Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 16 February 1856 — Page 1
%v -csxr.^TS*tt'fi
.gi Mrrf Sl»H? irJ 'jdf: lis ", fit pit "^c'ty'i »,r3" Or*"
«r» Wfcirt
-'rrs
r-'!
like the violets that grow ®'Along the daisies in the dell Are her eyes^-tho stars of night
-a-: •^•7Si/, tVitii "l*k
Ci
Ne'er a mortal heart did swell „With such sweot end puro delight t„ As the eyes of Bonnie Bell. 3 }j- &.
..... J.j
_Mn»io trembles on the Hp Of the faiiy Bonnie Bell OI I'd gi vo soeh sweets to sip,_
Wealth that Groesas ne,eT could tell, I would-coin my brain and soul, Could tho mintage buy a spell ftt'vi. fyjl-. That would waft-mo to my goal— "V til Waft and win me Bonnie Belli:,
tl'77
rTs
rrsft
-^fwTr.- [Evoning Mirror.
WESTWAllD nol^ROOM FORTH E LITTLE ONES. fci The Cleaveland Plaindealer of Friday last, says:
»^«*T
the supper, and gloriouslv paid all the bills!"
The partners selected, spoke well for the
judgment of the girls. Thc Times says:
o'clock, when the ladies escorted their beaux home, and them went off to their own.^
®kkomkna. of the
-Rblaxixg the
rff.t S3
if.
•. BONNIE BELT-.'
•.£•' Like two rose buds crushed in snow •?. Are the choeks of Bonnie Bell,
T'ir
Aa the sound of silver fino,
tho voice of Bonnie Bell Wit, like bubbles on tho wino, Pare as pfearl in occarfiBhell, Pparlcles through her golden themo
»Sf5
1
fc:zd:
mo
1
Joyful a marriage boll biys?t& 1 could glide adown life's streara^*'15^ 01 ,f..- In ono boat with Bonnie Bell.
\c
1
One of the most interesting sights might islaturc,^ and I'll go agin all banks and Lave been witnessed yesterday morning at eternal improvements, and if there's any of the Railroad Depot. There arrived on thc|y°
from beggary and a life of penury and crime 3'0U
bracing air of the prairies and forests of the Sr'°oerJ
"West. The sight of the clean and comfortable clothes and blight faces of four score
change-which may result in virtuous ami
useful our unqualified adoiira-
ur
je Shore train two passenger cars of lit-' skinned, jest sa3T the word, and I'll light tie children between the ages of five and upon you like a nigger upon a woodchuck. ten years. They numbered about eighty, My constituents sent me here, and if you and were brought from the destitute and wane to floor this two-legged animal, hop miserable precincts of New York city, like on, just as soon as you like for, though I'm the Five Points, and had been rescued
a
them. such people before. After expostulation, 'j Most of them were orphans—or children
of people eo destitute as to be unable to pro- ^10 l°w°r chamber, upon which he ride for them, and they were now under the sheathed his knife, flung his gun on his care of a gentleman and three kind-hearted shoulder, and with a profound congree reladies, exchanging the foul atmosphere and marked: miserable quarters of pent-up attics and "Genilemcd, beg your pardon. cellars of New York for the healthy and
1
boys and girls a pleasant sccae, but tho «teni of tho cold tins year is greater '-•amenity wliiol, lins scoured for tl,om "l"?
tion. Mr. Phillips the Superintendent of ™ucI'1"1-la]7
Toledo road, gave thc party a free pass-
age, and they went on to Oberliu last evening, intending to stop there to recuperate by a good night's rest from the fatigues of a long railroad journey. They will bo placed in families at the West, and their •education and comfort duly provided for.— They will not be exempt from the usual 'issitudes of thc world, but they will be rescued from that almost inevitable certainty of vagrancy, misery, crime and prostitution which aro so rifu in the povertyStricken einks of thc great metropolis.
The Privileges
of
Leap Year.—The
Lowell ypwt says that thcr leap-year ball of the Carpet factory girls came off according to announcement, on Thursday evening and was a very pleasant affair. The ladies, it says, "to the number of about, seventyfive, healthy, robust, cheery and lovely, took their carriages, called for their beaux wero drived to the hail, where ladies managed, selected their own partners, ordered
was
livin
The company broke up about two' off and took in its stead the abominations
Lakes.—An opinion
quite prevalent in this country that the Vftier in the lakes rises gradually forsev•n years, and then falls for the same period. MpJ. Lachlan has investigated the subject, collected all the facts which could be Mcerlained in relation to itfor the last sixtyfive years, and he comes to thc conclusion that there is no regular septennial or any other great floods in any of the great lakes. He is inclined to believe that differences in barometrical pressure in different parts of the lakes and lunar attractions at the time of vernal and autumnal equinoxes may have •otne influence in causing the daily oscilla tions and other irregular transient tides.
