The people's journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1850-1857, October 16, 1856, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    T. S. CHASE, }
VOL. IX.
Business Cards .
F. W. KNOX,
attorneg at Rain,
Coudersport, Pa.;wilf regularly attend the
Courts ill Potter county.
ARTH.OI3. G. OLMSTED,
flttorttei) 4.eottttrirlor at 'RAW,
Coudersport, Pa., will attend to all business
entrusted to ltis care, with promptness and
ids lity, •
Utlicc , ...in the Temperance Block, up stairs,
tisiu-stseet.
ISAAC BENSON
X ttoritep at TLatu,
COUDF.RSP - ORT, P.A.
Glitee center of West and I'bird streets
• L. P. WILLISTON,
lattorittp at Rata,
We!tibor,', 'nog.' Co., Pa., will attend the
Court , m Potter 41 - 141 C4ctitieA.
. A. P. CONE,
Ertt - orttep, at 'Eat»,
Weilshoruugh, Tin a couuty, I'a. will regular
ly attend the cou,:ts, Of Putter I:ounty,
June 3, 184.5.
.
JOHN S. MANN,
fittornrl2 4:7 eounotlor at /Lab),
CouddrAport, Pa., will attend thu devera 1
cuvi• w Pau. r nud M'Kean counties. All
Uustues., eat rust. in his care, will receivi,
praa.,a .afratiaa.
(lake at. Maiii-stredil, oppuaite Ilia Com
lIJUIV, Coudersport, l'u,
C 0 LT DE ftSPORT HOTEL,.
Baran .f. MiTagatice
Pnol.it 1 P. T 0 .
Corner of Muir) ;01.1 Second s:reetx, Con
cliooport, Potter Co., l'a. 44.
W. K. KING,
Surbcßor, Qratqman, an'a
ontm 2 anar,
SaJet'ip3rt, .11' can Ca., Pa.,
Will intend to hasitit,oi for non-res:dent land
holden, upon rolson tenni. References
iiren if ruquirod.
P. S. gaps or arty part of the County uptle
to ardor, . 7.3.1
H. J. OLMSTED,
Surinnar an Draftantan,
it: the °diem J. 8, .414 tin, Coudersport, Pa
ABRAM. YOUNG,
Mattipmaltec and 3)tlneTer.
An work warranted. A etock of Walenee
and l.•vc ry on hand and (or Sall'. Cali at tbe
Euro of Staid) & Junes, Coudersport, Pit.
BENJAMIN RENNELS,
RLAC CSKITII.
Ali work in nit !le, done to order !mil
with d eitatch. On West Erect, below Tit rd
Coudersport, Pa.
S;N1ITII C JONES.
np34iri in 'Dry Goods, ( i'l•onries, Stat:one
27, Drag+ & Paints, Oils, Faaey
&e. Alain Strew:, Coadtrsport l'a,
JOS ES. MANN. & JONES
t;tneral Cirocery and Provision Doom:,
lc Dr s (iLiod+, hardware, Lloozs and
4nd-nha:e. er wen watt: to boy. Main
S.ree . , Conderspor. l'a.
D. E. OLMS'IT, D
Dealer:n Dry Goodi, Ite.ttiv-m aim Clothin g
Groceries, Crockery, k.C. COMICrSpOrt, l'a.
J• \V. SMITH,
D•a!er in Stave.,, bind manufacture a Tin
ripper, and Sheet-Iron Wore. Main large t,
C•miersport, l'a.
M. W. MANN,
Dealer in Books & Stationery, Mns:c. and
Magazines. Main-st., opposite N. AV. corner
41 the pubiic square, Coudersport, Pa.
A3IOS FRENCH,
Physician & Surgeon.. East side .Main-it ,
Abore 4.h st., Cuudersport. Pa.
DA-VlO 13, [MOWN,
Poundrynlan and Deidar in Ploughs, Up
pa end pr 31:01, street, Coudersport Pa.,
JACKSON & SCIIOOMAKER,
Dealer; in Dry Goods, Groceries, Crock, rv,
opt! Ready-11140 Clothing. Main street, Cou-
Aetspyrt, pa : •
K• J, VITENEY,
Merchant Tailor, and Dealer In Ready
made Clothing. North of the public vinare,
Coudersport, Pa.
A. B. GOODSELL,
GUNSMlTlT,Coudersport, Pa. Fire Ar m s
inannfactnred and repaired at his slop. cm
short notice.
