Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 27 October 1855 — Page 1

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1

$4»

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,E1LL OF HATES FOR

Ain Kii'LSlXG A N O IN

I/NXjpUtO-.into

Third

B)UM:C

J"

!.

b--.twoon the several Publishers

offrinvfordsvillc,

"*v ANI

"MO.NTGOMKIIY

I.LK

of March,:Iao5, as follows: 1'5*'' Vearly Advertising. Ui OHO (iohufin.'iiur annum, subjcct to acmi-an-

vv

1

JoritNAL,"

ttKviEW,"' on the 7th day

mittl ..c ....£30,00 *•'nc-Y?ulf' ranmn, ]er annum, enbjcct to H«mi'-':iriniml chango _• »8,00 j.OaorThir^ Ciohinm,• per annum, subject to J, Henu" anriuiil ohttiigc 15,00 "SJtfart»*f*Oolmnn, per annum, siibjoct to -. semi-annua I .change "a A'*C!iri-" of one .squaro or less. per annum ,7.00 a

months 4,00

T,iW^vt. AiVKRTiPKifENTfi .is heretofore, one dol9lorpor 5qTiare, for throe insertions for cacli additioiml iiiJi'.rtion-iij cents all over oncscjunre, chargas a^'i'uiro and a half, all over one square and a ^hiilfj eharyod us two squares HSt fax Patent Medicine Advertising. flOne'Colutiiu per annum.sem-ftnuual change $85,00 .IlHlf ,'W 25,00

17 00

12.00

AlVpuhli'oriales, Transient Advertisements, &c., bt^onro, for first insertion and 25 cents for each n&Ulioiiul insertion.

a5

Special «ticcs. Obituaries. Literary Notices of all

.• kindn.'hr.lf nnr rt'srular iidvertisinp rates. .fcsJTXiltriistJ.* of Patent iModieinea, §1 per square, for. lirst insertion.

Curd mid Job Printing*

^Ono prick of Girds, (f0) §'2,00 Two (100)

lWU»r, p' hundred 5,00

each additional liuinlro 8,00 •"^tiart.n* Sliest 1 Vr.trr. jmr hundred 8,00 tfneft. adSlitiomil huntlred 1,50

ICiglitii f»lleet l'c.»t«r, 50 or less lt50 Hull Tkkels, 1J eo!ios. to ho paid for invariably, before talven from the oHlee.

zi miction Tickets.

nve dollars per thousand will be ehnrfred for l''.lietio:i Tu'kota, to be paid invariably in advanc-\

Show il "n nts.

Two dollars per square will be charged lor ad\ ertiiiomentsof thiseharueter, for lir^t insertiou—each ••Additional ihsortyn. $1. •T Horse and Jack Bills.

For MiiL'le II'ir Hill A2—each additional llor?o on bill, $1.

Pnrticuiftr Notice.

The y-aymont l'r all 1'atent Medicine advertiserinmVft'mnst br satisfactorily eeeured before inserted, by an accented order, or bv cash.

Mf ATIT.KS Tl. "HOWEN. KF.VIEW.

4zi .1 KHliMlAir KEENKV, JniriwAi..

AND

,^]illr.Nl)^'. Yfe are now receiving one of the most desirable Stock of Standard. Miscellaneous, Theological. Law. Medical, School,Dialogue, (}pnj»rapli5'al, rammar, Arithmetic, Ma^\s, and Fine Stationary, of all kinds now in use.

I"

TjITIIOGK.VPII PAINTINGS,

5f ilillVrcnt ^zi's and qualities. Full and Half Boiniil Hl'k Jlooks. Ledgers. Invoice. Trecussion Notes. Mcinoradums of all kinds. Paper by the Kcum, of lifty diil'crent kinds. Gillett'ri JYu.*, No. ^03. bv the (Jross—and fovty other Brands. Our NOTIONS are full and complete.

TO THE LADIES.

We have added a line new large SHOW ("ASE.to our Store, entirely for the display of cur fine

bid' JI1WRLRY. And our ]mrchase is so very largo in Jewelry that it is impossible, tor yo\i not to get suited lit. our Store, as we have over two hundred styles of ,.

It II 1 N S a it E A S IN S Ult1 pnrest 11 aid .Solder Gold down to tlic com moil Pel'* Solder—and over one thousand

GOLD AND CORNELION KINGS,

Gold and fiiker Watches,

'"G OLD LOCKETS,

Of all kin.I.-, and sizes. Ladies and (Jents fine

€8SA6^r8 & KEYS.

