Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 23 June 1855 — Page 1
to TJwi»
I
r"
wsS-.tfarf ratrs:
•lib 130 3«0 0*
NEW.SSTORE
&
AND
W O O
1
H"AVTNG
I
which
color'd Caiicocs from 8 to 12£ eta. pr. yd. Ginghams, Lawns, Berago Delaines, &c., from 12% to 25 cents per yard. Beantifal French Chinta and llrilliantenes from 25 85 cento per yard. T&
issues and Bcrajzeo. from 30 to 50 centa per yard. Nice Stimmor Shawls from $1,50 to $4,50 JPlaih" and Satin Straw Bohnets from 50 cts to $3,00. and Fancy Parasols from $1,00 to $8,50. radios Collars and Mitts, a nice assortment, all prices.
Bomo very handsome "Work Boxes and many other notions, atyii-r BENEFIEL& ELTZEOTIFS.
April 21, 1855.
THU
best assortment of Window and Wall Paper in town, cheaper than ever, at April ilJ55 BENEFIEL & ELTZROTII'S.
1855. F. H. FRY, 1855, jllAS JUST RECEIVED A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF
SPEENG & SUMMER
GF
every variety and qnality{ which liu will l»o liappy to exhibit to all
WHO
Having purchased tho Mammoth Stock of Boots, Shoos, Leathor, &c., of L. Falley, Jr., wo intend to continue in tho same business,
1
-usA. $ai*z ,* CisD vO njoi
.». a -T "f?3 -!Iul
kA?,' i. .. "'.•» ,.\ :1 ,., •'. #••.
R\% R. R''
Djsl
iBENEFIEL 'A ELTZROTH, removcdU to Elston,s Now Brick, at
thd head of Commercial row, opposite tho ^Post-Office ond Campbell's tld stand, are now in receipt of their Spring stock, comprising a complete variety of latest styles and best fabrics, to
they respectfully ask tho'attention of all. Wo shall bo pleased to see our old friends, and AU who.may be disposed to call on ns, at crar new •tand, where wo think wo can exhibit goods, the Bight of which will sufficiently recommend them, and whioh wo intend to sell at tho smallest profits possible. We think wo can live as cheap as any and are determined to be undersold by none, but 'mean that'tho&o who may favor us with their patronage, shall have goods of us as low as they arc to bo hod in town. $ *JU 6n i,
April 21, '55. ...,iv6n40
PAST
may favor him
with aoall. He wonld particularly call tho attention of tho ladies to his stock of summer shoes and and gaitore. which have been solccted with great car'o.
Eff* A good supply of Jenltin's superior Teas, constantly on lior»u. .. .i• .« I- ."" F. IL.FRy.
March 81st. 1855. vC-n37tf.
Square Up.
A LL THOSE knowing themselves to bo indebted J\. to mo either by noto or book account, are requested to call and make payment as soon as posBiblo, at tho old stand and all those having claims against mo will plcaso present them, as I snail remain in this placc hut a lew days.
Having disposed of my entire stock of Boots, Shoos,
fecM
to A. P. Watson & Co., I would be
speak for them tho pc.tronago heretofore bestowod npon me. L. FALLEY, Jr.
nnrl should
bo happy to wait upon all his old customers and as many now ones as may favor us with a call.
A. P. WATSON & CO.
April 21,1855. n40tf.
Lnud lor Sale
8
THE following described very valujBp^ablo pioco of timber land in Montgomery rJL^oniintv. Indiana, is for sale, namely: west half of south west quarter of sec. 34, township 20, north range, 5 west. Tho land is about ei^lit miles "from Crawfordsvillo and twenty from Latayettc.
Inquire of William P. Watson, Esq., Crawfordsvillo, or of tho subscriber. JACOB LYBRAKD.
LyBrand, Allamakeo co., Iowa. April 7, 1S55. n3Sm3.
Wcw Arrival of .*.*
SEASOKABLE GOODS.