Rule.—The President of
.! tho Know-Nothing Stato Council of ^Wisconsin has issued a circular to the dependent lodge*, announcing a change of platform, '"making eligible to office Protestant foreigners who are thorougly trained and edneated in American principles. You are -therefore (he aaya) at liberty to admit into -your councils persons of that olass who are aataralised citizens of the United States and of known integrity of character, not to exceed in number one-third of foreign-born citiicoi in each council."
*'1 •sa.tq
he passed, ran up stairs into the Senate
Chamber, set his rifle against the \va
and bawled out.
"Stningers, whar's the "an
"Walk thi3 way, said the cr *,
is at this moment lighting a real pnncipe,
and he was sworn without inquiry. When the teller came to count noses he found that there was one Senator to many present. The mistake was soon discovered, and the huntsman was informed that he did not belong there. "Fool who with your corn bread?" he roared 'you can't flunk this child no how you can fix it—I'm elected to this ere Leg-
Run Oi'F.—One John Niblo, who had
bccn an actlve at
g. he
"We wore amused, however, on obscrv- known.— State fceniinel. fng bright-eyed lasses, with roguish eyes| *s
house, on the ground floor, walking about furn tureof even the best bed-rooms, with theirhats on, smoking cigars.
1IS
oratory gentlemen who wants to get
little smarter than nny other quadruped
Cfin turn out
through the efforts of kind ana charitable! After this admirable 'harangue, he put people who had gathered them up and bowic knife between his teeth, and took clothed, and were now sending them to the "P h' rifle, with "Come here old Suke, great West, where plenty of bread and stand by me." At the same time pointing comfortable homes will be found for all of
nt tlie
an(
d,'ove•
Chairman, who, however, had seen
tlie raaR was
persuaded that he belonged
er
]ePpiDO
•a
that
me in?" at the same time taking out his credentials.
S.,*-- ..--'V. «, ,, -I I
Juuuota
But
didn't think that lower room was
maY s^oli'
The Extent
of the
Coi.d Weather.—
o:h wi hm
.th.0,
flh (ll!st
vl
^'h^h'tants. It extends,
towards the tropios, and is doing
wbe re
visits of the Frost
Kinij have been heretofore unknown. At Austin, in Texas, may are putting up ice four inches thick "grown" in the river near that city. This is in latitude 30-t. or only some five degrees north of tho tropic. In Florida it is feared th At the orange trees are ruined. In the neighboihood of Louisville Ky., the peach and other fruit trees have been killed by the frost. In North Carolina, thousands of dollars, it, is said,' have been lost by the injury done to the pine trees of that region, though we supposed that that tree could stand cold. In Virginia thc apticots have been almost entirely destroyed. In Boston, the cold weather was so severe that the linden trees which adorn the side walks, split w?th the frost as if a wedge had been driven into them.' Bnt these will close up again in the spring. In the Southern part ef this State, where the winters are usually light the same thing has happened to fruit trees.
knoxville, Tcnn.,
recontly discovered to" have two wives
at
(lue
tr:?,upto demure young gentlemen, and "so-1 several years ago when he was a .t the honor of their "hand for the 'next '^Democrat," and probably if he had concCtltlion!'—who could refuse? One en-i tinued a Democrat, never would have been raptured soul engaged himself to eight dif-1 compelled to run away for fear of punishferent ladies for Monie Musk, and to sixjmen'-—Evansville Journal. others for Hull's Victory! Many a poor Perhaps not. For "when he was a ii.art hid away under a vest was irretriev- Democrat," he had one saving qual^-, and ably ruined. But it conld not bo helped." a potent one too, but when he threw that
once sloped to parts un-
to say that he committed
of Know Xothingism, he presented such an unredeemable combination of sins that no known country, could have held him.— Let him keep the "unknown."—I7ra. Cour.
