Indiana American, Volume 25, Number 33, Brookville, Franklin County, 31 July 1857 — Page 2
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INDIANA AMERICAN
IBI Tit, l" I Mllti ' B, p ". T. .. .OODiVI V Editor. thai but I P ter JHUIAMAPOUS. IEDIAEA. miDAT, 41 I V SI, IMS rUBtUCATl'.- Nf. 4 Part I eiree. fcaat t 4 rilo Holt try I all aiaaa at Joa how win 1 imin aa4 eeateli la lacUn.il I Oalv aUhlaan Pol 41 Oalv CMM Osaa Oreel II lakae Will gaelleanenl st4e tea la :i:t Tb t'ineinaati paipera of laet weak wo tabled lengthy Accounts of 4 ease of poiaon- j lag, in that city, by which one child died, , and 17 otheT ware considered dangerowely , .11. Even the JEWowirer apoke of U aa a ter- j ribla affair, and beaded ita account of It with large capitals, yet when the facta wer i know U lot down ita indignation The acte.ara theae A drunken fellow who makea a little money by selling pouon ' d loaeenraw, which he calls ' Bat fclxtermlna 1 tors got dewnker than usual on Wcdnee-! lay, and acatSered hie losengaw along the streets-, wbere they werepiekeii up eyaume eighteen or twenty "ehildren, who ale tliein, and um mado aicl one of whom Hed The trat impreesion was that some confectioner had made and distributed poiaon ed losenges which had produged theee reaulte Cnder j this impeejio4, Iba sEciteuientm the ity , waa uelenea a it it were anything straage j (at poisonous preparationa to he dispensed through ihe eity. The police and the editora know that there ar huudreda of eitixene there, who make a living by dealing in poi sons which are kill. g thoaaands of their dtisens,yet it prodaeee ao eaeiteamoat ! come of the polaoaed viotimaare carried to the grave every day, while others are linger iag in cellars ana garreia poor ennnaonou. a . i i i dagraded, poiaoaed creaturea, otners ore ataggering through tho streeU,or are writhing in paroxyama, or raving as maniacs, yet no one cares lor litem, v policeman ia seat tu boat out the perpetrators thay carry on their murden.ua boeineea in broad daylight, and ao one molessa'tkaaa. Will some one tell Ua wherein it would hare been woras for a confectioner to have made araenic losenges and to have distribated them to the children, than it ia for the grocers to mix poieonoea liquors and sell them to the men? In our opinion tho confectioner would be the better man, and engaged in the more honorable buainess His victims die without, being flrat disgraced and mined. The liquor-ller first ateale the money, then the character, then the life. He stains the marble that telle where the victim liea Wkan if w.a Ii ftm it tliMf thin Mtnnaire poiaoning waa cauaed "only by a drun kard, " the terrible indignation subsided. Te eaae Lewvbawl axa a aa aw k, t nrf as . ak af a wwmav ewvaivw ibuvh eatsw em asetw we aawweaaa v oourae a legitimate ctdaMral of she liquor businees. Ho it is. But why should a system of poisoning he tolerated which make its victims so numerous and its accident! so crnmmon that they fail to excite concern Sere in Indianapolis, the victims are een every day, reeling in the street, and more than one per week ia carried to the graveyard, yet wo are told that it can not be prevented These men have a ccMfrluiowa right So carry on the poiaoning bueineee Bat if a con fatioaer should mix arsenic with sugar and tell or gin? it to children, be 'should be banged. It is murder to sweeten arsenic and decoy children, but to sweeten strychnine, and deal it ont In gilded pal4044, behind screened doors, to men who are ntioed by their love of liquor this ia perfectly constitutional sod right, ao says Judge Persia, the man who batee slaughter honees and bawdy houeee. but lore hV a-laclaaeil E-eulrer ea i4e Eaaaaa DtaaeulUet The Enquirer, which haa bun read ont ef the party by its Southern brethren, thus rebukes them for opposing the submission of the Constitution to the people while it justifies the Free State men in resisting taxation by the Miaaouri legislature Wa ropy from tho Enquirer of 22d inst Wa have never known, in the political history of the country, any party or faction that ever assumed so weak and untenable s - position aa that of aome tlie Journale and politicians of the Sooth in opposing the aropocition to snksnit the constitution of K Ana en to a vote of the people 1 1 ia i nconeeivable that any intelligent person should raise such a question, much lea seriously diacuae it The very tint gerat of our Republic may be traced to the principle that governments derive their powess from the consent of the governed that representation should go with taxation. Representation should go with taxa tion," that is the doctrine of the men if Lawrence, and it i because they wer not requested in the legislature which provided for taxing them, that they refuse to pay Saxes. The principle which underlay the American Revolution, underlies the question of taxation in Kansas: The Free State men can not pay taxea without being false to the spirit of the Revolution, and to the doctrine of the above extract hence we ay the Enquirer justifies their cause hy its aoearine though it eondems them by it is. ELECTION FRAUDSft is undeniable that during the late Presidential election, the most iniquitous frauds were perpetrated, and we believe now as we believed laat October, that this State and Pennsylvania were carried, as they were,by the importation of illegal voters. In 1 '.ilndilphia the matter has been investign i fere the Court Thai investigation v . lertaken by Wm. B. Mann, a candidate lor District Attorney. The case has been pending for aome time, and a conclusion has been reached which we hope to sec noted all over the Union. Mr Mann eon tested the election of Lewis C. Cassiday, the Democratic candidate. The Court, after e.xamining into the returns of but eight out aome thirty or forty districts, found eleven humdred and sixttf-eigkt JraduUnt Demovote i there were hut 1711 legal Totes in all theae eight distrusts, and vet the Democrats managod to oast 1168 illegal totes putting into the baltotbexone fraud - "Tlent ticket for every legal ticket, nearly. Let It be remembered, this is not newspaper rant, and mere partisan exaggeration, but) the ascertained fact, decided by s Court of i Tusttce, after fan investigation I
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A PAPER FOR
