Fort Wayne Weekly Republican (Newspaper) - June 23, 1858, Fort Wayne, Indiana FORT WAYNE WEEKLY REPUBLICAN 1 FORT WAYNE INDIANA WEDNESDAY MORNING JUNE 23 1858 NUMBER 8 Fort Wayne Republican PETER P BAILEY and ISSUED Office 011 opposite tho Public aqua Per Year in Advance RATES One Square 13 one insertion subsequent Sime one year six months three months 1 Column one year eii three months Half Column one year fix three months Column one W six months three months Announcing Candidates for office For double column price and a half d All Modi of Job Printing done at rato ami executed with neatness and We wish it distinctly understood at tho be ginning that our twins of Subscription ar We do not propose to nows other conditions we mean ex Ibis language and not has been practiced in many other instances t paj at the middle or end of the rear standing the terms stated were cash Our de termination to pursue this course is tho of many yeara experience m tbn business fairs of life The same lessons of experienc taught many of our best men to change their whole of mixed system of credit and cash to adop exclusively the all their fu tufe in the of the Union have long since abandonee the credit tad adopted ths cash plan as tb one to ensure success The people of our port of the West ar now In x prosperous condition of life and do not want the trifling accommodation of credit on their newspaper which ma have been and doubtless was desirable in the first Settlement of the country But the for this having passed away the WASHINGTON June 15 The Senate at noon at th call of the The of the President con veiling an extraordinary session was A committee was appointed of Messrs Allc and to the President that quorum was present and the read to receive any communication ho may I pleased to make Mr Allen subsequently reported that the had performed that duty lir Green presented a memorial froi Benjamin W Perkins of Worcester Mass in which he states that he in June contracted with the Russian Government by its Minister ut Wellington for purchase of a hundred and fifty powder and in January 1856 for thousand five hundred stands of arms The were promptly delivered but the contrite was violated by tho Russian Minister Per kins assorts that he is wholly ruined ant wants damages und asks th Senate for relief against unjust and sive acts of foreign Mr Green a resolution which was to the Committee on foreign relations calling on the President to whether any complaint had been made t the Government in relation to the breach of contract Without undertaking express opinion he thought this a case which demanded the attention of ou Government It turn out that th memorialist is mistaken but the comes before the Senate in plausible shape Mr Mason called up resolution live to the British which sioned an interesting and lengthy discussion in which Benjamin Military HIM others participated It seemed to him a matter of moment tha ho judgment of the Senate be passed upon them because of the bearing they may have on any since introduced Prom some causo lieso same aggressions been continued n tho Gulf of Mexico and the waters adjacent by British cruisers We have reason to believe that the visitation and detention of vessels has not been in consequence o any new orders Tho probability is that cither they nro acting without or from perversion of existing authority He thought when the subject was brought o the attention of the British Government she would disclaim these acts but tho distinctly presented the question the two countries nnd hence it was that the judgment of the pronounced in advance of negotiations Mr Warto enquired of Mr Mason whether those aggressions had not been committed in the effort to put down the slave trade whether our flag has not to cover this trade and particularly whether there s really any difficulty between the two Governments which may not settled by in a honorable to all parties preventing the slave trade and our lag as a screen There seemed o him no difficulty While he in no justified the British proceedings vet ho that n war should bj abhorred by wth parties who wish to prevent it Tho English could have no motives for insulting ur Hag but she has presumed more on us lan any other foreign power Mr Mason replied that it was an fact that Great Britain had been for many years to obtain from all nations as against the slave trade le natural right of search and visitation nd has obtained it frum the principal of Europe but tho United States have denied it Ho would not say there nay be no practical mode of a final of the question if claims ic right of visit fur any purpose ycl he did lot how it could be done Mr trusted the resolutions be adopted before the HP had hoped an would jc for deliberate discussion and taken as would forever put a stop to the pretensions of Great Britain The Ohio had there tin the motives of Britain were Kowl the nations of the laudably directed remarked he did Mr t ic of between this country and Great Britain as to give credit for sincerity in thu pretended occur between United nnd Britain The latter had but single aim to the commerce of the world she grasps at every ocean and point With this view she has for a long series of years been to obtain from our the of visitation which cannot be conceded without carrying