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( er - MrW. Vol, trn. MOUNT VERNON, OniO, THU1K3DAY, NOVISMBlin 22,1000. No O 'vMw MW ''r'WWMMMW IOTP 1 JlJJltl..j vllu lltl'ljJJi Finn Tiff! A n J!) luiivUiuni o Ml, Vernon Ilusiness Cards, i-w.-m .w. l, suioks, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, AptM-ht-j 7 MT. VEHNON, O. W.VANO w. o, oooraa, COOPER, VANCE' ATT0RNKY8 ATvlAW, MT. VERNON, Oino ' Office south oastcornor of Main ud Chestnut u orjMsltehtOva Uoonty Dank. sept 20 MA USUAL DEAN. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW AKD IT OTA BY PUBLIC. MOUNT VKRKOM. OHIO. OFFICE JuiUon'i Building. Main Street Below IT... fUi....' lldnL MMWA -VWMM. V.H.I 0111. 0. BONNET, . . . ....JOHN D. BOV8E r " ' B6NNEY HOUSE, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS -AT LAW and solicitors in chancery, , - mmain.8t., peoria, illinois. Particular attention siren to Real Estate and Collection oust throughout the State, j n46-ly WALTER M. SMITH, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, MT. VEBNON, OHIO. OAce on High Street, oppoaite the Coort House. . . . feh25tf .. HENBY B. MITCHELL, Altonrey and Counsellor at Law . AND NOTARY FUBLIfi, OFFlcE-Northside Kremlin Block, MT. VEKNON, OHIO. tMtl W. COTTOH. W. . DAI COTTON Ac BANE. Attorney's A Counsellors ru Law, Alt. i'trium, Ohio. tsTILLattond to all business intrusted to their II oare.iri anrofthe Courts. OFFICE, N. E. Corner of Main and GenbierSts. -overrylo'sMeronantTailoringbstabiisaueni. Oct. 19th 1868.tr i , ' USOUHN II. OLUROYO,,: .. - ' dealer is ' Newspapers, Magazines, Cheap Litem-turer Ac. -. Back numbera of Papers and Majrasinos furnish-'ed. A'U Rastera weeklies: printed, and ill books published, curt be hitd on application. ' OFFICE On Main street, opposite the Konyon Houae, Mt. Vernon, 0. - May, 10, 1860-nW m6. SPERRY & CO. THIS FIRM are filling up with almost oeiptsof ehoroo . i - - - ,:;?;HEW GOODS, ' of ''TATE'STRY BRUSSELS," Three Ply and assorted Ingrain Carpets, Ruga, Parlor nnd Common Door Mats, thoirstock is larger and more boautiful than evnr as well as a frosb supply "COCO" nnd "CANTEN MATTlNdS," OIL CLOTHS Ac. D. 0. MONTGOMERY, III0RKET IT 5L1W BANNINU BUILDING, OVER N. McUIFFIN'S . - 8HOE8TORI5. : Mount Vernon, Ohio. Special, attention1 given to tho Collecting of Claims, and the purohose and sale of roal Estate. I hare for sale unimproved lands as follows, 810 acres tn". Osage County, Missouri, 60S acres in Warren County, Missouri, 302 acres in St. Fraji-eois County, Missouri, also 125 acres and one 40 acre lot in Hardin County. Ohio, and 83 acres in -Mercer Uounty,Uhio. iiarcn i. on, lu-ir SASHDOORS AND BLl D . J. A. Anderson, BT ANUPACTCRKR AND BKAI.KR IN SASfl, DOORS, AND BLINDS, Gfen. Jones' Ware House, High St., between Main and S. It. ' Depot, Mount Vernon, Ohio A KINDS of work constantly on hands and Jr. warranted. All orders promptly oxecutcd. tST Dry Pino Lumber, Shingles, Lath, ic, alway vnnanu. : April 2(1,1859, 21 ly.' 4 . . DR. a. E. MoKOWN. STTUGKBOIM" DENTIST, OFFICE OVER L. B. WARD'S STORE, Mount Vernon, Ohio. (Rtiidenct. No8, Gambier Stmt.) All operations in surgical and mechanical Dentist ry warranted qual to tHoae of bestcity practice. August 30, 18o0-u43 m3. - . w. sarncs. CBcnjcrra DBS. BARNFJI 8CITAEFER, HOMOirATHRrPHYSICIANS. Dr. Barnes having this day formed a co-partner ship with Dr. Schaofer.fnrmorly of Goshen, Indiana, in the practico of medicine and surgory, resneotful-ly lolioiM for the firm a continuance of the patronage heretofore extended to him. Dr. S. oomos with the best of references. Mt. Vernon. Aueust 8th. 18ft. N. II. All porsons indebted to the undersigned en book account are requested to call ana make sot' tlemon t by cash or note before the first day of Ooto bernext. O.W.BARNES. August. 9, 1880, n iO-tf. DEVOE & BUBBELL, MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS I1J SASH, DOORS AND BLINDS, niOn STREET, NltARLT OProSlTI TTJR COURT HOUSE, MT. VERNON, OHIO. WE make window-frames, door-frames, Ac, Ac, and every article in our line required for house furnishing in the very Best style, ana or the very best materials. All kinds of sash constantly on band, and all orders will be promptly and satlarao torily oxecutod.-ly. 19. March 17th, 18(10. " fAINABD & BU1CU1DGE, , LITHOQKAPIIERS, , in Every Vnrlety of Style, BANK STREET, Opposite Weddell Bome, Clewand, Ohio. Hosiery A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF MEN'S AND Poys swifjlosi and Ladies and Childrens Itoae, MILLER A WHITE'S. at REMOVAL. DK. c. n. KELSEY, DENTSSlST! HAS lakek.Tor a tern ef years the rooms recently eecupied by M. V. H. Bill, and Imrrie-sliately over the store rooai of Taylor, Uantt A Co., where ke arillpreaeeate the various duties of the profession. With aa experience efee-er 15 years tonstantpraetice, and an acquaintance with all the LATE IMPROVEMENTS of the Art,hefeeUconB-(ent of gielngtttire satisfaction. The bMlekill of the Profession warranted io We exerdiie'd, in every case.- On hand a fine stack of Doa tal raateriil'a recently procured from the Eakt. Kntraaoo oe Maia street, between Taylor, Gantt A Ce.'i and L. M a'nk's Clothing 8 tore". April ltt-23tt ' I BOOTS! SHOES! Opiri aaderslgned reapastfiilly tenders htf,ri I (hanks for the patronage ecetoWed apntE t j I hini in, the Buckingham eorner, Sad would' V Inform thapuhlle that hehaarenioved Mistook to the . BANSINO BITILDINOj . y a few ooora south of the Kenyon Bouse. He has just opened a lot of choice goods, purchased directly from the manufacturers, wbtsa he Will war-raotJo eastomeva. Among Us new stock will he idlesCongressanl Lace Gaiters, ' , ( L ting and Kid) Misses and Children's Oalfer-; Men and Boys Congress Gaiters, 0xonlTies,CaJC,Ki4 and Enam-lled Brogans e.,e fjairatidir. J., , NAT MeGIfFlN. MiBoollanooua Advertisements CABINET BUSINESS, Oe flfl Takee pleasure in announcing to the oitiauna o X Mt. Vernon and vicinity, that he continues to narry on me CABINET MAKING BUSINESS. In all Its branohea, at his old stand, at the foot of Main street, opposite Buckingham I Foundry, where will be found Bureaus, Tables, Chairs, Bedsteads, Waahstands,Cuphoards, Ac, Ac, , , UNDERTAKING, 1 have provided myself with a new and elegant Hearse, and will be ready to attend funerals when eror called upon. CoQutof all kinds kept on hand and made to order. J, S. MABTIN. Feb 2 J '68 a 6tt. SASH; DOOR it BLIND FACTORY THE Subscribers would inform their friends, and the public generally, that they have removed their MACHINERY, to Furlong Foundry, west High street,where in connection with 8. Davis, they keep on band, and man footure to order, on short notice D00R3, SASH, BLINDS, A MOULDINGS, of all the various patterns. SURFACE AND IRREGULAR PLAINING, end FLOORING, hard and soft, dressed to order. We would ask for the 'new firm, the patronage so literally bestowed on the old one. BYEBS & PATTERSON. Mount Vernon. June 14th 1800, n31 tf. WM. HAET, Wholesale and Retail dealer in ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE No. 107, Water St., Cleveland, O. IIIAVE NOW ON HAND A LARGB AND C0M-plete assortment of ROSE WOOD, , MAHOGANY, BLACK WALNUT, AND CHERRY FURNITURE CHAMBER SETTS of various styles; LOUNGES, a tall prices, COTTAGE BEDSTEADS, ItA TTRASSES, of ffair, Manilla, BcceU, Straw i . : . . ? Piano Stools ; Piano Stools, Alt of which I offer to the Purohaaing Community at Prices to suit the Times. May II, I860, ly. ' WM, HART. wniTE No. 1, Miller's Bcildino. School Books. - - A full supply of latest editions. Bibles and Testament. Family, Pew, Pockot. COMXENTABIES. Clark, Barnes, Alexander. Knolish & Am. Poets, Including Scott. Byron, Milton, Hemans, Pops, ' Cowper, Campbell. Goldsmith, Shelly, Shakespeare. Misckixak. a select assortment. Juveniles. A large and choice supply. March 81. n21-tf. HOWARD ASSOCIATION. PHILADELPHIA. A Ittnevotent Institution estabtts hed b J a Endowment, for the Belief of the Sick and Distressed, afiicted with Virulent and Epidemic Diseases, and especially For the Cure of Disease) of the Sexual Organs. MEDICAL ADVICE given gratis, by the Acting Sunenn. to all who apply Mr letter, with a de scription of their condition, (age, occupation, habits or Hit, c.,l ana in cases oi extreme poverty, Jieai cines famished free of eharce. . VALUABLB REPORTS on Spermatorrhoea, and other diseases of the Sexual Organs, and on the NEW BEMEDlESemployedin the DUpensary,sent to the afflicted in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. - Two or three stamps for postage will Be acceptable. Address DR. J. 8KILLIN HOUGHTON, Acting Surgeon, Howard Association, No. 1 South Ninth Street, roiladelphle, fa. By order ox the Directors. EZRAD.HEARTWRLL JWA GEO. FAIRCHILD, Stonier. -13y MUSIC BJKOKE ! ! Call At Thk NEW MUSIC STORE TWO DOORS BELOW KNOX CO. BANK and you will find tlx best assortment of Musical merchandise ever offered to the cltisensof Knox and adjoining counties, consisting of Hallet, Davis & CoVPiaoF ortes. Mason and Hamlin's DODXL CIUBEOISi VIOLINS, (TITITAR8, ACCORDEOKS, BANJOS, TAiwnmvi-:.iioKf:s,cLHOMf:THtPirfi3, H-UTEH Fl.AWr.LBTS, PIUALUS, V1U-- , LIN GUITAR 8TRINOS,auiAei Also, a Good asaortaient of Mojiral Works and laitrteHo. Books. ' ' the Iret Agriealltiral tndartrial aad Weehaaleal As- sueiatLMis in the United States; aadvs ' DEFY COrTIPBTITIONl i BAM'L P. AXTELL, Agent. . . - Art. Vtrnoa, 0. 