Civilian and Gazette. Weekly. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 31, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 6, 1857 Page: 1 of 4
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at r^óm without prioé, i
to the Sute, dimetly or in-
" itionized, similar to
™7'?TT-' fvsrS ™ .
" * * «ket.t
"Ml
tome from to aid railroads
of the tou t itfito.ottór
of eapply have we I- None tat. taxation.—
stem Texas will be U foeiw hw
ti endow agricaltaral institutions, assist
schoolsand enoouraga '■ supj Atiergwafcj,
of utility as may be worthy of legislative
a bAld one,
a*k
ronto aturo—,
ie or interest jMt*now¿ Whej>
be both a will and a way to open a
eaoross it, by means of the antalga-
of the part , interested,in tbe^revio
astbe"Leol-
ts formed for
^er means of J
vej to some
potot *. pelote on
the rmj - -TÍ j ffj iwn|Wf
m .í.-mVtí r .. 1 •..•>«, >• , •(<
Moeooir,FpiJfc Co«-H*at^ and nop* ate «
tremely goódihttUs county this jew, and shoald
the worms but miss M, (here will be a much larger
ootton erop made in t«. obúíty thisyear,' than
ever haa been made heretofore.
—1
Pbk*bttxüíx2i.—The Be . D. C. Henderson,
Su ted Glsrit, gives notice in the Birdvtfe Union, I
that the naxt meeting of th Preeby tery of Texas j
[N. 8.] will be held' it Crockett, commencing at 7
'¡■HmbémhÉ
in November, 1W .
t the "New Sehoo'
b organization in Texas. ]
iP§jPi¡
grants, and made a new ouOjthe ,
U of whieh extend to.¿jxty.
Tehuantepeo Company." The
t the
est, and most healthy, haa beendemon-
the surveys of Major Barnardsnd Assis-
tant Engineer Williams and otters.
Tbereportof P.E.Traatonronthe
.ftberonuísayethatitp^'r
almost equal impórtanoe, iathe demand for a
survey of the 8tate, by able snd'exper-
geologiste, whóié' províibe'lt to to analyse
ascertain' their eioeeses and deficiencies
¡peint óút
tbemmoel^ródaetive^toprobe the earth,
f each sounty and neighborhood ; to show
us wheW lie the coal and other minerals, <fec.
The importance of these subjeets cannot be ovsr-
geologioal survey should be provided for
_ and placed ip; the h n<¡|g t£$*Hjti<frohgfc-
ly skilled, hrttos $hw*. And right h«e,clbt us
we kave ^¿r^J)á4;;t^m'eiítWí*^ot^F!Lr;oo¿mr
lee
of the State in connection with the position of State
-a position for whlobthat in
jadgmoat, is unfit; and why I Bccauee
it iq impossible that he can .before .than an amat-
njnind,
otherwise
Bg it positivo that he could not.be, in an
enlightened señs"e^;q6aliflad to do"pu,blio justio-. as
' H^tej&TwM, whose im-
- Telegraphic diapatchies, datedN¿ .
Sept. ttth, state that thé ¿diooner Bldórado
Galveston, otí the evening of the 12tbrpaased with- [ *nd offenng,,^lth a great
In one hundred ftet ef the wreck of tí|s Oentia, "<> • " "* .mmen« ^ltu,^;frtB^by
America, and. laid by until 8 o'clock the next morn- « superior quality of its soil," while Herrera. Ber-
ing. She then rah down to thespotrbutsaw*¿th-
2j«p* EW9rfdo loñ£&£.SZ1 ^íh22íiaíded r
.lying by—one ef which n. th. bark Saxony. frnm and New Qrlean^ Iof ,oob nwn- And then " W,U 8eVersl
I Likens informs as tb^t an exaellentl bj^the various routes, wíií su^ípiently explain tho
•rtide of iron ore exista in larte quantitiea in Bask pee-eminenoe of Tehuantepec:
that he is familiar with a coal mine I From Engiatkd to San írannioo, in nautical milt .
i the Sabine, of great prospective velue^both go-
: to shoWj among many other things, the necessi-
ty add value ef ¿thorough geological snrvey of the |
SUte. ¿ m
í Cape Horn.
'By Panamá route.........
Nicaragua route.
Tehn an tepeo ronte„
, HP The official vote for.Judge of the, third dis.- California !
triet, a* finally received, ra-electa the Hon. B. B. I Horm and,
B. Baylor by ,4 vote*, over Thomas Harrison.—
Pretty dose work in so large a vote. Harrison is
young and baa a bright fata re in atore.notwith
standing his defeat In this case.
7,60S
7,041
6,#71
the fehaantepeo route, will
a, or lessen the distenee to
_ one half what it Is by Cape
the journey between three and
* the ether Isthmus routes;
'mi to San JPtthciteo . f
Horn..
This roa
lished, and
travel.
the route
bridges U
wet or dry
eetab-
Fram Ntw OrUant to San Franeiteo.
.14,194
. 4,9ií
. 4,681
8,804
fcttr.htiir.* TfiTT By Panama róúté, 4,606
attraeting very considerable jtfawagwM 8,7«7
Thomaa K. Likens, e¿ Heuderaon,
by the laat steamer, assures us that
Liberty'to Henderson to naturally
i, only requiring use and a few small
it reliable and pleasant either in aadw^Tava a t*oUl ofl
ither. He give# us the dlsUuoes| yearly. Tbisdireottravel,a d
follows; f&isa.ni i~
les. ..65 *
..............24
Reobss....'....81
.....v.. 16
18
86 172
:.;....::.4S
Shreveport.....Í...:i ...85 77
Shrevepert--..— .r..........849
dliU^ kaepQpand wit)t;the _^ ^
fa 84 «Usa; bat the bottoms of I Liverpool to Canton, via Saez..
Tehuantepeo route 8,704
Captain Cram^of the United States engineers,
and lately ohief engineer on. the Pacific military,
depot, estimatesayearly.travel of 80«0Ó persons;
to whiebadd- 68/KKIl others engaged ia Australian
"-jpasssnjaro
. ^ ^^tefaBt'wiMófi
mast be Mt in the shortest route by .the Atlantio
Sutes, point to shooess for this route. Other eon-
siderations illustrate thi; promise—such as the
travel between jihe.. places within the extremes of
the route; tb* transportation of United States mails
and sapplies for the naval and military sUtions in
the Chinese and Indian seasv as weU as on the
Pácifio; and the probability of doing much, if not
all, of the Eastern oarrying trade from England, as
China and India oaa-bee reached* fbarteen days
by this than by the Old World route.
tbafctbe title waa
S i
ts.
#5
K the
I *er,
to the title when
"Oil
were urged sgainat the title-
under whioh iVwas created was in
I atlndianola'
, nor can it be t
>tes of tin
r manner equal this." As
5?"? ■
doth . I
i -'"*2
óf poahuiia and T<
OEM tnrned wib.
S ftoe the grantee had received some
agues under this! law, which waa in viola-
SÉMWP
oare that not over eleven leagues of -{ánd be
~ in the same hands. ,Upon this ground, and
thsrjceasons, ooqstraing the concession itself,
Buirford delivered a very, olear and 'uoid
t and excluded the title, to which the plain-
and thus presents the question to the
irt. A verdiot of oourae followed, for
ed by fin )aat week. It to^tnkfi^MMa to haval
O work of an inoendlaty.
