Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, January 08, 1857, Image 2

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I". READ A 11. lI.iFI2AZIER. .131170 RS
MONTROSE 'PA.
Thnriday, January s; 1547.
REPUBLICAN TICKET FOR 1860
TOll . Prr4SIVEST,
JoriN clt,NßLiessv.n.!tiONT
rsnt vicv
IZILLIAM•L. DAYTON.
" 4 1,, ' T H E.
INDEPENEiIhr REPUBLICAN
FO
. ..
- Th'lllird;Voltinie tir . the,INDEMNDENT REM - DUGAN
m
a ill co
meuee in Januar); 15:+7. The paper, - ultich,
has alt.eady acquit ed a large calculation and become.
, • ogtal.dialreti on opermanent basis, will receive the in.
crraae.l attention': of the. Editors during the ensuing
'• .Year,: and their mdeavor will he to improve it in ev
: ery 'department, so that, if it-has heretof4ro deserved
the commendations of the : pit-ss and of its Pilb:§Cti.
I.,:irg.,.'t will hereafter' still better-(?es -deserve than. ----..s r ---..--------__ - _
The circumstance Mt iiii' Which the :.1141.,RrENDr.,,rr i \ - VillOl 18 TUE P
_ ttosatlPTlVlt PARTY.—
Rr.rCitt.iCAN wits established were these: The rapid I
..;
~ ... . • ...
;
and daring encrertehmentalof the Slave rows had i '! 12 " : Aid '''''' . l' ''''' untl ' iej a ' U ' ii " l ' dale i bus
1 ,- culminated in'the lu....r.air,ta of the l'N 0U:141-Kansas ! e i ttelnoina County, has been rem.ivuel for the
Act., thereby exciting the. ineit int, .se indignation I
clime
of i
~,t . ,,,,
4 . . Ili ,. br , i
, 11 .. .
, . 1 ,, wzn, :p.,,, .. ..,,,,,,,
among f..ecalom•loving Citizens of all , arties; apt all ; t " n -
Al whom patriotism pred• - truitiatrxl over partisanship '
Ti'-den, Sham-Denmernt, is appointed in his
felt Oat the time for a union of freemen to resist the i p l act ....
The Post-offics. is removed to:an out
: aggreivions of:Slavery had arrived. ~In the.Autlumn 1 . . . .
of IS-3 - 1-, the feeetnun of Saz : quebanna County. aeith. ; , •f - ny Miller, mule two miles 'front its
• Out distinction of party. indt and organized the Re- 1 tin.mer locarion, as if for the purpose of Xs
... nahlidm party, (being the; Eist orgatdration of the r --
kind in this :4rtte,) fat t hd , p ur p ose of ra - I lita i„i ng I comatzodiny the pc 9 ple, who are naturolly
t .
those:ninciples or litce t ly Itransinittiqi• to . us by the . 1 v ery indignant. ;.- -
p .
fathers of the Republic, ut the Declaration of lir.d - }i. 1 - ~ - -
Grangatr, Post inaster at MIA, this
pendiinee and thesConstitution Of :Ille,d - rited States. I- • " ir ".
•
Hay the park has increased in magnitude and pow. ; i.:cc . ,."1 % . , 1 1;1 4 ft I so b een reiii „ ve j , a nd t h e o f.
- er Since that time. the hilttory,o6the eimntrc can tell.
Cla - it first tile!: of strength. n the natinnai arena, it i l fie° given to Snyder. This chan, ,, o . is made
has almost overthromin•the'once invhicible ilnd fully I for the ....nkneTenson as the other. 111 - r. Gran.
urgiusized cohorts of the 5ii1.7.2 I);.unc c!acy, exhibitin" i •
it . , c ,. 3, 1
it
. ,
Limn a vinmr and elpansiver,est- - as to fill our oppo t. . I ' 2.1.r. t "" "' ' C ell '''' ' ' ter than Sheer.;, nod
.: . ,
-neuslwitit dismay at tlieir future v. o:Mcet.;•-, and to 1 ;litres to say so. 1 herefore off goes hisitend.
awaiiim in thebearts of the ft iends of freedom well ;
Aro . untied hopes of the speedv triutm.h -of the p inei- ; - - T lie -. ,; •id the T)
removall 0.. t --t drive to another part .r
pies of freedom, jlll , :Cit, finl. humanity. Inlantiaryi., , f die Township, grontily diseonimodes those
: • succeeding the organizatino of the Republican pa.'lY i - li. t .i;g near tile old offir..v, without NU :Lily no
., . in thiS County, the pu b lication of our paper vas - corn.
; i t
:.;.tnenced, to advocate the prineipl• m m
a that pal If ! coModating .others, us is now moved down
: met With it geuerons welcomer, and : we nest ivns,not .1 To - Nr itl i m ab o ut two titiles- oof the Rushville
without its influence in.sidingsto build up the neble I • ,„..
, .
'orgaz4z.ation which carried -the :Wilmot Disnict fir , i 1 r)
'''t"rmse;
t • • .
Fremont by mule than rive thousand majority, and I Th e Post, a ,ffi e e Deimrt mend uvicitlittl a' in. returned Galnsha, A. Grow so thasseat in the No use i .
. .
which he fills with such high honer to -himself an d - , leild to lay a heavy hand on Fret: Suit men,
.. I ,
' his constituenti. 1- To LIM support of that cr ganiza- i w-nert'Vt'r it can reach them. . Mr. Jesuit
tion, While it retrains trite to the , Cause of freedom, ! i ,-
we shall continue to.devdtm our best er.ergies;
and 1 i'le.t ow-, ter,Gteneral CaMphellaided: by ea
!.
iwe urn convinced that it is of rerpaired to h a ve the 1 It.tin' Meddier; in Montrose—seems detennin
:f.R.maublic at Principles fallv understood by all, to ire I t d
to
.
tne pity gready,inerease strength :Imam. the mas. ' I
'sea or the peopl ; for the, voter who casts ' ltis ballot .;
Suscitit:hanna corm! v :lfi incanvenit nt :as pos.
for.no purpose 0. selfish-aggrandizement, but for his', illy '• r.
' mit perhalis' the main object is to fill
.
country's good a one, petal only to be conVir.c.d, to ;'' 't'" -
vote tight ; and with such t. cause as ors, with re:,- I all I lie ilEces with turn m ho will 3 ield implie
esrs aUd jtistie.e, and all the better instinetsofthe hu• ' .d• I
!once tltne party li;4ers. and become
inta 'part on our. side, we !must he'dereliet of duty I ' 1 !'"'' • - • • I •
if we cie not win increase:l:support:to th e c ause c 'f i re:inlile eoz:thiits for lint diffusion of dough
f t z'': , lnl• ' - - ' • - •- i . lace documcnts: a tiorg the pcnple. Suseple-
It is Mdisputable that the prr,:s exerts : :a great in- + lk
:..11tien ! de, fnr good or evil, over - the opinions of the I I lilnilli' - e"' 1 4 1 ,1 2- .) . can- hardly be. converted .to
'- p eor d., D a d th, . old organ
_of the Demotratic rat tY 1 a pit - ices.% or sic
Bordslt. liiitu such ntism . by isue
' in this County taken the same stand for freedom that i
the. otin of that pmt)-, the:Traliji;rd D.rporfer, did ; nittch l /:istnko tho character of her people:
in. Detiolfora County,--ait, to retain its consistepey as . '
4 paper profe:sf--ir, ' " NT. soil IP:iodides, it should have
4o:1c: 7 -the Itepul.dlc.ut nar9; M out,' hire carried el
most the entire tote of Susinurhanna;Countr. except
that class of voters aNhombo arguments or consider
otionti of tight could reach. To eountemet the mitt
chicsna.sinauence al.. .4r-Aro I Ak;; -, , c ifiAr , atini
. . ....vrwt".;.„!tne cause ru , ...,,, .