8BEMU8I0! IflterestlrfS tobm Washington From the Tribune's especial dispatches we quote as folio we! " THB PBK8IDKNT ADMITS THE BI0I1T 01 EECE8 StOH. . The President admits the right of South Carolina to secede peaceably, and will not res ist it, if the Convention there should so determine next month. Resistance, it is supposed, would produce more calamitous results. Hut, if she should attempt to opon her ports, they would probably be blockaded in vindication of our revenue laws. And if she should try to set up an independent Government and send a Minister here, he could not be received. It is likely other nations would be notified that any such recognition on their part would be considered a casus belli. These are stated 8 probabilities, but with some rea son. The resignations of the Federal office holders at Charleston have not been ac eepted, and will be retained by the Presi dent for further consideration. Alfred Huger, Postmaster of Charleston, has sot sent one, and will not, except under coer cion of publio opinion, which is now disin clined to that extremity. Only one Postmaster in the State has signified his purpose to resign, at a future day, unless the State should withdraw sooner. The Post-offioe service is the most sensitive branch, and its pulse furnishes a good indication of the popular feeling. THE CONSTITUTION'S SECESSION ARTICLE. The President personally directed the contradiction Of the article in the Constitution, after the election, favoring secession, and distinctly notified his Cabinet, from ona of whom it was believed to bava emanated, that it must not be repeated. Five out of the seven are avowedly against the whole scheme, and Messrs. Cobb and Thompson now speak of it ss an event they fear and deplore, without pretenaing to advocate it. THE DESIGNATION OF MB. TOOMBS. Mr. Toombs' resignation from the Senate wag rendered necessary by his pledges during the canvasa. .In holding on till the 4th of March, however, he takes the chancos for a re-election, which everybody believes be de aires. Georcia hat no confidence in his cousel nor faith in his stability. He is now trying to recover from bis recent affiliation with Mr. Douglas. Last winter he declared bore that he wasted no batter epitaph than 'Ilore lies the man who destroyed the Re public' We subjoin the following from the World's telegraphic correspondence, under date of the 12th: . THE TIMID STBU CE WITH PANIC. The timid among small capitalists, who deal in stocks, are becoming alarmed. To day thry thronged our largest commission bouso, and vainly sought purchasers not a single merchant venturing to invest a dollar. Corporation stock is falling rapidly, while no sales have been made of any others. BBAL ESTATE STEADY. It may be considered a hopeful svmptom of the times that real estate is affected but litt e. It is generally stationary at this sea-son. All our citisensnow begin to feci alarm imagining that ruin, black, iaretrievable and utter stares property holders in the face. DeBpite this tremor of the body poll tic, a strong conservative sentiment prevails, trivial exctptions being made in the cases of a lew Southern clerks, more of whom re signed to-day, their resignation to take place on the fourth day of March. It is an easy way to escape being turned out. A CABINET DISCUSSION. The President, most of the Cabinet, and several other distinguished gentlemen, met yesterday (Sunday) and discussed the prts ent state of affairs. A witness states that Gen. Cass was affected to tears, wbilo Mr. Buchanan, in touching language, lamented the prospect or possibility o( a disrapton dur ing his administration. Of course, nothing was done or proposed to be done, sucn is the first demonstration touobing secession made by the administration. SENATORS OBEBtt AMD WIQf ALL. These gentlemen are here to-night. Green opposes secession, at the same time depreca ting Lincoln's election Wigfall is delighted at the prospect of a disruption. He hopes Texas will follow South Carolina. Probably nothing would be lost to the country by the individual witbdrawel of Mi.Wlgfallfrom the Union. 1 HOW VIBOINIA STANDS. Several Virginia Congressmen are here. They represent the sentiment of the stats as eminently conservative, aad in favor of sub mitting to the election of Lincolq, As an in stance of the state of feeling there, it may be stated that at Ocoqaan, where a Lincoln pole was cut down, Lincoln had 58 majority over his three competitors. THE CABINET FOB NOTS1NO TBAITOtlS. , A rumor gains credit here that Messrs Jerry Black and Secretary Floyd have informed the President that they will resign if be upholds the Federal laws in cast ff nullification by any State.'. It is certain that the Cabinet is not unanimous on the policy to be pursued. Mr. Burbarjaa preserves a studied silence on theiubjecf' ' ,"' ,' THE CoHOREESIONAt, DELESJArlORS FROM TBI ; ' . ' SOUTH.' " " ' ''" ." We have Infonnation'cons1deTd rellabls.to the effect that the senatorial and house dele. gallons from South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Alabama, will be present at the opening of Corgresi, but will withdraw from the' halls if secession takeJiplass) during th session. ' Extracts from the Cincinnati Com merolal. The complaints made by some of the pa1 pers, that the forts off the harbor of Charles ton have been placed in a defenceless condi tion by the Federal authorities, are said by a semi-official dispatch from Washington, to be unfounded. We are told that Fort Moultrie is garrisoned by three companies of U. S. troops, who would defend tbe Government property against a Charleston mob. But if Mr. Buchanan proposes to recognize the right of Secession why de'end Furt Moultrie? Will the Old Pub. Fono. bave the audacity to keep tho flag of the Union flying over the Palmetto Fort, when tbe sovereign State of Soith Carolina in her serene mightiness, goes out of tbe Union and hoists the Pal. metto flag? Would not Jerry Black, the Pennsylvania Attorney Ganeral, secede from the Cabinet in that case? The imposing resomces of tho parti-ular ly sovereign State oi ijouttx Caroline,' are handsomely advertised in the amount of the war-loan, which her illustrious Government is about negotiating with those remarkable bankers who have just taken a terrible ven geance on North America, by suspending, in pursuance of an act of the Legislature, the redemption of their notes in specie. Tbe sum is $400,000. And the cash is to be in South Carolina paper, which is uncurrent in all parts of tbe country. Why shouldn't there be a panic? Consider the immensity of a war-loan of $400,000 in uncurrent funds borrowed at par. The 'Orange' Congressional District of New York, has been in doubt. Tt is now represented in Congress 'by Mr. Van Wyck, a Republican, who made the speech about burning negroes, in the House, last winter. The Sullivan County Republican, of Friday, gives the following as the majorities in the two counties which constitute the District: Van Wyck. St. John. Sullivan . - 170 Orange 186 Giving Y. W . a majority of 16. This is one of the few instances of close contests this year, in which the luck has been on the side of the Republicans. Tbe comprehensiveness of the term Aboli tionist, as used by the demonstrative section- alists of the South, has been still further ex tended. At latest advices, all persons residing in the Cotton States who were not in favor of the dissolution of the Union, wero classed as Abolitionists. A few years ago the term Abolitionist was . frightful in the North. Call a man an Abolitionist, and he was. done for. But tho indiscriminate use of the word wasted its terrors, sq that it bis become perfectly harmless. A similar process will produce a like result in the South. The Richmond Enquirer has the goodness to assure the country that Ex Gov. Wise does not intend to employ his terrible minute men in a raid upon he Federal Government. This welcome intelligence will of course re assure tbe Wall street gamblers of New York. In tbe face of a streak of news as this, the bears must go down. It is probable that the Ex-Governor's projected inva sion of Ohio and Pennsylvania, at the head of from twenty to thirty men, will be post' poned until tho 'overt act' comes to pass. .News is received from several points in the Northern States, that companies of young men, moved by a martial spirit, are tender ing their services to the President elect, to assist, in Military style, in tho ceremony ol inauguration. A lew well-drilled military companies would do well for