Fort Wayne Times (Newspaper) - March 1, 1855, Fort Wayne, Indiana JOHN W. 15. TO AMI PER MARCH 1. 1855. 26. WAYNE the Louisville earth had welcomed calm hour That woos the maiden to her The sky had changed ils blushing And melted to a deep dark While o'er the vale and on the hill The evening star was trembling So so softly fair It was glowing Ti e spot was lovely and round with vine and leaves of With here and there an opening made For the low wind's sweet Yet not for winds for there Was one whose girlish brow was fair As And by her side Knelt one whose soul's unfathomed Whose whose hopes of future Whose earliest love was But on her lip there was no tone In soothing answer to his His heart leaped with tumultuous But was and and sti 1, Save when she met that burning Then came a momentary trance Of inward It The quivering lash was downward cast And though the cheek was juSt A weep m And thus add torture to the Her soul too long bad nursed a That lore could never win or The struggle passed with that wild The lover bowed his As though a poet's glorious lyre Was trembling on her lips of would that thou hadst loved me I had dared to love thee K have spared the deep distress Which thou must feel and 1 might have plucked brightest And made their fragrance all thine would have spared the saddest hours This untamed heart has ever had it been my haply love as others My spini would have chosen thee As one who wins not to might have My soul has hope and trust and passion But knowledge plucked iway the And all were found told me human love was as the fades as yon false from the heaven's unclouded well for those who every love But for the soul that feels ils Life is too for hope is knew my heart could nurse dared not woo affection's And uow the only hope that's there is proud ambition's daring soaring hopes must only dull Then should the lightning scathe my breast The fatal truth will come too t to have thee s This though it no Is still the darkest of my thus they One deep mournful glance of that dark wail low as the wind's soft One parting word and he was With this sad time now could bleat Witi but one And she a moment bowed her As o'er her cheek a pallor spread Like unto That grief was It was the and the last That love could Her destiny Was half soul was Her unchained spirit let to spring Free as the eagle's dauntless wing Tbat mounts the the Earth has no chain to it A. Jan. 1855. JLove taer thou loTe her when the sunny over her bosom Will be placed with the silver threads of her step falls sad and Wilt love her when the summer's smiles On her lips no longer will love her With right good wilt loTe her then our cherished To thy sheltering arras we thou love her still when her changeful grown dim with sorrow's When the bOsom that beats against thine slow with the weight of When her silvery laugh rings out ao more And vanish her youthful free good I shall love her Thou wilt love her then our dearest one We give to thy loving no frief has she ever spirit is light and None with has innermost but wilt love her when the thoughts Of youth in their blushing bloom good and I will love her Thou wilt love her then our darling take To the joy of thy noble for thee does she smiling friends of her early No longer to meet their approving Nor their unfeigned Forgive if the tears fall And promise to love her will love her With right good Thou wilt love her then with peaceful trust We our sobbing sorrows Irei father is and the emerald soft on her mother's When her brother's voice is no longer her hushed to Wilt thou love her lor to thee she Her star on life's troubled will love her Through good and With marriage vow on her youthful Then we give our child to Methodist Book and Southern Methodist suit against the Book Concern in this was on last amicably by the commission now in in our which is thus For the Rev. A. L. P. W. L. and C. B. For the Cincinnati branch of the Book Rev. J. F. M- E. and the Agents Co. Tiie terms of we are as Book Concern is to pay the Methodist Episcopal Church South eighty and the Southern 820,-000 in and the balance in the remainder in instalments of four and five It is understood that the Book Concern pays the taxable costs yet and that they indorse the debts and notes of the Southern preachers without to all other each party final decree will be published before Immacolate Conception in new of order knighthood is to be established in to be entitled the of the The Paris of ihe London Atlas says it is to be confined to the Each member to eight quarterings of if purely and with dogma of the Immaculate Conception to meet with considerable in several as in the usury lairs limy propriety cf in in If Ilio is uf and n bo tu Ibr ilio cf y why may not and and and cared allowed to do the tlie North and usage of the world has so far the legality and of taking for use of that no man ut present day would havo tho to deny and tlie soveral Slatoa of hy their