Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 1 September 1855 — Page 2

E E I E W

«s»AW3F$It8 2g,ri£&J

SATURDAY MORNING, SEPT. lj"1855.""

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JAKR,

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Democracy and the Union! RIGHT SIDE UP AND COMING

National Democratic

THIS UNION FOKEVKIt

CONVENTION!

The NATIONAL DEMOCRACY of Montgomery count}* will assemble in Mass Convention at Orawfordsville. on Saturday the

8th of September,

to nominate candidates for the following county offloeB: Clerk, Auditor. County Commissioner Coroner, and one Representative for the Lcgisla lure. The following distinguished speakers will be in attendance nml address the meeting: COL.lt. B. ARPENTER, of Kentucky

LIEUT. fSOV. WILLARI), HON. CYRUS L. DUNHAM, DANIEL W. YOORIIEES.

At Sunrise the Jackson Artillcrv will fire a

NATIONAL SALUTE

OF

THIRTY-ONE GUNS.* IK

The several townships will come in procession with Banners and Music. At 10 o'clock a I A N O S S I O will be formed in front of the Court House in the following order:

NEW ALBANY SAXE HORN BAND, INVINCIBLE (illARDS, FRANKLIN CADETS,

JACKSON ARTLLERY

,, Martini Music, SOLDIERS OE THE WAR OF

I

si 2 AND

EX I CO,

ATTICA BRASS BAND, TOWNSHIP DELEGATES.

The Township sendiiitr tlie lniirest delegation according to the Dumber of votes will be presented with a

MAGNIFICENT BANNER.

Ict.

every NATIONAL MAN turn out on this occasion, and fhow tbe Abolition 1'nnatics of the J)ABA' LAXTA'liy ORDER, that there is a nationality and a patriotism still hurninir in the breasts of the TKl'K AMERICAN TEOPLK. That we abh-M-their deeds of Uloo«t, Murder, Arson and

St.'ipinc,

committed in on! hitherto j.ejieeful and quiet cities. Bung your wives and children, your neighbors and every one opposed tr religions proscription, disunion and anarchy. Give one day to your country. and make the eighth of September, 1?"5. a day lone to be remembered ly the.National men of old MontiTomerv.

THE RIOT AtJAIN.

The lust Journal comes out with a scries of affidavits in reference to the Louisville riot. We have only to inform our readers that every one is taken from that murderous sheet, the Louisville Journal, to set at rest any effect their publication might produce. The attempt to clear his skirts of the blood, or, at least, the imputation of the blood, shed by the organized assassins on that unfortunate day, is the best proof of his (Prentice's) guilt, and, at the same time, of a healthy state of public opinion in the city.

Probably there never has been a display of bold effrontery and audacious falsehood equal to that shown by the Fusion Know Nothing presses upon this occurrence. If nnv one, however, is entitled to "go up head'' as the "first best" liar among them, it is cither Dr. Fry, or Ellis, of the Lafayette Courier. Take the following example from the hand of Fry—"In every riot which has disgraced our country, they (the Old Liners) have been the originators, they have struck the first blow, spilt the first blood, and committed the first murders."

We call attention, not only of the public, but*of the Presbyterian Church, of which Fry a member, to the above statement, Tvhich he knew at the time he penned it was a lie baser and uiore cold blooded than any Judas ever uttered. We snv further to the Chuith, if its character fo: sanclitv and

religious conduct is hoped to be preserved, its preachers and elders must do something to convince the world that they have no apologies for, nor parctl with, such a communicant as Fry. We say in good faith, that if there is truth in the Scripture, or divinity in the history of Ananias, there are ungodly lies told in every Montgomery Journal enough to sink, not only Fry, but his whole Church into perdition. If they will persist in covering him with their mantle, they must suffer in common estimation. They might as well bolster up in a religious community the Prince of Liars himself.

