The standard. (Cassville, Ga.) 1849-1864, April 22, 1852, Image 1

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3 /nrniltj jtasjrajitt-Sraatfli In JJatinttal unit Itatc ^ulifts, litfrntnrr, Jhnttsrurmts, JHorkrfe, .fortign -unb Jrantstir Bms, fa. • BY JOHN W. BURKE, Editor and Proprietor. “BE JUST AND fear not.» TWO DOLLARS, per annum, in advance. VOL. IV. CASSVILLE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1852. .1 • r—j © ^THE STANDARD, ' IS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY, AT CASSVILLE. OA. 'Office.—S. W. Comer of the Public Square. Terms.—Two dollars a-year, in advance, * or Three dollars at the end of the year. No paper discontinued, except at the op tion of the editor, until all arrearages arc ' paid. Miscellaneous advertisements inserted at $1 per square, for the first insertion, and 50 ' cents for each weekly continuance. Legal advertisements published at the usual rates. Advertisements not marked, will be pub lished until forbid, and charged accordingly. Letters on business must be addressed, post paid, to the editor. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. iss nzn im§. $ PLAIN AND 0IL3T NEATLY EXECUTED AT AUGUSTUS R. WRIGHT, CASSVU.DB, GA., Will practice Law in the several courts of Law and Equity in the Cherokee circuit. April 24. 12—ly. CHASTAIN & YOUNG, ATUP03BJXTJ6TTS AX LAW, ELLIJAY, GA., Will practice in the counties of the Cher okee circuit. April 24. 12—ly. ROBERT H. TATUM, ATTORNEY AT LAW, THENTON, GEO. Business entrusted to his enre in any of the Counties of the Cherokee Circuit, will meet with prompt attention. Nov. 21. 43-tf DANIEL S. PRINTUP, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ROME, GEO. Also Agent for the Bank of the State of South Carolina, and will make advances on Cotton shipped to Charleston, only charging legal interest for the time the advance is made- Sept. 5, 1850.—tf. JAMSS MILNER. JOHN E. GLENN. fc^&XK2srjsr,'~ Attorneys at Law, CASSVILLE, GA. March, 4, 1852. 4—tf. MARCUS A. HIGGS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CASSVILLE, GA. Will attend promptly to all business con fided to his care. May 29, 1851. 17—tf. J. D. PHILLIPS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CASSVILLE, GEO. Feb. 19. 2-ly. WM. T. WOFFORD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CASSVILLE, GEO. March 15 tf E. D. CHISOLM, ATTORNEY AT LAW, VANWERT, GA. Will practice in the Cherokee circuit, and will transact any business entrusted to his care. Jan. 29, 1852. 51—ly DAWSON A. WALKER, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Spring Place, Gen. Refers to Ker&s & Hops, Augusta, Ga., Wilet, Banks, & co., Charleston, S. C. A. Wells & co., Savannah, Ga.‘ April 24. 12—l.y. JAMES C. L0NGSTREET, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CALHOUN, GA., Will practice in the several courts of the Cherokee circuit. Refer to Hon. John P. Kino, ) Augusta, R. F. Poe, ) Ga. Richard Peters, Esq., Atlanta, Ga. W. Akin, Esq., Cassville, Ga. April 24. 12—ly. W. K. COURTNEY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, TRENTON, GA. Will give diligent attention to any busi ness entrusted to his care . n the Cheroke cir cuit. ""•'a.-SKS, |G. R. Buck, [Lexington, Rev. T. Mosojn, J Tenn. April 24. 12—iy. JONES & CRAWFORD, -ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CALHOUN, GA. April 24^ 12—ly. WM. H. & J. W. H. UNDERWOOD, ROME, GEORGIA. Will practice Law in all the counties of the Cherokee ci.cnit (except Dade.) They Will both personally attend all the courts. J W. H. Underwood will attend the courts of -Jackson and Habersham counties of the Wes tern circuit. Both will attend the sessions withe Supreme Court at Cassville andGaines- Ville. All business entrusted to them will hejpromptiy and faithfully attended to- Office next door to Hooper A Mitchell, ” Buena Vista House,” Rome, Ga., at which Jilaee one or both will always be found, ex* cept when absent on professional business. April M-ilS^lji The Standard Office, CASSVILLE, GEO. Such as Pamphlets, Handbills, Business and Professional Cards, Visiting and Ad dress Cards, Legal blanks, Posters, Blank Nbtes, Bill heads Circulars, Catalogues, La bels, Horse bills, &c. &c. We think we can give satisfaction both in the execution ar.d prices of our work, and solicit a share of the public-patronage. JULIUS M. PATTON. ABDA JOHNSON- PATTON A JOHNSON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Cassville, Geo. Will practice in the counties of Cass, Cobb, Chattooga, Floyd, Gordon, Murray, Whitfield and Walker. [Feb 12. JOHN A. CRAWFORD. F. C. SHROPSHIRE. CRAWFORD & SHROPSHIRE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, CASSVILLE, GEO. Business entrusted to their care in any of the counties of the Cherokee circuit, will meet with faithful attention. April 8. MEDICAL CARD. D R. S. C. EDGEWORTH, having per manently located at Cartersville, re spectfully offers to the community his servi ces in the practice of Medicine and Surgery. Cartersville, March 4, 1852.