Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 6 August 1859 — Page 1
She is not dead. Pntelecpa!- ,-i Boeide her cradle-b«xl
My memory keepe The vigil gad.
No voicc replica*. Her lifts Naught ccho to my crics?
In life's fclipcc Slie Bilent lies.
That brow is cold, Those cjes No mora my face buhohl.
,t"' !'h0
Charleston—that there is 110 difference beJween the position of .Mr. Douglas and that of the entire sound Northern Democracy .mi this (picstion. livery blow struck at 'him for his opinions on this subject strikes fhein and they think it would be manlier, more ehivalric, more in accordance with ideas of Southern frankness and fair dealing, to attack them than him. He is a solitary man—a brave, honest, sincere, straightforward man, it is true—but for all that, only one man. lie entertains 110 opinion on this question not held by the entire body of the conservative Democracy of the North. Tugli has expressed the same views 011 the floor of the Senate.— iS'o Senator from the North dissented front them. No Northern statesman, who valucf
This is all gospel. Douglas does ,10 more than give voice to this sentiment. He has the boldness and honesty to do it —the courage to warn thc Democracy of the South of the rock they are drifting 011 —of the dangers that will result from an interpolation of the Cincinnati Platform,
iolative of thc solemn engagements of
llie party,, entered into in 1S51 and con-i
firmed in 1S56. It may be thought easy to conspire, and coiubinc, and kill off Douglas, as he is only one man. But the matter will not be 1
mended. Thc conspirators will only then
Thc Northorn Democracy can not blink this question they can not slur it over.— It ia one that conccrns their manhood, their rcspcctability, their houor. They made a solemn engagement with their Southern brethren—as solemn and as just a covenant as ever before was nude. Tlioy can not permit this compact to be overridden and disregarded they can not allow
1
N E W S E I E S O I I N O 3
THE DEAD CHILD.
Awake, my childl .:••,- »g ., Awake! 'Tia long since thou hast sniU'J,
My heart will break^ I'nlc-M bcguil'd.
Alas, she lies Within Death's fold. .../. '. 1 t-:-(Sho dwi ilrt with God.
Her foot,
With heavenly Bandalu shod, Traverse the streets ity Angels trod.
Then let her nleqy Her dreams Are bliss, Dear .Saviour keep
Near Edeu's utreams Th.« lamb we weep.
From the Cincinnati Knquirtr.
llOLCLAS AND Tin: POLITICIANS. We arc informed by a Democratic cotemporary at Lexington, Kentucky, that Mr. Douglas 1ms been "expelled" from the democratic party. In the name of all the gods at once, will it be pleased to tell us when, where, and by whom 1 Not by the Democracy of Kentucky, surely fur, at their last Eighth of January Convention, fjicy expressly refused to make any test of the "admitted abstraction" of Lecompton. 'J'hi.s was done by an express resolution, in which all tests fterc discarded, except the
their public men, who simply stand upTatit! defend it, to be stigmatized as "traitors," and read out of the Democratic party without a complete sacrifice ofthcirindeperidcnce as men and their respectability as citizens:—without, in pniflrtfrd pe'rsdhlil degredation. To suppose them capable of permitting one of their "Statesmen, who does no more thin fearlessly announce their own opinions, to be cut down in tlicir eyesight, presupposes a servility and an unspeakable cowardice that sinks them beneath contempt and to a level with tame rabbits and whipped spaniels.
Who is this man that, forsooth, has been read out of the party and "expelled from its councils?" Who is this "traitor," this enemy of Southern rights, this votary of "squatter sovereignty," this man deemed fit to bo coupled, by Kentucky prints, with the Van Burcns and Chases? Can it be the same Douglas who voted and spoke for the annexation of Texas—who advocated it in advance of all men in the North?—
Kansas, am
*1 .......
"excluded" by the late Democritie ('on- |,.ls defi-nded h«'r ventions of Iowa, .Maine and A ermoni .'—J report, and shichb Let their platforms respond, in which they ,|1(. Abolitionists: incorporate! the substance of his recent t|yS time, uttered 'letter to Mr. Dorr, and indorse the
Cincinnati IMatform. A\ as lie expelled by \[js.nm.i Restriction? Can it be the same "It is not at all pertinent to instaiif-'e the t!ie Deniocrai-y of Ohio? he last Ftate whose way home was again lit up condition of the black man, or the laws Convention unanimously and by aeelaina- burnin"' i-Hi'des, intended as symbols of made expressly to oppress him, either in tion indorsed his position on (lie Tcrrito-U treachery to the free States? Can it
.. .t:„„ av.,„ i.„ \xv il.,. ,• I notin either ot these cases, una the black
1,0
,ll° S:'m° |),,noll,s
wlll,
Heinocraey ot Ulinnis. lift tin- unaui-, ],iliS |)0,!n ever conservative and true „aUcstion. Because Wisconsin is mean
wIlo
with
position taken by him in the Senate debate J(.(j .,|j ihroiiirli of last winter. Exrr.i.f.Ki), indeed Kx- js 3(_ pelled, jirobabiy, by the. J5o\v:nans, of flic j( jj Washington Coii.s!iti'tioii by the Slidells, if Louisiana bv the Ike Cooks and Liebs, 1 1 1 '|and freely expressed all of Illinois by the Van Jiuiens, of Newj Vorl and the I'reniont orira", the Jlertdd 1 a Iv by the Uobinsoiis, of Indiana by the slave-' traders, of .Mississippi by fhe Charleston ,, ,, 't was gooil I'eiuocracy Mercnnf, of South Carolina: by the Big-1
!stale!