have moral and made it for the money to receive some for its havo prescribed limits of tho prices vary in States by law that six dollars is the full under all that may bo given for tho use of one hundred lars for a whilst others have fixed varying from five por cent to or havo the rates and to between tho borrower and is to be presumed there is a reason for these thoy would not have been contend that it is to mako those and to tix j for an and v. hut is rates of interest to protect borrow er Vf li 21.Tav 5; quittes t dull at Colt -n cu of at to to Com baruly to great to he to high ratea of u liy similarly bo of thoro aoy for ibo I Tho laws as thoy iu the are and Thoy maki ro Thoro is a Di ili it is in Fonio but thcy no moro to bo and taken a a sinall no more a quoto 3d Utiki and Naval nt 1 M ti i i I L 1 c 1.ANO.A is with Lord as Lord s iii di of wh t is known a a bawdy n and r for a hunt American near the scene of tlie us there were at lessi one and u in The Wednesday iy 5 11 thai rf J i. iiV a-x li ro c i 10 r. over lend at City for a itr Ilie ] 1 th in to the of aprs ei the ious lo of Iii d the fame the oin 1 tie ou Feb. 17, 1855. Referring you lo my for two wet I havo to ask you how far I represented your views in mjr letter of the 20th it .i lop ifi iho which I Jii do or not recognize e of far as to permit the lo regniate of in their own within their Stato Do you iir not the opinion which we named lias long been be la the of has power to with slavery as one of tlie in the i fur tho uso of tho the Do yon or not that and fur no Amerio to 00 of tlic past these fur of of tho and thai long has proved the rates to bo that upon rates of restrictions will bo found to bo and unequal in and Connecticut adjoin Now In the three it is fair and legal to tako six per and no but ono foot west of their western in New tho lender may tako in North tho rato is six per whilst one fool souib of the in seven per in just and In tho rato per and on contracts ono fool of the northern line in the rato is and on special contracts and ono foot west of her western in the usual rato is eight but on special may bo raised to Standing at the northwest of a man may have one fool un soil w here tho rate of interest is eight per another foot on soil whero ten is and stick the eane ho holds in his hand in soil w here may fairly and honestly bo Here are people living around an ideal on in a similar Mid yet under the rales of which they may and take are any kind of in the natural or under more in Jersey City and per in parts of the State of Now Jersey only six can be legally given or in California interest is and the rate is oy agreement between the borrower and things prove that tho legalized rales of interest are not settled by any fixed principle of of that they are arbitrary depend upon no rules of political hut are regulated by and of ilian by demand fnd or the wauls and of tho money be por in New York why should it not he worth as one or one foot east of tho eastern If it be worth seven per in Jersey why should not the of the living ono fnin over the allowed to or lake as if they aru willing to do Why aol the leader on one side of its streets be to agree upon the seme rato of interest at the sumo of men may do on Ihe opposite not such a law anti-republican and But tho laws regulating interest aro still more and raise more distinctions than Take instance of of Hoard of Sir Charlis Posi Homo Colonial Sir George Nir Lord of iho It vy of Puhl sary ol that and tbo but w ith energy i Lord is willing to give a rale than the j The above form tha Lord laws in order to the i and go The der for his greater precluded from doing ' except Lord are tho at though the may be law holds him tho threatening rod of Sir Charles Napier mada a savage in our and and in New and if ho bo Nearly three millions sterling hid beeD war l ot of Led down ana red by the y of Foreign rowdies infest thus deters the poor man is prevented from wants supplied at reasonable ho could have done if rates were but if lie needs and have money to carry on American Fisheries had English in Poland had been ordered to leave tho Russian was a in the House of If a citizen to borrow however great may And no man whu pure can legally 10 rate nf pose a in good esl than six per but if a or aims No man is by or least some of | no man it by no man is wishes to it mav il ' he must go into the market and pnv 1 on tho night of ihe 9th, regarding high to tho j Charles tho the of a pmail and for imposed law Inni to pay a premium for the protection it ducs noi gicc my 1 will of the of tho usury of Brooks of New York has Ulto tho Senato of a a of ilu illegal is so that wo an of its in tho tarnest bope that a system will be adopted tays tho New York Ibr a lu to hu for the lull of the The aro to meei a beforo any to the and all are to be given as Wide a as The sessione in the lisi of volere are lu beso arranged as to and placo as to