The Palestine Advocate states that Mr. B. I
were .argu
Hancock
ton'agtínrt the title, and by Mr. J. W. Harris and
~ ieral Chambers himself for the title. A. H.
Imers was also assooiated-^rith the counsel for
defendants, and Judge S. G. Sneed and Col.
:e4rton'With those of the plaintiff.
fact that the case gees before the 8upreme
■t prevents, pur publishing onr notes .of^tbe very
I arguments. It involves points not heretofore
itftfin Texas, and ^hicb of course arise upon
no other titles in the country. i-i
They will be disousaed at. the next term of the
Court at Austin.—Avrtin InteUigencer:
V..«.v Í
k 4 *<«— !*•••..■
jKysflhwti'i. 'ittaJg
oC Icaasjmere *."T" .1 **?.'.'..' " t
tivepow^tibn,byiín^^tom^K^raX^ " «
or SmtrUone." - wSüüS." w
The Creaoent makes ths'most unsorapalons uee cantMLPtawñélajv..^ 4
* « « <mmp«óns MMrfions to prove. *■ MR. •« •
w tt;h'llofT r*00owubnr«<'Ü
boat, built at Magnolia, and is now only writing ft r1"^ nnmnnr.rtrt ri.Ttr in thin rhita al " 4"*-" 11
water to fioat her .to the moath of the river. where I b«tTe-1 Tb* Coran*Ni41"1^ Shipping List, wh
she will restive her machinery. Mr. B. propoess 1.í'í W ohanrta. 1411 lon«"*tetod th* idea that the praasnt ci
taking Sown.a load of ootton with him. speetfully such fanoifol, though designing, o ugta, I ^ moB#y market was anweaehlng, begins i
j «ng . «oao oi ■ ' ■«" we wiU refer to a fcw facts and figures, whioh may pMwaaTe-
Boani Oil.—A uorapany for the manufacture of lead to the eharitable conclusion that the two I our Sw^tf4tíldÍBa for firat ola
rosto oil, is about being eaUblisbed at Mobile, Ala. horns of the Crescent have been Uken at some ofhg^M y while for
The vast pin? regions of the. south wffl thus be the fashionable saloons of New Orleans, or else are |tlonB, I
turned into profiubje account. The oil will be I the horns of a ^ilernma. -
made by a patent process, and will cost from 16 to I By the census óf 1860 the inhabitants of foreign
20 cents peT gallon. I birth in Louisiana and Texas were respectively as
| 'follotrt'S ■" : a
Lisbt Hoasita.-—There are no lees than 862 light-1 Waxmx vbom. 'Texas.
houses and light- vessels, bnitt or authorised to 6e '
built, on the Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico coast of]
the United States. Of these, 844 are lighted with I
the Fresnel light, most of Ytíoh have been fitted
or built since the year 1845; there have been but
two of this description of lights in use on this ceast|
up to the year 1840. : ■
Thi txhüanterjw Bouti.—The mails by the
steamship Texas, from Vera Cruz the- 2lst inst.,
were received thin morning, which brings the offi-
eial intelligence of the* annalling óf the Sloo grant
■of the right of way across the Isthmus of Tebuan-
best and most thorough geological talent to be ob-
6]^9S: tallied.' We iflude^ with the' lii^iést respect, to Dr.
a i" : Moore; Jr., the patriarchal ex-editór of the
Éston '3;ele8wPh, 'wfe9Be ganeral int^lliganoe and
rary attainments we valutas highly as bis besi
'' ''**' ; L'"' '
lis survey shoaldbe committed to the chief man-
agement of the best Geologist possible to obtain,
years to complete the work. The Reports, like those
of Missoari, should bé made as free as possible from
the ase of scientific terms and as plain to the ander-
"""■ÍÍA84' standing of the mass of farmers as possible. Let
' w >ri Si.!« V. m Jama anil if !n fki> Cto fa avncniio
this be done, and if in the end, the Sute expends
$60¿000 or $106,000 in the work, the people, as they
behold and realise its immense advantages, will say
it was wisely expended. A parsimonious provision
for so-important and laborious an undertaking, wil^
necessarily lead to the employment of second or
thlrd.rate.men, imperfeot work, ill-gotten up Be-
ports, and doubtful results. It is one of the things
that should be well done ornot done at all, and so
regarding it, is the reason for üke frankness with
which we have spoken., . It is too imporUnt for per
sohal friendship to influence our coarse |n refer-
ence to i<
If the Legislature should determine to aid any of
tie Colleges ofthe State, we would prefer seeing it
dune upon ««oh terms, as would secure in every such
institution a permanent professorship ^n AgHonl-
ture, Commerce, Navigation and Mechanics. In
ethw words, that state aid to such .institutions
should be sacredly , applied to the development^
our industrial pprsnite and olasses—that the youth
of the land might become intelligent cultivators,
merchants, mechanic* and navigators—giving us a
constantly accruing home: supply of mec intelli-
gently undemanding' the principles upon which
their respecóv .pursuits depend for their highest
and most beneficial v direction, for their own and
the aggregate good óf "the 8tate.
i Jacinto and Trinity are avoided, and
Kajor Likens says there to much lees sand, on the
new route. At Oreekett this line Intersects stages
for Nacogdoches and also the west; from Hender-
son there to a trl-weekly line to'Marshall and
Sbreveport, aa also hacks to various other pointe.
From this time tte, i^berty stealer will run
semi-weekly,connecting with the stages at Liberty, I .
by wh}<ib pssetogprs to or from Oalvpstpn wil1 ;k-
L tbreugh without detention at any point on
Do do • /. via Panama ..
Do
The A^ JP 1 ML,
ly impressed witb the importance ofithe
way across the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. __ .
•ve a number of the "Kch
I (Va) Constitutional Whig," dated March 9th,
1880, found among sundry old files in our Seiaps I
— • ••
#9.fodowWg,J
Wallace, to bél
^thoportof/Sa !
j seven yeats have rolled
by on thiwheels of time. San Antojo de Bexar ,
to now, «¿then, in Tetas; but Texas to in the U.| drr
L J. W. B. Wallace resides at Co- ■
i Colorado, hale and hearty.
64 days.:! Bail Boa m Mxsiop—Bio Gsahbx Itsks.—The
via Tehuantepeo '40 « jBrówna*?Ile Flag opntains the following items of
üe of this, frontier two newspapers, which
impart .thsf Ooeurrenoe of pksslng events to
adém—one in Matamoros, the Bameher , and
o... (if "this route • " " I one, El P« We, in Camargo. The latter, El Pueblo,
of $15,000,000, stipulated to be paid by by Gea..J, M. JvQaryj^U'aad.to not
lie, for the extentóon of our boundary and emmently democrat,c ip its tone,
New Mexioo and Upper asd Lower California, bnt ÍBolose«:an itoonat of Ulent 'that Will effect
wv,^Ó^Sn;r,'raZiieRftenment and improve-
and trantii airost. the Itihmut of l™80* of its country.
oared to the United Sutes by the 8th attlcie of the | Rail Road.—Gen. Carvajal's par er, 'El Pueblo,'
projet, shall be a part Of the treaty^" Isays that subscriptions have been obtained to the
■ , « « . , — I amount of onemillionof dollara for the building of
we are glad to see that the late personal dimoulty |not then the people, of Matamoros must bestir
in Austin has been honorably adjusted : I themselves if they would not s^e the trarf e of north-
Trait d' Union of the 18th inst., pnblishes
at length President Comonfort's decree annulling
the Sloo grant, and conceding to the company late-
ly epUblisbed In our oity the piivilege of opening
r-ooeanic communication aproas the Isthmus of
Tehuantepec. The decree, which is very lengthy,
provides that the'Louisiana company shall imme-
diately esUbiisb communication by wAter to the
highest navigable point on the Coatzacoalcos river,
and within eighteen months from the date of the
privilege, commence the construction of a railway
from said point to a port on the Paoiflo—a carriage
road to be opened and kept in order'until the com-
pletion ofthe railroad. The Government concedes
to thó company all the land nesessary for the con-
struction of the roads, depots, stores, & p., and the
exolusive right of tranaporUtion aoross the Isth-
mus.