Pennsylvania but by the honest,-!
lers, ol Jiearted Democracy of the country, and nowhere, we venture, less so than iu Ken'l ueky—nerer, itcrer.' l'robably our eotemporary at Lexinirfon might as well understand it now as at any other time—he will certainly learn it at
loetrine for whieh he was applaudher limits iu ISo-j and in
same opinion that !t
now win
cites
the dotting of a It was good 1'eiuocracy tlien. 11 wa sound then that almost tho entire South rallied 011 him as against Buchanan. II has not changed his position. I As for Lecompton, the least said about it the beffer. It is an extinct issue, and 'we airree should be made 110 te.st cither way. Douglas did 110 more than what
the same Douglas who was the first North- specimen from the Boston Atlas and Bcc, crn man to denounce the Wilmot Proviso on the floor of Congress?—the same Douglas who stood side by side and shoulder to shoulder with the illustrious Clay in breasting the waves of sectional violence and passing the Compromise Measures of 1850? Can it be the satne Douglas who, on his return home in 18f)0, was yelled at by Abolition mobs, and voted "a traitor" by the Common Council of Chicago, and who called a meeting of his fellow-citizens, and proved to tlicni that lie was right about the Fugitive-slave Law, and they were wrong, and made the Council repeal their restrictions? Can it be the same Douglas who, at a later day, applied the principle of the Compromise Measures to Nebraska and
then. It was so '''V11
I lannnond of So have been done. I to have been kicked out of Conirress.
iof Senator I lannnond at the South for this 1 {opinion. Jell". Davis said at Portland that he had grave doubts about the propriety of Leeomplon, and admitted that by "in-1 action" the people of a Territory might exclude slavery. Vet lie is a saint with
our Kentucky eotemporaries. Cobb said
that "thc majority of thc people of the
Territories, by the action of (heir Terri-J
torial Legislatures, could deride the ques-
the church. Orr Stephens, Ceorge W.!jn(4
.loncs, ."Smith i»t lenuessec, and at least
,. «. li-,. 1 1 fwent} other Southern men, li.n expiess-: .)renic ]1(.re as tliev are in New England,
'Xmln'ot 'iu'fe r.""""'' *"rof l«r»«.c".bo mmf**. Tl.oi.say States can be carried after their diseardal.
,iU0
«*xPre»»ed, wi
tested.
wa.v»
wc
of Representatives. Still we arc not *i*-_ priiiciplcs iicotissarilv lo:nl to the c:irrving formed of their having been read out „f
thc party. Cobb said that "squatter sovereignty" was a purely theoretical issue,
and afforded 110 ground of difference in the Democratic party. So spoke Hunter and others. Still Douglas is a "traitor" for I
a 0
hive succecdcd in nrostratimr the best tiling of'the question. hope of reaniination. lo thia the: husband
iiavc succccucu in prostrating me DCst, 1 !oh ected, and had her interred thc same
friend and most fearless defender the con-1 History utterly fails in a parallel to thc day, (Saturday). stitutional rights of the South have ever persecution of this man by the politicians. I After the burial services were over had in thc free States—one who has more successfully combatted Abolition heresies than any man now living. If Douglas is laid low, thc sentiment which he rcjirescnts will still live but the stronger, and the more aggravated by thc outrage of his fate. It will find other voices just as bold— just as outspoken, just as manly and positive.
Issue after issue that thc leaders of the
Democratic party Wd never before en-
tertain for an instant has been gotten up to kill him off. Newspapers have fired broadsides of epithets on him. His friends have been turned out of office: cross-road orators and Senatorial orators have set upon him. Thc big hounds and the little hounds have been put on his track, Still thc "Little Giant" lives—what is more still, he grows. Day after day he gets stronger and stronger. Thc masses have taken him in their hearts. They have put up their shields to protcct him from the politicians. Thc cabinet-maker's apprentice of seventeen years of age has bccome at forty-six thc great tribune of tho American people, and is destined hereafter to
=======
wood/,- This, popular, loy£ j$:ttot»h$|itQ»ejl in by river boundaries 6t sectional ilurtitr. It ^elfva'dcfc the entire country^ Ifi'tfxists in" Mississippi and in Texas ajf ycll^s in: a a O lar heartleapsjout with 4le.lighp.at the-inenf tron-ofTus name. "And thecontinueI~war on Him by thri "politicians^ win'oBly^fiperi this ardor into acclamatory enthusiasm?
