Wabash Express, Volume 18, Number 36, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 10 August 1859 — Page 2

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iLgc iwiiaoflsg express

PCDERT N. nUDSOW. Editor. Ti:itm: it u ti:. im. .AUGUST 10 ' ! WEDNESDAY.. coi !itt rovr.iTun. Al 11 o'clock tb CouTention was called U order by Han. H. D. Scott, and Join Daird, Fq , waa MiffUj President. John It. Hager and Jet. 0. Jones Wer chosen Secre tsrie. On motion of 47. K Edward. Eq , each Township tu requested to aelrct our Vie President, when Harrison township eelecied John I). Meridrtb; Sogar Creek. Thos.! zfcCullough; Fayette, Daniel Fuqua; Oder Creek. !. ;Poh; Nevios. Henry Burgett ; Lost .

Prr.k. JuLn D.ckerou L.-i : K..t. Dr. II. Us". ' 1 . . . i

L.;Pi.fie-n. John Voolruff; I'r.Ine Creek. "u " "V eluent UnßUV to Uli w hat C-r. could J. I). E.KW; H.ney frrek. Samn.1 Vo,;'W -1 'ce -o icter .nd the to, w.itAe Ul conUinil,. u,t tlltJ old .Uwin, r,airie:m. W.H.o Thorn'or.; .od Lt,D.!f4f of lU U"c'' 1 Wy,k " t!" ,,.t u fouU do ; that by it. former aUacl. Willi. WLiUker. . Y J-el,pe tkeir nabele U wm Cour of lU Uiilf j Suu, ... to an untatural degree, and "instead i f lie ' , ' , . . . . Mr. Scott rrorfced the fidlowio fcr the ac . , t t it had art the t xmide tl ltupuin the mile- . 1 , . vf!. plump, j'iicy outlluo of youlh. w hare, l l tion and corrriifi.ent of the Ciitrfittci. ' vil I ll if pendente of the J udiciary and weakening lh

RefiltfJ. That each t-iwi.h p ill rparte If detemtir to tirt. eend and third choice f r each 'lf.ee, or lhej er.n l.atir. a uj .my tf all the Tote. a ech tia il ip iy .iie. ard rtf rt l' e an e t U-i Cueiitt n. 2d. That in ' tri in lm C-"iuli. M far r orni'ia'.jont. the poll of the Cu!y. a fixd ly the Aeor4 m eaf L twri,iii i..r id pre aent jeir, t taken a tie t-M tA r j ic i.U tion ; ad that aacK tnnhip te ail-jaud on t fvr erery fif:r r.d'a a;id on for evrr fraction of !t than Lfty at.d oTtr a.rcteci at fl!o a : loinidif. r.'it. Itairtton t6' Hif I' r .. ' Tralria fiera I" prlrion Plroa I KHey tl lo4t('rt(i l: yrn - n 4ar ( if 7"i i'ttrr ( rf J FTtt.... ?" IlCt)U ..... to? t. , M I 4 , 4 f 4 3 4 3 , 5 , 3 7 1. That a majority of all lh tote ta-t ahall te terearf to a ch'nte. 4. That llarrion t.insli;p aelrct tie, and each of the other, two crou t acta ao Kxcutire Coruiutttie. 5. That w pletlife ourelM, indieid'J a aa - m a .'.( and f oliectivtlT. to arnl it ana hu-ihi-i lite Iiominationa which hall thia day te made. The reailutiona were taken up arparately and adopted. The caodtdatea fr the ditTcrer.t oßleea were then put in nomination, and the conTeation tnok recta for two h 'jr, in order that the dif ferent taw Dhipa miht ru-et M-prately and determine for whnm they draire to Cast their rotca. irtinoo. At Q o'clock P. M , the dilTerent tnwralf pa hating fjeterm'ned for whom they would tail their vote, the Cotite r,ti n again aaml.l-d and proceeded to huines ; the townhira otirg ii their namea wrre callrd. The Trctd dent aiino.;r.crd the rvult a4 foüow: Wholanilerofei)tetfatwaaeen!y.two, nceary to a choice, 37, of which V.. l. Allen reeeieed. f- r Am Ji tor, rote, C. T. Noble, IS Tote, and J. C. Hurntf, 1 T(fe. For Hifor der, C. II l! ailey r.ceiftd otea.S. Harber:, 10 Voten, U'ni. Wool!en,3 Tote, and acat.rring 4 eotee. Vor C'rry Commiavioncr, Scnd Ditrict, TMij. McKcrn rrcfire l 7J Tuten. Thir.l DiairK-t, Win Hr.wn rceieed Ii Tote, J. 11. Saiifor 1, C rotr, ar.d i'hilip KaLr l lj ) , l" Tote. Mr. Allen, Hiliy, UcKeen ar.d Hrown having rtctiti'il a majority ol all the Tote tt. wrre dcclre". the tnniin-ea of the Con T ntii'it. The folh in; Orpiton I'xecutiee Comirs'.ltee a then Selected: Mtr. H. H. Heut;, Jarre Wihe, W. K. l'dward,,John P. Haird and Kolt. Tho n, of Harri oii tow nhi p ; Jh n Cleiu and F. M i!U. of HoneT Creek; Willi Simmona aod J.iido D. TittT, f Prairie Creek ; WilÜim C"P 1 nd, ard H. C. Mx-ll. cd Piarrirt r; John K. Wuvidrutr aud A. J. Liton,f I'i r.in; l.cther (irn ar,d John iWady -f Hiley ; Joeph York and 7.dixk KctTt, cf Ia-1 Creei; Jamt Hnuk ind Henry Ituratt, of Neein; William Gt o linan and J. S Cato,of Saar Crtek; W. H. Juhnaun and Kohert ItricR of Olter Creek; Joa. Jame and DTid Ki-ftc of r'ayett; and William C. V hittaker aud 11.1'. Handolph.of Liotnn The tuineaa of Ihe Convention l-ving tl.ua nuifthed, II. W. Thompson waa called upon to j ddrea '.he r.ame, which ho did in hia uual at!e and eloquent manner, xn outline of which wt will prra ul to our rta lera tomorrow. Our Ticket. Ihe action of the Opposition Convention h?in now Wf re our res der, we propose to review it. and tr if it i well. Tb t th nun-

tuts presented are go I and fficirnl mtn, t0jar.d elahsrste defers- of the peice nctntly one will pretend to deny that they will be , establish. d b iween Frsnce aod Autrit. He ejected, we hope. (admits thai great indigoetiutt tris'td in No roe diapvte the qualif cttion of Mr. ; France, at the time of bS writing, sgsiust the AtLtM he seems to t-e peculiaily fitted '.odis ; treaty, bi t thinks that time will prove the pro charge the duties cf Auditor. Having been a'p1-1 cf Emperor NapnWa coirc; and . . a, -.a

