Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 1 July 1854 — Page 1

WESTERN EF 'ROPE AND THE UNITED STATES. I

government of this country, and

W

contended Sentinel.

apprehension, and regards tffi destruction V"*?

3

of the growing commerce and the war-fleet

we may be likeliest to come into collision.

We have not, therefore, invoked a special

blessing upon the guns, the bombs and the

congreve rockets which the all'-cs have sent into the Baltic to batter down Cronstadt,

rind lay in »shes St. Petersburgh, where 1'ETER THE GKKAT laid the foundation of a

•inew civilization nor have we rejoiced at

the bombardment of the free port of Odessa, that other miracle of modern commerce

and the burning of neutral vessels lying

there." fe The Tunes correspondent says:

I call your attention to an article in the ^London Times on the subject of French interference in any difficulties which may ssfarise between Spain and the United States.

Though I cannot go so far as to affirm, with the writer of that article, that Louis Napoleon has positively given assurances to Spain that she has nothing to fear on the sssubject of Cuba, yet my information points in the same direction, and leaves me no reason to doubt the accuracy of the assertion. I have taken occasion from time to time in your columns, to invite American attention to the course of France since

Louis Napoleon has been upon the throne, and to what might possibly be her conduct, in case of a speedy triumph in the East, and of the necessity of immediate occupation for her fleets. Tn view of subsequent intelligence, and of constantly recurring symptoms, all indicating a similar possibility, I feel it my duty.again to state my belief that it will not be long before the Emperor will seek an occasion to thrust himself between the two Powers in question, less as an umpire than as a party. Unless the United States is willing to accept whatever settlement France may impose on them by superior strength, they must be prepared to repel force by force. Whatever impetus the French Navy majr acquire in the Baltic and Euxine must have a field to spend it in and what has begun in the East may be easily continued in the West. Should that Navy be seriously damaged, however, at Cronstadt and Sebastopol, it need not, of course, be expected very speedily at Havana or Key West.

iCST" We conversed a few days since with a gentleman who had just returned from a visit of observation to Nebraska and Kansas. He informs us that there are hundreds of families moving into these new territories daily. Kansas, which is the southern territory, is the great point of attraction. The soil is better and the climate more congenial. No sooner is an Indian treaty made and confirmed, than the whole purchase is staked out into claims. He stated another fact significant of the future. which was, that no slaves are going into that country. No effort will be made by the people from the south to make it, or cither of them, slave territories. Why should they? Tha country is a vast fertile plain, much of it destitute of timber, and adapted only to grazing purposes. Slaveholders can take their chatties to the sugar and cotton growing districts of Texas, where land is cheap and slave labor profitable. They will not be guilty of so great Nebraska bill and express their undisguised a folly as to hazard the right of this^kind approval of it, he would be made more of propcrtv by taking it to Kansas or, likely to know something of a public sentiNebraska." Here we see the effects of non- |ment than he now knows. It may be true intervention. Without that restriction— that the eastern abolitionists in his neighthe arbitary line which has always been borhood are opposed to the Bill, but if he so offensive to our southern brethren.— will travel south, among the people of Illitwo more free territories have been added nois, he will find there is no hypocritical to the Union. By popular sovereignty or canting opposition to the Bill. More

THE EUROPEAN WAR.

Tire drama in Europe opens in vast

The Paris correspondent of the New proportions. The slowness of the march York Times expresses in the following para- »nd the momentary stillness that now pre-1 of a most outrageous rape, committed on a as a on in pi re ii so a it a in a ha graph an opinion which we in orme sentiment of awe. England has 70,000 county, Mississippi near Bvhalia, by a ^Americans in Europe all seem to share,

mcn on

that the immense allied power of Western jn the Baltic leads the largest fleet the a very respectable lady who was but lately Eurotte is disposed, and will be encouraged world ever saw France has more than

I. .i T? 100,000 of her soldiers in the East Tur-' turkey's nests, and was out of sight of the bv victories in tre bast, to dictate to me kev has some 200,000 under arms Egypt house wlien a negro man who was plowing

ant^

Eu'i°JJe fr,°m in«si"»-

coaxe(j anc[

hostile armies. Nothing like this has been hut

fought together for the rescue of "the holy shrines." When the Crusades commenced, the Infidel was in Syria but he turned the tide of war backwards, was soon a possessor of Constantinople and of the south coast of the Mediterranean to the Atlantic and even had crossed into Spain and thundered at the gates of Vienna.

