Weekly Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 15, Number 20, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1855 — Page 1
WEEKLY INDIANA
ftutional democratic tetosp;apcr
STAT
J
QiFMnniFMiPir
Jlcuotcii to-tlje million anil (T rue Interests! ;of tk (Ikintri)
J. C. WALKER & T. 11 1IOLCOMBE, EDITORS.
1'UliI.ISIlED EVEUY THURSDAY JIORXlNfJ AT TWO DOLLARS A YEAR.
' W.:C0TT(t.M, lTBLISHER.
IXIMAXAPOf.as, I.3IAXA-, THURSDAY 3IOIUVIiY, OCTOBER 185.5.
V
lUccliln Sentinel.
H'P.T.tnm EVERT THrESDAT MCJUMXG OX A
MAMMOTH SHEET, XT
TWO DOLLARS PKlt YI5AK, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE.
JO" AM tern, P-viJ, WALKER 4: t'OTTOM, Ia.lUianoirs, Iiid. J. C. WALKElt, Pnpritr.
THURSDAY MORNING, SEPT. 27, 1335.
Oov. Wright's Departure. Oor. WaioiiT left thL morning for the East, to attend the New York State Fair and to deliver tha annual address. The Govcrnoi this day addresses" the County Fair at Connersvillc. He will retnru on Monday, the Sth day of October. We have new;r known a nian of more industry and energy than the Governor; ho is always at work fw the good of the eottn try. And while a few editors aro barking at him, he keeps straight forward in the discharge ef his dntie?, and has the nnlimitetl cocHder.ee f the people. "We shall look with interest for his address and promise to lay it before the public a soon as received. His appointment was a compliment to Indiana, and wc have full faith that the CTedit of the State will not suffer in hif hands! Otr Ik would be rich if Massachusetts, after all her extravagancies, should elect a Democratic Governor; if the very Sebastopol of Abolition and Know Nothingism should surrender to the conquering march of truth and the immutable principles of Democracy. This is a consna-imation most devoutly to be wished but hardly to be hoped for. Yet it
is not impossible that Beach may be ehosenJ
Governor. The repudiation by the Convention of Gacdiyes, aud the nomination in his place of JlccxTVixL, have created great dissatisfaction. The -Know Nothings claimed that he hail been true as steel, and that they would rot alio. v him to be sacrificed. Bnt rlABrrsxn was rather moderate in his abolition notions, and although ho satisfied the conservative Freesoilcr", he was distasteful to the party which goes in for bold disloyalty to the Unici.- The violent men have triumphed, and Rockwell has been nominated; which course has produced a strong reaction in favor of the stablo doctrines ef Democracy. Maine has set a glorious example; may it be followed by the State of Jons Hascocx and James Ons.
Y
(7- The Richmond Enquirer, with that calm good sense, for which it has ever been distinguished, repudiates the idea of retaliating cn the North by commercial regulations and restrictions. A legislative enactment to that effect would be an empty ebullition of spleen, as its practical enforcement would be impossible. It is better for the South quietly to look on and await the return of sober second thought in the North. Mr. Jepeersos
who was tho father of the doctrine of State
hts.so much villificd and so little under-
Railroad Excursion, aud Celebration at Logansport. We accepted an invitation to participate in tho enjoyments of the occasion in reference, but must regret, for the Rake of our readers, our inability being quite indisjosod at the timo of writing to present the public with the extended notice to which wo would naturally bo led by our inclinations. The
special train left Indianapolis on the Fern Road at about five o'clock, Tuesday mom-
ing. A goodiv cuiuDcr 01 our citizens,
whom were our worthies, the Gov
ernor aud the Auditor -ok State, an well
as tae prospective Uppositioa candidate for tho Chief Magistracy of our Commonwealth, Mr. William Sueets; together with
some very beautiful ladies, who shed ou all
around an animated light and lustre; with the addition of a few accessions from towns along the line of the railroad, made up tho
complement of tho Excursion, which, though
not verv large was none tho less delightful.
The Indianapolis and Feru Kaihoad, over
which we traveled ti Kokomo, while in
creasing in its business aud brightning in its
prospects, is also improving its track and mending its running arrangements. Under the supcrintendency of our friend T. Walk Kit ;
flex tee, whoso great energy and perfect
qualifications for the oflicc tiro unsurpassed
by any person of our acquaintance, every
assnranco of a management upon the line
satisfactory to the public, is now vouchsafed. The "Excursionists arrived at Kokomo, the point at which the Cincinnati and Chicago Railroad is to erossthe Peru and Indianapolis
Road, and to which the portion of the former
running South East from Logansport is now complotod, at about 10 o'clock. After cn-
oying ourselves for a short timo in tho woods
at the junction,, we were greeted by tho
whistle of the train expressed out from Lo-
g.inport b meet us, and wcro soon most comfortably seated in the new and elegant cars "of tho new Road, cheered the while, as
well by the very refreshing music of the
Logansport Crass Band, as by tho hearty wel
come extended by many of tho people of our sister city; among whom were tho inimitaUy amusing Judge Wright; our friend and
brother of the quill, Mr. S. A. Hall, of the Pltaros; Mr. James Dcns; Dr. Gerrolamak, Capt, Ywu3, and a host of other very clever genial gentlemen, to numerous to mention in detail. The Railroad running from Logansport to Kokomo is but just completed. Tho line is quite straight and tho track peculiar for the absence of nearly all necessity of grade. We have never seen a strip of country where it might be said, with so near an approximation to truth, that "to build a Railroad all you have t da is to clear away the timber and lay down tho iron." When the track is ballasted the road in question will bo one of the first elms. Arriving at Logansport in the vicinity of noon, the Excusionists were received with open arms by the citizens and escorted in carriages through tho principle streets, giving the strangers in
the number an opportunity to witness the
- " t ' . 1 hiiu uuiuia.1 vyY 1 buunjr f i 1 l i tuw j Jby nir Fusion neighbors, wa3 opposed UigM 0( jrospcrity and progress ft itclrrmri
O violets .iva'ty.. In hi3 lettTT-" Wat. D.-t
Oh.es ite'said: " I Aro we, then, to sluihl toourarhis with the ' hot-htaded Georgian? No, that must be the last resource, rot to be thought of until much longer and greater sufferings. If every infraction of a compact of so many parties is to be resisted at once as a dissolution of it, none can bo formed which would last one year. We must have patience and longer endurance, then, with our brethren while under delusion; give them time for tetlcction and experience of consequences; keep ourselves in a situation to profit by the chapter ef accidents; and separate from our companions only when the sole alternatives left are the dissolution of our Union with them, or submission to a government without limitation of powers. Between these two evils, when we must make a choice, there can be no hesitatieu. But, ia the meanwhile, the States should be watchful to note every material ivsnrpatiou on their rights; to denounce them a3 they occxir in the most peremptory terras; to rrotcst aga:c3tthem as wrongs to which our prjscct submission, shall be considered, not as acknowledgments or precedents of right, but as a temporary yielding to the lesser evil, until their accumulation shall venrcigh that of separation."
