W to practice Law in the Sup continue;
to attend to cases before Congress; to prosecute Claims and settle accounts against the Departments and Boards of Commissioners to procure Patents at home and abroad; to ob
THE ST. LOUIS UNION Book and Job
Printing Establishment, No. 35 Locust street between Main and Second, St. Louis, Mo.
HARLES & HAMMOND, Book and Job
Printers, Main street, St. Louis, Mo.
tain Pensions and Bounty lands; to collect debts, dividends. legacies and inheritances in any part of the United States and in foreign countries; to make investments of funds in Loans and Stocks and on Bonds and Mortgage, and to negociate the purchase and sale of Loans, Land and Patent-rights in any State of the Union. Particular attention paid to A St. Louis, Mo., Wanzer Minor & Co., California Land Title cases coming up to the 126 Pearl street, New York, Moses Wanzen U. S. Supreme Court on appeal. and Henry J. Minor, New York, Archibald Young, t. Louis.
Communications prepaid. addressed to W. G. SNETHEN, 5, Carrol Place, Capitol Hill, Washington, D. C., will meet with prompt attention.
Manufactory, corner of Third and Pine
"MURRAY & DORMAN, Iron Railing
streets, continue to manufacture at the above establishment, all kinds of plain and ornamental iron railing, balconies, bank and jail doors, book safes, fire-vaults, iron window shutters, iron awnings, lightning rods, bedsteads, gratings, and in fact, any thing which can be formed of iron.
RCHIBALD YOUNG & CO., 99 Main st.,
N. B.-We manufacture all of our own
goods, and sell by wholesale at the lowest pos
The Prairie Dog, by ALFRED S. WAUGH, Esq., St. Louis, Mo. Greatness of Character-Random Thoughts, by an Occasional Writer, 65, 135 Germany. Influence of Enthusiasma on Happiness, from the French of Madame de Staël. By BERNARD A. PRATTE, Esq., St. Louis, Mo. Our Country's Good, by - of Kentucky,
The public lands and western improvements, by K. of Mo. Predestination, by Hon. A. BEATTY of Ky. The Western Railroad Improvements in connection with the Interest of the Eastern and Middle States, by K. of Mo.
Notes on Ruffin's Essays on Calcareous Manure, by Hon. A. BEATTY of Ky.
Friendship, a vision-Random thoughts, by an Occasional Writer, The Trade of the Southwest, by Lieut. M. F. MAURY, U. S. Navy, - Who are Oppressors, and who the Oppressed? By Mrs. MARY R. HALL, Keokok, Iowa
Twilight Musings, by A. M. B., of Ala.,
What is a Minister like?
GENERAL INDEX TO THE SEVENTH VOLUME.
Agricultural interests-National Igno- rance of, in the United States, 182. Agricultural science
manures, influ- ence of the atmosphere saline and earthy matter, bones &c. 309. Aliments. Constituents of the blood, fi- brine, albumen &c. 81. American art, foreign opinion respect- ing, 291.
Alton, a tabular statement of exports, in 1851, 406.
Animal and vegetable organism, 81. Growth of animals, Tissues, Food, &c. 84. Animal and vegetable king- doms, Circulation of matter &c. 309. An Incident, 50.
A Declaration, 202.
A Hint. 202.
A Thought, 134.
A Free Spirit, 416.
Atala, 51, 123, 204, 279, 349, 418. Banks, Condition of the New Orleans banks in 1851, 195.
Bank of the State of Missouri, Report of its condition, 31 Dec. 1851, 334. Bread stuffs, value exported from the U. S. annually from 1831 to 1851, 193. Burlington, Iowa, Convention, Resolu- tions and Memorial respecting the Improvements of the Upper Mis- sissippi, 93.
Calcareous manures, Notes on Ruffin's essays, 247.
Cañon of Chelly & the Navajos, 102, 218. Capitol of Missouri, 435. Chateaubriand, anecdote of, 203. Cincinnati, tabular statement of its commerce for 1851, 39.
Civic and rural embellishments, 75. Coffee, and the coffee trade, production and consumption of coffee in different countries, 301.
Coin and bullion imported and exported annually from 1821 to 1851, 403. Commerce of the Mississippi valley, outlines of a system, 1. Commerce of Cincinnati, tabular state- ments, 39, 44. Commerce of New Orleans, tabular statement of exports, imports, ship- ping &c., 113 to 115. Commerce of the Gulf of Mexico, 219. Commerce of St. Louis, tabular state- ments of imports, domestic and for- eign, steamboat arrivals, &c., 264 to 269. Prices of leading articles of pro- duce. Imports of liquors, oils. Lumber trade &c., 322 to 329. Commerce between the United States and Mexico, tabular statement, 270. Commerce of Para, 389. Commerce of Alton, 406.