A1 .SO, uUR STOCK OF

E N N I E S

Is Large mid Fine. Size—from one inch loii up to the iavgostsize made. Also full assortment of

f' IMSrr()LS,,

Colt's atul other Kevolvinsr Single and Double Harrol. Also we keep constantly on hand the best artie'e of

Colorado and Virginia Tobacco

To be found in town. We also., luivo a choice scleetton of the finest brands of

TTAVANA AND DOMESTIC CIGARS,

To Tic fo-md in the market. Over one hundred

Frorti Pe'venty-fivc Cents up to Twenty-five Dc hirs. Al?o a fine variety of the most celebrated

VIOUSS AND GUITARS, BANJOS, FLUTES, FIVKS AXD MUSICAL BOXES, ANJ

other small

1

nstrumonts. such as

HASPS,

etc

We are nls" short notice. tiling iueJuii-xl in t.V.e line of Musical Merchandise —vsuon as STKINitS FOK ALT^ INSTRUMENTS

We are also prepared to mend vour Accordeons in

I

We have the largest lot of Buggy Whips to be found in town. LADlti?! Wo have a few of those fine

White Crape Shawls,

Very cheap, and a variety of llibbons and Dress Trimming*, lint?, Taps and Keadv Made Clot'iiins, cheap lor cash. We take :\!1 kinds of

COUKTBY PRODUCE,

S^ fjiro us a eall. £??™To Peddlers and Countrv McrviluiuUs will sell ypu ali kinds of Notions at low figures, a-s we have a very large stock on hand ii. rrRSELL & BKOTIIPJ:.

May 26, l355-^4Snly.

DOZEN Cans Baltimore Oysters^" 50 lbs soft shell Almonds. bo linelish Waliiuw. Ic.i.'J **,51)^ Filberts, *50 Brazil Nuts..

i%t sale hy WILSONV GRIMES fc "Co. lr

MAUD.

ALFRED TENNTSOJF.

The September number of Blackwood's

we feel that our hands are bound, like those of Thalaba, when the enchantress

sung to him as she spun:—

3°°

Lottery Tickets, or cards, (100) 1,50 chilli additional hundred

1(^°

•"Furhc'ral Imitations, (note paper, enveloped) 3,00 X'ireiilurfi. on half sheet letter, per hundred-• 8,00 .Bh'iiks-simrlo quire $1 two quires 2,00 and for cneh.additional qniro, 75 cents. '^Vhole Sh.'ct lVste's, per hundred 3^,00 (*anb additional lntndred- 5,00 .Halt

"Come into the garden, Maud, For the black bat, night, has flown, Come into the garden, Muud,

I am hero at the gate alone And the woodbine spices are wafted abroad, And the musk of the roses blown.

For a breeze of morning moves,And the planet of Love, is on high, Beginning to faint in the light that tihe loves

On abed of daffodil sky, To faint in the light of the sun sho loves, To faint in his light, and to dio. .• •..

All night have the roses heard The flute, violin, bassoon All night has tho casement jessamine slirr'd

To the dancers dancing in tune Till a silence fell with the waking bird, And hush with the setting moon.

I said to the lily, 'There is but one With whom she has heart to be gay, When will the dancers leave her alone?

She is weary of dance and play.' Now half to the sotting moon arc gone, And half to tho rising day •Low on the sand and loud on the stone.

The last wheel echoes away.

said to tho rose, 'The brief night goes .. In babble and revel and wine. O young lord-lover, what sighs arc those,

For one that will never be thine! But mino, but mine,' so 1 swaro to the rose, 'Foi ever niul ever, mino.'

And the soul of tho rose went into my blood, As tho music clahVl in the hall And long by the garden lake I stood,

For I heard your rivulet fall From the lake to the meadow and on to the wood, Our wood, that is dearer than all

.From tho meadow your walks have left so sweet. That whenever a March-wind sighs Ho sots tho jcwol-print of your feet

In violets blue as your eyes, To the woody hollows in which we meet And tho valleys of Paradise.

The slender acacia would not shako One long milk-bloom on tho tree The white lake-blossom fell into the lake,

4-i

Brinir them on. Wo keep everv-

1

FV \R I .*

JTeW fftick. «, gve e?it fine kiln of front Brick H: in.lT. PTOSEL & BR(X 'i .. Il2tf. ."?»*:

we'

for sale. Pi •July 36. 1?55.

