Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 2 June 1860 — Page 1
J&-
8 1
9 J*#?
ig-YQWXI, NO. 46.
MAHMOXIl STOCK -OF-
-AM)-
Jewelry!
JAMES PATTERSON,
TTAYIKft i«st rrUffho) frtor. XowVffrlf afidPhHai" Xlifthtohii. ftoidif inform tile citizdM/f Mnnicopiart *nd»u«^undfn*ci'iirtU»«.ihnt hehas purchased, and are being opened. the mort complete stock of \Vatche«. Clocks. Jewelry, Fancy Articles nnl Cutlery, ever brought to Crawfordsvillc. It consUU in part of' •,
WATCHES!
GOLD anil SILVER. Hunting and Open Faced.
For Dwelling'. Store?. Banks, Churches nnd School
IIOUJM,
of Seth Thoinin', Jerome's and Waterbury Clook doinpany'a manufacture. -r^47 Xil¥
Of all styles and pattern-: Coral, Carbiniele. Mosaic. Cameo. Gold-stone, and Miniature. Also—Lockets of iiil fixes.
POCKET BOOKS! Of all shapes and size? Morocco, Calf and Buckskin l'ur«»*.
TABLE CVTIjEHY! Of all prices, from seventy-five cents to $G per sett.
P*ockefe. ^Knives!
The most complete stock ever saw in town. From 10 cents up to S3.
From ii MAXIMOTlf size to a I'OCKET MIRKOUr
SILVER AND PUTED WARE. Tare siltffcrTeti nnd T»Me Spoon*.1Cops. Forks. Castors, Huttcr Knives, Soup Ladle-. Cream Spoons and •Sugar Toil!?*—all warranted of coin -itandurd.
jjE* Z» C3, •£1* Genuine \Ciute*•( Butcher's an5 other reliable brands. Walking Canes! Hi- and little, thick mVl thih Ral tan^Outta Pcrcha, Hickory, ,te. JAMES I AlTLHhON.
May 1'J. 1f«0. Main-si., Crawfordsvillo.
A NEW WATCH MAKER
X3ST TOW! 3
I
WOULD inform the citizens of Montgomery f.nintv tli.it I have succeeded in oblaitnns the services of ii Crt class Workman from I'hilpdelphin. II-' .inm well riiCominended. All work wi.l rcccivc my own personal .„nicn-
May li!,16fio.supervision. JAMES PAlTEUSO.i.
Important to Travelers
WESTWARD! I
HAVE just received a complete a«=ortmcnt of Revolvers, dun?, Pistols nnd Howie Knives. Ite-Tolrer-i of Coifs. AUen\s. Sharp and Mylilja. tan patent.
May 12. IffiO.
WORMS.
M^ iK fvOTi! a* hand when these *'oiin 0? elual1 ii.iod Ixi'lti t.1 b--nm-» hnth tr.mblesome unci diini: r.-n. r»r. .Soliii IS:i1V V«4j«'lal»lc tVoriii 2»Mlr«}cr ij remedy alike ple:fiint and effectual Tor the evil'. Tliere is not the least difliculty in cott:njr Miildrcn'to take 4hc medieine. It is prepared in (tin fili-in ,f Canily Drops.' and will bo Caten'with nvi lity by children of nil ais-s. It destroys and ex-p-1^ w..ntis r.' etr^tually than any remedy now in ii ic. whi e-iit the same time it will in no way effect inni.-i»u»ly'the health nt th^ehiM'.
It cull Ic* proeiireil at T. I). iiHOWX'S. lli'.Xl^ OTT .{ SON'S, r.ud MANSON .t POWERS". L)». JOUA* HULL'S Principal Office. Lmii^ville. Ken lucky. .( [Marl J. IfCH-Pm.
WOOL! WOOL! WOOL!
The !'fatrfoi'ftsville
•E
IN OPERATION AS USUALI
CUSTOMARY PRICES.
Mixed WMOI worVfcd soparnte: all Wool HY Knil wiili liinTv'tiun*) enclosed, will lo promptly done waA roiurticd. R. M. HILLS.
"W'K would nbo
c:\M
Mr.
JAMES PATTEHSO.N. n-ffiy.
Watches, Lockets, Jewelry
1 OLP, Sihvr niuj 'bMv rcvidv and (Jc Cgltttf. .May K\ lrtk)r
raicl
Miisical Boxes,
EPA I RED and w.i: n:r. d. To thi-- branch of the it b:i-inmis I call especial .'ittentirTi,.and feel c.« tili-r!.-Mt. that in rrrc.-1 hnd qiialify
ot'
^rU.-iHr!','/
1
v'
1
Ltneiion will be Riven. JAh. 1 A 11 I'.NSON. Mav
I1.'. 1HI0.
l4:l
.v
4 'ft.i
j? '••£-'Specta cles', Spectacles". p'nicd Spectacles of tho finest
at rcvoivt'fl. A No. ICr» IVrtccJAMES IWTTliKSON.
iH3Iy
Geld Pens,
OFMayfines
tlio quality: for sal1" by 1.'. ICtX). A ME.? PATTERSON.