~ ... s , ,
• -..---.3..............,), !‘ ha-rp else cause
frectliinn at hca• t, to seen -e an extensive circulation
of Republican papers. We hare to aCkno‘ - wiodge the
i .,^ , er i erons exertions of many friOntla i . : the iliffitront
Townships, lu ittereatz.i7,7 the list of .s , l l .•ectibers to
• ele'f!..iorpr..Nors-r RErs::_n_v:,tr. JIT:t it. is an irtdrtithi
cd feet that iherc still retrain hundreds in the Corn
- ty,;that the interests of the, R ,. .publituin party—as
`well as: onr own—require should breams : FAlhjeli be t ft,
. and who might he preatired by a little SySteraaric ef
fort. As an additional incluecnieut to such cif our
, f:iend ft g may choose to ixturest themselres in this
matter, f! , r a elltb. of Air 77 Ca" ItnhA rrz I; rr I;
. 7,nyisp Jar r - ..
on e yocer in adeanoc, ice iii/larstclan-crtta Nuinher
.. f, , r•
• ono yr= to:he getter yp of the cqub, as.:oone c%•:»ipert
ration for his trouble.
- . dur . readers will hear us, witness thai we. gird r.
renoh.grenter amount of rratlirg matter in onr -col
umns than country papers ih general ; :and While'our
firstl 'object is to sustain thO,prineiples of the Repnh
• Bean payty, we aim to giro: such a rat iety, cousisting
of pattry, tales, sketches, rtglicultaral articles. pa-_. re.zpolidence, aces items.,lc., a. will'rAc tbe r.-
.trritcals an intereitirg az!ii usefulßally paper.
Ifitaim Republican friend; agree with us on theim
portance of ,;lying an.exierisive circulation to the lo-
cal Republican press, no trust there via he foand
rnenlin ea cry ToWnship tu the County who rill .or
at edrclinF,lr.
, . t .
' . riaxs,—il,ti t ) p;_•l7 ilwtlii". in advance. . .
The Stavrilittlder-s ke-1) a very. vigi
' ttint i , eye on thetperiodieals - of the tiley. i-f p ,:)-.
- t,,1 . -,o ie that dare express a pr . e'f,trerice for,33.ree
x -
etorn pver Slavery., - are- rc.sientlessivetahoti - ecl
I.',- 11'e leadcri of southern 6 - : lion.' "The.
Phi taikiplthi Stt' urtia v ' • - ,liiii.-; Post", re
eentily ea' me und(T tit- van, of .tha I••ropagan
d4, :11(3 the. sE. , In e,16:, ble triliza , r I tiriplas n•tw
fallen i on " . I ), ..;.ttairt's 11fort.thly." The idenee
1 t
of e:l'Sh'i• tiarta:' , lnnaltle . , eonsiglng in the up- .
1 1:
, ! I'
... c. ii pl - Cch.,
,
h?, l lt 7r .
l ig ofstic.h clOctrines. as.arr e , ‘ntained in , 4 intcrestina. stories and beautiful pictures, or
i t because their Paretas fail to- put intol - their i ,
Are peelarsii,-a of Indor.cr.denec and • other
writings of Thorrir,s Jeffer s o n , and „ re c . h.„, c l 1 !lands the chai - nting' little magazin4 iSbieh I 1 "
1
hem. Of the. ' •-v I " al
as .. .lincendiar" hi- the! modern Shain D,,,-.l.Publish'ers--Provlfni for • I SL- cr. '. dour
s I
l al works of' the kitid I now published An the 1 d
in .,
rarelliey. As both th 4 :, publivt;ons , , en.'
having each a larze eircadation, a i way , de _ l i United States, the contents of most of i t dun;''l ' -' ''
• i
i thous n
1 evince a remark:ll4; skillful adaptedriess of 1 •
rived thei r .prineipal f.l: 1
Ippo . rt froni thc North,
i " In bright sueceseion rise, her ornament and guard."
it is ' thought they - Will shri•ive the shock ola 1 style and subjdet to the purposes Of bttb a
- J. T.
.. •
- withdrawal of ihe•pa,tronage of Southern 610-.1 musing and instructing the jtivenit4s, we 1- • •
~, belieye that none.is snperior to "The gaool- I • - . For the ßepublican. .
eaterS, even if that of Northern doUglifaces
J , [
Wyoming
.County Letter:
• should neeompans• it. tut - while the smst.uin. i fa '' .2l • -Cur attention ha's been. partieni-Sr - 1
!ers of the p;puiiar inatitiltion'so ic: 1 - I •-•
1.. 0u.5,,. lIX- •
1 ly attracted to the naraber of this magazine I ' 11' ,7 tcnot.so . 's Wyoming Co. Jan. 4,',1 557.
I l for the current month. 'ln the first phice, its Masses. READ AND FEApErt :---Forawhile
eltde Free Soil .reading 'front 'heir fainilies ;
1 pwt, events rive occurred in our community
i fine white paper, large clear type, and tau....
',the framds of Freedom aTe far "less ria-tiett:'
.1 ..,, that
. have afforded topics for • much talk and
merons attraettve illustrations, are enough to I
Mar with regard to 'the eita actor of the papers
'tries' 1 • e'
speculation. Yesterday morning there was
rittrnnizit.. Modern einoeraey,-liiteing make any ordinary youngster's mouth ,rater, i
i another, more. serious than - any thai had pie- i
as we hayeaseertained by actual.experfrnent.
no foundation of democratic principles to
happened. -In the lower part of thill
.rest upon, is obliir. ,- A to depend firxrn shrewerli And then, sueh a table of contental• " und I vi°u4 Y
Gray ;" - "The. thin- i township wnian was found by one of his sons
inent to stistain'ilsclf. AWare.ot the'l. the-world Joe ;"' " Lucy
I I,- oceros ;" "Popping Corn by 'Wholt.,;ale ;4' i suspended by the neck from one of the pur-
~ iy of the public press, it...seizes upon
l i ." Skating ;" "The LoSt (It'd ; ft " The Poor I t ''-i plates - of,his barn, quite dead,and evident-
Possibleneenee ofreachingibe people
through his oWn act.. He had puts elmin
I Spirit," dze. About as suitable a ' i asi .11
it agency. Consequently, , in addition
{around the plate and to that, attached a rope !
I conk] be made to little readees. is The artisan rest distintrnished in too many,
"with , 'arranged .
1 -4
which chug be obtained filr a well . 'arran noose - lie must have
see by venality and untruthitiln -. here I S A . " I - relit ' lv f
es-it
I adjusted it . about his n e c k . 0 the " big'beani,"
of ; year by sending one ilaLsr to the piihl 4 ',iiers,
:.... found pr.oliablv in evert' 4.lar , e c't •
- 6• 1 ) "Dix, " Edwards, 4,-swung off from that, doubtless breaking'
_ c l rth one . or. inure newspapers ' profe.;- Co..CI I, No. _ ' B2l '_, Bt° .. 1 * - a Y' his neck instantly , ‘ Hedid net reach the 114 7 . 1
. .. . .