Cold Weather
and Tns
Potatoes.—
The Louisville Courier says: The late intense cold weather proved unusually destructive to vegetables that had been stored ,P.
potatoes. At a fair estimate half a million
The frost extended into the ground to the
many localities three to fourfeet. This was
sufficient to freeze the potatoes that had
aw ay for winter use, and utterly ruined the !p 1 is one strce-. or avenue the
1
depth of over two feet everywhere and in ?-PT J"1
containing from "two hundred to a thou-«.Wlth ,Pc[Iun5fs-
sand bushels. They are first covered with
a4laver of hay, grass or straw, and then a
weather penetrated the covering of the po-
amination was made, had frozen them thro''
to the very bottom of the pile, and of course1££
been for shipment tent that they were
rof,course
ff:*r: to .«* -1. Is -jfc^cr.t'vi V,^ odi* ?.c. 4i •:•?. "k m"2-
7
..., AN ARKANSAS LEGISLATOR, LIFE IN TFIE ISLAND OF CI BA.
I ADEMOCMTIC FAMILY- mSPAPEE--rDEVOTED TO POLITICS, NEWS, MISCELLANEOUS LITERATURE,'"MECEMignARTS,
A member elect of the..lower chamber of Hon. Zadock Pratt delivered a lecture to stand for a moment -and gaze in .at the the Legislature of Arkansas was persuad-: before the Kingston Literary Association "window, if you see a preLty face, and if you ed by some wags of his neighborhood, that
Qn |(h ins( wbjoh flnd reported
if he did no reach the State House at 10 j, Albany Argus. We clip some in- be very likely rewarded l,v clock on the day of assembling he could not be sworn, and would lose his seat.—-
terestingf extracts from it:
The Hotels in Cuba.—Whoever expects
living is as different from our own
can be
JIUCIV I:J,
-ji
ijttte can be said in favor of the
arrangements at most of the hotels.
guests flock in, and after every other avail-
citiu
10,-a.ble
ANCI
ui
place has been occupied
hefin put jnto lhft flmih 6 bftd
How the Cubans live.—You rise early and
drink a cup or two of coffee while you avfi:'first.
hibitorv the excellence and variety of vesr-
etiibk-s do away, to some extent, with the want of if, and he who has roughed the world lor himself can livo very comfortably. Catalonian wine is generally used at break-
is very palatable. The cooking is general-
lv good, but even on the tables is the coarse brown the process of refining is not considered necessary where it is made.— In fact, they seek to live with the least expenditure of bsbor, and though it may suit them very we]l,*f must confess to a temperament suited to working a little harder and having things a little better.
A Coffee Plantation in full bloom.—One of the most beautiful uig-'ots that ever at-
green tree from like en to twenty feet high, istantly forming with the with a.large and smooth bright green leaf hours of tho day. the flowers are white and sweet scented, and grow in bunches at tho base of the leaf. I.v Oi It is usually planted in lots of about eight acres, laid out in wide walks, the borders
rested upon each tree, and the whole forms
least beautiful of auy, aro by far the most'
profitable, some of the largest yielding an
stretch toward the plantations, lined on each side with the nnequaled royal palm, interspersed with other trees. The palm overtops all the others, many of them lisin
.-°ne.
1 ll ,r
mil
VOLUME VII. CRAWFORDSVILLE MONTGOMERY-COUNTY, INI)!, FEBRUARY^lG/tee^NO^l.'
income of over two hundred thousand dol lars per annum, while the smallest produces about one hundred thousand. Sugar, coffee and tobacco are the three great staples of thc island, but sugar yit-Us about double the per centage of prolii of either of the others, and in-fict the culture of both coffee and tobacco has very much dccreas- most comprehensive mill in tho ed.
a height of one hundred and twenty fcet° ^et!/o
and the truck isas.ouod
they had been-turned in a latnc Ihese
a enues were much improved by the exer-1
lions of Governoi General Tacon, who,
with all his faults, was an iron willed man,. I'll!?
island. Fhere is one street or avenue, the'
A
asc0 IsabeI3a
of dollars will not cover the loss on potatoes, ^xt
5.n
med losc
1D°
lnt
lhe
of JsIan 1 Sl0wl ass
/..-W* Vlfc» .1' "i f\* 'as'
t?
