Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 19 January 1867 — Page 1
tfEW SERIES—VOL. XVIII, NO 21.
BUSINESS CARDS.
MEDICAL.
MRS. M. HOOVER,
PHYSIOI AlsT. Offlcc and Itcsldenrc un Vernon Sired, \early ODDOMte (he Pout Odlcp. \V1f.'I^?Lvs ^*=1 uaivc at'pntlon to Hie practlcc of "edfclne and ObsIMrls ,.1?„ t„ tho treatment Vi J'J?ouicaof onion and Children. A ubitrc of the public patrouago is respectlully solicited.
May 5, iNifl. jwlf#
Plivsiciiiii and Surgeon.
DK. fi. J. DOltSE Y, Respectfully
tenders his services to tho citizens of
trawfnrdsvillo And vicinity, in all the branches 01 lm profession. Office nnd Itcaldcncc, on Main street, west of iirabatnx Corner. (August IH-Wt.
MACHINERY.
I!. I. IcGllATH & Co., MACHINISTS,
Manufacturers of Corn Shelters, Horse 1-owers, Drag Saws, Sugar Mills, Sugar Kettles, Castings, Brass Castingsand Machinery of every description.
a E a
CUH
turn out Repair Work in a few hours.
Shop on 3c St., south ofUramblc noust,
Hf
Real Estate Agency! TI1K
undersigned will noil or buy Heal hstatc.— Any person having Forma or 1 own Lots lor sale will do woll to leave them with us.
For Sale!
4 or 5 Good Farms, 25 Town Lots. 5 Residences. 1 Brick Store Kootu. 1 Briok Residence, with it) acres ground attached, WEBSTER. MAY & KKENEY.
Eaquiro at the Recorder's Office. (dec&l'OS.
WANTED-AGENTS.
m-( I'Ell VKAH! We wont ?|P I L)VU agents everywhere to sell our DiPRovKD $i»H Sewing Machines. Three new kinds. Under and upper food. Warrantod five rears.— Above salary or largo commissions paid* Tho ONLY machines sold in the United States for low than $40, which are YUBLT I.ICBNSBD BY HOWB, WHBBLBB A WILSON, GKOVER&BAKKK, SINGBUACO.. AND
BLUER. A LI. other cheap machines are INPRINOKMKNTH and the SELLER or USER aro LIABLE TO
Iso the same sites in LINKS FABRIC.
These goods were bought to meet the demand for
C1IA WFORDSVILLE
1
LaFayette, Ind.
iniit24weUyw.*5i)iblOd.
EXTRA
Extra Pay! Extra Pension!
Grunted by remit. Arts of Congress to soldiers, their widows, minor children or
parents, PHOITIPTIjY COM .ECTKD 11V
R. II. Galloway, Attorney,
AND
Government Claim Agent.
Office over Corner Booh Store, next door to the Mayor's office, Crawfordsville, Indiana.
Kvery Commissioned officer below the rank of Brigadier Gonernl. who wait in thu service March 3d, 1R65, and resigned, was mustered out or honorably discharged pftor that date, is entitled to extra nay. Tkoso who received none can now receive. Thoso who received three months pay proper can now rcetpe^the difference. under tho Act of Congrats, July
Soldiers enlisted for three year* discharged after March 3d, 1PG5, or on account of disability, are entitled to $100 bounty, enlisted for less period $50 bounty.
Widow? of diseased soldier entitled to an increaso of pension of $'! per month for each child under 10 years of ace.
All claims intrusted to rai care will be promptly attended to. Auk. 11,1*00.
care will be Bromptl K. H. ii ALLOW AY.
REAL ESTATE.
STEAM PRINTING.
IE^IEJ'VIIEJ'W
(SECOND STORY, LEE'S NKW BIllCK.)
WASHINGTON (TRIiKT,
Job Printing!
1
CLAIM AGENCY.
II
BOUNTY!
IS"
feSfS*.4?
DONE TQ ORDER!
vA
J] ^I'er.'ons in want of any description of Printing, from a label to a mammoth poster, should not fail to call ntthe Review Job Officc. 3tT7®AlI work dono just when promised.
FURNITURE AND COFFINS.
J. T. Kinkead & Co.,
Manufacturers and Dealers in all kinds of
Furniture!
WASHINGTON STREET Opposite Centre Church.
Our Cabinet Ware Rooms
are woll stocked with a fine assortment of Furniture which will be sold at the lowest cash figures.
COFFINS
of all kinds furnished on short notice,
WITH OK WITHOUT A HEARSE. Ausust-ie-ieBO.tf J. T. KINKEAD CO.
Claim Agency.
BOUNTY!
