Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 15 November 1860 — Page 1

Jeremiah. Ivteoiiey,*., Enrroii am

The .-on 1'i.iurs

Piiti.iinui.

I «^.u»

1

O-.vl, 1

"s. 0 mnntii!-'

the tt,!0V

«v«a on tlie shortest rms-n^ie «'iKi.tcd i:vtos. Give P.:.' si iVsl.

'ik*: «kf KSwrlSon Tit-lie.s. .c (If'tnri i'"r t'ions:Uil "ill 1"? i*Jl- v*j(.|] '1'•) be p-'-'-i ''11

br:i'iv5fe.

wo are si

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ii

V. Iiere

over

& jteii a

11

UE

THE "JOl'IiXAll

Th rs

BILL OE PRICES.

run

^.DVianTisix AND

Yearly Aavcrtl*la»ar,

Quarter column 3 week-4 ..-•••

2

month*.

3

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1 year, 1 month 2 months,

llnlf

1 1 mouth,

1

2 months,

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j.nn 7.00 ii. oo

m.ou n.no "l.j.GO s,oo 11.00 12,00 1.1.00 16^00 2.3.00 I .00 iit.oo

S.Oi) ,00

2 .00

45,00 8,00 5.00

!.*(.*t to set

«-,vov,,i,c,!,1",'ll.s

Mt

kinds et'.h-b

r! .-cnient 25 el*. !'o

-oUanire, »t the same rate. Ail I'liWie Tr»»n.l«:n Aiv. vii*i* sfjurt:'o, Stjr hist iiirci tioii jik H'Uiii. -. .insei'iion. 0 "lliSJ-rt asiil-Josi P7talli'£ Hi

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Special otsees an num. suhjiKt 1° .i oi, v.vin? rcv.'jitly Purs.**.-*,

vii\ ror

n?ul £Js»«ss p-:ri-::r. "pd of iiuK !jiv i:-rcpa ei

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T.nut i.' th-' vuci

i] nt

"i he upla V.'iu-re

•J. iiin ih:i.ie, liu.-iiVv-tot

it:!!-i jrl'ii ts 1. when rn. v.-i'h

:-r 'vi

in 111i 1 jf .13-re 1 -eoloro!

C:im° th'. Their

ti e:

!!|1 ill' 10 t'-jrej! uejit'.t ij... in the 'on.'-c ligji'.

Twinkle'-, li'.v

Tin- rivi:lc ia10

Who.-n ".iickrving Ihruii^h Shine.- ith t!'.e iiiiuirt: Tl'.c {rlinimerinf

1

•.in.-c::-, tho eir. nil.- i!.~ wn.lc.r5.run, it.= gL'k!..'n set- lis, of the Min.

Rut 'nenili ren eviinv.n iree,

J.ovcr listeninji le.jjjht i.rrru.u- hi2sr»r lUi'.rk. within it^ i-r.-cnI'"tii'ipy, Iter hiu-li "T nini'len hhamc.

M-isoellniiooi is.

Mr. ftouph-N Eloquence.

John B. Cough, the world

1er,0Vl ne1

Temperance Lecturer, is now holding v-|,j(.h would be Sunday. Maritza would forth i't New York. rhe last number join them with her husband and little of Harper's Weekly speaks of him thus: i'ones, and altogether wor.M celebrate

1 1 1 1 a

sThe effect produced bv tne famous 1 ,,

"empcrance orator upon his audiences tempo 1 is a most Lriking illustration of abroad impression of the "purely dramatic style of orafoiy. It is another tribute to the influence and power of the drama. Mr. Gough is not a thinker—lie is an actor. IIis pictures ot the misery of drunkenness, in its many aspects,

SO vivid and thrilling that tlie spell [boyhood

temporary tual root. When Sherridan

begins. It is not tfleeted by his 1111113 or tragical anecdotes. Rninfhndv fold I'OX

standard, ii'r.

and yielded amusin^.

.IIUH ll ll I llll III

£\.I S 1 A Tragedy in Tuti'Iiey. fTnihslJtcil from tlie Pari.-- Gazette de.« Tribunavx fur die Ciiu-innftd Gazette.] •i\A frightful crime has lately terrified the inhabitants of Niche and the neigli"j" boring villages. Niche is a

is 7 liljH04.1 rvor. -pleasant

d:.v at $1,50. in mlnmee i?2 within tlie renr: u».l little City 111 the province Oi Koumelia, $_,Yo aftor the expiration of tlu yc iv. Iso sub- European Turkev. criptt«n discontinued until all arrearages are paid- I tmlLSS at the option of the jiuMWht.