Dodging the Question! Mr. Wallace, in a letter published iu yesterday's Journal, is very non-committal on Know Nothingi sm, but fails give a positive answer to the question whether ho is a memUr ff a secret jWVVi 9itlj, and refuses to answer certain queries propounded t him by Mr. Stewart in h!s letter of the 21th. He wishes to avoid tho isaua by raising immaterial questions, but such a game won't
Ilaving denied, in certain localities and
to individuals prejudiced against the secret
conspiracy, that he is a Know Nothiug, he . s'aoald make the statement good by his affi davit that ho is not a memlvjr of any secret political society. If he fails to do this, he virtually acknowledges that he made tho de- . nial merely to proairo the votes of anti-Know "Nothings. Como out, manfully, Mr. Wallace, and
mtko the afudavit, or admit that you are a
Know Nothing. Tour Iv. N. brethren claim that they have no tho privilege of acknowl
edging the fact that they aro members, and many of them do it. Why not bo as independent some of your own brotherhood? Ia conclusion; wo will reiterate the following question propounded t Mr. Wallace Vy Mr. Stsazt, and reqiest a positive answer yea or no : 1st. Are you not cognizant of the fact that there are in existence in Marion county several Councils or organizations of a secret po litical order, commonly known as Knew Nothings? iM. Arc you not bound by tho oaths of this order to vote only for native-born Protestant Americans to the exclnsion of all others?
A New Gaxk cmn Tbavelrra. A new ityi ia now being practiced npon travelers,
not withent success. The last case of
the kind occurred at Cleveland. A person rrt,-pd a fellow.fraveler of l-icking his
no fcet on the cars. Upon the arrival of the train, a r-oiiec oCicer (bogus) arretted him,
and took tin to a police court-room, (also
VTn 1 where examination was deferred till
morning upon the defendant's leaving $100 as aeenrity, as h had no friendi to sijn
lon4. The $IW a aeva
there apparcut at every hand
Logansport has at this time a population !
of about Gve thousand souls. Iler situation
is one of the most beautiful in the State.
With tho Wabash and Eel Rivers at her
sides, and her high and delightfully undulat-
ing ground on which to build, she presents a constant natural stimulant to those improvements which add as well to tho elegancies as to the comforts of life. There are, perhaps, a larger number of splendid private mansions, with beautifully decoiated grounds, in Logansport than in any other town of a similar population in ludiaua. By moans of the Cincinnati and Chicago, and the Wabash Yr.l. ley Road, giviug her a transportorial out and in-lel. North and South, and East and West, she will soon have commercial facilities which will contribute a fresh impetus to her subiitantial improvements, and give ai acceleration to her business greatly exceeding anything before experienced by tho denizen. of tho place. After partaking of a sumptuous dinner, spread for theguest3 of the city at Baksett's LIotex-, the visitors and citizens, to the num
ber of several hundred, assemplcd at the
Court House, and listoned to some very per
tinent and appropriate speeches from lSicuauo
M. Corwisie, of Cincinnati, (one of the Di
rectors of C. & C. R. R.) Gov. Wright, and
Mr. WrxLuu Sheets, of Una city, and Judge Wright, of Logansport. Tho remarks of tho dilTercnt speakers were devoted to Railroads and their importance to the coniilEy in general, aud of tho importance to Logansport of the completion of tho one under consideration, iu particular, aud were fraught with much that was instructive, and with wit, sentiment and anecdote. At the conclusion of the proceedings, a resolution of thanks to the speakers and visiters was unanimously adopted after which with many "good-byes" wc rotraccd ourstjs to this city, in good cheer and highly plea'ed with everythiag that had occurred.
(V7 The question of the Danish &um!
Dues is exciting some interest. Denmark
contends that she has the high authority o! Vattel in favor of the exaction; and the tcxi
of his work contains the qualified admtssior
of her rijht. But the reason assigned is thai
Denmark is put to expense and inconvenience
in maintaining light-houses, sea-marks, and other things of that sort for the safety ot mariners. The general principle is, however,
i distinctly stated, that a Strait, which con-
accts two sexs, the navigation of which U common to all, should itself be open to all. We might pay Denmark a reesonablc sum
in consideration of her expenses, but further
than that we ought not to go. Wheatojj, in his Elements of International Law, expre?set the true doctrine. " Straits are passages communicating from cue sea to another. If the navigation of the two seas thus couneeted is free, the navigation of the channel by which thev aro connected ought also to Iks free. Even if such strait be Ixmnded : loth side by the territory of the same sovoreign, and is at the same time so narrow as to be commanded by cannon shot from both shores, the exclusive territorial jurisdiction of that sovereign over such strait is controlled by the right of other nations to communicate with the
seas thus connected."
We subjoin from an exchange the follow
ing sketch : "The 'Sound' is a narrow htrait lying between the Tsland of Zetland, belonging to the Danws, and the Sweedish coast, and gives entrance to the Baltic sea. The fortress of Orenburg Castle commands tho passage and extracts a payment from all vessels entering the Baltic ; the ships f Denmark herself have to pay, as well as foreign tunnagc. "The origin of this exaction is, that in ancient times Denmark undertook to build and sustain certain light-houses along the coast, for which the Ilansetowns agreed to pay toll. 'England, France, Holland and Sweeden pay a duty of ono percent on every cargo entering tho Baltic. Other countries, including the United States, ay ono and a quarter per cent; even Danish ships are taxed to this rale. In the year 1826 a treaty recognizing this duty, was concluded lctwccn the United States aiid Denmark. This treaty, however, according to one of its stipulations, may be ; dissolved by cither of the parties, provided i they give one year's notice of their intention. "During the Presidency of John Tyler our Government determined to put a forcible end to the imposition. Mr. Upshur, then Secretary of State, fitted out a fleet of merchantmen and vessels of war, under Commodore Stewart, which ho designed should force its way into the Baltic and thus at once rid the United States of the Sound duties. Mr. Upshur's sudden death, however, by the explosion of a cannon, just as the tlect was ready to start, delayed the expedition and it was finally abandoned. Other attempts were made to alwlish this tax. While Dcmark was at- war with Schles-wig-Holstein, Mr. Flenniken, the United States Minister, offered, en the part of his Government, to pay Denmark $2"O,0 O for a year's suspension of the dues; his death prevented the proposal coming to a head. Finally, on the 1-th of April last, the United States notified the Danish Government of their intention to cease paying the Sound duties, and the stipulation of tho treaty will accordingly expire next spring. Should no amicable arrangement of tho question be arrived at in the meanwhile, we mav then cxnect-to nee ourj
rcv!t uft '-lh-ound wuluipr.tr1'ikc coij-t
voy. A serious conllict wut lUeu-most prooabfy arise. " The Danes are much alarmed on this subject, an.l fear the United States will seize on their AVett India possessions, the Island of St. Thomas and St. Croix. They ure lclieved to be soliciyng tho good ofiiccs of tho French Government."
"Sabbath" and "Sunday,"
A correspondent of the AofVt ami Queries,
says the only, words in the English for the first day f the wet k.ta forei he existence of l'uritaiisiu, were Sunday and Lord's Day. The former
of these expressions were used ny our ibaxon ancestors, with all other Tuetotiio nations. The
latter was adopted from the Christian foi in of
Southern I'uroje. Sun. lav in Italian, still retains the Hebrew name of Sahbato. The word for Sunday in Russian . means resurrection:
"identifyiug tLe day, as the Southern nations do, though more significantly, with the great triumph of the Christian faith." Disraeli, in Ids Commentaries ou the Life of Charles I, Jixes the. reign of KlizeK-th and the year 1551 as the jeriod when Sunday was first called Saturday (dies Sahbati). lie "It was in the reign of Elizabeth, dining the unsettled stale of the national religion, that a sect arose among those reformers of the leformed whr were kuown by the name of Sallm-lari'tne."
Also, that "John Knox, the great reformer of;
I rum llio Wflilitn-rton Union. Tue Position of the North.