NOTICE.
VLL
person' knowirs themselves ir.dehtdi to the f-Uito of .Lie Winn, deceased, by note or nthrriviij. :ir r".]in come forward without d»-!a" f,u make piyiiKiH and all who ni ix!eet to do st are mtiiieil that thcyA.ill be sunl^ without rei-neet Co u.-rsons. JAMI!S L\ XN.
SAMUEL l!l.N"l-Oi:il.
''Mayl®, 1*®V S Kxodut. r«
your attention to our Lnr?e
Stt ck 4*
fiJ9 MB J»
*t greatly r"JiKvd nrieej, to cxchanco for Worvi or ml! pay the hisrhes! market price in Cash for wool delivered at our wnreh--"»ie.
SWEETSEK, DAVIS .t HILLS.
Xfny 5, 1?C0. n«if
Nolicp of -IpplicaUon for License.
1W0
rKtUce Application lor License.
I
inamna. ai their m»xt lorm cumnioncins on the first
Monday lit JunQ.lfHlQ fiiY a Uccn.^ to sell inloxicaiiu^ it WAS prnitcil in tilC 1 C^C Liquors inlejt quitniittif.* than a quart at a time, for
yE^CXR .SAl,E. A -UV1) I-PX- situated en Vnlnot itreet. near the Christian Church. The dwelltnR is a one-story, with three room? also, smoke-house, stable. woml hou*e, Ae. Site of Lot, 60 by ICS feet, and is well set^tlliShrmhb^ry. There l-Vtso on the Lot cood Wfll and Ctsti'rn For'lennv.te., inquire at the REVIEW OFMCE. April".<p></p>iSlttKfcSSsSi
______
FANCY DRESS SILKS,
TO
be sold at 20 cent LES3TFH.VS COST of importation. Price* raucing from roRTY CENTS to three
d0llT"/
VUKB S CASH STJR^.
AEdsinci
NEW lot of Embroideries. Sleeve# and Collars. and Flnuneiiws. »t reduced price*, at ipciy .. SXVDER'ri CUE.VR.CASH STORE.
AVn^sfoelt-dr "JOHNSOK'S. A April ».un.
•t :tr ja rrii .:
U!TCOLS FATOB OF THE "IRRKPBE9IBI.R'(«rMCT" BETWEEN THE FREE A» 81AVE STATES.
In his spcech at Springfield, Illinois, on the 17th of
June
1858,
ABEAJLAM LINCOLN
enunciated the "irrepressible conflict" doctrine between the free and slave States thus: •*.' „. '"In my- opinion, the slavery agitation will not cease until a crisis shall have been rcacbcd and passed.
'A
house divided
against it self* can not stand.' I believe thi.
ex]»cct the Union to be dissolved. It will become all one' thing or all the other. Either the opponents of slavery will arrest
the future spread of it, and place it where
thc public i'mind ~shnll rest in ihe belief that it is in the course of ultimate extinction, or its advocates will push it forward till it shall become alike lawful in all the States, old as well as new—North as well as"SoaUIT"""
It will be seen that, in this extract—the genuineness of which will not be disputed, as we make it from the volume containing Mr.
LINCOLN'S
debate with Senator
SEWARD
fates who ever sp]it ra
DOUG
LAS in Illinois, in 1858, issued by
fc FOSTER,
Mr.
FOLLET
LINCOLN'S
friends at Colum
bus, Ohio—he takes the ground that there is an irrepressible conflict between freedom and slavery, and that this Union can not- endure as it is. All the States must become free or slave. Mr.
after
ward, at Rochester, New York, in October, 1858, took the same ground, but not as strongly or boldly. Mr.
SEWARD
DOUGLAS,
has
frequently since been termed the father of the doctrine: but it is an error, as w'e have shown. It belongs to Mr.
LINCOLN.
when he returned to Chi
cago, to commcncc his campaign for the Sena'e, on the .9th. of July,. 1858, thus denounced this "irrepressible conflict. doctrine" of Mr.
LINCOLN,
He said
"In other words, Mr. Lincoln asserts, as a fundamental principle of this Government., that there must be uniformity in the local laws and domestic institutions of each and all the States to band together, organize as one bod}', and make war upon slavery in Kentucky, upon slaver}' in Virginia, upon the Carolina.?, upon slavery in all the slave holding States in this Union, and to persevere in that war until it shall be exterminated. He then notifies the slaveho ding States to stand together as a unit, and make it an aggressive war upon the free States of the Union, with a view of establishing slavery in them all, of forcing it upon Illinois, of forcing it. upon New York, upon Now England, and upon every other free State, and that they s'aall keep up (lie warfare until it has been established in them all. In other words, Mr. Lincoln advocates boldly and clearly, ?. war of section?—a war of the North against the South, of the free States against the slave States—a war of extermination, to be Continued relentlessly until the one or Ihe other shall be subdued, and till the States shall cither become free or become slave. "Now, my Irieml.-, must say to you frankly that I take bold unqualified issue with him upon the principle. I assert that it is neither desirable nor possible that
there should be uniformity iu the local in- When ever thejimc shall come that the solutions and domestic legislation of the people of the United States shall refuse to
different States of this Union. The fiatn-! be citizens upon equal terms together, but
ers of our Government never contemplated uniformity in its internal concerns.— The Fathers of tho Revolution and tlic .sages who made the Constitution well understood that local and domestic institutions which would 'suit the granite hills ol New Hampshire would be totally unfit for fhcTiec plantations of South Carolina that they weli understood that the laws which would suit the agricultural districts of Pennsylvania or New York would he totally unfit for the large mining regions of the Pacific, or the lumber regions of Maine 0 "How could this uniformity be aeeomjplished if it was desirable and feasible?
