Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 26 May 1855 — Page 2
THE REVIEW
si Ayr *o as a
SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 25, 1S55.
PRINTED AND PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING BY CHARLES II. BOWJIW
1ST The Crawford sville Review, furnished to Subscribers at Slj50 in advance, or S2| If not paid within Ihc year.
I A I O N
LARGER THAN ANY I'APEIl PUBLISHED IN Crawford sville I Advertisers call up nml examine our list of
E3T SUBSCRIBERS,
All kinds of JOB WORK done to order. To Advertisers. Every advertisement handed in for publication, •hould have writen upon it the number of times the advertiser wishes it nsertcd. It not so statcd.it will beinicrt«d until ordered out. and charged accordingly.
Asents for the Review.
E. W.
C.Mtn,U. S. Newspaper Advertising Agent.
Evans' Buildintr. N. W coYner of Third and Walnut Streets, Philadelphia. Pu. S. II. PABVIN.South East corner Columbia and Main streets. Cincinnati. Oliioj is our Agent to procure advertisements.
We wish it distinctly understood, that WO have now the RKHT and the I.AIIOKST assortment of NEW and TANCV Jon TYI-Eever brought to this jilace. Wo insist on those wishine work done to call up, end wi will show them ourassortmentot typs.cuts. Ac. Wo have pot them and no mistake. Work done on abort noticc. and on reasonubleterrns.
JCST'Crawfordsville is decidedly one of the busiest inland towns in the west. Her population is now full three thousand and steadily increasing. Within the last year thirteen fine business rooms have been erected, and many more arc in course of construction. We understand that the machine shops of the east and west railroad will be located at this place, which, with the completion of the Kokomo road, will add greatly to the general prosperity and wealth of the town, as well as the surrounding country. We do not believe there is a town in the west that has a brighter and more cheering future than Crawfordsville. For richness of soil, fino timber and splendid
water power, our county is second to none
in the State, and to manufacturing men .she
A
oners the very best of inducements. An
iron foundry and paper mill is much need-
Ci:inEIU-AN'l,
CliEfiC «S: CO.
These gentlemen have just received a heavy stock of hardware, iron, nails, tfce., which they are prepared to sell below all competition. There is not an article in the hardware line but what can be found at this
X^TBughum Bagp.'Us in his last paper of the 17ih, informs his gullible readers thatsome twenty or thirty Irish wi'i'c brought here from Lafayette to participate in the late corporation election, and pretends to bo very indignant, and demands to know who brought them here. He says when the know knothing party shall descend to such contemptible tricks and downright scoundrclism, he will leave and condemn them with all his power. Now we challenge Bughum, or anv other Thug, to prove that a
single Irishman voted at the polls who
in
is, Bughum knt^" when he wrote the article
question, that he was writing not from actual knowledge, butmereJv from hearsay. The idea of his condemning ihv know nothing party if they should
of the ballot-boxes in Cincinnati by the know nothings, or the butchery of inoffensive Germans at Louisville. He never heard of the burial of that arch blackleg and rowdy Bill Poole by the Order in New York, or the doings of the Know Nothing Nunnery Committee of Massachusetts. Oh!
110,
chines arc very highly spoken of, and are if he finds that he has been mistaken, acbeinr» used to a considerable extent throughout the West.
not a legai and competent voter. The fact gant octavo volumes, containing portraits
unfortunately
mit any indiscretions is decidedly rici?
he never hcaid of any of these
things. If he had, we are sure he would have condemned the secret Order long ago. Call over Bughum, and we'll lend you some of our old exchanges, from which you may be able to post yourself up on the doings of your moral reform party, during the last
few months.
jC-£rWm. B. Keeney has removed his cigar and tobacco establishment to the stand formerly occupied by T. D. Brown, immediatelv cast of the HoHon House.
The Legislature of Kansas
•emblc on the 2?d of July.
