The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, September 28, 1854, Image 1

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1 1 . rl .
Clan Vroprittets.
t.itrt
Live and et Li p
HT Elp CO9IL
Methinks wo should have this Lngraven,
ri
whOre all who are nning . nay read,
where interest swoops Ike a raven,
Right eager to pounce and to feed;
For too often does honesty dwindle
In &moms that fatten on wealth,
It is fair wo should aslr. for one laboi
Tk recompense fairneiasheuld give
But pause ere we trample a neighbor,
For !duty says, " Live and let live."
• ' •
•
Shame to those, who,' secure intheir thrivin
Yet}fain would keep poorer? ones down—t
Thos6who'like not the crust.of the strivini
To grow to a leaf liketheii. own.
Shim° to those *ho foriVer qre graspi ng ®I
'At more than one modal need hold,
Whose heart strings are coning . and Cies'',
Round all that gives Overrule of gold, • -
Shame to those, who with . eager attuiniiigo
• Arel willing to .take; but not 'give ; •
Whose selfishness coldly enchainint— .
Forgets it should "Live and' let
There's room in the 'World for more pleasur
If adman would but learn to be just,
And regret when his fellovi man's treasure
Runs over with teardrops and dust.
God s t int es to help one smother, ,
An"he who neglects the behest,
Disgnizes the milk 'of bis mother,
And apreadeth loie's pall o'er his breast ;1
And the spirit that covets unduly; ' • 1
MaY doubt if that God wilt forgive, .
For rOgion ne'er preaches more truly,
Thin %%hen she says, " Live and let live
Miscellaneous
•
..inTuCiiie - nt, of ' the, ne, rsslastios.
The Want of provisions in the camp Of . ur i
Boyne, just previous to,his capture by the A
inericark hegioto be severely felt ; the Amer)
jeans had seizedtheir last supply Which s'ome
boats contained ; all resort to -the country 154
ing around,. where tory. , friendi wereii lye
found, was totally: cut off. ;The ivrsecuted
Ameri l s Mid fenced them in as with a ivy:ill
of vettg..anee, which could not be pa,..ced,
T
m
_ famine ad comenced.its unnerving. power)
siiikness / was multiplied among the soldiery,
fever attended with its deliriums,' ravedlro'
couch to , couch. Water, eater was the in
eessant ere._H
And although the 'udeon on
pl
.one side, of the camp, poured along its Sifen
waters, and the rapid stream of Fish dreei,
• roared Sweetly alone' in the ears of Had
sick and desponding forces, yet it was iMpos;
aible to match a &tip from. thosadreadfultvi
' guarded waters; a hundred bullets were i sdre
to pierce . whoever made the attempt, soon !as
they stki±opeii to touch the silver currentd But
such were the cries:for water, by the sick. arid
dying, that their women, moved by pity, /were
made superior to the dreadful crisis, (itnagin'
~... ing that the Americans would nut -from/feel
ings
of 'gallantry ..shoot a female,) snatched
'.. 1 .
hastily their - pills and ran to the _shores to
try what the event might be. Their opilaiori
- of the enemy, as it proved, with rspect tc
1104 persona was coiretly,formed, but iheir
pails weit.doonaed to l a c liarder fate, for While
they could not 'find' it in 'their hearts tolspill
the blood of defenseless females; they were
• sure to riddle their pails as _they/ hung f ro m,
their hands, so that little or no water Could
be procured. '' :1 1 1 '
• In this dilemma, a faithful . wife; who! had
. left her, native
,coulAry for love of heriliusi
band, who was one of the unforttinate lifesi
sians sold by his government- to the King- of
England, at a certain sum per head,to fight in a
cause the merits of which he knew nothing ;I
this woman, as she moved 'from cou4h-t
couch, listening to the moans of the sick tot!
. water, suddenly resolved : I will try, perharrA
I may sneceed to bring a little. Her husband
tried to i dissuade her, but she persisted, her
sympathies were strong, for as.a kind co6fori
, ting.angel she Made it.her business .to hover
over theAiseased and' wounded of- her eOun
trymen, 'fthe llcsians) all the While she lia / d - ,
.been in the army. She.sprang.aki ri g the ad
venturolis path that led to the ditaded Shore,
her hashand following close as far as he dare;
already she stood at the brink:lit fall view of
theguna on the other side; for 4 moment she
cast an imploring glance that coy; andithen
to heaven for protection; her right hand had
• dashed, 'the. vessel deep into the wate;a; ‘ a
struggle to clear the open shoe , and reach
the deeply shaded bank, had mirked. het ag
• ited demeanor, when a ball,ainied at herfpark
struck, las she had stooped over the vessel too'
low, her angel bosom—the blood spouted and
dyedthe ground before her quivering frame
fell crimsoned in the gore other Otithful heart,
Her husband, who had waited it a short dis
tance for her return, had not ttilivedlis!Coll
- eve from his allof, earth,lwhile : Within
his soul ; vibrated-between the rest extreines ,
of hoped and despair, her scream struck his
ear—her reeling frame showed! hint that the
,shaft of kleath had cleft her heart-asunder.—
She had but touched the ground. where she
fell, when his arms , encircled 1 her , dy e d in
spouting blood from her bosom filnti . c;with
grief; he dreaded not the flash 4:?f .
: the' deadly
rifle, but lune her to the camp, sttn . ggling in
'the pangs off` dissolution, while ;he rinpressed
on her fading forehead, the last-lciss of / fervent
affection: 6 '
The grief of this man was retpectol ; not a
gun moired its trigger, bushed were the ynl-;
lies'of the sympathizing, vet brave Vermont-;•
ers; her, pail, and not her penk had l been
the aim of the dial:mimed marksman , : the
green nir
ountaineer.
ss'4 Yankee ; boasting- an teterate fia
:aired . of 'r.erythinglltitiab, is.li.vi a nigh = boring with a colonist faully.: - He.taYet!
every opportunity to lave n slap,.aVh r 4..tWx.,
Bull, aid the colonist Aloes all he can ,de'
fend thewenerable gentleman..
" Youare ar‘ru i says tlta colonist ',gititust
youtancestors," :
• " No`Cf ain noes-. . •.. • • i
"Rho was your father!" •
"A tankee." . : • •
- -
" Who were your .forefathersl"
"' ~,
" Who Were Adam and *Eve
" rankeee, y thunder."
. . .
eAu editai in- lowa bas been fide two:
hundred .and dcillars fpr
girl in ebure4.—,Ddity • ,
. Cheap enoughi We ()nee hugged; a
in church some tea - years ago, - and. ill§ serape
has test a :ihouFand dollars 4 liitOevei
iteze,—Chicoge -- -1 4v-tica.... •I 7 7 •i
-'I
Iresslipiarasseel
•The Taniperance Sociati of Harford Uni.l
varsity :met at Chapel Hill, Thursday evening
Sept. 1. Rev. Lyinan RichardSoo, President
of the, University opene4 the meeting by
prayer. On motion, Prof. W. 'Riclurdson
B. Makollum Were appointed a com
mittee to prepare a brief address for publica
tion; setting forth! the trtio position of ,the
Liquor questiOn.al the,proisent time. S. W.
Tewksbury, Who, had been requested to fur
nish an -address !for-- the,l evening, !then en
tertained the ' i tindtence with a beautifuVand
arornentative di course Upon the subjeet of
prohibition. IJ. 13. McCollum, A. J. Gerritson,
Prot,. W. Richardson and others addressed the
meetuk,r , in a happy manner, -shovi l ug the
clutracter of the liquor traffic, and nailing it,
witltidacisive;arguments. ; ‘1
On . motion:, 11;.. Teiiksbury was requested
to fUrnisha cop) of his address .for publica
tion. Prths. Itichardsen then offered the fol
lowing resoliitions which ;were unanimously
adopted. ,
Whereas, kt the last session of our Legis
latu're the iltiiiA.stion of 'a general Pr)3hibitory
Liquor LAW li'ailbillitted to a vote of the .
