Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, January 25, 1855, Image 2

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    INDEPENDENT REPUBLICANi.
lEEE
filnitri- - 1 Paiteettittim - •
Jonathari Mef i vin vi. f,:ito•ht&l#elviti. tif
bel for Di '-Foroq• Dig a tviittlifo swirl
litalii,., -•'` the : t , i ` - 'l-P F ., , ~,
1, Con
i :univealttts( „ in GrOn. 'Ana*
L
i. . "I t
‘ .. 1:4 ent : , Thts tail*. , N tct, gt4lty #ir Ear -
c a t i* , 4 1., :v.... :1 : 1 \.3;\ 1iii,.. 4 , -;,.. 7 :',
Continoriwea.it vs.
~ illiarn Day ton 'ln
dictment for fitrnishing intoxicating 1 drinks
to a perion of ltnown inte mperate habits.—
Jury unable to agree upo n their verdict, and
discharged by the Court. ; ~':
Commonwealth vs. William Daytelk - This
was a case under the aet'of Bth May, 186'4,
The m in o r, Convention .
~ , i , prohibitin ' the furnishing of intoxicating lig-
Whoever haS, Observed the,politicaftn coie: Alm* to i ir 'b f k bawn l intem P erat 4 ha bits.
L; seprot
'mantis of theiten fr *V7eriPaifl"Of iiiiii - eliiit ..; - judge: riplot i mid' thnf'inlinwing points
i
for the past fesilrtentlis, Musth‘ conside r a- 1 •• Th at °lel net I°°k O ct uPb° its Pa'
hly_amused. at their - last tiodge; - perpetnttid age, 'although t he Defendant had a license to
at their lete'ONanty Convention. The ' Sc- aduhrpra: a nd had no knowledge that his
%magus leadere: knoWingthe mat of the pe j o- right t'll'Sel.! fin d er.hisli*Se,laa been alter
* here t o .b e atrea •
g ii. F ree s e ii, 4vo:ta k ti, ed by the I.4l;lislature. li '
great pains-to hoodwink thtm on - that qu4s. -2. That the giving liquors in any quanti.
tion, *Ea, before the Fall 'election; labork ties 't° Pcrs° ° t , a iatemr erate _ habi" or ith
hard% tojriake them 1001 t one way and ptilf l P°Ts-, ;even' If i t were * glans of wino at a SO'
" ---'''' - - --0- •' ' 1 ,': *, ' vita vi was within the provisions of the
and voting flit Go;-i - rti7x. • lag er. . ~..,S . ,V - --- -.1 ,- ,y,.... 4. .. i_...,.-....1.,.. t.....,
failed, in that, -instance, aa
but h-not, yet a m i ni iir intemperate hibits or a minor.
given up. They have . limey r, • discovered. becn
The eviden was, that Brown-wlts- a man
that they counted too much on 'their y ower of intemperatehabits+that • he worked in
over the People, end that the great bedi f
,Fs. August ftir 15ayton at aidam about six miles
hottest - voters have deserted them : and the from Great B end . As brown was going up
fore they have consented to belie their. Id °a Monday orniall:, lie called at Dayton's
creed and at this late day, profess Free s oi i and took a s m all drink of liquor. .4.s he re
)
Principles. Men who* have for months been turn e d un;Sat u rd a i ni g it, he ala° el" and
advocat i ng t h e N e t rask a biii aa . r i ght a rm' took a drink.. This thaJudge ruled brought
Democratic, -came
. t4:ether , in. ConventiOn, him within the provisions of the ttattite, if he
the"other slay, and pronounced that bill—the knew . Brown rwas a man of intemperate hab
pet measure of the
• present administratin, its- ,Verdict} guilty. Rule to i *hew cause
and claimed throughout tf l e a im
country a st why the vei•diet shoulit not be. . Set aside, t ) .re
universally, as a Democratic measure, god i turnable to i n ert sessions.
1
its support the test of Democracy—" an out- 1
rage against northern sentiment, and noith
ern feeling—a measure alike uncalled-for and
- unjustifiable- by any principle of justice or
good faith." Very true, but how long Azo
did they find it out? Had they not made
the discovery when 'they held their County
Convention in August last?'lf they had
then declared the Nebraska bill en - unjustifia
ble measure, an outrage, and carried 'out the
principles so expressed at the election 4,ittt
Ibllowed,weni'titt bare believed Them hottest
iti their declarations. And no doubt therare
honest Free.Soß men among them, who b l are
only been misled by designing and atabitiOus
leaders. But what has oceurregi since Oec
don to convert those Old 'lluniers tope
F'ree,Soil Faith? The truth is that the Pro
slavery
.tendencies:ng.
of the ratioorgatliza
tion called the Democratic party, have utter
ly alienated from it the great body of north
ern freeinen, and These would-be leaders hare
becoipe alarmed at the pOopleis movement
towards a union , its , the Free-Sailor Reptibli
an ,party. They feel that Ower haeide
parted from thetn, and haxe.gleirmined to
make one more desperatleffirt to regain it.
It is the love of power and plaCe, the drire
to regain their old ascendency, that brings
men. who have been all alongadvneatitigland
lauding the Nebraska ' bill, to dewy* it
now. , Who ever heard before that John
Boyle, C. 'L. Ward, Ashiterst Carpenter,
iVm. C. - Ward, Thonias Johnson, Isaac
Reckhow, Azor Lathrop, D. O. Tull,
e
Daniel. McMillen, A. J. Davis,James AC-
Millen, Sze., were anti-Nebraska
.? 'We know
that most of these- -echowere allyromi t nent
in, the Convention-have r•epeatedly , mires
soli their approval of , the measure, and Some
of them •have often spoken publicly in its de
fence, and ,electiorieered for. Iligler on thit is
sue. But now,these nien get thgethl, land,
at the risk. of losing standing in the fry,
pass anti-Nebraska resolutionss unanimo sly.
Are they in earnestior , is all this done ran
object? Webope they are in earnest, but if
so their conversion has been remarkably sud
dest. They can show the honesty of their
professions in- a way-that" Will. not admit of
Aonbt, The Republican party now raidly
;1
forming throughout the North, is as em heti
oally and distinctively the Freedom/ partY,
48 the sham-Democratic is tke pro.slivery.
party. Let' them, then, if they are honest i
in their Free-Soil - profions, come out from 1
'the party in which it is held treason to attempt
to carry out those principles, and joi n th e
Free. Soil party. tviivitever a mates ffes
sions, if he endeavors to prevent a unson.of
the friends of freedom, he is an ally-: Of the
'Slave ifr6Nrer. But these men who baN4 been
a year in finding'out that the'ltiebraska bill
is wrong, affirm their determination i t stick
to the. party. A fig, then, for the anti
io
"Slavery professions., Such friends of f cdom
_are wcillsit So fi tr from helping stop
the: career of slavery-extension, -the will
1)4 it forward.. Their party is proalavery,
'-and they will vote with their party and a
,
year or two after the mischief is do wit!
