Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 29 July 1854 — Page 1
t2
A
TFMHSOLUTION OF THE WHIG PARTY. /PROPOSED FORMATION QT A SECTIONAL WHIG ABOLITION FREE SOIL PARTI*.
The Baltimore Patriot, a Whig paper of long standing, and well earned influence, -puts forth the following article in reference •initio the present condition and prospects of the Whig party, which we commend to the ssss^attention of reflecting men:
The disorganization of the "Whigs has really been completed by the rapacity with vwhich the northern sections of that party clutch at the control of the government. ,v It is thought that the issue of slavery or ^freedom is likely to be more profitable than that,6fan ad valorem or specific traffic.
They have, therefore, formally given notice fgfeto their Southern brethren that the partnership heretofore existing between them has terminated. Not only has the Hon. Mr.
Steward announced this ominous issue of Freedom and slavery as the sole question for popular decision, but the Hon. Mr. Wade, of Ohio, and others, have declared .the final separation of the Whig party. -yTbis is confirmed by the Northern Whig
press generally. The New York Tribune, &a»sthe admitted organ of the free soil move«®fment, consumates a series of indiscriminate finsults to the South, by proposing "a Basisiswofeffort," upon which it proposes to unite! the whole forces of the North. We only 'hope that a design so malevolent will have •ssano more serious effect upon the peace of. the country, that the suggestion to fire the I •j.* Capitol and disband the Government, orj Ssifi tliat which recommended (o the free negroes and fanatics of Boston to "organize", an armed resistance to the Fugitive Slave law. m^IIere is the plan. ssife We maintain that the only policy of the sfmiincerc friends of freedom, and (hose who are determined to resist the aggressions of Slavery is to unite in solid phalanx and so make their ,, efforts tell. There is no sense in any other course. No man who realizes the importancc of the existing crisis, and who higfimi&ia firm i*nl rcsoluio in bin opposition to -:the denomination of the Slave Power, will 4 stop to ask about the party antecedents
of any candidate presented for his suffrages. If the candidate is a true and reliable man in the service for which he is now wanted, that will be enough. We go for Whigs, Democrats and Free Soilers alike in the coming elections, provided they are true men. (Our italics.)
This tallies precisely with the plan ad*8s* vnnced by the Hon. Mr. Steward, and adopted with such unanimity by the North,1 cm Whig press. The Southern Whigs "2* on the other hand, have agreed to the proposed separation, because they have long since seen that co-opcration in such a design Would be treason (o their country.
Their representatives in Congress have refused to side with Mr. Smith, Mr. Sumner, -*nnd Mr. Scw&rd. The most influential portion of their press had declared its independence of party obligations, and opcnly refused to go upon the platform with "democrats and freesoilers," to secure the possession of the Government.
Whatever of ancient sympathy we may -'have had with the gallant northern whigs '•who stood by Webster and Fillmore when they stood by the union and the rights of the South, we can feel little regtet at part-: ing with a faction whose leaders are mer-1 cenarv, and whose masses mad. If that A
faction would rather see the fugitive negro 'protected than the manufacturer if it likes better the friendship of Garrison ahd Fred.
Douglas than that of J. P. Benjamin, or -Alexander Stephens, or Meredith P. Gentry if it prefers a naked and supcrogatory decree excluding the South from territory which she never expected to occupy to a cordial interchange of products and a liberal cession of commercial advantages if it would swap the sister States of the viSouth for monarchicalCanada—for Canada,
1whose
population was driven from the Republican colonics because they would not defend their liberties, but still repeat the traditions of confiscation and exile—who sneer at our institutions and laud with obsequious loyalty those which they have derived from the crown: If the Northern ssf -'Whigs prefer an alliance with such a .. people, to one with those who quitted their
Southern homes to lie on Boston Heights, |m confronting a poirerfulfoe -without the amwunition to hare repulsed him—whoendured the trials of Valley Forge—who met the ""-•confident foe at Monmouth, and crossed the wintry Delaware to strike a blow for -Freedom when she almost despaired of -existence—who bled with the men of Mas-j sachusetts in the trenches of Yorktown,] nnd saw the humbled battallions of the haughty invador pile their weapons at their feet: If the Northern Whigs are •willing, as they have professed, to exchange American freemen for British subjects, and republican whigs for renegades, fanatics, and fugitive slaves, we cannot under such circumstances withhold our approval. Self-respect—the protection of our firc*«ijles, demands it, and it is done.
