Pfe5^=t-5sE-2« 



58 



MOORE'S RURAL HEW- YORK . 



FEB. II. 



CmteaU of ti? Rural Ew February 12. 1853 - 



ACMCBf.TUJtAU ric 



In.pro.el Breed* «f C-*lU*-AfTsfc*re*. OHasSraLtd.). . . . 



"PreOtaMc F*n 

 AtTtoalUinl Matters io Io*». 



i 



SiE''. 1 "" .'.'"'. :.'''.,' vK;-S 



i 



Conjrejsional Proceedings. 



-Mr. Wade, of Ohio, moved to postponi 





Lake u 



: If:., 



I 



and* to Ac: Hi HH sure the 



appropriations would pas* a* they always do, and 

 Cuba, booked np 15 It is bj nuuiifesl destiny, and 



cultural, of all inteicst*, ia the least fostered by 

 this Government. Thebillwos taken a] 

 naye»>— and dUcostcd. Ueewra, Gwin and Stew- 

 art offered amendments to the text, after which, 

 kfr.Pugfa moved to recommit the bill to the Com- 

 ibUc Land 



, motion of Mr. Own, was rcconsid- 

 1 furlhcr discussion on the bill post- 

 poned until Ihonth nit., riDCO vrhich dale we bare 

 it heard from the Capitol. 



Mr. Fiigh moved fur any correspondence with 

 u Mia relative to compulsory enlistment of per- 

 ns claiming American protection, iu the Prussian 

 ormj . Adopted 



I Mr. Bayard, from the- Committee oT Judiciary, in- 

 troduced a resolution approving of Minister Roid's 

 decroeofl'. <i'g tho Consulates 



'- - in China, and declaring that nolcgislntionisrcquii- 

 ed to legalize it. Adopted. 



The House hill for the punishment of counter, 

 feiters of military land warrants was read and 



The Indian Appropriation bill was taken, np and 

 passed. Quite a number of private bills have been 

 acted upoD by the Senate. 



Itm -1. Mi: Wilson, from tho Committee on 



Elections, made a report iu the Nebraska contested 



election case, declaring liird li. Chapman cntitlei 



instead of Mr. Ferguson, the sittin; 



The Hayti-n Revolution. 



■.el., i i:„. 



hoU.frcn 



Jeremic. Hayii 



peror baa been compelled to return 



Prince U ilh the re^t ol In* troops, and 

 that he will ai B | 



mic have marched up to Port bo i 

 people of Jeremic and the adjoining 



Ncii'5 ^ntngmpljE 



advised the Empei 

 Additional ad vie 



ab.-lii 



ivcdi 





. had 





fur between IbelmperinllTOopaud the Insui^ 



Souluuipje had advanced as far as Uuro, and ivaa 

 neditating a march upon St. Mary. A conflict 

 ad taken place between two contending parties, 

 ul we have no reliable information a* to which 

 ide was victorious. About forty of the L'mpcioi's 

 troops who were wounded, bad arrived at I'orl au 

 jlican movement was pending at 

 The Emperor liad called furmoic 

 troops, but could not raise forty men. Reports 

 'hat Jocnel nnd Aux Cayea bad de 

 clarcd for the Republic. Tho Emperor's forces do 

 general opinion 



1 Qoffri 



, ill be successful. 



1 nearly suspended at Jcrcmio a 

 e, dn embargo having been laid 



Onn 



n nfMr. Li 



•ran,. 



List of New Advertisements thia Week. 



,rii 1 ■ a 



I Years— John Woodruff. 

 KL-U. lllk-nnll. 



ROCHESTER, N. Y , FEBRUARY IS, 1850. 



On 





Dana.— As the dress donned by the 

 1st nit., proves really beautiful ond 

 acrvicenble— anil, moreover, is greatly admired by 

 both Press utiiI People, fnumeroaa exchanges and 

 i"i n ipondenta baring used rerj strong language 



I prolan) -it is bat juit that we should nc- 



ksOT?ledgotowhom vrt ore indebted for an outfit sc 

 recherche and becoming. The Type was mnnufac- 

 tared by Ciias. T. Wiiitk & Co., of New Y.nk, of 

 their improved nurd mi-tat, expressly for the Rural. 