-r j-

rl

pie: and, with some companions having {lie same object in view, he set out on .his journey.

v..

,!v tnct

11)1111!

ire. b: ii-'ht:

diate and immense, but it is laerel}*,--ome of the dlagers whom he met,

thov miMit not legislate or judge under Know lnm. IL.s father came in and he theswav of strong passion. Mr. Gongh's too treated I anko as a stranger. anSS'lfc!,, To these. Ho swJops !™told tbom that ho on his«-ayto a,l before bim. exnept ,l,e P-ionlesj, a -l^t J,1 hjge »kcrt for iicfiiminodji

eloquence su-|

to

&e ^,Vr^ro'M!G»t.ho was thinking someubat

it«

charm

In a little village near Niche, a Bui-1 so uneasy that he went out. Left alone garian family lived, husband and wife, now, Ivato confirmed herself in her with one son and ono daughter. The horrid purpose. She took a hatchet daughter Maritza was married when from the mantlepiece, sharpened it, she was sixteen, glad to get away from and went towards her guests room.— a home where her mothers miserly She entered noiselessly—walking on disposition and her father's feebleness her toes—an unnecessary precaution, I caused continual quarrels. 11er broth- for Yanko slept very soundly. She or anko, having already attained to raised the lamp to look at the younir man estate, also sought to emancipate man and as she gazed her hand t-roni-himseif from the harsh and often un-j bled, and a feeling of pitv arose in bur just restraints of home, and to carve breast. But an instant after her eye out his own fortune. So, he declared caught the girdle round his bod}*, and I his intention of going to Constantino-1 every other feeling but covetousness was instantly extinguished. Then raising her arm. she struck" the ill-fated youth several times, and he died without uttering a single cry.

Many years pr- mil one heard anvthing of Vani o.-: ••••Notwithstanding Ih.e little kirn ci him when he was with iuc:u. ma cuts made innuiries about him of all do ,t ciianccd to ass

tliat way

great city, but all in vain. Iy knew what had become of him. .{ !!'i t/.a. who lovc-il her brother dear- (",:' en cried as she thought she might •or see hivn again. She wou'd f're•nt!v run to!he door when traveler.-'

pas? ing. one whom, r-t with al and love. Tniiko has day, not a was in

r.- gic 1 '.Vll

/ceb.do'A.

stop? sre ne tin- r-,

'he.

rn: 'lit: s. 'rcre ii -».i"Al'i!ir iha-

to see if there was among she ne'

he was in -band had

ceased to

a woman':? tenacity of Six years passed away not returned. quite two months ago, her cottage among her

ren, busying herself about household matters, when she heard the old dog that had actC'-ropunied her when she leit Iter lathers house, barking as ilOUi u.

jrcat joy. returned

She tho't from the v.-ent Oil

than usual.

fields earlit 'vith her work. mmutos aftei wards lho elrildren ran, terrified, to n,. mother, ami then, looking round. -lie -aw a young man standing on the ioor step, lie was tall, dressed in the ume ("I iiand. a no

!e country his

ct were very dusty, trds him and wel­

comed him. But ho took her in ttis .'arms, kissed her. and said. -3 am vour

'•rother Yanko. Am 1 I hen so clu

11

ed vou out •t know me?" 'fhe vouii wife, dttrub with joy. looked at the trav cr.

nd desjritc the change of age, she the features of her

i. There was great joy in the cottage, The children began to be friendly with 'their uncle, and hetjuite won their iove wlit-n he sh.owed tin. in tiie fine things he had brought from Constantinople.— I ••••He asked about, his father and mother. r'joiced on learning that they were still alive—for lie had forgotten all his '••former troubles—and then the brother [and sister concerted a plan for surprising the old folks. He was to stay with her that night- and the next, day oarlv to go on to his birthplace and ask hospitality of his parents, without dis covering himself. How he would en

1 iov their surprise when he toid diem

j')^, w^as their son! .The day after that

along, the spots so familiar to him in his

the audience is that ol the most At hist lie came to the oatskii us ofj mysteries."-i-'. Let every family lay in emotional actor. Tb.e effect is i.nme- the village, and h.sheart began_ to beat.

