Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 May 1855 — Page 2
E E I E W
O A O
8ATURDAY MORNING, MAY 5, 1855.
PRINTED AND PUBLISIIED EVERY 8ATURDAY MORNING BY CHARLES H. DOWEN.
1
WThe CrawfordNTillc Review, famished to Subscriber*) nt (11,50 in advance, or (2, If not paid within the year.
I A I O N
LARGER THAN ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN Crnwfordsville ..•it Advertiser* call up and examine our list of
1
W SUBSCRIBERS. _/J3
All kiadi of JOB WORK done to order. To Advertisers. -. ^verr advertisement handed in for publication, should havo writcn upon it the number of times the •dvortiuervishesitinaertod. If notsoatatod,itwill beinaortod until ordered out, und churned accord ingly-
Agents for the Itevierr.
E. W. CABR, U. S. Newspaper Advertising Asrent, Ivans' Building. N. \V. corner of Third and WalnutStrcets. Philadelphia, Pa.
S. II. PARVIN, South East corner Columbia and Main streets, Cincinnati, Ohio ia our Agont to procure advertisements.
We wish it distinctly understood, that we have now the BEKT und tho I-AKOEST assortment of XEW and FANCY JOB TYTKCVCT brought to this place. Wo insist on those wishing work done to call up, and we will show them ournssortmontof typs, cuts, fec. Wc have got them and no mistalcc. Work dono on short notice, and on reasonable torms.
GLORIOUS NEWS{FKO"fI THE CAPITAL!
INDIANAPOLIS REDEEMED
|The IIiir&>os Annihilated! 11
The Charter election in Indianapolis last Tuesday, resulted in the total overthrow of the Hindoos, the Anti-Know Nothing ticket being elected by 248 majority.
The State Sentinel in commenting on the route of the Thugs uses the following language "To feel that you area slave to a master, or a serf to a despot, and to endure it, is to feel what hundreds have felt and thousands have endured. But to know, that whilst surrounded by the empty forms of republicanism, we are enveloped in the folds of a political serpent, unseen, inscrutable, but felt and dreaded, whose poison tongue drops secretly its venom on our lips whoso putriscent carcass entwines itself unobserved around our necks,—to feel and know that wo are surrounded by an engine, with an unknown motive power, which may crush us or elevate us at its will this is to feel, and this is to know the slavery of a despotism which binds the soul in iron links, and makes man's heart a hell.
We love a true friend, and admire an open foe, but we despise the individual who will bite us at the back and hold as a craven deeply dyed in infamy, the miserable assassiu, who presents its dagger to the bared bosom of an enemy, but shields himself behind a self-erected monument of darkness. To think freely, to speak freely, to act freely, and openly, are the boasted privileges of an American citizen. True Americans, brave men—men who are not afraid of day-light, and who loathe a craven, will never, can never tolerate a secret political institution whose motto is darkness, and whose watchward is cowardice. The incipient step in the regeneration of Indiana, has begun at the Capital. It will continue to go on purging and purifying until the pestilence of Know Nothingism is swept away from our midst, with not a vestige left to tell where once it held the despotic reigns of power.
KNOW-NOTHING DEFEAT IN PHILADELPHIA. PIIILAOELPHIA, May 2.—The municipal election resulted in a majority of about 150 for the reform candidates for city treasurer and commissioner. They were supported by both Whigs and Democrats against the poor who are doomed to starvation. Know Nothings. The select council will stand 9 Whigs and 15 Know Nothings common council 39 Democrats and 38 Know Nothings.
DAVIS GARVIN.
We invite the attention of our readers to the advertisement in another column of this
O^rlf Know Nothingism is beaten in Phil-1 ly consumed as a matter of cconomy. Let adelphia, which one year ago it carried by the poor eat more sugar, rice, tapioca, fari VT\TF. TTTnTTS4\TT MA.TORTTV 'na, maccaroni, hominy, dried fruits, ant NINE THOUSAND MAJORITY, where can it hope for success? Sam had better put on his seven-leagued boots and hide himself in the swamps of Guiana.
fiim. They are gentlemen of large means ia(jer beer cussing the "d—n Germans," and design doing a heavy business, for which purpose they have greatly enlarged their fine store room and filled it with a splendid assortment of goods. Their long experience in the mercantile business in Boston enables them to purchase goods at figures which will warrant them to sell at greatly reduced prices. One thing the.coiniminity can safely rely on, and that is, that their goods are all of the first quality, and we are satisfied from our own personal knowledge, that our farmers will find it to their interest to open accounts with this establishment.