resident of Vi-o tour tr from kia erl.esi . thildhoi nl.he is known to thia people, and i.r ' Vy. industry and t fhetene v. eerety his ener knowa to tLaro. He is both honest and com j pete.t. Mr. Daitsr is an old citizen cf this county, aod ha, furiog all tho history of hist . i r, ilc,i : ,i i . ' pastl.f, .arna,lfrh.uTe.f.nouv,sb1orepu -; . . XT I la. ä.! ia.'au . 1. ! . talton. No ono do-itits his integrity, or his a.i.i. ia .r.-u.. it. ,i;.. Af p. . . r uiiiit wj v. nri ii nv f tw ... . M...i M y K n n '.r.s iinmirMi I.e ,. A. , - . . ' WOntj v,orami.s.jiie.a i-i uie.4 a ... im ; a a trKtl, ir cui (ilil'i ar .1 lavorar.y ron i th strictest integrity, aod as the c..ca of County Commissioner i one of th greatest' ireportsnca to thia pecpie, we are much grsti fied thsl the CoQveulu u aaw proper lopiesect aach me for thi important poitioa. Th aov is the Opposition ticket hs the Coavt.tiou doc w ell ? la aa ia.rortaul n ; tioo. ; We da act regvrd the Cccvtetioo which wet! in lli city oo Saturday, as a yerfy Conveo ! tioo. Itwasoista. It had become a settled A .v. - . .v.. aav.a taitiwtisio wa a . s BV m w d m m W 44 to U q 9 I

Notb.cg w.t.naayeauaJdanythirgtolhe.r e t-.ard ror.qiered the aM '..ue . ven of bse j --', ' I oettle the question of a'.lTery for the w k .1 1 ..rn.i.l kim m.i.i If (In. ia ... .1 tri 1 1 a idea that ll.e S-o'.. Lh w a h fi nii r. y s.-et inr. i 1 J

reputation. There t not two tetter men in'"" , ' f - - - . ard be free or :Te. as tker please .' . . . fflorr. ha.ed uron Ibe ehracter ao r.cmrf. ! . at at i-fr..J.. i;. r,!.:.nin.' r.,..r ' 1 ir-

tgotomry. ibf j irt tr,tn of tiprtitrir, I (i f t,,f , j ff,.,tJ. t.inr w uu -1 I. t . . , . i the common gronod opon wbich Re . . " J ai iit'th l.i fifiM llaliA ia i..r,t fifa Ia fifa "

tnarcial abl l!f tUSa Of tneVT. SClf If tT and d.ratar.d the moamn of lh Urtna." ,s.v- W. n.rr,r...

sLouIJ bo selected fr Car Mice who w,re( Consti: :ul,0n of tre Unite J Mate prohdit th th tjost ttT.c'irl U discharge the duties c f the j S:a'e (rot mskirg "ansthirg but grid id-! rsrticulaic.fT.ee. A suprero disggat for rise !lver a lk-al terder in payment of tlehts " ! Tfcia rrihit iiK'n of the :aiea d.-e rot arjdr l.grrenin efT.ee alrr rly as a re-a-d for r.r- J, u u c (r,..,f,s ,.ul r ri, c;p ff ftissn fealty, had takm possession tf tie p.:' ' hip . d "s At all event. Congre hs r,elie niin!. snd the Joj le bsd resolve I to cbrck rr o s !e so t tlur g tut gold sd ilrer a lejts.1 ft. If the men selected are not fit i r tie re Wrie r-

apeclive pcst:t.r, they ojjht to ts Uaten ;. but if, cn the contrary, they are U Iter rneu ' than are th.ir epponer.ts, they should bs elec ted. Ith Jorg Ueotke cry cf th re !e .j that there wai too much deference paid to, teen's political Tiewa and cot ecough to it, Ji wiJual merit. Now in this county a tew policy i iDaugurs'ed will the people aait io forTer esulliattng itt A jlicy that will in tb f :luro Lr aurato Vigo couf.y tho bat tuen fr

