Indiana American, Volume 24, Number 30, Brookville, Franklin County, 11 July 1856 — Page 2

A NBWSPAPBR-'CQMTAMMü A BRIEF SUMMARY OP THE LATEST PORE36N AND DOMESTIC INTBIUGENCE.

INDIANA AMERICAN. I jjfcfl

mhimm see ve vtrre. to Li um ss MW, M ewvt , eas bo eaatt .' T. Ä. OÖÖDWW, Witor. si areinsaoo hin. ol oar pur,ir rlrcti Immhk) Qsi we have row. i IM UffUlftruU.lOO It MUM, im two mihn in in.nMi"i. tun ' In (Na wvsv.UMa.al po,l..n w r flw Nfl " idonitt ip. ftAeVitlU awlU rniibw - - - "mm -m RATIFICATION MEETING!! JJt'LT ie. IMSTn Piom of I nutans without refu4 to pant political differences, who f eppssod I the eflbtte now making to spread territory secured to fresdom by a eoertd oo to promt as, ar. reauested to Met in Indianapolis, on TUES DAY, JULY IftTN. to ratify the nom .nations for President and Viee Preai Oeot and at Philadelphia, in the I7ih of Juno. Let tile whole people eoeae up in their might come with ususie tod with ban oen eon with, a aoMlael notion to moke n mighty demonstratio it favor of Fwnooat and the rights of Freemen. JOHN D. DEFREES. Cb'a State Ca. Com. OWL JUDICIARY The Judiciary of our country is poesensed of great powers, and must sustain hoary responsibility. It is the tiseery of oor government that Si kail stand upon the broad platform of low. deciding questions, not by prejudies, oof by party dictation, nor by the will of tbe masses, but soberly, jjepnassoaately, legally and justly. With this understanding we place in the hands of oor Judiciary our propart, our reputations and our lives. Aa to the persons composing the Judiciary, wa hare a right to expect tint they shall be men ot' suitable age, wwU d in law, both in its great 1 and deUils. of native good and sound discretion, with in püble integrity. They should bo axon of food reputation ai to their private morals. Such would command respect, and yet wo are driven to admit that there haa been a decline ia tbe moral power of oor courts, aad a great weakening of their hold upon the publio confidoooe. The fact ia patent and needs DO argument. Sorry are we that it oust be recorded. Can we reach the oeoee? Can the remedy be suggested? w - It haa been supposed that this change . may bo traced directly to the system of the popular election of J udges. Wa admit the force of some arguments gainst popular elections, yet we beHere such elections preferable to legis ) alive elections these are usua ly the worst form of popular elections, corn el! tbe dangers of popular elecwithout their safeguards, with the evils peculiar to themselves. We greatly pre tar an election by the peo ple to one by politicians. Wa submit to our readers, however, that possibly the short term of Judgeship, and the frequency of elections, have had ao injurious effect. As mattare wow stand, one term ie scarcely too long for tho efforts to secure re-e-lection. Would it not be better to bag then the time of service to seren or nine years ? Cut off the temptation to judicial electioneering, destroy the necessity for the judge to utter a party shibboleth, to address party clubs, aad to endorse the party platform from tho Bench. Again wo submit that making the Judgeship a prixe for party scramble has brought it into contempt. He is first ohoeea by a mere cabal a knot, a j onto. Then he is run on strictly party grounds, and comes to his seat, pledged to certain views concerning Bank, Tariff, Slavery, Temperance, Prohibition, the. He ie not Judge, hot too dominant party. It has pronounced the decisions he shall merely embody and announce them. He ia tho avenger of the majority, instead of hoinif a check upun it, and hence, aa ono of the most important judicial functions viz. defending the rights of tho minority, is no more ! Let the Judgeship bo left out of mere party jpaaiiattnnn 1st conventions leave thia aiatter to the people, and let them oho ess tbe best man. Too meager salaries of Judges have tUledthe Beach with inferior men. X food lawyer one who has now a reputation as such, can make more in tferoo months than a year's salary as a Judge will afford him. Hence he wUI 00 Ware his office for the bench, aod a slsit or drone is chosen. But Way compare Judges and first-class lawyers? The conductor on a good iwilroad is hotter paid than tbe Circoit Jadge. bonce, if a man haa a wile swai sowea cswWatrea. ha will be eonafoot and artJoiga. Many a retail aairh rooeises a larger salary than tbe tfOof Common Pleas. We must lo pay a competent price for It ia a markt table comOaOÖHsx. Chwap dodges are almost as a nuisance aa cheap school-tea-Or It ia true that some men of aresütlon the Bench, but ooAj so a taaaporary expedient, until sowaatoiog ease "terns up.' K JusJee will be reopfeted, they ho respectable men. If they are ia trade, usurious in coodksoluto or lieentious in nor00 roigor ia habjts,