ornament in Washington on the 4th of March, but a few blank cartridges will supply all wants of am munition. Wo advise young men of the North to keep perfectly cool. The South is entitled to a monopoly of the military fuss and feathers of tbe lay. The bankrupt bahks of South Carolina propose, in consideration of the decree ?f tbe Legislature legalizing the suspension of spe cie payment, to loan ths magnificent govern ment of that sovereign State, the prodigious sum ol four hundred thousand dollars, with which to prepare for war., Think of it. Tbe Nation of South Carolina is about to have four hundred thousand dollars in broken bank pa per, with which to purchase munitions of war requisite to bringing the Federal Govern ment to a realising sense of the tremendous nature of the difficulties it will have to con tend with in coercing that sovereign and aw fulStatel y. When the ringleaders of the movement to precipitate a revolution in the. Cotton States, are closely questioned as to theitvsubstantial reasons for attempting to disrupt the Union, they invariably refer to the Legislation of cer tain Northern States, nullifying the Fugitive Slave Law.. It is remarkable that these nul lifying Btates, are those '. wherein fugitive slaves are fewest, and farthest between; and that tbe States where the complaint is most vociferously made, are those which never lose fugitive slaves by flight to free soil. ' t . In the first place the eminently patriotic business men of Charleston, S. C, seemed to Imagine that the way to alarm the country and impress it with the material importance ah (J moral heroism of South Carolina, Was to become bankrupts; they seem to bave thought better of it, however, and aow ths telegraph informs ns, that o singular is, their sensitiveness, that they soora the idea oi refusing to pay (heir just debts. ; We are almost ready to pronounce the patient . convalescent.' Jerry 'Black, Mr. Buchanan's Attorney General, Is attempting to play fire-eater. He, a Pennsytvadiab, with opinions' Sec ording to bis fees, pretends Is believe in ths Right of State Becesa'on, and gives but that be will resign if the President UkeS any steps toward coercing a rebellious Slate. Tbe day lor such detestable hypocrisy and toadyism te become politically profitable, his passed away. Jerry will never get anything but public contempt, for bis' poor-spirited and thick beaded flunkey ism. Ths New York Herald notices with exultation, that the men who are now most rampant for secession in the South are those who have little or no interest in negro property. This the Herald thinks s sign of the loyalty of tbe non-slaveholders to tho institution of slavery. Perhaps it is. And it is also an index to the hollow, and silly, and fantastic madness that rules the hour. The owners of many slaves want peace. The 'poor white trash' shrieks its devotion to the despotism of the section., , They are becoming sagacious down in the Cotton States. They have resolved in some of the country centres of commerce, not to buy anything of northern manufacture that they do not want. (Fact see telegraphio dispatches.) We hope they will stick to this. It is a healthy sign when people only buy what they want, and what they can afford to pay for. An Honest Growl. I am sick of politics. I am sick of (oroh light fizzles. I am sick of "tbe Prince." I am sick of men who never talk sense to women. I am sick of gloomy Pharisees, and wordy, idealess sermons, and narrow creeds. I am sick of lawless Sabbatarians, and female infidels, and free-lovers. I am sick of unhealthy, diseased books, full of mystifications and transcendental bosh. I am sick of "chaste ribbons" and "ravishing lace.' I am sick, in an age which produced a Bronte and a Browning, of the prate of men who assert that evert woman should be a perfect housekeeper, and fail to add, that every man should be a perfect carpenter. I am as sick of women self-styled "literary," who think it a proof of genius to despiso everyday household duties. I am sick of schools for the manufacture of bent spines. I am Bisk of parents, the coffins of whose children are already being made, asking teachers to add "another branch" to the already tuioidal pile of lessons. I am sick of over-worked, ill-paid female operatives. I am sick of seeing tracts distributed where soup and bread should . go. 1 am sick of seeing noodles in high places, and intelligence and refinement sitting' id inglorious ease by their own firesides. I am sick of the encouragement held out to women by the other sex to remain pretty idiots, followed by long moral essays upon the enormity J of being such. I am sick of flummery and nonsense and humbug and pretension of every kind. I am sick of this everlasting scrambling and crowding, and pushing and jostling, on the edge of the five feet of earth which is all any one of us can bave at last, after all our pains. Now, don't lay this growl to Indigestion, for I never had it, or billiousness, for I feel as if I were just made, or long arrears of unpaid bills, because I pay as I go. No, sir as the Episcopals have it, "all this I do steadfastly believe." There now I feel better. Fanny Fern. Illinois. A special dispatch from the editors of the Chicago Tribune to the Cincinnati Commercial says that the majority for Lincoln will reach at lest 80,000. Both branches of the Legislature are Republi can, which secure the re-election of Lyman Trumbull to the United States Senate. A most significant feature of the result in Illinois is that Chicago, the home of Douglas, gives a largely increased Republican majority, while Sangamon and Morgan, the central senatorial district of the State, the home of Lincoln, hitherto strongly Democratic, has gone Republican by a handsome majority . The St. Louis Democrat says the returns indicate that the Republicans gain two members of Congress, one in tho filh and one in the 7th, with some prospect of a gain in the 9th. Well done, Illinois! .. Is it a Halter or Exile? Ex Governor Wise, of Virginia, declar ed in s braggadocio speech nt Portsmouth, that, "so help him God, he would never uhmif to the election of Lincoln." Oth er persons before him have declared their intention not Io surrender to the supremacy of the laws.. ' Old John Brown fcr instance, took that position when he made bis attempt at Harper's Ferry'. No man was mors instrumental in getting him hung than this crasy oiator. Did he enjoy the spectacle so much that he desires to see it repeated? , Is he envious of the fame of the hero of that exploit? Or does he sup- j pose that the hemp market is exhausted? Or are we mistaken in, tbe meaning which we ascribe to his threat, so that his simple intention is to sail away into foreign lands? The latter is clearly the most charitable interpretation, end ths beat for Wise, as tt will save "both his word and his deck; and so ws adopt it. . Wise is going into exile. N. Y. Tost. .."V 1 "RVrtrrt fha Rmitii. I A dispatch to the N. Y. World from Charleston, 13th, says the banks hiive no) yet suspended, but are still paying specie. It is thought,' however, that I ley will be forced to suspend within a week, probably in less time. The stringency of the money market is very great. The Charleston Mercury, or one of its correspondents, calls upon the banks to relieve the mercantile community by discounting their paper. It says no honorable man desires to repudiate his indebtedness, though South Carolina is going out of the Uuion. The dispatch says: Delegates to the Convention which meets on the 1 7th of December, will be chosen according to the legislative districts, and none but men known to be in favor of se-cession will be elected. In fact, it will be required that eaoh man whose name shall go npon the ticket, shall be pledged, under his hand, to vote for the immediate secession of the State, in any event, before the 1st of January ne xt. A company of German riflemen, one hundred strong, bearing a Palmetto flag, paraded last evening. They stopped in front of the Mercury office, and gave three rousing cheers for their adopted State The Moultry Guards have resclved to adopt gray jacket, black trowsers, blue cap, and an appropriate uniform for active service, to be mado out of North Carolina goods. Gentlemen from the interior of the State say that but one sentiment prevails there, and that is for secession. There has been a torchlight procession in Aiken, in which two negroes carried an effigy of Abraham Lincoln on a rail, with the following inscription in his right hand. "Abe Lincoln First President of the Northern Confederacy." The effigy was taken to a scaffold, hung by negroes and then burned amid the cheers of a large assemblages' A rumor prevails at Washington that the President subscribes to the doctrine of Statn rlrAta n, : nmmnU.i .1 ,i, fm. .,i. ireme soum. A dispatch from MilLdgevilie, Gu-, I states that Hon. Alex. Stephens will ratike ! a conciliatory speech against secession. He and Herschell V. Johnson it i said will speak al Atlanta some night this week Several of the leading men of Georgia are opposed to secession. " " ' 0"ke of Brown's Pikes. General Rob.