otllcialaiatioo. If. however, men will con. j

Itinueto yote by party dictation, imp!N ?a..a tk. hi, heretofore d.0 ao.wh so be it; tut in our Judgment tb lim h Come, when tie reord should eitel men to fill ! Count (iff.fn v Kn ;itr iha rro iUit ciuilifi Union. Whom tie Democracy will nuiu irate wt Ju ul know, iiur Jo w care. If ihey place ' i. 4i . .. i ... iV - ! ueuer UrllCniriOirara mail usic tue -wy-, iheu their ticket should succeed ; but if not. then Allen, Ratley, McKeeo and Urown ahojd recsive a majority of the popular tute. ... . . .. m.m m ' XT" Dr. D.xod, editor of the A'c-W. eal ppr of considerable io J jeoce, drnountea, wiih gret rhetaeoce, ihe project f d-li'-d jjmonium Ui evtry puttie chvul iu New Yoik. He tyi a boy, uttil he i f..ur'ren jtir o!J. wnU tio cxrrcite te'u!e the p!y j h get t ill i Fi .t i tt.r la b iirt titer. cruuiiii . , l f f an old man, induced by oeer-eieition at an ape which d m a not demand viwltot exrcie of any kind; leiJr tli. w think auch proeee ae apt to retard the growiuij of Uy. aiJ will ultimately dettroy their carriage and figure al-fi thfr become uien." The am thicj i alJ to te berTed in thediatcWd appearance vt the lejja of j ieerule dancera. "I'a ccaai'e exercie, teaide injuring the mridal fcillie of man, haa the tet dn.ry to ji jure the e'ial tircilatlon of hi blood." Cool The followini rply to a "dun," re ceied by n mercantile etablihrr rt of thi eity. ha a considerable number " of "ice in it : " , 111 , Au. 4;h, i ji?. M$$r$. : Your fir tTthe tili . roachf d me in .if. t v, arid toiittiit duly ii'td. 1 n at. er t yosr queaiion aa to when 1 thought 1 wi.ulJ rille your bill, for twre J, n.ulin, JLc , purcllaed iq lo6, I would only ruirk that, i vou haee charged me $3 73 interet on aaid till, I i let tou know at once to rri-Tent anT auren.e or anxiety on your part, that it i. and i'iriy A4 err a, aainat tnj pruciple to pay iiitrei, and eaint my iiUrr-t to pay principle , but a you ak to ki.ow when I can settle it (jour bill,) I think 1 hall I able to do ao the tuor. nin after the Heaurrecti jo, and away over on the other akW of Jordan. Howeeer, let you ahould think me aa icy r inixditelo atrarger, 1 Lere drop the j kr, a' d täte to you, candidly, that I ne you no auch bill now, nor did 1 at any former period,': and if aome man, by my oarnt, haa awindied touou. of that aura, lam truly aorry for it 1 buy my cd all oeer the country, from St Lou i4 to Cincinnati, ami my bill are alwar proinplU tilled and promptly nut when matured 1 am inclined to think there i a mistake in the l ime on yoiir p at, and that , of , it the man you ar afiet with auch a harp tick lie letn in the it. er eantile trade in our twn. If he is not, pe;ie write n- word, i't-act ibii.r tl. man tlut rn the till; for thi re ceitaiiily ia aome aindUr uiDg my name, a I oevt r knew, heard or read of auch a firm a your. n.r did 1 eTer buy fiTe Centa' worth of anytt in Terre Haute, i or do I Vnow any u.an in or about your place, exceptxl. who haten to owe tne $19, which 1 hi-pe he will tall ai d pay. So to conclude, and in aJiort, I have only t aay to your clerk who ru&de out and forw ardt-d that bi.l, that he can eud toe, at hia own col aud charge, any fcind of a hat he -asea, worth not lean tfian two ilollara. i win not re hard on him lor the tirat otfence. lie can Mini it by lpre to my address al ; size. 7 J tur, fe 1 1 a? 1 T . . I T Thi re it a conscious ene of safety ft It J while trarelliog over the Terre Haute t Kichraond Kailroad that ia Ml on no other route Thia ia produced by the anioothna and good ordering of the road bed and track, and is enhanced by tlm vigilance ver manifested by the conductor and other offcera and e;nl b.yrea t.f ihe mad. The track and road t ed i in pt iftct orlrr oTer the whole length of the lire, arid i a silent panegyric to th emrpy. faithf ilru and efficiency of the Koail M tster, Mr. Jul. (i Hire, w ho has bet n in the t mploy of the Con pany, in thia tap.ity, we believe, ever it.ee the road vrs built. Il haa teen one of the features in tha policy m m a a. 4.. ol lh'. cornptny, tn employ none bit first rate j men to eirperin tend and run the road, and the wiidon of the polity haa been fully vindicated by the paucity of accidents, and ty the Unprec deotrd financial Pucctf of the road Fvery officer on the road or connected with it. knowa his tuine and hia dity thoro'thly , anil i erform it faithfully and can f-dly. May the Company ever pursue the nmo wis ar4 literal piliej and be ewarJtd. wilh lh sain uCffH -o 1 Mr. Rvjniond, editor of the New York Ton., in a le'ter to that paper, male a long too i. . r lou.ie: in ineir canaemnaiion m be forced o admit the justice of the peace. He the Epa-or has streeglbeued himself immensely througkout Europe, and at horaie, both by the war and the peace ; "He hs carried the rnilnary renown of Frai ce to a pcmt tili higher than it held !e ( CfcUMi,ol h) n.n fcrf,tl ! . I renitati n as a (er-ersl lie has r ven inde ..j.....t..i i ... i v.. i urmifiir I i it. siiu i iiini iit uii lt ini . . , ' " ' , j . : '.-!! f' ifi ml t!. r rr.t if 1 1 es of h i l.ein ie t f i am. t.y pr.MrpiIv aeitirg asij and ref iiarf ...1 hen. fits ard advantages fr.m the' . s a . s I w ar, v. I scale. I his (leeatii to pub.'ic Itter ff. a r.Mt .-. i i(,it TrxiU hi. " - - - - - - - - - i teen auppod by many thst Copp. r toira are i a l'gsl t rider to a certain amount, tut ihe idea j is i rroeous. A Utter from the Hon James ?.o Srowden, director of tie U.S. Mint at Philadelphia, has lo elicited by receut in 'qiirie upo the subject, in which he says: The ow reo, t et a Irgal ter.lir ft any j specified aoovtr.t Neither wa iL eopper if ; former years a legs r fJ toina I lender f r anT sum. ThfT i ard authorized to ";s cirrtnt . monT. but thev are t expreaslf a a S .Jk- 1 aar a at T a 1 tt..lt S f t BWA A a 1 At at I I. a ITThe Missouri Republican Uli a sljry o j yourg man whohai ao mooer. but who w act - ed to visit CoooecUcat. and who r acked him- ! f ilitJ a tcx acd had Liravtlf called for b? j expiessmaa. The discreirstocy Utweeu i the largo aize of tbe boa aod il light wtight, j caused suspicion tobe enaoJered in lie driv ! er mind, aad an inTestigatioa discWd ibe i youcg taxn, already tsxrly out cf breath, atd lathed io teaas. i

I U!C HlOur i Vif I iMrU iiaiu a)uj u j I'uinni

1 .1 'II., "f Vi..!1-

niHug, Im Terrw lists ist tinrt7i AB 6s Ml Thum congratulated th Contention iiihio the unanimity wiih which i'scandiJaioa (had ben selected, and would aupport them with pleasure-Ucaas they potaeseed thoae old fashioned qualification which were ap- -: - - I 1.... -1 ft .1. ,li iif th Pettuhin isiru unm ' " - j - - --- g .Re. did net care whether they greed ; wj,n i,im t,r ro upon al) questions. There j wete Trr. feW who did o, iure he had learn- ' I i ... ... . . ... r w t.v t.ln.olf nnt.td V beinC ' repon,eie lot uuu bum hc m""";' uthtr prrliiointry rrnark, he proceeJeü to how that thu Teiuftcraiic priy ought to m held reiponitle for the present coiidilion t( the country ; that it had no l!irmti ruerelief or luirl luv p ' . . - 1 I! , ' . . i t: . were ülled with mere tgiiei. uouuun.g in public c on tiJc nee in it intimity ; that il had interfered with Conalitutioiia and lawa until thty ha 1 ben made to aul'M-rve n.trw parly nd ; that it had tampered with the currency until wo wrre reduce 1 to auch a conJition that almost eeery bank not in circulation rectifed 1 ita credit u ore from the prron who pned it than fr.m the bank by which it wa iiaued ; that it had drtryed the ylem of protertioti uudrr w hich our trade and mdutry had proa pered, niid had forced a ftie trade tariff upon the country which did not produca "cvtnue enough to aurpe-rt the OoTtruroent, and persisted in il whi'e the nt itditim-a. were necea arily increain; ; that it had squandered im mcne Mant itiea of tho public land upon private railroad corporation ; that it had i anandot.td all the conervatiee nu-asurt-a which wore established atul anctine-d by the "conscript father" of the Itepub'tic ; and that ita whole course of policy va ruinou ami detrucliee mamtaised and pereeered in by ! ihe reduction of the Itovernruent to a mere prty machine. exerciing no power but tbo,e neteaary to collect and pay out the public reTiDUtr. He then reft rrtd to the Slatery qttftian, ai d the txcileiuent existing iu the country in referee to it, w hich he Rreatly deplored a b-ing calculated to do nobody any good and Tery great harm to the country. It bad already anwn the heed of ditcord all oTr the load, ai tl the rflect wa cen in the fact that each of the great Sectiona of the Union w aa gradually be coming alienated fiooi the other. Theae cou .epieiicea were now o iiuuitiliately before ua that it waa impoaaible for any man to vhut hi eyta to them, and the iue thua made h id to be net and dt-cidtd. The excee of p.wty and MCtioiiarMrife, which had produced them, mut t ither continue and make the breach be-tvt-en the north and the south btill wider atul more daogeroua, or a conservative party muat riae up, composed of good nu-n, of all the exitin parliee, and jour the oil of peace ai d conciliation upon the troubled and agitated hi. He hoped for the latter, and was read to occupy an humble position in auch a party, j hecauae he belitxtd its foru.atiou lobe abo luü-ly ttceesaary to the peace and harmony of I the Union. lie considered the Democratic partj as responsible for the slavery aitatim It had coniiuenctd it in lt2, with no higher Tiew than to give M. Van lk:icn popularity in the south, where he had none. To tfTctl thi thty insisted that the WKij parte, with Clay and Webster to lead it, was an Abolition party, and that if the south did not form itself into a Sectional party, it would be overrun by the (toths and Vmidel of th r.&rih, who would et all their Nrgroea free. They were admonished that this course would have the effect t conolJatc the south, and thereby furnish an apology for an anlagonistical consolidation ol ihe north, and that tlvu there waa dsnger of an open rupture between the two sections. j Hut they paid no heed to thia aduorwtion. ! Ther went on insisting? still more and more, t inai ine wnoir ncnu was wcounrg mooiuion . .i - i.l- .1. i : l . : . ixed that the Democratic prty was the only party liat the south could trut, until at last, by the repeal of the Miasooji Compromise. they succeeded in persuading the south to be- , leive that alavery might -be extended above m j wtll as below the olj compromise line, and ' that there w aa danger that property in slave within the Statta wouH be intrrferrj with fhia resulted, aa waa foreaaen, in couaulidat ing the entire aou'h except a single Bute i,lto 4 $rC t 0na(,tl Jtmi'rarj. And this great ' 0mJ,f rD alliance, thev made suberv,'ent to . nj, 0f,;e dt.Kcratic party; was becoming tnre ar i a.ore excite evtrj Jej, bj tlt reit S crr clÄtnori tlf,e Mrn, partisan leaders, no nuff danger in every northern iret ze, as j lte w ar Lorse aoufTs it upon lb battle field exctomtxt is kept cp by the old crv that a all w ho are Dot democrat ard atw.Wt ;nit, that Sew ard. Chase and Gid lir-gs arc the only genenla of the great Northern army. And thus thousand of Soulhern peopl, who have no sucana of arriving at the truth, are pursuautod to Ullere that slavery in the Suic j ,, , . . , really iü u. ore d-rar now tho var before. Juet as tie Whigs foretold, the scattered eieteer da of antagonisu n the North begun to ... ,. selidatrn in resistarce to this movement font I be couselit uf the -utLcrn demcrat, and the agitator .f. I''" takn g alva-jtsge of this condition wun earn omer.in an ai Kry ira rooi lareai- : ...... 1. T:v 1 .iniiu it iinur! tiiir Liii.ii livubte iur ir . u'.ls in esch afciion of the Union ; aoj at thi womett the whole country is perplexed fo . I v .. - k . :. i ... .. i. .1 it - v.. i .u 1 . , , , ,. ... . . , much aid ar xiuly on this auluct. and had' . " n.aJo up hia mind that there was tut oe renaedy, and that a Tery plain and simple one II. t.ll..l V I I. a nr.. I Ivy I .t .1.