As the pimpernel dozed on the lea But the rose was awake all night for your sake, Knowing your promise to me Tho lilies and roses were all awake,

They sigh'd for tho dawn and thee.

Queen rose of rosebud garden of girls, Come hithei, tho dances aro done, In gloss of satin and glimmer of pearls,

Queen lily a»ul rose in one, Shine out, little head, sunning over with curls, To tho flowers, and bo their sun.

There has fallen a splendid tear From tho passion-flower at tlic gate, .. She is coming, my dove, my dear

Slie is coming, my life, my fate The rod rose crics, 'She is near, she is near And tho white rose weeps, 'She is late The larkspur listens, 'I hear, I hear

And the lily whispers, 'I wait.'

Sho is coming, my own, my sweet Wcro it over so airy a tread, My heart would hear her and beat,

Were it earth in an earthy bed My dust would hear hor and boat, Had I lain for a century dead Would start unu tremble under her feet,

And blossom in purple and red."

UNPREMEDITATED ELOQUENCE.—As

*"er contracted

magazine contains a long criticism, upon great Democratic meeting, made one of the Tennyson's new poem entitled Maud. The most eloquent speeches denunciatory of critic says: ''Other passages there are, Know Nothingism and Abolitionism and in more ambitious and elaborate, studded all defence of the principles of Democracy, we over with those metaphors, strange epithets, have persued in a long time. We should and conceits which are the disfigurement of like to publish the whole-of it, but our modern poetry, and which we are surprised space will allow us to give only the concluthat a man of genius and experience should ding portion. Said Mr. Carrigan persist in using but they all seem to us to "This Know Nothing organization (and want life and reality, and surely the ink was I am dealing wish their principles, not their sluggish in the pen when they were writ-!?1611') also tramples upon the rights of suffrage. In tlie State Council that assembled ten. Only in this one does tho verse flash f, •, rx n.rn in this city last October, the following resout like a golden thread from a reel and

0lution

an ex-

atoplc of upremeditated eloquence, may be given a short answer of Curran, the Irish orator, to a certain Judge Robinson—"the author of many scurrilous pamphlets"— who upon one occasion, when the barrister was arguing a case before him, had the impudence to reproach Curran for his poverty, by telling him that his library was ra-

"It is true, my lord," said Curran with dignified respect, "that I am poor, and the circumstances has certainly somewhat curtailed my library my books are not numerous, but they are select, and I hope they have been persued with a proper disposition. I have prepared myself for this high profession, rather by the study of a few good books, than by the composition of a great many bad ones. I am not asbamed of my poverty but I should be ashamed of my wealth, could I have stooped to acquire scurrility and corruption. If I rise not to rank I shall at least be honest, and should I ever cease to be so, many an example sbows me

universally and the more deservedly con-IE

that an ill gotten reputation, by making me Constitution, beat down a combination of conspicuous, would only make me the more ?e T0ITl ^anat'^s™-

-r DEMOCRATIC FAMILY NEWSPAPER—DEVOTED TO POLITICS, NEWS, MISCELLANEOUS LITERATURE, MECHANIC ARTS,

Wbigs, who consbhitc the guard about the

tomb of Claj-who forget not his trials and

chensYi it in your heart of hearts his paternal and patriotic sentiments this night your country calls aud his spirit invokes you to assist in staying the rushing tide that would sweep away the constitution he so often defended. [Applause again and again.] "And you, Democrats, with upturned faces and flashing eyes, take heart from this night's work. 'The constitution must and will be preserved. [Applause.] The revolution commenced some months ago, and the old line dominion has been answered by North Carolina, Alabama, Tennessee, and Texas and only a few days ago the good old State of Maine, standingupon the

us

..ti Stone bogms to speak. Her noble sons 'rally for the Constitution and the Union.— (fc^rTwo things made to be lost—sinners Her indomitable Democracy will soon speak ^nd umbrellas. io -S•-*. 'in thunder tones. (Vehement applause.]

^'VOLUME VII.' CRAWFORDSVILLE, MONTGOMERY COUNTY, IND., OCTOBER 27, 1855.^ NO., 15.