The Crusades accomplished none of the purposes for which they were commenced. But they accomplished other and greater results, and European society and the system of modern states, grew out of the con* dition of things which they brought about. —Albany Atlas.

FRANCE ANI) CUBA.

The intelligent correspondent of the N. Y. Journal of Commerce, thus speaks of the intentions of Louis Napoleon, in relation

to the protection of Cuba "The time has hardly come in which it could be expected that Louis Napoleon would declare his purpose to protect Cuba, but he has hinted his intention, as is generally believed, to certain persons, and among them to Senator Cueto, the present Minister from Spain to the U. S., who recently had an interview with him, while in Paris, on his way to this country. The advices on this subject, which we havo through the London Times, and other sources, are but incidents in support of the opinion that the Emperor contemplates a war with the U. S., for the protection of Cuba, at any moment when the U. S. may attempt to seize upon the Island. The YVashington Umon of yesterday refers to the fact that the declaration said to have been made by the Emperor, was addressed to a "foreign diplomatic agent, then on his way to a distant mission," and remarks that there are circumstances pointing with much force to the "diplomatic agent" referred to,—that is, the Spanish Minister himself—whose recent intercourse with the Secretary of State, has probably shown that Spain is not yet in a mood to comply with the present demands of our Government, or to yield to our wishes, at any time, for the acquisition of Cuba.

A message from the President is expected on this subject. But I learn that it will not be in a form to serve, not only the

immediate purpose of a communication to

Congress, but as a manifesto of his policy

towards Cuba, for the benefit of all foreign'

powers, and particularly France.

Illinois

..

.N°r

to.

for Spain and

The Editor of the Peoria News

makes the following statement, in reference to Senator Douglas' political standing in

and non-intervention. New Mexico, Utah, than three fifths of the people of the whole! the North will have no more slave territory, Kansas and Nebraska will be made free State, including Whigs and Democrats ap- they had better start now, for the North States. The South cannot complain, prove of the principles of the bill and will, are bent upon it. Now, we can assure the The principle for which they have always sustain them against all opposition. [editor that the Southern people have no

has produced this result.—! la the larger towns, and in some of the

thc passage of the Nebraska bill, declared against it, but Chicago is essentially an ren are. So if he wants to get rid of us, fu'

that he had not seen the federalists of Keene eastern city its citizens know but little of let him put out across the lake along with

so exasperated since the news of Perry's the rest of the people they vainly imagine the first gang of runaway negroes he finds.

victory. He mentioned one or two persons that that city can manufacture public sen- We believe in the right and folly of seces-1 who, he thought, displayed rather more in- timent and control the policy of the State,' sion and especially in the right of Aboli-! donation at the triumph of republican arms whereas the votes, the wealth, the intelli- tionists to secede. Let 'em go. in°l813 thftn,$heir infirmities would allow geucc and the political power o£the State! them ta expwps against the republican prin- are to be found at an immense distance CRISIS OR NO CRISIS.—In Bulwer's sarciples of 1854. "Can the leopard change from that city. castic comedy of "Money", Mr. Graves,

MURDER AND RAVISHMENT COIIUITTED BY A NEGRO. We learned last evening the particulars

jie Bosphorus and Euxine, and negro slave. It appears that Mrs. Redman,

1

nations of the Western Continent, contributed about 100,000 more Austria threw her down and ravished her. The 45 years of age, who came frequently to The Albany Atlas says it has "from the ana Prussia, with their united armies of fiend made her promise she would not tell,! inquire for lefters from home. He was a bennnino-, entertained something like this' 000,000, are relied on, at least, to protect and then returned to his plow. The lady! man of pleasing manners, and evidently

married, had gone into the field to hunt

,, Re iirt3 juiiik uu,uuu uiium nutia injure »111:11 1 ucjjiu man nu »r piu.rmg were stationed, with an intelligent, happy-

Tunis and Circassia are said to have in a field close by, came to where she was, I looking English gentleman, of about

8

of Russia, as the installation of a power on-alliance. The last news tell us of the she was and ravished her the second time, glad °o avail lfimself of an opportunity of the ocean, absolute in its will, and wanton! compulsion of the prosperous little state of After accomplishing his devilish purpose, conversing with us, and spoke freely of his in its unchecked strength- and with which I Sardinia into the Western Confederation, he choked his victim to death, and then past and of his hoped-for future. He had

fT

no

an

seen since the Crusaders nor have J-ng- covered, until a pair of hounds were brought land, and make all the arrangements neoesland and I'ranee been allied since Phillipe

Augustus and Richard Coeur de Lion rphCy jmme(]ia,tely traced the track to the He had accomplished this—had taken and negro, who was still plowing, but he denied furnished a house in Philadelphia, and was

all knowledge of the affair At length he confessed to the committal of the deed, and gave a full statement of everything, and in taking him away, the parties passed by the house of the

dozen men, at once.—Memphis Whig.

