Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 14 October 1865 — Page 1
THE
NEW
I
xvn,
BUSINESS CARDS. GLYCERIN.
For Chapped Hands, tl»e
Blnfisrd'a Glycerin nml Camphor Ice,
For Chapped Lips,
tTae Binford'« Glycerin and Camphor Ice.
For Chapped Face,
U»e Binford'ii O Ijrcerlu and Camphor Ice.
For Chafed Skin,
Use Hinford'a Glycerin and Camphor Ice. TT IS MADE OF THE PUREST MATERIALS, A and isuncqualcd by any other artiolo in allaying all irritations of the skin, with which so many are annoyed during the inclomont season of the year, rrioo twenty-five cents. Propared and for sale, 'wholesale and rotail, by E. J. BINFORD, nov2G'04. Washington St., Crawfordsville.
E. J. BINFORD, O O I S
AT THE OLr STAND OF HENRY OTT.
West Side of Court Hotgg Square, CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA,
FOE THELADIES. Celebrated Pearl Drops, FOR
beautifying the' complexion and curing diseases of tuo skin. For sale only by E. J. BINFORD. Price 35 conts a bottle.] feb27-1884.
B.V.&UfcH. GALEY, DENTI S*T S
OFFICE-North Bide Mala St., over Brown's Drug Oraicfordsville, Indiana. &ng5'65m3.
Store,
LEE & BROTHER'S NEW GROCERY STORE. Tsoldfor
HIS establishment is now mooUnd witli a Krire aa8ortmentof plain and fancy Groceries: whicu wilt be cash or produce. Farmers of Montgomery county call in and examine our stock before purchasing elsewhere. [I)oc3'04tf.
Physician and Surgeon. DR. N. j7~ DOKSEY, Respectfully
tenders his services to the citizens of
Crawfordsville and vicinity, in all tho branches of his profession. OFFICE and Residence on Main street, west of Graham's corner. ,J une 18'G4:n3.
elstoTmSk"
Green St., South of the.Fost Office,
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIA A. /"CONTINUES to discount good paper and sell ox\J change on New York, and Cincinnati,and to receive on deposit U. S, Legal Tendon Notes, Bank of thelStato of Indiana, Free Banks of Indiana, and notes of all solvent Banks of Ohio. [Decl'64yl*
Would respectfully inform my old customers and tho public generally that I can now bo found at my
j%9etv Blacksmith Shop, Oil Main Street, a few Doors East of the Post Office.
IIORSE SHOEING
And Blacksmithing in all its brandies executed with neatness and dispatch. I have three Forge* in ope ration and omploy none but experienced and priioti cal workmen. JOHN GR1F1' EN. june4,1804-tf.
Crawfordsville
WOOL EXCHANGE,
AND—
MANUFACTURE!
THROUGH
additional facilities for manufactur
ing and supply of Goods, wo otTor for sale or exchange. the largest and best stock of Goods we have ever had, for spring and summer trade, and on the bostof terms. Also, will manufacture .V'
CLOTHS, CASSIMERES,
JEANS, FLANNELS,
Pension, Bounty, BackTay,
Commutations of Rations for Soldiers who have been Prisoners of Warqtiind Prize Money also, Claims for Morses and
Other Property lost in the ServTce, and fact every species of Claims Against the Government '.'P-# Collected with Promptness and Dispatch by w.
JR. BRITTOJY,
83?
SATINETTS,
BLANKETS, &C.,
on reasonable terms. Country Roll Carding, and Carding and spinning, will be done promptly and in order, at tho customary prices.
Wool rcceivod for cash or exchange at tho old Kclseycorucr: also for work or manufacturing and returned when done: or at Factory.
May6'65ra6, R. M. HILLS.
WOOL.
ALEX. WHILLDON & SONS,'v
Now occupy their New Storos -A
90 & 39 North Front Street, andttl & 33 I-rtilia Street,
PHILADELPHIA,
bocn thirty years in tho trade, and know-
Havini
MANUFACTURERS
ing all tl
In this vicinity, would solicit consignments of
WOOL,
WOOLEN TARNS, COTTON YARNS,
and will mako CASH advances, if desired, on all shipmeuts at tho rate of six ycr cent, per annum
CIIARTKR OAK IM!