The K. N's. met at their wigwam
in Commercial Block on Friday night last We understand that but few were present
J5Tln our notice of the rooms of Messrs. Campbell, Galey 6c Harter in our last number, we promised to give a more minute and fuller description of No. 7. This room has the same rich bracketed cornice, supported by pilasters as No. 8, and of the Italian style of architecture. An elegant solid walnut top counter supported by bracketed scroll work which gives it an easy graceful appearance, forms a finish to this room that is decidedly attractive. At the further end of the room, at an elevation of two feet from the main floor, is located the office. An easy flight of stairs leads from this to a room 40 by 20, in the second story used by the same firm as a ready made clothing room. Immediately in the rear of No's. 7 & 8, is a large and commodious ware house, throwing as it were, the two rooms together. A door way in the center of No's. 7 & 8, also forms a convenient connection, making on the whole, the most con-venient-store rooms we ever saw. We understand that Chilion Johnson, Esq., was the architect of No. 7, and certainly deserves credit for the style in which he has designed and executed the work. The painting was done by T. H. Winton and is as finely executed a job as we ever saw.
0^7" In passing along Commercial Row we noticed another new and beutiful block letter sign, forty-two feet long, put up by our old friend Winton who imforms u« that h^ has and intends to keep, a full supply on hand. Persons wishing signs that are nice and durable, can get them on better terms by calling on Winton then they can in any eastern city.
ROBINSON'S ATHENEUM. Next Thursday, according to the bills, the magnificent cavalcade belonging to the Atheneum will enter town, preceded by soul-stirring and enraptured music. Every where, this establishment is spoken of as being superior in point of talent, splendid scenery and paraphernalia, to anything in the show hn« We notice by our exchanges that the immense pavillion under which the performances take place, bas proved entirely too small, so great is the rash to witness their unrivalled exhibitions.
NOTICE.
Rev. J. COIVWIN, Agent of the American Bible Union, will deliver a lecture at the Baptist Church, on Monday the 7th inst., at 7 o'clock, P. M., on the subject of Bible Revision and give an opportunity for contributions and subscriptions to the funds of said society. All persons desirous to understand the operations of the Union are solicited to attend.
JC3T The lovers of the weed will find an excellent article of chewing tobacco at W. B. KEENEY'S Tobacco Emporium, on Green
street,- opposite Commercial Block. We have tried it and can recommend it as being superior to any other in town.
JtSTA tremendous meeting of the opponents of the Prohibitory liquor law was held in New York on Friday evening.
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JJgrThe Fittsburg Union announces that two hundred members of the Baptist Church at Masontown, have withdrawn from the church, because their minister has joined the Know Nothings.
J3T David Wertheim is now in receipt of his spring and summer goods. His stock of ready made clothing is the best that we have ever seen in this market, and we understand that he will sell them at very low prices.
If you want anything in the line of
fancy clothing, go to HENOCH'S. His stock is decidedly magnificent.
jjg?' The New York Tribune predicts that next winter all kinds of breadstuff's and meats will be fifty per cent, higher than they are now, and that as a consequence, will be beyond the reach of masses of the
says: "The only cheap article of food is sugar, and that can be bought for a less price per pound than flour. It should be more large-
while his own father is hardly able to speak English plain enough to be understood.
It
and
less meats, and much less crude vegetables. Let the farmer resolve to grow more, and the consumer eat and waste less, or the present prices will prove only the beginning of sorrow.
FUNNT.—To hear a young man whose physiognomy denotes love of sour crout and
We wish to direct the attention of
our many readers to Dr. A. C. SCOTT'S card in another column. He has a few patients under his treatment, that are getting well as fast as could be expected, and they are well pleased, and have very little doubt of his success.