There is but one mode in which it could
Cnrdins. Onrdinc nnd Spinninp. Keel inc. be attained, and that is bv abolishing the ,™rS^ State Legislatures, blotting out State'sov-
ercignty, tnOrging the rights and soveffgnty of the States in one consolidated empire, and vesting Congress with the plenary power to nuke all police regulations, domestic and local laws uniform throughout the limits of "the Republic'."
A SirVGl'I.AR COn'CIDE\CE. It will be recollected that at the Charleston Convention, the .majority and minority platforms were recommitted to the committee on that subjept, and both reported
"^OTIOK-i« hereby siveh. that- I will apply tot he iiaejc with certain alterations. One of the .il Itoanl of Commissioners of MontCiitnery county, Indiana, at their next terui_eomuieneins 011 the first alterations IU ttlC report Ot ttlO majority Mondtiy in June. lSG0.fjr» license to sell IntosieBtinj -i .1 ,vnrrl "\-if Inml 1,,,' Liquors in less quantities tha«) quart at a tune, for
as
,l'
one year. My place of buines and the premises toI'C the word Dc'liocracy, Si h£fr ofS^it nu'mfi ^o^t^i^^lread "the Dcmocraey of a?Z^w nTcr-:^^^ stead of the "National Democracy Montgomery (Munty, ludiniin. 111 the COU1SC of tilC tlchato
StrlKt OtH tilt, WOlU .,111011.11 Oc
MontKom-ry county, ludmtia. in tnc course oi tnc uci.aie tu tuc V..111- ,which
Convention on the platform, Judge
JESSIT,
T.
ai"
olio year. My p.ace of V»usin.-s nnd the premises I I ,1 wUate?iu« pqujir? are tob?drank.are ir.»ti-t on Lots out the word "National, as that icas n-it
fonal."—/ Cin. Enquirer'.
THE WAGES
,lS?
oy
shall divide tip and act by elans, by rac then farewell to order and peace, as the present condition of Mexico will be uir
It is the principle of Know Nothingism carried out. Here separate orgrnization of Americans, there of Germans hereof Abolitionists, there of slaveholders, &c.: till the country is all clans, all disorded, all civil war. This is not the policy. Let 11s be one people an equal harmonious, and then we shall be a great, a happy peol:,!o'
THE 0I»P«fITI«^f TO B()( SM8 THE FREE STATES.
The New Orleans True Delta gives tho names of the prominent delegates from the free States who oppose the nomination of
DOUGLAS
1
the Chairman of the "Imittec
lc
_^
Remiblican part v. He wished to strike I
It will
be seen
SIN.—
FU
He who gives
himself to vice mnst inevitably suffer. If the human law does hot convict and pun
verse, so surely does a crime, though con cealed, destroy the happiness of the future. No matter how deeply laid have been the plans of the criminal, or how desperately executed, detection pursues him like a bloodhound, and traoks bim to bis
I1IDIANAFOLI8 CORRCPO.\DE.tX. IBIFFEBEXT EEASOS8 OPERATED. The Richmond Jeffersonian conta ns he I
There was one thing about the Cincnrro Convention that I don like. 'J he ic'egraph informed us that Monday a id Tues
No such proceedings as this have ever
beforc characterized the Convention of any party, and I hope will never characterize a Democratic Convention. I hope our. Democratic Germans will always be willing to let the Irish, the French and Ihe American portions of the party all meet together with the Germans 011 equal terms, and
Tt
ils.
