Newspaper Page Text
w ..111 ! ii.j;"t ,. !' Equal LawsEqual Rights, an Equal purdefi'sjThs Constitution and Us Currency.' r- y . . - T : -r-r " T ' ' ' ; ' !tyi., j una if.- VOL. V. NO. 30. Xr i' i:. n ...I:' I ) ! ) ' . ' KALIDA, PUTNAM COUNTY, OHIO, TUESDY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1845. WHOLE NO. 238. ui cj t;;io ! ,'- . SONG. .,!-.'' . ,,, ibT T. K. HERVET, . I Wow Aon bast gone to the home of thy reit, Twh why should my sonl be s and ' - I knew thou haul gone where the wenry ere blest, And the mourner looki Upend is ?lndt , , Where Love tins put on in the lnnd of its birth the eharms it hath paths-red in this, , ' ' And Hope, the sweet singer that gladdened . the uvearth ..-yt-l' " Lies asleep on the bosom of bliss, lVi, ; I know thoa hast gone where thy forehead is j.. starred ; ., , ... , .. -.. . With the beauty thnt dwelt in thy soul' Where the light of thy lovfllnees onnnot be marred Nor thy heart be flunjr beck from its ".. I know thou bsst drunluof the Lethe that flows. Through a land where tfj o"o not forget, That eheds oer memory brtly repose, And takes from it only regret. - fri thy faraway d welting Wherever it be,' ' I know thou hast visions of mine, 1 " And the love that made nil things a music to me. I have not yet learned to resiprn. . .;. ' In the hush of the night, on the waste of the sea, Or alorra on the breexe on the hill,' : I have ever a presence that whispers of thoe, .- And my spirit lies down and is still. , ; . Mine eye must be dark that so -long has been '.''. ' .-4..dim - '!.-.'!! -I i ...-.i.. Ere again it may gaxe upon thine, . But my heart has revenlines of thee and thy home In many a token and sign ! I never look up with a vow to the sky ' But a light, like thy besutv, is there; And I heor a low murmrr like thine in reply, , When I pour out my spirit in prayer. ' And. though like a mourner tW sits by the . tomb ' " ' ' I am wrapped In a manile of care. Vet the grief of my hoom, oh l call it not gloom, Is not the black grief of despair. By sorrow rovealed, as the stars are by night, Far orTa bripht vision appeorst And Hope like the rainbow, a creature of light Is born like the rainbow from tears. - ; Ciiilduood. I do not think we sufficiently sympathize with our junior in years. ! Thai false pride, that dearly bought experience, through which we maintain a superiority over them, disposes us too much to overlook their many beautiful traits of character. We do not remember that these little people, in their own selves, and so far ns (heir unripened sensibilities carry them, are each of them the centre of . a circle, the moving point round which revoles iho whole world besides. Neither do we think ofien enough, that there is a freshness in these young souls which may profitably revive our jaded hearts, and an honesty of purpose like an atmosphere sur tounding them, which if would be well for sis sometimes to breathe; and that lastly, by u, becoming as little children," we are gett ing taught, by those who, of all instructors on earth, are nearest heaven, for they have ome most recently from it, and its fragrance its still floating about them. I envy not the man who can look on the open countenance of the true hearted boy, or the fair and delicate face of girlhood, with those pensive eyes and.Iong golden hair, and not call to mind his own by-gone years, nor seek to read for those untried spirits what is written for them in the book of daily life. Were I to try to feel like him, 1 should not succeed, for I regard the young with an in tense sompathy.,. Remembering most vividly, as I do, when I was one of them, and recol tectingthe upward feeliig where with I used to regard the full-grown, I cannot help now n shaping my thoughts downwards, and becom ing one with them again. , It may be, that we do not give in this wor'd sufficient indi viduality with whom we mix. 1 he selhsh feeling of making the world one thing, nnd ourselves fhe other, closes up the heart ag ainst all the tender sympathies; and the ap prehension of childishness, and its imputation ,to us, prevent our entering into their feelings, and giving them their due weight and impor tance. " Yet who remembers not the days of his boyhood? what traveller, even in the midst of his toilsome and busy years, when man- ,hood had hardened his heart and disappoint ment taught him to rojoice'no more on earth, lid not turn bis eye backward to his father's Wanly welcome, the tendor reception of his .'mother, his young sister's proitrj trusting in him, and his happy home, whither no care or borrow could pursue him the family hearth "Was a sanctuary, and there lie was safe. ' ' The innocence of childhood, consisting, ks it does, in the ignorance of evil, is for me the one Chnrm which makes it so like what .'I dream of heaven. Alas! how ofien when gazed on the fair hair of the young, and eyes that looked no evil, have J in my heart shed tears that such whiteness of soul was '.HO longer mine own bitter tears of repon- .tanpe, but ineffectual one? likewise, tor jney were lbe lament for What had long since de partedi'., The fruit had been tasted, and the paradise of primeval harmlessiicss wandered . from: forever, .' ..'