because it has no intellec-! not know him but he could haye|

[called till them by their names. Six

]j. finished'"" his year's absence! It was along time.-

speech in the Warren Hastings trial, 1 I!(^ armed at his fataer nouse,,

and when Montalombert sat down in the door was shut lie knocked, and

the last davs of the last Legislative" his mother opened the

•Acsemblv of Louis Philippe, after an|lnm with cordiality, as is the habit attack upon the government, it was|bo people with strangers, and invited moved that the Houses adjourn, that him to rest h.msell: but she did not

Know him. His father came in and he

rph'it mav concede the' justice I tion for the night, and said he would

reason, ]1C pay them for it. At the last of li cause, but if does ^o ueion iie rJ l* Tt not afrocted bv bis funny old woman face brightened.

1 Il

1

boy

brother,

1

1

cf

,• had sui»posea to

00

tost.

1 anko and Maritza had a good deal 1 to talk about, and the night surprised them before they were aware that it! was so late. The next day the new-! comer started on his journey,' and roc-1 ognized with great gladness, as he went!

been making a ltteky journey, for his girdle was full of money, and he did not eonecal it. Nobody saw hint come in, it was so early. I should be a fool to let slip so good a chance. But he is my guest," she added, having a little rectitude left, which Iter bad passions

he inhabitants had not quite extinguished. '-AVhat

(of this part of the Ottoman Empire matters that?" she answered to her1 are. _for the most part. Bulgarians, a self thy blow will be all the easier/' thrifty race, who devote themselves to For an hour she argued thus with heragriculture and the raising of cattle in self, and then the criine was resolved the fertile plains near the Balkan moun- upon. Iler husband was told of her tains: fTo their simple imaginations intentions, and for a long time he re-

Constantinople is a city of enchant-j sisted them. At last lie said, "J)o what ments, where riches and honors abound. you will, I Avash my hands of all part Induced by these traditions of herj'ii, ihe transaction." Poor lei low,"' he wealth,* many Bulgarians every .year added, '-he sleeps very tranquilly. Togo" to the. Turkish metropolis to find morrow, where will ho be? I)o yon that only by painful and incessant la-1 remember, wife, our son would be bor can they earn their daily bread.— about his age?"' "Silence! what busiSometimes thov return home with tho ness have you to talk of our son, accumulations of their industry, and now?" said the old woman "he isdead, live like rich men. telling their neigh-' nobody knows what became of him." bors of tho wonders they have seen. (Jantcho could not sleep, and lie felt

Ivato, all covered with blood, unfast­

er had shown ened the girdle, hid it. and then changihem. his par- ed her clothes. But what should she with the body? She had never

from thought of that, and day light surprised No-! her before she had resolved what io

do. During the morning she heard the glad voices of children at the door.— She opened it., and there were her daughter, son-in-law and their little ones, with joy in all their faces.— ell.' said Maritza," '-have you recognized him?" "Who?" the mother asked. turning pale. "Who but Yanko, my brother and your son? He has reI turned, has been at my house, and should have rrrived here yeskrday, curious to see ifyou would know him?"

Ivato screamed on hearing this, and fainted. Her husband, running to her cried, "Oh, wretched creature! what Inn thou done?" "What lias become of 1113- brother?'' said Maritza. Her father replied, "He is there," pointing 1 to the room. When the door was forced open, a frightful sight met their eyes. Yanko was there, bathed in his} own blood, assassinated by his mother!

S

nau a sticic in

The neighbors soon heard of it, the officers came, and the whole family was

arrested and taken to Niche. On the arrival of the Grand Yizicr whoadminI isters justice in that province, the oe-j currence was mentioned to him, and he formed a tribunal composed of Mussi: 1 men and Christians, among whom was the Orthodox Bishop, as the accused belonged to the Greek Church. A11

the circumstances were stated in evidonee, and tlie old woman, Ivato Gantcho was sentenced to be hung. The Bishop alone objected to that sentence. I

alleging that the Orthodox religion! forbade that, a woman should be either hunger beheaded. He suggested that she should be thrown into a caldron of boiling pitch. The Grand Yizior re-I fused to re-enact the atrocities of a bar-1 barous age. and ratified the sentence of

the Judges. The wretched woman ae-1 I cordingiv expiated her monstrous crime in tho view of a great concourse of poopie. [It is somewhat singular that a story should be told of incidents occurring] in our day which have so many prototypes in the traditions of various nations. The letter communicating the! above, which was written from Constantinople

011

Uvf)

At the last words the

111 the evening Ganteho and his wife

eloquent, showed tne voting man to a little room, sweetmeats with which their children J- ft. .. ..... 4-V, 11 *-v 1 ...

tll0 oM

Who can this stranger

would be! this fashion: be that chance has sent to us.'' Ho- has

the 11th of last month,

bears every appearance of truthfulness. —Ed.

