Bloomsburg democrat. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1867-1869, October 30, 1867, Image 1

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VOL. XXXI.
OFFICERS OF COLUMBIA CO.
Preddent Judge—Hon. William Elwell.
( Inn D err,
t Judges— '
Peter K. Horbein.
Proth'y and on of Courts—Jesse Coleman.
Register and Reeorder—John G. Freeze.
( Allen Mann,
Commisioners— 4 .Jobe F. Fowler,
Montgomery Cole.
Sheriff—Ssmuel Snyder.
Treasurer—John J. Stiles.
( Daniel Snyder,
Auditors— L B Rupert,
( John P. Hannon.
Commissioner's Clerk—Wm. Krick ha tn.
'Commissioner's Attorney—E. 11. Little.
Mercantile Appraiser-(,'apt. Geo. W. Utt.
r ° l inty Surveyor—laaso A. Dewitt,
Distrkt Attroney—Milton M. Traugh.
Coroner—William J. Ikeler.
County Superintendent—Chu. 0. Barkley,
Assesort Internal Revenue—li. F. Clark.
John Victual,
Assistant Ane:sor—J S. B. Dime'. I
J. /I.lkeler,
J. S. Woods.
Collector—Benjamin P. Hartman.
N EW STOVE AND TIN SHOP.
ON MAIN crrll EMT. (NB AM.Y.OPPORITC
MUNI'S druil.6..) 111.00M3OUR1, PA.
1116 undersigned has Jul lilted up, and opened
his nuta
asD TIN PiIIOP P
In ;hie Mare. where he le prepared 10 make up new
Tir W khF. ktnde fit his line, euA 114 repair.
it.r with neetneee and rliepnteh, ilpoll Ike most ren.
.nnabie term'. Ile nieu keeps 111 hand erroVE.l nt
YttriOLlO patterns and etylee, 'truth he will sell upon
term' Is put nurcherrre.
dive biasa,tlt, lin is a snot mechanic, and de
ortniiid of ,he enbilt patronage.
JACOB METZ.
Binamoborg, Sept. 9. 1446.—1 y.
PLASTER FOR SALE
The un4er•i3nol le about tittio np 3
MASTER ISM
bt the PENN FURNACE Mita V, and MN Orr 10
;be public ON C KINDRED TO OEST
Italia Scotia ViThile Planter.
prepared fenny far ate in ilumniitiee to 0;1111ml - tine
et*, at eny time from the fiat of Ninrch nett
J. S. bk.SINCII.
Cniewisen, hut. 23. 14117.
BOOT AND SHOE SHOP,
OSC A P VIRTON,
ite.pectrally Infiniti* *be public that ha 411 haw pre
patthl tom:motorcar*. all lithdt
ftiBOOTS AND SHOES,
at the 1.0 WEST limAihle Prices •
at stunt notice and in the very best And !Alva! etylei
2Jr. (Pirate. (MI is WefblitiftWil in tilontindiarg4 ha
add inang yenta or Ant.A.‘4 , ll nu, watt *rep.
station far goad warn, integrity and tronar,tite dent.
tire utp.nrpassed.
HA thare f tioAino#, on lintsth 4it Varner,. of
lints and true Ptriqd, neer J. K. tJertan'e Pony,.
ht.tornsnera. Oer. to, law; -.gm
11 1 0.11 KS HOTEL
GEO. W. MAUER, Proprietor.
The a 10 4 ,0 well Reined betel bee recently Hader
roue radical changes in its Willie! arraftgements,
and its proprietor announces to his former custom
std the, travelling penile that his acernumodutions
or the comfort Of his guest* are, second tontine in
be couotry, fig table will always be Vomit sup
tied, not onl) with substantial food, but with al
be delicacies of the season. Nis wine bad Ityunr
cicala, that popular beverage known all %Ur licary.',
urchtteed direct front the importing houses, are en
Welt , pure. and free (rum till poisonous drugs, no
- a thankful fin a liberal platonaire in the pant, and
- AI continue to deserve it in the future.
Of:Oit(a. W. MAULIER,
lun.f 13.18131.-0.
IACHINE AND REPAIR 81101)
The traderslOad would moat reepertfully an•
ounce to the WM. eetieral4. that he hi prepared
n permute eil kinds .1' HAi.tHtNCRY. at JiwEPH
lIARPLESe'. POLINDRY. is Ilinomoburg. where he
sn aiwAya be found read) to do all WO* ur repair
ng, intradam Threshing Mg, woo*, 4114 in *hod, alt
tnthi of Farming Diensila. ALM% MINING AND
TrtNo LP (it' CANTING AND MACHINERY.
one on *Min waive, In a Fund workmanlike man
ego. um must la
Tesimona torins.