...... . f . w. kcsll theri.alres by what tau.e HrjJ lease! reDlo of tbe North, and af ihe ..:h. tr! . ... . .

. r - - - . - - p - - cjraervative. aad were deeply attache-! to the Union At all event, there wa so much conservatism aruorigt tbera tl at it was incumbent upon all cf st class to do whatever could le done, to secure its acndi r-ry ia the put l;c co-ir.cila. For himstlf, be was reaJy to cuke with all o' this cls by whatever narre they cal'tJ the melvts to ovea-lhrow the den erratic party, ard irirg lack the Goverametit to it true course. Ilia own peculiar viewa oo the sulject of slavtry were pretty WeI1 C0W8He had surrendered tone c .t. J cot expect that everj r.vj with mom fc igLt co-operate would ubaeribe lk,m- Indeed he kd sometirxe- doubted kfllifr il w P ßoi anybody to arpe wilb bira 00 1! ul;fC's.'sh?r political, ckU "';t7iul. fjf i "Oi particulars, opoa all of these. Le wa rrobatle Lr retica!. a r a -.w, 9

when judged by olhera ; aiuce pretty much all

men are ii the habit of acting upon the idea that'orthodaxy laroy doxy and heterodoxy la your doxy." Ioamuch, therefor), aa he wculd not be likely to change any of hit opinion, and did r.ot expect Vi find a party any where (hat would 1 likely to arpro then all, or be inflüei.red by what ha thojht, or aald, or did, he waa perfectly willinjf. to unite with thoaa hd were redy U abandon theultraiam of UtH tho North aJ the South, aud twake one lor.jr pull, one atron pull, and one pull altogethrr" f.,r the peatc and quiet of the country and the harmony of the Union, lie considered these mulls of ao much import ante that they were worthy of the strongest efforts lo briag them about ; end to do ka, all of ua should f Willi ig to concede aoraewhat of our preuliar opitiii.n in re ft ranee to mere tmeaturtt polity, when by doing ao no great principle of government i endangered. Hi thought that, generally, the proer diatinetien ltween princifdea at d measures waa not on dertood that the latter vntht vary to suit the Tryng circumstances of the country, without auy saerirlte of the former. And there never w a tiiuo which demanded more strongly than the preeut. that thia distinction ahould be obaerTed iu order that a great eontert ative party might rie up and prepare to make a aueceful canvas iu It-CO, againat lh democracy For hi part, he ha.J i.o dread of tho atue hich rniprhl be ttatowed upon auch an alliance ; for he waa pretty well ued to ahuae, and it had never Jit succeeded io changing hi course a single bair'a breadth, and he did rot think it ever would. Hut in his opiiiiou complaint upon this score would not come w ith very good grace from the democracy, who wire now beginning to realize that "thoe who live in gla houe ahould not throw atones." When they settle their own ditagreemt-nta and are able to tell ua what demoeraey really i, theo it will I time f r them to talk about the pie bald complexion of other parties. At present, it is imposible for any body t know what it mean : il is rep. resented in almost every section ol the country by the Tiew rnol aJapted to particular !o ralitiea. In I'timsy lvapia it is for protec'.ion; In (leorgia, for frT trade; in Virginia it i furious Hgainst in lorn al impioTernenta in any form; in the West it gives away the whole public domain to private railroad ompanie ; in South Carolina it Jt-mands protection, to alave property in the Territories; in Illioni It denoQccrs this, and says that the Territorial legislature have the right to abolish alaveiy. In Michigan it is for squatter aovereignty, giving the right to the people to make the Territories slaTe or free aa mere Territories ; in Mississippi this is denounced a the most abominable of all the hereie of the day ; in Alabama it is for re opening the slave trade ; in Indiana it calls thia pirnry. Kvcrywhere it is divided upon the Kansas policy of the FrefiJeot a majority of the party favoring it because il forced slavery upon Kna against the consent of the ptrple, and the minority being denounced as advocating the worst form of abolitionism. Vow, a Li-n all lh se dUagreerueiit ate settled, atul the party once more becomes the "harmonious democracy' it may afTord to talk about the incongruity of the inaUri.ils comLintd sgiiusl it. Jut i this locality they denounce most funou) those ( f thr ir t arty in tLe South who advocat. the n vival d the lave trade, jet if they tl c President in 1 r-fi I hi se diagreeingd men must harn. onize. Now, if the conservative of the North nre to tu called aholitiouth merely Lerauao thri may nominate a man for whom sonic taLremit may eote, ty the aame procea cf ieoii'iog these democrat my b. callod frfct tradtr$ Thi is the partisan mode of argumcu:, jet hciihtr sUtemeut wosild b true. Mr. T. aiid tint hehad always been oppoot' to disturbing the lTry quentton at all ; h was opposed to its agitation. He did not be lieTe that the excitement aWit it would haTe tecn renewed to a.-iy dvieroua extent, after the atljustment of iJ-o'J, but for tho repeal of the Missouri Compromise. That repeal, oen ed afreh, dd wounds ijiat weiß fiat healing under the soothing infl leasee al a healthy con cervalinc which the Coonrotuise of 150 had engendered. The cxcite.auoAl .was not only retieweJ, hut it became more vielett, and unless itjs arretted, the roott deplorable rrulu,niay ensue. Tkj conc40Uc of this idiould prompt every man to do aome thing to arreat it