.. _ .
...pretend to discover their mistake— ereep
-ott they will prohably get tozether, as in this
case, declare the measures of the party afrong,
and renew their allegianeeto iti Men Aiho are
:in earnest genet •allyait ditegtily frerrt that
I ,
• We are aware: true theriiisii‘sorts
of men in ,that 'Convention, thole-Irhive
bemoffire opposed the -Nitautitt , I, by
word and act, and those who have demo
it -
:Ted its words, - while supporting it y their
~a
.:irts; ht4 now the 'more manly, open
:)laa "ocatabed to.the dee4tiva. Patti, and
—lwire
ter :, we: may expect that t hey will all
unite in talking inti446very and voting:pro.
,
slaverk,that is 4 alleng asibey main in their
~ ~. .
connection-with the party to wine ey lave
Just renewed their allegiance. The' ill kid
it•diffseult - to get- li vet - y knatinat -of the
' freemen of S419, 1 10' 1 0 31 " minty a
14162121. •
CHARIXB F. 'BEAD AND-IX. B. FRAZINI, EDITO R
MONTROSE, PA.
thurid&V, January: 25, 12554,-."-;-•
Eau rot.- - Our New . York corresponde4t
requests us to state that in his communication
publbilted last week, he wrote " living epis
tles;natnd not " long epistles," as the cli
p:444 made him say.
;Milt
lie seen Ahst •Chsrles C`33 tc
iikOr is tolecture 4 20th
.: apd : > in.ti ..14144 the 40.01 4 31st,
asti ..asiVat; Susquetssurs, Ltepa
•felFIWy '41114*. - The 84 . 14
, eti , trs Ida& isemiti
to b 0 Rua
110Pft.F.# 1 '
a:#lo4 Pi: ourSadirg;iiive art (19*
6:l%Bittl4l,•l4;ibos; 91419'1k5V1114i , .5, is
7 1; ifk0*4 . 41%411110310:1( , )11 fratitus:- t e
F. 416 rd AI o *l C,10 14 7 to_ial
PROk
.*ksteika4o..plosuout. mea of-
AGSPltiearlitin. -
ME
I WE
In Pennrlvinia, the Speaker of the 13 se is a
known AbOlitiOrk leader.--Washington Union.
W .
e nelieve all the !tregular-Delrlocmtie'
papers - of thiS Smtkcit i greci 'With the E r stt ) in in
anathematizing the mte`who voted Ter, the
peaker, hut it is alittie singu
lar that Uhilp'the charge brought ag4nst him
by the Unix, the Philadelphia Pinney/an
nia and oiher-pro.slairery- shoots,- isitha i t he
is a Free up in this region it s di ein
ed good:poi l ley to represent him a* -a
slavery inan. This misrepresentation is
doubtless tllaught necessary in order:to rusk°
out a ,ease ag,ainst our Representative) Mr.
LaTanor ii who LAS been, so independent bs to
vote in accordance with the principles' of his .
Free Soil cnstituents; instead of sal:Knitting
himself to the controtl-of a few tmprinciipled
We aui assure. Mr. 'Lathrop
• i
that,.noWever m uch rns 'Vote may nave lend-,
_ed the doughfaces, it is apPrOve hye
the people) who - haVe ibeccre so 'Mu l ch in ,
earnest as to discard . 41cl party ties In pursuit
of prhu4ple, and e_xpeet ;their RepresentativeS
to do the Same. M. Lathrop may safely
consider hignself instructed to vote On the side
of Frees/snit. . j•
, •
igssas.! Ends am It RC;
I:w , as a Democrat. 'The princip les which
• I
once made' me a I:entoerst, now make me to
Republican: Theytireltbe principles which
Washington advotted,j which were !Pigtailed
by the iminortal 4efrerson, and which beesniel
the ‘iettledpo:licy or the country' iii 1787 by'
rates of the . patriots of the Revoltition.
il i roni 1787 te 1852,; a period of aixiy.fiie
yeaM, these principles remained the .‘ settlid
pdick' of the countri, and their entire ec•r.
rectnfs was unquestioned by the North, and
fully ;acceded to by the South. They ; &Omn
i repudiated' by the Etemeeratic, and adopted
theilepublican Party. They were derived
from the Constitution, are sanctioned bY
Supreine Court, and have been reptiatedly en.
dors4 by Conges# and by the i people: : --
Their Correetness and their importance to the
hancii.3uld prosperityof my country and .to
the Mare sacred canna of hantinity have made
me a Republican, yet a strong feeling of !at
tachment to the Demoeratie - PartY still m
lin
, ,
ge around my heart. teelings . :ar affection ;
and Ohniratien, though . deeply 'minded, in
demi *we to Lend tiny steps testard the Dein'.,
oeratic Convention-: I listened with 'mtisfac:
tioa to the speakeraas they. alluded to ithe
primitive ,days _of!, oar Republic,; when ;die
Democratic party fought valiant* for , princi
ples dear to the hesrts arYreemen, and ' ex
ulted OVer the 'itteceislhat crowned its labors..
Wasbington, Jefreksbn and lackion were; al-
Inded to as patriots whosememories 6e en.
shrined in the ',beans of Denvetata That
our Country bad 4ttled down npon .
advocated by these illustiious heroes
Was a subject of congratulation. . ; Our hearts
.all responded to these sentiments in they fell,
hi eloquent tones,'frorn. the lips of the spoth . -
ers , and verse filled With pride when they, told
is the party tdivais triumphed When it °dye.
eited such glorious' principle& We .eiperi
,enced&*eling brawe and veneration leen
its girt Fineipl t es were advocated h , its,
sh.eat Mat ; for there is a moral 'grandeur and
4thrhnity in the greatness of men and in the
greatness of principles. It was then , a great
•and glerious *W.; and taus -the.aPeihers
adverted to it as itonce was, they win. re.
*OA to withjpo attplanue. But 'Aen
.theYisat -down silent upon the men Who
ioW ' lead it, 1104 the pcineiples it 11164 Ada*
eatels and upon the poeitioia it near:oustains.,
before the venally; a feeling, 4if i sadneas 'eet-1
sledj downepot .the; audience. Every man
tv onnaninbis;linelted dimwit las heart
a 'Alias weft that the emits!! at not
itmairal!t thePrile,o l rth the :fermi bi tort'
of the party, WoOkington,Jeffeallm : (gene,
God taro4o Om! These names
hianld 'neVei *mind tiitither,:asiead
ereletoiestiklitisivbse- Patti. labOtiy. or
Death,' Free imi 441,1 Fugitive, Slave:Wl,
Neiferi4:6oi: 44milodHmit • -What a
•1314--me end) the
;duiro y. are, sev y,
c v # l 4 l *riiiii:Ot.#44 l3 o6l4leirersoo l Trieice
1 464 aeuguni .
