a letter transmitted to Gen. J ark son, in I II JO, unclo sing certain farts in relation to Houston s movement and Ins endeavour to organizo nn exn-dilion secretly against Texas, No use was made by Gen. Jackson ol iho information thus seasonally com mu mealed, and Ihe letter was returned In Mnyo in 111.1b. 1 he boast of Ihe Globe shows why General Jsekson did not avail himself of iho information thus impartedAc tens a eopftderate of lltmtton'i. Then in the second plncu it is amusing lo ire the easy im- pudenre of the philters in this iniquity, now lh.it lhy think they have got lliu North tied hand and fool. Thai with Iho fartlier reflection that the free Stales have been led thus far by pretences llml could have deceived none but fool or iboso willing lo be humbugged f tilts the subject of all claim lo be considered in Ihe lihl of statesmanship, or as a mailer of national interest. 1 hey sink it at once into a great fraud practised by one section against another. Those who doubt this, will cease lo doubt nfler reading the following report uf 8am. Houston's speech recently al New -Orleans, ou this point. The llee gives tho following versiou of hit ojniung temarks on Annexation. He said ii li;V he voted fur the mrasuro when il was before iho pcopr,- thai ihe tint act of his admuiiflraiion (being the first eonsliiuliooai rreiilenl) was In ileioalrh an areut lo Ihis Government, followed shortly bv nnotbvr. with extraordinary powers, cuiiveying ihe wishes of lliu jn-niile, and empowered I. si be Harbours) A I'hnnwe of Prois. We find the fullowine: paragraphs in iho Albany Argus, llm organ of Locofocoism in New-York and the champion of ihe auii-improvemant parly iu that Plate and the Union. This is nn entire changu of front on these grenl questions, nnd to whal shall wo atiribulc it 1 Gov. VgM hns recently vetoed n bill lur the gradual progress of the Canal improvements in his Htale, passed by A Legislature composed of his political friend by large majorities in both houses and last winter by Iho aid of Cnpl. Tyler nothing was done by the Texas m-ijority in Congress, for harbor nnd river improve ments. Hut now something must bo done for the diftnct of the country nothing for commerce. 1 he maxim usea lo be, " iu peace prepare for war "it would seem that Locofocoism neither understands the aril of peace or war if il did, it would not make war on harbor improvements and facilities of transportation. Hero is ilio Argu extract, which we shall expect to see copied by ihe faithful, and pronounced correct doctrine, in which wu shall rejoice, because il it good Whig doctrine. From ihe Albany (Locoforo) Argus. It is undoubtedly true lhat huuld diiliriilues at any lime occur let ween Holland and Iho United .Slates, the great lakes of Ontario, Krie, Huron, Michigan, and even Cham-plain, will be the principal theatre upon whirh ihu contest is lo lie decided. Tliese lakes are not inaptly termed inland seas, and iherc is a population and weulih growing up an mad ihcfii, und a ciimmerr floating upon their waters, which render them still more like the Ocenii. It mcy iheti be asked, can Congress do any ihing to en-courage it growth, and particularly fur surh vessels as aro calculated for war steamers and how T It is simply by ihe improvement of such harbors and rivers as may be needed, nnd such as will allow shelter and passage fur boati of the larrett clan. Theie are best cideuluted lot war steamers, but it is known lhat owners are now deterred from building boats as large as they otherwise would, because the water on the Hi. t'lmr llm (the verv important strait whirh rouuects llie upper wuh the lower fakes) is loo shallow. The same obaiarle exists in most of Ihe oilier harbors on the lakes, even in surh imKiriaui ones a Dunkirk, ( .luvelaiul, Chicago, Mil' wnukie, tit. Josephs and Grand river. The "Hnppr I'umilr." The Albany Kveiiing Journal furnishes the following items of the harmony thai exuts omuug the 1 exa plunderers: The liotton fott, a paper that represents a larire tdiare of llieTexatism of New-Kiiglaud, qur tinned the justice of turning men who shouted lustily for I'olk nnd Texas, nut of ihe Huston Custom Hon. Tho If. N. Journal, one of the or- gun of the Administration, in referring to the same subject, : " Wlien the lenders oi inn party can dispense with (ho services of those who elected them, the voters ran di peine with their service at lulure olerlinii. There will come a day of relributioii, nud then wo shall jn who are independent ot ihu people, and who are roll tiik. vtnvt.v.." 'I In is plainly spoken, llul the language of the I'rnniyl-vania K'tfitoH, h paper whirh, a ihe Mmning JVetri intimate, upejtk for V iit'-fresidi-nt D.iilas, is far mure pregnant sud ominous. Fee w hat the Kevstone a: The olftco of Vice President docs nol appear lo lie under stood: ils incumbent ha no duties exrepl presiding over the Senate during its se-siou, and with the Lxetulive a'lmmislra-lioti ul Government he has nothing whatever lodo. Tho utlice was created so lhat the deal Ii or resignation of a President should leave nn interruption iu government, and upon the officer, whose duty depended soleiy upon a remote couluiirciicy, llie 1 oiiveiiliuii which made llie L oinlitulnn, ilevolveil Ihu dulic of ihe Prenideury nf ihu Hen ate. When, therefore, our i oii1emprnrie- speak of ihe administration ol Polk and Dal lar, they cuinmil an egregious blunder." A Bmai.l Sim mot to hi Mistaken. 'The Whigs elected their whole ticket at a charier election iu Canandai- gua, N. Y. on ihe 4th iml. by a majority of 40. This town has been Locufoco for a good number uf years. The lown of Liverpool, in Onondngo county, Wat redeemed from Lo- eofiieo rule at ils lale chaiter election. This shows ihe set dl the euirent. Gov, Wrsiihi' l nonl Veto. Most of the Texas papers, says the Albany I'v. Journal, havu endorsed, though ibey generally nk lo Ite esriiH.il from pul it 11 inn, llie Governor's Velouf the I'liml lull Tho Urnne titntinet is, however, nu cxreption. Tuat paper says : Thr Vrio. We have heretofore eipresed q-nie folly our opinion in regard lo the Governor's Veto ou ihe Canal bill, and upon tlill lunlier cuinideraiioii of Ihu subject, wu have no desire to alter lliu opinion w havu expre-sed. On ihu contrary, a careful p-riii'd of the inetaairu u second lime, convinces us lhat the veto is not only unie and injurious in ihe lntt interest ot tne H-opm oi the rtnte, nut mat ino prominent reason as-signed by ttie tiovernor lor taking ihis slep, are ipiiie tucou-siileut with many coieinporary acts of his sice henry. We cannot regard Gov, Wriglil's veto in any oilier light Uiaa n total Hliniiilorim,ul ot our enlire svsiem ol Internal Jin provements, and this feature of llm veto is so apparent, lhat many pajH-rs have alriMily laken a decided stand ihal way in ilieir at tempts toiustam it thus virtually saving that lourleen million ol dollars ol Ihr people's money tlrill lie llirown nwny, nil lor the want of a small appropriation lo preserve and com plete the untiiiished works wliirh nre already far advanced, and whirh, if they were completed, would enhance ihe value of prujieriy iu different lornliues, and extensively develops the resourecu of the entire Huii. A Noni.r SriutT. Philadelphia County and Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, have determined lo put al Ihe disposal of the Nlnie ihrir respective quotas of taiei, in advance of ihe usnal lime of payment, lo meet the interest duo in August. 