Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 29 March 1856 — Page 3

t5l A

~A

KNOW^NoTaitfG OF, TUX48£.CEKTUR7.

Kxdft- Nothing

Arnold, known.bitherlo (it must^pj^ni^

other security than what depended oji the

viz.: that he had latelv seen their mean and:

"We have it from the highest Catholic

their lodge in his vicinity,

Contrast Daniel Webster's opinion with that of Know Nothings, both of the las contury and of the present time •aid: ,v I "We are all Prodestanfs, genrrally speaking, but you arc all aware that there pre-] pides at the head of the Supreme Judiciary of the United States a Unman Catholic: and no man, I suppose, through the whole Unifed States, imagines tliat the Judictturos is

Ichb

safe—that the adminstraiion of public justice is less respectable or less secure, because the Chief Justiec of the United States has been and is a firm adherent of that religion. And so it is in every department of society amon.i u=». "Tn both houses of Con^res*. in all public offices, we proceed on the idea that a man's religious belief is a matter above human law' and that it is a question to he nettled between him and his Maker, for adof )!inof or rejecting revealed truth.

N\'»SH!.V( TON'. 1-M) "P..

Highly important dispatches from London! Clarendon refuses to male apology for Cramptor. 1 President proposes to Fend in a war message! Look out for squalls 1

TN

haste,

(From the best authority.)

Washington,

Toe

OF t^' d1V^-A%d

Ibl Webster.—Brigadier

Dan

General Benedict

eil

rfj,e

exertions of the parent country (England) former do not. As is with the body, so it "for delirerence. In proof or illustration, witli the mind and temper. The strong he asserted a fact upon hisown knowledge.

Pflrson Brownlow, of Brownlow's Knox- {J1C time the animal takcslogrow to its full ville Whig, in portions of an address on! size. But man, of all the auimals, is the one Know ETothinL'ism, by the editor, :!hrit seldom comes up to his average. He

Snooks.

(From another correspondent.)

Wasminntov,

Feb.

*2"—!.\

W

o'clock.

.• No truth in the report that important dispatches had been received from Mr. Buchanan. The Crampton affair will be satisfactorily adjuste.d. The reports of all the other correspondents arc utterly false. 'II. G. (From a very high source.)

asutxctox,

Feb. 28—5 r.

.t.f

The Cabinet in secret session to-day!— ("nfuvorable dispatches from Mr. Buchanan! Clarendon guilty of duplicity

I !.

Ban

Crampton\ will have to tfo will have tfXgo Matthews will have to go !.! Rowecroft will have to go too—all go!

Gassuags,

Jr.1/

Midnight, March 1.

The dispatches by the British steamer

nro in. Clarendon and Buchanan have punished for the crime of lefusing to vote been by the cars. Crampton did not go for Banks for Speaker. He was the author to bed last night. Marcv is excited, and'of the successful proposition to send acomsnys there is no u«c to try to patch up a n^ttee to Kansas to investigate the questions pcaco.tis long r\s Palrucrston is in power. in dispute between Whitfield and Rceder. *. Kr.vnoLF. Sc-n.. Extract of a private letter:

WAshiKiTrox, March 2.

There will be no war.

JEEU.ES YELLOWI'LUSH.

HIGHLY IMPORT AX

Special dispatch to the Daily Bluster.

Wasiiixoton

March 2—daylijjh.t.

Crampton is packing up to £ro. I have this on undoubted authority. War in less than sixty days! Let it come!

v-t VERY ISTERESTIJCG.

(Private and confidential.] Ths Mosquito business, I ham, will not be settled until next summer—probalily in August. There will be a conference on this business over on the Jersey Flats. The bed bug interest will be fully repre«2»ted.

1

VICHY LATEST—AX ULTIMATUM.

Esejxisively to the Evening Rattletrap.

Yours,

J!

6 o'clock.

harbor, is completed. This declaration is considered in well-informed circles here, as nn equivalent to eternal peace.

I have just heard that war is not to be dccUred until Stevens'Steam Batterv Rt Hoboken, for the defence of New York Donclson would be no wuere.-JWA Xjmon

Agjjof Man.—But few men die of

age. Almost all die of disapointment, passional, mental, or bodilv toil, or accident. The passions kill men sometimes, even sod-

,^

301c comnion

ed very unjustlv,) as "the traitor," was kwith passion, has little exaggeration in it good Know Nothing. In an address to the "JfltAf #*m, *um. *hsm-ftor-. American army, he said "Eren (heir last stake, frelifl&n) he represented to be in such danger* as to have no

nfc a ajlca{]

assuring lum

•And there is a grmt disiinc'ion which ijn the mean time, fid! in with some exli is somelimos overlooked, and whi -h I am nfrnid is now too often overlooked in New Krvjland, the glorious inheritance of the of ihe Pilgrim*.