Ilialogg eXpOtleitC.l nig as foreman hi
s shop o r Low,. N. m o o * of thus more, for over
hie yews, warrnatg tutu in 113)hig 911 at Ito can give
tire witirfaction to WI who ma} CIVOr him wiU!
work.
ftkoninstmrg, Nos 21. Mk,
Ruuo le !I ASSERT
6==l
lit iwbretiber ha vin purdiAsaki thu —ration
Ilua4a,"
LOCK !RAVEN, ra
inporty of C. W. titimity. t 1,0111,1 pay to tho
tcodt,th the. (loose, tfit,aclod.hottof,„ cord thc loth
to acnerittly. that hn tooth:. to ohccp a Hum,
tth the acconotoolationt att4 contforth or a nolat.
It humbly solicit(• their patronage.
.1, Orr 11ailltK.
Late or the Mott:fon House. Philadelphia.
.nrk haven. nee, Sri, IIIIYI
IiSS LIZZIE PETERMAN,
taloa anitornre to the latifr. of Illuoirisburt and
roolie it unerotly, that she hr. ptst tccrovpd from
Nutter's wtows tier
bpring and Sumner
t n
MILLINERY GOODS,
instio:af *ll articir a ovnnlly found in grit cross
illinery Blots*. Ber goods :ire of th best quality
mitotic/11g the most handsome and cheapest In the
lisrkst, dolt and entwine them for yoyrielve4.
Nobody should out, has alss..str.re hilurre etatttiii •
0 Mos., Peteriotqa's Ot.tek of roods.
the slinrtest 110110. or riVair..4.
0 1 4 Off oft Mao sliest. 3* d-or below the store of
er Rupert.
Bloomsburg, MA) , 1111111-4 t.
I RUGS, DRUGS, DitUUS,
are Medicines, at John R. Moyer . * Dray OW*
014t[ nt Main and Market attract*. A gaud tow. ,
eat of
PURE DRUGS,
Patltto. Otto and Varnishoth alway* nit
*rd. tad Will be cold cheaper that; at any tither
UI "QM in lewa.
QUALITY GUARANTEED,
rweriptious cuertaly CatiptiUlided at Mayee's
rat
Ayers and Jaynes Medicines 'Ad at Moyer'. lung
SIM
►L'ultart'a Tar Cnedhl. Aaker'■ Cod Liver
iiinednill Nyrnp, Geld at air:re Drug
41.
tit any tenable patent medicines, call at Moyees
us store.
watittr of ail kinds, whnlexotle snd retail, etp. R.
aes Otis do
r te. Bloonisburi. e 4.
1004.--.
----- -- - ---- -- ----------
A WAIAL YOUNDRx.
. 81.00518111.11t0 CO-
O
I '
.'- . LUMBIA,
CO
w:, . C 0 . ,. PA.
I , HE taboteriber, proprietor
8 lor ihe above mimed rt
w Moire ostotilioliotot, Is now
to.: - ' propartiii to I'oo4 order*
~,,,,40 - . 1 ; ' rot
A Kind Of Macidotry,
*row rialliorc lunary Noggin ve
TIO-101111110 OM,. 11,.
Mlw'• to Mika aIIiVINM, 'owe and
• :ilfi 10,01111111111 NAINIIY sus& IN
la
aid mak& *wawa, war.
I Ai lariparawoulrada i► IN
=I
11101-44 Mar the 14eiswi
nikrros etwirta,
' II E
Foomourgpatent.
Is Pt NUMMI) EVERY WI:P*BIMT IN
BLOOMSBUttt, PA., WI
WILLI 4 IWO% IL 1 4.00811,
T6IIMAI.-1119 00 In Minna?. not paid within
SIX MONTHS. tl , eente additional will be charged.
(1.7" No paper dirrontinued until all arrearunea
are paid except at the option of the editor.
ruvrtm OF ADVERTISINII.
EN UM COPINTITUTI A POPARIL
One 'query ftne Sr throe Insert 1nn0..... •
Every subsequent insertten.lets shunt%
Erzm
I
o n , squaw, o,fo 0001 w.
4.00 I 0.00 10. 0 0
Two topmasts, 3,00 5.00 1 0,00 1 0.00 14.00
Three " 5,00 7,00 8,50 1 1“.00 IB,s
Pour ruptures, 0.00 0.00 10,00 1 1400 110,00
ISstrenlunits,l 10.00 ll' ,00 14.00 I 1000 3aoa
00e column. 1 13.00 1 10100 00,00 1 30,00 60,00
Extuuttor's and Administrntor's Notice. 300
I=
taarr adversicernents inserted according local:0u'
entilwt.
thwittere entice*, without ailvertieenient. ***MP.
cents per title.
rrathilent ndyertiemento paynblo in &Annan 411
0111«rn dn. Orr t lino insertion.
orricz—la shive's Stork, Co,. or Mail% thin
itou Strreto.
Addres4, W it. JACOIW.