4o say odr exchange pHers, md we pot the fart ou record as more creditable than any thing Ihal has met our observation for years. What more sublime sight than lo see whole roinimtmtu moveil by a common impulse rising In protect their pledged faith f Hat lies and victories cannot N compared lu il. Anti-Si. vr.ar Ciftvi,isriiu. Them i a Convention of Ami-Slavery men, or Liberty Party men, or Attoliliomsli, now iu MeHion m Cuieiiiniiti. We nre not advised oftlw ob- jei-u of ils meeting. Mr. Hiruey ia among limn, and this leti Is us louppoe lhat Us intents arc political. A friend ho sent u a rcHri of a Speech delivered by Mr. Iliraey, at Handusky, a'Kiul the first of ihis nmnih. He there staled in sul'Slaure that Annexation was a Whig measure, and vat coiisuinniaied by Whigs: It wa recommended by a W hig Prcsidrnt, and p.used umih hy a W lug Seiiatei and, tardier, ihu Whig noinuiuti-d Mr. CUy 10 thai Liberty men iliould not vuiu for their eandnlale therefore, lug were rep.milde for Auiicsalion. How much will thoiagaciiy or monthly uf such a man advanco any good cause f We would publish the report of the speech at furnished lo ut, did wc mil think il would lie attaching loo much importance to ihu sayings and doings of Ihe man. Wa may possibly make some use of it herealler. For Ihe Ohio Hlate Journal. Comme-n Rrhool Keporta stna" Ihrir Reviewer. Mr-.ssits, KlilToiil : Your correspondent is hard to please. He is not satislied with iho Legislative CommiUee's retiorl, because it did not embrace statistic for reference hereafter. Like all our public documents, it was written lor display. He dislikes still more the report of the Secretary of Stale. His facts are incorrect hi recomnienditlions " visionary," nud, above hII, his ilylt hi figures of speech nnd Dowers of rhetoric vtiy find. Indeed, hu is exceedingly peevish ul the Eierretary, uml loses no oppnriouily lu show il. llul, however these things may bu, lliu writer has evidently a very couifuriaKlu opinion of himttlfh veritable sir ornele who hns much lo say much fault to find, but uulhiug lo oiler him 'elf. Like all lelfconsliliilcd censors, with a dash he demolishes ihe plnns which have been considerately proposed here and esinblikhed by lliu wisdom and experience- of other Stales, as "vtnivnary" and "tjiti rottc," an another crusade uf fanaticism wiinhy the age of "Peter Ihu Hermit." It is forluiiate nl leasl thai thoe who soberly and honcilly thought our srhout sysiem iu r.ilher a bud wttjui needed some effort lo infuse a little moral and inlcll;cltial vigor into iu dry bones, have been so very mndetttij and ntnlevmly aituionidied They will leel their way mure cuuliuusly here alter. The writer gravely introduces his rninplaitit with some original general remark ou the ' upenilUiulniif e ol legislation" and ihe evil of looking lu the Legislature for a remedy for "all ihe ills of the body poll tie," All this mny lie correct, and yet hnvc nothing to do with the present proposition. The objection will equally apply lu every general act of legislation, and will hardly help the wri ler's'pairmlisin in raising Ins "standard" agaimt any improvement in ihe common schools. If ihe objection be good, lei our laws ! declared unchangeable. Bui what does experience in school legislation else where teach us 1 It is nol many year since Pennsyl vania mode a radirnl change in her school lows, Ttiis was oluii-nately resisted by the counties and district themselves, ihio' ignorance and indisposition lu change. Bui now ils general benefits are manifest.- Hut a very few yuar since, each of the R00 township in New Yulk hud three Krhool commi-tiuner and three school iii-peclors, or near IiOOO school officers, bemdus the conniy and township clerks who received and transmitted the returns. Thu rclums indeed were regularly made, The muihiuery seemed In work, and there were munv who, tike vouriiueru- lous corrc'pundeiil, llinughi the school were as good ut vctUd be f.Tjttct'a, 1'erhnp they were. And undoubte.lly so are the common school of Ohiu at this lime. This is not saying much. But those who looked vithm the machinery, found the N. York ichool Jar from tieinir what ibey vuvht to As iusl as some "rifiotttir" and "ijiiisoic" people think of ours. They found thnl this army of srhoul ollirers, hku our county nud lowiiiliip officer, did nn more ihnn they were absolutely re quired ny iuw io no. iu oilier worn, me sciiooi were rnreiy nr never visited by ilium. They knew nothing per-oniilly of their condition and wnnl. There was nn mural iiitluei're nor intellectual itilluencv thrown into these districts ur, (if your correspondent will permit.) "breathing its iuipirnliuu over every important proem" of Ihe ichool syitem. Alu-r years uf exjierieuce and the application of n shrewd and intelligent sagacity, the authorities ol that Hlate, uotwilli inndiitif the stale crv of " suiienilxitidaiil kiislaitoti, " (lor they hud croakers also,) determined lo change ilieir school in-. Now, what UTtts doncT Himrdy, as was proposed in pari lie , ihe creation of county and town tiuprrinimdrtilt, whose exclusive public ibnies were lu infuse tlml 'pint'1 of improve meiil conlinqilnted liy Ihe ineinl ul Ihe meatiire ill tJluo. it whs precisely what your correspondent so superciliously condemn in Ihu ieMirl of the Herniary ol ttale, Il wnS what beforo was left undone, und pruhuhly otherwise never Would have iHTiidnne, How f.ir ihal change has realised the hopes of its friend and whether we may expert miy imprnt euiuiil from a similar law here, will t coii-ideied lu rentier. It may 3iso be well lu look a Utile into the classir and historic illustrations ol Ihe reviewer his palriolir df feurc of 'llm H.ople" against the ntgre-nom ul the learned Goih und Vnmltils llie windmill he has himself muted ami routed with the quixotic rhivnlry nud whether lii by)erciiticism on the nerrrtaiy ol statu " smell ' most ut tne " siumii mortality. Statutes were ordered lo be dittributtd gratis, amnug the sev eral counties oi ineaiaie, lur tne use oi various puolic ollicurs, and I would refer the reader lo a Report mado by ttie ttee'ly of Sitatt (J aiuune) dated Feb. 17, IHU, in which he rive a tabular statement of the number of copies, Ihal were distributed lo each county, nud the suiplus in each county ; showing the aggregate iimntwr diilnbuted to be 1 1 volumes, and a surplus of 'J'Jl volumes, over and above lliu wauls of the several comities. This Keimri of the Hec'ty uf Htale will at once prove that only bImiuI linlf Ihu 'i0,00lj volume were wanted ih rough the rttate, and that Iheref'ure the publication of the remaining 10,000 voluuio was an exlravuguul and improvident locofoco triiuaaciion. Medury well knew thai "these were the records," and vol Ihis li uih lovinir, innocent Editor, endeavor to palm off as truth, a deliberately false statement "thai 12 or 13,000 of these slaliiies had liecn told by the Htale al .'1,00 per copy, and that thu Htale has received for the sale of the same. Was over a more baso and fraudulent nllemnt made lo a- buseeven public gullibility ,thnn this? fciuch cunduel however is perfectly iucharaeler with the " Statesman," nud accounts for the go:al loss uf coulideuce in the editorial article of ils several Kdiiors. u now affirm that the Hlate of Ohio, wc believe Am rwrr realised 1,000 in money from sales of the Revised .Statutes. To prove thu, I would refer thu reader lo the annual He-port ul ill i) Treasurer of Stale fur 1111:1-4 and tilU-d. By these it appears, ihal oulv g.WJ.lb was received in 1R43 from