Decatur Eagle, Volume 2, Number 41, Decatur, Adams County, 19 November 1858 — Page 2

THE EAGLE H. l. Phillips.; „ > Editors* Prophietobs. 'V. G. SPENCER,) DEOATUR, INDIANA. FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. 19, 1858. BLANKS! BLANKS!! BLANKS!!! Blank Deeds, Mortgages. Justice’s Blanks, of all kinds; Constable’s Blanks, df all kinds; Blank Notes, &c., &c , of the best quality fur Sale at this Office, •r— — - THE SATURDAY EVENING POST. The proprietors of this justly celebrated Weekly Newspaper, have issued their Prospectus for 1859. To convince the public that the Post is the most reliable | family newspaper published in the United 1 States, it is only necessary to say that it was established in the year 1821, and has attained the age of thirty-seven years. Through all this time it has been a regular weekly visitor to its numerous patrons it Las survived the many financial crisis that our country has passed through during that time, and which sealed the doom of so many American journals. The Post is peculiarly adapted to the wants of country families, as it contains weekly, not only a large amount of the best Literature, but the latest news, foreign, domestic and Congressional, Agricultural Essays and Information, Domestic Receipts, and a correct weekly report of the Markets. “The Cavalier,” an original Tale from the pen of the celebrated author, G. P. R. James, Esq., has been secured by the editors of the Post at the enormous cost of 81,680; and we may further add that Mr. James will write exclusively for the Post. Three Stories from Mary Howitt, a lady whose literary abilities are known whereever the English language is spoken, have been secured by the editors of the Post; besides a Series of Articles from the brilliant and graceful pen of that popular American authoress, Grace Greenwood, to be entitled “City Sights ar.d Thoughts,” will appear in, and probable run through the whole year. T. S. Arthur will contribute an original Novelet; Weekly Letters from Paris; Choice Selections of all kinds, and in fact everything calculated to interest and instruct its readers. The terms are always cash in advance, Single copy, one year, 82 00 Four, 5 Eight, and one to getter up of club, 10 00 Thirteen, one to getter up of club, 15 00 Twenty, one to getter up of club, 20 00 The postage on the Post to any part ol the United States, paid quarterly or year!v in advance at the office where it is received, is only 26 cents a-year, Address, always past paid, DEACON & PETERSON, I No. 132 South Third Street, Philadelphia £®*Sample Numbers sent Gratis to anv one, when requested. Glad Tidings! We are requested to say that the New Steam and Water Grist Mill of C. D. Harts, one mile north of town, is now in successful operation and is doing a good business in the way of making an excellent article of flour. Mr. Hart has been to great trouble and expence in procuring the very best Machinery, and in having first class mechanics to put it in operation; and he now has the gratification of knowing that he has the best Mil! in this part of the country; and the people will be gratified to know that there they will be sure to receive both good flour and a good , turn out. Kight Side Up and Smooth Side Out ! C. W. Miller has removed his Fashion- ( able Tailoring Establishment to the cor- ■ ner of First and Madison Streets, directly East of the New Drug Store, where he says he can make an ugly man look handrome, e ragged man look respectable, a dirty man look clean, a sick man look well, a pour man look rich, and, a mean man look decent, all by covering him with a new suit of clothes ma le in the latest style and most durable manner.— As a Knight of the needle, Charley is deservedly popular and is bound to win. Give him a call- See card. gcg~Dr. D. W. Champer, has removed his office to the corner of First and Madison Streets, immediately East of the New Drug Store, where he may be iound at si! limes unless absent on professional business. - -II <1 111 XsTlhose of our patrons owing us on Bubscription, job work or advertising, wishing to pay in wood will please bring it along, as we desire to lay in our winter s wood before the roads become impassable. Grain, or, even tu-juey, no! r'-tused