th a .nan m. 4coss gentleman, but if ho Ine M dnoor a rufflen. hi will l

d. We once heard R Judge charge jury, in a gambling ease. rnd he Inai.l ..vkikil ..f I I. . .1 1 flTaan in uir im.li Aiiivm ill"- inn' Ii I" i. between I. oo. Smut. Poker and Seven up. He had II the slang, and niani Tested an acquaintance which must have resulted from long intimacy with card placers. Ue fined as a Judge, but talked as a gamester. Wl o can respect a court when the Judge ia a vile debauchee ? No one. Yet tilt people have been sometime. reduced to tho alternative sr lot-tin.; a knave or an ass ! It is humiliating that there ie so little ooeudeaee in live incorruptibility of our courts. Right or wrong, tbe people have come tu believe that court may 4e bought. Unfortunate it is for judicial reputation that there have been reoenl instanons in which wealthy villains bava escaped punishment by the "lew's deley," and it is difll cult to eon luce the public that any delay would have thwart d justice in tbeeaeeof poor men. The case of Matt. Yard, and I'ratt, of Jefferson ville'bave increased the feeling. It is of no ue to oonceal it judicial favor la regarded as a marketable commodity. Judges should show that they are impartial (hat they "shake their hands from the holding of bribes." Nor is the petty tyrannj, the overbearing insolence, the hauteur of tome Judgea, calculated to impress the Im holders lavorably. It is true that judicial bluster, biowbuatin and insult witnesses, and bullying attornivs, may win pot-house glory, but excites unmitigated disgust in tin- In-art ot 11 r honest and decent man. Our courts should be dignified und firm, and in all that, they will be amply sustain ed. This is enough at this lime wc have honestly indicated what we believe to be serious difficulties in the way of our Courts. We desire to see them command ihe respect snd venera tion of the whole people, but are con vineed that aunh ia not the ease Nor 1 .1 .w.. .w u wc uuiiuvBi mo iswt inn. ; nun .:,K .Ki.h rtr rrihn. I J - nals have opposed progress bare ' nrnatrated educational movements, und I r . . ... ... a. 1 nrvni1!! nn Hiuii-is hi viri nsv hwmr kened serious and painful apprehensions in many loyal hearts. Let our Judges see to it that they keep the ermine pure and unspotted. Aa thia ia a question of vita! iroportance to the people, we shall allude to it again Buchanan's Opinion of Slavery "When He was a Young Man " The apology for Miss Nancy's Fedralism is, that "he wis a young when he made that fourth of July speech in 1815, being only 25 years old. Eleven years afterwards, when 36 years old, while in Congress, he made the following remarks, on the 11th of April. 1826: "Permit me here, Mr. Chairman, for a moment lo speak upon a subject to which I have never betöre adverted upon this floor, and to which, I trust, I may never again have occasion to advert. I mean the subject of slavei nifi ii'tfL' it 'nn di a BELIEVK IT TO PK ORE AT I'O LI T ICA L AND A cut.' it unii ,t i KVir iriuvk S a. I V I a 14 SafV I I . a I i . - I GOD MY LOT HAS BEEN CAST IN A STATE WHEIIE IT DOES NOT EXIST IT II AS BEEN A CURSE ENTAILED UPON US BY I'll AT NATION WHICH MAKES IT A 8UBJECT OK PK PROACH TO OUR INSTITUTIONS Now, that be is old and well stricken in years, he calmly resigns himself into the hands of a Committee, and says, "ihe piriform must speak for me." That platform provides for an a unlimited extension of tlii "great political and moral evil," and he is willing to "entail" this curse upon the futuie inhabitants of Kansas, though thankful that he waa "brought up'' where it did not exist. But he ought not now be held responsible for sentiments entertained at so immature ao age ss 30. ii i The Fourth. The fourlh of July was celebrated in various places, and in divers manners in this county last Friday. At Mt. Carmel the day was celebrated in true patriotic stylo. J. D. How land Esq.. delivered an excellent address well adapted to the occasioa, and free from any allusion to the questions ol tbe day. At iMetamora, the Sunday School celebrated the day in splendid style. Several distinguished gentlemen addressed iheni, and, all in all, ihe day was most delightfully spent. The Democracy held several meetings for political purposes. Ooe near Bull Town, and several up the creeks The supposed reason of their exclu aivenese is that they widied to try on ihe revised edition of the Declaration. "We hold these truths to be el "-evident tbat all men are created equal, except niggers and Black Republicans, that they are all endowed with certain unalienable rights, except the emigrants to Kansas and Aboluionisls.lbai io secure these rights governments are instituted, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, except when the governed wi.-h to exclude siarery , from their territory, then their powers are vested in the standing army, or in committees of Missonriansand South Carolinians who may drive settlers from tbe polls, or way lsy them and rob them of their goods and escort them out of the country." To us the new edition does not sound as well as the old, but it is owing, ro doubt, to our old hunktrish ideas of freedom.

An Inc dent with a Moral. Wueti 'lie office-holdi r were at the BOejgeoMon tn Cincinnati they bought ii braXK runnoii and seal it out on a boat, to h ive it rendy to bellow up

some fnlliUM fin uli ilinr n irn with 14 be!the news ol the nomination lowed right well nenrly as well as Will Birche's home made Imby waker, but it most signally fail. -d to get up the enthusiasm. Kniling to accomplish any thing in town, b it making a not and burning powder, it we detailed to help get tip a pole nt Hquire itudicail's -a tit emblem ot the most potent Ih nioeralio argument of the present canvass a cane. Now earns the difficulty. The mechanic who had mounted it on wheels, in imitation of of Ihe Democratic party for whom :i was made, eschewed th long-tried nnd well-approved method of mounting cannons heretofore, and determin ed to try n new plan. 1! had embibed a kind of an idea of wheel sovereignly he thought that wheels ought to be m idi to go as they pleased without the restraints of screws at least without the old way of screwing up as the thing traveled, so he reversed the axle, and rigged the cannon and longu so a to loon ih. -.-tewe a. she traveled. Murk tin- result. When tli- i irlnl lo travel, ihe screw iiiii- I. iie .nid (w.iy went the whei I. Tftfy saw that a screw was loose, and a wheel oil', hilt not one ol llietu had sense uiotigh to know that ihe thing wits put up wrong, anil would urn work that way, or if ihy did, they were not honest enough to confess that they had been deceived by the builder. so they put on ihe loose screw, snd tried again, but oil it oamii again, and again, ait infinitum jusi so with iheir famous HqualttT Sovereignty. It looked well, and made n tremendous noise, but when the tiling began to work, it all went wrong the crews were loose, and ihe fnilher it went th looser it got, nnd one calamity has succeeded another, but yet they try lo patch it up.'j ,Uut it is all in vain, the thing wont work, and The People intend to take the matter in hand nnd gel a Cabinet maker who has hitherto proved himself equal to every emergency, and they will have the good old style of popular snreimtv inaurrrnted which will sc ..." ...... , ' Mia r.t to t Vi u Btltra rt flias lurrilAviua 1. u 1 v tu a sew ovvivi e s iiiv vv s s 1 w is. a the ligltt to make their own laws, speak their own sentiments, and print their own papers. They will reverse the axle, and fit up the cor of state, as our fathers had it. ere civiljwar was know, among un. experimenting. They are tired of By Authority. So show our reader that the Presses and hotel were destroyed by order of Government, we publish below a (rue copy of the indictment found against them by a court whose judge is an appointee of President Pu re It was executed by government officers, nnd the deed is an act of the government. It is squatter sovereignty: "The Grand Jury silting for the adjoumed term of ihe Kirat District Court, in and lor the County of Douglass, in ihe Territory of Kansas beg leave to report to the lion. Court ibal, from evidence laid b fore them show""Wr ' r " town of Lawrence, has from time to time issued publications of the most inflammatory and seditious character denying the legality of the TerrxtnAori addressing and com mending forcible resistance to the same; demoralizing the popular mind, and rendering life and properly un sale, even to the rxtent of advising assassination as a last resort. Also, that the paper known as The Kantau Free State has been simi Urly engaged, and has recently reported ihe r-soln:iont ol a public meet ing in Johnson County, in this Ternto ry, in which resistance to the Terriio rial SWaOJ even unto blood has hotB agreed upon. And that we respect fully recommend their abatement as a nuisance. Also, that the building known as tho "Frew State Hotel," io Lawrence, has been constructed with the view to military occupation and defense, regularly purapeted and portholed for the use of cannon and small arms, and could have been designed only as a stronghold of resistance to law, thereby endangering tbe public ... I..tv anil unniiiirmiinr. r. In. Iii.. un( "'V "Si '"ti . . "v . ...... ...... sedition in this country, and respect - lully recommend tliul steps De lasen whereby this nuisiioce may be remov ed. OWEN C. STEWART, Foreman." The present Condition of Kansas. The correspondent of the New York Tribune lurnishes a melancholy I picture of the condition of tho people i of Kansas: Alas! the Free Slate cause and Free Stale men are sutfering. Everyday some of them leave the Territory. Ilia not (ear that calls them away I have seen many young men who were willing lo slay, and fight too, if necessary; but business ia prostrate; no one can work safely on claims, our ooard is high; and thus, under a biting persecution, Freedom U being crushed out. The presses have been destroyed. That at Topeka has had supplies of paper cut oil, and there is a deter ruination Co finish thoae correspondents who dare remain to chronicle ihe wrongs of Kansas. I am closely watebed. Many of ray letters are taken. I have just learned that a system of espionage on the boats down the river, at Lexington, wheie they .enernlly slay ail night, has succeeded in ifviting a number of my letters. 1 have not received a letter through the mails for a coniidemble lime, and 1 have many correspondents, and regular correspondence wilh my family. 1 have no doubt but everything lo me is stopped al Independence. Wearied of a m nn! i r persecution and the continued rfsh, Mr. Itedimlb has left tbe Territory. 1 have concluded not to leave, as this would merely play in'.o ihe hands of the Border Ruffians.