We have had many occasions to admire and to applaud the fearless courage and matchless ability with which the Itoston I'oit stand up in the very midst of fanaticism and treason, and not merely defies, but boldly charges home upon both. The following article from that journal
is of that independent, liberal, and national
character which has given the Post fo high a
sLainImo- throughout the Union. I no SHmn
cannot but le gratified to know that she ha
friends even in Massachusetts who dare J -j defend her jut rights, and to tell the Nortel its face that the North is not right in waging this eternal warfare of agitation upon the South.
We commend the article especially to the calm
consideration of the men of substance at the North, as well as to those Southern men who believe, or pretend to believe, that there is no
iruiy tso una national men &i lue iorin; "1'he Posmox or the Nouth. Ou Tuesday
the, Boston Atlat put a question which it is earuestly hoped every citizeu will thoroughly consider ltfore he lends himself to a movvutettf
couspicuoua aud alarming a that jourual advocates, to wit: the formation of a great northern sectional party. The question is this: "'The fjreal nutttion i$ not, it the South pleased, but it the Xorth right?' "W'c agree to this form of putting the issue. Is iiik NonTii bight? Is it is right in its pres
ent defiant attitude? Is it right 111 forming a party for national purpose iu which the citizens of fifteen States iu tho Union cannot enrol themselves? Is it risiht in making the basis of
this party to be an attack on one ef the great interests the klarerv interest which, by the con
stitution, was left to be denlt with ir the States
where it exists? It is a fact Unit these 6lave
States refused to go into a union with tho free
States on the basi.-, of the international law, that a slave reaching a free country became free; but stipulated that the fugitive should be returned:
and this was, prior to the constitution, put into
me .Mnnwesiern ordinance. nil iuisiu view, is it right for the North to say that 110 blavc shall lc reclaimed from its soil? Is it any more right
that this interest a minority interest should be attacked, in spite of the State-rights limitation, than it would !e if the navigation interest, 1
or tho manufacturing interestboth minority interests should lc attacked? In a word, is! the North right in trying to sever the fraternal ties that connect the South and the North in the
jrrand old common bond of country? Wc earn-1
estly hopo that each patriotic citizen will, iu the feeling of a Washington patriotism at least as near as he can get put the question, the; North ri;ht in all this? j "Toshow more clearly in what pofciliou thei North lias lieeii, let us go back a little, and state a question with scrupuloushistorical exactness. 1 Bearing in mind that the North-western ordi-! naure prohibiting slavery was passed before the adoption of the present constitution, wc remark that, from 1761) up to 1S20, no law trat pitsstdbijCungreifi rtlation tn a prohibition of slavery in the Territories of the United States, aid no State ira ixeludnt from the Union on 'ireount ojshtrerij. It is true, discussions arose on this subject in Congress. Thus, Illinois and Indiana, when Territories, passed slavery laws we tntnn laws recognizing and protecting slavery notwithstanding the Northwestern ordinance; and when Illinois, in lblS.camc in as a State, objection was raised to her admission on this ground, but it was not sustained. We Btatc
Jacls that cannot bo successfully controverted ;
and repeat that, from 1 icy to lov', no prohibitory law was passed relative to slavery, and no State was excluded on account of tdavery. "In 181!-':21the North took the iosition that Missouri should not le admitted into the Union without having a restriction put upon her, prohibiting her from allowing slavery toexist within her limit; and the North announced this de termination in resolutions passed by, we think, nearly every northern legislature. And in this manner the united North stood upon the posi tion that Congress had tho power to enact a perpetual prohibition on a sovereign State. "Was the North kigut in taking this position? To answer this fully would require elaborate argument, for the considerations bearing on it were so weighty as to involve tho issue whether there should be a continuance of the old union of co equal States, or whether a new union should lc commenced of nfyiaxjiu.4-J'ri9r. 4k:urj.''1?Hthcr-Uiau"gi cv this ground, we prefer to" fstatc that statesmen ns illustrious as the country has produced went into the argument, and have left on record arswer to the question, was the North incur in the position it tiok i. e., that of insisting on a prohibition 011 a sovereign State. These answers were given by Presidents JeiTVrson, Madison, Monroe, John Quincy Adams, Jackson and Harrison: by a host of statesmen, from Henry Clay and John 0. Calhoun to those far inferior to them in talents and reputation; and these are all to the point that the North teas not right ! We challenge contradiction 011 this poiut. We nllirm that, tho opinions ot all the great men whose
names we have given are directly opposed to; 1... .1 .1.... 1 . I
m u nomine iu.it ionyirsj nus pnirrr i'i i;iogr a restriction on a sovereign State. 1 hey pronounce such restriction to Ihj i NvoNbiiti tiosal ! If the judgments of theo patriots and statesmen have weight, they show that in ISl'J-fh) the whole North stood upon ground that was
not tenable. It was ground marked out by clamor, passion, ilemagogueism, and not by reason, judgment, and a regard to the obligations to a common country.
VRIDAY MORNING. SKIT. 15.".
News from the Seat of War. By reference to our telegraph columns, it will be seen that we are in receipt of important news from the Seat of War. The steamer VXashington arrived at New York at 3
oc.oth. yesterday morning. The dates at.
Liverpool come down to the 12th inst. Telegraphic reports from the scat of war, at that date, announce the final capture of SebaJopol, with a loss of life to tho Allies ot twe.tt tiiousasp, and to the Russians ol thiei r thousand men. The destruction of Sebi : ipol is said to be complctcthc Russians t emsclves having blowu up their fortificnti i,j burnt their stores, and sunk their ships oJwar. Measures have been taken to LuteT-i tliti.-Rottiau. forces on their retreat, and the intention is declared oa the part df thoAllies'lo demand an tinconditional surrender of the whole. We Shall look for details with great inter
est.
In addition to the above, the telegraph an-
nouueej another attempt at the life of Napo
leon by a maniac. When maniacs meet they
naturally become beligcrcnt.
Democratic Gathering. Tho Democracy of " Montgomery will give
a grand barbecue at Crawfordsville, on Sat
urday, tho Cth of October, to which the lovers
of the Union and the enemies of midnight orders aud religious proscription aro invited without any reference to old political distinctions. Distinguished npeakers expected from abroad.
Democratic County Convention
Charleston.
at
SPEECH BY SENATOR BRIGHT.
The Democracy of Clark County held a
Mass Convention at Charlston, on Saturday last, which was ono of the largest and most enthusiastic outpourings of tho honest masses of the people ever convened in that section o tho State. The speech delivered on the occasion, by Hon. J. D. Bbiuiit, our present able and efficient Uuited States Senator, was ono of his happiest efforts. The iwwerfully impressive language of this gentlemnn tells with wonderful effect upon an audience. Tke principles of our party vindicated by a man as fearless and independent as Mr. BK.airr, cannot but strike conviction to the honest mind. Wc aic very happy to hear of the enthusiasm which crvadcs the ranks of tho Democracy throughout the State. The election is nigh at hand; an election, which, though of no vital political importance, in the consequence of the offices to le tilled, is destined, still, in its moral effect, to have an important bearing on the future. Its influence will be great, because the questions of the coming contest are the issues involved in the present. I.et tho Democracy stand firm and battlo vigorously for the right for the right of conscience and the good of the country, and the victory will be theirs the victory of the strong in heart and of the correct iu principle.