Jtis notconsidered a breach of etiquette
lift your hat find "beautiful," you will
as you priss on.:
uld eem
Jlcr
if vou have
the double bed inhonor of
bein" the first comer, it is ten chances-to
ass st
S 1C a
80 after she
eVfcU if
tJiey
Tirsi'
ie
3n,e
of which are planted with orange, bansn, based upon the census and election returns, mango, and other tropical trees, the partial shows Lint it is increasing very rapidly.— shade of which is necessary to preserve tho
coffee tree from injury. The luxuricnt,, .. ,. climbing plants of the tropics intertwine At the P.esidential election :n the branches and offer every shade of beau- total vote cast was 13,5'7. As thepopulatiiul flower, and when the cou'ee plant is lien had increased considerably in the perialso in blossom they are so largo and abun-'|od between 1350 and 1G52, it must then dant that it seems as it a cloud of snow had i,
never
Tt strikos our
st'*eets
city go home to our diuner, and many of theni do business after (hat meal. Fish, flesh and fowl, of almost all kinds, cover the table, together with cucumbers, green corn, and all the fruits which are luxuriant Severe Weather the Souxn.-Tht in us is as a a iv luxury, the duty charged being almost pro-1
Charles, Calcasieu Parish Loui iana) Press, of the 12th inst., speaking of the
a a
The Homer, (Caliborne Parish) advo-'p
matfi, lasting as it has for nearl}r three }jerC)
traded tny eye was a coii'ec plantation in weeks. The earth has been frozen as sol- steps of the capitol to take the oath of felull bloom. The coffce plant is an ever- id as a rock ail the time and ice lias been con-.
nn inn
llave
a scene of natural splendor, fully equal to recently in Texas, no the moat exalted idea of the garden of Eden.: 547, votes were polled.
The sugar plantations, however, though the rato to this, we should population of 723,-
7
-o u„
worlu IS
tp ,-l a r„, The lloor surface of this immense structure Evening on tne .ivcnucs—L ho avenues
out of the eity extend for miles as they j.,.
The leaves are from eight to ten feet Ionv -joimnn Peron5'j
for W!
''i
l0anta,as
fiv«seP^ate
nlcr
'..
stalues
S
and
'Qte^l
been gathered and covered up bv the farm-!« ones on either side of the main avenue, this region of country The remanc^le crs, who generally pile them away in hills' S
Rrdens
CoLD
ai?d
rt
layer of earth to the denth of 15 to 20 inch- each, silver -livery, w.to boots and those of several of his neighbors, hare been es, and occasionally two feet. ^The unex-»SPUr'. walks are crowdcd wuh the ad- almost ruined by the bursting open of the pected and long continued excessive cold'^
ircr?
°,
,JD^n
cou es,e
re the
we
7''
:K
(1
be-on near o(W,000., ,At the election
nrr
,i,rilo
moc cc^
nnmihihnn in 1 RAO Tulmrf 1 r-./«.
population in 1850. Taking the lower m-
any case, the aggregate at this time must exceed half a- million. This evinces that Texas has grown as rapidly as Iowa.
The Laroest ilrrx i.\
the
cres TIlcre
^J^Th"
load the air degree of cold is shown by a rather smgu-
P^f.
J6t
and tash-Jar phenomenon which we learned• .jester-
la
da*-
A
volantes every evemng, the postiluon Coatsburgtold us that his own orcnard and
ies, exchanging^trees.
Utoos, and in'many instances "Where an i^ the cosuj .fan keeps time since the coldest days we have experien-
f.
,!f
shipment were also frozen tosuchan ex- tli#»T ihrrw nvpr rc^.^a Th» unnoflrftnpd
unsaleable
he
ene
JS "A
.m'J tii'i
7
a srrcet smile
Any attempt at what they
rudeness, however, would be
while th
swears o^irne^ers^rrroraTntrasion^ their own is mere empty courtesy.--1 one that madyiim utt^ an mvoluntary .' bed is filled up-in your room, and new
i-°
t°o, if you see a lady going irom church ejaculation..{ "V
one if you have not a companion and ifhe y° ^r your admiration, and both parties of a young woman seated alongside the is not ready to die of a fever or some other separate, pleased with the kindness ot couq| jdiiver. As soon as she beheld him she disease, you may think yourself fortunate.' Plimcnt»
carriage, she is glad to. have you of- Wl'he gate was swung back and the wag-
Iwr, even if you are a stranger, ion.parsed.out. He worked his way up to
pi'etty girl, and you tell hermit amid.the dense throng of people, nud ex-
gtfls she pleasantly thanks claiming "Sarah!" attracted the attention
World.-The
tho Pacific,' at Lawrence, Mass.—
is 16 aci os the ]ar es
is ti acres—tiie largest mill in England is 1 acres. There are now in operation 40.000 cotton spindles and 10,000 worsted spindles and these are to be increased to 30,000. and £0,000 respectively.