M arch 3, 1848.
J. W. HAADING,
Fashionable Tailor. All work entrusted to
kis mare will be done with neatness, comfort .
and durability. Shop over Lewis Haim's
rime.
ALLEGAINY HOUSE,
SAMUEL, M. MILLS, Proprietor.
Oa lb. Wellsville road, seven miles North
et Cooderepen, Pa,
. . r
.. ......
.
. . . .
.. . .
• ::-. :- . ... .
,
I .'L'S. ,yl.
•
. f .
. .... . . . ' •.. .- • - -
...
. .
. . i ll . .
,
. p I -,
.• _. . . : • . . :
..... _.. ..,.,_.._ ......
H ... .:•
. ...„
~,,.. ~,.._ ...
.." . ~
. .
THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING.
Terms—in Advance
One copy per num, . si2s
TERMS OF ADVERTISING.
1 square 10 lines 1 or 3 insertions. $ 1.50
Each subsequent insertion less than 13 25
1 Square, 3 months, . - . 2,50
1 " 6 months,— - . 3,50
1 " 9 months, - -- - . 5,00
1 " 1 year, - - - 6,00
Rule and figure work, per sq., 3 insertions, 3,00
Every subsequent insertion, - 50
1 column, six months, 20,00
14/ 66 64 9,00 . ,r. 1, 12.00
-
Une-half Column per year. - - 20,00
rine column - - ' 35,00
administrators' or Executors' Notices, 2,00
Auditors' notices each, 1.50
SheritPs Sales, per tract, 3,50
Marriage notices . 3,00
Death notices, each. 50
Professional, or Business Cards, not
exceeding six lines. per year
Merchants advertising by the year, not
exceeding 2 squares, with occasion
al notices, (in all cases codified to
their bns•ness,)
Whe , e the paper is sent to the P dyer
tiser, especially for reason of his
adverasement being in it, the *.taro
will be eharged at the rate ofs 1 per
rilintai
Eir All le:term on busine•ts, to seeuro at
ention, 3:11 wild be addross,ed (post paid) to the
uudenigned„ T. S, CHASE, Publisher.
,SDE Campaign Vriie Vorm.
The following snag from among one bun--
dred and fifty sent in to the N. Y Ercning
Post, in answor to its propoAilion otfuring 4100
fur the best itepublican song, was awarded the
prize by the committee:
♦ta.—"Suoni La Tromba."
Men of the Nardi, who remember
The deeds of your sires ever glorious,
Join in our prau victorious, '
The pa•:ut of Liberty !
Hark! on the gales of November,
Millions of voices urn ringing,
Glotions the songs they are singing,
Fremont and Victory !
Hurrah !
Join the great chorus they're singing,
Fremont and Victory:
Come from your forest-clad mountains,
Come from the fields of your tillage,
Conic forth from city and
Join the gre d host of the free !
As fro n their cavernous mountains
4,111 the deep duudi to the ocean,
Join the great army in motion,
Marching to victory
Hurrah!
Echo front emu) to ocean,
rill:mug and Victory !
Far in the West rolls the thunder,
The tumult of battle is raging
Where Weeding Kansas is waging
Warfare with Slavery!
Slroggling with foes who surround her,
! she implores yowl() stay her:
Will you to Slavery ho:r.ty her 1
'Never—Ale shall be free !
numb !
Swear that you'll never betray her;
Kansas shall yet be free
Mai ch! we have sworn to support her;
The prayers oldie righteous shall speed us,
A chef never conquered shall !cad 113-
Fremont shall lead the free! _
Then, from the fi . eldi red with slaughter, •
S:avery's hordes shal be driven,
Freedom to Kansas be given, •
Fremont shall make her free !
Harrah ! •
To Freedom Kansas be given, ,
Fremont shall make her free !
Men of the North who remember
'Fhe deeds of your sires ever glorious,
Join in our mean victorious,
The inean of Liberty !
Hark ! on the gales of November
Millions M. voices aria ringing,
Glorious the songs they are singing,
Fremont and victory
Hurrah!
Fremont and Victory!
Front tho Pittsburg Journal and Visitor
THE V7.110.N0S OF KANSAS.