TIIE PRINCIPLE OF JVE«ROEQUATiyv ITY SUSTAINEDe.-yea »•_. There are Republican's who complain that injustice is done, their organization in attributing to [it the principle o£: iiegro equality. Yet",wliat"do..jWe see I.. EepuV-i lican States like Massachusetts and- Maine conferring upon the:negro all the political and civil right's of^the1 native-born 'whites, giving them considerably higher privileges than is granted, to- the foreiguJborn-- citizens. Their organs do*not hesitate to sustain, in' the'strongest terms, the justice of these onaetmcnts.'^Takc the "following
of the 11th iiist., which is edited by Col. Schouler, formerly of the Cincinnati Gazette and the Columbus (O.) Journal.• That lie is orthodox in his/political faith, amMias a right to speak for tire"Republicans, none who know him will question. In his issue of the 11th, combatting the position that the negro can never be equal to the white in this country, lie says "Is it proved or even,rendered probable that the colored race, if emancipated, could not take care of themselves? We say it is not, and to assert it as the Times does is simply begging the whole question. Is it prove'I or rendered probable that the African can not lice in. this country on an c'jiKilUt/ with whites 1 ire sa it is not, and that no man who asserts it. has ever assertion
'. /rt demonstrated the truth, of his assert
repealed the hoary-headed ,{/t// ,w«.^ reasoning estriction? Can it be the same 'vl.t is not at all pertinent to instance lb
tI,c
«1:iv,!
01'
tlimughout his !m{|U
1
imt uf
of
the oe.States, becaiuse w.e do
C01Rli(itm t0 ]icnait of tL
:l11^
1
l"
0
I 1 1 ih '.d a' Wen^and what
utli Carolina said ought to \Hnd the negroes surpass the Irishnn oj
I iiuinninl ii.l if im.r'it I t"ston 111. intelligence morality and ui-1.. ..... 011g.it and „oud Ui=aiship Xhey !ire 1»«, which he argues to prove the nemure thrifty, more orderly, and every way cessify of a federal slave code for thc terDouglas did it. Me hear no denunciations superior it is the same in the city of .Phil-: ritories, and urges a dissolution of the adelphia, as facts will abundantly prove, XJiiioti if it is not. adopted, lie directed
ter entil]PlI* tll voto
lli iiuir {]l0 iglllir:illt
Dutchinau"-
surji iss
,iu.
lfu
.r
CV
erv way as
citiZOns.
(ion ot sla\en Still obb is not. de-1 Iassachusctts, Maine, and other Kepubnounced, but hebl fo In .• ln-h-pric.-t iu jj0
nl
States have incorporated this idea
their sta
tute i,uuks.
cans 0
If
„1C joctl.ine "of negro
out of Cin. Eta/.
I
People begin to suspect that this is only a heresy because Douglas holds it and this is thc truth. If Douglas was out of the
whether we would hear any
!gestion
1 /a 1 1
lsonic
THE WO LANDED Ilf IT
.stilIg
lUe
]lilfi ,.Ver done fhe South justice who allow a negro, howcer intelligent, to cole, ln.such ease, even, the ampntatioh
through irood and means proccs that the negro docs ,nced be immediate only when there is, Thft
,, .. I not f/escrce the. pnetieste nor, itcctuisc whieh is rarely the case, dangerous hem-, „v, ilher lrom the shafts ol ]t7-v,w/iVy
/t at (/lC mme
who has ue\er, up to Iftxhuttui find an ignorant ])titeh.t/ia/t to {to anijutati!, and tie the vessels rogula.rlv, sentiment inconsistent rote, when he neither knows his own j'oli-! then t» apply a temporary ligature to the
M.Arniand, oft aytQafps, wfitis vs:faila\vM araflf est -"vJjhe^batfclc ioWghfe ®1 th^Ticifio Wafc hotly contested on bOth^Sif5s,% an d-"at
tor Baron Larrey: direfetiLfcMthc bridge,::dres3 the'.wwlrfdefl:^^as rapidlyfe
thein£el}(u tial^ai-altiei-'i a
selvcsi indbcd^cmii%trhave tlieiiJwoimds
dressed: -Wpunds4 ofuthc neck were also usually immediately fatal-or com'paratively slight. (Jtae pfcthe prisbners had received a wonnd in the mouth wifli a saber bayonet, which glanced oft" airs.the?sidc of the jawt, and came out at the lateral part of the neck.
There was hardly any loss of blood, and a sim'ple suture at. the comiiiissure of the lips, and a bandage were all that were required: iInjuries of the.upper extremities almost always, whatever their amount, al
"i-
disposition ol ever we do under these circumstances, if
the black man to dweli, side by side, on the part injured be Ihe leg, .and still more 11. .un.: terms of equality with the white, is to the thiirh, we shall rarely save life. 1- 1 he stood Iboo and ]iC where he does enjoy that• equali-1 The armies now en paired both use the
tho same views, without ty. I nforfunately there is no place where rn.'w liretinns, (he balls of whieh deviate us lot 11. /or the crossing of a /. fl,o case to tho lull extent,^-r pre- jfi,,. less after sfrikin^ai. object than the
ed localities, tooppii ss tlu, co.oied man. expect a larger propcrtion ot eomininuted '•lint suppose we the free colored fractures. Hollow and explosive projec- .av51
quality.-
A CURIOUS RIvSUItREC'l'lOX CASE. The Columbus Fart says: A curious case occurred last week at Rome, in Franklin county, Ohio. Mrs.
holding the vile heresy which Orr, Ste- 'wife of a C.crmali'of that name,! Pouth, lie and his doctrines have their ad other Southern after a short illness, was supposed to have vocates among the Democracy: while othwithout being 1110- died, ller husband made immediate ar-
.. I, it -., ,Atttake ,.•! 1 1 ""'n cavil, might show to bis own people to
1
tillery
lerous.
is the result.' Why, we venture the asser tion without fear of successful contradiction, that you may take the first thousand YAN( i:Y ON l»or:i„\S. a neisrtics as thei/ come, and a thousand' A few days since the Hon. William L. Irishmen in the same way, and yon will Yancy, the celebrated Alabama Hotspur,
mfulo
.Si,C(.ch
at
Now what riirht have we to say, with such :. 1 1 1 the most ot Ins speech at Senator Douglas, a preliminary lesson, that the black man could not prove himself worthy of .freedom and citizenship!" ..