COMMERCE OF THE UNITED STATES. Statement of the value of the dutiable merchandise re-exported annually from 1821 to 1851, 400, For- eign merchandise imported, re-export- ed and consumed from 1821 to 1851, and the rate of consumption per ca- pita, 401. Statement of the value of imports consumed, value of domestic and foreign exports exclusive of spe- cie, tonnage. &c., from 1821 to 1851 inclusive, 402. Statement of coin and bullion imported and exported annu- ally from 1821 to 1851, 403. State- ment of the consumption of iron in the U. S. from 1842 to 1851, and the rate per capita, 403. Statement of bar iron &c. imported annually from 1821 to 1851, 404. Statement of quali- ty and value of iron imported annually from 1843 to 1851. Average cost per ton and duties paid at different peri- ods, 405. Conversation. Temple, 348. Cotton trade, vide commerce of NewOr- leans, 114. Statistics of growth and con umption in all countries, by C. F. M'CAY, 234. Criticism, 416.
Hints of Swift and
Financial and commercial prospects of 1852, 367.
Fine arts, 73, 147, 217, 290. Flow of soul, 203.
Food, vide division of, 306. Friendship, a vision, 361. Galena, Lead Statistics, 399. Germany, by Madame de Staël, 138. Girls, 144.
Goethe, a sonnet to, 144. Greatness of Character, 65, 135. Great Britain, Tonnage of, compared to that of the U. S., 193. Mercantile marine of Gr. B. and the U. S., 194.
Gulf of Mexico, its commerce, 219, 383, 4.
Hannibal, Commencement of Railroad, 110.
Harpies and Hyenas, 49. Hint, 202.
Henderson & Nashville railroad, 409. Human food, division of, 306. Humanity, its progress, 69. Hungary, its present condition and pol- icy, 340.
Ingham, S. D., Observations on the currency of the U. S., 92. Independence, 345.
International Language, Description of some of the Signs used by the Prairie Indians, as an, 430.
Iron, imports, poduce and comsump- tion, 403 to 405.
Iowa, description of the northern coun- ties, 319.
Kossuth, Louis, 345.
Lead mines of Wisconsin, 394. Lead, Statistics of Galena, 399. Legal wit. 278.
Love and Hate, 217.
Lumber trace of St. Louis, 329. Marcy, Capt. R. B., Report of route from Fort Smith to Santa Fé, and from Doña Anna to Fort Smith, 23. Mercantile marine of Great Britain and the U. S., 194.
Mississippi river, Improvement of the Rapids and of the channel at its mouth, 6.
Mississippi and Atlantic Railroad, Sur- vey &c., 408. Narrow-minded Uncharitableness and Comprehensive Earnestness, 417. New Orleans, decline of its commerce, 4. General statement of its commerce for the year 1851, 113, 114, 115. Con- dition of its Banks, 195. Internal improvement convention, 407. Northern Missouri Railroad Charter, 258.
Ohio and Mississippi Railroad, Report Commencement at of Engineer, 12 Illinoistown, 408. Ohio river illustrated, 289.
Oppressors. Who are Oppressors, and who the Oppressed? 411.
Our country's good, 152. Note, 219. Para, its commerce, 389.
Periodical Literature, 147.
Public Improvements, and the Press in Arkansas, 189. Ohio & Mississippi, RAILROADS. report of survey, 12. Commencement of, at Illinoistown, 408. Hannibal and St. Joseph, commencement of, 110. Railroad share and stock market 115. Pacific Railroad, amended charter, stock subscription &c., 186. New Albany railroad, progress of the work &c., 187. Railroad improvements of the West, in connection with the in- terests of the Middle States, 225. North Missouri Railroad charter 258. Railroad from St. Louis to New Or- leans, 293. Railroads in operation and course of construction in the U.S.,Jan. 1st, 1852, 330 to 333. Railroad litera- ture 348. Southwestern Railroad, 407. Mississippi & Atlantic railroad, 408. Henderson & Nashville railroad, 409. Railroad decision in case of Kennard vs. New Jersey Railroad Co., 410. St. Louis, Sales of Real estate in 1851, 31. St. Louis, Commercial Statistics for 1851, 264, 322.
St. Louis, Railroad to New Orleans 293. Ste. Genevieve and Iron Mountain Plank Road, 408. Satire, 290.
Scene on the Ohio river, 289. Schiller, sonnet to, 213. Song of the people, 201. Song of the mechanic, 291. Southwest, Trade of, 375. Southwestern route to the Pacific, 23. Spirit glory, 45, 118, 196. Steam carriages on Plankroads 250, 315. Steamboats of the Upper Mississippi, history of, 397.
Steamboat arrivals at St. Louis, New Orleans, and Cincinnati, vide com- merce and commercial statistics. The Missouri Statehouse of Jefferson City, 435.
Toby & Anderson's Plow factory at Peoria, Ills., 338.
Tonnage of Great Britain and the U. S. compared, 193. The Bud, 122.
Tribute to Labor, 271. Trade of the Southwest, 375. Twilight Musings, 428.
Valentine, Influence of a devotional spirit, 360.
Plank Road from Ste. Genevieve to the Vivific Arts, 68.
What a Minister is like, 435.
Poesy, from the German of Schiller 145. Wheat, arrivals at St. Louis from the
Prairie Dog, 33.
Predestination, 214.
Progress of Humanity, 69.
Public lands and western improvements
Missouri, Mississippi, and Illinois rivers, respectively in 1851, 266. Wheeling Bridge Case, Judicial Deci- SION, 410.
Youth, a gleam of, 134.
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