the sales, and iu IUU, i-U,00 making in all the sum only of iM2,75 lhat has ever been received, "by Ihu reeords" from the sales uf these book. How doe this comjarc with Mednry's statement "tliat 12 or 13,000 volumes had been sold al .1,00 per copy" made lo cover up the iniquitous and swindling arts of a Loco foro legislature, in combination with the .Stale printer lo plunder the pcoplu's pockets of somu jU't.OOO Inn i ihcHiale in ihis operation, besides llie probable loss of several thousand more ou the 7 or 0000 volumes yel on hand, and which caunot readily lie sold. With regard lo ihe 12lh vol. Ohio Reports, Ihe Editor in vain Irics lo escape by equivocation, from the onu of having eh.vgml the Hialu fur binding said volume SAmnre than the bookbinders in Columbus would have done the job for indeed onu of whom ariually ilid exeruie n pari of said binding al lOcenl per volume, when thu "Hlate Printer" churged anil received pay at 50 per volume for ihe same book. The Stale ha nothing lo do with pnvale dealing between Medury and Mr. Derby of Cincimrali, (by whirh an old debt due Medary w a expected to be secured at the exeute or the Stale). Medary it accountable to the Siate for the binilintr uflhtfse Imuks He has received hi pay (5750) one year ago. The bunk arc nol yet bound the State has lusl the i n oi tneni, nnd ineir value is now depreciated in consequence ihe Stale now cells for Medary lo fulfill his engage ment (hy which he put in his porkel 51.ri0 more than other good men would have rhnrged fur Ihu binding) and it is a pitiol, contemptible ciuil.ldu in tlctnry, iu trying to creep out of ii by throwing the bldine oo Mr. Derby and saying it was a " t lii-r" defalcation, Aj c. The fads are there untied to ihu counter the Stale Printer cannot pscbimi from them ihal the Stale was plundered out of $ 1&0 in the binding of mis mil vol. Bini AAr uf ' Z. pen negotiation on Ihu subject. 'I heir reccptiuii and treatment was somewhat cool nnd envaher, ami ihey rrlurned lo l'exns wuhiHit olitauung any sati-laciiiiii. Another appeal was made with similar results Ihe impression going abfond thai nuiv-leiiihs ul the Texan were annexationist. Then polity dictated a reserved course, und ht thought a lutlt tnoo cent trickery voitht lumnt the cjim am h-iji un lit mtiurt tii a final irtllrmmt. He had olleii h nid thai when a Invrr had hc?n kept in atayam-a by his mint rest for some I tne, unable lo obtain a "yes" ur "no," sumo sudden IiuIiIiiik off ur lelil praise ol some neighbor Ih'auiv wuuhl srarn ly tail lu elicit an answer. Prompted by this idea, ilsetlirncv was immediniely put to lrl. Fiimdly mttrci'ttttetrnt courted irith other i'otrtri,and, airart of the mutu tl frultmty exitUtig brttrten tmr Country and that of Hm'land, htr hamt ira tint tvltcttiit hi ii partner in the dnce, wlucli he readily qi anted) but laiiulinriiy was nder iueh in Ihe giillnpude as iu unglova with her. The bait sris takm, and ihe u ha altraui dearly Ivvtd m linking alfftttd merit made a direct prtpwat. II lo have voted fur annexation, lo have ntiroiiati-d lor il. lo have courted il, and lo hate evun coquetted lor it, hr op-iHisiltun, then he supHed be was whal he had somwiiuiea iteen termed ou ihal head. With leifard to public sentiment on the sublerl in 1'eXn. nearly every man was of one mind. He had hern at many meeting, and a net; alive voire wa a rare thing when mines ntiuu was Hil. Presidetil Jo firs was IK tAoH of the mens urc, anil w.Hild tin every thing in his power lu satisly lha wiine oi tne efpic." IT The Patlcison N. Jersey Rcenl Association has dissolved ils organization, and adopted resoluliun denouncing Daniel O'l'onnell for his recent course against this country. After declaring ilieir ailaelunenl lo ihoir adopted country, ihey say in their resolutions that it is the duty of mem lers of Iho Association "as American cititrn, and as sincere friends nf the Irish people, lo make know n lo ihe world our disapprobation of such language, and as far as in hi lies, publicly in protest agaiml and repudiate such seniimciils res ec ling tins country." Unci.r. Ban Pats thr Pi run. Senator Baghy, according to a correspondent of thu New York Tribune, is "Bag-bvitiug," or rattier playing Benton' old game al a great rale. He has had his residence, enrriage, Ace., at Washington for a long tune nnd makes his honu there, yet draw his mtlta just a if ho actually travelled in and from Alabama. Not cunlcat with this he drew nine hundred and sixty dollars for siippo-iiimis traveling un the llh of March ! And Ihis is nut all. He is actually prosecuting a claim against the government, w hilu as Chairman of thu Comimlleu un Claim, be w ill have In pass on this very claim. 0 T Nothing fould more completely demonstrate the mrn-dactiy of llie Statesman than H course on Ihe Tai law. It has been making a great fuss because mcrrhnni' capital and nmnty al inlercsl tr-ii made liable in taxation under die taw of Inst winter, it is now whining bee auto "all household furniture, gold and silver, Jewelry, Atr." is m4 taxable under llie same law ! What will In' the nest sliiA ( Home- nnnttfnrliiri" Their Kflrrfi The iliei I of encouraging Hon if Masui ai Tuns., is happily illustrated by the following brief reference lo a manufacturing village in Greene couniy, N. Y. We attract it from an article in Ihe Hud ion Uepuidican, in which Ihe editor urges iho importance of Manufactures upon ihe cilneii nf ihal town, with great force and propriety. It I impossible to give one's attention In such spectacle as the wnicr adduces in support of bis argument, without being forced to acknowledge the great bench Is whiea the Tariff is conferring on the country: The beautiful and flouiishtni! vdhrn of Pratttville, Gteene couniy. Situated some thirty live miles from the Hud-ion nvcr, wiihnoothur mean of communication thin the ordinary land carriage, audlhit over iho summits of the (.'auk ills, is another instance ol the salutary influence of the manufacturing business upon the pro ciuy of the place in which surh business is earned on. In addition to the very extensive leather manufactory of the Hun. Z. Prall, (said to the moil ftiicntiva in ttie world,) there are various oiher species ul manufacturing carried on, including lhoe of It nih-er milieus and cloves, India rublK-r eloth, oil elolh, Inchon matches, iVc , whirh gives steady and profitable employment lo n large number of laborers and oeraiives, and allords a handmme, and in some cases a inonilircul return lur ihe capital invested, and furnishes to iho larmer of Hint vicinity a ready market for their prmlure, al belter prices than they can obtain in New ork, leaving the traniorlaiiun out ul the question. From a plare ul some hall a dozen houses, bas sprung up in a few years, a village containing sumo two hundred dwellings, wuh new ones cuiistanily going up. The prnjpelity, and ilid ed ihe eitltcurc of this vilbige, is chirlly nilribulnlde in the exertions, combined with the business tart and taleuis of our late Kepreseiitalive iu Congress, Col. Pratl. One such man in ihu rily ol Hudson would creniw quite a different aspect of things in live years, from whal we now see." Tin II I K Ouhi-r I.KTTr-it. So much in the shape of Inters ran lm sent .11 mile lur live rents, weighing unit half nn uuuru, that we apprcnemt, savs inu iew i oik nim, tne new law wdl have finally lu lie altered, and nverenla taken lor n smile letter, ll you please, with an envelope, and ten rent tor a double leiier, or we fear thai the lallmg oil