Extra Bounty Extra Pay! Extra ^Pension!
Granted by Acts of the late Congress, to Discharged Soldiers, their IVu/otos, Minor Children, or Parents. Collected with Promptness and Dispatch by
IF.
BACH-
ARREST,
FINE, ANDIMFKISOKMEHT. Oiroulara KRKB. Address, or call upon Shfw A Clark, Biddoford, Mtiiiio, or Chicago,111. .. A MONTH 1-AUENTS wantod for tilx KNTIKRLY NKW ART10t.Rfl.ju9t out.
O. T. UA11EV, City Uuildinc, lliddcford. dcc23'05-2t«lwoy.
GROCERIES.
I,i i: & BROTHER'S NEW GROCERY STOKE. THIS
establinhmcnt is now stocked with a Jarre assortmentof plain and fancy Groceries: which will bo sold for cash or produco. Farmers of Montgomery county call in and cxamitio our stock before mirchasng elsewhere. [DecJ 04tf
PAPER-WINDOW SHADES.
F. BMtITTOJ\m, Attorney,
AND
GOVERNMENTCLAIM AGENT.
VST" Ojjice. in Washington Hall Buildiny, over Simjysons Grocery Store, Crateford*vil!e.~&l
To Discharged Soldiers: efts By the late law Equalizing Bounties, an Additional Bounty of $100 is granted to each and cvory soldier enlisted for throe years, and served out his time Mho has received or is entitlod to receive no more than the $100 bounty heretofore allowed by law and any such soldier who has boon discharged before the expiration of his term of service oy reason of wounds received inline of duty is entitlod to the Additional Bounty of $100.
An Additional Bounty of $*0 is uow allowed to each soldier enlisted for two years, who has rccoived, or is entitled to receive, no more than $50 bounty under previous laws.
A bounty of $50 is now allowed to each and every soldier enlistod for any less period than two years, who has been honorably discharged on account oi wounds received iu the line of duty.
rl\tthe
For Every Body.
the Corner Book Store a large lot of Cap, Letter, Commercial Note, Bill and other sixes of
]TrifR of Deceased Soldier*,
If a soldier, enlisted for throe years, as above stated. has died of wounds received, or disease contracted in the line of duty, the Additional Bounty of $100 is allowed to tho widow, minor children or parents of such diseased soldier in the order named.
If a soldier, enlisted for any less period than throe years, has died of wounds received, or disease contracted in the lino of duty, the Additional Bounty ed to tho widow, minor children or
0j
the Store you will find an assortof those REYR TVND pretty HUHTIC WlNpQV Sl^AD^S, BRf
P. R. SIMPSON'S.
AUo nannfncturer'B Agent Tor
POWDER & MATCHES
JunelO'C6we6m.
AXES.
ARefined
jg
a good reliable article, and we have no hesitation pftren^s
Superior article of LippencottA Co's. Double Cast Steel Axes, warran etf
0 8U
will meet the approbation of the
saying that they public. Country dealers
supplied on reasonable termTo Ojficcrs:^
AuglH-GO-tf. L. A. FOOTKACo.
ATmentCornerBooknice,
augl^'OC.
Groceries,—Wholesale.
GOODS
ch deceased soldier in the order natnod.
,i\
f^hr
All oHicors below tho rank of Biigadier General who wore in the service as such oo the 3d of March, 1803, and who were honorably discharge, or who have resigned, since April 0, IKUS.arc now entitled to three months pay proper
To Pensioners: Widows are now entitled by law to an increaso of their pension $3 per month for each child under 16 years of age.
Invalid soldiers, for total disability, are entitled to a pension of from eight, to fifteen, twenty ond tvroa ty-five dollars per month.
To obtain the beuefits of these laws, persons in all cases to make ft new application. Applicants for the Additional Bounty must bring or send their Discharge Papers and get a receipt for the same.
Having for a number of years past devoted myself especially to the business of collecting claims, 1 feel warranted in, saying that 1 can insure not only prompt attention on tho part of the Government, but an ?Mly and satisfactory settlement of all just claims intrusted tomyeare.
Ket* Reasonable and DO Charge In Any Case Unless Successful. AU letters of inquiry, containing stamp, promptly answered.
Parties residing at a distance can have blanks tyftd insirnotiona sent to them by mall free of ch*niQi on application to me. v. WWITTOW
Aug. 11,4w
w- V-
,«B!
A\'J- nnil U« Claim Agl.
Tabic Cutlery.
lteflnod Cast Steel Axes, warran ed. For'salebi A Fine iissortmcnt Of Table Cutlery, for' sale by deo3tf LEK lillOTllKH. '. JtcStf I.bk, A HBOTHbK.