=======

NEWS FJtOM CONGRESS The news from Congress this week Is more than ordinarily interesting. In the House, the Bill to admit Katiaas as a Free Stale on the Constitution : aire.xty adopted, passed by it vote ol 100 to 97. It will fait In the Henate. In Ihe Helmte, Douglass's Bill for the admission id Kansas has also pass ed. It dillers from the House Bill in authorising an eleotion to make a coo stitution. It is, in every particular, hi ah ttiiloiinieiit of the present Kansas Bill, and directly n the face ol tl.e "principles" which underlie the management of a flairs in that Territory. It requires a residence of three months immediately preceding the election, which is to be on the 4th of November his very ingeniously framed, in this respect. While it appears to provide for the vote of bona fide settlers, it is careful to date from prior to tbe first of August, while the Free State men are diiven away, and armed band- ol Missouiiana nnd Carolinians, as will be seen In the n.-ws from Kansas, this week, are guarding every avenue to the territory, and driving back Northern men, if they choose to go in companies end with arms, as all niir ml lo m w territories have umi ally gone in all past time, snd, as ihwcxpi nonce ol this settlement shows, is ihe only safo way to go now, if a man carry with him the liberty ol -.pi i eh. r'lirlher, III the l ice ,(' I Ik pit -sent .bill, it declares all laws mil1 and void, infringing the liberty of speech or of the press, or of tbe right of the people to bear arms, and provides for a military force at the polls, io prevent illegal voting, no test oath mIihII be allowed. this Is conceding nearly all that iins Item contended for by those who oppose the pi sent law, under which, according to the President's own showing, the greatest outrages of any civilised country, have been lawfully perpetrated. The following is the telegraphic account of this movement, as published in the 1 citj pnper: Mr. Goyer offered an i.roei dment that no law shall be made or have elf ect which shall requir- a lest oath or oath lo support any act of C ngress or any .other legislative not, as a qualiti calion for any civil office or publio trust or lot any employment 01 progression, or to sen e as a juror or to vote at elec . lions, or which shall impose any tax j upon or condition to exercise ihe right I of sutlray by any qualitied voter, and ; 1 . x. n i . L i.-. 1which shall restrain or prohibit free 1 discussion of any law or subject of j legislation in the territory, or free ex- j preesion of opinion thereon by the people of lb. Territory. This gave rise ion debate involving the question of squatter sovereignty and wlmbei Congress ought to interfere aspropos ed, having tell the people to seilte their own a9irs. Mr Cass saidi that some nets had passed the Leiislative Assembly of L ,.n .... i.;.. I. ,i. ...... ,......i ... age. How could people puss laws un - in!-', nil" ii m iii unuinti IUI Af ilir , less they bad a right lo free discuss - IOU. The amendment was adopted by a ; vote of 39 to 3, also an amendment j was 0P allowing unnatural ; i'd foreigners to vote. We are anxious now to know what will now be sail in defense of the measure an endorsement of which is a test of Democracy. We think this is most clearly an abandonment, by ihe Senate, of the Cincinnati platform. There is now no distinciive feature of thrtttill left, except the repealing of the Missouri Compromise. The Sen ate has taken away every right coaceded, by annulling the laws of the territory. We suppose, however, that tho party can hop on to this platform, in some eight or ten days, nnd say they never did believe in the Kansas Bill. If ibis bill passes the Hou?e, farewell tofieedom in Kansas and elsewhere. It will, in future, only be necessary to drive out freemen and then take a census, and then a vote. r mfurmt rnmnnrnrf aa rawwawswwi w vvaata vi It is sometimes asked why so many Democrats of 1849 refuse now to act

with the leaders of that day. The an-1 defrauded the community, tbe oonuswer is plnin. In 1049. the leaders ' dt;nce of Public nH 9m 0l adnpted their platform to the views ofjin companies. Such ought not to

