The Southern watchman. (Athens, Ga.) 1854-1882, October 25, 1855, Image 1

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^lt — ATHENS, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 25, 1855. NUMBER 30 PUBLISH El) WEEKLY, B¥ JOHN H. CHRISTY, IDIVOI AND rRSrilBTOI. Term* of Subscription. TWO DOLLARS per annum, if paid utrictiv in ad ■nee; otherwise, THREE DOLLARS wilt be charged 09* la order Fhat the price of the papei may not be in I the war ora Urge circulation, Club* will be supplied «l the rollowlns low rate*. ::: JiSr _ _ dlttodee r*Ut, (it Culeutrara/ai tie order. Rate* of Advertising. Transient adrertisementa will be inserted at One I wolUr persquaref<,riho(lrst,aud Pifiy Cents per square Tor each subsequent insertion. Legal and yearly ad rcrlieement* atthe usual rates Candidates will be charged $5 for announcements,. bad obituary not ices exceeding six lines in length will be charged as adrertiaeii.ents. When the number of insertions is not markedon and Advertisement, it will be published till forbid, and I charged accordingly. 98nsint«a anil professional Cnriis. ^johF^T^chrTstyT^ PUUJf AND FANCY Boole and Job Printer, “ Franklin Job Office,” Athens. Ga. *, All work entrusted to hie cerefaithlully, correctly and punctually executed, at prices correspnnd- JsnI8 ing with the hardnccs of the times. tf C. B. LOMBARD DENTIST, Life is Real. BY H. W. LONGFELLOW. Tell me not in mournful numbers, Life is but an empty dream; For the soul is deep that slumbers, And things are not what they seem.. Life is real! life is earnest! And th( grave is not its goal; Dust thou art, to dust returnest, Was not spoken of the soul. Not enjoyment and not sorrow, Is our destined end or way, But to act that each to-morrow, Finds us farther than to-day. Art is long, and time is fleeting. And our hearts, tlio’stout and brave, Still, like muffled drum*, are beating Funeral marches to the grave. In the world's broad field of baffle, In the bivouac of life, Be not like dumb, driven cattl.e! Be a hero in the strife ! Trust no future howe’er pleasant, Let the dead Fast bury its dead! Act!—net in the liviug Present, Heart within, and God o'er bead. Lives of great men remind us, We may make our lives sublime, And departing, leave behind us, Foot priuts on the sands of time. Foot priuts that perhaps another, Sailing o'er life's solemn main, A forlorn and shipwrecked brother Seeing, shall take heart again- Let US then he up and doing, With a heart for any fate; Still achieving, still pursuing, Learn to labor and to wait. ATHENS, GEORGIA. Huomsnver the Store of Wilson A Veal. Jan3 | PITNER & ENGLAND. Wholesale Sl Retail Dealers in Groceries, DryGoods, HARDWARE, SHOES AND BOOTS, April 6 Athens, Ga. MOORE & CARLTON, DEALERS IN SILK, FANCY AND STAPLE GOODS,| 11A RD1VA RE AND CROCKER Y. April No. 3, Granite Row, Athens, On. LUCAS & BILLUPS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS AY DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, HARDWARE. <fcc. dc. No. 2, Broad Street, Athens. wiLLIAM On)ELONV^ ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office over the store si Wm M. Morion A Son Will attend promptly to all business entrust od to his care. Athens, April G P. A. SUMMEY & BROTHER, Wholesale and Retail Dealer* >n Staple Goods, Hardware, Croekery, AJYD ALL KINDS OF GROCERIES, Corner of Wall and Broad streets, Athens. I ia. : WILLIAM N. WHITE, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL BOOKSELLER AND STATIONER, AndNrwfpofcr cad MagninrAjtot. DEALER IN MUSIC and MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS LAMPS, FINK CITLERY, FANCY GOODS, AC. No. 8, College Avemte, Newton House. Athens, On aign of *• White’* Univi*sily Book Store.” Orders promptly filled at Augusta rates. T. BISHOP & SON, Wholesale and Retail CSoccs, April 6 No. 1, Broad street, Athens. I mind so well ballanced, that I took a JAMES M. ROYAL, chart of her head. I consider her quite br . own cur!s sbadin g her face > eloquent HARNESS MAKER) a model of female worth. She possesses witb sweetness. H AS removed his shop to Mitchell’s old a ]j t h e qualities for a good wife and Harry was of course enchanted. The Tavern, one