14*(11 , 3 , 1.,..8ie1, ILwentaitorand
„ - 1. 0 t; that ;nnektfaitid . ti*tioorz
IffirPu
oifiod4o:.o4ojunithe ..
itepublii. I -- •
• . -
six* s.
~'~ Y ¢
i i ii
, . ~,
r
CORRESPONDENCE.
-Fir the; Aelnthlicen.
The Deineenitie Ccmventita.
"
1. I
Loud gloi7ing in the past and ableet si
letiet upon the kosent was e toltitx.
.4#l4rAi
the sOaketa. The aged sphistiEteifek,ed t
a r
1r... WO 14 1 —.,1uP°ki h e*I tii•
oiliT / 1 0,,, * 4,114118 of) ,fir"
~fir"
elei:takeov* uktAhe itttles#d idWortni.
,tiOjw*l no*Jatlke, hei„ k442:144m50s
iiideo`U ‘'SO irigioniiiitoi N'ati coiiipiaccii.
, •
cy p4on the I;)etitkicrat who talksioudly
,of
the nisn and priikaples that lonco naethis
paityjto
and. the principles:.-that no* sink it to Infa
my. - 1 - • -- • •
• Ncit so 4ze:m 4 ble is it to deny - the only re.,
$
cent-measdre_the party, can claim ; .wholly.
its oWn. It may; perhitis, do Air an Editor,
$
sineeiiVik* thnohcanted.esage-of-theisirti
iu thts count,, to state facts incorroc97 and
to ddeievelMiirtiryNo — teni 'Mkt the support of
of. ice measures.. But we cannot conceive
what: manne,r of excuse is to he furnished the
Spe#enilirut *, 7 411 - hinifrabli
menifor uttering a falsehood so palpable and
So bike as the, following.- 4 The Repeal of
dur.oltisseyri qoatrronqie was note sunrise
of the D4weristfe , pang." " Are Pierce and
Kies t Is the National Adminis
tration a utig Adminiscrancin f • --x-sn,
and Congresii,ialt Whig? , The State Central
Committee `lri:tit Mr. ,Bonham its Chairmmi,
was that Whig, and "our good Gov. Bigler"
too!? Mid you, ray dear Democrats, were
you all lirhiga last Lill? For shame! . ITIWt.
You'lney elf reeolve timr, "this is x time
'when all:good me.n are required by ez4'ene les
of politica events to arouse thetitselvei. to tte
tour mse has becoma desperate- in-'
Aced, become naseaaary to
.resort to
'such dcperate, nay, suds ignoble Means. -
if
yott : are ashamed bf 'the Nebr aska Bill,
whynot iienottnee it manfully and 4Soiveto
oppose it by
,your votes and 'as welt by . everf
other means in your power, -Avitethm - your
party su‘tainSit or .not t' But yOu are not
opposedito it, else you would have been'- in
fivior of re:enaettnent of 'the Missouri
Compromise, instead of being oppoSed to it,
as is your.party organ. - Was it not enough
when the. Democratic party gave .litah` and
New - Mexico
_to the Slava :powor, that ib 2114:4
now g,ivi!, it Kansas and Nebraska? Must We
be robbed of every foot of our territories and
not try to regain , an-inch? You have sol
emnly resolyed dna the rights of the lAroilh
are ouirayed, and then you sit down, and, fold.
ing your arms, sing the lullaby of 1852.
Ac-qui4tsee. Think You the neble °.Tacks i on,
of wholit your speakers . love to pat e , would
have anted-thus:? The y told us that when his
party resolved that' ,the 1.4;1163 of AtneriCan
sailors ivere outraged, he rushed to the battle
field shinning Free 'trade and 'sailors' rights.,
Had. he resolved that his own conscience and
hispwn rights were . in t vaded, think you ' he
would have sat coniposedly down and uttered
that ion-a - idly word, a+uiesce a No, indclei.
The stern old hero would have ,sprang to r bis
feet, shouting the bat9e-ery, Free Soil turd
Northern Rights. Ile never would haveSten
mittedf as you do, to Outrages upon his rights
and his conscience, but would have resisted
every such encroachment to the last moment
, of his life. .
• With perfect coolness the Convention de-'
neis the obvious faults of the, party, and With
unequalled impudence assumes for it virtues
whichlt never poS.sessed. All winter long
we hake been hearing ,- that the .country- has
settled down upon the principles of the I;tem
ocratie party., -The speakers seemed to take
partienlar pride in impressing upon the inuli;
ence the fact that the policy of the Democratic
Partrhad become the settled policy of the :
country; and the Convention resolved that the
oppasite party 'was wrong in all past time,"
and that the "Democratic party had given to
the noun try all that trasgloriousinitshistery."
OM;of.the speakm labored hard to prove
to dui; Conrention 'that Free Trade was ! once
the measure of the Democratic party,! and
called on Major Risl3ce, a veteran of 1812, to
prove Free Trade was the battle.ery when he
ru.shed _into the 'conflict. Ile alluded, Ivery
feelingly, to the act, that the veteran Demo.
er#s'of 1812, recently assembled in Wash
ington, wore, in large letters, upon their{ hats, .
Ottalariouspersoocratieniotto 2 "FERE TRADE
and Rights. 'When the eloquent
speaker took his seat, the Committee report
..ed the following resolution :—Resolved,inat
we are in favor of a Tatum The qukion
was put - and 'the Convention adopted it with
out is single dissenting voice.. -
Etas Democratic Free Trade become the
settled policy attic canary 4 • Whence &rine
the idea of the present tariff It was propos..
ed ; b3 . * Tierni Clay., a Whig (whom the party
orgrin is gracious enough to commend as.a
juse:statesmatt,) as a compromise between
the Free Trade of: the Democrats, and the
high' Tariff of the 'Whigs. By -the Statesman-
ship and Chiquence andenergy of was' :
urged-through the National Legislature, and ;
by virtue of Whig votes, bemtne the 'aetaed
.pokey" of the, country. That Compro mise ReT
casionally altered and.aroended to meet the :
detialuds otan iiierl*gingeommeren, forms;.