Olnntnsbnri, Colombia County. Ps
rot the Demount.
THE TRIL3IPIII.
111` RAN' EN
Hark ! how the Joyful tidings role,
From every city, town and ville
Where Freemen still their ballots pole,
And thus the, place of Freemen till.
CHORUs:
They come! They vne! 6 still the cry,
For Sharswood and Democracy,
0! lift the Keystone banner high,
And shout a glorious victory.
On the growiug numbers swell,
'Till hundreds murk the winning score,
Awl hundred yet, are bound to tell.
IVe've triumphed as in days of yore.
We've triumphed, not by lawless might,
Or treading freedom in the dust,
We've robbed no freeman of his right.
Or at hint bristling bayonet thrust.
IVv . ye bOl.lllll no Man in Iron chaito,
Nor thrust hini into primni
That iiiight live upon his gaine,
Or keep him front Election polls.
TliP common law ins been our guide,
We've fought the battle on the squire,
11'W1 Truth and Justice on our hide,
We're bound to win another year.
W've Tr;;Anphed, thanks to God, at last
The clouds begin to disappear.
we sing the reign or terror past.
And hail a glorious future near.
'Wouldn't Take Twenty Doifarm.
Some waggish student at Yak College, a
few years since, were regaling themselves
one evening at the "Tontine," when an old
farmer from the countr, claims! the room
(taking it for the bar-mewl and inquired if
he could obtain lodging. The young chaps
immediately answered in the affirmative in
viting. him to take a glass of punch. The
old fellow, who was a shrewd Yankee, saw
at once that he was to be made the butt of
their jests, but quietly laying off his hat and
telling a worthless little dog he had with
hint to lie under the chair, he took a glvs
of the proffered beverage. The student , :
anxiously inquired after the health of the
Old man's wife and children, and the farm
er, with affected simplicity, gave them the
whol e pedigree, with nuttietons anecdote:,
about his farm, :Jock &c.
"Do you behtug to the church?" asked
One Or the wags.
"Yes, the Lord be praiod, :oil so did
my Nater before me."
"Well, I suppose you would not tell a
her replied the sttalent.
'Nut fur the world," added Chu farmer.
"Nuw what will you take for that dog?"
pointiw: to the limner's cur, who was not
worth his weight in ,1 wy tnu 1,
"1 would not takt twenty dollars For that
dog. -
"Twenty dollars? why, he is not worth
twenty centi."
"Well, I assure you I would not take
twenty dollars for him. -
"Come my friend," said the student, who
with his companion.; was hoot on having
some capital fun with the old mu, "Now
you ...ay you won't toll 4 lie for the world,
let me sue it' you will not do it for twenty
dollars, I'll give, you twenty dollars for
your dog: .
not t it, - replied the Cuuer.
''You will not? Ilere, let us see if this
won't tempt you to tell a lie," added the
student, producing a small hag of half dol
lars, hem which he counted small piles on
the table, where the tamer sat with his hat
in his hand, apparently unconcerned.
"There, - added the student, "there are
tweet,; dollars all in silver. I will give you
that Ihr your dog,"
The old farmer quietly 'skull his hat to
the edge of the table. and then as quick OF
thought soaped all the money into it except
one half dollar, ut the sume time exclaim
ing, "I won't take your twenty dollars!
Nineteen awl a half is as much us the dog
is worth—he is your property !"
A tremendous laugh from his fellow
students showed the would be wag that he
was completely "done up." and that he
need not look for help front that quarter;
so he good nuturedly acknowledged beat,
insisted on the old flamer taking another
glass, and they parted in great glee—the
student retaining his dog, which ho keeps
to this day, as a lesson to him never to at.
tempt to play tricks on men older than him
self, and especially to be careful how he
tried to wheedle a Yankee fanner,
111. A min stopping his paper, wrote to
; age editor think fokee intent spend their
nittunie fur papur, my daddy didtst end
everybody fey hY Wll3 the ino‘t intelligentest
emu in the country und hed the smartest
Andy or Ws that ever duped taturer-
BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA CO.,'PV,-;;;;.i.:::" tk.' i... 4 5„..0A./.., : , : ..Q.Cre 30..,8-..•..,:,.
emendate fur the next Presidency tif the
Uniteef Slates—The Vinrinnati Enquirer
presents the name of Of! ()rife
tun as the choice of this 0/th) Democracy
Apulurity in the Nothfore.
Cove Art, October 21.—The Cincin
nati Enquirer to-morrow will present the
name of Outage 11 Pendleton as the choice
of the Democracy of' Ohio and the North
west, as the candidate fur the next Presi
deney of the United States. The Enquirer
has enjoyed great celebrity as being the lead
ing organ of Douglas in MO.