Pectic at the; coming election. A.nd
Wheren,,s, IA general-apathy upon the sub
ject is belicqd to ekist, and inlmany instane;
es "nn aqtu'al ignorance that such vote-is to be
taken. And:. - •
Whemits, IWe bolievelhe decision of the
peo - pld t upon this subject to .be of great im
portiince;,l,therefore, • 1 • • _
Resolved, Thartoitipetent personsbe sOlic-•
ited or enipleyed by this Society to hold,
mclings in various parts of the comity; and
th Ls bring the matter .before the people. s
' -.solved, That a meeting be held in liar
for llagii.on Wednesylay I Sept., 27, i 4 two
ii iic
o dock P.NI, which all persons interested in
the Cause are inited tol attend. ...
11eso1ved,l'hat a competent. Speaker be'
procured t address said • meeting; of ,which
due notice:4in be giveu in, the public prints.
The follbwing is the .aihiress as prepared by
h --
the Committee: -. I . •
Fo the' citizens of Susquehanna. 'County.
ily.a resolution passed at the last session
of our State Legislature the 9pestionola gen
end prohibitory. liquor law is, submitted to
the. decision of the people at, the • ballot box
next 'fall. The Legislature has from 'time to
time, in accordance With the wishes: _Of
.the
people and iti, MVP sense of duty,,taken meas
ures to arm it: the evilii flowing from the traf
fic in ardent Spirits, with but partial success.
',The public; mind has for years been impress
,.,
ed...with the tiecelsity of suppressing the ;vices
edusequent upon it, and, as a means fertile
attainment of its i it - ibjeet.re4rietions and con
ditions have bele : imposed upon the sale, thus
limiting the traffic to' a - priyil ~elecl few; and
excluding: the many. Property in liquers is
,govei•nel and co 'trolled by peculiar regula
tions and the; effect of our previous legislation
hpon the subject
C has been to create a itionop
oly 'unequal, and unjiiit id its ciperations, With
eiit, the attaininek of any great public good.
We have iri 1 fact partial prohibitory liquor
law, now, forbidding the Many to engage, in a
traffic,, the evils of which' tbey.are compelled
to shaile, addl dealing omit as' a kind of beuntv,
'to a few chosen ones, a privilege that nourish
es %lee, crime and immorality under the'sane
tibn of the lalw. •The,• Legislative records. of
the ComrnoilWealth abounds in measures plac
inw,eonditions. Upon ;the privilege of sale,
where gran*, and even then restricting such
privilege to the few. Ilief•e facts remove all
- donbtsas to the , glitof the law-imiking pow
er,the people, t legiiilate - upon . and' control
thelabject. - ' Th t poweV has controlled, it in
the past, withhol ing.er ;granting the privi
lege as in i iiscwi- em itsaw fit.:. • The right to
engage in the traffic hi - .a..vbeen treated, and
properly, too; as 'a prierferred,. rather
than as a right common ;and, inherent ' We
haVe 'slibmitted to. thiii ''partiiil Prohibition
with ; its attendant monoytolv in the hope that
it, might be effect* in suppressing the evils
for which it •; as designeL .Thepolitical ae
,
'quiescence of healthily, inn systehr as une
qual \and unj st, furmshes a ,beautiful index
'to the strong emperance feeling in thepublic
mitmtl. '' Notli g but a sincent desire to pro
mote. the mo , is and happiness of c.omtnuni ty,
and rid it of i greatest curse, could ha'o6 in
need a high hided and intelligent people to
ear without' It murmur the burdens aid ine
qualiriesimpted by the present license laws
of the Conan wealth. - ,Partial ' and übjust
as they are, j eir influence Or' good. has been
; limited, failin g as they hive ,to meet our
mex
pectations or ur wants.' 1 1 4 Tatempence with
its dangers and its rites S!iill commits. its ii
oensedtravages,-imposin,Tats burdens upon the
ta.xtpayer and sowing the seeds of disease and
crime in our midst. ; :While we lament the
existence of this great wrong and Unite in the
hope that effectual means may' Is' employed
to retrieve lit;. we should riot hesitateto make
use' ofthoSe Maryut placed in our reach; and
byi action' as well as word ; carryout the project
inl which the temperance !world has • been , so
king engaged. - !' -
The time to . cenunencel the* work is now!
The qUestioniisclearlyand distinctly before
us, And we aie• called - npthk in direct terms
"to vote for rind against ;a law which shall
entirely prohibit by proper andethistitutional
regulations and penalties., the manufacture
i
and sale of nto4icating liquors except for me-;
)dicinal, 'sacrameutal, mechanical and artisti-
•
!cal, purposes!' . llere, then, is the issue, inde-! I
pendent and clear, placing the question upon
its 'own -merits, and‘calling upon the people'
to speak through their proppr organ, the bal.!
lot hox, in• opinion from with -no appeal can i
be made.' There is no association of other!
qin4stione 'of a mereparti character with this
Most important one- , --no "side issues" caleu-i
lated to distract and7dra4 from - it a-full con-i
sideration—but alone and untrammelled, as
it should be, it standg Out and appeals to us
as men, who have ai he.art Vie 'true interests
of humanity; \ which' is the great interest of the
State, to decide' by alai; rote itaftitureeliar
actor and pasitioia.-, i
, ttponthe decision made at the ballot-bo!y
this fall beep'. the - fate - tef the I teuiperancel
'44 miation for yeitra to conk: ' Ifth4eniperancel
rues ofthe State do` not actricire r riad . come to!
the polls prepttifi &fend thel„eansa,hy at
!
all rate, and. theyfi;e 4efee.te4) , will be a
1 long time indeed before ':ii I like privilege i
amain presented. ThelftWhii4 sentiment Will
he :said to bave been's' soetta*ed by - the , ' vote
l
1 given, end PenneYlvania BMW - out:among'
her sister Statm rits Wig proscribed liuman-i
itv, and he visit., ' . - ~ •
"But' let the temperance tines airrei e , an d 1
full vote ie given and thereia*M,utal ced i ti n
1T I thafthe: 44;4 inill:,64Psn,ph. • i ' We ~ias
glith in the 'virtue and wisdom , of the peolil .
1 1
Al'rv,`KLY 10t111.111L
.. 6.1*•04
- 1 - T - I
,t 0
afros
,
l
of this old Commonyealth of ours . ; their:
past pi L asition upon ' this qiication . has
truce end. n
*their attachment to the tempetanoe Otirse eud.
ibt t he m; - be faithful and eftrve, now and they
- t. I
an put tin end to the struggle ' and attain
tlieir Object. Friends of the prohibition, your
9pponOts ,when thedaY tomes will be atthc
ballot4box with their whOlestrength.- . Be you
there likewsie With yourlarmor on, prepared.
te . pilt; yOur veto - upon. ;a traffic, spreading .
1 .
eriliniiand misery in your midst; cut dOwn
this pzrtial prolrihition.and give us a genirtil
prohibitOry liquor laW,restrictingall,grantiag
no
. priviltgeS to poison, the. individual . .iii . a
•khalif Wa.y r . hringing upon his. family Want.
and sheltie, into Society [disorder and corrup
t‘ion iiridifillingthe atmosphere witlia moral
pestilence: . The time r.creet has come. The
The
right Withyou r maintain it in October next."..