^^"Bughum says that he "never took Horace Greely for his polar star." That the only thing he ever agreed with him on was his high protective tariff notion. Bughum has undergone a great change since last fall. Then he was anti-slavery. Now he is pro-slavery. Then he was temperance. Now he is anti-temperace. Of course he will deny these assertions of ours. Policy
feeling denounce him as a traitor and a hypocrite, who has allowed the green-eyed, white-livered monster Sam to lead him astrav, and bind up the last remnants of his conscience with an oath.
JASON W. COREY.
We were glad to meet the above gentleman at the depot yesterday. He has just returned from Washington, having secured patents for a couple of machines, not only of the greatest utility in themselves, but the securities of an ample fortune to him. The press has generally joined in their recommendation, and, as they have been practically tested in Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania and Ohio, everywhere giving perfect satisfaction, there is no doubt about their efficiency. Mr. Corey will set himself to work immediately manufacturing washing machines to supply the demand at home. Citizens generally are invited to try them. Orders will be promptly attended to. Send them on.
The National Intelligencer pays the highest compliments to Mr. Corey's corn planter. We beiieve the time is coming when it will be as generally used as ploughs. No farmer will be without it. Both machines will be exhibited at Mr. C.'s shop. Call and see them.
jfcgT The Know Nothing authorities of Crawfordsville are making a fine spec out of their offices by fining farmers who chance to hitch their horses to shade trees. We advise our old line subscribers to be very careful when they come to town, as they are all marked, and will be fined on the most frivulous pretext. We expect the next law the Corporation Thugs will enact, will
Now if Bughum has any regard for truth he will go and see for himself, and
knowledge the fact in his next issue.
w^s!jngton
demands that he should, and his oath requires that the right to establish them in^ the or it. Already numbers of honest prohibitionists and men who are anti-slavery in
no fermer cn|er |ow[1 unfess
'standing shirt collar.
cd here at present, also a large steam grist fact, that the Know Nothing Order of Mis directed and controlled the armed mil!. Arrangements are nearly completed for the construction of a first class hotel, which, together with other improvements now in progress, will make Crawfordsville a desirable residence for the most fastidi-
establishment. We recommend our, following singular clause:
farmers to call and examine their stock and
prices, and if they are not satisfied we shall
and a h|gh
iPSTlt is now a settled and undeniable
souri mob that invaded her elections. (£7- Bughum denys that the Know Nothing Council ever passed an ordinance to line persons for violating laws that may hereafter be j^QSsed by that distinguished body of ignoramuses. If he will step over to the Recorder's Office he will find a copy of the Locomotive of January 13, 1855, in which was published Ordinance No 1, the 9th section of which contains the fol-
Kansas and controlled
'In case any person or persons, who shall hereafter violate any of the provisions
of pr(ijnance 0r
begreatlv mistaken. This firm are agents dmancc hereafter passed by the President and keep constantly on hand Atkins' ccle- and Trustees of said Town, fec. brated Automaton Reaper also Garr's Horse Power and Separator. These ma-
any other Law or Or-
JC-OT We have received from Messrs. Leonard Scott & Co., New York, the reprint of the Westminster Review for April. The table of contents is as follows:
Memoirs of the Court of Austria. Drvden and his Times. 0 ir Army: its Condition, and its Wants. Lord Palmerston and Premier. Victor Hug-o and his Writings. Reorganization of the Ci\il Ser\ice. Administrative Example of the U. States. Cotemporarv Literature.
g&T Washington Irving's Life of Wash-
vov.es
rill as-
is to consist of three large and ele
t|ic
jrather of his Country, with a variety
of maps and plans.
com
course he knows nothing of the destructio
Of
a
for temperance, and is in favor of the principje. If Bughum ever gets to Heaven, it will be njt by works, but simply on account of his be'ieving in Christianity.