THE
subscriber would respectfully inform theciti zona of Montgomery county that ho has purchased this
New and Elegant Saloon
and will ooatinuo to keep hisbarat all timcssupplicd with the very best quality of
LIQUORS and CIGARS,
Particular attention will bo paid to tho
Eating Department,
FRESH BALTIMORE OYSTERS
and all kinds of Gamo, togothor with overy delicacy of the season, served up at all hours and on tho short-
f«/an^65-ff. JOSEPH BLUE.p
I*
6 4
Attorney,
AND
GOVERNMENTCLAIM AGENT.
OFFICE WITH COUNTY TREASURER,
CRAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA.
To Widows and Other Heirs of Deceased Soldiers: 1st. Wlicm. soldier has died from any cause in tho sorvioe of tWUnited States, since the 13th of April 1801. leaving a widow,sho is entitled to a pension of $8por month also a bounty of from $75 to $402,%e-
S all an$ars of pay. J. If tjie soldier left nowidow, his ohildren under 16 years of age are entitled to the ponsion, back pay. and bounty. 3d. If the fbldier left no widow, child or children, then the father is entitled to the bounty, and back pay. but no pension. 4 th. If the soldier left no widow, child or father, or if tho fafhor has abandoned the support of the family, the mother is entitled to the bacK pay and bounty, and, if she was dependent in whole or in part on her son for support, to a pension also5th. if tho soldier left none of the above heirs, then thff brothers and sisters are entitled to the back pay and bounty.
To Discharged Soldiers: 1st, When a soldier is discharged by reason of tho expiration of Jiis term of service, ho is entitled to all arrears of pay and the balance of the bounty promised to him after deducting the installments raid. 2d. Soldiers discharged for wounds" ^received in I.INE OF DUTV are entitled to a BOUNTY. 3d. Soldiers discharged by reason of disease contracted in tho service, or wounds received, which still disable them, are entitled to a TENSION in addition TO THE ABOVE.
IO'By a late act of Congress every soldier who shall have lost both hands, or both feet or who shall have lost one hand and one foot in the service, shall be entitled to a ponsion of $20 per month.
Officers returns to Chief of Ordnance, Surgeon General and Quarter-Master .General made up, and Certificates
of
Non-Indebtedness, obtained.
Fees Reasonable and no Choree In Any Case Unless Successful. also to the settlement
Special attention given
Ut,ritf "VAf b'ituriV(.vn. W. P. BRITTOft.
of vecea&itS" um* vt* uly8'C5.
0. W. 8APPENFIGLD. E. M. SAPPENFIELI).
SAPPENFIELD & BRO., Attorneys at Law
AND
REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
TX7ILL ATTEND to business in the Circuit and 'V Common Pleas Courts in this and adjoining countics. Will give prompt attention to the settlement of Estates, collection of Pensions and Soldiers' claims. Also, solicitors for the St. Louis Mutual Lifo Insurance Company.
UHpOfiicc over Krout's Drug Store, Main street, Crawfordsville, Ind. RKFEKENCES:—McDonald & Roach: Indianapolis Smith Jk Mack. Attorneys, Terre Haute Patterson Allen, do Hon. I. N. Pierce, do: Ju^goS. F. Maxwell. Rockville Wm. Durham, President First National Bank of Crawfordsville: Campbell, Walker and Cooley.Professses of Law,Michigan Univcrilhy, Ann Arbor. Mich. [julyB '65-yl.
OINTMENT.
'A Sure, Safe, and Reliable Cure for
Itch, Scratches,
SOLD B-y
E. J. BINFORD, Crawfordsville, Ind.
[feb9'64.
THE NEW BOOK STORE!
JAMES PATTERSON KEEPS
constantly on hand, in connection with his Watch and Jewelry establishment, a complete stock of
School, Blank and Miscellaneous Books!