A THRILLING, ELOQUENT APPEAL AGAINST KNOW-NOTIIINGISM. C. W. Carrigan, of PhUadelphia, at the

was offered and adopted: "That the members go armed and seijpe upon the ballot-boxes." "They must go armed to the ballot-box, and not with that

"Weapon that is surer set And firmer than the bayonet— A weapon that comes down as still

As snow-fiukcs fall upon tho sod And executes a freeman's will As lightning does tho will of God."

Not with the ballot—the scepter of American Freemen—[immense applause,] but with the knife and pistol. A more gross outrage upon the ballot box was never contemplated. "In Cincinnati, at their last municipal election, the ballot boxes of the Eleventh and Twelfth Wards were taken possession of by a Know Nothing mob, broken to pieces, and their contents given to the torch, and this, too, by Americans who desire to show how -well they would ride America. What a sight for a free people. But their treason to the Constitution, and utter disregard of the sanctity of the ballot box, was more fully evinced in the late horrible riots in the city of Louisville. The right of franchise was denied to all men whose eyes first opened on a foreign soil. They cared not whether he was Protestant or Catholic, Irish or German, whether they or their fathers had fought and bled for their adopted country. It was sufficient to know that their birth-place was not here they were ignominiously trampled on and ruthlessly assailed men, women nnd children mut* dered and their dwellings given to the flames. Such a holocaust of bleeding hearts, burnt homes, and blazing dwellings, constitute a fit monument for an organization conceived in tyranny nnd nurtured in blood. [Long continued applause.] "Upon tho plea of Americans ruling America, they have been guilty of untold excesses. The human heart is palsied as they pass in review before it. "Americans must rule Amrica," and with sacrilegious indifference they invade the sanctuar}T of the Lord, and disturb the communion of the soul with its Maker. Americans must rule America, and in secret conclave they advise the carrying of dagger and pistol to the ballot box. Americans must rule America! and with hideous yells and demoniac shouts they stiffle free speech and attack the free press. Americans must rule America, and they hang an Irishman on his own children ana men giv flame?. Americans must rule America!— and they blow out the brains of a child in the arras of its mother, while all around are mutilated bodies and burning houses.— Americans must rule America! and from rank showers of blood and the red light of!

Blooming at Beltane When the whirlwind has the mountain,. The more shall Clan "Alpine cxault in her shade ."Moored in tho rined rocic,

Troof to the tempest shock,

Firmer he roots him the ruder he blows.'"

"In sunshine and storm, come weal or

woe we will stand bv the faith of our fatli-

woe, we vuji stana by the .aitli ol our lath

ers. They may strip us of the green leaves

of success they may lop off, one by one

the branches of our strength but the old

time trunk will stand, and lift aloft its defi-

A

^n"porcV,"in thc^pre'sence" o7'his~wife'and iwhic1}

ildren and then tfve his dwelling to the I

blazing roofs, they build the rainbrow of terest which formerly attached to Sebastolorv, and to shuddering conscience cry,'polis now being transferred to Nicolaieff, "We are ruling America!" Great God!—Jon the river Bug, formerly thc second, but what a picture to thc brighest era of civili-jnow the chief naval arsenal of Russia in zation! What scenes for a republican gov- the Black Sea. Here the Russians have ernment! Anarchy and blood-shed tri- their naval stores, and all that remains of umph over American liberty. Free speech ther Black Sea fleet. The Czar is now at outraged, free press attacked, freedom of, Nicolaieff, and it is supposed that the obconscience violated, free suffrage trampled ject of his visit is to concert measures with under foot, arson run riot, citizens murder the Admirality for making the place anothed, and our constitution a rope of sand. "Oh, ye members of this secret organization, (I speak to you now as men—as erring men,) who are on the threshold and anxious to leave, fly at once, to the protection of your country's constitution. The guardian angel of our destiny has moved the waters, and now, this night, step in and be made whole. It is a duty you owe to your fathers and yourselves. Rally with us to the support of American liberty.— [Great cheermg.] And you, "old line" „p

heroic devotion who lore his memory and p^ople, and now all this is upon my back,

eat

^P"