; , , - I
-sing . euteality, yet covertly :intended to ai'd ' ' r ' :
,-. , . .•
the sham Demoeriiey, and' sednlouslV infus: 1 THE Pvitfou, I.dost Asa Altrvu.. fiiir ;.an .
~., ua- 1. • 7.L' here ean.he little doubt, that the man was
. ing 'through their
.COluinirs • articles jittended i t i: is. 61 " re "I ' . *P"e. beet evidence g , F . 1 I.ts.bOring under sortie Mental . , aberration. ' 'lt
Junly to; benefit the' n'trtr Shea jd - • ; hear i lt• .II f 4. f ' .
..,_ ,
tnat a nights since he tool: a larg
at ;he South thus Inistain 'the cause of Re- ; zinc I ' l/1 b found lin the frotinent c '4ritets I i '' '. - ' ' e
Lpablit ' lin, he. mitnid
l an
Probably 'lie tarred, iwe 41:1!! Orake iron) •its . pmges. The Pit Ors tipiautity.of laudanum, but h. exciting
did notttecompli,h his design.. The .irome
utdit,loltert4. an4 :l lave his press' thrown into 1 ell '" "' mei ' al.iii?)!' as well as praetica '-.;?,ciod f
I f zru s e In treatii:r.--fli ..g n etinn'YP'irlai 'lit to I,diat! provoking cluse - of,his suicidal act is not
'llle riier t ; or : others tie - destroyed. ...WC do 1 the interests of 4;41 ieulture, and the :4 1 1
„ lima; t known. .K.r years . _ past, however, he 'has
itni;oWttiisel raaliation,' 4r.fin'tatitin of such ail arts . . The farmer W.ho would ki .
.lutoe.; been harassed and -ii e r . pl exe d -in business . at
-Is.
Boill i ks; RufG h at:
, f 7, . - 0 , ,,,e,,, but W e think .! with _hi s..neighbomi in these days of I gross.' Lairs, havi agau tr ate d tot a llui a at . Il e _ h un d s
that l e . i,,) t !pro : Sleveri..p iA e t y :I s at , l au d. 1 - ,and improvement, lanast-: •'read one 'o
1 1;: r re e : u( the' -Constable nod 'Sheriff: . His . conduct
Ellon'thediti denunehitiotiOfixipera -thy ad:l-"grieldtklini perio4kalsi.. and --- +Anil
Vey to FreifilOil s and in ea naming tile
41 f . a L L ,._,.., i lean., good ones ra , kleta mme -f ramo b e t ••, , ,,i,, - bits often been strange—unlike ' that of other
irlui ments of . -the Plotroh;.Locrta, and davit )nli - i Men *oder similar tiroutnatt4ieeti,'yet I icr not
• - • 1 t
. ._
;that t touch[ them ' ta . -;
..' -
DI con mmationi' it is •
no. be forgotten. -.! .- . . - know s that any one ever thought him - to be
...:. i- - - i , i' . -
_mann
paten
every
by th
I . 1i144
b
tno inure tban" fair 4.bat, . Republicans: should
sustain theitepubliciatt_ 'press exelus•
t. • , - •
ion (if tlic i prc?-laver_ dolignitice prOss,arta,
of literary periOdicals,.these. that show lean-
I Ing towards freedorn,, instead Or those that
llean towards Ariggeiicbint. . •
Of the co-caned= neutral paPerli that hahi.
tually sustain the Slavery-propaganda, we
.1-mention 'the " Philadelphia Ledger", and
1 . " Dollar Newspaper." . And judging from
the following, remarks of the Tribune on the
first number of" Harper's Weekly". just. is.
(sued at New-York We have here presented
another aspirant for the support oldie dough
; faces: .
".liqqtr's Wed-1.4,a Journal of Civiliza-
I !ion, has *cared. "Ilt (memr with a long,but
I very dull, ltnnheringand clumsy apology . for
the election of Mr. Buchanan.. That event
I The journal cf
. regards as a new
Compl'omise and a new Salvation of the,
Union. This idea is original ; hut it is too
1 sleepily expressed. The whole Journal of
Civilization is of the Isatne heavy, Uninterest
ing and uninstrnctive, character.. It is: ar-
I ranged too with exeeSding eltmisinm,and oh
;
Sence of tunispaper sense, as if the editor had
jmade the worst Of }di material. Unless our
new contemporary wakes up he can't get On
! with the plities'he has adopted. - YOu may
-ucceed as the apologist of Border-Rufliimism,
Ostend Manifestoes, and'any other , jThlitieal
iniquity ;- hut. for that you must he smart,
lively,entertaining,i
11:4 not pro , y, Monoto.
of.us and tedious. The 'first number of the
new paper is a decided failure." ,
PE ! :csm - traxlALtaist.ttrßE.—BO!hbrnnell-
cs Penn-ylvania Legi , •l4tare met nn
ittesday last; r:nn .etveted Speakers.- The
Sehate elected_P. , l ,l (, 1 3enubdettn.l.
ppeaKer, y voLo of
1S tO 15; tznd the itouse eleuted
rettee Getz, (Sham . em'.) of 'Berk., to the
of7ice • vote• ;of 52: to 40 Mi;S: P.
'ATeCalniopt. (Rer:) 2 scattering and 2 not
v , ting. There Were
.4 absentees from the
.114)01ilicanK
The Anti-Benton men have trinniphed .
in the Missrntri t egislatore,hy the eldetion.f .
Ri,bert. Harrison, anti4lenton old-line Whig,
as Speaker. The vote stood. Harrisfm CO,
\V !sin (Benton) 52. The 131
infra lit:le Free Soil4h, rate
mocracy prefer old line Wh:
Slavery is the great tittehstni
ev, in these degenerate days.
_ .
nrSenator Stunner;• Hain:
ihongh very aniipttylri be in his - seat a'
Washington. Th4hysicians have .
his r. turn th 7. beio're. the Isrit inst. Ttey
say that 'lThift pre,:nt eondiitot, th e ex.eite
ttlew wou!d; bring t,it a rektpse.—
c may never be able to take his seat again.
the setiSon in which members
.of Congress gonerall,y, do, nothirg, and the.)•
nre it. I C.onserioently wt. hsve.ni.
greiional new's to lay before our tenders.
Ttir
scnoot,i - ELLoyr; A MONTHLY 11.AGAZTICE
rare Bore Atip G - T . 4Ll3•+—lfCliildren don't Icon
to love books,lnoii . -a-ilays, it must be either
because, they are ineapable of approti'ating
Wettera Correrposa4-sea of the Reptibliran.
Letter from Illinois.
