Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 28 April 1860 — Page 1

yf-

•y%

lis-

NEW SERIES--VOL. IT, WO. 41.

mum.

-The Tc«r* roll slowlr br. Themo«r onlhe fr^ "P'"' Tb# snnV low down the «kr. l^rena,

rtr

Th« frost gleam* wher« to«

rs

na

But thVbe.S!bc^onM Wtnoly now. AVwh°nThe ^mmrd.n were nigh: The »un will never dip *o low.

Adowoaffcctlon*clondliw»ky.

A hundr*d months hare passed. Wen*. Sinoe la*t I Toorhand in mino. And felt thy pulM best fast, Lorcna,

But mine bent falter far than thine. ''sA hundred month*—'t«M flowery May. When np the hilly ilop* we elimbcd.

To watch the dyin* of tao day. And here the rillafechurch bells chime.

We loved cach other then. Lorena, or a a re to el And what we might have done. Lirena.

Had bnt our lovinm prospered well'. But. then, 'tis past—Those years nre flown I'll not call back their shadowy forms, 111 say to thoic lost years sleep on,

Sleep on, nor heed-Jife's pelting storms!

It matters little, now. Lorcna, The past i9 with the-eternal past:r Oar heads wilt soon lie low. lor?na.

Life's tide is ebbing out so fast. he re a re O an I Of life, this is so sma'l a part: -'Tis "nrsr TO DUST" beneath the sod

Ilut there, up there.'tis HEAitT ro iiEAnr.

A HKDt'CTION CANE—THE HLDltlB MJWISIIKO. A case of seduction in Groton, Toinp'kinn county, which has just corac to light, is the subjcct of a great, deal of among the friends of the party, and indigiiation among the community. The facts of the case are, as near as we can gather them, as follows .Something more than a year ago a merchant ,of that town, whose previous intrigues with the fair sex had rendered him obnoxious to a large portion of the community, made a public profession of religion and joined the Methodist

Church, and suocecdcd in making people believe that he really meant to lead a better life. His victim, the wife of a respectable and industrious machinist, belonged to the same church, and report says the}' \v9rc throwu together much at prayer meetings and became very intimate, so much so°that it become the subject of general remark, and finally came to the cars of her husband. His suspicions were excited, but he did not believe his wife unfaithful to'him, until last Wednesday evening. On coming home he found the house deserted and 011 instituting a search he found the merchant ajul his wife together, at or near a barn, standing in a field some distance from the house. The outraged husband knocked the merchant down, and jumped on his face with both feet, breaking the bridge of his nose and cutting his face in a shocking manner. The merchant begged for his life, but the husband continued to stamp him until life was extinct, when he took his faithless wife home and informed his neighbors of the circumstance, and that lie supposed lie had killed the merchant, and lie had better see to it. The next morning some of the neighbors went to

ifriend.'i. The merchant has been taken

or Cortland, to keep him from the man

now IT V/AM DOXK IN A ISIS A JVM A \V. The resent brawls in the House at W ashington, remind us of a story we heard in Arkansas, seven years sinsc, which lias never been in print. It is no disrespect to the present enlightened and genial State of Arkansas to say, that in its incipient or Territorial days it was rather rough."— It was a very common thing for a man to leave the bosom of family in sound health in the morning and return dead at night. Cuttings, slashings aud shootings were of daily occurrence. It was dangerous to be safe. The Legislature was chiefly composed of bullies and blacklegs, and 1 the sccncs enacted by them wore often very eccentric.*' A fight arose about something in the House" one day. The Hon.

Mr. Banger of Napoleon, called the Hon. Mr. Slangcr of Helena, a liar. The Hon. iSlangcr retorted with a bullet, which took off the Hon. Mr. Banger's left car. Both then sprang into the center of the hall with drawn bowio knives. The Speaker said by G—d we must have fair play in this business and rushed out into the floor, with a cockcd pistol in one hand and a tremendous toothpick" in the other, and in tones of thunder commanded the the Representatives to forma ring. A ring was formed aud in the classics of the plausibility, at least time the combatants "went in." They the architect of the

Helena. He was good at draw-poker and faro, and handled the toothpick beautiful. He wasn't of no aoeount at legislation.— He was middlin' on h'osses. He put on too many scollops. He had no family 'cepting his brother Bill, the best poker player on -•"Red River. I move resolutions of respect be passed and for'arded to his brothcr Bill."

They were passed.— Cleveland Plaindealer ."**

A MOTHER, IN STORT, Kills HER CHILD!—-The Hamilton (O.)

Telegraph

uji Last Tuesday, a little child of Mrs. Shaffer, (sister of Mr. Campbell, who reaides in the First Ward) who lives in Gernuntown, got possession of an old pistol aad snapped it several times, after which •he handed it to her aiother, and said in a playlol manner, s^oot me mother!"— Mrs. Shaffer took the1 pistol and pointed the muscle toward her child and palled |e trieger ezploding^the eap and sending trough the child's head, killing it j. The pi8tol|had not been disfor more than a year, and was loot 0 b# locoed.

