Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 6 April 1854 — Page 1

rSC BED S&. iffikBS:

The Montgomery Journal

Is published every Thursday, at: $1 ,50, if paid in advance $2, within the year and $2,50, after the expiration of the year. No subscription discontinued till all arrearages are paid

FOR ADVEBTtSINK,

$1 per square of 12 lines Brevier, for three insertions. Each additional insertion 25 ccnts.

A reasonable reduction made on yearly adadvertisenients. All letters must be post-paid insure attention

Satan in Comioil.

The Richmond Despatch contains a fancy sketch under the above title t?hich is too long for oar pages, but it contains eo vivid a picture of the evils of intemperance, and so justly assigns to intemperance the first place among the destroying agencies of tha world, that we cannot forbear from quoting a portion of it, and condensing so much of the rest, as will make it intelligible.

The writer represents Satan and his peers to have met, after the Miltonic fashion, in council where the former, after lamenting the impediments thrown in the way, by divine mercy and good angels, of completely subjugating and ruining men, offers to him who shall best advice, and who shall suggest the surest means of destroying mankind, "the dotninion of the earth and a prat at his right hand forever."'—Prohibitionist.

Then successively speak Moloch, Belial, Mammon nnd Apollyon: each in his turn speaking in character, winning applause, and carrying the

palm from his predecessor. The de-i"" °n

suddenly, from a beetling cliff, far out in the burning lake, arose a blue, lambent flame—which while they gazed, took shape a horrid shape, and stood before the assembled fiends.

It was clad in vesture wet with blood the gore hung heavy from its matted locks, and the fiercest fires of hell shot from its burning eye-bails. Even Satan started and turned pale with fear, afcd Hell shrank back with horror. "Hn l'e fear me, then hissed the horrid monster. Weil might ye fear, were I not a friend and an ally. But thou kno'.vet-t me not, O Satan,

vears—but now come to offer service nnd allegiance, and to claim the of fered prize. Fear not, but listen, and let me be ruler oI the Earth, for none hath power like me, in nil thy dark dominions.

I

eupport of the gambling

forth their families to want and wintry winds, and the babe shall perish in its mother's arms, with its tears frozen to ice-drops upon her bosom I

I

I

vy.

(or I am an carl!, born spirit', and have i»8 «nd serpent forms. Jong hid my.ell-»yo for thousand

Moloch, Belial. Mammon and Apollyon promise much, but they shail be my servants and subalterns. Their power is weakness compared with mine. O listen, till I tell thee of my strength, and how I will wield it. My shapes and names are legion, and 1 change them at will, so that men shall of times hug mc to their bofoms a* an angel of light. 1 will be the greatest of all hypocrites and deceivers, betraying ever with a kiss professing love and kindness, when my only a up.j midsion to torture and destroy tne is ruin.

unimaginable horrors. I will stand leave him as an inheritance, a fondbeneath the gallows-tree, and even ness for me and the son shall follow while the death-rattle is in the throat! in tho footsteps of his father, down of the criminal, will drive men to to perdition. Ihe physician shall infobbery and murder. I will lie in voke my aid in sickness, and in ail wait in the streets of cities, and plan circh'3 I will plant myself securely, the midnight fire and assassination.

a

I will plunge my victims into prisons and hospitals I will sleep them in poverty to the very lips. I will cast deadliest foe.

will turn the dagger of the husbanc against the heart of his wife, and her blood shall stain the cradle of his children. Stimulated and urged on good fellowship—and if there be one by me, the father shall dance in ma-( of all that glorious race, for whom mac glee over the mangled bodies ofi yon planets, from their golden urns his murdered babes, and laugh to see pour down their silent, everlasting their fair locks dabbled in blood the cataract of light, who excels his felmother shall "forget her sucking lows,

child," slain by her hand, and mock visions of beauty, and strew his path at the tender years and helplessness with rose-leaves, till at last he shall of her offspring. walk heedless into my coils.' And,

On whatsoever hearth-stone my once my slave, though a thousand foot shall be planted, the gladsome should weave their heart-strings fire shall go out, to be lighted no more around him, and weep tears of blood, forever and the roof-tree shall fall, he shall, in all his pride and beauty, and the voices of children be hushed, sink deeper and deeper in tribulation and all that men cluster around them,j and anguish unutterable, and dig his to make their,eart'nly homes so much own pathway down to hell.

like heaven, shall vanish like a wreath at the feasts of all the great and the of smoke, nnd desolation brood overj wise, of earth, where rank and fashthe ruins.