Copartnership. By reference to our advertisingcolumns it will be seen that Drs. J. P. Porter and Schnitzer, have associated themselves together for the purpose of practising medicine. Mr. Porter is an old resident in our place, and is well and favorably known. Mr. Schnitzer is a literary graduate of the University at Kempten, in Bavaria; and a medical graduate of the Medical University at Munich, capitol of the same State. He is r?commended as a thorough practical physician, and our German citizens will be glad to know that he has permanently located in our place, for they have long felt the want of a regular scientific German physician. /3FThe Congressional Globe will be issued on the assembling of Congress. — Let every man who feels an interest in the politics of our country subcribe; it is an excellent book of reference, nnd a shure guide to vote by. See Prospectus. /gyOur friend, John Sidgwick, offers for sale his Steam Saw Mill in this place; it has the reputaion of being one of the , finest Mills ever erected in north eastern Indiana. See advertisement. UTA few weeks since the Bluffton Banner came to us containing a notice that they would have to suspend publication for a short time, in consequence of press of job work; but since which time we learn that thejoi work was done out of the office. Fie! Charley, no more such excuses. The next time you are so pres- 5 sed withjoJ work send for us, we are an i excellent sub. Send us the next issue from that “Fancy Type.”— tony. JPJTThe Washington States in accounting for the difference between the result of the elections in Pennsylvania and in Illinois, most justly remarks, “The Ad-1 ministration did not fight the battle in Pennsylvania on the Cincinnati platform. The Democracy of Illinois did fight the | battle on that platform. There is the se- | cret of a disastrous defeat in the one, and a most brilliant victory in the other.” NOTICE.—The members of the McClure Working Men’s Institute, at Decatur, will meet at the Recorder’s office in the town of Decatur, on Saturday, Nov. 27, 1858, at 3 o’clock P. M , for the purpose of transacting some very important, business, all members are particularly re-1 quested to be present. S. S. MICKLE, Nov. 19, 1858. President.

Emigration between St. Louis Salt Lake City. Mr. William A Wallace, of the AltaCalifornia, furnishes us some interesting information in regasd to the amount, of I , travel, between this place Salt Lake. He left the latter place on inC 2d of Oc- ; tober, and arrived here on November 5.h. On the first day out from Salt Lake he met Hubbell’s train of fifty-two wagons. This train started with seven hundred head of cattle, of which number one hundred and ninety had died—one hundred and seventeen perishing with cold in one night on the Rocky Ridge. On October' 10 met Judge Eckles with a train consisting of one coach and four six mule wagons. The Judge had with him a little white girl lately recovered from the Indians. On the same day met a train of I twenty-one wagons, which had lost fifty head cattle on the way. He reports having passed on the route fifteen hundred and sixty-five vehicles, eight thousand and sixty-one yoke of oxen, seven hundred and four mules, forty-six horses and twelve hundred and thirty bead of loose i cattle. A large portion of this emigration is occasioned by the establishment of the Gov-1 ernment forces in Salt Lake City, many of I ' the trains being filled with army supplies; 1 but aside from this, there is a vast amount i of miscellaneous emigratien and commeri cial intercourse existing between the two: points. While it furnishes an illustration ! of general progress, it points to the future I when St. Louis, from her central position ' will become the metropolis of America.— St. Louis Republican. It is sard that every member of the New York Legislature, outside of the City of New York, who voted tor the Lecompton resolutions in that body last winter and who were nominated for ie-elcc-tion have been overwhelmingly defeated. Lecompton has made sad work with the politicians who supported or endorsed it. National Dem. n i-iw Senator Broderick, of California, is crossing the plains, in order to acquaint I himself by personal inspection, with the , route of the Pacific Railroad. That is the way to do. 1 Haskin Elected.—Full official returns from the ninth New York district show the elections of John B. Haskin, anti-Le-compton Democrat by thirteen votes. The Douglas men of Washington City made a grand demonstration on the Little Giant’s victory. A liar should have a good memory