Maintain it; and find your record' iiothe .
grateful Ilearts . ,of the redeemed,- iii- . (l4.Ttqd '
prison acid empty alms-houses, in the increas
ed prOsperity of your State and the unproved
,Condition of Society, and above all in the eon-
Sciou4nOs of having obeyed' the .dictates'; of
_
.
wisdohi end humanity. i
i.• . • •
r ; Onimption the .report of. this ineeting,'. to
'ether With the address; wits
_ordered to be.
sent tip.hoth. county papers for insertion.
1. The meeting then adjourned.- 1 -
\V. RiciLannsos, President.
i S. J. lalrorthrop,. Sec..
4 ; -44 • 4 1.4 4. 10 44--- ' -: •••• 44 • : ' •
I * . ' 4l'. I ' . Evaporatioti. - .
liivreilE4rtsro rams cIni:iECTED THEREWItii.
1... T h reciprocal I -processes of evaporation'iand .
cotaltin4tion are the means whereby `the
hold siirfrieeof that part of.the globe Which
iConstitules land is supplied 'with the
‘ fresh
, nioisilini, 'and water necessary to 'sustain ;the
!Organization and to maintain the functions of
the 41iinal and vegetable world. ' T.hencesap
and jnict are supplied tt . ., vegetables; acid fin
ids to animals ; rivers and lukes.are fed,
.and
'earrylback to the ocean. their - waters, , after
supplying the uses of the 'firing World. Jim`
extensive surface of 7theotean undergoes n
' Oever4tearsing processof i evap oration, -arubdis
rriisses.irito theatinospliire a quantity of pure
water, piloixntionate to itslextent of sialliee
and temPemture-of the. Atli above it, runt to' ,
I the steto of that air With respect to . setiira- -
I lion. Tlfis vapor is carried "with currents of
air tlirdugb . every , part -of the ritinosPhere -
w
, hich surrounds . the glObe When by Vaii,- -
1 OuS inetAiorological 'causes the temperature of
the iiir:i's. reduced, it -will treqiiently haftpen
that it Will come below]
th
then. 1 , 41. at limit - :at which
stispended. vapor isrp.l state ,
.of satura
tion. deposition - or eondensation javill
theretinti take- place, and-rain or aqueens.
I loilt4 N:%lill be formed. !If the condeflA Va- ,
per eollilet in spherical jimps, it .will beine-:
I - tipiteted, and . fall on the surface of the earth
I to the form:,uf rain ; but,' from some unknOwn .
I erinsOt 'frequently happens that instead of
olledting in drops, the i COndensed .'vepor. is
• termed into hollow bubbles, ...,enclosin,,.. wi th in
them la fluid.ligliter, bulk for bulk, tliailitlie
litinotlirre.. -These- bullNes are also find
to have n repulsive influence. on each other,
like. 'lliat,"of bodies siluilarly . eleetrified.-L-
They ';flonat therefore, in the ionosphere, their
!I:limit! repulsion preventing them cOalesOrig
so as. o form drops.. - Iri this state having by
laws kit:Optics- a certain degreeof opacity,they
become distinctly visible and 'form eloudS.-
- The vapOr suspended in ! tlie '-air during a; hot
Summer's day is so efeli.atell. in . itS tenapera
ture, as
. te be. below the point f . saturation,
rend- th erefore,. though the net u el. ipiatiti tyj Sus-
tended be very considerable,, yet,- .while; th I
e fir is ;.capable of sustaining more,-no conilen-.i
I*..tioil can take place but in the evening, af-'
I !tpr the inn has departed ;li r e source of heat
i''keing withdrawn, the teraperature ~ 'tf the air
[lindergob.s.a great depression,. and time qUaii-1
[Ott of.viipor suspended in the atmosphere,' '
4jow at a low temperature; first. :attains. Wand
1-'s,'ise.4 u4ntly passes theipoint ef satnration.—
4 . depoiition of 'rnoisfure then takes Place t
Y . ,
the condensation-of tl.e . rediindent vapor,
~ , , o rth a t mosphere; at -. 1 .0t
'lle smell partieles ,
I liii..)isurct which fall, .on the surface,leoelesc-'1
king by' their natural .colic ion, forni,elearii eel-]
tilueid7drops on time surface of the 'grill/ na ,', and!
Urirti known by - the name of ;few: The clouds'!':
On! which the condensed resides of . -Vapor.are;
licolleeted,.are affected by an attraction which,
ldraw‘ them toward the mountains:and High-'
leSt•poin‘s of the surfaCe of the earth.
,ICol-
Ileeted . there, they undergo a change, t iby which
they feria, into drops, and are deposited iii the,
form of rain ; and hence, 'by their . : natural
gt..tivitation, they find their way thionglithe
pores', lind interstices of thee:4th; and in Oran
inels along its surface, forming, in the ', one
-
case, wells. and springs in
-various parts of the
earth! where they find a natural exit; or where
an artiffial exit is given to them,. and, in the
other ca r es, obeying the form .of the:surface
of the country through - which - . they arecar- . .
ried,.!hey' wind in narrow channels, first deep-
ktiing arid whieniug, as they proceed;and are
fed by tributary streams until t.l4,,ferinlinto
gr.eat, ri v ers, or -spread into lakes, 'end' at
length discharge their, waters into .thet tea.
'The protess of evaporation it not.cOnfined . to
the sea, but takes place . from , the surfate of
the- . 5,0i1, Viand fronr . .all . .vegetahle and animal
prodUctions. .The.showers which fall in ;.ini
tr43r, !kat icatteredin a thin sheetof moisture,
over ilielsiirface Of.the country, spmilili. - re
ttirn tothe form -of vipor, ...rind.earry - yith
them; inlthelitent form, a quentitY of heat,
Which . they take from every object I;6r:contact
.withilieni—thris moderating the temperature
of. the :earth, and "refreshing the •animalf and
.io,*lri . bla cr e ation. - A :retnarkablei example
I)fivaporation or a' large scale is.stipplied by
that great
.inland *a, the Mediterranean,-
That mat - Ural reservoir of :eater. rei:eiv'eS 'an
..; - . ,
extmordlnarnumber of . large rivers, *tong
. be
which .tnaLytrientiOned.'' the Nile, 'the
.121an
uhe, the pnieper, the Monk-. the Ebro,l the
Dew, rind many others.. --It has no tionmiuni- .
..ctition , •with the ..fwaean,,.excelit 'by - th e straits
of,Gibairalter, and th ere, instead of an outward '
-cirrent,lhere is 'a iapidi gad never4easiiiiin-
viardillotr of water. ' . We Are,, theieforei.ota-,
born
polled tat:conclude that the. evaporation froin
thp . atirfa'fe. of ,this tea caTries off the.enoritneus
. tptaniity.!of, Water constantly-,_ siipplied from
thbielSoitrees, .•-•ThiS, may in a ' 'degree he at
'eoUrlied for kfthe feet that the Mediteliane=
aii is auriciiinded. bi-vast 7 ticks. bf, , ;lana.on
etia . rylaide except theyeat. Thewindovileth
erirt
. hloi. from the snath,.4e.portli, pr; tri?..ln
themast,4taa . passed. over a-consideriblel x-.
tent cif land, and generally.in' a state, With
'yesppo. to
-vapor, `ctitiaidthtbly ow! sa tira-.
tiOtt. : These dry iiurrents - lof wind, ee.iningin
leepoiit liiitli.Ole etirfaceoftheAledif4Trnean.