We nÄctf' rtui.sjbto i ioWa nfÄTui r t If vefsitv flCra ' .gMc Mmnil AA.il A Wtlie is on the rw cast rwen mni i'll ill tin' iTi rk, 1 ) k .11' fW"i II Ail it Ii! Ti i ii Post Office, and half u uiile ent orell Inn poration line The html luv lugl timbered, .uiii win man' n sptenn .r ii ' Ii. ' uveeent iiotih ! and aull . it 'he bu-'le wni . .-a ft .a a . I . ia tlie point tor any luaitiunon or that looks to tho puttvnaro of the the Stat1 for its support -tin n f t railroad )tem the sent nf ".iflgJ'iritrum ajl part Iii 41 Ii 'Uli'' -1 'Wf IA oa'tvihi year-whatw folpm of tho i tWte 4 leTI in i benevolenJ' aooietiea coatone a ar, and the iMzal leaatdcaa are Irmiu d"n1 and , I lit jidher 4y, atviUuMo located b aiotnhera from tUl tIk t of tlie ftiHlitiition cm Will no vi. lodJea, and 1 to every 1 part of thV Stnte The Triiateea ethihit a , wiae forethought lor tho future ot the I net i tutioii hy determinier on . renitvnl !! The removal haa not been determined up on nor so much " mentioned in the Hoard, though it ia talked of f friere! of 'h- In atitution liora :nd eb8whcre tbroupli the tiute Tha nuccMity for new buildioga makes thie a nrvper time t diacuae ihe looality Vetnii Uittt tin-mutter wir determined bomcwhat by the local luhacrip- . trona for the purpoee of.erectinji.the needed (Miilaiaga II the mimal of tm d' the 1 frienda of aVs reaaoaalla correct, that 4-V -, 000 oan he raiafd in ib rouuty fr the ; round and huildioEavil will go a greal 1 waya in determiuiaf 'h vote of tbo truateea, , unleaa a liheral local suhscriptiou ia
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. . ., I i . . I I llliwrilinii. ninj siti'i Kim., in rreicntct hv the frieuda w f Iraeneaatle , , , . IL ' .J . , . , .. .ding? To ih. " professors? Hirli And hot The location apoken of by tm xcoMonee I . , y , . , : . , jv. .Iii vua , cite U.gethei? then I am oppoied to it is hglbla and beautiful, but If has never' , . , . , - , 4. , ... JL Poor old man! he is behind the Um
been spoken of in the Hoard They Hid talk'if the Hlylhc farm, And other locul it ies BAVfl been piken or Ly Ir no- oi ine reIUOAl m wTonnai i,nHdi.t aa we were that the nrosneeiof mori( ,iftVery from Miaaouri would tend j ftttifu,(, , llM ni',,e U. wealth and noDtila- ," I wo h-H tJiu, th) offüut of H Bm. gle election would heeo great, in ao abort a . time Her the talk of thoee who exrwnt to emigrate, is of Miaaouri Sppulatora are looking after Missouri hind, and aot a few are movmg thcTo in prefereeceto Iowa. The Missouri Demnnrat of last week anyi, rs, j i f tl.nl wok.'., aivlv .Invu ll'lOlMSI AitrM , " . v If J, . .. ' ..t.. . land havo been entered In that district, and Almoat entirely by emigrants . ,. emigrant Irom Free i .-Lit. - chielly Ohio und l'enniylrania The Amount exceeds that of three ytart previous at the same office .n the Warna w Hiatrict 900,000 aorci had been bought within about the seme period, and the office was closed Two thousand sored per day are being en tered in the Jackson District, ami in tho Pal - nil. i ii. me i 11 a. l m ,wv I ., , ary. In the north-1 myra District there Are on Acrci of Und subjict to entry western part of the State emigrant aro tur ning into Missouri from Iowa, where Freedom has made tlie land ao valuable that they dislike buying. Iu consequence, they have invaded Miaaouri, not as the Missouriaaa invaded Kansas, with Ipissols, whiskyjngs and m nr. ler, but with money, ploughs and thrift Th is ia the result th Democrat says, of the tettled conviction that Missouri is smn to become a Free State. BROOK VTLLE COLLXOE The workmen are putting the finishing touch on tiie eollego building, and the com- . . . . . . ...
mnniry , tu ana Arouna nrooxvnie, Are ma- making great preparation for the opening of' closing a lock of hair And giving his dy.
the next seion, on the 31st of August. Mr. Chase's personal and professional jpularity ia unbounded, and many of his former patrous in Kueh and I ranklin counties are now preparing to give him a cordial greeting on hia return to eastern Indiana. whilo those who know him ouly by reputation, are Intendiag to try him aa a teacher. He la geouring an efficient eorps of assistant, and wilt give general aatisfnetion. We learn that provision Are being made for boarding quite a number of young ladies and gentlemen in private familiee, at as low rates as the prices of provisions will admit, while there are numerous rooms in which yoang gentlemen can hoard them - selves at greatly reduced prices. The une. quailed hoalthfulaaae and beauty of the place make it ooe of tho best localities in the west for a first cms. Literarr Inetirution Renti ire cheap, and property is cheap thus offering unusual inducements for men
of means to either rent or purchase, for a ; er of the two letters, said to have been writtemporary reaidence during the period of ten in answer to the letters from Elizabeth educating their families. Where a man of Geary, ever reach Liberty nor were they large family can oeibly rent his farm for mailed At Madison for Liberty ,aa shown by a term of years and movo to aseatof learn-: the Register, no letter leaving on or near
ing, and board hia own children, it is much cheaper, and if not cheaper, it is much Let ter than to send them away to board Wc commend this lyetem to those who havo famdies to educate, whether in regard to Brookv ill. or any other College. Here both sons and daughter can receive instruction, in the same classes, and from the same teachera. While upon this subjoct, we will repeat
what wo have often said before, and it is ap , qvidence enough to locate it somewhere, nlical de to other institutions as well as this. ' but ne one seems disposed to ferret it out We Would prelev to educate our children j further. The letters produced were proat such an institution rather than at the nounced a base forgery, not only by the
mammoth colleges that number their hundreds. We would not advise that those who are juniors and seniors at other colleges should leave them for younger colleges, but we are sure that the preparetory studies, and those of the first two college year can be better acquired at younger institution. than at th crowded universities. In these, the classes are too OWge to receive the individual benefit from the teacher that they can in smaller einen A l.et th. "o younger instituti ;ri. to im l ne all their classes. L men everywhere know that thorough . - f education depends not on the number who are in a class, but on the indi v hlual application of the student himself. Moreover, recent events, of which we shall speak more fully hereafter, has led us to question tho isdom'of concentration, whether of wealth. or learning. Wo shall oppose, in due time, ht our way, all centralising influence, in of'chuTch or State r ducational enterpri. se iordon Tanner's letter to cx-denator Bright, has called down upon his head cru j el invective from every Bright organ and 1 Bright politician in the Suite The design I seem to be to make his torment o nt..Ier " able, that no other Democrat w ill dare to ein against Bright. Willard and Co. Whether they will scare off Hooding, and others, remam to be seen. "foi