Wc do not think that this separation could have been avoided. Not only has there been little sympathy for some years past between Northern and Southern Whigs, but there seems to be no regret on the perty of the Northern Whigs at the dissolution of the party.—Indeed, we have seen but one suggestion of any basis upon which they can bo reunited, and hat upon the basis of their-enactment of ithe Missouri Compromise. That proposi
tion is simply impossible. The condition imposed upon the admission of future States was never considered of any legal obligation as an extra-constitutional act. It was made between parties who could have had no control over the rights of others not then in political eiistence. It assumed to bind the rights of the future States. It has been set aside, not upon the application of the South, but upon the demand of Northern men who were unwilling that such a restriction should disgrace the sovereign people and the Sovereign States. Many Southern Whigs may have regretted the introduction of the subject. Some might have voted against a repeal of the Compromise, but none can advocate its restoration. The basis of adjustment being then impracticable, we see no other. It must be as our former associates will it. We must in future regard them as we do other political organizations which exists among us, and regulate our relations with them accordingly^
TIIE PEOPLE'S TICKET. This is the heading which is given to the fusion ticket composed of free soil, sore-pa-ted Democrats and Whigs, nominated at the fusion Convention on the 13th inst. A greater misnomer was never perpetrated.— The people were not there. They had nothing to do with sending the delegates. The meeting was composed of self-chosen, self-constituted delegates, made up of the most desperate aad hot-headed politicians and fanatics in the State. The leading spirits were Rev. George B. Jocelyn, Matthew R. Hull, George W. Julian. Stephen S. Harding, Schuyler Colfax, Michael S. Garbcr. fcc., &c. These are the menu ho pulled the wires in the nomination of the mis-called "People's Ticket." The honest, hard-working people were not there. They were attending to their own business, in their corn-fields, their harvest-fields and their work-shops. These representatives were not present. It was a Convention of dfones—men who attend to other people's business, nnd livo and fatten on other people's labor. In this canvass we shall call things by their proper names. The leading Whigs of Indiana, whose principles we have combatted for years, are not in this contest. The Smiths, that is, the old Whig Smiths, the Ilaridens, the Whites, the Dunns, the Stapps and the Marshals were not here. A new set of men, with new principles, are in the field. Desperate men of desperate political fortunes are now our opponents. Knowing the enemy we have to fight, we should wield our weapons accordingly. With right and justice on our side, we appeal with confidence to the Democratic party, the only living, existing, national party in this country, and to the friends of the Union, of all parties to sustain us in this contest. We enter the fight with high hopes of a glorious triumph.— Democrats, gird on your armor. The old enemy has retired from the field you have now to fight a new army, composed of the deserters of all armies—the laggards, and the drummcd-out-of-camp. If you can.'t whip such a motley crowd in October next, you had better ground your arms, and let all the glorious achievements of your past hiftory be blotted from the records of the country.—State Sentinel.
REMARKABLE FEAT—Some time since the point of the lightning rod on the steeple of the first Congregational Church in New London.. Co:u.. got unscrewed and fell to the ground. It was i.uch a dangerous piece of work to replace it, that the committee were unwilling to employ any one to perform the task. A Mr. De Wolf, however, volunteered to make the attempt, which the committee permitted after some hesitation, having promised him a handsome sum if he succeeded. He did succeed, accomplishing the task with out any apparent consciousness of having done any 'hing extraordinary. The New London Chronical says the point to which he ascended is very near two hundred feet, and for the last fifty feet he had to climb up a stone surface, with nothing to hold on to but a small iron rod, and when he reached the ball he was still some 12 feet from the end of his journey.— This distance he had to shin up a single rod, a labor "which he found so fatiguing that he became exhausted, and was obliged to return and seat himself on the ball and recover breath. This he soon did, and fearlessly resumed his travel towards the clouds where he accomplished his object and came down.
