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-m t -sot -.. - ' .", -" . . .. . "5 YOLUME 22. MOUNT YERNON, OHIO : TUESDAY, JULY 27 1858: NUMBER 14. IS FHI.tHTl KVT.'ar TVKShAT VOOSUTa, DT L. 11 Alll'EIt. Office in Woodward's Bloek, Third Story. TERMS Two Dollars por. anrnirti. payable in ad-iTance: $2.S within six months: $3.0ft after the X-Viration of the jenr. Club of twenty, $l,5t each. -o "- -.. ' ,r- '' BATF.S OF A H T K H T 1 M !l 5 i B j B j B o a o a i a f :r-s . - . n L7 $ c $ $ r. $ p." $ c. $ c. $ c. 1 00 t 25 1 7S 2 23 S 00 3 50 4.50 6 TO . : , . rare. - ,1 75 2 25 3 25 4 25 5 25 6 ftthfr 75 3 00 "3 ?are, - 2 50 3 0 4 50 5 05 00 T 00 9 00 10 4 ifMm, . .1 50 4 00 5 00 C 00 7 00 S 00 10 .1 7ir. rhayt.jrfil.le moutifi, $10.- '-iclfy,.:... .J c'h"i, c 4 M'fahli! ijnifi..,.,,.....' J eo'umK, cAanyerfc'e fnrirtcrlt,. ., 12 .. $ 1 5 ... 15 -.18 J coinmit, rh'tnitetthfe tHfirlrrltf. ., .2.T : I eotitmB. r4i';rafc quarterly, 40 Twelve lines -ef-Mioien. (thi.-t"t.vie) nrecoun-id n a yquare. : Elitoria'itice of avrtiomM." ''r calling - -attention f 1 entorpriffl uitonncii to ni'npnc inoi-" y wa ot c.rporati'ns, will be charged for at the rate of lOcenH per line. fJH" Special nofifes. tStfre mivrrisies. "r tnkins. 'precedence of regular ,alvcrtiseineut.-i, double usual "ratew. ' ' ' .jgp- Xotiis f-vr .meeting, charitable soeiotics, fire "companipf. Ac, b.ilf-nrice. ,-jt-if Marriage notices inserted for 50 H Pentlv '?5 cent?. .unle!! accompanied hy obiturrie, which 'will be charged for nt reenlar advertising rntosi. Adverti(emcnt!diiilayd in larg" type to bo "chariJed one-half tnoi'j than rcptular ru'rs. ff-fr-AU trauieot advertisements to bo paid for in a(lTance; '" Written for the Banner. Lines on the Death ufi. U. !IIc.- r MARY PINKBHTOX. '". In a far distant land en.-hrouded in. clay, . His palo lifeless form in silenco must stay. The frail, beautiful casket to dust muVt reign But the jewel iinmortul in heaven shall hino. ' From father, friends, sisters, a grief-stricken band, . He hasted away to a cold i-tratigcr land; " A trembling farewell to each loved one is givon; Ah! little thoughthe tbey would raoct butinhuavon. His broad noblo brow and his deep flashing eye, : 'Spoke a soul well refined, and an intottect high, And tho tear-drops that trembled . atlown hU polo cheek, ' .. Told deptt of affectioa no languago could speak. Oh ! how oould he leave tho dear friends of his youth? The companions so loved, and the home of hU birth? 'I low leave ihefair'irl w'uose yun heart he hd won t)h ! how could ht leave her till Ion ' ve.ui rolled on? Buthopo hove-red round liiiu, on bright bulmy wins, "Tbo nil vor-toiiguod syren whispered beautiful thius. The song of riuu treasures oa a far western strand, Whera gold dust lies sparkling liut b. iUt gloaiuiu and. - - ' Th Toil of futurity lifts: t his siht Fancy picture a vision, rare, clou lies and bright, Far down through the vijfa of time, he can see A homo of pure beauty," from sorrow all free; Wliero the bride of his he.irt. like an angel of light DitTures a halo of happiness bright; So queehlike her form, and so lovnty her face, Bho seems Ue embodiment of all eartlily grace, "'A few years of toil on- .Pacifi ' far strand. ri.h-Kt treasures from th jlitterifi j j"ari 1, v Then with love undiminished I'll li isto to my hont?, -To my sisters so doar, Uui no :uorj wjil I roam." Vaia dreams, yo havevanishod ! bright hopes ye have Sed ! Tho heart that ye (Tittered is pulseless and- dj.id. The eye that ye firvd with a luster so l;ep. Is now closed forever ia death's dreiluiloss. sleep, "Consumption, dread monster, like a fir?e. cruel thihi; Fr a while havered o'er bivtt, on p ile, djidiy win;, Then serzeJ, where tho w-:ll--jrrii of li'o is rencwui). Aud gorged, like a faloon, on is vietinrswarm blood. Meek, suffi-rin. and pale, ho laid down to die; Jo mother, tin i-ler, t- s-othe him was nij;)i ; Uut sweet comfi.rt be foan 1 in lii'de so prized. For treasures and gold fouud the poarl of jroat price. Now lifeless as roarblo he lies on that -shore; A'ale and silent he rests 'monj the glitterin g- ore; . He sleeps there in peace though his gay hopes Iiayo flown; El Dorado is vaauhed but hoavea is won. . . JlIXOWAT, June 15, 1853, . .. : - Hon - Wri .ten (or the Banner. Written at fht grace of Jior ichonlmalei nf the im - family, who died ncceieely within fuarieeu day. . r v ; IT KM. SLSAMtAH 6. BOOTH. Ti evening's ponsie, lonely honr, , The sweetest of the day. Vfhen zephyrs kiss the closing flower, As fades the sun's last ray. How sweet at eve in thoughtful mood, ' Through solitude to ro:B, TVlrcra BAugUt oa nature's scenes intrude, . And VHt her works alone. Tenia js tear drops freely abed, Os shrub and tree and i twor; t'l Uukl by the lone lepcr' bed, v BeosMtn. this wixxtUnd. bower. - -. . Fi youtaful forms, by death were borno, -fcT this loae resting place, . . -, . With scarce motnent'a warning, torn From weeping friends' embrace. Horn oft beneath thfs halcyon haver, . i childhood have they played; s llew oft when free 'd from ntudy's hoar; . . They from yon school houre strayed. By Cancy'a po-:il dip'd io dreajas, : Their path through life they drew, - " Alas! 