Thebes% al the present Twin:-
n
Deying . that Free Trade and the Nebrasji
ks 641 were Demberatie. Measures Were not;
stOciefatil acts for . this
Cop.' mutt even anrogate to itaelfthe
44 of the ComPrOmise racasures;.f as if
the people of the North-were not 'indigent*
-4164 when Mums : was doomed toSlavery t
without reminding them /hit 'Utah *arid Nein
Mealoo two also consigned ae,
indlatmoo :by . the. - Demooratie - party. • The
Conventionisearmi to think it Waal IiECESSIbIiN
to success` that tbe Territorial
Fugitive Maim bill abould heeldmed as Dein
'9oll4r_ * C l l4 ' eso•__"!' 3s l l ath‘jug4 tb, wer4:liatiaL 4 _
under: the Whig adatimistratiet't of Filhwiret,
acid sustained by the
. intsenee and *queues
ofeuti . t Whigs as Clayton, Clay, and Web
st'pr,and ham * the Wail paCej ot the
atunuiateder Whig intlueeke. ;. -
1-The Deinceraide. "arty- 41 1 49rii,1
bins& of principles to the 'citantry.and throisl
dit4rit timgloic to the patty that dale oppoie s,
ti wonderful dearth "hr
imi the tunientioe. TheY:.Werel
Arligettolatit ep,mt .44 #epiooi
'the , permeadingit4theepublican
tildng:thetic fir* :kJ** they 'ertdorsedlta;
11* lid**tead.' - resettAin
the elPut")*4°44.*liPm;:isfici-jti:..itelftin?
ri~lican.-'—
ME
=NI
elation :it ittpneription of met I pti SCOOfflit of
religiogis airettillY INlifting the,
*din* he -Miasonti Comintenita -. : . Air
1
pet 4
sutning lite liti:sr*Vei 4141*
it very ~ ' . esti : ralhO tl*R*ll4li .
can party : " a of no '
- irinaVesr eltt
then stal
. , „eat* "thee*tryikateoltdavt7
in P - -," 'is feaiher.l. '
-`>'
rem. Rest;Mae - h
ynap beedpessed by
the Democratic p.erty of' this county ever ,
4 4116911TVaistWevtiestisr iatitiCT'ti - piW l
;
ed resolutions Ia favor of the Wilmot Piri- .
ao; year ',xifier ,
.*ear, tind .. vited against it
the first. Opportunity: The first time "pope- ,
lar eoiteraigniy,"; or pendtri .
....k,ktkorsliivry
tu
into ftrixi.thrritery, vMs4,utini ttedito the ,
(as Demeetetle-"party
this o=4 'voted in Amor of'it, although an.
- niud i
li - Making i • in -4ver of :the 1
WilMot Orovieci. Our I) ;entoeinbek ; :ofi
C°tlgie 02 1 1 1
adb"SK'eches in ciPP°Olian"el
Wilamt rrovisO and in &reel of Ovular' sOye
reignty;:lall over the conittY, and' was ; W ell
.suetainedi,by the party. It atilt . adhered 'to
the Oro4se, When it voted in favor of the ad
niission 'itif Slavery into Utah and ?Teti *xi
co, end in favor of making Slave webers o
• worther Freemen, and it witeeminentlyf
soil last *ll whed votin g in favor , of 014 re
peal 'of the Missouri Compromise." And'uow•
when there is ne principle or measure eieePt
the Nehriska bill am t diathmuishes the Demi. ,
oeratie party from any other party, they' : ex •
t
press .141 Soil sentiments and then in a v .
'quiet way, scarcely observable, resolve en ft
here to=" lite organization.. , ' - That is, f fife
r4olve;tei• vote fur the nominee of tbe Dalt .
rilbi,e drvention, knowing, that he will be i
. profeleiery candidate, except, in one awful
contingency. That one contingency, even th '
distent leer that such a thing .might oced i
threw the . Convention, the I speakere and t e
i
party organ into a pitiable state of eecit
merit. ..= The prospect now !is, that the Demct!
eratie.Party South will be wholly abseebed
i
by Ae:Know Nothing as:the Whig paliy .
i 4
in the ,North. , This accounts fur the luie 4ll4 ,
cry, ahOut Know Nothingi and Slavery.
,•'. Th e
party i4orth is alarmed it it lose its &put ' -'
ern-wiag irn•ttle -Whig patty= have at i
done: i'ln that case it meat fallow its Must, i,-',
out predecessor into the hind of fcagetf4ln .
A. great alarm is manifested by the Isiee
brash, Domed-41A, 'est the -secret order tie;
eoine;.like them, pro-Slavery. This [alarm
prhbably arises, or more probably it does it - 4;
ari ,,,
se, trom the fact that the Democratic par-,
ty: whieh passed the Ne4itska bat and at.
tempfedto "creak out" the Free Soil senti
ment from the people of.the North, iS',every.
itherat defeated by the !know Nothings.-- 1
Theiritets, show, pretty eimeliisively, 4f what
kind o , l:material the majority of,,tbem - er(
composed;composed;:Whether the Free.Soil`.l;ortion
will naite with the &Judi in electing is, pie.:
Slavery - president caw be "gues• -• i i t .
ilftei n
knowledge of a simple 'pet.. The:llatio al
Government does not mikh voters et
business ia lett With die! States.. Mire
he muse of a National to;acenid-
.
plishilie object of the Know N othings i except
to make the time and naniter in which a cur
elgn4t; is admitted to the elective franchis,'
nniftifin throughout the l'oitedStatesi
- That
ia to he done by ' each tate weparately, la , i
clot by the General Government. The P-
,F,
,identkan have no control Over it. Now the
Ainti2airieken Conventio6 maymake a f •
. (...
guest whether the "Anti -Nebraska' Den
'
[ remtk, w ° e '
Nothing Lodges" aro going to vote (Or a pro-
Slav ry P res id ent,just, f or fun. ' I pm* ih4
1 ;
I !could rote for an Irish ..atito;ic . .tor Pr tai#4 t
if
ht; lima anti-Arebra.Oxii., roomer .11in /4 4 r o
Nebraska Zuno-Nothiay. ' • . i ,
,kpipui horror waslexperieneed :!by tlf
CoOcrition because •nen - were miser'On
account ofrelegiou: opinion.. . Thee,* ti on
f
Wal'eemposed of men hf good sense. re
Wal,nce, a man in that Convention, Ottholiie l or
Protestant, wile believes there are Ifourtder
men it this county, (to say nothing o tb
lourteen hundred K. 's) who would pi
scribe a tun on account of the mann .;
Whinli he professes to worship God. ,
,metee,,teeeteeettameep oerats thatt a ar
;right, to worship God according -to I the di
'Wee of his conseienceiwill net be .