In about six months the National Conven
tion of the Democratic party will meet for
the purpose of selecting candidates for the
Presideney and Vice-Presidency of the Uni
ted States. In common with the Deem:-
racy of other Status, our friends in Ohio
have a preference, and that preference) we
propose to express. It is a preferenue that
none who know the sentiment of our peo
ple, who have seen it manifested in many
different ways it, the local prom, private lot
term, and in political etteventisms, will dis
pute. In the name of the victorious De-
mot:racy of' Ohio, who but the ether day I
vent greeting to the Democracy of the
Union, that Ohio was redeemed from the
rule of fanaticism ; that she had vindicated ;
the Constitution and arrested the hold ea. I
veer of Well who have been trampling
upon the rights and liberties of the people I
—in their name, we, this day, seize upon
the honor of presenting the elaimsof Ohio's
son, Iron. George IL Pendleton, to the
Democracy of the country as Ohio's choice
for the high office of' President. Ile is not
only Ohio's choice, but he is the favorite of
Kentucky, who will send a full delegation
for him to the National Convention.
Inds
ana, Illinois, Missouri, and Minnesota will
not be behind Ohio and Kentucky in their
devotion to Ohio's noble and trusted states
man. Ile is, by all odds, the strongest can
didate in the Northwest ; we have reason to
believe in the United States. He possesses
in a great degree, the Democratic popular
eonfidence which was given to Stephen A.
Douglas, and upon him has fhllen in the
Northwest the mantle of that eminent man.
a gentlemen, scholar and statesman, whose
history and character are known to the
country, and everywhere recognized and re
spected by all parties. In the very prime;
of his life, with a mind inured to eultiva
tine and study, with habits of' a profound ;
thinker. experience of a tried legislator,
oniaently sound in judgment, eloquent in
the expression of his thoughts, candid in I
his political views, with an integrity that
was never questioned, he is that model 01'1
President wide!' we had in the early days of I
the republic. With him as our candidate,
standing upon a platform of the Constitu
tion, equal justice to all sections of our com
mon country, with equality to all the special I
privileges to none, the same currency for
bondholders that the people are cempelksl
to receive, prompt payment of the public, I
debt as it thlls due in the legal tenders of
the nation, immediate restoration of the ;
Southern States to the Union. with their
full share of the representatives in both
branches of the government, 148 guaranteed
by the Constitution, and universal amnesty;
for all political offences ; with such a plat
flout, and George 11. Pendleton as its ex- I
ponent, we will sweep Ohio by 50,000 ma
jority, and also the country, as we did with ;
Franklin Pierce in 1552, when the Conquer-
Pr of Mexico, General Scott, was a (midi.;
date for the oppesition.
. 150
A Cumi's fowl , : STottv. --A very eurious
story is told by several of the ancient WO,
tem respopting Egirvard, a secretary to
Charlemagne, and a daughter of the er.pe
ror. The secretary fell in love with the
princes, who at length allowed him to visit
hot% One winter's night he stayed with
her very late, and in the meantime a deep
snow had fallen. ll' he left, Ilk foot marks
would be observed and yet to stay would ex'
pume him to danger. At length the princess
resolved to carry him on her back to a neigh-
boring house, which she did. ft happened,
however, that from the window in his bed
room the emperor saw the whole affair.
In the assembly of his lords on the fol
lowing day, when Egirvard and his daugh
ter were present, he asked what ought
to be done to the matt who vompelled a kings
daughter to carry him oft her shoulders,
through frost and snow, in the middle of a
winter's night? The levers were alarmed,
but the emperor addressing Egirvard said
thou loved my daughter thou
shouldst have come to me ; thou art worthy
of death, but give thee two lives. Take
thy fair porter in marriage : fear Oud, and
l o ve one another.
A WILD Won.m—On Monday evening
last, an old woman went to the farm house
of Mr. Caleb, in Elk Neck, and asked for
milk. Having drank freely, she left and
was no more thought of, till on Thursday
last, when Jas. E. Oldham, Esq., in crossing
Caleb's cornfield, was attracted by the tum
bled condition of somo of the shocks, which
on examination, proved to have been arras.
god in a kind of a tout. Making search, he
tinind iu a neighboring gully, the same wo
man then taking refuge under a brier bush.
She seemed quite wild, and talked so inco
herently that nothing can be found out of
her origin. Her accent is Irish. The con
stable of the 6th district had been apprised
of ifir condition and it was supposed would
take measures to have her removed to the
Alm House, though at latest =outs be
had not arrived.—Otoil Meteor',
M r 'Why itiSod retiolutions like Wet'
ing Wits ? They want earryinelig
01110.
=:=:1
Retributive Juoltee.