4T.'l
E. & I. O. HENOCH,
NNOUNCES to tho citizens of Crawfordsvillo /A and vicinity, that they have brought ou the finest, cheapest, and most fashionable stock of
SPRING & SUMMER
CLOTHING
ever offered in this placo, and which they intend to sell lower than anv other houso in the county. We would say thoso tfiat want good goods and cheap, to give lis a call and judeo for themselves. Our Btock consists in part of clack, brown, blue frock undsack
©[LOTIKl ©©^T©:,
fine black and fancy Twist do. Italian Cloths do. Xnstre do. Linnen'Drillings plain and fancy do. All eorts of black and fancy Cassimero l*ants.— Doeskin do. Italian Cloth do. Checked and plain Linnen do. Linen Drillings &e. Vests of all kindSf sorts tod sizes, also- a good assortment of shirts white and fancv. Drawers of all kinds. Hats,
ihc Court House, wliich they fitted up for the accommodation of their customers who may want to trado with thorn tfnd live too far off. All of the above canlMj obtained at both of our establishments either at wholesale or retail at tho very lowest cash priecs.
May 1% 1855. v6-no44-]y.
Valuable Farm for Sale. THE undersigned offers Tor sale one
flp%of tho finest Farms in Montgomery county. J^jono milo north cast of Waveinnd, 'and lSjg miles from Crawfordsville. It contains three hundred and twenty acres, two hundred of which are under cultivation. It contains a fino orchard, cmbracing apples, peaches, fec. The dwelling and out houses arc good repair, arid te suitable for a tavern stand for which purpose it has boon used for long timo. A good spring of water is situated close to tho house, also a good well at the barn. For terms apply to tho subrcriber living on the premises. MOOKE:
IS, l&56—in8. =ir"s
AY STATE SHAWLS ofthc. latest styles, direct from. Boeion, and at city prices, at GRAHAM & BHO*S.
ARRIVAL OF THE ATLANTIC. Very Important Intelligence—Bloody Bat-
NEW YORK, Wednesday, June 13.'"'
.. ... ..
Desperate engagements took place on the nights of the 22d and 23d before Sebastopol. The French took and retained an important position of defence. Eight ,thou-, sand killed and wounded \. p.}
The Allies have made some rapid advan-
France and England decline further conference at Vienna. SECOND DISPATCH.—The Atlantic reached her dock at this A. M., with Liverpool
dates to noon of the 2d mst., and 109 pas-|of
sengers. Her news -j
form an estimate on the evening's loss.— There must be five or six thousand killed and wounded.
May 26.—The enemy has made no demonstration either in front of the place or against our lines on the Tsehernaya. The works of fortification at Kameisch are progressing. The sanitary condition of the army continues good.
May 20, 9 A. M.—Tho expedition to Kertsch and Geninkale has been attended with complete success. The enemy fled at the approach of the Allies. They blew up their powder magazines, destroyed their batteries and burned their steamers. The Sea of Azov is occupied by the allied squadron.
It was rumored that Pelissier had attacked Liprandi. Canrobert was reported wounded, and another General killed. The rumor w?s regarded as very doubtful. •wjjord Raglan telegraphed as follows: "MAY 27.—The Sea of Azov is occupied without any casualty. The troops landed at Kertsch, on her Majesty's birth-dav, the 24th, and the enemy fled, blowing up their fortifications on both sides of the straits, and destroying their steamers. Some vessels and fifty guns have fallen into the hands of the Allies.
Lord Raglan further telegraphs that on the 25th, Gen. Sir Geo. Brown had reached Geninkale, having, the previous day, destroyed a foundry near Kertsch," where shot, shells and Minie balls were very numerous.
In the advance, the French were on the right, the English on the left, and the Turks in reserve.
A dispatch from Lord Raglan of the 30th says: "Letters from Gen. Brown and Admiral Lyons, of the 29th, announce the destruction of four Russian war-steamers, and large depots of com."
The Allies' ship9 have succeeded in blowing up a magazine at Orabest, and destroying about 100 merchant vessels. Only one Russian steamer remained in the Sea of Azov: y't*
Advices from Sir George Brown, of the 28th, state that the troops continued heal-
taken, and were captured. The number of guns found by the Allies exceeded all expectation.
4 »-*Vw':
f- ITJ* ,'•! j«-!