Writing Paper. Envelopes. Pens, Inks, and every articlo used in public and private schools. Teachers and pupils will find .it to their advantago to call and cxainino my stock and prices before purchasing olsc where. A most magnificent stock of
.A. I_, IB TT S
ust rcceivcd and Bold ai priccs to defy competition, 'hotograph Cards, plain and colored pictures, Moulding. Cord and Tassels, Family Bibles
HYMN AND PRATER BOOKS,
Scraj) Books, Porte Folios and Fancy Artioles of all descriptions in most magnificent profusion All the Now York
Weeklies and monthlies!
tc
The Ledger. Weekly, Clipper, Wilkes'Spirit. Waverly. HarpcrB' Atlantic and Eclectic Monthlies, constantly on hand. Also agent for
Raven, Bacon & Co's
Celebrated Pianos!
Don't fail to visit Patterson's Fancy Bazaar and Book Store, two doors wost of tho old stand, at the sign of the GOLDEN WATCH. aug26'b5ylo JAMES PATTERSON.
L. II. WUlssa. John W. Ramsay.
CLAIM AGENCY!
WILLSONT RAMSAY,
TTI71LL give special attention to the collection of VV Claims due discharged soldiers asd the widows' and other heini of deceased soldiers.
OFFICE—With Sr.muel C. Willson, No.3^Empire Block, (up stain) Main street. SojWiI-y-*»5-l Craw'fordivlllf,
Indl.rnu.
TflK feND OFlHEWORtD^r
The Curtain to Fall"Positively" Sept. 20, 1878, at Svjmt—Louis Napoleon will appear in tlii 'Role'of Anti-Christ—
Highly important Fact. A British army officer—Captain W. B. Baker, o£the Royal Bombay E^igeers —has at last settled an often disputed date-'—the year in which the world wijj come to an end. Tn a work just published in England, entitled "The Day and the Hour: or, Notes and Prophecy a Sketch of the Future, extracted from the Bible," he imparts a considerable amount of information which is certainly "important if true." The day of judgement he tells us, is fixed for September 20, 1878 the hour^ sunset the Translation of the Saints having previously taken place at one o'clock Jn the morning on the 25th o£ January,-*1875.
If Captain Baker confined himself to
readers. But
IM*
Queen Victoria, tho prinle of Wales made Prince Regent. 1608..Disappearance of King George of Greece.
Austria seizes Greece, and eats up two minor German states. Russia seizes on Turkey all occunring probably in 1669 and 1870. 1871..Russia and Austria combine to mako war on
Franco, October 27 1871. The Emperor of Austria dies about the end of 1871. Russia seizes Grecce, and makes tho new Emperor his dependent. Napoleon signs covenant (perhaps) with tho Jews, October 27, 1871. The Emperor of Russia is killed in Palestine, on the field of battle. June 3d 1872, and Napoleon becomes supreme monarch, all the kingdoms of the old Roman Earth falling to him (except Britain) before tho end of this M. Pestilonco in Rome begins December, 1874, or January 1874followed oy famine. J874. .Resurrection of tbo Just, exaotly at -1800 1, M. 6th December, 1874. Fall of Rome and a greatj a I a 6 1 8 7 4 fHSMw-Sl. JF&tf•atoft'Sftenuary?~n£to7tion of the Jews to Jerusalem, March 10, 1875.
Anti-Christ also appears, and is fully revealed April B, 1875, The two witnesses also appear, April 2,1K75. 1874..Paris taken June 20, or Septempcr 5, 1878,
Eclipse of thesun.Julr 29 snooting stars 13th to tho 24th of August, Fearful storms the last week of August, causing great sickness in AntiChrist's army in Palestine. Sign of the Son of Man appears about tho first of September.— Christ appears descending on Mount Olivet at sunset on September 20, 1878. .§ NArOLEON
III.
We must now leave Louis Napoleon to settle these boundaries according to his own liking, while we turn our attention to three most important events which^tcur in quick succession after the power of Napoleon is consolidated, but before his appearance as Anti-Christ. These events are: 1st. The resurrection of*the just immediately on the expiration of the six thousand years of the world. 2d. The destruction of Rome. 3d. The translation of the saints.