-inson of Lowndes has one of the genuine John Brown Pikes, taken at Harper's Ferry It is an elegant article to perforate the delicate throat of a sleeping Southern mother in fact nothing could be belter adapted for such a purpose. With it, too,' a demon in human form could dispatch half a dozen children in as many minutes. But the Pike's chief value is as a symbol of the fraternal affection of the North for the South. Who will stand against the Pikes? No dodging Hooper's (Ala.) Mail. Were we called before a grand jury to testify our belief on oath, we should say most conscientiously and religiously thai there are incendiary sheets in the South that have done more to gire edge and point to pikes "to perforate the delicate throats of sleeping mothers," than all the John Browns ef the North, dead or alive. These presses have never yet cast one manly and elevated glance, or breathed one lofty thought on the great issues involved in their country's peril. They have played the vulgar parts of mingled buffoons, alarmists, and headsmen, and God forgive them for the sleepless nights they have already cost many a tender woman and nervous child in Alabama wi hin the past three months. It is our solemn be lief that the conductors of such papers, animated by a rpiril so low and groveling, will take .to their heels and runaway whenever comes the clash of steel which they cry out so lustily to provoke. In times of danger tho greatest cowards are the bloodiest in counsel, the most cruel and inhuman in action. These presses havo done nothing in this crisis but erect gibbets and make hangmen's nooses for ; every "Yankee" and imaginary enemy j that has haunted their trembling dreams hey have disgraced the manhood of the J South hy their puerile fears, which beheld . an assassin behind every shade. these disruption gentlemen bring upon us j the trials and perils of revolution and civil war, God forbid that we should hive to trust to them to defend ui. Since the world began, and societies and . governments were created, such spirits as these never yet were the patriot leaders of a people through a crisis ol trial and danger. Such a spirit as they manifest is only fil to spear the wounded on the field of battle and rifle the pockets of the dead. Mo bile Register. : . . . -,,- New Jersey Election. The official vote of the Bute of New Jer sey is In . " Ths result is the election ef four Republican and three Democratic electors. There were three tickets in the field the Fusion, the Republics and tbe straight Douglas. ' Ths laUer had the names ef ths three Djwocrsls who sreeletted. TH Interi sting from Wrwhinirton.' The tolleoir.fr interest injr paragraph we olip from (he Washington correspondenae- of the Tribune: . .TUB I'HKtilDKN'S INTENTIONS.' The President does not prpow hwuinfany pioclamation concerning secession, aa report-ed, because Congress will ssnemMe before tur meeting of the JJ.iutb Carolina Convention, when his opinions will be communicated ir thuMesaago. He avows himself, horsror. atrongly against the Whole scheme, and wUI onlirge upon the L'nioa, the inWtfrity if which he declares It his intention to sua! a-tain hy every Consiitutienal urana.atid wit a a full convict! n that b will be denoau by his present friends at the South. . . t TDK movement in south oasohna. There is no doubt that the tnovesMnt to South Carolina has assumed unusual proportions, and includes many who have hitherto counseled against peieipiuu action. Letters were received to-day from some of ths best and etlmest men of I he Bute, not Identified with politics, who say lb sentiment, has penetrated all class. and cannot be re sisted with effect by those who rteplore iv ana jorse tnc calamities which must follow, no matter how the controversy may teitai-uate now The most potent element of safety in this excitement ie- to leave the bnua to tbe Southern Suites which are oDDnsed to accession, as at least twelve out of lbs fll'ueu are. There is already, a strong dispositieu, among " the in to insist on being represented end heard io any Convention profews-edly projected (or the' benefit of ths South especially a Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky Tennessee and Missouri have to bear the) brunt Of the coutest, and suffer more is a Jar from the Underground'Railroad than Sbuth Carolina, Akbaiua, Georgia and Florida have done in ton years. , ,, . , i , tcb. rcsc,BifTKm.T coiiruiNs. Mr, Buchanan complains bittorly of the treatment he is now receiving (rota tho South, for which be has sacrificed himself and his Administration.' And hia Canine including Messrs. Cobb and 'rhomps:n, both ui niiow are mucn subdued io temper cou-cntiu ihi sentiment, Infant, the revolution has got 'beyond the control of the managers who started it for politicaTettoc't. ' iOONqqESSIONALSDJBISKHS.' ; ' I The prospect of businesi lor ths Buoroach. ing session is discouraging legislature wilj be comparatively aiwoendsd ascent (r th ordinary appropriation.-,., and much excite-? mont may be anlictnated . A II ihe kirlMar.. which Republicans exhibited during ths Speakership content will be neeetwarv to bear lht' victory becomingly, )n allowing the) "eTish,;d t0 "n,i ibir detest passion Another Expulsion from the Soutb.1 ' We beard from an eye-witness araiher In. dicrous casa of explosion from the Sou . h of si northern gentleman, who ha for man years been in the habit of miking fall visits tej that section of tbe country, in search of cus-, torn, as the representative of an extenslr firm in our city. No one eversuapeoted hin of abolitionist proclivities, as ha had always, takou pains to uphold ths "institutions of tha South, and had always been loud in his do nunciations of the "incendiaries" and "agitators" of tbe North." On a recent visit, however, he happen to be among a number of men who were dis- cussing the political aspect of the lime. la his zeal to agree with the local testing and sentiments, be engaged in conversation. Aa unfortunate impediam-ut in his speech, which increased as he became excited, led to lite disastrous results.' " VGjntlomeni" said he, "I g g-go for Li-Li-' Before he could finish the xenteue a deweti hands were upon him, and be was rndel pushed about. ( , , , . , , . .. "I g-g go for Li Li Li ) atamiinr. ed again. ' .'.,., ,. "You go for Li Li Llnco'n, do yeu t The you had better leave for some place where) you can go' for him with uiur sa'ety tm your Jnglar," was the advice giveu by a person present He endeavored to explain, but the more excited he bocs me, the more dim. cult it was to express himself. He was bur-' risd from the hotel, - and in the hands of a' self csnsiituled ccmmlllce, was condsetsd le the limits of the next town, and warned nv or to return to the ens he ha I just lift, . "I-I-bow to y y -your dsoision,". ba managed to say, as he turned his face te tbs. departing escort; buty-y-you have been t-l toobasty. I g-g-go fur li-li-liaitiog tb power ol C-C-Congrcss " The Committee waited to hear on dots. but left the discomfited northerner to pur sue his way regretting his fate and imperfect ulterance.X J, i'rtnivg J'oet. ' To the People erOMe. . ExiciTTivs Department. i t . Columbus, Nov. 12, 180O.f . , f.. - 1-11 : . . i . : . r . v.r iciiuw-vitiMTiie iu large roriHHis i ish- All tboir crops have failed. Their prospect iva destitution is without s parallel in tbe history of our country. The ttopls are without ' tb necessary means to provide theaaxelvee with lood for the approaching witter- Their . sad condition appeals to the charity ol the hu- . I m He everywhere- ' God in his iniuilte mercy 1 hath blessed the people of Ohiej and e . 'the f Slates ol this Uuion. Is not oar duty, out c- , ourabundsnre, to supply the wants ef our brethren Id Kansas ? The 20 h ia baa been ' sat spart in siasy of the Slates tjf Hit procla- matrons ol their reaped ive Kxtfcejitf if lor Ilia , Thanksgiving offerings of llrf pvoyhfc As Us Governor of this State. M pm recoiameod that contributions be. toy. As relief of Kanraa, in the iert chrrrrbes of ths Stale on that dsy. -Let ma invoke the eJetvy tu ! call the earnest attention ef their eowrnga-'' ' tios te the wot a of ooarity sns love. Where) 'other suitable arrangionU are aot aol made for tranmaitting eontribtUiona. tiler eaar be forwarded to this Depart meat, whence they wil be promptly seat to the proper autkeri, ties in Kansas for ditlritatioa. ''Blessed are (he merciful ft ther shall oV ' tain mercy.' ' - ' ' Mf( DCNKtiiOyi ' -.. .-' . ,! V .,. . t
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1860-11-22 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1860-11-22 |
| Source | LCCN: sn84028554, Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1860-11-22, Vol. 7, No. 3 |