The privilege is granted for the term of sixty
years, during which time the government will be
entitled to fifteen per cent, of the net profits pf the
Company, and reeeive, in addition thereto, twelve
cents for each passenger or paokage.carried on the
road. The decree contains, besides the above, a
large number of provisions respecting this conces-
sion, the most important of which are the one
which obligates the company to refund to Mr. F.
P. Falconet, $800,000 advanced by him to the Sloo
Company, and the one binding the Government to
proteot the new Company in the proseoution of the
work on the road.
Hie Trait d' Union, and the Mexican press in
general,, are loud in condemnation of this decree ;
the pripcipa! objection being that the government
has abandoned many advantages which had been
secured in the first or Sloo grai.t. All, however,
agreq,in saying that the .sacrifice 1b not to be . re-
gretted if < speedy termination of thi6 great enter-
prise is obUined.
: . Beeides these oomments on the 'decree eaUblish-
ing the Louisiana Tehuantepeo Company, /our
Mexioan exbhanges.oontain nothing of interest to
our readers. It was rumored in Mexioo &at the
liberals had attempted an insnrreotion in. Puebla,
but, ap to our last dates, this rumor had not been
oonfirmed.—flrue Delta
COMKAMDIK OF THK UTAH EXPEDITION.—The
Louisville Courier, has a biography of General
Johpston, who has lately received the appointment
to that portion of the army which to to deal with
the rebeliioas Mormons of Utah. He waa born in
1802, in Mason, county, By., and graduated at
West Point, with distinction, in 1886. For the next
eight years he served , in the United Sutes army,
andjwas engaged in the Black Hawk war. In 1838
he resigned his commission in the army and went
to' Texas. And as Adjutant-General did much to.
organize'it and give it efficiency. In 1887 he be-
came GeneraMn-Ghtof of the Texas army, and in
188? was the Secretary of War in the Republic,
and participated in a memorable Indian fight in
gland...,.,.......;... 1,008
Ireland.... 1,40
Sweden.... 861
Wales 17
Germany..........*. ^91
W A horse and buggy were stolen from In]
front ef the Methodist Church last night, and not
recovered nntil after mid-night, when they were]
found in another part of the town, where tbey had
been left by the perpetrator of the offence. Mr J
David Ayers offer* a suitable reward for the detec-
tion of the offender. This to sot the first outrage I
of tbe kind whieh has been committed here, and it
is determined to maka an example whiéh' will bej
likely to put a stop to this speeiés of larceny;
fg* We have again to condole with friend i
Cashing, of . the Teiegragb, on the death of bis in-
fant daughter, Mary Nannie, who died on the
26th, following iu mother to the grave.
Franoe........ ¿.ca-..i
Spain.
Portugal .,
Belgium
HdUaad.
Turkey............
Italy..............
Austria 11
Switzerland 184
Bussia................... 10
Norway.. 106-
Denmark 49
Sweden........ 48
Prussia.........'. 76
Sardinia 0
Greece 0
China.. 0
Asia..... ............ 0
Africa ..ivi... .14:
British Amerioa y.... 187
Mexioo (transferred to Tex.) 4,469
Central Amerioa..., . 8
South America.... .... 1
. West Indies.............. 22
Other Countries......... y 65
IiOUiaiAKA.
8,650
84,866
1,196
48
17,617
11,668
1,417
167
lis
118
48
916
166
788
.66
64
,. 288
149
880
9
88
88
17
90
490
406
8
16
1887
1178^
good partiee. There to very little unempli
lUl in the market seeking Investment, v
! supply of paper to Urge, and very «keaaly 1
zed by capitalists. From the great ponti
the ourrenoy, amounting to many mllllo
tbe last month, It woold bs folty to ei
tsrial diminution in the stringency for
to eome.
886,189
681,778
"10,671
to show
EuSibiijtt. AaAra.-'-The Telegraph still persiste I 16,764 66,418
in its view of tbe .ineligibility, of members of the] ThetoUI native populationofliouisiana.then was
Legislature to tbe;United States Senate. In, reply j272,958—iaolading 17,468 freé negroee, more'than
dokbstio conbumftioh o* cottok,
Tork papers give tbe following aa tl
bales of ootton consumed in the Unit
ing tbe last four yean :
Tear*.
1848-48...:.
1847-48
1868-64
1866-67....................
The Courier and Enqairer
'hat this home consumption will im
standing the present curtailment in
the northern mills, from: the high
Thus it shows that from„l$6$-64 to 1!
erease was 91,667 bales, and'that froi
1866-^7 a period of fourteen years, the I'
the crop was only 660,827 bales, while
in the consumption was 877,009 bales,
tbe increase of the oonsupjption |n the
| States was 67 per cent, over turn-thirds of
inorease in the production: also, that while In
46 the consumption in the United SUtes was
16 per oent. of the total production, that in
the consumption was 24 per oent. of the produotii
e North1
it telle as though
Um Sprint, b'
i . withflow ^
the North Wind,foc t to reckless
It pomes not to serve as, it seeks not to save,
in|B*t headlong and dadiing it rushes along,
«2-1Alld truer than ever was lullaby song.
Í love the North Wind, for I know it hat
O'er graves of the loved ones for whom I
wept,
And e'en if it blighted the roes-tree la bio.
Th%t shaded hi*
Galveston, Sept. 88,1867
New
iber of |
dur-
Doestioxbm Boston.—The famous'
has famished the N. Y. Picaybne an
bit visit to Boston, from which tha i *
tracts are made:
Ninety-nine extra-sised angle wonni
at high pressure speed about a garden
of showery afternoon, and being perpe
ootton. back when they got to tbe edge, and
'the in- cross sach other's trail in Innumerable
M would, if the ground were soft and their <
Wacu the Nxoboxs auk Ownos-The tolloi
to onr request that it would publish the views ofl the,entire foreign born population of TMas,4nolñd-1 table is made, up from the atotistios of the
Senator Butler, one of the most profound jurists ] ing Mexioans. The total native population of Texas I o^dbus, 1860, and may not bo familiar to all our .
South Carolina ever produced, it selects a prelimi- was 164,084, of whom only 897 were free persons °f The Southern SUtes rank in slave popi '
nary remarkof ihateminentmac.instead of glv-loolor. Thus nearly one fourth of the free whit^ I ¡a tj,e following order:
ing the deliberate expression of his opinion after [population of Louisisna were persons of foreign yirwini«.
mature rejection. |bir^h and about one sixteenth of the native popu- — - -
The Telegraph'asks— | lation were free negroes, while in Texas the pro-
"Have the'¡States the power to superadddlsablli- portion of foreign to native born was only one in
ties to those established by tbe United SUtos Con- nine, and, of free negroes to native whites, lees than
stitutlont" one in four hundred.