40.w.ioff lwat,er with Avidith and - passing oft.;
ffirc itiorlded!?,y (relh-pi. - !rtt9ls 'of air, which
~, repeat these:me profess .. .. -
.!i , '
NOTED TO POLITICS, AGRICULTM 4 SCI! CE,
•
nuntu f pan, iarshit Nor
•
:Canes of , •
Thunder claps arc the, effect. of lightning,.
which causes a vacuum in the atmosplpete
through !Which it pas..4es.; the air rushing on:
to rester§ the eqtrilibrinu,!may cause much of
the noiso, that is heard; in the, clap. An easy
eiperbrient on the air{ pump illustrates . this.
Take . n [glass receiver::omi at both ends, over,
one end tie a sheep's bfadder, wet, and let h
stand nitil thoroughly, dry. Then place the,
open et 4 on the.plate and, exhaust the air
slowly. ‘rom,underi . it. , , The bladder soon - 1.3 - •
tomes concave, owing to the pressure of at-,
rnospherie air upon rt,the supporting air. in
the meiyer being partly - thrown out. Carry
on,the Cihaustion, and. the air presses at - the
rate of tifthen pounds, to the', i square
The fibi.es of the bladder being no longer ca-",
pable et bearing the",pressure' of. the atmos
pheric 'ctflumn ujxm the r§eeiver, are torn to
pieces - i lvith a noise equal to the ,reix!rt of 'a
musks !Which is oceaSioned bY the air nigh
ing in 0 restore the linagiffe
rapid sueression of such txperimenti, on a
large scide, and yoniiltel,ttle peal of thunder,
the ruptnre of the . first bladder being the
clap. Put the espial:ln of thegamel3, oxygen
and hydrogen, of which, Water is composed,.
will also, account for' the noise..
. ,
_,,.
' ILOVE: JEALOUSY AqO ,41.31 DER.— A. 01Wit
nati papCr says :—We reCived, yesterday 'eye.
niug, liy - a gentleman; from . ..Keine, thepartic
ulars 'of a bloody trasactiOn which, it is said,
has thrOwn the•neighborhoc:d in Which it took
place into an unprecedenied state of excite'
ment. l' The following, ' are the, facts as they
were gi4en to, us :—A, yo. ng man named Jo
seph Baird, son of a fanner who resides near
Jamestown, and abotik Li miles from Xema,
was mkerie last Suridafl.o a younglady to
whom :`as' man named Fr64,lriek Robinson had' i
for some time previously hid • his addresses, 1
and wh4 also lived in the 'neighborhood. 1 The i
happy pair passed their b *dal, day and the
following at ',Xenia, eddy, Tuesday afternoon
z
.e
started back in a onef-ho ' buggy for home,
Whenl'yithin a mile off, his' father's Tarin,- ,
Baird -was startled te,il4lailicayance of his I
rival, Who suddenly „emei*d from a clump of
, .
trees a: little distance -ahead -of him,' - Re
whipped his but Robinson with an oath, '
exclaimed, "You don't g:t away from Inc so
earthly : 6 ' : and tired. The shot missed hint, tnd
Baird, i springing froin the buggy, advanced
toward him, When Rebinion"fircil again, this
ante th 4 ball passiniithrough his ;h&litt, and
stretehi4g him wifeless corp : .*, upon the 1
grintud4. The unlia,ppy bride, iin the mean-
time, rar,hed frantically lupon . the assassin,
who, paralyzed itt ibe deed h 4 had perpetm- '
6.4, allowed the pistol to:be'taien from him.
Mrs. lkilainks,that She fired at him twice,
and rn4sed him, wh6, dumping into the bug
gy, he 1640 the hOse, nrid putties hint to
hia toptitoSt speed wits soon out of sight. The
corpse ( ' of he murdered mini' wai donveyed to
143 tattier'- resi4eucj , ,.whb shortly after pass--
ed' that :Iv v :with his, wation. Our informant,
adds:lW chexcitiente;t 'preyails in the
,
ne!gllWrli oza, and but**, doubt-, is .enter
j.
tainedt of e 'apprehension of the assassin.
ITo4tyTarrns,vonllVlY,Es.--Although
your linshatid may neglect to give you a good,
"dres.s, ' p not seek:revenge by giving Lim a
gUod di,es...ing. po,i,iot,..l ? estate between the
choice Of an eXpenslye mantle and your hus- ,
band'S affection;'thc4forMei.may be dearer to
Sour hick, but the latterishould be dearer to
your bosom.,. • Should your husband 'bring a
friend; Dome to partake of yesterday's beet, do
not be churlish, hut' let warm smiles se son
the coil. repast. I Prefer 'country rambles to
town lounges; . the celor of the rose is bright
er
thaw-the hues of silks, 'land the dew drops'
outshin‘e the jeweler's. gems - Never deny;
your hitsband the pleasure of smoking a cigar
by the tire side; it is' thedomestio calumet, of
peace!, ! Be careful in brdwing "'the' cu s p with
cheerS;"but not inebriate;" sticng tea is ' bet,
ter' than weak. arguments. • The - hand which
Was pledged at the ittitar,lianot, di4raced by
sewing on a buttont; I and, .rentembor, -at. you
sow, Soi shall you reap. I ,1 , . - .1 • '
. 1 •I i . - 1 ,--------- - -'', . .-.- .: -, ' '
PnOecss OF AfAxiko .5.1t67..-tTliii-ptg lead,:
is carei'ed • td; the ;to of• the.. tower by. windlasi
and. chitin, and worice4 -14 Y, steam . ; tis
.theii
put hi ti furnace kepiConSt aptly b,uriii tug nigh t
and day,,,and attendedby, two 'sets! of men,!
°Dolor the ;fire and!twii I to
.pOur;
.the - Melted'
kid: id-tin it ridnersj.!! After passing]. through I
the - st'ridners it falls!, disbince of 150 feet, the
through the giving. the, Shot their
shape 4f form ; they ,faliito a tub for basin
of water; • here a infin is ena ged iii dipping!
them ;out with a ladle . and - throwing; them.--in
an tied - plane,. down *Mai :thee; :run to
drum 'ldeated by.stes n and Wprkeal .
chinerY - so as to dryttlie, l shot drYthey.
are passed into - a reyelVing yvbich stops
by action of machiiiry_civeryjfive niiinite for.
polishing them; frbin this.j.4ount they • are!
throvin into a hopper,'ltt4 from this pass over'
a serif of inclined Planei,!Where the' defective
shot Are carried oir,4ml then ',through ii3eives
into ; dr n wers; y here ; ilieyt are, 4sserted
actionf,cif machinery .-!on the geivei; then into
large boxes from *Well - they are tiken and;
put into sacks; weighed land are . feady for
use. :1T•, . ~ .
. _
' • VoWs.LA country parson Owe fingfrom
the teitt, "Vow and pay nto,the Lord your'
A'ONN : 6I in e,onrie of Ins rars proved pretty
e
conclusively that after a • rson had made a.
vow it was his'duty . to pftrfonn it.l Directly
after service, a s9rt,of Indian,. not at all com
panionable, to say
,ilie least, came 'up to the
rever6d divine, saving -h I i, '‘` ' , '
" I 'Ow I kofictinie with you;II • •
"Then you Must, go," Iwas the:unhesitating
reply.;, ~, •! - I f . I
"1 t ow,l stay toppper," said he, on, arri
ving at the 'gate; lere L was 'no 'al tertiative,
and . tlie mitusterinVited Itint itl. - '...