_ 3SamikrrAi,. Witt. C0.,.1LL., Dec. 25, 'S6
Matta& .Entrons:—A_ . merry . Christmas
to yoti and Your-readers, one and all! As
fou gather closer around Your winter's fire
side, it may be that a few. lines from one, a
native of your county, and almost his •whole
life a resident there, but for a - few' weeks
past an inhabitant of the "Sucker Stme,"
may not, hounacceptable. I would not how
ever trespass upon }our patience but fur the
probability that this may. fall into the hands
of some whose interest- in the Writer may
compensate, in their view, - for the lack of-in
terest in what is written. Nor is this all.—
Having nothing"to do to-day, with all day to
do it in, some method must be adopted to
kill time, and I seize the most feasible and
plea-quit one. A. would go out gunning; for
the quails and - prairie chickens fly over tne as
I pass to the.grove, with most audacious te
.merity; but fortunately- for them and per
haps-for myself also, Lam not the possessor
of any kind of firearms. My mission being
that of a.humble pedag ogue, I um generally
supposed to he aimed with weapons very
difirent from thoSe, and the gentle tenants
of the prairie and the grove•go past me un
molested to their biding places. •
j To-day is, here, With one exception, just
such a Christmas as romantic lovers and their
iconlidingfair ones are said to delighy
There is no - sleighing, but the day is ealm
bright and beautiful, and nature reposes in
more than wonted l"Veliness. -, It is only
when .we leave the blazing fire and , To out
of doors that we begin to realize that spring!
lis not Yet here. it is a Winter's day- in all
.•
its glory. The grove, the prairie, and even
I -the uni-ightly slough, sparkle with the lustre
of a myriad diamonds in the bright • sun- .
beams.. The ground is nearly half covered
with ice, and the traveling is a curious mon
grel between sleighing and wagoning, the
'latter decidedly predominating: Instead of
the merry .ringing of the Christmas sleigh
bell:, so fluniliar at. the east, we hear the
sharp and frequent rattle of the wagon upon
the fiozen ground. f •
I am fully impressed with the,idea that
this is a "fist" country —that I :int
,among
a "fast" people. Every thing here scents
to be going forward with steam-impelled ve
locity. Ilad Galileo lived-here: the truth of
his assertion, "Theworld does niove," would
not have been so long questioned. Cities
and towns spring up as if by magi . C, the off.
spring of a single year. Railroads, those
iron veins of internal commerce, now inter.
sect almost every portion of the state, form
ing a complete network, and converging at
that great com met vial center and metropolis,
Chiengo, ulieh is to the body commercial,
what_ the heart is to the body physical. -Ill
inois is destined to the one of the first states
in the Union. Already she stands fourth in
the list in her popular vote at the recent
Presidential election, and the time is not far
distant when she will achieve that greatness!
which her central-position, the enterprise of . ;
her populationy'and the unexatnple . d fertility
or tier soil, 114.1 1,6 .•••••",
The winter thus •far, has been cold 411'
little snow. Last TueSdaY month r ' (Dee.
23d) cannot, I think be surpa.; d•• by any
thing you hake had at the tit the line of
cold weather, and SundfDee. 14114 . gave ;
us a speciimp of priirie winds. (jood
friends, if pm) wi , slcto know how the. 'wind
feels after hag traversed over thousands :
of acres o <firairie, its force unbroken by the
-friend • interposition of a single hill, or tree,
or oek, came out. here and take a position
which 1 tthall . point out to you, with the mer
, .
cury standing at-10,"and the wind tearing
and racing along - as if Eolus had rolled'away :
the stone from the mouth Of hiS cavern and
let all his unwilling prisoners go free. That ;
Would be what i call a strong appeal to the
sensibilities, and if you did not com i c in with
a. full conviction that the West is h "Lt:•eat
country," and.with a just appreciation (.)fthe
blessinzs and comf)rts of a warm hLuse, and
a hickory fire,' your feelings must be hbrri
blv blunted,.aud " The motions of Your pir•
it dull as night.'
But perhaps it would hate been ;yell had
I sooner taken the advice of the poet;
'' Tell tot as news whit every body knows
And, new or old, still hasten to a close."
And your readers possibly will wish (if
tnay
_appropriate a somewhat celebrated I li
berniadsm) that I had supped befure s l be
gan. I trust that, howeier rich and alight-
,
; fill may be the regiOns of the 'West,: Ns hick I
I have no oceeasion to dispara" ,, e, " Old Susi - plc . --
0 .
hanna," my own dear birthplace, nay still
flourish, lier_ruzged bills blossoming as 1..,..
dunl and gener.ition niter generation of \it
I thous men and women
t i4l
i / 1
A ei 4 1
,• - I
hl
: .1
- . 1
. . i
' f - '
r
,_, .
i
eolte,spoqbeiNe.
eleratiged. He was not an intemperate man, I
Servile Insurrection - I WHAT M
DOSS 1T EAN?— There is some
;yet he is known to have purchased a pint of The country has recently - been startled 1, - y• eisiriderable excitement in the State of Lou.
whiskey the day previous. lie kavesa wife the diseever ) " rmi de s p rea d and deep laid isiane, growium out of tire progress of emanci.
I plans of insurrection among the negrocs in pation in that State. In New Orleans city
and largo family, some of mhoin are quite' the southern States. - This discovery hasear- it is stated, within the • last twelve months,
smell, and two ere' young men. I ried dismay and terror to the hearts of many one Court, alone has emancipattel between
A little more than a week ago, ameesen-I people, and, indeed, nothing could be better five and six hundred blacks. All the Courts
ger informed me. at bed time, that a man had
I calculated to a I waken alarm in the hesoms are supposed to _have• set free between one
been •badly stabbed, near the Depot. On •" e l l of the boldest. A man mho could face. I trumeatid and fifteen hundred. In Elie interi
deitth in its most appalling shape with firm= ' or of the State it is said that the evil has been
my arrival. the man rae bleeding profusely 'less and constancy, tillght ' welt shrink with [felt to a degree that has attracted the atten
from an extensive wound in that region of the i apprehension and dismay from a clinger Lion of grand jurors and Judges. In the pa
body to which the "seat of honor," is usual- whieli threatens to bring death, and m °reel l rish of Point, Coupee, where the vote at the
ty ass i gne d . n e said th at w hit e on hi s way than death, to the wife of his bosom, and the ' late election was teem een
.seven and eight
home,lie was assaulted by a man who inflict
children that surround his hearthstone. hundred, we are told that the free negroes
Such of the Southern journals as have at i are only eight less than the number of white
ed this Injury and then ran, and he declines i •
temptes to give any explanation of the cause 1 voter.. In the parish of Rapid's a Judge
'
divulging anything more particular in regard of these insurre ctions, have concurred in at- I recently delivered a charge to the jury upon
A ,
to it. great variety ofeislutions 'lave been tributing it to t he discussion of the slavery:lmo subject, It must be a sorry state of af
proposed to account for !ids strange afliiir, question during the recent Presidential (dee- . fairs when the Courts cannot he entrusted
Lion. It is well known in this State, mid all with the work of emancipation. Doubtless
but it is not known that any of them are con
, over the South, the pro-slavery party have the Judges act from the best of reasolis , and
rect. The man's liabiteSsoinetitnes led him
denounced all who opposed their schemes for ido not grant applications ext'el't in ease.
to carry a glass bottle mild. , mitt pocket, and extending slavery into . Kansas as abolition- I where the emancipated person shoWsc•videnee
whether by any misstep lie chanced to break ists, and charged that all such per-ons, con:- that he, or she, will not be a burden to soci
an immense =jot ity at the North, ery. The Delta admits ilhit the free negroes
the bottle and so Whet :this injury, Without Posing
is not known to
the aid of a third persoli,
were determined, if they obtaints.l power, to 4)f New Orleansare superior in industry and
;.e abolish slavery throught the Union. Of intelligence to those of other portions of the
this depenent•
course this was a fals,•hood, and known to South. Slaveholders and the Courts are
An accident occurred some weeks since at be a falsehood by those mho gave it utter. quite competent to decide the question of
, , ,r „ ,
Pratt s T annery, b y w Men a man had t h e alive ; but the slaves who lietened to these emancipation without the interference of those
. .
wild harangues from the furious pro-slavery whe ,... ,reeard even matters of humanity with
largest portion of his Fight foot so seriously
deineeurniee in'eniliel to em bi tter . e it n-- ,
injured as to require ail:Nita:het. The case '‘'''- ~„ ' l ` , , . ° , l , I s P elitie3 ' Q es •
SOS o f t h e oiniteern Cu )le egaitite. tee
,eo -
is doing well: .
e tile id' the Nurth, w e t re not unwilline to Pine 1 'SLEETING OF THE STATE LEGISLATUUE—TBE
- In Nor. last " mint:A(l2C commenced
an credence to •a F t ol t :0 fl t • o '
117 tl
to (l i • CAUCUS . N OM INA TIONS. lI ARRISBL • O, • Jsn . 5.