f'I And now, tb,s n.ght the-old Key

aut fronk MooredI in the ritted rock of the 'sfreail,

Constitution, proof to the tempest-rock

all fanaticism, 'firmer he roots him the

ruder it blows. [Enthusiastic applause^ jg

"Then, upon this sacred spot do we j°iQ

hands, and renew to one another our devo-

tion to the common bond. The spirits of Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Clay, and Webster, from the classic shades of Mount Vernon, Monlicello, the Hermitage, Ashland and Hartfield, are imploring us to protect the constitution—to preserve the Union. We send back this answer from Lewis Cass and Edward Everett, James Buchanan and Richard Rush, Geo. M. Dallas and Daniel S. Dickinson, John C. Breckenridge and Robert Winthrop, Alex. H. Stephens and William B. Reed from the North and South, East and West from thc mighty army of national men every where—the Constitution shall be protected the Union shall be preserved. There beats not the heart, there moves not the arm, there exists not the steel that can penetrate the panoply of such true Americans. Surrounded by such defences, the constitution is safe— the Union secure. We 'smile at the drawn dagger and defy its point.'". [Repeated and continued applause.]

TKUTIISWELL EXPRESSED.—Inhisaddress at the New York State Fair, Gov. Wright, of Indiana, made the following excellent suggestions. They comprise a volume in a nutshell: "We must cultivate the roots, not the tops. We must make the family govern ment, the school, the farm, the church, the shop, the agricultural fairs the laboratories of our future greatness. We must educate our sons to be farmers, artisans, architects engineers, geologists, botanists, chemists— in a word, practical men. Their eyes must be turned from Washington to their States counties, townships, districts, homes. This is true patriotism, and the only patriotism that will perpetually preserve thc nation."

AN ARCTIC NEWSPAPER.—ThcNew

an(j

wjjj

Qne 0f nob]G

Wal!

York

Herald, in its account of the fxploring ex pedition, mentions the following memorable incident in newspaper annals: "A weekly newspaper, under the title of the Iceblink, was published on board for some seven or eight -weeks. It was in manuscript, and its motto was, In tenebris servare fidem—Sus tain your trust, even in darkness.

A

VALUABLE INSTRUMENT—At

copy

of it will be a historic momento worth preserving."

the great

Paris Exposition, an instrument is exhibited

thc,

force

mcasurecl

wind«

caa be

facility and utmost

exactness. It was invented by vice Admiral Krugar, of the Swedish navy.

JtST The Mormons of Utah have invented a new alphabet.

THE HARBOR OF NICOLAIEFF.—The

with my family—96 wives and 221 children—to provide for at the same time, and

in

er Sebastopol. By some authorities the river is said to be so shallow as not to allow of large vessels coming up to the town except during the spring floods—by others the channel is said to be from four to six fathoms deep.

•it JBRIGIIAM YOUNG SPEAKING.

Brigham Young is still "abroad" in Utah. In a late speech, the Holy Prophet talks to his saintly hearers after this wise:

t0 tbi3 Unje we llavc carried tlie

our bacUs. osepb (Joe

did jt in his beside ca,.rying

Smith)

,h,6 whole

we will carry it all and bear off the King-' dom of God. And you may pile on State after State, and kingdom after kingdom, and all hell on top, and we will roll on the

kingdom of our God, gather out tne seed

of A ah a it a ry- it- ,i t'- a

I there said coltily and aloud. If

feel

EO

'JO

'Onrs is no sappling, chancc sown by the fountain, HORRIBLE SCENES WITHIN SEBAS- much blood. The ditch outside made

ntcr to fade I TOPOL. [sick it w.is piled up wilh English dead, ripped every leaf from From the Sebastopol correspondence of *ome of them scorched and blackened by the London Times: Ithc

horrible heartrending, a revolting.

cannot

^)Ccou]drnot

^c"^

ft,K 1C

a FuscIit concclve

]ike unt0 it

be rauti]ated an(] yet ho]d

JN

w]ien EVERY

]Jm{j

roWj' aQ(1 rj,,ht an,,lc3 to the ]inc 0f th0

our mercies by their general. Tlie wound ed did I say? No, but the dead, the rotten and festering corpses of the soldiers, who were left to die in their extreme agony untended, uncared for, packed as close as they can be bestowed, some on the floor, others on wretched tretles and bedsteads, or pallets of straw, stopped and saturated with blood, which oozed and trickled thro' upon the floor, mingled with tho droppings of corruption. "With the roar of exploding fortresses in their ears, with shell and shot forcing through the root and sides of the room* in which they lay, with tho crackling and hissing of fire around them, these poor fellows, who had served their loving friend and master the Czar but too well, were consigned to their terrible fate. Many lay, yet alive, with maggots crawling about their wour.ds. Many, nearly rnnd by the sccne around them, or seeking escape from it in their extremcst agony, had rolled awa)' under thc beds, and glared out on the heart-strickened spectators—oh! with such looks. Many, with legs and arms broken and twisted, the jagged splinters sticking through the raw flesh, implored aid, water, food, or pity, or, deprived of speech by the approach of death, or by dreadful injuries on the head and trunk, pointed to the lethal spot."