/^"Bughum thinks that we have in our: possession one of the nine bags of lies that the Devil once upon a time distributed throughout the earth. Keep cool Doctor those pill bags of yours have more in th&m than are dreamt of in your philosophy.
jCSTIn about two weeks Judge Hurley will retire from the liquor traffic to make room for a successor, who, according to the law, will be appointed by the board of commissioners. No liquors to be sold except for medical purposes. We are apprehensive that the coming season will be very sickly, and we hear that many design taking sacrament daily. In view of this state of things our commissioners should get on a "heavy supply.
THE SOUTHERN SIDE.
The know-nothing State council of Georgia adopted, at its last session in Macon, the following resolution, and directed it to be published. It is thus officially printed in the Savannah Republican.' "Resolved, That slavery and store institutions are protected by the constitution of the United States, and the obligation to maintain them is not sectional but national
ganization of State governments belongs to the native and naturalized citizens and that Congress has no constitutional power to intervene, by excluding anew State applying for admission into the Union, upon the ground that the constitution of such State recognizes slavery."
AND NOW THE NORTHERN. The Massachusetts platform is embraced in the following resolutions passed by a know-nothing convention there: "Resolved, That we hail with hope and joy the recent brilliant success of the republican party in the States of Maine, Iowa, Indiana, Pennsylvania, and Ohio, and we trust these victories are a foreshadow of others soon to come, by which the free States shall present one solid phalanx of opposition to the aggressions of slavery. "Resolved, That in the present chaotic condition of parties in Massachusetts, the only star above the horizon is the love of human liberty and the abhorrence of slavery, and that it is the duty of all anti-slave-ry men to rally round the republican party, as an organization which invites the united action of the people on the transcending question of slave dominion which now divides the Union."
THE DIFFERENCE.—Bughum is sworn to lie, while with us it is optional. That accounts for him always being a little ahead.
POOR HISS.
This devoted martyr of K. N. ism has been expelled from the Massachusetts Legislature on account of his conduct with Mrs. Patterson. Poor fellow, he has had his day as grand instructor of the order, in 1 Massachusetts, and with all his knowledge in keepiner secrets, he was not able to conceal his doings at the hotel with Mrs. Patterson. We have no doubt his animal nature was excited to the utmost tension by his labors in the nunnery—he had inspected the wardrobes, peeped under the beds, overhauled the dresses and underclothes of the inmates, had patted the Governess on the back, and committed other familiarities which had doubtless unstrung the American Patriot, and he fell a martyr to the voluptuous charms of the first good looking woman of loose habits, that he met with.
The expenses were charged to the Commonwealth, and penurious old Massachusetts investigated the bill, and poor Hiss was hissed from the Legislature. Alas, for human frailty. The Legislature led him into temptation, in violation of precepts taught in the Lord's Prayer, and then expelled him for yielding to the temptation.
We presume Mrs. P. has taken some of the degrees from the State Instructor, and is now prepared to confer them upon those seeking the light of K. N. ism.
JCST'In a recent speech delivered by the Hon. H. A. Wise, in Virginia, occur the following passages. They will prove interesting to many of our readers, having both a local habitation and a name in these precincts. We copy from a report in the New York Herald: "They (the know nothings) not only appeal to the religious element, but they raise a cry about the Pope. These men, many of whom are
neither
soun(ithe
count
WiDS,
BCUHUM'S LOGIC.—We were not aware ipers: until lately that Bughum was a great logi- An iron of about 40 pounds weight, atician. But such is the fact. He says that tacbed to a No. 11 f5e1?1Jfs!l1s" npnded 50 as not to impede the fall of the ia man can drink and wallow in the gutter. then lot the weight fall from the
good temperance man if he only i-.mr.-lit of 225 feet. It struck the
Episcopalians, Pres
byterians, Baptists, Methodists, C'ongregationalists, Lutherans, or what—who are men of no religion, who have no church, who do not say their prayers, who live God —defying livescvery day of their existence, are now seen
with
faces as long as their
dark lanterns, with the whites of their eyes turned up in holy fear lest the Bible should be shut up by the Pope. [Laughter, applause and derisive cheers.] Men who were never known before, on the face of God's earth, to show an interest in religion, to take any part with Christ or his kingdom, who were the devil's own, belonging to the devil's church, are all of a sudden deeply interested for the word of God, and against the Pope. It would be well for them that they join a church which believe in the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost."