" I . - ow I stay altaight f " . was the cool , is=
sertion, as he drew aWayilrom the 1nb1e.,.;
'llui a
4
good, man , w' t t tittbtnissign . had
11) 4
c ; ased to bevirtue . a n • . thout discomfit
ere, stud— ' - 1. 1 ' ' ' ''l I -'''
" - You 'are welc4Me . to+ight,. but I rear -you
,ehall 4ave iwthe tnnrnilig:\,-,4 , e I I '; - I i
- - ,
*gik t faThiLy : Airimet o*---' l i2.lriti..—. - At a plo,
t4ct4i Meeting, beld - -wl4lorit int-a'thousaiid
milealroat ilabitton,l,Spi, an ,incierst .aiter in
:the 4reh l imnse and reliei , eo., ,her if ,as fol
10”;,w"1,7see youegjadi ;here_ that , seem to
lore ge.iawii, finfaitow ,' rib bo ns, Mid laces,
is
iiinie:than'their, eiihitor, - II 'Ovid theni'etite.
'and-adorned my hat, with -FrOch artificial
.
Banc bright colore; riliivria mid , aliy, blue ,
trjainiiings : but I fgendthey were tirtiligiug
me down to.li-11, and Ilikole them off and'
gave (beim to -ivy s ister." 1
ning, *Oda 28,, NU.
Volitii - at . .Ati4ii . .:: :
_ ..
.
' /far Among 'the pow erful articles winah
have "-`appeared in the religious newspapers,
we bid iit•tbe- New York C'''ridian-Enquir-.
er, Bnptist, ihe-foliowiug . : 1 .• , _
,•
7 ,": The idea of ignoring a man's , individinili-,
ty, and' of ifyipg him •a , badge; in society ac=
cording to the - accident -of . hii birth, Was one
of Abe maiii"iesults, as it is: one of -the chief
'props, of arrogance in•man and of' deSpotista
i n governments. r • • ; -.-, .L...:
A man isrborn a .Christian, and he has all ,
the characteristics of the'4w. • '• ‘ '
A man is• • lietn,a 'Jew, and helms !helm
pulses of a. Christian. • , , ' i _ . } • ,
A..nian is born a Roman Catholic, %rho de
tests the Pope and loiiitism:
,1 i.', - -- ,
..
A:man is born' a Protesuintond his seniti
one nature leadi-Liiirto the inost ieastious re ,
'Won. ' ' - •'" - ' '•'•.-- -1 . , -,
A man is born in Europe Wittuall the In-'
stinets of a irepublican. , , i • , .
A'man is born in, Ainci•icat with. proelivi,
ties • to exclusiyeness and aristoeracie44.,`••
1 , Don't yon see .yOur short-Lightedi*s ?- 1 --
on cannot judge men bY'what they; profess
to be, or by What, from the inrefenee of their
birth, you 'sip-pose thern-lto'. be. You-must
judge them by 'what they' arei. If you wage
war against all who are cor,ruk whether.born'
here -or abrOnd, whether CathOlies 4:5 Protes
-1 tants, you will iti , ceed, becauSe.there is jus
tice and comuio •sense in yOur'war. ' From
the moment, how, ter, you - descend from that
comprehensive platform and' single out one or
the other accidents or•-birth, as your •special
enemy, you' will not only fail; in your endeav
or to reforui, but you. will Tdt*troy.the repute
! lie which ;%,* wisli.to save, by destraying-the
Principles of religiou's !Wolf and., political
i equality upon, Which it is founded." • '
I.* - • *''' - * H*. . .*: .-.•••
" You a `tue that: the adopted citizen is too
.. .
narrow-minded to. comprehend our institu;:
tions. : iiy e rowdinghinyoutfromTour polit
ical society; you rob'hitu of , the, only chance,
he has - of eletlitin„,“: his triind.'i
" You argue fivither they ehtnuiti,eir alle
giance to two 'poWers-L-to the Pope of Rome
and the COriStitution of. the United States,.
`.The animal principles of (iavazo las ma
terialized your understanding.: .Your senses,
are - fascinated by the gesticulations 'Or the:
Italian, ;hd your reason does not pay hbtriag,T
to the gentirs'of the - Ainetican: YOur - reason
does not' pay homage to k the' innumerable
ageueies,:oc enlightenment Which the pulpit,
the school : house,, the press,: : the fi)rum, . the
whole atmosphere': of American hfe, provide
for defeating the, most
'as
of the ,Tutt, as well the niost God-defy ing
ravings of the Infidel. Like all . thatis divine,
those miluoMees are silent, and you donot see
how, they iyorL But, like allthat is pngod 7
ly, resentment and'intoleranee are boisterous
and noisy i . ''and thus !Jaye for: , champions . rd
those whctunl niinds nee shut, who are tklin I
and Whii do riot hear unless t,hey hear a ;lois.
1
"They talk about. the oatb of
_allegiance, toi
the rope as slicer nonsense: i I f old man :
hiniself had the sli g htest'notion of the validii
ty of that Oath, the first' thini . he. would bale'
done when he fled - in 1849, would have teen
to call to his assistance all his subjects, or, ii
they- had dared a straw' about him, they
.. woulLl
have rtished en masse "to' Rome 'toliii rescue.;
• "You libel your American intelleetualityl
by.repeating the trash of Italian quack-* - ,r...
quence."
I ; I
* I * • . 1 1
, - i I - 1
"Of coarse;- popular passion is blind al -
ways. Mobs follow those who are most sue
cessful. Cioirdi of needy. p4aliticians 'who noiy)
declaim against you will soon crouch at youti
fief:- •Bucthere is a GCsi in Heaven; -and ai,
sure es He,
.in His goodness never doviateS;
from His divine principles, find sends ever
day his sun .to ;illuminate this wicked world
lest dirkinks 'might make Wickediim' me
wieked, just as sure will those who hay
Christ iu iheir heart and - Washington in theiir'
mind .neyer,deyiate from their. divinelyfinspir-i,
ed principlt ; .and: long hence, when }'on ath
yclur effort are. forgotten, history will speat
nth emotion of the national then who, by
yi'aging wet against alljcorruptmeintluenc*
imi by shnnning invidious distinctions etee 4
tedhy accidents of . birth, brought the coml.',
tryhacktp the practic.d CliristuinitY of .our
Savior, and to the dignified Land modest vir;
tues of the republicanl tashiligton." 0
i .4.--....:-.: -: • -;
i ' El
I
,
.It has ocen well, sai that •",patriotism IS
the Jest refuge.. of, scot;drels„" a, 'sentiment
'that may he 'received ' true, when applied to
men hose vaunted love of country is simply,
love o self; and who with - patriotiski •sound=,
ing o their lips . would .build up their own
iperso al fortunes ou the ruins of theircouur
'try. , The safety•ef the neoutilic" wasthe
cry o , CaialinoWhen he sought' to destroy
the liberties of his illative land, and lured by
the - syrenlOund, the youth and: chivalry of
_Rome were led to joina faction which thef
discovered, when tooiato to retrace their steps,
to be a base conspiracy against that Republre
whose:safety and preservation ;they . had vain
ly imagined_ constituted the bond of/their utt
ion. ILiberty,-fialernity,. 'equelityi wasp the
shout, of the gory triumvirate of.the „French'
'revolution', of the bloody Denton, the . fierCe
Murat atill the remorseless Itobespierre: Tn
the namel of Libety a (14sTiOtisin ' was-estab
lished, in the name of FnitOtity; f brotherS,
fatbers,iniothers and children 'fell beneath-the
'death stroke of. the : Gttillotitie, . and in., the
name of „Equality. every trace of freedoirtwas
ofllitoirattid and every righi', deitrOyed.---' Tr.
C. ;Dem' - ' - . -
i—.:....,...............,.......—:— . ....,. : . i
, I , question. for Alm: yVhigs ?