Millinery.
MILLINERY STORE.
Mrs.
nS ,i .rIe'!VV! Pottcrn'-L
Crawfordsville, Indiana.
lu
MRS. C. W. SANBURN,
WOULD rc8poctfully inform the eltisens or- Crawfordsvillo and vicinity that she ^established a Millinery Store in Dr. McClelland building, 3 doors oast of tno 1 ost Office, where she is now opening a
NEW STOCK
in oouaa o( tne^t*"
Latest Styles and Best QUALITY.
She invites the people to call and examine her liooils and judge for themselves,
KtufopS •'-&!%&i
Bleaching and Pressing
done on shcrt notice. Also particular attention riven tonll kinds of silk and velvet work. Octn.iHootr. Mrs. 0. \V. S AKIIURN.
Real'Estate Agency.
C. W. 8APPKKP1ELI). K. M. SAP1'ENFIEI.D
SAPPENFIELD & BRO., Attorneys at Law
also a large number of Farms in this and adcounties for sale, al Land ."partially improved.
After property is placed in our hands lor sale. should tno owner through our introduction, or by moans of publicity given by us. sell tho property at the fixed prico, or for more or less, tho commission must, in all cases, be paid to us. nZpOffico over Brown's Drug Store,
Crawfordsville, Ind*
A I 7
-v^
JYo. «, Commercial Block.
Crawjordsrille^ Indiana.
Williams,
I'i. I.
TS ««in In th. market with a full nnd Iconiplute ?f
aU
Prll°lc* the Millinery lino, ot tho
Postmaster at Sbrth 'Madison':
Public Ruiiorally aro
united to call beforo purchasing, (nov84'66y.
Medical.
DR. J. C. SINNARD,
HOMEOPATHIST!
Offers his professional services to the pernio of Criiwfordsvillc and vicinity.
•UFA TUP V* ^"DANL-SI'D: ,SSFL' I, Tii FlA
1 »aT--iho
Ilomeopathic System dese vos
all the praise which has bocn given it. PSE Rx*MrLK-"In 1849, twelve Homeopathic Physicians in Cincinnati, treated 2410 coses 6f choleraoontVeriCS^^~dea^thsG5—mortality about
3it
and ronidenco on Main street, ia the house formerly «ceupiedtbr E. J. Binford. CRATFORDSVILLK, IND. novlu 66) ivootf.
llillinery Store.
New Millinery Store.
I :.- -1
AND ..
REAL ESTATE A'GEWTisV
^XTILL ATTEND to business in the Circuit and Common Plea* Courts in this and adjoining counties. Will give prompt attention to the settle* mentoT Lstates, collection of Pensions arjjl Soldiers*
Buy and sell on commission. Houses andXots, Vacant Lots, Farms, Farming Land in all the Western
1
Taxes paid and Titles examincdTn*dU~Ofe*W68tcrn States. Have for nale alarge number of desirable dwellings thiscity, also, a large number of vacant I/ots. at very reasonable terms. llavo also a largi joining counties for salo, also 15,000 acres of Western
Vcrnon street,
KF.FKKENCEB:—McDonald A
Roach, Indianapolis
Smith A Mack. Attorneys.Terre Haute Patterson A Allen, do Hon. I. N. Piorco do: Judge S. F. Maxwell, Kockville Wm. Durham, President First National Bank of Crawfordsville: Campbell, Walker and Cooley. Professors of Law, Michigan University. Ann Arbor, Mich. [jan6 -Ob-yl.
FOR SALE.
Lot and Buildings north of Center Church, for sale in parcels to suit purchasers Housoand lot of acres in east part of city. Terms easy.
A well improved farm. 103 acres 3 never failing springs, mile west of city—terms easy. House and Lot on West street, near! College. Price $050.
Houscandlot of acres in south part of city. 24 rods on pike road, 40 rods hack. 100 good fruit trees, barn|34 by 30. woll* cistern,cellar, ana good out buildings, house 2 stories high, 0 rooms, with wood house under roof of same building, good selection of small fruits, grapes, Ac., auda fine collection of ornamental trees. Price $4,000 in paymonts.
Farm of 105 acres, GO acres cleared bottom land, oodsaw end gristmills.saw mill cut 5000 feet per ^ay, two run of stones, building 4 stories high, timber enough on prsnUos to run saw mill 5 years, good orohard. barn, and comfortable house, with good out buildings, good spring, nnd coal bank on farm, tnilea east of Kockville, Parke county, Ind, Terms in reasonable payments,
Farm 110 acres 1 milo west of YontitsvUlo. in good repair, good house, barn, Ac. Terms $75 per acre. Have also for sale 500 acres in Page county, Iowa, Will exchange for town property in a flourishing town or city. 200 acres iu Cofiy county, Kansas. Entered 6 years affo. Price $2,00 per acre. 1G0 acres in Dickinson county. Iowa $1,10 per acre. 500 acres in Missouri at $1,00 per acre.