'the DeoDle of Indiann. Thev haw i , r j 1 adapt it to the people of South CaroinÄ jt jH ejuy , RfB ,,gt fa peo. pie's platform of 1856 is subslanlially the same as the Democratic platform of 1 849. Hence, the people who refuse lo be sold to the South stand on it. Here are the platforms side by side ! UtMOi KVIir PLATfORM. fcVctrd Jan. H, 1S49. UtWUVID, I ll.it UlU I nil i mii mi ot Slave i) toshl iol tn be iiiIihmIuevtl iulo any Utrritor) wherti It doe'a uol now aatsSa Kmolved, That Inaa aoih at , Mesko aad California are in i . i and in law five Territ'inea. il le the Out)' it l miicr jt in ireveiil ibiIntrodu. UiMi of Slaver) ii in ti lln-ir liroiU. oroot.ro a a plat. FOKM. Krerted Mar 1. ISSfl KaaoLran. I : . t we art. iiiM-(iiiiir-iu'siiiei 'l'ii'i In ihe extsntioo of slavery ; aul Ibal wa iiU-rlv rruillale lh i ilforni or irin cielea adopleil b tan n-li-aijlsd Democra lo Convent on o' ISittUlu 'iidoraina; ami arov. Hit; Ihr Kaiiraa Nebraska iniquity. Haaui vca. That we will r. -iat by all irunr llieaut Hit- ad'iiieaion af any lave SUVe Intn lliit I ll Mill, fnriuril nut of lorrlUiriee . ir I lo rteSOwaS by the Mitt hi ri Couiiruuikas, or olhwise. Noble Sentiment. The Wabash Exjtress, hitherto a warm Fillmore paper, speaking of fu sion says; "The JoOrtta! may rest assured of one thing; that whenever it becomes necessnry to succeed against that party, who is seeking to make K n. -. a lave Slate that party, who is endeavoring to place VV'illard and his corrupt followers in the highest position in the gift of this people that pnrty who would elevate John Q. Davis over John I. Usher, then will ihe American prty, in this Congressional District, unite ns one man with any other body of merj. to prerent so great misfortunes from befalling our common country, and our beloved slate.

Is there no Remedy?

While the absorbing quotum ail Whu wilt-people U freedom in Kansas Is before the people, 'their rirmerty from

the citizens of this county OOght not forget that it yoke is upon trir neck WW 'W that is uifieaaing n welghlcrery yosr. They have bornt it so I--" and so patiently that they msy have become callous, and il may be that they are ready to submit to still heavier burdens. The purchase of a splendid corn farm at 466 per litre, to. mii asy lum with no improvement on u but the foaota, adapted to the wants of an asylum, is but another evidence thai the parly who have ruled and taxed this county for years intend not to let up unit! the people rise in their independence and nay they will try a hen set of men. Had Mr. Stout been elected Commissioner two years ago, and Judge (lant one year ago, not only would this outlay have been prevented but others. The managers ol hat party are aware of the difficulty of meeting these ixtrsvagnnl outlays of the public money, hence they have refused for years to run one of the old board for nvleolion, but they are careful to put on one who will follow in the firotstcpa of his predecessor. While we regard the election of Kremoiil snd Cumback and the rcpn sentatives who are to vote for United Slates Senators, as mi object of tlx very lirnt importenoc for the ceouring io pence in Kansas and preserving the integrity of this Uuion, we hesitate ni to say that the other officea are matters of minor importance, except the office of County Commissioner, and such are the burdens that the present board, nnd their predecessors have fixed upon tho people, that even those who favor the I he election of Bucha nan should rebuke the exiraiiganre of the Bonrd by putting men (here, as fast as possible, who will study economy. Mona Stkculatiov. The New Castle Courier informs us that Prof. Lartabee is Co , have served it the same way they havo the Gas-Tight, uoi iu money, but wont send the pancrnnr rHnrn ika man., (luoaa thI Pro!essor has no l.opes of again getting his fingers into the public crib, hence he intends to flieee tho publishers ol country pipers. kXW The Central Committee of the People's party, met last Saturday and cho,e T A Goodwin. G. W. Claypool . v r awi en .. and K. D. Wmans to nil the vacancies OD lhe lil a for lne offices of Treosur er. KheritT and Coroner respectively , When thev accept, we presume that thev nnd t'ho(lt. heretofore uominaud ... , . . w" "ccrFl- W,M "Ulw" nouncementof their names in tho Am erican os some other paper. Mean while we wish to say to our readers I li ti t ttiA nr.iui.nl rwit a i. .uti.t.!. t ,, , , . . , county office!, and the election of any 1 candidate on ibis ticket, except those 1 who have a vote tor United Slates Senators, ia a secondary matter with all true lovers of freedom. On these! nu n, whatever personal objections there may be, we hope there wiii be! entire unanimity, for in voting for or aareesiritaf tlinhi tar ä vnln f.r Ar . iruinul n'iii 'i wit- a vi stac. wiu" y . . . . ... Jesse U. ur.giu. it urntucKy slave no.der, and J hn Peltit, the men who, in the United Stute Senile, pronounced the Dt-elarntion of Independence "a self evident lie," and we think there are very few men in thia county, who are willing lo bo thus represented in that Senate. All other considerations sink into insignificance compared with this, and whether these men, and those heretofore named, accept or not. we want to see the quest.on of the extension of the non extension of slavery loom up above all other questions. Insu r anc The suhjeel of Insurance is one which ought to engage the a'tention of every person owning property, and j lo have ull property insured is n duty that every man owes to himself and ' his family. Owinir to the numerous - 'companies that have done business in ihe State in years past, and by failure ! DO tOO CaSO. Ve have, 10 our oUtc, companies lhat are reliable and safe, and the stock all owned within the State, and under the direction of men of long experience in the Insurance business, and men who are known t be telinble. Such com panies ought to have the ; preference with our citizens. And as a perfectly reliable company, doing business only within the Stale of Indianu, is the Rising Sun Insurance Company, which wc cheerfully recommend. Fools and Madmen Ex-President Fillmore, in a speech at Albany, New York, said that none but ii fool or madman would believe (hat the South would not secede if Fremont and Dayton are elected. We give our opinion that none but a fool or madman, or cowardly slave, will be driven to ihe support of Mr. Fillmore or any other miin by a fear of such a result. If il haa come to (his, that we must i-u the slaveoeracy for whom wa must vote, we are in more abject bondage than the negroes in ibe South. By tbe way, does not ihe Ex('resident's views give the diuniortiMs "aid and comfort" in their plottings agninst the government ? They now have ihe opinion of a "distinguished staiesman" that they would be justifiable in dissolving the Union. It wa all right tbat Jnckson and Calhoun were boih from the South all right that Pierce and J. D. B.ight, ihuugb living in the North, yet pro-slavery as any two men living, should govern.