THE SPIRIT OF '76—The citizens of Promfret, Vt, on the 28th of March, held a large public meeting and denounced the Know Nothing organization as anti-Chris-tian, Anti-Republican, and unlawful, and born of lust for office. The meeting was composed of men of all shades of political opinion, and the resolutions were adopted ueanimously.
VIRGINIA AS IT IS.
Mr. Henry A. Wise is the Democratic candidate for Governor of Virginia, and is making speeches in various parts of the State. In a recent speech he is reported to have said:i#*' "The four great cardinal sources of wealth are agriculture, mining, manufacturing and commerce. Virginia has fresh and salt water, river heads and ocean front the best sod, rich loam and limestone, and inexhaustible mines of mineral wealth. The bowels of her earth are rich in iron, gympsum and salt, which can set her rivers in flames and yet nothing has been done with this wealth. She has an iron chain of mountains running through her centre, which the great God has placed there to milk the clouds and to be the source of her silver rivers. Every river has a water power which would turn spindles enough to clothe the world, and yet you hardly manufacture cotton enough to clothe your own negroes in mining she has done nothing and commerce has long ago spread her wings and flown from us. We have all these four sources of wealth, and yet the State has always relied upon agriculture alone.— Ye have thrown away three out of four great cardinal powers of production and what have you done with the fourth? What can I say of the agriculture of Virginia?— It has only scarred the bosom of mother earth.
Its science is all known and practiced by the old negroes on her plantations. Going through some of your counties you overtake a man, and ask him—"Whose house is that?" "That is mine." "Well, whose is that?" pointing in another direction. '-That is mine also!" "Well, whose is that over yonder?" "That is mine too, stranger!" "And do you own that way off there, also?" "Why, yes, stranger, I do but—scratching his head—don't suppose I am sod poor as to own all the land about here." "You all own plenty of land, but it is poverty added to poverty. Poor land addded to poor land, and nothing more, and nothing added to nothing gives nothing.— While the owner is talking politics at Richmond, or in Congress, or spending the summer at the White Springs, the land and grower gets poorer, and this soon brings land, negroes and all under the hammer.— You have the owners skinning the negroes, and the negroes skinning the land, until all grow poor together. Well, what has been the consequence of this? You have lost a million and a half of population. You have peopled other States, now as rich as Virginia herself. You have peopled Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Indiana, Illinois— States bey_nd the Mississippi—and now California. The sons of Virginia have been compelled to leave their mother for other lands. Notwithstanding Virginia has done all this, and this, too, is my boast still, she has a million and a half of population left, and still her gympsum, her salt, her harbors, her rivers, and all her undeveloped wealth, and needs nothing but men worthy of her fathers and mothers—worthy to marry her daughters, to develop these powers, and make old Virginia herself again."
Overlooking the main cause of the deplorable condition of the state, a contempt for industrial pursuits resulting from the system of slavery, Mr. Wise discovers in raiiroads the panacea for all the maladies of Virginia. He says: "She has waited for population and commerce. She ought to have said, I will have producc and means of transportation, and that will bring commerce. Lay down upon the piers of commerce the raw material, pile up there the productions of agriculture, the gypsum and the salt and iron, and where the carcass is, the bazzard will be also, and commerce will come where the burthen is. But as it is, there lias been no produce upon the piers, and commerce has spread her wings and taken flight. Hasten, then, I beseech you, and touch that Queen City of the West, which Prentice said "was haunted by ine ghosts of slaughtered swine."
[Irem the Lincoln (Maine) Democrat.] THE JtlEDAL. It is proposed to present to the Massachusetts Legislature a large brass msdal, bearing the following inscription:
Presented by
The citizens of Maine to
The General Court of Massachusetts of 1354-'5, As a token of gratitude to that honorable body for relieving the recent
Maine Legislature
From the disgraceful imputation of being the most ignorant, ridiculous, bigoted and corrupt Legislative Assembly our country has ever seen.
The reverse will be surrounded by a plain wreath enclosing two rampant jackasses, one very large, and the other very small, in bas-relief.
The medal will be presented by Rodney G. Lincoln, Esq., and received by Mr. Hiss, of Boston supported on one side by Mr. Emery, of Orange, and on the other by Mrs. Patterson—all of the nunnery committee of the Massachusetts Legislature.