r--
tion ofcoUon is 2U000 oound
500)000 pounds per
0
nieet again.—] answered "John," and losing all control
women" as rather singular at over herself, fell forward on the haunches One lady from the Northern States of the horse, from which she rolled aide-
irom me i\onnern states
(oi
dressino*, and also eat two or three oranges, j?was utterly shocked, as sh* appeared in Avav into the arm of a tonu husband. cited the deepest and' intensest interest, after which you pass away the time to tbct^
for the first time, to see twogen: jf Despise the general merriment Ot the 'l00
best advantaoe till 9 o'clock, when you tlemen, liit their hat^ to her with the com-Jcrowd, Sarah and John held each other for standards were all faded and in ribands,
restaurant that the beautiful lady's refresh- cares if they do laugh. He's my dear liusments had been paid for by the gentleman band, and I'll kis3 him if all tho Wurld Vv'ho admired the glances of her bright stood by i" eyes.
A.* I
The thermometer fur several javs ran-! ged as low as twenty-four degrees above zero, and ice was formed about two inches
last and dinner, but no coffee. It is soft thick. The orange trees hereabouts are ..mortal sage of the Hermitage, that the bigand pleasant, about as strong as cider, and nearly ail killed, and the few crops of canc oted crusade against foreigners should rewhen taken with a lump of ice from Boston, standing are completely blasted. Thc jceive such a rebuke from the people of the trees are bending, reeling and breaking un- State beneath whose soil his mortal remains
er
°P
Cr, jn to,ncre 3
gentleman wno lives not far from
°.f **7, ^vhue the grace-. In passing hrough his orchard recenLy,
(1
obse
^P!
they were all ruined "'v" horseback or a soldier with nxed( son on Bear Creek they found one or[bayonet on foot, are always in sight. chard, a large tree a foot through, split width of three or four inches, ten feet into the larger limbs. they sometimes throw over their faces .a The appearance was as though the tree had dark, rich veil. been struck by lightning.— Quincy Rep.
rf, •, tjd V.. jr~vi l-payonet on toot, are- always sight. chard, a large housands of barrels pi potatoes that had 2Vte Ladies of Cuba.—The ladies seldom open to the wic en showed away .the city and vicinity
7
ed ma
ar the
ar- bonnets, caps, or carry a parasol— and up some te
"J,
tr ees bt
b/
«JK 89
iafa ri, \Vi so tt(
Meeting with a-Wife.—The following interesting incident we copy from a California paper: "The arrival of an ocean steamer is always the soenti of a large crowd of spectators.at the wharf. One afternoon, when the Panama came in, a tall individual from
The Democ-rattc Paut-/ axi
lcn
cra lc
tio, the total would be 501,017 so that, in .their enemie
party
wool Once a month the two 'V I
a month the two!