—2m. J. R. PARROTT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, (DM’ra&sraiMB, <EMV. March 11. 5—ly. DR. MILES J. MURPHY, Ptt¥S©3iEi.tc u. or Botanic Physician, H AVING permanently located at Carters ville,will attend promptly to all calls as Physician or Surgeon, hoping ‘ffthn it well founded medical education and successful experience to merit and receive a liberal share of patronage. 02?“ Particular atten tion paid to diseases of females. Office at II. M. Morgan's Store, opposite the Cartersville Hotel. [Feb. 12 MICK HOTEL, By Wm. Latimer, CASSVILLE, GEO. D^“ A comfortable hack always in readi ness to convey passengers to and from the gtate Road Depot. Jan. 29. “THE GLOBE HOTEL.” CASSVILLE, GA. T HE undersigned would in form the public that he has taken charge of this large and commodious House, situated on the south-east corner of the pub lic square, and by his attention and care hope to merit a liberal patronage by the Public. His Table will be the best that the country affords No pains will be spared to make all comfortable tha t may call. S. J. HIGGS. Cassville, Geo. Sept. 25,1851.34-tf. cmr hotel, ATLANTA, GEO. Comer Loyd and Decatur Sts. (Abont 100 yards from the Depot.) T HIS establishment lias been recently fur nished from the best houses in New York city, and no pains will be spared on my part to make it one of the best houses South. Time and patronage will test the above as sertion. A liberal patronage is solicited. L. R. BUTLER, Proprietor. Feb. 12,1852. T. A.bURKE. C. W. DEMIXG. BURKE & DEMING, Book Sellers, Stationers, Newspaper and Magazine Agents, Madison, Ga. Jan. 15,1852. 49—ly. A. ALEXANDER, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRUGGIST, Atlanta, Georgia. DEALER IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, English, French and American Chemicals, Sur gical and Dental Instruments, PAINTS, Oils, Dye Stuffs and Window Glass, Perfumery, Fancy Articles, Brashes of all kinds. Bronzes, Fancy Soaps, Trusses, Tanners’ Tools, Draggists’’Gfass Ware, Ex tracts, Dentists’ Gold and Tin Foil, Force- lean Teeth, Patent Medicines, &c. Together with a full supply of every arti cle usually found in the line, which I offer at the lowest market trices for cash or approv ed credit. My arrangements with established houses in New Yoik, give me facilities enjoyed by fitw, for selling pure articles,' and at the low*- est prices. February 12,1852. 4i - ^iSMWL ©A1R3D, PR. ROBERT C. WORD, Office,—N. East of the Court House. j«n. 15 1851. . > 50~!y. G. & H. CAMERON, DIRECT IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE DEAL ERS IN Crockery. _ NO. 145 MEETING-SI!., Charleston, S. C. HAVE always on hatid a large and exten sive assortment of the above Goods, (select- ed by one of the firm at tbe Manufactories of, England and Franco.) which they offer for sale at as low rates as they cad be parehaaed In any city Of the Union. Jan. 15,1852. 49-ly. /arts anit /tracks. Farewell Address of an'Editor to his Delinquent Patrons. BY DAVID L ROATH. Wretches ! In thus condescending to address yon I am fully conscious that I am elevating you to a position of far more importance than you deserve, but I must allow myself tbe satisfaction of giving you a parting shot before I take my fare well of you, 1 hope and trust, forever. In noticing you 1 am aware that I low er myself greatly even in my own esti- ma‘ion—I feel as mean as if I had been discovered stealing mutton from my best friend. Yon doubtless imagined that you would be considered so utterly con temptible that you would escape scot free—that you could sink into your in significance and thus preserve yourself from tbe finger of scorn. Mistaken wretches! you shall be dragged from the mass of festering corruption in which you flatter yourselves you are hidden, and exposed to the broad glare of day in all your naked and bideons deformi ty ! You shall not be suffered to fatten undisturbed on tbe brains of those by far your superiors in every desirable point: you shall not, jackall-like, prey unmolest ed upon the forms from which your un utterable meanness has driven tbe breath of life. Shiver in the ektreriiity of your terror ! for a pen of steel shall pin you to the wall. For years I have “ coined my blood” for your benefit. In sickness and in health—when the dew of agooy was up on my brow, and when the bloom of health was upon my cheek—in all sea sons and under all circumstances, I have worked like a Trojan for your in struction and amusement. With fin un- spairing hand have I cast my pearls be fore you—swiuc, miserable, selfish swine! An adequate reward for my arduous la bors I never hoped to obtain—it never entered my head that you could appreci ate my various exertions to their full ex tent. But I did expect your encourage ment so far as your contract went in a pecuniary point of view—I trusted to your honor, believing you would not prove recreant to every principle of com mon honesty for the miserable pittance to be gained by so doing. How well I calculated let my subscription list an swer ! Who can calculate the vast benefit I have conferred upon you ! Have I not spread out before you new views of hu man nature which your narrow contract ed minds never could have imagined ?— given you facts which have been of im measurable advantage to yon in yonr leisure, yonr business, your professions? —delved like a convict in the rich mines of other men 's thoughts, without my aid, forever unapproachable by you ?—and kept you constantly enlightened with e- ven tbe very subjects of common conver sation ? And I may suck my thumbs and whistle to the wind for my recom pense ! Yes, you pitiful robbers of the beggar's mite ! your sordid souls would shrink in horror from the contemplation of an act of generosity! yonr vulgar ca pacities could never fathom tbe depths of a true man’s feeling! Were the world peopled with abortions like you, Truth would cut her throat in despair, and Ge nius would drink itself to death on New England ram. To cater the complete satisfaction of every one, payer, beggar, stealer and borrower, is a little more than a mere mortal editor can do—an angel editor might possibly do it, bat we do hot hap pen to have any of those gentlemen act ing as conductors of journals in this low er world. If one could translate himself hither, and he was to choose this busi ness and put his dependence upon sneb as yon, one year would suffice to clean him out—it would finish him, lock, stock and barrel, even though be were in pos session of the roof of Solomon’s Temple could dig gold faster than a crazy Cali fornian. I have done my duty—I have labored harder than the industrious fleas —and here am I to-day, a walking skel eton, reduced thus by a kind of things calling themselves human beings, but who I swear, are a species of vampire ! My own mother would not know me, and my father would kick me for the poorest apology for an imposter it had ever been bis ill fortnne.to behold. I am afraid to leave the sort of cave I breathe la, for I alter so fast I could not swear to my own identity before my return- I am known as “the ghost,” and pursuaded by the friends I have left, to offer myself to Barnum or some other curiosity mon ger, as tbe successor of Galvin Ed son, the walking anatomy!. If I had not some little character yet remaining—a little spirit which prevents me from dis gracing a name once respectable, I should follow tbe profession of blacking boots or collecting puppies for the sausage mar ket. To the commonest feelings of charity, which should be permitted in some small degree to actuate the motives of ever; member of society, yon arc the most ut ter strangers. Yon cannot perceive up on what principle it is that an honest man I If there were but one of you, or even oue hundred, I should not trouble myself a- boat yon, and you might go to tbe devil without tbe semblance of a reproach from me, but there being so many of yon who have for such a long period of time been so industriously, so enthusiastically en gaged in snatching the bread from my lips, I am constrained by my outraged feelings to give my opinion of y<TU in plain terms. If there Were rewards for tbe redaction of petty swindling to a science, you most undoubtedly might congratulate yourselves on having achiev ed the prize, for if there is a species of condact which in absolute meanness can surpass yours, I am yet to become quainted with it. I can appreciate the inducement of a hundred thousand dol lars to a man of not very rigid principle —I can in bis case understand the cause of his departure from tbe strict laws of honesty, but your degradation, you mis- erable one and two dollar robbers, is too deep for my conception. You are match less in your vileness—unapproachable in your iniquity—unpardonable in your crime ! To expect that anything I can say will produce a wholesome