THE 9MJIOND WEDDIXC. There is a rumor that the beautiful Miss Bartlett, the heorine of the Diamond" Wedding, and the envy of all the fashionable, and woald-be-fasbionable young ladies, from Maine to Georgia, and over the Rocky Mountains, has grown wearied of her bargain, and gladly flown back to the sheltering wing of the parental roof. We do not know how true this report is, but if it is a fact it ought to serve as a warning, and example to all the shallow, foolish girls, of every community, who neglect, and despise plain, honest, sensible men, who are known, and honorable members of society, to run crazy after the first importation of foreign airs and affectation that makes his appcarance. The disease is not confined to any particular localties. The pretty country girl scorns the young farmer for his want of polish, and marries the dissipated clerk of the village dry goods or grocery store, who kills her in a little while by starvation or unkindncss. The village Miss, educated, or rather corrupted at a third-rate boarding school, looks down on common" mechanics, and substantial tradesmen, and wants a city" merchant, or at least, a gentleman of independent property, and the chances arc, becomes the prey of some wandering-vagabond, who lives upon his wits, and perhaps forces her in time to contribute to his support. The stylish city belle is content with none of these—her dreams are of titles, cashmeres and laces—she must have a French Count, or an English Milord, or at least a rich Southerner," with fabulous plantations, and countless servants, all to do her pleasure. Docs a thought of the sweet affections, and tender duties of wife-hood, and motherhood ever cross the minds of these fair, yet foul mercenaries, who coolly calculate on the barter of body and soul, for so much lace and jewelry annually

Docs any one suppose that Miss Bartlett would ever have married her lean arid withered Don, if he had been a poor man, working for his liv ing, or even without the veldt of his magnificence and Cuban titles.

The case of Cora Withers (Mudame.de Wilhorsf) is fresh in the minds of all, who married against her sensible father con-

bier of the first water, and her wandering

itably sccured by

American girls ought to consider well before risking their chances for happiness by marrying persons whose habits and modes of thought are totally different from thoir own. American women, notwithstanding all that is truly said of their wrongs, cn-

the spot indicated, and found that the man j()y a freedom, independence and dcfercncc ]iud not been killed, but had come to and which is given la no other women on the crawled home, as they easily found by the icc of the earth and the difference beblood along his route home. tween a good-looking, good-natured, gal-

The machinist's wife says that she and :nt American husband, and a testy, crabthc merchant lnvc met clandestinely for bed, cranky foreigner, is not at all i'avorathe last six or eight months. She has been ble to the latter. L'jt who will take the Ment to her friends. The affair has made the husband rn-:ane, and he lr rj since madii one or two attempts to go to the house of the merchant with the avowed intention oi takinrr his life, but has been restrained by his

SSi'MATi MOM,

0

-A new work bv Profossor ^'illiam Mor- which the r:a:l kc

away from Groton and sccrcted in Homer otiti tlofl "Relations of tho Ganglio-Nor- one hand behind and the

vous

"THE TEJIPEIIAVCE OF WISE DBIifKIXC. Theodore Parker writes from Rome In Europe, you see many things which seem strangg to an American. Take the U3e of wine. If I am right the Europeans consume about 6,500,000,000 gallons of wifle. In Fronce, leave out of account the pasture land which is not ploughed, and the forests, of the actual and arable land, one-third is devoted to the culture of the grape. Yet there arc immense districts where no wine can be raised at all. I sec it stated that the government returns make it appear that the people of France drink 850,000,000 gallons of wine, and the calculation is that the amount is not much less than 1,000,000,000 Yet I don't believe, in the year 1859, there ivap.so much drunkenness among the -39.000,000 people of France as among the 3,000,000 Yankees of New England I have been four months at Rome there are wine shops everywhere I am out doors from three to six hours a day, and have never yet seen a man drunk now and then one is merry, never intoxicated. The Romans, Italians, French, &c., are quite temperate they drink their weak wine with water, and when they take liquors, it is only a little glassful at a time, (which docs not make a spoonful.) I don't believe there is a bar in all Italy where men step in and drink rum and water, gin and water, &c. Excessive drinking is not to the taste of the people.

whose domestic happiness he has ruined. ^Jan," which tho Press predicts will "com- 1 three inches. It camc down with a crash to that hetnenl}' home. A child hand —Auburn Adv. maud the attention of our most philosophic that made the platform creak. A tenth placed the crow 11 upon 3our head. niiuds." In its review of tho work, the keg being placed on the pile, Mr. AV. lifted

Press says the entire mass, ten hundred and seventy The question as to what-the soul is the pounds having recently hurt his left writer sa\, true wisdom can only answer, shoulder, Mr. \Vr. did not think it prudent