with it in her favor tho supremacy of the seas It was obvious to all that visitation practically the right of search Il was admitted by nil writers to be a belligerent exercise and should never be submitted to in time of peace there had not been energy enough in the management of our foreign relations not what we had a right to expect from the lone of thu inaugural address He trusted thai something would now be done It was hta opinion that Great Britain would not surrender the demand une has so long aud pursued Information should be given lo ner that her pretensions longer be submitted to negotiation that we cannot permit search if she upon it thim ihu people of the United States should for war Mallory was fully satisfied that the instructions of had never been modified or extended These visitations nave been going on for ten years but because have been multiplied doubtless by the hope of prize money they nave attracted more general notice than heretofore Douglas did not propose to go into this of British outrages His object in rising was simply lo notice n telegraphic dispatch giving an account of the proceedings what was termed nn Administration State Convention in Springfield in which its public course was condemned He proceeded to show this was not a convention of the Democracy of Illinois Two persons nominated for State officers are not and lave not heiin as consistent Democrats The true Democratic Convention that held last instead of being abused ae was endorsed by it What was this Administration Convention There was A man in Illinois who held office nnd who traveled all over tho State claiming he is authorized by the lo denounce every man as a traitor w 10 docs not approve the Constitution This man with a few bolters from the Convention whom they voted down 55 to 1 got up the recent one The squad of federal holders were threatened with removal if they failed to attend Their is to divide the Democracy of Illinois mil denounce Douglas Never yet had lie wen denounced by regular convention A bogus gathering was got up by Dr Charles agent for the Post Department His history was When Jim Lane ind liis gang wero driven out of Kansas Hod to Illinois pretending to bo a confidential friend of Buchanan This WAS the chief of of tho Society of who took horrid oaths to break up he Democratic parly under penalty of being liy men frowned on by devils scorned iy migels and forsaken by Ood denial this on authority on Dr himself Douglas reiterated the that Licb had confessed to him and had fat to hundred others Tho mutter was further debuted Mason that A rote In taken on iis opposed it Ho to he the subject The went into executive nnd subsequently Juno 15 A strong military forco will bo detailed from Iho troops intended for Utah to Ari zona Lieut Murray the delegate frum Arizona will shortly thither charged will important Government duties but will be in Washington next December The Sen ate having the for tho si ment of a Territorial Government Ihc special order Il is doubtful whether there will be a quorum in the Senate some having loll lor home thin afternoon Lieut Richardson has arrived at thu British from Admiral at Ber muda Orders have given against with American Tho Steamer Styx has been recalled to tb The of Coin anil iu tho United Status The precious uow become th subject of trade They have lost their ox C character of mousy ami have enter cd into as a o tho soil This very Curt fluctuations in money nnd more uncertain ty any other cause When gold am silver were an scarce as to used exclusive Iy as money or in tho most an luxurious then money was less variable quantity Now it is the subject of commerce and is exceedingly abun dant ono year and as scarce the next Th consequence is that great variations in th value of and profits of trad are continually occurring There never wa a time in tho history of the world when the hanker the merchant or the required as much information am prudence us they do now Tho revolution of commerce are and must continue to be rapid and violent The and pow the new elements of machinery loco motion and wind modern science and art have furnished the unstable will be tho movements Fo movement in commerce id dependent on the human mind and this acts the more rapidly and exclusively in proportion to the numbu of its objects and the extent of its means The very increase of facilities of revenues of wider fields of greater credit and in one word of more extended action and greater power cause a necessity for much greate intelligence sagacity and prudence in the conduct of business without which all inus be variable uncertain and The of the precious metals is now ono of tlm most elements o commerce for with that movement goes the pivot of credit or moro properly what the philosophers call the center of gravity All credit gravitates sooner or Inter round ho precious metals It is not that they themselves arc of so much consequence as like a weight or a measure they are test of strength In this point of view t is important to know the proportion oi this strength in different countries and communities In the number of the page G vol we endeavored to ascertain the Money and Currency of the States Since then there have vast changes and rapid movements in coin currency bullion and in all departments of finance