=======

Thunder nnd Ught! niug. t ruet i n by lightatoyi We hnvo jtiKt loomed thai the barn of Semuel Stewart, of Riley towawwjp. Ilatler Co. Ohio, was struct during tbe storm on (he 3d inst, kill ing a young man, nnd four valuable horseM, and destroying about a thou sntul bushels of cor.; and oats A comparntivelv small outlay, in good I livhtnin U will he in entire ct.rity against euch a calamity It is ..lv , a few weeks since two houses were I struck in Brookville. snd considerable ' lamagp done. Hince that lime some liftv rials liavii len tnit un in roan. and tho. enterprising youm nmn Jameson ,1 Shritier of Ml. Cnrmel are ready nnd willing to put up rods at short notioc nnd 'i good ni I : nn person who nrrd them. While on this subject we will can iion persons against amsll rods and inoompetent and dishonest men The'l smallest rod that ran be trusted is seven sixteenths of an inch, und diese must bo well unk in the ground und well i lc valed abovw tho buildup. Hut these men understand heu Imsin i snd can be trusted. They cm be addressed at Mt. Cntiu.l lud. By all means put rods to your barn before (he new crop Is in It. Fraternal . If any (hing farther were needed to show the depth to which Prof. Larra bee has fallen, the following notice ol Rev. J. W. McMullen should be sufficient. Mr. MuM ul i n 11 one ol the Methodist presche's stationed in In dianapollt. A few evenings ago he took occasion to address m number of oitixens in Indianapolis, on the txci Ung topics of the diy, aa ovary American oiiiaen outside of Kansas has a right lo do, except in the slave states. Brother Lfcrrabec thus notices him, The poor mule brayed away untiIhe tires uenrly died out, and unlit the . r i ..o. patience ol his hearers was totally . exhausted. He proved himself an, ass, nn impudent fanatic, na "juaerant vagabond" of the dirtiest order We understand tlint be also made a miliar harangue in Wealey Gimpel, n Sabbath nfternoon, on the 22J inst. in n't s I vve wish his parismoers much joy 01 l uir political preacher, tto u, Mac 1 f r. , go it vou VHabond. "Political preacher " eh ? You! . . k, . siiinii.i I nit 1111 ni-f nrliar h:is 14 r hihl1 11 - v f --0 - to make speeches but your noble and honored self, do you ? You can talk aad write by the hour' in defense of the laws of Kansas, bul no one mayspeak for freedom without being called a mule an ass, a Innatic, a vagabond. Go on, Bro. Larrabee, you may get a few votes, bul it will be very lew. The people would quite as soon vote for Robinson himself. Caught a Tarter. The old line convention, last wiuter put J. E. McDonald on their ticket, for i Attorney General, though Mr. Mc - I Donald is more of nn Abolitionist than Morten or Test. In 1849 he ihus de - fined his position on slavery extension. "1st I do admit and believe that Congress has the right lo legislate on I Is., .uro...! ,xl Nl.. I..I r .e o I I Mi.. Sua. , . it sr ritones of the United Stales, the DlS III. " 1 I ' I ' sj V 1 i7l r a v f w IUI 0SS St? i i ... . 1 -i it . i 1 1 . , Co,umbi(l incUfciwi.. j gj, hm j fHVor of tho adoption of ihe Wilinol Proviso in ell the Territorial organizations. 3d. 1 aas in favor of t ho prohibition of tbe slave trade in the District of Columbia. 1 am in favor of the abolition of shivery in the District of I Columbia, the citis-ns of the District expressing a winb to Congress thereof. If this could not be done I should then be in fx vor of removing the seat of gov ernment to free so I. 4th. 1 am opposed to the admission of any more slave States from any Territory not properly included in the Texas compromise." Now, unless a new Constitution has been adopted, or the old one is made of India-iubber so as to be made to stretch to suit the limes, Mr. McDonald ;nusl vole for Fremont. No esrthly considerations should induce a oi n who entertains such views as these, to vote for the Kansas bill or its abettors land defenders

We conjt atulate the Republi- j raont, by calling him a "ragged orcans of ihe Fourth District upon Iihv- phHn," the silk groved, nabobical folmg such a clear-headed Represent- lowe ,hat old Federalist. Buchtive as Mr. Cumback. His recent ex- ,. posure of the land grants by Congress anM' ffct to desptse his present to railroad monopolies, should recom- abilities. With a sneer of contempt mend him t i the confidence of every they say he is only a surveyor only laboring man. We hope Mr. Cum- an engineer, not a statesman! We back will again be returned to Con- . , . i r ii ntt t j , guess be is statesman enough not to gress this fall. CUumbui Ihdeptnd- .... ? , ent plead the baby set as an apology for There is no question of his being " hal he diJ and 8aid when he was 26 returned. We do not think there are j ) ears of Mge- We an lenmenin ihis county, who vo-.ed j enough not to say "fifty four forty or foi him in '54 who will vote i 6ght." and then cower down and say I a.e.wa it ii t

a air-inst him now. while, if mistake sä not, there are scores who vied aainst him. then who will vote for bim now. Not only has his course on the Land bill been approved, but the unswerving manner in which be has defended freedom endears him lo the heart of Ireemen. Tbe slaves to party may aoft like 1 im but those who love their country more than party, do. Proclamation. E UTITC PiraSTaSKT, IsSUMt.l Imltanaliolla, Jul) 3d, ISbO.j I, Joseph A. Wright, Governor of the State ol Indiana, do proclaim rind direct that the qualified voters of the State, at the neXl General Election, to be held on the second Monday iu Otto be r n xt, do elect twenty-five Senators and one hundred Representatives, lo constitute, in connection with the Senators bidding over, thu next General Assembly of said State and lhat all Inspectors, Judges and Clerks ol said Election, nnd other officers having duties to perform conpeultd with eaid General Election, do conform to this Proclamation. JOSEPH A.WRIOIir, Go"Bnoe. Erasmus B. Collins, Secretary of Stutee.