Tt$ FAMILY CIRCtfi
All IlfFOKTAJfT EDUCATIONAL MOVEMENT. ,. i .) . ,(. pardoned for amj i nK 1,1 " i'Oltt movement At nxtte Im- en ua iMr than ordjaai v pl.-nmire, from tho it that ii iWesfcOdow an tftriifti vouau I ntatiniroi w!he- than We bad nv reason tu hope Savn years ho in oppoid lion to a favorite plan for female education, suggested by Or. Simpson, then editor ut Inn Christian Advwutt we pini. nf the doors of all ooltef . to females as woll a males and particularly referred to Asbury Cnlroraitv So Tar aa than know there waa ,, olia win Approved of mir Mijrttion W.ha. hH i.h .arioua oW-., i w chimerical crotchet that never would re t,,, i.,j, rotation of aenail.lM men The manifest mill of ffNior schools to R-ither vitti tin. increaeing dcaire of ooainmnit I. a i ..-iiiarsaa thorotighlv aa aona, gave us confldence in kfM pjan. Sin. lln n, we haw seen mam proioiemt inelitutions slatted on the plan, and work adtnirahlv, Litt we Lad no hopea of so soon finding 1d. endnwrd inalltntlone adopting H At tha lato meeting Of ska Board of Trus teea, of Asbury rnlveralty, a prOoaiti..ii was madetoopsn the doir of tha t'niveriH alike to both sexea. The suhject waa ! raferrsd to a judicious comtmttsa. which reported unanimously in favor of the attgCeatktn. ami Lut one Tmatre opposed i. ao Ihr aa we heard. One old fogy, who lavored eataLliain- a female dpnrtntnl, Hieeov aring that the plan cmtemplsted their re , citing in the aame classes, and to ihe name profcssi.ra with die males, jumped up in amajtement. and rn! Wlmi' in thi huil n - rc times For wantof lime to perfect the plan at that session, the matter wns referred to an able commitleo, to recommend details and to suggest terms. Ate , at the nsxt meeting of j li Hoard We regard i now ab a fixed am a s a a. WV S 9 l fact, that the portAls of A.hnry Univerai 7 " 1 " 0p4ned toour dAtighters as well " nur nM . , As we Intend to Allude to this question fain wit add nothing more At thittme reach of MerrUee I'oaireri im Quite an interest hit rocetnly existed iu South KaNt' in Imliuna un account of an , ' , , . . . a eged breach of niarrmgu contract charged ; . .. b T r i m L I against Itov T. H tieary of Liberty Circuit ! Z itv a respccuin c voung itiuv oi iauison J" . ... i The circumstances are about these Mr üeary waa entertained, during the late; session of the Conference, by the family of ( which this young ludy was a part. As an acknowledgment of the kindness ahown ". ! him during his sojourn, he sent her the Ladies Iien$iiory fur the current year ... ... , . On ita receipt she wrote a letter, enclosing a Book Mark, which letter wai answered ... ., . . . .. . I with thank for the token, and there ihouuht the correiMinUenre ended. Not so; the younn lady. She alleges that she received some 14 letters from Mr Oeary, all of which she answered in due time, in which, on n.s pari, pmpoaaii -- J mado which were accepted by her, and the time of the marriage fixed at about the middl of April A few day. before the i - lllllO IIXOU, Bile liefen linn, nntj riTcncu n .euer piirpnrung to m.ism. vc r erty, Ly a sister of Mr f.oary saying that . .. . . I i ... I ;w he wa. dangerously ill: and in a few day ore. aDo received anotner irom me same ' 1 a :.rAM;.. i,. .. . V. . i,,. ,. .. .1.. ..I in. . ing words, A c On this sad termination of the love Affair, she had tlie sympathy of such acquaint anceaaawere in the aecret In a short time nowever it was mown mat air itcary was alive and well had not been aiok at all, and that somebody had been playing false in this alleged love afl'uir Believing Mr. Gea ry guilty of this base ne a friend of her' in Madison, preforred charges against him before the Presiding Elder, and he was put on trial for Breach of Marriage Contract, falsehood, dissimula tion, &c On the trial, but six of those reputed letters and but one envelop could be ' produoed. including thoee purporting to have come from his sister; tho loss of the others was accounted tor by their having 1 been burnt On examination of the Post j office register at MAdison And Liberty no letter had jiassed either way corresponding with the alleged correspondence, except the . letters relating to the Repository and neith the day alleged Of course Mr. Geary wa acquitted of the charge, there being no evidence thAt he I ever wrote a letter to the lady, except as is above stated, ami there wa nothing of love j or matrimony in it. I bat a very poorly plauned, and poorly executed scheme for injuring tlie reputation of a worthy young man, has been thwarted, is evident Wrho was tlie guilty one is not known There is 1 eommitteo who tried the case, but by others j who upon the trial compared them with Mr. l Geary's writing, and Rev. Mr. Terrell who . prosecuted the case, after the investigation, j gave hi opinion, in favor of the entire inj nocenee of the accused, while he believed the young lady had some vile person. been victimired by aaT" It were perhaps well if, that hotbed of treason and traitors, were leveled with the ground and an example made of the men who are attempting to involve the country in a civil war. .Y A. Ledger. It was leveled about a yeai ago. Gov. Shannon and other government officers, leveled the Free State Hotel, tht printing office, and private residence, yet the "ex j ample'' neither frightened the free state j men nor involved the county in a civil war, but it came very near defeating the Democratic Candidate for President. 009" We lcam thAt a party of jolly gentlemen, among whom was Gov. Willard I were enjoying themselve in a room at the ' Bates House, Indianapolis, last week, when a dispute arose upon some question of law. Gov. W rang the bell, and told the waiter to bring up the -trd and 4th volumes of tlie - itevieed StatuteThe clerk wa 'up to i snuff,' and not disposed to hunt up volumes never published. He accordingly sent up ttro bottle of liquor, with the message, "Here are your Revised Statutes.'