The Illinois election— Douglas Sustained, i popular Sovereignty Triumphant. The late contest in Illinois, between Popular Sovereignty and Congressional intervention, has been one of the most exciting political struggles ever wiinessi ed in this or any other country; Douglas, the acknowleged champion of the Popular Sovereigntv party: the indefatigable defender of Popular Liberty, and the people’s right; the great political gladiator of his country and time, vaulted into the arena, boldly proclaiming to the world his principles, his firm conviction that a neI gro is not a white man; tii.at the South have rights as well as the North, and that Territories as well as States are capable ' of governingthemselves in their Sovereign capacity. He took a bold and manly course, openly avowing his contempt for the insane doctrine of negro equality, coolly throwing down the glove of defiance to the world, the flesh, and the devil; challenging the combined forces of Republicanism, Know Nothingism, Buchanan- < ism, and every other ism, that stands in the way of his cherished principles. Horace Greeiy said on the the passage of the Kansas Nebraska Bill, that'the

battle of freedom was to be fought on the soil of Kansas, and he might have said ,on the passage of the English Bill, that | the battle of freedom was to be refought on the soil of Illinois. The political bat- ■ ties of Kansas were little more than school boy debates, compared with the recent encounter of Douglas and his enemies. — The cohorts of Republicanism marshalled their forces for what they supposed and still suppose their decisive struggle for ascendency. They engaged all the great lights of their party, from Senator Trumbull down to S. P. Chase, knowing, and admitting, ’that the result of that campaign would i have a telling inflenee in the Presidential i election of 1860. Inch by inch the‘Little Giant’ advanced, driving back all op position, overcoming all obstacles, until victory perched on his standard and the hosts of fanaticism, with trailing banners, crest-fallen and dejected, sad and dispiri ited are forced to yield to the ‘Man of the Age’ Such laurels as indomitable perseverer.ee, untiring energy, and unbending integrity must sooner or later command.

We confess to the weakiness of feeling more interest in the Illinois contest than in anv, or in all the elections, that have or will take place during the present year Not that we wish to acknowledge any undue enthusiasm for Mr. Douglas; though to adopt the language of brother Monroe when speaking of the American Eagle; — 'Such veneration as a Christian may bestow without idolatry we freely give him. But it is a fact that the great principle of Popular Sovereignty, has been fully and fairlv established by this controvesy. — Mr. Douglas staked bis political existence on that singie throw of the dice, and won if we should manifest a serene indifference as to the results of other elections, we shall plead in justification, the fact that we have beheld a ‘greater glory.’ If Stephen A. Douglas is not the next President of the United States, we confess we are strangely bewildered by presentindications. — Lorain Eagle.

The Louisville Democrat holds the following plain talk will; !b ft M ashington Union, upon the result of the recent elec tions: ■_ i . The editor of the Washington Union has heard of the elections in Pennsylvania Ohio, and Indiana, and looks backward for consolation. He records, with satisfaction that the Democracy were beaten in 1854, in like manner, and succeeded afterwards, ami concludes that what has been will occur again. He reasons like the quack who determined to follow experience—his own experience. He found an Irishman sick of biliiuus fever, and prescribed foi him. The said Irishman ate a heavy meal of porjt an 1 cabbage, and got well. The next patient was sick of billions fever, and the quack gave him a dose of bacon and cabbage, thinking that what had been would be again; but the patient died! The empyrical philosophy of the quack failed; but it is about as good as the philosophy of the Union.

There are some causes in existence now that did not exist in 1854. We need mention in this connection but one. In 1854. we had no organ at Washington warring on the Democracy of the North for the sake of securing the next dynasty That was one nuisance with which the party was not cursed. We want some statesmanlike discre-1 tion, instead of folly, at Washington. If there be no improvement there, we need: not look for improvement elsewhere. We know what the Democracy of the free States can do, and we know that they cannot sustain some things that have been thrust upon them; and while it vered in we mav look for worse, instead of better. We assure the Union and its masters, whoever they are, that they cannot separate Douglas from the Dumocracy of the North. It would have been just as wise, twenty eight years ago, to talk oi reading Jackson out of the patty, of just as wise in the same time, to talk of reading Jackson out of the party, or just as wise in the coffee-house and cross-roads politicians, at the same time, to talk of reading Henry Clay out of the Whig party. This folly must stop; and not only so, it must be repudiated, if anything better in the free States is to be expected. We know that there are formidable diffi- | cullies in the way but they must be surmounted. Potatoes sliced and dried, are now extensively used in France