Men, fr their religious sentiments, are accountable to C». I. and to fl.d onlv. DAX1KL WKBSTKR.

a it

A New York paper gets up tho following decide.! hit, at the expense of die Wa.shnijton letter writers Special to the Moi nip.LT Thanderblasf.

expression, eboked

for even thousrh not suddenly fatal, strong passions shorten life. Strong bodied men often die young—weak men live longer than the strong, for the strong use their Istrength, and the weak have none to use.

latter take care of themselves the

are apt l0

t{-lC

profligate Congrcs$ at ^lass for the sou! of a winch live, in general, temperate lives [nine days, and both his hands and feet lioman Catholic in purgatory, and partici- have generally their prescribed term ofi

pating in the rites of a Church against years. The horse lives twenty-five year? bodies of a Jirs. Atkins, and three others whose anti-Christian corruptions, their pi*jtheox fifteen or twenty the lion £it?out vvlioso nnrncs a.ie unknown. All belonging otis ancestors would have witnessed with twenty the dog ten or twelve the rabbit to the ship John Rulledge, Captain Kelly, •their blood.—Dodsley 8 Annual Register for ei^ht the geinea pic six or seven. These '0,f ork. 1701,p. 47,48. numbers all bear a similar proportion to

was to live a Jiimtired rears, according to his

-j physiological law, for five times twenty arc

onf.

authority, (he prudently omiishis voucher) reaches, on the average, four times his thnt Catholics are all absolved from allegi- growing period' the eat six times and the ance to this Government, because they can rabbit even ei-ht times the standard of the take the oath of allegiance without commit- measurement. The reason is obvious— ing perjury by the simple process of meijtalman is not only the pio?t irregular, and the reservation! I have no donbt that Chief'most intemperate, but the most laborous Justice Taney of Baltimore, and now at

an(]

the head of the Supreme Courtof the Uni- the most irritable of ail animels and there ted States, took the oath tosupport the con- js reason to believe though we cannot fell stitulion, with this mental reservation." what an animal secretly feels, that more

Jn the abovo the Rev, Mr. Brownlow evi- than any other animal man cherishes wrath tlently judges Catholics, and anion- them 'f keep Varra, and consumes himself with tlie fire of his own secret reficctions. the revered Chief Justice Tanev, by Know _______

Nothing ethics. As an instance, we state p0UTIC5

upon the authority of a highly respectable

hundred but instead of that, he scarce-

J^rd worked of all animals. He is also

AJfD PlETV

.„T

he

-Americans"

peop]c

gentleman from the country, that a neigh.. which they turn from one employment to "bor of his informed him that the Know- another is truly astonishing. Diversity of Nothings asked him to become a member of Pursu.its exceedingly attractive to this interesting brotherhood. .L hey

among other inducements, thatafterhe had black the eyes of a "bogtrotter," and then become a member nobody need know it, i^o into their lodges and get down on their and that he could even go before a marjis- kncc-s and open the meeting with prayer tratc and tat. oath that he ma not a mcmler,!Tl.,c'ir pi«y llml oflhcjrwmg l»» who came home from a camp meeting anu nnd yet not violate his conscience: Let no nolliinr fur a whole week afterwards but reader imagine that this is a fancy sketch, the facts can be substantiated.

nn(j

the facility with

teresting brotherhood. They will burn

(jovvn a c],urc11,

belabor a Dutchman, or

n^: ."SHout! Shout! we orefgainin' ground." An old dou- run in one day, while she was en paired in her religious exercises, and Ti i",v'no

wa)'temptation,

made a grab at a

bone on the (able when he was' saluted with the following pious poetical address: '•If von ilont get cut I'll lvnnc'c vott down, ]IJl.-illdtljali

Von nasty..r,tifi!i:i^. lloj-cari'd hound: O. glory. Iliilk-liyah."

Hurt ford (M'l) Don.

Pnn,\nKi.rriTA Ciki,

on a

Beniikii.—A

young lady from Philadelphia a few days sinee arrived in Petersburg, Va., in male attire. The E.v ress gives the fullowing account of the way she ''went on" while there:

She arrived .in the city orio day last week, to all appearance a lad of some 15 or 1G summer'-, s'opped a day or t.\vo, and

gant young travelers popped champagne, with them, tonk snacks at the "Bower," and flew around in quile handsome style. Yesterday afternoon she was on the point of leaving in the Smthcm cars, when her father, who having fir innately guessed her course, was in pursuit of her, and had just arrived by the Rlehmond train, fo:tnd her seated in the smoking cir of the Weldon train pufiingr.wav on a prime Havana, with her little tiny feet cocked up agaijist the stove, and withal quite at home. On the affectionate piren? beholding his gentlemanjlv daugliter thus metamorphosed, lie was at a loss to express himself, but finally manlaged to exjlaim, "is that yon, Ttouisa?"—

To which 11 gallnnf. runaway responded, "this is me, f-ither. Oh I'm so sorry I left jvou," and she burst into tears. For the a!:e we suppress names.—

va-

fair wanderer's Ft is needless to say they returned together.

Fillmore io Donchon: "What did you say of me in 18/i 1

Donchon fo Villmorr: "What did you think of me at that time?" Fillmore io Donthon: "I thought you a d—d fool."

Donclsnn to Fillmore: "What do the rest of mankind think of both us now, on the same ticket?"

Fillmore began to whistle something about the Fone, and Ponelson stammered out something about the

Hon. George G. Dunn is now being

.. v. .» ... |uu iu*g uu Ci-Ui juill Ui LliU illakUl

Previous dispatches all bosh. Crampton of the times, not becausc we feel any parand Marey passed a good niijht.

ticular interest in the difticuliies among the Black Republicans.—X ^1. Ledger.

HERE DO THK XlGCJER WoRSUIPrERS CJKT

Supplies.—We

their

03r"Ii

Very Grkex,

Sr.