We answer that the United States Senate, after We have not at hand all thereturns of passengers
an elaborate discussion, decided that the States I „riving within the two states slnoe 1860; but those
could not, a vote of 86 to 8. | for 1864 and 1866 happen to be before us. In 1864
that I homeland has got more comen thaá aeord of
'altedj oroes-cut saws.
Tontee your friend, and yon call out, "Jooea,
wait a minute," and y ou start to see Jones, think-
ing he to just across the street.
Misguided man I tor distant Jones 1 you "
nil hills, and turned ninety corners befon
get within hailing distance of Jones •
Tbe streets look as if they had I
2. South Carolina.
S. Georgia
4. Alabama .... .....
472,828
.......884,984}
881,6821
841,848
...808,878
where else, and dumped her* In a huge
~ nobody had ever taken the trouble tot
them out again. It looks as U eom
n building a lot, of cities by eonuraot, and the
badn't eome oat even, and he had thrown
• remnant of streets, and odd ends of alleys
snipped off bits of tones and aveuues, and
It Boston. If any street in town should be
attraihgt mile in any direction, it would go
mgh a dozen private parlors and lorty five pub-
music bails, in fact, Boston looks as It first
•: :::::::: >::::::::: |
7. Louisiana
8. Tennessee....
9. Kentucky.....
,244 gOg i and poured through aseiveona aide hill and left
".l"i$MM p *001*
....,,210,«811
. . .. .. 'fn u.„i>ni r'oa's ! !,. Thc Aoeoba Bosxaus.—Professor Olmstead, at
One or two plain questions will place this matter there arrived in Texss«,068, (the greatest ¿umber 5^*®° the Scientific Conventiob, read a highly Interesting
so distinetly against the Telejpaphthat even It can- in an, ,ear) wWte si,169 arrived in Louisiana. In 7^ jasper oh "Electrical Hypothesis ofthe lata Bo-
,ot fan to see it. 8aPP°"'1J*- ^«"Ph^ ~n" 1866 the number of J,US arrived iu Texas and 80,- {|; I.'
stitntion of Texas provided that no member of its 888 in Louisiana. Last year 999 arrlvedinTexaa^at 116. Florida. 80,810 tioñ ef the "Origin sñB <^use of tbe-Aurora Bore-
Legislature.should be eligible to the office of Presi-1 we have got the returns for Louisiana, though the 116. Delaware ' 2,290 alis." Contrary to the opinion whioh ascribes it
dent or Vice-President, Judge of a Federal Court, nBUa] proportion doubtless holds good. Tbe nuniber of slaves in Texas is now over one) t0.'ert#®t{sJ br msgoetiam, ha
U. S. Marshal, Distriot Attorney or member of the | Tn i860 Texas had a slave populatlrfp of only | hundred thousand. | Sie^ttrt ofwhwfit .WMMmpoMd' b^ '
from the planetary spaces:
In .1860 Texas bad a slave population of only I hundred thousand.
CaWneti Would any manofeeuse pretend for alsg^gi-in 1866 (tbe last ComptollerVTeport)^it bad) - . .
moment that this would not confliot with the fijd- increased to 166^608, and is now more than double &*!& a Boouwb dow the Sierra Nsvada.— of the exhibitions, sometimes spreading from eai
eral constitution, and be, therefore void? If not, tbe nomber of I860. In 1860 tbe slave population) ^Wleon J,he summit ofithe South Dome^wedls- [
then eaPb Bute might impose restrictions on the 0f Louisiana was 244,819 ; in 1866, aoeording to 1
quaiificaJionB for either or all those offices, In direot Auditori books, it was 868,197 , an inorease of ibout | , ,
antagonism to the federal constitution, and a piti- eight per oent. Daring the same timft the free neg-1 health. This had been gradually undermined I many digiees of longitude, the different stages j
zeo of one State would be eligibl. while precl^ly roes of the latter state had inorewed from 17,468 tól^ ^^0? the a^M^nilf'p"^1 ^'the^sami^ro^h^STad^Ung^t^'a ,
the Same sort of oltizen of another State awould not 2^,848, or more than 25 per oent. Nor should a I ability it would have made its own way dewo the I plaoe on the earth, in its diurnal revolution, comes
he substantially tro uniform ].^AV Orlnnna mnn nmlnrhlHnif kn ~ '
rule of qualification.
be, and there would be sabstantially no uniform New Orleans paper, anderteking to reason upon mountain in a few years more. L:, wit'b his usual I successively under the nearest point of the Auroral
He of qualification. daUof thiaklnd, overlook the: foot that the freé }<>« of mischief and adventure, proposed to dis- bbdy, situated1 inipace. Thlrfiyjrem tbeeeÍM^
Again, suppose one Sute or half the SUtee, were negroeB of New Orleans, acoording to official retaros, looat* ll *nd tlme down t0 the bottom~a dl*-t ^ ?g two small tor light itself, but
#• . a. .« 1—--—- i tanoe not far from three thousand feet. With the too great to result from any known terrestiai foree,
to demand a religions test lor eitnur or all ot tnese i outnumber the slaves in the proportion of over six aid of some limbs of trees, whioh served as crow-1 as magneUo or electrical fractions, occasioning
offices. The same result would follow. I of the former to five of the latter. The number of bars, wo scraped the earth from beneath its outer-
.
t , a ,r. , , v,, r triaalatioa of the matter of the Aurora; fourthly,
The office ofUnited States Senator stands on I .laves in this State increased from 81 099 in 1846 ledge'and after half an bourns industrious efforts,! from the periodicity of the Anrors, especially its
... . .... Slaves in tnis state inoreasea irom at,v , in J^ . Th« monster «lowlvsscular neriodioiiv appearinc at long but neai
[Taylor county, Va., in con-
passed the following:Among other
'■ .
ia special favor of the M. E.Chnreh
" r oharohee that may consider
oral vineyard for the
ly suoh ministers sá
■gh to enable them to
idBng . with the oivil
atry.
itisfactoiy to the honor of both parties the dtf-S? W W'U -AWS,4hat the
■hieh resulted in A hostile rencoptre tjito |íí°,?f?í wagonwnnptoompetew.iti
have determined that each party with1 One tram of railroad can will take more freight
;be several charges made ag^nst the other, f mules, and carry it further In a
reoentlv appeared lathe columns of the ®at« day ha mules could in a week,
«and Tswir&atiM and thatall earaeaofft New Camargo presente the same facilities as
'does MaUmoroAr-save.only the distanoe, in river
navigation. Steamers'can land the merchandise
at Camargo with the same ease, and with but little
more cost as at Matamoros, and there oan be no
denying that, with a railroad from thenae into the
interior, Camargo, anlesa steps were taken to pre-
vent it, would beoome in a .very short spaee,of time,
the great emporium of the frontier. Less than
diffiealty and hostility are hereby-declared honor-
ably adjusted and finally settled
Austin, Sept. Mthy'1867. . ^
"THCS. F. MoKlNNBY. .
F.M.GIBSON.
B. J. TOWNES.
JOSBPHOS U. STEINEB.
WM. BTBD."
Seleoted by
W. O. Pbilljps.
Seleoted by
Joan Marshall.
Assented to
(JOHN 8. FOBD.
tW. C. PHILLIPS.