ANOTHER CLERICAL SCOUNDREL. A great excitement occurred in our town this morning, occasioned by the arrest of THOMAS K. FRY, who for the last year has officiated as pastor in the New School Presbyterian Church in this place. He is charged with the seduction of five young ladies, all members of his church. In the examination which took place this afternoon, sufficent evidence was aduced to convict him, and he was bound over in the sum of 65,000
for his appearance at the next term of the'lions of dollars, sufficient to build three Circuit Court, in default of which he was thousand miles of railroad. committed to jail. There is a strong feel-
ble in years and profourid in wisdom, assembled in the city of Phifadelphia, and then and there presented one George the Third, King of Great Britain, as guilty of various offenses against the people of these then Colonies. Among the grievances thus alleged against him was the following: "He has endeavored to prevent the population of of these States—for that purpose obstructing the laws for naturalization of foreigners, refusing to pass others to encourage migration hither, and raising the conditions of new appropriatoins of lands."
This is one of the high crimes and misdemeanors alleged against King George the Third in that immortal document, the Declaration of Independence. For this and other causes King George was declared to be unfit longer to rule over the destinies of the Colinies, and that declaration was maintained after a sanguinary seven years struggle.
What King Geerge endeavored to prevent—"the population of these States"— during their colonial vassalage, the Kings, Queens, and aristocracy of Great Britain have endeavored to prevent ever since.— The London Times, their organ for half a century, which was quoted by our neighbor of the Tribune a few days ago as favoring the doctrines of the Know Nothings, has been employed in the work of villifying the United States, and thus endeavoring to accomplish what George the Third tried in vain to do. Thanks to the liberal policy adopted by the United States in relation to increase in population, though not greater than she has increased in territory. Many thousands of the best artisans of Europe have, the efforts of Kings, Emperors, and their organs to the contrary notwithstanding, brought hither their skill and their handcraft and laid them at our feet.
But of late there has sprung up a party in our midst who are endeavoring to bring about what our monarchical enemies have sought in vain to accomplish, and very naturally the London Times takes occasion to approve of its sentiments and to hope that it will obtain a permanent ascendency here. It looks upon the new party not only with "sympathy," but with "considerable sympathy," and regards its language as "patriotic and wise." Had a party arisen in the United States in 1776 having the same object in view as the Know Nothings—that of proscribing foreigners—King George the Third would unquestionably have regarded their efforts as "patriotic and wise." But instead of holding such views the patriots of the Revolution called foreigners to their aid, and Lafayette, and Koscuisko, and De Kalb, and Steuben, and Montgomery, and thousands of others responded to the call. Nobly did they aid Washington in achieving the liberties we now enjoy. But, had the life of one of these patriots, by a special favor of the Almighty, been lengthened out to these our times, and we were to ask those whose liberties he had helped to conquer with his sword, for a small office in their gift, he would be turned aside and told he was nothing but a foreigner, and that "Americans must rule America."
POLITICAL PREACHERS. In an able article on this class of persons the Cincinnati Commercial remarks
1?
-~r
O-
*.
believer in his name? Is it to be found the fact that uuder the influence of a com mon fanaticism these two great extremes meet and coalesce in loving union?
There are now five and a half millions
soldiers in arms in Europe besides those in
increase the number to o^r eight millions,
These troops require the employment of an
past
and hence the surplus ot agricultural pro-1
duce
From the New Albany Ledg8r- OCT A sea serpent one hundred feet long J^-Inthe yeat 1776 (July 4th,) anuBK seen near Cape May, by a dozen men ber of gentlemen, many of them venera-
l"~~*
Sixty ministers of the Gospel in the State of Massachusetts have left the souls entrusted to their care, and are playing the fanatic and the fool in the Legislature. Angels might weep and deviis laugh at the fan tastic tricks of men who, in the eyes of aL the world, are writing their own disgrace in hewn from the atmosphere of^ characters indellible. Consorting with all grades and kinds of ed in bonds of unity with the atheist and the unbeliever, these men are hasting to exemplify how little civilization we have in the middle of the nineteenth century, how lit!e religion there can be in the free light of th
tastic tricks of men who, in the eyes of all palpable suspension bridge, built of blocks
lOTn he a
0
crades and kinds of the unwholesome, link- shuns the sun eternally, and once in a while .dentg
Cnd!