According to my chronology, the six thousand years of the world expire on the 9th day of December, 1874 the resurrection, therefore, of the dead just will take place on that day. We know, however, that there will be two stages of the resurrection at least such is mv ion of the word of St rum.
It', as some hold, the living shall actually see the resurrection of the just, we shall then have positive proof. I do not think we shall do so, and therefore I do not expect my opinion can ever be proved right, nor can it ever be proved wrong. I merely state my belief that the "dead in Christ" will rise before daylight on the 6tli of December, 1874.
Daniel says, "Blessed is he that is waiting and cometh to the. three thousand three hundred and five and thirty days. My explanation of "this verse, on the year day principle, has already been given but like the other dates, it must, on the literal-day principle, be calculated back from the 20th September, 1878, and we come to the evening of the 24th of January, 1875. On the night of the 24th 25th January, 1875, probably some little time before dawn (Jerusalem time,) will take place the translation of the Saints. I say before dawn because I believe that the resurection of the dead and the trans lation of the saints will occur at the same hour as Christ's resurrection, and because we are told that this first step of Christ's coming will be as a thief in the night, and that it waB at midnight that the cry arose "Behold the Bridegroom cometh," and he appears to have oome somewhere between midnight and daylight- Ao I do
CRAWFORDSVILLE, MONTGOMERY .toUNTl, INDIANA, OCTOBER 14, 1865.
THE ANTI-CHRIST.
The author continues: "The 3d June, 1872, will see Louis Napoleon almost suprome in the Roman world. In the eastern division, Greece, Turkey, Syria, Egypt, and the conquered States now belonging to Eastern Austria, will probably fornUhe five tributary kingdoms represented'by tbe five toes on one of the feet of Nebuchadnezzar's image. By that date the Rhine provinces will be ceded to him. Bavaria, with the Austrian possessions in the T^rol, will be tributary to him Yenetia will be his and before he is revealed as Anti-Christ, Portugal and Italy, and perhaps Belgium also, will acknowledge him as*tlieir Suzerian. The western division of the Roman Empire being also divided into five kingdoms, probably France, Spain, Itaty, Bavaria and Belgium, to agree with the five toes oh the other foot of the image. In this case the two kingdoms of Spain and Portugal will necessarily become one, but this is a point we may well leave to the future we know that there will be five, and only five, kingdoms in the western division what the boundary lines of eaoh will be is immaterial.
not believe in a visible resurrection,so I do not believe in a visible translation. The wis^virgins Will Vanish at one moment sifljptaneously, in the twinkling of an eye, as the dead have risen. One of us bhall be taken, another left and those who»-are left will sleep on in perfect unconciousness of the disappearance of their dearest relations, and friends. A few possibly may be watching and may perceive in a moment that one of their party has suddenly vanished, but to us generally in this Jiemisphere the translation •will for the iHBment be unknown. In the other hemisiAerc, however, this great spiritual sig^oi the Son of Man may be more openly manifested for there, two shall be in the field, twqjyomen shall be grinding' at the mill, ana one shall be taken and the^other left. They will not, howevefr
1'
is to kind hearted
that. He gives us full particulars: of the very remarkable events which will happen in the next thirteen years, as will be seen in the following table of "events to come off' to use a sporting phrase: 1807.-Second expedition to Italy, 18C7. Day of humiliation, 9th of October, 1667. Retirement of
see ^py. ascension they will only perceive the sudden disappeaiance of the body and since it .will be mid-day then
this point, he would only tantalize his'fin*the centre of the Pacific Ocean, very ..i i. few
0f
the'Bwellers on earth will see any
thing—those few being chiefly resident in l^lw Zealand and Australia. THE ENGLISH TO CAPTURE PARIS.