It needs no praise. To render it >lm iL l,|,-. „ ,. 



had it copper-faced by the Newton Copper Co. of 

 New ^ oik The rule-, iiiishe«. Ac., were furnished 

 b\ N Li win, ul linilnhi, iiiiin whom, as we have 

 *""' l "' 1 '" '■ "" ''' '" "" m, ' r <" reluible or honorable 



u I"' ' 1 1- rum I printer's furnisher in the eounl ry. 



Our main title heading was " got up" und engraved 



by Mr. Mis, of the firm of Lkai.i.iv. 1 j & 



Mix, of this city. Most of the vignette headings 

 ol iIi-|hii hi 11-11 In were designed and engraved by Mr. 

 Q G In Hi taa.of Buffalo. The corner pieces, 

 head for Horticultural dcpnit.neni. At 

 signed ami oogntrnd by Mr. Gbo. Fkai 

 of this city. Though "good wine needs 

 <> >- |....|,i Ihnt we Hum publicly neknowledge the 

 ""' "''nil-. -I in niikiiu; th,- Rural one of the 



ire into the expediency of reporting 



and provide for Hie punishment of 

 polygamy in the territories of the United States, 

 and restrain the people and authorities therein 

 from interference mill the federal judiciary. 



Tho House passed, with amendments, the Senate 

 bill relating to tho N. Y. Indiau reservation in 

 Kansas. It set apart 230 acres for each individual 

 Indian who removed from New York to the reser- 

 vation assigned them under the treaty of 1838. The 

 Indians arc to have a year within which to make 

 selections, nnd pre-emptions arc to be received 

 from the date of settlement. The money derived 

 from the sale or lands other than those selected by 

 the Indians, is to be paid to the treasury for their 

 benefit. The Senate bill, with an omendment 

 granting the right of way Uinuigh the Fort Gratiot 

 Military Reservation to Michigan, for Railroad 

 purposes, with the privilege of erecting depots 

 id work-shops, was passed. 

 The Homestead bill of Mr. Grow, which provides 

 at any person who is the bead of a family, 01 

 itizen of the United States, 



The Emperor hod placed his family on board a 

 csscl at I'ort an I'rinco, and there is no doubt of 

 is intention of making lus escape fiom the country. 



ineluirhad adjourned IhcGrai 



ferer ia decidedly raging throngfaoc 



■ 



DgtOlttOTt CSl ihe newly di« 



orered mini - [„ 



<£l)c Jlenjs (Eonbcnscr. 



Tae lower branch < 



,.!;.„ 





tin; tlielii- . , ■ 



to -'.. 11 bdl for the trial 

 D.and the virtual aboluioi 



Wheat wo* rnisuj this last ■oaspn.fbr the first 

 time, on the Island of Hawaii. Between 3.000 and 

 4,000 barrels of flour are now ground ot Honolulu, 

 all of which is produced from native wheat. 



It is said that Brtgham Young has nzcommuni- 



carcd some three hundred and sixty of the Saints. 



fbi delinrjiieneica ofaomo sort; their fault i^ sup- 

 posed to be too free intercourse with tho Gentile*. 

 Tut New York Tribune says one hardware house 

 tb it city has sold this winter over twelve hun- 

 dred pair^ of skates— nearly five hundred of which 



when the city looked 1 



ghly bare ol 

 r Soulouque has ship- 



tand v 



(l::l( n 



lois lileil u 

 theiiatn,,. 



■..rd.ng 



Affairs at Waslunrrton. 



T.i r. See, 



Ml llieiul ,, 



■i the Tree* 



■ Bourn 



t . 11 reply to tho resolution calling 

 UM "tu*1 and probable receipts from theCnston: 



public llUI.I- .■,!,,l 11 |l,r l -,.„,-, ,-, ,,„ H, . 



fiscal year, nnd for bia opinion, whether the said 

 ■ " ! - inatt '" meel the public oxpon. 

