Plymouth Banner, Volume 2, Number 49, Plymouth, Marshall County, 9 February 1854 — Page 2

toon was it down again. At last he thought he had a good aim; "bang" went the g :n down fell the dead body to the groun. I with a hJtvy thump, and down went the Mister Thief too as fast as he caul I. "WI!." sM the Squire, it is quite true thai I am c!ii -f magistrate in thse parts; b it people are fond of talking, and it w mi 1 b a bore if th-y cam? to see this tie id radii's body. I think the best thin to be dons is that I should go down and bar him." "You m ist do 3 yo think best, dear;" aid his wife. So the Squire got out of be and went down stairs, and he hid scarce put his foot out of the door before the M ister Thief stole in and went straight up stairs to his wife. Wiy. deir, back already!" said she, forsh? thought it wis her husband. "Oh y.. I only just put him into a hole, and threw a little earth over him. It is enough that he is out of sight, but it is such a had night out of doors; by-and-by I'll do it better. B it just let me luv the 6heet to wipe myself with lie was 8J bloody nd I have mule myself in such a ms'ss with him." So hn got the sheet. After a while he said "D ) you know I am afraid you nvist let me hve your night shift loo, for the sheet won't do by itself, that I can see." Sj she gve him the shift !i!so. Bit just then it came across his mini that, he lud forgotten to lock the house door, so he must step down and look to thit before he cam back tt be'., an J away he went with both shift and sheet. A little while aftr ami the right Sl'iir. Why! what a tims you'v taken to lock the door, deär!" said his wife; "and what have you done with the sheet end hifi?" "Whit do you si jr." sail the Squire. "Why, I am asking what you hate done with the sheet and shift that you

had to wipe the blood." said she. "What, in the devil's name!" sai the Squire, "has ht taken ms ia this time too?" Nit diy cams th Muter Thief and sk t for the Squire's daughter as he had promis' I; and th-n the Squire dared not do any thing else than to give her to him und a goo I lump of monay into the bargain, for. to Ml the truth he was afraid lest the Mister Thief should steal the eyes oat of hi3 hesd, and thit people would btgin to say spiteful things of him if h broke hiä word. Sa the Master Thief lived weiland happily from that ti.us forward. I don't know whether he stole any more; but if he did, 1 am quite sure it was only for the sake of a bit of fan. The Democratic members of the Georgia Legislature met in caucus at Augusti, on the 19th ult., and adapted resolutions. amng which are the following; Resolved. Thit th? Democratic party of G'orii finphatically avows its construction of .h Btliimore platform of 1852. in reference to the slavery question, to be a distinct repudiation of the principles of the Wilmot Proviso in any fit tare organization of territory now in o ir possession, or hereafter to be acquired, and that we eannot recognize anyone as belonging to th Dimocritic party who shall seek to enforce, or (hill advocate thU principle so repudiated. Resolved. That while our rrarnvst sympithies are due to those northern Diinocrits who, amidst the storm of fa naticism on the s-avery question, which has raged in pist years in their section of the Union, stood firmly by the rights of the South -wt recognize as Democrats all our fellow citizens of the North who now stand fimlj with us on the platform, of th( Aafio.u'. Democratic Patty, and arc therefore pledged to defend the South from any future assaults upon her inttitutions. HonmzLE Occurrence. We have been furnished by Simuel C. Meredith with the particulars of the following limentab'.e occurrence; A company of young men from Cambridge City and Connervii'.e went out on Monday night to shoot pigeons a few miles from the latter place. On their return, between twelve and our o'clock, those who lived in Connersv ill left the omnibus at a point where the road branched oiT to .vard Cambridge. At one of them, Mr. Mausuall W. Passes, wis taking his gun from a wagon, it was discharged by some accident, the lead passing into his breast, through his heart, and out at his back, tht slugs which composed part of it striking a watch seal and forcing it along with his chain and watch partly into his body. He was instantly killed. Tha deceased was a son of Hon. Samuel W Parker, member of Congress from that District. His age was twenty-one year3. He had just left College, with bright prospects for the future. " The news of his death will overwhelm with griaf his parents, who are at Washington City. Guano. The British Government has received official despatches from the Admiral commanding in the Pacific relative to the quantity of Guana remaining upon tha ChiP'hs Islands. If ii estimated that the available supply amounts to 8 millions six hundred thousand tons: but the Admiral imagines that the islands will be exhausted of saleable guano, worth freighting to England, in eight or nine years. This is very significant information: n should indtr our farmers to look for new fertilise at home. 'I have very little respect for the tie of thl world, as the chap said whes tht "'. v "r ? k'.