Apples.—There

is scarcely an article

of vegetable food more widely useful and more universally loved than the tipple. Why every farmer in the nation has not an apple orchard, where the trees will grow at all, is one of the

en barrels, and they will

to )C 0

them the most economi-

cal invcstluent in

the whole range of

culinaries. A raw mellow apple is di-

,, gested in an hour and a half- while

)0

j]

0

10

#cloor,

reeetvodj

cabbage requires five hours.—

most healthy dessert that can be

laced on a tablc is a bllkcd ttpp 0

if

freely used at breakfast with coarse broad and butter, without meat or flesh of any kind, it has an admirable effect on the general system, often removes constipation, correcting acidities, and cooling off febrile conditions more effectually than the most approved medicines.

If families could be induced to substitute the apple—sound, ripe and luscious—for the pies, cakes, and other

Journal of Health.

oman Ka!

A New York paper says "full evening dress is a white cravat.'' This is still more airv than the Georgia costume.

Tlie XJiiion, in any c-voiiL

8

unworthy, more degraded and more

sinful position cannot be conceived

rLo

ter, murder reputation, sink position

wretchedness to walk abroad in ease

is a purchase from perspiration

flection wa.s •mind, the sketch wo have just given would banish forever the drinker from the drunkery door.

And what state can that mind be in that can keep such a house? How des titute of all the finer feelings ofhumani-

tv—to speak of religion would be non-, sense. Where is love for his country

ami l.is kind Can paWoliw# i»lm«-

11 such a bosom? Impossible Can

and enslave his follow men soul and body, hand and foot? Incredible.— How much of Christ love can be in the bosom of a man who continues to sell spirits, and sees and hears and reads the awful deeds it is doing against God and man Not a spark.

And is it possible that the spirit deal-, er can commend his traffic to God

A Withering Appeal to Dealer# i» Tlie ft host oriBarracks street, Jew Strojsg WriifiK. Osleang--A 19orriSSe HJiMrovery. The followingeloquent appeal is from For some three weeks paat there has the pen of the Rev. Alexander I)un-!

•••ateaitTSmrfmrf.'-loursisiiinclan-lj

prey upon the shame, the crime, the

and circumstances, aleh a man sciumb.-?. jt

of bread, is odious, lo beggar j,

lies, break tb.e hearts of vu\es scattei

dissolve family links of the^Closes,

ties, is a baseness indescribable. I .,

honored to gam place in the world is

walls with untempered mortar. To

erty to vise into luxury is again from 'stro^t one ol' those mat ter-of-'

in

•prayer? Could he lav his hand on his

and crave God to bless his efforts? It cannot be. His blood would run cool. vor. his smitten conscience could not bear

his soul would freeze in tho endeavor.

the piercing glance of G01. ..... ly canw on his trade by forgctting

eternity, trampling on the sacred die.-'

tales of conscience, and escaping from thoughts of future death and judgment*. Infinitely better for a man to beg his bread from door to door than occupy such a position. In this case he might be an heir of heaven—but who can recognize the selling whiskey an eternal g'!ory ?-....

TlaiUty Slie Faihor of the Mas?. Solomon said many centuries ago "Even a child is known bv his doings, wliclbor bis work bo pm-c" and «'bclh-

er it be right-.' Some people seem to think that chil-

1

113*

1 1 .ii market wnl offer.

1

1

looking out for him or herself, and (lis-

liking to share good things with others,

grow up a very selfish person. When I see boys and girls "often ([uarreling, 1 think if a sign they vrill be violent and hateful men and women.