'twas tint a meteor's glaum, A transient rainbow hoe. ' 1 ' ' a of Hy to tbU ebnrcb have come-f-i , Vf Hh tiearu oppretl by eart, - - Bat foand relief to Jesas' name. -- v s - , WhUe with His aainu in pmyer. '. Bnt they are gone 1 Should friends lament? " Ad pafat, eease to movrn; -.' They were no yours, aal Uod who lent, v. i l - justly Claim hia own. - ' ' .-' ; -- , - - - - - :.- - - , And widowed airter, brother, too, Ferbid tho Tie -wj sigh; ' - r- Xhoagti lone aod saJ, your way press t hrough, cTo- iae your Hads tm tilghi " Tkj soar beyond those rolling orbs, , deck the. axei of Jilght - . , T - Jlrrayed ia Heavea'a own promised garX t -t - j rrtn ot purejj white. v ." - JJ Jtm They tmlleJ to leave their tender tltt, : 1 To range tho plains or light? - - '-jp - Z'a t'. ''.c-- tlsert of dying cries, ' ' ;X ' ' la t.it tit intraloUsbi.4i 1 ' XL.-a ihej tard met oa that blest shore, 5 They're Jjiaed the holy throng" T. " i -'- -r toils and aaSTerioga er,! - l-irv Z tot. . - ..'J; ?' T 1 ii-7 r"''--: ,. t 1 A 2" t ST 6itial rocfcbings. j i .i i Putsnant o pablic notice, Defecates, repre-sMitlnir' the Democracy of Knox crinnty, met in Cnnvfnlion t the Cmrt House, in the city of Mt. Wrnon, on Monday, July 19th. lHo3. On motion of J times W'throw. E-q., D. C. Moxtgomkuv, Eq., was cho-on President of the Convention. Hon. Jacob Mkrbix, of Derlin township, and Jonv ; Mari.ow. Esq., of Howard township, were chosen Vice '" Presidents.;' and L. II AitPKrt, appointed St?cretry, It was then moved t!.t. n list of the townships lie caUiid over, when th followinsr oreiiile'nenappear-;'! anJ took-their;s ats as ..Delegated, viz: Jt'-Ht-m John S. MoCalmont, Win. Darlinp, A. c. Scott.1 ; ; v -. .-; BiilltrG. C. G i.uMe, G. W, GamMe. ; rrfii'o N. Ilr-diniton. JJjfor i r",.Mrii- A. R,Mihavt, Dr. IL A. ; : jmea Wiihrow Brown Tho? Wale, A!,mzo Barrett, TUos. shair-r. - . x . Howard John Mario, Anlhonj White, Isaac T. !ti'n. ll trritnn Moies W. Si hooler, Jon. McArtor, Moses Dudjeon. Cay Churlei Elliott, John B irss, James Panll. : :i ; ftrrjan -Jol.ii Sollers, Joseph Green, It. S. Tullo.ss. --1 VcatJ.'tf-'Ilobt. Miller, Mirliu Beehtell, John Allen. . College Abner Wade, Elisha McQueen, Ja cob Smth.. ' .Voijro H II. Youn?. I'ifciEUix Shipl'v, D vviil Porch, John Reed. RerUn 3. G. Williams! Johu Uuramel Jacob M'-rri'i, Mnris John Thompson, George Beers, A. Thrift. Jr; Clinton M M. ShipleyT D, C. Montjomery W. C. G i.ston. ' Muter Henry L iverinj," llcnry Knox, Vuleti";-tino Sh ifT.. " X-lf'trd Isiac P. Lirimore. Ml I llthurif Joseph Den mm. Liberty- Christopher WultT, David Bricter, John Koonsmau. Hdiiar John Lyal, James lleadington, 3. A. S.ivda'n. IKijac X. B. Ink. A. Darling. Jamos B ill. On in tion of JaCo' M-trriu . Esq., the de'e-patesj present from each township were author. , Zi to any vacancy in their respective dele g.itions, or to cast the entire vote of a township, in case of a partial repres-titailinii On motiivn of James Wi'hro', Esq.', the dle-gttion from" each township were auihorizcd to appoint one of their niiMther to cona'itute a c6;n m it tee to select DhIc ites to the State Con gressional and Ju licial Cooventions r The Committee thm appointed consisted of the folowiiir ire'lemen. viz: A. 0. Scott. G. W. Gamble. N. 11-idinjrton, James Withrow, .-Thos. Wdi, John M rlow, J01iatha.11 "Mf Artor, John B ss, R. S. Tulloss. Rjbt.. Milb-r, Jacob South, II. II. Yoiin, -David IVjrch, Jacob Ierrin, John Thoinp'!!!, V. C. Gaston, Henry Live:inr, Isa-ti" P. li irimore, J.weph penman,. Christopher W .l.T. J.h.i Lv il. A. B. Ink. ' On n niou of P. V i le, Eq.. the C. invention then proceeded tj uoiuiuatd a DnDcralic County Ticket. " : KOMtVATlOV F.ia ACDIT?It. - - - - The fllo viii jreujein.iii wvm in ninated as candidates for C mtifv Auditor viz: . Jnvph An ken v, Wiiliam Walk' r, S. P. Axu-li. I'll-; lir-t ball it. resulted as foil s: A ! en t ....... 1. . . : . . ........... .. ... ...... 3 ( W;tk-r Tl . VAxudU........ : ..... 7 Jo-i'pb A:i!f-?-nv, ot" II -rl in, havi i a nnj irity of all the votf-s e nf w is d 'e-l ir. 1 th .D-rn'oerat. ie nominee for Aadi'orj and on -iuoti:ti thif uomi-nation was ra i le unanim 'H. - 311 Kit KF. ; - " ' -; . 'The Ioil 'V.vin J jf-iitle-n ;- ?rn no ntaatg 1 for Slieri.r, viz. El.vtrd I!ily, D. C. B -a-h. Joseph Love. Absalom Thrift, David BrudJock, Thomas Wade. ' The balloting was as follows: 1st B wllot. 2d Bal. 3d Bal. :io Riley. ...... Beach ..... Love....... Thrift. .... liraddock. Wade . ... 8 .18 12 . 3 .:io 21 11 1 8 25 On the third B illot, D, C. B -ash of Wayne, having received a majority of U the votes cast was declared duly nominated for Sheriff, and on motion the- nomination was made unanimous. ' PaoSECCTIXG ATTOR.VET, "John Adams, O." 11. Soribner and W. C. Gas ton were placed tu Bominatiou for Piosccnung Attorney." -';"'.."'- V -: The vote was as follows: . Adama... ..:..: ' '.,..'ii... '.... i,44" "" .. Schribi.r..:...Vi.i..;;;i...'.:....;..c.. Gaston.......... ............13 John: Adams, of Clinton, having received a majority of all the votes cast, was declared the nominee, and the nomination wis made unanimous. :r .' ..' ',-. .' ""';.