Many seemed bent nlone on making their peace with Heaven. The attitudes of some were so hideously fantastic as to appall and roof one to the ground by a sort of dreadful fascination. Could that blood)' mass of clothing and white bones ever have been a human being, or that burnt black mass of flesh have ever been a human soul? It was fearful to think what the answer must be. The bodies of numbers of men were swolen and bloated to an incredible degree, and the features distended to a gigantic size, with eyes protruding from the sockets, aud the blackened tongue lolling out of the mouth, compressed tightly by the teeth which had set upon in in the death rattle, made one shudder.

In the midst of one of these 'chambers of horrors'—for there were many of them -were found some dead and some living English soldiers, and among them poor Captain Vaughn, of the 00th, who has since succumbed to his wounds. I confess it was impossible for me to stand the sight, which horrified our most experienced surgeons—the deadly clammy stench, the smell of gangrened wounds, of corrupted blood, of rotten flesh, were intolerable and odious beyond endurance. But what must the wounded have felt who were obliged to endure all this, and who passed away without a hand to give them a cup of water, or a voice to say one kindly word to them! "Most of these men were wounded on Saturday—many perhaps on the Friday before indeed, it is impossible to say how long they might have been there. In the hurry of their retreat the Muscovites seem to have carried in dead men to get them out of the way, and to have put them upon pallets in horrid mockery. So that this retreat was secured the enemy cared but little foi the wounded. On Monday only did they receive those whom we sent out to them durino- a brief armstice for the purpose,

wbicli

of Zion, and establish the Kingdom of God _n clock—a pagoda in rums—another

to bear rule over all the earth, and let the oppressed go free. I have never vet talk-,

edsoroughm thesemountamsas ld'din,

the In,.ed States when they -killed.Jo.-eph.

ver

man should lay his hands on me, and say,

prisoner,'the Lord Almighty helping me,.

utruu-j'

I would send that man to hell across lots "The oldest inhabitant could not recog-

was, I believe sought by ourselves, as

our overcrowded hospitals could not attend to any more. "The Great Redan was next visited.— Such a scene of wreck and ruin! All the

in it a as to

C.IOCK

turret with a snot right through the

exP!usion

CIOCK

tower with thc words 'Barwise, London'

th eo

„_

cook b4iues

„,,„

human hU,A

a (he mensils

shcl bad Jo(f in lhe boik.r Md

-*1 blown it and its contents to picces every-

wbere wreck an

destruction. This evi-

now. Let robbers keep their nizeitnow. Climbing up the Redan, which j0Ur letter, you will be certain to kick hands off from me or I will send them encumbered the dead where fhev belong I am always prepared

we

Wltn,esfc?

%e

for such an emergency." ...- tack and defence which cost both sides so

sc,e.n®

of

th®

nnd othcrs

,, recognition. The quantity of broken ga'Of all the pictures lorrors |,jionso

A 1 1 ii ii ii ii

war which hnvebeen presen cf ie «or diiiary the ground here w.is covered with the hospital of bebastopol presents the must

t]u

._m

Thc

',

ifl

tra"ltPinallon S1C bok

anything at all

ow the poor human body trance"

its soul with-j cu.s.d^cnt.rnnGC.

j.s shattered, and everv

ve'in flnd Rr rv is pour ng

onc.