effect upon you, would be the height of presump tion. You are past tbe point at which one conpunctious feeling could be awa kened—the hue of shame will never more be beheld upon your unblushing fronts. You are so wedded to your brazon ef frontery that human exertion can make not tbe slightest impression upon yonr hardened souls You would behold the last pang of expiring nature with the hor rid calmness of indifference, and chuckle over the acquisition of a beggarly amount from a nigger dead of the pleague 1 Mor al lepers are ye, stalking through the land 1 nngrateful vipers, who would re joice in the opportunity to sting the hand which generously fed and protected you! This is my farewell—much good may it do those who are not so far gone that recovery is impossible. Yon have got all you will ever get out of me—you have robbed me of everything I had in the world, and reduced me to destitu tion, and now I hope that having accom plished your unholy purpose, you feel in some measure satisfied and will have a little more mercy upon the next poor devil of an editor who is trying to scratch for a livelihood Though in such ex tremity, I would not change situations with you, for I have the gratifying assu rance of a clear conscience, while you— pah 1 you stink in the nostrils of every editor in the laud 1 Corrupt wretehes 1 I leave you to wallow in your infamy— to fatten for a time upon the recollection of your villainous success, well knowing that the day will inevitably come when the tortures of your own minds will be come a punishment more severe than the invention of man could inflict. In this thought I glory—it is sweeter than bon ey of Hybla—it is more refreshing to my spirit than is a glass of iced lemon ade to the lips of a thirsty man 1 It will cheer me beyond expression on my pil grimage to a country that you can never behold 1 I will feed upon it in the desert —it shall be my solace in the hour of af fiiction—it shall be my hope, to the end 1 Let humanity take warniig 1 Contemptuously, Arthur Swipes „ ”, w U.USJI geui, i ui lueir uaiurai pusiuuon uy me elastic Every man should please his wife—if and they all went to work to show that ! compression of the atmosphere, and ccn- he can. Every wife should please her husband—if she can. Every wife should sometimes bold her tongue—if she can. Every lawyer should sometimes tell the truth—if he can. ~ morning, as we were taking a very com fortable breakfast at the coffee-room of our hotel, and as I was reading Galigna- ni’s daily paper, I found a person at tbe next table addressing me, in nasal twang, flower to the sun. Each mingled in the j sequently to have inundated *he earth’s honey of its influence, and they nursed j surface ? I do not undertake to say that “the wee canny thing” with an aliment > the deluge was caused by a comet; but, ... *^at made it grow. And when it lifted 1 what I wish to be understood to say is, Eve«y man should j its eyes towards the sky, they wove a 1 that the indea or supposition would not be contrary to, or incompatible with tbe laws of nature, or the true principles of natural phylosophy. It is natural science that induces even the infidel heathen to bear testimony, not only to the allegorical, but to tbe literal it put on its silver rimmed diadem, and truths of the sacred scriptures Heathen showed its yellow petals to the stars.— writers have related that at a certain time. And it nodded to the little birds that a great (and as they would have it, a na- were swimming in the sky. And all of tural) eclipse of the sun took place, them that had silver lined wings "; aud " ’ ' mind his own business—if be can ; and l soft carpet of grass for its feet. And the every woman too. Every one should ! sun saw it through the green leaves and take the newspaper, and pay for it—any smiled, as she passed on ; and then, Ly how. : starlight and moonlight they worked on. ♦ | And tbe daisy lifted up its head, and A Countryman at Paris.