We will give the hypocrite, however, a chance to redeem himself. Let him, in his nest paper, give us one single instance in all the history of our country of a riot originated by what he calls "the Old Line leaders." Come out, we say,—only one instance of the kind! Nay, give us one instance of a riot originated by Old Liners of the rank and file.

Fry, in the same article, speaks of a number of American citizens ruthlessly shot down before any resistance was made by the American people. Now it has been reduced to a certainty that there were but four Americans killed—how many Irish men, women and children, the last day will only reveal. But over those four Americans there have been enough lying tsars shed by the Fusion speakers and editors to swim our navy. If any person should have been, like ourself, curious to know something about the private character of those four canonized martyrs, we are able to gratify him, thanks to the Louisville Courier, a Know Nothing paper. We subjoin a brief biography of three of them—Graham, Rhodes, and Hudson.

Graham was a man of bad character, who had been guilty of previous riotous conduct, for which he had to answer in court. Some time since he was arrested for robbing a house of ill-fame on the plank road, and the stolen property was found in his possession. Believing it to have been his first offence, and in consideration of his youth and promises of good behavior for the future, Judge Joyes merely held him to bail in the sum of §1,000 for his good behavior.

Rhodes was a man of violent temper, and of such character that his neighbors would hold no intercourse with him. He had been "indefinitely suspended" (which was tantamount to expulsion) from Boone Lodge, I. 0. 0. F., for bad conduct. He treated his wife so badly that she was driven away from him, and for several months previous to his death they had not been living together. He refused to pay her physician's bill incurred after their separation, disowned her as his wife, and only two or throe days before his death forbade the physician. who had been called to visit her during sickness, from longer attending her.— But, abused and maltreated as she had been, with the holy devotion characteristic of her sex, forgetting all his faults, Mrs. Rhodes

now seeks to remove the cloud that surrounds his memory. She is represented as being a worthy lady, and her womanly devotion cannot fail to excite admiration.

Hudson, who was murdered by his own friends, and not killed by the Irish, as has been stated, was a man of notoriously bad character. We see it stated that he was recently released from the Indiana penitentiary, where he had been sentenced to serve teim for stealing, and at the time he was killed an indictment for felony was hanging over him.

Graham, martyr No. 1, was the robber a house of ill-fame. Rhodes, martyr No. 2, was so vile that his neighbors Mould have nothing to do with him, lie forbade physicians from attending his wife in sickness.

Hudson, martyr No. 3, ivho was killed by his own friends, had just been released from the Indiana penitentiary where he had been confined for stealing.

Such are the fellows mourned so profoundly, bewailed so eloquently, and, along with Bill Poole, so certainly canonized, by Dr. Fry, and all the Thugs of the land.— The man who has so much sympathy for thieves and robbers, if not one in heart himself, has to guard himself well lest soon-!

or later he takes his dinners in the same cell made vacant by Hudson. He will teal, if he has a chance nnd the courage. If he is met abroad in a great crowd, let people put their hands on their pocket books. We do not confine the opinion to him, but xtend it to every Thug leader or candidate belonging to a fraternity of which Graham nd his stripe of fellows are members in good standing.

Ot the verity of the biographies Fry need not attempt a quibble. JEvery man of common sense will know, that if the Courier published any such slanders upon the dead, he would not fail to be called to account.--But the editor is s:ife in the tfuth of what he has written.

PUBLIC SPEAKING.

There will be a meeting of the National Democracy at Whitesville, miles south of Crawfordsville, on the Danville road, on Tuesday next the 4th inst. An interesting time may be expected, as a number of distinguished speakers have been invited.— Let everybody come out and hear the truth"Old Hickory" will announce the commencement of exeiciscs in tones of thunder

1

On last Wednesday we witnessed

one of the grandest sights ever beheld by mortal eye. We allude to the Democratic Convention, Like some mighty conquering army, flushed with victory, the rank and file of the indomitable Democracy came pouring in countless numbers into the Capital on the morning of the 29th. The soul-stirring music from an hundred bands, the fluttering of flags and pendants, the glit-

tering of golden eagles amidst the folds of

freemen like the roar of the sea, all com-|^on^.e

bined to make the affair the most magni-iw^°

ficent and enthusiastic ever witnessed

in this State. The abolition convention

tence of a waning protestant religion—no

voice was thunder. No one, not even the most brazen-faced disunionist, dares to as

4\,

was there, and we wish every man in In- V,

run red with innocent blood, find no mer- ,^

cy a his hands.

nounce to our readers that the Col. will be

conic out, and bring their wives with them.