Here we find the position decidedly and emphatically taken, that the negro is bet-
than thc "raw Irish-*!
have for him a higher regard and a -aeat-
cr admiration than they have for any man
01
rangements for her funeral, having proeur- principles, yet disapprove of any avowed .1
eda coffin in this city. On placing her opposition of those pnncples, f"r fear of
body in tlie"coffin" a General pVrpinition haneftil result upon the "harmony of the
0
1 1
signs of life still remaining. Restoratives being administered, Mrs. Peters gradually recovered, was taken'by hcr fricnds to this city, and is now well. We arc informed that she refuses to again live with her husband. The circumstances-connected with thc affair are strange indeed, and should undergo investigation.'" tr'-
——>A man who resides in Fulton, Ohio, returned on Saturday last from the funeral of his wife, and going into his solitary home, sat down upon a chair and died within an hour. It is said the poor fellow "died of grief.''
inan
relatives of thc supposed deceased
1 1 who reside in this citv, arrived at Home to
attend th fun
-ralt ^hich
had alrca
,lv
ta
ken plaec, and hearing of tho circumstances, caused thc body, which then had been four hours iu thc grave, to be disinterred,
\u-vx
=======
10.UI?'
to survive for some tunc usually to die,
loxyever on the road:to or soon alter their
economy, and a free use tf antiphlogistic
means enabled recovery to take place.—
Injuries to the lower extremities were nu inerous, and the fractures were often comminuted. The rule was here, as in other
eases to extract accessible foreign bodies,..tj
mous I emoerat.c vote by wh.ch he the const,tut,onal rights of theSmfh narrow minded cmngh to to Hoi.. iBriii^h House of Lord^'whon it Was first 'Stephen" A. Douglas the champion of the ™hi. A girl belonging fo ihe upper returned to the Senate answer. Wis ho
time permits a raw jorrhagc: for in this ease it is prcforrablc apo eon
:ftcx tior thai of his candidate, docs itprore'^ wounded vessel. When the amount of that II iyconstn is either just or /rise in 'general stupor is sueh-as to.-lAd to fhe fear 1 limiting this arbitrary discrimination?—of fatal syncope durinir the ojieration, a
Let us be Just. and sensible as well as crit-!provisional dressing should be applied
loan. 1 le entertains now ical and patriotic, Mr. Doolil tie. Tiie otiiy As we fo often saw in the Crimea, wliathas entertained
1
vunjf {lw
I {,g 1'ioporti. .nal Iy employed,
|spoctul and tieatod as cit./xns, and what the art.llery lighting has become inoic mm-
Columbia, South Caro-
with his denunciation the following high compliment: For Mr. Douirlas. as a man. I have' much
rc-sl,e,:t
,ml
-that they ood and
the Republi-
j- (_)|,iu .„,j the West were as su-
/-r,'e:!t «'uiiratii.n. With un-
common powers' of intellect, with great energy am! unflinching purpose, with great reliance upon his own powers and resources, with a nature perfectly fearless, with 'a courage that leads him to grapple with the greatest dangers, with a spirit that leads him to scorn all compromise of his principles, he is thc. most dangerous man to the South that the. North has ever presented in the Federal Council.
And now thc Democracy of the North 'p'
THE TREATY OE TEAXE-UftVai'T-IS RECEIVE!) IN E U111) I'JG —IT»S. TEiMIS-j l!y tlic arrival*'of the JEiuopa.wb have three days' later^ hcHvs. from .Europe, but the terms of th&qJeace are .notyctchccti-j.
anf.i?
.t,ie ™^I.lM?ucntial
ingsfcfor4ho reaison^tfiac^tlic^e whichipenc-
a A a
tJjan an
arrival at, the fcospital. In some eases, -f?'
however, vigorous reparative.power of the
arrest hemorrhagev and so to put up the ^nt
to put up to be car:
par as to enable the patient to be carried
to the hospital whero the question of am- .l"rtV'. i" i.» -i head-to chastise the 0
putafion would liave to be decided 'lhe
military surgeon is .thus compelled to re-
sort to nii.chtempormng surgery and, for :Ji(.,iolls |,at
U1 su ip
hrtWAYOf vitrnpftim vonnr«T.txrf» tiAvi'i»r nt tlw* r. ^i ,• I es winch necus only a littiug occassion to burst forth in such a storui as shall as foil-
irfTnincnt.&
so
.i'!1?'v."'.
i(
..
eld spherical balls. must, tlieretore t.*u]{.111
1 f(JW acious ul!l
tu,[
],rultlIS0
fo
t,l°
,r
mi
„ht ,limv
tLo Will
.i
fil
..s .r
d-ju
(ts :iu
ratdly-.iaiown. That the. .Italians-are satisfied with the. manner, in which the wJvH! the Cincinnati T^/ioi/i/'cr: i. -r _.^.1-^a\-Ut.TL,.-ai btui,,a.ni1n-a•»i
a,uI ab
I
lc ,)f
WrtoIhfMidixnT. owt runn,9ters- The latter nation'w is as inucli arc., uojv no pohtu-al disabilities unpo.s- L-,
!-iH3tt5rtd:o6toijardinia^who^ toeholds
1
^lsirW ^'^.