door east of Grady *t Nicli- mo jher *’ sequel may be guessed. Harry is a firm A Now. Harry was a young man of fine | •><*««’ phrenology, is always ready to fillordersiuthc best style, intellectual powers, whicu had been im- as his knuckles knocked against the door. VVhen the door was opened, our lover hero was greeted with an unexpected sight of a diminutive crooked form, a pair of spectacles, and red hair, were the principal features in the tout ensemble ofhis fair receiver. Now, red hair was Henry’s aversion. The lady, for such she evidently appeared, conducted him to a pretty parlor, where music and books showed the taste of the fair owner. After a short scrutiny, Harry turned to the odd little figure beside him and re quested to see Mis-i B. ** She is before you," said his com panion. He was thunderstruck and stood gaz ing at her without motion, but at length collected his scattered wits and tried to commence a conversation “ under diffi culties.” He introduced himself as her unknown correspondent, and explained that lie h id come to make a personal acquaintance. She answered him with modesty and good sense, telling him that their intercouse must be on the terms of friendship, until they became more intimately known to each other.— They conversed long and pleasantly, and he scan found hitnself admiring her voice which was soft and sweet; and before he left, her winning manner had so charmed him. that he had quite for gotten her red hair and spectacles.— Thus their intercouse continued for a week, at the expirat ion of xfhich time he made her an oiler ofhis heart and hand. She hesitated ere she replied, but smilingly asked, have you so far over come your aversion to red hair and crooked form, as to make me your wife ? He replied that he loved her, and cared not what was the color of her hair, so long as she would consent to be his. An answer was promised lo be given on the following morning. As early as propriety would admit, on the next morning, our friend Harry again sought his beloved, but was greatly surprised to he received by one so like, and yet so unlike her to whom he had been paying his court. There she stood, with a sweet smile on her lips, and a laughing light in her hazel eyes, with out those distinguishing marks of per son which ha ' first attracted his notice He almost doubted his senses, until she THE NEXT CONGRESS. The Washington Organ has ihe fol- vested in a native or natives, all their high prerogatives, and august powers— not even foreigners among us, till of late years, have complained of it. The annual immigration is now 500,000.— and what was necessary in 1787, thus becomes in 1855 a hundred times asne-1 National Americans ccssary now,—that is in the ratio of * Anti National Americans 5,000 to 500,000. If then,—as now we see,—foreign horn people superceding American citizens as representatives of America in foreign countries.—cxclu- lowing classification of the next Congress, and upon that predicates the subjoined speculations: Nebraska Democrats Anti-Nebraska Democrats Republicans | Whigs 233 The Democratic parly Is thus in a . meagre minority. It is at war with sive of foreign military compamesamnng an( j w ith each of the other parties. us, with arms in their hands,—foreign It has not the most remote chance of a horn riots, and rioters murdering Amer- national majority ; and, although its fol- . T ... - . lowers boast loudly of the promjssory ican citizens as in Louisville,—foreign 1 . . . .. / . • „ p . j b victories they are to gain, yet the Fre- born legions «rganized to vote down sidential question and the whole policy American born citizens *at' the polls;— of the government may be settled by the if then, we say, we now see with tj, e present Congress. Not by the next. In this exigency, where will the De- IRISH CATHOLICS* OPINION OP IRISH PROTESTANTS. Wht do SotrrtiERMfeRs Visit thb North.—-The following is an extract On the 25th of last August, .he Cru- from a portion or • letter, written by a sader copied the following paragraph Northern gentleman to a fnendjn SpaN from the.” Irish American.