scfl»s
that
i- ii .*'• -x i-j- Jon the delegates at Chicago, for votin/i for following letter from its^ndianapolu, eoHLincoIl) fhcv
respondent, dated May _l :_— ward delegates froa New York, who said The Chicago nominations have been an- they did not believe in being voo d—d nounccd to tlTe public, and the peculiar pious." A delegate from this State—from virtues, talent and services of the nomi-! Cuyahoga county—b\- the name of R. F. nees, which induced their selection have Paine, was moved to support Lincoln from been proclaimed. As to Mr. Lincoln,' reading the scriptures, a thing we suppose these are, as near as I can ascertain the '1C never before in all his life engaged following: {in. A little squad of Republicans met at 1. He is the only man in the United *he old Court, House, in Cleveland, and
t/iis Goucr?ti7ic?it cflTi ?tot C71CIK7c 2")€T7??(i- Ststcs TVIIO is just jis old us lie is Y'z Pfliuo, flinon^ others.* OD Ins return ncnlly, half slave and half free, do not about-51, more or less. [home, talked to them. Tho Leader thus 2. He is the only'respectable man in reports him '••rmk the United States. I His speeea
3. He is the only fnan'ih the United speaking.of the causes, which led to the
wi.^'
the country, but are in duty bound to set many nations. them at defiance, and also the rights of the "Neither shall thy name be callcd people of the Southern portion of the Abrarn, but Abraham for a fath
Union. Judging from the manner in which the nominations arc received here by Republicans, I doubt if the reasons assigned for Jand Kings shall come out of thee. making them arc very satisfactory to those Ck'1' eotcmporary of the Ohio State who arc expected to support them. The,' Journal will take note of this scriptural auratification meetings are tame, slimly at- thonty offered by the devout Mr.. Paine, tended and without speakers. Saturday
evening was to have been made uiemora- j" Abr.'un," lie will at once throw down that, hie by speeches from Corwin, Lane, Smith
etc., to countless-thousands but neither
out a roar at all, had not the Honorable
!|e
But the Republicans tell the Germans, vote against us, and we are Know Nothings
was ci
IJO
at Charleston. It will be seen
that they all held office under the Federal
Government, and represent its interests
., ...
i"P
nt
4
.i /. In New lork—Sche.I, Collector, ow-! an wc have anv hope. then.
,JTIVE
3I
\T6TICF. I»*I\CR'chy Kiven. that I will npp"!y to the jreported it, csirc anient, j. \er ])a]- JJutterworth, Assay Office Spencer, I ves in the Union If there is lloarxl of Cumniit4mnpN 1!* Mnntirrtn :*rv ••tin nfv. Kol tmcfnlrfi in thf 11 !1 A ft! t-llO nflTl V.
-ii r. a
tliftt the Disunionists oi crn paper.) wi ea
the South and the Abolition-Republicans It is the meanest specimen of "availabiliof the North both repudiate the word Na- ijas vet been attempted in Amcr- amo,ifr our people in going out of tinnnl ,, 1.
1. It further adds:
THECHICAGO CONVENTION.—Indeed,
8STTn making a desent upon a house of
different reasons operated
wcre nofaH
speech was brief and to the point.,
nomination of. Lincoln and the future pra-
4. He is the onlv man in the United I gross of toe party, Mr. Paine said that he States who was ever beaten by Douglas for believed the Republican party had the the Senate. promise of God for their success, in proof
As to Hamlin, he is the only man in the which he submitted the following pasUnited States who turned traitor to his po-
jsagc
litical friends because lie could not stand ently appropriate the dootrinc of popular sovereignty. 'i he Lord appeared unto Abraham and These arc the several qualifications put,
ol. scripture to the meeting, as emiu-
sa'd
forth as being possessed by these very walk before me and be thou perlect. eminent statesmen and political servants.) "And I will make my covenant between The joint qualifications urged are, that
they are good Abolitionists, both strictly eecdingly. sectional men, living in the Northern I And Abraham fell on his face, and States, and both men who hold that the God talked with him-saying, people are not bound to pay any regard to I "As for mc, behold, my covenant is the decisions of the judicial tribunals of
unto him, I am the Almighty God,
mc
:iI)d
thee, and I will multiply thee ex-
thee, and thou shalt be the father of
many nations have I made thee. For I will make thee exceedingly fruitful, and I will make nations of thee
:ino
as he has at the head of his columns
s'gn
board, and put out "Abraham,'' out of
H'hoin
the speakers nor the thousands came, and provided he believes in the scriptures as "ainc.
"nations and Kings" shall come
J0 110
peed
William Grose, of New Castle. Henry P1.0 averse to kings in this country.— county, State of Indiana, formerly post- have no objection to the Republican master at Jim Town, in the same county, nominee multiplying his progeny until he nnd once a member of the "Legislator," played out," but we do protest against of the Legislator happened, as a perfect God-^end, to be present, and in a perfectly willing state to gratify the nteetin," with one of his most chaste, classical and gramatical snorts, which was'accepted as a roar. '1 h:s is hearsay.