hu 5E f
sin u iu rrii if
- DEVOTEi TO THE
the bible " in Like all the productions of thia learned i ili ii ur thU lt urn the impUN of mtitnt r und prorhund in entitfation. To tin oholrti who wiahr-M to invnNÜKAl the mot if tlu marMr, n- lot would th roo( of rfk vorh. thin will I m moat valuablf production wlnli ordinary reader will prit it for it frrtorand impliritv though loan cd and protound W l, ut iu appearance with yladuc, a it (in i'idi ne of propre I lo nuthor, alwuvx anti alavery, wm once to cicrroAiv to havo nllihed auch a Ixxtk na tltia Koiirteen yearn ago ho could not have Leen induced to put forth auoh a work Him i ii iii .'i ij a-ae vuvii as ' aaia . h.mU were tied hv oßeial ooantiot, with ! the sin us editor of a roAerriti're religioua puiMM- that dare not diacuaa Slavery But a kind Providence permitted thai fHyiou(f) 1 luve holder of the Methodic 'hureh to net i he fool more then was their wont, aad a cM'reiion of the I 'hurch was the fortti net- result AW the question of slavery, can he and is discussed with grsat free dorn, and thie is one of the results It is puhliahed hy Swoi-metedt and Poe, ('ineinnati. in their usual superior style Dt.VLIPatll.IK ACADaMV. Wo Iiavc not received the Annuel I'aIa logtte of tbia Institution, hem e can not give the statistics coticsniing it We learn however that Ke Mr ALboit, the popular l'reaidejt, haa resigned his office and will open a rreahytenal Academy 10 Hrookville I . ... . .... i in a few weeks We are not oflieiaily advi0(j W(t w prMum üxlt j, i aa it isa or stop towArds the oalaLliahmeni of tlie Acad , emy iu Hrookville under tlie patranage of the White Water I'reebMery, to which we alluded aome months ago. Whither this Ln the intention or not, the effect will be the aaaaB np..n the Dunlapaville Academy; for the popularity of Mr. Abbott will carry . with him quite a number of the students, that would otherwiiao have attended that jul,tjtllljün w loaru that Mr. Abbott was pr0I)0(M5d by aome of the leading members 1 f his church for a profeaiorahip in the lirookville College, which met with favor upon the pan id the ollere Trustoes nml the Presideut, si slao wo hear Mr. Abbott himself; but the others preferred that he should establish a Proshytorial School. He is to acrve Also ASpastorof the Brookrille PresbyteriAn Church Moanwhile ws wish the Hunlspvills Academy all success. It hue A commodious and beautiful building, . and iiu themidstol A populous and wenlthv " country JUSTICE TO JUDGE PEEXIN8 We are pleased to learn that Judge Per kim was not personally preieut at the riot which destroyed tlie bawoy house, and that tlie testimony of one of the witnesses whioh implicated him, asnn acceaaory before the fact, when explained, does not so implicate him One testified that a meeting was to be held, or was held, nt .Indue IVrkina a Lohhi. ( thi. vrnn nn unfinished house Woneinir to the Judge, and not hia reaidence a many auppoeed from reading the testimony. We do not wiah however, to ls undorvtood as ear . qualifiingthe testimony of the Judge aareported in the SenHnL The evident inUntion of tMlimünyü,c deii ;n ub. üi Jud 8tioD aToakJaaawwafa, are nil to prove that tho house waa a very bad institution, and reil0Vftj Qf jt hy tiolenpc V deMrvi f naminm a' itt Z ..... New Vera Trlaae On rerMcaers We give in another column, a portion of the Tribune's account of th New York Riot. We are dad to find the Tribune beginning to 9mff m and ground in regard to the dangsrs which threaten our neaee and nroanaritr. from i.h dftnnish mw of fortinert( and facili. , ty with which they can he used by design 1 ing demagogues.
W. HB -'V mm. .-ii.. ,. i'i.iii r-ii'iuii ii. Aa are as mueh opposed to proscribing . , . .... , . . , . . ... hunter is playing an even game when be risks
a man because of tlie place of his birth, as the 7Vt'6un, or any one else. But when foreign born eitixene intend to preeerve their formsr nationalities, and as a body aeek to operate in political or religiou matters, at foreigners, then we think it is time to look out. It is only against this that we have ever sought to make war, and though all abandon Americanism, ws shall ha true ! to onl itcm of U wni?h w, ew eased, for we beleive it to be right We commend the 7W6mte's account of foreign influence in the late riots, to the consideration of all men. OLD NICE CAUGHT The law of Ohio appoints an inspector of liquors a practical Chemist, who is to test the various liquors offered for sale, and report whether there is more than a due portion of poison in them. One Dr. Cox is the Chemist in Cincinnati, and he has made some rich developemenu in regard to the . poisonous liouors on ale in thatcitv ilaving examined the cellars of th common people, he called on okl Nick. Longworth a few dayB ago, and asked to be shown a specimen 0f his 400,000 bottles of wine. Old Uick wa terribly indignant, whereupon Dr. Cox had him arrested for contempt After a week's consideration he concluded that, rich aa he was, he had Letter come down, so he compromised by allowing the Dr. to examine his wine. ———<>——— WITHOUT CHANGE OF CARS. From and after Monday morning, this week, the 6 o'clock express train, on the Indianapolis and Cincinnati line, will go through to Chicago without change of cars, and through to Iowa City (via Rock Island Bridge) with but one change of cars. This is the first time that a train of passenger cars ever went through from the Ohio river at Cincinnati, to Lake Michigan, without change, and is an event that people will "make a note of." This road is now putting freight through to the Mississippi, and to Chicago without change of cars. ———<>——— Preeere Voir BaJleta for AnotAer XleeUea. We learn that the Supreme Court is about to render a decision which will make void many of the elections of last fall. They will decide the law of 5" constitutional which fixes a uniform time for taking eer - tain offices, the result of which will be to allow the old officers to hold on till the first oi November, and require a new election in October for Treasurers, Recorders, Ac. aw" Jion. W ill Cumback has our thanks tor a copy A the t ongresssional Ulobe and Appendix. He also has our thanks for ma ny other favors " too tedious to mention.''