1 1
jircssed his chagrin, in his.address to his army, that his»«-"natnral .allies,"' meaning liussia, Germany and Prussia, did not conic to his assistance.' Upon them he lays
reS])0
st of
NAror Kols
tllcro
as
London'27
nnes say
^ind, it 'is evident In Illinois, in Tn
,,.oul(I
tukc
it into his
i-«» i. -ii i. ».
[)ot
dyc of thc fcw()
yn
jusLifv our
our part, we scarce know thc case calling .)f .V,(jv ,m \ustrian'-French alliance places where men utter their benedictions i'»V sight, said an Italian om.tess, boastlor immediate amputation on the field, ex-
cept. when some large projectile has car- ,'^j -Jtu.sHtan-'The treaty, which heard of but oik voice touching "the hour jllll,,1c
il iicu iiwnv, Inhb \Mth irro:ucclidb*c liiccra- 'cntluisiasticiillv ohocror in the nn«l the man a voici which proclaiinft
an910U-nceti/isnmv- rcg l-rdcd
Napoleon III has friends at the head "of- a recruiting party of'one-hundred and fifty thousand men.— Kussia, now so loyal, was enlisted among his intimates bv that hrtnv'y 'shake of the
ar
(his theory: The width and depth of the river from Cairo and Memphis to New Orleans is no, materially increased, yet immense addi-. .. tions are made to the quantify of wafer in
tin: channel by large streams from both the eastern and western sides of fhe Mississippi, The question naturally arises. what becomes of this vast added volume of water.' It certainly never reaches New Orleans, and as certainly does not evaporate, and of course it is not confined to the ehanncl of thc river for it would rise far above the entire region south of us. If a well is sunk anywhere in the Arkansas bottom, water is found as soon as the water-
t.,ic. 3I,/S,SS,P1"
tl,c
a-cul'd,''-1-v
in the United States. Thev have adopted twenty miles lrom the Mis-: sissippi, 1,1 Arkansas, dug a well to supply-j.. the boilers of his engine during the late
I his principles, in all thc conventions of that party, whieh have been held for the purpose of nominating delegates to the ('Iiarleston convention, as far as 1 have been able I to understand them, Douglas delegates have been nominated. Even here, in the
of hi.5
again, not wholly approving
was observed throiigliwit the which jg-t Democratic J-arty. -sts on a porous substratum, which al,
was reported to thc husband, with the sug- Mr. lancey the most conspicuous d,s-
,)Cniv avowed that if he were an Union into the (.Julf but for this provision of
"c would espouse the positions ol tuit.
espouse tlie positions
Douglas, but, not believing that the union I of the States cau or ought to continue, lie
opposed to any doctrine likely t-j ecinent
)B)
reached. When
U'^'fipp' g^s down flic wafer sinks
1,1 ,hc
wcli.
Hood. When the water receded his well went down till his hose would 110 longer reach thc water, and finally his well was dry. He dug a ditch to an adjacent lake to let the water intu his well the lake was drained, and the well was dry again—having literally drank ten acres of water in less than a week. The inference is, that the .Mississippi, from
vu
]I..v ,,f
(o
lls
that M10 buricl be deferred, in the unionist iu thc Southern States and has would long since have swept New Oilcan.-
',a"K
ll'S ,Jltlll:.r
vont fhat |jf
1
1: vx1.1't1oxaitv 11:
a meetiui
iSociutyi
seems gifted to penetrate depths hid from Trenton, an Englishman in the neighbor- r1"""P 'l''l"-'s
1 8 5 9
^1,a
possible, soas to pillNbem in -a coridftioTi j? politicians. -.Win.a seems U, have,:^'C^r-yu the least disturbed or harmy -.ltlltoo.
bccu
nia^bo deferred^v^St^the.injjirito UGe peace was arranged toen U.^iu-.that, in Ma^aelmsettK, a blaek ma,f'S rote of thediead onfy^amffcdr shuploiicsa-i! W^- -iiWMuch Mr .j™1
Thftf!"rtf -tHe "fiie'p-weri- iceoinninl^rlfiKV rfgloXe^as^if sitr.iha^ not ..befca-ia-dccply. iu- elT^^ripVif ant nia'ri 'oii'aeeonnt of tlx- eol- .worfl more sijjna! manner than he did terested party in thtecw}»r^^j^s
s.igiii^^au.MtSF,\)^^ife'-'"-^iii.',-':'''All--thiis'
a A to an jr to 6 in ii in at
.ifcrT
uu^
dressed: AYoxmdsi rftehv neck, were^lso 4o^m 8i.o ia.truly wm«U{oek ana ^Junker Idl .4til
jjlqeed under great obligations.., «... to staliir'firiiilj®, an5 this good The-'aJprejs o'f
Napollon-
^^feri^Iic'lfc ft "fo r,!Pari^Tis most remarkable it^lhrigiiage. "'He -says "pcaeo-was-cbn-cluded because the contest .was about to assume proportions-no bLofiger in keepiug. with t|jo interests which rance had in the war." What is meant by this? Does he meSa"*'to''iiftimatc'*tliit revolutions were
ITT X~.v,s: 7
'ECUO, EQUALITY KOASTEU .OF JN a immi
,lci^^V4hc,)cgi^iym^he
treated with^reat. ^egleetr3ind:even by the proximitf. i'"' l'^l tu'al
'j)H)xrinity."