A Petrified Wife—A few yean since, a gentleman residing in Rising Sun, Indiana, who had married a second time, wished to remove the body of his wife to a new cemetery. Preparations were made to that effect, and laborers opened the grove in the usual manner; but when they reached the coffin, they could not lift it, so great was the weight. After obtaining considerable assistance, however, the men succeeded in raising the coffin from the tumb. They then could not resist tha temptation of peering info the coffin and learning the reason for its unusual weight, and found, instead of the remains of a corpse a stone figure, the exiact counterpart of the woman who had died. This strange story soon spread, and hundreds and thousands of persons were present to see the strangest spectacle The husband took the body of his den"rted spouse home, and has it there now, where it is visited by hundreds of the curious and scientific. The body seems to have been petrified and to have become a perfect stone woman. The probability is, that the body has become adipocere. and will before long melt or crumble.--Cincinnati Inquirer, 30th up.

Who the Deuce Was It!-A respectable gentleman in Windsor County, Vermont, many yaars ago, had an ambition to represent his town in the State Legislature. Though a man of good character, and every way able enough for office he happened, as Aunt Peggy used to say, to have ‘a great many winning ways to make folks hate him,’ and was, in fact the most unpopular man in town. Going to •Squire X., an influential man who happened to be friendly to him, he laid his case before him, and asked his influence, saying that he didn’t expect help without paying for it, and, declaring that if he could get X’s influence he was sure to be elected. The’Squire -put in his besljumps for his man; but when the ballot-box was turned, another man was declared elected. The disappointed candidate called out to know how the votes stood, and learned that he had got just three votes! ‘But I don’t understand it,’ said he, turning to the ’Squire with achop-fallen countenance ‘Nor 1 either,’ said the ’Squire, ‘I put in my vote; vou put in another; but who the mischief put in the third is more than I can imagin’.’— Boston Post. II —i 111 Stop that Boy!—The North Alabamian says: ‘A cigar in mouth, a swagger in his face a care for nothingness in Lis manner. Judging from his demeanor he is older than his father, wiser than his teacher, more honered than the Mayor of the town. Stop him; he is too fast! He don’t know his speed; stop him ere tobacco shatters his nerves, ere whisky makes a beast of him, ere his pride ruins his character, ere the master the man, ere good ambition and manly strength give way to low pursuits and brutish aims. Stop all such boys. They are legion; the shame of their families, the disgrace of thier towns, the sad and solemn reproach oi themseives.

■ The retiring editor of the Dayton Gazette, who is a printer, in his valedictory says: •We have experienced more true happiness as jour, on a tramp, on board a Mississippi steamboat as a deck passen"er, our purse dep’eted to the last half dime, without any expectations, a thousand miles from friendly faces, than in our happiest moments of editorial life.’ Those who regard editorial life as a path strewn with flowers, will please make a note of the above paragraph.— National Dem.

Minnesota.—When we consider that eleven years ago not one acre of lard had bsen sold in the Territory of Minnesota, and then actually see (he numerous and flourishing villages and cities within her borders, mostly settle by an enteprising intelligent, emigration from New York and New England, the wonders of the magician and Aladdin’s lamp become mixed with reality, so as io almost coufuse the regions of fact and fancy.