THE BAN N Eli. WJL J. BURNS, Editor & Proprietor.

PLYMOUTH IND. Thnrsilaj Jlonins, Feb. 9, 1851. Advertisements to insure insertion, must be handed in by Tuesday preceding the day of publication. CdThe excitement kicked up down town on Saturday last was occasioned by the door of Rusk's store room being fore ed open, and a man caught in the act of giving away Goods. He says lie did'nt steal them, but see Nclson'6 ad vertisement, and if he's a mind to lontinue giv;ng away his goods, it's none of our misfortune. Oar WooJ Customers. The punctuality with which our wood customers have supplied our wants evinces a determination, to secure us a -warm time, and places us under obligation to confide in their integrity for the future. A huge wood pile, in cold weather, is a relief to sure eyes, cold fingers and a troubled conscience. Ecclesiastical, He v L. Nf.beker, pastor of the M. . Church at this place, on last Sabbath evening announced the commencement of a discourse to be continued from Sabbath to Sabbath for an indefinite period, upon the authenticity and advantages ot the Dible. His text is in 21 Tim. 3d ch. 16r. "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God," &c. A deeply interesting subject has been selected, and we have no doubt but it will be ably handled. The authenticity of the Bible is a question which has very naturally fed forcenturiel, skepticism and infidelity. PnmilllllS. At the lat meeting of the "Northern Indiana Teacher's Institute" held at South Bend, our county seems to have been quite liberally and favorably represented. The committee on Essays reported that thirty had beeu contributed For one on the subject cf Teaching Grammar, B. F. Kendall Esq. of Yellow River, was awarded a Diploma, and for one on Physiology, Miss Lois Helen Leland was awarded the first premium, and for one upon the same subject, Veinon Gould was awarded a Diploma. There were but nine subjects treated upon by those receiving premium:. The session is said to have been a - lively and interesting one. AllOther.Firfc The dwelling house of Charles Cook, some four or fi ve miles west of this place, was consumed by fire on Saturday eening last, together with tingreater part of its contents. Mr. C. and his wife were at the house of a neighbor, and the children at home did not discov er the fire in lime for their alarm to be f0f much service, as it had caught in the upper part of the building, and was too far advanced before they discovered it. They however, displayed extraordinary presence of mind. Their ages being about 7.9 and 11, and instead of running to their parents as most children would have done, they proceeded to carry out their beds, clothing 6tc. the younges takiug it rather hard because be lost his boots. OH thC Marth. Plymouth is regularly and constantly improving about as fast as could be expected or desired. It is frequently tht. case that the smaller towns in the west, in anticipation of the construction of same stupendous public improvement, overleap themselves. Their projectors and builders reach beyond their means, and with a hurrah and hubbub endeavor to push obscure villages into magnificent cities. Such has not been the case at Plymouth. We have no empty stately edifices, whose crumbling and dilapidated walls continually admonish us of the folly of their builders. We have no idle machinery awkwardly erected in half finished frames in the differ--tit corners of our town, rusting and rotting for want of sufficient employment to prevent such decay. We have no empty duelling! our shops and store houses are all occupied; and better than all, we have as few confirmed loafers as any other village containing 1200 inhabitants. During the past season 72 buildings were erected, besides numerous improvements mide to old ones, and during the ipproaching summer double this number will be erected. Tha little post office, which a year ago. had difficulty in securing a competent keeper, mailed last week, four hundred and forty-six letters from this place about 4 per day. Two Railroads from this place west, tnding their terminus at Chicago, are iuw under construction one of them runr.bg ev from thit ?!ice tc Tort!