ampie all u se may ho or ere lo bo just as is at the Jf who are entitled to they bo d Ihe voucher of or The registry is to he and ui a lime the a lew days Ihe are lo the last lime lo add and make the lisi compiute as A copy of is lo bo used ol the al ilio sanie naie it gives the name and is under system it Sellien in a moment und an bus a right to vote or mode ol appointing may be by the in this whero illegal has beeil so and that nativo boni despaired of ever again ballol box such a law has Mr. dare not more than six per for tho use of violating iho but the Navigation Company p. may offer any rate it To lake more than six per from stigmatizes the lender as and readers principal and interest liable to to tako fifty per if thoy choose to give from the West Chester and Philadelphia Railroad Company L. p. 119) is all and honest and these companies have availed allows ail lo vote can show a and it excludes all who have no Is not this result to be desired and to be worked Ai d who better to do that work than a Legislature elected by the votes of men was this to all tho information wo could there wore at least Ctvo hundred illegal votes and and how many moro that were it is impossible to The detection in this case was an uncommon It was so fell and boasted of. It might be done again tho opportunities of borrowing at high j the good and pious who would not the same but how can wo be assured that more than six per from a body 1 the same wiil always be And it it a have no hesitation in considering it i is it far better that the same reMili very meritorious lo take all can got from a ' should bo Perhaps the nature j extra and by operation oj which of a has something to do with tho all those chances ot collision and which an election than and exist not only in the rates of to ho but in the penalties against ibuse who exceed the whero but six per is if more the principal and interest are liable 10 whilst in where ton per is the the forfeiture for an usurious taking is only the of interest Now seven por ii the legal ihe pious and holy that if one bo caught his whole principal and interest are forfeited and he may in lined prisoned six but in and where tho legal rates may go as high as ten and twelve per and where people supposed to bo less pious and less honest than the speculators Wall New who aro kept rigidly virtuous by Trinity church u perpetual supervision over ihe for usury is only a forfeiture of the excess of laws I bo thought to mean that as must he by law from hnt that collectively iu corporations may be sin or or else thai they as cannot take care of their own that corporations are d be to attend to their Tho af the clause ef Iho proposition used to be considered the ora cum in the rales of in S and even in the name as in New with tho made between men and iho penalties for an mixed up hty lion of the usury show and 1"'r an hour - individual Wo cannot see it a would be is true that a registry might be moro but little tho and that it could not relieve us from the dead weight of voters imposed by our hut it would free lie from evil of our elections controlled cr by men w ho oome here as they came last to vote and go back again to Peru or Terre or wherever their work on the railroads Wo have no more stopping over night here on their road from Ohio lo tho Central because they heard that the next day was and they wanted a hand in as wasi the case last and we should hear no moro ot the construction of in every direction so easy and us a Register gentlemen of the and whatever who desires that our should be fair of Iho c-f tho wiil you his hearty Ind. your to ihe u must fi ed tirio g belter to the f rich milk ibun dry Chopped or meui slop of k be given a at suy and They be dry ard watered day I- d he curried or of ee n n or tine given two or n also variety of eut or ihen stirred a vv new light was thrown upon the had for a week on the request of Lord It wag to be on the Aberdeen had boon created a of Lord Mayor of gavo a grand and present were Lord Sir Charles of the Crimea nod Baltic who wore received with Napier himself and bitterly attacked the Baltic lefi Liverpool on the of and arrived out on the 5ih. city ot arrived at the same time and was taken up by the to convey troops to tho issued a proclamation for bidding lier at home or abroad the enemy with of Ilio Lord John Russell and were successively sent for by the but all tailed to form a when was sent and news from tho Crimea is Canrobert reports iho deaths of Captains Pouter and during a of tho on tho of has gone Russians wore constantly making Tiie siegu works were in abundance have reached Ihe is nights fine and mild days latest despatches from Lord dated the and 2-ll.h of both allude to the in the W. Atelier of the future of the and snys that w ill resume their work the town Lucan has been Irom the the cavalry in ihe Admiral Bruat to the 3Uth of January that the French Batteries had received