or
j,^
,''-\udJ.^
lut^'yr
thereby make it of creator itronortions 'among the peoide of these seelions, and I Serous enthusiasm for national indepen- .-
nsibi(ity of his misfortunes. iuiJay.s,-lo the. utter dismay of the cabals.
ticjpatc^"wdien^lic eommenced j™" a,ssure you there is a depth of enthu- dene, will bo convorlcd iuto..an endless
^itibliwin bear an 'siasm in tho hearts of the Ueuiocratie mass- disg.ace.
Tn Illinois, in Indiana, in Wisconsin, in and in New York and
1
Michigan, in Ohio,
|)(.']{„.siSn war led to a French'! and maledictions, without reserve I have jll,1I.v
head he gave her in fhe Crimea. .Fortune son-like pluck and jiowers which canhas given him a great part to play, and lie him triumpnntly through tho great sl ritg
can play it at once nobly and profitably.— jof which the battle ground was I llinois, I ''ven
price of her ready submission, the Romans true patriots in every Stale of the Union, surveillance, every line she receive,) the newspapers may! Hut, recently, another feeling has blend-1 subjecf.-d to rigid scrutinytn that Italy should od with the popular enthusiasm—a con- "Af'""//• be liberated from the Alps to the* Adrial- vietion which daily increases—that alone
i-: but a few spacious stipulations would ho can safely bare (ho Democratic stand-j ,,
rif(ii'f" 1 1 .» i) 1 1 fiti I Ik. lohowniL' I .scL down t. !a r""^
,ions would lie can safely bare (ho Democratic
:ni'1 {h°
.Km- |nnl in thc nox I'rosilontuiI (':ini[. u^n
5|| this i. .niiiso to the car, and the Em- iard in the nex Presidential campaign. The
peror of tiic French, in answer to even- 'powers which sought to crush (In: foremost
ktc
m:ln
t(1 mrtl noi)lll(!
.and
mt
Ku.-^.oan powers
,,two
w]i() ]i iJ
U(
.U
cllomioSi aI1
a
in the ranks of fhe Democracy sig-
an in the ranks of the
......j,,,.... nallv failed of success but more iirnobl
JUtW ilis still, risking every thing in (his infamou
friends he might point to llussia and A us-: crusade, it has distracted and ...well, nigh tria, both humbled and both spared." destroyed the Democratic parly. Thc petty despots of Tuscany and .Mo- It is in this great emergancy that the dcuaareto* return to their States under people, regardless of aiI from an Adminthis treaty, a fact which will not increase isfratiou which cannot so much as save its popularity with the Italians. ifselt, would fain save! a parly on which 1 •»—. rest the hope of Union. What other man PrcriJIJAItlTIES OF Till-: MISSISSIPPI. is equal to the work of gathering again
A late scientific paper, in discussing the f'"5 scattered hosts ot the national Dempeculiarities of fhe Mississippi River and ocrafie party the countiy upon its borders, maintains This is the question on fhe lips ol nine
Democrats in ten iu all the States I have named. I hear of but one man mentioned as sufficient for this great emergency.— Ann. Cosar out null us—-Douglas or a the next President of tho United .Slates. Politicians
,K
v'
fore the wind.