. ., Iv,' m'."i,"-,'- : .i- tEXEit's CoMKT.i-m the month of Juno, 'l770,: Messier observed .comet, which was 'afterward sufficiently observed to render its course, through the system calculable.- It " was found not to core'spond with that of any cornet previously known. , It remained visi ble for an ilnusual length of, limef and con tinued observations on it proved that it mov ' 3cd not as cornets' were then' generally found to move, in a parabola, or very elongated .ellipse, but in an oval of very Bmall dimen- 1lts! wbit was caiciila'ted by the celebrated 'LeseJI,, and found to be an ellipsp, of which the: greater, axis was only owl to t'""ee '.timijs the diameter of the earth's crb'tj which ' fyiowecj that its periodical revoluihn round 'the sun would be tpmpletetl in fire ytariand .kai. ,A -., With so short a period,: the comet otiehi frequently to be sen. But here springs op a difficuliv. This comet was never seen be. fore, and bns nevet been sopo s'liw;! ..iWdal then, has occome of il? and where and how did it exist before iis discovery by Messier? 5 appoarance was too conspicuous and its lifeht too vivid .to allow of the supposition that it could have .been present, yet not ob served, ' , . , , . ., ,'- ,. .. .;. ,, ... The taw of gravitation dienovere'1 ny Newton, and fully developed by his illuntrlnm successors. enables us fully to explain this difficulty.- We nan adopt tne woraaoi Aragot : c,t;,i r.i a Why hat not the enmr.l btf.n tiea every fiveveart and a half before 1770! -i Because the orbi t wa then totally different from that it has tince pursu ed. -.. ' '. Why hat not the. comet beenie en rinee 1770? For the reason that its passage to the point of perihel ion in 1776 took place bv davi and before the fol lowing return, the form of the orbit was so alter ed, that had the comet Dr-rn visible trom the earth it would not have been recognized, Lexell had already remarked, acenrding to his elemrnts of 1770. that the comet ouifht to pans In the vicinity of Jupiter in 1767, lens than the fiftv oiffVilh part of his distance from the sun; that in 1779, when it returned to us.it would be, near the end of August, about five hundred tim s near er that Same planet than to the sun: so that then notwithstanding the immense size of the solar globe, its attractive power on the comet was not the two hundredth part that of Jupiter. Thus it could not he doubted that the comet had experi enced considers tile perturbatloriBin 1707 nnd 1779; hut it is yet neceSsory to establish that these perturbations were numerically strong enough to explain the total want of observations, as well before as after the year 1770. The formularies in the fourth volume of the Mccanique Celette give the analytical solution of this problem: the actual elliptic orbit el a comet hcin; known, whatwositspreviousorbit? What will it be hereafter, taking into account in both cases the perturbating effects caused by the plan ets of our system? Well, then, by putting these formularies into numbers by substituting, for its component inde terminate letters, the particular elemrnm of the comet f 1770 it will first be found that in 1767, previous to the approach of that body to Jupiter, the ellptc orbit which it described corresponds. not to bve but to mty years ot revolution lonnd the sun: alterward. that in 1779, on its departure out of the attraction of the same planet, the orbit of the comet could not be completed in less than twenty vears. From the samo researches it re sults that, before 1767, during the whole progress of its revolutions, the shortest distance of the comet from the sun was one hundred and ninety nine millions of leagues (five hundred and ninety seven millions of miles,) and that after 1779 the minimum ot distance became one hundred and thirty-one millions of leagues (three hundred and ninety-three millions of miles!) This was still too tnr removed ior mo comei iu ue percepuoie from the earth. . . - ' , However singulor it may appear, we sfei then. fully authorized to soy of the comet of 1770,- that the action ot jupitor orougut u to us in 1.7b'. and that the same action, producing an inverse enact, removed it from us in