We want all to hear the truth. A splendid

prize banner will be presented to the township which sends up the largest delegation. "The Eighth of September

Let us all Remember."

Come one and all—

come

banners—come men of

all parties and persuasions, young and old.

'•Come as the winds come, when l'orests are rended Como as the waves come, when Naviea are stranded/'

NEW ALBANY SAXK HORN BAND.—This celebrated band which played at the Democratic State Mass Convention on last Wednesday, has been engaged by the Democratic Central Committee of Montgomery county, to play at our Convention on the Oth. They will give a Concert on Friday night, and we recommend all the lovers of music that wish a rich entertainment to go and hear the Banner Band of the West.

PERSONAL.—L. D. Ingersoll editor of the Oskaloosa (Iowa) Times, is at present stopping in our city. He made an eloquent speech at the Court House on last Saturday nieht before the Union Democratic Club.

an^

the starry banners of the republic, the excitement is down. The people the shouts and huzzas of thirty thousand-

wou no

star

^e

of the 13th of July was a mere township months there will not one be left (not even meeting compared to this mighty gathering J'mmy Wilson) to tell the tale. The peoof national men. And it was no mere spree P^e reopening their eyes, and are going of Young America—no shedding of hypo- investigate and decide for themselves in critical tears at the card table over the pre-

exhibition of a fulsome pathos over bleeding ery man's throat whether he believes it or humanity in a drunken revel on liquor smug-:

al to the best interests of the American 's00*1

Republic to revel in bachanalian rounds

through the streets of the Capital and un-i'n

der the very dome of the temple where our laws are made, there to spit upon those laws and nullify them, by rendering them a dead letter. The Democratic party did not enact the liquor law, but while it is a law it bows its obedience. The Convention was spoken to by distinguished speakers from this and adjacent States. Kentucky had no less than a hundred delegates on the ground, and Illinois fully half that number. Of the outpouring from the different localities of our own State we have nothing to say, it spoke for itself and its

no^'

gled in evasion of law. That was the ex- PeoP^e that he was not an Aboliample of the dark lantern politicians, the, ^on's' but others of 4he Order with less political whist-players of the Red Republi-

('cunning

can Convention on the 13th. The Demo-j^ne Party

cratic party is too proud, too noble, too loy-

da-v

1

-ja

ers an

bodiment of splendor and live thunder.— these martjTs. and there the fell destroyer The Red Republicans trembled beneath his exultingly displays his horrid mark. There, ponderous blows, until our sympathies were

wh'le

ii t\. ii reflections invade the mind, and thrilling enlisted for them—they paled, their knees .•

tempt that was made in Hardin County, are blending the wailing notes of the sorKy., to justify MattF. Ward in one of the row-stricken. Oh! how agonizing to hear very foulest murders ever perpetrated, un- the plaintive moaning wrung from the bleedder any circumstances. The Col. still !DS

hates the man, or the party that will mur- ^j)e

der, and the Louisville rioters, who, at the tion—to hear distracted parents calling in late elections, made the streets of that citv

(may

with drums and

but

[For the Review.

GRAND FIZZLE. LINDEN", August 30, 1855.