MAZEPPA.
(til
1
I
Voltaire, in his history of Charles XII,, says:— 'Mazeppa was a polish nobleman, down in the Palatinate Podolia. He was educated as a page to Jean Casimer, at whose court he acquired some knowledge of bellesletters. An intrigue which he had with the wife of a Polish Palatine, having been discovered, the husband had him tied naked on a wild horse, which 'was then set loose. The horse which was from the Ukreline, went back thither, carrying with him Mazeppa, half dead from hunger and fatigue. Some peasants took care of him he remained with them for along time, and distinguished himself in several incursions against Tartars. His superior information made him highly respected among the Cossacks, and his fame which was daily increasing, induced the Czar to create him a Prince of the Ukraine.'
POLITICO-RELIGIOUS EXCITEMENT NORTH. The political and religious elements in the States septentrion of Mason fc Dixon's line, are agitated by a furious tornado, in consequence of the passage by Congress of what is popularly denominated the "Nebraska Bill." We have been denied the leisure to examine with critical care the provisions of that enactment. The Lord's vineyard, in which we are an humble laborer, has demanded so much bf our time and has so entirely absorbed the powers of our mind, that we have not bestowed more than a tery hasty, glance at what is denounced in the North as the "bill of abominations." Nor do we expect ever to trouble ourselves about the matter. When the question was under discussion in Cohgress, it created no interest, certainly no excitement in the whoie South. When it passed, the South shot no guns and kindled no bonfires.— The North has had all the excitement.— The measure was conceived in the North. The leading statesmen of the North were its nursing fathers. It was understood to be a favorite measure of the President, one of the most distinguished of Northern patriots. At all events, it became a law in accordance with all the forms prescribed by the Constitution. It has the image and superscription of Ccesar, and let Caesar attend to it. Ministers of the Gospel have nobler objects to claim their attention and employ their talents. They are engaged in a great work, and should not come down to mingle in the melee of such paltry and petty feuds. "Let the potsherds of the earth strive with the potsherds of the earth." a
The men'most intensely and madly excited seem to be ministers and religious editors. The preaching of the cross of Christ is superseded by denunciations of the Nebraska bill! The press and the pulpit are in constant eruption—eructating fierce and fiery streams of invective against the Southern States of the American confederacy!— The whole battery of ghostly artillery, from Luke Pohenagamook to Sandy Hook and from Black Rock to Cnpe Cod, has been unmuzzled, and is now belching forth its death-dealing thunders upon the devoted South! Priests and people have cried "havoc! and bid slip the dogs of war!" Blood and carnage, fire and pillage must riot over our fields and plantations, in order to satiate the high and holy morality of Northern ministers and people! A less bloody offering cannot appease their wrath in consequence of the passage of the Nebraska bill! I We have no intention of discussing the imerits of this "bill of abominations" with these "ungentle shepherds," especially un-
dog-days are passed. We have no wish to be infected with hydrophobia. Even now, the mercury is standing at blood heat, and we are not sure but we shall receive, if not the bite, at least the fierce baying of these "dogs of war." We will try and evade them, if possible. Of these politicoreligious fanatics it may well be said and sung: "The dog star rages, nay, 'tis past a do lbt, I All bedlam or Purnasaus is turned out.
I "Fire in each eye and paper in each hand, They rave, recite, and madden round tho land."