F*
French before Sebastopol.
iles—Three Victories uy the Allies—Fur- ed in splendid condition and will be shipper Conference Declined by England and ped with all materials of war. France. Large convoys had entered Sebastopol
from he nortb side a
ie
The steamship Atlantic arrived at half- i.eartjjW°rjc past eijjht this mornir/g. The news is most ,, ,, o- it. n_ .v The Allies had completed their fourth important. Since the battle of Alma the ,, .v -r, ... ,r ,. .* .-'i\ parallel and the British were moving all Allies have achieved three victories. -s ,5 their heavy mortars into the advanced par-
ces. They have seized and retained the The pLTic.-I was reported at DantRussian line on the Tsehernaya. The Eus-
the most exciting charactcr, covering as it. mi r» t? a AII „C. The Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs does three distinct successes by the Allies first, by the last arrival we had a brief an-,11??,
nouncement that the French had driven the1 °f
Russians from a strong position of defence departed from the pnncple or place of d'armoe before
Sebastopol._
mi A OOA neutral vessels of the circumstance. This occurred during the nights ot the 22d I TT KV and 23d, and was a most sanguinary affair, ASIA --Letters from Erzeronm report that the place being defended by nearly
lhe
whole garrison. The total loss on both sides ^rf-stan is not yet in killed and wounded is set down at 8,000. J?"5'- The Russians had manifested some Gen. Pellissicr says that the Russian loss P°
re-
rc
contre says: 'Battallions of the enemy with reserves
attacked our trench of counter approach in ,.
was sanguinary and lasted the whole night. Our 12 battalions lost nearly 2,500 men in driving back the attack."
have definitely established ourselves in the I FaC^u'
for burying the dead. We are unable to1
works carried during the nights of tho 22d i'°rd"s „for.'J0 construction of a railroad and 23d. An armistice wis agreed upon
thy. Five vessels laden with corn had put pr0Vement at Shanghai. On the 9th of into Kertsch, not knowing the placc was February all was quiet, the troops having
French accounts say the Russians burned I vances as lead to the fear that they might 30 transports as well as their four steam-'stop the export trade at Shanghai. The inships, and destroyed 36,000 sacks of corn,' surgents along the coast had been attacking 16,000 sacks of oats and 16,000 sacks of foreign'flags. A British expedition had flour. Fourteen .Allied steamers entered consequently destroyed twenty junks with the Sea of Azov. most of their crews, and the remainder were
Reinforcements were daily arriving at killed on shore, J.Constantinople. sj A famine threatened the people of CanThe occupation of Galatz/and air attack ton and food riots were apprehended, on Ismail were confidently spoken of. 1 A British fleet of eight vessels was to
The garrison of Sebastopol drew most of rendezvous at Japan, and afterward to protheir supplies from Kertsch. Its capture ceed to the Russian settlements in the north, therefore must exert a speedy influence on The U. S. ship J. P. Kennedy was at the seige. Canton, the Yandalia was at Whampoa,
Fifty cases of cholera arc reported among and the Powhattan at Singapore. the British troops, and some among the The American clipper Challenge had re-
into for a telegraph from Constantinople to Egypt. Official accounts state of the earthquakes at Broussa, 445 lives were lost in the first and 204 in the second shock.
Menscliikoff had returned to St. Petersburgh and was well received by the Emperor.
Seven hundred and forty-six Russians were in the hands of the English, prisoners, while the former have but one hundred and eight privates and one officer belonging to the British. No returns of the French.
A conspiracy to assassinate General Ivalesgi, Greek Minister of War has been discovered at Athens, and some arrests had been made.
v/--:Miss
^^iffljpCMTIC FAMILY NEWSPApR--DEVOTED TO0¥X^r WEWS7 MISCELLANEOUS LITEtyATTJEC &"&¥
il VOLUME Vi i: l:^CRAWFORDSyiLLE MONTGOMERY COUNTY, IND.',4 ''JUNE 23, 1855'. f„ NO/ 4a
A-'-
.?£*• fr. .^-'j
The French squadron, under command
Admira] Penand for Kie] on the
i~. 23d ult. to ioin the English fleet which is of the utmost importance and i. j?nrmn
I loer rntinrtprt hnrnnn N
rte-Jd nd Na
,SSS.^
3
ll!! F,m
Nightingale had been laid up with
a fever but was recovering fast. Parliament had not been in session during the week. Addresses had been voted by the various classes of working men to Mr. Layard.
The British shipping returns for April continue to exhibit considerable decrease in the employment of tonnage.
An agitation had taken place for the introduction of the Maine Law into Britain without the remotest chance of success.
Lord Strangford and Charles Manners were dead, both advanced in years. The Exhibition was beginning to attract more attention, but still fell short of expec-1 tations. There were 30,000 visitors the) first three days. The King of Portugal was in Paris. Marshal Housipe died at Bayonne.