The True Spliit of Christian Charity A Beautiful Prayer. Wc extract the following passages from a prayer to be found iu any of the larger editions of Koman Catholic Prayer Rooks. This beautiful prayer was composed by the late venerable Archbishop Carroll, and breathes the true (-nit it
of Christian l iety. It is recited by the piiest
Scotland, was the true father of this new doc- ,ro,u ,uo rT1 u responded to by the con-
trine hi England, although Knox was the Ih.soui p'Sn ; successive unaay in the vear,
friend of Calviu. (Vol. li, ch. 1G, p. 353 ) Calvin was opposed, as were indeed Luther and other great reformers of tho day, to Knox's views of Sundav: Knox Lituself was Kliiiul
some of the present day professors, if a tradition at Geneva is true. "1 hat when John Knox visited Calvin on a Sunday, he found his aus Kre coadjutor bowling on a green. At this dav and iu that place, (continues Disraeli) a Caltiuisl preacher, after his sermon, will take his place at the card table." This question is so much involved with the death of Ch tries I and the rise of the Commonwealth, that Disraeli has treated it very largely in the fifteenth nad sixteenth chapters of his second volume, and with great erudition, judgment and taste. Dosfon Transcript.
r!trtic"l6 ' Correspond ents. Our tables arc crowded from day to day with communications of every character and discription of which the human imagination could form a conception. It u utterly and alisolutely imjiossiblc for us to give publication to everything we e. When we say this it is not to be uifVwfotood that communications of a proper character are not always acceptable. Wc aro ever ready to welcome to our colnnins a well written ac-
( count of a public transaction, occurring in any
section of our county: a political essay of respectable comositioi), or a literary production, whether of travel or of abstract thought, elegantly couched, is gladly received.
Those, however, who do not feel themselves
qualified to crite well and with perfect finish, need put themselves to no trouble to famish us with reading matter.
One word more Tersonnlilies should be
dealt iu as little as possible in all contribti
lions to the press. We will publish 110 com
munication whatever attacking or rellectin
on individuals unless a review of the course
of a candidate, except whore the name of
author shall be attached
Miami.Medlc&l College. Cincinnati, O. The regular course of lectures in this institution will commence on Monday, 15th October; but a preliminary course will le given beginning on the first of the mouth. It should Ikj remembered that this is the lest medical school West of the Alleghenv mountains; and also that the fees are so moderate and the expense of living in Cincinnati so reasonable as to place its facilities within reach of all. Clinical Instruction c&u tie had at the Commer
cial Hospital, St. John's Hotel, for invalids, and 1
the City Dispensary. The last named charily has been greatly extended, so tint from two to three thousand patients are anuually prescribed for, and many operations performed. Advanced students enn take charge of cases nt the homes of patients if they wish to do so, and watch l! ' daily progress under tho supervision of rrofis6ors of the College. The facilities for instruction arc of the first
class; but, in addition to these, the medical student will find what he most needs, viz: a
set of Professors who will take a personal in
terest in his improvement, and whoso pride and delight will consist in educating their pupils in a manner worthy of the noble
science of medicine. They are themselves ornaments of their profession, thoroughly accomplished in its respective branches, ( and
wedded as by a vow to its advancement. To all tho young men of Indiana we earnestly
recommend this school. Even if thev in
tend to prosecute their studies in the East or in Europe, they should Ugin with the M iami Medical College. The gentlemen who have charge of it have had all tho advantages of European culture and are vp with the times inevery particular. Persons wishing for information should address Gi:o. Menten'Hall, No. 107, Fourth street, Cincinnati, Ohio. The follow ing is tho list of Professors, any of whom may 1m addressed: It. D. MrsfcKY, M. IX, Professor of IVscriptivc and Operative Surgery. J. P. JrpKivs, M. D., Professor of Surgical Anatomy and Surgical Pathology. Jonx Davis, M. D., Professor of Anatomv. Jonx P. Whitk, M. IX, Trofessor of theTheory aud Practice of Medicine. Geobge Mknplmtall, M. D., Professor of Obfctctrics and Diseases of Women and Children. Joax A. Mitror, M. D , Professor of Materia Medica, Therapeutics, and Medical Jurisprudence. C. (J. Camhivs, M. IX, Professor of the Institutes of Medicine. II. K. Pootk, M. IX, Professor of Chemistry. Wili.ivm Ci.km'Kxiv, M. IX, Demonstrator of Anatomy. J. T. Wcbo, M. D., Prosector to the Professor of Anatomv. Tor the Daily State Sentinel. Messes. Editous: If it is agreeable, 1 will give your readers and tho Democracy in general, an account of tha Fusion meeting at Castleton yesterday, the 25th. I placed my self in a commanding position whew I had full view of the as they arrived in tvrtrhehnitig masses to hear our friend Wallace and wirc-wotking Taffe discourse eloquent phillppicks against Democracy in general, and tiie Sentinel in particular. The weather
was propitious and at two o'clock the iron horse came Pimrting up as if frightened at iQUeme,Jmmi gathering ol tho faithful, and then gracefully delivered itself of its precious load consisting of the mortality of William Wallace, ee-squire, who with all the politeness, affability, condescension aud urbauity of the renowned Fred. Douglass, whoso cause, fwv do sag, he advocates, stood
with "uncovered mien" in joyful and grate-! ful acceptance of the cheering which ions to
be spontaneously given on hts arrival
I'UI.IL SD 11 4NPVWK.
Tii.- lint. i ( tUf iiniiii.-r r- (1itij fl.
.111.1 mo fcrc li'jven rr falling with - Mal
Fact for the People. 1 Keep it Injure t.,e ieuj,h thit u vv for Salmon P. CIiae and the blacL R. i.ubi;, :!-. t-'.-l .1
vole that li-grfi .-.hall l :,! !ow i-d (Ii, ?i-lit ol
nuuiu-'u, uie riui 11 billing on -J u i"ie't ol 1. ui- ; i,i i,i.,i . i. T ..nn,; eligible to ofilce. of .H.i,:ulmi:,nl to',1, VnC 1 ilXr'K 1 1 S Urfli.u.1.J aam.l e . . ,,!t 1... t. . !. mf '
..v -vti'i., nnw nittii uir Mollis 4M IMZt tlH. " h'rffi ilbrfartthr pr;,lr, I lull .1 roe lor Sal ; !mM",'l liV;; the rrxt. iih K. fcoji aiM ,u raf,,. IS a Votethat all while p.TM.ii t U.rii 01 the . Al. tike tUeui, U inut 1..r rvturt, I""'" ITniletl States h:! I In- pt.lnl-il-l fi..i to:ii,-. :
..... uurntfj s-rr
Miieiiioifiimi iumii ami M fli-.tin hour Fr ! Ialvtl ! a wliiW iu ie un brlctil rs
and holding other; and ih.a they ,i.a!l tv placid
in the same position whee the negro is now, and te considered an inferior -ate in our midst that they shall be drat-ddrd vhile the
elevited in the scale of social nnd political con
dition, as litis been done in Massachusetts. AVri U before the people, that Salmon P. Chase
condemns our whole policy in reference to the colored population; thinks all legal distinctions should be done away that a general amalgation
oi color should take place.