., thousand persons assemble at the cashier's have eve- been vour c-ir-Pri' r,.mii.c n-r -4 and did much for the improvement of tholoffl ,.e paTS out 8S0030 l0 then, 7'. J" fHer -1 I '|',
.u.i 7
,ge3j appropriating to each one the
that docs credit to the tfiste xact amount she has earned.--Dailj
at
T'"
HATUEP..-The extreme seventy
m^ficent palms, vul- of tne weaihet for the last two or three
drives, two narrow- weets nas probacy been unprecedented »n
°P
ec on
^^east side. \V iulc vis,ting a per-
the mountains, who unfortunately h'ad no military spectacle. ticket to secure him admittance on the dock, stood outa-idu of the gate, watching through ..... its open panels with gjreat anxiety, as if he
light,^ ,I must, say that a compliment of expect'ed the arrival uf some dear, friend.— and made a speech of welcome. The hethe kind I have mentioned from on Ameri- After a full huur thus occupied, Lis heart roes of the day marched in the following can, is esteemed more highly than from [gladdened by the approach of a small frfr- order: :S. their own countrymen, *as they consider niture wagon,containing several women, The division of the line, composed" of ours to come from the heart, while they among whom hp ^cognized the features of
Noble hearted woman. That was a proud sentiment, and did her heart great honor in .it.? Utterance. *t', •f
A\ Eloquent Thtbute
ward
ale
wi,l.h
care of the 8tli in^t says* -j-insults offered to his* native land. Ilis
have had one o. the longest and most breezes that -blew over the blue bay of .-1,^ preaching to his congregation on tho intensely cold snel. of weatner e\ er ,expe- Dublin, and wreathed in the roses that grow subject, of Dannel in the lion's den, and his nenced bv the oldest mnabitant of this cli-
on
,h Green sod of Erin. But if, a.s the
0
a]itiV
iepiion of a few
a ou
POPULATION IN
A estimate of thc opulation ot Texas,
In 1850 lhc census gavo it
njo5D2
lhrce rcg
me nore, iioui wnien sue loueu aiue- jas^ terrible winter before Sebastopol, cx-
to
Jackson*.—In
a sneecb recently delivered by Colonel Ed-
Pickett, Jr., in reference to the Democratic victory in Tennessee, he said: It was well for the memory of the im-
der thc weight of sleet—the most disas- repose. In every drop of hi* blood, Jack- have been miserable looking objects indeed terous ever witnessed here. The mortali- son was an Irishman. His father was one at the moment of.the.fall of yeb.ttstopo^ur. ty among the cattle will be unprecedented, of the Iirish patriots whoso brow turned month ago. *•*/..
New Orleans was ascending the
to the constitution of the United States
whisper had reached his ears that the President elect was an Irishman, and therefore an anti-American, one hand would have been laid on his bn i-t, and the other would have grasped his sword, and he would have said, "yes, in every drop of my blood and every nerve of my arm, I
very rapidly.— an an Irishman but here at least is an that while it beats will love
iahabi
American he.
the
ixo Mex.—1he Democratic party has ever young as when the shepherda first noted less than 45,- been the only true tnend ot the working them from the plains of Shina!" Applying the first. men of the country. As a mighty bulwark, "What shadows we are and
pride and wealth, and power, attempt- ows we pursue."
to enact laws calculated to benefit the!
few to the iniuvv of the many, the Demo- Creosotefor\
ha=
stood between them ying ^thus far thou sh
5,
who cow rofess Such 1QtfcQSe luVG for
who cow profegs such
{l'cj
are
an
rich ?.nd poor. We call upun the working men of thc countrv* to lak heed and he' not deceived, by the deceptive plea of the'i
Know EotLing prew, whose conductors in
days of yore hare stigmatized them by the vilest epithets. Look over tho brink of the
precipice, whence they are decoying tou. I'i
Remember the history of the Dast. and in'^07r:i'
eec true to ou
°T1^" £. "w"
1,-1 pro^ your evr^ 'rn 'faUl°f*.
annum,' and 500,000 ol'l ed friend'for rour re^'on«" Thn
irienu.,
elected to the senate of Louisiana, by t!iirty majority, in place ofHon. B. WictcLiFrE, elected Governor of that State. This gives the Democrats a majority of two in the Louisiana rena'.e. $ 1-
fr^-The Boston Chamber of Commerce Congress fyr a
have resolved to petition general bankrupt law.
mOftgl
2 aJ& $ %A .-•
Heroes
as
it
Wore- 'are still shiding in their courses, clear and
rri, \r •,
!t
fo and no farther." Icrcosotc applied to warts. lie applied it The Democratic p.uiy has over been in freely to an obstinate warty excresence on favor of those laws, which, like the rain
eJ
cvor'
This
easi,-v
the
7u1
ia£
intense love for you "-LiC ,v
E
*i.u, .,1 u^on
to break down and destroy vour true! inluctmext for a Kate. Anorev/ J.