AMÜSSttlfiRT AND
MERE MENTION: ~~~~~~~ ——>The erection of a City Gas Works has been commenced in Iowa City. (My Lookout tor countrrrH ' one the Nortliern (tank tf Ky Eiajr Kx I'mnident Killinore !- nil. (r un iulluinntion el the on 1 1 ; iiiK j Ali.ut aoven thonnnnd l.u,inc- n.-u in Ik loo, retdde in tin aeihoafag laaraa ——>Fifteen deaths resulted from lightning, Wednesday last, in Ohio. ——>We had several refreshing showers within the last twenty-four hours. aiojr A achool teacher named A. I. Mot riwn' hM bwv" ttrr,l,", hokonu It.d lor higamy He In -ight wiuh OMIT A lioiiae full of aonaialiko LuLunoji without its cedar Lut daughter. h the a (.reside are like the roa iu abiiron MT The Terre Haute Kxpreee report the di'Mtli of Mia llaucgaii wIL- .l .-x s..nnt(.r Hanegan ut Covington. I HT Tho third tuinunl meeting of the ' American Dental . mention will Le Leid in Ikiaton on the Ith of August next gsgrtJeo PeaUidy offers 4I ,ismi to the city of Newburyport, for any benevolent v . t. il 11 lr. I object its authorities may sponify Frances P Hlair, Preston K.ing nod W II S-ward, are ofl' t.. The ri...isiid Islands, on a fishing excursion 'Orange peel contain- nn active xii .. .... . ... . onons oil, which leopaMoa life ct. rt time it ia partakei A late decision of .lohn Point says, the city of Lafayette ia without any govTS mrn( They are all discoverer that think there ia no land when the enn se nothing hut sos fisaVfiov Wiae, of Virginia, is at Wab ington to assist in tlie sctlh-ineni of the new ' Kansas war at the South IW I he man who t.iok pa-a-c .n the wnK" f morning returned on the shade of . a a, km night. He ia doing well. The am-ients were ,, opinion thai I Bono waa a maiden who had pined away for love, until nothing but her nice was left, fOjr John Van Huren has io. mtly been ruatioatiug at the residence of Fletcher Webster, Marshtield. Mai. aaT'rhe Free State men of Kansas, claim ! that the census of the inhabitant of tho ter-
, , . . - .' m J mi- au vlUvl I T KOUI.IDUIIU LIIIUTI UUI r.toryreoently4ak.n.showsa,Kpulat,onof Well, then I suppose they were all j on the doorstep and commenced an near fifty thousand persons (runk fint , Qn )W think j irfM in German, which our raporOoT Wo learn from the Pieriuout Whig hew 1 felt! Nothing was said about whisky, j ter waa unable to understand; but ita tha' among tho viaitors expected ut the Fan- Hut tlia there wer soldier, and thay bad I effect upon the audience waa alarm quier White Sulphur Spring this eason is some kind of s wagon for him to ride in to i ing. sx-Presulent Pierce. ka dep .- and still better. thre was a good ver e corpse was carried a white - . ... . . v. i flag, inscribed in German, "Victim MT In Boston, Saturday l young mar- pioua preacher to rid with him. Now was MeteoPoLITAI PoLicE.'1 A. ried woman was Lurned to death hv the nnt that gisxl, juat to think, after he had fu . nroraaaion moves! tha lancnatre
overturning of a fluid lamp which she had a aa n V a a ia m placed by her bedside before going to sleep asjT-This is truly MrÜf ' l W live in. There aro no iviii. a',,,, now. The aex jump from infancy hi young wo manhood. They talk of marriage at ten. and at fifteen have faniiliei. lasT An old man of 61 yaara, got lost in i Ii .. ,.-..1. . ,.M ,. , . i : u . . .i . ... ..,...,. ... m. viiipi in., i. is. , it !Miori i nno since and subsisted for nine days on crAnberriei before he was found tmT A correspondent expresses his belief that the Schuyler fraud injured the Kail road property of that county one hundred millions of dollars, i. e . its market value I4aT Since the nnenina of aaTaanaiiaii in I February there are said to have been at least two hundred persons drowned in the Ohio River, between Wheeling and Pittsburg 49-The New ork Aldermen have voted to send a specisl iiiessnger to England to induce the owners of the "Oreat Eastern'' to send her (o that port. 4töT"The amount of money contributed by Edward Everett, to the fund for purchasing Mount Vernon, derived from the audience at his lectures, reAches $25,000. Sfcäa Wa. think Ihnl mviliniAn. I o. his own head for an animal's tail It makes precious little difference whether the result be head or tails. 4aT Th woman put up at a raffle in Perham's gift enterprise, recently, and who brings hsr drawee the sum of &5,HX, with her hand and heart, hes been drawn by a man in Palmer Mass I'nfortunato mortal! IsaT-Th N. Y. Central R R Co., discharged about fiv hundred employees on the first inst., ths usual falling off of business in the summer enabling them to make this reduction of foroe OEsT An English paper gives an accunt of a tea party ef sixty old woman, who were th mothers of eight hundred and sixty-nine ehildren! They must have had something te talk about at that tea party, we should think W fiEsT A Kentucky editor thinks he is to be pitied beeause ho has lieen a whole week without mail intelligence' Perhaps some are still to be pitied more for having been all t, . h r. . . . , their lives without .ntcll.genci of any.aort 49" Gen Walker, report says, is about to return to Nicaragua. We have no objec tions to his return to that country, but hope no one will be silly enough to go with him. If they do, they may learn a lesson that we have been trying to improve upon since Ö S. fEaT A cheap And Imndy remedy for diarrheoa is simply to take a tumbler of cold a A t . 1 a a. aaa . water, thicken it with wheat flour to the ! conBistency of cream, and drink it. This is to be repeated several times during the dy, or as often as you arc thirtv, and it is not very likely that yon will need it .n the second dy. MT Tho last iettei of Mr Marcv. addressed to Hon. John M. Botts, of Bich : mouu, was w jruroooee uie inner as nis , friend, to Hon. Thos. K Seymour. I'nited States Minister at St. Petersburg, Russia. Mr. Botts, expects to spend several of the ensuing months in a tour through Europe, and will visit most of its celebrated resorts before he will return. MT One day last week a family livi on south Ann street, Hartford. Ct, heard a groaning in the attic of the building occupied by them, and rushing up stain found a man who had heen on a spree for several j days, hanging by the neck, with a leather , strap fastened to a beam overhead. The 1 woman occupying the lower floor cut him down, threw bim down stairs, held his head in a pail of water until life was restored, and then larrupped him soundly with the strap, 1 Afterwards he went into her room and showed fight,, when she attacked him with ( R rolUng pin, drove him into the next room, and iocked him in. The next eay she gave birth to a boy thAt wieghed nine pounds, and is doing very well.