of ihe tcwuiue will I greater than is now ruiileiiiplaled. A writer in the Dovleslowu Olive Branch ha leeh al great pain lo nscertam now inurn ran e irniisuniicd ior nve rents An avoirdupois half ounce is grams. W afers one Rratil. Sealing was, usual qtianlilv, live grams. A sheet uf luobi-Kp weighs 172 f rains. Leiier wN'r, M. Small envelopes, li grams large ji. ou cau send Jta) milus a letter fur five emits, containing, vis: tins sheet of letter paper eurlosing seven bank notas seated wuh wax; or the letter and three bank note in an envelupo. Hall a sheet ol letter pa per Willi hall' taelo cncli'Siil under wai. A sheet with a dune and a half eurluM-d sucure-l by wafers. One sheet of leiier pniicr with a quarter vngie enclimeil secured y was. A sheet of loulscap m an eiiveluiK1 sealed with a wafer. One and a half sheet ol letter paix'r sealed wilh wax or wafer. Il is aid to have lieeii Ihu intention of 1'oiigresi lo charge five cents fur asiugh' letter timlcr aides and Ivn cents for a Hoiilde teller, rto greater deduction couni ov imtanieti m tno lirsl experiment. So ihe wo pic said lake ten cents or live cents lor smxje or double letters, ike hall ounce is therefore saul lo be an innovation on Ihe intentions and wishes of Ihe iwople, and must ta-uclil an exclustte class who iraimnil mo. ney by mail. We do not think so. Under the old law a letter containing seven bank note transmitted lo New Orleans wa charged i postage! under llie new law and according lo ihe hall ounce syitem, il will Ihj rained lor ten rents, be ing but a hall ounce to Ho transmuted tieyond .Xf miles. Tlir. Stats: pHiimnn. Allhc instance of Sam Molar. the Supreme Court have grant ml a writ uf injunction to stay proceedings under the law ul ibe last Legislature, which au-ihorixca the hilling of ihe Stale Pruning in iIhi lowest bidder. Il appears ihal this recipient of the -puili hit no noliun ol ro luiqiii-lnug his Imld upon ihe pubbr treasury, wutmui a struggle. He ha enjoyed the Siatr Printing so long ilint he seem lu think it should lie given to him for hie, and he has prevailed u Hiii Messrs. Wood and 11 orchard, (tioth Loco-,) iu gram the writ of inpinciiun, thinking thai he will be railed uhhi to do the public pium.ig until adi cismn is had as to the legaluv of the lale law, winch dec it ion may not take plare until ihe c due ol ihu iienl session nf the Legislature. This contemptible method of selling aside the will ol the jieople, for llie unlv pur-mis ol pulling ihe public money into the already wll filled puckvts u( Medary. rannot but rcroil iion the party that upholds such proceedings. Hurim KHctor, Low Watrr Hrr-AMrHs Aohoi'KP. We are Informed thai there are at I-' reach Ulaud sixteen Steamboats aground and ahore, ImiuiuI up and down. The lloais hn vu w rul up the rhaunel, in rudvaiuring to force their way through il, thai there are only i leel of WHler on Ihe b.ir, while Iherc arc ,1 feel oiilheolhrr bur. Vinannatt Atlai. Tiif. Htatf PniKTiNd Two Loroniro Juhaxs A I WT TIIK lO'.r HKSERTATI V I'.S OI'THK PkoP I t.. JuilgeS HVwiaud tiurchard of lha Supremo Cuurl of Ohio, have granted nu iiijuncttuii, lo slay proceeding under ihe law of the late Legulaiurc, providing tor llie execution of the printing of the State by contract with the lowext bidder. Tin in n characterise piece of Luroloco assurance, and a shameleNS attempt to oveiridu thu will of the people as expressed at ihu ballot-boxes last full. Snm Medary hates inosj confoundedly to let go hi hold upon llie liitciou Ireal thai has so long yielded him ils sweets the " spoil " of " blank puces," "caste quires," Ate., and his friends, the Loco loco Judges alxive iiameil, have got bun by Iho shoulders, and are holding In rn up lo ihu templing reservoir, while he lakes a rrcsn sura, neterinined mm ne shau l be tcrarwu, jet awlule. Well, we shall see. Marion r.aglc. Fur the Olro State Journal. Messrs. Editoii : I perceive lhat the State man of the fi'.h is in an agony, Sain Medary is in a uplutler, und the "dapper lawyer" is ellurvesccing like & vial of fermented mi beer. Verily has Syntax sent a few shafts from hi quiver whirh have transfixed the loughcnod pericardium of "honcsl Sam's" conscience; and hn writhing nnd contortions under Iho smart, are alike laughable and pitiable. The quiver is by no menus yet exhausted ; and ibis notable spoilsman will receive hi merited Mirlioii " I is due seaiou." In noticing me vuponnug oi me onpprr lawyer," syntax is al a loss, whelliur lo deal in the grave and serious, nud thcrebv hazard a compromise of good sense nnd self-respect, or adopt the far el uu and romplimentar ( (a slyle always llatlering lo ihu nuireiied and inhaled mind.) 'I'lic luilcr, jierhaps, would lie Ihu mil judiciotmcoue in ihis cne. The name of author caines with H quite n charm, whirh is truly fasrinnling ; and n you up man of ardent and iinngma live mind, ( which we intend a a complum-nt lu ihe promising youm: gentleman in nitestiun.) ran re ei in the pleasure and sell graiiliralioii ul seeing himself displayed in the columns of a uewipater. Whether these urn Ihe young gentleman' npi-rations 1 cannot tell. bill certain it n, that great emergencies call great gminiei into action. (Lid il not been lor tliesirgu of Toulon, there perhaps never would have been a Napoleon ilonnpnrlc ami who Know iiui Ihu " Adven'Ures oi nuug, the Monkey,'' (in w ich lie seems lo take surh an abiding interest) nastieeii scttcd upon by llie "dapH-r lawyer" as a lurk v instrument ur means of displaying in ihe astonished world ihe hidden capacities of his gigantic mind. If these be Ihu voting gentleman s desires, far 10 II from fyutai lo throw any obiriiciions in his way, Charily would dictate lhat we should leave htm In pursue, unheeded and uudisturleda iho golden image uf his mental plnnlasmagora; and enjoy nil the ecsiary of imagining himself a very great wnfipiipcr scribbler. Il is proper, however. Ihal Svtilas should evpnif die alo- Inlet fahehaod, periielrntcd by Itn 'umll-fn-er lawyer, this renegade whig, 'hi arram pimp, wnu ponoer lur uiu Statesman, by riinuuif round luwn, ami collerluig iho small mateiials," which arc then boded down in that slew-Hii uf calumny. Truly this n au enviable vocnho.i lur a "county court lawrer." Heir him. in llie Statesman of the fiih. He says. "Will lliu Libr-rv Committee, ur their lured defender, deny lhat llie Statutes were given lo lh agent at 7 cents wr volume f h ill tltey deny that the ".llemoir oi niepneii nurrougns" or Sling the Mo'ukev" were purchased Willi the pruivcrly of the Stale f Will Ihey deny lhat nn odd volume of "Lillell's Living Age' nnd n great quantity uf duplirnlu votuma ol Imoks alremTy in llie Library, wure purchased with the pncriy of llie Stale? Now these inquiries he wihe to palm oil ns truths. Mark now, how plain a lale shall put you down " The following ceriitirale of Iho Librarian, nud a reference in the Agent' receipt nnd bills, on file in the Library desk, will convince any man of the utter falsehood uf bis statement : fiir In replv in your iniluiry. I would Hate thai ihe Agcrl sent out lorirhaiigfi Revised Statutes. old Laws Journals, Aie., for oiher book, was not furnished Ihe Revised Statutes al lb rents per volume , no hook bearing the title of "Adveniurcs ol Ming im- ni-uikcv." ".Memoirs or oiennen Hurruuifhs." ir odd vuluinenf "Lillell's Living Age,'' havo been returned by said agent UHit the 'helve ol the Stale Library, nntilier are there many duplicate copies of book pnl into the Library by laid Agent. Yours, Ate., 4, 'im.l.ir-ll, M.inraruin, Hem ihen we leave iho young gentleman nl tho "marc's nest" which he disroverrd, wuh a he in hi mnuih, and tmt idea in his head. We trust, however, the reader will eiru-e Syiimi for wasting ammunition on surh small gnmcf his deoro is' only lo act in oU'dieuce to that sen plural in jane lion which av "civ a siMirrrne shall nol fall lo the grmind uimoliced." Hut wuh ihu redoiitunble imilsmaii uf Ihe ' Slaletmau" Syntax has a word of grave inqMirl: mid in what he ha to say, he wuhe to Senk of and to Mr. Medary as a public man. The attempt in ibn-r censure lur public mailer.