•
eve '. ry whig, wh Osefatker, uncle b r oth
er,
or
Min.., If ibisquOstionliefore . coMmitting hini,
sat vote te - whig'ticket
this fall ; ' 1 1 '
' " ow , can } vote for , ',view vrbq .are,.mrotn
to di frOchine - n4; Ottheri a 4 Made brag WO"
es an some,of- the, heet 7 nlighhois ow; ~ dear.
eet fr ends "I bin g e'l" ~': . , „ • ,
e sive - make.Gtorfyion o 4ndAother.
4 , iisLio:pP9Miti,Peinkily.ar.,e Ming*
chit; of g9ll. Aolvell 9 0 bPlorla.,Placq , 1 ,,n
ihe - liitOt„ iit the eiietie . Cittgr.. - Doptilif 4..
trig' ra 4410116 i; hf tbd''Yeiiiii Of • the - ticent;
tgeutiotehniartb"-Caeolinkftonr tileSecre . , 6 1
% . S":
1" ) :: : :::: ! : : :e I : ll il i : e l . t:h a : t4g on
ry4
sour ape just As': the •,d.tnerreatypist • ptqls
out his watch ;nd say* " Now i t i ! -, ~4 '.
', '
' I
' 1
-• ' I ' 1 '
. , „ ~ ~,.
lls .I:mige Pollockuksispw.illfoi,lbissi ?
l " .. • 1, - ;.7.)l3lleississussw,itkreo:lll4i - 1 •-•
,
Judge PoltOk:7'itild'restieVlßT4itizen of
1
Pittibtirgli, on Taesday.evening„iteoth i t.
tlis omarks well.' ireportedforrthelittsbit li
pazetti o • One Ofid ii, MoSturdenesiipportet4hd
ere, tli'crefOre - pioruiried •to 'be - correet: tin
the course oflus remarks he said'.F . •
.r .
' " I stand here as the advocate and defeWer.
of. Civil and Iteligient'plierty, notnithiti, td=
ing the vile slanders, fo i the'. contrary heaped
Upon '; ine i
,but., „if iny., aurvh : :Or any ;.:,other
ihurch tkoi . s.eqfiriihtei t 4 liiiliticiit nrenat r nd.
make fittlarciiiolitient - enginr,DOWN NV ll
ITT" ; (Immense applause.) ; ; 1
• When it 'is remembered that . one of this;
OiaritFSOl•linow-Nothingism ialhat the ;Pri
lholie church has "entered the political af, na
*MI made itself a political engine,' there an
be ntinneso• Obtuse as to. inistsike 'lndere. .ci
. -
r.
locktii Meaning. - And- -what '.reason has the
Knovi-Nothing ;candidate for Governor, and
':'tlier 1(now-tiotbitig party, to' charge the' , ttik;
Olics With having made their church `ii . It
leaf dilgine . ?' -Simply because the Catho ie.!!
do . ,net 7choime to kiss, the: hand. that. -Weald,
smite them and vote -Kriow-nOthing Whig
imen ; and measures, --Suppose, that azptrty
ishould forinin'this. country , with liU4lr
o 'ed
'determination, to oppose everylklethodist [fo.r .
?office; and ,also to prohibity-them from !the
Iright of,. suffrage, ,whenever- they bail gained
idle power to doso.i Supose they were amain-. 1
iad.t.oA tweet= openly; aud.let; the worlitknow
who.the men were , that-_ held' these dastard . ,
prinCiple'S. ';' Would it reiiiiirenny•actioni - by
ithe Methodiik church, as a, church; kir every;
one of its-members-to ;oppose;• with all this 1
.. . ,
po• ' Weroiny one her, knew to belong te such. a
.societyl...: We ". think not I .Then - why is: it .
;strange tlint,tite Catholics should oppose, Na
? tive American, :Know-Nothing Whiggery,
iw'hen it its perfectly/ welt - known to thent that
,such proscriptive sentiments areeritertai i neil •
towards their by. that party'? '.. ' '! .- . .. I
• We are'. net . the adVoCate'Of. Catholicism.
We believe there. -ern 'bOld'bad men ambng.
the . priesthorid; : bitt•-We..AISo - ktiow that there
are _protestant cleigyinen that also .deserve,l
..theesecratip . 4'llll gotOrien. -. . The ; froles - :1
'.: tent, church's - otild not,beeoriderniied becanse'l
:i.it'c'entribied'' itch !lama' '641-Ilishop Gilder- .
il
drink, • neither should. the Catholic . oh urehl! be
A ' 1 ' beC - i
] condemne, ;1' ere.y • 4 111 841 1 ‘ t.: Co l4air .l 6-tniel
wan °Chad ii!ibit a.
i tid _mistaken- views,, •,' pt;
, '..KuOlf Not hi nil Sin • ' p refek.ici. ;lb . fear * . thnt..l.lo-_'
nianisin, uni4 Checked, 'will . eVentuillY tibite
?church 'and' sirite,*66 eiturchi)r-Zi g la u diti•
united with that of government. Are the'rea 1.-:
fly craven-la:m -ted - Americans: WhO fear - that
few millions . orCift iiiliCs iiitithi - country we
=don't known - the :einet nuMber,.- byte three
millions would be !a high figure,) are nble . to.
wrest flip .gdverninent of', this, free • rePublic
from the viands - of enty-three niillioni of
freemen li- - - • Opt- `,.4 . W upon . the tremblinecoWard '
'... who would advance such anirgowent... Out 1
wetnre also told that hendieds of thous..inds
of foreifs 1. are landed . upori our: shoreii eve;
erryear, anti that they ;they eventually
i pVe
the power; - ',...`iVi_fOriperft are' nOt! Vath .- , i?' , i
ind, if .it is that--c Moue
_that, ,is to ue
.dred,.mitivelbern Aniericnni are Coining '" '
pa nhood (pito as fist
_as
. - Ciitholics are;beji
brought to our-Shores., It is'bilt inotherhill
bear of ruinprepheeyitig - thig , ;•ery. 1 1
z - W e are glad . tharJudge - Pollockhaslhi
I the trankriess -to kmit that hi belongs 'to tl
iio'Ciety generally..knoWn as `.linow-Netliabg;
lop unless - we . rune& mistake ~the cliiimatrl
• the Pennsylvanian, liiii,Principles Waite 'e 4 o
dem ned, end he viltit'lletu',.by . the'most oil
whelruing inajority-eyei_pollo in, .this . • Sta
--...t.ctriabury ..Pe4/... _ . - - . . I
, .
'Eke' lieligioxis :Press on KnowiNp.;
, - ..• . ‘, ihiugisru. ' - 1
. The , ,New York ("kurchlnfin, the leading
eigan,oc the Protestant Episcopal Chili-eh;
come; out this week With a very. strong r !arti
cle against the Know-Nothings. The follow
ing estract I will fillow,the spirit in_which the
,subject is discussed; `arid the reasoning of the
t'AirreAma-n upou it : = - • - . . ..- ,1 .'
'. ",The Know:Nothing agitation is precisely
of :.the nature-of; those popular eiciter n ents'
which, when they ,gain Cult_ dominationover
the public miii . d.inid heart, give' birth to cii
il couVursions; . brood and -crime. It has al
ready, in,-,ya u riouS p”1.3e . -.'- given riseto scenes
vii.denee`,And,,disterbinee of 'the public
peace;sand Although we have no apprilieu
sionlhatit will
,go to tlie.extent of Unsettling
the, foundations, qf societi vetit is pre cisely
that mixture of true And false ideas, salutary'
I, and,pqrnicious princiPles; convictions of Icon=
.science and rtnecilscs 'of Prejudice. and hate,
which all history teaches us are the 'sluff
whereof such isstieS - aite wrought. . i l ,
" We have . nO'objeetiOli to theietieal of the
;naturalization:laws andlhe;limitation ot the
fright of voting to native barn eitizens--vith
la piovision, if ;it. be desired, for granting by
!specialiegislati op ,that right, and also that of
eligibility_ to certain qtlices„ iii Special. cases.