INSTRUCTION OF
GOV WEI8HT OB DAILY MEW PE0EE1 014 a Ma KotToa N. ' know that aoe tuna i bko, a good, "1 I fail n. ned Jd thxiiet a rote aoBiethtng for your par, aboot family altim. in on of the churcbea im town, and, n 1 had aoine thought of moving to town, I w rote aoniething ahnut it and thought may 1,0 N"" '0",', P"1 ' in PI'. hut yoa didn i da it. and ao I roueluded that if you were all ao tiff, that you might get along . . , , the he-t you could. Ui 1 wouldn t more to ywT oM ',roudl toWB; but ,lnM I that I have heen thiakmgagood deal about it und mnetimee I have fait mighty had oer it, and ao I have forgiven you for not i printing that other leitet Hut while I've heen thinking over theae i In n. i- and a good many others, aod about how much harm Lad been done to the -horch hy the political preachers, and bow many good people had to leave the church oa account of it, and among them eld t . v .r ... . t . . I
oro.ner -oeey n rigiu, mat uear em uov , exlit for Ä iing year f w are to nor, how aorry he wae beeauee he had to have petty and ezolueive nationaliloss confldencs in the preachers, and then tics established and maintained, and how he had to go all ever the State and tel more eepeciaily, if wa are to have thorn of it to get them to do right; and them, thoa conatituted, defying tha about poor Urrabee. how he waa abused legal authorities? And yet look 4t
atl( persecuted until ha bad to ouit preach .... " " ing, and give up hit limns Oh! you don't know how it made me feel Well, you see I have not moved to town yst, hut am tili living out br whr I did, so 1 have a good deal ef time to think, and i t j ..... t .-i .i 1 ae more pnpen tnan aome around here who nr.- a heat, richer ! than I aid, and hear all thess things Well, 1 I thought a hasp about them, but the other I day, when your (per came along I cot hold of it as I always do, and my wifs says ,hal , , R U9mmim I never ouit it till I devour it well, a J wee aaying, I was
reading it, and a hoi do yoa think I WSJ&!? U i.y irweatbeaewoid. At ihe point of the th wh,U "TO of roW
bayonet ioodnc' gracioua, thinks I what now: well, directly 1 saw that it waa something about that good old brother Joaey Wrighl Wsll, I read on until you told US aL.a at. .1 . I äm a -a that they werestArtiug b im off to aome other '"try. to do buaineia for our government It' 1 1 a t f . 4 . a t m a m w all thmk 1 1.. my elf, pretty good, if J. Ii Bright did beat him for the Renau of the Cnilod States, he lidn t et aa much honor at lost as Hro. Joy. Butthen they started from thu Palmer House. Yet. the Palmer House! well, lets think a little. Don't Goodj win any that is head quarter! for old linen? Yea Well thev en in for frss w hiskv don't een out with the preachers ao long, and i 1. . a a. f a s . 1 n a iL t,,0,Jh, ohard of tliem, and some of them had said such hard thinra about him before i ne '"' u all, to make it all up and not ae- ... ..r.tk' i.itlw..- nut in Hu nun I. w.v Ir. ihnv - , .111- . I. , .... . w ..... it, and then again, what an endorsement of his own reputation, he did not select a common man, but on who stand high in th public estirantion. And particularly about your town but still, that is not all. I aw in another paper that he had notbaoklid when he got to Cincinnati, but that he wa still on his journey, and was n in company with another preacher, who also La a reputAtion in Indianapolia, and tili 1 better, he is to be a lay Representative of , the M. K Church, at aome great meeting ' thtr ,0 be held on otuw ,id of Ocean. And I then have been thinking how good we Methodists will feel, and eepecially the preachera in Indiana, when we read some of hi good speechee there, when he tells them what a good church he represent, and what a pure and humble set ef men the preachers are, won't that how progressive methodism? Now 1 think you see that I am still a little like I was when I wrote you that other letter that you didn't print. Hut then there is aaother thing I went to say something about, for I tell you though I do not live in your town I am not so far behind the town's folks as you might think for. I think and read some about our college, and 1 have just been reading about our Methodist College at Greeneaatle, where tbey had so much fuss laet year, with their old Eastern President, and I understand he hai quit teaching school, and gone to Nw York to preach, and that they have elected some real good old brother in his place, and that he is a verygood lawytr, and that thay have auother lawyer at th other end of th teachers' board, and that they have om mighty good school masters in betwesn, and eome of them are preachers. So I think we are inst fixed, lor what the law cannot ao, w ' a, . a All t 1 a A . because it is weak, they will ha able to do ' with t,ie Gospel. ßut 1 m,U8t cloM' 12 rina i come out to see us when the fruit gets ripe, we will give you some of the liest we have, A Proorbssivb Mbtbodist ' mm - , f1 ZETI1N?. . waM , The following resolutions were ! ndoptod b the Aiomni of Indian Asbury Tjniversity at their late rej union Greencastle, July 16, 1857. The Alumni of Indian, Asbury University in their Annual Reunion, deem it advisable to adopt the following reaolutions : Resolved. That it is with profound , raumk wo learn of the recent difficulI - a, a. a , 1 1 ties, which have taken place in the ' L n'versity; and while we areaisposed to censure no one, we can but re gard these difficulties as having al ready passed, the results as being but temporary, and that the future is yet bright for our Alma Mater. Resoh'ed. That tue action or me - , oarfi 0f justices in their selection of . Judge David McUonalu as tne Illiure j President of this Lnivrsity meets our approbation that in him wc be hold the scholar, the governor, ana the Christian fitted in an eminent degree for the position tkey have assigned him. Resolved. That the Trustoes have acted wisely in re-electing to Profes sorship m tnis institution, tyrus Nutt and Miles J. Fletcher that the distinguished ability with which they have heretofore discharged the duties that will again be incumbent upon them, is a sufficient guarantee of their future auccess.. lcotre d , That we are deeply interested in the welfare of Indiana Asbury University and still retain unimpaired confidence in her future prosperity. Rob't N. Hupsoh Jameb P. Lube, Jab. M. Reynolds, i Com. Philip G. Gillett, Iba G. Grove
YOUNG AND OLD.