 ■'"'"■ ■ ■■■ '■■- receipts during tho first 



quarter of tin r- .... imgs.-pte 



ber last, were nearly |S0,»3I,009, as stated in 

 annual report. The receipts for the remain 

 Ihrat-quartere are estimated nt #-.-;, -.eon,,!, 

 which $87,000,000 were estimated from the C 

 lODU It wu bftlierad thai the .purler ending 

 DocembwlMt, would yield U0i000,000. The prcs- 

 cnt quarter, ending on the 31sl of U U 

 C)0, nn.l tlit „,, xl q UarBW| , 



Mr Yulce. e| llvmila|1 of „ 1( , S(S113 ,, , 



tOH.bfvep.jiog a bill lor] 



v-e of letter po» 

 itbeeo agreed to ; adesire 



. ■ 

 •ttbnates that about 

 iportation of the 

 mads between tho United SteJas aifyZ 

 tries, .nd Hen rorl ad Hew OHa^TwdSon 

 Francisco, and b*ck fer itn- next tis^j] , „ L. 

 larger part of the service is to be paid wUh the «-I 



1 

 1 



■ ■ ■ 

 100 miles, and S ceuls for 

 Tin- Post-Usttar Oentt 





■ndod 



postages 



tew line* < 



nml ageut of the Treasury Department 

 - a^-o to 

 noeeted nub lbs California ifinl 

 LjhoinSd 

 ahargea btoss 

 >ug iu all the dcpartiueuU iu Califc 



From the Pacific Side. 



Tub Overland Mail, with dates to the 12th ult., 

 arrived nt St. Louis ou the 3d iust. Tho trip was 

 made in twcnty-lhreo days, including a detention 

 of twenty. two hours. 



Rumors prevailed in San Francisco that S00 pris- 

 oners in the I'euitentinry had been accidentally 

 poisoned by the use of some chemical mixed with 

 the flour. There was doubtless some truth In the 

 rumor, but the matter was greatly exaggerated. 

 The Probate Judge of Carson Valley had published 

 11 curd declaring his intention to perform the duties 

 of bis office without fear or favor from any man.— 

 A collision between linn ami niHi-murmous was re- 

 garded OS inevitable. 



Gen. Kionos- was glill prosecuting the war ogaiu st 

 the Indians in the north with grout success His 

 troops hnd killed quite a number, and token over 

 200 prisoners. 



New digginga had been discovered about fifty 

 yielding 



Ivers were freely drawn. A gen 



great difficulty, prevented. T 



any idea of an impartial jury 01 



olil.uiieil in Mini city is preposterous, 



al law will probably he established. 



The St. Louis Republican publishes a lotlei 



Salt Luke, the 14th, stating that Judges Sincln 



Crndbaugh leave the territory io the spring, nn 



that their presence as federal officers, in ndi 



; the law, ia merely farcical. The Icttci 



that there is no loyalty to tho Government r, 



Mormons— that while, to a certain extent 



respect the power of law, they neither rccc 



respect its spirit. Neither murder no 



r crime has been or can be punished. 



acknowledge losing 800 K«e», 20,600 sheep and 

 horses, the destruction of 1,000 huts, nnd an im- 

 mense quantity of grain, altogether valued at up- 

 ward of $!0i),000, during the late war. Mr Yost, 

 in a letter to tho Santa Fe GastUe, intimates that 

 there is a deposition to deal too harshly with these 

 Indians, and so) i that if certain terms arc exacted 

 it will turn them from the pursuits of industry and 

 agriculture— by which they now suppo: 



I the l-'iiiin;i 



of valuables on board 



. St. Marc, and that should affairs 



im he will make his escape with 



e for dethronement. The Li»>» ■in- 



old gentleman hasalsi 



sufficient to soothe the decliuingycaisof a deposed 



A'ne.iu Kmpcror. 