Thev have converted the pulpit into ti "stump," and houses of worship have been transformed into political amphitheaters for the fierce contests of fanatical and incendiary gladiators. The Nebraska bill is now discussed, instead of the awful retributions of eternity. Negro emancipation is urged, to the utter forgetfulness of redemption from sin. "Free territory" is a locality of more frequent mention and more enchanting sweetness than "the city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God." The name of negro seems to have become more precious, certainly more conducive to excitement, than the name of Jesus, which ought to be above every name. These spiritual knights-errant, who appear to think they have a divine commission to correct all the wrongs, real and imaginary, in our nation, are infinitely more chivalric in their onslaughts upon the States South, whose heroes and statesmen Were the chief architects of this great Republic—than upon "principalities and powers, and wicked spirits in high places."— They seek, with maniac valor, to pollute with the blood of civil war, the graves of Washington, Jefferson, Marion, Monroe, Madison, Sumptcr, Jackson, Clay, and others, the most illustrious champions of our country's greatness and renown—the men who purchased by their blood and their wisdom even the liberty which these fanatics abuse in scattering political and religious fire-brands, arrows, and death broadcast over the land yes, with mad daring they seek the disruption of our Republic, while they shrink with mean poltroonery from any rencounter with the hosts of the prince of the power of the air, "the spirit that now worketh in children of disobedience," against whom they pretend it is their chief business to wage unceasing battle.
But while we intend to avoid as a pestilence any conflict with these wild beasts in our political.Ephesus, we cannot refrain from measuring strenth with them in the moral and religious aspects of the negro question. We entertain supreme and unmixed contempt for the sublimity in morals which tbey affect over the people of the South on this question. Admit that negro slavery is the social and religious gangrene
A-DEMOCRATIC FAMILY NEWSPAPER—DEVOTED TO POLITICS, NEWS MISCELLANEOUS LITERATURE, MECHANIC ARTS, &C,
VOLUME VI CRAWFORDSV1LLE, MONTGOMERY COUNTY, IND, JULY 29, 1854,
From the Western (Baptist Recorder.
they boast to have demonstrated it to be,
ship arose much of that splendor which adorned the churches, colleges, and cities of New England, 'in days langsyne:'
The South protested against the inhuman traffic, but the South was then too weak to resist the overwhelming force of the avarice of the two Englands, senior and junior. The negro as a slave was forced upon us. Otir money was extorted for his bondage. lie was a poor, miserable savage—the most degraded and debased of all the human family—physically and intellectually he was but a short lemove above
ed
sour krour. From this miserable condition the South rescued him. He was snatched from the jaws of death. He was fed and clothed as he had never been fed and clothed before. He was treated with a kindness and a consideration which he supposed impossible to be manifested by persons having the complexions of those cruel monsters who brought him in the slave ship across the great waters. lie felt indeed anew world. He enjoyed privileges and pleasures, and luxuries undreamed of in his father land. His new bondage, contrasted with the intolerable barbarity of the slave ship from which he had been redeemed, or with the cruel slavery, or even with the savage libertv of his native continent from which he had been torn, was, to his untutored mind, ecstatic freedom—an Eden of glorious and rapturous happiness, much beyond what his eye had ever seen, or the most ardent and ambitious impulses of his heart had ever longed for.
the ourang-outang. He was sunk morally now what it ever was, pursuing the same beneath the most°gross idolatry, into abso- liberal and progressive policy, and re-af-lute feticism. It was in the condition that! firming and
lle had been born a slave nnd was bought have so Repeatedly and emphatically rc-
He had been born a slave nnd was bought have so repeatedly and cmpnaucaii} re-
The Louisville Democrat relates an
incident so honorable to humanity Hoosierdom, that we cannot forbear repeating it. The restoration of most kinds of lost property, we have no doubt, is not an unusual occurrence in enlightened countries, but it is only Indiana that furnishes such an act of moral heroism as the restoring an umbrella, and at the trouble of walking two or three miles to do it. It will hardly
smess, either in the cattle or pork line, arid while there forgot his umbrella, and returned home without it. lie actually
thought that an umbrella once lost or left
anywhere, was lost forever. Such, how-
by Northern or European money from per- fused to Democrats, oppose all their meas- yylicn
pctunl bondage in Africa, or else he had lures, and to decive and mislead the people.