| Format | newspapers; microfilm |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| Digitization Information | 300dpi, 8-bit Grayscale, Model: NextScan Phoenix Upgrade, Software: iArchives, Inc., 3.240 |
Description
| Title | page 1 |
| Source | Reel number: 00000000001 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 4452.94KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 1183 |
| File Size | 4452.94KB |
| Full Text | ( er - MrW. Vol, trn. MOUNT VERNON, OniO, THU1K3DAY, NOVISMBlin 22,1000. No O 'vMw MW ''r'WWMMMW IOTP 1 JlJJltl..j vllu lltl'ljJJi Finn Tiff! A n J!) luiivUiuni o Ml, Vernon Ilusiness Cards, i-w.-m .w. l, suioks, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, AptM-ht-j 7 MT. VEHNON, O. W.VANO w. o, oooraa, COOPER, VANCE' ATT0RNKY8 ATvlAW, MT. VERNON, Oino ' Office south oastcornor of Main ud Chestnut u orjMsltehtOva Uoonty Dank. sept 20 MA USUAL DEAN. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW AKD IT OTA BY PUBLIC. MOUNT VKRKOM. OHIO. OFFICE JuiUon'i Building. Main Street Below IT... fUi....' lldnL MMWA -VWMM. V.H.I 0111. 0. BONNET, . . . ....JOHN D. BOV8E r " ' B6NNEY HOUSE, ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS -AT LAW and solicitors in chancery, , - mmain.8t., peoria, illinois. Particular attention siren to Real Estate and Collection oust throughout the State, j n46-ly WALTER M. SMITH, ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, MT. VEBNON, OHIO. OAce on High Street, oppoaite the Coort House. . . . feh25tf .. HENBY B. MITCHELL, Altonrey and Counsellor at Law . AND NOTARY FUBLIfi, OFFlcE-Northside Kremlin Block, MT. VEKNON, OHIO. tMtl W. COTTOH. W. . DAI COTTON Ac BANE. Attorney's A Counsellors ru Law, Alt. i'trium, Ohio. tsTILLattond to all business intrusted to their II oare.iri anrofthe Courts. OFFICE, N. E. Corner of Main and GenbierSts. -overrylo'sMeronantTailoringbstabiisaueni. Oct. 19th 1868.tr i , ' USOUHN II. OLUROYO,,: .. - ' dealer is ' Newspapers, Magazines, Cheap Litem-turer Ac. -. Back numbera of Papers and Majrasinos furnish-'ed. A'U Rastera weeklies: printed, and ill books published, curt be hitd on application. ' OFFICE On Main street, opposite the Konyon Houae, Mt. Vernon, 0. - May, 10, 1860-nW m6. SPERRY & CO. THIS FIRM are filling up with almost oeiptsof ehoroo . i - - - ,:;?;HEW GOODS, ' of ''TATE'STRY BRUSSELS" Three Ply and assorted Ingrain Carpets, Ruga, Parlor nnd Common Door Mats, thoirstock is larger and more boautiful than evnr as well as a frosb supply "COCO" nnd "CANTEN MATTlNdS" OIL CLOTHS Ac. D. 0. MONTGOMERY, III0RKET IT 5L1W BANNINU BUILDING, OVER N. McUIFFIN'S . - 8HOE8TORI5. : Mount Vernon, Ohio. Special, attention1 given to tho Collecting of Claims, and the purohose and sale of roal Estate. I hare for sale unimproved lands as follows, 810 acres tn". Osage County, Missouri, 60S acres in Warren County, Missouri, 302 acres in St. Fraji-eois County, Missouri, also 125 acres and one 40 acre lot in Hardin County. Ohio, and 83 acres in -Mercer Uounty,Uhio. iiarcn i. on, lu-ir SASHDOORS AND BLl D . J. A. Anderson, BT ANUPACTCRKR AND BKAI.KR IN SASfl, DOORS, AND BLINDS, Gfen. Jones' Ware House, High St., between Main and S. It. ' Depot, Mount Vernon, Ohio A KINDS of work constantly on hands and Jr. warranted. All orders promptly oxecutcd. tST Dry Pino Lumber, Shingles, Lath, ic, alway vnnanu. : April 2(1,1859, 21 ly.' 4 . . DR. a. E. MoKOWN. STTUGKBOIM" DENTIST, OFFICE OVER L. B. WARD'S STORE, Mount Vernon, Ohio. (Rtiidenct. No8, Gambier Stmt.) All operations in surgical and mechanical Dentist ry warranted qual to tHoae of bestcity practice. August 30, 18o0-u43 m3. - . w. sarncs. CBcnjcrra DBS. BARNFJI 8CITAEFER, HOMOirATHRrPHYSICIANS. Dr. Barnes having this day formed a co-partner ship with Dr. Schaofer.fnrmorly of Goshen, Indiana, in the practico of medicine and surgory, resneotful-ly lolioiM for the firm a continuance of the patronage heretofore extended to him. Dr. S. oomos with the best of references. Mt. Vernon. Aueust 8th. 18ft. N. II. All porsons indebted to the undersigned en book account are requested to call ana make sot' tlemon t by cash or note before the first day of Ooto bernext. O.W.BARNES. August. 9, 1880, n iO-tf. DEVOE & BUBBELL, MANUFACTURERS OF AND DEALERS I1J SASH, DOORS AND BLINDS, niOn STREET, NltARLT OProSlTI TTJR COURT HOUSE, MT. VERNON, OHIO. WE make window-frames, door-frames, Ac, Ac, and every article in our line required for house furnishing in the very Best style, ana or the very best materials. All kinds of sash constantly on band, and all orders will be promptly and satlarao torily oxecutod.-ly. 19. March 17th, 18(10. " fAINABD & BU1CU1DGE, , LITHOQKAPIIERS, , in Every Vnrlety of Style, BANK STREET, Opposite Weddell Bome, Clewand, Ohio. Hosiery A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF MEN'S AND Poys swifjlosi and Ladies and Childrens Itoae, MILLER A WHITE'S. at REMOVAL. DK. c. n. KELSEY, DENTSSlST! HAS lakek.Tor a tern ef years the rooms recently eecupied by M. V. H. Bill, and Imrrie-sliately over the store rooai of Taylor, Uantt A Co., where ke arillpreaeeate the various duties of the profession. With aa experience efee-er 15 years tonstantpraetice, and an acquaintance with all the LATE IMPROVEMENTS of the Art,hefeeUconB-(ent of gielngtttire satisfaction. The bMlekill of the Profession warranted io We exerdiie'd, in every case.- On hand a fine stack of Doa tal raateriil'a recently procured from the Eakt. Kntraaoo oe Maia street, between Taylor, Gantt A Ce.'i and L. M a'nk's Clothing 8 tore". April ltt-23tt ' I BOOTS! SHOES! Opiri aaderslgned reapastfiilly tenders htf,ri I (hanks for the patronage ecetoWed apntE t j I hini in, the Buckingham eorner, Sad would' V Inform thapuhlle that hehaarenioved Mistook to the . BANSINO BITILDINOj . y a few ooora south of the Kenyon Bouse. He has just opened a lot of choice goods, purchased directly from the manufacturers, wbtsa he Will war-raotJo eastomeva. Among Us new stock will he idlesCongressanl Lace Gaiters, ' , ( L ting and Kid) Misses and Children's Oalfer-; Men and Boys Congress Gaiters, 0xonlTies,CaJC,Ki4 and Enam-lled Brogans e.,e fjairatidir. J., , NAT MeGIfFlN. MiBoollanooua Advertisements CABINET BUSINESS, Oe flfl Takee pleasure in announcing to the oitiauna o X Mt. Vernon and vicinity, that he continues to narry on me CABINET MAKING BUSINESS. In all Its branohea, at his old stand, at the foot of Main street, opposite Buckingham I Foundry, where will be found Bureaus, Tables, Chairs, Bedsteads, Waahstands,Cuphoards, Ac, Ac, , , UNDERTAKING, 1 have provided myself with a new and elegant Hearse, and will be ready to attend funerals when eror called upon. CoQutof all kinds kept on hand and made to order. J, S. MABTIN. Feb 2 J '68 a 6tt. SASH; DOOR it BLIND FACTORY THE Subscribers would inform their friends, and the public generally, that they have removed their MACHINERY, to Furlong Foundry, west High street,where in connection with 8. Davis, they keep on band, and man footure to order, on short notice D00R3, SASH, BLINDS, A MOULDINGS, of all the various patterns. SURFACE AND IRREGULAR PLAINING, end FLOORING, hard and soft, dressed to order. We would ask for the 'new firm, the patronage so literally bestowed on the old one. BYEBS & PATTERSON. Mount Vernon. June 14th 1800, n31 tf. WM. HAET, Wholesale and Retail dealer in ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE No. 107, Water St., Cleveland, O. IIIAVE NOW ON HAND A LARGB AND C0M-plete assortment of ROSE WOOD, , MAHOGANY, BLACK WALNUT, AND CHERRY FURNITURE CHAMBER SETTS of various styles; LOUNGES, a tall prices, COTTAGE BEDSTEADS, ItA TTRASSES, of ffair, Manilla, BcceU, Straw i . : . . ? Piano Stools ; Piano Stools, Alt of which I offer to the Purohaaing Community at Prices to suit the Times. May II, I860, ly. ' WM, HART. wniTE No. 1, Miller's Bcildino. School Books. - - A full supply of latest editions. Bibles and Testament. Family, Pew, Pockot. COMXENTABIES. Clark, Barnes, Alexander. Knolish & Am. Poets, Including Scott. Byron, Milton, Hemans, Pops, ' Cowper, Campbell. Goldsmith, Shelly, Shakespeare. Misckixak. a select assortment. Juveniles. A large and choice supply. March 81. n21-tf. HOWARD ASSOCIATION. PHILADELPHIA. A Ittnevotent Institution estabtts hed b J a Endowment, for the Belief of the Sick and Distressed, afiicted with Virulent and Epidemic Diseases, and especially For the Cure of Disease) of the Sexual Organs. MEDICAL ADVICE given gratis, by the Acting Sunenn. to all who apply Mr letter, with a de scription of their condition, (age, occupation, habits or Hit, c.,l ana in cases oi extreme poverty, Jieai cines famished free of eharce. . VALUABLB REPORTS on Spermatorrhoea, and other diseases of the Sexual Organs, and on the NEW BEMEDlESemployedin the DUpensary,sent to the afflicted in sealed letter envelopes, free of charge. - Two or three stamps for postage will Be acceptable. Address DR. J. 8KILLIN HOUGHTON, Acting Surgeon, Howard Association, No. 1 South Ninth Street, roiladelphle, fa. By order ox the Directors. EZRAD.HEARTWRLL JWA GEO. FAIRCHILD, Stonier. -13y MUSIC BJKOKE ! ! Call At Thk NEW MUSIC STORE TWO DOORS BELOW KNOX CO. BANK and you will find tlx best assortment of Musical merchandise ever offered to the cltisensof Knox and adjoining counties, consisting of Hallet, Davis & CoVPiaoF ortes. Mason and Hamlin's DODXL CIUBEOISi VIOLINS, (TITITAR8, ACCORDEOKS, BANJOS, TAiwnmvi-:.iioKf:s,cLHOMf:THtPirfi3, H-UTEH Fl.AWr.LBTS, PIUALUS, V1U-- , LIN GUITAR 8TRINOS,auiAei Also, a Good asaortaient of Mojiral Works and laitrteHo. Books. ' ' the Iret Agriealltiral tndartrial aad Weehaaleal As- sueiatLMis in the United States; aadvs ' DEFY COrTIPBTITIONl i BAM'L P. AXTELL, Agent. . . - Art. Vtrnoa, 0. 