Keep it hrfure the people, that if C1.3 mj and ls 1 v' :t ' rf ,h i tkl-o-Vecd, a Uw wiU-K-'pais'id fotbiddtr - ' !i t?.."51
An.l tle -luiuiix-r ot life Las Ami the autumn nt lifols rliill kit. I lrrjir, Wheu like leave Afuie ioreti,ourho dUapMar, A they dr-Mj one br m fpwu tb ItlM-rtnr rpnr AnJ the auluiun of lifo Ium a ty'. AtM ttie winter oflife j a.t an.l cold. When the feelinpi tire tutt anl the heart trmwa oH An.1 we Int. for Ihe n-st Hint the weary ahatl hat ' In the alienee an J nota of the iiMHiite araie:
irmve can r-w 2wepetni,fl fr:r '
.Courts from naioralizin- foreitruer.. " 1":.
and throwing the duty entirely upon the United !,-,,... ' States Courts at Cleveland and Cincinmtti ISSViTS'S;?. f.fKS1'measure which would practically nullify the An.l the ,.avruuioi a,,.hir .,J ! SHn naturalization law in this State. ! r li i.ncH lUi Hie rdinre refl.vte.1 trm Um
nrepu oejore the people, Lhat C haw and his ; Ut.,..iii,j: n.e Kl..rtem vnu- the he.-
1 lie one nerer flajju. nor l.. oUier .levari ; An.l Hie cye nevor tir.Ujui.-h ui.h.ovlr-1 iLe iemAn.1 the ..t, tli.nnh un.Linj t,?l f,.,-ever ar n '
lUack Hepublicuu ticket are iu favor of the pas ssre of a law called the"Pcrsotial Lilerty Itjll .
ihc provisions of which are iutendcl and calculated to prevent tho execution iu this State of tho Fugitive Slave Law, founded upon an express provision of tho Constitution, and to embroil Ohio aud the General Government in a forcible collision, leading, perhaps, to civil war and anarchy. Krep it beore the people, that Chase and the
Mark liepubiican leaders are in lavor of such
They mu.eiyi Uiv? emblem of earthly Jeea, Vel Ira, ViM llelarkitevi,a r4inle of A4 bear, 'mhl lb nistlmu ef re hare anj Casori lh harlot the aiurU In nmxno.tli h-er! Aft 'aim ok Italv. "Almost every telegraphic despatchtli.it arrives," snj s a lau EngUh pakt, "is rsrerly consulted in tho e pec tat! on that it will announce tK cornm.uieement of di-
ultra, extreme ami unconstitutional legislation ; tutbanees in the Two Sicili. s. The
SmWi V IT
upon ine snujeci oi siarery as i lea.i .imtly tyranny of King lVrdinand. which iiicroa, toad.sSolnt,onof the uum; that they Lave ; every day, the undisguiscl hostility L him tf formal as.vtionali.atty in the orthern States i the English and French governments and th alone contrary to the eouusels of Washington language of the Loudon and Pari i'ros nil and other revered Kevohconart tat riots. iitd combine in rreitlnrr n, v..,.!;. ' . t .-
that they are doing everything" iu their power
to suaiter t ins glorious Constitution, which cannot lie destroyed w ithout leading to the most terrible civil commotions and the utter destruction of our prosperity as a nation. Keep it before the people, that the interests of Cincinnati, especially in its t.-adeand manufactures, wonhl receive a severe blow in tho election of Salmon P. Chase and the Illack Kepublican ticket, who are in favor of making a war upon the institutions and the rights of that section of the country where the merchants nud manufacturers of Cincinnati find their U-st nd most profitable customers.
Keep it before the people, that a vote for Chase aud the Plack Republicans is a vote for the passage of that odious measure known as the "Maine Liquor Law," with its confiscation of property, its invasion of private dwellings, its severe and extraordinary penalties for slight offenses, and the whole scheme, of legal coercion to carry out ihe ideas and notions of moral reformer. AVn it bffvre the people, that Salmon T. Chaw.
the gic.".t champion of the rights of the negro.
liss written two dilierrnt b-rters in the
paign upon Ihe subject of Know N'othingism.
in one oi wntcli lie doe not condemn thst dark conspiracy, but in the other he professes to W very hostile to its principles. One letter was written to deceive and hoodwink tho Kifw Nothings the ther to deceive the Hermans. AVei it before the people, that Salmon P. Chne
is guilty of tlio most shameful duplicity upon
the subject of State nilicy; that while" in his
lians to mat,, an appeal to arms.- If lh Kii of the two Sicilies had Uen Iv.rn to theroodt-
lion of a p'litlcinnu fanner, thero is probably Iittle doubt that he would have filled well that position in life.lH-cu resjnvtcd by his neighbor, and esteemed as a good an, conscientious, though rather bigoted man. There are united, to much fcr,;,omt,itj his character, the r.nteachublene.ss and olivine right insiiLct of the Boiirtm race, which in any pri rate condition of life. Would have siinT.lv constituted au ultts (ner-
! vative; but formed in a King the basis of principled tyranny, nnd have led to irreparable
alienation fr.mi his turbulent subjects. In ILa year lsl, when King Ferdinaud acquired tli cognomen of BomUatore, he was comparatively an amiable, inoffensirc sovereign. He wa simply an auti KcI Republican monarch, stronHy uUachol to the Koman Catholic faith, and dirou s of preserving the temporal sovereignty intact, both in his own dominions and those of the Pope. Since that pcrhd, however, lie baa looine cradoally toured by the difficulties f his position; the jKvuliur relations lie has assumed towards the Jesuits. Lart produced a roblne&ji
ram- between the repvtive Courts of Xaplea and
i.oTiie, ii leeis iiienactM in hit pr.TOgativea by Muratisin, Republicanism, and Eltrainoutan. ism; and deprived of the svmpathy of evexr nati.ui in the world, he has "had resort to tixr lust desjerale means of retrieving his position the iron hand of desjotic lyrannv. The last accounts that have leen renMreA
1 1 from Italy appear fully to justify the London Morning Adrrrtiter in saving that "then ia not
i.nt-vn nccepuiiy un noiniu.nion ior iiorernor at tins moment so detestable a tyrant on I he face
iitr n.-i i.ueii miii ii- nuneieu 10 ins 10: hut opin-1 oi me ran n as ihe Km of Aaple. Kverr
ion ujM.ninnisui.jeci which were iiara money, one who H susjt-t4Nl of ihe iliohtest disaffev
iree iraic ami aim lank ne, in other address- lion is incarcerated.
es, represents himself as entertaining v iews the
iuo-X oj-.ite n j Mm these tpiestions. Keep it before the people, lhat, in cousotpicuce of these heretical and censurable views of public policy n.lviKMtexl by Ssdnivii P. Cha.se and his crew of Plack Republicans, and in view of his puplicity and dishonesty, he should receive the greatest popular rebuke ever administered to a man aspiring to the honorable posiliou of Coventor of Ohio. Cin. Enquirer.
ComiiiLT a wav down the railroad with
rapid strides, sped TatTe who, in order more fully to impress his country friends with h:3 poverty, was riding, as he expressed it, shanks horse, "though for the life of us wc could see no horse and he left us ignorant also as to who Mr. Shank was. Taffo came tip with dignified pace and made a pretty fair imitation of his leader's grace and condescension, still watching Wallace to see if he was doing it tight, who gave him an approving nod as much as to say, "Pretty well done, Johny." Now all this would have been wondrous
fine drawn up iu their economical imagina-
oulv been sustained
Pulpit Folltlcs. President Longstreot, of the Mississippi Uuiversity, (himself a learned and veteran Methodist minister) has beeu very severely censured by Know Nothing orators, newspapers, and preachers even of his own church for the seasonable warning which he gave to his ministerial brethren to Iwware of the mischievous
t doctrines nnd practices of a secret political or
der winch claimed to take trie place of the pulpit in purifying the Church, aud spreading far and near vital Christianity. Immediately after its introduction iu the South, indeed beforeupit politiet had, to any extent, left the haunts ol the Abolitioni-ts, this pious man sounded the alarm, ami called upon the true friends of religion to rally to the standard of the Cross, and to discard at onco and forever nil the seductive secular appliance which were offered by politicians for their own personal advantage, without any-real regard for the spiritual interests of the Church or the MvpIe. "As a prudent man foreseeth evil, and hideth himself," t.o this exemplary Christian beheld afar off the ruinous consequences which would
I llow from the attempt to blend Church and t ?.. .i. i. f r..t.: :
of this demand will hz apparent to any person
in every Roman Catholic Church in the couu- i on a moment's reflection. Ko man has a rirhi
A 11'.
iry. v e quote u as one oi me many evidences
Descsciatiox op tiie National Democrats bt the Strinof:.llow Paett Is Kansas. While the Black Republican papers aro falsely charging that tho Democratic party in the frco States is in favor of tho extension of slavery, the Atchison and Stringfellow Know Nothings in Kansas and Mis souri denounce it as no letter than Abolition.