John A. Roebling attempted to
Niagara river. The following ac
of the attempt, written by Mr. Roe-
is published in the New York pa-
fnre, a height ot
surface fairly, with the point down must have sunk to some depth, but was not longer out of sight than about one second, when it made its appearance on the surface, about 100 feet down stream, and skipped along like a child until it was checked by the wire. We then commenced hauling in slowly, which made the iron bounce like a ball, "when a cake of ice struck it, and ended the sport.
I am satisfied that no metal has sufficient specific gravity to pierce that current—even with the momentum acquired a fall of 225 feet! The velocity of the iron when striking must have been aivput per second—and consequently its mtyartrntum near 5,000 pounds. Its syxfcw-e opposed to the current was about SO sup. inches. This will give an idea of the Titan forces that have^been at work to scoop out the bed of the Niagara river.
Q^T-At a recent barn raising in Montcalm county, Michigan, the whole mass of timbers fell, crushing six boys, who were from •eTen to fourteen years of age
Iiater from Europe.
ARRIVAL OF THE
Critical position of the Allies !—The Conflict Fierce and Sanguinary !—Sebastopol still intact!—Most of the Russians Outworks Captured, with the Chins and Mortars. —-A (tempt to assassinate Napoleon
Immense Russian Forces concentrating in the Crimea Advanced prices in Cotton Advance in Breadstufs! The British funds steady
NEW YORK, May 18—P. M.
The Steamer Baltic, with advices from Liverpool and London to Saturday the 5th inst., and from the Crimea to Friday the 4th inst., arrived at this port at half-past five o'clock this evening. The news by her from the seat of war, though not of a decisive character is highly interesting.
COMMERCIAL INTELLIGENCE.
At Liverpool, the demand for Cotton had been active during the entire week, with a large speculative movement. The sales comprise 107,000 bales, of which speculators took 49,000 bales, and exporters 4,000 do. All grades had advanced -Jd, the market closing active.
The market for Breadstuff's opened with an active demand, and wheat advanced 4@6d bushel flour l@2s bbl., and corn 2s quarter, but the market closed dull, the demand having fallen off, owing to high prices. Philadelphia and Baltimore flour is quoted at 1 l@42s, and Ohio 44@45s white Wheat at 12s 8d and white Corn at Corn at 47s 6d@48s.
Richardson, Spence fc Co. say the market for Breadstuffs closed dull, and prices nominal at the advance. The weather was cold, with a hard frost on the 3d. The same circular quotes, Beef advancing, with an active demand. Pork less depressed. Bacon better, with an active demand. Lard firm at 49@50s. Tallow less active. Iron declinig.
Trade at Manchester dull. Baring's London Circular quotes American Stocks inactive, and rate nominal.— Sugar Is cwt. higher. The Money market easy, the Bank of England having reduced the rates of discouoi 4 cent.
GENERAL INTELLIGENCE.
Advices from the Crimea were received by telegraph up to Friday evening the 4th inst., and dispatches were being received daily by the government by this means, but only a small portion of the news thus received was permitted to be made public, the government retaining the exclusive use of the lines.
The allies were gaining ground, and had taken most if not all the Russian outworks, together with a large number of guns and mortars. The encpunters had been frequent and most sanguinary. A large number of the Russians had been taken prisoners.— Notwithstanding these advantages, the effects produced by the bombardment were not of such a character as to justify an assault, and the bombardment of the allies, not having produced the anticipated results, had slackened off very decidedly, for the purpose, it is stated, of not exhausting the ammunition. There can be no doubt whatever that the situation of the allies was generally regarded as critical in the extreme.
Immense Russian forces arc reported concentrating in the vicinity of Sebastopol, amounting, it is admitted, to one hundred thousand men.