I .. 1 1« »i
JSAJJIJI Ryndcrs, Mar-j ing ourselves and doing justice
JN Iloar\l of Ciimiuissioner? of Moiitci nu-ry eonnty, bal mistake in the name of the parjy. —i T\ _»„• 4 Indiana, at.their^noxl term eommeneins on the first Vifinn.! "In Maine—Shcplev, District Attorney, For one I have no such hope, but I am de- that the expectations of toe authors Oi: nothings, but each can raise an cr greatly disap- ,,r cause tliseotufort. Depend
*o
lite the Sc-
old brass bctsey would not roar: and, in-1 interpreted by Paine. hope there is case such secession occurred, to call a prcssiblc conflict of Seward, and in direct deed the mcctinjr would have cone off with- i'
of Old Abe," for we with most pco-
any of them being sot up over us askings. Uut the pious Mr. Paine ditl not read all thai is in the hook of Genesis about old Abraham and his wifj Sarai, (qucrie, is ihe Illinois woman named Sarai, too) ami io Gray of the Plain Dealer, who is reuiiirkabie for his Biblical knowledge,
it,.. And
-on. an
1
quotes i'urther from the promise to be found in the book of Genesis, as follows Democratic party, but of precipitating
day of the Convention week was occupied I "'I his is my covenant which ye shall revolution intending to result in the disby tho Republican Germans, sitting its an keep between mo and you and thy seed af- solution of the Union. exclusive separate class, to -prepare the tcr^thc". .Every man child among you The Democratic State Central Comn.iticrmsto be dictated to the u!i Convention shail be circumcise.). And yc shall cir- tee of Louisiana, instead of calling a new to be held on Wednesday, into v?hich thejeumeise the flosh of your foreskin and it Convention, have issued a call for the reAmeric.il) portion of the Republican dele-j "'hall be a token ot the covenant betwixt assembling at Baton Rouge, 011 the 4th of gates was to be admitted to receive the "5C jc'"- He that is born June, of the Convention by which the delterms and perform the acts required by thy house and he that is bought with egates to Charleston were originally apthe Germrff! class.
snr-y rnust needs be circumcised. I pointed. This call takes the ground that Uji aham (Lincoln) took lshttiacl his the seceding delegates arc responsible 011-
overncd by a common majority.— sed in the fiesh of his foreskin. And Ish- gates were appointed have been fulfilled. 1 his son was thirteen years old when The State Central Committee also object nr'.ir.nciscd in the flesh of his fore- that to call a new Convention would imply skin'..*.'. And. all tho men of a disapproval or censure of the course his house and bought icith money of the adopted by the scccdcrs—a responsibility strange-r were circumcised with him."
all that were born in his house, ly to the body by which they were appoin-
and all that were bought with his /none//, ted for the manner in which they have fulcvery male among the men of Abraham's filled their duties, and that this Convcniionse, ai,d circumcised the flesh of their tion has the right to reconvene for the filforeskins in the self-same day as God had! ling of vacancies,-if such should be deicrsaid unto him. And Abraham was ninety mined to exist, 3.1 often as may be nccesyears old ami nine when he was circumci-1 sary, until the functions for which the del-
4
mentablc thought, and we regret that the pious 31 r. Paine did not withhold his vis-
and will beat your brains out. Vote with since it will be a source of grief to the
would be our duty to make the attempt
"In Rhode Island—Brown, District At- tcrmincd to act with these who have such tornev." hope, as long, and only as long, as'it may be reasonably indulged. Not so--much ill
C®"Lincoln's nomination (says an East-
an-'
1 1.
111
expectation that ihe South
1 'obtain justice in the Union as with thc
hope that by thus acting.
1 1
the
ill-fame, in Chicago, a few nights since, the laws against the slave-trade were repealed. police arrested several delegates to the Republican Convention. Three of them
3
In speaking of the repeal of the laws'
Convention1, was sounder the control ofjagaiust the African slave-trade he says. jg frjU1 fighting men, German tnfideb, and ruffians Jf
we
should fail to obtain so iust a
of preservi the Union, and
Lc of
&T"The
were from Ohio. Tho "deconcy party" is« this year throughout the Union will be "becoming liberal million dollars.
.'M'* -rl |-n/-i
CRAWFOKDSVILLE, MONTGOMERY COUNTY,ilNDlA'M, JtfflE _2, -1800 WHOLE WTJMBER. 938.
BALTIMORE /u'D BICIIMOJiD. ftLitl The New York Tribiine of Monday, has]
any that they will of partiality or sympathy between the •parties at issue
1 1
Steps'are in progress at the Scuth^to meet the emergency occasioned by the Charleston secession,. the adjournment to Baltimore, and the call for a new Convention atRichmond. In Georgia, the most populous and important of the seceding States, a very warm struggle is going on between, the -opponents of the secession policy, the immediate occasion being the election of delegates to a State Convention, callcd by. the Democratic Executive Committee, to meet at Millcdgevillc on the 4th of June. At Augusta a delegation hostile to the Secessionists has been elected, and a resolution has been adopted in favor of sending delegates to Baltimore. A proposition in favor of sending delegates to Richmond also or of authorizing the delegates elected to sit in both Conventions, was voted down. Ex-Governor Johnson bus written a letter in which he takes the same ground with Stephens, viz: that the Democratic party is pledged to the doctrine of leaving the people of ter