ED. REVIEW:—It was announced in glow* ing hand bills that there would be a grand rally of the Republican party, (which I suppose means Abolitionism and Know Nothingism,) in Linden, August 28th, and that Mr. Jas. Wilson and others would address the meeting. The day was a pleasant one,

thing favorable for a large crowd,

^urn chose to stay at

ra ier

than to go and hear a man

not

^el'eve his own preaching.—

midnight

n^d

sP'te

Order is fast wan-

predict that in less than three

°f Messrs. Beard, Wilson and McNeil,

w^° try

to

thrust their arguments down ev-

Wilson's great effort was to sat-

will let the cloven foot stick out.—

sa

of the

to me on the same

meetlng

ancI

an(^

ie

that a negro was as

0USht

to

CNJ*°y

the same ri bts

privileges that he himself did but yet

^ace they claim not to be

Abolitionists. Funny, isn't it? ha, ha.— If anything further should transpire in re lation to the Abolitionists and Know Noth ings I will be sure to let you know. Another very important thing is, you can set old Madison down thirty majority for the Old Liners. A CITIZEN.

[From the Louisville Times.]

A VISIT TO THE SjIOULDEttI.XG SEPULCHRE. Solemn and awe-inspiring are the ravages of Death, even 'mid the scenes of wealth, where he came with a slow warning step and left friends consolation and comfort, to cheer the home which he made desolate,

c}

S^oom

0

sert that there was ever any such demon- •, ,, :he appears in the little family circle of the stration at Indianapolis before. We can- poor, whose only happiness is their union not now dwell at length upon the speeches and affection. Are his ravages more welthat were made, or go into any detail of the come where wealth is not to be found?— mightv swell of patriotic enthusiasm, that

no

er cast but oh! how solemn

and heart rending are these ravages, when

^1C humble cottages of the

,, poor, affection weaves a silver chord as pure

swayed and controlled that vast assemblage, u- ,i and binding as any that links hearts in the as the lofty forest is shaken by the rushing halls of affluence. In the bosoms of the of the winds which it has no power to re- poor, are hearts most firmly and most closesist. *jly strung. And, lately in our city, how

Col. R. B. CARPENTER, of Kentucky, many of these heart strings have been *nap-

-i ped asunder by Death, led by a band of

4T: 4l

.. Kutnans, into the tenements of poor foreigndiana had heard him. He is the very em-

3 3

Catholics. Go to the Sepulchre of

gazing on those ruined piles, varied

4,

smote together, and they cried for mercy, "smouldering heaps lie the vanished hopes like the criminal at the bar receiving his and fond realities of many. That raonudreadful sentence. jment which proclaims the abiding shame of

Our readers all remember the noble part thousands, proclaims alike the tear of the r, ,i widow and the orphan. With the hoarse COL. CABFEKTER played the shocking at-'

emotions sway the heart. Neath those

clulling jccrs of inlluman plirpetrators

and

vaiJ1

lacerated hearts of those poor be-

.„ iings, whose brightest day was but warmed

sun 0f

ieu sce

regaid him as one of tne very best the winter of their life. Where is the heart, and most efficient orators of our country.! in which exists a spark of sympathy, that He is a young man. with a very old head. could listen unmoved to that poor wife callWc arc most happy in being able to au-j

with them at the Convention on the Oth, of her lost husband in the tomb of martyrs and we have no doubt they will give him'while ever and anon she murmurs, "Oh, the largest and most enthusiastic hearing will such wrongs be unavenged?"— ever given to any speaker in tins county. I J?o!,

SU,th

resignation and mutual affec-

f°r their beloved and persecuted chil-

f°rms with heads whit-

ened by the frosts of years, resting stones

dycd t])e b]ood of thosc wl?0on cheered

ing on God to be a father to her little or

phans, and hovering around the abode of sorrow, hoping to find even the burned body

W

a.w^uj.

"°f

be

-r Ti ^0ci ehastiseth those whom He loveth.—

uo\. V\ ILLARD, Hon. Cvnua L. DUNHAM, ^Each flame that, from the burning homes and DANL. W. OORHEES will also be here, of the poor and desolate, tinged the azure and, as there will be extensive prepara-|sky» bore to the Heavenly courts, a record tions made, we hope the farmers will all

«"»™,ged.~

indeilible each drop of blood

... (that fell from innocent veins, cried aloud to

heaven or

VMgemc0.