When I see a little boy willing to taste strong drink, I. think it a sign

that he will be a drunkard. When I see a boy who never attends to the services of religion, I think it a

parent,

I

a

CRAWFORDSVILLE. INDIANA, NOVEMBER 15, 1860. I WHOLE NO. 634

ecn

lt

toil to assume high airs, and gar about all bespangled and bcjeweled, is an elevation wrung from shame, dog- j" redation, misery, and death. How in-! fatuated must tlie dealer be to be rolling in every comfort and luxury, possessing wealth and property, and purchased at the poor inebriate's expense. Tho publican well clothed. while he is in rags the publican wife, handsome, buxom, jeweled, but the poor drunkard's not where to lay her head ti*e publican's children, clothed. I fed, educated, and preserved from the I inclemencies of the season but mark I his customers, cold, starved, ragged, 1 wet, diseased. Y\"hat a diil'orence be'twecn the state of those that are supported bv strong drink. Surely, if re-, left in the drunkard's' -'f,having

considerable cxcilemont among

.• the negroes who live in the neighbor-

hood of Barracks street. Now Orleans.!

..,

of a ro|1(lrt Ulc

w. w.^xcd man

cholv position—a more pitiful, more f'ee"- dored' nlair wlioblew

nit hjs bl lins in th lt 0C i( Vi was in

lho ha )itoroccUis onM

his iUc lvsi

body, the soul, the time, the eternity of a fellow creature, is awful! To prepare the way of bankruptcy, pauperism, disease/prison, death, ii not to f' pV-oAehV-tVilTV be coveted. To assist to ruin ehtrrac-

,|

cnt 0 aild

"j

midnight strolls, clad most unearthly whit ••roes saw the ghost, and some

i( llu

vs sul)k

|'|isior*

tc

0

1 tjnjcrJit

domestic firebrands and death, biea.v ,.(..Kiv to take oath that the u'host story up liappyjtomes, divide united liearts ,,

(1 a nct

1

to have no dignity to stand forth in I Thisliad"'u7beYn^ MsThere

tlie cause of religion is to daub Zionsi j" i...

4."

ural element linds little room. Hewalked up to the ghost the other night. and catching firm hold of it, discovered it to he a pool' old half crazy woman 1

who wanders out of her house at this!

time with one of her white undershirts

.. drawn up over her head. Tiie myste-

ry was fathomed, and the locality hasj

lost all its former interest.—-Aw Or-

I icons Hce.

Tiik

DET-rciirrK or W

ISM.—A

i!'ioav.

the edit*

a ,otorious

T7'

such a man be a reformer-a regenera- »'"vmg taken umbrage at an advert.se.1 iiveii .1 liouse !'v,fn'..ol a personal ch:ir:i(-tM,-tor of irticle to degrade, dehumanize

a nandsotne apology

..

LnW and enter the'divine prose,ieo. I l"bhshed journal here for the last

dren have 110 character at ali. On the -1 .1 and safe, our hav line, and good corn contrary, an observing eye sees in tiie^e 1 .,

young creatures the^signs of what they l'

UTii likely to bo lur nt'o. I -Anair^ by diligent only tinive. hen I see a boy in haste to spend p| sanctum of the editor, it apevery pen

:is soon as lie gets it, 1

think it a sign that lie will be a spend thrift. When I see a boy hoar pennies and unwilling to them for any good purpose, a sign that be'will bo a miser ti,o playf.,1 pranks of'sevorai aMolopos,

1 be^' s"end

eighteen months, and within that, period has boon challenged, murderously

a,H-l

he can on-

Sxvift of

1

at length spread among tlie

and there were not a fuw

had satisfied their enriositv bv

visits to the locality and were

ra )ric

tion. At length it even

credit with the police, and two.

1( limcn ot loi ]%K lU rcnil

rW i»K rich« by rnb co«m» m..: "rfo "ti'.c, ,U'fr!!m this tJ. f,,v! l-^- '""IfO'!, .l.arp and to be rich to be honored is to be. clis-

tUlt:

)cac 00 a

:, vu

red the ghost to be' over

et high, and of ghastly visage.-

uw

onie r0 uui J. i!

swell out into portly dimensions by tho .-.(-ji-acted numbers of oeopl( on foot

sale of strong drink is the price of pov-1 .^jj j* [iV cal)S everv inidnio-ht to Bar-

his ofhee set 011 fne, and

repeated threats made against his hi

and last night his

Cuni

itestio\edb\ lire,

A Kissy 12«Iiior.

J. i'j. Johnson miiloi. •.m/l livninvfil-v of the "11 untsman's Echo," a sprightly little hobdomanal sheet ]iublished in Nebraska Territory, in the last issue thus enumerates his occupations:

I* Besides editing the Echo, tilling our

with

r,i,,.,i.,.

('1n'\

.,lct,,'.u"'l||Hr' v.h^i hive/'

0llrs

'from

rom 1

01

..,

1

5

J™1

,U

akmixts.