The peach trees were in bloom Orleans on the 5th.

Tin-:

learn from competent

Worshipping Presidential ticket, and the leaders of the'party are in active correspondence on the subject. Their supplies will como from abroad. The only hope for the Union is in the patriotism of the masses.— X. V. Herald.

O^rHnj. Donelson says that if Gen. Jackson were alive he would be with him (Maj. D.) Doubtless. But then if Gen. Jackson, were alive Maj.' Donelson would not be where he now is. He would be a Democrat. And so he and Gen. Jackson would be together. Or, if not, Gen. Jackson was "death on traitors," and Maj.

"MARINE DISASTER—A VESSEL IX COLI.I-SIO WITH AN ICEBERG— REAT I.OfiS OF LIFE.

Captain Wood, of the ship Germaniaj arrived, at this port yesterday, and furnishes the following aTccotinl of the sinking of the John RylJedge by running into an iceberg, and rescue of one only of the ship's company.

On the 28th uli., observed a ship's boat ahead, and dispatched a boat in quest of it. Approaching the strange boat, it was found to contain alive, Thomas W. Nye, of Sew Bedford, the only survivor of 13 persons,

break, or like the candle, run the remainder having perished of starra-

weak burn out. The inferior animals tion and cold. Nye had been in the boat

were

jr&zen*

The boat also contained the

The ship J. R. left Liverpool for this port, January 16th., nnd fell in v/iih ice ob Febuary 18th, in lat. 40 deg. 34 min. south long. 46 dt*g. 5G min. west. She got into fields of ice next day, but succeeded in working clear, she subsequently, however, ran into an iceberg, stove a hole in her bows and was abandoned at P. M. Five boats wiib the passengers and crew left the

ship. It was the intention of Mr. Atk:"son, the mate, to have left the vessel i.i his boat, but she broke adrift, and he and several others went down with the wreck. It was conjectured thai the other boats which were well-manned, and furnished with compasses, would pull for the Gulf Stream, as the weather was severely cold.

They may possibly be picked up. The compass of the rescued boat was accidentally broken, and, it being cloudy, her crew could not shape their course. After picking up the boat the Germania stood to northward until dark, and then lay to during the night, in hopes of discovering some.of the missing boats but as nothing could be seen of them she bore away to the southwest, keeping a lookout.

Union.—The

hundred negroes, and, each went his way rc joicing.

By precedeht and courtesy Mr. Dunn should twenty-five hundred years on the banks of have been appointed chairman of that Com-j the Tigris, have, by the strange vicissimiuce. but Mr. -Speaker Banks took it upon tudes and chances of human things, been himself to exclude him altogether. We! dug up from the ruins. of Nineveh," and put this on record as a part oY the history transported across the Atlantic—a wonder

authority that many European politicians! hope to. hasten the dissolution of the Union Washington, "makes us one people."'— by assisting in the triumph of the Nigger

has' be^en beautifully, snid thatf

'the Veil which covers the face of futuriiy is woven by the hand of Mercy.' Seek not to raise that veil therefore, for sadness 1 might be,seep to shade the brow that Fancy •had nrravid in smiles of gladness.

cs

ing die forenoon a very thick snow storm prevailed, but the weather cleared towards noon. bark came out of the ice at the same time as the Germania. She stood to the westward, and probably fell in with the boatstheofJ.il.

The J. R. belonged to Howland & Ridgeway, of this city, and had about 150 passengeis. She left Liverpool with a crew of 26. As yet only one is known to be saved. She was insured for -S70,0C0, and her cargo consisted of 800 tons of merchandise. Twenty-five persons were on board when the last boat broke loose, just before the ship went down. "t

Affectint Incidknt.—An

affecting

occurrence tool place some time ago in a seaboard town in England. Six little childred got into a boat on the. beach, and a mischievous boy shoved it of!'. The boat drifted away to the sea before the children were missing. Terrible was the agony of ihe mothers when they knew it. A number of men went ofl'in all directions, and every bo.it was on the lookout until far in the night. Daylight returned, and still there were no tidings from the helpless children the day wore away, and still nothing was leard from Lhem-'-they we're either lot in the wide expanse of the ocean, or buried within its unfathomable depths. A Plym-iuih fisherman, fishing early next morning, discovered something floating in ihe distance. He bore down to it, and discovered it to be a boat, and in the bottom i:c children, all huddled together like a nest ol birds, fast asleep—God having mercifully given them that blessed solace after a day of terror and dispaiv. He took them aboard, and feasted them with bread and chees-.*, and gladdened their desparing little hearts with the promise of taking them home. Between three and four in the afternoon, the fisherman was seen, t.he boat a'stern. All eyes were turned eagerly towards him. The best spy-glass in the town was rubbed again and again, and at last they could fairly see that it was the identical boat. 1 iie news Hew through the town the mothers cam fanlic to the beach, for there were no.children discerned in the boat none to be seen in the sloop. Intense was the agony of suspense, and all alike shared it with the parents. At last the boat came in tho word went round*—"The}* are all safe and many stout-hearted men burst in to tears, woman shrieked for joy, and became almost fantic with their insupportable happiness. It was, indeed, a memorable day and a prayer, eloquent for its rough sincerity, was oiiered up to Almighty God, who, in His infinite mercy, had spared these innocent children from the perils nnd terrors of the sea during that fearful night. Five of these children were under five years of age, ar.d the sixth but nine years old.