.
experiment,
the result of which. I hope .at Iloilo', and hence these have hurt prompted —The catieuees of both
p arties in the Ilouse
some timo to,repoit fiVilie benefit or - ) our and oeceuraged to thetstteni; is which have met I his evening to Felice of liir the or.
agricultural readers. The object of the ex- ' i s . i s t ,l'i‘, 4 " Zeieni:atilL discov
foie th, , d i 5:124 ,, r . 3 from ii hid ,
e re d e n d ari pp rec ,,,d, gmmiez oh nto-morrow. ' The De - mot:rats nom.
periment, is to secure ; early potatoes. The the inatt•d J. lAA% rence Getz, of Berke, lin• Speak
te m ives and the date:Jeers riffle , South have in, etlanitntsev, all the others l," leg be
ground having been thoroughly ploughed, lie' just bat•ely escaped, hi the timely. mid we withdraw n, and then adjourned. Illere were
inacle sufficient furroveS into w hi ch the poen rill'e'l.t . a" sav• providential diselosures o f 5:3 niembere pr e sent." -
(..
the ( s e n of the slaves . 1 - Undonbtedly the
1 . s .i.. .., b Zeigler , the kssietent• Clerk
tats were dropped tiV proper diet:ince:, rind
!sing denuot om m es sv h• o , c ur rut , p ini ,,,, i , ()I the last liiiti.e, mill be rominated by the
then well covered with straw, which in turn Climpt. Jae', , ,
,
a a into a minating their falsehoods
was well covered wit i earth, by plotighieg have mem , • I •• f 1 * '
1
and for the t leale 4 Pei-so:ell a ' di : .iinci:nicen, • Democrats for Clerk of the !louse, and Win.
I) a in t , in 1 :....Sl-, .111 C le r k
_, I(SL t,C 1 .111..
.1;" •• r t- •t- t tl •• • -.1 t' • •sti
furrows on each side. 1 In the Sp r i ng , h e Fur_ ag..in,t all the people of the North, and l ias e Iniving no opposition.
.
,
po , is to level these ridges with the harrow, thus prompted aim encouraged the slaves to The Republican caucus to-night :unmated
and should Jack Frost, keep hisniose out di revolev. Mel ] nese; M wild have baen attempt- S. P. AleCalniont of Vt•trango, 1;i1 Speaker,
f rom tA. W. Benedict, of ll•nitington, fist. Clerk ;
i ed, except for the hope: hiseirsd of aid :111d
them, I opine we shall have some (if the ear-
.„,n, t ,,,,,,.. he Iwo; I L ',,t- tl:e North
‘
lice potatoes; dug in this latitude. ?_ Win. J.Backl.ouse, of Allegheny, for Assi..r.
Who is to be bl ame d for the gl , ti ii at :d ap- ant Clerk ; S. E. Ge inner, of Bucks, for Ser-
The Flouring Mill erected at this' place prehension which still broods os cr tilt South'
gcanm-at•Arms; 11. 13. Hoffman, of Dauphin,
tind is ho has e : ,e se d tl a . endsirrassment to for Doorkeeper, aud'll, duringWelshing
the pit.st season, is now in operation
. 1 th - e business. of the people iii the distriets to her ISlessenger. Ther m l itre ' 45 present.
and doing a fine . basiness. 1•1:q. Bacon is
%%here these outbreaks ha:e occurred ? The The Senate caucuses will meet in tl:e moor:t
one of the proprietorts, and the ienerable old ; . answer is still the Is sldet•s and unprilici- ing. The Republicitns will probably nend
i
man daily engages iil• time superintend e nc e of pl e d demagogues who gave rise •to the slave- nate David Tageert, of Northumberlaimd, for
the concern, with gre'at zeal and energy. ry agitation by the repeal of ;he Miseourl Speaker ; Geo. W. Ilamtnersley, of Phila.
Compromise, and mho eteleisvored to justify phia. fur Clerk, and .I.llolcomh, of Bradford,
When You get at other letter mav it be
.. t, .
7 • this o u trage by attributing to the neople of tor A-s:.ti,nt Cite k.
follow and better. 's i'
e
the Nor:1 1 the desig n of ari ll 1 ' (i• slavery The Democrats of the Senate will ()omi
t, is im,
o
Very truly ytjurs ; ) 0 -8. 3. 8, the Southern States.—St. Louis DMZ. nate N. B. Browne. of Philadelphia, or J. 11.
___ _ _ ____ ____ Walton, of Monroe, nir Speaker.
liii the Vepubli, an, . y,
SNOW DLOCKADE IN Wirciesses.—The Mil- Mr. Benson, the Republican IZepreserita-
The' Mane.
waukie Sentinel of the 25, gives an account riv e froth Potter, issick, and is not expected
Lestox, Wyoming Co. Jim. .sth, 1857. of the difficulties cneoluitered 1
->y :I train of here ut, the openin g fti • Session:
u is
—I I ,
EDS. REPUBLICAN :---- ....At on (lira is lII.* cars (91 the railroad between ' that city and
matter with You, since cleethm ? lime you Prarme do Chien, on the .7,l 2es i es i pp e Tl u s C - I-e7•The South is receiving tier punisnment,
road extends to Il ,se c t, e l, tw,. ll . 3 .l' ormr in ih s tiot front the North, bet front herself. She
"kinder gin out," or what is up ? fer me set
%sail her own hands emnrived the engine
rum the raver, st here a party took passage has
dam" hear from y ou, now-a • days. Don% be f '
alm.sut two %%eel., lief ire Cliii-tmas. Ti,,, that has struck a deadly blow at hi r vitals.
scared, if we are in alp/are/lig, but. "up - snuw 'drifts were deep, end no trains could n
_ _ er r e hli e nit . n ii mid have , er Vl'ed the I
and at 'em, agile' for be sure itext time .It_ (*et :its i • . 6 , It'• ~ t i ; i•t t l , 1 • ion, and kindled the torch of civil Wnr all
, • -
user the Ii ii under the pretext to gist_ sta
will give them Jessie. ~ ; tied t4Lk, after two or three days' delay, ilie
• liiilly to their peculiar inetitte ion ; and in the
Irian liretight up in a deep drift some- six .
Surely , vm e thought v. hen the Inflian, of
miles lthis side ol Llosef•bel, and then coin. i ens Lour of their sut•ces, their inslimutionm
the Borders as well as •ieteriisr elected Bte .