1,13ut as tothe rest, we' have nothing but icoi
idetunation and repraiatiOn'to espniss , okthis
Iwhole Know-Nothing er.raniiation.- . This or
iganizatien , invOlF.es te,ll; . pgils t,le spirit of
,retig,ious fanaticism and, theological hatted.
,It 'proposes to wage a political war agitinst
the Roman Catliolics--" war to 4he . knife"-:-
la' wir,of ~ eitertnination waged, as we un der
'stands,, -'
'gi s , by. political weapons. Untred . .t the
'Roman Catholics, as such, this appears t o be
~
1 1,the,deepest ;source and, spring of - this' inove
-Int. This at' bottom is its inostesseatial
'character.' Now, we hare - nothing -__ti&'asity in
l i favo'rof RomaniSm. ; . ... -, . . - ' '
f." )17.3 Would de. everything to check_ the -..
gressof Romanist*, to work indeed its • ntter
lextincticin, that' can .be ,properly and'fitirry
[done. But we would. Put kt down byl the
.. ~, .
ferce„of,Artith and arguine . nt,. not-by political
; iprescription and Hsec tien.'s 'Verseintion is
•betli if ivrotilin prlnciple and-foolish policy,
tilt well 'as* incOnsisterd. ' Ith 'tour eminent, pre-
Aensions iu hdlialf of. g44l9.u.sfrge4 o / 1 . [l'..pr
*Nut9 ql!YAlA'Prf.° l ',.faith or , ` opinion, a oi yo u
,-
itruthe ti it i grew ;. you ineressai the evils you Mei
,The - ilailigera pitt "athait 1 13e.%iideS;ifIluili f rnow
'..,itethirii r s *AO political itilente againit-110.::
ntinle;atholie , lforetg . uetsi , haw :tan they fop=
sisteutly,belp waging the sfun#marfaA again st.
44tiKembfini:Arig- .0 4W ) 11 °-'lo*°''i'l fi nd
:hew ave' that
,sUit the genius of -tiarli.Stilit
tkiiis.'t. Troit *lli the .itise IA tlieliiiitioriitts
faiiiltbitit.:,. ,t-., :.:; -,,, i• ; .i. I fi , 4.1 i , - :-.:,, ~ , ,it i , t .
f•-.* .. , A! , 41 - - , -1-4 , .. I:i'..-ist,,i, .: As ....,, - 4 •, , : 411 r,: •
1 1 , ,LastAutyzot: leist among, the 1 reoksuikkii:
rePtalitiPg - dthi 4 NOPT'/IPURK.:OSTP*.O94
148, : , it. s a secret aeociation,league , or brother
-14°4: Any; secret organ[ do
t Whit ItitobjeCia,'ne tfiattei biAiiriad itu4litt.
Ipertant they may be-4ny such organization
!designed to aecoMplish itiobjectS by -a4ting
1
folume 11,
on:,tbe elitions.;•by wielding' polities
is - nuatreelptertinittitoniselueyousind:dan:-
gerous. Such organizations' are fly stsrf'i`
thiigs most liable Mt*One the - terrible en
gines of fanatics bilitiviriaideotyillfins.
waiit amongto -Titus eitteirroTkilitt 1
no,%ortl George 'Gordon 'Maio: -I T he ir - , rifonle
diiternce-04 country -aid ineienie f
we'Would C•verthrotv.e': e:--- •
.:::p. *mice' Piiiitapeir . . .—,; ,i,.'i . ,. 4; -
' ''. l •Poll o ck P flaiert'fbeattlii* '
..:.; ),V el Judge isa S , ,
•A i
The, gentleman,: the.... - Oiator,. i .the titatesMany. j •
whom ~the . .feng-degs...baie Chnsen - ,S . :thslr; , ,
stands bearer ;-, the: -- greatTOM . bilitnent OC
absolute
~rhiggeryi- t 4o_ abiin4.* Of,liecrati,t, ::
whiskey-dpubug„.the, "i'liie..oi*,. - *Ito0.l#,:„
for the,.ariczatitTlO(Teins;the.'.bigh 7 - 07*5tt li,
treitnrous,liorosenp4e4now so,plgumi;*,.
at, length Shown - lii:fieOtoltb'ev 0?..0.;,: , Thi5.„.,
7 1 1.adIr of 'fP:i'litjes#:'f:4ool is
...IPTOPIIO4H.i.
• an -anti-chttstian ,rejigiAn;_detiflni,.-10...ripelt -
tlie`ienser GOII riglits - aha'Phviliges **PP'.
sunder"ou r :r "coaSki..laa . aajaad..,l4 - #ls:4l9lppix. i. .4. -
all: . this t ime-searin g, ..Oftee 4 Oeklflt . O . .: ..!:7:„1: - :
date ler : the chief :maglstineyOti l'enii4" l l .l' . o
.;
, ia -litta Conic forth from hitt : ,,hl,o4 tiaqq,:un . 7 - ; -
(ler . ithel - guerdienShip - pi. :. a committee, ion
Oeire by oplosoy:010 frilsehoOditliegOotTne .
ple .Of.:,Pe.rinsylVaniii.: - : Remade his debut - .at, T.' .
:PitiShurg; in. the presence Of, n Crowdet,freiW.; '
"three to
.fiver'opuspo,iter.str:,7_as'o* - E4,-;
.baldtargans ; inform _OS.' : - -l'i t i - i,"i l 4 -41- sitil.,3o*,
for the ; numbers piesent ;'. tititti;as the'iligS:i.. •
Say from three to five thousand ,' it will be. safe '
;to set.do*n
..fhe ono . pitio,,at.:o,4irt 1000 : ,, T -,
to I'soo, not e. very large large , - Midienee 1424 . .the' . . - •
city 'Of Pittsburg. o " lloneyer,',intinbeni:io.-. - of:
little cOnse4uence.f:There iaq. l : 6 !" 6. * il 0; ; ";: -
000 :present, Or , there may not 'hire bee t five: .
hundred, it does'net, in, the. eeet, : ,:liffeet the' .
main .qu es tion: . All the pnblin.*ant.. tilitiiiii.: -•
is what this grieo l :lcoo%F'-'.NOthiOg said:' Ve.'
have been inforMed, - . o494ghilits;etioike;:oe ~.
, months peat, iliathe'irai,weiii - gio fitutrtisilie? • -
state and
,:nse tiii::9,64 ',)3iito - 8641.-itie',4Oiai - ,-'
eratic party. -
, - .6: -. WaS - rOpte4fited, In, the .fie*. !.
Pie asthe'firSt T4hig iii:. the; jytfo';*' - tiipa'Or : '
larffe: cultivated 'intelleet;'.' Tic Scholei endiii'. .
' statOtritin ;, and We - anticipated
. ,a, we n, -
iP'Peill; - on: • r4:iitoiii i ; :when 1. - he*iniM4E - a - ::',.'014,. -,
stand, . :In . this ; e have been dikiikaiirited:+l- .
InScesd''Of Gov:rgleiiindinni-4 - -fdetnaii . ..4 . oiii-' 1 -
I AV+ of his,:ili c steel, a . gient;.o'tif to encounter . .
1 atitdeStroy, .
would - be, gloii, • iiicthihftir'' 'Oak!