*’a recogniz ed and strictly orthodox organ of the Catholic Irish population: tanburg, and published in the Express I wonder the gentlemen of the South seem to have such u propensity for com- - If there be upon this earth one i»g to the North. As to the ladies, t mg more contemptible than another, it do " ot w ; ond " Bt ,h f r 8™* anywhere, is the Irish Orangeman. In degruda- « w t arch of novel, £. N ° w , tion there is still a lower depth. If Southern man. nothing but »l»olnt a there be upon the surface of this globe ; " °» ,d ,nd V Ce ,nel 1 0 ? 1 foot . ,rt one scoundrel greater than another? it is ‘ b,s region of fanaticism and hypocrisy the Irish American Orangeman !** " brre 1 «”* ,d not br,n « P ro P« rt / A member of the Irish Orange Asso ciation, in reply to this attack, writes to the Crusader, giving an account of the without therertainty of its being stolen,or associate with my fellow men without having my feelings daily outraged by ex- iv* T* ir‘„ „“‘‘i ‘‘r hibit ions of bitter hostility .—When I see qualifications exacted from a member of „ precedent of 1787 before us, an Ameri can party organized to carry out Amer-1 their legislation ? Will Seward, Chase, ican principles,—is there any thing won- and Wilson, with their followers, Gree- derful in it 1—EagU and Enquirer. ,e J and Raymcnd. come to the help of the “ Nebraska iniquity ? They have HOW THEY READ THE NEWSPAPERS, co-operated faithfully to break down the It is a proof of the great variety of on, y P art y » hat s ‘ ood between * , »* m and human development to notice persons tbe,r onba °. wed P ar P° s ®?' What, we reading a newspaper. repeat, will ihe Southern Democrats do ? Mr. General Intelligence first glances Tbey Wl ” be c ? m r elled to a PP eal to the i u .i 7-. . I National Americans whom they.have as sailed with such abominable injustice A NOVEL WOOING. It was on the return of Mr. F lecturer on phrenology, to the city of B , that one morning; Harry G. en tered his study, and after some desultory s P° ke ,n ber c,ear swe et tones, when he conversation, commenced looking over s P ran g forward, and seizing her hand, some phrenological charts, that" were be gg ed her to explain the mystery. She arranged before him. While thus en- sm,led as she said > y ou must for S ,vc caged, he noticed one of the heads of m y ru se, Harry ; you said personal beau- Miss Emily B. of C. copiously marked. had no weight with you, and I wished He examined it and became much in-1 to P r °ve you. You see ine now in ray tercsted, as it described a person of an I P r °pci shape and person. Can you love original mind and superior character. 1 me as . web as when I wore specs and -a As he laid it aside, Mr. F. said : re d wig ?” “ The person there described I met }} e cou,d an8Wer onI y by gazing ad during my absence, and she possessed a niiringly upon ber.graceful little figure mind so well ballanced, that I took a | eo delicate yet so spirited, and those soft mocratic party look for aid to maintain at the telegraph, then at the editorial, and then be goes into the correspond ence. Mr. Sharper opens with stocks and markets, and ends with the advertise ments for wants, hoping to find a vic tim. Aunt Sukey first reads the stories'— then looks to see who is married. M iss Prim looks at the marriages first, and then reads the stories. They will ask the co-operaiion of the American party in sustaining their own laws and the peace of the country ! But is it possible that a party so reck lessly assailed as the American Order has been,can permit itself to be approach ed by its defamers? It can keep no terms with such enemies. The Ameri can Order has stood under arms for the Miss Marvellous is curious to see the | law Passed by this speculative adm'mis tration* It has bravely borne not only the brunt of its abolition adversaries, but the desertion of its own men ; yet the ad ministration, with the malignity of Mexi cans. has been firing upon the men who were maintaining its position from a sense abandon list of accidents, murders, and the like. Uncle Ned hunts up a funny thing, and laughs with a will. Madame Gossip turns to the local departments for her thunder, and having obtained that, throws the paper aside. Mrs. Friendly drops the first tear ofl°f dut ^' : ” 0t ... sympathy over the deaths, and then over tbe ! r P?