-ance, or public derebcimn of duty, by casting umdum allu sion to prtritfr hje, are ever llie unerring iiiuiccs oi a weak and depraved mind. The Statesman is wrlrome lo profit by all the glory he can acquire tiy such a name ol habitual aspirstoti. This notable personage has bad so long a lease upon the ireaiury iloinaiu, thai he has grown bloated nnd insolent upon Ins espionage and cries out " treason and rrlwlhun " if w but hint al ihu " way and menu " by which hu hns become swollen. We havu two objerls in view in this cunimomcn-mn. One is lo establish, by indisputable rvidenrc beyond the cat il of a doubt, the liuih of our statement, as published in Ibe Journal of the Ath inst., and llie oilier is, lo eipoie tho unrigbletMi perveiston ol truth, the misrepresentation nnd contemptible shuttling and falsehoo I (characteristic, however, of die Statesman Ldilor) by whirh he endeavour- to esrn. In the firl plare ho represt nt me a saying "that ihe Statu of Ohio paid him (Snm Medan ) I6,1H for the priafiftg- of the 211,000 Itevned StaliHe. A relereure lu my eumnnuii ration of the .'nh in which 1 nv " the publication of then MatnUs cost Ihe Mate of tHiv some l.'i.HOO," will convince, ihu reuder of hi deception in ibis pnrticular. These staiuius did runt the Stale abuui a' P.') (including p-qN-r, printing, binding, eVc.) as apear Irom a rrpurt of the standing eoiu mil lee un public printing. (et' append. s to H. Journal of IHUM) but ihu " Sinte Printer " wuhes lo raise a lale issue, under which he may escape. Hi statement with regard In the "clear pnibi" which he derived from this job, mat gu for whal il i worth, when we statu thai from the Repurt h-t re-lerred lo, as presented by Mr. Clark, in llie set urn of HlWI 1, il appenra. thai a resoiiil'lc and energetic printer inl-olum-bin (Mr. Chas. Scott) was alo a bidder for tins jubt and his written proposal apix ars, nth ring bond wuh ample ecuriiy, lo execute Itie work foi a fr sum by mnie 5d,:iKt than lha amount oaid in Samuel Medary. This unwarranted nr rease or esces in rompeimUnirt, nlhiwed Medary more ihau auoiher responsible printer otimd la do the icor tor ; together with his arlual pron's in i'hfi lob, we might well conclude, would swell the "rlrar profit of iho Stale Printer, iu this job, lo nearly the sum firt stated by Syntax. Tim extra compensation w ns allowed lo Medary by Gov, Shannon and Audiiur trough, without the cone o ire are of the Treasurer of Stsle. Our object was in show llml ihe-e Staluies co-t ihe Sin to soma g k'l.OlNl, that a Lwoloco I .egislalure of llt.W ordered ihem to lie puliliihcd, lhat Samuel Medary, as wu verily le buv, w as mainly instrumental, by dictation and management, in gelling Ihr mentor pnsied fur llie purjiota nl terurmg a fat job lo humelf, by which hi managed lo receive tome iUi) more for excculing the job than was offered by anollmr rvsinusible printer. and ihal one half the number published would have Wen abundant m supply the whole Stale. Who but ibe Stair Printer himself will d. nv Ihe force of these fnit-elusion-F Medary huiiscll does iol deny them wuh anv rri- iible et idence. but lakes cover under n stibterlugu, and gives only hi own ipse dint, instead of proof lo Ihe contrary. But tin veritable sHiilsmaii niusi remcmoer inai mi insr irnid in reference- to In iiwudubiiqii- neiei, nre like "Red Dog" money in tins market, at least Wi tier cent under par cannot bo taken for their face, because the "iitaividuai liability" is w or ill nothing. '1 lie next falsehood which ho perjietrales Is found in ihc following quutalioii, Ihnn hi editiuial of llie tilh. "Tho writer (meaning Svntax) nexl say there Im alrvadv been M or I.I, Ota) sold. 'Ac sale of 1.1,0011 by Ihe Utile at J.I.HO per e-'. Mm, the price set npo them, would b jf.l'.i.OOO.teilain 'f.,0H0 of oil thry cast, and 7 ( II OHO volumtt ttill on hand,' Now here the reader will perceive thai "holiest" Sam Mrda rv "dehln-ratrl v and Willi malice aloretliought" trie lo impo ihis mol glaring and premeditated laUelHioil upxHi the pubb a mull' a relerencein ihe lirsl number ot Symat willthow thai he never biotf la tl ll vr I.I.IHSI roiitmt of these Siat-HttsliaJ been sold by the Stale, On ihenmlrnry Syntax well knew nud the veritable Nam Medarv well know, ihal, by iiMih'iiiui of ihe Lcgiduturr pa-vl March 'ii, lolo, tlivse AssissMK5T. The amount of merchants' rapilal and money at interest relurned for taxation in Springfield lown hip last year, w as j'li7,870. The amount returned ihis year ii "i,b)IJ, Taking one half of ihis a the amount under Iho new Iuw subject lo taxation 1 1 1 ,311 nnd ihu increase of taxable property in Ihelown-hip is .1.1,171. The amouul "n w u inseo in uiu rouniry luwusiiips, (wnn ine excei- tion olMonrliehl,) will Iw less than Inst year. Moor lie Id is increased by a large additional amount of money al interest. The iimou it uf money al interest alone in Springfield tuwu-ship, is JpJ.t.no. A small bank would nol be amiss. I Ihj l.uculiMu demagogues will hud n a regular rowing up stream lo emmurr Iho farmers and laborer dial this law is ihu burned monster ihey pretend il is. fyririgjirld liepub. Crape let the Ueiola Vntlrr. A rood in dire, viiitinir lately this v alio v. writes us as follows : Gt n tltincn: In ffninff from Columlms to Ports mouth, I wns much plcaflud to find lhat all portions of our Hue valiby Imvc not sullcrud ns much from thu enects of cold and drotiirht as llm region about Columbus. I'VoinCtrcluville south I found very manifest improvement in theappenranco of the corn crop only a few ileitis being cut oil by frost, and although brick ward the fine showers of lato will doubt-leas briii them on, no that a fair yield may reasonably be expected, l'ho wheat too, aionp; the valley firomiacft fair; it islilit in straw, hut will be leas like-y to suifrr from rust than if of strong prontlt as last year. Onta arovory backward, and must be li'lit crop. Graas, nlso, is almont pant hopo of a fair yield. t Hi too whole, tho crops of this recton look vastly better than I expected lo see ihem after witm'Sning ino and prnnnecta in tho upland portions of Lickin and Franklin counties. Anotliurcorrctiionlent writes us as follows: In travelling last week from Cincinnati to Richmond, Indiana, via. Hamilton, Somorvillo, Camden nnd halon, 1 took some pmns to n certain ttio nros pect of the crops, and I lind Hint farmers pent; rally agree tint should tho weather contiuuo favorable, there will be moro than nn average crop, except hay, which will be short. Wheat, corn, and oata look well. Cm. tJuzelle. Fire. A firo occurred about 2 o'clock on Sunday morning in the frame buildings on the north west corner of Alnin and Court ntreeK Although the buildings were nearly as combustiblo as tinder, the I lu i ieu wcro arrested .beforo they had much extended ouverni persons, uowevur, sulk' red considerable in jury by tho tiro and water. Messrs. Kavmond