We now propose to if possible what movement in Precious Metals has been so far as possible m regard to the United States 1 Of Tlic California mines uve made gold an original of and hence aided and stimulated the commerce in bullion so that the movement of great masses of gold is now on every day occurrence This is not of so much as it is to determine where tia balance fes in looking for this lot us ascertain what the whole production of gold in the has been This we can tell rom authentic In the account we include the gold produced n Carolina Georgia and other places as veil as in California anil give the general for each year This will give the production which being compared vith the exports and imports of coin and will the whole specie movement in the States From tu 1837 to If less 1857 Scene in Market Cuur to Shoot Supposed ol the Attack Voil J was the Market Court ilr Shatter am watking up to ihc outside ae costed him the most epithets nnd then passing through the gat the platform drew a loaded pistol it at M r Steers head catling him You God d d corrupt and others caught Mr Shatter by the hand and drew hint when the clerk asked why ho should no IKJ lor contempt At this Mr Shaffer turned and again the weapon With the almost in the magistrate's flico challenged him to do it Ho was and removed from tho platform He court room but was arrested some hours afterwards on it warrant from 1 Connolly nml brought back to Essex Marked Mr Shafler wo learn has licen for two past from toothache A mola of the lower jaw upon the right side hai time a when the disease extending to the branches of ihu fifth pair of nerves resulted in an attack of facial neuralgia attended with the most agonizing symptoms He was unfit let for business and would sit by hours iu his scat at his sweating profusely under exquisite torture Yesterday morning unable longer to endure the suffering he called upon a dentist and directed him to destroy thu nerve of the carious That person accordingly probed the cavity and applied the preparation He then told Sir that he must bear flic pain for the day He also the use of chloroform though its application was earnestly besought saying hat Mr could not bear its use Mr Shaffer however procured a quantity while on his way to his office lie took several doses during the morning and about loon left the office saying that he was going out lo High In about an hour he returned saying thai his was so great that he could not go as ic had contemplated A short time after a German named linden a client called to secure his attendance at the court He spoke of tho tho Justice Mr Shaffer arose n great excitement and declared that he with which lie did his partner that he would lot be back His demeanor approaching to the character of delirium alarmed them On his way he stopped at n n Chatham street in a frenzy of aud throwing down a double a pistol lhat ho wanted lo shoot a scoundrel The weapon was furnished lirn and he hurried to the Court where he above described took place his arrest he was placed in a back room guard Jn the evening lie to recover and insisted that had been killed No one present could convince him till Mr Steers himself came n and assured him of the Mr Shaffer vas taken home and u physician called lie las not been able to leave the house to-day le hits no of the nt tourt Home The whole affair seems to been a case of mental aberration in consequence of neuralgic nnd use of chloroform a of mania not unusual in such Between Mr Steers and Mr tho most cordial personal relations ever existed and Mr Steers declines liking nny further proceeding in this singular Highway the Old California Taken On Hay 3rd we published an account received by telegraphic despatch of the robbery that day of the Nevada of of treasure belonging to t Co The Cal Union givis ho following particulars of this daring outrage on tlw highway On the morning of May 3rd between onu and two anil about one and a miles this side of Nevada the daily and Folsom stage which connects iy railroad with Sacramento was stopped y six men armed with and pistols nnd a of treasure to Wells Co containing contents wero two ono numbered valued at and the other value and dust ami coin unking up tho balance The vore assayed by of The circumstances of the robbery were aa foU The Line stage which runs only three times a week between and Sacramento via Rough and Heady he former place about one o'clock nnd f lie other stage soon after the two with sixteen On this stage was Isaac X of who hail a largo of money belonging to Murks ankers of Orleans and who was the only passenger armed Five of tho the and demanded drew his pistol but was advised that they would kill him if he shot very coolly and carelessly told them hat they Imd made a mistake ind that tho Iher stage had all the treasure and express natter an assurance in which the driver joined The robber's look-d under the driver's scat and found no box nd left to intercept the other The safety of Mark treasure was owing o the presence of mind thus exhibited awley then that the passengers hould go and protect tho other stage which fas now in sight but being unarmed they Mined On reaching the daily stage one of lie robbers seized the load by the oad and the others presenting their arms the Tlic driver the Alta Express box