The instruments in God's hand for the destruction of Paris appear to be the Engjisli, the only nation which shall yet get the V%tory over the beast for "The shield of his mighty men is made red, the valient men are in scarlet." The taking of 'Paris is foreshadowed tlfiis: "The chariot (guns) shall be with flaming torches (port fires) in the day of his preparation, and the fir trees (axles of the gun carriages) shall be terribly shaken. The chariots shall rage in the streets, they shaft jfcstle one against each other in the broadways
(boulevards)
tliey shall seein nice
torches, they shall run like the lightning. He shall recount his wortLlooj they shall tiielr walk, they shall make liaste to the wall thereof, and the defense shall be prepared. The gates of the river shall be opened, and the palace shall be dissolved."
PARTICULARS OF THE LAST DATS. Elijah shall come, and he will be accompanied by "that prophet," the messenger spoken of in the 3d chapter of Malachi, who is probably Enoch these two win appear suddenljr, they will restore all things to the minds of Christians plunged in grief at the late translation they will tell us what to do their presence will cheer us and their power of working miracles will protect us in our tftfequal struggle with Antichrist. Insane men will attempt to kill them, and will themselves fall dead~at a word, until just before the end, they being the ^gly two in past generations who have never died, will be killed by Anti-Christ in Jerusalem, for it is appointed unto men once to die. This will be probably on the evening of the lltli of September, 1878. Their dead bodies will lie unburicd in the streets till the morning of the 17th of September, when the spirit of life from God will enter into them they shall stand upon their feet, and, in obedience to the great voice of God, saying, "Come up hither," they will ascend to heaven in a cloud, in the sight of their enemies, who shall be in great fear.
The. last twelve hundred and sixty days of this life will be the most miserable that the world has ever seen. Previous to their commencement there will be war in heaven, Michael and his angels fighting against the Dragon and hie angels, who will be driven down into the earth, when a loud voice exclaims, "Woe to the inhabitants of the earth and the sea! for the devil is come down into you having great wrath^ because he knoweth he hath hut a short time." Then will the Dragon give his power and his seat and great authority to Antichrist, who will open his mouth in blasphemy against God, to blaspheme His name and His tabernacle, and them that dwell in heaven he will make war on the saints and overcome them, and
they that dwell upon the earth shall wor-r ship him, whose names are not written
in the Book of Life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world.
Negro Suffrage.
The |3hicago Stibune insists upon it that its party is everywhere in favor of negro suffrage. It claims that all the State Conventions but that of Ohio recognize the doctrine»more or less plainly. It sums up who are and who are not in favor of negro suffrage, as follwos: "In addition to Chief Justice Chase, the positive sentiments of such leading Republicans as Fessenden, Sumner, Wilson, Foster, Harlan, Stanton, Andrew, Morrill, Collamer, Colfax, Wade, Grimes, Chandler, Trumbull, Brown, Sherman, Sprague, Yates, Howe, Washburnc, Farnsworth, Wentworth, Stevens, Kasson, Julian, Boutwell, Garfield, Spaulding, Bing ham, Hooper, and others are well known, or may safely be inferred. The Boston 4'lvertiser and Commonwealth, Atlantic
Monthly, North American Review, New York Tribune, Independent, Rochester Democrat, Pittsburg Gazette, Detroit Advertiser, Missouri Democrat, Milwaukie Sentinel, and a host of others, all the Republican German papers, and many religious journals, have recently advocated the same doctrine. 4 "On the other hand, the Copperhead party in every State, without exception, condemns impartial1 suffrage by its plat
WEEKLY REVIEW.
form. Not only is it idle and false to deny that the question is an issue, but it is the living issue of the campaign. The Republican party may glory vn its past achievements, but it must also, as it is in power, act up to the living present, and must win its future races on living, not dead horses."
Let the people remember that according to this Republican authority, the "living issue" in the forthcoming State elections is negro suffrage.
A Sad Fall.
[From the LouiBville Press, (Abolition) Sept, 25.]
The fall of such a man ap Col. Jacques is sufficient to arouse the sorrow of every man who knows the former worth of the gallant Jacques. He was one of the first and most influential of the Methodi^fodenomination in Illinois. When thatfwdy established a feguile educational school in Jacksonville hTwas placed in charge of it. He managed it with such talent and success that when a greater educational enterprise was
pTojco'ted
was transferred to it. He was engaged in this when the rebellion commenced Col. Jacques was a man of intense loyalty, of commanding influence, and of great oratorical ability. He took the field in behalf of the Union, and speedily raised one of the finest regiments that Illinois gave to the service of the Union. It was called the preachers' regiment on account of the number of preachers enlisted in it. Of this regiment Jacques was made Colonel, and he served with great distinction.