I do not know.'' Nevertheless, the the-1 to lift any more. His next feat was I10Mory advanced as to its central residence in ing at arm's length, above his head, a one the both* is remarkable, and the more So' hundred and eighty pound dumb bell.— from the fact that it seems to be well sus- Xext, throwing out, six times in succession taincd. The dualism of the nervous sys-iat arm's length, above his head, a one-hun-tem is defined somewhat as follows The dred pound dumb-bell. Thirdly, he raised two departments of this system are known ja barrel of flour on his shoulder, and held as the cercbro-spinal, and the sympathetic it there about two minutes. Next, he or sensory, the grand centre of the former raised his body about«two and a halt feet being the brain, that of the hitter the so!ar into the air with his little finger. His fifth !plexus. In other words, while the con- feat was raising his entire weight, five tents of the cranium are known to be the times in succession, about three feet above brain of animal life," the .solar plexus is the floor, with the middle finger of his regarded as "the brain of organic life."' right hand. In two years he expeets to

By the solar plexus," is meant thatdc-jbe able to lift sixteen hundred pounds.— partmcntoi the nervous system which is When he commenced his feats of strength more immediately connected with the in-: he could only raise four hundred or live tcrnal visceria, finding its poles, if we may hundred pounds. express it, in the epigastric arch, imnie-

diately under the breast bone, and the cerebellum in the base of the brain. This then, after patient investigation, the author believes to be the grand centre of physical existence.

The immaterial soul is traced from the microscopic spermatozoon," lodged 111 its germ cell" in utero, and with great demonstrated to be body in which it

cut each other frightfully, and for quite a dwells. Believing for reasons fully stated,

spell it was difficult to decide who was the 1 that the soul has the solar plexus for its better man. But finally Banger, by an

adroit thrust, cut off Slanger's head, and instant death was the result. Mr. Slanger's remains being removed, and order restored, Mr. Banger arose^and said It is my painful duty announce to the House .v the death of the Hon. Wiu. Slanger, of

immediate place of abode, which being at ouce the great sourcc and centre of son-

1 1 1

tient being, the cvoiycr of organic or rad-

1 llfe

in coutradistiuction trom the ie-

noinenal life, which has tor its centre t.10

tion, that a suitable composite hoinccpathic

preparation applied to the poles above in-,

dependent upon this, the'very root of the difficulty is reached. This affords, of course, but a crude idea of the aim aud argument of ths work but should the sublime theory it contains upon investigation by^ scientific men of the profession to which the subject properly belongs, be clearly demonstrated to the world, it may not onl3' revolutionize existing theories of materia medica, but it wilTplace in the hands of thousands much invaluable knowledgo of their own constitutional being, and must forever silence that materialistic skepticism which would limit the existence of the soul to the life-time of the body, of which, if Professor Morris be correct, it is at once the builder and tenant.

l9*The salary of the Vice President of the United State.* is $8,000. per annum..

In the north of Europe, and {jjg

even in Switzerland it is not so. The English without help from the Irish and Scotch, drink about 600 or 700,000,000 gallons of beer every year, not to speak of the wine, spirits, See., they take to wash it down withal. There is drunkenness. So you find it in Scandinavia, in Holland, and North Germany. How do you think the Americans will settle the drink question Certainly nob by taking merely to water, tea, coffee, etc. W'c shall have more leer, perhaps, return to the making of. cider, and certainly plant vines whore tliey will grow. Drunkenness is such a monstr.ous and ghastly evil, I would do almost anything to got rid of it. But I sometimes think we have taken the wrong track. I am

tQ Hee

sent, a foreign count who added to his|ffccNcw y0rk Legislature, and think it Countslnp the qualities of a roue, and gam-1

jic J^ngc Law introduced to

wi[l do more than our Ncw Kng

sc]icme of prohibitiou fu

iand

.cc.

unhappy life since—sometimes with, sonic-1 .... .. _. __ times without her vagabond husband—has],-' FEATS OP STKESVGTJB'. been a terrible commentary upon her folly, Mr. G. B. Winship has been astonishing No gentle words of comfort and love. No But even if wealth and social position the people of Philadelphia by exhibitions soft folding of little hands prayer. i\o were inevitably sccured b}'such matches, of his strength. He 'accompanies them 1 mother! with a lecture, in which he dilates on gym- Missing the low, sweet candence of her nasties, &c. He is described by the 1iu!- voice missing that tender "good night," lctin as about twenty-five years of age, of'seeking, seeking, seeking all in vain, that medium height, full chested and rather ark for the weary dove—a mother's heart.

thin flanked, hands and feet well proportioned his countenance intelligent, though not remarkable in any way. After his lecture, lie prepared himself for feats of strength. He appeared without coat or collar, aud in his bare arms. His first performance was to lift nine hundred and

sixty-three

ounds weight, the arrangement ly in love re

which is thus described There was Oh! let yi

rich Cubans we go in for the native j:t platform of timber, twelve feet high,! lead them in the green pastures, and by stock.— Rockford Nctcs. from :t beam in t!i2 center of which were the still waters ot the jirecious Savior's

I suspended nine l:i was run through a

S? ring were

of nail:-, the

I'hildelphia, has just been issued.' placing the stick between his legs, lie with Kctuembcr their angels do always behold

other

System to the Immaterial Soul of! body, raised the enormous weight about it may be that a child hand shall lead\ou