HOLLAND.—A convention of Reciprocity in the coasting trade between the Dutch Government and Prussia had been confirmed.
ITALY.—The new Sardinian Ministry has at length been re-composed. The eruption of Mount Vesuvius had subsided.
SPAIN.—The insurgents at Caspi and Ali-1 antz had been defeated. Two of lhe leaders were shot. The provinces were tranquil.
INDIA AND CHINA.—-Details of the Oriental news had reached England. Intelligence from Burmah was encouraging for prospects of peace. Nothing of Persia.
Trade had undergone no material im-
been withdrawn to Canton. In the interior. things had assumed an unfavorable aspect, 1 and the insurgents were making such ad-
if *,•
cireuhr respecting a blockade
"n1 for,s 7hlch
.' P'°P« 'ons were peremptorily negatived by England and I ranee.
T*
4
\4''
The Sardinian contingent had been land-
^d the Russians were
working vigorously on that side erecting an
allel. Two deserters from Sebastopol reported the army very strong. The hot weather which succeeded the rain was causing sickness.
2,0 th
sians retreating to the hills, the Allies took.S™ boats stationed at Sweaborg havc made la mnrnmfinr tntenrri t.hr» nnnrwif.A rn«3Qt nr Kertsch. and command the bea ot Azov
T* A -R 4
'he division of Russian
a movement toward the opposite coast of the gulf in the direction of Riga. The Russians are making a land communication at Ternz at the extremity of the Gulf of Bothnia.
thf
that the flag covcrs the cargo and he warns
Gen. W.l iams was busy fort,fj-ing the city
t,on a altaok Ka
was enormous, and that of his troops con- ^""jption of the Vienna sidcrable, but much less. The French
tained their position. doubtfully reported that the new Austnan Prince GoVtsehakoff's account of the
Conference had not taken place, and it was
Austrian negotiations are now more than ever directed with the view of obtaining for
Tr.
.. mi the Cabinet of Vienna the supremacy in front ol bastions five and six. The combat I"
Germany.
Pelissier telegraphs under date of the pou,rts the publications of the pro25th, 10 P. M.: To-day we have occupicd jtocols of the British Government as premathe line of the Tsehernaya, the enemy, who i'ure'm consideration that the negotiations were not in force, offered little resistance jfor «»ld "garded as term,and retreated rapidly into the city. \Vejna^..
1
Count Buol, in a circular to the Austrian representatives, states that the German
TT.
lccr?^
acrfs t,'e
18
h.raus
las gnen
.°,f
A
s«c2,
conll'act
84 miles,
13 sa,d to har0 been en,ercd
•,"4' :•. .. •. ..'. .«*.••••
'ceived part of the crew of the British ship Countess Senfield, wrccked on (he Prolas Shoals.'^
Capt."Adams"proceeded home with this mail with the ratified Japan Treaty. Several foreign firms were opening branches at Ilong Kong.
LOXDOX, June 2, A. M.—When the war steamer Driver was sent ou( into the Baltic to seize the vessels lying there, off the blockade, she warned among others the American ship Samuel Appleton, of Boston, which she also seized vwth a warning to clear out within six days. A day or two after, being out cruising she fell in with the Appleton and an officer was sent on board to examine her papers. They were found perfectly in order, whereupon the officer demanded to see the bills of lading.
The American Captain objected to this and began to make difficulties which excited the suspicions of the British officcr, so he insisted on their presentation which was at length complied with, when it appeared that the Appleton had just landed 50,000 rifles and 10,000 revolvers, besides about
FEELING ON THE BATTLE-FIELD. The Crimean correspondent of the New York Su7i, writing from Balaklava, gives, from the experience of a wounded Frenchman, an opinion with regard to that which is felt by the soldier in time of conflict, which is something as follows:
Before the battle begins it is usual to fuel no little tremor, and many cheeks, which are known to be in communication with stout hearts, blanch visibly. As the conflict becomes imminent, courage returns, and with the first flow of blood an enthusiasm is raised which constantly increases, and very seldom flags in tho least until the last shot is fired. The effect of seeing a comrade shot down is generally to excite an unappeasable thirst for vengeance against the foe, though in the end one "gets used to it."