1JOHN MARSHALL.
half the energy And capital expended by oar mer-
chants with those of Matamoros, wonld continue the
which the Gherokees, seven hundred strong, were
derated by the Texans. When the Mexican war
broke out, joined the American army at Point
Isabel,-and was elected Colonel of the first Texas
regiment. He served in tbe battle of Monterey,
and was aid to General Butler. His post during
the battle was principally with the Ohio regiment,
commanded by Col. Mitchell, of which Hon. John
B. Weller was major. This regiment was in the
hottest of the enemy's fire, and their Colonel fell
wounded in the streets of Monterey. They after
wards repelled a charge of lancers when shattered
with, grapesbot. Gen. Johnston's horse was thrice
wounded, but bore him through gallantly. For
his conduct on this eventful day Gen. Johnston was
complimented for .gallantry and- military skill by
Generals Taylor, Butler and- Hamer.
: When the four new. regiments were formed, un-
der Gen. Pierce's administration, he received the
commaad óf Colonel. Since then he has remained,
for the greater part of the time in command of the
department of Texas,, restraining Indian, depreda-
tions, .avoiding conflict with the civil authority,
and giving complete satisfaction to the people of
Texas, as evinced By the flattering tone ofthe pab-
lie press of that State towards him. The best, proof
of the estimation in which his services are held by
the administration to his present responsible ap-
pointment.
precisely the same footing. It is a federal office, a I to 105,608 In 1856—being a gain of more than three I Joílid'from °ite*bS^f «wnúitos,' and Itaranother definite Interval in ?^nd*ser!es°of exhibfiloni,
part of the federal government, orea ted, defined andJ'jjUI1(j,^j pg,. 08Qt¡ jn ten yeBrs. moment was plunging down the mountain aide. I whioh increase to a maximum and then diminish
qualified by the.ied«ral oonstitution,Just as folly The Creeoent áaka for statistics to rifcow that half shall never forget the terrifio feroe with whioh that to numl r and intensity,until the phenomenon, in
and; eompletely as the offioe of Preeident of the of Ta.„ u noi raD1dlv becominu abolitionized - bonIdOT thanelerecl down intothe^^alIe/. ploughing its grandest forms, vanishes f^om oar nocinrual
TTnir ^ Rt.t™ ..j T.n™v,™nl rapidly Becoming aoolitionized.— a th through the eartb, bounding from crag to heavens—a fact whioh appears to remove it «rom
Upited States, and the debates on the Trumbull hope tbe above are safficient. If not we have orajj, awakening the echoes for miles among tbe I the pale of terrestiai, and to bring it clearly within
case show that it was so regarded by the master I at ]ea|lt the 0onf,oiation of good company. If these I surrounding summits. Large pines and cedars which the domain of astronomical causea, implying a ne-
mlnds, the greatest jariste,in the United States Sen- «.nres Drove ánvthins thév show at least that Texas stood in- its path were snapped off like pipestems.fbulous body in the planetary spaces, from which
ate. and eaneeiallv those who hAv^ all thei, V_^_ .Í" It leaped like a thunderbolt through dense oIuateraTthe material of the Aurora is derived, having a
•te, and especiaUy those who have hejd all their] ^ worse condition thánLbUlslana.in this mat- ,"¿"nd~we oouíd ^"see the' tall tre^tope bow | revolution around the San, and a ^riod In a near-
to the right and leftas the destroyer swept tbri
lives to the great Démporátio dootrine ofStrictCon-1 jer; The faot) however, is that the "peaalaT insti- w
struction. W.e do nbt propose to continue a discus-J tntíon> was never safer, and public sentiment khom-
sionon a point so palpably plain, and one that I 0!1 the 8Tjbjeoti in either state, than at pre-1 l^e
properly belongs to the Legislature to act upon unt>
practically
Tax Kídtralitt Laws. —Aoooud ts from Wash-
ington say that the administration is determinpd l ^f- Human nature is pretty.mneb the same in |fowhe^And gold ^t^es,in"htosiepril tiona n>
onforoe the Neutrality lawn, and has already men of every creed. Bel igloos freedom, making on cause and effect.
taken the initiatory steps for that purpose. Iflr nftn 0f all persuasions equal before the law, entitled
stations have been sent to Marshals and District 110 the 8aB,e pTivUeges in the State, is tbe surest
road to the latter city—for from Camargo to Mata-
moros the distance is not so great, and the country
is far more favorable for ite construction. And
then what mind can. oomprehSQ^ tbe advantages?
Thi Shob
ing dtopatoh :
Supply of Luster. . DU *u° u
Editor Civilian .—You stated in your yesterday's I
iaper, that the great reduotion of the Imports of coast, with an already populated country tosupr'-
Mobile Lumber into Texas the last year has been In and! with the-hordes of. immigrants that sue1
ptoaBsarar—
It is stated here that the I This to only partly oorreot. We formerly received ^^9 the beginning of an era 1
nearly all the good lamber from Mobile; now, none [ happiness and riches, suoh as was never
on Boas thi cxktbalc
1 Patriot haa the
This great falling off has been I by their most sanguine visionaries. ThS people of
these two States,-or rather.three, of Tamaulipas,
of
^Tt to ascertained that
board the 111-fated steai
sured in London. The
cargo," "
pose
yytJ ■ rv - -
on board_(reoeived I worthy of ^ note. ^ ... . . w„... 1 tnese iwo ataies, or ratner loree, «i xamaunpas,
®d> ($1,600,000) she I caused by the inferior quality of the Mobile com-- [ Leon and Coahuila, have the capital. It
. alone, or $2,400,000. pared with the Penaacola pine, consequently our L,ly; «quires the energy. Will they exert that ep-
amouot ia the banda I (nrie has been turned-to the latter pon. Our W- ergy! Time will show.
wo r wo I gjjpjg lumber from Florida theyear upto 1st I Judicial.—The fall term of the District Court
Sep*, inst. were ovbr two million feet, and Isnow^ln session at
„ , , , . . _ ., . „ - this place, Judge M. P. Norton, presiding, this gen-.
Calcasieu one million feet, and Sabine about eight |tleman having exebanged Districts with the Hon.
hundred thousand feet. The supply from "our o*n |E. J. Davis, Judgé of thl District. ' judge Norton
Enolasd amd Ibdia.—Tbe London lime , of
Sept. 1.,says: "It was on Saturday, the 87thof
Juñe, that the curt and scarcely credible commu-
nications of the telegraph first announced to the
country that the mutiny: of the Bengal Arinyhad
assumed the characteristics now bat too well known.
On Wedeesday, the 1st of July, the stream of re-
inforcements from these shores to Calcutta set
steadily out, and from that hour, to the present it
ledóf has flowed on continuously, and with so sustained
a* even- accelerated a current,
i-fiftha of the gold on
t Central Amerioa Is in-
wlth vessel and
nderwriters here pro-
1 the go|d at once.