f SSUntian. - as), lorgtt. tlie Mass Mueting jrfWt at Aii.I'-rron It will ben n Jr The ilU op the ?th inst. t guihering. Old Liners hold a Un Meeting at Indinanapolis on the 17th. We hope they will do their best. iTiTViceis the most dangerous whn ll Pnt" on ,h" blance of vlrAft T Tim wife of President Abbott. of lhw Inlpavillo Academe, died of frMM.h.-.U a . . tr S ot 1 7FU, ",vrr- un niiraciay. 9WJ 3d. Hubert Brutidrelt, Esq., will ad M - ,1k lMomih,ggrov Fremont " ,ub n pdy. '"'X 'ih. at 7 o'clock, V. M. X"ll Mr. McDonald is here next Satanlay, won't somebody got him to read Mi aOiaOtf 1649. and explruii 4(9 We have received the lieMrt of lla Kansas Investigating Committee, which wo will defer Dnbiisblnu until about ,h, lust ul An misI It shall then appear io fulj. gW Wonder If Ui old liners will pronounce tho Report of the Invesligaling I'.'tntuittee a lie. The notion of ihe Helmte would in linste that they believe it. de'dw wweoaf Fun-.-The dwelling house of Abram i ..( ii... u . i.i- 1 1 Wl u,,,u W'"'"H. osra.ruy.i, ny uro, on WeUnoaday evening of lost ( The 8re originated in ihofcarsj re(t, where no lire had been known for several mon hs. The coalenU of the house were saved. XslTWe imagine that those "Young Americans" who were eaughl plating esrda in the Rlootniuggrnve Academy Inst Sahbith, would be sorry to have ns publish ilieru. Vary well, boys, we will pasi you this time, but don't bo eaught at saoh trioks again. The Know Nothing or Ameri

,2

can party have called a convention at i under President Polk, y tlmt our tiIn li inapolis on the Hah" inst to nom- l ( '! whole of Oregon was "clear

inato an electoral ticket. We hope Kilbmu, man in ihia eonnle .ill attend Hither (ban he should miss, we will lid him , our horse and bugKl There is an old liner in Bloom jng ,ruV. township whosays that Tom 1 D , . ' . . ri. Benton made a speech at the Cincin r aU Convenliun' iu which he declared he would not support Fremont. The r aforesaid old liner is the same man who, on hearing the nominations, remarked tlmt he would rather they had nominated Jsckson, but he gueBsed old ' Buck" could beat the Abolitionlata, nnvhow. 9 s tT Wonder what the knowing ones of ibis county will now say of the Kansas laws. They have insisted that there have been no such laws. One man will swear to it, because he has never teen any account of them in the Enquirer. Cass says "they are a disgrace totheage," and yet they are : legally enacted, the President says, ' snd .hall be enforced if there is powei j enough in the army to do it. M3T We hope that everybody who : can, will attend the meeting at Indian . Bpoii4 on ntXl Tuesday. Railroad I " I fare is reduced to half price. By timee w ly arrangements, conveyances can be had to the stations. Let every body go. Every man who wishes to prevent a foreign war i the acquisition of Cuba, and who desires to prevent further bloodshed in the civil war that is laying waste our western frontier, drenching its plains with blood, and burning its towns, and destroying Un presses, should go. N. B. If that drunken candidate dont want to whip Tom Goodwin himself, and thus s eceven dollars, there is an elderly lady living in the bottom who will undertake it for five dollars probably less. She says she has done it man) a tim- for less money, and she thinks she can do it again? So far as we are concerned we are not particular, we only want lo put him in a way of saving his small change, i . j i a " Only an Engixkkx Not content ith deriding the childhood of Fre- ' "U dont snoot, Jolinny DUM, oo it shoot, and we'll come down to 39." What a Difference one year Makes Last July, the In liana Sentinel, alluding to the re usal of Gov. Reeder to recognise the Missouri Kansas leg iblature then in session, said: "Were we Gov. of Kansas, backed by the Admiaistiation. we would trest lhat body of pretenders, much as the Long Parliament was treated by Cromwell, and subject the out law leaders to a test si writ ar to lhat endured by the weak and unfortunate Charles I. In other words, as beheading is now out of fashion, we would hang that desperado Stringft llow, to the first tree that presented the proper convenience for a little episode of this peculiar character." But lo, what a change! Now that legislature was a legal body, iu acts. thouith bloody and oppresnive, are valid! Why this change? Simply because its masters, the President and lie slaveholders say so. Can any sane man think the people such fools as to be led about by such leaders? Why should the legislature be hanged in 1865, but in 1056 their acts be enforced by hanging Reeder and others?