When I sec a boy or girl always a,„.l again a sj,rightly re-l «u»e »l'

nt

ien

1

According to the Saturday Press,' "Ave, aye. but wager ye dinna ken "Albert Edward writes for it:" what I said afore that." 1 wager re The Prince of Wales has agreed to dinna ken j'ourself." write a description of his American •sg.-o-qs— tour for the Ledger, on condition that, I B$%,~\YC absolve a man from gratitude Mr. Bonner will pay off the nationl to us when we remind bim of a favor

ed from a trip to tl

emertrino: from

1 1U :!1 N

nros nn(

to 0510

1 a1 ru Sfin(1

in00n

heso stories, wliich

1

i!1 an

1

cr

,,

1 the iih

troub es, nppro^-u-

hostile intentions,

ali kinds of vengeance upon the editor and the premises. Just before reaching the himself den ce checked eled at his head from the window. This unexpected phenomenon quite abated his thirst ibr satisfaction, and 31r. Byth.e senior editor of the News, has

1 1 ... ,.

I t' ,.l(!

1

,niS UlfcCtl

-J.? gfm-TCngf 7jm

Ym«n in" w? ose nii'i'ds'thesnnornut-1 "bout thirty feet above the water, rises little bronze colier in which the danand

Ingi).

ng sharply

es

r: I

11

cr:u

,,. crack in a plastered wall, dwelling-house was!

Afil

I'll I mouth of lioger's Creek. 'Ihere cc.r- in tb.e ft ding up his pleasant class

I think it a sign that the child will they had, and both made time, but rey- fu^"1,1^ nard tho

4

zly be sight rie it probaldy a good sized calf of onrs that had been

running out. The buffalo have taken our caution, and for two weeks have

no

troubled us.

sign that ho will be a profane and! profligate man. E6rOM Lord Elphinstone was asleep eonstiWlien I see a child obedient to his! at church while the minister, a

think it a toign of great future prosy preacher, was holding forth. AtjGilc it .1 ]Mge

blessings from his heavenly parent. length the parson stopped and cried, |^c And though great changes sonic-1 "Waukin, my Lord Alphinstone. A times take place in the character, yet! grunt, and then, "I'm

us a general rule these signs do not I ister. But ye arc sleepin. I wager

il, I ye dinna ken what I said last." '-Ye

visitois'.-.--, 1 .„

.. -r 1

1

-Last wee.c. upon two

I think it occasions from our office, wo witnessed 1

the enclosure, but cut and run

Tower came in sight a nice race c- ..uthorilv

very

110

said wauken. Lord Alphinstone."

Lnu

the ch

sleepin min­

debt of England (.CbOO^000,000) within the obligation becomes from '£«o KrfSt luX^.^oS I ixtotod on wo

be PaK

Tefni^:

he Chicago Tribune, Ctli.

HinpSav i\'sst«ii'al Phrnomciton in

liAVK V.'i AN KARJtlQl'AKK AM0X0 t.'S

01 hemlock, pine, and other inland, the eastern or convex being very steep. Tlie west side concave toward the lake descends ularly, b'it less stoop. Cpon the ge the (•rest, is about four Jl-ct wide, along which the party walked easily, from the southern limb, gradually ascending. as stated, as thev receded from

,ori:

,lC'

1

1

ri:

kstkkn

JornNAii-

correspondent, of the N. York

Tribune, writing from 1'ike Fealc. says: bi Saturday evening a nuit aspirant for Congress resented an affront from the Daily Herald by spitting in the face of one of its editors.— occasion to call on the Evening News, ,1 found that gentleman writing in hisofI lice, with a Sharpe's rifle and four revolvers 011 the table beside him. Converting his editorial room into an arscnai proved a healthy precaution, for 1011 the same evening a man named border ruffian

From an eye witness, (Jen. R. VL.Uerino rccognized. in tho disguise of a-

lowlv into* the earth* Tl»e locality is about twelve miles and begged her, in the name of Cupid,north of St-. Joseph, or a mile north of to pardon the trick which love alone the mouth of Roger's Creek, in Van had suggested. He'was inspired, ten-

I finely and heavily wooded, the shore in

Buren county. (Jen. Swift was accom- der and impassioned and. Fanny, in ta#f anied l»v Albert Swift and S. P. An- king leave of hinr. ciirsed. perhaps, in

paniod ov \iuen owm iiiia o. jr. jvii- ivuig icavo ui ninr. enrseo. perhaps, drews. formerly of this city. The par- her heart, that inexorable virtue in iy were strolling along the shore oil the! which women in general, and danscu^ 21st of October. The country there is ses in particular, are proverbially condem nod. r-