8BEMU8I0! IflterestlrfS tobm Washington From the Tribune's especial dispatches we quote as folio we! " THB PBK8IDKNT ADMITS THE BI0I1T 01 EECE8 StOH. . The President admits the right of South Carolina to secede peaceably, and will not res ist it, if the Convention there should so determine next month. Resistance, it is supposed, would produce more calamitous results. Hut, if she should attempt to opon her ports, they would probably be blockaded in vindication of our revenue laws. And if she should try to set up an independent Government and send a Minister here, he could not be received. It is likely other nations would be notified that any such recognition on their part would be considered a casus belli. These are stated 8 probabilities, but with some rea son. The resignations of the Federal office holders at Charleston have not been ac eepted, and will be retained by the Presi dent for further consideration. Alfred Huger, Postmaster of Charleston, has sot sent one, and will not, except under coer cion of publio opinion, which is now disin clined to that extremity. Only one Postmaster in the State has signified his purpose to resign, at a future day, unless the State should withdraw sooner. The Post-offioe service is the most sensitive branch, and its pulse furnishes a good indication of the popular feeling. THE CONSTITUTION'S SECESSION ARTICLE. The President personally directed the contradiction Of the article in the Constitution, after the election, favoring secession, and distinctly notified his Cabinet, from ona of whom it was believed to bava emanated, that it must not be repeated. Five out of the seven are avowedly against the whole scheme, and Messrs. Cobb and Thompson now speak of it ss an event they fear and deplore, without pretenaing to advocate it. THE DESIGNATION OF MB. TOOMBS. Mr. Toombs' resignation from the Senate wag rendered necessary by his pledges during the canvasa. .In holding on till the 4th of March, however, he takes the chancos for a re-election, which everybody believes be de aires. Georcia hat no confidence in his cousel nor faith in his stability. He is now trying to recover from bis recent affiliation with Mr. Douglas. Last winter he declared bore that he wasted no batter epitaph than 'Ilore lies the man who destroyed the Re public' We subjoin the following from the World's telegraphic correspondence, under date of the 12th: . THE TIMID STBU CE WITH PANIC. The timid among small capitalists, who deal in stocks, are becoming alarmed. To day thry thronged our largest commission bouso, and vainly sought purchasers not a single merchant venturing to invest a dollar. Corporation stock is falling rapidly, while no sales have been made of any others. BBAL ESTATE STEADY. It may be considered a hopeful svmptom of the times that real estate is affected but litt e. It is generally stationary at this sea-son. All our citisensnow begin to feci alarm imagining that ruin, black, iaretrievable and utter stares property holders in the face. DeBpite this tremor of the body poll tic, a strong conservative sentiment prevails, trivial exctptions being made in the cases of a lew Southern clerks, more of whom re signed to-day, their resignation to take place on the fourth day of March. It is an easy way to escape being turned out. A CABINET DISCUSSION. The President, most of the Cabinet, and several other distinguished gentlemen, met yesterday (Sunday) and discussed the prts ent state of affairs. A witness states that Gen. Cass was affected to tears, wbilo Mr. Buchanan, in touching language, lamented the prospect or possibility o( a disrapton dur ing his administration. Of course, nothing was done or proposed to be done, sucn is the first demonstration touobing secession made by the administration. SENATORS OBEBtt AMD WIQf ALL. These gentlemen are here to-night. Green opposes secession, at the same time depreca ting Lincoln's election Wigfall is delighted at the prospect of a disruption. He hopes Texas will follow South Carolina. Probably nothing would be lost to the country by the individual witbdrawel of Mi.Wlgfallfrom the Union. 1 HOW VIBOINIA STANDS. Several Virginia Congressmen are here. They represent the sentiment of the stats as eminently conservative, aad in favor of sub mitting to the election of Lincolq, As an in stance of the state of feeling there, it may be stated that at Ocoqaan, where a Lincoln pole was cut down, Lincoln had 58 majority over his three competitors. THE CABINET FOB NOTS1NO TBAITOtlS. , A rumor gains credit here that Messrs Jerry Black and Secretary Floyd have informed the President that they will resign if be upholds the Federal laws in cast ff nullification by any State.'. It is certain that the Cabinet is not unanimous on the policy to be pursued. Mr. Burbarjaa preserves a studied silence on theiubjecf' ' "' ,' THE CoHOREESIONAt, DELESJArlORS FROM TBI ; ' . ' SOUTH.' " " ' ''" ." We have Infonnation'cons1deTd rellabls.to the effect that the senatorial and house dele. gallons from South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Alabama, will be present at the opening of Corgresi, but will withdraw from the' halls if secession takeJiplass) during th session. ' Extracts from the Cincinnati Com merolal. The complaints made by some of the pa1 pers, that the forts off the harbor of Charles ton have been placed in a defenceless condi tion by the Federal authorities, are said by a semi-official dispatch from Washington, to be unfounded. We are told that Fort Moultrie is garrisoned by three companies of U. S. troops, who would defend tbe Government property against a Charleston mob. But if Mr. Buchanan proposes to recognize the right of Secession why de'end Furt Moultrie? Will the Old Pub. Fono. bave the audacity to keep tho flag of the Union flying over the Palmetto Fort, when tbe sovereign State of Soith Carolina in her serene mightiness, goes out of tbe Union and hoists the Pal. metto flag? Would not Jerry Black, the Pennsylvania Attorney Ganeral, secede from the Cabinet in that case? The imposing resomces of tho parti-ular ly sovereign State oi ijouttx Caroline,' are handsomely advertised in the amount of the war-loan, which her illustrious Government is about negotiating with those remarkable bankers who have just taken a terrible ven geance on North America, by suspending, in pursuance of an act of the Legislature, the redemption of their notes in specie. Tbe sum is $400,000. And the cash is to be in South Carolina paper, which is uncurrent in all parts of tbe country. Why shouldn't there be a panic? Consider the immensity of a war-loan of $400,000 in uncurrent funds borrowed at par. The 'Orange' Congressional District of New York, has been in doubt. Tt is now represented in Congress 'by Mr. Van Wyck, a Republican, who made the speech about burning negroes, in the House, last winter. The Sullivan County Republican, of Friday, gives the following as the majorities in the two counties which constitute the District: Van Wyck. St. John. Sullivan . - 170 Orange 186 Giving Y. W . a majority of 16. This is one of the few instances of close contests this year, in which the luck has been on the side of the Republicans. Tbe comprehensiveness of the term Aboli tionist, as used by the demonstrative section- alists of the South, has been still further ex tended. At latest advices, all persons residing in the Cotton States who were not in favor of the dissolution of the Union, wero classed as Abolitionists. A few years ago the term Abolitionist was . frightful in the North. Call a man an Abolitionist, and he was. done for. But tho indiscriminate use of the word wasted its terrors, sq that it bis become perfectly harmless. A similar process will produce a like result in the South. The Richmond Enquirer has the goodness to assure the country that Ex Gov. Wise does not intend to employ his terrible minute men in a raid upon he Federal Government. This welcome intelligence will of course re assure tbe Wall street gamblers of New York. In tbe face of a streak of news as this, the bears must go down. It is probable that the Ex-Governor's projected inva sion of Ohio and Pennsylvania, at the head of from twenty to thirty men, will be post' poned until tho 'overt act' comes to pass. .News