when he was that they were not to fooled nd they wanted Wells Fargo On this being thrown to them they look it ip nnd then politely told tho driver to git ip nnd git The driver of Telegraph line had in the meantime and heard the sound of the box as it truck the ground A gentleman from Forest city by the amc of Nichols of Nichols Uroa gold ust buyers and two others had a narrow scape from facing robbed Having Been left iy the stage at they obtained bores to overtake it Nichols had with him and the others it w said some or On coming up to the robbers Hie latter supposing that they were i pursuit of them led Mr Dawley says lie five persons who stopped Telegraph jinc stage were armed with four and a revolver They very informed the passengers lhat they ranted none of their private funds but tho of the The were all on foot The consignees f the treasure in San Francisco A Co were telegraphed to from Nevada tho loss ami Wells Fargo Si Co nade the amount good The latter house at Nevada a reward of ir the arrest of the robbers We are by the Hoe's telegraphic despatch hat two men Daniel and Jack arrested on suspicion 1 Nevada nnd the Sheriff is in pursuit of wo others June 17 The this liat ihu law by tho Into legislature liking from tho Governor tho right of for thn government of HUte House wu Judge Hartley ou he Mr volume of the History of the animadvert upon Ur to tho Unit and his toward the American patriots He While such was thu sate of the nnd at Boston Lord Howe at London linally with and the ministry used the pun of Samuel Johnson to the public mind Johnson was a poor man's son and had himself lasted the bitter cup of extreme His father loll no more than twenty To bury liis mother and pay her little debts ho had written For years he had gained n precarious support as nn author He had paced Hie streets uf London all night from not having place where lo lav his head lie had escaped a prison for a he owed by begging alms of Imd broken Ins bread with poverty and had even known what it from sheer want to go without dinner When better days came his loved the poor as few else loved and he nursed in his house whole nests of the lame the blind sorrowful A man who had thus sturdily battled with social evils and mis so keenly touched by the wretchedness of the down trodden deserves to have been able to feel for an injured but he refuses to do so Having defined the word pension as given to a state hireling for treason to his he was himself become a pensioner and at the age of three score nnd six with small hire like a brave who loves his trade he set about the task of his work masters In a tract which ho culled Taxation no he echoed lo the crowd ihc haughty rancor which pissed down from the K ing and his court to his council to the to the aristocracy ind followers with nothing remarkable in party zeal but the intensity of its or in his manner but its unparallelled or in his argument but its grotesque extravagance The had declare to the general congress their willingness to resign t neir opulent town and wander into the u retorted Johnson flw leroes of Boston will only leave good housed wiser men To the complaints of lo carried out of their country fur trial he we advised them not to offend When it was argued that they were condemned unheard he asserted there is no need of a trial no man desires hear that which he has already seen Franklin had remained in Great Britain or no reason but to conciliation and with an implacable malice which was iet oft by ponderous effort at mirth Johnson pointed out at him as the master of teaching congress to put in engine of political electricity and o give the great stroke by the name of los ton Did the Americans claim a right of resistance Audacious cried acrimonious The of the English is like that of the who returning from war found excluded from their own houses their slaves Virginia and the Carolinas had shown of oppression How is asked Johnson thai we hear tho loudest velis for liberty amongst tho drivers of The slaves should be scl free hey may Ixi more grateful nnd honest than heir masters Lord North inclined to said Johnson can be more noxious o society than clemency which exacts no and he proposed to ami the Indians turnout the British soldiers on free quarters among Americans all their charters and take away their political privileges Dickinson of Pennsylvania had insisted hat Americans complained only of Wo do not put tho calf into tho said the moralist we wait lill he ins become nn ox This however the bade him erase not for its ribaldry tut as unwilling lo concede lhat the calf ind been spared and Johnson obeyed comparing himself to a mechanic for whom the employer is to decide Was he lold that he Americans wore increasing in numbers wealth and love for freedom This said he that they multiply with the of their own rattlesnakes disposed men accustomed lo think masters In the experiment of binding obstinacy before it is become yet more obdurate He nocked at the rule ot progression which showed that Americans must in the end Europe iu population said in derision not knowing how much truth ic was uttering in and ct the princes of the tremble in their Had Johnson been truly a man of genius ic would have cscapcd.the shame of having n his old age aimed freedom the Power or Habit John It in a lecture