!■■■ ti^t We scarcely
know where to look, for^^any similar example. On
a single day in July>-rthe 21st—bíx vessels left
these coasts, conveying W00 troops; and the whole
¡giflÜ^g ^ ' ¡That mouth
J
month which terminated yesterday, wititeesed ré-
doubled efforts, as the energies of the"country rose
JHBmPl promptly to the level of the exigencies which each
mills" ia inoresaing every year and bat for tbe diffi-1 haa Mntly b««nre-eleoted Judge of thelithJadi-1 mtóia^ló^ced. Intb« aggregAte we dispatdied
.nit. fl„.,i„_ 1™ .V. _i,|. I cial District. To ihji belongs the honor of having jiotheEaatin July, about 9,000 troops; m August
r £--->■ 1 , g y " y T ^ T organtoed tbe first ponrt under the juriadiotion o we sfcnt upwards of 15,000, and in ships of greatét
Taras Caik* do not appiar to stand the entire nearly supply our Texas markets, except in Dresaed Texáa on this frontier. We weleome him back to - - — - - - -
trip toKew Y«ik, and keeptbeeondition Inwhiohl lamber. New and large milis are being erected I tbe aoene of his former iabors.
they leave our prairiee. W4 notice an aeoount of on the Neohea and Caloaaiea rivers'where the pine
the arrival in ¿at city of ltt head belonging to| and oyprees is aa good as the Florida, so it is pro-
- _ .... _ NawsPAiaaa im Kansas.—The followipg, aocord-
followlng account | bable that in a few yean, we wtll be independant I ing to Thé Sqnatter Sovereign1, are the papers now
of both Mobile and Peaaaeola for onr supplies ofl published in Kansas, nineteen in all. Thoee mark-
a hard let of Texians, bought I good lumber, and thus a vast amount ef money will ed with a ¿ are Democrats:
ithfeh are selling a'I be retained here and our trade greatly increased, I fKansas Bereld ..'..Leavenworth.
tbe b|at—eay S@83iC;| ' B. B. P. 1-j-Leaven worth Journal..
i >■ I Times..;..
Isdiaxs nr Maxioe.—The savages are still com- Herald of Freedom. . — .Lawrence.
mitting depredations on the Mexioaa frontier. Bepublican^...
" " "ishee accounts Begister Wyandotte.
aád Oaab^l«. |cif '* ^ " •
Mr. Thomaa White, of whioh
ia given:
•;Tbea.
1
Sb« t
Se individaais ioee*, we should have baea rnnoh
mere so If It had been apon a good lot of cattle.
...... ¡¡gggljjgM
atlon.
suoh a thtae are a drug| 1# a h«roie fight between twelv* __ ,
and three1 Mexicans—a 8r; GCnaalca and bia two
sons^ in which the savages were routed with some.:
from a gentleman I less, though one of theee brave men, a son of
bree months since,! elder Qonaales, waa killed. The sapa paper at
td to lease a store I that another party af Indians had Been chased
for the
'An...... .Quindario.
Sovereign .Atchison.
Zeitnng (Getraan),.........
tutienauit...:...-;....... ....Doniphan
K........... White Cloud.
....... Laoom pton«
Tribune ....Topeka.
News. • li ..-i i-. .<>.... .Emporra.
__ Leader.... -.. Jiá'ii '.'iiiVi Á ÍV. Cen tropolis.
haa been ealled.tojvñane.: ÜThii Sa á proper spirit; IPreemMía Champion, Prairie Ci^y.
bat in this, we doubt not, from the well known ac- 1+Note Book .Teeumseb.
tivity of Qov- Oarea, hat ha will be found equally tEnterprise .Kansas (Sty.
"«W 1
j of D
1 Mexican
our own I)
our whole
the poo-
mtm fnot
are tak-1 it persaver _
f of Texaa for Ora Nbi«hk>«s.—The political
Governors, ■ BHI
of thoee SUtee, have just been
—Sr. Oaiaa of tha former^
latter. TbaLegl*totó«W
5S
Rusbxso Watbrs.—The Austin Intelligencer
I "
"Afriead of ours who waa out in the rain Moa
day last, and got slightly Irrigated, gives ns á
graphic account of the way creeks rise in Texas,
ralb was coming down in a most decided man-
Hto way led him oter.a creek, which when
.rfSffir® purpose
^ roaring and
about four feet
IW
m
asked I volted
a-.. ■■
.S-W'i
irri of I dowp the steep bank toto the bad of tba credk for
th# purpose'of coring, ha heard a tremendous
farmer, I should make a;
*¡[® j rearingFand crashing; and looking up tbe creek ha 1 ordered to be
saw about four feet perpendicular of water eomincJ
«him, aad he bandy had Unm,
lady in-lnP trees, and sweeping away *t<
mm
•f - - -
. , . , .. ., , , .... - j privileges enjoyed'by nominal ohristianB, who are, j this or that artiole is a matter which dfiea not oon be turns him off to at
>pv ^ ^
. Nxwspapbb Ikpjsbsomamtt.—'The paper, whioh I ton (Illinoils) opfrespondent of the New York Day
Attorneys on the Beaboard as well as to ,the officers] m„f i.n(l of making all mnull annA und nktrlmin the mere.monthpieoe of an individual, the reflex Bookstates thift the agent for the transportation1 of
ofthe Army and Navy to use all lawful means at^ i * d P Í ST of the peouliaritiea and idlosyncraoies of a single panpers from the Five Points, New York, has been
^ eiroommand to n^e vent ZbelwdtionTleTvin^ 1° ma°y Dat,0rl8 °f Eur°pe' eTen 'D th9 «•"« • !«"• to make iteelf unpopalaror bringing car loads of white children to tbe Wert
tbeir oommand to.prevent saoh expeditions leaving I mogt enhghtened, and even in one of tbe States ot l ludicrous, aad can never be a power in the 00m- and selling tbem out (aa he says) to pay their uc~
the United States. 'this Union, men of the Hebrew faith are still sub- munlty. So long as the namea of the publishers are penses. Boys and girla are sold at from $16 tof"
*" -"""'-y;. If the ptmhaser finds he
holds on to his servant; If
- ÜAll.kl. .f tk. <ui.. . I r• •«— J — > > I II1IB ur Minn BI kivro 10 a maim n uniu UUVD uvu uuu - I ue imiu, mni UU w shift for himself. The pt
formation deemed Tellable, of the fitting out of Jpractically,-aa far from beiag true followers ofthe I cern tie pabilo, and for which they oare nothing.! er is under bo obligation to take care of him
three eever^l expeditions, viz; at New York, NevHfa|th they profess aB the 0lass they proscribe Nor do they trouble themselves muoh about edlto-j ia a oase in point: Thoa. Butler, a half-witted
Orleans and Mobile, for the re-invasion of Nicara-J jyen «The JewthatShakspeare drew," .¿hough or^4do£over's steeí^SbS^'AI m'1
gaa, under tha lMdership of-Oenv Walker. Intelh- J a pnre fi„tion, waa made by the revengeful creature newspaper oMnfluepce *nd ability is an inaStution, him 1—t t— , -
gence from an otUoial quarter has cometo hand of p0rtrayed by the poet through the harshness and not a personality, and its expressed opinions of a him off, and he haa been forced to sleep In, .
another expedition, having its centre in, if not „f h*¡ot¡ „ hmthran in th« atnnV number of men aoting with unanimity, with 00m- stables, <fcc., and beg his bread. ,
nearly altogether confined to Texas for the inva- P ° ? ° r ^ u , ^3 mpn motive, and with a fixed purpose. Louis Na- This'ls a ¿ne specimen of abolition pbilaMlV.
n.?Tt'r I . 1!. ^ of mon wh0 hBV8 not iraPT0!ed poleon crippled the French press effectively, when The business to nnderetood to be very pro ^ *
of Mexico, and it is snpposed being designed mnoh in mora]B 0r magnanimity sinoe the palmy he compelled every newspaper-article to bs signed in New Tork,and tbe.Day Book aays that It
for the 8éizure of tbe State of TaniftulipM. The}da_8 0fVeni0e. A writer in the Rochester Union by the name of its writer; and the lionckon Timea l oipally carried on bj abolitioniaU, who thi
writer addsf that General Sam Houston is by the Rflv« hoth trnlv And wall— woold ^ h?lf vlf°T *£á }*&*•*< were the horrible thinf to seU negroes, but who fcaTt
.. .«¿ii j Bays, ootn wuiy ana wen I same rule to be adopted in England. I same soneamisht *
reports reosi ved implicated as the leader of the ex-
pedition.