I

I

next plunge is into perdition. I will sweep whole continents of their inhabitapts and give woes and sorrows

Eilil'ji'.]

and "wounda without cause" to the whoie race of man. Yet, whosoever is wounded Ly me, shall seek roe as hid treasures to be wounded yet again. I will hind upon their brows the iron crown of suffering, burning with hellfire, that shall scorch and sear and eat into their brain and heart and soul, yet shall they full down and worship me, and, for my sake, part with houses and land?, nnd wife and children, and hope and heaven.

Let Jehovah send forth spirits, pure as the snow-flake, to dwell in earthly bodies I will seek them out, and kindle in their hearts an unquenchable fire that shall consume them and the cherubim shall watch long for their return, at heaven's gate, but they shall never again look upon their Father in Heaven. The student at his books?, the mechanic at his toils, the laborer at the plow, will I destroy, and none shall stay mo.' I .vill coil myself in the brain of the sea-cap-tain, and seal up his eyes, or so distort them that he shall know neither chart nor compass, and his vessel and

bo"1

cision was abont to bo roiwJo [he bones oflhe mannjra ivh,ten the

«h»" "f «»d

bottom of the ocean. I will be th omnipresent curse of humanity, and under my guidance, the race shall walk forever as in the shadow of an eclipse. Eyes the)- have, but shall sec not, and ears they have, but shall hear not, the °nd and the purport of the crooked paths through which 1 will lead them.

I will take the eons of the kings and the mighty men, and the captains, and the great ones of earth, and will mangle them with horrid wound.?, strip them of wealth, reputation, life itself, and fill their last hour with torment. Around their dy-

0 0 0 1 a 0 0 1

darkness, brandi.-hmg their forked tongues to eting them and lick their blood, as a fierce flame licks up its fuel. Thoughts snail become things, living things, to mrck and curse, them. And some in their agony shall leap into this burning lake, in hope to escape stiil greater torture and some will I hold upon the brink, and rejoice when 1 see every nerve shrieking with agony, as open to their startled ga/.e the horrors of that pit in v.hich plunge them forever.

Yet this is not a!!. I know that you will i::tigh, (if iieiids can laugh) when I tell you that I will ?o manng» that mankind shall all along think me tluir friend Though it i*3 mv

will he the patron and sole wuoie. race of Adam, yet j=o will I mix

a

her "whose house inclincth and their dany habits so flatter anc death, and her paths unto the dead." delude their stupid senses, tnat they And I will through

a

the very flower of manhood, to blight and shame and everlasting contempt. On every foot of earth and sea will I follow my victims. Where discord and anarchy prevail, there will I be: where cruelty is, there will I come, and burn out from the hearts of men every vestige of mercy till they become fiends incarnate, and devise

with their business, tuetr pleasures

shall pronounce me a "?ood creature," nay a "creature of God P' At their wedding feasts I will be the source of joy, and at the funeral gathering, the solace of their sorrow. The rank grass shall grow over those slain by my hand, and the mourners shall forget it, and fall in their turn. The father shall commend mc to his son, and reeling to his grave, shall

make myself a companion and a

familiar, and men shall never be so merry as in the presence of their

Poetry shall lend me her rose-gar-land, and music her charm and the spirit of melody shall speak from myriad harps to sound my praises

will turn the dagger of the husband and witch the world with the idle knife in the street during a drunken I row on the 5th of July, uttered the following warning while standing upon tho scaffold, Read it, and

dream that I am the inspirer of mirth and the soul of happiness and all

I

will lure him with song and

will point the son's knife ion reign supreme.—where forms not

against the father's throat, and his less beautiful than those of heaven, grey hair shall drip with gore. Where! move to celestial harmonies, and war and vengeance are,

will rouse where wit and mirth and wine go

their fury to ten-fold rage, and blot round, and glasses sparkle on the from the soldier's breast the last ves- board, I

tige of humanity. The incendiary's um, and they shall feel richer, wiser, torch shall he my banner the crack!- stronger and more witty than before, ing flames of burning villages, and! But at the last,

the shriek of murdered innocence, the one by one, from their fancied eleva-1 music of my march tion nnd they shall drag out a I Pestilence shall follow me as a wretched existence in the hungershadow and

will lap their senses in Elysi-|

I

will open unto him the) dens and vilest purlieus of the earth,

gates of a million dwellings which and sneak to dishonored graves, re-1 /else had been secure. I

House lias be one of the anc er filled that

.. VOLUME 6. CRAWFOKDSVILLE. INDIANA, APEIL 6, 1854.

we walk the earth, decimating its inhabitants and tumbling them into hell. Give me then, O Satan, the dominion of the earth, and thou shall behold, through ages, "Hell's every wave bfeuk on a living shore, Heaped with the damned like pebbles."