-" COOJTTT COJIJItSSIOXCR.-- Tbe Convention proceeded to ballot for Coon, ty Commissioner. The following- nominations were made: H. II. Youny, C. S. McLain, John Welch, Adam Rinehart, David Porcb, John Uarrod. The vote stoodt ; : " 2t bal. . 2d baL . Yopn?, ..... ...............20 -35 . M. L Uii, .. ...17 18 Welch, ...w....... 9 "i: :"'-i ''--'. ;' .- ttiMeha,:.....wVi..... 8 1- Iv"rc' .; 6 5 "'"-- IIarrod,......v....rt w g ; itff IT, II. Young, of Monroe, wa DOtalnateJ OB th aec'ood ballot, and tbe nomlnaiioti was outde anauimoai ; " ;''"' -: '' --.- -.v. .v'-':-;:- .-CQSOSBsV,;. r-rv::; Dr. 21. Shaw- and .'James Heddtngtott' cre placed in ,iominaton-' for ihar o3ca bf Coroner. Theot stood afaUowi ,w . : : V- ghaw: 1 ' '''."-V '-.? ' - ...j : . .-.. ... .............. . , ... lt--lir . -.r- .i, - rriv.l W'-JJtimiMn, .....a..,., .J r. Dr. M. Shaw, of Berlin wa1 nominated, and tbe nomination made unanimous. DIRECTOR OF IMFIUM ART. John Bricker, and John Lyal were announced as candidates for Director of the County Infirmary. The vote stood: :' -- Bricker........ 43 , . Ly hV, e :.- ' 1 T John Bricker, of Liberty, was duly nominated, and the nomination' was made unanimous. " ' ":-'::" StlUVEVOit. E. W. Cotton, of Clinton, was nominated by acclamation, as the candidate for tbe office of County Surveyor. '- . '' REPORT OF COMUITTKE TO SKT.ECT DKt.KtMTKS. The Committee : to appoint Dleerates to the State, Congressional and Judicial Conventions made the-fifllowlnff reports - ' - ' Dcliafff to Stale Convention. W. C. Gaston, Wm. M-WiMiams, S. T. Critch field, I. P. Laura ore. G. A. Hall, Elie Miller. D leyifei to Congressional Convention. Rob ert Miller, John B l'TS. Thos. Wade, A. Bal. Norton., A. C. Scott, M. W, Schooler, Isaac T. Beam. Joseph Ankeny. W. J, Morion, Benj. B.ll. Saol. tsratl, C. C. 6 amble, John Adams, II. II. Y unjr. . ' . - ." - ' '. ' Delegates to Judicial Convention. G. A. Rfne hart, C. II. Scribner, Wm. Dunbar, Jacob Mer-rin. . ' .- "' - -" ' CEXTRAt, COMMITTEE. J. II. McFarland. Clinton; Robert Miller, Pleasant; ! Wm. McOiiin. Mil ford; A. B. Ink. Wayne; i Jno, S. McCamment. Jackson; James fledinsrfon, IliHiar; John Marlow, Howard; William Beam, Clinton; - : " tTsnal B ill, Morris; " ;, ... - ' " -.'-.-'--' W. C. G iton, Clinton; Thomas Wade, Brown. ; II, n. Youns oflTered for adoption tbe folloa-injr resolution: Resnfrerf. That the deleo-Mes to the Congressional Convention be and they: are hereby in strne'ed hv this roriventron, to oast tbeir votes tor Gen. Joseph Burns, ot Coshocton, as the first choice nf Knox county. Dr. Scott moved to lay tbe resolution upon tbe table. Lost, ; Dr. Scott then moved to strike out the name of Joseph Burns and insert that of Samuel Israel. Lost. ' The original resolution was then passed. On motion it was ordered that the proceedinss be published "in the Demorr if ic" papers, of the county. ? D C. MONTGOMERY, Prest. Jacoh Meuhiv, JoHx Ma auo w. . L.; Harper. Secretary." . J.v, ice Prests. )olilical. . From the Ohio; Democrat. To C. II. MlTCIIENER, E-q ,' Sir: As. Democrats of the 15lb congressional district ot" Oil io. and as citiz.Mis of Tuscarawas county, we lake this method of expressing our preference for you as the next Democratic can-ilidate for Couress,.aud request- that you will oermit the use of your name i this connection, We think, sir, that it isi-b tt risht thatthe Dem ocracy nt this county .should yet have an opportunity of voiinij f'.r tho man for C ingress in whose favor they have so unanimously declared o:i to former occasions in county coiivtiiui-ui, h man, to , whose fi lelity to nuc party and its principles is still worthy of our highest confidence and esteem. .' x . ; ' Very Respectfully, . Your ob'd't serv'ts, 1 -iij toon Ream, - "-"'' - -v a: U le . ;K . - . J liu v alter, - - : M V. R...a.n, ; : li. C. Bla. kUurn, . peter! Forney, Jacob M.z-t, . Philip Mizer,' - . Paul B uy, . G 'orrt S. Smith, Henry Ankneyy -; -"'-- L"vi Travis, . -'.;-V"; O. B iys"-i, - ' . Philiip Zi nmer, . ; E. T. B lXt.-r, : . .-? ' Andrew Creter, ' E. N. Manning, . M.. Hajran James .McCiure. ' ' ' S. B.ers. r: ':: John W. Rvluey, :. R. H. Nujren, -. . ; " ' Thomas Baxter, and others, ; GevtLEME.v : Your request that I aiain offer as a candidate evinces that you have strong faith in the justness of Tuscarawas baviHg Hi candidate, and while I accede to the reqnest. aud thaiik v'ou tor your expression of coiitjJence. lef me say that 1 consider fidelity to the party a duty whicli every democrat owes, and for which he is amply repa.d in the protection the democratic ortrauiza lion gives him in bis freedom. The judgment of- tnaturer years confirms my belief in the opin ion that next to beiuj; a gotxl citizen, it is my duty and that of everyman who desires the per let-uity of this government, to be a democrat.: The principles laid down by Thomas Jefferson and which have become the urticles of the dem. OiTatic faith, ;f carried out nnkes of every dem ocraia good citizen and a supporter of tbe cou-atiiutioii.aud laws of the land. The high character and influence of the democrats whose names are appended to your communication, indueej rae to ass a