LORD ELGIN'S MISSION.

On arriving at Sherbrooke, Lord Elgin replied to an address from the Mayor, with the following speech "My visit to Washington although not precisely in my official capacity of Governor General, but rathor as envoy extraordinary —if it has not accomplished, in every particular, all I could have wished, I have reason to believe the result will be beneficial to the inhabitants of the British provinces. It has ever been one of the leading objects of my efforts in Canada, to pro-

some manner. "On crossing the frontier and looking at. the forests, I thought that their proprietors.

would not be unwilling to have their lum-

UC

m0

PRETTY Goon.—An old democrat of this out middle and southern Illinois are for it.'North, and we shall not leave them alone following 'V\ met a gramcounty, who came into town the day after Chicago and its neighborhood may be in such bad company as he and his breth-' ™^rian»

his spots?"—Cheshire (2T. H.) Hepublican. Let Senator Douglass come amongst us. as he shakes his head at a file of newspaHe will find on every hand warm hearts pers, says "In my day, I have already- S3TWEALTH OF GEN. CASS.—About 30 jCJT Fifty uiiles of the Egyptian railway and strong arms ready to sustain him. He seen eighteen erisisses, six annihilations of years ago, Gen. Cass owned a farm in what have been opened for traffic. Mf and from India now travel British have thus got a short way to their India possessions.

A DEMOCRATIC FAMILY NE WSPAPER—DEVOTED TO POLITICS, NEWS, MISCELLANEOUS LITERATURE, MECHANIC ARTS, &&

VOLUME 5. CRAWFORDSVILLE, MONTGOMERY COUNTY, IND., JULY I, 1S54.

b)','

a

"f.

I these the only parties, Sweden is to be alarm, crying for help, when the fiend left the refinements of really o-ood society.

Denmark forced, into the his plow and deliberately walked to where Being a stranger on our shores, he was

Spain, also, is made to feel her dependence,, resumed his plowing, as if nothing had come over to Philadelphia, bringing with and to contribute her quota to the cause happened. him a little son, apparently about °welve of the invaders. Greece'is occupied by the jn

owners would be pleased to send ^IS

wayside, I thought that mates mi'rht have some

perhaps the meggs and poultry

which they would be glad to send to market, without paying duty. So that, how-

... ever some may be disposed to look upon

reciprocity,

be

I am sure the people will not

(j pieasc,-

'pleased with it."

burnt and annihilated, by the fire of the allied squadrons of France and England."

jC5T"The Cleveland Herald (Whig) says: If the South will leave the Union, because

villages there may be a few hot headed. have that he will ever be a man of sense. I politicians against it, but the masses through- There are a great many good people at the The v_an Francisco Sun is account

Passengers will be received with a glorious welcome, agriculture and commerce, four overthrows is now the heart of Detroit, and by simply on it. The all the more ardent becaxise of the fierce of the church, and three last, final, awful, "holding on," he has become the possessor cut of rail- and bitter war which has been so unjustly and irremediable destructions of the entire of a fortune estimated at three millions of waged against him. constitution." dollars.

If he would travel about middle and gigantic labors, and immense sacrifices.— house without noticing the family, rushed p0WC,r to license teachers. In Montgomery southern Illinois and hear the farmers and The fortresses which she has raised, at up stairs where the false one was at work, there have been licensed 113 teachers,— mechanics speak of the principles of the

which she has formed by dint of patience, plunged into water fifteen feet deep. A money, time, tyranny and skill, will vanish man ploughing near by, supposing some-1 thing was wrong, ran after her, but only reached in time to see the bubbles where she had sunk.— Cin. Enq.

re idea of leaving the Union, than thej and there was nothing left the planter.

TIIE 3IISSIXG STEAMER CITY OF GFIASSGOW. AN AFFECTING STORT.