Also a large number of farms in this and ndjoiuiug States. For particulars apply, Western land constantly on hand, for salo or exchange.
Partita wUMng t» purchase lloaaes mid l,«m in tfeia City will ylease aill ut ourofBcc far ptirtlculti rs. jan^o'oo. SAPPENFIELD A BROTHER,
11 silver Smith.
1 if
Nttw Watch laker Shop!
The undersigned would respectfully announce to bis friends and the public generally ths.t he has opened a
"Watch. Mlaker Shop In the old stand of McClure A Fry., wost of the Court House.for repairing Watchos, Clocks and Jewelry. All repairing warranted.
Late in Patterson's Watch Maker 8aop.
Crawfordsville Sept. 39,1800.
Paper.
Wall Paper
onnn T)AT WALL PAPER and WinOUUU J. 5 dow Hangings at from 15 Qei\U to $1,50per bolt, just opened at the Fancy Ba* laarand Book Store of
JAMES PATTERSON.
feb24'9fl. [Woteo
Leather
Harness Itcathcr.
A
LARGE assortment of Harness Lea*her just received ^t WM. P. WATSON'S.
•owrWWBR
I I
,OR A WFOEDSVILLE,. MONTGOMERY dOiJNTY, INDIANA, JANUARY 19, 1867.
STATE ITEMS.
The wheat crop of Spencer county is enduring the freeze finely, anil if nothing further happens hereafter tu destroy the crop, we hope to:be able to eat cheapre a in an he a
Hov. Austin Glurk, while liuuling* saw' logs near Grecnsburg, a short time since, was seriously if not fa.tally injured by a log^ which rolled over him "Vhile he was assistiug in loading it onto a'sled. -,. iJ?
The Smnissippi Insurance Company have brought suit against thirty of its policy holders it Fort Waynfc, fur refusing to.pay thei) sessments, and on trial the cStupany u. defeated in fevery case.
Two Kvansville women got?on a frightful drunk the other day ,aud fell through the White river bridge, falling ou a pile of stones fifteen feet beneath. One of them was dangerously, if not fatally injured.'
per
OFFICE WITH TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE,
A mad dog made" liis 'appearance in Mount Vernon, on the 7th iustant, biitiug everything that came in his way. A dozen or more dogs were bitten before the rabid auimal left the city. The people were so much excited that they did not think to shoot him. He'made his escape.
Andrew Paris and Ilenry Wires had a little fight iti Orleans county oh the first iustant, in which Wiretr came out second best, Receiving several cuts from a knife, which set his pugnacious spirit free iu the course of an hour.
BAD SHOOTING.—A ,fow days ago a i..vf,» ""I'odjnto Greeucastlc and perched himself upon Ulc stRnplo of the court house. About'fifty shots were' fired at him, none of which took effect, and after taking a good, .look ut the town he sailed back to the forest from whcnce he cauie.
TROITULI IN TUK SOUTHERN PKXITKN-
TIAlty.—Desperate Encounter between a Convict and one of the Guards—~The.
Convict Killed.—Thu Louisville Courier,
of yesterday," has the following from Jefi'ersunville: V. •I-''*' ^t!
A desperate convict by the name of George Henderson, who had been sentenc ed to four years' imprisonment for grand larceny, in the Southern Indiana penitentiary, an old offender Ind the leader of an outbreak at the.Joliet, Illinois, penitentiary in which ho acknowledged having killed the warden several years since, was regarded "With suspicion liy the officers of the prison as being' in league with some of the rest of the prisoners for the purpose of exciting thenAo mu-. tiny,? In the afternoon wl^ijewthe COUT were at work in the wheel shops, whew Mr. Henderson also 'usually worked, he was /Wo-*-
1
mess knife at the grindstone, the co^ victs using these knives about their petsons' for nothing else but to eat' with, ordered him to.'givc up the knife, and go on with his work whereupon he jumped upon Mr. Sage, making an attack with his knife, and would have succeeded in killing the'officer but'for the timely, arrival of Mr. Bau'gh, the guard under the wheel shops, who threw off the prisoner, at the same time firiug four effectual piBtol shots at him, the prisoner escaping the shots by taking refuge behind a,pile of wagon wheels, but returning fight by throwing heavy bars of iron at the officers. Mr. Baugh fiuding tho pistol-shooting of no effect, made an attack, with a wheel spoke, and with one effectual blow succeeded in felling the convict to the floor" During the scene the guards were promptly at their separate posts, oxpe'eting at any moment an outbreak, which, through the vigilance of those efficient men, was kept under entire subjection. Henderson, who was still resisting the officers, was finally taken to the whipping post, aud then about to have the eat-o'-nine-tails applied, when he was discovered to swoon. He was placed iu .his cell, suspected to be under the influence of tobacco, which narcotic had been successfully applied on previous occasions by this prisoner in swallowing large quantities of the juice about the time a whipping was to come off. In an hour and a half, upon visiting his cell, he was found a corpse.