by the intelligent people of Susquertat
"Bet their ?elision, (ash they call it,)lis atec
pa 4 ;43
et by this very Conventioe, when it. '
re4lution in favor Of , universal 'edu ti
elk the means of efficient common se oo h
The Catholic church has made a del t 4 pn
ef
fort to break up our Common Scheid sy ,
zia - .. the :Democratic :perty .. arrays itself
against time Church. iMy dear De. - ts,
you know Defiling, sure-enough, for yob', are
Etini Nothings with out knowing it. That
,
t _i4 the kind. of opposion the KnowiNothlngs
offer to the Catholic Church. They Beare
nothing for the-manner in which a Catholic
worships God,. but they do care lot. the influ
ence the Catholic Church brings to:bear Upon
be of the country. The Convention
Netter pare-voted itself ''to be a ,etup d ass
thin to heve made itself so perfectly ' ice
foils by along senseleel rign t
iarolqsb i the
ul
iistAti.oftonseienee.. ' 1 5
4
:.. • 1
~:-. ineteid of offering prieciples to be s cel l. i
.al ) 0 1thi . peaple,cori oontendingfer a 4, t
tuasitre, the Convention spent. th4r whhle eve
einir„ end;used faer Columns of its enan, to
ishisseand libel a new party-just aerOg in
ici,,exiiitence. , So Line n is the s.De'ocratie
ip4tYlfreitit the proud positioh it * nn cittn
i
4 - - There was a time When thale. oCrafic'
arty, p romul g at e d and ma
and great and
..t.
uspertant truth*. : ;This r.Coevtiltion iepre.,
46 0 ting the - Demoergey of Sesciee ,:, ', 'co.,
:satisfied its lo ft y ambition in ..:, ..., et and
tozoo g lies, libel; and gross
Alone. it seeks preeminence, Atli any
.tritekt ioeprineiple,4r measure -41 ad tes,
Fiat. by: abasing, delientreingami ;int' lag ev
°;°ffig'iligt4l7l"l46i- it; its t 30017
ll# s oieittit:eo oll 4 .. 16 4rit 1 4:0* ' ' gone,--
and with them the Strength 144.4 a, r .a. the
-.tiarty . .,. It was -*nee conseoratad. liberty
''
and freedom; r now It is prostitibiti tcii3layery
iiiia 'o r pp ii s sjoil. ft was °ilia thei:.:.. ,of pa.
mots to.6:stoke eights - to theoeir.f- - 'it .
ie now ' the-engite4-ot-of.- .iii- - ree '
'..' ' . 'of their rights:::Osee ' ' ; 7 i .• 1 14
, :t&n_ iOf tbe#ttiiiiie o*-1411634:. ' ' ' . ' l . t. 1 014
; lI II I Y A kf ild !lC l O riei oi o#4 l:' ' '' • : sue,
4CterinjiiigrOcrAtiegifti , . A
:' v
,Itirorgen, Whited and errogino, tells
!nviiithey] the field in fittare4ey
I toe bi Powee# .•" Vi t e :' -'• to
but
h *I/ ) , 04(tr..,.. •' 1 eta „•• 1
04 -mon • m • . ~ (It
' t :Finis "ill* * l'-- ~1 ,- , 5 - -
Iritt; be ani-7410 l ANe b , r * T tn °o t° '
4 0.44,
e. ta cum tnewl,, t.
in- TAH - , ~ / i--2 - .
e kina; only a_tkpritronyer.-
i I , t 0 CAYENNE.
• , 4
I=
t Wnuayory'2o ming co..
-l'ol'a P a
Massa& EDiToll:—Our
_folks have "long
eimsidered the i g Ood-people of Susquehanna
unt.iiitsttit Ateir ikpeticirs - in the
matter of eiluestion, but of lato they are — bi:-
sinning - ratherjskiptical on "the latter point:'
An adverthienient has just been - pcisted 1106'
93seces' bar-rocon, which attrscts the atten
t)on.cif -all= mir-lio" and I believe they ire
Oght_in they eritf best its,
yitfx and pitbcOphy. — . lt is too tie,ti a
4pecimen t' , C? ilost l 11 give y 94 a literal
copy of it 01.1 . ,
" Notieeias th.sflui. ;subscriber'. will 1
scell his of about fifty Akers' or :more
Of land and tl a most part of 4-cleared iind7a
frairm-rueri slid-lho . 'oe on
house and, 'Apples-apd .paagli l irees..and (be
"Se* Farm is lio*, well Seeded.Doirn- and:!l
aLisiod &..tiOoll:,linnse on it and -:it lies in . thOi
;.:Nortietisti_edriter townAiii
And in Sa'sgUohannah. oOlintY apol . pfneiiiiit4 4 l
Ncirthwest . of :Deopaugh
,and
west of litr:Oakeleya.Depriug .
eight nuleivSaUthwest of . 'inuntroso Deplore
• ' -
land f3ur files _from Springville 1L
foutrmileSfrOm Di mie corner:Sand four miles!
from ; 14o4klyu Seenteur 'and thurinileS to .a;
iood i 4 lii.ill hnd Do good Work and good]
deal on ill and', a&nit_threo quarters to good
"Scow -mill and )4.611 Scituated . for roads and ,
about - lialf a ittile,ot.a State ROad runs
ing frointuti4ro toppaugli ,To Dituic tori
nen andithO inhabitants All Iround all
about and the Subscriber ivilliScell the Bead
farmer. For niton bililarit'gJiiker and - fiati l l
It run and if :any parson -that wishes " To by
cum and 'Se it before the first of April Janus'.
ry 15 1855 " . i • . '
,{
It is t° be! hoped that the advertiser . will
. ,
succeed•in sel ling' his farm, and leave fer - oth r.
o,- er arts. IN
f OuitoWnshiP election came off last week:.
!, [ ,
:' There was scarcely • any excitement, though
two tickets were formed, and several person
in•behalf of each party were diligent in p r
I.
paring rind diStributing ballot. But, ; alas;
4 I
in these latter.da37s, regular tickets and'uonal
-1..1 i nations ihave Wien . into sad disrepute, and
1.1 with us it happened when the votes ,came .t o
e k
4 l.be-counted, thtt those who were running fqr
1,. office iio mewed but very few votes, while
in aim* eve. 4 instance the -persons receir
- ing the large , Majority of the votes, were net
only thine whose names had not been mai
timed, but who were ignorant of the f
that they mr,.. 1.4 voted for. 'Everybody w
birx tt
much surpiiio at the result. Every v
'voted for" the',regular eandidate , ;, and everi-
, body kitewnicithing about it. . Most of those
who s*e thins elected to.office received the
matterWithi gocal grace, but one or two, tls-
pecialli 'ther . Poor Master elect, were highiy
indignant anclidenounced it es a vile im i
tien q 1 the Know-Nytiiinge,, , But who 0
Know4yothings are, nobody can find out .._
, Iltunol 'sayi !Abet one of the defeated runi
dates *determined to break up the electicla.
If that z ia done there is fuu'ahem. v '1
' t : MY ownhoPinion is that the Know -Nu
~, • '
, ings laid nothing 10 do with it, but th at e
whole ieheine was. Secretly planned and r
,
w :
1 f.,
,vied l out by 'ales-, individuals, - for the 'in
In istii cit .4
witn.in t. the ettect it :would have w
1 the minds Of the people. it ii, at any : rate,
pretty: comer hereabout, to hear the K , W-
Nething,s denounced 'in unmeasured terms •
I For • several years bast the subject of s 'r
itual manife stations has elicited considers le
to , , ~_
,interetlit in this vicinity,. Rapping mediums
o- •,_ .•1 s ' i't
nave °mime's° common that thereis °actor
' n morel in c4rery neighbeahood—and we have
ad ' . I i
, speaking mediums who favor us (as they al
l's ,
lege) . with! communications ' .from the spi tits
Ile- ' 1 1, .1.