delivered ut Hall London thus illustrates thc oi Thu report ia from A 1 from Buffalo lo Niagara Falls and said to a What river is that said he Niagara river Well it is a beautiful At said I bright and How far are the it mile or was tfic Is it possible that only a mile from us we shall find the water in tlw turbulence which it must show when war tho You will find it KO and so I found it And that sight of Niagara I shall never forget Now your bark on that Niagara river it Li bright smooth and glassy There is a ripple at tho prow the silver wake you leave behind adds to your enjoyment Down the stream vou glide oars sails and helm in proper und you set out on your excursion Suddenly some one out from the bunk men What is The rapids are below we have heard of rapids but we are not such fools as to get there If we go loo fast then we shall up with the helm and steer lo shore vre will set the in the socket hoist the mil and to the land Then on boys don't bo alarmed there's no danger Young men ahoy is The rapids are below we will laugh and all things delight us What care we for the future no man ever saw it Sufficient for the day is the evil thereof We will enjoy life while wu may will catch as it flies This is enjoyment time enough to steer out of when we arc sailing swiftly with the current Young men is The rapids are Now you sec the water foaming nil around Sec how fast you pass thit Up with tho Now Pull pull for pull till the blood starts from your nostrils and tho veins stand like upon the Sui the most in hoist the it's too Shrieking cursing over they go Thousand go over every year thu power of evil hubit crying all the When I find out it is injuring me I will jive it In concluding the speaker warned men in very impressive language that they could not even by penitence amendment and a long life of religion and usefulness wash out the stain of early dissipation nor banish accusing spectres that rise in their holiest moments The way Congressmen Swindle the Public The Washington correspondent of the New York Tribune writing under date of the 13th inst says A is expected in the House tomorrow For forty years the Post has passed Congress without objection or any investigation of the report of tho Yesterday it came back tho Senate with amendments Mr English the Chairman of the Committee asked if it contained anything but muni matter He answered in negative nnd tho passed and was signed To-day it is discovered to contain virtually an steamer clause providing for a mail Portland and New Orleans via the Peninsular uf Florida of which Senator Chairman of the Post Office Committee of the Senate is chiuf manger and proprietor If Ur was ignorant of this provision ho was derelict in duty in not catling attention of the House to it for at tlie east calculation may involve an expenditure of nearly half a million Much comment Is excited at such legislation From Utah LOUISA June 14 Col Thomas L Kane from Camp Scott May 10th this evening lie reports Governor dimming having returned after having made several ineffectual attempts lo Mormon Hegira to the South Salt Lake City and the Northern settlements were nearly deserted a only Forty thousand persons -ire to be in motion their trains extending a mite down the valley The most advanced trains wore already hundred miles distant To evade answering whither bound say Going South Their supposed destination Cedar City or some part of Sonora There were no mules at Camp Scott Met Col train twenty miles rom Platte bridge Johnston would wait the of the Commissioners The Indiana we're the Mormons calling them 1 and saying they won't fight Young delivered the records were supposed to have been destroyed to Heavy rains extended far West All Streams wore full British The following incident U related in an English papar and is publishing at lie present time when so many are industriously fanning the flames of war The spirit which would supplant such amenities and lurn men into enemies should not encouraged: A young roan who lately proceeded io Australia in an American ship thus describes i meeting at We signaled a large the conveying troops to the seat of war in India After the usual civilities with the Hagus been wo clipped our ensign three times is a mark of respect to John Bull It waa not very long before a boat was rom tho troop ship and the chief of Iho regiment and several fine voting men came on of us They were surprised nt our clear spacious and expressed themselves glad to stretch their legs for ships was greatly overcrowded Our captain produced wines nml cigars and was our voyages stayed with IM and on leaving we snook hands all round As their boat pushed onT we our mun and gave thorn which was soon answered bv ho troops The band of the assembled on their quarter deck nnd played Doodle nnd God Rave tho Queen sun scl and when it was dark ve saluted with signal they iy with two to our ono For a final ve use a bluo which illuminated the ship fbr 1 itf an Robert Owen Converted from tho lion Owen IF S to his Xew irony tho gratifying liat he to tho Mr Owen is well known this for his but his influence has ever been by views A writer in thu Cincinnati Gazelle says I am lo notice Messrs bj late in your valuable paper tha ihc Church in city more judicious movements In behalf o church extension in this