Daring the progress of the war Colong] •Tfi/'niioo vuo cor«i!crrtiT»ccD with Bishop Simpson, and both were well satisfied that if a Methodist of proper position in the North could get amonw the Southern Methodists much might be done towards crippling the rebellion This mission Col. Jacques undertook, with the approval of Bishop Simpson and of Mr. Lincoln. Col. Jacques bravely met the peril, and traveled extensively among the Southern Methodists. He returned just before the battle of Chicka mauga, and took a conspicuous part in the battle. Col. Jacques was the companion of Mr. Gillmore in a visit to Richmond for an interview with with Jeff. ^Davis, in which missiou they succeeded. This visit was intended to to bring about peace. The Colonel has recently been detailed for breaking up the negro camp^, such as Camp Nelson. This is the cause of his presence in Kentucky.
On Fridfcy last. Colonel Jacques employed a fellow calling himself Dr. H. G. Miller to procure abortion in the case of a Georgia woman. The Colonel was present during the tragedy, and was arrested with the female abortionists, at whose house the murder was perpetrated, and with Miller, the abortionists—the murderer of innocence. The victim died in about eight hours after Miller commenced his depredations. The whole party were arrested in flagrante delictu, and are now in jail, the Coroner's inquest having amply confirmed all the suspicions that led to the interference of the police. Mr. Turner saw signs of the outrage in progress, and made his preparations for arresting the guilty parties, in w^ich, as we have said, he succeeded. We do not rejoice in iniquity, nnd we cannot but drop tears of sorrow over the fall of such a man as Colonel Jacques. .». _,
Falling Idols.
"The.separation of fame from virtue," observes Mr. Edmund Burke, "is a harsh divorce and it is a grievous piece of news which reaches us from Louisville, in Kentucky, to the effect that the Rev. Colonel Jacques, the last of Mr. Lincoln's peace envoys to Virginia, and illustrious forever as the man whose "magnificent moral courage" smote Jefferson Davis with awe, hasjust been indicted and ar rested for procuring an abortion to be performed upon the person of a loyal fe-
ma]e
refugee from Georgia,
Colonel Jacques' colleague in his mission to Richmond by whom the history of that mission woo *i»- -uiia, Mr.
Gillmore alias Edmund Kirk, was a long time ago held up to public admira tion as a rival of Baron Munchausen and were we disposed to adopt the polite logic of the Loyal Leagues and the radical press, nothing would be easier than to prove from these shining examples how naturally abolitionism leads to lying and infanticide. The man who begins by cutting his wife's throat, it has been justly observed, will eventually come to carrying off his friend's umbrella. We might show how from Charles Sumner denouncing it as a "dog's" work to obey, as a citizen, the Constitution which, as a Senator, he had sworn he would support, an easy pathway slopes to Gillmore alias Edmund Kirke, telling tremendous lies in the name of universal emancipation, how, from Wendell Phillips clamoring for the extermination of the whole slaveholding South, to Colonel Jacques arrest ing the increase of the population of
Georgia, is but a pleasant moral promenade. '"V A ". For four years past all real moral distinction have been sedulously obfuscated in the minds of the Northern people by the agitators who plunged the nation into the caldron of civil war, and now that the skies begin to promise a return of the republic to law and order, and'-tha control"Jf sound raflficrvative- fri-jj&tplee, it
..i-i 11
WHOLE NUMBER 1205
wouldbea mere application of the lextallionis to baste the Republican! gafldef with the sauce which has been lavished so freely oli the Demacfatte gooss.-*— Every man whose intellect and whosJ conscience compelled him to differ from the administration of the Republican party, has been assailed by tneif organs and their orators aB a corrupt and dasigning traitor, a monster whom it wefe abase flattery to call a villian, and mawkish clemency to hang. At this very day we still hear in experienced candidates in uniform abusing, not civillians only, but their own comrades and superiors in the military service of their country aB "copperheads," meaning thereby to stigmatize as a crime a lawful and honest difference of political opinion. The word so employed is a mere term of abuse it has no more seuse or point than Daniel O'CODnell's denunciation of the Dublin fishwife as a "hypothenuse" and a "parallelopindepon it is simply an inarticulate explosion of the irrational fury'and hatred which it has been the constant'businsss of the people who swallowed Mr.