Hear the squatter sovereignty paper edited by tho Know Nothing Stringfellow, who
33T3 :
"Every Sfatinnal Democrat is an Abolitionist in disysUe. Such a ono might not steal a nigger himself, but ho would pat on the back those who do. He did not know tho now Governor, but J'ieree was a coward, ami had not the nerve to appoint a man who would do tl South justice. For instance, he had appointed a Southern man to govern Nebraska, where slavery could not naturally go, while in Kansas, which is of the South, he has given us a Notthcrn man. Men who come here from the Northern States, professing to stand on the principles of the Kansas Nebraska Bill, were asking to make the Territory a den of thieves and a harbor of Abolitionism." Reader, there arc papers so devoid cf truth and fair dealing, so notoriously dishonest, as to hold the Democracy responsible for the acts of partisans, who thus bitterly denounce it, and who aro leagued with its enemies in seeking its overthrow. In this class we include the Gazette and the Commercial; the latter of which still, in the face of truth, asserts that (iovernor Shannon made the declaration that ho was for slavery in Kansas.
Cam op Tnn TsETn. If you wish to preserva fine teeth, always clean them thoroughly
aftsr von have eatin vour last meal at night.
riaciiAsrs iv the PciTiTii Akxv. The following statements appear in a speech recently made by Lord Arthur Paget in the UritUh House of Commons: "In the Life Oinrds a lieutenant, colonel's commission and outfit cost $ LS.2.V), which would purchase an annuity of $2,473 for his life. His
pay is J.,.(l.. A captain s commission and outfit cost $t'J,5W. which would purchase an annuity of $1,015, while his pay is $1,135. In
other cavalry regiments a lieutenant colonel's commission and outfit cost $3J,873, which would
buy an annuity of $,100, and lus pay is but $1,725. In the Foot Guards a commission and
outfit for the same erade cost $ 16,000, and eqni-
vaieiuioan annuity oi jj.wu, and the pay is $2,410. And these arc said to 1m fair examples of the operation of the system in all arms of the service. The sum total of the annuities
which might be purchased by the amount given for the commissions and outtits of ciirht officers
of various grades and ages, indiscriminately taken, is stated to be $12.ho0; while the amount of their pay is only $12,300. In these instances officers not only serve for nothing, but they pay
9oiiieiniii ior inc privilege. "It is stated that in 1?53. out of 30 lieutenant colonels, 13 were promoted without purchase: of 51 majors, 22; of 236 captains, 120. In lt-51, after the war bean, of 795 original commissions
granted, only less than half, were purchased. "The enormous money co-t of aliolishing the practice of selling commissions is indicated by the following return lately made public: 3!' comniUioin of heut.r.t.nel,A alticl nt I .ftis:, 'Ail " mj.r, - 07".5 ' .t.in, " :i,or.'.).:!no ?,:t-M ' lieutenant, ' l,iM,W5 VX ensign Sii.t cornet, .Vtl.O"! Vj? . . , -iv,-,.v,r "There is an implied property in military commissions valued ntabout $10,000,000, w hich, though based upon a most jKTnicious regulation, it is assumed the government must purchase before they can correct the abuse of which it is the cause.''
to how how groundless is the charge which the enemies of civil and religious liberty bring against that Church viz: that it is inimical to republican institutions. We cannot believe that a clergy who it.culcate, and a religious community who cherish, such benevolent and patriotic sentiments as these, would ever prove recreant to the high duties and responsibilities of American cilizcnohip. Here are the passages referred to, and we commend them to the especial consideration of those w ho affect to be
irigmencd at mo growth and extension orthe Roman Catholic Church in this republicau land : "We pray Thee, OGod of might, wisdom, and justice, through whom authority is rightly administered, laws xre enacted, and judgment decreed, assist, with Thy holy spirit of counsel and fortitude, tho President of theso United Slates, that his administration may Im; conducted in righteousness, and bo eminently useful to Thy people over whom he presides, by enconragingdue respect for virtue an.l religion; by a faithful execution of the laws in justice and mercy; and by restraining vice and immorality. Let the light of Thy divine wisdom direct the deliWrations of Congress, and shine forth iu all their proceedings and laws framed for our rule and government; so that they may tend to the 1 reservation of peace, the promotion of national lappiness, the increase of industry, sobriety, aud useful knowledge, and may perpetuate to us the blessings of equal liberty.
"We pray for his excellency tho Oovemor of
this State, for the members of assembly, for all judges, magistrates, and other officers who arc appointed to guard our political welfare; that they may lie enabled, by Thy powt.ful protection, to discharge the duties of iheir respective stat ions with honesty and ability. "We recommend likewise to Thr unbounded mercy all our brethren and fellow-citizens throughout the United States; that they may be blessed in the knowledge amr sanctified iu the
observance of Thy most holy law; that they
may tc preserved in union, and in that peace whodi tl.o wm-1.1 ennaot r-ire: and. nftcr "eniov-
inc the blessings of this life, bo admitted to
those which are eternal."
to ask an editor to shoulder the burthen of an onslonght upon a neighbor which he himself is not willing to carry. Wo shall never shrink from the rppiamsibility of anything
wo ourselves mav utter, but it is not right j
that wc kliould be made to carry for the quarrels of every person who seeks, whilst he is behind a musced battery, to u.e our col
umns for the promotion of his own ends. Astocnpinu Fa.vrn. A most a-stouudiug fraud has been discovered, which has been perpetrated in the transmission of $50,OfK) from the Land O.Tice at Dubupie to NewYork. The boxes containing, as was stipjHsed, r0,fXK)in gold, when opened in New York were found to contain nothing but lead. They wer sent by the American Express Company from Dubuque, and were two in number, and" should have contained $''5, ) each in American gold. Ono of theui had some appearance hf boir.g brokeu on the way; the other, to all, seeming untouched by violence, and both packed and fastened in the usual
way. It is not known, or even sunnised yet, whether the robbejy was committed on the way, or iu the Laud Oflice lofore tho packages were committed to the chargo of the express messenger. The upper layer of metal, iuside, was of sheet lead, under which there was nothing bnt bullets. Tho practice of the Express Company is not to suffer gold packages to lo out of sight of the messenger on the route, if possible. The messenger who brought down the SSO.C in gold from Chicago was in the train which met with the accident at West Albany, and had bis fac e and head seriously injticd by tho falling of one of the gold boxes upon him at tho moment of the collision.