But w hat should be done? ia the question askumes.

e l every day. It won't do to rely upon the Cinciwnaii platform, for that krepa up the agitation in the Tertitcries before they are ready to bocom State, and give op ihe whole q'iea lion of slavery or no alsTery, to a squatter population. It wont do to demand CorgresioDl protection to slavery .in the Territories, for, in the first place there-is not the lohtest possibility that it will ever bo granted, and, in the second place, it consede to Congress a posrer which it doe not .poaaeas, ender the Constitution. It won't do to confer opon the Territories, the authority, to create slavery by act of Congress, because Congress caunot authorize theo to do what it cannot do itself. It won't dst to authorize them to abolish it, hecause if it exists there, seither Congre nor the Territoriescn abolih It. Butin hiju.lgmart it rill d.i Ia 1t lh nnitllnn tint., in .... , - . ' i lei the people of the Terntoriea enjoy iiit what i . . , . , in' mej no! unuer mo vonsmuuon oi ine t United States, and when they com U asa for I admissioo Into the Union as States, to let-theos mselres This was publicant-. n r 1 1 4 , , , i . t i t ai. r, .v ' J -mou It ia the doctrine of the Crittenden Uort iir.err arierulmerit arrl vrfi 1 'r , . . . - .... DaTis wa elerte to Conrea from this D a irict, by the largest ma tont t erer given to anr .... ....... roan. oy can t inn position te maintained s aod supported as it La tren by mertbers of all these parties, and let thirr, at t;t wrae litse. In hi j jdgmect it could K. and he did not think it w a at all weakened by the fact thai it rutgl. te supported by mn who disagreed with each other upon other abstract questions growing out of larery. H wocld tot Tote agict a n.sa placed z;p c such a platform mrrejy lrcaje Mr. Ui J Jmgs or the most vi 1 lertaouthern firo ester eoud f-r tim: te shoul J ra;her r; jice that their ultratsm was, for a time atleat, UiJ attje. Ü tic oght tlatthe praclice ef jadiieg of parties ty w hat particular in dividual di J, tr aaid la doce quite mi chief enough to be abandoned. Now, te te lieved thst teiriy all of the Republican party and many of the Democrats of thi coacty agreed with kica in these views; ht thought also, that a majority of th Republican ia this State did to. At tbt am licet ke was aatit fied that a minority of them were io faeer of more extreme trtaiarti. But it Would U fur

that party to decide whether ita coura ahould be direcUd by thia majority er minority. If the majority yielded up ita coctervatiara aad put Itself upon an exlrera platform, b could aee no olhtr tbac a dark aud gloomy mull iu the future. II waa neither a lUpubliaaa nor a Democrat. and it waa not likely that b woald eTtr be cither. Yt in a combiued tffurttoal-