community heretofore Tho attempt lo build up par church generally in failure Tho purchase of Iho building on Clinton street waa a move in Ihc right direction And now you tell us that ft lot has been purchased and paid for 01 Cutter sts for tin purpose of building a church for under the charge of Hev Mr La This certainly well for the zeal o the Episcopalians of our city for that of tho members of Christ Church by whom I understand the movement is principally made But I hope the gentlemen having Iho matter in charge will pardon 1 11 for a suggestion before lliey upon a plan for their building The which they propose to enter is a lurge one and already ripe for the harvest but mey may rest assured lhat unless the work is entered upon properly failure will to attend it taken hold of properly it will be crowned with complete success Tho requisite of success is a neat Spacious and comfortable house one that will hold eight to len hundred people Small churches will do well enough on but in practice they arc in large cities failures If I had my way in a city like Cincinnati 1 would build no church with lesa than two thousand sittings one where the poor could worship as well as rich Bui where in man or the man of moderate means attend he Episcopal church on an equality with iis more opulent neighbor Certainly not in Christ's St Paul's or St John's Churches where pews range from to This to the man of means is nothing But 0 the poor man more than he can pay I do not wish to be understood as advocating rec churches for in this country I do not think they will succeed except amply endowed What I want is a largo church where the pews can bo put at a small price and all can come in on terms of equality This newly organized parish has now the opportunity of setting an example worthy of itself and of tho cause And I hope the will not for ft moment think of a small church with the of enlarging at some future for hey mny rest assured that future will besides if it does it will cost almost as much to enlarge us to build right in he first place Now it is only n question f a dollars and if hey have not tho nor cannot raise it better tut whal have out at interest nnd they can got what they want than to the whole project for ever The clergyman in charge of this new parish has Iho ability to Jill any church that nay be built for him It is to be that thu gentlemen having thh latter in charge will sec the importance of the enterprise self-sustaining from lie beginning nnd not d tax upon the other forever Five thousand dollars be to build church liat would people Surely the of Cincinnati will cheerfully this small amount if by so doing can build up permanently in our city Flood in the Upper Mississippi ST Louis Juno Tho river rose 2 inched for the 24 hours ending at six o'clock List night since which time it has been ri sing at rate of an inch and a half ti hour The levee is now perfectly submerged On the floors of some of the stores tho water is one and half feet deep is wholly underwater an the bottom to a great extent inundated An additional rise of six to eight feet is coming down the Missouri and the Upper Mississippi and iis tributaries continue to pour out a flood Very heavy rains prevailed all lust night and this morning ST Louis June 11 11 For the forty one hours ending at 6 o'clock last night the river rose twenty-nine inches and is still rising one inch per hour Tho water is now about four and a feet below the highest flood mark of The tipper Mississippi is rising at Dubuque nnd the head waters of the Illinois are again swelling Tho Missouri fell five inches at Saturday but there is an additional rise coming from above Heavy rains prevailed yesterday bul it is clear this morning The Flood iu the West ST Louis Juno 14th Despatches from state that on Saturday afternoon a opened on the Mississippi side of he town through which the water poured it a fearful rate filling up thu whole space levees and is now running over the embankments on the opposite side a thousand feet nf the Illinois road is washed away The wing of the now hotel fell in Sunday and the balance expected to full during the night Nearly all the houses were tumbling down drifting away or sinking Scarcely s building in the city is expected to ho flood The water is two and a half feet deep in the second story of the Taylor and still rising rapidly Mound is also in danger of overflowed The levee on the Mississippi side of las broken nnd he whole town is The buildings are floating oft From Fort Leaven worth ST Louis June 14 A despatch from dated June by the U S Express lo The sixth column of troops will not march till the lust leu Harney nnd lis stall with an escort nf 45 men of the 7th Infantry under Capl McLaw leave he day foil owing This diversion from the date already fur their departure is owing to thu heavy rains which have occasioned a freshet of streams The bridge over Salt Run las been carried away but is relative lo the oil of apt Marcy's train has no foundation im TliR nt reports from Cairn arc of a most alarming character The rising and running over the Ohio levee in several Mr Ashley engineer of the road gives it his opinion that foot inon of a rise vill sweep Cairo entirely away Mound water The depot grounds ho highest of the town arc covered o Hie depth live