is received from several points in the Northern States, that companies of young men, moved by a martial spirit, are tender ing their services to the President elect, to assist, in Military style, in tho ceremony ol inauguration. A lew well-drilled military companies would do well for ornament in Washington on the 4th of March, but a few blank cartridges will supply all wants of am munition. Wo advise young men of the North to keep perfectly cool. The South is entitled to a monopoly of the military fuss and feathers of tbe lay. The bankrupt bahks of South Carolina propose, in consideration of the decree ?f tbe Legislature legalizing the suspension of spe cie payment, to loan ths magnificent govern ment of that sovereign State, the prodigious sum ol four hundred thousand dollars, with which to prepare for war., Think of it. Tbe Nation of South Carolina is about to have four hundred thousand dollars in broken bank pa per, with which to purchase munitions of war requisite to bringing the Federal Govern ment to a realising sense of the tremendous nature of the difficulties it will have to con tend with in coercing that sovereign and aw fulStatel y. When the ringleaders of the movement to precipitate a revolution in the. Cotton States, are closely questioned as to theitvsubstantial reasons for attempting to disrupt the Union, they invariably refer to the Legislation of cer tain Northern States, nullifying the Fugitive Slave Law.. It is remarkable that these nul lifying Btates, are those '. wherein fugitive slaves are fewest, and farthest between; and that tbe States where the complaint is most vociferously made, are those which never lose fugitive slaves by flight to free soil. ' t . In the first place the eminently patriotic business men of Charleston, S. C, seemed to Imagine that the way to alarm the country and impress it with the material importance ah (J moral heroism of South Carolina, Was to become bankrupts; they seem to bave thought better of it, however, and aow ths telegraph informs ns, that o singular is, their sensitiveness, that they soora the idea oi refusing to pay (heir just debts. ; We are almost ready to pronounce the patient . convalescent.' Jerry 'Black, Mr. Buchanan's Attorney General, Is attempting to play fire-eater. He, a Pennsytvadiab, with opinions' Sec ording to bis fees, pretends Is believe in ths Right of State Becesa'on, and gives but that be will resign if the President UkeS any steps toward coercing a rebellious Slate. Tbe day lor such detestable hypocrisy and toadyism te become politically profitable, his passed away. Jerry will never get anything but public contempt, for bis' poor-spirited and thick beaded flunkey ism. Ths New York Herald notices with exultation, that the men who are now most rampant for secession in the South are those who have little or no interest in negro property. This the Herald thinks s sign of the loyalty of tbe non-slaveholders to tho institution of slavery. Perhaps it is. And it is also an index to the hollow, and silly, and fantastic madness that rules the hour. The owners of many slaves want peace. The 'poor white trash' shrieks its devotion to the despotism of the section., , They are becoming sagacious down in the Cotton States. They have resolved in some of the country centres of commerce, not to buy anything of northern manufacture that they do not want. (Fact see telegraphio dispatches.) We hope they will stick to this. It is a healthy sign when people only buy what they want, and what they can afford to pay for. An Honest Growl. I am sick of politics. I am sick of (oroh light fizzles. I am sick of "tbe Prince." I am sick of men who never talk sense to women. I am sick of gloomy Pharisees, and wordy, idealess sermons, and narrow creeds. I am sick of lawless Sabbatarians, and female infidels, and free-lovers. I am sick of unhealthy, diseased books, full of mystifications and transcendental bosh. I am sick of "chaste ribbons" and "ravishing lace.' I am sick, in an age which produced a Bronte and a Browning, of the prate of men who assert that evert woman should be a perfect housekeeper, and fail to add, that every man should be a perfect carpenter. I am as sick of women self-styled "literary" who think it a proof of genius to despiso everyday household duties. I am sick of schools for the manufacture of bent spines. I am Bisk of parents, the coffins of whose children are already being made, asking teachers to add "another branch" to the already tuioidal pile of lessons. I am sick of over-worked, ill-paid female operatives. I am sick of seeing tracts distributed where soup and bread should . go. 1 am sick of seeing noodles in high places, and intelligence and refinement sitting' id inglorious ease by their own firesides. I am sick of the encouragement held out to women by the other sex to remain pretty idiots, followed by long moral essays upon the enormity J of being such. I am sick of flummery and nonsense and humbug and pretension of every kind. I am sick of this everlasting scrambling and crowding, and pushing and jostling, on the edge of the five feet of earth which is all any one of us can bave at last, after all our pains. Now, don't lay this growl to Indigestion, for I never had it, or billiousness, for I feel as if I were just made, or long arrears of unpaid bills, because I pay as I go. No, sir as the Episcopals have it, "all this I do steadfastly believe." There now I feel better. Fanny Fern. Illinois. A special dispatch from the editors of the Chicago Tribune to the Cincinnati Commercial says that the majority for Lincoln will reach at lest 80,000. Both branches of the Legislature are Republi can, which secure the re-election of Lyman Trumbull to the United States Senate. A most significant feature of the result in Illinois is that Chicago, the home of Douglas, gives a largely increased Republican majority, while Sangamon and Morgan, the central senatorial district of the State, the home of Lincoln, hitherto strongly Democratic, has gone Republican by a handsome majority . The St. Louis Democrat says the returns indicate that the Republicans gain two members of Congress, one in tho filh and one in the 7th, with some prospect of a gain in the 9th. Well done, Illinois! .. Is it a Halter or Exile? Ex Governor Wise, of Virginia, declar ed in s braggadocio speech nt Portsmouth, that, "so help him God, he would never uhmif to the election of Lincoln." Oth er persons before him have declared their intention not Io surrender to the supremacy of the laws.. ' Old John Brown fcr instance, took that position when he made bis attempt at Harper's Ferry'. No man was mors instrumental in getting him hung than this crasy oiator. Did he enjoy the spectacle so much that he desires to see it repeated? , Is he envious of the fame of the hero of that exploit? Or does he sup- j pose that the hemp market is exhausted? Or are we mistaken in, tbe meaning which we ascribe to his threat, so that his simple intention is to sail away into foreign lands? The latter is clearly the most charitable interpretation, end ths beat for Wise, as tt will save "both his word and his deck; and so ws adopt it. . Wise is going into exile. N. Y. Tost. .."V 1 "RVrtrrt fha Rmitii. I A dispatch to the N. Y. World from Charleston, 13th, says the banks hiive no) yet suspended, but are still paying specie. It is thought,' however, that I ley will be forced to suspend within a week, probably in less time. The stringency of the money market is very great. The Charleston Mercury, or one of its correspondents, calls upon the banks to relieve the mercantile community by discounting their paper. It says no honorable man desires to repudiate his indebtedness, though South Carolina is going out of the Uuion. The dispatch says: Delegates to the Convention which meets on the 1 7th of December, will be chosen according to the legislative districts, and none but men known to be in favor of se-cession will be elected. In fact, it will be required that eaoh man whose name shall go npon the ticket, shall be pledged, under his hand, to vote for the immediate secession of the State, in any event, before the 1st of January ne xt. A company of German riflemen, one hundred strong, bearing a Palmetto flag, paraded last evening. They stopped in front of the Mercury office, and gave three rousing cheers for their adopted State The Moultry Guards have resclved to adopt gray jacket, black trowsers, blue cap, and an appropriate uniform for active service, to be mado out of North Carolina goods. Gentlemen from the interior of the State say that but one sentiment prevails there, and that is for secession. There has been a torchlight procession in Aiken, in which two negroes carried an effigy of Abraham Lincoln on a rail, with the following inscription in his right hand. "Abe Lincoln First President of the Northern Confederacy." The effigy was taken to a scaffold, hung by negroes and then burned amid the cheers of a large assemblages' A rumor prevails at Washington that the President subscribes to the doctrine of Statn rlrAta n, : nmmnU.i .1 ,i, fm. .,i. ireme soum. A dispatch from MilLdgevilie, Gu-, I states that Hon. Alex. Stephens will ratike ! a conciliatory speech against secession. He and Herschell V. Johnson it i said will speak al Atlanta some night this week Several of the leading men of Georgia are opposed to secession. " " ' 0"ke of Brown's Pikes. General Rob.