Uy thia alrife, he waa w illi to act and vote Wl, ihoe w hoc alii d thaiutelfta IUpublican, anj tho to tailed thematleea Demoerata. couij ja .j, ,e ihour h, quite at easily and with aa much propriety as Leconiton aod AMl-Lecoipptou Dttuoeruts could act together, after the furious curses thty had Uatowtd upon each other. At all events, be waa ready to do It, and he didn't care what other pmple thought of it, for he was wholly indt (undent of all rarlies, ar.d had r,o f ar of their tonsure. I! m understood the INpublitana in ihia State u f have decided already, thai they did not desire to jiittifefe w ith slavery in the 3 ale. S fr he agreed with them. They had also acted upon lh doctrine that the new Slates, when Coming into the tiiin. should settle the que lion of slavery for theti.i I t s. I i. this, he" was also agreed with them. Now this embraced the whole slavery Issue except the single question of executing the Fugitive Slave Law. Upon thia subject he know of no differrr.ee of opinion here: all were agreed that the right to recapture a fugitive lave wa a Constitutional right of which the roatr could not be deprived. If he was right In all this, here was ajlatform, if any were necessary, broad enough for o all whether Re puMicar a, Democrats, Americans or Whija to stand upon. His own view waa that all euch should unite upou it, and go be fore the country and appeal to ita reason and belter judgment. IIfre( to tjii county, we plsced oursi-ltes upon it one rear so, and de fen ltd the democracy. If thi combination hall extend all over the State, their d feat in the State tbctioos will be a!o accorot lihed Anil if to the w hole Uoior , a cormervatiee President may be elected in lcC'J. Thia was his deliberate opinion, and he t-hould labor lo that end, tnder a .. . . I ser.se tf the South Would SIC the necessity ol meetir r us ut'on these rronnds. It was otit of I D 1 W the question to talk about making the North arid South agreeupon ihe abstract question of the t r j ediency of slavery. He did not txpect to agree hitrself with many of those with whom he wa ready to unite and who had been born and educated ia the North. Born and reared as he wa in ihe South, he did cot regard slavery as they did but he was tired of quarrelling about it. lie did not eapectcver to see the i irre sLcn the men of New England would again tolerate slavery a they had once lone; nor did he eTer expect to see the time when he should be brought to denounce his father who w ere slaveholdi r, a violator of the Jaw efGod. Eyt he did hope to see the time when men of opposite personal vie upon a subject about which the world had always been divided, could unite together to support and upholJ a common government, which if preserved would be a glorious legacy to llit ir children, but whirji j def!ro)Z'd could never be re Constructed. There were h; aen timents and he should cl Upou therp. If thry did not prevail if the i xample which (he Opposition party of this county has set. shall not be followed le here if evil Ci uneN shall control the u ovt m Ms of those rpj os. d lo ll.e democracy of the pfti.: tiay, and ultriM hall prrVüil wliile he shall tlteply deplr ir;he will ftrrj-y the nnolat ion of Vtiontrig thfit he ha dene bis duty in couum Hing to moderation, ana that the retijt ptnnot he charged to Lin. The stcurity ul the pe.ice, quiet anJ hrpp-ireia of ll.e whole Union, i worth .i superhuman effort if auch a thing n re possible. Let ua do w hat we can towar.ls t and truot to a kind Providence for the ichievemetit of succe. No man has a rL'ht n such a contest to considrhia o n personal interests. He should give himself to the country. If all Ihe really eonaervative men rf the Noith and South shall thus act. he ha I an ahiding conviction that nur ibtituUona from which so much light had already gone out over the woil 1 would b- preserved s-s a glorious legacy to our decoudanla, for in auy gen eratiuos to come. Tlcl.uffei Kclerllc SVctio! IC end era. Wc are indebted to Mr. Geo. JI. Grant, agent for W. Smith it Co., publishera of McOuf fey 'a Eclectic Readers, for a set of the above named wucks, comprising a series of alz volMr. McCuffey ha deroted cjueh time and labor upou hi "Readers," and they have l , - . , . , . tamed a very extensive circulation and au al most wcild w ije refutation. We are not prepared to say thst they are thecry Lttt "School t, i , , ., j , . ,i Reader, tut that they are adiutraidv adaptad io me ae lor w men iney are intenueu, nu ore al . w a 1 m : 1.1 who has examined or ut d them can denr. They sr in.lt etive in their iiu ieiui.ru i iue npquj w tue puj-n the various aUge of Li jr gresa up tbe hill of science. The 1.1 Reader, after U.e alphabet, intro- , ... ,,. .-, duces the 1st lts.ous in spelling, and is de ...Ji.l.l I .... r . . l. .... l. - i; m ."'i.w m ...ii j . ""Ji jo'.i wioi-jj i.. .ii ii eay and natural grsdationa a to make the change almost imperceptible, but when the end i reached, if full justice ha been done, it leave the pupil at a considerable elesation from the plsin whence he started. In the 2d Reader intr ilion in artlculat ion is commenced, and the let ms are try plain and easily vmderstod. At tin commence r&ent of each leoo the principal words con tained in it are arranged for spelling, and ea ay quetietis follow, ter.difg to impress upon the reader the sense of whst ho ha rf sd. The they proeed,ritiri; step by step, until t.ey resell the"6.h, introducing all the vari. oms concofr.iiatt, necesry for tbe formation of a perfect reader articulation, punctuation, pronunciation, accent, infle . . .... ctton , emidjasi,! irethods S meirort o! of the lis modulation, m l all the Tsri various utiog the yoiee, to ptetx the ear tenr. The"6.h!o contains extensive Instructions in the art of locution, and the whole ret, at a seriea, are tie Tery best set of Reader lht we hT rer bad aa opportunity to examine No other serie of School Reader p ret cd to riTal McGufley', except Goo.lrtch's. Roth of the have warm advocatca, and it in probable that the different estimation in which they are held by their respectiee friends, ia more a mstter of taste and habit, than at. r superiority A I I I r rv w . . . . . . . .1.. . I ... . oi"o iij-ij ( vitm vin me on er. v e nave a prej idtce io favor of McC.cfJey'a Readera. tslToiic dcty must be a manly and delightfil ecplojnicot down South: Some exeiteroent wa created in town on Sunday last by th udden eofcemect of the law relaure to the right of aegroea to saunter aowui ioa atreet ana cocgregsto at the corners. A cumber of wkippiegs wert administered by the police, to certain alares, and we doubt oot but that the Waaon will haTe a whailraAma T. r tf.-.. l;. I . v. .uiii 'irrr, ;

Tho lall none. Illwndln'e I'ssssrlla

Creelaf. Nispara Falls "as a amarraiog bivo agaia yesterday; filled and overflow inj with an in rnne throng of people. Collected to witr.aa the fourth repet tiou of Vfons. Ulondin's daring feat of crossing the chasm upon a table ttrttched between the cliftV The crowd ga'hered waa almost, if not quite equal to thai astern bled upon any former ocraion ; and ihe gathering was warranted, for the sight which waa witnessed airpaed a '.I ihe previous exhibi lions of tsie same characttr. Yrun this city we should jude that the attendance ws greater than at any time tfory; and from Kochestcr and other place in the vi cinity, on both sides of the line, it could not haTe been much if any ev All the seat and stand plaeea within view s!nc the tank, in the pleaure grounds upon this aide of the riT. er were crowded, and the toclosure upon the Canada aide was better filled lhaa upon any other occasion. Möns, lilondin rode into the r feature ground '-ii'iPuour. wi.inu Bkfarfa- 1 tiTlfitTi lit at ft a r t m I I utrnaw aa f t . a siarv j v - s i a , ea wriw iew moniet.i 01 tie. ay iu preparation, llis trip ecro t tlie Canadian shore was accom pluhed quickly, aa he proceeded at a tripping pace moi-t oi the distance, and only paused a few seconds occasionally t corrttl his bilance and ebtaiu slight r st. All of hi feat ho re served for the return journey. Arrived at the Canadian bank, he refreshed hiruself a littie, and took a rest of perhaps til tevo rri iii Ute, heu he aain stepjeJ upon the rope and Hipped down the laut, airr plane. toward "the I and of lha fre and th hum of ! Ihe trave." When about half wav lo ihe ecn ter, he stopped and sat down, theo stretched himself at fud length upon the roje, then per formed a number of daring antic, and fiuall) t.d upright upon his head, reroiinieg in that reared positiosj for a length of time whu h set rued a rnomtiit at least, swinging and Licking his feet iu the most reckless though ludicrous qianntr that cau be coaceiT td Ol. leuming his journey, he proccede4 but a little way wheo he again halted aud retreated hia performance, with the addition of a back ward somersault, and ooe or two udden aw mg around the rope, which eaused a geoearal flutter among ih heart c-f the oecta'or, and brought little screams from many of the ladies Starting forward again, he proceeded to the oj en apace iu the renn r. brtweeu the extreme tuy ropea that branch off to either bank, w here ihe cat. le apan ihe gulf wuhoul atay or ac coinpaniirettl. litre he paused again, au 1 lav in Iiis pole upo'i one of Ihe a.'UT rire lie I i Ui'uvii mu'i wiimwit inn rti 'Oo u . .. i ... . ., i . . ,t . v .. I . ......Lev: Laiiiri teneath. an 1 awinirine i ii r ii i hi ri'air im iiiii.' r Liu. in uir an inn l.irnsell by his hand, and feft. w,th great rapidity. Going back again in the same gvmnast.c manner, when be returned to the point w here hia pole rested, he began a m rie of ter formal ces which outdiJ in thrilling arid startling t ffect upon the nerves of the spectators, alj thst he had dene lefore. Clutching the rope with hia hands he würg his L'dy clear frem it, and hung for a length period of more than secot ds, ausjx uj, ,i ,v the arm-, and by one arm, over the fearful depth of the chasm. Then hf reptaledly turn ed such a somersault as is familiar to boys, throw ing his tret oyer h head and U-lwetn his anus, and hanging w ith the shoulder joints in a most unnatural position. Then he staatht ened his ImhIv itito a horizontal position, still suspended by the arm, thrown backward a deserided an extrtioti requiring immense strength, and calculated lotxhaust tl.e nrrTons system tremendously. After this he aus pende. 1 hiaisrif ty Ihr Iri, end ty on single!