A TV AE.M.ISCF, BK'l'WEK^ AI'STKIA ASD KlTS»HA. It is said that these two powers, which have been estranged in policy for sonic years have come again to a friendly understanding, and will uiiite on a policy opposed to that of England aud France. 1. Austria agrees to a revision of the treaty of March ol, 1S5G, in the sense desired bjRussia. '2. In the event of a congress

mc(j at on 0f

cnccg ex st ng

ro at vo to

C(j a geparate

dicated, (which, iu justicc to Mr. Morris, |0^ disturbances in Hungary'or Gallicia, is our own word,) might be made an effee-

ju5s a

tive remedy for the effects of intense aud pajj0Q those provinces. 7. The two ,• i.l i_t rni- „f 1 ...r.

continuous mental labor. This relief, af-1 governments will invite Prussia and the forded directly to the psukee, or soul, the I (jerman Confederation to accede to the. radical life restores its natural energies, I

as the pheuominal and historic life are both

nian

^.

TA5E A5U AT SEW

IfEXDKICK* AI.BA^TV.

These gentlemen met at the markethouse last night, before the largest crowd of people that we have witnessed there for four years. WT have to-day printed a careful report of their speeches, giving the substance of what they said in their own words. The' high reputation of Col. Lane as a debater, and as a stump orator had preceded him, and we must confess that he fully sustained his reputation. His speech was ingenious, eloquent and full of anecdotes. He made a desperate effort to break the force of his position as the President of the Fremont Convention, and to explain away why he slaughtered Fillmore on that occasion, but it was no go. That boisterous'arid hearty applause always met with by opposition speakers here, failed to respond to his twisting prevarications and turning to get out of a dilemma.

A distinguished Republican said, "How Lauc scatters he had better make a clean breast of it, and advocate the pure Republican doctrines, and trust to luck for the Fillmore vote." "Mr. nendricks followed Colonel Lane in a compact and effective speech replete with good sense, full of facts and arguments. Everybody understood him. Every one was disappointed in the man. It had been given out that Hendricks wa^iiomatch for Lane. Every one left the market house with praise upon their lips of Hendricks and

cfy0rt

Kverv Democrat's face was

wreathed with smiles, and their hearts made glad as thcj- listened to his able, earnest, and triumphant defense of Democrat men and their measures. We do not wonder now that Lane refuses to make extensive joint appointments with Hendricks. We admire his wisdom and prudence. If every voter in Indiana could hear them both, Hendricks would beat Lane ten thousand.—New Albany Ledger a

TBBK MOrilEKLESS.

They are motherless! Oh! gently, gently, keep back those bitter words. Avert that cold, cruel start! Mark you not the tearful eyes! Alas! that sorrow should ever make a child's heart its home.

They arc motherless! Stranger hands ministering to their daily wants stranger hearts wearying of the irksome duty.

No fond sweet kiss no warm embrace.

Dratv the little forms near to your heart! Pillow the aching head upon your bosom! Think of your sunny childhood your mother's earnest love Her gentle care—her patient forbearance—her precious forgivness. Then only in kindness—let j-our hand rest on each honored "little head—011-

L-prove that strivken iitile flock! ours bo the hand that shall

A stick love! Let yours be the blessed benedicby I tion: "Inasmuch as ye have done it to the

suspended, and least of these, ye have done it unto me."

before Ins jue tacc qf our Tathcr in llca\en. Then, I

Spe.ik OKXTLV to the MOTIIKKLIMS! A wuisjlit "I' «oc they bear, Gree' tlicin with lnolw 1 teiiilcrncss,

Oh! iul'l not to their cnrc. Fp".ik jfuntly t« the motherless Whiiii tiinr.- their eyes bedim: ItcRicmhor who has bid them "come"—'

Ami eml them unto him! Tln-n yours shall that rich Me.-.-in:,' hr— "Friend- you have done TIJIS I NTO HE!"

A FISH STORY.—In the State Board of Agriculture's rooms, in the State-house, is a large glass box or vessel, wherein is kept several live specimens of fish, among otliers a suufish about six inches in length.— I The Secretary recently caught a common horse leach and placed it in the water with the fish. A contest immediately begun I between the sunfish and the leech, involv-1 iug life or death to the worm, which was watched with much interest and curiosity.

The sunfish attempted to swailow-the leech head-foremost, but the latter fastened liimself to the under jaw of the fiah nml obstinately refused to be swallowed. The next thing was for the Ssh to get the leech out of its uiouth, aud to this end various ingenious maneuvers were resorted to without effect. At last the fish, raising) his mouth above the surface of the water, blew the bloodsucker from his position.— Again the fish attempted to swallow the leech, this time tail first but the wily worm fastened himself to the outside of his enemy's mouth, and had to be dislodged by a repetition of the blowing dodge.

meeting, she will support the proposals that may be introduced by luissia 011 this jThc struggle lasted for more than a week,! subjcct. 3. She engages to act in concert janJ at last the fish succeeded in getting with Russia 011 questions pertaining to Las- the leech down, wdiercat lie manifested his 1 tern affairs. 4. She offer's to accept the satisfaction bv a series of inexplicable cur-!

plVlssia ]n settling the differ-

brain, the author presumed, and as he tells ^ustrja js attacked iu Italy, Russia prom- the surface of the water—dead. The I us, proved the correctness ot his presump-

Jses tQ

furnis],

an

versa

vcts.