The last statement is wholly unfounded,
AaaoxmoH or Mattxb. — Aooordlng 1
ui<nuicu,And in every branob of industry, science I 8lA*M. The Panama
and arts, Jewish names shine with Undisputed Star, of thelith ult., says:—M. Eagene Rohen,, . n M R u .r i—
„ „ _ _ „ , , 1 splendor. From Mendlessoha, the great friend of the French Naturriist, who lately prooured a num- mente made by Sir David Breweter. it apWS
w^ofEnvland Mwa^ronf tWwast'eoSt of Afrioa !L«ssing, who died mourned by kinjrs, down to iber of lamaa in Peru ud Ecuador, for tha Spanish I 'i'vti'J
dated a?8wrre^e6ne, 18th alt. The bnly pews?f| ^S^rtótw'unttv^JA^have^bMn f6 of><^ern®«nt- *"1.we undamtand. arriwhore froml°i]^.,#8i
tabsm?o™mot^!LOTiffthe^Mast^with^as muoh visor artists, celebrated phjBicians; lawyers,
ambassadors, and some had tongnes evan sAy can
AniiiA^l^^.lr.wl?tiT didates for the presidency of tbe United States.—
m not I la this great country the liberal
seventy slaves on board and In the act óf shipping I Sstituttc«"lsV«é'mb^in'ímwSieíof au'hsT'n^l Thb Morsas Moulds the Max.—That it is the I a tubs, the colore wYli be arranged in
more at tbe time of capture. A' great namljaikpt ltnraland adopted obildren, and oertainly the Jews mother whomolds tbe man, is a sentiment illas I outermost of which ia black, oorre-poi
sizóAnd swiftness than before. In the 29 vessels
departing during July, there Was only' a single
steamer; in the 28 which followed in Angúst, there
were no fewer than 17. Those readers—and there
will doubtless be many wbose^ interests will carry
them through the details of these statistics, will
find the information very intelligibly tabulated in
another column .of bur impression this morning.
Some 25,000 soldiers, it wilt be Seen, have left
England for India since the is.' of July last; irres-
pectively ot all those reinforcements which have
been assembled at Calcutta from other parts of oar
Eastern dominions, or drawn from .eur.o.ther colo-
nies or expedition's. If it is remembered that these
efforts have been made with a peace establish*
cruising off the coast evidently waiting a chano
° 08 " he ha Jew, but he is also not woree-aad if I
le^prts otthe Northern P atea. '^tfao^ som^M T' 0¿¿ltí^ held a eonsultatio^ with one of their chiefs res-1 were produced. Qaart* exhiblte^b .
' ""—I dLiwhTdid™tbuv bL2-1 pec ting the successive stages of their progress In I Uke glass; but calcareous apar, Ihd sefrel other
A Cbicaoo milwokanut.—Eighteen years ago Bat what has religion to do with all these matters I 'he arts of civilised life, and amongother'things minerals.did not. In explanation of tbfpbeiiojr.
E. B; Ward, the millionarie of Chioage, sailed a | Thn nBniar did not sell bad iewelrv because he waa I he Informed me that, at their start, they fell lntoa|enon, it hstatad that the iiarliolee of the^ap which
mnft even now M. „ JPJHL.
lus and- Durham led .the van of the squadron,-two
clear months have elapsed tbis'.very morhmjg. ^
„—te payment; one
. , . os the table the other to be
water eomingj read that day six months.
in its ren aril Circnit, hád a larie atom thrown at bi
with tha ii haval
I in New" York on
About a thousand '"A-
a, were present, and a eetablWunent, for the <
(spirit of tha oeeaaion. the.offloUl rept, is fix^d at
are ae trae
! sün to Uve as tbe natives.
irough ly simple ratio to tbe earth s perlodis.
Presently it reaobed a ñrppipipé, bounded . .
into th« ri Aha'iatór'aíd^mnd sw.*-!" wbit* Childkxm.—There is a society in
into the river below, throwing tbe^water and mud U^ew York, which expects muoh credit for humanl-
*n imDor""ltl ''- • • • ^ "- children, and find tbem
The naturalized population^ both states I high and far, and act ally making an important | IZh.
true to the lawaunder which they have cho- change in the couse of theatrwm, wMohtt partial- infa ^ A laM nnrnborof Harper.'
IkHÉMiÉBMiÉl n5 « Up" Ü\n -if j,,1 Magazine refers in very ealogistic terms to the oper-
stiona of tbeae philanthropiate. There are no donbt
serve to pnzzle some scientific geologist, with bigh n«rlaot«d children in our" larca
In fnrnhnnd and oold anaotaolea. in hia anecnlationa an- m,"y negiectea cniiaren in onr large
cities whose
oondltion would be muoh improved by their removal
to the agricultural districts. But abolition philan-
thropy will not bear close inapeotion. A Waehing-
" Jews whenever emancipated, have nobly and
gloriously worked side by side with their Christian |
brethren,a
same sqaeamishness about white obildren .•fith-
I mend
sqaeamis
Ditpateh.
trodacelnto the United States.
upon, will exhibit, in t¿e most beautlfalaanner,
all the colors of tbin platea. If wa bit
Ml
8 fully eqaipped toi the aove trade, ^Be I have never diBgraoed America. We do not pretend j trated by the fallowing recorded observation of a I centre of the system of rings formed
y{ to say that a Jew is better than another man be- shrewd writer:
" : • - - — ■- — . .,!=•
to tha.
oonvex and a plain surface, "in repealiti tblaex-
^wttwriusr; .' T_j: r I periment on tbe anrfaoes of other bod "
When I lived among theObootaw Indians 11 fonBd that there were several on wbowJ
~— oolors were produced. Quartz exhibit, '
of Chioage, sailed a The pedlar did not sell bad jewelry because he was he ihformed me that, at their start, they fell into a . ,. ...
small schooner «n the lakea. Ia l845 he took com-1 „ and the banker did not act in his way be I great mistake. They only sent their boys to| dissolved by the breath, either
maidof a craft of 860 tons, which was the com- 0|uise he wss a Christian." 1 • - ' ■-— L —
menoement of Ward's Lake Saperior Une. Within
the last sixteen years he baa paid to shipbuilders!