A most determined attempt had been made to asassinate Louis Napoleon, by an Italian, while he was riding out. He fired two pistols at him, and his escape is represented as exceedingly narrow. The only object of the assassin is said to be private personal revenge.
Lord John Russell had returned to London from Vienna, and French Minister, Drouyn de l'Huys, to Paris.
The British budget passed both Houses of Parliament. The King of Prussia is ill of fever.
Lord Raglan, in an official dispatch, admits that the bombardment of the Allies had not produced the expected result.
The number of the allies killed and wounded is not large. The impression in England was becoming quite general that the seige would be abandoned for the present, and that the defenses of Kamiesch and Balaklava would be left to the defense of a few corps while the main portion of the allies would try and penetrate into the interior, and attempt to cut off the supplies from Sebastopol, and then completely invest the city.
Numerous re-enforcements of the allies were continually arriving. The French reserve of eighty thousand
The Russian official account of the progress of the siege are to the 24th. It says the damage sustained had not been heavy, and had been repaired with promptness and facility, while the skirmishes were generally successful. The loss sustained by the garrison from the 11th to the loth of April, were seven subalterns, and four hundred and fifty-six men killed and six superior, thirty-four subaltern officers, and eighteen hundred and ninety-nine men wounded.
On the night of the 17th, the English captured the first Russian rifle pit, after a desperate encounter, in which Col. Graham Ecrerton, the field officer in command, was killed. On the 20th an attack was made on the second Russian rifle pit, and it was almost immediately abandoned.
According to the statement of two Polish deserters, one hundred thousand Russian forces were in the vicinity of Sebastopol, sixty thousand of whom had arrived from
tare of the advices were being daily asked in Parliament, but the Ministers declared that due discretion shonld be used in regard to the publication of the news.
Lord John Russel had again taken a seat in the House, when he stated the substance of the negotiations, and intimated that the protocols should be submitted to Parliament. •*1
On the night of the first of May a sharp engagement occurred. The front and left of the Russian rifle pits were attacked and taken, with eight light mortars, and two hundred prisoners. The affair is represented as a most brilliant one for the allies. On Wednesday night, the 2d inst., the French, under Gen. Pelissier, attacked the advanced works of the Quarantine Bastion, and carried them at the point of tbe bayonet, taking twelve mortars, and established themselves in the position. The following Thursday night the Russians made a sortie to regain the position, and, after a sanguinary encounter, were driven back.
Lord Stratford de Radcliff returned to Constantinople on the 2d inst. Mehomet Ali had been re-called frojn exile.
The British Baltic fleet had left Keil, and the French fleet was about to sail from Cherbourg.
An insurrection in Ukarine, in Russia, had broken out, and twenty landed proprietors, with their wives and families, had been destroyed.
Late advices from St. Petersburg say all articles of food were up to famine prices. The monthly report of the British Board of Trade, including five days less than the corresponding period last year, shows a falling off of about one million sterling, the greatest falling off is in metals, owing to the diminished demand for iron from the United States.
Sir John Burgoyne, before the Roebuck Committee, gave important testimony in relation to the war in the Crimea.
Strong feeling has been manifest throughout England against the Ministry, and indignation meetings were being held in regard to the manner in which the war had been conducted.
[Telegraphed expressley for tho Review.] ARRIVAL OF STEAMER AMERICA. HALIFAX, May 24th 1855.
The Steamer America arrived this morning. Baron De L. Hueys has resigned on account of unwillingliness to protract the war. Count Walahski the French Ambassador to London has been appointed his successor. All of the documents in regard to the Vienna Conference have been laid before Parliament. Reschid Pacha has been superseded by Mahomet Pacha.
The Italian who attempted to assassinate the Emperor Napoleon has been condemned to death.
The emigrant ship John from Plymoth to Quebec was wrecked, and a large number of lives lost.