})Ctweeii her and Prussia

uy

convention. G. In case

engages to station an army of occu-

aboyc st

ipulations. If Prussia and Ger-

accc(

|e t]ic n0]y Alliance will agaiu

menace liberal Europe with subjection, and Louis Napoleon will have cause to dread a coalition of all the great powers against him.

6&"The IS*. X. Herald declares that Wendell Phillips has elevated Scolding to be one of the fine arts. It says:

The order of W endcll Phillips is the poetry of* scolding. Theresites could not hold a candle to him. Phillips is Juvenal, Horace, Junius, Pope and Swift rolled into one. He has sublimated and etherialized Billingsgate—purifying it from its vulgarity, and making it almost divine.— He finds fault with all things in heaven and earth, and the place below but so classical and elegant is his satire that the object of it (eels delighted, even when his thrpst is out.

-j,-- S

But alas the exultation of the fin-1

jctor was brief, for the next morning

]ie affairs of Germany. 5. If found Mr. Sunfish floating sideways upon

auxiliary force, the uni- bloodsucker had triumphed even in death,

strength of which will be detcrmin- and left no living foe.—Columbus States-!

EDITOHMT, LIFE.—A newspaper is a queer institution it im-n' be destroyed at' night it may light a candle or a cigar it I may curl a girl's hair Ah only think of1iff that girls Of course we don't mean an3*! one in particular 2so, indeed. An ed-1 itor's thoughts are completely, sweeth", exquisitely wreathed in your rich tresses. and—yes nestling down with you in your midnight slumbers gently to guard and peacefully to keep watch over your happy dreams! Yes, indeed! That's "the destiny of man3' a Republic—we know it, for we have actually been told so The ladies 1 take to it, and it to them. First the dams-' els (if the printer divide this word we are ruined) eagerly read, then repeat the programme, and then it goes among the soft and beautiful tresses, and the daintily embroidered night caps Who wouldn't like to be a paper of this sort About half the people we suspect! Editors are pretty clever folks, but they don't know everything."

It snowed at Oswego, X. Y., on the 25th.

CK A VF011DSVILLE, MONTGOMERY ,COUNTY,f INDIANA' 'Al'ML 28, WHOLE NUMBER 833

LIFE WEARSAWAY.

Life wears away.

Life wears ivwoy

Whether we do the good we may— Whether we5pend it in work or pl iy. Freeze in December or dunce in May,

Life weary away.

Life wears away _!

iin its pleasures and pains, its hopw anj fear? It-s losses and gains, its smiles and tears. We may bcckon to tim^, but he will not stay—

Life wears away.

XJ

Life wears aw.iy!'

With its restless nistlits and toilsome morns. Love crowns fts.with joy. or hate with thorn---— The heart beats on with lU loves and scorus— ..Life wearsayay.

Life wears away

But heed it not, so look boyoiul. A« a child for his horn :, with yearning fond We may laugh at time, that he will nm slay, And smile in peace as life wears away.

-SSfThe following, by Dow, Jr. is matchless in itsbeaiity: Day by day old --orrows leave us

Leave us while new:«irro_w3 coins: Ci'ine, like evening's shadow-', lengthening Lengthening round the spirit's heme. 1 LNij" by day fade Friendship's Flowers—

Flowers that flourished in the Past— I'ast, oh Past!—once bright and glowing: (iiov. iug ouec, but diu-.ui'dat l.iit! ist to fade of nil is Fancy—

Fancy, ever young and gay: Guy im when young Love wasdreamixg. iJrcaniing. drcuinitiir. day by day.

I'lfjCRiniAGE TO MECCA. reccnt publication of the Ministry cf Algeria and the Colonics, make some curious statements relating to the pilgrimages to Mecsa during the present year. The ceremonies at Mecca terminated on the 11th of last month, in presence of about

50,000 pilgrims of 17,850 had conic by

.sea, and 22,150 b} luncl. In 185-S there

I

declare, to the events of Dejeddah last joctoi| 7

year, and also to the dread of the cholera,

which made extensive ravages in 1850.— As soon as the pilgrim sets foot on the

I. Visiting the temple and going seven times round the Kaaba, starting from the

Scrfa and Merwa, within the hunts or the

son

ing, until the return of the keeper,

jok.x MUBowonii posxiitr-Tioia

I Life wears away.! Line the rosy flush on the morning cloud, i'tkc the flowers perfume by Ui«5 stronjj wind bowed. suribeaiird smile, like the"nigbl'? dark itself while living, and griuds and cheats

t!einr

most men whose daily labor forms the sole political importance.

support of their children". lie cut himself oft from sccial and doriicstic ties, and held -the most distant and uuiienial intercourse

therefore, was to be sold not a dollar of the principal was to bo used even a large be 11

(io!J of tho n,nl,.,1 reVcnues

rcjIlVe$(ed

were 160,000 pilgrims in 1-10,000, r0„ntlation of his 'benefaction was to flov

and in 1850 120.000. The decrease it the number in 1856 is owing, tho natives

a

1 1 1

pieces or white cloth, one tied around the loins with the ends hanging down to the middle of the leg, while the other is thrown over the shoulders so as to leave the right arm free. He must go bare-headed and wear sandals. As long as he wears this garment he is bound to lead a pure and regular life. At Mecca he begins the ceremonies under the direction of a guide.— They are as follows

of niisc

Black Stone, which he must kiss or touch utiUertakinc". in completing each circuit.