Xhe crucl victor

wear with secret pride his blood-stain-

ed laurels, but long after those laurels will ^asjs

have withered, his victim brow will be

radiant with a diadem wrought by "angel

hands. fcowthe conqueror may glory inj

his foul achievements, but the day will I

come when the conquered shall chant the

^eweakmustr

not then ye poor and bereaved, life may be drear and charmless, adversity's clouds may gather thick and rapid, but listen ever to the sweet, charming accents of hope, and in grief's darkest hour, remember, as "ye sow in sorrow, ye shall reap in joy."

LOOK HERE.

THE LOUISVILLE BUTCHERY. In a race with falsehood, truth is always

a laggard at the outset. This arises from' time huih th«

Whig, Native and Democratic—wo behold

did not present a ticket printed on colored

paper—the badge of the Order's infamy

and the laws overthrow. And these

uate it but the bloody doings at Louisville, standing out in the full glare of the civilization of the nineteenth century, will be execrated by every lover of his country, as springing from the corruption of depraved hearts and debased minds. Bribery, peculation and perjury, were the first fruits of this disgraceful Order, its second has been murder and arson—the third and last, if permitted to mature, will be the destruction of our liberties, amidst a carnival of blood.

TIIE OPINIONS OF A WISE MAN. There is perhaps no man Avho has ever been a candidate for high office in this country, in whose purity of character the public, and particularly that portion of it that has acted with the Whig party, feel such entire confidence as that of lion. THEODORE FRELIXGJICVSEN, who was run for YricePresident on the same ticket with HENRYCla^T# A man without political ambition, of high-toned moral principle, and distinguished for his connection with the most important religious and benevolent enterprises of the country, his views of public questions are not biased either by political aspirations or party spirit, and are entitled to the respect due to those of a wise and upright man. In an oration he recently delivered on a public occasion, he made the following remarks on a subject which is seldom treated with as much calmness and candor:

When the Constitution of the United States was under advisement, by the law of nations a slave escaping to a free country became free. The slaveholding States

j. ... were unwilling to form a union upon the

0f

ix re a a a S at at a

i^hereaf\^

Despair

We would like to see some of the boys

from each township by the first of the duty but politically we agreed to leave it week, that we may have some banners sent where we found it, and that was with the out to the different townships, those that slaveholding States, with all its responsibilhave not vet been supplied will please call The whole case is with them. "It is a gravely momentous subject, enat my shop, opposite the Review, in the 3d story of commercial row.

ib

T. H. WIN TON.

OCr Some of the Know Nothings of Louisville propose to get up a concert for the benefit of the sufferers by the late riot.— They may be able to restore to them some of the furniture and old clothes consumed in the conflagration, but who is to restore husbands to the widows, fathers to the orphans, sons to aged parents made desolate by the outrages of the nicbocrats?

that international law between in-

d( pcndcn Stillss lcy propoScd

ifree SuteSi if wish t(J uJit(, w,th

and thus form one

its conscious integrity of purpose. The ob- ... ™urnurs of discontent and jectof falsehood being sinister, its start must be rapid, otherwise its effect will be lost by truth appearing. Now that the facts coar nected with the Louisville riots begin to appear through diverse political channels-

the appalling trull., that the wholesale God and a living prayer for His Ruidanco" butchery and arson committed on election day, in that God-forsaken city, was deter-J SWEET REVENGE.—Portsmouth, Gosport mined upon and fully arranged in the Know

on

Talk not hereafter, of St. Bartholomew, ye led with suffering, sick and dying, when no midnight marauders and brutal assassins! Pa'^ nurses can be procured, the sisters of That had the plea of a dark age, to exten- charity are flocking thither and devoting