J'1(1g'cs': About noon they soltiy sleeping

i- 'ame upon one of these latter, of a half the vessel and the musical murmur of

,,t,( k,H 11i'pw' i-ic the lake, and the outline almost a semi kened lv a vvarm breath upon her

{]ie rve

limb resting on the shore in bluffs ded under tlie bolster, in search of a

i": !}. ir. us it recedes from the lake, until in tb.e scir was in the habit of carrving her

by General Swift, some 81

rods long. I earful of a land slide, they retreated over tlie concave front of the

ridge. Thev went back and examined the

cinitv, the shocks often being quite violent." 'Formerly two men named Beck, uncle and nephew, hail cabins near tho ridge which they deserted through fear of these recurring phenomena, which ion one occasion were so violent

011

little farm, grinding grists for the a cdic-hcll oft' the in the elder neighbors, selling sugar, tape and pills, Beck's cabin, when he ••thought it time we are also prepared to entertain those to leave.- He now resides in Ivalanniwho wish to call upon us. in the best,

ZO

as manv comforts as a limited

or

1

lie sound did not return again,

.|- which resembled in sharpness a n-re "tin

..

lvii

1

the. ridge iln m, in

the woods an old Norwegian sailor, to whom he narrated the circumstance.— He had not heard the recent-sound, but

one occasion were so violent as to

o.

••Our Cabin" is That country being wooded heavily, id our table spread shingle-weavers, and among,

som

Our stable is warm

treasure,

eighteen years, the most marvelous fahoutmg. Jason lucd in tales are current of these phenomena eeiua'} (and their causes. Of course, "buried and a "murder" figure, large-!

pears tho following paragraph. i« the^e murdered her Frenchman and announced by telegraph is explained .. t], hiice at the b.v the fact that he was a firm believci' doctrines of Spiritualism, and had other matters weighing on ilnd.

loMowing paragraph, is there murflerod her frenchman and .tiii.ouiu

I sometimes intruded upon by an un-l sunk his treasure in the huce :tt the S b. tlie

nn n(

.clor^\i

shell-fish, was burie-J recently with mil-

..« .i Ithat be 1

*a:ii!y seems to be an opening iva- e* 1.1 m. 1

mlxtcv nx

stU()( 5

nv

for 11 fresh his mind

„f „atoral sei-

„vci-, Ihese j.benonioi.a being

fl lu

^.s

vies of small lakes in that vicinity, one, of which has a freak of disappearing! far A midshipman as.vod a pries, to. utterly at times, and another which is I toll him the ddterence between apnest (reported to be) fathomless,

An old woman at Saitash near Ply-!

itary honors, a body of marines and the j.jic

regimental band being present, and

number of non-com missioned officers

alternating with the boatmen of the

Royal Marines in bearing the remames.

Si 50 PER YEAIi IN ADVANCE 2 00 WITIIIN THE YEAK.

nmiuMiiui»n mriTTr

this c'itv, who has just return-1 sailor, a gentleman of fine appearance

J1 1 1

1 "indulfTiKMH his I interesting description of natural feat-1 ing, had been one of her most preserve in vestnu'iits of

t.

shore of this lalcciand address, who. during the engage-'

ppositeto this city, we have an ment from which she was just depart-

pl^'^omejia of the region he' ing admirers, who had transfixed ber

en ess 'ManVno-! visited, which are well worth noting oye«. cannonaded Iicr with boquets, andj ^. tnd some had"even down, and the section in question seems bombarded her with sighs. Thus dis-^ in which'ease thev saw

that invites search. covered, he threw himself at her feetj

."US

middle it is one hundred and fifty feet gold, diamonds and hank notes. Sat-. isfied thus of the intentions of her visithe intrepid Fanny, by an impulse ubiime audacity, threw oft' the covher'h out of bed. and

above the thick

tor of erl ir'

tli rust

the lake. The surface of tiie ridge is geiic-ral'.v sand here and there how ever, a huge tree v, as seen in vigorous ?(rif"The Vow York Iicrtild makes tne growth, but buried to its branches, 'or foilowing tsJmate of the money left in between 20 and 110 feet in the sand. this countrv. or brought out into eircut!ie

Some of the party observed tli esc lation singular features of surface and the Wales: half buried trees, and remarked that "Octroit it must be due to some great convul- Chicago si on of nature. Tho three gentlemen St. Louis had reached the highest part of the! Cincinnati, including 0 ridge and were standing in a line, look- Pittsburg ing oft' over the fores{. inland, when suddenly, apparently from the southeast, a heavy, rumbling sound struck their ears, prolonged and repeated.— The day, it should be remarked, "was moist but not misty, and not a day vrhen one would look for thunder nevertheless to this was the sound first atrrrouTen.