'2. Drinking the water of the well Zcm Zcm, at which savs tradition, Hager and *•'•*»'^ATE

,n and lady who appeared to be look-

illg

fur

so

city, in commemoration Oi Ilageu jfriiMnJ coni-tconsty saluted them, and inous search for water for herself and her

t!i

sounds from the prisoners struck upon his no resides in New Haven. In that, city '-der.' ear, he immediately posted off to the cell he o\v from whence they cunie, aud barking fnri- to-day ously, signified to the prisoners that they tract were committing a breach of the prison discipline. On one occasion, the ceils be ing all full, it was found necessary to make up a bed on the floor of one of the balconies for an inmate. As this arrangement had not been communicated to the dog. he found, 011 making his evening parol, tins prisoner out cf his cell, and immediately hauled off the bed clothcs, seized him by the arm, and led him into the rotunda, where he kept him standing, without cloth

who

of spring-gun arrangement. The3* returned yesterday with $30,000 worth of furs, the result of a two month's trapping tour. We consider this a very profitable business

,liething 0:1 the road. Our rural

(1

lni

jf they had lost a muff. That was

{just what they i.ad lost, and great was

6. Repairing on the 9th day- of tiie their apparent jov at the recovery of the month to Moirtit Arrarat, about twelve

iI!jr

flir

.lt

staircases leading to the different cells and merce, ascertain if all was right, and then

"i j,e .V(lb0raneo of his

miles from Mcee:^ after morning prayer, ^-atit.uie, the "gentleman," in spite of i,Con cordially rcceivcd in some places. Mobamincdri 1 tnnntiun says that on this disclaimer remonstrance, insisted upon The Government had reprimanded the hill Adimi built a teniplc, »uk. *Luioin.uct jy^wardinrr tnc hone.st finder with a dollar, Pai/s and Patfic for giving currency to performed his demotions. 1 which he desired him to take from a the report that England was blanicable for 7. On the following day the pilgrims all1

was

am for !:ind of wild-eat

quietly I

.••.,• •. 3'

Fow Days

The folly of the charity which starves ARRIVAL OF THE AU8YHALA1IAII.

and steals, that it may build monuments H06IIIXH S J-'risl I which will couple the name of their author TUB FIOUT CERTAIN TOCONR in the name of posterity, with the fame cf liberal beuevolcnce, finds apt illustration

the history of tho now celebrated Me- |})oo,

"PORTLAND,

was to b(

for fifty 3*cnrs, before the ful

for the benefit of the poor.

Was eV(

,,.

UK

,rc

cn argc

~!lCiuc pro

0r a:jv 0

ne ever proved

fu iurt, 7 Saoped by law chr.r,

ui!u. v. it

undermine by commissions, diminished bv natural v.astc in the absence of an ac­

drcd soil of Mecca, ho must put on tv.o iiowlo-1 L'Oil legal holder of the bequest, bail at a small amount.

|irccted life 1

Ishmacl quenched their thirst, TION OF TIIE DROPGAME.—Hie Providence 15. Praying at the station of Abraham, Journal says: marked by a stone, on which he is^ sail to: fpv. mornings since, as a worthy rcsihavc stood when he went to sacriiicc his

•s0'i- tho Phiinfivld Turnpike, he saw lying in 4. Slopping and praying at the place (|)C

AND Incexious

(,f

Lxi:CU"

Johnson was driving into town 011

ro

called EI Madjen, the spot where Solomon pe .rance tint he slor.ped and picked it upstood to see niorter mixed to build the nw |,.uj ,.ot proceeded far when he met a temple. carriage containing a smartly dressed gen5. Running seven times between Mounts

^J'a lady'* muff, of so promising ap-

,ic

Donoghcase. The New Orleans Picayune the 12th, arrived at this port at six says i- J*v-o'clock tliis morning. The Canard scvew To amass the fortune which ho'left be-'steamer Etna arrived at Liverpool on thd hind him, he labored harder and practised more self-denial, and more closely shut up his handand heart to all bunovolence, than

mbi via

he considered ho had been hunted out of eight counties, while his opponent, Sayors, was allowed to go with the greatest impunity, he did feel sore at the treatment ho was receiving. He apologized if he had used expressions which he ought not. Two gentlemen were ready to give bail to tho amount required.