ritorics to regulate-the question of slavery oral government has exclusive jurisdicin their own way,-subject only to the Con stitution of the United Stales, and of referring any conrroversy that may arise as to the binding force of any Territorial laws on that subject to be settled by the Judiciary The indications would seem to be that in Georgia the anti-scccgsiouists would carry the day.',*
The State Convention of Alabama, by which the delegates to Charleston were elcctcd, foreseeing the contingency of a secession, appointed an Executive Com-
fulfillment ot this promise iu the Convention of the Dcmocra of Alabama, hostility to tho Compromise Measures of 11850, introduced by the immortal Henry
which they arc unwilling to assume.—
If these promises—this covenant—is What however, the State Central Cointo
ftiliillod in the person of Old mittec refuse to do has been done by two Abe." those who refer to the book will other bodies. The Central State Rights find, that in this man in whom .we expect- Democratic Club" of New Orleans have cd to have tree soil and the extinction of, issued a call, signed by Pierre Soule as shivery, is to be a slave owner, to buy President, for a State Convention to be them with his own money, and to beget held at Dohaldsonvdle, on thcTGili of June children by his own slaves. This is a la- to elect a new delegation to represent the
Dcmocracy of the State, at the adjourned Convention to be held at Baltimore. This
1011 in which he saw that the Republicans 1 call is-addressed to all such voters as adhad the promise of God," on their side, here to the platform adopted by the 111a-
I
us and we wiil surrender to you the gov- Christian Anti-Slavery" people at Ober- determined to support the nominations eminent. lin, and elsewhere, to know that in Old made at Baltimore, and as arc averse to Abo", and his seed,-slavery is to be intro-• all sorts of divisions in the Democratic luced in all the land. Why that beats ranks, the organization of new parties, and
jority of the Charleston Convention, as are
Southern negro breeding all hollow. Alas '. the reviving of odious issues under the iralas what upon earth arc we coming.to ritating distinctions of Union and anti-Un-W cannot afford to make war on tin: Bi-ion men. ble, and tiie visions of R. F. Paine, of the Another call for a State Convention, to county of Cuyahoga, in the Sti.te of Ohio, meet at New Orleans on the Sth of June, sorely distresses us. for the like purpose of selecting delegates
It is a pity so much corn whisky was to represent the State at Baltimore, has
Chicago but it must have its course been issued by the Louisiana Democrat-
tt land do its work, and although delegates' ic Association," George a Fosdick, Presi-
tnstead of their constituents, ifereisthei v, mnv now have bricks in their hats or uent. 1" snakes in their boots," and will yet come I A Stare Convention for Mississippi is "In Massachusetts—Whitney, Collector right we hope.—Ohio Statesman. |to be be at Yieksburgii on the 30th inst. of Boston Waters, Deputy Collector Le-i ncn—. This Convention it is alleged, will approve land, Collector, Fall River Chapin, P. 31., WHAT THE S2IRE»I-:NS IVARVR. the act of the scccdcrs, and will authorize Springfield Carpenter, P. M., Greenfield.: ()n the 18th of July, 1S59, Win. L. such delegates as it may elect to attend at!
we make the following exti
of right-' send delegates to it. Sueh of the scced-: nish' eructto oui-sel- crs as may fail to obtain an endorsement tonless shirt, such hope at home will hardly feel like showing tard pot, with •mpt. themselves at Richmond. I.', is cvuleut hard and brown
that movement have been
ting and doubtful.
DOUGLAS CANE.—
unless the
expense of taking the census
The first Black Republican Convention
upon the probable'composition of the delccation to Baltimore from the seceding States. TTe give theni in preference to iv sufrfestions of our own, for the reason land pledged to accomplish certain puvpos- oxERwmTLMiNC^ wkmo: at thfv will not be liable to the charge j«?
of
refor,m-
pledged to the accomplishment of thcfol-j0.*
lowing purposes. To bring the adminis-
tration Of the govornmcnt back to the con-
He entreated you to follow him "It is true." So much for the present, then :n} child." "But the future. Madame, the future."
The future—this is the future. After dishonoring you. he will leave yo i, don you to infamy and poverty—leave you to die of shame and grief. Des-pair and
sorrow will send your father to his grave.
As they went, the young girl, taking the hand and gazing in the face of her benefactress, said "You arc indeed a prophetess—r.o'h.ng is id re ture." X:7-
No, mv child, I am not a roimctess, 110 a witch, but I stincts of a mother 1
Baltimore antl Rieiautuid. There is often an uusiispccted tr:f] to wheth-jlje saved in every household. It is not in really cccnomy alone that the wiie's alt'.-i.i.-.m
appear
so
nccei^arv
."Mates to maJ
pointed. The South has shown itsjli there's a great deal of donie.-tic happiness niu'ch less inclined to be precipitated into jn a well-dressed mutton-chop, or a tidy decisi'.c measures than Mr. Jfancey had breakfast table. Men grow sated of beauhoped. Not uily.has.the luoveuicnt fo :nd
ty,
tw n_ an hope that by tlms noting, within a reason-1no encouragement troui the non-siavehjid-i conversation, however intellectual but able time, there will be obtained unity ing States even the cotton States even they can alwavs appreciate a well-swept 'n? he iuimediatcly the Un-i the cotton States appear to be very hesita-i[,earth and smilling comfort. A woman
The remainder of the log will be spnt to) te'ligence of the Baltimore For inspection by the Southern ker,
delegates.—Decatur Magnet. 10th inst.
S5T"The
probabilities are that a full old-
fashioned crop of peaches will be produced in New Jersey this y»ar.