tions if it had ouly been sustained bv a i State on the dark altars of Know Nothingtsm;
livnafi.de. good gathering of the people. Wal- j to take ihe Gospel out of the hands of the minIace cmcr'cd from the car and instead of the istry, aud place it iu the keeping of threadbare mass which ho advertised to greet him, one lwliticiatis; to make religion a matter of civil solitary con-fasionU was the "all told" of compuls.ou instead of an inject o free choice; , . , t and he advied his brethren to hide themselve
llic gaincnng. a, y ou ..... r imagine im-ws. f,om lC HW j,,,,,, ltfniptt.r wi.Pll ju. t.aim,
hditors his curses were not mud i.tttdeep; lie ,,. lli!4 iinn.v warning was heed.sl.and they, walked "to and fro" in discouragement and (t their honor le it said.) have kept aloof from despair. He looked wan, glimmering and the partisan strife, which hai come, ns pteineLineholv .'loomv and pcculiar.and in a most dieted bv him. W others it was w hollr dure-
me reasonableness i mtiienng and srrcasltc manner deciar
Castletony7tf tiol a thousand inhabitant
out the tlcas, and in pitv tor his Uesper
coudition wc failed to inform him that a Fusion speech had no longer interest enough to call ontthc fonuer from his plow, or the mochauic from his tools, that tho principles of Fu.-ion had been "weighed in tho balance
and found wanting." TalVe catno up, and
and tho m.r-t recent raodn
of punishment in prison is indiscriminate whipping, inflicted alike on old and young, rkh bm poor, noble and plebeian, and, w hat i worse; innocent or guilty. The Naples correspondent of the Iondou Times, undor date August 21Ui, says: "A gentleman at Potenza recently received fifty blows, and teas nftrrtrordt declared tancent. At Castollamare, two gentlemen were punished in the same manner for having hissed nt the theatre. Several advocates hare Msoboen beaten for denying accusations made against them " Sympathy with the Allies against the Hussions is esteemed a political offence, and tho hostility of the government towards France i carried so far, that hc wanton insul; was recently offered to the French flag of refusing t return a salute given by a French vessel at Messina. The strictest surveillance was iMi'ng exercised over the Jesuits, and the publication of CirUta ltttnltca had Ikkmi prohibited. Sccausn they had ndvated the cause of the French anj. English against the Russians. It is not surprising, under such circumstances that an insurrection is looked for, and if the last report from Italy is to 1m Wliered, thr plan of the disaffected had ceased to he a republic, but a limited monarchy, under Prince Murst. A pamphlet, said to have lcen written by Ctant Salict Hi, who, in the revolutionary period, was
.i - ... ...
Canamax Keoiment ton the Crimea. TheLondon Morning 1'ost savs, the British
(loverment has "cordially responded to the
with wonder and consternation loXel for the .
people, for it was evident that no
responded to their agonumg appe
this tunc one or two more made lit
anco and soon tho riveting consi
Democrats and four Fusioi-.ists, nnd no more. "Cyrus" of llge-publican letter memory, was there from a distance and in such hxstc must he have started that he forgot to weatherboard his horse for he rode nothing but the frame, a living skeleton, a live illustration of "death on the pale horse."' Alter writhing an hour or two in feeling sujenie the aw ful
silence was broken by "Cyrus' who intimated ! that some meddlesome Democrat might come : along and just be mean enough (oh cracky) to j
give the Sentinel a hint as to size m their meeting. It had the effect to start them immediately and they went trooping down the railroad, one after the other, ever and anon looking back at inhospitable Castleton thinking, no doubt, that "distance lent enchant-
red that j garded, and they have entered the arena of partv Its with-1 'frife, thus scandalizing their "holy calling,' le Operate' am' becoming "stumbling blocks" in the path
seek to know "the way, the truth and the life." While President Lungstreet has leen most severely censured and savagely assailed on account of his admonition, the excellent vuVcts of it mav 1m dilv seen iu the determination of the
true Christian ministry to condemn nnd disown '
this "entangling alliance" with the wotld. Ihe
one of the Ministers of the King of N'.-. pies, an J was afterwards one of the Triumvirs duriri); Iho
ivepuoucan regime at Komc, had created much sensation, not only in Italy, but abo in France and KnsrLind. It boldly itropose that, with the aid of Louis Napoleon, King Ferdinand shall Im? expelled from the throne of Naples, Trince Murat be proclaimed monarch, and promise that the latter will come fot ward whenever ha shall he called upon by the Italian pecuVi though he will not take the initiative. Prince Murat is said, by those who know his character, to bo little lilted for ihc Herculean task of reueneratin.' Italv: tit drowning mm eaiefi i
15 ; straws, and there" is little doubt that the patriot
oi .-veil ncrii Italy are in a great strait at tin present time to find a proj r lea!f for a moremen! whieh eetns ftdly np. Journal of Civowen e
The Treasure Chest of the AtUntlc. The N. Haven J-vj.-tioI conta:rs an intercitiug letter from Port Dover, C. W., relating to the discovery by Green, the celebrated diver, of the ill-fated Atlantic's treasure cho:d, from which wc extract the following :
Yon no doubt have hoard cf the many name-
.n . - . i:. i 1 i niuiaiu'uimi Kion lin I lllll.n.r rliH.1 ru!
ii i toiiowinz expression ir.nu iusin.p iuore . . . , . . . .- . J people lad , . . , ,,Rt ,H. t,kcs t or lot in with tho stcamn Allan tie; three years .jn-
aK ,,-r he crusade now coins on. neither will he ap "' iJW"'Mn yv.WK l he Rtatnte. I Ulievr.
eirapiHJar- ; nror. it in the ministers of his tlock. Letevorv the claim of ownership of property thnm
ted ot two MeiL.wbst minister in the South nad it. Ill ht, to three years. In thisc.se the time limit-
mcnt to tho view."
Itespect'v,
A. P. SHAW,
r.lcvpire.l on II. n ".I'I. in ...I - il.. -1
coraiea suonianne diver, r. achel here on tho 0lt., in the canaltoat schooner, Yorktosrn. Caj't. Patterson, on Lis way to ihe wreck, ".' miles distant. Thev returned yesterday, and
Im ing well acquainted with Capt. Palter-on, 1 ) obtained the following account from him :
i "At Hint 10 o clock Green descended by mesjt. j of a line, which, having a grapple on the ea.t 1 ti.frw n1t.ij'l....l I.. t.tnU.in KmI.iV Ifa Warn
The Btrength of Ithe Union t diesd with three pair of flannel drawers. Unv "The Union had proved to. strong for null,- 'iTl- U" "' l rt J air of woolen pants, ficat.on, t. strong for secession, and wo iU , ,h" " c"3,s- an,i ,,h,r,','liJ-lirs. "f llc"
prov4 b. stronc for aWition. That fell n-irit N """ " -J "u'u
would be crushed whenever it was brought iu
VFi,ra nil liiw Bsntra s i Aa - I r i a 1111 . t sachuetts. Tho ivorlL. there would not involve ! P,,,,.,,,.J f bhot armmdhw Issly. to sink him
. .. . ... ...
m.ny !e of advantage to some of them: "I regard tho Church and her Minister a distinctly committed to theiriucvangelizatiu of the wotld; aud lhat tho Miuiitirs of Christ should confine themselves to their projer spiritual fu action, without turning aside to take part in the political and party strifes that are cu
j staidly arising to tempt them from their path." ' (Sec letter, .S V. A lrocate. August 30.)
lhat fell spirit j
.i :.. M- !
! sole or ? ot an inch thick, aud a lelt of H-l
feet he had a pair of stogy shoes, with lead
lsiibENT ok tiie Qceen's Vis it to Pauis. j and elopient tribute
the country in civil war and revolution in their
opposition to slavery. Theso remarks arc understood to have been made in a recent speech by Governor-Adams,
of South Carolina.
(and the breast piece cm not weirh less than iT
pounds.) Taking hold of the lin he descended, finding it perfectly light so that he could seo all around him totl.e'denth of sixty feet, when
it grew dark, and for the balance of his fearful
a - - f
they are a Jiist, lor.iDie, j0:)rnev amid the caverns of the deep, he was
lO liiu sircugiu oi nir vn.le.l
solely by the line, until at the depth of
a tta aa rss i a k aa V V . . .a . . . 1 . f .