The entire English press admits that all hopes of peace have fled, and that no as sistance can be expected from Austria, and but little from the rest of Europe, and that England and France must light it out
O
Earl Gvey in the House of Lords, has given notice of a motion, that an address be sent to the Queen, deploring the failure of negotiations, and stating that the proposals of Russia never were such as afforded a fair prospect of concluding a peace. Mr. Gibson made a similar motion in the House of Commons.
Correspondence from Sebastopol dated April 27th, explains the difficulties of the siege, and states confidently that the Allies advance are on acquired ground. That while the works are so advanced, there can be no doubt of their ultimate success, provided, the Russians in the field are unable to force the Allies to raise the siege. Canrobert has announced that when reinforcements arrives, he will enlarge his circle of operations.
the "'forts at the north side of the harbor, ifor several years past, and upon examining
and had taken part in the cannonade, car- the blossoms a singular phenomenon is obrymgthe balls clear into the enemy's lines The telegraph lines from London to the
Crimea were completed, except a small por- inside the cups from one to as many as section over the Danube, and dispatches were eral well formed peaches, and a lare ma being received every four hours by the government, bat few of them were made public, though questions in regard to the na-
1
Later official advices from Sevastopol, to 10th of May, state that the Russians made a sortie with a large body of troops on the Allies right., and that the French advance was driven back immediately the second attempt to repulse, the Russians shared the same fate the Russian loss very serious
General Metmora had arrived with 4000 Sardinian troops. Three ships left England on the 10th to blockade the White Sea.
The following paragraph is from tho London Standard: Very extraordinary circumstances oro reported from a quarter which precludes any doub} of the truth of the statements that have reached us by letters from St. Petersburgh. It appears that fine American ship recently arrived at a port in the Baltic, and it was stated the vessel had on board eight thousand bales of cotton, but our correspondence state?, that their informant visted the ship and found in addition fifty thousand rifles and five thousand revolvers. Messrs. C., merchants of Boston were passengers the Standard asks, what are our Consuls about that thev have permitted such a cargo to land without apprising the government of the fact.
FREAKS AMOXG THE PEACH BLOSSOM3.— Dr. White the postmaster at Union Star, Ky., in a letter to the Louisville Courier, notices a singular fact that we have be/ore referred to in this paper.
In that section throughout every peach orchard there has been a greater bloom than
servable. In some orchards for every blossom examined, there has been found
jority of the blossoms have three or four cups in them. This has never been observed io that part of Kentucky before.
JgrThe New York Weekly TVifamt hu now a circulation of 199,000.
CRAWFORDSVILLE PRICE CURRE5T.
ARTICLX9.
Floor Wheat Oats Rye Barley Corn—in tho oar-• Ilay Apples—Green
Sides Shoulders••
Lard Pork Beef—on Hocf Clover Seed Timothy Seed CofTeo Sugar Molasses, N. O. Whito Fish Mackerel, half bbl. Salt Onions
inuMi.
#10,00® .1,60® 8o@ 60® 75@ 45® 1,200® 75® 1,00 2,00@ 2,50 8,50@ 3,25
60
Dried
Peaches Beans Butter—Fresh Eggs Corn Meal Chickens—Dressed Potatoes Bacon—Hams
S,00@ 20® S@
G0@ 70
1,25@ 1,50 2,00® S@ 10
None offered. Sugar cured.
6K@
6® 7@ 3
8,50@ 4,00 3,50® 8,75 6,00® 2,00® 8,00 13® 15
6K@ 7 80® 85 6,00@
None. None. Nono.
8,00® 8,60® 75®
ONE PRICE OF ADMISSION!
To witness tho Three Combined Exhibition*.
THE rnoruiETons OF THE
MBnr^.o-z:zizxi,
CIRCUS & INDIAN TROUPES
with a desiro to giro entire pcncrul satisfaction, and place their L'MTKL) KXIIIHITIONB quito beyond th« reach of competition, have entered into an arrangement oetween themselves for the Combination of their
Three Superb Establishments!