orders to their said that preparations for tho assault were Russian army in want of sortie was made ou tho causing great loss to the is rumored that the and of them wore seal to They demanded the the army from tlie Tho rumor it was thought was apology was made lo Omar and he withdrew liis has been appointed Minis ter of and Roget of is paid that Emperor will take of tho army operations on tho Napoleon had arrived at Peace Conference at Vienna had not yot has lior to negotiate a separate treaty with provided it covers the obligations as that of December Diet has to tiie on a war and aro teeming disposed to Join tho and the at Constantinople was io favor of Sultan intends to raise a national voluntary at has risen to 141 causing had asked lo lake command of tho African troops in the merchant ships had been firod into by the Russians at Austria demanded an is a of a battle having occurred in of an attempt of the to enter the in the Turks were Russian ihc of Austria havo received orders to retreat to tho reasons given by the are show that in some Slates consider money less than in and money is worch neire some than The very of i im s in legislative | in States is the a- Thu now or i Some of allow higher rates of than ] the older 1 and can be made moro and re- there in tho older 0110?, and the commercial parts of the | er ratea than the as in Jersey City i and for similar also cause they aro better enabled thereby to with Now because of its would otherwise draw them to their will ear gu enough is We lo che of fi bs t mai I hey the less will be required to liu to 0 fletti un has e g 1 fer coverai v that oxen vv ili mi t-s a being d as lie the lard If bo it to is n that all our are weil provided fur in this resi Firm of the changes wc of the oM and well known lirm of et The ch in fact is in as L. died more nnd the has since been conducted by the surviving and of new and CI rt Mr. as a hiil in old CI or twenty-six years and as lie been in ilio be must Le in to in lias n member of twelve and during of Mr ho had and 1 conili riot on Tuesday rigod from the to ihe 1 wtr portion of the street the crowd d by and a that they would be the of every and that his traveler who had just put up at the Exchange 1, and who bad out in front of the to the was down by tbe rowdies and verv badly Another man down upon the railroad and as soon as be reached the ground was covered with who pummeled him almost to The ground where this took yesterday presented the appearance of a butcher's } ard dyed with red A third a boarder in tbe of Mr. who also went out in the street to the was knocked down and brutally pounded on the bead with pieces of kicked in the and body with thick and heavy would liave been killed had not a fellow boarder who witnessed the butchery armed himself with an fighting his way into the rescued the As il his skuil was fractured in one and his head laid open in several while his chest and body was horribly One or two other men were seen to fall in the crowd and to be dragged What their fate is no one the the exclamation moat made use of Mere as to the Down with the damned be the death of the bloody not and we're not afraid of the etc. There oan be no doubt that the failure to convict the of of policeman has the of emboldening the spirit of the and of making perfectly reckless as to the s af their lawless They do not forget that tlie murderers of Mory were not and that Cunningham's life was and they fancy that can now gratify their hatred against the Americans with spring is drawing and they have been promised revenge for their defeat last They arc fully that their good tine is riot was about the thirst for blood having been somewhat when a sleigh containing four police officers drove and one arrest not however of one of Ihe This man whs sent to Bridewell yesterday We have heard of no other Chicago is the Russian ioa on the map of tho world not force itself on tho It forms the ninth part of the habitable portion of the Ils immenso extent every variety of from tbat of Spain and Portugal to the cold of the Arctic is the principal soat of foreign as Moscow Is of the vast internai trade of Iho Tho former is the great outlet of the of and has an wilb ihe interior by rivers and The waters of tho on which St. Petersburg are too shallow to admit vessels of largo burthen their cargoes are discharged at and barges employed in them to tho is built on an island about soven miles long and one and tho mouth of the harbor is strongly defended by a fortress bullion an opposite Hero are extensive wet and dry with and all tho great are requisite in fitting out a fleet and keeping it in repair and fit for including lor ropo Canals ara which enable to take in stores to tho The military thirty-five of the besides smaller has so as to bo incapable of admitting large was founded by Poter tho In 1703 a ship from Holland was the first merchantman thai had ever appeared in tho