following eloquent ex­

tinct we clip from a report of Hon. Edward Everett's oration at the Webster banquet in Boston, Jan. loll the birth-day of the great statsman: -'And from the wars of those old Assyrian kings and conquerors, whose marble effigies, now lying on the floor of William Appleton's warehous, after sleeping for

and a show—I .«ay from the wars of Sennacherib and Nimtod himself, down to lhat now ragingin the Crimen, there never was a battle fought whose consequence was more important to humanity than the maintenance or the overthrow of that constitutional Union which, in the language of

belter had Alexander perished in the

residential ticket, and"* the Granicus, better had Asdrubal triumphed

phed

at the Metaurus, better had Nelson fallen at the mouth of the Nile or Napolean on the'Oeld of Marengo, than that one link should part in the golden chain which binds this Union together, or the blessings of a peaceful confederacy be exchanged for the secular curses of border war."^

0^7"Tbe Boston Post announces, in very pleasant paragraph, the marriage of 'Mr. Jonathan Know No'.hing, youngest son of Ned Buntlin, to Miss Temperance Freedor.., only daughter of the Kickapoo Rang(.i3. This record of political matrimony is a convenient addition to the news of the day in these times, when births, marrirges and deaths succeed each other among the opposition political parties in such rapid scceession.

Tbe

iscyf

r° pi°\

York Central road

oyed 5,548 persons last rear.

Posthumous Birth.—The

•AliTICLES.

Paris Siecle

relates an extraordinary incident as having lately happened in the Rue de Faubourg de Temple. As the coffin, containing the body of a woman who 4»ad just died at a! house in the street, was being removed for interment, bfoodSras seen to ooze from it.— The bearers were ordered to stop, and the coffin opened, when the erics of an infant, under the shroud, announced that the deadwoman had given birth to a living male child. It was taken and consigned to the care of a nurse. fc

O^T The New Orleans Picayune says that a race is soon to come off in that city, between "Rocky Mountain Chief," a horse 21 hands high, and wei^hinff 2,500 lbs., 2nd •Ursa Major," an Australian bear, weighmg 2,000 lbs. The stakes [are £1,000 a side.

CRAWFCRDSV!LLE~PRICE CURRENT

yp.icEb.

F'our Vi'hoat. Oats P.ye Hjirley Corn—in the* oar-. lluy Apples—Gre^n lricd Peaches Beans Butter—Fresh Eires C«rn Meal Chickens—Dressed Potatoes Bucon—JIams

SiT.r.Otfvj

Fancy Silks,

'Tissues from .25 els. (o $1.25 per Yard

French ami Swiss Printed Lt:wn^ Briilianteasj &c. etc.

$1000 Worth of Bonnet Hibbons,

Trimmings and Rich Enibroidcric-s,

SPLEMMQ. SHAWLS,

R,.nnots. Frotudi VcsiUij-. rccf-ntlv imported from PAHIS, h'rt ir.-li, Kngii.-di and American

TOILET QUILTS,

20

kolls

or cAurirn\(

r,loves. Iloosicry itc.

$7000 Worth of Clothing,

ln-arly dl of wlndi lias heon manufactured expressly f.'T us in IJoston and wliiidi we guaruiitce

TO SELL TWENTY PER CENT LESS

than can bs purchased elsewhere. Kverv gisnnr-nt has our name stamped upon it and tho "work is warranted.

Our Stock of-

Boots, Shoe3, Hats, Caps, and

Quee.nswas'e,

will always be full, nnd we nre determined not to bo undersold. Having recently made extensive additions to our Mammoth Cheap Store, we are now prepared to keep and supply our customer^ ith

G-roceries.

Mr. Garvin will remain East during a large portion of the Summer and forward

NEW GOODS WEEKLY BY EXPRESS,

To our friends in the country who buy scd! again we won hi say that we are nor.' prepared t' furnish thorn wirh th?ir Spring Stocks of LESS than Cincinnati or Louisville pricca.

March 20. lSiiti. v7n87-1 v.

Fresh Arriva!.

RECEIVthofollowing

ftr

em-

10,000

this day at Masterson's Confection­

ary, articles, frcah and in fine "Tder: N. O. Sugar,

Laguyia Coffee, Cocoa. Cocoa Nuts,

1856.

do uf, 75® Xiioj:

10.00(g)

2.000 2.50

io j|

l.r.n@ T.Vf5

SiciesShoulders

Lard Pork Beef—en Ilocf.-.. Clover Seed Timothy Seed Coffee Siiornr Molnsses. N. O. White Fish Mnekcrel, halfl!I. Salt Onions

1 r.@

1 o@ G0@ C,no@ •S,00@ 2.0 Vi) '50M

Xone. None.

Tiic jftuiunolli ROSIoh

CHEAP STORE!

COiVDUCTliO ON THE j\'

ONE S2I0E SYSTEM.

DAYIS & GARVIN,

PEOPRIETORS, s.

TAKE

pleasure iii infortninr? their- muneroiis friends and eustomer.«, that they are now receiving their New Stock of

Spring & Summer Goods,

embracing the following variety:

DRY GOODS,

CLOTHING,

HATS & CAPS,

CARPETING-,.