INTO O.NK COLOSSAI. EXHIBITION.
The wholo of which may. be now witnessed, collea lively, uiiiler 0110 Pavilion, at the price of odmisiiol heretofore required for each of tho samo exhibition when given separately.
"Will le exhibited at CRAWFORDSVILLE, ON SATURDAY, MAY 20,1S55. For ono da/
°ni)oors open at 2 and 7 P. M. Adraistion 98 cents only.
THE PROCESSION
Into town will be formed by Till' TROUi't. OF VOIITSTRIANS. suporMv mounted on tlicir gaily corateil Steeds, preceded by a full MIMTAKY »ANI» driven through the principal streets in (rinj carri:i"". fnllowt-d by the feenecn I.NPIAIN CJIILI 3 and WARRIOIlrf, in thfcir unlive costtimc, mounted on tlieir Huntinc Horses, and fantastically dccoruted and ™Pa"soncd, with the Carriage?, Cages and ans contain n§ the Animals, to tho Mammoth I'avilion srected for lU« Exhibitions.
Mr. VAN AMBURGrH I whose daiin? achievements 111 tho YVII.D nKASTy DMN, have won for him, 111 nil pails of the world, in»perishablo renown, accompanies this exhibition in perion, mid will fearlessly enter the Cages of the Wild Animals, where ho will exhibit his astonishing and my* tenons influence over thesu formidable and ferociew creaturcs.
Attached to this Mtpicstrian Troupe i*
DIillST STONE'-:
"The gro'it original inventor of I'on .Mots, and expun* g( of Joe Millers, now acknowledge ai
TIKIS ©L@WN1 ©F VMS E53AB whose inimitable Hits at tho Times, Satirical Harangu«» Pungent Sarcasms, and never tailing Hiinwiir, hav» wo» for him the high reputation of the Wittiest Clown l» Christendom.
A S O
E. W. PERRY, E. STONE, J. WORLANDj G. DEMOTT, O. DODGE, G. BENNETT. J. CRAFT., D.ROGERS, S.CRAVEN,
Equestrians, Vaullers, and Gymnasts, of known abililj and merit
Foremost"among the attractive novelties of th»Ce». pany are the characteristic performance, of the
Wild Tenants of the Forest!
(Male and Ftmalt-W number.)
Costumed and Decorated in their .Native ,""''"'""J" illustrating with truthful uccuracy SCt-Nta of sAVAUa LIFE.
THE BUFFALO HUNT!
Iu which tho wholo party will nppear
Dancing.
sin
811 aD1
scene of action.
AT ASOTHEIt PART OF T..K ESTKBTAI**^*
The Indian War
Da,,ce
loireth^r wiih
Will he ?iven with fearful ac. cruel ceremoo* the Savape Kites a|'Pcr!a",l?/,lor1| Prcne, called
SONG
THR
And agaM. in an '""'""^nerspcrsed wilb Grotesque CORN OA I
t,l
hoopiiif. I'rohclung, Sic. B«»:d««
"''',(r,rcnt periods cfthe performanee
WNCK,
THANKSGIVING DA*C.
WAR
OF TIIF.
THE
SENECA3.
SNAKE DANCE, attended with ludian Murte. j], fsi„ ,r, TAULKAIX Indent
POCHAHONTAS RESCUING CAPTAIN SMITH, Terrific Scalpinc Scene, THE DEATH SON'",, Ac. jgy-For Programme of i'crformanc*, Li»l of
tnd other particulars, see pamphlet.
AbIjb
AMKYi.. «P"»,',-«JXSaB£l£.di
knowing hiin.yjlf
.score will do well to call soon
DR.I
AI\ ("hall—. rieif Baregn and Dotted bwisa can
cheap ut
Ilis. BrilHanteena, Ti»« can be h*d RAMEY'S.
be
/"1HILDKENS,' Misses,' Boys, Ladies and MenV Shoes of all km-!* and auoa, than aver bofore offered »n KAJLKY tt-