* eir P ,,nc, P e • J the marriages; for, savs she, one i. !" a > ata, n ‘be law,^moimaUer who passed about as bad as the other. ,t and 'ben they will carry out 1 hose Mr. Politician dashes into the tele- P™ c, ? les of na ‘ ,onBl refo " m 'V ? * be graph, and from that into the editorial Am 1 er,p ? n ^ e l fV*™I* "?* r ending with the speeches alluded to. I prehension of which is the true cause of Our literary friend is eager for a nice ihe rhetoric,grammar aad' (he tosie of ' ll NchiaAa vole production, he turns a careless glance . A ‘ ie . „ c al.the news department, aad ,he,, lakes ^ to his Greek, pet fectly satisfied. - . »■« *> J ho N»"on .l Amer,- The pleasure seeker examines lhe can vo „ „,ll be Ihirly-sevea. This vote programmes of public eaterlainmems, f " l! e oven sl J ort V»t and decides which will afford him the "" s perhsp, eked out b^the . A . r , vote of conservative Northern Amen- greatest amount of amusement. | can9an(] p emocratSf who , wI.Hst they The laborer searches among ihe wants may have been committed some months for a better opening in his business, and i - - A . ip.il , c. . I aso lo vote for the repeal of the obnox- —hut enough; an extension of the list | is useless. Jan 26 tf 1 proved by culture, but he was decidedly 1 THK FORESIGHT OF OUR FATHERS. _ , __ ,, up , , I odd. Ha had a spice of romance in his The New York Express, remarking UOach’Making ami Kcpairinge I disposition, and was a firm believer in I upon the fact stated by Mr. Berrien in phrenology. He depended on that sci- his reccnt | etter> that pr i or to lS0 0, the TAIUTFCI P nnuppp lence mamly to give him an insight into , - . . ,. JiUTlLD 15. charaeter of her whom he should annual foreign immigration to this coun- choose ns a partner for life. I try was only 5,000. and now it is 500,- Thelady in question seemed to pos- 000, says thatin 1718, when the Federal sess all those qualifications which heU^^ wag formed theWashin had been so long seeking for; and a most _ n novel idea entered his mind. He deter-1 tons ’ Franklins, Madisons, Shermans, mined to write to her, and state his ideas | and Hamiltons, that made it, deemed it A T tho old itand recently occupied by R. S. Sclieveuell, offers for sole a lot of superi or articles of liis own manufacture, at redu ced prices—consisting of Carriages, Buggies, &c. Orders for any thing in hislinc thankfully received and promptly executed. .^“Repairing done at short notice and on I on the subject of matrimony ; acquaint I their duty to provide There is just as much differ-1 ,ous ,c g ,5la ‘. 10n ’ h .^ Mn . ce f eea be ence in readers as in-anything. ^vantages they will hereby give o the But the worst is yet to-come If each I Black R-P^bhcans. does not find a edhmn or to. P-cn-, |he House falling i .to the hands liar liking, the paper is good for noth- ^ danjjerous Rnd des ; gn ; ng f» na . in °’ tics. The result, we predict, is inevita- &T Ivan Golovin, a Russian noble- «e.from the material of which parlies man residing in Brooklyn, gives a flat- a ' Present constituted. It will re- tering view of Russian prospects in the T”" 5 ‘be co operation ofenem.es cher- Crimea He says • I ,s ‘ u ng an unabated hostility to each other, reasonable term*. NOTICE. T HE subscribers are prepared to fill orders for all kinds of 1st. That the President of the United States should he a native born citizen. 2nd. That the Army of the United States should be in native born Ameri can hands. her with his head, and request a cor respondence, with the view that if it resulted in the mutual satisfaction of both parties, they should meet, and if they could love, should marry. He act- Spokes for Carriages andWagOng, U d .cconlingly, nnd reqnesMil of Mr F., 3rd Thallhe Navy of the Dnited Also, *t .h.. rr uhj,,h r «.. —* shooMhc under native horn BOBBINS. Irs character: which he enclosed inhit, 4 h ThalTreolie . shonldbe iwvj letter and forwarded. He waited for a • . „„. , .. , ... w 1 , v . . .. . , . . . , ized and made bv a native born citizen, week .in a state of feverish anxiety; but 1 at length an answer came, and the lady granted his request. The letter breath ed the spirit of modesty and good sense. The Crimea has plenty of cattle, and 1 M « w.