There is a terrible sting in retributive
justice. When the judgments oLitiesion
and malevolence come back to be executed
upon those who fulminate them ; when the
insolent official is suddenly hurled from his
high place, and made to occupy the seat of
the criminal ; that is retributive justice I
It was Mr Wade,. if' we remember rightly,
who a few short weeks ego proclaimed that
no Democrat would, hereafter, be permitted
to take his seat in either [lowa) of Congress,
There was sufficient insolence in the declar
ation itself, but Mr. Wade is not a man to
leave unsaid anything to give point to his
speech. He declared the Democracy a
generation of vipers, and denounced them
as unfit for association, with Sumner, But
ler, Stevens, and the erudite Colfax. That
was putting the Democrats sufficiently low
down in the scale ; but to see the full form
of the speech we must remember that Mr.
Wade had set up the negroes of Ohio to
do the voting for the proscribed Democracy.
At length we have the result of the issue,
Mr. Wade himself is stricken down, and
all his negro constitueney has gone down
with him. What he denounced for others
has fallen upon his own devoted head. He
and the negroes are left out, and the De
manes' mane in. Sumner and Wade and
S evens and Ashley and Chandler and But
ler have all gone down together. What a
precious brood of martyrs the Radicals have
cast into the Republican graveyard. Now
let the humane and considerate Mr. Holt,
and the kind hearted Stanton, give us a
funend eulogy. The fernier should be con
fined to the diameter, services, and states
manship of the virtuous and exalted Sum•
nor, with a by-play reference to the conserv
ative nature of' military over civil govern
ment, the supremacy of' Congress under
Republican rule, the great interiority of the
white men, closing up with a learned die
sneation showing that the rebellion hascom
meneed. We are Nei of light literature,
and really count on Brigadier-General Holt,
Judge Advocate-Gencial of the Cnitetl
States Army, to give us something wonder
rally like himself in this matter. The pee
plc are running astray—absolutely running
astray. It will not be five years at their
present rate of Spec'', before they will come
to the conclusion that taint by jury, a free
press, and free speech and civil government
are respectable and even essential elements
in our Democratic system. The Judge Ad
vocate-General, who is a sort of cross be
tween a lawyer and general --not mull of
either—might easily convince Congress that
we are in a state of war all this time, and it
might be well 14 Congress by special act to
make it perpetual. This would giveground
for restoring Mr. Stanton and putting out
the President, War would go far to justify
a total divegard of the Ohio elections, and
we doubt not Stanton might he induced to
annul them by proclamation--appoieting
Wade to his old place in the Senate. This
kind of work would be nothing new to Stan
ton, who sent thousuuds of our people to
prison, fled enabled his detectives to make
some of the most complete and profitable
operations or raids upon individuals inspir
ed, of course, by a loyal regard for the great
Union cause, that has ever been performed
since the day. of La FittC, the pirate, We
say to the Republicans, you are never safe
separated from your leaders—and we bring
the matter directly down to Stanton. You
must have hint back, or you must all go
down together, At all events, let us hear
Stantoe on Wade and Chandler and Ashley
and Caker, the detective, aud Ruker's book,
and how lie kept in the war Department,
and how be Clime to write the veto of the
tenure-of-office bill, and then how he got
caught and went out of the Department.
Stanton, we remember, is not much of a
talking man, lie keeps his own counsel.—
They say he was a sort of detective ; but we
think this is not true. There was no need
of such work from him ; and then be was
so known and hated by everybody.' he nev
er could have made himself' an effective de
tect i ve, —National bielligeneer.
Mug. LINcoLN's Exro::E.----The New
York Glizen takes this view of the sub
jeet of Mrs. Lincoln's sale
"The letters are all but a confession that
the political farms and places obtained and
given away by Mrs. Lincoln's influence with
her husband were regarded by that lady in
the light of personal perquisites, to be dis
posed of either lhr presents or flattery, as
the whim might seize her. She can now
only go one step farther. Let her take up
each present, state from whom received,
and, further, label it with a memorandum
of the probable profits in place, or on some
shoddy contract, or permit to buy cotton
which the presenter must have betted. in
this manner wo think it might be found
that the actual value returned by Mrs. Lin
coln's influence to a gentleman who pre
sented her with a carriage and a pair of
Iturses—cuiainly not molting over two
thousand dollars, all told—must have been
in the vicinity of ut least Four Hundred
Thousand,Dollars ; awl very likely a hind
lar exhibit. might show that every shawl,
and dress, and article of jewelry in her col
!action, must have been paid for (finally by
the country,) at the 8440 extravagant rate."
WANTED TlME.—Buss, I want twenty
five cent., staid a jour printer to his employ
er. Twenty•ilvo emits! how soon do you
want it, Jake ? Next Tuesday for the Cir
cus. As soon an that'? you can't get it. I
have told you so Aim that when you were
in want of en largo it sum of money yuu
mot giverietta) , tour wear' uotive,
Crime la Cuba.