What a chapter will that be in
.his
tory, which shall recite the wrongs
ouffered by the pioneer settlers of Kan
sas l But the story ‘l . ill never b e , L u la,
The cases of individual suffering are
too numerous for record, and they will
he known only to the victims themsel
ves or their relatives. Some of these
instances, however, have found their
way to the light, and they reveal a
state of things in that scourged land
'which no right-hearted man can con
template without indignation,
...Yet we have men here in the North,
who, for political reasons, prefe'is to
discredit those accounts, and attempt
to convince the people that they' are
manufactured fur political-elfecf. We
have a case in point before us. Mr.
DEVOTED TO THE'PItINCIPLES OF DEMOERAGY, AND THE DISSEMINATION OF MORALITY, LITERATURE, AND NEWS
FREMONT AND VICTORY
tily CHARLES S. wzrm.mf
COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, PA.,. OCT. 16, 1856.
Henry L. Pennock, formerly a respec
table merclra ofWaynesbn g, (Treece
County, and well known in this city,
Moved with his family t'u Kansas some
months ago, On the 14th inst. he re
,.
turned to his former residence, and of
course had a sad story to tell his old
neighbors, But the Waynesburg
the Buchanan organ of that
place, reported that the rumors of vio
lence and outrage in Kansas were false,
and, gave Mr. P. as authority for the
statement. We have received the
Waynesburg- Eqgle of Saturday, in
which we find a letter from Mr. Pen
nock, and we make room fer au ex
tract; It was written in reply to the
Messenger :
1 left my home to visit Pennsylvania,
on the Ilth day of Au oust, at which
time things appeared to be quiet. The
first letter I receive.; from home on
My art ival in Pennsylvania,• dated 21st
August, and from tine of my daught
ers, informed me that her three broth
era had been compelled to leave Inane
to seek a place of safety, from the bands
of Pio-Slavery men, romping about the
country and threatening xo diivu out
t! , 3 a bnliii,,nists---the name given
by them to all wh, do lint agree will,
them in endeavoring to 'make Kansas a
Slave State. I have received several
other letters frnni the feruaies of my
and one from my son, in all of
which they advise me nut to attempt
to return home until the excitement
cools thiwn, as is tiici; opinion: I could
not be•permitted to reach them by way
of the river in safety.
5,00
10,00
These, gentlemen, are a part of the
facts in my case. The!e ale many oth
ers I could mention if tiMe woul,l per
mit. Under these circumstanc,es, my
mind is in at rest, and I know .that nuy
flimily are not at-present, nor have they
fur sometime, been in the meut
of perfectly contented mitu4
Alost respectfully yours,
HENRY
HENRY L. PENNOCK..
The same paper 'contains a letter
written in Kansas, on the 10th Sept.,
by a daughter of Mr. Pennock, to her
friends in Greene county. She writes .1
like a brave woman, and what she says
has the stamp of. truth. She says :
On the day the Free-State men:were
expelled from Leavenworth, your ft ietid
Haleman Golden, crio driven out of the
place; ifhedbl not cr., they were to hang
him. • He left, and went to the Fort.
Alter staying there three or Ibur days.
he came to our house to stay until the
great excitement should " cool down,"
On the next morning Mr. Bitilicip and
li Bob" Roberts„stopped on their•road
to Lawrence.
.llaletmu joined them
ar.d they all started off in high spit it
On the Saturday f Blowing, news Came
that three dead hondies had been found
on Stranger et eek, and one was t ecog
nized as 1-lalernan Golden ! This is
only report, but from the difterent di
rections, in Which we hear it, and all
the same way; leads us to believe it is
too•true. They had no arms . of any •
description., Whoever shot them, did
it for the. purpose of robbing, as I
know they had money and watches.
Th:s is a poor victory. Tire Pro:Slave
ry papers will blaze about the •' victo
ries won," and half are just as I have
add you athese, three. Give them ten
to one and they will fight. A delight
ful sport lon them to meet a lone man,
traveling peacefully alc.ng, to torture
him as long as life lasts, and when they
have murdered him—coldly rob him of
his money, and leave his dead body to
the mercy of the hungry wolves. Such
things: have been done, and will be
done again. No wonder the Free
. State party have at last taken up arms
against them. 1 have du co brothers,
perhaps four, fighting fin their rights,
and I hole and pray they may do their
Ivor]: well. -- There is no
one at home but us women, and we are
not afraid of any one but cowards ;
brave men do not stoop to acts of vit.:
liany. We have no men to do anything
for us ; we have to haul water, get,
wood, &c.