in e the position of a candidate: sLbject to the approval of the district loiiveution. .Twice already the democratic conveution of Tuscarawas have expressed their preference, and sent vtii delegates to solicit a caw didate licatcd in this couuty, but our modestv in part, and the respect we have for the democracy of the other counties, on each occasion led ds to give our support first to Knox county Th 5t and to Coshocton in 56, rather than press a nomination for this cou nty tin willingly from them. . In so 'doing, atid exhibiting that courtesy to them which ia dae at. all times from . one democrat to anotW, we believed and still believe that they would on the first proper opportunity reciprocate the favor. Had the democrats- of - Tuscarawas acted 'ike the Hubs at the gates of ;R me , rode into camp with the" sculls, xtf slam enemies at tached as trappings to their -"horses, they "niTght have extorted a nomination Va '.56.' Uutvthey wre' not "barbariaes. On" fhe"- cojairary thir wTioTe history demopstrate that ' tliey'are Cbrfsi iiaif deraocrats,"ever reailj to; tiphold the demo. crntTeannef and be'wi'h the foremost ''iw "winning a vietory, and the last io appropriate tfs reV eaduto themselves.--; -Br', their example in 1S56' the democracy were" taught bow to conquer tha 15A'Trict, f- ! rw v. . , example on the part of others may enable the democracy to keep it. s . Passins; to other matters, I deman'l the atten ti'n of the 900(T democrats of this district to the peri's that beset Hi a id ihe duties we owe each one to the other, and all to the great party of our faith, it is of all the parties . that have arisen Oil this continent the only one found capable of maintaining a National reputation, and. uphold uig by its owii own organization the government we- live under, Tke. away to-day its' disci p'iue in National, State, . Couuty and Township orgaiiiz ttioiis, th whole civil fabric of the American-Union would tumble to pieces. Is there a man living among you who believes that the present government could have survived the internal commotions of the last three years, With the republican party in the' place occupied by the democratic part) I Th it parly, - with many good and great "men .in it, contained nevertheless all tbe revolutionary elements that have. so fearfully agitated and alarmed every patriot, and brought us so near the precipice otter which all free governments before ours; have rushed head long. None-but the great democratic array could stay tho avalanche, and though mangled "and torn in the eoiiflict it.did stay it, and we owe this moment all we have of civil and religions. liberty weowe our escape from civil war and bloodshed in every State wo owe our personal freedom and protection of our property all all to the wise counsels of democratic party and Us organization. . But what do we see! Scarcely re covered from their defeat, th rebellious leaders are again gathering their hosts, not for a com biued attack, butfor a guerrilla war upon the democratic party. Only six..years ago they assumed a National platform maintained - the southern States in their domestic institutions adhered to the fugitive si tve law, and were ready to hang u democrat if he chaeged them wi tt' sec. tiotialism. That was a combined attack to wrest tho government from tiia dem ocraey, rmt it failed. Four years later they dropped the South and mado a combined attrfcli to elect a sectional President." It. failed.: Next they male a combined attack to defeat the democracy by sectional legislation; in which they so perilled the govern' meat.. It failed. Iii three pit'-hed battles they have been beaten,- They now betaku themselves to the mountains and propose carrying on the war by lying iu ambush and roliing stones down upon democrats, and crushing them where least expected, while marching to the support of the Union Their scheme is fully developed by the Cincinnati Enquirer as follows:. : "The Sciikmb ur tub ...UtaiJuLTCAX3 to Elect the Next PuKsi hex j ok thk Uniteo States Exposed.--'Wiih'to, the last few days develop ments have been mtvle tSat show the existence of a deep plot upon tho part of the opposition to secure the next President by throwiug the election into the House of Representatives, to be chosen in part ibis fall. It was arranged at Washington, to our certain knowledge, at a meet-in;? of the leading Republican' and "American-editors und : other magnates of tho party, who were present by invitation. D -.spairing of beat ing tho Di'moerajy before the people in 18i6, bv a fair contest upon principle, they have resolved to bend all their energies toward securing the House of.1 Representatives, - which U generally voted for with mt a thought that. )ti addition to its other duties, it may Jiave to elect the President of the United States: " TUr gHme"1s to run Republicans' in Republican districts 'Ameri. cans' in American districts to the South to en conragfj tho running , of bolting Democrats and Independents' in Democratic districts to divide the Democratic -strength and thus elett Rpubli cans. -.and so secure the; I louse to a certainty. "Having o'it lined a'.in-ij itity i-i ihn House..'t'he-oppo-iiiou will fun several candidates for Presi-deiit iii 'put tin? forward iheir sirongest men in each loc iliiy, witli the; sole puroose ot pre venting a choice by the people of 'that office, tn which event the election goes t the llousu. to be elected this fail, which, by their intrigues, previously, they bad carried. This, we know, is their game, arid it-'. explains the '.