Wayne, and the other southeast to Cincinnati, via Peru, and we shall hazard nothing in saying that in less than twelve months, we shall have ample railroad facilities. With a view to these facts, are not our citizens tired of seeing tin ir little half starved newspaper as the only means through which to give them pub

licity? Circulate your prospectuses and' come on with' your subscribers, and it shall be different after three weeks more. () T) T. : ti. . v; t of this new Richmond in the literary world, have omitted an important item which occurred some twenty-three or four years ago. Gen. John L. Spann wai favored with a little post office at his farm in the north part of Jefferson county in this State, during Gen. Jackson's first Presidential term, which he had named Lancaster. Solon Robinson was either directly or indirectly acting as a kind of mail agent at that time, and from some cause or other was induced to suspect that packages containing money vere not always safe through this office. He mailed a letter at some office north of Lancaster, on the Indianapolis and Madison mail route, (which was then carried by stages, through in two days.) to the address of some o.ie Et Lancaster, Pa., but intentionally, no doubt, made the Pa. so that there was so little difference between it and la., that on a subsequent investigation, neither court, lawyers or jury wers able to discover a material difference. The next djy, Mr. Agent came along, clothed in his official?, and finding the letter in the office at Lancaster, a., awaiting its proper owner, took it from Gen. Spann, travelled on to Madison with it iti hisoirn possession, and at that place an examinntion was had of this package, which when opened, proved destitute of a ten dollar hill it professed to bear to Lancaster Pa., and of the mailing of which, the sagacious ogent had as evidence the P. M. where he had started it. lie had Gen. Spann arrested and taken to Madison for trial, and upon examination of the evidence, hi? Madiscn testi many proved fatal to his successful pros-; ecution as the witness who aided in first examining the packes after Robinson had travelled some twelve milrs with it in his own possion testified 'hat the letter had been broken open, ani in attempting to fasten it agaiuv.iih the same wafer. It was still wet! Gen. Spann was honorably acquitted amidst the shouts of his old neighbors and friends of both political parties- and since which time he has almost constant ly been honored by his fellow citizens with a seat in either one or the other branches of the Sta'.c Legislature, and we believe is now in the State Senate from Jennings county the county gat of wuich is but eight or ten milts from Lis old post office heme. But Solon since that time, has had his locations a3 varied, if possible, as public opinion 6eemed to be at that time, ofhis honfsty and inUgrity. A part of the time in the north part of this State, occasionally resurrecting his forgotten past Ireds by scribbling for some Agricultural paper and if we are not mistaken, favoring Socialism, or Fanny Wrightism, and lately at his new location, his Hot Corn Stories sem to be giving him j a lick ahead; but a late number of the New York Courier and Enquirer closes a short review of that production by saying that it "belongs to the bewildered philosophy of the socialist school a philosophy which exalts the sensibilities above the conscience, the imagination above the judgment which annuls moral sanctions, and makes sin simply identical with misfortune which confounds all the natural relations of society, ami either altogether puts from itself all th rules and ordinances of the divine government, or turns them into an unmeaning jumble a philosophy which is utterly demoralizing. heath?nizing and ruinous. This i6 the system which shapes, this is the spirit which vivifies this hook. --Christian childhood should shrink from it as from a basilisk, and ChrUtiau manhood should brand it with ineffaceable infamy." 1 Mistake It seems to have been rather currently reported through the country ür the past week or ten days, that whilst on his way to Jeffersonville, Eno hai managed to get the advantage of Sheriff Thompson, killed him and made his escape. There must be some mistake about this, as we are pretty certain that tht keeper of the States' prison has Eno. and we art sure that we still have our excelleut Sheriff. He got the wool over the eyes of a Michigan Sheriff, but ourt ii not alway asleep when his eyes are shut-by a jug full. The next State Fair is .to be bcd ak