the year 1779. " ' ,' k . A Practical Joke. ' How , use doth breed a habit in man." ; Every Dbdy has no ticed the truth and point of this exclamation. Wo remember an instance. ' : A gentleman of considerable talent as an orator, became the member of a lerjislaiive body in one of the eastern states. In speak ing, he was addxted to an odd habit of hand ling bis spectacles, first pi icing them on his nose, suffering them to remain a minute or two throwiug them up on his forehead, and finally folding them up and laying them be fore him upou the desk. . One day, a very important question came up for consideration; he commenced a speech in opposition. A friend to the proposed measure, who was a: most incorrigible, wag withal, determined to spoil the effect of the honorable member's remarks, and according ly before he entered the House, provided h'mself with a. .dozen puir of spectacles.-1- Tlie member commenced his speech, with his usual ability. . But a few minutes hud elapsed before he was at work with Irs spec tacles, and finally got them up on his fore head. At this juncture, our wng, who stood ready, laid another pair on the desk before 6 speaker. 1 hese were taken up, ano uy reaular gradations gamed a place on his tore head, by tho side of the others. A third, fourth and fifth pair was disposed ot in Hie same manner. A smile settled on the coun tenances of the .honorable members which gradually lengthened into a grin, and at last, when the speaker had warmed into one of the most patriotic and most eloquent snnten cp he dnnosited a sixth oair with the others. and there was one long and loud peal of laughter, from all quarters of the hall pre sidents, clerks, measengers and members, joined in olio chorus... Tho speaker himself looked around in astonlhment at lhiscuriotiv interruption: but accidently raising his hand he grasped his spectacles, and the whole force of the joke rushed upon his mind. He dashed the glasses upon: the floor,r look up his hat and left the hall. Tho bill pissed bv a triumphant .majority, -probably in conSB rii"Tice of the gentleman's silly and useless habit.'-" - ' -''-.. , : - .- r Some one oj?served '.to Henry, prince of f russin, mat it was rare to nun genius, wu, memory ano jungmeni uuiicu in uiu s.iiih person. - " Surely there is nothing astonish in in this, replied the prince, "uenius (akes'his daring flight towards, heaven he isf tbya'gle: wit moves: along by fits and Marts- he is '.the 1 grasshopperi memory marches backwards ho is the crab J judg ment creep9 slowly along- ho is the tortoise. How absurd to expect all these animals to move in unison!" ' ' ' Do your own Thinking. Tn all agss of the world, had men done their own th nkmi "called no man master," the Alexanders and Caisars of antiquity urould not have deluged the' earth with blood Farmer's CBranu-VVo believe in small (iirms and thorough cultivation. Wo belitne Ijiat-tlie soil loyes ,;o, onr, as we.ll as its owner, and ought, .tnereiere, to be manured."." 'I ' V ? ;i !:".',' Wo believe in large crops winch leave tnn land belter ilmh tlvv found it miking doiii iIia frm rich at once, - Wo helieve in going, to the bottom ot things, nnd, therefore, in deep ploughing and enough of it. All '.he better if with A sub soil plow.' ' ."" ' :i :':'i'' Wo believe that every farm should own H good fanner. : .' " ; :.' '."'"'.. We believo that the best fertilizer of any soil is a spirit of industry, enterprise nnd in telligence without tins, lime and gypsum, hones and green manure, marl and guano, will be of little use. ' 1 We believe in good fences, good barns, good firm house's, god stock, good orchards, and chil Iten enough to gather iho fruif. . Wo .bebevo in a clean kilchi n, a neat wife !n it, a sp'nning p'ano, a clenn cupboard, a clean dnirv.and a clean conscience. ' ' We disbelieve m larmeis mat win not im prove in farms thai grow poorer every year starving cattle farmers noys turning into clerks and merchants in f irmer's daughters unwilling lo work nnd in all farmers ashamed of their vocation, or who drink whiskey till honest men are ashamed of them. i Moreover we believe in taking a Newspn ner in caving for it, and reading it. Such hints as these are worth at least a yeiu's p:iv. Thusendelh this chapter of the articles of our creed. , ,; .,- ? How formidable are the enemies of im provement, in whatever depigment attempt ed'. A rail-road or a canalr however , bene ficial when completed, is sure to meet with opposition when first proposed; and even the most splendid discoveries of science have been treated with contempt, and their au thors held up to the public execration. Need wo here mention tho names of Galileo, of Bicon. of