Cuided by the station in life of the party in America— Jlccnan was a blacksmith lie hoped the Bench would assess tho

1

it shrank into a mere pigamy, compared The Clerk auuouuced that the Bench with ils gigantic proportions when the tcs- agreed to Median's own recognizances for tator yielded to his destiny. Then by the £'50, with two sureties in £25 each.—• judgment of the courts, it was diverted [Loud applause.] lie added the authorifrom its original purpose, and the relics gathered from the wreck, go into block stone pavement in New Orleans, aud are put into brick and atone mortar for a now City II:tll in Baltimore and poor John McDonogh is remembered only to point a sarcasm against folly, or sharpen an cxamand impracticable

tics had 110 feeling beyond the preservation of the peace. It was stated by tho Court that Ilccnan could not further bo interfered with aimvhcre, unless he broke the peace.

The securities were promptly signed, and Hcenan has left Derby for London.—* Bell's I.ife was most indignant at the cap* turc, which it attributed to Ilccnan's companions getting a place where they were almost scrtaiu of arrest.

A subsequent edition exhonoratcs IIcc' nan, and says he look all ucccssar}' procaution, employing a man to sound tho police and put them off the track. This person deceived Ilccnan and his friends, and gave information that lead to his arrest.

Jh-U's Life indignantly scouts the idea that Savers or his friends caused the arrest, and slates that Meenan's party believed Sayors utterly incapable of such conduct.

It was considered certain that the fight would come off on the day fixed, the 16th. FKA.NCK.—An imperial Commissioner was traveling through the neutralized provinces of Sardinia, and is said to hava

jlc tallest change" ho hap-' the outbreaks in Spain and Italy.

go ill a body to the Valley of Motina, and pened to have in his pocket. Finally the The flour market was heavy and lower

there sacrifice propitiary victims they all nnsu*pfcling finder accepted the V, and wheat quiet and unchanged. cutoff their hair and nails, devoutly burv--I, ,,,,1^ back four dollar* of A 1 13s 11! OR! The fluctuation on (he Bourse wero ing the portions it off. After remaing! ('ojinicrcc money. With renewed expros- liirht. The rentes closed the 18th at 69f. two days at Mouna, they again visit the! temple of Mecca, and then prepare for their departure.

1

During last summer, while visiling the County- House at Lwreuce, we were am is-! cd by Sheriff Cary's story of the intelli-i gence of a. huge St. Bernard dog, which was the property of one of the underkeepers, and his constant 'companion in the prison. This dog had become familiar: with the routine of his master's du'ies, and was more feared by the prisoners than the master himself. After the pris-' oners had left the workshop for their cells. aud were properly secured, the dog would invariably at stated intervals go up the

iions of gratitud-j the gay liv.velcr passed S, market dull but firm. on. It ii hardly necessary to .viy that ITALY.—The King of Sardinia was about when the rewarded finder arrived 0:1 t0 make a tour of investigation through his Christian Hill, in- learned that he had been new dominion. niujj!"d out of four dollars in good money.

1

to his country

iidcrcd himself iia'dt lempting to shove'

i.MX I.lli CtaDITtOS Of A I .'CV. TISI: T:\v E.'KSTOKS.

Tho New Vork correspondent of Charle.-.ton (S. C.) Courier, thus writes regarding the wealth of some of the editors of the former city

Gerard Hallock, 01" the Journal of f'om-

a r'ch man. Thou tiendiiiL' to his

'his

city

return to his quarters. If any discordant from .Monday afternoon to I'rnlay evening,

The British Ambassador, by orders from

London, and the Sardinian Court, accom-

the queerest pr.nv him. ^-.r The Parliament at Turin would adjourn to enable the members to join the royal cortege. Garabaldi had arrived at Turin jand taken his place in the Chamber of tho It' preventatives. —There has been a great An* ti-Aiistrian demonstration at tho capital.—»

The occasion was the funeral of a student who dii-d from injuries received from tho polica in the recent demonstration. Six thousand persons followed the corpse to

editorial duties t'1 grave with patriotic pride. The police 'did not interfere and there was no disor­

1

considerable re:! estate, and he iffers for sale a portion of it—a lift3- acres— for which he demands

S |U!.i,000. The interest of Mr lial'oe!: in the .Journal of ('o::nn:ree is of itself a furtu :e, hi and hi-: two sons ownini' about thrce-ouarters of the establi.-hment, from

jand the riehe.-t editor we have, next to ucned and ordain-d.

took him back to his quarters in company Janx's Gordon Bennelt, who is estimated be German i.ates Oi with the doe, to inform him not to further at or just double. making special dcfc".n\e i. ,n On ..untlior ric.-n .••r.n wliilc*! Horace tiroclr is bv no r.ie.ms a rich Jaimn —Affairs HI Japan

molest him. On another occasion, while Horace Greeley is by no means a rich. the dog was in tho Sheriff's office, a gen-, man. If- has no: a taecl of keeping tleman called upon business, and the Slier- money, though I dure say be makes it being absent at the time, the party con-: enough. 'I he 1 irnes is not yet pa3*ii:g eluded be yvould call again, but the dog concern like its rivals, the Herald and insisted upon the stranger'.- stopping, and Tribune. 1c will be when it gets a few taking him b3- the arm led him to a chair, more years on its head and wrinkles on its where he was obliged to remain until the brow. '1 he Brookses, of the Kxprcss, are vent bj Sheriff came in.—Ncicburtjport Herald, both becoming rien. 'I hey both married and the rebels and their arms wero cap- —.»»»— money South, one near Richmond, the h-' tured, and the demonstration iu Naples