leg, tea I d.iw nward w hi le J around ll.e lope i ty-fi v i - r tutntd m oe somtrsaull atood upon hiaj Choiia t-tirrr cy that dur. hed aain, and in fact peiformed all tne uiost I n lh wealher the laJiea of that city do reckless f,ats attempted by tightrope peifoni). jail their shoppiog in carnages, and retire tr iii.it. r iriiifinrv rirriiiii.tiiina Tm i- i ... 1

acain. before r. achiW the bank he halte,! .ml npihtej some of lhfe antic, mm-in ngdtleimined lo fatigue Jnm-; i,. tj,r lnt p. int of en dyrai ce, i) 1,'ioruughlv satisfy the bj-. cutorwith his alii'ilion of dating an I rkill. Atd they w re salltied, Ih-voioI question The peiloriiiti.re was Wundtlful atid rXCUli'g eno'igh lar ihe nnl ite.ly n lo r n!:t r ena lions; und astiy f r the gr alet i t gl t n Oy Mol. a. jio:. dm. Ui-Jfulu Li-ffit, t. A Young i r I ln I rugrtl bi' i Princes l lie 'xtr .tveitge tier U ronu. Last I. ceo hrf . an ntnrer i n l tie t ie s nt u in form o4 (lie Ctevalitr Gtisrd, caIo ed alooj; oiiC of the inn-trow Jed and fsji ioiiale tret-! f P I. r-t tig Pasing a luttun tit n If, he Rl a charming yourij girl enter. He loll .w ed her and . srtvirk tiy hej- AJ iirful :'. iiti'il'! I'ritce.and C L'eO.iU'as and ei.( rress which distinguished htr. (In her retiring, he learned tint he xi as the Hao.'lit r of A pour I rAir.otrict 'civ ili-m.) 1 1 at the shop peoj 1c w ..rk ed (or her at a low rat, from admiration of her youth and character, and that she would re ttirn al six. That ofllcer, wi'h tap of hia rienj, indul gd in a swptuos vlinucr, inrjaming 1 is pasions witli cot!y chatupiigne. Hut exactly af six, a Lare aud enrgeous .Vnwt (a rtoutle sealed sledce, stopped near the ;r7ii, harnt-sMd wi:h ihrre splendid horses. Th- poor Olga advanced, waa inalantlr half at ill -1 in a fur cloak, lifted into the'rX, carried on to Czar ko Z'-lo, here a eon ven'enl but lonely house of entertainment s aite.t them, and tv there trutallv ravished, after Lnd.gnanily rejecting etry liiid f loibe Hut her reit mc was o vio't iit thai twie disfigured ihe facta of her aaiiNut. t On her return her father appealed to the hat I Po1'. n van,. he police master as. Uored hiru that ihecnn.inaU could not be iden- .-.,, 0( - ;f lruVh,Ti ao t)j,ifer ,n ihe country regiment, w a w ritten to. He w as iu- ' fatigaMe in hi ei.qniries Discovtrii g thst three t flicera had uddenly p'onoo'ire I them j t-i.. . .i .k ' .1 t . llWaslVavsasiirx In hidn 1ha sr in I I . ip fa;., a I 1 . ; wro'e a pe itionto the Kipperor. and ueteeded m awaamu m u... i, riu y . it V.ltr Wil len' hi ,o put wpl a nur irpuu ,jiU pat J. This was done. The criminal was i -'since CalitiUin ' lut nark the nunisj'n.eut. The Cut in uAlY .-'"1 e'led hip to n.try the ...fT. rer, ' endowed.J.er on ihe spot w ul, half hl e,.ijdlv ! , makirg her at once Te rTwt .tU ,y. and I i...t:.. i l . j" . ' I i urn iji.o.-o i i j i "uru m ! () uivoice,

leaving htrerlirtly free. All the three officers ) . , Vl JU,JC "JkoJ were iransjvorted to a country regiment, desp, ro,u iiftinville, no Csurt waa Leid. Abut in the heart of Russia, and were refuved auv ' 0 w itnesses have been aummone! Tbe ri.e. the military rank. jmj rity for the Republican candidate w.. Never was r.litifal justice core rapid and ' i .,, ,rn '

asrs a a ij'Iete. j l,s sentence iloea boocr to the' Er.ipr..r, and alinoatwkea ualoi.g. in certain eases, for an ommp.ttnl despot, bet this is not iLe only ir.sU..ce in which Alexander II hss given prof of a good heart ar d great r,. nr. ihe circcm.aree las ejecited an immense aet,aa,lt) !n the Rus.i.n capital, n.J w.ll do .btlesa have good n-uLt. ttrlanetiwl) Uccnrrenre. We are pair ed thia morning at being corn pt-lled to chronicle the su Iden and unexpired death of two of o.rctrs-Natnar ie Harn ilton and Jamea Rirchfield. ifr. Ilirchfield bJ W engaged in digging or cle&iiing;nd Pu,,ir"f ia "w II in the well upon tha .,frnij.,, of Mr. Hamilton, (or aome three cr fon-dy, whieh was troubled more or lea ith what is called damps, and from which. preatoua tp yetrday at 3 r. sr , they tJ received no serious irjury. At thi time, imme. diately after the first rain, ihey went out t work, Hamilton at the winsllaaa and Rirchfield descended the well. He.had gone down probably i feet, rhen.l.e waa beard to moan, then fall. Upon Mr. Hamilton hearing or seeing the fall, he became terribly excited or agitated, and io or position t every entreaty from wife and children, caught the rope attached to ti e windiitt ir. ms nanu wiih a deUrmination to feet were heard lo strike the bucket, w hieh was! protaül at half thedethtf the well, the,, ihe ry irhi son at the Indian, to "eave Lltn," or "draw ; " then lettering, he fell s.rüe 4 feet to Ihe toiU:n, a lifeless Corpse. T hus hurriedly, ooexpeciedly, without a moment's warnirg, were tie aoult of these two men lanoehed into endlos eternity. Hundred of our citizen upon heariog of the accident, im mediately repaired to tb pot, asd after diligently laboring and devisipg for three hours, for eitir.gT3iih(ng' or driving out the poison, acceeded ia rosea ing their lifeless tod sea iron their awful oituativo. Crearorrftriiff Jf. rittf.

NEWS ITK.MS.