He ceased. One unearthly yell of applause arose, amid the stamping of countless feet and the clashing ol adiamantine shields. The Arch Enemy stepped from his throne, and leading the horrid spectre to a seat at his 'right hand, thus spake "Terrible being if thou canst indeed do these things, thou art henoeiforth my Vicegerent upon the earth.

Go forth! and my realms shall be crowded with the souls of men, thick as autumn leaves or sands upon the shore. lint tell us by what name to call thee

And the fiend answered

Air. Benton says the bill will b« dejfeated he declares he does not know |how, but that it will be, he is certain.

Such wrong as it meditates, he says, never does triumph. lie will speak, he says but shall not speak out of order, nor over hour, he says, people, and taiiily to oc kill the bill and write i13 epitaph 'Yes, Sir,' in his own language, 'the bill will be pent to b.,—

rising in public estimation, while his

American people indignantly correct

the head of the government, and consigning such a patriot as Scott to the inaction of private life." ,s

The Murderer's VVarniag. aged 20, who was hung at Pittfburgh on Friday, for the murder of a man he struck down with a

I

I

will be

Jiquors, for their use has brought inn to an ignominious death. Had I I never touched liquor,

if

I

ohn

will hurl them down,

will spread I joicing to hide from the withering,

famine and disease even in lands of scorn of their species, and to give plenty and health, and will seal up their souls to eternal punishment in the eyes of all my victims so that! fires less fierce than those in which I, they shall not sec nor know that their have tortured them on earth. Nay,

the kings and governments of the, earth shall pass laws for my protec-j tion, and that of my emissaries, as

land

A

Sir, and its au-

ihoi-s will be sent there with if, 'Sir.' Of its principal author, he expressed the profoundest contempt. 'Sir' said he, 'the iner.nest man in our country is a poor white man .who marries a woman with niggers. Ue is not allowed to associate with gentlemen. Sir, lie is hooted off the Court House (Green, Sir. Yve have nothing to do with him, Sir. &

Another correspondent writes.:

Colonel Benton says, speaking ofi tho Nebraska bill, 'We shall heat ilhem. The only fear I have now is, that they won't hold it up long enough to knock it down, Sir!

1

The New York Herald advocated the election of Franklin Pierce, and now, alter one year's trial, makes the fo 11 in 1 a at n:

Ahead—T

lcohol!"

So saying, he spread his broad batMike wings, and hell grew lighter as ho vanished.

For a thousand years hath his fiery breath, Smote the wide earth with crime ami dealii, And furnished men, as daintiest food,' For the red flesh-worm's slimy brood.

Old EtiHIoirs C} inics.

A Washington correspondent say?: The leading Tennessee Whigs

he

"A vear-s occupation of the White 'Uie converted :n cnp. ry wen.Cot,»e ha. proved General More, to

1

the blunder they made in "l853 of! ,.^!? placing such an imbecile as Pierce at

heed it, all who put the maddening stranger }ou re ready to graduate, bow 1 to heir 11 ps. Co me in next. Hello! mist 1, du

My friends this is a solemn scene. 1 take that bottle avay." You see a man before you condemned One after another, as fast as he to die.

be a warning to you young men to humor and whisky, the j\ew England keep out of bad company. Let my 'fate bean example to you to not touch, taste or handle intoxicating

I

would not be

where 1 am,—I would have had my I liberty like the rest of you. I

feel as

could talk to you for hours, but it is no use to me my time is drawing to a close.