you to Dresk flown and destroy vour true I ndictment for a friend, the Democratic party. Be!:» ve them Parker, the founder of the 1-Cr.ow Nothing not. They are wolves in sheep's clothing, 'Ordrr in Rochester,
and will prore themselves to be such when ed in that place, on the 28th ult., for comit is to their advantage to d'j so. Haiti- imilting a rape, on the 20th of December more Repullitan. jlast, on the person of Sarah Dav .-, of the —n—Ti T~
!ESiID0
ftn
&C.,:,•«*-*
?.'J *r-' »..• attw
^liiExcH
at
Sebastofol.—The
Pans correspondent oi Wxt National Inteluyencer gives a spirited accbiint of ther tri
umphant entry cfthe heroes of Sebastopol into Paris on the 29th of December. The
world has seldom witnessed so thriliiair The city was magnifi
cently decorated, and the Em'peror^with a
inoSt
brilliant suite joined the procession
menLs 20th and 60th.and th«
07th. .. Then came the Imperial Guard, composed of the battallion of the Firsts Chan-
vs
indignatu^xal.the oppression and. Locked Jaw.—The old case of thh dis-
oa?e
mother's chceks were fanned by the soft referred to bv a Scotch clergyman, who,
eg»*
ments of Voltigents, thc Artillery and Engineers, tho, tvyo regiments .of (Grenadiers, and the regiment of Gendarmery.
The poor fellows of the line, 20th 50tb, ami 97th regiments, which has been longest in the East, who spc.nt the whole of tho
deep. Their glorious
hands, and shouts of applause hailed thdoa as they passed along! And tho men themselves, meagre, worn, and haggard, many of them, bore unmistakable evidenco in their faces, forms, and uniforms of the severe and long suffering to which they had been subjected. As they passed by, with their company of wounded men in front, of the hundreds of thousands that were thcro no eye was dry but their own. I could not keep my own eye dry, and I would not have done so if I could. Yet near four months have passed since those hardships which have left such deep and long tracca in the physiognomy of those who endured them have been tcreminated. Thev must
which stands recorded, must be thut
miraculous deliverance from imminent peril thus proceeded:
l'And
S
the constitution and thc liberality it guar- tears over the little lot of man. Thouar.tees, and here an American sword shall sands of generations, all as noisy as our be ready to defend that liberty till this arm!own» li!ive been swallowed by time, and is palsied in death." there remain no record of them any more yet Arctures and Orion, Sirus and Pleiades
what d'ye think was the reason
why the lions didna tear Daniel a' to pieces, and eat him ftp, eaven as a cat cats up a mouse? I dan't say nane o'ye can tell. noo. Very well, I'll tell ye how it was: I he Laird above, he r/in'm the locked jaw!"
A Beautiful Thought.—Carlisle says, "when I gaze into the stars they look down upon uae with pity from their serene and silent spaces like eyes glistening with
what shad-
Warts.—Dr. Raine3 of St.
Thomas's Hospital, London has written an
article to thc Lancet, detailing the effect of
lh/'
?,:Scr.
l!i0n
and sunshine of heaven, shed their bies-, sticking plast' r. I his course he pursusings alike upon tho Irgh and the low, the
covered it over with a picco
^^'e'lays for two weeks, when
the wart r/ai found to have disappeared eavin^' the part beneath it quite healthy.
certainly a remedy which can be
applied by any person.
I
Deaths
from
wri
doing so think of that party which has ever season many persons have lost their lives
Freezi.vo.-A missionory of
the American Sunday School Union, in
that during the Intensely cold
^c.'end your rights and in attempts to cross th* prairies. Recently
con^g It
tb ttr Pons nnd a da
met Ul,S tra ,c late lost llieir
«^ter,
^7-
cold was extreme and after wander-
»bout awhile, they sank down in the
re?7
CJ. B. Lahalson*, oemocrat, is husband, and is said to be a reportable woman. Oh! these pure, mcral, Pope-
hating Know ^Nothings.
Thc result of this election conclusively shows that Know Nothingism is fast dyinT out in Louisiana. At the la=t GubernatoriiTl of oats produced fifty bushels to the acre, election Mr. W-ckuffe carried the west From the poorest and most worn piece of Feliciana district by a majority of seven.— ground on his farm thirteen fcuis^red bushAt th Democratic increased to seventy-three.
York, wai indict-
city. Mrs. Dav:3 is living with her
Poxaxb Oats.—A correspondent of- tho Louisville Journal gives Li* experience with re fe ranee to the advantages of Poland oats over ordinary varieties. His last crop
.r.ua uiatii^tuy a lU'-.jUHLV U1 ftCVCD.*— vu iauu vuti muci cu uu&il* 6pccial election, already noticed, the els were obtained the second year from Lhe cratic majority in this district has been product of three bushels sown the Grstycar
abating a loss often bushels by rats. I A Vsar Bad Bill.—A new counterfeit bank-note is described as having fur a vi.7^ nette a "female with a rake bv. & im