« be indispensable to the salva- buiscuits are easily carried to the use of of ‘ b « Union, and this compulsory the army. Sebastopol has fallen after co-operation » ak e place, even if the the most astonishing resistance, but parties Fever the instant after, and re- England is humbled, for neither her tb « oonfl.ct upon the issues of na- fleets or armies were successful, and Na- 'urahzat.on and administration reform poleon showed the weakness of England for the first ques.on is vital, oect.onal- so well, lhat even Queen Victoria thank-1 ,sm must be put that order. “ He should,'* says the writer, ** have a sincere love and vene ration for his Almighty maker, produc tive of those lively and happy fruit's, righteousness and obedience to his com mands ; a firm and steadfast faith in lhe Saviour of the world, convinced that He is the only mediator between a sinful creature and an offended Creator; his disposition should he humane anti com passionate, and his behaviour kind and conciliatory; he should be an enemy to savage brutality, and every species of unchristian conduct; a lover of rational and improving society, faithfully regard ing the Protestant religion, and sinperely desirous to propagate its precepts, i. .e., charity and good will to all men ; zeal ous in promoting the honor, happiness, and prosperity of his country; heartily desirous of success in those pursuit*, yet convinced that God alone can grant them ; he should have a hatred of cursing and swearing, and taking the name of God in vain; lie should use all oppor tunities of discouraging them among his brethren, and shun the society of all per sons addicted to those shameful prac tices ; prudence should guide all his ac tions; temperance, sobriety,and honesty, direct his conduct, and the laudable ob jects of the association he the motives of his endeavors. The Loyal Orange Lodge Associa tion is formed by persons desirous of supporting, to the utmost of their power, the principles and practice of the Chris tian religion, to maintain the laws and constitution of the country, afford assis tance to the distressed members »of the order, and otherwise to promote such laudable and benevolent purposes as may tend to the due ordering of religion and Christian charity, and the supremacy of law, order, and constitutional freedom We venerate the Protestant religion with Protestant liberty of sentiment to wards those who differ from us, and dis avow every species and-degree of per secution. These, and these only, are the principles of Orangemen, and we are neither afraid nor ashamed to acknowl edge them.” The Philadelphia Times in comment ing on the above says : ” We do r.ot think that either the Irish American, or even the Evening Argus itself, acute, as are its hundred eyes in discovering faults in the Irish Protestants, can find anything to com plain of in these principles. For our own part, we confess that they appear to us the only principles which ought to be entertained or acted upon by the foreign re * population of this country, and they re dound highly to the credit of those who proclaim them. When such a body of men are denounced and sought lo be the Southern people thronging lo New port and spending their money to kee^ alive an old decayed community, tho very hot-bed of abolition, which Wtrtlld starve without them, I confess t ant compelled to think they are either joking or blustering when they threaten a sepa ration. IIow can they exist without the pure sea breeze, the luxurious sea bath ing, the lobsters, the black fish, and the exquisite society of Newport ? Is there no sea-bathing at the South ; no purd mountain air; no spot blessed by nature where they might seek society and health, that they must run their heads among the Philistines ? commonly used in our cotton factories. All itoiin as good and cheap as can be had from the North. Address. , P. A. SUMMEY & BRO. Athens,Ga Who will attend to all orders, and the ship ping of the same. March, 1854. A SLOAN & OATMAN, DEALERS IN Italian, Egyptian Jb American The lady stipulated **°’ 8 '£ months’ cor- g lates * wb en cited into th. ... respondenee. .Her which they »eteto| , he Uoited g„ t& , shouId be „„ der the 5th. That the Federal appointments and patronage should cotne from this native born American source 6th. That the militia of the several service of AND EAST TENNESSEE MARBLE. meet From this time they wrote regularly, I upon various topics ; but the peysonal appearance of each was never once the subject of allusion. Harry’s high opin- Ilonument*. Tombs. Urns and Vases; Marble I * on b ' s *" a ' r correspondent was en jhanced upon the reception of every me • 1ST Alt order* promptly tilled. ATLANTA, GA. Qff*R*f«r to Mr. Ross Crane. junel4 I 1 letter, until he became thoroughly in love with his incognita; and lie began most earnestly to long for the expiration of his probation. It was with a beat ing heart that he took his seat in one of with the process attached—just printed I ' be cars of the railroad which was to And for sale at this Office. Also, various convey him to the city of C. where his other Blanks. j fair inamorata resided. (g~.vnv lllanks not on hand—a*, indeed. 0 Blank Declarations, F both forms, (long and short) together j Almost any kiudof job printing—can be fur nished on a few hoars’ notice DRYGOODS, „ AT REDUCED PRICES, Now the question was to be solved, could she love him ? He was not hand some in the common acceptation of the word, yet he had an intelligent coun tenance, a dark expressive eye, and a G 0 .< tO . K !!lr* y, **f n<i gCt $ K>d bnr *?'i u : f ‘* good figure; hut he forgot all hisadvan- Ca*h, before they are all gone. [July 5.1 f r . ..* • .- J i j Itages of person or station, in his anxiety NOTICE TO DEBTORS ANDCRE DITOIIS. LL ]ier*ons indebted to the estate of Ed win Pendergrass, deceased, late of Jack- i co olly, (la.. n?o hereby requested to ke i nmediatc payment ; nnd those linv lag den Audi against said estate »!*' ipiired lo present them duly uuthcnricuteii Vitbiu the time prescribed by law. ' WM.J. PARKS, Executor. . >5ej>tc:ubcr 27. to create a good impression. He never once asked if she were beautiful; for he felt if she were not positively ugly, he could love. After alighting at a station, and a walk of a few minutes he found himself before a small but beautiful | cottage, which bore marks of taste and refinement in .its occupants. He knock ed, and i; seemed to him that his heart knccked full as loudly against his breast President’s native born command. 7th. That only a native born citizen should have the Federal Veto power. 8th. That the Vice President of the United States should be a native. 9th. That thus, that branch of gov ernment—the three branches of the Le gislature—which makes the Treaties and confirms Federal appointments, should have a native to preside over it 10th. That in case of a tie vote in the Senate, a native only should have the casting vote. 11th. That Congress and the Presi dent should make uniform naturalization laws—lhat President a native. 12th. That to be n Senator in Con gress one must have been naturalized 9 years. 13th. That to be a Representative one must have been naturalized for 7 years, The President, (says the Express) having the appointing power of the Sit preme Judges, a native born alone can name the men who are to expound all laws, and cases arising under the Con* stitution, Treaties, and the laws of the United Stales. Now, our fathers when the foreign emigration was only 5,600 ed the French army, and not the Bril ish, for the capture of Sebastopol.— Napoleon I. owed all his success to his cavalry; the Russian cavalry is as large as all the others united. There are a hundred redoubts on the way from Se bastopol to Simpheropol, and some plains beyond, behind which the Rus-ian cavalry can manoeuvre. Let us wait a down. Other ques tions are comparatively ephemeral. They may be postponed, hut if the Union be ” laid on the table,” it can never be called up again. A Close Retort.