Ihe owner of a
-sl(1
porous substratum, which
sorbs the redundant waters, and thus pre-
.lccuulu]ntioil which
AN ,:.•» ITI:.-
thc wisdom" of philosophy. It looks ath- hood dispatched his son with a- note (,, tral Jtal\, oul) to convert those hope wart the dark vallcj _y.ithput dismay,-"Gen. lJalil, to warn him of the approach-1'T' disappointment.cheered by the bright scenc byond it. It ing danger. Thc General being deeply looks with akin do? chastened impatience absorbed in a game of chess when the noi to that lantl where happines holiness perfected. There will be accomplished. There afflicted vir- nut the note in his vest pocket. tuc will rejoice al its past trials, and ac- battle next day, when Gen. Kahl was bro't
nut
knowledge their subservience to its pres- in mortally wounded, the note was found niagnaiiimitj. ent bliss. There the sccrct self-denials of unread iu his pockct. the righteous shall be recognizcd and re-j warded. Thcro all hopes of the Christian I 5®" Iu Austria no mania allowed to shall have their complete consummation, marry who cannot write his own name
Tll IT A 1,1 AN WAIt ITS NSi (i I' CES TO MH'IS NATOI.EO.N'. The Manchester (Knglanil)!nardiau. in an article upon the consequences of thc Italian War to Lous Nai-oi.kd.n, says: "The daggers of the t'arbonari will be re-whotfed a hundred Or-inis will be in (he field for one Thc bafttcd I uitarianism of Italy and the irritated Iiougeistu of France—one moment, reconciled fo the man of the con/) d'etat, on thc point of conducting all his past offenses again.-,! liberty and law to thc expeller of the Austrian—will resume their old hatred and distrust, aggravated to tenfold bitterness. J»ut passing by Liberalism for the moment, ,0 what other cud will this mask of sympathy for Italy have been worn.' To awaken thc active hostility of Cermanv, and to deepen thc distrust of Kngland to \t hriiiL' a (i'Ttuan annvof observation to th.-
,. ., v- if 1 Rhino, and to double the .-strength of thc ot the New Jersey Historical ,, ,. ... 1
at Newark, N. J., Gov. 1W, in Cdii,h,"toVaki' handi with revolution in
response to a foast, made a speech, in (be person of Ko-sulh to pour out (he
gST* Eternity is a depth which no geom- which he related thc following anecdote: treasure and blood ot rtincc to inflict an etry can measure, no arithmetic calculate, On thc day preceding the night on which mcurablc wound 01, Austrian pride, witii-
when, to their surprise and joy, they found no imagination conce'.vc. no rhetoric des- (Jen. Washington had determined to cross out crippling thc strength that may one day cribe. The eye of a dying Christian the Delaware and attack the British
exaet
ppiness will only be was presented, without withdrawing 'his acquirement ot a certain amount ot 1111I1Tierc all thc Gospel attention from the game, he thoughtlessly glory the purchase ot a momentarj. There afflicted vir-j
the note in his vest pocket. ..After the P^n»ari,y
\engeance for that wound, and to
t'1-
Duchies and (,-ii-
these ends—which arf those which deserve to be
at
1C.
A I E N
Vi'-T'r,^.rf! :"lt! ou
nifty, be very
as|| have pleasure.,inJnlonniuS,l:-m that V}y.
I ^vc
111
till appear
1 1
to his.ann}-. weaitVrb3i»? a'^yet Feeeired '•Tw'flttrinilAit
^Jjtactor^ing.4tjggauoa86re ofeAju3tic'o and 'loluge^Jv equidity." iwt i,
———<>———
JOTl\ SAXE.
**Mr.\fe: the Democratic candidate'f(.r
T,
about to break out in Ilungari- and other hiladelplua 1 irss as follows: parts of Enrop~er"tfnd'thatKthey would not T0 J'ou suppose that, you, admirer and •l^A !n "Vflnnin'ff wi'fli T?rrtriMi InKii-rtbiH oi,,l ,'chafltrHOll ot tllO "Ijittlfi trlMllt ot flip
'I'll "PEATE'' AND THE. ASTONISH-?. ENT IT CM EATES IN STEW YOK K.
^Tfic^I?^^ A'lWfri^ Ihe New York JZvcuitig Post whicli lias lAlicau^ftaSj.'b^fs fcf '"^48%liberally with the Kmpcror ^Ia^acliiis'cttS. 'Tt' ihvs
Napoleon, aWl^ivcn. him full credit for rod in'eiiiions, now says "if the proposed turn out, under no more than a ...... xLsting despotism
•il'd.L li(3si,qi' S(|.i4rij, ,« |i( ,,SIlj w:iffhod over by the dosisi'ns i)f I-'rance and Austria, and £iiaril I'V rlieir bayonets against popular'"' uprising and piVifJreS.^, tlinft" 'it will jirove
white niaii'
'as for prtliK
W A
,or
urK,,r^.v^,^^'^r
I fulne.
1
rrCt,nmeh aid from Austria. The ad- land .States, conversing freely with Dem-j"1 vigilance: ".My daughter has never
as the result their warehouses and work-shops-lu all tlmt twenty minutes at a time out
.o0LS
js V-mMvon'will l^ve ,v
Jj'\.
will luUe t.rleited bi.y
(,,vr'r
A
of the Fre,„.h Ji.jmMi,-.
1
,wu
to or
wliielr lie Im' 1
c',*t
aWa th,: fuu
1. opportunity for
inaktnff ^RS1i iiuP «jf indelible. Holiilitv that
C,.ivT'nvhiL' evfr^ftirfT^ha'd and he will provoke oute^BsJ^opiioi^Or later, ot' the revolution-rcvol
1:iteT'
ut ,llC!
0|
ma\
scheme as they will, but tho alternative i.inevitable. Iknow that the would-be Warwicks, larger and less, arc not, without of to a or to a a them take heed fo (heir wnvs. Not manv mouths hence they will witness a storm of enthusiasm for tho man of the, people, especially among the Democrats of the Western and Ivistern Stales, whieh will drive (hem and their schemes as chaff be-
into
Set. against
stirh. losses— called gains the amount of niili-i |,l, style. loSed th-
-inn, .icno.i and
°P^'"',r,tUn!!*».•
of making
pOSIBJ OJOjaq J3A0 uiup OJOUI S[.),|«nq jo suojijiui oojiji oq 0} p^icuuiso si 'ji:jA qi 'oiqo ]-5tip'id
J'jUTOpe
iir blnod. Jt was tor no such jialfry end that Kiirope and America applauded his departure, and (lie Italians hailed his up-
11?':'1'1'1'-.