Boots and Slsoea,

a E E N S A E E

TO THE LADIES,

We would sav tliat tliov will find our stock ol'

Dress Goods

unsurpassed by any in town, uni'ohg whieh in found riehj plain and

Elma Pigsl

Prunes, Snltonna Raisins. Laj-cr Kaisins, Citrons. Dates, I)rk«d Plums, Cheese, &c. Smoking Tobacco of the best quality, also Chewing Tobacco, Cigars, ifee.

J. I. MASTERSOX.

iTarch 29,1S50. a37- tf.

for sale by H. Ott. Drn«rsri?t.

Auenst 4.185?. vTn"

SPRING *TRADE

"NEW ALBANY

NOT TO BE UNDERSOLD.

MERCHANTS

Can depend on Rnvinir their

E E N S W A

AND

A W A E

For the fSIairanoth £^tabli.TLnieut of'

BROOKS & CAMPBELLS.

As low lis from uny house west of the Mountain.",

have in Store unci to arriv.- for the S

Wo

Trade

whieh we are del

10 Srajar cured.

oym. t5@ 12® 5.00® 3.50(3 3,To 10.00@ 2,00@ 3,00

od's Edh?hi5roh

mi

These Periodicals ably represent the three great litb-nl parties of Great .Hri'ain— Whig, Torv.

and Radical,—but polities forms only one feature of their character. A,s Organs of the most profound writers on Science. Literature. Morality .'and religion, they stand, as tlicy ever have stood, unrivalled in the worid of letters, being considered indispensable io the eholar and tho'professional man. while to the intelligent reader of everv class they furnish a mon-correct and satisfactory'recerd of the current literature ot' the, day, fhror.ghont the world, than can be possibly obtained from any other source.

EARLY COPIES.

The receipt of Advsjncn fiijocts fr-m the Hi it-i.-h. j'.ublisliers gives additional value, to these JIc-

]laecd in the hands of the original editions.

Jbw

TERSfS.

Por anv one of the For anv two of th

lour tonr

For any three of the ur Reviews-•• For all four of the Reviews For iJh'.ckwood's Magazin For Rhiekwood and thive Reviews-• For .Blackwood and the four view-

di.-coiini, of twenty-jive

011.

pring

509 Crates of Crockery,

comprising nil the latest designs and qualities, 3tennined to o.Tur to the trade at

I XUSI AI.TA' LOT.' FltiLKtS.

ALSO

100 Bo^es of Glassware,

ConsisiiiKr of all kinds of Tumblers. Jars. Molusses Ciin*. Salts. .Sur«rs. and .I'rescrve Dishes, &e. T-gether with an immense stock of

FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC

Hardware ami Cisllerv.

Tn our Pomestie Triirdware Departmi"!it. Ave. enn only say that wo ivill dujiiicate any Cineinnati or 1'ittsbiirk'li invoice. And in ail Foreign Goods, no house K.-ist or West shall undersell us. as ivu imt. ilircL-tlv from the manufacturers. We lnive also the heaviest stuck of .••• •••••.

FARMIUG TOOLS 'tr Around the Fall-, nnd will ntlVrr them at such prices that will induce every one that irives our stock an examination to leave their orders.

We only ask that all. before making their purchases will {rive our s-toek a thorough examination and we feel coiitident of owning prices thai v.'ili be satisfactory and secure your eostom.

You will always find us open from rt A. M. until 0 P. M.. readv to show vou through cur s'ock. '•&" All orders scut us, will receive the personal attention of one of the members of the iirm. .omls (!ol voro I :it WJinri boitls .1 ctl'vvsonii!5e, A. S. li. li, Depots tree of churgc.

GIVE XJS A CALL.

Maieh 1. sy.l

JiKODICS CAMFKFI.L, clain :?t.- iNe'.v Albanv,

itiiSui 'orwHiscais

FARMER'S UID S.

G]L?:AT ]{!•:DL'CTION IX TIIE PRICE

or xm: i.\:-ir:t rrin.iCATK'N.

L. S(.'()'['T

tt

CO., NKW Vt'IMC. eontinue to

publi.-di the i'ollo'.viiiL' leading British 1'eriodicals.

LONDOII QUARTER!

t'otsrrvtilive,

Edinburgh Rcvi"-v/,

Norlh Briiish I?evlnrr,

Wos^ninisler i(:vv

be

RIaek

CJmik-II.

Lihnrnl.

1856. 1856. 185S

At Home Again.

Mans.on & Powers,

Succcssors fo Sloan & Morgan,

Wholesale and Retail

DRUGGISTS,

jlj-AYE RKMOVKD THEIR DUCG STORK TO

the cast end of the new brick, known

EMPIBE BLOCK,

reconth erected on

MAIN' STREET,

•«»here may at all times be foiind the

•Largest and Most Splendid

assortment of

DRUGS,

2L

Paints,

ri

Letter Paper,

rnnr tr»)

Torv.

The srreat and iin ortani: events—Rciigieus, Poiitieal. and Military--now agitating the nations oi' the Old World, jrive to these Publications an interest and value they n«ver before possessed. They occupy a middle ground between the hastily written news-item-, crude speculations, living rumors of the newspaper, and the ponderous Tome of the historian, written lonsr after the living interest in the facts he records .-hull have passed away. The progress ol the War

the East occupies a large Compri-iiiLr .-oioe of the rich'1

space^ in their page.*. Every movement is closely English and An.r-ricni criticised, whether of friend or of fo\ nnd all .-hort-eomings fearlessly pointed out. The letters from the Crimea and from the IJnilio in Riaekt". nod's Magazine, front two of bs mot popular contributors, give a more intelligible and reliable account of the movements of the great belligerents than can ••Isewherc be found.