. eeeine crumbling 10 pieces. Befere the rdee
, • , n.. nets! the ss om k in earnest.
chanan they would condes&tid to let our pa- I , The :arain %%field plunc , •mo thed r • - 1 , ta u thin, Sinithert chivttry %mild hive
rushed
1 detention,
aerie,. the Mitt, Colititic rod the tin Wai like p en - pers conic throug h w ith out etentien, but we snow [king soinetimee ne high as the tops of
' the hater:oils North. seizsd upon the
were sadly mistake, Do they think by
~ . I - i• •'• • '- .1 halt, h
cars, ant tom .1,, to a et... 1 Ana iii! the ,plc o f' the „
. shovt•llers—passengers amto its anon * notes ,
m d a ll amore .i i g I h.qn. C 31111.111 city, and borne oir,
withholding them to make the Republlean -
12 „ selves that wav—ceuid clear the is heels, end ' ls of •tovelimment ,•
the art-lei-es mid -.3 n , ,ee
Put) as lign(?rallt as a lleainritY of i then runningback, dash in aelitt So they now , sm itt en with mortal fear, ar.d shaklng
o•••
Fur he assured there is method in their mad- ' struggled, but three slai s :11111 mi loht s , meets ! with a cower - dice that it castes even conceal; I
n e e .. ""U I ~, .....,. e4 .1 sweet: nines pii gie-s.- P re% e it It onibles in the fiee or it-, slaves, and eon-
!tees • for while Lisp e' •
' keived here in twenty. slew' were ail neente •; mile scant . ) sop ' . fe-eee 'ts irritiiiitv to defend itself againet the
L .i e s e ... a r . :...., i.
could be obtained from the feW Linn !Mho., stlrrior poiy‘rsof it , ow ii property. Is nut
four hours after I ~. atom, the Republican .
. accessible. I here humiliation ? Where, since the and Tribune Tribune setatitet mime, if at. all, till the
' tun of the sioricl, im, ere, the vain so doanerile.
Parties were detailed to eut and br tig
'leeway 5.,, T,bersdity, and often not till Sat- , wood for th eeis a kept up steam den—the boinefel ht. cApOi((i—the prestmip
engine„ they d
urday, alter, though on the
.direct route, and , with difficulty in the four locomotives. A t 1 time; so beaten and shamed r---Cin. COlll.
; roost only eieteen miles front Montrose, and al length, after almost despair:tig of being thaw. ' ,
• ormm illY OF F OR nIG X INTELLIGENCE.--Our
ed out till spring, one of the winking parties 1 .., f E
invariably coming from the South.— rom • urope )3- thy Milton, at . ew
IN.
returned to the train at about two ot. lock one ..," ` 1 , ( " t '''_, , ~
D017 . i. your P. M. knuM• where little Wsom- lorts. lino nang.iroo, iii. Philadelphia, are tl/
i morning, with the joyful report of hav leg t
; time 1 - stl i from London. Havre. Southampton
ieg is, or the mail route from Montrose to heard the whistle of engines coming frein the and Liverpool. The missieg steamship Iler-
Tunkhannta, that lie - Sends the Piglets down I eastward e and the excitement Was intense till
1. • • mane, had reached Seuthampton, basing en
the Red Read, to tbe Lord mile knows ehere, 2
, juet about day hglit, the relict: tt :tin from Alad: 1
countered terrific weather, and b.en obligm•d
.n with four engines which 11 d been work-
and up to Tunkbannoek lAs well might he 1 "' l " '‘ ,to return on account of her machinery I ...'
wing
1 ino for several days from the eastisiird, broke •
,„ 1 1 ,,, 1
send them round by 'SI . • Turk 1 Ph . ' d 1 e ' l .
. / es' and' lia e - through the drdis, - -Ititchire , one'' the whole (''''''''''' Her in.ills and passengers were
e sent. by the Fulton.
Orin and up through Glancy Jones' district! • train, limed to Museuda.
,
' The Persian fftivernment less issued i nree
_Be assured it is but :the carrying out of the I On reaching Aladison rain began to fill. • • l - ' • -
~ laiontion rt•cognizamg the Eeglish declaration .
, and the Drains i• - •• - • .1 lz • I i h• t -
•skis Lic., c. 111, so 1..1. mate' • f „ T . B • • i haul , , ,
recommendations of ;the Union and kindred ,
ne rite , : ta k en tne ieeneis
- overflow ed the truck. The mercury fell to " " -r '
„ s
prints, that the circulation of Republican pa. , of Ormuz and Karaele in the Persien Gulf.
zero, and the track could then oniy be clear- i
pens must be curtailed, or their craft is in e d 1, i s •
y th e s l ow wor •or t h e p i c k axe. . nen • ,
gone so far that the next step, unless
danger. 1, for one, think that if there is noth- ire read such accounts of early snow storms ' sua has
: b • (oyez till interven.ion can only
! prevente d y, p , , . .
ing rotten in Denmark; there is in our Post- on the priliries sic do not wonder that the
,
,he actual lio,t y ilit • Great severity said is to
Office Department. . I " WYOMING. , Presidential Electors of Wisconsin were pre. - • -
he displayed towards the politieal prisoners
vested from reaellie. , the capital in time to
0 . of Neufchatel. Sonjoult Kaki) his been reta•
east their votes according to law.
ken berm the Circassiane by the. Russian ar
my afte'r a gallant deft nee. The Englieh
Pirliaineet is to meet for business on the 3:1 •
of _February. Queen Vi ctor i a and I . :unify
heel visited the Arctic ship Resolute, just re
stored by the United States government
~i~ceSj~yle~~~~.
Department News. •
The Prepayment , of all Trail:len t.. trd
:Vatter. Compulsory.
The National .
IntelligencerofSaturday com
tains the following: : . _ • - . •
We are requested 1.4') publish the - follow.
ing regulations, made: by the Postmaster-
General, in order to carry out the provisions
of the act just passed, requiring pre-payment
of postage on all tranzient printed matter,
viz: •
i . ,
1. Books, not. weighing over four.pounds,
may be sent in 'the mail pre-paid by postage
I stamps, at one cent an !Ounce any distance in
The United States undex three thousand miles,
l and at two cents an opnee over three thous
; and miles, provided they 'are .put up without'
i a cover'or wrapper,et: in a cover ur wrapper
i open_ at both ends or Ides, so that their chur
-1 aster may be Aeterrni . ted without removing
the- wrapper. .
~1
' 2. Unsealed circulars, advertisements, bu
siness cards, transient newspapers, and every
! other article of transient printed matter, ex
-1 cept books, not weighing over three Ounces,
sent by mail to any. pact of the United States,
are chargeable 'with onp cent poatage each, to
I be prepaid by postage tamps. WLeiernore
than one circular is printed on a sheet; or a
circular and letter, each must be charged with
a single rate. This 4pplies . to lottery and
other kindredsheets resuming the form and
nettle of newspapers; ,rind the miscellaneous
twitter iu such sheets roust ' also - be charged
with one rate. A basil:teas card open unseal-
ed envelope of.a circular subjects the . entire
pact et". to letter postage. . . Any transient mat.'
ter, like a circular or handbill, enclosed in or
withl a periodical- or newspaper sent. tua sub.
scriber, or to
.any person, subjects the',Whole
packagc.to letter postage; and Whenever.sub
ject to .letter, postage. from being Se or
from arty Cense whateier, all printed' mat
r,
without ezeeptiOn, must -be,. d
prepaid i - fq x
eluded from the mail._ ,':lt is .theuty of -1
N le
postmaster at the : nittilnag officr . . as well as at
the office .ofdelivery carefully 'to examine
iall.printed 'matter, in order to .see that it is*
charged with i the proper rate Of postage and
to detect fraud. - At J4liees . where;postage
stamps cannot
. be procured, postmasters -are
authorizt4 to receive Money: in prepayment
of postage on transient matter; . !alt. 'they ;
should be careful., to keop-a supply Of stamps
on hand: : . t:. • • • ;
kind Isdi_who
,sent U 3, a iniuie
pie, says a Western Ed itor , with the request
to "please insert," is assured that 'such arti•
chni are never crowded Otit by a pressor oth
er matter.: . ' '
THE " CHIUSTIANIZINO" INFLUFNCE OF
SLavEr..V.—The followieg Ordinance; in rela
tion to negroes, pa,sed by the Mayor add
Board of Aldermen . of Memphis, Tenth, Dee.