—>Tbis one morning while the sun was looking. “Stranger, is this fellow Galignani, a re- j birds in black, gray, and qnaker brown liable chap ?” I assured him that be j came; and the querulous blue bird and passed for an authority. Laying down j the courtesying yellow bird came; and his paper on the table, he pathetically i sang a native air at the coronation of described the tramp which the pro gramme for the sight-seeing of yester day’s paper had given him, and declared his inability to keep up with the in structions for that day. Finding that he was a character, I carried on tbe con versation ; and he talked most edifying to all in the room, as be spoke loud enough to be heard at the very end. I enquired if he bad been to London. His reply was, “I reckon I have; why I come on purpose to see the Crystial Pa lace.” “Well, sir,” I said, “and how did you like it?” “Oh, that exhibition is some!” “And pray, sir, what did yon think of the Greek Slave ?” "There, now, stranger, I takes it that where she were raised cotton was dreadful scarce!" [Young American Abroad. How to Cure a Cold —Of all other means of curing colds, fasting is the most effectual. Let whoever has a cold eat nothing whatever for two days, and his cold will be gone, provided lie is not confined in bed, because by taking that surplus which caused his disease by breath, he soon carries off his disease by removing tbe cause. This will be found more effectual if he adds copious water drinking to prostrate fasting. By the time a person has fasted one day and night, he will experience a freedom from pain Und a clearness of mind in delight ful contrast to that roented stupor and physical pain caused by colds. And how infinitely better is this method of break- colds than medicines 1 that daisy. Gems of Thought. Falsehood could do little mischief if it did not gain the credit of truth. Uncharitable persons are generally more unthinkingly than perversely so. If you can get a man’s thoughts to en tertain what is right, you may trust him to do what is right, if he have a right principle. He who takes his character from what others say of him, will be ignorant of bis real self, which can only be self-known. The knowledge of evil may help to do good, and assist us to measure its value ; every new idea should be to us as a new feather in the wings that bear us up ward. A bad man has no more common way of keeping at peace with himself than that of ascribing to others similar or even greater faults than his own. Independence of mind, freedom from a slavish respect to the taste and opinion of others, next to goodness of heart, wili be3t insure our happiness in the conduct of life. A large share of the wrong doing and speaking of life comes of the mind’s list- lessness. That we should be listless, however, about what is right, shows how degenerate we are. There is a fashion in the world of ho noring what has a fair outside. Success, too, is made the te5t of merit ; so much so, that if a man have a crown rained down on him, it would be said he was princely born. Timidity is generally the fruit of self ishness ; some men are so circumspect, so sensitive of danger, of things that may harm them they know not how, that they never give advice, or say a gene rous word for another, without trem bling. Some men are too courteous to inter rupt your discourse, at the same time that they He upon tbe watch until you are done, bearing nothing you say, and only thinking of what they are bursting to speak. Is this courtesy ? All creatures in their utmost sum, be ginning from least, and going onwards from first to last, arc but shadings, jots and titles of tbe one good, that is so beautiful, so great, so good, that nothing else ean be so, but in tbe proportion of its likeness to it. A Will and a Way. A poor woman who was ardently pi ous, on hearing some benevolent object presented, had a strong desire to contri bute to it at least the widow’s mite. She went borne and searched the house, but could fiud nothing. She wa9 greatly dis tressed. She knew not how to be de nied the privilege of casting a little into the treasury of the Lord. She entered her closet and prayed earnestly that God would make her submissive, if it was clearly his will that she should give no thing. On leaving her closet, she went into a back apartment, and spying a lit tle bag of dried seeds, she took them down and thought to herself that per? haps some one might purchase them.— Just at this moment her minister came in. She disclosed to him her feelings, and showed him the seeds. He took them, and observed that he was going over the river, and perhaps he might sell them. On his way, be met a bro ther in the ministry, who invited him to address a missionary meeting that even ing. He consented to do so ; and in the midst of bis address, be told the toachisg story of the poor woman, and presented her bag of seeds for sale to tbe audience. A gentleman arose and of fered five dollars for them. He took the seeds and offered them for sale again.— Another person offered five dollars for them; and thus they proceeded, until they bad obtained twenty dollars for the bag of seeds. Tbe minister took the money, and, carrying it to tbe woman, spread out four five dollar bills before her as the avails of her seeds. Sbe was overwhelmed under a sense of divine extensive and refined than mere gravita- S not forbidden by omnipotence to cross goodness, and most cheerfully jave the tjon. The handful of earth that follows j the earth’s orbit, or approach so near to whole to the Lord.