'T.I ttiAtH BattU thai Qnuli fnr

" wieiii n t v- . . soa evw haw IUI rhefcoelres. This . the pita for adhering to the Kanaaa till under which somech blood has been shed. Ytt, under that Mil, the following law has been pessed.frlating to the freedom of speech and of the press passed by Mieeounans, yet enforced on the people of Kansas by tho sword of tbe nation. And now, having made it a penitentiary offence te apeak ones seotimenia on uhe subject ofelawy, the aiders and abettors of this wrong say "Let them settle that question for themselves." Forfa violation of this law, throe printing presses hsve already been destroyed. and scores of men have been shot Ot driven away from their bomea. Tbe presses were destroy ad by ordar of com i a courl made by President Pierce, But read this law for ihe govtrnmcol of quatiers. Sbo I IF ANY rtlEK PKU SON. BY SPEAKING OR WHITING. AftSKItT OH MAINTAIN HAT PEKHONSIIAVK NO T THE RIGHT TO HOLD SLAVES IN THIHTKHRITOHY. or shall Introduce into this Territory, PRINT. Pl'BLlSH. WRITK, (HRCULATK, OR CAUSE TO HE WRITTEN, PRINTED, PUBLISHED OR CIK. CULATKD IN THIS TERR1 IORV. any book, paper, magatlne. pamphlet or circular. CONTAINING ANY Ur!5! ALOFT! IE RIGHT OF SUCH PERSONS TO HOLD SLAVES IN "ssj bui THlüTKRHITOKY ueh raTS" shall be deemed (UILTY OK KKLONY. AND P lMlKIHtV IMPRIMIN MKNT AT II A HD LABOR FOR A TKR VI NOT LKHJt THAN TWO Ytt A HS. Nobody we have tet encounIcred appears to know one great fact in Mr. Buchanan' whole pontic existence. The world thirsts to diseovf r what single notable act is associated with his nsme. N. Y. Timm You must be poorly posted in the history of our great men. Did not Buchanan, when Secretary of State, nnd unquestionable," und that we would lake to Fitly. four forty or fight, and did he not save the countiy from a war with England b; giving her five degrees and forty minuiesof that territory ? It is a "great fuel" rn his life that he was opposed lo the war wilh v-a : m.a a u England in 1812. and so much oppoa- . - d in 1846 that he swallowed his own words, and yielded to John Bull's dci mand To CoURKHPovnxyT.- -We have on hand several well written Communications, and several detailed accounts of political and other meetings, which we havo been trying to find room for, for several weeks, but the terrific and heart rendering news from Kansas, with other matters of fact, of public interest, crowds upon u - from week to week so that we have not been able to meet our own wishes nnd the wishes of our friends in this matter. We find that we will be compelled to give up some of our agricultural and miscellany unless peace prevails on our borders. We hope no one will feel j slighted if his Communication is de layed. ii r- They will not suieed, we are certain, in inducing a single foieign born citizen to leave the Democratic, party. They have tried that part; proved it true to the country and their intru sts Sentinel. Yes, if it U lo the interest of foreign born cilizen to bo driven Irom Kansas, or be compelled to labor by . . " the side of slaves and regarded aa on a par with them. Whether they are leaving the Democratic party or not, we will not say, but you know thai they expect to vote for Freemont. Candidates for Congress The following are the names of the canditates for Congress in this State, so far as they have been nominated: 1)1 it riff 4 Pttplet'. Old Lint. Jataae Lock hart. Wro. H Kiirllah. Jaiuet Hut;hea. '.rn.- B. Foley. " Kdinund Jobnton. Jamet M 0'g. John G. Davit. D vv Voerboat. Wea. Z. Staart. lit.. d M . 4ih. iih. Olh. ns, .'.JobB M . VV 1 1 till' . ..Will Cnmbark. ..David Wllfore. . . .Jubu I'ohuru. ..Jh. P Uther. . Jaiaee Wilton. Mil. John U. Petlll. In the Tenth District neither party have brought out their candidates. We are hsppy to learn that an interesting revival is in progress in the Presbyteiian church avt Dunlapsvi lie, under (he care of Rev. John Gilchrist, Some 25 or SO have joined (he church and the interest is yet on the increase. We regret however to learn that Mr. Gilchrist's health has so failed that he has had to give up his charge. The World's Fair o; All Nations Among the noliuable things on ex hibition in the Crystal Palace, we saw the contribution of New Pills, from labratory of Dr. J. C. Aver, the author of the widely known and valued Cherry Pectoral. As it is against tbe express regulations of the Palace to admit any quack medicines, this fact shows that his remedies are not placed in that category by the authorities. Indeed, we have before known lhat his Pectoral was highly appreciated by scientific men, and have seen lately that his Pills are held in great estimation by those deeply learned in the healing art. True Reformer, JJaes. Extract from thc ! .a or the Sxkatkin 18S7. Every member ol t is body, in addition to a pocketknife, pens, ink, and paper, and acartloaJ of books, shall hereafter be ap. plied by tbe clerk with the following! necessary articles: Two Bowie-knives, one Shorpe's RihV, one heavy gutta percha club, ooe Colt's Revolver, one sword, and one brass field -piece Any other articles of a warlike character desired by the members, must be purchased at iheir own expense. Mr. Sumner is worse, and is declared in danger of sottening of the brain, by Ids medical attendants. He is enjoined to avoid all excitement, and will b irdly be permitted lo resume his seal this seaaion. He will never fully recover. -JV. Y. Tribune.