-Tr - - T-y freai Ik a. Y. Trttwae. OE1EA40EAJLH DUEAJfO OF E0B3OCTO4 Thor muit bo many honoat men I in the Serenteonth Ward of this city ' wno would do Tory angry were tho name of "Americana" denied to them, and who at ill poraiat, in a pit of the palpable anomaly, in calling thorn aolvoa "Gormana.' They inaiaton being Gcrmana in their habita, man nora, cuatoma and lancuairc,arul clan niah in their aooial arrantrenienta. V " imiu IV II, It Vill-r IA t ghak off a tbe memo. no Know now nnro u ia, at once u) rioa and attachmenta of btrthplace, and no one could bo more tolerant than we aro, of an innocent induJgenco in auch feelings But the nnrest tyro muat understand the wide difference batwaon political dutiea and aooial pleasure When German seek New York, when they become, by virtue of eoteran obligation!, Amorican citiaena, they hare no right to consider themselves as anything but j A nigricans. How are our inetttut mm. - all the diegraceful troubles we have hiftl in tho Seventeenth Ward? Th rioU 4re all reported in the aewepaper, and spoken of on the streets mid in the public meotintrs. aa Gr man riots. How discreditable ia that to ik, firman ntme! How doon a I.. gtaiD 0004 It 044t Upon men of a no Ida orierin! It ie truat that. John M nl ler, the man who waa unfortunately ehot, was by birth 4 ftornuo. But he waa, nevertheleaa, by choice and adoption an American. He was no more wronged than any American wonld have been, who hod been kilmark uent procoedingal Ilia neighbor inaiaton avenging him, not oa an American, but aa a German martyr. At onoe German mobs urc oraaniaed to des troy thoee who are falsely supposed to be tho murderers of Muller. It ia insiAted upon that tho Coroner, who t is to investigate the death, shall ap I point a majority oi iiermans upon I f . v k . .1 m i . . "is jury. At ins iunerui me sann I .4-1 II . Ti . A nationality is aepv up. wne reporter, not our own, eayi. "At four o'clock the hearse arrived, and the crowd concentrated in the vicinity of the houee. At thia juncta. aMaI. imhiUm asma 1 0f Germany filled the air. Then we I Tai . Mm a m a a , 1 o r t have the following call issued; All the German oitisens of the Seventeenth Ward, are hereby re quested to attend a general meeting to take place on Tuesday, the 14th inst.. at Eustachi s Garden, No. 515, Fonrth street, near Avenue A. The object of said meeting is. to deliberate what moans and ways are given to us, to resist further murderous attacks of the Metropolitan Police, and to bring the murderers to punishment." Signed. At this meeting, which waa held in a German theatre, a Mr. Schenecke, we are told, concluded an eloquent address, by expreasing a hope that "at the next election the German , would take the matter in hand, and vindicate their outraged rights.' A Mr. Untschen, a (rerman, declared j that nlaW8 WW6 utter non(l6nge and folly," A Dr. Merkle said: "The Germans mast not bear indifferent-, ly." Now, where is all this to end? It is not, it cannot be for a moment, pretended that Muller met with any misfortune as a German, which he would not have met with had he been of American birth. And yet hia death calls forth, not a merely social expression of sorrow on the part of his neighbors, bnt a political demonstration, in which Germans as Germans are called upon to oppose certain laws of the State, just as if those laws, admitting them to be oppressive, did not bear juat aa heavily upon the native-born as upon the for eign-born. At thia rate what end will there be to factions, and what resource from anarchy? And now, we ask, in the name of common sense is the stomp of American citizenship to bo indelibly and unmistakably impressed upon any immurrant, if these two-fold political relations aro to be maintained? When will the different races occupying our broad territory become assimilated, as they must be if we ore to be happy and great, if every one shall insist, upon every occasion, in asserting ita own individuality? When we consider the political evils which the Germans have suffered, we are astonished and mortified at the loose and intemperate way in which they talks here, about tyrany and a V iUtCSUl- 'U V lilivll t IKUtsli AAVW JJJ lAlÄA worse off are they here, than whea Of violation of their rights! Mow much all Germany was trampled under the feet of the first Napoleon when the whole Empire was dismembered when French garrisons occupied the cities of V lenna. Berlin and Ham burg when universities were dis- ! . n sa solved, and the people beggared to sustain the glory of a military Moloch when men like poor Palm were shot for no crime when State after State was absorbed by the swollen a M . . Empire of France, and when the great commercial towns, whose wealth was only equalled by their antiquity, ware sacked, ruined and conquered? Or are these turbulent people forgetful of the sufferings, the imprisonments, the executions and exactions more recently inflicted upon them by their own rulers? Is it credible, that after having tasted of the cup of genuine and bitter despotism, they can be so cheated by demagogues, into the belief that they are really suffering here? We will not believe it. We trust, as we know we may trust, to their recurring good sense and sober second thought. OST The Josephine is the neweet article of female attire, and is somewhat like a shanghie coat. It makea the wearer resem ble a comet little body And tremendous tail MT At this season beware of exposure to the sun, of unmuseled dogs, of mothers with young children, of unripe fruit, of cold drinks, of everything, including yourself and getting in debt.