F.j

1' rr"

prints, especially during the present exciting state 1 -'Veil to t.ie* European atfairs. inasmticli as they now be

noti'-i.- of

Per mil.

7 00

CLUBBING.

00 Oo

17 00

Payments to he made in all costs in adocive. Money current in the Stale where ioniicd 1 -will be received at par.

per cent. ro:

above prices will be allowed to (.'r.n .- ordering or more copies of any one or more of the works. Tints: Four copies of 7'hadav

P0STAG]

four

kkI.

one Review, w'll be sent tootle, •i-blres- fori'.': eoTios of the four Reviews and JJh.ckwy-^-d am so

In all the piineipal Ci''e- Town-. works will be delivered, l-'KKMOI-' I'OSTAf.f.. When sent by m-.iii. the P.-s

Royal Octavo. l'SOe pages, and numerous Wood and Steel Engravings.

This eonfesiedly. the most complete work 011 Agriculture rver published, and in order toirivc ii a wider circulation the publishers have resolved to reduce th^ price to er Five Dollars for Hie T^o Voltiine^!! »ent bv mail •'poat-jcid) to

[ofWhenthe

ilshers.

Lights of PINE SASH of all sizes ktl

•1.

I

United States will be V.ut Tiventy-ioiir 'ont- a th year for "Jilackwoodd" and but 1 'ourteuii (.ents a vear for each of the Eev-cx.s.

THE FARMER'S TO SCIENTIFIC AXJ PRACTICAL AGRICTLTL'RE. By Ij:.nrv Stk?i en.-, F. R. S., of E'Jinburgh. and the late J. P. Nojtrov. I'rofcssor of Scientific Agrieuittire in Ya'e College. Xew fLivr-n. 2 vols.

raliforma

LEONARD SCOTT No GoH.StrcCt, vT n?l'.

'V Y'.ik.

1

Oils,

Glass,

Perfiuncry,

Stationary, &c, &c,

in the Waba.sh ai!e\,al! of which will he Sold on the most liberal terms for CASH or on short, credit, to those v. ho

ire

known to be guilty of the habit

of paying their debts. Crawfordsville, Jan. 2:i. v7-u2f--tf.-

Land

W arran ts. llighest market price £LTO.\ ct

i. will L'ivethe Warrants, rch 1, 1Si(3.

for I.MIld

lam:

lm

H. IIMBOCKEE, V. IIOLKSAl.i: AM' KJ-TAH. IV

Bocks, Stationary, Wall

PAPER, BLAETK BOOKS, &c. No. 7 Vc». rt.. three doors FROM MKP!tMN*.-FOfTli SIDK,

Indianapolis, Ind. OiTers for salt) ttm followincr a-ficle?, eith. in birifi? "r small quantities, very low for cash various ••vorks in

Thcoiog-y, Mcdiciiir, Law, Lileratwre. Also Bibles, Hymn llooks, and I!htnl Tloidc.-.--\'arioi Woilcs ('l' History, lli'^rai'liy and i'm-try. A!I of the various Classical and \innn^n rfehool Hooks used in this scetion of couiitry.

I'ojtr.lar treatises on A^rieulture. Aivhiteeture, .Merlianisui, Maeliiiivry, Engiiicc.ini.f, .Surveying, iMi:. l'opular Treatises on the Diseases an. 1 Ut-mcdie.s of bo ueslie Animals, and ins!rii'-tion in iv^'anl to Iu-ariii!.'. rattening, and Marketing. Also, th^same on Fowls.

The most n-babb'Worlis on Fruit Culture. M»-l reliable Treatises on sui-i.-i-s.-ftill H'-e tiaising alrfo. i.'ii Oard'Tiimr and l-'arminL' L't'ii'-rally.

Wall l'ancr. Lorderm^. Window and Fire-l'oard l'.,p,r.

Giis Moi'Wiiig: for Ficita-

Franies,

Fl^iE FRENCH PICTURES,

Juvenile and Holiday Itoo^s. Writtini', Ix-tter. and Note l'ajic.rs. I'lam and r'aney- Envelopes, Visiting Cards. Steel 1'ens, Inlcrj, Slates, Drawing I'apcr, Hrb'ol Hoard. I'crfora'ed Paj^-r. Large bi-avv D.- fiii:g Paper, Colored Printing Paper, Prinriiiif Cari^.

Gold, Silver, and lar Pen- ils. I'e.-nl, Ivory. Papier

•he and T.

ii'Jicr rnniKliCr. UTIiKK V, liv 1^ *jj Wt riiiiJ«1 \7hmU1.

i:

WA I IS

WINDOW CUE-TAINS,

FIRS BOARD PATTERNS. The sub.- I'riber will ree^iv of Mareb

from the 1st to theiOth about

SIX THORSAM) ROI LS ()1 TIL!! JILOVH JIMOIIS,

Patterns of French

rienn Papers ever otl'cred

to thiseo.i ir.iiiiity.

eat the Moo: Sioi::: of ii. i.iMP''( KF.R, No. 7 We-! Wa. iii .gioii otrct, -3m Li'iiananolis. Inil.