A post mortem examination was made by I)r. McBride, of this city, from whioh he deduced the following facts: The blow from which he is supposed to have, died was inflicted on the left side of the I head producing fracture of the skull of the skull through the temporal bone and along the,corosal suture and through tjie right temporal bone, down to the base, of the occipital bonc, rupturing the internal carotid artery just as it enters the base of the brain, producing very extensive cxtravesation of blood around the brain— the prisoner surviving aud fighting with a tenacity of a blood-hound. An in quest was held upon the body, and verdict rendered of "justifiable homicidc."
Parties wishing to make quick sales of their property will a property. Wo have mado arrangement* with Real I boilC, CXtcndttiiT iroill the hftSG Estate Agencies in most of the Westorn Suites, and L.i,„ii #l,™nrl» *Amnnr»l l»n
aro prepared to make transfers at a small expense. I f*kull through tile teiUDOral OG
BEAUTIKUI, PASSAHK.—This beautiful
passage occurs in Holmes' new novel in
the Atlantic Monthly'. "The old clock that Marmadute Stoor made in London .more than a hundred years ago was clicking the steady pulse beats of its second century. Tho featured moou on its dial had lifted oue eye, as if generations of chijdren, while the swinging pendulum ticked theui along into youth,: maturity, gray hairs, deathbods—ticked without grief through all the still or noisy woe of mourning—ticking without joy when the smiles and gaiety of comforted heirs had come back again.
'i''J via
""Sci
has a 8125,000
SPRINUFIELU, Illinois Opera House.
.,lltH ..IT
^.,-|V.JI Oi ^"V jt "feour'1.
WEEKLY: Otl!
Mlnnl Fate of tho Universe.
If two bodies were placed in space .without auy force acting upon each other
3]rs. Hamuli Smith-, widow of Charles F., Smith, deceascdv^orfierlj of' the Sixth Indiana Rpgiinen^.lias h^en appointed than their own cravity, they would imIJX, \sr._II.Tr. j. I lucdiQttily start toward each other, and would rush together. The sun and planets whioh constitute the stellar system to which our solar-system-belong are prevented from running together iiito one mass by their revolutions about each .other. The revolutions of the planet around ourBtfh, and of the satellites about their primaries, have bceu ascertained with that wonderful precision which is the just pride of astronomical science, and astronomers arc just now eugaged iu tho sublime problem of unraveling thoi IHJVOlutionH op-the countless suus that tuakp 'up'our stellar system. Already the cluster of the Pleiades.is indicated as the proximate locality of the ceuter arouud. which our sun, with his attendant planets is sweeping his vast orbits, aud it is sug-, gested that it is probably, the common center of the orbits of all tho suus of our stellar system.
If the force of gravity exteuds across the inconceivable spaces which separate the several Btellar systems ot the universo those systems must rush together unless they are held apart by revolutions around each other.
If light were an emauatiou, as held by Newton, tho spaces between the solid bodies of the universe might bo absolutely empty, and, in that caso, the revolutions of the bodies around each other might go on forever. On the other baud if light is a vibration in a subtle fluid, the fluid might obstruct the motions ot" bodies revolving iu it, and they must flnnally come together in one mass. The experiment so ingeniously devised by Arago, and carried out with such honorable regard for ,thc fame of its desiguer by Messrs. Foucault, Fipeau, Bereijue to determine whether there i» a difference in the velocity of light in its passage through air and water, has demonstrated that light is a vibration. It follows from this that, as far as,'light extends, space is filled with a,material fluid, wliich resists the motion of bodies revolving iu it and bodies within this space must gradually wind their way inward, and ultimately conic together into oue mass. '.the moou must be drawing very sljmrly nearer and nekrer the earth, and two bodied in th6'"far distant future,$nil come together. The solid cryst of tho earth will be broken up Jjy the shoek^ an immense quantity of heat will be generated by the destruction of tho moon's motion, and the two by^ies^ will fuse together into one molten globe, As thc^ newi nnd enlarged earth is cooled upon its surface, a.second series of geological deposits will b,e constituted, accompanied perhaps, by strange and inconceivable in a a a a if
Wheu this mass is first collected, it will be iutunsely hot from the destruction of motion in the sups and system of suns as they come together. The heat will bo radiated outward, into the universe, and the one mass oi" matter will bo gradually cooled. During the cooling there will be the same play and. mutual iuterehange of heat, light, electricity, magnetism, aud other imponderable forces that aro now upon this earth. As the cooling proceeds, the action of these forces .will,diminish when 977 degrees is reached, light will cease and darkness will fill tho universo. As each vibration of heat leaves the material mass, it vill expand outward at,the rate of 192,000 mile3 per second in all directions, in the form of a swift swelling hollow globe. When the temperature of absolute cold is reached, (T-T493 2 degrees) the last vibratiou of heat will leuve the mass of matter, and will expaud outward through all infiuity of space and time.