and the captain and crow were treated with groat by In 1714 sixteen ships arrived and from to 15!'0 now clear inward of one-half aro Tho open days in the tho middle of May to the end of many good are well with tho exception of the public the are built of The aro naval school fer custom hou and summer all U and for tho no of tho year is into space of a few as the winter and the last ships of tho season take their fearful of being lucked up by tho tho scene and all The summer to about exclusive of and persons employed in the that which permits you as a the the obligations of making W. special Agent of Smio lo her per with the was Frr o Bank was then taken several mndo and finally engrossed for a third and tinal nays 18. aro the motion of Mr. the tho combined not and that no single bank should issue more System struck so that one-half of the slock bo held by of the in the of slavery among those for the regulation of that answer at your earliest wili oblige your obedient Editor U. S. property of the so as to give the present which always redeemed their and a haif to or the of this so that no bank can be established ina town a less number of than otic so as to allow banks under this act to issue small notes lo the amount of one twentieth of their so as to require ten persons to form an for banking so as to prevent the free banks to establish for purpose of the value of their above tho material amendments to the question was tiren taken on its fur a third and carried by the following Jackson of Jackson of of St. Barnott Richardson Vandevanter 10. were in which hills were reported back for further of two w ere to amend tho law relative to the formation of High to amend the ael relative lo weights and measures; to provide fora Geological Survey of the Wbs lost on ils 35, noes 23; to raise a revenue for the years 1855 and 1856 w as The tax it proposes to levy for State purposes is 20 cents on the and a poll tax of for ench Tho was occupied in the School in of tho during thp fixed the tax at cents un the and a poll tax of 50 the in is a copy of the which passed Ihe House of and which is at exciting tho to tlir lille 01 by for by the Senate and Home of the of in Congress That the grado ol Lieutenant and the same is hereby revived in the of the United in order thai w in tho opinion of the and it may be deemed proper to acknowledge eminent ot a Major General of the army in the late war cf in Jho mode already for in subordinato tho grade of may be specially conferred by and by tu take rank from the date of such service or services Thai when tho said grade of Lieutenant General by brevet shall have once been filled and shall have become this joint resolution ehall thereafter expire and be of no Feb. 19, 1856. My answer lo your wili bo brief and I fully recognize tho doctrine of rights in its application to slavery as well aa 15 for and 10 j The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions at their market value six months be ore in the as I correctly set All real estate security was stricken that so thai after the suspension of any 1 The whole of within bank Its securities be when redeem all us the hank empowered the balance out of the 2.' My response lo your second question in my your I do not entertain the opinion that has any power to interfere with slavery as it exists er man who believes in a God necessarily believe thet there is a law to all human and that this law is to by men in public and private rather than any human law in it. But I seo nothing in the of the as I understand the of requires as a Senator from to do anything in with the law of If I thought I would not take an to support the of the United Organization in does not embrace the question of slavery among for the regulation of it people of have fixed in which most of the members of that organization fully against the support or of by national entertain the most profound that the harmony and repose of the and ihe highest interests of master and that national government should be relieved from all connexion with responsibility for and that this disturbing question should be lofT to the people of the States where it they do not soak to impose these convictions and opinions upon their of other or to proscribe them for not io those and will submit to no dictation or from any body of men or section of the as a Senator from shall for the opinions of her people all the freedom of and all the influence upon the of and the administration of the w hich a Senator from Virginia can for the opinions of the people of the Ancient Yours El Feb. 19, 1855.