II. W. Hawkins.—This

gen­

"P

rofessors"

where.—Aseedy son of

Yankee Doodle came along! When fortune iaiia distressing, There's nothing like a Yankee sung

And scientific guessing. Early next dny, our hero and an-

How hath he fulfilled his mission other odd looking genius weie seen on a ladder, nailing up a broad strip jknew had the power to extricate himof canvasa ail across the front of aj ]f the hands of his crucifiers, house on the levee end the job being (i niuch more or you worthy of completed, there wan displayed in ,. ,.. (should no office of em-i

The tiling produced a sensation, at

an oki rickety lable. got a vial of vin-

egnr, pot ol tar, a bniile of whiskey, nnd various other well known odoriferous affairs arranged around him md with a bk.ck -kull cap on hi3 head, and a red slick in his hand, he made no bad "splurge'' at a representation of a modern Faust. Madam? Lud might have, taken a lesson from him ('you understand mc now?') nnd Herr Alexander should have seen him. He drew a mystic ring on the ceiling, with charcoal, filling it upij with mos't inuiscrib,-it)!e "curlicues,[

right over the table, and business !eoon commenced.

juircr, after toe mysteries of guess-

"Stranger, good morning walk up and proscribe yoursfdf as a true in quirer after the irrevolations of Ges-

out ui ujc weaKest, most corrupt nd imbecile Presidents that have ev- .V .V their fate was seeded, and so is yours filled that position. General Scott

0

since his defeat has been living a re-I

,. ',.

1

0

tired life, and has been every day °ke the guessing spirit to descciu,

0

successful competilor in ]85J has "VVhaUloyou snicllr" ......... I been as rapidly sinking. As public ii.as:er. I opinion is now tending, we should jnot be at all surprised to see the

am about to be launched into °uld dispose ot them, toe professor peiance societv eternity. 1 feel that I am prepared found his customers sideling half taking a nip one day before a young to be called before my God. I Kcej ^)''y upon him ail day. long, and many familliar faces and friends ofi wm'U, now and then, one would exmy youthgtAnd I trust that this will hibit a beiigerantspiriUbetwo.pn good latter.

E N I O N E N I O N IN A N E E N [J. KEENEY, Publisher.

New Orleans Guessing Institute. Douglas and the Women, nenot 12ohny E clipsed-N ew

E

No-|

known and "hard up," in New Orleans. Of course he soon set about guessing some way to keep out ot the scrape and, befors he had quite whittled his stick away, he became absorbed in the inception of a grand thought. It seems, sitting down to guess, his astute brain made a plunge, at once, among the metaphysical and scientific ramifications of guessing, and, not long after, he might have been observed, with a sober sort of

nc- take the following items from

the

W

N E a

found himself, recently, all alone, un-

ie

I blood

S: GUES.-MX: TAUT IN 0.\C I.IOSSEN: Only 25 jive cents. -j populace, but by cold blooded a\irice jj

a 1

once, among sailors, pedlars, levee Without dwelling upon this horrid

the converted tin cnp. cry well. over the battlements of heaven into hell. They set up a howl at their

"Crimini jingo! you larn fast!—

S

a

9

my pupil

Brimstone. "Good you envelope the faculty

a

"Whisky, by thunder!" "All creation! how quick you take it! are you sure it's whisky?" "Sure? well, I recon!" "You'd better taste it and see. it whisky?" "Well, it is

1

Take a good swig, then you'll do .,

..... ,.

out was questioned by the eagercrowd I "Mintjul^ps? queried the old man,j

in waiting as lo "what sort of a show! "why, what in the name of drinks is

ariington correspondence of

thei^ew lork Tribune:

1

Some women of Alliance, Stark county, Ohio, have ingeniously sowed thirty three-cent piece.* boween two sheets of gauze, forming a tranisparant mat of three or four inches square, and have sent them to Senator Douglas, with the. following letter. The letter is signed by oyer one hundred names: To Mr. Douglas, of Illinois, Member

V. S. Senate. Sir: We, the undersigned, wives,

mothers and daughters of Stark coun-

twinkle in his eye, marching off along !|y ^h'O, feeling grateful that our th(*"Levee" apparently looking for a Roasted of the free and home of jj house to let, humming-

b\av'e

1 3

that white bus-

bands sons and brothers can enjoy their own hnerty, beg to present you the inclosed

1

thirtypieces of silver'' of a

testimony of the sentiments we entertain for your labors in the Nebraska bill. If Judas was worthy of his reward for betraying one whom he

flaring, spraw hng, ht. agg'ing, bt olument be. proffered you.) for this'^^j harmonies of the backed, decapitated, knoc.c kneed, (betrayal of liberty for tuts effort to tho atmosphere was round bhoaldered, h^v-legged Jimp-

a a

brutal than

in ST IC t(.M O III cl C. 0 !Y1 dDj 1 I0? hi 0 V\ I f* iv is r-noiflPTP 7 V/7 ?7f/? of A *. 1