The sound, however, continued for

Somid

ullCC A

cd by six shot-guns and rifles lev-

•, 1 ana tci ininating :n ti buarp detoiiatmg cers oi fii'Ot

jnf hf nn

immediately under their feet, ae- Expenses in Canada '.

companied by a trembling and shaking 11-Jxponses of the. Prince and

.. T,m.Hdi:,tr-lv J.-u., ,,.

of the earth. Immediately a, crack opened, clearly and well-defined along I the ridge, gradually widening from a quarter of an inch to three quarters, j, and. as

ii

Fanny Busier en Ciiemise. A S})anish paper tells the following^piquaint story of Fanny Elisler whiel^j is altogether too good to be lost:

During a voyage, the illustrious bed"

Re-entering her cabin, she was sooii the undulations of

shape, the cressent opening on the waves. All at once she was awn-

being extremely rogu- face. A'few words of tenderness cs,

of nearly a naif mile radius. |caped.asit involuntarily, from a trem-

This curved ridge, its upper and low- bling mouth, while a hand boldly glk.

iied so vigorous a kick to the stomach of U10 thiol' tli tit. he measured liis length upon the floor and vomited lots I of biood. 'xhc alarm being given, tho fellow was secured, and subsequentlyrc. ogn.''d as one of the most illustri:s robbers of Great Britain.

(i

of the Prince of

,........$20,000 20,000 20,000

tv-'H ..100.000 ....lo.ooo

Ha 1' is rg .10,000 Washington, including Cabinet dinner and visit to J.it. Vernon.50.000 Richmond, including ball 50,00U Baltimore 20,000 Ph 1 a del ph ia. in 1 ud in ball 100.000 N'pw York 750.uOO West Point 5.000 Albany KK000 Boston 400,000

30.000 000^000

suite, and oi tlie fleet 1.000,000

General aggregnto 8M.5&},000-:

Hints To Farmers.—Toads

ar the

?trrotcction of cabbage agair.s lice. Plants when drooping are revived bv

a ew

drojss of camphor"

Peai-s are generally improved byon t'be-•mountain ash.

Suiphor is valuable in preserving* grapes etc.. from insects. Lard never spoils in warm weather

1

if it is cooked enough in frying it out. Of feeding corn sixlv pounds fronnd kernel. ."-•

Corn meal should never be ground. very fine as if. injures the richness of it. Turnips of small size contain more nutritious matter, in proportion than large ones.

I

of these,"'resident-there for sixteen Jerusalem with turchiiglu anc ,•••

1 he sine'

ly in their narratives. The squaw of! Soutiiworth Barnes, a prominent mera French Indian trader is said to have chant of Boston, which has alreauy been

1

Torchlight processions were designed more than two thousand years ago.— See

Maccabees iv. 22, wherein an

account is given of the high priest Jason who escorted King Anliochus into, tsalem with torchlight the fourth

ide bv drowning of Mr.

y-The Shoe and Leather Reporter says: The plan of using shingels in tho bottom of shoes originated about thirteen years ago. the first lot being cut. in New Hampshire Huring the past

and the and a jackass. The priest gave it up.

features of other singular sand ridges "One wears across on his back, and the other on his breast," said the midship-,! man. "Now," said the priest, "tell mo -Vrthroiulin.' bv those to' whom the difference between a midshipman araeters are familiar. and ajaokass. '1 he midshipman gave lit, and asked what it was. lho he did not know ofanv.

'V' W

1

PR!CST

SAI.,:

mouth, England, whoprovided-the bar- should not count time by racks and hospital for many years with

ie{U

ia

.t-beats. He lives longest who

ows tho most, thinks the wisest, acts

bcs

fl

ma cc

t. 'Tis the sun of knowledge on

the man's dial, shining brightly and

cb

ronicling thoughts and deeds that

true time

in Saab it is „id to ,, on