- of the Navy has appointed Comi mandors Engle and Gardiner to select propellers m he sent on tbe expedition in search of Dr. Organ this afternoon a letter from Senator in answer to questions propounded by tho editor of that He pays thai he fully the doctrine of State Rights in its application to that he does not entertain the opinion that has any t i interfere with slavery as under State laws end that tbe organization io does not the ct of those tor tbd of which it was the New York of Feb. 20, 1856; first bearing before joint of the upon the petition of the for the removal of Edward G. Loring from office of Judge of took place this afternoon in the hall of the House of It was packed in every parti who desired to could not gain Arguments wore made by Seih of the act of Congress which Wendell and W Ellis Mr Phillips spoke about two He said the of Lieutenant General was on the 28ih of 170S, and is present Legislature had but two to chapter Lonng ought Judge J be 5. be it further j The first may be settled bt tho shall deem it expedient which provides for the removal he is hereby empowered to by and with address lo Ihe and consent ol the a or even of tho army which may be raised by To sustain this of this and being as Judge may be to 9 1 iiic lin V bul In a oi Feb. 1855. sti hns arrived Ht this port the 15th still and new roinj anies were been declared in n of and nil the purls in a state of had been ordering bi t such n hard blow from Mr. M that Col. Kinney has written to tho enlistment of This of the of 10 thai a had been created hail of part of the and hr. ot jj reported that Gen. Concha had sent IU As hut now in ol their The had left and the Medea reu Mr. C laru has ving in the of the ir The Rear Admiral reviewed c. Liver even troops Concha 12ih degree being fir internal improvements must ' of I have their improvement aro from a letter written by Col. Kinney to and as their security is less than improved and person at the lhat the v. force real they mast bo allowed to op in tho of high rates of in- and matters ot iile and death cf 781 are males that it was and properly the new lirin their and ranee so well lur in their sale of and OF just shows that town to have a promise granis of they lack in toeu of twelve laws to tho tnat lite of money varies according to place and ita y betra and they thus repeal in some the r. Commercial 3.0o2 f. Of the 1,723 over 21 of r inks as is said to be nc stir town in iu point of ill Orf f and Racine tho armies of tho United and shall 1 entitled to the following pay ond | monthly monthly allowance j for when tho same shall not bo provided | by the aud forty rations per day | or money in lieu thereof at tho current j who havo authority lo from time lo j euch number of not exceeding ( and not as lie was answered by abundant that Loring violated the State law of 18-19, which imposes a penalty of fine and upon any Judge of who shall hid in tho law of 1793. Tbat Loring prejudged in the Burns by to before a full hearing was that the case was so clear that be hoped no I I would be placed in tbe way of each to have tho pay aud of a Lieut. That the ignorance of law he in that ease is proof positive of ho in the year I the office of Judge of Probate d the nay of an with tho rank ot of sale of Burns before the and tbat be made to tbo for tbe claimant delivering was one of tho most logical arguments made by and created great excitements The did not will undoubtedly bo removed by a majority in tho and a small ono ia Petitions continue to pour as in the act of 1708. from that date to tho present amount lo more than It will ho seen that there is to the grade of Lieutenant General a of six Lieut. Colonels and two with the and poy of a Lieut. on the The following extract is from n made by Mr Albert at tho Southern The following lion recently held in S. C. Said the provisions of a in to Legislature of New York in reference is time that we should look about ' in what relation we stand to the From the rattle with which the tickles the ear of the child born in the to that covers the cold form of the everything comes to us from the We rise form the sheet in Northern and pillows of to in I made at the dry our on and Ivi s in garments made in Northern we eat from Northern plates and our rooms are swept Northern ottr gardens dug with Northern and our bread kneaded in trays or dishes of Northern wood or and the ve y wood which feeds our fires is cut willi Northern with brought from Connecticut and New Mayor of New York lias to return Belgian paupers now in the by of the Belgian to at the of their own The to send them West he that if are not proper subjects be the West should not 1. Makes ten hours a legal day's laboi in all 2. No man shall employ a ten years of 3. No man shall employ a child under fifteen years of age to labor over five hours a 4. Persons employing children stall see that they attend schooll hive days each 5. Guardians shall bind out under the above 6. Agriculturists shall give in their at least four each 1. The for each The act to take 4th to 1855. Russell the Las be t n elected Professor of and Beiles in the Harvard to succeed There were five but Mr. Lowell was not one of nnd was elected without bis This vras n high lif wiil spend a year iq and before he