The Havanna correspondent of the New
Orleans Picayune gives a terrible libitum or
crime in Cuba. 110 says :
Mr. Chinehillu, Postmaster-General, has
had an awful tragedy enacted last Sunday
evening at his resideuce, which nearly cost
him the forfeit of his life. One of his sisters
in-law and her mother had been residing
with his family for some time ; the former,
a young widow, was about marrying a sec
ond time. She owned a mulatto about soy
euteen years of age, who had boon brought
up in the family, and was of a very prepo•
sensing appearance. His mistress took it
into her head to sell him off before marry
ing, for which turpose she placed him in
the hands or a nem broker, to try and sell
him to some planter. This, of course, was
not tasteful to the slave. Having acquired
city habits, and run away from said broker,
he C4lllO to his mistress determined to re
monstrate and demand, aucordiug to our
slave statute, a license fbr three days to find
a minister iu the city. She would not grant
this just demand, from some particular
reasons, and ordered hint out of her pros
ewe, wnen the mulatto, who had prepared
himself with a poinard, stabbed her over
the right shoulder blade, severing the main
artery and causing almost instant death.
The fiend then went to her mother, and
stabbed her three times; directly he made
straight to Mrs. Chinchilla's room with the
intent of killing her also, when Mr. Chin
chilla threw himself between the asaassin
and her, received a dangerous wound, there
by saving her life. His blood thirst being
satisfied, he run down stairs, and us the
doorkeeper tried to prevent his going out of
the house wounded him on the shoulder.
The alarm being given, he was chased and
caught, a short distance off, and taken to
jail where he oonfomod his guilt, awl ap
peared perfectly resolved to meet the worst
tine. All the other parties wounded are
doing well. It is the general impression
that he will not be condemned to death, as
there are good grounds for a smart lawyer
to plead. The following (Illy another holy
was murdered by a negtsi (slave), at IO
A. 31. on Calla Coneordla.
Cardenas there hales been anotherbloody,
tragedy between a lover and his affianced,
which from lioque cause uuknown, al►Host
butchered her to death ; he is waiting safely
in prison the re,ult of the lady's injuries!.
Our criminal record surpasses anything
heard of in modern times.
Mr. Lincoln's Una My.
The friends of the — late lamented," those
who persist in according to him more patri
otism and virtue than even Washington
possessed, hats recently ditoovered by au
official statement of the worldly affairs of
the great mnrtyr at the time of his "taking
off," that. he was in the blissful possession
of Government bends to the a►nount of
about rialtty iltuusaml dullard! and they
point to the fatt as still another evidence of
his great loyalty• When we take into con
sideration the fact that the bonds in question
are subject to HO taxation whatever, and
that the fohort'ey community are taxed ex
orbitantly to pay an interest in gold equal
to lane per cent. on the loyal Lincoln's
bonds, it becomes a question with us as to
who is the loyal nian—he who boasts of and
measures his loyalty by the miming of his
bonds, or he who submits quietly to inorbi
taut taxation that the government may he
enabled to pay such loyal leeches all interest
ht g 914 1: We doubt whether Mr. Lincoln
would have ►lied possessed of G o vernment
bonds to the amount of oue dollar, had they
been subject, like other property to taxation.
The true patriot stops not to count the cost
of his patriotism, but freely gives his aunt
nitilated wealth, however great or small, fin
the defence of his country. flow many
such patriots can we boast of in the late
moat% ? The truly loyal men were those
who stood by Ow Constitution, every article
of which was) epudiated by our Radical rulers,
and outside of whice Mr. Stevens boasts of'
acting; and the day is not fitr distant when
the people, who have been duped and mis•
led, will so declare from one end of the con
tinent to the other.
Ji - our; KEt.i,Y 11Ecomn.—The New
York Mereory recently published a letter
written by 3lr. John ;ran to Judge Kelly,
in the early part of lstlC, as follows :
That e known you since the year of p 29
or 1830 ; have known you when you were
studying law with Colonel Page ; knew you
when you were a vilent Jackson, anti-bank,
anti-Whig, anti-Clay, and a strong Calhoun
and pro-slavery man, of the most copper
head kind ; I knew you when you were one
of Fanny Wright's followers—an atheist of
the most "damnable kind ; 1 knew you
when you were leader of the Philadelphia
church burners in 1844—yourself and Lewis
C. Levin ; I knew you when you wanted to
burn down churches that your father wor
shipped at, and where you received your
name at the baptismal font. All this you
would have done, were it not for the gallant
few, General Patterson, General Cadwala
der, ex-Mayor swift, Josiah Randall, and
last, not least, Colonel DuSolle, all Protes
taut gentlemen, all Americans, with the ex
ception of Patterson, an honest Presbyter
ian of 'OS. You 04 a renegade in relig
ion as well AS in politics, and a disgrace to
the name and memory of yourhouest father
and kindred.
oar That man is poor who cannot pay
his debts, though he has thousanda in his
possession ; that man is rich who "owes no
man ought but love," though he eats hie
corned beef that a pine table in a log cab
in, kept clean by industry.