—Morning Star. Beautiful Extract You cannot go into tbe meadow and pluck up a single daisy by tbe roots, j Turn of Life. From forty to sixty, a man who has properly regulated himself may be con sidered as in the prime of life. His ma tured strength of constitution renders him almost impervious to tbe attacks of disease, and experience has given his judgment the soundness of almost infalli bility. His mind is resolute, firm, and equal; all his functions are in tbe high est order ; he assumes the mastery of business; builds up a competence on the foundation he has formed in early manhood, and passes through a period of life attended by many gratifications.— Having gone a year or two past sixty, he arrives at a critical period in the road of existence; the river of death flows be fore him, and he remains at a standstill. But athwart this river is a viaduct called “The Turn of Life,” which, if crossed in safety, leads to the valley of “Old Age, - ’ round which the river winds, and then flows beyond, without a boat or causeway to effect its passage. The bridge Is, however, costructed of fragile materials, and it depends upon how it is trodden whether it bend or break.— Gout, apoplexy, and other characters al so, are in the vicinity, to waylay the traveller and thrust him from the pass; but let him gird up his loins, and pro vide biinseif with a fitting staff and he may trudge on in safety with perfect composure. To quit metaphor, “The Turn of Life” is a turn either into a pro longed walk, or into the grave. The system and powers having reached their utmost expansion, now begin either to close like flowers at sunset, cr break down at once. One injudicious stimu lant, a fatal excitement, may force ic be yond its strength—whilst a careful sup ply of props, and tbe withdrawal of all that tends to force a plant, will sustain it in beauty and in vigor until night bas entirely set.— The Science of Life by a Physician. which continued for the space of three hours'; and they perhaps, spurned the idea of supernatural darkness, as mu$h as the Rev. Mr. Stuart does that of a li teral flood ; but, Chronology proves tbe time specified to be precisely tbe time of the Saviour’s crucifixion, and the sci ence of Astronomy demonstrates beyond doubt, that it was about the time, of the full moon, at which time, it is a “physi cal impossibility” for a natural eclipse of tbe sun to take place. Natural sci ence when properly undcrstooc^ends to confirm and s’rengtben Christ® faith ; but when it is wrested to the encourage ment of infidelity, the porpetrator de serves at least, a passing rebuke. JOEL MATHEWS. Upson County, April 4th, 1852. For the Chronicle and Sentinel. Mr Editor In your paper of Wednesday last, I see a short article headed “New Theory of the Deluge,” statiog the “novel” views of tbe Rev. Mr. Stuart, of Cincinnati, “respecting the deluge as described in the scrip lures,” in which it is said, “he insists that it is an allegory ” “A literal flood like that described by Moses, the reve- rend'gentleman says, could not have 4a ken place. Men of science reject, as an absurdity the idea of a universal deluge having occurred since the creation of man. And none stands out for a li eral flood except a stubborn few who make the omnipotence of God the scape-goat of physical impossibilities.” I concur with you in the opLion that those views are “startling innovations upon the general belief,” and upon the vital doctrine of Christianity. For by the same parity of reasoning,all the great and orthodox principles of the Christian religion might be allegorized. And if the reverend gentleman’s mental facul ties wore as well stored with a knowledge of the principles of natural science, or the immutable laws of nature, as I fear his heart is wiib the corrupt principles of infidelity, he certainly would not ac Tiie Author of the Federalist.