*rus/
of
gospel, and how much justice can be apprehend a deluge of fire. Is war with
What is there iiT the professions of such to brain, or are the red men of the prairies to
lead us to hope that the time is rapidlv ap-! suffer? Whatever it is, bring out the can-
proachinc when the word of God willhave jiion that whilome had no wheels, and give
11
....
equal number of men to supply them wit ^acj,
stores and transports, so that there is now
year, and who have become consumers jtg
in Europe the ensuing ear will re-
daced equal to the produce of at least lit-
Both of these sources of supply are now
suspended, and the question arises who will
confederacy with fair average crops, can
supply three hundred millions of bushels of
wheat and corn for export to other States,
wealth of the nation over one hundred mil-
szr At
ing auiuuy Council in Pennsylvania it was announced the Massachusetts Legislature, whitethatje^ and hang him upon the first tree.—Onto- jthat
the
"He -Pjoneer. jourment we observe that several Catholic nunneries, is said to have been greatly cha-
0^7-Fifty bushels of green peas were pick- churches have been robbed of their plate jgrined when she discovered the kind of com- res ed in Charleston, S. C., on Monday last, land jewels. |pany she was
1
thought of "blue lights" shining in these
latter years' The weather is so changeable that the'
mercury fairly palpitates ?n the necks of
the thermometers, so that the poor instru-,
or the water brooks.
served any special heavenly
into effect on the 12th of June and also to the fact that the Temperance Legislature
GOOD NEWS FOR WESTERN FARMERS.—! of New lork, while on a visit to the city, 'acros, or 122 square miles, and the number A correspondent of the Boston Atlas writes:! got on a drunken spree and broke up in a
:row.
eXp]0it
of the oxb school
an(j
frjr]S( repaircd
a str-ent
instead of producers of^ breadstuns, c., p^gg^
members
are
pr0pertyj
Danube has heretofore supplied Europe.— ,, invested their
means and
monev
in ^Ssbipg boat, on the 18th, A reward of a thousaricWoUars-iras offered for his capture, and an expedition started in pursuit of him. These are great times in the sea, as on the land and in the heavens. Most persons in the world have seen the elephant, once the greatest of mystic wonders, and now a select few have had a glimpse of the sea serpent, and so the elephant and all things of dry land must stand back, like-ilying south of the River San Juan, and wise the fowls of the air and the comets if bordering chiefly on that River and Lake any there be just now, should curl their Nicaragua. Mr. Fabens proposed to Col. tails about their red noses and flee for outer-, Kinney the colonization of this region, and, space. Big reptiles are in the ascendant, in consideration that Col. K. should sucThe monsters from the waters under the seed in the colonizing, offered to divide earth are looming upon us. The siege of whatever profits might result from the enSevastopol is going on, also, the siege of the terprise. The proposition was acceptedallied army by Sevastopol. Napoleon has a large number of colonists enlisted, and a been to see Victoria, and she did'nt like detachment of them, numbering some six him, but was obliged to ask him to "call or seven hundred, were to sail for San Juan again." Ursa Major (Nicholas,) died the on the 7th prox. It was intended to engage other day. There was something of an at least 2,000 emigrants, and other vessels earthquake not long since in Asia. The had been chartered for ther accommodabig bell in the tower of Ivan, Moscow, re- dation. Those engaged in the enterprise cently fell and killed a hundred persons.— declare it to be of a peaceful character, Venus and the moon "locked horns" on the and undertaken for the purpose of improvbright field of the fair evening sky, once ing the condition, by the legitimate means upon a time last week. Northern lights of agricultural and commercial employments are often seen now-a-nights to flash up with of a country abounding in natural woalth strange brilliancy. There was a thunder, and facilities for trade. The truth or falsistorm one day last week with a slight sprink- ty of those declarations will of course, bo ling of hail, and yesterday was a very fine elicited by the lecral investigations which day.