4 waif rmoM at Goodwin. Illinota ia a Bute and baa a grout people. Jte citiea and towna apring op aa by mag ic, and don't die ao aoon away. It grand Central Road paya State oxponaoa, while other linoa of iron eon noot it with the Miaaiaaippi and the Eaat . laat year one of too Captaina took hia eeoel, "Dean Hichmond from ( hu-aifo to Litimm.I. mid now I learn from tho Chicago paiwra, tbr wvtn. I n. . vi ""III l.n I IV'l j. diachargiug her rargoat theClIica awicrio i en, uirecuj irom i.ivarapoa iro warf IMroct trade from 1 1 lino ii and Wiaonatn with the Old World Dooa'nt it eoem like a dream t Tbia ia a in ere beginn no mg ibe florth wheat, beef, and Weat an furnish whiakev for all Europe and such a trio will be to strong for any opposi tion. I shall not gaea ganeh about tho fatnro, yon iUid people would be sure to imagine that I bad vaagbi the spread-Lagle style Illinois ia rapidly derelopinr br educational reeouroee. hchoola. ColU gee, Bern inar ies and Univoraitlea are arising rapidly, well aotivtred ood vigorona Onr State Institntiona are not eloeed, our blind and muten and insane are not driven oat to die, and rur 'rovernor ts a aoAer vis It is thought that extensive mannikotoriaa both of oottoo and woollen Bods will soon be eaUhhsbed along " k River, which affords aa fine water power as nan be fou od at Lovell or elsewhere Already la rg quantities of fine sheep are raiecdand when 4 few of Gov. Wrights hydraulic Rams are imported it la thought the breed will be famous and the mutton unsurpassed I But if we have no hydraulics we have Jadga Douglas The "little giant" is giving himself and hi frienda much trouble by makinc "peeciiN. He recently delivered on . I w at Springfield, in whioh Squatter Sovreigiity waa boldly repudiated Utah hoe no right to choose her owe domeatic institutions lor Pol warn is not allowed by the Constitution ' Juat aa if Slavery waa apoken of in that inatrument f The speeoh waa reported in two forma one fbr ike meridian of St. Looia and one for I LI. -1 1 1 .a . ' nieagti, out an in vain, even mal I aaa a t 1 a m. In . L. 1 . J i.recaution cant aave mm. no ia boldly contradicting all the doctrines he advanced in the Senate, and fn the conteat of '56. Ha ia atullvfying hia whole biatory and placing himaetf in the shamble on sale to the Reuth. Will ii bay him? The Senator ia a man of mind and of wonderful vereatily. He iaan accomplished sophist, and skilled in making the worse appear the better reason. He comprehends fall well the power of 4 bad name, and beeps opprobrious titlee upon his opponents without stint he appeals to the cooraer passions and leaves no means 1 a B . n e a aa .m un tried to secure his bold upon the ..a n a e. aaa. .et at . ' "dead rabbits, ""shoulder hitters" and hard cases of society. He has much ability would that it were consecrated to freedom. He is doomed to disappointment The South need him in repealing the Missouri Compromise and then throw him contemptuously aside at Cincin nati, not even burying him decently. It will do so again. In his own State even Egypt can't aave him. He is in the I . S. Senate for tha last time. When he ehall have retired to private life, and shall review his historr he will surely see how he "miseed Ur and that will give him acuter grief to feel that he done wrong, and looking upon what he might have been, will eay in the touohing language of the poet: "Oh I when I thinks of what 1 r And rot I need to wee, Mthink I'se throwed myself away n ithout sufficient ooe ! Well here I will atop. It ia to hot to write. Our village seems absolutely melted and what few are passing move slow and lasily Oh, air. iu hot ! Yours, Bon Boy. Grakd Piaiub, July 17, 1867. Beoe villi, July 13th, 1957. M. Editor Your paper had in No., 30 of July 10th, nn article man ufacturod by rrancif Bartels in this place. I do not want to reply to all his sour -c rout, but I simply will tell you in as good dutch m I con, bow the whole of it waa. It was not on Sunday, but on Tuesday the 21 it of June, when, before our Priest commenced reading mass, Mrs. Miller, Bartels s mothor-in law came to the Church with that child of Bartels', and wanted it to be baptised and called. As it ia customsry in our Church to have a God-rather, Mr A. Smith was aaked to hold the child, which Mr. Smith did. After the child had been baptized, our Priest did, aa usual, write the name of the child, and parents into a book, and nothing else was asked, or said, after or before. Mr. Bartels says in his long and broad article, that the child waa stolen from him, and aa there woe nobody preeent bat Mr. Smith and me, you know Mr. Editor that it waa not me who stole your Brhamachick1 i 6n8 because 1 rather raise them aa I t a. l y a a. a l many as I want myself, than to steal them, and lam most asured Mr. Smith will not steal children neither. Mr. Bartels would not say that hia moth er-in-law took thechUd to the Church. He brought it up in such a style as if the Trustees which had been either Smith or me, stole his child, his whole tale is worse than a bare -faced lie: 1 "cause our Church, nor any one of '. the members, had any thing to do I . I . 1 A A 1 A I A with that matter. It was between him and his mother-in-law. I suppose she intended to fulfill a duty. Supposing Bartels had sent his child by his mother-in-law, and the Priest bad refused to baptise it, because we did not know if Bartels has been willing or not (and it was not our duty to ask her about that) would he not, aa he ie a high officer, I understand he was deputy constable, of the Democratic party, have rung the Demo cratic Court-house bell, and mode it known to everybody ? Johw Dorrs. 4tT Robert Morris, Esq , ha withdrawn from the American Freemason the beat Masonic paper in the land. It will be resumed in November next, by J. F. Breanoe at Louisville Ky May it be a good aa heretofore Paor BaAGDON Prof. Rragdon having returned from Iowa, hAs determined to re mein for the preeent in connection with tho Asbury University. If aay other change of purpose ia announced by next week we will inform ear
Ma