The President nnd Cabinet say emphatically that what whatever course particular northern Democrats may pursue concerning the English bill, they intend to stand by the provision excluding Kan-. sas until she have a population of nine- 1 ty-tiiree thousand, ascertained by the census, and will insist upon that condition as a party test. This declaration will be substantially affirmed in the message. The papers over the State are complaining of the scarcity of an'i Douglas Democrats. The Illinois election has operated like a fatal epidemic —it has swept them all off. In this city they are scarcerthan hen’s teeth.— National Dem. The Columbus Statesman says, ’the ceremony of marriage will lose half its terrors if the number of divorce cases continues to increase.’ A sober man. when drunk, has the »ante kind of stupiditv about him that a drunken man has when he is sober.— Sterne's Tristam Shandy. It is the opinion of a Western editor that wood goes further when left out of doors than well housed. He says some ol his went haK a mile. A salute of thirty-two guns was fired at Cleveland last week in honor of Douglas' victory in Illinois.

The more any one speaks of himself the less he likes to hear another talked of. _______ DECATI'R MARKET. Corrected Weekly by Nuttman & Cranford. * S I’T 40 Beef,’ 3504 tOO Bye’ 62 Flaxs’d, 1 00 Buckwheat 25 Clover' Bean? 1 50 Flour, hun 20l * >7’ 2 , 5® Rutter 10 Black salts 300 Cheese’, 8 A l‘» I Shoulders smoked, f> Pork ’ 3 00@3 50 | Hams “ 8 Fort Wayne Market. For the Week ending, Oct. \6lh. Wheat. ™BS Lard, $ 8 Finer s■’ Hams, 10 Rye flour, ”00 Pork, 5 00@5 50 Corn 40 Deef, 4 5 Buckwheat, 40 Flaxseed, IPO O.tR 4 > Clover, 4 >0 Barley, « Timothy, 1 25 Rve 4> Apples, green, 75 Beans, “ dry, 125 5 Wk—. g Butter 11 Whitefish, 450 Cheese 8 Trout, 4 25 5 Lake herring, 400 ■s a jt ’ 162 Hides, green, 3 Bacon . 8 Hides,dry, 5 Steam Saw Mill for Sale. The undersigned will offer at private sale up to Saturday, December 4. 1858, the Steam Saw Mill connected with his Grist Mill, in Decatur, and if not sold at private sale, he will sell the same at public auction, on said 4th day of December next.. A credit of one and two years w'll be given. Nov. 19,1858. JOHN SIDGWICK.

FASBIOXAILE TAILOR! C. AV. MILLER. Begs leave to inform his old customers, and the public in general that he has moved his Shop to the corner of Fust and Madison Streets. directly East of the Post Offhe. Work done on the most reasonable terms; —all kinds of country produce taken in exchange for work.—v2—n4l DRS, PORTER & SCHNITZER, General Practitioners in Medicine and Surgery. OFFICE—Over Bollman <t Patterson’s Store. Commissioner’s Sale. Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned commissioner, by virtue of a ceriain order of the court-of Common Pleas of Adams county, made at the Nov. term of said court, in the year 1858, will sell at public sale at the Court House door, in said county, on Monday the 3rd day of January. 1859, between the hours of ten o clock A. M and four p M ,on said day, the following described real estate, to-wit: The west half of the north east quarter of section twenty, township twenty-five, north of range fifteen east, containing eighty acres, also, the south east quarter of north east quarter of section twelve, township twenty five, north of ranire fourteen east, containing forty actes, tn said county of Adams. Said land will be sold on the following conditions, to-wit: One-third to be paid in hand, one-third in stx months and the residue in twelve months from the dav of sale, the deferred payments to be on in’erest. secured bv note to the satisfaction of the undersigned, waiving valuation and appraisement laws. W G. SPENCF.R Nov. 5, 1853. Commissioner. Important to the Public’. GROCERY AND BAKERY. J. R. SIPES,