cV allctte hnttera suttercd Ions to extent of about $100 covered by insurance; S. II. Parvin 6V Co. hatters, about $ 100 insured ; Sainuol Burdsal, druggist, about V4000 insured for 1,500; Mr. McClosky, sandier, v-tuu msurauco uncertain; Mr. ltnidwin, pit titer, 3 to aV 100 no insarnnce; Jacobs, tailor, 2 lo jfclOO no in.uraiico. A colored confectioner and shoemaker alsosullercd some loss. The fire originated in tho tailor sin in. We understand that Mr. I Hnrns, fust Director of tho Hope Company, fell when returning with tho hose carnnge from the lire and tho wheels paused over nis uuuy, injuring him severely, whether dan- goroiwiy wenavo nol learned. cncirmui thniu From ibe Uhio Cultivator. Pnllsare) fCrwpa-Articles thai mny jrt ke Plnnl-d Wlsitrr Fn tmr Cnlile. Through a large portion of Ohio the grass crop will evidently be an almost entire failure, owing to the severity of the drought, and there is reason to apprehend lhat most uf tho other productions of the farm will be very light crops. In view of theso prospects, what is the duty of the farmers of this region? Certainly not to settle down in despondency, and spend their time in utelcss complaints at the dio-pensations of Providence, as we regret to find many are inclined to do. On the contrary, every sonsible man ivill cusl about in his mind to discover what plan he can devise, and articles of culture he can still adopt with rennonuble hope of succecs, for supplying the deficiency that will occur, and furnishing food next winter for his domestic animals, and pusflibly for his family. Fortunately it is not yet so late in the season but that tits grounds can be replanted with seeds of some kinds, that with ordinary summer wcathei, it mny bo hoped will produce a vtiluuble crop; and therefore no time should be lust in setting about the work of putting them in, where land is unoccupied or crops have lit i led. Here we can see the necessity there is that farmers should read more, and obtain a knowledge of a greater variety of productions than arc ordinarily cultivated in this country. As an evidence of this need, how few ot the fanners in central Ohio know any thing about the nature or value of Mangle Worlzel, Kola Ilagn, Millet, and many other crops that might be tuund of value at a time like the present? We will briefly mention a few articles that may yet be sown with success, if the season should from this time prove favorable, and give a few bints that muy aid farmers in selecting such as are best adapted to their land or other circumstances. Sowi.no Co hn ron Fodder. When it is apprehended there will be a scarcity of fodder for cattle, a few acres of good corn ground should be prepared, after it has been well moistened by rain, and sown with corn for fodder. If the ground is rich and clean, it mny be sown broadcast like oats, at the rate of three or four pecks per acre, and ploughed in lightly; if not too wet or clayey it would be the better for being rolled after sowing. Or a better method is to furrow out the ground and drop the corn in rows, any two and n hull leet apart, ami six to eight inches in tho rows, then going over it once or twice with a harrow ufiertheplunts appear, and with a small plow between tho rows at a Inter period. In this way a heavy crop of fodder may bo obtained at a trilling expense. It should bo cut before it begins to ripen or turn brown, and after wilting a duy or two, be stucked in such a manner as to sweat withoutspoiling. Common I urhips. buoulu the season continue dry for a month or so longer, and other resources gen erally fail, it will still be in time to sow common turnips, and the prospect of a moist fall will be in favor of sowing this crop. Now land, with a good proportion of suud and muck, is the best tor turnips ; next to this, any good bottom land, or rich moist soil. that is not otherwise appropriated. The seed should not be sown earlier than the last week in July, in this climate, as the hot sun of mid -summer is unfavorable to their growth. Potatoes. Farmers who have plenty of potatoes ou hand fit for planting and good land for the purpose, should immediately put in several acres. We found one of the best farmers of Licking county ploughing land for this purpose a day or two since, and he assured us that he generally found the lirst week in June, the most suitable season lor planting potatoes for winter uso and even the middle of June he considered a good time. The potatoe crop mny prove a very good one this year, and every body knows it enn be made a substitute fur almost every olhur, both for tho sustenance of man and beast. Let us have plenty of potatoes, then, next winter, if there should be a scarcity of whoat, onts, and corn, and they will provo ut great value to the farmer. Huck-W hk at, This, wo believe, is the latest article th it can be sown for producing a crop the same year ; and it occupies less time in coming to maturity than any other. Tho heat of summer being unfavorable to its growth, it ia commonly sown in the month of Augtwt and harvested in October. We aro not sure whether it is generally found to succeed well in tho south part of this Htate, but we pre-sumo it is a pretty certain crop, if the fall is not too dry and hot. It will be well to sow this, if other tilings lail. Thr Mammoth or Ilr.FTii.Es. In the county of Washington, Alabama, not far from Mobile the fossil remains of a monster in the animal creation havo been discovered by Dr. Ai.rkrt C. Koch. We find nn account of it in Dr. K.'s words in the Mobtlo Daily Advertiser; it hns been railed by him ZtiUo-don isUlimnniif in honor of Professor sSillimam of Vale College. Hero follows a description of the monster: "I have succeeded in bringing to light the very nearly complete skclton of a moat colossal and terrible replilo, that may be justly termed the king of the kings of reptiles. Its fenilh is one hundred nnd four fret the solid portions of the vertebra are from H to lo inches in length, and Irom o to 14 inches in diameter, each averaging 75 pounds in weight Its greatly clongnted jaws are armed wttli not less than forty incisor or cutting teeih, four canine teeth or fangs, and eight molars or grinders. Theso teeth all fit into each other when the jaws are closed, and it is clear that tho animal was of the carnivorous nature. The eyes were evidently large, and were prominently ait im tod on the forehead, giving the animal tho power of keeping a constant and vigorous watch for ils prey. The body hod members attached resembling paddles or fins, which in proportion to Ihe size of Ihe animal wore small, and were doubtless intended to propel the body of this enormous creature through the wntcrs ot those large rivers or seas, which it inhabited or frequented. Each of these paddles or fins is composed of UL bones, which form in union, seven freely articulating joints. Tho ribs are of n very peculiar shape and execedinrz- ly numerous. They are three times the thickness at the ttitiirotid frHS l.sske Krl I fjamrlMioa am Ma vast ita h. The distance from Sandusky via Cincinnati. Louis ville, and Knoxville in Tennessee, to Charleston, it 1U;K) miles. J he Cincinnati Chronicle states the dis tances along the route us follows: Charleston to Augusta, ... l.PJ miles. Augusta to Mac i ii I Circle, - - VS4 u Remainder to Ross's Landing, about, - 100 HiwasieeRnil Roanl, - - - JW Knoxville to Kentucky river. - - J!7 M rteuiucrty river to tne uino, - - J00 " Thence to Cincinnati, . . - HO " Cincinnati to Sandusky, ... f&0 " Total, 1,05(1 It will be seen that it proDnsed to uso in Ihe lino 80 miles of the Ohio river, and 100 of the Kentucky. Including this river navigation and the rail ways soon to bo completed on the route, from Handuskv to Cin cinnati, from Savannah and Charleston to the northern bounds of Georgia, and the Hiwassec railroad from Georgia line to Knoxville in rennessco, two-thirds or three-fourths of the whole work will short ly be in successful operation. The only material obstacle iu the way ia the making of a road from rvnoxvuie to tnu fientucKy river. J he distnnco is 1117 miles, and the pass is through the Cumberland Gap. A tunnel will have to bo made about one mile through a sand rock formation which could ho easily pcnoraica. w mi this exception, tho whole route from Knoxville lo Slack Water navigation on the Kentucky is very favorable to tho construction of a railroad. The cost of completing this p-rcat, and tnilv na tional work fro. n lake Hrio to the Atlantic seaboard in Georgia and South Carolina, is thus estimated by the Chronicle: On the Hiwasseo about, ... $1,000,000 rrom Knoxville to the Kentucky river, ID7 miles, at $'..'5,000 per mile, with heavy T or II ruils. ... 4,925,000 F..mosKii St. Clair Papf.r. The Ohio Dem ocrat unwittingly shows up the worse than humbLi legislation uf its own partv on tho subject of Umil Retonn. It gives as "a sutlicient reason" why the .Mniins aro not ootina uy their endorsement ol ttt, Limr money, tho tollowinir: "No person can be expressly or impliedly bound in tho performances of an illegal act if tho con tract be such that its performance necessarily causes a violation of the taw, tho contract is void, and of nu encct. in IM& tf the Lcirialatura parsed a law, making it a penal oil u tic e, for any citizen of Ohio, lo act as ino agent ot any foreign Hanking Company, or in any utunucr tu give credit and circulation to foreign paper. And the penalty for becoming such agent was one thousand dollars. This law was re pealed last winlor;bul ninety-nine hundredths ol tho lied 1'og paper, hears date prior to its reneal. And tho Smiths being tho aireuts of said ilank. in viola- linn of the statute, are fur that reason nut hub lu as endursors." A correspondent of tho Now York Journal of Com tncrce, gives a vory interesting description of a visit iu rarnguay, a country which waa tor many years under tho dominion of the celebrated Dr. Francis who exercised au atithuhtv as riennulie as ever wns nni...u...l ku X'-.v..l.... 'I... C 11. .1.. .. i. j t-niniiviii. ii" niiiuwiiifj pruBiiu uu scribes tho splendid cactuses which irrow wild in that country without exciting any admiration in the inuantianis : Tho hills wo passed woro verv drv. arid soil, with a few low thorn bushes and a groat variety of cactuses, beautiful to look at, a hoc ling to touch. We conclude that one that we saw, with ils hundred bright straw colored Dowers, would inako a man's fortuuo ns a show, with a decent hand organ, in any of our cities. Another, that shot up a single stalk, about four feet high, and then put out hnlt a dozen brat chn as much lunger, standing singly and alone on tho top of a hill, covered with pink (lowers at least five inches across. Tell me, ye botanists, why tho most beautiful of tho world of llowers come from such ugly, prickly, thorny plants, that filled our fin. gers with thorns, when wo could not help cull ir the flowers and pulling them in our hat bands.' OitKR.t.i.t. The first improvements in this place were commenced in April. 1KW. Till that period it had remained a wildernoss, uncultivated, and from the nature of the ground almost inaccessible, except by the pedestrian. Tho first families which emigrated hither woro obliged to transport their effects by hand for about two miles, over a yiHdinir, swhiiii" soil, covered with a denno forest. Now (he place contains at lenst ,.rHfU inhnnitants, taking into account the students in attendance at the Institution. Hy refer once to the laid year's catalogue, it will bo aeon lhat the number of students connected wilh the Institution wasM); VAp2 tit ales, lr femntcs. There nrn said to bo more in attendance the present year. The Faculty consul of the President, tho ten Pro-feasors, nnd one Tutor, in the (Allege department; in tho Preparatory depnrtmeiit there are a Principal, Aaaislnnl Tutor, ami nix Assistant Teachers. Uriv-land UrntUL lower that Ihey are at the superior extremity." Slav a Cask. An interesting decision on what ia called the "slave case," was made in tho U. S. Cir cuit Court, in session on the l:hh ult., at the capital of Indiana. The cose involved the following points, as sinicu in tuc mate acnunei ; lst. That slavery was only a State or local insti tution: That Slavery is batted on local laws, not sustained or supported by either moral, natural, or national law: 3. That if a slave escape from the State in which ho is hold in slavery, either by accident, consent or, nis mnntcr, or ngainn mat consent, ne is foruver free: 4. That the ordinance of 1787 orcan- ixing iho North Weslcrn Territory, only guarantees the delivering up ot fugitives from labor to citizens of the original States, and thttt as Missouri (from whence tho slaves escaped,) was not one of tho orig-nal States, Ihe citizens ol Indiana were not bound to dclivor up to M ifsfiii r i her runaway slaves." The opinion of tho Court wns delivered by Judge McLean. Ho admittod tho correctness of tho propositions 1, M and -'t, but overruled Ihe demurrer to tho declaration, decided that if Indiana had remain-ed a territory, under the ordinance, alio would not havo been bound to deliver up the slaves; but having adopted a constitution, which in part nbrogntes tho law oi me ordinance, she is bound by tho constitution of the United Slates; and Missouri being one of tho great sister family of States, is entitled to all the rights and privileges of tho original Slates, from an outer oiaies in ihe union. From lale Kinlih Papers. Tho distanco between London and Binninirliam (110 inilesj wus Into performed in 105 minutes. Dr. Ctuilmers, in consequence of increasing infir mities, nas retired irom the public business o! the Free Church. Few persons aro awaru that from 1700 lo 1814 there aro on record 101 shocks of earthquakes in Kngland, P18 in Scotland, and 17 in Wales. It is ascertained that no fowor than 110,000 American cheap Clack havo been imported and sold iu Fnirland within one year. Tho founder of a "iruo" and new religion has advertised, in the Paris papers, fur a supply of priests, bards, &c. Tho docprst mining shaft in tho world is one in tho Tyrol, which is 4K fathoms, or 27t!0 feet deep. Of tho population of Ireland eighty-one in the hundred aro Roman Catholics, eleven Imndrethi Fpisco pa linns, and tho remainder Dissenters. According to tho Revue do Paris, the Sovereigns of Fiitgland, Spain, Naples, and Holland, will bo guests uf thu King of tho French in July next Fatal Arcmi.ST. On tho !Vth ult. near Franklin, in this county, sn individual bv tho naino of Da vid Ferry, wns crushed tu deuth tinder the wheel of a heavily loaded wagon. He.incompany wilhsomo other teamsters, was hauling logs to a saw-null, and being intoxicated, attempted to pass the wagons in advance of htm. In doing so he brought his own in contact wuh the one iiniuediatrly in front, which collision broke tho fore wheel of his wnggmi and threw him Irom his position, on the log, under the wheel of his competitor's wagon, which masid over his htuly. Hu died in an hour and a half, Ihirrtn Co. Star, Total cost, - - - $5,!K5,000 Or in round numbers, $G,000,000, as the Georgia Railroad mi (r lit need some aid. This is certainly a very moderate sum for a work of such vast importance. All of the iron can be made on tho route; and it can be inndo there cheaper than in Wales. II the dimculties to be encountered in Dassintr tho Cumberland mountains have not been under estimat ed, we doubt not the work will bo undertaken and completed. Tennessee is now the most insulated State in the Union. This road would soon double her wealth ami population, and develops her vast mineral resources. To create a cnenen in feeling and interest between the North and the South, noth ing will contribute more than the construction of an iron way from lake hne to Savannah and Charleston. llvjfato Com. Jldvertiter. Th Uwnisisice of luaect l.lfn. We take the following beautiful oxlract from an Historical Lecture by Judge Charlton of Georgia: "The earth teems with mysteries the sky .