Supposing, however, thejjethereal fluid which fills the visible portion of the universo is limited in extent, so that the last vibration of heat will reach its boundaries and cease, what then becomes of the force of the universe and of the doctrine oi' the conversion of force.
The Progress of the Hcvoliitlon at Washington. We trust none, of our readers omitted to peruse the incendiary arid 'revolutionary lauguagd which Thad., Stevens, the lladical leader in the House of Representatives, is roportcd to have used on
Thursday in rogard to the lato decision of tlip Supreme Court of the United
States deolaring such military commis
sions as assumed to try citizens iu the
North, unconstitutional and illegal. The
speech strikes the key-note of Radical
thought and action, and indicates tho point of destination to which we will ar
tl'
ai it
IFrorn the Scientific American.]
a spoech as Danton and llobcspierre were
nccustomod to make in the French GeneralAssembly when the-most enormous
outrages upon public or individual right
were to be perpetrated. It was that
of England, during those times of revo
lution, when that body usurped tho control of the State, put to death the Exec
utive, and ruled ovor the people with tho
rod of military,tyranny. That Stevens
and his co-conspirators, for that is their
appropriate appellation, entertain similcr
idea and have similar projects in view,
none can doubt who liave noticed thoir course for .tlio last few years, and who is
familiar with the spirit they display.
The Judiciary and the Executive, coordinhtc departments of the Govornmeut
are to be got rid of jind removed at all
events and at all hazards. Usurping the power which the Constitution has be
stowed upon them, the Rump, which had
previously seized in a revolutionary and
illegal manner the control of Congress, designs to set itself up as tho sole author
ity in the State. Head what Stevens
says:
At the same .time, the earth is winding •its way inward toward the sun, and must
1,10
iu i-lmrge :.of that: department, iu putting au unusual keen edge upon his
fate awaits all the planets, and our JSIar system must one day be but a .single globe. When this glabe is cooled to the right temperature, it may be covered with a multitude of inhabitants, and astronomers may rise who will watch its.,revolutions among the associated suns of our stellar system. If their knowledge and intellect are equal to the science of our astronomers, they will foresee the ultimate coming together of all theso -suns into one couimpn globe. And not this only, for they will predict the final coming together of all the stellar systems of the visible universe into one.mass of matter.
"Congress wns ,bound by every consideration of honor and policy to protect the loyal people of the South. An obstacles standing in the way of such action must be removed. The President was Commander-in-Chief of the army, but Congress ^ras his commander, and he would be compelled to obey. He and his minions must learn that ours was not a government of kings and satraps, but a government of the people, and that Congress was the people
There is no mistaking the spirit and
tenor of this, and none can douht that:
its author really desires what we" have here attributed to him. If the Rump
can be elevated to the supreime control of
the State, we should really have such men as Stevens, Ben. Wade and Sumner,
who rule it, as dictators. We are now
threatened with a government such as
France had in 1793—the Government of
a single assembly, obeying the. orders of
i«triumviratc of daring and aspiring lead
ers. We say single assembly, for thero is already hoard the mutterings of dis
content among the more violent Radicals
agaiu^t the United States Senate for -its
backwardness in responding to their revolutionary purposes. j/ ..j..'" After being used as ,au implement, it would soon share the fate of the President
and the Supreme Court,'ttnd the so-called House of Representatives would, stand
until they are now seen almost .entire, in
their hideous deformity. Commencing
with the destruction of the States and-
the,consolidation of all power in',the Federal Government, the step is to be followr
ed by the overthrow of all- the Departments of the Federal power itself saYe
one—that whieli is already' in the posses-,
sion of the conspirators. It is now air: most cortain that a bill for the overthrow
of the State, for the impeachment ami removal of the President, and for the
nulifioation of the decision of the Judici
ary, will be put through the House with all possible dispatch. Emboldened by
ble check in their plans, the lladical Tri
umvirate of the Rump is determined to
go forward and to risk ev,ery thing uppn the issue of the revolution. We would
say to these men, since they are determinto give us lessons fromHhe French Revolution, read carefully all the events of
that horrible drama. Though successful
for a time, what did the chief leaders and
actors in the strngglo eventually gain?