Sta-e of Indiana, •i mtgomcry, county.i -lloisfgoiiipry Cireisit Court,

September Tc ni, A. D. 1SS0.

James (irahem it Nathav, Graham etc.! Arf

U-hi:i,,nl.

William Marton. 111CRKAS. r.n the I'-th lay of J.innr.ry. A. D. l-.'j. Mlill phiintili.- JtUiie G:nh i.Ui iV N ,'ithan (Graham, tiled their note ami written return in he above entitled eau- in the Ci-rk'? ol'le.j of said court, against tin-said d: fenuunt Willinm J'.ui ton. us also an allidavit of the amount due upon -aid Ji-n--. and setting frtli that, said J/s.-tVudant had se-.-retly left tiie .-tat'-- of Indiana &c. There-pend-.nry of saii jr-t:on is herehy

Attest: WILLIAM P. VANCK. Mar,-h 22. Pi inter- fee

Acbniiii strat or's

oTiE in h-.rt jy i.i\ en that the i::i.!-.r-u:ned has been upppointed Adiidnistr .tor of the- e.~ tate of Andrew .NIb-he l, h.te of ^loiitgoirery comity, deecus'.:d. Ssi.1 estate supposed to be so:\-ent.

1NT

AI.F.X AX E E1' ir IT V11EL f. 1 Ad n:.si rat c• r. March lflo no7-0w.

Administrator's

riocice.

jq-OriCK i- !.er'-by given t!

gi' tl.eP ti.e -lndersign^d

li.-.s been ap}i'!ntcd Admin:v.rntor of the tate of John M. Royal?y, late ot' Montgomery unty, deceased. Said c-itatj s-up[osed to be .:olvei.t.

WlLLiA.'u 1). Iti» i*AL*i"\ Admin'.strato.'. .March it',

Noticc of Sale.

ICE i.- hereby gi vuii ,\ uction. on esidence of ,b

GUIDE jmoaitev-ill be

March 27, IriS. n3T-3w.

1 will soli, at nubd» of A"i il.

I'-tilBV M. Re

niery count}', deceased, ail liis [-crs'-nal proper v. eon.-istlr.g of one horse, cno wagon, be.!« and b"l-' •,:ng. kitciien fund Hire d'e. A -^r' lit of el: on all f,nn« «Vcr 'bree

Wilscn, Grimes & Co.

Aro new receiving and openinpr in tlio

IvEW JUUCK BLOCK,

CORNER OF MARKET AND GREEN St,

In Rooms No. 1 & 2.

A \eiy hrre, eonudcte nnd entirely ffew Stock of

DYK GOODS,

QUEB1NSWARH,

A E W A

GHOOERIES, moy,

BASILS,

W!.\»OW

April 7th, 1Svo-n^.'-tf.

We have every varie'y all wool, from to Doeskin Oas.-imerc* from 7 r.t oriees to suit ail classes,

Shirts

•j-'*

Detendant WiUifiiii Rarton, and

thiit said suit will stand lor trial at i,e njxt rrn of sa'd ."'e,!rt. to ij,. h-idcii in the Court Ilou-e st Crawfordsvi'dc. in said ''fiajtA commencing on the second il'..-r.di ne-Xt' 1 S-jV. r-r order of the Court. V-

to!!:i!"-,:

the purchaser giving hisnote with nppv,v ,- jiv waiving valuation ai fipr-rn'-emen' laws. ALEXANDEK MLTCHELL, Adi:..'

Notice of Sale

ic A notion,

011

and

Oregon price will be $7. To every rMier part the Union and to C..nida pe-'s: tS'" This work is NOT tTiV old "U^ok of I the Farm. I Keniittances for any .of the above nnblieanons 5luuld alwaysbe Mdresscd, jest-paid, to theEub-

next, at the residence of John M. Royalty, bite of .Mon?„'' men- county, dcccnsed. all his jefsonal property, not t:ikun by the widow. eon«istim one rt iV.e horse, work horsed, and eolu. er.ulo. hoes, one two horse wsujou, farmiiigritenaiis. hou:-a hold ami kiuditn furi.iti n-. an-! tin.-!' property S e-jf-h A3 farmers usually h«»vc- A eredP. of'nine I months will bo given on rd! iBr thre-t dolf.'* i^ur3

tac

VTOTICE is hereby iriven ihut I v. 1 at i-ub- Thror,-: to be hud for .11 the nrinC

l,ureh irer giving his nntt? w:Ui approved1!

mr'rtT, vair'«njrvalnnt*«n and njinrai»jBCDt laws Vf.M. b. .ROYALTY. Adm:nS*tiat..r. March25,1S58.

Bhiiigies Wanted.

r\r. million

r.

1

js*"

Lf.

SADLERY,

Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Ready Made Clothing. &c. Their Stock is full, and selected with enro suit the spring trade, which they will sell ns rhoap and on ns aeeotmnodntin.7 terms"na any other houso in the place. We invte nil )io wish"to purchase, to give us a cull and examine our Stock beforo purchasing.

Fancy Dress «V Trimming (ioods. T.AI.'dh and eoniplete stock of Ladies Drcs.^ (toods. Triinjuinirs, ITosiery. Gloves, Laco*, FAlgings.lnsortinL's. 'hcmizcti8. Unlcrsleeves,Col iars, 1 Iuiidkeiehiets, iV".: rtveiee-l and for sule by

WILSON. Oi'IMKS CO.