Are you prepared, fellow-citizens, for such a devastating and gory reformation? Shall anarchy, confusion and assassination P!cseu! .the

triumph, marching under the black banner Th« of Ignorance, over the fair fruits of intellect "10

and patriotism, as devised and sustained by our fathers? Shall the bloody Moloch of Know Nothingism tear with its ensanguined hands, that glorious Constitution with patriots compacted? So sure as God reigns, if the ignorant and profligate Secret Order be permitted to hold sway for another year, our people will become so familiar with blood and arson, that human life in our city will be the mere sport of a brutal mob, and all property lose its security. The sanctity of the laws has been derided wherever the hideous aspect of the monster has found worshippers, and the humanizing Gospel of Christ has been stripped of its balmy influence, to give place to the brutality of passion. "Do unto others as ye would that they should do unto you," is no longer recognized as part of a Christian's creed— but revenge, dark, malignant and bloody, is now called to the redress of suppressed grievances. All the accounts of the disgraceful riot at Louisville, from unprejudiced sources, show that it was the result of a plan, agreed upon in Secret Council, to deprive a portion of our citizens of the right guaranteed them by the laws and Constitution of the land. Murde'r and arson were to be a part of the programme, if the occasion called for it, and behold the result in all its horrible prominence. The Secret Order must bo destroyed, or we shall soon be its slaves or its victims.—Philadelphia Pennsylvanian.

to the

,e

than thc oraI

jn c,0$(jr bon(Js

*of

n[ltionSi thcn

in any county in our own State. Our forefathers agreed to this modification and the thirteen Colonies unanimously adopted it, and thus left slavery a domestic institution in all the States where it existed, si, "This is the true political state of the question and, therefore, we cannot disturb it. As a great moral and social evil it is open to free consideration and debate, as are all other matters pertaining to moral Mackerel, halfbbl.

compassed by perplexing difficulties that call for deliberation, and candor, and good temper. And, more than this, it invokes afresh the cherished and fraternal feelings that formed the American Constitution, which has so long and so iilustriously shown how much of human wisdom and forecast and how much more of divine benignity crowned this first great experiment of a free and self-governed people. May it be perpetual May no rash hand mar its glory or dare disturb its foundations! Should not almost eighty years of prosperous free-

dom.plead for our Union? Should not the smiles of God's favor toward for all that

and

Nothing Lodges, and connived at by the °f each other. They are thriving commercowardly wretches who hold official posi- eial towns, and the fact that a navy yard is tions in Louisville. The work of destruc-|at Gosport, has broughSN® tliose places tion was begun by the hired ruffians of the thousands of mechanics/who ate engaged Secret Order, who assailed every man that:

r'h!e

on

are

that would call such ruffians Americans!—'

the miscreants who dare assume the name have been universal. The pcstilence rages of American, to murder unoffending women

and children, after they had bathed their'ant^ the sick are abandoned by the surviv^ hands in the blood of tbeir husbands, fath- jors fur so fearful is the fever, that but few ers and protectors! Blistered be the tongue

l0WaJaJus

!ls

for ali

Jefferson county, Iowa, which last fall gave 194 fusion majority, has just elected a full Democratic ticket by 40 majority.

In Davenport, Iowa at the recent electien, there was a Democratic majority of 150. The whole county (Scott) gives an average Democratic majority of about 100.* In April last, fusion and know nothingism had 250.

A FRANK ADMISSION.—Prior to the election in Tennessee, Kentucky, and North Carolina, the Buffalo (N. Y.) Commercial, a leading Know Nothing organ, made the following fiank admission, which was not only uttered in sincerity, but has the merit of being founded in truth: "If Gentry is defeated in Tennessee, and the Democrats acnieve a decided success in North Carolina, the American party will no longer have an existence as a national organization. Even if they win a signal victory in Kentucky on Monday next, it will avail them nothing, upon an overthrow in the other States just named."

Mr.. EOITOK:—PICOKC announco my name as a' candidate for County Auditor. s»ubject to the docision of the iN'atiuiml .Democratic 'on von tion.