-.interest' they take iii the Congressional elections so-m to take place. Democrats, tberefiire, should remember that, in' oas rug their ballots for members of Congress this fall, they are electing the men who may, possible choose the next President of the Uuited States. - - ; - '. thisj view of the case the election of a mem ter ot Conjfrrxs !ecoine.s a matter of importance to the whole nation; and onr lriends in the different districts slioul I fully ijndefstanl ihe cou S-'quences that may flow . from their defeat or success on that oSneer, who is, in a certain contingency, a Presidential elector'' By running Hale or Sumner iii the New Eug land Stales, Seward in New York. Cameroii of other reuegades in IVnns I vanla, Chase in Ohio and the west, and a Southern man in the Slave S ates, they hojKj to prevent an f-lectioii of Pres. ideut by the people at large. If thrown intothe House each State would: have one vote without regard to her size or population. , A simple ma jonty 4f Slates wou'd secure the election of a President from among the throe highest candi dates. The defeat of the democtara ibis fall iu" a single congreasi.-nal district iu any one State, may give that - S'ale a majority of Rqiul.licah Congressmen in its delegation, and (hereby carry ibat State for a Republican President in ISCiO, (no matter bow great might be her Democratic maj nty,) and secure his election. The staying away from the polls of a single Democrat in our own or other district in l.So.-s. may. defeat the Democratic candidate in the district; defeat his party in the State delegation, defeat his State in the House of Representatives unl fiually defeat a Democratic President in 18o0, wiib a prospect oi reopening tut tne commotions and strifes ot a slavery agitation more alarming than ever before. unnjiug iu its train dissolution, anarchy and the extinction of the only fre government now upon the face of the earth. - . - . These "are the peri's now menacing the democratic party. They are the perils menacing the whole- people of the; United States, and it behooves us all thatln what we ebaU do, and in what we shall leave undone iu the 'next hundred days, that we do not some . one of us care lessly, br in ' a;' mometit brpassTon ' become the i;it rumen t of defeat to the democratic patty of toe vaioisfor years to come. ' In becoming a candidate it may be expected that I define my position on the difference of opinion between Mr. Douglas and the democrat, ic Administration. I will do so iu as few words as'possible, ,. We all." know that along, with the shows that enter our towns" there are' a number of. side shows, one : offering' to lefe yoa see the auaconda, another frizzly bear, a third a giant, all tor a dime a piece., ..Now. when -I go to the showand notice, these , side tenu, I come to the conclusion that they ail .belong , to the. man that owns the btg caxvass, and that he haiTdivided oflf his curiosities simply to humor tastes, c It so bapp-ens that the democratio part j . now bav a little giant, aud in arrangiug their curiosities it was thought, beat, toput Jiim-in, a tent by farm-self, to show to those: reput4i;ans who co: Id not stand to see all the, democratie giants -at once"; 1,'ain p posel. to deception, and will here pie e myjelf ihat if nominated Jand elected Iill get and the 'old bucVgiant in lbeb:gjerit.'-' " V The reej nt happy settlement br. a dempcratie CoheTess ot the alaviery;agttatioji by the "passage; of Eiigfish's Conference 'Bill remive? that d;S "CultT from the sKu! lers'I ofi the ddlhocratic par. iyr'-Tta end,;:-"' t 'fJr;:n.i ?.ccoiBf!;s5-;?j ters in their own cfiarge, - and framing such or-ganio laws as they desire without interfernce from any quarter. So that democrats have no longer any real differences as to the rne'ans tbey never had; as to the end desired a free State. We are therefore how all Douglas men and all Buchanan men, aud more than either, are all democrats -atandin? on a common plat form. By respecting the. rights and opinions of out fellow democrats as we would oiir own by preserving harmor.y and good feeling in our Conventions, and bringing up the whole strength of the party to the support of the democratic nomfnes by acting in good faith with one an other, and mainfainin? in ail its viof our National -or-ranization, . the Dem'Kcratie partv will prove is iuviucibli? in overcoming the perils of the future, as it has those of the past. Respectfully -'- CHAS. II. MITCIIENLR - July 15, 1833. VERMONT CONVENTIOB". On Friday, July 21. a gang of fanatics lost to all sense of moderation, " virtue' and decency, met in Rutland, Vermont. As theso people are only one remove more extreme than our Ohio fanatics, We copy from our New York exchanges sortte passages from their delirious and disgusting ra-vings, in