The Catholic School has recently been investigated in Massachusetts, the lids being lifted off the sinks by the fingers of honorable members of the Legislature and the gas that escaped during this delicate operation appears to have made a great stretch and to be quite inflammable, but that will not account for the half that is going on in this great country. The expressive monosyllable Hiss has been added to the roll of the few immortal names that shall not die. So also has that of Poole, and who would blot the record out? Ballot boxes have been "busted," and the tickets sent fluttering through the air. Barricades of the most approved Parisan style have been erected in the streets of Cincinnati What can the matter be? Is that queer fellow SAM about, or is it SAMBO or SAM BOGUS alias BOGUS SAM? They say that it was not the Sam that smelled at the sinks of the Catholic School and puffed his whiskyfied breath in the face of a sick girl, or that pitched into the ballot boxes. Was it then, Sam Bogus? Which one of the Sams could it have been that was so anxious to get very well acquainted with the old nun? Perhaps the Maine Law lever has something to do with the "spirit boils" temperature of the effervescing universe. The horizon in the northeast will speedily be a glow with the blue flames of liquor in the latest approved con- Jectecldition of consumption. Who would have
round' thelkies? ^he^nS full of tht interpreter-asked him where he Hved, and ... .. rr he said next street from ballot box. moon, that institution will be snuffed out by, .... :„s
i! ,1 i-i i-i„ In addition to the foregoing, we are inthe earth shadow, reaching blackly tnro
,, ,, formed bv a "entleman of unimpeachable the gulf of blankness intervening, an in- io«»
-o ,1, v.i/-«i, credibility that about 12 clock he went to
t? e"th'S Cnl? tWe"tyT S':
C_. U- imifnrcn cnmfi n.
trampled upon in a country whose constitu- Spain brewing, and is the universe scintilla-' times, that it was thought a sufficient extions profess to mi^rantee equal rightsto all. lating in sympathy with the President's
1 i\. O Ann Vilindwn/1 rfune
free course, and a speedy triumph over all the Sea Serpent one hundred guns.opposition? Is it to be found in the fact that among the most zealous of the preachers of the spurious gospels of the day are
Com.
to be found in strange conjunc ion, the pro- Indiana Legislature fessed minister ot Christ and the open un-
was more liquor guzzled by the members coursc, according to the doctrine of that
than by that which passed the Prohibitory delectable society, is not a proper person to 'law which, with all its enormities, is to go hold office.—A. A. Ledger. SIZE OF LONDON.
of
In Addition to these facts, we have
recorj
(er Tbe
garrison and in the navies afloat, which will Massachusetts Legislature, after their won-
farailiarly on the
the bi]1 for thejr drunken fr0]ic These umns wou]d
pecjmens 0f
who haye undcrtaben t0 break up
teen millions of farmers. traffic. Thev pass laws confiscating men's four deep. The surplus of wheat from the Baltic and
inff th ir neirrbors mint
Europe? The western States of this!,.®, ^hamDafrne
^n{j
yet
bout enf0rcin£r
their ultra and unconsti- have a man
One half of this may bTshipped to Europe, ^onS uq^ letter! We shall at Vienna-lords both ["Hear," andlaugh-, and its value and carriage will add to the see what we shall see.—Sew Albany Ledg-,
£3rMrs. Patterson, the "lady"
THE KINNEY EXPEDITION. !fhe Courts of New York city have taken Col. Kinney's case in hand, at the instigation, it is said, of Anthony General Cushing. This expedition was undertaken, it will be recollected, upon the abandonment of the Mosquito Coast project, by Mr. Fabens, U. S. Consul at San Juan. Mr. F., during his residence in Nicaragua, had purchased large tracts of land, amounting, in the aggregate, to two million or more of acres,
will ensue from the indictment of Col. Kinney.
found fche
m0S^r?n,?/,J?LP
pyramid that reaches out indefinitely and,. *1 v-._ ___
I .i 11 ,,.i, i„ ferine them, because they had not been res-
knocking the moon, as the longest pole does wj
a persimmon. Is the world coming to an I
rAl!t
13
From the Lafayette American.
O^rThe city election day-before yesterday passed off quietly, and without disturbance. The contest, as will be seen by the figures below, which we take from the official returns, has been close, leaving the Know Nothings nothing in particular to brag of. They have succeeded in electing their Mayor by 28 majority together with the other names upon the general ticket, and six out of ten members of the Council, but they have done so by the skin of their teeth.