When wounded less than mortally, it is not usual for the soldier to be immediately aware of the fact, unless some bones are broken. A sabre may be run through any fleshy part of the body, and even a bullet lodge in dangerous proximity to the vitals,
and he for some time be totally unconscious
of pven a scratch, "vvhen lite is taken bv ,e(j
a single blow, the effect is varied the
nature of tho wound, as well as with tne,vcj
temperament of the man. sometimes ie
poor fellow will leap high the air, giving
a piercing scream, and again^ he Mill he
down quietly. Oftener, however, he sim- ^jjj
ply falls dead without a struggle. In
cases the features of the killed romaiu un-
changed for a loDg time after death
open and brilliant, and, perchance, a smi.o
illuminating the face. To see such an one
it is difficult indeed to rcalizcthe presence
ROWDY DOW ITEMS.
A poet in the New York Post concludes a history of Neal Now's proceedings with
ol,1»
1
.j
0,
NEAL Dow HUNG TX EFFIGY.—On Wednesday morning a effigy of Neal Dow was discovered suspended from the telegraph wire5? near the Russell House on Charleston Neck, Mass. A placard was attached to thc figure, on which was written—"Neal Dow, the Murderer." The right hand of the figure held a jug, and the left, contain-' ed a paper entitled the "Riot Act." I
The Hartford Times says: I "We have sometimes doubted if this Neal Dow were really in possession of his sober senses. On more than one occasion his violent and unnecessary severity has indicated an unbalanced mind. The best construction that con be placed upon his recent action in causing this needless' slaughter of one of his fellow citizens, and the attempted butchery of many others, shows him to be, a least, a remorseless, unscrupulous, and dangerous tyrant, who wants only the power to commi: atrocities that would affright a Negro. This is the man who is vauntingl}* called the f.ither and
'Marrt
j. ,7 itLt-n
izn
T0 ITIUL TR&TRI .£* .. ~*S'J TV HC«V 4 N* .R. -XCR^R"
adequate and intelligible idea of the great'
country, and it has ceased to be regarded
800 bales of cotton as the ostensible part of ligation and enterprise of men of genius. other sound, the scream of bigotry and in-s cargo. The ship was carefully overhauled, a*nd nothing contraband of war found on board.
thc cxccerlin3
a 0
vouric
spirally fi
r0
nn
{a
(o ho1d lhc Ptcamor as
nnt]
-j
j,
js ovcr Qf
Qne
0
1 a.' -n 1 the path and other preparatory labors thc
1
cliampion of the Aiaine Law." ., .. ,, -Noble fellows! noble fellows they Prcs,dis_o
Q^-Mr. Bannister thc ceronat made an ascension from Adrian, Michigan, at 10 25 A. M. on Friday last, and at 2 50 P. M., landed in a tree top near the town of Redbank, Clarion co., Pennsylvania, a distance of three hundred and fifty miles. His feet were badly frozen in the journey.
O^rThe population of Dayton O., as ascertained by a census just taken, is 21,000.
inpr—ii o*m»rn—i
its practical operation came under the ob- Nothing readers. I was bortv in England servation of men it was a mystery unfath- hv nccident, not choice I was not consults omable. Even words failed to convey an
Cl\
comc a
on nn
with that peculiar feeling whic^i greeted its "native to the manor born," by giving birth. Still, it is looked upon as one of, "value received." The consideration was the greatest achievements of human ingenu- renunciation of my birthright, my natal itv—the great scientific triumph of the prcs- citizenship. 1 paid the consideration and ent century. (became, as I supposed, a citizen of tho,
But the wonderments connected with the United .States hardly established !tl toy magnetic telegraph have not all been devcl-
ncw
opedv "It were an easy thing to span the myself doing a soldier's duly in Mexico earth with the magic wire r.nd to cause in- under mv newly -adapted flag after that telligence to leap with lightningspecd across hind myself by other relations to this couna continent. But to compass the sea—to try I marry an American woman and unite countries thousands of miles distant have sons born unto me, Americans all I from each other, is a question that has en-j come nut info this wilderness to carve out gaged the attention and provoked the invea-j home* .frr mv sons. am startled by an-:-|