been recently consigned to slavery by the Such is the task of the Whigs, Abolition-
misfortunes of war, "and was bartered into.ists, and Know Nothings now and in it
American servitude for sundry Boston 'no- they, of course, are joined by the disap-
tions,' English gold, or Dutch cheese and pointed office-seekers of the Democratic
an
find a parallel even in the honest days of•
occasion to visit New Albany, lnd., on bu-
Seen AS THE CHOLERA CALLS TOR.—A family of Germans, who resided on the
and had imposed upon
but the.r avar.ee hasava.led ^em^nothjng
they are rotting in untimely grave own seeking, and the country is sole heir to their concealed wealth.—Detroit Free Press.
'"US' Beware of counterfeit ones on the
ever, was not the case in this instance, as j-jt.re
he happened to leave said umbrella at the
coats an
of our
Chicago road, within fifteen minutes wa provinced blacksmiths, perhaps of some from the City Hall and hau been support- fHrmjn£
at the public expense for the last eight =n(1
coks, has been swept away by the chol- /,
we: era. First, the father WHS taken, then the two children, and lastly, the mother, in
-Ty^n-J-
which these psuedo-philanthropists and re- From thu Pitteburg Post. .. Ax UNSELFISH PRATER.—A correspond ligionists profess to esteem it, and which .OPEN'ENEMIES AND FALSE FRIENDS.
the question should be asked them until the the whig party generally is, has one to a prayer offered by request.during «l*sfebabbling gossip of the air would teach the advantage over the party in power. The vere drought, by a venerable Methodist starling to repeat ir. By whose agency party having control over the State or na- preacher, who b'ore no goodwill to the Bapwas it communicated to this country'? If tional administration, and the majority in lists. His prayer was somewhat remarkait be a civil and social wound upon our Congress or the Legislature, must do the ble for its unselfish tonfe, and ran in this body politic, by whose assassin hand and positive acts. They must enact the la\v, wise 'Let it rain, beginning at my plantapoisoned dagger was that wound inflicted? and attend to their execution. They must tion. in Hamilton county, coming down the Not that of the South, surely. No South- manage the public works, disburse the pub- religious neighborhoods of Columbia and em State—no Southern vessel, or one lie monies, and carry on the entire machine- Nassau, where immersion is not practiced, manned by Southern sailors—was ever en- rv of the government, All laws enacted, nnd reaching tJlack Creek, even Black gaged in the hellish business of bringing and all acts done by the party in power. Creek, and bringing forth in abundance negroes from Africa to become slaves in whether right or wrong, are exposed to the none o'f your little 'nubtins,' however, but America. No, that was mainly the work censure of the opposition. 'I he minority long ears, as long as this good right arm.' of old England and New England. It was party originate no measures, assumes no re-
in this 'traffic of souls,' in this 'piracy' and sponsibility, and, in fact, has little to do' DISEASE IN^ AR.—It is now pretty well 'kidnapping' and 'man-stealing' in this but to oppose the ruling party.