—Thos. Camp bell, the Brittsh poet, a few days ago, in the New Monthly Masazine, then under his editorshio, signalized himself Gava.ry can maneuver. " J”' " I b the perpetration of the following pair hltle-let the incapable Gortsehacoff be J ^ Qn tt A mpripnn p, aff replaced by General Rudiger—and we I " will see the consequences. The' Pole defeated the Russians in every fight in 1831, till the arrival of the Russian Grenadiers. The Hungarians themselves gained the battle of Wurtzen. Tbedivis sion in favor of Paniulin, which played such a great part in the campaign in Hun gary, is on its way to the Crimea. The Russian Guaids are untouched, while the British elites are decimated, and the French somewhat damaged. The Cri mea is not Russia, but even the Crimea will prove a hard nut. (dp* Ftw readers can lie aware, until they have had occasion to test the factj how much labor of research U ofteii saved by such a table as the following’—!, the work of one now in his grave, if History is Poetry/’ as one who is a true poet himself forcibly renfatks, theu here is “ Peotry Personified.*’—Harper, 1607 Virginia first settled by the English; 1614 New-York first settled by the Dut£V; 1620 Massachusetts settled by Puritans. 1623 New- Hampshire settled by Puritans. 1624 New Jersey settled by the Dutch. 1627 Delaware settled by Swedes ami Fins. 1635 .Maryland settled by Irish Cstliulicf; 1635 Connecticut settled by Puritans. 1656 Rhode Island settled by Roger Wil liams. 1650 North Carolina settled by English; 1670 South Carolina settled by Hugenotf. 16S2 Pennsylvania settled byWm. Peuu. 1733 Georgia settled by Gen. Oglethorge; 1791 Vermont admitted into the Union.- 1792 Kentucky admitted into the' Uniori; 1796 Tenncssc admitted into the Union; 1802 Ohio admitted into tho Uniott. 1811 Louisiana admitted into the Uaiod. 1810 Indiana admitted into the Union. 1817 Mississippi admitted into the Uuion; 1818 Illinois admitted into tho Uuiou. 1819 Alabama admitted into the Unioti; 1820 Maine admitted into the Union. 1821 Missouri udmitted in the Union. 1836 Micbigin admitted into the Union.’ 1836 Arkansas admitted into the Unio& 1245 Florida admitted iutothn Uniod; 1845 Texas admitted into the Uuiou.' 1816' Iowa admitted iuto the Union. 1848 Wisconsin admitted into the Uniori; 1850 California admitted into the Union; The Heart.—The little I have eeeii of the world, and know of the history of mankind, teaches me to look upon (lid errors of others in sorrow, riot in anger. When I take the history of one poor heart that has sinned and suffered, and represent to myself tho struggles and temptations it has passed thft/uglf; (be brief pulsations of joy ; the fetfe'rish in quietude of hope and fear; the pressure of what ; the desertion of frie'ndsj (hff scorn of the world that has little charity; the desolation of lhe soul’s sanctuary and threatening vices within—lienllfi gone—• happiness gone—even hope lhat remain^ the longest, gone—I would tain leavi , 0 — re tabooed and proscribed by lhe proscrip- , ,, |e erring sou j „f lrty fellow man with tion-hating " ditnocracy, but one cor- n - |in from wIloje | llin dsit cstute.—Lo/tg- clusion can be arrived at—that the de- ] /y/ 010 de mocratic leaders have sold themselves to the Roman Catholic Irish power, and A Smart Boy.—A boy of 6hr ac- dare not resist being made the instru- , quaintance, says an exchange, fecerttlj' ment of oppressing and ns far ns possi- ! attended church, and after li-tening ble exterminating the Protestant Irish, j attentively lo the parable of the wise and We do not meddle or make with ihe busi-! f U oIi-It house builders, s tid to liis mother* ness, and suppose the Irish Protestants j on (| ltJ wa y home— quite able to take care of themselves. j 0 „’t think that man was so tUtTe But we always like to see fair play. | a f, er a j|/' And why not, iriy son ?” Sold.