At the lall at the llotcil dc Mile an mci- federal Union, nevotionio ineconstsnuion, i nn im, wion lie struck l-ntom, or something dent occurred to tho Quoen which, notwith-; which is the real lond of onr rnion, is tho which he s-oii ma.le oet to be the w )ieel-honv standing her well known self-jo3scssioii, was i sentiment that pervades all henrt.Mh.it are-oftbe ill-fated Imat; groping along, be slid on near discon.;ertitig her. After the quadrille, truly patriotic, and constitutes tho great r-le-' -riene. d.v-k. from there- to th- guanl of in which her Majesty took part, sho resumed inont of its strength. As the I'm..., rods '' -fJ . Pif " d'seorrred th her seat in the chair of sJe, when the Fm ' upon the constitution, it can only bo n,Uu. tZYrthi. .Vi
07" A coal company has been organized in Michigan, and thirteen hundred acres ol land, comprising the lcds have been secured. One of tho lied a is uion the Central Uail Road, another on the Detroit and Milwaukie Rail Koad, and the third on the Detroit and Lancaster Plank Pad.
a . .....
before last. William iiiiamson, residing eti
Water street between Walnut and Vine, was shot in the j nv by a young piau named Joseph Cassiday. The latter was passingalong the street very much intoxicatel, atul was breaking the windows of tho different houses as he passed along. Williamson remonstra ted with him, when Cassiday drew a pistol and shot him as alove stated. Ho was ar-
rested, imt as illmmson was unable to :iipear in Court yesterday morning, in consequence of his wound, the c.ie was continued for a future hearing.
peror availed himself of tho opportunity to , irered by assaults iirxui mat instrumeitt. ,h,nt t ti,.tin. i 1 :.. 1 .1
dispatch an atd-dc-cainp for one of the Arab j !icrcer tneo as-utilM aume a threat- ,im, to a staunchion i.ear the gang way, and chief who was present on this occasion. ( n 1 ing apret tho lov of the fonstitiition is r.ot riving the Mcnal he ascended earning with him his approach his Majesty took him by the J sloc to rally tho patriots of the land to its. apiece of the wheel house which he bad tiehand and formally presented him to the Queen rescue. How important, therefore, that or- j cured. ( piece of which, uWit 8 inches long, 4 of England, when occurred a reallv graphic i crv public question should bo subjected, with j inches wide, and 1 '.C inch thick, was sawed 01 scene. The chief immediately prostrated i indiscriminate scrutiny, to the terd cf corti- Jin'1 P'rd'-d to me by the captain of the YorLi,;m...lfr.rl, it...., . l .r i n. ..l t l.a t-r.o I r.iii, .1 ii e nirii.I,..o f,.lhr r-mfM il.ot town) 11- had gone down, in all. 152 lect, and
II lI JiJV 'iiVIIV a.illi III ll .S'.i'S mo nu .i nvi"o,oin a 'Viivin v I i 1 ' V X. s. Iiai 1 . . ..f her Majesty. Th-act was ro instantane- violation of the constitution ver fails to cn- J., S ! l!??Zt A. . ..J - ., ... . 1 . -i .t . -i . i . 2!V'U descended, having iu-,t paitaken c4 a .mij that lliurn lett-i t. i.Kllillltf ol iireeeti. till r.r-tli e.ilirtrtf rnl cr.rwe. mtirAO Al..-. 1 . - . ... J .1
atelv raised, consisting of two thousand eight tlI15 ,T a1"1 :iU Ul:lt ,H sa"1 H u,lil 11 waH j "tioinsm is at once condemued by this test ; i 1,,-ad pie, e. hunilred men. Tho rt"imei't will bear the I ,,,cky 1,10 ,l,r England au-1 the Moor , and hence it is lhat in its fanatical warfare ! hi great succe.
Suooti. wi ru istext to Kii.b. Night joval Ofiors' ff Canadiatt people, and
that two Ciuadian battalions will le immedi-
name of the "Royal Iliitish North American," and will Ihj under the cmgmand of the Duke of Cambridge. The suWdinate commissions will Ik; conferred ujion Canadians, and ofih'ers already settled in the Province, of both English and French origin.
I hearty meal without removing Lis drr, tae t lb,, l.a'71.1 v.iei e I I II J i tj-rii.f it V'S4 I litA'Tlfte ML
lucky the Cjucen of England and the Moor j and hence it is lhat in its fanatical warfare i hi great success thu far. and hen be des-en-were not found in such a position U-hind a! upon the South it haslcen compelled to relv ded the second time lie w as quite Lot. (the day curtain instead of before such a blaze of lights, j for its justification upon a law higher than the I w,Vi ii'tensely hot.) Dcveudmg by his -econd The chief dressed in his bttrnooso, his extra-', constitution. Reiving mainly uion an RJW I lit be stMd on the deck, filing his wy rJiirig i: c.. i - ::. r . 1 i he soon reached the "third" window, which lc-
oiuinaiv cuiucti tap, uunuu ins i.uu in ner itcai ion reii"iotia lauaiicisin, aoomionism i , , , , . ... . . ' . ini nr.br.iVen .lie vlinttorisl. nnd rearliin? in hit
becoinw powrrltil and dangerous; but there j ha7,a M lal Ui1 it , , R. mnch C(,v,.t', fr
a - a a a .
tu.t in thorsKition it had isvn u.scniKM 10 mm
Majesty's lap, and spread his arms and hands
on cither side or her knees. 1 he Queen bore it with great dignity, though when the cere
mony was over she turned ujwm tho Empc
is too universal a devotion to the constitution
in the American heart to allow any fanati
cism to gain a permanent strength that will
07"A man committed suicide in Feather river, California, when a coroner's jury was empaniicled, heard theo videnee, and brought in a verdict that the m'i was a "fool." Sansibl jury.
Cholera is Kansas. Tho St. Louis
llepublicaii of the J0ih saws "This malig- ror-a meaning smile, which a fterwurds broke ; endanger the Union. Wc looK with conli-
natit disease ha3 appeared in Kansas, opiositc out into a gool humored laugh. Another denco to the next presidential contest, in
St. Joseph, in its most aggravated form
has proved fatal to
nttaetked bv it. Me:
K. Carter, and two other gentlemen died I it was ol .served that ho dimply lsnvod' td'ter i olitionism or not, and in that issue we look
within twcnty.four hour from the time they j the Eurnpeau fashion. Paris Cr. .V. 1 for the complcto vindication nf the foregoing firt vvera attacksd.' aid, I remarks cf t'overnor Adams, Wash. Union.
oit aggravated form. It 'chief was afterwards presented, but his Ma- lS5f., for the complete and final prostration j ! Jl",. "n'l hiar" a tl all those who have bscn j josty took the precaution of saying few words 1 of abolitionism. The question is then to be I j, r,li)'.,i'OT,'.r ..ivir-' Le w essers. John Pee, Newton to tho dark son of tho desert previously, and , tr'.ed whether tho Union is stronger than a!- i p'pi i,;m ,iuj jj" cf jn tj,
him, but were tinallv obliged to buov lltm ls?a and make sale for tin's place, f r medical afrn-
Not ls-in .nble to reach far enough to make this line lat. be aain ft-s."i tided for a hook to hook through the handles; reachitg tho dec!; he made known his succeis anJ requirertiett;
Ins no ho'k was read v sat dowu ItLtil vtio
ey wer about
was an Jr. Ttry .
MlrippiHl Into, nnd did ell in tlmr power lr
dance