The Jersey Blue has the following affecting story During the latter part of our career in the ^Philadelphia Post-office, we became acquainted, among the mass of human beings whose faces appeared daily at the "General Delivery Windows" where we

h« bcc° cduc?ted

few hours th^ corpse was found, years of age, to select a residence for the

trace of the murderer could be dis- rest of his family which he had left in Eng-

p]aced upon the scent of the track.: sary to their comfort when they arrive.

expecting letters from his wife, informing him of her sailing with their children in the steamer City of Manchester.

We handed him a letter—it spoke of her expectations t,o sail in that steamer he

negro's brother, who said that it was his went away with such glad anticipations as brother that did it, as he had talked about might be supposed to fill the heart of a it before. This occurred on Monday eve- husband and father long absent from his ning, and the news did not become generally wife and children, whom he soon expected could have known that night, but the next morning to meet and embrace again. A few days fully established, will give as general satisit spread like' wildfire, and the whole passed, and another foreign mail arrived faction as any system can. He advises an country was aroused with indignation. I with a letter to our friend from his wife, amendment of the law so as to allow tow*nThe excitement became intense, the people saying, that she had not been able to make ship trustees to assess special taxes for gathered from every quarter, and the black her arrangements in time to sail in the school purposes. This of course is a very wretch was taken by the infuriated crowd I Manchester, but that she would certainly imperfect compendium of the matt* and castrated, then hung by his neck un-j sail in the Glassgow. Some time after forth in this report. We have only to notil nearly dead. He was then taken down this, letters came, which she had mailed tice such as struck us a likely to prove mand luing by his heels until life was near-1 at

fhe

ly extinct, when he was shot by ten or a, now he was unspeakably happy with the

mote commercial intercourse and kindly, pearance. The plump happy seeming face jn

received and treated me in the most hand-! upon us with a maniac expression. He claim that as a credit. Lafayette has 1710 walked mopingly away, but his face haunted children nothing said about houses, us still. A few days after this, a steamer teachers'pay. We want Lafayette papers iging the report that a vessel

arrive^

^r!n

sorriewhat

ber pass free of duty to the United States markets and when I saw some fine horses. and cattle on the fields, it occurred to me f^|se bad brightened his countenance!^ Evansville papers to this fact, that the them over the border free of duty again, when looking at the houses by the! h°pe as a drowning man to a straw

c}es

ver the border free of duty. And intelligence, and he clung to this baseless fayette or Evansville either—but hai

We left the post-office a few days after

this. Yesterday we inquired concerning

this wretched man, and was told that he

had been for some time in asylum, a raving maniac.

will have lost in a few weeks the fruits of God, what will become of me!" She

great expense, on the coasts of the and caught him around the neck—kissed jn Lar/ran^e 92, in Jefferson 84,—while Baltic and Black Sea, will fail to the ground him—said she had come to bid him along ptUsh onljMicensed 0, and Parke only one. —set on fire and demolished and the fleets farewell. She then ran across a field, and jn

pected to live to the time, when slaves in Virginia would advertise for runaway masters as it took all the corn to feed the hogs—all the hogs to feed the negroes—

0

toui

rat"er

through the mines, conjugating, or

cogitating thus. lositive

comParati\e

tf v'J .. r".

^customed t'o

time of embarking in this ship, and tercstin£f to our readers

almost certainty of seeing his wife and children in a very few days for the N. Y.

river the anxiously expected steamer. We

feelings between the people of the province of one month before was haggard as the month S42 for male?, $23 for females, and in the neighboring States. I was met face of death, the eye that so shortly be-.Both Madison and New Albany pay male in WashingtoflPfe the most cordial and fore we had seen dance in the light of in- teachers on an average more than we do, liberal spirit, and at Portland the people, ward joy, were bloodshot wild, and glaring

mail steamers generally make the passage that Indianapolis has 3,058 children bebut a few days sooner than our screw steam-! tween 5 and 21 years of age—1,584 males, ers. Soon he with many others commen-1 fomaleii (though the number of feced going down every day, to Queen st. 'males is incorrectly printed 146)—7 'good' wharf to look for the in coming steamer. (school houses, and that teachers are paid