work of •chattelizing' inynortal beings, that. Such is the position of the, two great iti the hospital than to be shot down in bat, old England and New En^falld-wthose por- parties of the country now. The demo- tie. Three Americans died by^disease in tions of this little globe of which af- crats have control of the national, and of Mexico to one who fell in battle. When feet to monopolize all the religion and phi- most of the State administrations of the the Russians mvaie
lanthropv which obtain from 'farthest end whole country and have majorities in most lost ^0,000 men sic ness aion*, ion to eitherpole'—laid the foundation of their: of the Legislatures also. All positive leg- want of necessaries of hie, and jeg i-ci boasted commerce and »reatnessandVealth.! islation, all laws demanded by the public the commissariat tpai
pled prosperity, the rapid expansion and
growth of the country in wealth and power. and all the elements of national greatness, during all that time, afford sufficient evidence that the democrats have not betrayed or abused their trust. Democracy is
defending
party, who imagine the country is imned
because
them for their
false
and their shirts were all made of flax, like every other part of the dress, were home-
SpUn
which
house of an honest Hoosier neighbor, who Qanada twerlty years previous, while b"v discovered it soon after the departure of his
cnt 0f
The party out of power and office, as from Florida, gives an incidetft ih relation
known
iI 11J I I AllUltU, UlOUUIot/ Vli\,
public monies, and manage the whole ma- the next year (18c29) the Russians lost 60 chinerv of the national and State govern- 000 men between the city of Adnanople. ments." Such is the task now committed to Some of these, however, were slain batthe democracy by the people. Nearly all tie. When they arrived at Adrianople the the time, for the last half century, the peo-. troops were in so wretched a condition from pie have chosen to entrust their public in- sickness and want terests to the democrats and the unexam-
mt
its time-honored and
the South found him in the European and enduring principles. the New England slave ship. He was in While such is the grave and responsible fetters, too—in the^hold of the vessel—half task of the Democracy now, the \N hig par- ,]ocument without the slightest hesitation, starved—weak and emaciated with disease, ty, and all other factions, whom the people
Corn
and treacherous enemies of our camp, olulu Friend of May 6, states about five mav do the great cause of Democracy months subsequent to the catastrophe, the some harm. But it will be only for a short same whale was taken by the Rebecca time. Our principles must prevail, and our Sims, of this port. Two harpoons were cause triumph. It is the cause of the peo-j discovered in him marked "Ann Alexan-
pie, and of freedom and self-government,! der." The whale's head was tound seri-
On their heads were worn large
roUnd-topand
were
must ever prevail in this country..-.,. ously injured, and contained pieces of the ship's timbers. He had lost his wildness and ferocity, being very much diseased but upon being taken, yielded seventy^or
HOW THEJCONTINENTALS STOOD IN ARMS. To a man, they wore small clothes, com-'eighty barrels of oil ing down and fastening just below the knee, Maybe that is the whale that butted the and long stockings, with cowhide shoes, or- J^ex and sunk her. namented with Iar^e buckles, while not a pair of boots graced the company. The jCSTThe Boston Post is guilty of th6
waistcoats were loose, and of following atrocity
Brian Bork. The Democratajs. .' huge dimensions, with colors as various as Some Negroes escaped from jail at MariDay before yesterday a kenluckian had bark of oak, pumach, and other trees!
j^iUs and swamps could make them
a
.Qther
broad-brimmed hats. Their
as various as their costume.—
an 0],j
soldier carried a Queen Ann,
had done service at the conquests 6f
S|(je
waited
a
fjuest, and actually tugged it across the SpaniSh fuzee not half its weight or calibre, river and all the way to Louisville, and de- ^h^b his grandfather may have taken at livered it safe and sound into the hands jjavana frhile not a few had old French of the rightful owner—a thing that never pjeces that dated back was heard of in this part of the world be- j^ouisburg. Instead of ihe catridge.-box, a fore, and the like may never occur again. jarge powder horn wus slung under the arm, and occasionally
a bayonets might
be seen bristling in the ranks. Some of the ,. swords o'f the officers had been made by our
utensils
they look serviceable,
unco lh
-tT.. roau uy me 1001 ui u»e uiuuli
anc
brough
tfrboro/ tbe
.u'ne
but
ttas soon to lav down their arms. After a
ifcirThe cholera is easily obtained: Four
green apples, two cucumbers, a quart of
cherries with
Such was the appearance of the Conti- PATAL Pnoor o? INUTILITY.—A man a well appointed army
named
a sleam
a£re
the Spaflford Gap, towards Pe-
far away.' cannot recover. He had spent ten years and all his means in perfecting his inven-
NO, 3.