-9, W - e
find in the Eagle of that city
Ee4t ordained Ly the Board of ifayor and
Alletinen of the City of Memphis,- That it
shall be unlawful hereafter to teach lettert4 to
negroes in Sabbath Seitooho or elsewhere with
in the limits of the coiporation, and that the
Mayor Cause the Superintendent of negro
Sabbath Schools -AN., to be no:ified of the
passage of this. tirdinat.c..; and for every vio
lation thereof, the party so offending shall be
taken before the Recorder, And upon comic.
tion, be fmed not less than ;50, !for exceeding
1500, for . each and every Ofrenee..
- • •
SEc. 2. Be ilfurther Ordlinecl,dx., That
no night meetings for religious or other lAir
poses, of negroes, -shall be - allowed between
sun-down, and sun-rise, except' with the writ
ten permit of the Mayor, under the supervi
sion of a Police force, detailed for the pur
pose of attending such meeting; and that any
person addressing, such meeting of negroes,
or permitting, it to be held on his lot, or prem
ises; shall be lined, upon conviction thereof
before the Recorder, $5O fur each and every
offenee.v.
SEC. 3: Be it further • Ordained, dc., That
it shall be unlawful fur any negro to preach
in this city, and that any one so offending, the
owner tliefeof shall be fined WO for each and
.every -offence. ••
THOMAS. R. CARROL, Mayor,
Attest : L R. Rwiimips, - City Register.
. ..
Punexemarr.--Mr.. Scott, a , reside nt of
,I Exeter, traveled on business tilt about eighty
i years of.age. - He wa.) one of thomust cele- . -
thrated characters in the Kingdom : fur punctu
-1 olity, and by ins_ methodi ca l :conduct, joined
fto uniform diligence; he gradually amassed a
1 large fortune. _Fig a lung : series. of years,
' the proprietors of every inn' he . frequented. in
Devoe and.Cornwal.l knew the day and the
very .la.n.,ir when be would arrive.- - A hlturt
I time before.be died, a gentleman ou'a joni
ney in •Cornwallstoppe . d ..at a smSll . .. inn at _ .. .
.r. - oft Isaac to - dine. The waiter. presented - ~..gar•The annual statement . : id..rail ways in .
I him with a bill of fare Which he did not tip- .the Union has just . been. published by; the .
prOve (.11"; but observing a..fiae.: duck roasting, - . , United States Railroad and : MiningAegister;
" I'll haVe that," said . . the traveller. - " Yoit ; It nittkes.the total nember Of miles of railway
callo w, ,d r ," "'s a id the . landlord, "I t iS . f o r Mr. -24,192, being an int-re:Lie 91,3,434 oVer the
i
' Scott of Exeter." " I .knew Mr. Seqtt Very' preceding - -- A 'II . ' • • '- 1. 't; •
, . .
,) e. ro • !'tic- ,tuert,..ase i 4 arg r in
.
weH," rcjoitted the gentleinati;'," be is n ot in t Pennsylvania than in nay other State. being
suits htnise." " True; sir," - sald,the landlord, ! 426, while the la rge , t.increat in - other States
; " but. six months age,:wheti be Washere . last, il a Illi no i s noo, Indianm 468 , . - 4 1 ) 4 wi t io ns h i
he ordered . a duck, ,to i .bo
,oadi,fttr hint this [43
.tuilcs..... - OUTb.inil' iti' unw: 2;104-:LUite's.i
' day precis e ly at two o'clnelt ;' anatn.l4'aik Ohio-heaclitig' the list with 2,806, Nei" York
tonistiment ut _thetraveller,, he :saw thold foilowing hext.. - with'2,7o2. And liiineia2,s3l..
gentleman jogging into.tholun-yard int abou t Pennsylvania isnitw the fourth ittilWitY 'State - , -
eve minutes before the appointed time, -- but. Is rutovertaking those tihea:d Of her,
BEAUTIFUL SENTIMENTS.--The ct=ident
say's,-in his messsage:
" Perfect liberty of:is:Joel:it:on for politieal
objects, and the widest scope of discuz4sion,
are the' received- and ordinary condition's of
government ia our country,"
This was said just after an election in which
the friends cif a candidate who c.irried elevta
States could not utter a mord . in his fay . iir
in a majority of the other. Statel. without be
big' mobbed. TIN perfect liberty of asso•
elation for political - objects" did not allOw in
thy northerly part of the roost northerly-slave
States a meeting of the friends of acandidate
who received. in spite of such proscription,
over- 1,30,000' votes, and whom the- change
of a few thousands of votes would.have made .
President. This widest scope of discussion":
was illustrated by banishing nien from the.
slave States who dared- to prek‘r Fremont
b2r virtually robbing . them of their. property,
And by denying them all retir6s in the courts
in 'refusing them access to the.cturtes.—Pror
idence Joertzal.
_______ .
Nkell'OLOGY
,tW I'M: . .YEAU.—Attaing the,
many noted: persons who . hale died . the iio„
year„may be named ,Julm: M. Berrien and
Wm. C. Dawson, of Georgia ; John AL . Niles
of Connecticut; Ogden . Illifrinim,, George
Steers, Robert L. .Stevens and. L. B. Ship.
ard, of New York ; • Samnal Floor, Frantis C.'
Gray, Rev.. Dr. Peabody; John C. Warren, of
Massachusetts.; • John
,M. Clay ton, :James G.
Percival, Rev.. Dr. - 4 ohn 0: Choules. ..
/ .
Across the - Atlantic , the name 3 oritelny of
.tre4.)
the titled . and' the great have -hcea.add Nd to
the list of the d4parted. Ault g ; those Wor
thy of mention here, may be n4ll
Helm!, Gil belt .a!Beeket;. Johp B aham, Dr.
Buck land, Viscount Dardinge, Sir JAM Ross:,
Theobald ~Mathei, Admire!. Beectioy;-13,iela,
,the astroilorber. Adolph 6 'Adam;Petet 'Lind
painter,. Piul D.elartiehi.. • ' :,' to' ' "' '
; The Portland (Maine) Advertiser
states that there ore in-that city 5 000.believ.
ers in . spit itiialisn:.
r: -
• The reports continue of slave excite-
Mews at the South. It is•sOid fifteen negroes
- have been executed in. Perry county, S. C.,
and twenty in Loui,lana. -
it is cSfimated- that the love letterl
dropped into the post office at Lowell, aye
„rage over 1500 daily. The factory girls are
unaniniotis in their opposition to Single hies.
redness.”
creeent sketch of the lire of Mr.