But who shall speak of the horror to'per month, males 641,06, and females conic.? Day r.fter day did he,with the many 331 ,G 1. New Albany ts 3,102 children, others on that sad walk, go down to the1 527 males, and 1,570 females (the girls wharf and -strain his vision to descry1 outnumbering the boys down there,") 7 among the numerous vessels, down the'J

to

resembling the Glassgow had children, no school houses, and pays febeen seen off the Bahamas this report male teachers $15 a month—nothing said brought hira to us again. Oh, how that about males. We desire the attention of

had regained their expression of Haute has 17G0 children—more than

was

the lunatic |fie

ANOTHER LOVE AFTAIR AXD END.—On -\YE

RUSSIA.—The Paris Constitutionel, al- by ville, Pickaway county, drowned herself hey would be entitled to in proportion to 1 in the creek in a few minutes after reading tv,« rmmhor nf children Vermillion has lud.ng to the progress of the war thus far.

note from ]or

s.\vs: 1 tend marrying her, and was about leaving on the other hand some are large deficient. "Before the naval campaign which is now the village. A correspondent says, after wen is minus $13,812, Marion §13,083, commenced shall have terminated, Russia she read the letter, she exclaimed, "My

more than a century of persevering efforts, crossed through a street, passed through a: Counties have made a free use of their

REPORT OF TIIE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. We have received this document but have not had time to look through it. From a review of it in the Indianapolis Journal we copy the following:

The adoption of the established uniform scries of school books, he thinks, will save

and shows that while 38 counties losejvari- j111

gain from §'17 to §800, and states as a sin-

gular fact, that some of the counties warmly opposed to equalization, gain most of it, and some that loose largely, are most devoted to it. he establishment of township libraries is postponed by the advice of the State officers, till the amount of the library

funcTiri'etoTniy'asc'eriiaed. He conclude

with several pages devoted to the present condition and prospects of the school system. He thinks it has succeeded better than been anticipated, and when

From the tabular statements appended we gather some interesting facts. Taking the principal towns of the State, we find

«very

ers

saw him when the vessel had been some $21,41. Madison has 3,240 children, 40 days out, and were startlud at his ap- 'more than either of the others, 5 houses

£r0ol'^houses, and that male teach-

receive per month £60,41, and females

g0od

an(j

female teachers a good deal less. We

explain that. Evansville" has 1,247

ves

Wednesday the 7th, a Miss Fuller in Dar-1 Counties have large amounts more than

„_ ,hlt

he did not in

an(

this

so

John Randolph once said "he ex­

[na"e unsuccess-

E°ljne'

miner, superlative minus

A PRESENT TO THE EMPEROR OF JAPAN. —Donald McKay, Esq., the well known ship builder at East Boston, is about to construct a beautiful yacht of about 90 tons, which he intends as a present to the Emperor of Japan.

ther

lanx

repair," and pays teachers per

]^rc

Terre La-

.school houses reported, and no teachers'

pa nam

mean

ed. What does the Prairie City

that

We find further that Indianapolis re-

0 2.442,— New Albany 8 2.482,— Madison $ 2,592,—Evansville §093, Lafayette $1,378,—and Terre Haute SI,413.

sce

statement No. 3, that some

'-LaportTs^l

Spencer $ 1 1,026. By Statement No.

ve see

that the examiners of some

County the examiner licensed 37.

KW The London Times pays the follow­

ing compliments to the dress of the British

2

"Loaded like a dray-horse, belted and strapped in like a dandy of George IV., throttled by his stock, extinguished by his helmet, and compressed to suffocation bv his belts, the British soldier appears by the side of his French rival a monument of our lolly and our obstinacy, an impersonation

of the blunders of the past, and a discredit

jtS** The Captain of a merchant vessel unloading in Turkey, feared to leave a part of his cargo exposed during the night. "It will not rain.'* said a Mussulman. "But:

some one .t steal them, replied the

Captain. "Oh, never fear, rejoined the

Turk, "there is not a Christian within seven miles."

a

clothing colonels, and to rescue the soldier, ^hen the wearer looks at one. Mr. STOWE from the tyranny of custom and the iron has one resource, in case the Fugitive Law dominion of routine." continued on the statute book. He can resort to his wife's shears and if that instrument is as sharp as her tongue, it will answer all the purposes of a razor.

The Eastern papers state thai a

white hat is one of the distinguishing majka of the Know Nothings.

NO. 52.

LLOW TRUE IT IS.