the same time wonder what little Hopkins jr., son ut Bishop Hopkins, ot

j^j]] The building used an a hospital Vermont, assisted by several other Rnisco-

pi]e^ inside thc dockyard 'pal Clergymen, has published a striking ar-

and is situated in the centre of the'tide on the follv and fanaticism of the pro-

pl0_ hibitory law. It argues that everything is

Jan. I good if used in moderation that the Maine "The whole row was peculiarly exposed Jaw is no remedy for intemperance that to the action of shot /ind shell bounding, the aim and end of its supporters is a bad over the Redan, and to the missiles direct- |one that it is follv in thc extreme tonttempt ed at thc Barrack Battery, and it bears in to remedy evils of excess by forbidding alsides, roofs, windows, j'nd door?, frequent together the moderate use of things Unit in

and destructive proofs of the severity of the themselves arc productive of benefits that cannonade. Entering one of these doors I, the wine used at the supper table in Cami, beheld such sight as few men, thank God, of Galilee, and all other wines mentioned in have ever witnessed! In a long low room, the .Scriptures were intoxicating that the supported by square pillars, arched at thc ban of the Almighty rested not ou their top, and dimly lighted through shattered use, but their abuse that the wine driukand unglazed window-frames, lav the woun- ing is not the worst of social evils, but, (as ded Russians who had been abandoned tojwe have of:en said) gluttony far exceeds it that it is nonsense to prohibit hud liquors to the healthy and allow them to the sick, &c.

The Legislature is verv strongly Republican. Thc Senate will probably stand 30 to the House perhaps three to one.—

J", Trlb'j.nc.

FOREIGN WINKS

ON0.

lacerated beyond

anciji Cilli-iJrji(l£Lrcs

here was cxtnior-

)omh pr ofs were the same as

jlC M^lakoR", and in one of them a mu-

was found with a woman's name in

t)

.fluW ei3

THK CLKROV AND THE PROHIBITORY LAW.

out the life I—The Church .Journal, the ablest organ of

niio-ht study here at every step, 'the Episcopal Church, edited by John II.

The Church j-urnal deals a severe blow. Its article will shock the fanatics but the article is marked by sidling good sense throughout.— Cirt. Enn.

'-x..

."^7- ..

RESULT OF THE ELECTION INOUJO. The Ohio election returns are now in from eighty counties, leaving only seven to be heard from. In these the majorities given foot up as follows: Republican 33,o00 IXmocra'ic

Majority 20,'lGlf The State oiticers elected are the follow--i'ig: ^*i

Governor—S.dmon P. Chase. Lieutenant Governor—Thomas II. Ford. Auditor—Francis M. Wright. Treasurer—W'rn. II. Gibson. Attorney General Francis D. Kimball, Member of Board Public .Works—Ak*x-| ander C. Conover.

Judges of Supreme Court—Jacob Brink et-hofT, C. C. Conover. The vote on Governor, in round nuin'i hers, probablv stands about thus: 1 Chase, (Republican) 1 GO,000 Mediil, (Democrat) I 10,000 Trimble, (Know Nothing) 50,000:

LHAKDIES.

AND

—Thc

New York Time* says: "The fact i.s, nineteen twentieths of allf the wines and brandies drank in this country, and nineiv-nine thousandths of all the rare and costly wines over which our high livers smack their lips and roll their eves and astonish their epicurean friends, arc manufactured fur the market—made up by a skiilfui compound of drugs, with infusions of flavoring matter, and a basis of alcoholic or vinous material, ro as to resemble any brand or any sort of liquid that may be desired."

l)i"d in .Tnil

A stranger in town-was taken to iail on Saturday evening last, under the supposition that he was drunk but it afterwards turned out that he had a sinking chill and he died in jail on Sunday night. A Coroner's jury was called, and upon investigation, it was found that thc deceased was a German, and had been in the employ of tho New Albany & Salem railroad at Bradford. —Lafayette Arncricun.

0^7"The people of Connecticut have ratI c-1 an amendment to their State constitution which requires that "every person shall be able to read any article of its constitution, or any article of its statutes," before can exercise the elective franchise in that State. It is estimated this amendment, which goes into immediate effect, will disfranchise one in nefirly every two hundred, in Connecticut.

£tT The umbrella men in New York have been compelled to fit out a dozen whalers, for the purpose of getting whalebone enough to keep up their business.— The ladies have put the whole stock on hand into their pctticoats.

:-'i

The white population of the free

States, according to the census of 1850, was 13,238,60—of the slave States, 6,184,477.

Or^-IIorace Greely, having been aecuePd down South of being a Know Nothing, writes to a Mr. Posey, who inquires of him as to the truth of the charge, as follows: "SIR:—I

never was consciously within a

mile of a Know Nothing lodge, and,never could have been induced to join one on

"VT7"". any account. By placing your loot against

tbe auti,or 0f tile

desperate at-

«,j]|y

report notjced

great liar. .a Yours, HORACE GREELY., A. POSET, Es^."

,'a