mt.miPiikn 'it-

Congress. Quite a heated nnd am'imleH di.cussiiti w as ging on at our btett dnttv in the Senate upon th bill reported bv Mi Dugbssol 111. for the organization ofNe hrns-ka Territory its friands claiming ihr they Imd taken the principles of the Com promise of 1850 as us guide, nnd hod made ench nnd every provision of the bill accord with these principles, leaving to the people of the tenilory the privilege of governing themselves freoofall control. ! except by the Constitution of the United States, nnd restricting them upon no particular subject, by their position north or south of r.ny arbitrary geographical line. The committee considered that tho Mis souri Compromise had heet suspended by tho Compromise of 1SD0. The bill meets with formilable opposition, and from present indications will soon meet a quiet and peaceful death. It has lately been decided by the Su preme court in Michigan that the prohibitory law of that State is constitutional. Where's the Detroit Squire? The Peru and Indianapolis Railroad is fast approaching its completion. It will be done by the 17th inst. and perhaps Sooner. JosErn Robinson Eq., an old and reputable legislator from Decatur coun'.y in this State, and an able lawytr, died at Greensburgh a few days ago. We have heretofore neglected to notice the death of the Hon. Ueorge II, Dunn of Lawrenceburgh. which occurred a couple or three weeks ago. Gen. Cdss declared a few das ego, in a letter to a friend at Detroit, in alluding to Douglass' Nebraska bill, "that Congrttt las not the slightest power ever slavery either in a State or Territory." The Nicholson letter, and a little more! If he had omitted the two last words, we could subscribe to his position. ARRIVAL OF THE .VSlA. New York. Jan. 31. The Asia with Liverpool dates cf tha 14th inst.. arrived bereut about lulfpast eleven o'clock this morning. Last rumors from St. Petersburg were more specific and had tended in Eons measure to restore confidence in a speedy adjustment cf difficulties. Consols adI vanced one per ten!. New York, Jan. 30. Pahis. Friday We hive received a telegraph dispatch from Vienna confetsiug the accounts reported yesterday of the defeat ol the Russians by the Turks before Kulafat, and. adding that the contest .was renewed on the 7th, neither side chiming the victory. On the mrning of the 8th a fresh struggle was about to begin. N Oii the Cth of January the Turks gained .1 brilliant victory on the Danube. They stormed and captured the Russian entrenched camp at Alila, and put 2500 of 1 lie em.-my to the srvord. They also attacked a body of 18.000 Russians sent to relirve Alila, ami after a sharp encounter compelled them to retreat. The Russians arc thus driven back fro u the position at which they proposed to cross th Daun oe. The Turkish force in the battle was 14.0C0 men ami 15 guns. h is admitted that Omer Pacha has brilliantly out mtneeuvcred the Russian commander. Asia. The defeat of the Turks under the generalship of Abbi Tdcha is confirmed, but Gugu Iihs gone to the army with free power, und the spirit of the Tuiks has revived. Now that the allied fleet are in the Black Sea, reinforcements can be sent in safely to Asia. Srhumyl had sent a messenger to the Porte announcing that he is preparing to act energetically against.the Russians. It is confirmed that Persia has resumed uegotid tions, with Britain, and will not at present atuck Turkey. The American ships E. Fletcher and Condor had been fallen in with at fcea, wrecked. The crews and passengers were saved, and lauded in Holland. FROM 12 II IE. lU'IFALO, Feb. 2. Tho roilroad men rel.ud tho trnck whero it was torn up, yesterday; but, two hours afterwards, in consequence of lhe excitement among the people, Mnyor King ordered it to Uo torn up ngiiti. . Gov. Uigler is said lo bo displo nd with this net ol the Moyor, and signified lliat it should be relad to-day. The excitemoi.l runs high and the people seem disposed to net independently of the Governor. Yesterday, the mub, headed hy M r. Ijuomis, Conduc toroflhe port, endeavored to prevent iho depaituroof the fi eight train on tho Western Road. Gov. Riglor has appointed Col Packard to take charge of iho West, ern Road. Tho two roads now run sido bv side. Gov. Biglor went down last evening, with 'the iiitentiou of forming n connection. Ho waa deterred by fear of theossemblnd mob. Passenger if ains will run regularly from to-day, changing at Erie. A call for n public meeting, expressive of hostility to SoniUor Douglas Nebraska Bill, has bjnn extensively Rigticd and circiliated in New York. Tho Washington correspondence of tho Tribune pronounce it an Administration measure and says that jfb? fiet i-: n in r" ?h ti).ji..t.

By Tilcgraph for the Cancer. The Laportc Fire, o um c unit im UJ C I'J Un BK r ,Jt-d,spach-fur which we are der Miß.. t.ons to Mr. McDonald, our operator at this place-that the fire-at Laporte on ruesday evening was not so disasterous as many of our citizens were at first led to r v:m u .1 i r.ii suppose. i