-dunes with them they float in the air they swim in the deep they flash from the dark-robed clouds they whisper in the ger(tle tones of the summer wind they speak in trumpet tongues in the voice of thft teiiipdst and the thunder. Ceaae th v Ion rn nas for the ancient days, oh, dreamer! Close thy book and. look about ihee, upon the volume uf Nature. See there, before thee, is a tiny insect that thuu canst scarce dintinguish from the grains of sand that sur- rotinu u waicn it it moves on with an energy and an instinct that enables it to overcome or avoid all obstacles. See it hus seized some object larier lhan itself, and still it goes bravely on notlnnc daunts it nothing slops it tread it under foot, (if inou canst nave ine neart to attempt such a murder) nud it will riso up again beneath the ocean of Bam) and turn once more to its labor. Doft thou know it? It is the ant, that lion-hearted ant. toilimr amid (he heat of summer; and though the season's brightness and its warmth are bringing up nnd producing ten thousand enjoyments for the little traveler, he is busy gathering together his provender for the long winter nine, wneu irosi ana snow, eua cold shall have locked up tho granaries of nature. Thou wilt tell me, that I sin mucking thee; lhat thou canst see this daily and hourly; and is Uiis a mystery therefore? If thou hadit read in those ancient legends before thee. of an insect so courageous, lhat it would attack an animal ot len thousand times its magnitude; of Industry so indefatigable, that it would climb house tops and mountains to pursue its course; of perseverance so unflagging, lhat though repulsed a thousand times, it would still return and overcome the obstacle that impeded it thy eyes would have sparkled with interest and amazement; it is because it is constantly belure thee because it be ones to the present time that thou lookcst so disdainfully upon it When did tho Knight tirranttof thy heart do half so much? When did their bosoms bent as high with valor and determination as this poor insect? Rut it hns no loves no burning jealousies no blood stained victories! How It no west thou lhat? I warrant thee, even that tiny breast has grown gentler for some fond ono that lived within its litllo world; that its blood hns flowed ipiickor when some Adonis ant has Mined around tho little citiuette: that its path has been stained by ihe Irophies of it mimic Daiucs. jsuiihou wilt say why dost thou luru mo from my glowing page, to point me tu tins moving atom ? Why not show me tho majestic mysteries of nature? Why waslo my time with a topic so uiniKiiiiicniiir i answer oecause ll tl insignificant. I point thee there tu out of the smallest of earth's creatures, to ask thee if the atoms contain such wonders how much mora the noblo and lofty works of nature? Follow mo, if thou wilt Let us dive into the caverns of tho earth, and mark the sculptured halls the rocky avenues stretching miles ar.d in ilea below the busy haunts of men. Let us plunge into the deep, and see the huge leviathan sporting amid the waters; ur, the rainbow-hucd dolphin, as she flings back bright rnys of the glorious sun. Let us climb into the air, and behold ihe eagle with his untiring wing, and his unflinching eyes, the noble image of indomitable perseversiice and of brilliant genius, soaring proudly and gazing fixedly toward heaven's brightest luminary! Oh, dreamer! if the momenta of thy life were multiplied by tho sands of tho desert they would be all too short to unravel these mysteries that are around thco and above thee," Ma. CamioiiVs Farm. Mr. Calhoun, like Mr. Clny and Mr. Webster, n fond of agricultural life; and, when not engaged in professional duties, he occupies himself on his estate at Fort Hill. About forty cultivated acres surround his mansion, and other sections of his grounds, according to the Express, aro occupied wuh cotton, corn, peas, end various other crops. He has drained his grounds, and introduced rotation of crops according to the report of a Com mitleo who visited it with an unexampled degree of success. The stock on his farm consisted of hogs, horses, aud cattle of good blood, and in excollent condition. His negro house ia a spacious stono building 200 feet long, divided into spacious and comfortable apartments. In nil parts of ins estate ha has blended the useful and ornamental, introducing admirable tillage with groat horticultural taste and benuty. The Agricultural Committee who examined this plantation, report that Fort Hill has been undor cultivation thirty or forty years. There waa a very heavy crop of corn upon it, and a largo number of pea-vines, and tho conclusion was lhat, by the enre bestowed upon it, its production wan unlimited. In Iho uplands of the farm, the Committee fi und cotton growing abundantly upon land which had not been a great while in cultivation. How to Prevent thk Diseases whm:h arise rrtoM the tSK or Leid in Cebtsin 'I'm.i..- This treatment is extremely simple, and only n quires the workmen to submit the following precautions; s ne j Brv iii lane iwo oauis oi snap and water every week, occasionally adding a liltln snlnhnr. and carefully to wtn tho uncovored parts of the body wnu soap ann water nt every interval between their working hours. They are to drink one or two i-Usm. oa of lemonade, made with sulphuric acid, every day. uv.vui.iiuK iu uiu grvnmr or less quaniliy Ol dust or poisonous vapor wilh which tne surrounding atmosphere may be charged. At the same lime thev should be more careful than the followers of any other trade to abstain from the uso of spirituous liquors. The efficacy of this preventive Ireattnent ia easily explained by the fuel, that the mineral poison absorbed is thus converted into a soluble, and therefore in-noxious salt, (sulphate of lead,) nnd the satiiriuc particles deposited on the surface of the body are ink on away,--7o;ji(7r Iteconl o AWriirr. Little Miami Rail RoAn. The Directors of this roud are now (Wednesday evening) in session for the purposo of determining which route shall be adopted between horo and Springfield. Wo regret him in consequence ol the early hour lhat our paper goes to press, we are unable 0 gjvo the result uf iheir deliberations. Xrnwi Torch Light, Wo wore told yosterday of a young lady from the interior of tins Stale who has just been married la her second husband; she is now I ."4 years old, and niairied hor first husband when she was II. At K. 7 Vi fen nr. |
Format | newspapers |
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File Name | 0378 |