How many of them escaped the fate they prepared and visited upou others? In
almost every instance the poisoned chal
ice they had forced others to drink was
commended to thoir own lips. The car
of revolution, which they had propelled so vigorously forward, at last rolled over
them and all,their friends. Eternal rotri-
bution, though slow, at last overtook them
and, like ACTON, they were devoured by
their own houuds, of the revolutionary
Cincinnati Enq.
progeny.
Southern Plunder In Northern Mansions.
From the Dayton(0.) Empire.
The New York Journal of Commerce, which, some dayB since, made the exposure, that in one of the aristocratic churches of that city there is now in use a comuiuni011 service, which was plundered from a church in the South, reiterates the call upon persons who. have in their parlors and churches here things that were stolen from the South during the war, to send them back. The editor
a
rive under their pilotage, for Mr. Stevens
is a representative man, and, more than
any other, is the Radical leader in the
Congress of the United States. It was a
ferocious tirade of abuse upon the people
of the South, whom the Radicals, since they are down, with chivalric bravery
desire to still further oppress and humil
late. It was a menacing attack upon tho
I Supreme Court, and an open display of
I contemplated violence toward the Presi
I deut of the United States. It was such
"Au old friend of ours, a Union man in the South through all the war, told us that his chandeliers were in a certain house in Massachusetts, his piano another, and various family treasures iu otbdrs. lte hnd traced them to their positions..' We have heard of a Southeru lady sitting down at a Northern,table and recognizing silver on that table as: her o^n. We have lieaid of a lady receiving from an officr a present of jewelry, which she recognized as the jewelry of a Southern lady who had been her old schoolmate and friend. A public sentiment needs to be aroused on this subject, and
'f»fT '4 -i
.) ail
and saw harbor.
little the manages of
the conspirators against the public liberty and the public peace have been unvailed,
•I-
ER 1271
the holders of sueh^-^oofli,^should be compelled, by the indignation of. their honest fellow-citiiens,-, to^ead^J baelc.t'*" '1
But ikfew.dt^yt) since,-we ^er^j.feesifttfdj 1))' a vefcy .respectable ^-aod— intelligent
kind of address that was frequently, gentleman, rcsjdjjpt .of, Ne^j I£jj)^ft, ., tH'nt'tWre are'riow hanging on the
hoard in tho celebrated long Parliament Conn
Walls of," ",Biast".,^Butler, at !Lowelly tWo hiaguificent pictYres-Trr'' Christ pn» the ,7 Cross," aid ^ary 'at the. Scpulchqrjlyy,. we think be stilted paihtb'd', evidently,. by some great masters,''which-aW'cer-' taiuly of.$1,00(1 .value eacho 'Thejt wei^ pluudcred from one of the elegapt ynanr^-. sious of New Orloans—the mansion of.^-y/ one of the wealthiest gentlemen of the South—which Butler confiscated and appropriated tcl Ueaffi]nal-t«r ptir^os&s, and as a receptacljB.of stolqn goods. -|Our.in'^! formaht wa&" a correspondent at New {,{j Orleans wlibn t"hissc pictures were shipped,. nnd them on the vessel'ir -the" itoilRfitoli'.' .hot
Interesting and Instructlve__UeniB.. Charcoal inflames ft about grbes, Fn)»p"}£ »ty|t. '.Ktoi pn&jtblMM 'il first made by the French in 1400. Tan- .v: niu is present,,in 140 plants, oaontohoue »"«*".•• :-..v in 9G, and guttapercha .in 7. Saluceses- 'W'timated the temperature of fired gunpowder at aboufc 4^300 degrees, Fahr. A '*?$•: rapid penman can write thirty words in a tnuto. To. do this he must draw his1,1 a ix a a
..T T-
1
half feet. Whtfn charcoal has not "absprbed moisture and is mixed with oxy- ,, dizing substances, it miiy be inflamed by •»'n»n violent shocks or by friction. The pro- nan'J jectile force of gpn .cotton, when used in moderate charges in,musket or cannon, is equal to thafciof about twioeits weight of the best.gunpowder. Gun' cotton, when "w''! properly prepared, explodes at a temperature of about 380'degrees Fahy.