LAPortTc, Feb. S, 1851. I A ecu. la of men, in North Cart Una, Between six and seven o'clock lat eve- j wh WOre Gui!l-V soni lhr( tiliCP' . , . - ...... 'S up n runaway slave, with blood houndi ning a fire broke out in some old bui dinirs a . - ' , a . : i ui unis , nn(j torn,;,i:g ,;m l0 ceruh, have been senbelonging to the R.ilroad eompany, for-ltällCed to Le hung, rJ all tnc peoplo say merly used as an engine house ami return j smon! shop. They were entirely cousnmed. ! Two freight cars, six or seven hundred! From the Cincinwti Ccnricrciil. gallons of oil and about fifty Jons of stone j lad Viduullt J FaitjT. , coal were in the buildings; but the coal. lJ1 ''his number I shall briefly notice was but little injured. The largo brick ' l'ie influences which, in this country, machine shops and engine housa v. ere hinder the development of a ftc and mansaved by th- most energetic effort?. The ! h' character, and .!.? Jang-rs that threatlarge round house was "lso in imminent ien our see institutions, danger, and ws ok tire several limes. f fse fir5i i-fl"?ncv which I shall notice. Great credit is due to those persons j unfavorable to tr.ar.ly development is who stationed thrin&elves on the top of i lal 1 :i Varty- 1 shall not ci-mbat the

the buildings endangered, with wafer, during the whole time, amidst ih? smok and flames that Seemed almost beyond human endurance. The win 1 was fortunately from the south had it been from the north, it would have been im possible to have saved the engine hous and the extensive machine shops. The loss will probably not exceed 3 cr ! 4 thousand dollars. For the li.ir.ner. Mr.. Editor; The first ti.i. ;1 I want to say, is, that the man who tiinot i-or to hear an Editor suv anything g,ii:s his views of right, or propriety, without . jr. flaring up. is wanting very nuteii illy in charity, to say the least of it. Aud though I may be considered cs standing! lected with the man that stopped his! . . f ! I 1 j r because the Llitor advocated .he I counec paper j tempr range reform; yet, if he is not heartily ushamed and sorry for what he has done; and if he does not come and renew his subscription, I hereby notify "all whom it may concern," this I have no felowship with hirn. Now the next man ! i want to get 2 track at. is Mr. V.f jour correspondent 'en a prohibitory lata.' And now it will be necessary for rre. j perhaps to say before I go further, thai what 1 said on th subject of charity or a willingness to regard vriih favor, as far hs possible, the opinions of those who differ with us,. is list said for the purpose of conciliating the in iuris" of those who oppose me; I only ask lo sUud. and have this question stand in its true I'hi before the public. "Why '13 it that the frienJsot' a prohibitory law, on the subject cf tha manu

facture, use and sale o: ardent sr.irits rsjcrr.tir, end I ero boav.d to go against that a beverage, fcave so long delayed to n 1 l'"1')', ytu know."

swer. er try to answer, my arguments, published suveral weeks ago in the Banner? an.l although Mr. W. does not in word allude to me, yet evidently that is his object. W. says, "es long a3 intoxicating liquors are sold, (as above mentioned) so long drunkards will be manufactured." Weil, suppose that is true; who is to LI me? Again! ''moral suasion alone will never induce all logive up the liquor traffic " What ihn 19 to be done? Why forsooih, W. s iys. make them quit. Observer says give them a tremendous Irtting alone. A grog seller once settled in a quiet, sober, quaker village opened . . . nn hia u'm rf c nl a iiiinnnrni) In tli .riK. r r lie in general" that he was ready for op-' eralious. The frienils callru a meeting to know what should be done, some were w 1 for tearing down his house, and mad flowing speeches. Others were more moderate, finally it was agreed they should "let him alone,' -And so they did. The first day, he sit in his front door, -puffing a "half Spanish," and wait ing for a customer; the second 'morning swept out hij shop, and look his seat much as before, while the busy quakers were about their various employments; the third day came, and our hero by this time, becoming somewhat short of the necessaries of life, sallid forth in search of some provisions for Kis family. Approaching a sedate old gentleman, he inquired if he had a ham to spare him; to which the Friend replies in the negative. Have you some chukms to let me luve? to which the answer wa as before, nu t so on for several articles, to II ..f hi. h he wasanswered in the same way. llr approached another, with no better success, ard a third. Becoming RStonished at the course pursued by his new neighbors, (for there was every indication ol plenty,) he wished to know the reason of such a course. "I'll tell thee," taid ri- ?f ,hrrr, "ynt ve hsre n? nse

j for thee, and we do not wish to ley ioI lent hands on any rsn, or h's property. and so we concluded to let thte alone." The result is easily conjectured. Now, ; it s'rikes me that if thU plan was carried jout. the result would be accomplished without legislation, i M. W. says, -morel station will t j not always be successful in refcnnirg the