—Aclergyraan having on a certain occasion, delivered himself of what is called a fine address, was met by one ofhis bearers the next day, when in the course of conversation, allusion was made to it, the parishioner remarked that he had a book containing every word of it, and had heard it before. To this the clergy man boldly asserted that the address was writtten by himself the week previous to its delivery, and there fore the assertion could not be correct. The next day he received a splendid copy of Webster's Dictionary. Arrangements have been made in Canada to raise immediately a force of 2,800 recruits for the British Army. The Madison (Ky.) packers^ have contracted for 25,000 hogs, at •'sG o9 net, for November delivery* ; The American Flag United States! your banner bears Two emblems: one of Fame. Alas 1 tlie other that it wears, Proclaims yonr nation’s shame. Your high renown, in glorious types, Is blazoned by your stars; But what the meaning of the stripes! They mean your negroes’ scars! George Hunt, the American poet- who, in vat ious forms has shown him, self ever ready to vindicate the charac ter of his country and her institutions, soon after took occasion to reply to those verses in this wise: England! whence comes each glowing hue That tints yon flag of” meteor” light: The streaming red, the deeper blue, Crossed with the moonbeam's pearly white. The b'ood and bruise—the blue and red— Let Asia's groaning millions speak; The white—it tells the color fled From starving Erin's pallid cheek. Don’t trt to talk Latin—“No use of my trying to collect that bill, sir,” said a collectoi* to his employer handing the dishonored document to the latter. ‘-Why I’’ ‘-The man who should pay it is non est." ‘‘Then taka it nnd hollect it, sir. A non-est man will not fail to meet his obligations/’ A farmer in Fayette county, Ky.’ has raised 0*000 buhels of potatoes this year Why. if liis house was built on • rock# where would he find a place fur hit cellar t' •‘Sure enough sonm*y,- where coiild hef T'ha* ideal never struck u< before/* The sour-krout Dutch, red-mouthed Irish, Rorqan Ca’holic anJ anti-Aineri- can combination caffs the American Party an “ oath-bound conclave of assassins and thieves," and he who can heap the tallest mountain of abuse upon the great national reformation, is con-1 _ .... sidereu greatest among the things of j A Significant Trctil—MiSS Mb earth! When our Revolutionary ares Dowell; irf the last number of ifkt WlA met in Philadelphia, and, around the * altar of their country, pledged their “ lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honors” to the cause of liberty, even they w$re denounced by the narrow- souled minions of George the Fourth Then, the sons, who, in the hour of danger, solemnly and fraternally pledge themselves to maintain the perpetuity of the Union, may expect the bitterest op position from those who seerti unwilling for Americans to rule America. Wash ington and his hero-followers survived the venom and acrimony with which they were assailed ; so, the noble band of modern patriots, who are now form ing an invincible phalanx around the Constitution, need not be disturbed by the fierce villification of their ungener ous red-republican opponents .-Kentucky Banner. Advocate, utters the following hold hut significant t/uth: , .*• As womeu are more affected by dm prevalence rtf immorality thin irien; it is really strange that they ifd tio’i fFrtw/1 down those vices of men which are so frequently fatal to their own trauquilti*.- Many a female who Would im( relrt-F iW dine with a profligate wou'd think hef- self foully insulted Were she invited to take tea wiih a courtezan; InUtheotiljr difference between the two is, one wears pantaloons and the other pantalets—the morale is the sarrie: Adversity exasperaes fools, dejects cowards, draws out the faculties of the wise and ingenious, puts the modest to the necessity of trying their skill, awes the opulent and makes the idle industri ous. Much may be said in favor of adversity; blit the worst of it is it lias no friends; Suspence lias Wen culled the tuotU-acho <>f the mind, Suicide in tub Bridal Chamber;^ Miss Clara Haskins was frtund dead in her bridal dress aud cltanlbef near Na- chez, Mississippi, on the 2d uIl After being dressed by her ?rideainaids, she requested them to retire fof a short tinle'; and when they returned they found her lyir.g lifeless upon hef couch, With ail empty vial which had contained pfunsii*. acid still clasped in her h uni. Sii.- Ii.id adopted the desperate alternative of self-destruction father than marry a man the could not love in iiUbdieoce to parental authority. The individual who plained himself *nl his good iutentions lias not yet rproutuL