Harvey, and of Priestley men. who, though now enrolled in tho annals of fame, were in Iheir day, exposed lo scorn and persecution? Galileo was cist" into a dungeon for teaching the rue theory of the universe. Bicon's philosophy was consider ed no. better than a dangerous 'innovation- Harvey durst not mention Ins d scovsry tor fears; lest he should wjtnt bread' and Priest ley, to escape the rage of an infuriated mob. was forced to seek a grave in a foreign land! And if it be said, these lived in times differ ent from the preseut,' may we not mention the illustrious name of B ickland, whose sub lime discoveries in Geology were withheld from the world for years, through the fearof incurring the high displeasure of his palrons? and is it asked from whom does rII this op position to improvement proceed? the ans wer is easy it is from the priest. It will be read;ly granted that it was priests who threw Galileo into the dungeons of the inquisition ; but. it is as true that it was priests who goad ed on the infuriated mob to pull down Priestley's house, and, if poss'ble, to take liis life; and it may be affirmed, with equal confidence, that it wis priests at Oxford who deterred Btickland from giving, for a time, the world the benefit of bis discoveries. Star in the East. ' Fulfilment of Propiikcy. In one of the letters which the senior editor of the Sa vannah Republican is writing to his piper. descriptive of scenes and events on his tour v. . . 1 T.li! to Europe, ligypt, oyria ami raiesiiiic, find the following extract, giving an account of his visit to Tyroi nnd showing the bJew fulfilment of one of God's prophecies.-, Rec. -.'. . . ... ! '..-; :.; We arrived at Tyre early in the afternoon, nnd surely nc pi ce can better correspond lo the description of it. Formerly insular, il has been connected with the mam land since the conquest of Alexander the Great, and the isthmus is still narrower than the site of ihe town notwithstanding the .accumulation of centuries. Of the ancient town not a vestige remains. All is buried beneath the sand, nnd several excivntions expose to view the substructions of ancient bu'lil'ngs, tho piers and arches of ait rfqilfedlict, but eveii these remains are doubtless long posterior to the era of the first Tyre. The present town is a nvsernblo place foil of filth and wret chedness, file only thing of interest wilhin th" walls is the remains of a very fin church, which has been identified as the one in which Euseb'tis used to prench in the third century. Several fishing nets spread out to dry called io mind the prophecy ' And I will cause the no-si of thy songs to cense, and the sound of 'hy harps shall be ho more beard." And I w'll made ihee like the lop of a rock; thou shall be a place to spread nets upon ; thou shall build no more." : , ' 1 v Strong.- Rev. Dr. Beihune, in speaking of the measures of Jackson's administration, says ; . . -' If he were wrong, public, opinion has since adopted the chief of h;s heresies, and there is no.Jiand Birong enough or daring .enough o lay one slnnf npou another of that, which he threw down into ruins;,; t : .; ; ... ., ,.,', Gen. Scott's daughter, who recently took the veil in tho Convent at Georgetown, died there on tho 26th nit.' jV.. , , , ... ' u FHiKNnsinp," is defined to be-tntimacy with a mail who has plenty of money and spends it freely. ' ."'""''' ' :" V Aucl.vizk ' Association.41- I his is a iiew association formed in the northwestern part of this Siale. A meeting preparatory to us organization was held at Si. Mary's,, last No? veniber, nnd a partial organization ellucted. lis first mcetiiig' was held at Lima, Aug: 15, 1815. The introductory snrmon was preached by Eldi.Wim J'uson. Eid. IVm. Chaffee was clios-in moderalor, and W. S. Ruso clerk. Eleveu churches whs represented, containing three ordained ministers, five licentiates, and 324 members. Since their pistornl organi zation, they have employed Eld. J. French as a missionary .in their bounds, and have raised for his support $72 63. ... A collection of $10 50 was taken on the Sabbaih for their own missionary Board, and a resolution was adopted to raiso at least $25 for the pay ment of. tho' Foreign Mission debt. The next meeiing will be held at Mercer, on Fri day before the first Sabbath in September. Cross and Journal. Roman Catholic Missions. Tho Annals of tho Roman Catholic " Association for the Propagation of tho Faith," for last May, re pons that the receipts for the preceding year were 3,540,U03 francs, 66c. There was appropriated to the missions in Europe during the year ending last May, io round numbers 660,000 francs, Asia, 970,000, Africa, 300,000, tho South Seas, 430,- 000, North and South America, 1,130,000 The share of tho United Slates, including Texas, wis 771,164 f. 72c; equal to S144,. 