order that it may appear whither "great numbers of the Black R -publicans are tending. If the leaders of that delusion in Ohio will pe ruse. these extracts, and theti in a contrite spirit resolve to sow no more the sneds of these awful and'disgiisting doings, we may hope to be spared exhibitions of this character in out own State. Otherwise, the disease will have its course, and we shall have all sorts of blasphemy and incontinence opca'y a! vocatel am ing us as it is in Vermont. Abolitionism, or fanatical Black R'j publicanism, which are. synonymous, is the root from which ihesa banefjl plants plentifully spring. Statesman. A few o f the Resolutions offered slavery. Resolved, That Slavery is a wrong' which no power in the Universe can make right; therefore any law, constitution) court; of government, any church, priesthood, creed or Bible, any Christ or any God, that by silence or oiherwise,'authorizei man to enslave man, merits the scorn, and contempt of mankind. V The SihbaM. ' . Whareas, Tho Jewish Sabbath is confessedly abolished by the Go? pel Dispensation; and : Whereas, Tho same authority sets apart no other day to be similarly observed, therefore Resolocd, That all efforts of church and priests to enforce our "objervahce of. the Christ in Sab bath, as of Divine appointment, is a flagrant vi olatioa of individual risrht, and. must be prosecuted in a dishonest disregard of the spirit and positive teachings of the New Testameut . The liible. '" -,-.;": . Resolved, That nothing is'true or right, and nothing is false or wrong, because it is sanctioned or condemned by tho Bible; therefore the Bible- is po werless. to prove any doctrine to be true, or any practice to be riglit, and it should never be quoted for that purpose.-Religious Worship. Resolved, That the time and devotion Spent in teligious services can confer ho benefit on an Infinite and Independent Power, aud can therefore be of no virtue. . Maternity. -. Itesoloe That the sacred and important right of woman is her right, to decide for herself bow ofien, and under what circumstances, the .shall resume the responsibility and be subject to the sufferings and carei of maternity; and man can commit no greater crime against his child, again3t society, ai.d against humanity, than to impose on her a.maternity whose responsibility and suffering she is not wiMing to accept aud endure.; . - , '. Mrs. Branch on Free Loot. .; - Mrs. Julia Branch, a, pretty young woman from New York, not yet thirty years of age, thusex-preSsed-JierseTf wiib rejrard to marriage and the maternal relations, in the course of a long speech whjch see med especially satisfactory to her hearers: ,..,'..- :' ; - .. - -'-.,-' " Woman must strike theF blow iF she would be free and become the equal of man. Yoa speak of her right to labor her fight to teach her right to vote, and lastly, though not least, her right to get married; but do you say anything about her right to loos token she wilt, where she trill, and h-jw hs will? - , Byroacur3ed his m.ither for his deformed feet; and there are thousands and ; thousands of children cursing the sacred name of mother for their deformed mental and moral conditions. I , Mrs. Gage, Mrs. Rose, Mr. Wright, and others, j go back to the mother's influence, and go a step further back, and say il is the marriage insiitu-turn thai is at fault. . It is ih$ binding marriage j eertmonyihai keeps woman degraded in mental and moral slavery, She must demand her free dom her right to receive the equal-wages of man for dier- labor hc. right to bear children when she will and by ' whom sht will. , s I believe i a the aVoiute freedom of the afTac-tions, and that it is woman's iPrivUege, eje her right to aceept or refuse Jtny Iov that comes to beeiShe should betki ruling powtr in all mat 4ert of' loo, and when her love has died oat for the man who has taken her to his heart, she is living k lia" to herself, her own nature, and to him, if she cootiaue to bold aa intimate relation with him. 1 ' : -4 ' V : . - , . , 4. !..', -. - it - - - ?-.;-':,- ;.;:." What is marriage?, ; Is -it the linking together of twolovinghearjsia holj,;sacred ooiou? Nol TbW is seldom tba easa when compared to the many ihousanda epon thoasaad of narriages of 'coavenience.'n.VomeQ ara bought are paid for, as the negro;.. sla is. . She ja estimated - aa a thing f barter, for 'man cottots tbe cost of bis intended wife as deliberateljas if he thought of keeping a cow, si dogv or a pig-i i : :i : M may ' t ave ' taken '.