Would respectfully inform the Citizens of Decatur and vicinity, that he has just received and keeps constantly on hand. at. his old stand on Main Street, opposite the Public Sq iare, ail kinds of FAMILY GROCERIES, Such as Flour, Coffeo. Tais, Sujirs, Spicas, Confectionaries, Nuts. Crackers, of all kinds, 4c.. He also keeps a good supply of the best TOBACCO IND CIGARS, Ever kept in the Market. He will furnish parties, and private families with all kinds of Cakes, Pies, and Ovsters. upon short notice, Call and ixamine his stock, for he is determined to suit his prices with the times and will not be undersold by any establishment in ttie county. v l-n34-Im. The Dollar Dealer!! FOR J7 < Fi 100 000 SUBSCRIBERS WANTED! The Editor oftfie Plain Dealer, neither ds-ad. daunted, or discouraged, presents airatn his annual compliments to ti.e people of these L nited States, and asks a continuance of their long and liberal patronage. He has been for twenty years the independent publisher of an indepeni dent paper, ami stands now, a« he has always stood, by the PEOPLE’S RIGHTS. He is for POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY Against “Conyree-ional Snvereignty." and for Douglas against the “ World, the Flesh and the Devil ” Toadoptour prices to the times, and to tiring the Dealer within the reach of every reader, we have adopted the following REDUCED TERMS. i Single Subscribers, $1 50 Clubs of Ten, 12 On Clubs of twentv and upwards, ONE DOLLAR 'PER COPY. Tins makes the Plain dealer the CHEAPEST F.UHLI NEWSPAPER IN THE WEST! Every one who has a spare dollar can now provide himself with a years reading and be fully posted up in the morals, murders and markets, riots, rows and religion of this moving, mad and mercenary world. To obtain the President’s Message, the Reports of Heads of Departments, and the doings of the first month in Congress. Clubs most commence the first day o' December. Those who i choose to commence with the volume will date their subserption from the first day of Ja uar . All subreriber to aclub will commence and . end at the same time. To the getter up of a Club a copy will be sent gratis. Address. J, W. GRAY. Nov. 5 1858. Cleveland, Ohio. Broken Bank Money, TAKEN for goods at the Oct 1857 White Corner

Farm fur Sale on Plank ROAD BELOW MONMOUTH. Notice is hereby given, that the undersized commissioner, appointed by the court of Coni mon Pleas of Adams county, by virtue of * ctr , tain order of said court, made at the Nov. term thereof, in the year 1 858, will sell at public sale at the Court House door, in said Adams count, on the Rd day of January. 1859, between t l ie hours of ten o’clock a. m. and four o’clock p., on said day, the following described real estate to-wit: Being the west part, of the north half, of th a north rest quarter, of section seven, township twenty-eight north, of range fourteen east in the said county of Adams; begining at the north west corner of section seven, aforesaid, and run. ning thence east twenty-nine chains ninety.jjj and one-half links, thence south twenty chains and twenty-one links, thence west thirty chains and eight and one-half links to west littof section, thence north twenty chains and twen ty-iwo links to place of begining, containing sixty acres and sixty-nine one hundredsof up acre, on the following terms, to-wit: One third ot the purchase money in hand,on* third in six and one-third in twelve months from day of sale, with interest on deferred payments by the purchaser giving his note with approved security, waiving valuation laws. DAVID STUDABAKER. Nov. 12, 1858. Commissioner. Sheriff’s Sale. By virtue of an execution to me directed sad delivered by the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas of Adams County. Indiana. I have k». ied upon and will expose to sale, b- public stiction at the Court House door, in Adams Count. Indiana.between the Lours of one o'clock and four o’clock P. M. on Saturday the 27th day of November, the rents and profits for a term ot years not exceeding Seven of the following de scribed real estate to-wit: The south east quaterof the north west quarter of section twenty-two, township twentyeight North, o range fifteen East, containing forty acres, more or less, in the County of Adams and State Indiana, and on failure to realize therefrom the full amount of the extern tion, I will at the same time and place l.y public auction as aforesaid expose to sale the fee aimpie of said above described real estate. Taken as the property of James Murchland, at the suit of John H. Blakey. david McDonald, Oct. 29th 1858. Sheriff.'