2 9,5P. According to the Catholic Almanack, there are from 1,100,000 to 1,500,000 Ca tholics in tho United Stales, ,'l.hey "have 21 diocesos, 675 churches, 582. oliic'r .stations; 572 clergymen otherwise employed; 22 ec- flesiiistical establishments; 220clwic.il stu dents; 23 'literary institutions; 53 female academics; and o4 charitable institutions. Tho American Railroad Journal gives the following particulars of the railroads in oper ation and nearly completed in the United States., The aggregate length of Canals .is estimated much too low at 2000 miles. The aggregate number of miles is 3,787, nnd Ihe uggregate cost $113,209,467. To these thero should bo added the Columbia (Ph.) Railroad, 821 milus, cost $1,201,069. and the Alleghany Portage, 3t miles, cost $1,628,481 making a total of 3,906 miles of railroad in use or nearly completed, the aggrcgalo cost of which amounts to $911, 24l,887.:.There,Vtarje.vnow in Hie United States, in operation a'ntTTieaj-ly completed, over 2000 mHes of Canal, aud if we add to these the Railroads recently projected, we shall have an aggregate of moro than Eight Thousand Miles of Internal Improvements. Odd Fellowship p En-qlaxd. -"The weekly contributions are Iwo or three pence from each member. . Some idea of the mag nificence of tho association in that country may bo formed from ihe fact that the amount of money in the treasury of (he Order does not fill short of $17,000,009; and tho annu al d'stiibution in relief of the members and other charities is $1,500,000. The number of members is about 260.000. The sum which Odd Fellowship annually distributes for charitable purposes in England alone may be estimated, as affording means of subsistence for 15,000 faorlies; whose maintenance has been cut off by sickness and other afflictions. It is easy to see what amount of sufferings is thus prevented. Cleve. Herald. . All for Honor. A correspondent of (he Baltimore Patriot gives thcfollowing account of ihe origin of the affray botweciu Elliott nnd Kendall. i v i- i. The quarrel bogrtn in this wayf they in vited Elliot to go with iliom s ml roll ten pins. He declined, because, he said, he had. been there once and the alley was taken away, from him before he hud finished rolling. Kendall then told him jocosely that if bo had not been a coward he would not have let anybody taken tho nllpy. , Elliott there upon called Kendall a liar! Upon this they were about to fight, when Bailey interposed arid prevented their doing so. , Some angry words passed after Ibis which caused Bailey to strike Elliott. The parties then separated, and inet again in about, art hour afterwards, when the fatal affray occurred.1 National Bank and Si'b-tkeasury. " From a passage in the letter of the presi dent, 1 observe an idea of establ'shing a branch bank of -Iho United States, in New Orleans; i This institulioa is one of the mos' deadly ..'hostility existing, against the1 princi ples of -Our constitution. J he nation is, at this fimn, so' strong nnd united in its senti mentf, iht it cannot be shaken at this mo ment. I- But suppose a series of . untoward events should occur, sufficient to bring into doubt the competency of a republican gov ernment to meet a crisis of great danger, or to unhinge the confidence of. tho people iu the public functionaries; an institution like this, penetrating by ita branches every part of the Union, acting 'by command and in phalanx, may, in a critical moment, upset the government. I deem no government safe, which is under too vassalage of any self-con stituted nuthbrilies, orlanyi other authority man mat or me nation, or nreguinr func tionaries. '1 What dm obstruction could not this bank of the United States, with all its branch banks, be in time. of war? .' It might dictn'o to ns tho pence we should accept, or withdraw its aids. Ought we then to give further growth io as institution so powerful, so hostile tt That it is so hostile we know, 1. from a knowledge of the principles of the per sons composing ihe bddy of directors in every batik, principal or branch; and those of most of the stock-holders 2; from their opposition to the measures' and principles of the govern men), and to the election of those friendly to them; and, 3. from 'the sentiments of the newspapers they support. Now while we are strong, it is the greatest duty wo owe to' the safety ot our constitmon, to bring this powerful enemy to a perfect subordination under its authorities, The first measure" would bo to reduce them to an equal footing -only with other banks, as tb the favors of the ; government. But, in order to be able W meet a general combination of the banks against us, in a critical emergency, could Wd ' not make a beginning towards an independent ' use of our own money, towards holding our own bank in all the deposits where it is rocei- -' ved, and lotting the Treasurer give his draft ' or note for pnyment at any particular place; ; which, in a well conducted government, ought '. to have as much credit as any private draft, or ' bank note, or bill, and would give us the same facilities which we derive from the ! banks?' I pray you to turn this subject in ' your mind, and give it the benefit of yoor" f knowledge of details; whereas, I have onl very general views of the subject." i Tbumu Jeneraos. The following resolutions trero adopted' at a meeting of Farmers of Licking county, held at Nowark a few dnys ago. The days of bank swindling, iu Ohio, would soon bo tiiimbered if the farmers throughout the Staid would resolve likewise: Resolved, That we, as Farmers and Pro-, duccrs, of the soil, feeling ourselves aggritw. ed, by the continued fluctuations of the cir culating medium of the State, by the opera- iion ot wnicn wo naveoeen vyronged of our, hard earnings do bled''e 'ourselves to haert . . other, that hereafter we will demand real money for our wheat and pork, and that we win .net sen or oispose t the same for anr .1 ' 1..-. 1 I ! mug uui gom or silver, :. ,.. . Resolved. That wo call Onnn ilia fiirninri and producers of Ihe Slate, to join with us in tne gooa wont in winch we are engaged - and to demand value for their labor and the products of their farms, and leave them selves no longer a prey to the often deprec'n aled currency of the country. . (KT we really pity the man whosayswe" cannot do without Banks." Tn tho democracy waged war against the issu Of 1 . ui" oi oiim-piasters ot denominations rrom fiveMO tWeiltV-five CeiltS. ihntvhwra Inlrl Iharr.' that we would be left destitute of "dhangt" should these nhnmin.nhlf ratra Ua rl 1 1. A MHml ...... .ijfc -rw ii iiu law U from cirrgilation. Did the DemociyJue.' lieve what the Whigssaidf No! TheysTOt these little filthy rag factories " wherVthey belonged put them out of existance: For this theJipre cursed for a time, but hnw is it now? As lliesR hits nf nrinv x.r.( i - .'.-'II. wUlUt circul ilion, the bits of silver flowed in and the whigs norparo ashamed of ihe arguments they then used. So With bills of a larger denomination. Druasvav with them nnrf d soon will havo a cf utionat currency! but not until then. Ytm shall1 wo see this eff ected? Peo. Forum: ' TnE "Poor Clerks." We notice an ad vertisement iifoilO of Iho Washintrtfin hnnor. Lf a s ile at auction of one of -the oor dis- Ctru(g series- jtiousenold eflects. the articles we flfid," mahogany sofa, yirble top Bijou table; mahogany K)cig, sewing, arm, ana parlor, chairs; ma hogany parlor writing desk and elliptic din ing -tables? mahogany double wardrobe with centre draws, mahogany rib bedstead, maho gany washslands and seat9, cane seat chairs, Wilton and tufted rugs, flue parlor, chamber and Stairs carpets and rods, radiators, Eng lish Hair Mattresses, chamber and bed cur tains: ball mantle and astral lamtvs. finn Innt. inn flasses. 8 Sltoerior oil naintinir in nVH r.' . 3 " frames, busts, very fine dressing bureau, ot- . I 1 . . ' loman to niaicn, curcei, soiar, astral lamps, in I about forty othef kinds of fine anicles. This is the way tho poor Whig office holders leave their places. Dont vou nitv; thnmt Kentucky Yeontam ; ' ' Banks are supposed lo afford a safe place of deposite for public funds. This is another mistake Nearly two hundred of these safe depositories have broken, failed, wilhin the last twenty years, and how many more will break during the same" time to come, the wisest cannot foretell, There has been at leasybifTy times ihe amount lost to indivi dnnlsliy rrfaking banks a place of deposite. . it: I. a ttian more wouia nave oeen It the people themselves kept their money. IT. S. Jour nal. . -. .' , Ifr As green corn is now evtenoiruU used, its deletetioug effects may be avoided by dissolving piece of iftarlash, about the s'zo of.a hickory nut, in.tho water in which it is boiled. - ,. - - ....I ., - , i A soon reason. A person conversing a few weeks ago, up m tho Tclafive power pos sessed by England and America, observe J that America would have marched an army " into.. England, "'and taken it during tho last war, only we did not want to assume its na- -' tionaldebt!" , '. y.X ' ;:'. v'f v - . Some misclrevous wags one night pullei - down a turner's sign,, and put it over a law. ycr's door; la the moruing it read; AH , sorts of turning and twisting done here. -