The problem is about to bo solved, and the tolerance am fold the contract made bemighty ocean conquered. From along ar-1 tween the United States and .me is to be reticle copied from the N. Y. Independent, pudiated, that I am to ho deprived of my we learn that the lino from Ireland to New-j citizenship, or at le^st that "it is to be robfoundland is to be constructed by a Euro-j hod of its virtue and i'. grace, that its atpean company, of which, Mr. Brett, who tribute Equality, for which prize it "must has laid down most of the submarine telo-j be stricken out: 1 must not hold an office grrphs of Europe, is a prominent member. want none, but I like, not this ban.' I gave The capital of this company is two millions away, my citizenship fr another this waa sterling, and the contracts—already per- the contract, and "T must have mv bond." fected—for the completion of the work require that it shall be ready for operation by January 22, 1050—less than three years hence. The cable of this part of the line is to contatn six telegraphic wire—like the great Mediterranean cable now being laid down—and it is !.o weigh eight tons to the mile. In laying it down of course several steamers will be required, as no single ves-
sel could contain the enormous weight of the entire, mass but the ingenious manufacturers, Messrs. W. Ivaper & Co of London, have contrived means of so splicing it as to render the joints quite as strong and tivc- country thev shall shake the American quite as serviceable as any other part of( Just off their feet. My boys are sons of the line. Thus, when one steamer ha'-, the sires of '7G (Puritan stock, not Ilcssiani paid out her portion of the. cable, tho end like some Know Nothings,) but they will will be spliced upon the coil on board of the never know it. Of the sufferings of their next steamer, and so on till all is down.—! ancestors in the cold days at Valley Forge Should a storm arise during the process,! and in the hoi dav at Monmouth they shalf
c0lirS0 0
jn -}K,
most
?ummpr
tempests. The cable, when once sunk up-
the bottom, will remain there forever,
1C
a
of thc grim monster Death. ccssfullv bedded.
undcV\e
The Great Apostle will be tried for murder, as I'm_
p^rrc of marine and safe from
disturbanC S
It would be difficult to
]j jt jts duration after it is once suc-
The American part of the line will be 1,200 in length, 71 miles of which will
,f of
Si. Lawrence, and the
tie owing Aer~e land a half of dollars. The wires across j,o do? If I live here am under asocial' Sow here's a great example for to sot to young and TSTewfoundJand will make 400 miles of lhe and political ban. If I go to my native?:
jvnd if lie gets convicted, too. 1 ffue?3 will make 1 ,nn ,i,.„ ... ., company nave had 400 men emp!o}eu our- consideration. I gave it. Am I to be him hop To find himself a clicking as he takes a parting' drop.
ingthe past year in that island a have been liberally aided
land from that colony, and have obtained advantageous charters and grants elsewhere. From our last English journals wc learn that the cable to under the Gulf of St.: Lawrence was about to be shipped, and wo may accordingly soon expect to he ab'e to receive despatches from St. John as easily and regularly as we now do from New Orleans. The cable, contains three electric wires onlv, it being contemplated to lay down another of the same rize when the European wires hare been brought across and the business between New York and 1 London requires it. The company which hand, in N
has taken thc business in hand, in -New, York, is one of ample resources—Peter!
did it well 1 said Justice Carter, inquiring iT-lTThe Know-Nothing^, like their *•!!-1 peror (Alexander) he immediately rodo the names of those "who fired upon i.he c*i,i- lustnous
predecevors,
zens from the city rum agency at Portland, always tc be blest." Having lost Virginia, their C/ar knew no bounds they laughed, and rubbinghis hands, just after the slaugh-1 they are expending their hopes on North they sobbed, threw themselves oti the ter. This is sworn lo by Frank Smith and| Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee. They ground, kissed first each other th^ri'tho Samuel S. Starbird. Judge Carter swears turn in perfect disgust from Massachuserts Kmperor's boots: and then his horse they the statement is not true. The word "«o- where they had it their own way, and which
*PNFV
*.!P *1:
FM SET
a.V'JL
V/?v
THT: GREAT WORK OF THE AGE. jA ASU Foil TI1K KNOW NOTHINGS It is but a few yenrs since, that the tele- To the Editor of the -Vi T. Tribune. graph wonder first unfolded itself to the Stn: -Will you bo kind enough to preserft world. Until it became an-actuality-—until
1
But you say I shall not have it. To this I reply: You are strong and can witlihhold it 1 submit.