Slid other meohanios, to employers and laborers,
■bore'than two and a half millions of dóllara. In
the brief period of sixteen years he has accumulated,
of the bodiee,- or form 1
school. These boys came home intelligent men, porcsoftbe bodi -,
I but the,married A^ci^i^wiv^ JSSoCif 2* -
and the uniform result was that the children "ere | newlsan<i ¿{.tinot ¿haraoteriatic of mln^l and other
over and abova all liabilities, a fortune of a million lmaat be a democratic _
and a quarter. Per some years he had intimate] ladies—address tbe apí>íic«¡tidi
Candidate for Matrimony r «Mrtert. vtta.--A.iWiw «K ló«.|r!Sr
The nndersigned announces himself aa a candi- ,, I, . . . WK ■ . .hiUMn And'
date for the office of Benedict, Pne vote to el^t. IX | U kU ?£&&*££
J-
.—That pears aJ apples oan
., ,i— rr— -m— ,—., ... _ , , w ,, .i.,,, and near th^coaat, too,* ia
and. complicated basslness connections with the at Newport, Walker oonnty, Texas. they beoome mothers, they edacate their son^ n0¿ to a ^uinty. We «re presented
Michigan and Central Bailroad, Involving mUlions BOBT. LEAKEY. This is the point, and it is trae. No nation can with several pears, from tbe oroba* of Major A.
of dollars, and the transactions were all based on a The abeve appears In the Hunteville Item as ad I become fully enlightened when mothers are not, IH. Phi'lipe, Of this place, which ren^ded us of old
X££S5S£2SS?£'£2S'
^ _ ooatract .ever existed between them ; eaeh relied on | thereto forked over to editor Robinson one dollar |°f the home-work of edjcation. I treme drontb, bis apple and pea^ree* have pro-
meat, andimmédíateiy after a conridenÁle reduc-f^® honor and integrity of tbe other and neither Lg ¡t ]n print. Weil, now, we naturally like Mm —The Winated f Conn. 11 dnced a good yield, considering ípir sise and age.
tion of ourmilttary resources, the result, we think, was disappointed. ^ Demoorate--Aat'e a fact-hut we can't go he aap- He„id oontalns the foliowing description of Mr. 8"«h "«h Aía aaawM . atarf
will asrame an aspect by no^ means ansátisfactery B. M. Bakuma.—This distinguished young beaded ieoie* sort—they are too much like our old Gal) Borden, Jr's proem of concentrating and pre- ¿{^^^h„ab* "dance ^thsewboleeome and
gentleman has been presented tothe people of Iowa demijohn, a little, contracted, hollow thing at the ™ f „., u ^¡.«j from the neiuhbor- dellciona fruits.— Victoria Admits.
talogued. When ths fijéf k^l «¡rtíis fleet entem sonóf Jowph 6. Samuels, jESq., of the ¿oo^d Simón Pure Democrats believe in eroeses in marri- joent. perAnut for it.) in cans^of sato elgbt ga¿
.1 _r .l. Ti-iiti. i——nnty of Shenandoah; is peeseesed of unusually I age. as a part of their religion—aa
top-4>rokon and Leakey
oente pér^quart1 for"'it,) ia*cans of six to eight gal- J T«* modifications made Wtbe overland mall
the waters of the Hooighiy oWaáxietiaa for Áb oomnty of Shenandoah; is' pñeeésed of unusually I age. as a part of their religion—aa one of the fanda- lions eaclf, is at onoe deprived of its animal beatby ronteat the instance of Hop Mm^Pbspe, bat
safety of onr country men irill be approaching^theu fine ¿lente and attai^n^^ • re*y, elf\ZnM jiincipta (videBr. Lawton) apob - whieib I ^anbtoctMrt^a Tm?'*JW Í>1 J? do-1
raoe ** h0 PerPe*°^te^*' • "B«-1 irrasa—a. '4egre«i below the boiling point.— L^wtirtber West^'tban^rlngfieliá, Mis«k.uH,
in with an unbroken^and^iiTe^etible. tíood. ¿ i his gentlemanly deportment and agreeable man- fort he undertakes a matrimonial voyage, Mr. 1 Thru prepared,tbe milk is immediately transferrod tbenoáWPayrtteville, Van
deed between60 and Í0 days ma, poisfoly wffic®, Ueakpy badbetter go into somoship-yard and have to theWler, a huge r^ept«leof caatlron.of in A***L toPreston, ^«rrtwfog atttrt
under favorable conditions, to Carry, a good ship ti,. Ha.. .... j * — j I calculable strength. While there, subjected, byLinttte rotrte from Mem [bis via Li .tie Bock,
from Pbrtembuti, to Calcutta, the desired hour "coppered and copper faatoned, toa heAtof bat ISO degrees to 16o| Freeton ahd Port Pilhnore t San Prancuco.
at hand; for since the Baceph.- niaStar. | if atom neceewty impels, he may be able to tand degrees, the air is withdrawn by X*6 nicely ad^pst-1
•ia Star.
Sqcnnxu—Tbe Palestine Advocate says, " Tbe
oldest inhabitant" never ksaw as many sqairrela in
"thu i,°zi .
I the trip. c.-'iív.isw'i'rví 5!>jo' lad air-pampe, and tbe prooey.oft _
——— .... menoes. The ▼ £ >£ itToffii J* ! pubUshea acómmanióátioc from Jodga Da Lyon,
Bbsiahation.—A certain old lady, whoJ
..S |||RP!HPiH|l|iHHMiM9|S|HI ■ ... _ ■ ■ t£."lin which he Bta>ea.tr m tee reanltot bia expert*...
corn fielda 1 famed for soar looks, and not very sweet worda. I r pldly condensed and thrown ° ^ | nient. that an acre of Cblntee sugar cane will pro- *
., m, and al- umching the aocidcnte oí life, was observed to be- pnmpa.amiso quick iattaprooe^tbatecooMing dQQa ,hree hnDdr8(j g llo s of syrup, twenty-fiv
„ most desperate efforts are being made toi come vary amiable. "What happy change has ccme to,<mr Information, a boiler or wo quw«si can op boshB,s of ^ of tba ,Verage weight of Wlba. r~
kill them eff, yet it «ems impossible, aa no dimin-1 over y« !" Mid a neighbor. -Why,? aaid the to 186 quarto within oto ^ajbai _wwa.| ^ ^ht of fodder.
ution vof the number is apparent. They bave al-1 transformed, to ttdl you the truth, I have bee all I The =- -il
ready destroyed many hundred bushels of corn, | my life driving for a contented mind, and have fin-j ismitj.
aSr'
ready destroyed many hundred bushels of corn, | m. )¡fe striving
and still come. Like the flias in the mble, it per-1 a]]y concluded to sit down contení
hape would be better to let them aloae,¿foraa fasti ¿ sensible woman that.
as eae fat and sauey marauderla killed, two hm>g-
ry ones appear in Jna place. : It S ;knaif*-.^e be a
Cms-the oircumatanoe of bia stooping vety fact that squirrels aremigratoq'rjattd wOaza lad'to. . . - ■-- ^ ¿
h, It passed over him. "Ton see," said be t aooount for tbeir presence In ear oOunty at this I we see tbe announoaraent of as invention by whwb
ASraeuiAA Stmpatht Mtarnia.—A meeting hUWends^if L^b en an upright jbage.IttifM ^e, by the fact that out Werttl^ are raisingbut|wagoM
A Btxak Waoak.—Por the five hundredth tima, * : — V"* DO' ™°*
A Valdabu Bxcifi—Mix
little for them to feed i
ing East in aearob of I
i emigre t-1
apnamanlb Watom.—a man .aid he had alty i
,409 effective men watch feat had gained eaongh in thne weeks to
for ttMlf. * i
I mon wads Toe wagon wBl aeat eighteen or twen-1 effectually keepa out air Aad
i of MMt and dirt, and |
e atooe, woodov brick
Th* Lxmmob
, involving ATqneation ofthe right 1
i to hold slaves In New Tor' ' ^
i from Virginia to Texas, waa«
: of tbeBnpreme Ooort
.'.i -. ,-tr -•
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Stuart, Hamilton & Brown, John Henry. Civilian and Gazette. Weekly. (Galveston, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 31, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 6, 1857, newspaper, October 6, 1857; Galveston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth177372/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.