inches conveyed onu of a mile rum Mound City in flat boats to Confirmations June The Senate has made tho following J R Chandler of Penn Minister to Naples Join Stockton of New Jersey Minister to ionie E Y Fair of Alabama Minister to ielgiuni 1C C Young of Minister to he Argentine Joseph A Wright f Indiana Minister to Chas 11 of Penn M mister to Ecuador The Pennsylvania Port i May 8th 1858 ft From and after Monday May 10th 1858 the mails will arrive and depart from this office as follows Cleveland Pittsburgh Philadelphia City Columbus and Cincinnati Mails per Pittsburgh Fort Wayne nnd Chicago will Daily at 5 r x Great Northwestern Mail per Pit Wayne and Chicago Hail Road Dally except at 5 30 A 5 30 P.M Mail from New York and States per Toledo Wa baah and Western Daily at J JO r M Indianapolis Central Illinois Saint Louis end Southwestern mail per Toledo and Western except Sundays nt DEPARTS 5 P M except nt 8 p M 7 A M Saint Mary's Ohio niM 8 r H nt 7 i N Intl nl 13 fl A P f H 7 A H Ind frilly Tal T I J Winchester Horse Matt nt 6 r X Saint Jot Ohio Mail It A N Liberty Ind Horse 8 r M Ohio Hone Mail Marion Ind Horse Mail 2 p m day al 3 p m All mails which in the will cloie evening uni which leave during office will be closed 40 minutes before time for departure open during the from 7 o'clock in the morning to o o'clock in evening except while separating and distributing the or Western at which time the boiM will be closed on day from 9 to 9 o'clock in the morning and from J to S o'clock in the JOHN G MAIER P nud to the Churches Fifty-eight were admitted on profusion o tho Ynks College Church at the late others had been received a few months loru have become uring the vacations in other hero nre thirty and forty lore who an early f religion tlic whole the year will exceed ono hundred and twenty Nearly all who attended ic in the First Church in for two months past lave byun Sume have IMBU mudo to tha seventy our of the Iwing by baptism At St Paul Minnesota has n extensive revival in tho yf 13 Methodist and Presbyterian -a business men's prayer meeting me hour at noon fifty additions on to tho Church during the ast six weeks Ctn 1801 a little more than half we ius one of the staple article of the earth four of dollars iu metals It would be a to that is an only revenue for gold and The Mint returns show hat right States and Territories have gold ind we have authentic accounts that the purchase called abounds tt silver U is perfectly certain therefore hat the United States will urnish its own coin and nnd supply a great deal to Ihc of Iho vorld The following arc the from the several States and H G corgia Tennessee Alabama New The mines of and would be worked much more han they nro if gold were not eo much norc abundant as to attract tho and miners in that direction 2 Of Commercial Movement While we lave thus been producing gold at such a rate we been exporting and as rapidly The following is the result of the exportation and importation of pecio from 1822 to 1858 arranged in of five years each 823 to 1827 838 to 1832 21 8.13 to KW to 1342 Tract Society Tho llev Dr Kirk of has come ut with a Proclamation on the Tract mater Ho says tho Now York Society have one right in their action and that the have also done right in their That those who do want to uy tracts on slavery can bo hat those who do can hu accommodated nd aa the Society will at once to print Tracts on Slavery no PROFESSION AL from the Pennsylvania ame from Cairo to-day principally bound or St Louis Many being in n destitute were passed free over the Central oad The estimated the number board at four hundred and fifty and the and injured at two hundred and fifty his own heart was riveted to the larth At the last lie rowed under the nf dissolution as though death were an scarifying his limbs in vain hope of though but a few hours more inutile in the moment of chance to be his eye on Ood or to grasp eternity the emblem of old political which also on ts death bed helplessly longing to live on lis name is never breathed as a watch word his writings never thrill as oracles Swept Away by tt ISAAC JENKINSON Attorney at Fort Ind Office in Building 2nd floor to get some hard knocks for ground he has taken but is ready to take them The Mercer Street Presbyterian Church cw York contributed the post year of which was given to the cause Foreign Missions and an sum to ic extension H WITHERS WITHERS MORRIS at 2 north of nji Fort Ind May 5th 1858 III occupied by liquor tores was destroyed by firo this morning in building and goods will exceed Insured for Another NEW ORLEANS June An explosion yesterday on tho steamer Eclipse ear by which two men were killed nd three Jews In Algiers At Algiers Africa the French governor ias solemnly inaugurated the new cost It has a dome nd is decorated with gorgeous arabesques nd is to accomodate persons besides galleries for the daughters and others Tlic Oldest Religions Newspaper Tho origin of the religious press is again the public A recent writer tho first religious to the late ov Alexander but the man who is lo Ihc credit of that matter is the ate Hev Smith On the 1st day of September 1808 ho published a religious called The Herald of Gospel liberty in the town of Portsmouth N II hat paper is still published The whole rics from tho time of Iho