Gillmore alias Edmund Kirke's mendacity, and went into raptures over the magnificent moral courage" of Col. Jacques, to feed and to inflame.
Meanwhile the profession of a notify sympathy with the extremest frenzies of the radical school has been counted
SB
righteousness to every man professing it, no matter ^what might be his offenses against the law or the gospel. Father Prout tells a story of a briefless barrister of good family, wKt carried off a valua-* ble appointment as a civil engineer in Ireland bv .reRpona «g-*o»«Tcry question wliich the examining committee asked biitf with the name of his nearest noble relative. He knew no more of civil engineering than a boiled owl knows of astronomy but he was cousin ,to the Earl of Clangallngher, and that was enough fo* the committee. The story is no caricature^of what our eyes have seen. Did General Butler steal other people's g(M coin and pocket their silver spoons? What if he did he was in favor of immediate emancipation and universal eofi'^ fiscation and so General Butler became a radical saint. Was Mr. Stanton a notorious hypocrite and bully, steeped to the lips in the meanest and most treason^ able intrigues whicli* marked the ou6: break of the war of secession? What if he was? he clapped "copperheads" remorselessly into Fort Lafayete, and in--invoked the Spirit of the Lord to com' mand our armies and so Mr. Stantqa,became a radical Carnot.
Of course all this will be one day efcad$There is nothing hid that shall not
ed. be made known. The scales of passion will eventually fall from the eyes of1 the people. The cloak of fanaticism will be rudely dragged from the shoulders of crime. The independence of opinions upon character will be once more recognized. Men will become as much ashamed of political as of religious bigotry. The obscene idols of the time of popular infatuation will then be seen for what they are, and suffer, perhaps, even more than their deserts for it is as true now as it^was in the days of Juvenal, that "when the king's trump, the mob are for the king but time and circumstances having done their work, as of old with fallen Sejanus, so again with a fallen Butler and Stanton it will fare: "Sejanus with a rope is dragged along,
Tho sport and laughter of the giddy throng! Good Lord,' they cry, 'what J'.thiop lips ho has. How foul a snout, and what a hanglng'facef By Heaven! I never could endure nis sight— But say, how came his monstrous crime to light7"
In his smaller way, the ex-reverend Colonel Jacques has only been the first to fall. Had he lapsed into his present eccentricity a year or two ago, his party would probably have treated the dereliction as a military necessity," if not as an act of positively meritorious patriotism. —New York World.
GARRET DAVIS headed another Kentucky delegation last week to urge upon the President the removal of General Palmer.
THREE men were killed recently at Littleton, Massachusetts, stone quarries, by a large mass. of.rock falling upon them.
DANVILLE.—The Town of Danville, Illinois, already feels the influence of the new railway projected to Indianapolis. Real estate has risen rapidly in price, and sales are frequent. Improvements are progress and others contemplated. A large hotel is to be built in the town, an institution Danville has long needed. Another hotel is to be built near the railroad depot. A railroad, from Rockville is contemplated which,, if built, will make the town of Danvillb certainly a railroad town.
MISSIONARY GROUND.—Army Chap-! lain—"My young colored friend, can you read?"
Contraband—"Yes, sab," Army Chaplain—"Glad to hear it, Shall I give you ai paper?"
Contraband—"Satin, massa, if yon
Army Chaplain—"Very good, What paper would you choose?" Contraband—"Well, ipassa, if you chews, I'll take a paper of terbaoker."
The Chaplain looked at the contraband, and the contraband at the Chaplain, then the latter sighed and passed f*rvgress.vA.»
4-
14