DETECT YOUR COUNTERFEIi MONEY! ! Every business man—merchant, mechanic farmer professional man. or whatever lie is, often in these days meets more 01 less with ComTtHFEiT Bank Notes and is liable to have theta put upon him, unless he can certainly detect them. The undersigned will, for the small stun of TWO DOLLARS, sent ’o him by mail, in return transmit to the person sending, a Complete Set of Init'uctiont for the SURE I etecti n nJ Counterfeit Bank Notre. Any person possessing these instructions need never fear having a counterfeit bill passed on him as it is imfo-sibls for any person to do so. This system is St ar, having been adopted by nearly all the Bankers and business men of the east, and has only to be understood to be come universally adopted — This is NO HUMBUG, endeavoring to swindle honest people ou toftheir money, but something beneficial to all who possess the secret- Any person not satisfied will have the money returned them on returning the set of instructions. Address, GEO. W. EAI ON. Albany, New York. EFEditors of Newspapers giving abow «./■ vertisement. with this notice, four insersiwin th r ir papers, ami calling attention to the same editorially, shall receive a copy of the “Instructions” free of charge on sending me a copy of their paper containing snch advertisement and notice. ... v2-n3S. GEO. W. EATON. THE SOUTHERN MONITOR. FOR 1358-5 9. It is now certain that the rtAart-t tssvr between the North and South is near its termin* I tion and must be decided one way or the other in IdGt). It is also certain that in this State, ! and the one adjoining it, (Pennsylvania ami New Jersey) the great battles are to be fought, as in the days of the Revolution. Jhe entire i South, with Pennsylvania and New Jersey. can ! elect, the President; and with a President true to the Constitution and vindicating the v-ilidl- ' ty of the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States, there will be security for proper Ity of the Southern people, and n gaurantee cf the equal rights and privileges of all the citizens. But if a Black Republican beelecied I then farewell to the Sovereignty and Indepnid- ! ence of the Slave States and the White People lof the South! If one species of propertv may ibe excluded from the common 1 errilorn s-y i may any other, or any religious creed, or emigrants from any section. hatever a fanatic- ! President,and a fanatical majority in Congress mav interpret to be in accordance with ‘Nntur al Right.’or the ‘Higher Law.’ will be do neorat least attempted. We need not say on I which side the Southern Monitor, will be foU»« in the great struggle. We may differ w.n many of our friends ns to men, and sometime’ as to measures; but when the standard-bearer is nominated by Democratic party, whoever he maybe, he shall have our zealous support. But the Southern Monitor, wi'l be a FAMILY NEWSPAPER, as well as a political journal; and propose to publish entire that most delightful of old Lngfish novels. The Children of the Abbey, n prefere ice to any of the flashy and demorauKH'g original tales of the present day. We shall .1 so have an AGRICULTURAL DEPARTMENT. for the farm and farmer, embracing MaeKfts. Rep rts, <tc.. with correct items of Commeutai i Affairs, Prices of Stocks. Monetary transaction - THE TERMS. ( (> To Single Subscribers, per year, >• n , “ Club of Five, “ L i " Club of Ten, " 10 U Invariable in Advance. PREMIUMS n , To every subscriber remitting $2 mJ, there will be sent a complete copy of the "Story o Disunion.’ by the author of ‘Wild W es-eru Scenes.’ (a volume of about 500 pages., 1 * soon as it is stereotyped; or, a copy ear 0 ,, “Wild Western Scenes,” and "The W ar 1 at■ ; (ready for immediate delivery.) at the op.> 0 iof the subscribers To every getter-up of a cl’ l of five, one copy of the book; and two copies J a club of ten. Address, J.B JONES. Editor and Publisher, v2-n37. Philadelphia, Pa. Wheat Stored. We are prepared to Store or pay the h'ghe’t price in cash for ten thousandbiishels of whe NUTTMAN. <t CRAWFORD Bird Cages. Two hundred, including every variety, seventy-five cents up, at J White Corner. Clothing, The largest stock and greatest variety e offered in this place, mav be fourd at the • Oct 1857 White Com«r