VIM NO IN • At # 11,11
wicerna,
l've no mother now, I'm weeping
Mho has loft we here alone—
She beneath the sod is bleeping,
Now there is no joy at home
Tears of ROTOR lung have started,
Her bright smiles no more I'll see,
All the loe'd ones, too, have Parted.
Where ! oh where I is joy for we?
Camas :
Weeping, lonely, she has left me here ;
Weeping, louefy, for my mother dear,
Oh, how well I do remember,
`lake this little flower," said site ;
"And when with the dead I'n► numbered,
Place it at my grave for toe."
Dearest mother, I am sighing,
On thy tomb I drop a tear,
For the little plant is dying ;
Now I feel so lonely here.
I've no mother ; weeping,
Twilit my furrowed cheek now lam
Whilht u lonely welch I'm keeping
O'er her sud nod bleat grave.
Soon I hope will be our meeting'
Then the glndne's none can tell,
Who for me will then be weeping,
When I bid this world farewell?
**Any Port In a Storm.”
It is wonderful with what unanimity the
Radicals everywhere now agree upon the
necessity of nominating General Grant for
the Presidency. A month ago, and before
the •"Manhood Suffrage" party could be
made believe that their pet idea of negro
equality and suffrage would he repudiated
by the States of Ohio and Pennsylvania,
they were not prepared to take "a pig in a
poke," as they called it, but rather favored
the nomination of a thorough-bred Radical
like Stevens, or Kelley, or Sumner, or Wade
—drunken Ben. Wade, we wean—in order
to ()tunnel the people of the North, as well
as the South, to submit to negro rule. The
late elections have convinced the wire-pull
ers that they are on the wrong track, so they
gracefully veer around in the face of the
wind, and run off before it, with a certainty,
as they think, of making that haven towards
which all politicians turn their longing eyes,
success. In order to do so the more effect
ually, they make a ware-goat of, and bawl,
lustily for the man who, of all others, they
would not have chosen one month ago. If
anything more was requirid by the people o_
convince them that the Republican leaders
think more of power and patronage than
they do of the prosperity and elevation of
the country, this last dodge should be suffi
cient. Let the people take this matter of
l'ruaident•making out of the hands of such
miserable pettifogging politicians as Bill
Mann and others of his ilk in this city.—
Sundae ihrrurg.
Now• and Then.
On the evening of the late election, when
it wiei discovered that the people had re
pudiated the leaguers and their isms. great
fear was manifested by the denizens of the
Gin Palace and the proprietors of the Radi
cal organs in this city, some of whom, con
scious of their deserts and naturally cow
ards, did not venture upon the public streets
unlve accompanied at a safe distance by a
police officer. The Arorth Auterkon, edited
by that ' 'good old man,' ' Mayor McMichael,
was protected by the energetic Goldey and a
squad of his officers, and it was amusing to
witness the "fear and trembling" of the
great American fisherman and his aids,
when they heard the triumphant mareh
of the Donocruey approaching the
alas , . lie feared violence at the hands of
an outraged people, on the principle that
"conscience makes cowards of us all ;" but
lie need not have feared, the men who qui
etly submitted to the abuse and slander of
his foul sheet for six long years, could nut be
recompeneed by game so small. With
them, "the hour or victory was the hour of
magnanimity." Rut hew was it throe years
ago? Who ("AMC to the pr eectioa of the
.I/crettey office when attacked by the. Radi
cal roughs with cobble stones? f)itt the
valiant Goldey consider it his duty to march
up a *pad of police officers to protect ?
Oh, no ; we were for the Constitution, and
our rights under that instrument, and there
fore disloyal. The time will come, however,
when a man's loyalty will he measured by
his veneration for and devotion to the Con
stitution of his country, not by the number
of his gold-paying bonds, as is the ease just
now,—Sand' jtorrimh
Itcrtim twit FtN.—Though no doctor I
have by me some excellent prescriptions,
and shall eharg.. you nothing lor them ;
you cannot grumble at the price. We are
most of us subject to fits ; I am visited
with them myself, and I dare say you are
also. Now, then for prescriptions:
For a fit of passion, walk in the open air,
you may speak to the wind without hurting
any one, or proclaiming yourself to he a
simpleton.
For a fit of idleness, count the tivklings
of a clock. Do this tbr one hour, and you
will be glad to pull off your coat the next
time and work like a horse.
For a fit of extravagance or folly go to
the workhouse, or speak with the ragged
and wretched inmates of a jail, and you will
be convinced.—
"Who maketh his bed of briar and thorn,
Must bo content to lie forlorn."
For a fit of ambition, go into a church•
yard and read the grave.stonea. They will
tell you the end of ambition. The grave
will soon be Your chamber.bod, the earth
your pillow, corruption your father, and the
worm your mother and niter.