1 earapaian, - we.' . fiiid.ti 'pigmy in . : - the ffeld.4al
coward, whom" - it*ottld- be :bite - fluttert . .l&-,
call a kanie. - Taking
,his frpittsbitt - t, speech, -.
ii ~(i. .' find it in': the intiraile 'friendly to - br.tri •
tbereiS nothing . in . it: fO'OMiniiendit't•tiaitigi'...
or: deinocrats: -.- 1 - ,t,ii - elaii.,:traikirteii'Cla~ - ....
'front beginning . to ' Vrid::.' i. Instead of ttilkiie
..
states' ianyhe plead like a (Witiagogab ,:-
in . :stend' of enlightening, 'lie endeniiiredlo'. ;
blind ;'.:instead . .of discussing the - ;;greiViiiine:P 2 :; -
• pies of . nbig,gety'and,ctintraiting theMAOtli , i .
thOSe. of deinecracy; as we` - ;had alight te:Eirt.,
Peet he: wonld, ho descended to the' imier...
depths:of &tiaticisiii:' Ina imitated more . the
. style -- of 'PetO. the.nefiiiit ' Anti Akat - ;42anyl
, tound - )stgfisiroin
.61 the 'fiese Or preentr*ittiwi.
1 iy.: - .. - I.l;eisin.fa - vor Of the'l,saleof theinablio'
itork beelus - - the ,' are' - tinpiotitablt:eist - .a , ..-
source of corruption. .: - Tihat;rephlypeertsy.i
I.Tlie - publia . .works haVeatirnys been tint sit=
able and a; source orcoiitlpti64,.tipa-yet,:wkes
•N•er heard:of JioneS - ,.reilock'S - OpnoSitiiiirfe
their retention - ant prosecution ;durintßit4: -
her's or - ',Johnsen'aTTadininistratieni 'l, - Where
vas his Warning: croice - thee; When,O:otoiiioa •
' L ivas..at . its height; when. Thad. Stevens' squici- ,
dered ;liiillions . .on,his
.tepe=Werin_, , ' l il4 hem . ;
one end of theitnntoteteent.t.fe, the 'oth e r eX? •
traVaganee and correeion'imateit '''.' 'very .
atmosphere?• Mrhere.weSlMEl Poll htisen?
(ole,
Bi3'in regard to a division Of:tile - 4dt' fend....
When his party frieuda in'tholegislatirefirtit: .
originated and 'carriedaSectionsimilaStoilie '
one rejected ' by the last legielature, - Why did •
he not . then remonstrate, and :45iposeiF 't, , Good- 1 .
honest: il.r. Pollotir; the idea makipktelig, -.-
ions:capital out. of it.didnoethon sinkefbiat 1 ;. -
141 Was not. then ti -, Candidate for . rive*"
. tie is-oPpoiedtO-the Nebraska tilt
,t.bo; be; .
Cads; as lie says, it is '." . :i. sit4le.schemofer. _
the extension of plattry." :..lianisiklit',Pt
- lock. again... - The ; . veiY.man : Itilio,. --. .while • ii .
CstepgrOs; . -' - veted fdr;tho admission Otillittle,
holding. TexeN‘whotlid - ati.rauckbir.;thet . , ant
to - extend' - the a rea : - 'of Sievert - ond , ;::egits(te.
the country -with the . ..diticusgion' of that .exe •
V• .
. titirque . s,tton i 4s any.4ther , lian.oreTi..,. _ .
aoru.(beitig a' tiaidid#ti,'-'for gOveinqi)';Op '
..
lod - tii the - .Nebraska bill midtol'thn_e*nsi4 -.
of- -slayerie. , ,-. " - Iforsiet; - :.. - tnoraist, - -IdgillitTe : ''
have . no VatiPoo l , l 4o 6 kiiltVP96o 9 7l,l* "
can-eutertairi , ;.ncit - forthi'iiidiAlitud., - :
high or le*, - Wh0,..-practitier' iiti*nd tifi*inot .
but think ikwill be li:11; k!evil :daylorTermayl.-
venlig ; when ?Snell: a . Mini : l4ld ifuct(*party.sgi'
he repreeenteoihniFeotne into _liotter.. , .l..4leav- ,
en . -grent it, may loug.be i deferred....Nro hate.
. already More On this; subject, than awe . intoid-
ed, and we shall' close I by . calling - AbOettett- - •
tion.:of our 'readers .t4i - o.lpartioOlai - falfe.
Pollock, in his ' speech,.dittiot deny hie cost:- - ..
tiection‘Oritli - the know-nothing* ,The ti
yet 'stands against him unde . nieii;.onik L,.., . we •-,
think, uudernable. - -Derriurrion ,'' - • .
to
1 1 .
ig-,,
fl
.t.l l
of
~ ..
Things in be litensembered:
bitting elen.,*.obiagtorea administration
a law was enacted by Conim, '
..c.witlibittAP'- '
probation, granting 'the:likbislot :nietaralisit
tali and eitizensluple Foreigners after tile
idenee' of two. years 111 this' eoantry.i This wail
altered by, the' Wend administration *to
elderAdains,'wbos succeeded Washington, t o --
fourteen years. :Out, when lifi;:leffenna;:tber
great Apostle of D emocracy, ernini•int6:Sii
er in 1802, the! tiinc of, pro.bathm win; indnied -
to iie Years, where it has ever aineeieitOtin
i ed. Inlis flrstigessage ,to., pengress; , 14r.
;Jefferson grid':"', :-, '-, • I_ I'l- - '-' l ,-
'' " " r rummer Vinit ieeentinending,g . 'reiiial Of
the, Jaws
. .fin the, isshject, of nOurithiatior
Consider's", `
the! , erdintiry'elintien ,of hunnut
rife, 4,d'enial of citizenshi p nadir's' ieirlinne -
'ef foniteen - yearsls - i'denialtb-a 'gest - tat*
of those who ' ask ik-and . noStroli'S. poliep
pursued-from. Asir ffisi:ittleninni,ll many
of :thesnAtahr, - #4,stiir:l,4i,ied•r-ni "co*seg ''
flirnee fe l tlieu, peisterity" *4,n4 #ilf* 4 4 !e, „, \
Wtin l i ,•tp_t_riapPY, ttig44.- ',in 'ii . .o tOlsAbit
1 3444014:,,,)110 6 4 # 1 4 iji.%(*iitlIWi01;10. ,
eNtelKett to !rnir u ß ne!! , . 46l tling tin dos
I fu4 LuStol $,004 14.0: , 4:. filitVi sui
y Onion , is glotkiii: -
~
... ', i ..,
~ itavali.
i i,
in
deed haS eiisely.,ppykr ' ~._ 41 '
..,- adittinnia
to certain 141".A,;4 1 ,_. . i.,• ,'. 4 4 leg.
- 5.10,4y.041 , 1 1:?11! ti*lire4, l .'7 . si.ittiol-fMlop
.ooVaegTAkOolgi. , ::Bit., , ~, , .:* -0. 1
10,4900. otlaW44- )14414414 1 fl.- s ti_fis ., .' , 11 _ . ° 1 --tt.*#!'
klwAididy - coriltipT4eitr, trrk9lr, *aid
_.
filo*, Eot*444e raP O B9. 1 emb arki ng
~_, - s
tlifo and, foitunen Permanfin -won ull. t-..-' ;
On thi s greet, aMi bread initeenitiel'lnt- '
, ..,.., • ~.
-
IMIE
,
'; -, 1 - • . ..[: : 4....'
=ME
lIIEI
iii'm'''' - 'li'z't. [- :..:iiiE ,' ;'' .