The . crop take care of itself. One
of our neighbors, Dr. Trower, had to.
leave home or suffer death; he had a-;
good crop; he has been gone three
weeks, and now, there is n.it one ear
.of coin in the fields, or one stack of
wheat left. He is- a poor man. How
many hundreds have suffered the samo
thing ! To 'see hard - labor thus de
stroyed, is too much to endure. What
will become of them this winter 7 Ali
the . Free State men near us had to
leave their homes, and families, The'
:prti‘SlavOry party have stolen all their
horses - ; they will not let any Free State
!elks have provisions from Leavenworth
and if they did we have no one, Or no
way to go fur it.
All the folks from Greene county are
strong Fremont. (they came strong
Democrats.) Fremont would carry
Kansas. *.. • s * •
Good news ! One of nut neighbors
just left - here. Woman is not deal.
He was left for dead, but recovered
enough to reach Lawrence. • He is
now able to talk a little: r hope he
may get entirely well to revenge the
clued.
From the Pittsburgh Commercial Journal
THE OCCASION OF . THE SEVENT:EENra
DEAR COUSIN :—lt's over now. The
flags are hauled in, the cords a c re tak
en down, thOwagon4 have gone back
to their shed 4, The horses to their oats,
the .ox to his owner, the ass to' his mas
ter's crib, and the dust is-settled dom u
again in the gutters. and on the pave-.
ment. It's all over ; and. now that it
is all over, and time has been to allow
of a cooling of feelings since the show
of the Seventeenth, what do you think
of it ? Handsome, now, b'etween ynu
and ne. private, n the light ;if the Fif
teen Hunched-, what do you think of
it? Wasn't it purekins—sevet al acres
of 'em ? Wasn't it a whole team, and
the crass dog under the wagon ?
Was'nt l . it a good many potatoes tO the
6 atch 1 Wasn tit. some 1
I tell you it Made me feel lonesome.
There's no use of making bones of iz,
it did make me feel lonesome. I ex.
r eriengo a realizing sense of the
words of the poet when he employs
an observation Pli . • the subject of the
peculiar quality'of that solitude enjoy
, . .
ed among the many with no kindred
.cunciousuess endued, which you will
find a' large in . Childe Harold's works.
My mind, 'these last few days, bas
taken very much the Childs Harold
turn. Have you ts.n extra copy of
Meditations, or Fox's Book
of Martyrs, or the Bloody Buoy, or
anything else which you could lend to
Soothe lacerated feelings? I wonder
drowoing's an easy deatii,—tir hang
razors,—or dog- buttons?
1 111 USE do something certain,— some
thing sure and of a fatal tendency, or
here will be no counting upon conae-
quences.
I had reckoned upon the Fifteen
Hundred as upon something invinci- I
ble. Fifteen Hundred's a great
amountof-population. It's a strong
family that counts eight members and
the heads—ten altogether. Ten goes.
into Fifteen- Hundred— ten into fif
teen once ind five to carry; into fifty,
five times—One Hundred and Fift.Y-
Families. That'; quite a village of
lamilies=ofiarge families. But when .
it comes to adding a eypher,—'noth
lug,' you might call it, and nothing it
is "over the left," but at the right it's
high in the figures of the multiplica
tion table,—when it comes to adding
a cypher, it counts ten to one—Fif
teen Hundred Families to One Hun
dred and Fifty. I'll thajdt you for a
lass of water. Fifteen Hundred
•
flies of the size of John Rogers's!
A whole family.in the • procession of .
the Seventeenth to evezy single man,•
child and maiden in the turn out of
the Tenth !
Sir, the - extremity .of the times calls
for corresponding- action. \Ve must
change our tactics. The stylo of stake
reared for John Rogeis won't do;
we must try another. WO are iu for
our platform, I suppose, but I am,
afraid we made a bitinder in the ma-
Buck-eye's brittle—it won't -
stand. The Fifteen Thousa.nd_'s
against it: The Fifteen Thousand
ain't partial to horse-chestnut. In. the
choice between horses they evidently
prefer Woolly. The reflection's pain -
ful, but it ain!t to be choked off. Mule
soup and grasshopper pie seem to be .
wholesome dishes, and according to
the taste of the.times. We may mourn
over the depravity of the national ap
1.-petite, but crape is no correction
-grief-is no- tonic. If 'yolks like grass•
hopper theyll swallow grasshopper ;
and ive can't help it. I have observed .