IT Twenty leading democratic papers ia Miasisslppi advocate the reopening of the laTe trale, and Buchanan' Collector at Vickaburgcpenly avd officiously urge it a a party measure. ITSeTen hundred dollar reward ha been offered for the aj preher.s'oa of a man bf the name of Atwood. w ho murdered Klijih Searcy, in Macoupin County, lllir., iu Jnn last. Atwud ia about 21 v ears of aje, fet inches high, rough akin, and Tery active ui quick poken. -S!r. Mair, a jrand daugh'tr of U'i4. Sid. dors, is giving reading i0in Shaksiar--playaia London. At the lactation of Lady Noel liyroo, a small party of prieate frieod recently attended ihe reading of M,cbik. U' Although the Frji ch language ia usually that i.f Diplomacy, a IfUer writer leam that.outof.ourttay to the Emperor nf Austria, Napdeon Hi, poke ia German i?uring their inU-rTiew. The Austrian lieutenant colonel SaUma. field, w ho foogltt sobraTtly at Maftnla, u T4 Isrrelite, le oujy Hebrew staff vtHcer in that army iQ which 12,(K0 Jevs ae ia actiTe aer. Tice. ! 37The Hon. Thaddeuc Sleeena haa t)fT r.l Mr. ise auTicient pecuniary aid to build aud equip a balloon for croaai-.g the Atlantic, or condition tliat Mr. Wi will pay no .iU r,tioa to Mr. La Mountain's chsPeng to rsce from $n Francisco to the Atlantic seaboard, but i lurn ,"1 ''mediate attention towarda the great t turorvan Tovare. a f va Am Kritoa Daow.xm Tuesday last. C. YAwaris, Eaq . editor of tht Marengo (lowaj Yuiior, wa drown 1 whil, bathing i0 thi Iowa li.ver at that place. Ho had hi. l.tllo son on his back, when lu is supposed to have heen t ij-d with a cramp, and saok lo me no more. Ti e child wt sir, 1 r According to a tatemenl in the Keokuk 7f Djr.lien. Auguttu Osr Dodge, iUce - m icir I'UOIIC triö 0 as consumed hi rati .max f .w 1 1. - . H i iv iur n u i h-filOj.'0 And vet .,.! L --i the Republican ticket tie "plowbandle tickrf , Mm . -, , lu '""u" ,l ' imposed of farmera enliialr. 13' Professor Rarey has len Terr aueceasf.,1 in Undon in 'aming a sicious horse, the "King qrOude." The London New saya the and. ence fairly trembled when he unlocked iron pole, gre it to the groom, and. w ith not even a stick in his I. .nd, stood in the ring wi;lj thst screaming saTag of a horse, aud then. fairly cttsanet; vied hira by his weird like tan. XT" In Milwaukie. !;t Ifondsy. Andrew Leutagen killtd kimself because hia wife wai "always cotnplaining.M He was wt,rth akut $3.000, and left it all to her hoping, however filial fA'knl.l Am .t s a, t , . 1 I . a " ...-ijr an uit iiu s .(i, m:not to attend hi funersl. 'r.,rjr tU tii lmea ir exhibit tntir goo.j at the rarnagf Jiw, thereby .,. ing ihemsjrea the exertion, f alighiing and et.'erir,; t'u. lo,.,. jt pronomces thi, f..n. duct ..f the Udie, barbsi.ojp. Tin. i. th.et,. era! e i-to it of al.uj in. It) Cuba and other tropica? cities. JrMr. Walworth, a w.althy platter rni Arksnsa., tt ho is ,,. e of ihe o. khtiu. f tSarato.:a. hr,;aje av,! ,,, mhi.t. h.. ... 'iUeaths JjO.Ootl to th Style of New York toward f--it..lioga hopul f,,r ih t,lu, J f the Ü-ale shoi.l I ref l accept it. it . to K,, to the Stite of M-ch.g.u. a. . ,f o: Äfc..,,,,4 by M.fhigai, a j, iv K-0 tv uhi.. Mr. Wal. wgr.Jb ;s l-tu,. ITH i. said, h ,he correspyndei.t of tho London Tu$. that ihe !:.,, rr of A is.ria told tier,. F.eury at Miafianr that the hattU ofSolf.r'no tost him Ij.tMi.l 0ir(l a heavirf losihan haa Urn rrr oiled by anyU.dy heic. tofore. and one that will rank that bailie with tie bloodiest of ajlier wara. It j Uu j tha tie lo.. was, j,, a Urgo degreo. aulTered by the rr.crper, the French cannon reaching them a easily as the troop, in tho front lines an J engaged in the fight. U The Lafayette J9rnl aay. that there was a..q;e proapea of a renewal cf the "Mor gsn'rxciterneiit in Carroll .county recently, over II. di.apr.,cc of a Su cf Malta, who) it wa. aaid, had divulged th aecnts of lh or.ler. It was thought h had Veeo made wa with. All the rivers, creeks ind ponds in tha i.eigtUi,'hopd wire dragged, but tho martyr to the cause of truth waa nowhere found. Th excitement ran high, but was suddenly and entirely allavej by the tew, thai the ioia.,nff j 11,40 had rvcenily been sejp p Ciocinnali try. eeii SlOltlltuTaO W IC Q d IS p ftfC 4 LTTho Old Lints Truasurerof Morgan couo. ty, who was defeated for a re tlecliou li.t Octobe r, is contesting the right of hi. auccesaful opiKiitcotta lake poaave.ion of the ofEcTl . . a ue cttj wr Lo lav ...r i t. ... wmw w , Sli I ) Wff ( owing to ll.e atef,ce uf Judge C!ai ai,Ma, a ' Thi.N ut Ti;w.-TU Manafi!J n,TmiA ' y u r , , . , , . ! . ' M" lLlt VUc 0 ' K'gd in the construction of a Flying Machine, j lie it quite aarogaineof aucces, aod filed at 1 caveat at th I'itn n w e ' J . a tent Office al W ashinrrton. It ' un,f r looJ lfc1 while balloon, j U. t ud toT elevation, ateauj in to be tb motive power. The invenior ia quite aaoguine thai ho has discovered tlie proper machinery where ' hy t1 e air ean t i . -n , . Luilt ! , s'1 '"' U l" I il VT ' 10 house for Ihe iwr. ' F5' w' fntiouiog hit labor without ioteTjarrted by ihe carious, A Ssrxa er RceLar Fitto. Tha ,Toor house of Monroe county in thi State ad for one of jt itr-atcs a number of year a siatcr of Robert Fuliou, the originator of the a teamboat. She was lining aevtral years ago, bii! we cannot say whether or tot she ia alive at present. It thus frequently happens .thU ih greatest heefACtors cf the hnnin raee, with their imme-liate fiieods, have suffered for the want cf rreunisrv means. Fu!t-n himTr

and thus descended.' t . . i . . nrescue hisfrrend. Hi.i'rcW!,tVr'LrJ V "Än' Hl Mtf a

nrt eoutty wa ix-De years hit senior. IT" A mm named Thon.paoo, a tclogra k operator al HaoiUl, was arrested to Kudon on the 2 h ull ,ehargd with coanterfeittug Dkad bis agents out through tbe country buying produce of H deCTiYtioB, for which they paid io counterfeit om dollars bills on tha Baak of Cadiz-, O. The s genta would ship tha prod oca to Thompson st Uaoibal. nlo would quickly convert it into mouey. Ueory Badea haaainceteen arrested in Qatocy, III., tl iq ccomplicc.