.- T» I- I c. ucinero. no asanas unoj Before me seemed to be a conHunt of Louisiana, and Old Bullion,, cabgraphic, chirograpuie, arabeque,

cn

di xr

I are ready and ripe for a terrible on-1 Arabian, American, and pothookian mo then slaught on the bill. Gov. Jones will. letters: and daughters, accused of no infrac-. „ij The finer senses stand almost alone in Tennessee.— NU ORLEENS GESSING INSTITOOT.' tion of religious or evil law and whose

•:cak and helpless fathers and

is caded for by no niaduening

laborers, and all sorts of stragglers. P/pture furthcy, may ou receive tne: with an amusing effect.

3 a 3

Liberty Alliance, March 1, 1851.

ot' Congress, a few days ago, on the

Nebraska bill:

ut you have never performed. ion

nav

.,!•

In sfraggleo an open mou.hod i"- livered set. Of course you will op- ,. f]

a

neology. Put your If it hand «P'-n fo \u that were pitched

1 C" .' I III UlSl l-'l

°'VJ etrnnger ,t submit to the yoke, bu

0

SO imprudent to complain. You willj

York, of Rhode Island of Massachu-j

I pett?, the Northern divines, the oppo-

nenta of Nebraska everywhere.

1 0 a

your eyes upon t.ie magic circle. So.: di ifit re, and so will you. 13u11 to ^it early leave, the eggs under which are now lying in the three na Aow. if vou wink orremove vour eve, i.u, c,.,„ .i .. _r r? it„

,v° ', .drive us to the wall in .1350, bu tj j- their houses be damp, cold, un- ly

things are changed. Then and before,

you were imperious and grasping,' f„

take all the territory north of that.

NUMBER 36.

Bayard Taylor and the Arabs. In a lecture at Cleveland, a fewevenings since, ayard aylor related the following singular circumstance:

While in Arabia I had a very remarkable experience There ia a

that of opium, it is prepared from the Indian hemp. It was much used by the Saracen warriors when about to enter a battle, as a stimulus. It produces on the imagination• a double consciousness one part of the mind seems to study while the other part looks on. From motives of curiosity 1 was persuaded to try the effects of it on my own system. I was in

Damascus at the time. Soon after taking the drug the effect began to appear. 1 saw the furniture in the room, talked with the company, and yet 1 seemed to near the Pyramid

0 0

a

foulest passions. .. igin of the Arabian Nights. My

aik. You have threatened before, verized peat, or fine charcoal, and the

the measure, we expected that

railing.* 1 ou will hiss, but so do ad-

a

0

a

1

merely adders, whose vocation is to j. o'clock A. M, and be token "to the

ll.

rc_:

Brandy and water," was the

magician still manageu to send him o-r

off satisfied. Every body eom.ng vV hy dont you dr.nU m.ntjn eps? uTm»L-"bIe 'v-m -C/»

it was anyhow? and the answer was that? pretty generally the same: "Firstrate most delicious drink,'' was the pleasure in announcing, on tne auand no mistake and the last experi- answer, "and I'll show you how to thority of one of the parties inteiesment is worth half the money!" make it, as I see you have mint grow-j ted in the caloric ship Ericsson, that

toot" for a premium to his enterpris- lighted with it. has been improved in important res-

An exchange says 'it ia estimated was answered by an aged female dar-j the first week in April, and about the that it will cost six millions of dollars key, with— middle of that month, it is intended to supply Washington city with a ^•••"Oh. Massa's dead and gone disi to dispatch the ship to Havre, either

I

and pathetic appeals cannot fail to I by?—Dayton Gazette. "only a fellow come along about aj from this statement they appear to A lbanv, j\. Y., March 22. make him acceptable wherever he monf ago and larnt him to drink be, then the groat nautical revolution The Maine Law passed the House maybe called to lecture.— Temper- Many are great because their asso- grass in he rum and it killed him in is indeed impending.—N.Y. Courier to-day by a vote of 73 to 42, and goes av.ee Union. dates are small, two weeks." Euy.