-an ex tre me question but" cutj crcr'tay''swa. side of the as uy oipi, definite form, statiag what conjugal lofe is, and to how few or how many an isolated household may be limited to. I will read a resolution that I think would bear more directly on the mar riage question: .. - Resolved) That the atavery and degradation of woman proceeds from the institution of marriage, that by the marriage contract she loses the control of her name, her person, her proper ty, her labor, her affections, her children and her freedom. What an Ohio Gentleman thinks of Marriage. Jiel Tiffany of Ohio,; indulged in some .very plaiu spoken remarks. He thought that the people didn't properly distinguish between love and lust, and that "free love" was but another name for free lust: - Men marry wivos thathey may be of use to them, and after marriage, when a man finds that she is not perhaps so useful as he expected, and his ardent love evaporates, he regards his wife too much as a thing of pur chase, as he would a horse or an ass. The women look upon the men in the-same light, and make a- calculation beforehand of what wc a husband is to be to her. Thus marriage be. comes a matter of bargain and salej Men and women are not married in a true sense. This is what the marriage relation undoubtedly is, and yet the Community uphold the system. Such a union of love, but of lust. When a man finds in a woman all that his soul yearns for and when a woman finds a man who is the full embodiment of all her desires, if that man and woman unite under those conditions, then they are truly married. . : The Freest rj Tret Lovers. Mr, Thomas Curtiss, a young and ardent gentle man ft'em Pennsylvania, expressed his sentiments. They were ratherer btarlling. He said, after some preliminaries: Our friends Mrs. Rose and Mrs. Gage have told you that they ar married. - So. am I although I have not been married twenty yeats as - they have been. . I " married myself to my wife, and she married herself to me; upon the express understanding, not that God sanctified it-r-we did not want God in the matter not that it was sanctified by magistrate or priest, be-causo we cast that idea, aside, as none of their business but because we saw we could in marriage better fulfil our highest and best use, and cay our happiness to the fullest extent, When we were married, we expressed that sentiment; and when we agree to separate we shall accom. plish that separation without the help of Ood, or priest, or magistrate. We don't want the consent of either of the three. ,, We do not want to bo united because God unites us; and we will hot be separated because God separates us. We wilt act apon our own judgment and opinions eacn. respecting tbe impressions, not what I state, nor what she states, but the impressions which are for both, and which are the common property of. alt, and, as such, to be nsed by men and women. ; Horrible blxsphbmt. In the discussion of the Slavery .qnestion which followed that on. Free Love, Mr. Curtis made his second appearance. He. quoted that resolutton which declares that "any Christ or any God that, by silent-e or otherwise, author ues man to enslave man, merits the scorn awl contempt of mankind." Curtis inquired "who was this God that people talked about? If he was the all powerful being he wis represented to be, why don't he go down South and put down Slavery? He desired to ask this plum ply now is it that you don't do your duty ? . With what consistency could : men worship this God. whom they considered all powerful when he neg-Iccted to exercise his power for the extinction of Slavery?" Henry C. Wright observed that, rather than give up one of his children to slavery, in order to save the Union, he would ''sec the Union d d to everlasting d J." Emphatic! $n(crc5fhig .uictir. The Coricubinae of the Plaio. . Not aloxxe- in Utah, nor nmoDghe Mormonr do the passions of men enslave and degrade the one sex, and barbarize the other. - .. ; An intelligent writer in the train of the peace commissioners Mate that tho system , of buying and - selling Iu Jian women is . carriod on all along the Plains, among the traders and frontiersmen, as a Tegular, established practice.. Almost every hile man along this route has an Indian concubine, purchased, in the case of joung and beautiful equaws, at as high aprica as three or four horses, though old and ngly ones may bo had at a much, less cost. Once sold to the white men. ber-iodian - relative renounce all further interest in her, and not. merely her per son but her life is at the disposal of her owner. When a white man: gets tired of lis slave, he ships her of? and gets .another. .The children of these unions are totally neglected by the father, and grow p as they may under the care of thr mothers.. At all the , forts , along this route, the young . officers, settlers,- and all that can afford it, keep their squaws. Si. . Louis JVetes. '..--.' r-..TV ' .-- ".-- . ... ' -"- Terrible ; Accident ' from " a Zlowinff Ma-... , chins. ! - A yoonjj man. named Healy, residing jn Fal- aington, Bucks county, Pa. was almost ins medr ately killed a day or two since,, by a mowing machiaei which was operating, It. appears' that something had got wrong with tbe knives, io attempting lo fix which, Mr. Ilealy sat dpwn in front of them. The machine.; was in gear at tho time, and something occuriog which started the horses,; the nnfbrtanate man was literally cat.to pieces in isvn instant. .-..Both. of bis legs wera cut elf above the tnees. After the tsach tne bad, pass64..over, hta.ha. cried. ttrtt'-'-, -which called lh attsation of a boy wor' ia nnthar nart eF sthe f!eldj The-b an"fhr bp?n. but before1 a'ay had arrived the tinrortuoa. man red: The doctor, with equal candor an I c . lesy was aead.?. TO tnVcnina ir cr.e that tad been! rented tLItra.perr.aly.iinmaterisd- t V.x ta t;s u U3 .; U.