j drunkard." Well what htzil V1. i.!,. t... it. r t , take htm by the nape of the r.tcfc f:oiu . ,he gull(,f loHeaven. I supioie. cr at i , by ..kg, ,umIui11... i t,iU Ve j npw j hm e ansWPrPi! all lhe afftnießll tf . W. that amount to anything j ' n psppvn common opinion that parties tr? essential to a republic. This may bs true. and yet it will not thence follow, that party machinery as generally u?ed in this country, is not an evü, I efTnm that Atrericfrii political pailiesare uufjvora- ! D' lo individual dcvclopment. HoxT I !il illustrate. j First. By th- he hit which they engen- ! d-r of iiuliscrimiiHte i-oudemuaticn of the- acts ot the anthconisl p;rtj; thus j tting up p-rt) bs the rii: ;ien of truth ! J;) eveiy action. Instt-d'ot usiiig pcrty M-rn i.:z . t u-n r.s an ii s mmniulii) 1 r rroiajiing truth und right-oufne. it la8 I 'V ' e '"'Ult'. wl 'lel'u"""' ; jij .j ,,f6f.s to uk its i.ain.' and rr.ai(h j um!, r its tailUi f5 Th, tw 3 fireat parties ! of ihe country, seem tu net on the principle, that just as muvh s one chooses to t'-rr;l olhpr ;,s to dtttVi tI' the exut measure of o, e l arly's appro- , r ,. . ' . val of any rosicy cr pi:nciple, must ba the measure of the other's condemnation. It hs$ been enough for a Whig to knotr that a measure is originated by a Democrat, to insure his epi coition, and vice hp tional Congress, through ti t State Lgis- ' turrs, du n thrush the party prrss to every political stump babbler in the Hani. The question is not, how hall we promote the bfst interests cf the country but. how shall we dtfi at the crpoite piT'y? Thus thp 1 nd trerns with i critr.iimion ind recrimination, censorioUf jtioing, pf-rso?iei bouse nd 1'itter oenunciition. Impartial ein lor is but little regarded, tiuih is set esidf es thinr foreign to political controversy. A and 15. ar two neighbors and great politicians as most Aint-ricar.s are and they di?( ii?s politit s on ihi? xvise; A. "Well neighbor B. what do yoa think of the Presidents mefFage?" i. "O, t!sfll vror.: it is all dfrr.o1 j. l n si ti 1 1 I it t r- 4 1 .Tti ftAm Ini fal urof idfitiiial canvess. S. "Friend P. how do you 5.0 on the Presidential question? I support vvu are &:ing to support the hero of L nn.'y'a Line." P. "Xo. eir, I support no Whig; I go for Piere;' und the compromises." S. "But Scott ia fur lhe compromises too, as you c? by the Baltimore Platform No. 2. Beides c'Ctt nercr fuinted as Pierce did in Mexico " P -But Scott is a Seward Whig." This is a pretty fair illustration of our party warfare as carried on bv individual sovereigns. The party .ig:.i cr wrong, ' is the general mo'.to: Secondly. Our j arties exert n tinfa- ! voratle influence by their txelutivehtss 1,1 l.he distribution of patronage. For- ! lifting that ctTice is not for the cood of the holder, but lor the public good, they maat. lh(. rvard of tha most artful j und crafty scramble. 1 Neer was there a more villainous precept uttered in politics, than to the 'victors belong the spoil." However, it may be in war, which is itself a prac tical abrogation of the principles of the ; moral law. it should never be named in j politics except to be condemned. Yet it is practically acted upou by both of the parlies of the country. The patronage of the government, state und national, worth more than fifty millions per annum, is distributed to reward party fealty. The emoluments of offices are almost exclusive))' conferred to the dominant party fur the time being: ami to question the behrstsof that party, isture to involve the important question of bread and butter. It needs no argument to show that such an influence must binder free develoj m i;t, and independent action. Hum t iiatuif is too weak wholly to resist sji h tt mpuiirns. In the present ow Mt (,f sroral culture in society, iJ .thuY s) strongly influence th rnaj'uity . 'men, us the emoluments of oftir;Mi.d when these ran be gained only iv vassalage to party, experience proves that lhe majority re ready to put on the collar and become slaves. What man 11 the country who has been cognizant of our political movements, has not seen thi9 party tyranny and servility? What perfect organization! Whsttiri!ncr in jvir'ing tgiinst duscnt What