0

lt

The professor counted his receipts ing almost at your door." they succeed yesterday, obtaining that night, and finding a round sum The young fellow soon produced: nine and ten revolutions a minute halimte»d for it for many purposes," to help him on W est, sold his "insti- the julep, and the old man was do- with one only 01 her engines, wnicn j(-

ing assistant, and the next morning! About a month after, on his return pects since the late experienced^ trip, j,-

tlemen, in accordance with a resolution passed at the State Temperance Convention, requesting him to spend as much time as possible in the State of Indiana, has already entered the field, and is lecturing under the direction of the State Central Committee. The most cheering accounts of[sufficient quantity of water.' the success of his efforts have been If it cost six millions to supply the "Dead!" exclaimed the young man,! now feel assured of a success «ur- our citizens^ received from the various Counties in Ismail demand for water in that -city, "why, how strange! What did he die} passing the most sanguine expecta-! ^Iadame oontag and company are which he has labored. His affecting in the name of Croesus what must it of?" tion ever indulged hy the inventor.—-jSP'rig to era Cru/. Saturday. narrations, inexhaustible store of facta'cost to supply the demand for whis-, "Oh,

he was off, jingling the silver in his home, the Virginian thought he would This secures the same number of (nine

pocket, and blessing devoutly the stop at his old friend's and "indulge,"! or ten) miles per hour in motion, wuh jj benefit of science! {but judge of his surprise, when his only half the power in use. The

I inquiries at the door for his friend| other engine will be got in ord.er by

two weeks direct or via LiverpoolSiThe owners

drug in the East whose effect ia like several hundred uollars forJaboi.

0

Cheops, whose blocks of some appeared to me like huge squares of Virginia tobacco. The scene changed and I was on the desert in a boat made of the mother of pearl.— The sand seemed to be grains of gold, through which my boat ran as easily

a 3 a a a a

I

a

husbands and wives, sons:

odors and mu-

series of arcades of rainbows.

through which, for fifteen jear*. I

], and all gratification

harmonious sen?ation.

a

easily conceive the or-

a a

huge Kentuckian, tried

'f^rayal seized the water-jug for a

Be

Mr. Stephens, of Georgia, a repre- boilei_ when I am letting ofi steam. sentative of Southern chivalry, thus I dissorffed himself in the lower branch iie oultry ouse.—A every thing

1

Well gentlemen, you make, a good following sensible remark from an "That portion of the naval forces deal of clamor over the Nebraska, gii paper. First of the roost which is already completely ready for measure, but it don't alarm us at all.

a

We have got used to that kind of pp ikletl \-^ith ashea and lo

0 0

,ve never performed. iou ,. should be cleaned vays caved in, and you will You are a mouthing white

0

a 5

but we don't care for your opposition. j.o should be lined with moss heath of the Baltic will coincide in point uu will rail, but we are used to your

a

a

ders, nnd we expect it of you. ou average of ]S5 eggs each per annum. Russia to the ultimatum of Europe

0

IV :»*, V«ii co.- stand that some $-10,000 or more of drill, biu set it uojy.i mui ,1 I s.n •,

'how can I take water into n,j

ted with ooultry now-a-days

a a

lrt" with blacklegs are best for can be received,

.1 .. .but never lay wore eggs than they can sin fore in Finland, and Cronstadt, all

V. don't chafe. Gentlemen, we have hatch. Remember that, no success within the Gulf of Findland. Of

and would not agree to run the line of hi they get in a state of nature, that the divisions of the Russian fleet 38 deg. 30 min. to the Pacific, and .\,

a

a

what line. You were greedy and wanted .stagnant, the drainage of the manure of Cronstadt. Ilelsinfore is protecmore. But now you will lose the' j,

njghole. You went a wooling, and handsomest be not bred from." built on three islands, opposite the havo come home fleeced. Don't be| rnouth of the harbor, and mounting SG0 guns, with barracks and case-

E

roasting while those with white legs tic fleet consists of three divisions of are best for boiling. If you want about nine line of battle-ships each,

1 1

them. Fowls in their native habits val* ports of Revel in Esthonia, Hel-

er. You tried to ted from poultry-keeping these three stations Revel is common-

Qhio ,nd xMississirri ailroad.

only be slapped in the face. Pon'tj On Tuesday, the 4t.h day of April. ments for 12.000 men. Tho Isles of resist. You, will only be lashed into Qhio and Mississippi RaUroad Aland, which were seized by Russia, obedience. Legislatures -of JNew p.