ÜI a r r if b. On Tuesday evening. 8lb inst., l-y Hev. J. W. Lneke, Coaulbs C BisatOT, Ev . and Miss Gboroiama Hol land, daughter of Georg Hollaad, Esq.. of this place Ty bar MIUWImI ainUoft Uh has iilaMMl U U bart Sarlrf US xrnm 4.HWa, A ad Uirlr .nlrlu .boM ad MrV Chang or roU asl4 ani SaS (San, , a i.hfM raaja o rlb-r lata ; Nor is. u ual kr aa talnaa Uiaw Saall UaSasnf Crava aSaWa. n Julv4.h. by John W Keery, Avane Waaa and Ann W. Uarwooo, boih ot Fraokiin county. Ptfb. Kr. Char Ira W. Morrow, lata of Hush county, lad., died at tho fro id-nce of his sister in low ahosil ih 1st n stanl. liar was on a that to lowaond rsptcting soon to leiara, ton. a small piospks on bta fas as sumed tbe form of EryslpeUa, and in a few daes terminated In lite, lie b-a VfB a large circle of frb nda and aauaaintanoes in Rush and Franklin Counties who will moern his lues. rtobir (t:ttm. Ma. I . A Qawaana Naaaat.aaar ihm i tf Stataeyl HraaSrrll !':$ Mai.i,. ... .S.tf.-k. . ...JU.bP IM awia UaWSMMOa MANrvoraaaoraATti. ftl ibertisfmrnli. Rising Sun Insuraiuc (Co., OK ItlslNU SUN. IND, l tilttonr. Ü MtllMl, iimi.ooO. BOARD or DiaKCTOlJ a. IUt4w.v, J r.Wai.k4, 0 a Leaww. w ii enwaii, Wa T. f4ra, Je iu.... J. W. SraMiai, J. St Jiaaisat, Ouiearia, i Use. O.J l.rearv.j W'.Tttaewf, 0. V. I'otiaaToa. w.. HaTsjAWay.WrweH. a. J. H.ra.w.T. ear. Jtf r,,' "srtaa rtsit tasaa al iuWI lrTAII peraaaa Saatrtae laaarana a 111 rail aa JuMf w. aaxLv, t Urolivau. a. . roVIJOTOX, Oeeaaal A ans. A GRAND UNION MASS MEETING Of Iha Hetbas(itr im s.u. v m in. ikOHLis a ni r At i it e n viu:, Will Urn aaW i a Uta Grave IBOJl A M DE IO0 V V I LLE, on rmosr, julv t, oov Km- r, llj ,, ,, 0 ,lton h( t0 m uprm basiil in oT UM tarsH alnqaaiil ,M.. n la IS Waat. rSraa.t atlaannr Ihr mar lit a III l-l.-aaa u,,pW tSaasaalra. i lib ijravl.ioo. & U. da) aa m lablo rill aa spraad. 1Sa ladlai ara parti uUny loltl to iiraS.Poalrrt will ba iMurd aa 100a at Iis spaas. r ara heanl ir nn Lei iha H iublraoi rnU ail Uua pxsd l.. ihr alrftrd p..llrt af Ua prvraai A4 niUiUlrauon, rallr U UtaaaUI Wftoo'iliaia Uaawwawrawrwsf. WJeaaV, Ose r. i,., ru.J .litcorararaf the Inrst'iahla Hair Raakarativo tili ronvnuca to labor In Sabair of ua affllclatl. ilit madtcibctara aalrssraailx adaaWMS b Ua Amarioao Praaa lebe Sar aaperter la all otbi-ri for rantiaf tbe hair ou Iba bead el Iba -!. ibal bat Kaan nhr-red lur tuauj jaara, le trom funb w Ith aa much rlftr sad luartaere as ab-DbUad wltblbiadBDUfa..f jotiUl. lWn aaa Ua ao doubt ibal it it aasa Uta e-reaieal tftarnvortrs Id Iba tuedlral warla. It rttlorse ymf luantull) era) hair lo lUorbjlaairoUr, aad I atauaio baaaUful tllky la dura, ebKh baa bean vary detlrabla In all agas or aba oM. ClarlnuaU Dally Kan. i ir 1. 1 4 L' u nn, lor turn Irina I picpoi I Wa baa I sLiira para Jart Wlaa. araeaaa mmti. lirimly and Wliltky. 1 .t Ji-I) ll W l. rsnaniAKavco. POWOKR.-Jatt received K.. Kl Sa and Ceauna Powder. July H W. L. Faaoraua Co. IMRH Juet ratsataad Smoked Haltbul. WVle a i-i-n ami Mtcktml aholesai- ai d retail St W. L. Faaqrata ax Co. VIOIj.XS.-U au aaat a eon) Vlnlla r jsly II W. L Ktaqeaaa lo I Co. hsLATE OF JOSEPH DEC'D. DEPUY. NOTICK It herab) yirea ikat Ike hat irn aii.oii.wl Adiuiiit-lrel i.i.u-.! Adtuitil-tratnr of u .- relain or in .u u., lata ol rrai.klia Cauuij t'l'Di. in ol Pr.i.Lli.. laitiaaa, ilevM aoltrtn. Jul) II Saul etUlo It tuiiii need to ha iu. I Ho.M s M UIIIÜX. A 'i u i mai rotor . ADMINISTRATRIX'S NOTICE. T K r I hlc of AvlwUlelrailoa apem Um aeUeeaf I j 1 ..liri.il Si IiiiiiiIm. r I..ih I...... . i.. ; "' rtirarsi ..ui or is r..Urt or i'ra. r-ieaa ol rraukllii nunl) Imliaiia. raramit muebUHi eiuai mate iaa4iblc ymr.il. and iboea bsvlaf claleae meet Sie taaai uurauani lw law. The miete it eotvae. Jsly II KMXABKTII M HüMBII. a . . . . ... ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE of Real Estate. NOTICK It hereby yWeo that Is sartBaaee wilh nn nr. Irr of lh-Court of Com.. n Hlaae sT Franklin Clii.tt . at tin Jul terra Id. r.-of. ISM. I will aell st i-ut.in aale m IboSUi day of Aageet, irttS, on the preeiiese. iB foUvwlug dracrlbed real aetata, boloiislaat la the fata la or Isaac Da vie, lereaaed.tO'Wit: A uariof Iba eouU weetiiasrler of i lion SS Town 9. ol reette ose Waat, and bounded at lollowt: trf taainc Um w.ns-wrwtrat-nsr ui aald e,earWr ertlrftn. iseure S.hjUi SU vJar, Oimce fcaal wits tee vsrlatto of Use dogeoe 4 oolee loa ataka, U rn.-e Rons 4 notet B (WI hr in Waas e p.4e lo Ibe laoe .rf Ihswi a aloe. wad. conialiili r IS aorta,, atere or leas. Tbe widow wi jots In tat aale sod roleeee u be ssrt haeer her dowel tateaset. Said laud Is be arid lo pay taedabu of eaid deoaMvaed. TKMMN Uf KAUT.. ee-balf rt iwa aarotsaa money cash la band, aod Ua bast wee wtwo batd la W too. Uit, atx-erwd by ease with a ps.ro ad e-cwr-uy. aiviua britaSl of v wastes or apprweeSSSaO lawa, IUI inlersel from daU of aal . jal5 1 1 it Joh K. Lfct., AdeslsleUsior. An Ordinance for the Assessment and Collectio , of Taxes for too Year 1956, in the CoipDratloj of the Town of Brookville, foi the purpose of Paying for o Burying Ground Sac. S. Be it ordained by tbe Corp arse aw sf belosn ti H roo vl lie, that Uera based It here l i a aar d and Sard u un all .roperi) ealjrs-ied U laaailva la aald Corpratoaa. Ua -usa wl wa eanla as avery buadrvd rdoilara laiMSII t Vedaassbas ihersof. Sr. . i. Ado be it further ordained. Tbat there be aad It bcrrby aaa. -aa.nl upoa a vary wbave aaa la issahitaalof lb. Corp.sral.Oii between ibe aoa of iweiity-ona and Sil) )sta,Ust um of laealya iiui poll tax. sti . i l sal isere pa and u aaaaeee ery peraoa own nt or Sarboriag duara er I lax oi Bit) rmte ou r r Oos. aatl i every feUrbeo owaeo or Itarisjnnl whbia Ibr Cor- . orai ion 1 1 nn it l tbe lows of Brovk tllr, Is be asaeased aad collected by tea M trthal (or easd l 'or.o ration . sac. i bs it further ortsJiied, Tbsl Us Usrx deliver lhr du.li-ale to tbe County Aa4asr sf Frank llu Coei.ty fvrlbe ;..r. of ' a. i.j Utllerwl Ukiii Uta tax duli am far coltocttos. Psasod Jul) Stb, iss. H) Uie order ol Ibe Bosnl. atAseUM.Vt . RAt' R. Jobs P. Hassans, r,.-. t. Clark. Jl) ii ii Dissolution. The Arm of Baker a llaxsard baa Ibis day base dtol e! b; mutuul cotaaat. Tbe ooaea aad aceounu are In rat band lor collaotton. aad I aaa retiMwilble for all or la imrUierrtilp Utta. June 13 I' .O. BtKKK. F. 0. BAKER, OKALKK Uj ntai'i.e Ana rsmoi DRY GO ODS a, NOTION 8, READY MADE CLOTHING. HATS. CA PS &('.. OWE DOOR FORTH BRO0KVIL1I BAJTT. Bvfooaviu.b; ink. Kurnishlnr srtlria of nverj dr-rripiion. CarsirBU made to order al tbe shsrtrti noues. aprtl II Prints! Prints!! FOR M rr.ui. . ....... Bey atsta lblMpslles't irsfuc. Dunitela, snd sll other good at)leaof PrtiiU.r V a priill F. O. BAMB. BLACK. SMITH'S Horas Rbose sad BsiUswM Bf vr.L.PAJaevsbvaOVe,