Breckinridge, the author says he colunieneed
life poor and parentless. Rather a pOorstirt
tt lit. Perhaps like little Topsey
burn, he growed.'?
It is said that Senator
.Dell; will lore
about' $lO.OOO _by the instoreclion
Foiaof his Ifegrrar,ln his absence, were huhg
4y 'one a the local vyurts, and five more af
terwards by the mob.
The London Shipping Gazette calls
; .
attention to . the onpnrtance of the direct trade
wit trChieagil,.jti:st opened, and cal
uniations-or the cost of cions'eritnee each way,
to show that mar.be carried on profitably,
.
. .
::. . Erery 'Free State 'but
.Poirisylifaaia
2ives a Inoot decided majority against Meehan,
~8 . 1: NO ll tauter .le and his leaders begia't o *
change their *tune, and t,ltaw' :son* desire to
keep Eattsas fruit Slavery's crime - and curie,
A man .named Air,, - who Was th e
- Democratic candidate- fer Treasurer of 'Clin
ton county Michigan, ay the late election, has
gline crazy over hig &fedi. Ile had- been.
often elected to (,ffi,:e, by the Democrats, and
quite popular.
The Pennsylvania •House!of . Repre
sentatives is etnnposed of one hundred mein:
hers. Of the members composing the pre
en t ilouse,forty-stx -are new members, forty t•
nine were memberi of, the
Ilouse last year,..
and five were' members previously. •
It i., sitid that the namath,- (Califon.
tiiit) county jail COll - § l;ii of -alive
.oak. tree
'with a staple and . chain attached. It' is well
ventilated, and uffinds a gotid 'opportunity,
for the :turfy of agronomy And- the bareme
ter, .especially wheti blankets nfe scarce. -
. - A .Republican meeting held in Le
high ei ! utity, uot lung since, 'unanimously a
dopted. the titllowing re.solution:—
/?escdrett, That in DAVID %Vaunt' we rec
ognize the " firettiost man" or the Old Key.
stoup," and .we long for an , opportunity to
testily our.lfighapprecialion of hi 3 noble de-
Yotion- to the caus,o of Liberty.. ,• .
.. An editorial article of sonic length in
the New Orleans -Delta, which is;copied ap - -
itrueingly by some of -the other southern jour=
naffs of that kidney, advocates
oi a purely-Southern party, to .prepare for
the campaign of 1S(10, whim it is - feared that
t lie .11eptibl jean party-!nest elect its candi....
dates - tts the Presideney and Vicarresidency.
The "Czar," a \Versa* journal, says
that while England, with Much noise and i);-
tentation;preptires an expedition against Per
sia, liussia; umistematiously and noiseles;ly,
is getting - ready to come. to the succor of the
Shah; and, in..t he , Meanwhile, continue; to
refill her exhausted magazines. and to rpllee."
the war tizateri 'I consumed during the Jan
war. •
Governor .slatle's benevolent effurtm
to die needy 41.gions oldieWest:with .
sthuui tiliehers, are.deniinneed by the
ingiun Union ai a par t of :a selivinelttr"
the West." - . trial 7 giiity
niisropreents mid abusei even the
, :prtiad-tho blessings of edteatien, among
`the ignuraut. Dues the eretal of-. the-Uititus,
shun the light.?
The ~Lotikport. Journal `state that,'
while - a clerk in a law otEee its that villager 1
1 was overhauling paperil on file; a package
f;aital which showed tnarks.ot haviug, beet at.
on fire. I;x:iv:lining further, the charred re-'
innitls of it .coimmin Jinn h fly, or inilior, was:
. sd which had probably carried the fire
rota the candle, in wings, to - the &en
nients afid set the papers on fire.: • • -
Mas!..aelinsetts is now represented by
only One Senator, and the, ftet produce; deep impviiNsion.. Mr.,Stunnerinay return
It o Washington for a time; but. - his friends
feel that • the Wiltdds. will prove _rata The..
politicalfriend: of Brooks Eave- : sn't taken
! his part that slavery !oust bear•tlie.o into of
his,Lcutality . aud cowardice.
•
I. - Must of the towns around us .have
been visited with snow, - tiudshOveli4off the'
sideulalk has - heetuzie Serious busineo.-L
-LPaths.fiir gi..tdienten are opened, - but in
some of the laruer towns-they are. talking of
1 special appropriations for shbvoing . the - m out
wide enough to adtiiit free p:mAage . of Indies
with . hooped '-skirts; and with 'sWifehing ofF
places' at intervals, so that Wheulwo :skirts.
'tappet) to ineet r thei ean pass. . -
.... Do our -readers know that. tbere„is no
safety' hi t he. so•called:self-sealing - envelopes.
It. is a fact.. .• Thwe,envelope*e.aiyi be opened,
and the letter read by any onF who
-.is
to perform so mean atria, and :When re•seal
ed appear as well as ever. /All that iSmece.s
st•try is simply to moisten / the - outside of rthe
enyeiope wherecthe gino/is.attached, and by,
patience and care •the i feat ,
Dolt% use t hese en velopeS' except, witlvaddi;.
tional.prycaution ofa wafer, minihige or paste.
• List wintcr / a - bill era, (To svj d thrO!
Congress, providing - for .t he .estahlistinient of
fre e i_.(.ll4loi s fOr .t he whita diildren r f the - Pis:
triet of Columbia. This law,..however,
a proviso' , attached, that it "was 2,taksa
ittrect in t hose/school: districts wiiere`
phi should, ay an election held fur thit . purpose,
vote to acccpt
.it. - Ttio . e)Oetion.
short time' since, and 'eery . school distriet
voted against theschool eap-:
ttal of Or country is.: to.eutCd in faith - pi - a dirk
region /if we ..iudgefrrini this, vote: •T,
..‘. .. Win.: C. Pierre Pent, of -Picrrepont
Manor, Jeffiq , son. Co., recently' iient' s don*.
til4l $2OOO to the church' Book. Soeietilof
1 Yee 'York.By e. a mistake the artiontit-Was
•Mentioned in, the Church Journal, m 113006
whereupon 'Mr. P,ietrtiraint fOrtiar:ded Oet
odd $lOOO, to !untie - his donation "ttettatily
cozLespond with the figures of the printek•;-'--
Thelditor of the "Church Journal":pronotin
ces tile, mistake the best Mistake, and' the
correction the wioit...sittisfaetctiyl'etirreetion
he h:ts ever . knolifin his editorial' exPetience . . -
-.... Our SUpremU Conti-is utek.e*Crer,s r,
ed. by the tar.that 1t iy:11„ atti o Feta* Wax,
be brought into direct
of,the United: States . ., -
ter tribunal is 'pretty sure tai decide that qwk.,
crs at. idaytis have. the z right to. take iheir pOp
erty just where the, please in .. thit,littipai,aad
it they should,.bring them here, our Supreme
C..art 610.4 ahsurvilly set _them 'fF,eg i if
'vaned upon ter act, and-the::whole power of
i the St be 11 se . d to maintain its .
)o Wilt of 'mlbtintting the gen.
t rat ai visions it:court thuf',i'it:ttovrtlestu
r
tonsil inwyci s. 'lliibutatet
if our Ite . xt election', were- made to :tura' eit
tirel)intition this very:-'pointa; - Wei shall,.
able, iadepelident,- stria ig.taliAletl; , - tiOt bTonid
mew Offiett: 4 litlt tfte'
'.—Boct; cor.-'of
Seektifig
Mil