Vvill

1

jp

0

j',-lends of the road. The party

v",]j a

hiss they are simply howling devils: ,hc road below Mill which kingdom they ought Creek. The distance (2(5 mile*) to! g^Mly to belong. It would be a, Fc.'-i I For to Mix IT.—An Old Aurora will be run in one. hour, and jvise and politic measure, well calcuf (Vllow'in Missouri, Wiio was in the: on arrival a collation vvill be served to check the immoderate awenj habit of "not belonging to tin, tern-!»' Company's cstc- ,!«?»: ,°

A W O N E W S A E S

1. Subscribers who do not give express notice to the contrary,are considered as wishing to continue their subscription. 2. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their periodicals, the publisher may continue to send them until all arrearages are paid. 3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodicals from the offices to which they are directed, they are held responsible till they have settled the bill and ordered them discontinued.

Scene at Barnaul's Museum Among a host of claimenta who presented themselves at the American Museum yesterday, hoping to get their dues from the Crystal Palace, through its President, Mr. Barnum, was one man who had a claim

"I have waited a long time for that bill and now I must have it," said he, addressing Barnum. "There are no funds in the treasury to pay with, and the daily expenses are much greater than the receipts," answered the President. "Well pay me one hundred dollars on account and I will wait for the balance till Monday next,,'was the,

reply. "We have not one hundred centa unappropriated," rejoined Barnum. "Then pay it out of your own

pocket.

I certainly shall not do that." "Then I'll sue you." "Sue me! 1 don't owe you." "But you do though, for my bill ia for labor, and the stockholders are personally liable for all such bills.— I must sue you therefore as a stockholder." "I pledge you my word I am not directly nor indirectly a stockholder to the amount of a farthing." "Then who is a stockholder." do not know positively any indi-

fTrwn vidual living who i3 a stockholder ex-

cept one. That man is Anson D. Munn. I perceive that he swears in his affidavit that he owns some seven or eight thousand dollars worth of stock." "Who is Anson D. Munn?"' "I believe he is one of the proprietors of the Scientific American.

others have followed suit. \Ye un-

in

feJor.„jV.

,j .,st house. The floor should be active service will shortly assemble

a

badly ventilated if their night before the upper part of tha

^3 not* approximate to that Gulf, and it is of course important

mixture of animal and vege-j which are thus seperated should not

b] food: if Hie water they drink be be enabled to reunite under the gana

& ., or if the strongest and ted by the fortification's of Sweaborg,

give an opening ex-! wh« she effected the conquest and

the Press and the a- annexation of Finland, in 1809, are

1

was. the oetofS'ive ear manufactory. Returning, «'ar enabled the Allied Powers toi, the cars will leave Aurora at4 clock i-°'-ore t.ii^e i&i.inds to t.ie Scandi-

y: nnd arrive in the city in time for tea. "avian monarchies, with which they ""what do you drink?" a.-ked the! The road lying on the river bank, and

at the foot of majestic hills, will make: S

m,mo. able^ nt. Lin l^uq.

S ucckss of the Ericsson.—We take

a

the trip a pleasant one, and the din- spirit and we cannot but hope thatg

pr tiip rp-nnion of friends and the! t'

1 6

ccvion and will con-mire' to mak^ advantage of this conjuncture

Lo

Association

y.

peculiar interest, wc give the Naval operations in the Baltic, says.

Tnbune.

Naral Operations ia tha Baltic. The London Times, refering to tho

m, or pul- in th« Downs, and proceed early in

1

March to the Kattegat, where it will

should be cleaned off every await the opening of the Baltic!,

every await the opening of the Baltic!, which is seldom accessible for.mari-

'The yard should contain a crass time operations before the latter part

el, slaked lime, of the month of March, eo that the

and "pure water. The I presence of the fleet off the shores

Evidently the Dorklings of time with the period at which the

breed them wiii Jay an definite answer to the Emperor of

The Russian Bal-

free from ice ten days or a fort-

also an important naval station, as

the offices in carriages at 1 command the Gulf of Bothnia,

a

"d threaten even capital of Swee-

3

b^ connected by race, reli-

a

traditions, and national

gallant people of Sweden may

of artairs lo recover the province:

recover

which was so shamefully wrested from them nearly half a century^ ago."

ransparent

Paper.—It is stated, ansparof being

a

a

1

d'no," returned the woman,| If their hopes are as well founded as '&•

y-

frather,

a

very thin

uis^olved in spirit's of

a

^est,

0 3 a

pli on

JNew Orleans,

N ew O rleans, March 29.--Mr. Filiimore had a public, reception to-

a

I I a

T,

a

waited by crowds of

I into effect on tho 1st of May next.