TRAPPING.—Trapping would appear to er iu Washington. Besides, under their crushed. be a much more profitable business than management, the I.xpress has been made SPAI:-:. Great eft/rts arc making to I i- :r Quite profitable, and has been carried on at capture Count Mountemolin and his brc fTolu ciicrsTmETt tlic Wjiich wc .. mi the least possible exnensc. Jmnon Lrootcs ther. The oouiiuaries* of Cclta haTC been take from the Lcateuworlli Dispatch, be usuallv set down at about SvO.Oo'i, ani eab!y arr m^ed. The value of the fcer* rcceivcd as evidence: from the* estate of his wife, and Krastus rit oy ceded to Spain is 300,000,000 reals.

Two voting men from 3iichigan—Walter cannot be worth less than §50,00 J. Rob-! The answer of Austria to the circnlar of Cooper and another, who.*-e name we have ert Bonner, as the world knows, is the M. 1 houver.il ot the annexation of Savoy, forgotten—recently went out on a trap- journalistic Aladdiu of the New orltl:— like that of Russia, raises no objections ping expedition to the Big Blue, taking He has only to rub his Ledger and out, the annexation so long as it is the free conwith them a lot of "animal traps," a kind comes the gold. It is a tight race between cession of Piedmont, and not an appoallto

i'ain".—The Kmpcror of Morocco

which they alone ha.'c a:i income of 60O,- coroat had been concluded between Spain OJu to -f-i-'.UOO a year. Notwitlis!:iuding this great worldly su, ee.-s, jrard Hallock is one of the 10:•( modest of 1:12:1, and he is what it liard an ditor to^e now-a-davs (HI this tit, at lea -t) a sincere' Christian. 31 r. Hallock worth *300,000 provisions of the concordat shall be sanctioned and ordained. the Rhino artf reparations.

9$HK

•_ &jk&L

i^ter FromJBarope.

Monday, April

23/

The steamer Austrailasian, from Livor-

n0Qn Qn

Qaecn3town

9th inst. The North Britain arrived at Quceuston 011 the eve of the 10th GREAT URITAIN.—There was uo netfsof

JParliment

was sit-

ting. ,..**• 1 he French and other continental journals accuse the English Parliament of favor-

with his fellow men, while he added house ing the recent irlist attempt in Spaiu and to hou&c, possession to po session, until the insurrection in Sicily. his actual wealth seemed to him to have A rc.orm meeting w:ts held in Hyde swollen to some twelve mi.lien?, and to Park on Sunday the 8th. The proceedprouiisc him the. means of eserciiing a ings were tame, aud there was not mora controlling influence' upon r. long succession of generations. Ilow, as lie pendered over the accumulation, in revolving years, of this enormous estate, his heart inusi. have swelled at the conception which he himself could scarcely grasp, of the beticficii.rics it would bring the poor, in comfort and intellectual culture, each \car in- peared in his behalf, and said Ileenau had creasing its s'phere of blessings Jiut it never broken the peacc ill England, and life-time, long as his promised tub?, was had no intention of doing so. not sufficient to lay the foundation good True he may have made use of such Ian* and secure enough to satisfy h:•= g'gintic jguage in the c::citcmcnt of his capture, conception. Not a foot of the property, when his passion was aroused, but when

than a thousand present. The submarine cable for Gibraltar will be ready by the middle of September.

Ilccnan was before the magistrate at Derby on the 7th, charged-with the intention of engaging in a pize-fight-, thereby c.uising a breach of peace. Mr. Leech ap-

had

ratified the treaty of pcaee. General Ortega and three .persons of the highest rank had been arrested at Calandron.— Ortega is to be tried at Tortona. A small body of insurgents had been defeated nt Bilbu.-i previous to Ortega's act. A con-

and ilome, and was promulgated. (inHMANY.—The Grand Bukc of Baden, despite the vote of the Second Chamber, had proclaimed the independence of tho Catlulic Church. He declares that tho

—Affairs iij,Japan were unsettled. vii QuecmU'trn.]

SICILY.—'The insurrection in Sicily is spreading, and the dispatch of troops from Naples in'inues.

N.U't.KS.—An insurrection has broken oat. The Royal troops carried the C'onsault, after battering a breach.

Bonner of the Ledger and Morse of the universal suffrage. Each dosirea the D«oNew York Observer, both being high in tralitv of Piedmont. the editorial financial graduated scale and The steamer Teutonic trrivedjitlistir* beating all the nabobs of the daily prcas 'pool on tho ISth inst. Tho Fuitan-zirirci •but Bennett and Hallock. .rou'hamptou %n the 11th.