Ulaf

persuade us rather to patience and hope? Let us wait for the healings of time, and kindness and the sure growth of the better feelings that will follow the spread and power of the Gospel of Peace. Let us, forthe sake of human liberty and man's la«t hftni.

a„d

bear and forbear in the fenr^'f

Norfolk, Virginia, are all within sight

the government works. That most hor-

visitor, the yellow fever, has con\e up-

these cities, and death and desolation,

I human suffering and domestic calamity

w'Lh

who

terrible loss. The dead, the dying

are taken with it revive. In this hour

sorc

distress, when the hospitals are fill-

their lives as nurses to the unfortunate victims. No other persons turn their steps to these cities save these heroic christian women.

In such deeds of mercy and christian love as these, the sisters of charity find a sweet revenge for the obloquy and insult thrown upon them, a few months ago, even in these cities of Portsmouth, Norfolk and Gosport, by over zealous political scetarians, called Know Nothings.

jCST The ruthless massacre at Louisville will present most disgraceful record io more thoroughly the blacker appears the crime. That bloodshed and murder were designed before the day of election, is perfectly apparent. The intimations of the Louisville Journal, the refusal by the Know Nothing municipality to take any precautionary measures, all go to prove that the Know Nothings had determined to carry the election at all hazards, at any cost. The knife and bullet of the assassin did their work, aided by the torch of tho incendiary. Dwellings were devoted to the flames—innocent men, women and children were burnt, shot, stabbed, hanged, by a crazy, maddened, drunken mob! If this be "Americanism," woe unto those who practice it—who uphold it—who would urge it upon a civilized, humane, Christian people. The day of accountability will bo awful.—Boston Post.

ln,e mos'!,S'

facls are

dt,vcloPed

1,1

DEMOCRATIC VICTORIES IN IOWA.—At the recent hotly-con tested election in Keokuk, Iowa, for State officers, the Democratic candidates had a majority ranging from thirtyfour to one hundred and four, or an average of fifty-eight. In April last the know nothing party carried thc city by £0] majority.

MORGAN tXOOK.

Jin. ErnToii:—-Please announce the name of M. M. V.'incJcave as a candidate for tne office of county Auditor, riubjcft to the decision of the National Democratic Convention audobligo

MANY VOTERS.

C'K AAV FOIUJSYILL.I5 PIIICE CUK2tEAT. AHTI L£B. I I-JUCES. liKMAJUtS. Flour Wheat. Outs lij'e -Buriey Corn—in the ear•• Jlay Apples—(rreen

1.00®

00ri

WE

50

S5@

76® 1,00 2,00@

Dried-.-

Fea-hes 3,'J5 8,00® lo@

tliis

of lhe f= uiv0 skve musl be modi

that welhall have .he same right to

Beans Butter—Fresh

S((S

70

Corn Me ill Chickens—Dressed Potatoes Bacon—liarns

1.25& 1,50 o0@ 8@ 10

Sides Shoulders••

Lard Pork Beef—on Hocf".Clover Seed Timothy Seed Colfec Butfar Molasses. N. O. White Fish-

None offered. Sugar cured.'

6@ 70) fc

3,50© 4„00 8,50@ 8,75 6.00(5, 2,00% 3,00 13® 15 3 ym 7 30® 36 6,00@ 8,00

I Sobe. j.N'ono. None.

60®

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL

HAT HOUSE, at 0.

Ill, M'ALTfUT ST., BELOW »th, CINCINNATI.. OHIO.

WOULD invite Wholesale iMalerrt to examine our stock before purchasing. Everything isncv and of the latest shapes and color, and we are^bound to hell fresh goods at low priced.— We ha^e now the largest Hat House in thc Union. Our stock is second to none. If murehants will favor us with a call we will try to make it to tuzir advantage to buy of us. L. H. BAKEK d: CO. sepl-n7w:i 141, Walnut, below 4th. on nnA bushels of wi^t

fatI/) W" mediately for wLi-b I wil P#y kiphest cash prict. ,t MASTEP.SON.

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