, of till ,departed-,good spirits .and bad splits
1 7 !the latter; predominating so far as I - Ilive
''', 3 : heard. ' ! ", •- - 1
tc -
Ono night, last week, the Rem C.,.. ii. Har
T 1
, fey,
'", an accredited champion of the doctrine, preach;
°n edia,this vicinity upon the subject of spirlioal
fig- manifestations. The fame of the malted
1
preceded him, and foronee I availed m self
of the opportunityof listenin g . to tun' abla
-
i
position of a subject which has the creel •i, of
' :* ning,l IliSky instances of, iasawity, l tuad
so far-as I. yet know has failed rto aotteln lish
any t substaatbd good. - • I -
bar , . i I
.the liarey was formerly, in the minrtry
• 1.
of the Methodist EpiseOpal Church. ;Te
itbj* of spirittxd manifestations comin up,'
he eras indUced to. examine it, and 'me'
not only a believer in it, but one of its a lest
~.atert meat ieelous advocates. For this : r:
he W,113 deposed from the ministry an - Idle
. eltu'reh. ' ts, professes to hold precisal
w the
b lro
sanieithenhagical views, • now, as then, ith
only t his` addition - of spiritualisni. -
• - Thci
,
sone appearance of the man is prorating
.: . ! . .
:••••-in . eloqifence he is; head and shell era
idave ~thii mass .of - . public speak 'ivith
oniiio ' s=i l filleng of - 'l'POech . . - PlCi!Stoli- ,'"ross
---eaphordetrs voice and fau ltless ottunte the
' is ablohyl the houttoretain the :Men •., ,of
'l* ' it,ooe i tre with Out their. 'giving' is% . o f
w.4iaripoli . . . .
- ' 1
~, r
,
To 4:opted to show, that the 'duct
'4l4ual t4anithstationa is not only itio
r a.nOcriltAilihe trrititores, but that t
tts to ex et the* hi thesu
` latter c a
4:3‘,14 tfie.e.o44 of the depaitid,
i*at rui4e nutaifost to Ines, by
lobs; or Iliewres, there was no roam w
occur ataio--aad, that this
4:adollitced *pep: eipoo
4. 0 5t44*.: 44 : P4 l
. ptarre.. Tahiti his own statements
hiajeieral thole- While - , itr iho
cloied4tud
" 111 00,received: 0 4
.I‘y. JO* $lOl4lllO • ,;ilt . the
,
Yr le. I .4 " : . - . •
- :• 1 :1X, 4 tK, 11141 . 14 *dr "4.40'1 111.
itifo,ools'loo6llll42-44---
BalYtist speaking .
or-medium. This
&lute* when after a
instead of John the
Sort of God. Again
A werfnot the lady
hut:rhespirit of : Jeris \ sitea4ing
-Ttki 'sibiinnort l e theeomtriti
letiiil4tii"-atiffirtrellt4
1 4 (
who spoke s
ihrough
th. to to saints. to p dr!M.•
I rom, the
Guth-of hMinevi; with tlui assorz
4 vdre in
fir
plumate success 'slid • glory. - To
v l5 10 ° 0 1 ° 411 4 •rt,Mt ar!dO e v ise t
thenPe'l4;i:init i l h a eni;ihere'lvere
:nuneistiona of Iwo, • • : 5.5 , -
gad 'there seemed nothing entre: •
n )*ll. that rin: Bible
or somethirig - siMilir tOlihni
: 4 in his discoupe,.. That wli!cil
to bip from John the, Bapthit, I list
iith feelings. of ' - compani!ire hyliffer •
co of td' ,
i those 1;i1- .
I tbe t
terrible
H. had R
purport
'tried-to
the - . conuniiideatiou: from !Jesus,
er eireeniViatie*-4156. shock.
mind, and awakened nnpleawnt feel.
~ver wishdto listeh to the 'lei again.
made tur
ing to*
,
Mr. arvcy - informed us that the JadY
- . 1 . f 11 .01' - sath h
was the'! leo a r. ts w ho y- er
side, and also gave - a history in brief ictf the
past few Tears of her life.
_- ~....
I have no reason to think that ..cnr.34l. or
the medium are' not Perfeetly honesii in all
they Le ieve and iffirm in regard to this
matter.:,. ) Of those who composed thct large
assembli on that' occasion, some be)icied,
many wi re amazed, and others doubteilon y .
t
self anti) g them, antt until the truth 4)f,this .
Wag is attested - bt 'inirtteles, I shalynit_#tif!'
subject probably remain A Sceptic. I . .
Mr.: liarvey stated that the doctrine of
spiritualism is. ratidlrgaining ground—that
tvhere,)l few years since, there weie only
four or`five, there,
,are now hundred:43nd he
confidently' predicted :its, ultimate triumph.
~ 1
am at the end of my paper, so•pleaseloteuse
safe. bliow and ever - Ynurs & : 8.
- , ,
, For tAt Rep4licak..,
1 ,
ii n
Mims' s Eorroßs.—l noticed in th rade
perden Republican of Jan: 18th the . .ifollow.
ing remark, which 1 suppose to be pditbri
al. viz: "An effort has already beet} corn•
mence4 in this, and other ICounties t tol obtain .
a repeal of the law creating - the office cif oSun
ty Surierintendent of CPITIMOTI Schools.—
sel i so
This ae lon is premature." ' Sits, the i!effort"
in thil unty, if r understand:it, as I ibelleve ,
1 doe s not merely to dikaway , the, lace of
Supen tendent, but to obtain an alteration of
the or law generally, ,Whereby mirky ob--
ieetion ble points shall be - removel. r Our
have long complained agatst the
•,), character of tlu. law ; and tandOubt-
e. last school law, being more gorous
eating an tuineceSary office, as they
uis ripened their cotnplaints into - slalom
it is remarked, j" The people have
had time to ,discoVer whether the d
i prove berie4ciel or not." :Sirs, some
-e-See,things' at the first view to be'
citizen
arbitra
edly ti
and e
judge, Ji
But
hardly
Bee lAi
Imes
Aicable--impossibie. One man can
!se the ' frame of an ordinary house,
i l can, he navigate 'a - ship, because the
eteexcc., or Ihot' ineither case, is too large.
la st)perintendency, Of this, 'or any
unty in the state,'
a. taskis . a great
..
large for one nub anddo any thing
Like 4cVjustice. I know not but that the pres.,
cut ioumbent has been diligent and done all
l ,
he or t i ny other could do.. But lam unable to
e i
see tlae strtnllest trace of! benefit. out .sebnols
have l l . - tieceivedi . " n'ot that I ould -Oast censure
after in--certainly y not-.4r I never did ex
pest! ny :.ctleirit to arcnie &in the office,..hy
whoa waver' her& '' I . -. , ...