that this season has been unusually
abundant in grasshoppers. It is very .
generally -remarked upon. -
Did you observe how largely bone
and sinew was represented in the Pro
'cession 4 Men from the work-shops,
m
BEING A PRIVATE SPI2TLE TO Till: POST
men from farms, men from, the mar-
ket house, draymen,, ‘vagnuars, print
ers,—all were there, horses, boilers,
shirts, looms, printing-presses, carts,
miller, and so - on, for six. miles through
the programme of Fifteen Hundred
Families. John Rogers ! Now the
quostiou naturally suggests itself, aro
we—you and I-and the Post and such
like—are we the Demoaraticparty 1
Ate we the party of the people—the
hard-filsted, the muscle-Men, the sweat.' I
- ens, the type of men generally, whom
James- Buchanan- loves from his soul, •
or are we not ? There certainly was
d strong indication of gristle in the
ranks on the painful occasion consid,
ered. Confidentially we must admit
it. As an organ you are permitted 'to
inddlve in variations---4hat is allowable
in or eans, but confidentially we may
as well drop the extras, and face-the
music in the plain. • In view of the
fact, hain't .we been pulling the silk
stocking idea a lertle too high. above
the kneel Hain't •been kid-glov
.ing rather tight Between us and
the - Post' I think so. Why, for every
manufacturer out there must at least
have been a score of operatives. It's
me . lanchollY, but it's true. It wouldn't
be prudent to insist that the workmen
were ctiinpelled
. itito the
,muster, as
some of our unwary ones have done.
Some of those honest fellows might .
take it into their heads to resent the ;
insult with their fists. Let me tell
you that skill and industry are the cap
ital which constitute the wealth of
their proprieter—a wealth which
makes him master of the man under
whose lietidship lie operates. You
can't keep a brother down who has a
sound back-bone to lift him erect, and
it's downright charge of imbecility in
Drain and holy—•a charge that Pitt.;-
burghers are very apt to shake five
fingers under d nose for—to utter the
insiUuation. It may answer for rig
gers, perhaps„but white men common
ly experience a biJlio.us attack at such
innuendoes which is very likely to
prove contagious—being communica
ble through the "lives." By the by,
harping upon that string, don't it seem
d trifle at • odds against • Democratic
pretension, that our pahy up here op
erates so exclusively and so cordially
with the* First Families of Virginia,
the cotton lot ds of Mississippi, and
the Gentlemen •of Honor of South
Carolina, while "from our souls we
love the laboring men" in Pennsylva
nia ; that we are fellows in council
and brothers in war with Upper Ten
under the line, who•sing to tie words
of" Greasy mechanics, filthy operat.:
ives and small-fisted farmers,"
Mail who loves dm laboring men, our
common candidate? Prithee, solve
me that.
Did you obse•:ve how many young
men were in -the Precession? ' I'm
afraid of the young men. I regret
that we are under the necessity of hav
ing young men. Young men havn't
lived long enough to have their tastes
propeily educated, and are just as apt
to enjoy a palate for grasshoppers as
anything . else. Between the two
meats, they are like to prefer Mule to,
Mulatto. Old eate rs have their stom
achs trained into more dutiful service.
They strain at a gate, Probably; as the
maxim has it, and if they don't swal
low the . saw-trill they do the planks of
its turning out,•at any late. Young
men look more to digestion. They
have a sharper regard for wholesome.
,They can't see the propriety of throw- .
ing aside a white loaf of wheat bread,
and taking to corn-dodgers, because
old Torn Tinker down street does.
Torn sticks to corn because corn was
the staple, in the days - Of the Rebellion,
and he cultivated a habit for it then
which wheat won't. satisfy. I tell you
I'm afraid of the young men. Four
yeafs ago; I'don't know but that I
laughed_ at them' myself, but seven
teeners then are independent voters
noW. It's had policy for an organ to
Make monkeys of young men. Be
tween' me aud 'you and the 'Post, it is.
We arc a John Rogers people. Four
years produces a *air groWthtintita
EDITOR & PUBLISHER.
most families; and whoa we recollect
the. number of families . to the acre its
tliis State, , the result "%nu:a make -a,
eOnsiderahle iprocesSion. The boys
that you shook your quill at in
, '52.