The Cleveland Plaindealcr under the

head of "foreign born," has the following

serious, candid and well written article:

$100,000. The amount of the school fund qu£dled in the whole history of the political is put at 82,460,000, which is invested by jP^st. Every paper on our extensive exthe county auditors and treasurers in loans change list, has something to say for or on mortgages, in sums not exceeding 6300.1 against upon the all—absorbing theme. The proceeds of this are divided among the The Whigs and Freesoilers, as a mass, arctownships in the ratio of 80 cents to each bidding for the "Know-Nothing" interest child of the proper age to enter the schools, ^bile the Democracy are making one more The amount divided bv this mode is §3*14,- kind effort to benefit the foreign born in 791, the childien numbering 430,925, |tllis

our

This ratio the Superintendent tound to be Democratic paper, so far as we know, has the largest that would not exhaust the attempted either to bully or buy off otir aannual "fund. dopted citizens. To bully, our party is too

He next discusses the advantages and courteous, and to buy, too proud* Besides, objections of the system of equalization,

Wfc aie

no'

thls

ous amounts from $25 up to §1,500,— survived through numberless crises and that is receive less' than they would under! eventful epochs. It has lost at times, a hathe old system, no less than 53 counties

iind a

A CURE FOR HYDROPHOBIA-. INFALLIBLE REMEDY.—To the Editor of the Pennsylvanian: Dear Sir.—The effects resulting from the bite of a rabid animal are so inconceivable heart rending, that the writer deems it but an act of justice to make the subjoined remedy public, for the benefit of the unfortunate hereafter. Within the past two weeks there have been two cases of hydrophobia, of the most distressing character—one in this city and cmc in NewJersey—and daily reports are made in tho newspapers of mad dogs being seen in and about the city. Every individual in tlu community, therefore, should procure and preserve a copy of the following cure, so that in case of an emergency, he might, avail himself of its beneficial tendency.— Win. Hoffner, Esq., of I'assyunk, the gentleman from whom the writer obtained thia^ invaluable receipt, states that he has known- ', several instances of men and animals who have been bitten in the severest manner by mad dogs, but who, having taken this remedy, never experienced any effect whatever of the disease: "Take of the root of elecampane ono ounce and a half, cut it fine, then boil it in one pint of new milk down to half a pint take this three mornings, fasting, and eat no food till four o'clock in the afternoon.—• It should be taken every morning the two last doses must weigh two ounces each.— This remedy will hare the desired effect if taken at any time within twenty-four hours after the accident."

The press generally, by giving the abovo receipt a conspicuous insertion, will advance the cause of Humanity.

MRS. HARRIET BSECHER STOWE'S husband has declared with great solemnity that he will not shave until the repeal of the Fugitive Slave Law is secured. The Sandusky

.Register knows an editor in Ohio who

SWOI

to the enlightenment of the present andwa3 elected President and, in conseall this because there is no authority strung quence, the unfortunate has at this time enough to interfere with the profits of

2J.--

"The progress of the "Know-Nothings" is electric. Within the past week alone, they have mounted up with a rapidity une-

of distress. Not a single

directly, personally interested

The Democratic party has

battalion there.

atters set 'nt0 Inland or Germany, instead of lending your strength, genius, hopes and aspirations. to swell the glory of the American name.

Its whole

course has been one of vicissitudes and variations and yet, to day it is the only Nation' al Party in the land the only one of which the observant eye can prophecy anything but ut'er disruption and defeat. '"V

The Democratic party might, with perfect safety, abstain from taking sides on this to foreign-

TI"T

.. ers—" 1 his is the result of your folly. We have told you a ain and a^ain how itwould be. Against our frequent advice you havo persisted in building up your Irish and German clans. You have claimed to pay all the rights and happy privileges of American citizens, while yon wrap up your sympathies and interests in your own nationality. You seem seeking to turn America

Your very policy of isolation has provoked, the Counter Native American movement. Now take care for yourselves.

Such would be the language as recrimination, but the Democracy are too generous to use it. The Democracy are now prepared, as they ever have been, to work for and with both Irish and Germans, and the representatives of any and all nations on the globe. They only wish in return, a warm and hearty co-operation—not as' reluctant allies, but as Democrats all, knowing no country but America, and ambition but its common welfare. "Again we ask the Germans and Irish to cast carefully about them—to inquire. 1st, what this Nati-ve American movement

is? 2d, How long they—only one-fifth of the population—can hold against it? 3d, What is their best course in this dilemma? —State Sentinel:'-

.e never to shave until HENRY CLAY

heard which turns the edge of a razor

0ne of A Bri|is|] rcgimeIJts,

0(J (he Grc has a

be withheld from going to the East,

call-

0

be-.

O

cause their uniform is covered with remiriscence of Waterloo, for fear it should offend the French.

The crops in Southern Illinois, are-

in a prosperous condition.