Tubiir were no less limn 600 applicants ppv.-mg 

 their claims for appointments as keepers at (be 

 Auburn Prison, at the late meeting of the New 



As unusual sight— in these days — of a British 

 regiment 011 American soil, is to bo witnessed in 

 Boston, on the arrival of the 43d II 



n n « »" t.r signed wity 

 s Reaper patent expired «. 

 .ivy at present has S3 *?m 



il reorndy In a Philadelphia prison from 



more Intensely engaged I 



n legislation. 



mated in PMtodelphln fo 



f Appeals in New "i 



I'.n 



It i 



; dur 





e the steamer is coaling, the 

 ted to parade. 



ie original Yankee clock manufacturer hue 

 • hence, Seth Thomas died at Plymouth Uni- 

 on the 23th of January, at the age of 75 years, 

 ivas the originator of tho cheap Connecticul 



clock, which in its early day was considered the 



great invention of the ngc. 



lining has been prosecuted with vigor at 



Galena, III., the prescut winter. Tho stock oflend 



t that 





■ity. 



Old World Matters. 



.ndy IIool 



.■ Y.u-k, 



I Of 1 



N. Y. Stati 



-and r 



1 robbers and pluu 



1 high as 815 to the pau. 



About 100,000 sheep were met on the desert. 

 Many had been lost from fatigue and scarcity of 

 food, At Apucho Pass they encountered large piles 

 of rocks iu the road, supposed to have been placed 

 there by the Indiana under MAonEn.iz. 



Ou the Colorado, camp fires of the Apaches v 

 seen, but no Indians. Tho roads generally 



The Supreme Court of California bad dissolved 



*<> injucl to prevent the Pund C01 iasi 



from issuing bonds of 1S58. 



Gen Wbllsr's message had been read i 

 Legislature, and was pronounced a very able 



. d.lll ;l 





UUTCAX Naws— The details of the Mexicmi 

 news by the Tennessee at New Orleans, is received. 

 It ia stated at Vera Cruz that Gen, Miramon would 

 not accept the Presidency, but declined iu favor of 

 ■ n of Zuloage and a Tobago constitu- 

 ti m, T!,,,, ii mi stated, would mum Robin to 

 pronounce 1U favor of the Liberals. Juarei, as 

 well ns HinmoD, was much pressed for money. It 

 is the universal opinion among the foreigners that 

 the United States would declare for Juarei. The 

 moral effect would be so great as to place that 

 party in power within CO days. The Coustimtion- 

 Qol Trejo, represent their cause as 

 prosperous, and that the people are Uockm- to th. ir 

 loudly of rietort 

 e.pially conti- 



standard, while their leaders ti 

 the Reaetioni 

 dent and threaten a descent o 



tCrni 



Naw Yobs I.kgisliti rb- Our Legislatui 



st, doing nothing. We learn 



a bill for a canal tax of three-eights of a mill. 1 



in —Erie enlargement, ftio.l.y*; Os- his troops, 

 ™egoC«uaJ,*uo.640; Qajuga end Seneca 

 Mack U!ver, |6S,7S0j Gcoesee Valley, $1% 



aits j hi* near 

 r*port*J, and thera the matter rests. I to hand c 



Society.— The Medical 



ual McetiugntAlbanyontbelstmst. A Com- 



) method calculated to insure more general 

 iuation throughout the Slate. After consulta- 

 nt- Committee reported small-pox more gen- 

 y prevalent iu the Slate at the present time 

 ever before since the introduction of vacoma- 

 and recommend that the Legislature should 

 pass n law empowering the trustees in each school 

 district to exclude from the benefit of public in- 

 struction, all who have uot been vaccinated. The 

 Society elected the following officers for the ensu- 

 ing year:— Pntident— Prof. B. Fordyce Baker, of 

 New York; Viei-Pfetident— Daniel T. Jones, On- 

 ondaga; 6Vc/v^iry-Sylvester D. Willurd, Albany; 

 Trta&urcr— John V. P. Quackcnbush, Albany, 



news has been telegraphed. 