••,7T
THE JRECORD OF I.l.MOE. B$tCI,.lJljaiM'oY*tnATIOTf IA NEW.
day of October,"!854. It was called for Noughts.meeting iu New York city the purpose of re-organizing a now party, KIIE DOIT.LAS MEETING. and:repudiating all former, attachments, The joufnnls all ro'neur in %xc!aufrin7
JIeTss,rs Abrani Lincoln- J. Emj^tur Pronu
Farnsworth, and Ichabod Cadding. were appointed a committee, to draft resolutions'j and- rcpcrtrthc following amongst others, which were unanimously adopted ,•
Resolved, That the.times imperatively] 'o meeung was very large, and a very demand the re-organization of parties, ami doubtless, represent* repudiating all previous party attachment,, I ""'C-ton hs-oMbo De.nwrat.c p„r.v-m names-ancfpredilections, we unite ourscl-lulls Uoueo,... it., will not be without
in(i
g'C-J1
ritories: that as the Constitution of the s.u-h 1U011 llunl United States vests in the States, and not l-anxing. such as Be.montnnd Souttcr tti in Congress, the power to legislate for the
rc
cxtrailftion of fugitives from labdr, to re-jno 'fS »f the rank and hie. peal and eutirclj abrogate the fugitive) W course .such a meeting in sue a Reslave law to restrict^slavcry to l!,c !^bhean e,,y as New Urk mu.t have a States in which it exists: to prohibit tho l"0' '1 Vc1,''P011 ^'..ocrat.c admission of any more Slave States into
the Union to abolish slavery in the l)is- represents thebouth.as well as the iSorth^ aiul is a national city, 111 all res-. pcets.. The spirit of the ^peakeM and of the meeting was, that the Cincinnati Buchanan Platform was good enough' Douglas PhUform, and that Douglas (despite the rivalry in Congress) would carry South as well as North upon it. A(1
trict of Columbia to exclude slavery from all the territories ever which the trcn-
tion and to arrest the acquirement of any :orc territories unless the practice of slavery thereiu forever shall have been prohibited., ''j-U
These were the sentiments of Mr. Abraham Lincoln, (ihe Black Republican candidate for the Presidency) in 1854, and if he has ever changed'or modified them, tho fact has not been made public by him.
This resolution gees the whole figure of anti-slavery agitation, and is as dark, hiomy and bloody as the most rampant-
mittce, on which tho duty was imposed, in Abolitionist could de-ire. It is the irre-
to consider what is best to be done. Such a call has accordingly been issued, Cla_ tor a Convention to meet in Montgomery This is the conservative Republican ofon the 4th of June, the same day with the ifered to the freemen of Indiana, and the Georgia Convention. Certain citizens, whole people of the United States 3^ however of the State,- have issued a call for another Convention, to be. held at Montgomery on the same day,, fur the purpose of electing delegates to lill the seats at Baltimore left vacant by the secession of the Alabama delegates at Charleston. In this call, the secessionists are charged with the design, not merely of dcs'roj'ing the
en)
asking a lew insignificant questions, said ciplcs of tnc Republican ptiry and sJJ*, in an impressive tone
Main
vour father's
fled from
You have
ir use Alas, yes It was love v.-hich induced you "It was."
l',c
am not a ropuctess. ..
1
..nothcr, ai.J ti.e in-| .liS(1
irt 11. piir jJ0
ts old c-)n!eiits sticking about
'.re
devotedly
husband
may love her
fa 1 nil v.
death of Theodore Par
which
occurred a oreuce on iv
Mtftangltaa
jf
JSON3TRATION. aiaamcnio
~qf~TfnrNorfhcr7rDcmocrnn) far thrkat'lie Giant—The j\ iic York Dcfc^'ition to the Charleston Conventiori Sustained:
,l
thc l!St 0 ofl,cors t!,c
trol of first principles to restore Ncbras- i'^raturc, such as (,corge Laneroft ka and Kansas to the posit:on of free tor-111.'
U"?,tl,'su:'1'Y
met-twg were
so,no of the ,,10st 1 n!in(, 0,,r
cil'
or mcr-
estate, such as h. J. Carman, to say
In
,Iu'
t"" od Mates for New ork
A*LN REPT'BMT'ASS "ABULITIO^ ISTM In places like this where rank Abolitionism is at something of a discount, it is usual for Republicans to deny that they feel any sympathy with Abolitionists, atjd they will even affect to feel indignant at being classed with that wollyhoaded fanatic faction. How much sincerity there is in the denial may be judged by one simple fact. At the Chicago Convention Mr. Smith, of-Indiana, nominated the notorious Cassius M. Clay for Vice President •mil he received the votes of eighteen delegates from this State 1 This MIIOWS pretty clearly what the feelings of the Republican leaders in Indiana are 011 the Abolition question, and those who vote with them hereafter may as well spare the cf-'
TKE 3.-i\S'i'i VCTN OF THE HIKAIIT. Madame Lenonnand, tde widow of the great printer and publisher of that name, f0r• ch-nr ihemselvcs from the chrirgc has just'expired in Paris at the age of ot\
ninetv-four. She had for years ountinucd in the business of her husband, and her house was the first in France.