the National Intelligencer, writing
1T.
that the soldier is more likely to die
in
1
men
us
of food, that not 7000' bear arms.
weie able to
jtyMany vears ago, somewhere in ihe Old Colony, there lived a man, whose name was Cornelius Cobb. At one time, wherf he was far away fron home, I think it was in some Southern port, a merchant called on him in great haste, requesting him, merely as a matter of form, to lend his name as security on a note for several thousands of doilars. Mr. Cobb, believing that the gentleman was as safe as Plymouth Rock—as good as gold—signed the
Cobb.' Long before the note be
camu c]llR(
t|)e
sstain
camu ll0(
ieVj no
tHl,nch merchant had failed. time arrived, the creditcounsel as to the best
the
the
pr0per
org ab]e
11J^,|1UU
n)el 10
for
jj
which they piofess attachment because failure, putting hi^ thumb to his nose, he has not offices enough in its gift to reward
rt.marbe(1
to pursue. The lawyers
(|R.m tc
informe(I them lh.lt
unl(J(!S t|lCV K0U]j
nothing could be done,
fintl the^fullow who had
uS( (j t.He"'fictitious'
signature for, said
nt man
their materials and claims are over- —(jurn Cobb'—lis a hoak agenuine Yanlooked and who would rum the party to
ver
had such a name
trick Whcn Mr Cobb hoard 0f thc
«Lucky
real or imaginary sen ices. ibadbi'en, I should have lost my corn, crib Of all the enemies of Democracy these are ,,,, the worst. The slanders of Whiggery fall harrah-«s. It is their trade. The ravings! fcg- The New Bed ford Standard related
of Abolitionists the people heed not. Their the following: In 1351, we published aif vitality and existence is in agitation. They account of the whaleship Ann Alexander: can db the great party of the people no Capt. Dubois, of this port, bfcing attacked htfrm. But the treachery of pretended and stove by a sperm whale. The whale friends, whose private griefs are too strong was coming at the rate of 15 miles an hour,, fortheir principles, give courage toouren-jand the ship going about 5, at the lime of emies, and furnish tl.em with weapons for the collision. The whale came with full their incessant warfare. Our party has force against the ship's bows, and stove in nothing to fear from the assaults of open |several feet square, almost insiantly sinkenemies, however violent, malignant, pre-[ing the vessel, and barely giving those on serving and lying they may be. But the ibonrd an opportunity to escape. The Hon-
wasft-t
there. If I
boring holes with an auger.—
prisoners were placed in the same room before it was properly repaired, and
likewise eseaped by the niggeranger route.:
#5TE verything depends upon starting well in the world—whether in business, matrimony, horsedealingor what not. Let the wrong foot be put forward, and one has no more chance for success than a Hot-
strippling bov, with altentot has for the Presidency of the United 'States.
A dav or two ago a Quaker and a
nau oiu rreucu hof_iiea(]e(] y0Uth wert quarrelling in the to the ieduction of
street
The'broad-brimmed friend kept his
temper most equably, which seemed but to increase the anger of the other. 'Fellow," said the latter, "I don'i know a bi "rer fool than vou are," finishing the
expression wi:h an oath. "Stop friend," replied "Thee forgeltest thvself."
the Quaker.—
Leroy, in aris, who had invented
carriage for travelling on ordinary
struck some obstruction, uppeu over,
an£ poure
the
o( lbe hi |s and sca|ding
hot water from the boiler
j,im
tjon( anci
ajs rom
plenty of bad rum, will insure
Ohio State Bank. The counterfeit is ele- that institution at short notice. Gentlemen A man may begreatby ch*wce,- necr gantlv executed, and will deceive many. at all skeptical should try on a fewpatterno. wire norgoof wu oa- a .n0
e0 bad!y lbat he
bad received flattering restimoni-
various European crowned heads..