JAXt,JftUi
not, therefore |gnlw '^ttupp'w'Ser .WheT»-ii*J loosely pouteS over it. A sudden heat/. tv of 672 aegr^i^aHr will ignite gunpow-.
1
der flai^e will not ignite it, unleBS-it re-:! mains long enough in contact with the grains to heat them to redness.' Alumiuum bronze is made from copper 90 parts' alurtiinum 10 parts. It works remarkably well. Harden a steel bar to its--) maximum, and, il will expend- to a dogree which may be represented by 84 t"he 'Lj' same1 piece ot steel rendered as soft as possible will only expand to fi2. According to a German author, the number of useful plants is about 12,000, but it must. be remembered ,that researches have oply, •«('. been completed jii|Cortain portions of theglobe.' A,.report of a French commii-1 "ITTW sion, published in 1852, showed that the
A Massachusetts editor lias discovered^ that Sumner is the only 'statesman iu Con-jj
gross! Bad for Congress arid the people.
MITCHELL,
sdt
Aa*x
greatest amount of light is obtaine'd.fr'Otri''!':'' a gas flame at the expense of twenty-spy-en per cent of carbon. For tho nianu-
J.=
di.T
facture of. gunpowder saltpeitet "should not contain mdW than l-S.OjO^'.pari.ofc-U'u'.^'i chlorides. SaltpeUr^fpr.^he, beat apoi.t^ Pg."'®t.' -morii- than l-GO'OOth' p#rt chlorides. A line of
bItt?^0^ro"d."Mtrout
Aubagne, France, a There arpMto b^.three
,I/-
from each end, and the price o^^J.'^ai-y'11 ticket will' be If. 20c. Glass maj7?^'-'1"" readily drille^ by using a steel drill har-^fr^"" dened and not "drawn" at all run fast,ia with a Bharp drill, wet with spirits ofB'nj turpentiqe and. feed light, The op,eration will be riiore speedy if the turpentine be saturated''with camphor gum.
ALL SOWT8 OP PARAGRAPHS., th&F
Philadelphia used 10 614,455 gallons of wate^ last year.
mand-
success in the past, and fearing no possi
f! ge ti .5
with Turkey, sudh as the preservation ,ofrf Jfr the peace of Europe imjier^ivelj ^-^,
0
Thad. Stevens refused to, make, any ni?-."'* pledges in regard to the Se,aator8hip-rrslrti-in. not even'.a tomperance _pledgc.-.--
A gentleman from Montaua lost $3,{00.)mb b»!a in Philadelphia while prinking a. glass ofc.j 4 whisky with a''friend.'' ui
A young man "in Brooklyn, enamoreaJ(tmn.,j of a young lady,^ had an unsatisfactory,, interview with her, and proceeding to hi^
no
Thefe is an enforced exodui' -of Gentiles fro'm Sialt Lake City. Young-has bought tbem^and their ^property out at I seventy-five cen,ts on tjie dollar. .-Iikoo icsilia
The,round trip from' the United States?^"^^,^, to Paris andtlmclr, during the Exposition" will be at the- rate of 8180 'to'8156 gold, on board the.Great Eastern:
lt
room put a bullet into'one of his luugs^^
James Gordon Beunett, Sen., of,the New York Herald, who is in his seventy™ .orninth.year,'lias recently had an operation, •.
n.V97d.
performed ou him for strabismus—squint viijuq eyeduess. M«"
At the stock sales, in Boston, a day or two since, the,stock in a petroleum oil tof Tt Jh company, which a few .,months since sold readily at 82 50 per share, was,disposed' .-oniulop i.J of for ten oents per ope, hundred shares...! .:3t nii no'i| The difference can .be(sg^nB.withp^,^b0,.-iyJff»oi'' .,lf use of a glass. I gniiiJifa#* Kbiiil
THE Albany Arytu says that'H1 New''
York engineer has planned and is'about
5,6
1
building a river steamer:eonstructed en-'' tirely 'out of Bessemer.steely "the length111' tobe 450 feet, tho ,breadth, 45, and'the" displacement 1,700 tons. By-construct-ing the steamer upon a pcenliar-*tnodei" which he has planned, the engineer claims that with engines of .'tori thousand''h'tffsfe' power he" can secure a speed- of thirty miles ari 'hour. The-boat will accomodate one thou'satid passengers, and is to run, if successfully built, between New York-1 and Albany, making the trip in the spaoe of fivo hour.
Mtfi'COl I l«9b tfdl :i
ii vi.'.
i'i 1 oJin*' lo'f .851I I
I »»n*
one of the oolored membera
of the Massachusetts Legislature, had one vote for Speaker of the House, at its last a a
4
wm
ffili