Among other works she published the memoirs of her celebrated namesake, M'11 Lc'norman.d, the fortune-teller, to whom Napoleon gave one hundred thousand francs, and iu whom lie-placed implicit faith. Both lived in the same neighborhood, and one day a confusion originating it a similarity of name, gave rice to the following anecdote, which gives a good idea of the character of tho estimable woman just deceased.
A young girl trembling with emotion, evidently laboring under great distress of mind, was introduced by the servant into Madame Lenormand's study.
Abolitionism. Abolitionism and Rc-
publicanism is one and the same thing—•' the latter only an alias of tho former—and those who really despise it, cannot with any show of consistency hereafter vote ihe Republican tickct or advocate its dOC*' trines.—Ft. Wayne S^/itinel.
The antecedents of Mr. Lincoln present: additional proof of the sympathy of the Republican party with abolitionism. Governor Chase of Ohio, although disappointed in the nomination Jiimse.'f, romai K-ptl in a speech at a public meeting a few days' ago, "his principles triumphed in tho nomination of Abraham Lincoln at Chicftj.0."
The Obcrlin correspondent of the CIcvc"
Oh Madame," exclaimcd the young ian(| Jjeil(lcr, who reports the spcech of mvheb "U Wl'° t!)° fUtlU'C' COill'
t0
I.Joshua
'"'Madame Lenonnand looked intently fori Obcrlin is for Lincoln and Hamlin, and some time at. the trembling girl, then after!1"1'
R. Giddings to the "Saints," says
only as they icpiescnt f. pirn,
those rights which v.e ho.d to uc from
Creator of the Univcr
Ttiil HSi I O" S.l A.MJ TKHS.NC 321II f".
,a
severally
•ry ti] 0:1
tired of music, are often .too, wearied
SO"2!
I The following characteristic advertise--^ mcnt, from Solomon St urges,- Ksq., form-"" orly oi' Zaiicsville, ()hio, ajipearcd i'fi tho
Chica.'O l'rcss and Tribune, of the 21st
....
Editor Prc.is and Tribune: I want iny dear sir to sell one or both of mv houses nt the corner of Pine and Huron'* streets, north side. I want, money, but will sell them without money—and almost
,. without price. When I commenced tlnscr
%-}fc y.((x /a7//
ibis is the futuie. hoped I should die before she did. She" h:n "gone before," and the 7IOMI:9 hafvc nd
Then putting her arm around tiic poor child, the spoke words of affeetion and reason, till her mind became calmer and then when the tears began to flow, and the feverish excitement of passion was abated, she ordered her carriage and her home.
,, .U)!j
fun lllJ
charm for me. They are too /ugh, too sh'ii'-i/, and have to6 many MODERN CON-! v'r.NinNcns to suit me. Som one, on looking, over t!ic e-yrner hou::: .fore it was
ico.v tier fjiM.-she-l. said it had x'-rcn hundred miles of LEAD ivri: in it I be ieved he lied! Ir tiiere is It df as muc'i. Didi
don't beiicv you ever Lt 11Y will all ttrpm
Nol I flon'i believe vou.i
As .soon as my wife returned to Ohio' from our trip to Like Superior in the suin-w uK-r of IR55, r-!.c wrote to me, "Husband
if I fin to move to Chicago, the ,'ooner
i]i( :i llOiH0
s,"jte-:1.
,~arv, but in those nicotics 'which Saturday monnug, sl.e departed v. Mt, ner weil reflated hous-. An nuf-.r-! amour, taking tl.e J, P. Cheney •ruet-stand, a missing kcv. abut-!""'1 h.r tne .-.uth, 0: cour-e tin.shirt, a soiled table cloth, a mu,-"
,c better I shall"
We have had a.i iod a hcuso,,
guided woman to forsake the tried love off years, and to abaud ii her confiding hu'--it: I, as he Ifrfd' abandoned his tr: siir.sj wife, and llv with him to the South. (Li cr
spend
0
SSrThe Post-Master General of Canac a'greatly injured him, he brtttrht up to Las abolished the postage on Amorlrcn Columbus, intending to tend her w.^r R0Tr8p&p<!r«xrhi»ng®s Jrieads
C-'J.
'he descned hu-band
was bv no mean- enviable, and his thought.-*, were "distracting but he immediately docidctl to pursue the pair, and to ir.K:• .summary vt-ngcnncc on the destroyer his peace. Tnking '.lie same route winch tliej, liad pursued, he o.v^.rtufk ..them at the town of Jackson. Tennessee, where they had stopped to
the night. Entering
their room at-an early hour in the morning, he found them occupying the fp.iie bed.—
Tid fired ut,oil the man.
in the ham).
rikirig him
when the citizens of Jackson ircuiustaDces, they desired
injured husband to take whatever vc:ihim he pleased.. But our him to escapc, desiring to "do no murder," and rested contcnt with having exposed him snd'frfghtencd inm ncar'v to death. The woman who" had so