,/i„ ... riiieo.nl Jiltv .thousand lives, the ruiu of (.overner in Vermont, writes to the tnhtor I fertile jirovinee.s, and tlie disastrous disfurbauce of the peace of the world. If he lias only this to proclaim as the result his campaign, the ^lory of .^lontebello,
justify t!.e sac-
Solferino will dwindle into anton, cruel and useless The immortal honors of s-niankiud thought, in a gen-
———<>———
HA MAN CillH.s.
ish the wire-pullers at Washington and ho idea ol a girl in Italy is indissolubly elsewhere, who, in their plotting and connected with'that ot a being devoid ot counter-plotting,, forget, that the people i:i" ""'ral sense, infallably preferring wrong "still live," and may be heard one of I hose |j° 'ight, and who can only be kept from
all,
«vil by the m»t luees.sanl wafeh
A mother's whole paternal duly her daughter seems considered in
toward
oorats, iu the cars, by their firesides, in I '"^n, since she was nine years old, .lor
'H! 'l-mPI'f-'ICI"ltM! 'I"5 one act
:"ul hJ
f'10
with suspicion.! people and the people's sovereignty—the j™nk in life in Italy, is practically a prison-
ihope and the, sole hope tif the Demi.craiie er until .she marries. Tnlo society she must not cuter—neither in the bit of levyincr party of the Union. For a time, the pnn'•ciple of which 1 speak was simply a pro-
Say that he gives pari, of his spoils to Sar-: while the issues, manifold and incxpressi- ''"'J1'- entail upon her tiic decpe. disgrace dinia, and leaves Venice fo Austria as the bly important, were the, concern of all r11"1 heaviest
this declaratu-n she appeared
,|u,t
•w,l,! lank in
^vorKl« c.sIoojij, with tho mother uf tho
nor
found admiration of tin man—admiration d:.-]dav her charms of the extraordinary abilities of a lcgisla- A" "'"easioiial wal.i wi.li lather, tor— and above all, admiration of (he .Jack- jor mother permitted but .sh
morning
|he. evening dance,
is she period graces, or brother, 1 must not
Lfo outside fhe house unless accompanied by her nearest kindred. To bo seen alone,
!,ul
l°w
yard.-^trom. her fathers
censure.
Kept und-r aji-r^
———<>———
The following is set down ast, tin live heating values of different kinds of American wood. Shellbark hickory bcinir taken as the highest standard, 100 pignut. hickory while oak si I while ash 77 dog-wood 7*i: scrub oak while hazle 1'2) apple tree 7d red ",-ik while beech black walnut, Im: black birch (i'J yellow oak fit) haul maple 5U white elm fS red cedar fid wild cherry ff y.dlow pine I chestnnt, :VJ: vcllov/ poplar f'J: butternut white birch -I!) white pine t-.
Some woods are softer and lighter than others the harder and heavier having their libers more- densely packed to/eih'-i'. lint the same species of wood may varv in density, ace,.riling to the condition.': of il.ij'f growth. Those woods which grow iu forests, or in rich wet grounds, are less consoliiiated than such as stand in open lield •, i.r grow slowly upon dry barren soils.—~
Tlieri: u-ood: from coals, in the
are two stages in the burning of in tlie first the bent comes chiefly lame, in the second from red hot
Suit w-ods are much more active tirst, stage than the hard, and hard'-, woods more active iu the second stage than soft. Thc soft woods burn with a voluminous flame, and leave but little coal, while the hard wood* produce less flame and yield a larger mass of coal.
.H«CK TKIAl/S IN i:.N( i,ANI. Dr. I. C. Noil, now iu Mngland, in a ...recent l,:ttcr to the Mobile lOgistrr, says::
To descend from the sublime t.o thc ridiculous, I must tell you of a scene I saw la.-t. night in an ale-house It. is an exhibition called ''.Judge anil -Jury," got up every night by a set of broken-down blackguard lawyers—men of decided talent, as not unfruqueiitly happen*, is linked with such low and groveling mora! .vn-e a.-j not,: to be able to sustain it.-,eli in a decent position in society.
They get up mock frinl:--, rngu.-.-'.rly conconducted. The judge and lawyers wear wigs and gowns, alter the stvle of the Kugli.-h bar. Cases after the fashion of the Sickle. —this ca-. der.-land, iast week, and argued at great length: Mr and Mrs. Sickles were arraign ed, a number of witnesses male and fenude, were examined the facts all brought out in the most glaring colors, and then argued with glial ability the audience a hundred or ire, sit around at li. t.'e bc„r-ta!des, driiii: beer and smoke at leisure.
ar. Cases after the fash case arc brought before (hem was actually introduced, I un-
The case- I witnessed last, spring was one of a gouty old gentleman by the name of Kiunkev. whose oung wife had treated him honiednat.after the manner ol Mrs, .Sickles, and. he sued for a divorce. ou can not conceive of the v. it and fun dram, out by those ra.-eals iu tie: case my side.' are sire now from laughing, they had as manv female as male witnesses, and .5 ou may imagin that (hey were a choice set ol ladies their testimony wa* given iu iniuiU-
A very h.indso'.ii young lawyer argument, iu one ot the most
1 itnjiassioiicd and eloquent specchei ot' an show hour ami a half l-e'ver heard, iu defense of thc much-injured Mrs. Flunkey— you never saw a lawyer mop- iu earncii, and exhibit more decop feelings, and he drew lown most whole of us
rapturous appt from