Te ,Visit two schools per day, officially,tuad
do them justice; is all thafany .superinten
dent aught to do, as I well know from expe
lierteei; r and this would reqUire;more - than
I . 4 . 2o'days to ge 'over the 1 cotint,y-: - To
. exam
ine the teachers properly for a single term,, if
theyll assembled at the pleemappointed; it
4"
local require at least, two weeks. -
.put.al 1
atatlii not being yet,' engnied,do not attend,.
their, iamination can' only be obtained et the
eiipese of an unnecessaryjournii; aod:the
rit
uttOr inty Of - ftiading'the superintendent at
bottle. - Isrow'it will oot do for him to, com-
mence visitation until the entire examination.
Ima'. been completed, 'by which . tiniemany
Schools ' will be partially -throUgh; conse:-
Oen lyy niuty,will escape visitation. ...,
,t : ill.iaot . say that Sfe. itiehardsew did not
dohis duty.' But Ido say that neather he, nor
I, nor any other part, could, or can - do,'
what the law requires; and dolt as it should
•beAnne.l Beside„thirty - thousaod dollars, . a
inil-Ir equal to 'loc what Clio"2o,c!it
ati,priapr:ates annually to education is, expen
ded to pair officers forl doing what' it is ' inc.
passible to perform inl a practicable Manner.
This is the basis of my objection:to 'a suPer
.tendaticy stalk law directs ; . and I..confess
I ani unable to see that my objections "ate
"premature;'.' Amer furthermore, the: full
amount of lieneftt which that office can possi
bIY confer, and even much greater, aknotone
dollar of esiPense,could be obtained, by it.
'OP! v constitutvti 'owed of visltanta As in.
S. tors of Owls In:each township.
f' 1 %Itlyn Jan, 00tli 1a63.
S;- A. Nawvoa.
irnprie
IDOL ray l
neithl4,
resisttt)
Even f
other
I
deal
oe of
- PeiWiti*iiiLegislatall.
10 tbe ili:i*i, :On 'Thursdny,,..3onutny 18,
.
.g..* Etta*: eat Offe*t :the , filioxiing ‘ reselit;
, - - 1i .,„1
-eseive4 That the .Comm i ttee ' on ditis
t i c
t o.
ierehy instinete4, to erillUire into th ex.
eney of repining 3 hill Aishaudin ail,
moor eogipanedi taltheStiti4,iid . hid:
i
-the forma on arneltuoin**, - aftfdih.
i miwienies outtltirdildthe nieralie
are not 494*, biliti titttittil.
'o miiol . ntioi:i *7ins to !*=:_lAo . ', TO* l
vote: - - - . ',' ' [ 7 .:f• -. 4,,
Atisi 6 okrpritoon t l,' -- rienik ,
z '
__ v _.4 rtlk; 17614ext4iiii,.: trendriiis, 40r
#44M1104.,Lei4;lreilitignit tticBcaittif
gre thiNril, 131h - ntnan,jakin#ert,T.
4 ~,' e 4 147- ?tfetrit -iii#l34t:' .;
, Pr•
•,, , 4 5 0 8 1rwq - - P e l't.
Tr' • - -, ,,,,r- N'„..... -- - '
imoh
V
typr
I via.
dus
:if '
stra
I And.
4w
. 62
4 1 1.16
1
1 1 11 7 1 %
I
1
i t "ll. l. 2ua—Mr l 7 l 4l4 l
.4 o at
, ia
04 d
spoks. 7 but ibe,_
ME
. . .
kiltearla*lONlglip:' *-
1101111-.- ern:done, thrash
eooiins 40111 the attention of `you r.: ,
to. ' '-: ,co of-a Carson League 4. -.
BeF . v' ' .. has been recent y tuitabilsked, anif-:..
ittiv . - oat effectual In suppressing ;
gal traffic in ardent-spititsi The elieet'' Akiii'L -
League is to entbree - ourpresent , lieetiser,
and punish every vioiatiorrof them, and ` 2 0
cure the early p asage o f .. l a - ~.,..;,....1. -
.. w ‘;........ ..
icing ;.the sale , it intoxceatbit drinks Ir
u itit: . 14 i - ' ' -
er ng e in C r State. 1 50 Go. assl lava ti‘orrt
ed, it has worked like adiaimtti.ticitit: litiiii.
fTsavloorofmr-18,Thioggovk 1
ewailieleriied_ tiiiiptaee, and - in' lut i -:_ _
ial-W-17A141rdoral74-17°1,144TINg
tkt: Ram traffm . !ro,ievcr7_ , :eht - • .-
its own legitiinitie one; andiritit tin. , , ,
cooperation ofttiO , frienas,At V:_, ,
.iti° o
throughout*A - 6de,, wi,lii;pe i tornirntire..
ly dry, - up theiiiiouniititui - 4 **et, Misery.
and aestAution,Aroo6 - thi litititrie#6* - -
of a wholesome ProhilAtm7 luw. ] ' I- -- -_,
'At ~ meet i ng of our 4 4 liV° °O, Saturday
lastlll64lloiiing'Offieers were elected r the `•.
, .
pi *sent year tr. •. - .". -/- , - • ' ,
President Rev. 3. B. MeCrearYr Pres. 1,
ideiit 11.:P. Wells, Seerfarkl'ED4P4 Trail.' •
;
urer S. I.Chase, D4'eatopiloh r n),*
Istareps DsoAle;.isair , Reekilim lcon; ) ; lters
dilman; 'Peter Deelteic /- T.. .;
~ hrblge,
Isaac BroOks; 3ames Clark- 1- - - . ~ ,-- i '
ProSecuting Attorney Sirneonl.ll-. el, . .
Our plan t;fralsbig firlida, is for ..:,-, Tern*
bcr to subscribe s 4 many shaltio4 slock,`...
each` share-being One 1%114ra-dell ..„ " and IL • -
able:at any time to an assessmetit t. n t to ca.:.
ceed 15 cenfa 'ow a sbare for one y :• -.
We have already some fifty. ' tho _dot, -
i d
lays subscribed, and ; hope soon to In
one bundied thousiMil. , i il -'. '.•
lig i ne
Let every toWnsbip takirliold oft is work, -
and we ,will - soetil / aVe leagues- leagues to. war<
rant'the organization of a County '.—
The next meeting of.the-league Lwillibe kelk ,
`at my. offiecin Great" Bend, on; Yrnlsit due
second .'day . of rebruary next, Thetilvie tibia.