There is strong talk of contesting the election, and from what wo hear, which seems to be well authenticated, concerning the conduct of the inspectors in Wards 4 and 5, we have little doubt the contest would be successful. For instance, a friend has handed us the following memorandum of a few facts which we learn can be proven beyond question. We do not wish to bo understood as charging the Inspectors in the 4th and 5th Wards as acting intentionally wrong but we suppose they have acted ignorantly of the provisions of the law declaring who shall and who shall not vote.
In Rochester's N. E. Addition, seven persons offered to vote, whose votes were roThere are 20 voters there who would have voted had they been allowed. The Courts have decided that this is a part of the City.
had
UP'
... One man in 4tn warn not. allowed tn ments seem like fro£*s on a hot day by the „:*k sunny side of a big stone, panting foV breath
One man in 5th ward voted, and after he
iV
Ieft-
the ballot was taken out ond
bccause hc had Dot 1,19
Af
Have any of our ancient lady fr.ends ob- ,00
not set down by the Astronomers—such as fiery horses, red hot chariots and multitu- man's vote refused because he could d.nous arm,es with p.eccs of artillery on English-would not allow him an
t0^
"Mng to receive the votes of persons of-
the Count for thc
TZ Si! two wards. Whether it be policy to make
the contest is another question.
thick and that hell is inside, we may well. 2 {£7"SO violent was the bigotry of the
CUse
nflice,
tance into a Know Nothing lodge, and, of
ii-
PaPcrs
wlth
o'clock three or four offered to
]a,c Aftcr
somo one came an^hU licket wa3 re.
London extends over an area of 78,029
SOme
another of a similar cliarac-
sus
,.Smelling Committee" of the
r,ate,
to a tavern, where they or-
at least sixteen millions of men emplo\e in dgnjcl dinner and liquors at the expense of abreast, and a peremptory necessity iethe war nearly halt of whom have been gtate. The legislature had just passed quired the immediate evacuation ofthe city, taken from agricultural pursuits during the
5
&
B(inA llWa
Jud
last six months.
ghouW (hat thege wou]d be
nds for vitiating
the votes of those
for disqualifying any one from holding
panions,
was
MORE TEMPERANCE DRUNKARDS. We have alluded to the fact that at no 'man having a Catholic wife can gain admit-
that his wife, or relations, or com-
were Papists, though he himself
a Conformist.
yl/l
Ifume's England, vol. 3, p. 3G1. It is a little singular that the "bigots" of our day have adopted the same rule. No
jts inhabitants, rapidly increasing, was.
pe0ple
tiie
2,362,233 on the day of thelastcen-
A conception of this vast mass of
maybe formed by the fact that, if
metropolis were surrounded by a wall,
in slapping the lady teachers havin^ a north gate, a south gate, an east
column
deliberately violated the law
ancj ma(]e
an(j
and west gate, and each of the four
invading the bedrooms of sick ?rates were of sufficient width to allow
of persons to pass out freely four
jjqUor iaw( yet this committee of it could not be accomplished under four
twenty hours, by "-l3e expiration of
the people foot which time the head of each of the four col-.,
compelling them to abandon the "nTTIht r,f "Rriticth Hnnw of
ju]ep
have advanced a no less dis-
the kind of Legislators tance than .seventy-five miles irota. their re-
the liquor
£pectire
gates, all the peuplo being close
Brlght
sending them to prison for offer-! Commons, a recent speech on the war,
and
of the British House of
jmme-1put. it to the mcapables of the aristocra-
1
-f .amMr,ne ty in thisstyle: "You have a man of the
these fellows prate large- f°r ^I3 office at Constantinople, and y^u
who
^N^hintr! shared lodgings with the Hon. Mr. Hiss, of no portion oi wnicn CM JOJJT
treasurvwas empty. Since its ad- gentleman was engaged examining tnej bej are^not aNe^
the worst qualiScation,
old and feeble and
ter0 an(*
3T°U
incompe n»
have,
a
g°yern™ent
a^oni^
made up almost exclusively of lords [hear and you find yourselves now, in the year 1855, at last men can explain to you [hear,]
tb» ift lheM