Will shake a set of fingers.at thumb i tt
leng,th from theiF„rtoses, toward you,
this fall, to infinitely more telling: ef...
fect. Don't make monkey s of the
young men: • • .
: I long to write more fully. Writing
affords a tempering:effect to mouinftil .
feelings. It soothes wounds. It staves
off the eraviug after . dog buttohs:
feels content, in viow of - it,.to live : a'
little longer. But my sheet is filled.
I may take occasion again to indulge
further in the solemn reflections grow
ing of the Procession. Till then,
believe me yours cordially,
From the Indianapolis Journal Of the 2fith,
A SIGHT FOR BEICHARITES..
We saw a scene in the Union Depot
. .
yesterday Morning,- that •we think,
preached a more, powerful Fremont
sermon than all. the - eloquence. of th•
stump or the Semite has yet produced.
Seated ailing the wall, on a bench, Was
a, family of thirteen, the father, mother,
and eleven children, weary, dirty, 4; 7 . .
titute and Wretched beyond all paral
lel in this prosperous city. .'At one
end was a well gr own boy of si-xtethn,
.without a shirt, his skin blue with the • •
cold, - expord, except where . scanty
garments of thin and coarse linen coy-.
erect, it. He had, been sick, and was
wrapped in a coarse coverlet. .Near
him sat a young woman, a sister, with -
her husband. She was bare-headed
and hardly decently covered with rags
that had not touched water, apparent
ly, since they wore-made. A pale and
_puny baby lay 'in- her arms. Three
or four little boys sat next,4an-look
big, creatures, as - white as 'their little
wool hats, except where the dirt gave
an appearance of health to the flesh.
They were ragged and shivering
with eta but they didn't speak nor
ci y ail utterly unlike the cheerful
ness and vivacity of boys were their
silence and quietude, that it made one's
licart'ache to see them. One of them
once passed his hand caressingly over
the face of the little baby which lay in
its mother's lap, but there was no smile
nor glimmer of aflection in his pale
face. The mother was bare-headed,
unwashed, and pale, as were all the
family. She, like her daughter, nurs
ed a little, sickly child that lay noise
less, but staring with its round eyes
at the crowd of pityidg spectators. A.
son, dressed, or rather undressed, like
all the rest, sat in the middle,-shiver-
big with a chill. He writhed -from
side to side, and groaned sometimes;
but never spoke. The father, a man
of apparently forty-five poets, had
wrappeit a small quilt about his shoul
ders, and either under the cheering
influence of so much greater warmth
than the test enjoyed, or because he
felt it incumbent on hini as the held
. of the family, was the only one that
spoke - while we were within hearing.
Ile had been driven from was, - he .
:aid, by the Buchanan:nen, as so many
other : poor settlers have been, and
rubbed of every dollar lie had in the
world. His cattle had been stolen by
Bufhrd's thieves, and he expelled from
the Territory because he •would not
take arms against the " traitor Lane," -
as the Sentinel calls him. He moved
from, near Lexiegton, Ky., and his
name was Ritchie... They had 'no
property, no money, no provisions,' no
medicines, though several of themwere
sick, almost no clothes. So forlorn -
and
. wretched a family - we never saw,
and they were 'made so by the infamous
scoundrels whom the'iA.drninistration
hired as "Kansas militia," to oxecuto
the Kansas laws. They were one of
the productions of Democratic policy.
The spectator! contributed liberally
tolelp them on their road to Lexing
ton.' Mr. David Hays, of the city po
lice, exerted himself moat efficirtly
on their behalf, and raised some ten
or t« elve dollars. Nearly every ituan
or boy who approached, leffsome con
tribution for them. We saw . sturdy
railroad engineers and firemen emp
tying their pocket books, news Boys
gathering their coppers into a conve
nient heap, kind-hearted citizens in.
robing bills. Every_ body seemed
touched by their silent,upcoreplaining
distress. Now and then -we could
hear men, saying : " There is . some
thing.ihr an old liner to' look at 1"
One little gentleman of the Buchanan
stripe.' paraded •up and down tho de-.
pot with an indignautitrut, wan:Ming.
and .curainghitterly, as he would hear
some sturdy Frementer say, " Corns
up. Jim, and see what your 'party in
Kansas have done." . It *as quite •
evens—.altugether. , I
. It n
....i.t.s.o
r.:~~n 7'C':.
ME
113
E
=EU
MEI
NO. 22
JUSTIS DEMIO.OO.