.be happy to - see all who desire to thoperata_
with us in this iiiimane and philitnthri‘idwinit.'
great !end, Jan. 221855.
Cause and Effect: , .
- SAuyik ill Cuunti,Penusylvtitlia ;
boadred aiulforirmsue 'licensed ru ,
These are the " Cause." 1. •
The'"efeco,7 in .part
1. Two hundred - and-four . pattiters,
till but forty- nine; of which mefe.,Umn'
by rum. Of this number, 1451 we
in, mostly Irish. =` . •I ,
..
. 2.
,Commitments to prison forth
nod s 282: of these 208 were - rereil
the who/enuraiser-intemperaWl
- .3. .C.Onvicts fiir the year„',B4li all
rate i6l foreigner-1- '' . I - = 1
4. The accoinpanving wretchednessottani.
Hies, profimity, Sabbath'breaking, i)bscenity,
demoralization ote"ltildren,idleireks„ agabond. ,
ism, sickneis and premature death:
Thenzemey-iose ocatsionedhy- all *lie, tibe -
1 ea . st„ item in. the aggregate of evil, is of course
principally paid 'by the sober and in ustrioult
Does Government owe thew no protectionl .
Or do the assumed rights of ruinselldrs offer.,
ride and extinguish all otheri 1! - - I , *- ~.
In the "-'York _ Pennsylvanian," of a recent
date. -we find. some equally, instructive sta.;
. tistics, a specimen of:which wet will give. 1
From JannarY 1852 to January 1854,thate
were s'"i' prisoners committed to the County
Jait----51- of these for,crimes connuitted under
the influence of intoxicating drink's(
From Janoary 1853 to - Sandaryl
commitments were =77-64 if w
caused by intemperance. -, - ,
The ,average Cost to the', Court
criminal is $l3O per innum. I
The pauper- tax of the Cottlity, l
the products of the" ;County Firm.
a year—=-Threeif'ourthe of iyhiel:*
the rum-made poor.
.
in the meantime, the - Court d irttist rev-
enne from licenses of about $l,BOO , -. annum;
to offset an expenditure,. caused- ,b • • drunken
ness, of sict,c)oo ! It must be ;acknowledged '
this is a. - brilliant'finitecial oper ation i UNS - 0 , .
Nititiotifsf. : ~ s - - - ',
Tim'Massachusetts Emi gra tion Aid 5t11 , ..
ty, . for the - settlement pf, - .KlMste
~Territory
with persons opposod-to 8.14 , ery, is, ,if -we
may,redit the Ektstob Adverti ser , , - lately ti -
prove a pro fi table investment fo; ite stock
holders, though not so intendr- LI:2 Wird'
de on the subject, tht . t L Advert SO vs:
. "ft has so made its investment% :*- are .very,
considerable in amount; that its mean are aTresAy
enlarged by its profits, and it couht. -. not-ibilidgt
to a handsome advantage"' `t::' - ; -''-:-
As rvirds the character of , . :settleiti
sent'out by the Society, the .s , - artide tells
-is that when= the Rev.-W-.1 . ,e - orgisisted
a -church in Lawrenen'atk, 3 . he faind
a larger proportion`or`men .lind , s' 1 en 160
had been c hurch eneinbers aCietne - than he..
could . have found iniany Winner :number it
the old States. 'lt was , A.Sti - : itseeitainedi
when the Kansas' Atheoeutill(, ovgatizsy!
;
in the same city, tha§ mire tirone teasels,
ten•wps a man of collegiate ! a tion. - -The'
Aid Compatties,•as the Adv ' infortairr,
have not as yet peg any *in' pats* : Ile
Kafisas, all who have gone 'th -s,- s • Whit
paid their own .wa y.... 'The. s. - -,. - . - -
company has used its means in . ! tmditig,•
tit) , of. Lawrence and erept'.... 4$_$&040111,
forget, itoarding-ixit*iiestern • , .blia4less- .
ry, school house,sn4churth.g• ,:.. tiler/ rent
without persuasion l oenid,_ , i : , . . thOte-viii
fasi weld can 801100 tleeltOte. *500.4'
_vette, besides'thecOsta oChn , . etiebta.-i•
Since the elosint in Of winter,•. - , ,
_.. illattlichti.
Setts company , has been rt. . ' - -Aid(*)
operate withgreat- - thiapriag;
sad hailidded veryeonsiderebievto ittssto.
Scdptioni. - A...t. tit9.ll'in TO e Voi*
' . -4.- ift6 - uce '
lton,
.; t:. riff found -.l ttwttetj. ikel LaWreice in
1/er..o* . or,iciogisi*ittwititio;fr4itt;
a party of emigrants every TiittlitY l - bttiti.
in ti tielth th e first 6t 'MOO,' t.''., - Vitig
_„tt itlk*
ti e,- a larger number of r. - s . sit§rfleas
w wish - to go to genes,. , -,lt, ever hid.
,The emigettloit ibretptlncteatiiitgail through
the North aid We 'on at ti t ° ,ilW l_
times. --
r % '": ',A --'''' -' . - 1
H • . - '
Ver We see:hi , tles.Ceart itecerdit that
the two - cemiterfeiteri, Whi l tet 4fikdrakVaild
14ersweetie;sot Epitg, IC 11 4 114 '! 8 I t t e eell
under , ten . thousand 'dollen bon* . for
- making sod sank*, iimita ' ' 0 r Altsies
:Caw rPlictioiutii: i -Uhl iiiti 's, if &slur
tit4t ..
.shoold protect meelkOm:ith
1 sholild ePtifil4Y'Prilt i r 9233. l.,A. iiii.
rftx44 , trig - ClYlP.Allnb ie ‘ l ,- 'tfe ‘ la . ' . ‘ llP
a - inedicoutti.Aptt a itireertsi , , .. , HA , ' We
,alaiks . only complain ti pa , eiwillit
half enouewk , - . 2l4villakti - ivv4l4trolitsl.
iii4 F ace
iffhait; - 44 1)141 **9 341 k*al *444 64
tag ibnow:mat; bX, tahifitifoiti*iiii*T u "
. °4 64l ?°Pei . ithe'lllbeiba, ial iS ti iV -Sai
Sjtaiiit'S;fidaehniSkSll-146r-411 1 PC*0 011111
I,l4loll4utlireveriay- - 1 6,, ,1wieb0
tn;lllooollll . l.the.eilit4ii , eltunterlifiater i
' - C,b,, itatuter'. , • = i ~ _ i , -.-- ~,,,, , ,3 .,, , , , , : ::, :
-1--.21E; -,4 ''.. 0 • - -Np --;.:-.., 1. _rv.;,..11-it ,:-:).-
IN MI
S / B.
=3
• iight
'Re"
Qt 2853,
fiktured
y= 9x-
'
'intcinpe•
the
Melt were
of alai
sB,ooc
to iroptior_t.
=EI