Hardware, S«dillcry and Carpenter's Tool*.

A*'M

I'LETK as«.-'rt m-. lit now opi-ned. ntul for ha" ale W1

Listi.N, (iKIMFS Co.

have a lai'^o sioek of bleached and brown »V Goods, drill-', tiekimr... linens, t-rasli. dinpi.!.-, ('ot-tonade.-, Ii-nims. 'lieeks. Stripes, ("lotlis, Cassiniores. Sattinetts. \'estings, Ac., for sale cheap as the eheape.-t.

WlLSttX. GRIMES it Co. Sundries.

IUX IIS SLur and Tallow Candle.*)\J Hnr and Fam-v Si oa^-'

fre.-h

K. luusins:

l." T. and M. l'J Dunns FiL:-: also eandies. almonds, nut.s, peaelies and .-tra\v liurries. in eans, piekloa, pepjier saiH'-. oysters, einnamon. «-hvcs, store and for sale by W I l,.S .\, GRIM KS it Co.

Is'oV it Commereial Jilock.

Prints, IF.CK »o .o sale hv

300 i:

f.iiwns, •V-e. Fancy I'rints. best hran-'s 7,awns and (iinirhanis.

jb®

]ieia-.re-and L'clains. WII.SON, GIMMES it Ce

lbs Ije^t S. I-'. Indido in .-tore nnd for sulo by WILSON, G[MMl-S & Co.

.Sugar Kettles,

See.

FIRST RA'I F. artielo of Susrar Kettles, Skilh-ls, A I'og Iron.- and other castings. For sale at No. i. ,iauu.-reijd Row. Only !o_f,,ney for Vose ifc Co'ti. reyertildo l!.Uc Cookimr Stoves. feb-j H. HALI. CO.

O S

EST PKCKIVFD, ONE III'NDRED ASSORT I!D CLOCKS, whieh we. warrant from one to live year.jail lit!

at from at PI'RSELL it Hr-

SprisiJ^ asid Stintjiicr Goods.

Iia,jinali & Casssll,

ING reeeived their stock of Rpring nnd nuiiiier Goo,Is. wonh.1 invite the citizens of .i wford.-villc and surrounding o' untry to cull uk Leir New Store in ...

ri-Av I Si

CRAWFORD'S NEW BRICK, Opposite Empire Ij'. iek. Cri.wfordsvillc, Ind'ami, uid examine, tlieir sjili-ndid assortment of pric«

Goods oc Clothing.

of double width cloth, =7,00 er yard, all wool to S-i.oO. anil Vest npi, ^ur stock of

READY MADE CLOTHING

is complete, comprising men's and boy's clothing of all styles and pri.es. We I ave also on hand ft variety of notions,

p,ik1

Collars," Cravats,

Hd'chiefs, Gloves,

Hoosieiy, Hats, Trunks,

JW.'rJilliLLAS iVc. i^o.

-MI of whi' we v.-iil sell at tho lowe.st ea.-h prices, an 1 we fee! confident ofsuliir.g the mo^t fastidious oth in st\ le and prices. Clot.i.ing made to or lor at the :ih'-vfe noticc and strict Ht.teution pi-.Id to ce.tting. We would say r.gain cull and examirm for to i-xamiur is to be convinced. re 1. 15, 211. v7n'•:-1 v.

The Peacock Plows I'argidt's '1 in and Stove Shop south of tl:e C'.

T'TCTKE,

LV

S is R. 1%. fo iiy 1 Company to sorv'i held rii, f.ebauon, :u -Jd Wednesday, .•lO'-h A. M. it" Ijir'-ctor-'. -JiARPH.

the election of Directors of rtjili for the ensuing v-ar, will t«.-R-one (.'ounty, diidia m, on 1 '.'th dav of April nevt at

ord'- of the P.-wrd A'te-,1: JAMLS

Secretitrv.

Xev, Afbasiv SiiScni 51. R.

NSW ARRANGEMENTS.

TRAINS SOUTH,

eastern a:

Tuesday the vi d»y of April —. .1 ..n

passr's Ci'awford.Hvillc at 'VA. M.,co v-

noting at JrHene sth- with 'morning fruia «r In ii.iunj-ibs and Tcrro iluuts and arriving nt New Albany fit P. .'.ccf»i:iniodniinji rawf r,i•" 1 Ie

r«i

I Februnrv In. !65."

v,-i «v

OK Ail A-MA Ea

oni ctii,_'iit '.rvftneastle with evening trains lor I. d-.nap--ii- ."d 'f'-r HatiUt. A ccomiiiodation train goi/ig- north leaves !r- en'-ahtle

.-n 1 for-iiviile 10 A. M. arriving at J.a.ayetty

J:lxjirc^s pa«ses Crawi jr 1 -.'ir»ir I. -fnyclts 10 1*. :iK-rtiing.

r-lsviil.! ?:I2 P. M. M. and ut Ch

"io ago next

jTliroiigh to Cinciiinati in 12 Honrs,

pni

.vt-aierii (ilie* :it the otl^e. V. i.i. IILWIX, Ag^nt. .51 tf

PEOPLE'S EXPRESS."

I.L Mr..net. Package- and Freight, of d-„\-c: p:if-ns, earriM'hr^n^h

vt rv iow rate*. 'V. «». IK'.VIN rn.-r I :?.f. A- -L» jvrvt.