Gkeat Britaix.— The Austrian loan of f 0,000,- 

 000 was announced for the Loudon Money Market. 

 Warlike rumors continued, and notwithstanding 

 peace assurances, the latest Continental correspon- 



peace was losing ground. Warlike preparations 



continued in France. It is again reporteil, l.mi not 



1, except by advice o 



belie 



gnyi 



11 Id - 



I \\ ill 





INCa! 



n.i.— The Kincardine Com 

 appalling distress prevail; 

 nice county. Hundreds of 



their best and thriftiest farmers are destitute t 

 where-witb-all to carry them through till am 

 harvest— the crops of the past year having ol 

 proved an entire failure. We could cnumernl 

 stances where, even already, families are subsii 

 on a few boiled turnips, others on bread and v 

 olone. and the supply so small, that it cannot 

 body ond soul together for many weeks longi 

 Somo have consumed everything iu the shape of 

 vegetation, and as their lost resort, have slaugh- 

 tered their oxen, which forms their whole suste- 



tlw .— Petiliniis have gone to the Massachusetts 

 Legislature for a law allowing Judges to accept a 

 verdict from three-fourths of a jury in civil suit.s, 

 when, in their opinion, the cause of justice would 

 be served thereby. Judge Nash, of the Boston 

 Superior Court, endorses the proposition. The 

 genon] principle of the unanimity of tho jury on a 

 - 1 is not proposed to be destroyed by it ; but 

 ■r long consideration, they fail entirely to 



agree, the Judge may, in bis discretion, accept the 

 >n of three-fourths of them as a Yerdict. 



ewski in French foreign ministry. The British 



sores to protect the English interests iu Mexico. 

 The Times* city article quotes the funds heavy uud 

 inanimate, and after regular hours experienced u 



contemplation of the navy 



Fn.A ncr.— There has been a partial 

 ic panic ou the Paris Bourse. The reported 

 offensive and defensive alliance has been 

 between France and Sardinia. On the ID 

 rie had an article to the effect that the avoidance of 

 var was uot to he considered altogether certain. The 

 expedition against the Insurgents in Algeria, was 

 iiccessftil, tribes having made complete submis- 

 ion. The French garrison at Rome will shortly 

 ie reinforced by two regiments of the line. At 

 \lrin the belief of a coming war was decidedly 

 ncrcasing. Letters from reliable authority nt 

 Milan, say there was not the least chance of insur- 

 rection. It was also stated that the sending of 

 troops from Austria had been suspended. 



of di-aiJoetio 

 forcements 11 



but 



outbreak. Austria 



pouring 11 

 in Naple; 



The r 



'■'> ,; " l">- 



modlfied 



The edict provided 

 that all persons taken in any flagrant attempt 

 against the safety of the State he immediately tried 

 by n council of war. Leading journals of Germany 

 were exceedingly violent in an attack on the 

 French government, and urged the necessity of a 





> Pruss 



tions of sympathy and loyalty greeted the Pmporoi 

 of Austria whenever he appeared iu public. Th< 

 Daily News says ;— Prussia has signified to France 

 that she would look not with mditlercnce, but with 

 groat anxiety, on any unprovoked attack on 

 ina by France. 



1 -Ui 



* Paraguay river with heavy chi 

 e that something definite hade 

 Qtn£ the action of this expeditio 



Ti|iti<.ns illghUj lower. 



;Wf»53s6d. 



Win.) '.'-(■"' ^-i..l 



";•!.;',:, 



Don 1 xco.— Turks 

 received. Heavy 

 rains since the commencement of the year. A 

 large per centage of the salt had been wasted, and 

 no likelihood of any more being gathered for three 

 months. The stock on band, n v < > bushels, -. ..t 

 the shipping ports. A vessel at Turks Island from 

 Port au Platte, St. Domingo, reports that place in 

 a deplorable condition. Trade U very dull at Port 

 au Platte, and confidence in Preadont Sasts Ajtka 

 restored. 





^Mtt^, 