Fora fit of repining. look about for the
halt and the blind, and whit the bed-ridden
and afflicted and derawral and they will
make you ashamed oreeralkietiting of your
lighter afflictions,
IMICATION OF WOMEX.
The Newark Eeenini OUT' ia / mays that
j
the inure actual and glaring wrongs of that
much suffering "other sea," is the veto that
custom has pieced upon liberal education,
such as it is to beeabtained only in the
varsities and colleges of the country. There
seems to be a prevailing scepticism in the
minds of the majority of men respecting
the propriety and necessity of highly edu.
eating women ; but there are, on the other
hand, those who lament the fact that flit
mothers, wives and daughters of this ago
do nut possum those intellectual attainments
which distinguished the ladies of the period
preceding the Elizabethian age, when Lord
Bacon's mother translated ecrinithe on free
will into Greek, and his aunt wrote original
verses in Latin hexameters. At that time
the Latin and Greek languages wore the
only languages that possessed much of a lit•
erature, and Latin was to Europe at that
day what French is to this. The vut stores
of Englith, French and German literature
now aceeseible had not then boon developed
But it is not impossible for a woman to be
an excellent housekeeper and an equally ex
cellent scholar. Why has she not as good
a right as her brother to read Plato or Virgil
—as good a right as her husband to make
her life, a happier one by drawing upon the
resources of literature of every kind ?
There is no los ible claim which one person
who wears acorn and pantaloons may have
upon the privileges accorded to the student
at our universities, which another one in
petticoats and bonnet has not also upon such
institutions of learning, or some other es•
pecially designed for bar wants and require.
merits, The State giros her the same rights
at the district school an I the academy a
are (worded to her brother. By what rule
of equity or consistency does it exclude her
from such advantages at a certain point, and
dismiss her to the household ? Opinions
may differ as to the intrinsic value of a lib
eral education ; but surely there can be but,
little room for doubting that if the Stets
deem' it best to provide such for boys wllsin
it. borders, it ought not to deny it to its
girls. A higher education for a woman
raises the standard in the family she team.
By this means she becomes an important a nd
.
..powerful agent in diffusing a liberal cavita
tion among the masses, and will thus in time
elevate the whole mental structure, and will
help to place at the .lommand of the many
what is now only with'n the grasp of the
free. The policy which would deny woman
the right to a liberal education is one of those
relics of barbarism which down.; the win
detention of all thinking pereone. And
we arc glad to observe a disposition in the
reformatrry spirit of the time to do away
with it.
The West, which often before has been
the pioneer in the march of social progress
has taken the initiatory step towards for-
warding the liberal educational interests in
regard to women. Mr. Childs, of the Muth
-1 igan State Senate, has done himself credit
by presenting to that body a bill to establish
an institution of learning to be called the
Michigan reinale College. The government
of the school is to be vested in the Board
of Regents of the University. They are
empowered to receive proposals for the do.
nation of suitable lands with building, or
with the means of erecting buildings as
Lansing. The site ehall not contain less
than twenty acres, and the buildings, or
their equivalent in nione, shall amount in
value tutifty thousand dollars. The college
is to furnish the young women of that State
with the means of acquiring a thorough
knowledge of the various brunches of liter
ature science and art. The admission fee to
tlie regular college course shall not exceed
ten dollars. Those from that State who de•
sire to pursue a more general course of study
are to be admitted free ; and the daughter
of any soldier who died in the United States
iorvice during the rebellion, shall pay no fee
whatever. No charge for tuition will be
made to the young women of that State.—
The fees: for others are to he regulated by
the Regents. The Regents have the powsr
to sleet and remove the Aeon of the cal•
legs, determine their salaries, anti have the
sine; general management which they now
exorcise over the t'uiversity , and in pro
viding the course of instruction, prescribing
the books and authorities, and conferring
the diplomas.
How long will it be before Pennsylvania
and her sister States shall follow the exam
ple SO worthily bet the whole country by
tl ichigan ?
A GREAT NATURAL CTRIOFITT.—Itis an
undoubted fact that mermaids are numer
ous in the Knaw river in Kanaai. Last
week a party of young men out hunting,
came suddenly across six mermaids who
were disporting themselves in the water.
On the approach of the young men the
beautiful creatures lit out" fur the woods,
uttering Shrill cries somewhat rusen►bling
the Krems of frightened school gies.
1191. A story is told of a "country gentle
man" who tar the first time hoard an I.;pis
copal clergyman preach. Ho had read
much of the aristocracy and pride of the
church, and when he returned home he mai
asked if the people were stuck up.
"I'shaw l no," he replied ; "why the Min
ister actually preached in hitt flirt sleeves."
oar ileum► Werd 13(moher, in * sumo*
delivered mond)+, mid that more public.
men of etninenoe had started from the bow
inoea of type netting than from probably any
other occupation.
NO.