first issue is in state of preservation and can bo seen by ny one curious in these matters The Church in New York The various churches in New York city numbered and classified 50 Episcopal 31 Methodist 1 Presbyterian 20 23 Dutch 7 Congregational 7 Lutheran 1C to Presbyterian Associate Presbyterian fi Presbyterian Primitive Christians Catholic 4 2 2 Second Advent 2 3 Friends 1 Methodist Protestant 1 ow Jerusalem 4 African Methodist and miscellaneous OCr In Philadelphia tho revival is going n with deep interest Crowded are held at tlic Street lurch Handel and Haydn Hull the Diligent Fairmount nnd other and hose and nt many of the lurches According to a in the cw York Tribune Iho Church to named u result of tho revival movement in other 1847 to 1852 1853 to 1857 ASH EIGHT DROWSED We have to a most painful and casuality caused by one of the freshets that liaro of lato been so at ninety-three miles mm this city on the five miles his side of on the Beloit and Branch of tho G C U R II The lamentable fate of family attAch as melancholy in interest to the pot on which they perished as invests he Notch of the White Mountains it forever irith the unfortunate Wileys A special telegraphic dispatch informs us hat about dawn yesterday freshet came rushing with great violence down a through which in ordinary seasons lows an Insignificant brook a tributary to ho Hook Kivor Upon the bank stood the two-story occupied by a much clergyman llev Horatio Frum some flither by the undermining of the hank r tho dwelling being reached by tho angry Inod it was overturned carried ts inmates the his wife and heir eight children wore in their buds hen buy wero swept into the raging torrent The father alone managed almost to his and the lank nearly exhausted the mother nnd her were seen no more alive The mast profound sensation at once that entire community The most active measures wore once taken to recover he and up to 0 o'clock u m four mil been Thn children were nf various ngM from years of age The family was ono much in liat ami tho sad fate that has them will causo tears wero away but we no lives lost Gold Torre Unite nml of exports Our loss in specie by trade in these years was one airly As wo had not of thai when wo began it is obvious that we should have been absolutely bankrupt but for tho domestic produce of gold for exudation With Utat however we really gained largely Let us now much we have In thu first place wu must ascertain what we hod on hand in 1822 According to the best authorities this was We have then this result taking the amount of gold since only into Specie on hand in 1822 Since produced Aggregate Excess of Exports JOHN HOUGH Jr Attorney and Counsellor at Law Fort Wayno Ind Will practice and attend to the securing of in the several of Northern Indiana A T fcCo New York Starr Co Frothingham Newell k Co J k Co Halsted It Co Spofford Co Chanc McKinney ft Co Boston t P ft J P Hawes Baroroft t Co Philadelphia Jonea tt Co Fairthorne Hall Co Worthington A Co i Jt Brooks Tweed t Andrews C Ihmsen k Co May 1858 Fire at Juno 14th On Saturday between seven and eight o'clock broke out in the building occupied by on water street and it could bo destroyed no two three four and five on Water St nd numbers ono and three on Main st The following is ths loss as near as can be Habcock Sontag's hardware store insured for Elisha Babcock's oss is insured for Brothers building was insured for The Canal Bank building is damped to tho amount of and is fully The Journal office building is a otal wreck insured for the is insured for A leather and wool dealer lost but except UK damage in removing his on iu comer removed all goods in a imaged condition Louis Kalm removed 11 of his goods but will lose hy damage om mud and water Tho damage on all 10 removed will not exceed ho total loss will not fall much short of steamer Universe passed iia morning ten hand Gain since 1822 In the page 0 Vol 1 for we found the amount of coin and bullion then in tho country to bo We have then gained in tho fast four years about in specie As these statements nre from the most Iho government can obtain we have no reason lo doubt tho accuracy of the result They correspond likewise with our own independent calculations Gold is n product therefore Iwon very in saving tho country from the evil effects of over trading and in providing a solid fund for tho maintenance of credit Anniversary of thu of Hill BOSTON June The anniversary of tho batth of Hunker Hill was today by a military in Hml n turn out in Tho also its annual meeting nml the old of Medical DOCTOR W D STEWART AGR ATE In and of the Medical Departments of the of Ky and New York City permanently in FORT WAYWE will giving and attention to all committed to his professional care whether in Town or Country Day or Night THE TO I have in the m Kyr and of the New York M well as through an Practice of years Those who arc afflicted aro to me on Berry Street two doora of thn 3d Church Office on Clinton Streit immediately over Ihc Post Office Mov 1858 Cora DUTTOX We spoke yesterday of iu urgent procuring from cud corn of the earliest varieties The Hilton corn will ripen from thn time of in ninety days liave known t to Wo have icard of it ripening in eighty All of m family of corn lhat Rot into the of Juno will ripen the front of fall