If it is.dangerous to your institutions that! foreigner* should come among you win leave. It will be a. loss and an inconvenience fo me, yet leave I must I cannot stay where I am not welcome, nor livn. where I am not as good as another. I will seek agiin the red cross banner, and on tho cold soil of Canada repent like the Prodigal.' I will take my American wife and my Amercan sons, and on the theshold of their na-
strength of the cable, form -1 nothing-know. One thing I regret I cah-
heavy iron wires not take (hem all, for one of my boys has
tlie tliiek tarred on-1 locomo American dust. ITe lies on tho
£,utta-porcha cords which, con-! chores of the Old Dominion, and the wa-
jn ^c ^.ct,. conductors, will be sufficient: ters of thc Chespeake dash upon his grave/
if she were at anchor
Ic
sleeps well let him sleep.
work 11 re a new difficulty meets me. If, as'
months, when! American jurists tell me, I cannotrenoun.ee
there is little danger of interruption from the allegiance I myself have volu'n'tafiatly
aa
one. They grants of
"no- where they had it their own way, and which crept in and tland they admit has disgraced herself. They vrJiioh they er Dow, saddle the result of the Virginia, election, not
We" was used in the article of the Portland they admit has disgraced_ herself. They wliioli they embraced from time to time'* Advertiser, in its long defence of DOT
published before his trial who afterwards upon the inherent rottenness of "Sam," as I (jr..n highly delighted at meeting a long1 tried him 1" _r {. they were wont to vauntingly call him butup-1 atr-:,t parent, -M After receiving the
on the disgraceful and fanatical doings of
in the people to be led away by any such secret, mousing order, or driven by its braggadocia.
0^7* Choice cuts of beef retail in Xew York and Boston for twenty-five cents a ound.
undertaken, then am doubly chcated.P.ut if this be-not so will England take me back? She may but my wife and children' England does not know. She may recognize my wife as part of my own individu-' ality but my sons, they are foreigners, born in America when their father teas' an American citizen. They cannot stand:
Pn nn (.r(nality
... ... cost of the whole is estimated at a million 7,0ns. llere is the dilemma. What am I.
line, running through a country hitherto i:n-. ountrv my children are under the same
#y,„ rc
,.
occupied ana unknown. In tne eii.ting ot disability. 1 ou told me I might become
J/JS*
.1 .S-*V» A +.%. Jf
for th* consideration ofyoxir Know
the matter I camc to the United
SVaies'by
invention in its working detail.-. But.now (]10 j11 of of your flag, your Constitution^ it has become a familiar thing. A fewyears -T0!ir l-uvs these told me I might "be-r have made it one of the necessities of the
choice, not accident came on
citizen of the Republic and stand
equal footing with my neighbors,
home I hear the war blast and find
with free-born English citi-
American citizen rendering a certain'
dir. a tod and my children too? Very respectfully yours, "f Bulicr Co., Iowa, April
into
Cooper being at the head of it. The en-' aligned to them they begged, tire feasibility of the enterprise lias been! however, to be allowed to take up their tested, so far as can be done without actual I quarters in thc open air if an carthquake( experiment along the whole line. There came the walls of the building might fall does not seem to'be a doubt but that it will On being required to rebe entirelv successful, add that ere long!
rn0 ,h( ,r
the Old and New World will be joined to- their bivouac the capital, they were much gethcr by almost instantaneous means of cast down, and eventually refused to leave, communication. Such is the spirit which
as
th(7
th«
»g«.
,i been
LEX.
A Iw.-orrn.VT. A letter fiom St. Petersburg in speaking of a regiment of Basch-i kirs, '100 horse strong, that had arrived' there from Moscow,* says the men were much less astonished at the Moscow Railway, by which they were conveyed than' had been :pcc!ed. They affirmed that it by no means went as fast as the breeze on' the steppes, and that a good Baschkir bofsb couid keep up with the train. The locomotive was, however, pronounced to bte sorccry, but the Baschkir sorcerers couid do some clever things also. On their en-
1'etersburg, an empty bar-
march in the morning, after
promised that when there:
the}" should see the Emperor. On this circumstance being made known to the Em^
tne hig-), «.ie (h)wn to the place. Their delir,htin seeing
cre
.,i.
an( out
an
or
between the horses legs,'
conducted themselves entirely as chil-
parent.-!»After receiving the Emper-Emper-
blessings thev marched off.
the Massachusetts Legislature. The com-J ing elections will show that there is tooj 0^7-An English mathematician named much good sense, patriot is mand intelligence Baily has been for some time past engaged in weighing the earth. Here are his figures: 1,256,195,075,000,000,000,000.000 or in words, one quadrillion, two hundred'and' fifty HX thousand one hundred an ninety-
I five trillions, six hundred and seventy-fiv» thousand billion tons avoirdupois.