— The following memorandum, respecting the authorship of the several papers of “The Federalist” Las -been handed to the Editor of the New York Times by a gentleman whose position the Times says, gives him the facilities for being well informed on the subject. “Tbe late distinguished jurist, Chan cellor Kant, in a letter to the former Editor of the Evening Post of the 12rh May. 1817, stated from a eomroun’ick- tion he had received from Geh. Hamil ton, that the numbers ol the “Federal ist” wore written by the several authors, as follows Numbers 2, 3, 4, 5 and 54, by Mr. Jay. Numbers 10, 14, 37 to 48 inclusive, by Mr. Madison. Numbers 18, 19, 20, by Madison and Hamilton jointly. All the residue of the volumes by Mr. Hamilton. “Tbo above corresponds with the me morandum in the hand writing of Gen. Hamilton, and by him placed in a vo lume of the ‘Federalist’ belonging to the New York Society Library, which vo lume has been purloined from the Li brary either as a valuable relic, or for some other less honorable purpose. “In Mr. Madison’s enumeration pub lished long after the death of General Hamilton, several of the papers claimed by Hamilton are appropriated to him self.” Another Wikoff Case.—The Ga zette des Tribunaux has the following: A young female iu possession of a large fortune, met last summer at a wa tering place, near the Pyrenees, a young man who lived in grand style, and who pretended to be on friendly terms with the principal personages of Parisian so ciety. He tormented her with his at tentions to such an extent, that sbe was obliged to return to Paris with her daughter. Having learned from her femme de-chamber that tbe child was of illegitimate birth, be shortly after heir return possessed himself of tbe child, and di.-appeared. His object was to constrain the female either to marry him, or to give him a sum of money. But as a prosecution was commenced against him, he deemed it prudent to restore tbe child. Tbe lady heard nothing fur ther of tbe advertiser. She subsequently met ao elderly man in society, who paid her great attention, and to whom, after a while, she confided the management ( f some of her in erest . A few days ago this man presssed her strongly to go and spe a chateau in the environs of St. case those who “stand out for a literal j £Ji 0Q( ). which was for sale on peculiarly flood,” with making “the omnipotence i advantageous terms. Sbe felt great dis- °f 9.^ !2 a Pe " oat , of P h P ical ira P 03 -[ trust, aud after some hesitation deter- sibilities.” For natural science teaches— 1. The universal laws of gravity, or the centripetal tendency of all created matter towards the earth’s centre. 2 That the earth is surrounded by an after some mined not to go without informing the police. When, on an appointed day she went, police agents were stationed near the house. She found in it, to her as tonishment, her quandum friend of the aeriform, elastic and compressible fluid, j watering place, who, with horrible called air. _ _ j threats, tried to make her sign some 3. That water is a non-elastic, incom-which be bad prepared. On hear- pressibie .fluid, capable of being put in i ; n g j, er C ri egf the police agents entered motion, or thrown out of it3 natural po- j house, and arrested the two men —^ sitjon by the increased pressure of the j q^e one who enticed her to the place was atmosphere, to a greater or less extent • subsequently set at liberty, but the in proportion to the force acting upon j 00D g maQ j 8 ( 0 he brought to trial for the elasticity of the. air. 4. That comets are large solid bodies, without breaking up a society of nice re- • travelling through immensity of space, laticns, and detecting a principle more! with an almost incalculable velocity, And Duties.—Every man ought to pay his debts—if he can. Every mao ought to help his neighbor—if he ean. Every man end woman ought to get married— attempting to swindle with menaces. Rooms in which, from any cause, there arises an unpleasant odor, may be freed of the-ooxions effluvia by placing a few the tiny roots of that little flower, is re- the earth as to inundate and ccmpress kernels of coffee on a hot shovel, and a I- plete with social elements. A little so- tbe atmosphere whieh surrounds it . lowing the aroma, or smoke to be freely cial circle had been formed around that: Now, according to the laws of natural j disseminated. It will dispel effectually germinating daisy. The sunbeam and science, is it a “physical impossibility” j the thost powerful odor arising from pu- the dewdrop met there, and the soft sum- that a comet should have passed so near j trid animal or vegetable matter. It haS foer breeze came whispering through the t the earth as to have caused the waters of been much used and with excellent. milter of istooishment to joq tbit tot j man mu wvowi vu£u> w uiamcu— um iviccm tamo wuii>)«v»w>o —— i —- —* — -t- ’ - -— —■— — ... . - * - ...» « i one can regardyour condact uinfiunout. if they can. Every man should do his tall grass to join the silent concert. And the great deep to have been thrown out cess, in localities lu.cstea tin c oiers.