-inson of Lowndes has one of the genuine John Brown Pikes, taken at Harper's Ferry It is an elegant article to perforate the delicate throat of a sleeping Southern mother in fact nothing could be belter adapted for such a purpose. With it, too,' a demon in human form could dispatch half a dozen children in as many minutes. But the Pike's chief value is as a symbol of the fraternal affection of the North for the South. Who will stand against the Pikes? No dodging Hooper's (Ala.) Mail. Were we called before a grand jury to testify our belief on oath, we should say most conscientiously and religiously thai there are incendiary sheets in the South that have done more to gire edge and point to pikes "to perforate the delicate throats of sleeping mothers" than all the John Browns ef the North, dead or alive. These presses have never yet cast one manly and elevated glance, or breathed one lofty thought on the great issues involved in their country's peril. They have played the vulgar parts of mingled buffoons, alarmists, and headsmen, and God forgive them for the sleepless nights they have already cost many a tender woman and nervous child in Alabama wi hin the past three months. It is our solemn be lief that the conductors of such papers, animated by a rpiril so low and groveling, will take .to their heels and runaway whenever comes the clash of steel which they cry out so lustily to provoke. In times of danger tho greatest cowards are the bloodiest in counsel, the most cruel and inhuman in action. These presses havo done nothing in this crisis but erect gibbets and make hangmen's nooses for ; every "Yankee" and imaginary enemy j that has haunted their trembling dreams hey have disgraced the manhood of the J South hy their puerile fears, which beheld . an assassin behind every shade. these disruption gentlemen bring upon us j the trials and perils of revolution and civil war, God forbid that we should hive to trust to them to defend ui. Since the world began, and societies and . governments were created, such spirits as these never yet were the patriot leaders of a people through a crisis ol trial and danger. Such a spirit as they manifest is only fil to spear the wounded on the field of battle and rifle the pockets of the dead. Mo bile Register. : . . . -,,- New Jersey Election. The official vote of the Bute of New Jer sey is In . " Ths result is the election ef four Republican and three Democratic electors. There were three tickets in the field the Fusion, the Republics and tbe straight Douglas. ' Ths laUer had the names ef ths three Djwocrsls who sreeletted. TH Interi sting from Wrwhinirton.' The tolleoir.fr interest injr paragraph we olip from (he Washington correspondenae- of the Tribune: . .TUB I'HKtilDKN'S INTENTIONS.' The President does not prpow hwuinfany pioclamation concerning secession, aa report-ed, because Congress will ssnemMe before tur meeting of the JJ.iutb Carolina Convention, when his opinions will be communicated ir thuMesaago. He avows himself, horsror. atrongly against the Whole scheme, and wUI onlirge upon the L'nioa, the inWtfrity if which he declares It his intention to sua! a-tain hy every Consiitutienal urana.atid wit a a full convict! n that b will be denoau by his present friends at the South. . . t TDK movement in south oasohna. There is no doubt that the tnovesMnt to South Carolina has assumed unusual proportions, and includes many who have hitherto counseled against peieipiuu action. Letters were received to-day from some of ths best and etlmest men of I he Bute, not Identified with politics, who say lb sentiment, has penetrated all class. and cannot be re sisted with effect by those who rteplore iv ana jorse tnc calamities which must follow, no matter how the controversy may teitai-uate now The most potent element of safety in this excitement ie- to leave the bnua to tbe Southern Suites which are oDDnsed to accession, as at least twelve out of lbs fll'ueu are. There is already, a strong dispositieu, among " the in to insist on being represented end heard io any Convention profews-edly projected (or the' benefit of ths South especially a Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky Tennessee and Missouri have to bear the) brunt Of the coutest, and suffer more is a Jar from the Underground'Railroad than Sbuth Carolina, Akbaiua, Georgia and Florida have done in ton years. , ,, . , i , tcb. rcsc,BifTKm.T coiiruiNs. Mr, Buchanan complains bittorly of the treatment he is now receiving (rota tho South, for which be has sacrificed himself and his Administration.' And hia Canine including Messrs. Cobb and 'rhomps:n, both ui niiow are mucn subdued io temper cou-cntiu ihi sentiment, Infant, the revolution has got 'beyond the control of the managers who started it for politicaTettoc't. ' iOONqqESSIONALSDJBISKHS.' ; ' I The prospect of businesi lor ths Buoroach. ing session is discouraging legislature wilj be comparatively aiwoendsd ascent (r th ordinary appropriation.-,., and much excite-? mont may be anlictnated . A II ihe kirlMar.. which Republicans exhibited during ths Speakership content will be neeetwarv to bear lht' victory becomingly, )n allowing the) "eTish,;d t0 "n,i ibir detest passion Another Expulsion from the Soutb.1 ' We beard from an eye-witness araiher In. dicrous casa of explosion from the Sou . h of si northern gentleman, who ha for man years been in the habit of miking fall visits tej that section of tbe country, in search of cus-, torn, as the representative of an extenslr firm in our city. No one eversuapeoted hin of abolitionist proclivities, as ha had always, takou pains to uphold ths "institutions of tha South, and had always been loud in his do nunciations of the "incendiaries" and "agitators" of tbe North." On a recent visit, however, he happen to be among a number of men who were dis- cussing the political aspect of the lime. la his zeal to agree with the local testing and sentiments, be engaged in conversation. Aa unfortunate impediam-ut in his speech, which increased as he became excited, led to lite disastrous results.' " VGjntlomeni" said he, "I g g-go for Li-Li-' Before he could finish the xenteue a deweti hands were upon him, and be was rndel pushed about. ( , , , . , , . .. "I g-g go for Li Li Li ) atamiinr. ed again. ' .'.,., ,. "You go for Li Li Llnco'n, do yeu t The you had better leave for some place where) you can go' for him with uiur sa'ety tm your Jnglar" was the advice giveu by a person present He endeavored to explain, but the more excited he bocs me, the more dim. cult it was to express himself. He was bur-' risd from the hotel, - and in the hands of a' self csnsiituled ccmmlllce, was condsetsd le the limits of the next town, and warned nv or to return to the ens he ha I just lift, . "I-I-bow to y y -your dsoision". ba managed to say, as he turned his face te tbs. departing escort; buty-y-you have been t-l toobasty. I g-g-go fur li-li-liaitiog tb power ol C-C-Congrcss " The Committee waited to hear on dots. but left the discomfited northerner to pur sue his way regretting his fate and imperfect ulterance.X J, i'rtnivg J'oet. ' To the People erOMe. . ExiciTTivs Department. i t . Columbus, Nov. 12, 180O.f . , f.. - 1-11 : . . i . : . r . v.r iciiuw-vitiMTiie iu large roriHHis i ish- All tboir crops have failed. Their prospect iva destitution is without s parallel in tbe history of our country. The ttopls are without ' tb necessary means to provide theaaxelvee with lood for the approaching witter- Their . sad condition appeals to the charity ol the hu- . I m He everywhere- ' God in his iniuilte mercy 1 hath blessed the people of Ohiej and e . 'the f Slates ol this Uuion. Is not oar duty, out c- , ourabundsnre, to supply the wants ef our brethren Id Kansas ? The 20 h ia baa been ' sat spart in siasy of the Slates tjf Hit procla- matrons ol their reaped ive Kxtfcejitf if lor Ilia , Thanksgiving offerings of llrf pvoyhfc As Us Governor of this State. M pm recoiameod that contributions be. toy. As relief of Kanraa, in the iert chrrrrbes of ths Stale on that dsy. -Let ma invoke the eJetvy tu ! call the earnest attention ef their eowrnga-'' ' tios te the wot a of ooarity sns love. Where) 'other suitable arrangionU are aot aol made for tranmaitting eontribtUiona. tiler eaar be forwarded to this Depart meat, whence they wil be promptly seat to the proper autkeri, ties in Kansas for ditlritatioa. ''Blessed are (he merciful ft ther shall oV ' tain mercy.' ' - ' ' Mf( DCNKtiiOyi ' -.. .-' . ,! V .,. . t |