-i jciri. i .a - Judge Lyncli in Indiana. A liaa Tarrci and Feathered. A married man named Coons, who is respectably connected, was tarred and feathered on the nightof the Gth inst., at CrawfordsvUle, Indiana. The Lafayette Courier of the 7th, has the follow-ing particulars: ;";'";- . It seems that the gay LDtharo has been in correspondence, for some months past, with a re-spectable young lady of that town, and had pro posed an elopement, to which she consented. Uf arrangement, the deluded girl was to go to Lade ga, on the pretence of visiting some rclatires, and he was io follow tho next day, aad joining there, leave together on the first train, for. the South. Accordingly, on Monday she went down to Sadega, and was followed yesterday morning by tbe gay deceiver. In the meantime the people of CrawfordsvUle had got wind of the affair, an informaP meeting of fifty, or more citizens was held, and a committee of five resolute men "appointed, with instructions to proceed atones to Ladoga and take Coons into custody. The committee left on the evening train, and arriving at Ladoga, captured him and brought him back ou the 10 o'clock train last night.-They were met at the depot by a .large crowd of citizens, and the guilty wretch was escorted to, the court house, which had been lighted cp for the occasion. Judge Lynch organized hi j cour, and Mr. Coons was put upon his trial. Eighteen love letters over his signature, and addressed to jhe young lady whom he bad sought to victimize, wero produced and read to the multitude. No other-evieence was needed, mid after a few speeches bad been made by prominent citizens! the lights were suddenly extinguished Coosa caught and dragged to tho court 'house yard every stitch of clothing torn from his back, a bucket of warm tar poured over his head, and a bag of feathers artistically applied. ":..." y A morodiideous looking object, eays oar informant, cannot be imagined. He was coated from head to heels. The committee took him in charge and escorted him to tha outskirts of tho town,-where they humanely provided him with a suit cf clolhing, and by a vigorous application of soft" soap and lard removed the tar and feathers. He was placed aboard the train for this city to day, and leaves by the Valley road lo night , for Coli-fornta.Highly Important from Utah Peace Ds-. clared Mormons .Evacuating the City. From tho St. Joseph Oazcttc, Sth. In tho. afternoon cf yesterday, 7th instant, the Salt Lake mail arrived in this city, for the list time direct from Salt Lake City, it having heretofore come from Fort Scott. We aro indebted to Mr. George W. Clayton, the gentlemanly conductor of the mail, for highly Important intelligence. .'". - The mail left Salt Lake City on Saturday, 19th of June. The Peace Commissioners, Messrs. Powell and McCullough, had arrived safely. Young acd the rest of the Mormons, wiih the ax.-ceplion of some forty or fifty, had evacuated the city and gone south to Provo. . Tho city looked, almost completely deserted. Peacn had beet; agreed upon, but on what terms - our iuformaut was unable to Iiarn. On the 20th, the mail party met Co!. Johnston and bis commond at Echo Canon, about ten miles this s:do of Weber river. The command was stretched oat on the road Jot . more than a mile in length ;' met Gen. Harney and comnranJ encamped just beyond Fort Laramie. Col, May and command 33 miles this side of Laramie; met a large body of infantry at Ash Hollow. Major Emery was encamped on the Big Bine; met an other command at Fort Kearney. The mail par ty encountered heavy rains on South Platte, about 40 miles beyond Fort Kearney ; bad to swim the Platte. The Weber river was also very hi;rh. The gras, the entire route, was lumriaut, and never before know to be so good. The Sioux Indians were scattered all along the rotltt?, but friendly; met largo trains cf prot ision wagons from Plattee river this way, all proctessing finely. Going put pn the 1st of June, the party encountered a Bevcre snow storm, and a heavy snow fell at Fort Bridgeron the lO'.h of June. Extraordinary Eirth. It is statod , by liurdock that the . wife of a countryman in the Moscow district, Russia, had given birth to sixty nine children at twenty seven -.confinements four times r four 'at ot. birth, seven times three, and sixteen times twins. In the year 1809, the Vienna, newspapers cou tai wjJ the. following announcement:: - Maria Ann Helen, the wife of a poor lioeir weaver in Neufercbenfeld. twenty ! years mar-, ried, bora at eleven confinements thirty-two. children twenty-eight. living and v tbar dead;, twenty-six were males and six female?; all werd begotten by Abe man, and nursed by herself. She had at her last confinement three children; one living and two dead. Her husband was a twin, she herself ono of four. Her mother bad twenty .three children and died during a coo-r finement with twins. Tbe greatest number children ever produced at one birth appear to. have been six, all of? whbaa were boy, and dead. Tho woman who g-ave birth to then bad . been twice married, and had already given birtV to forty four children; daring her firot marriag , which lasted twenty-two yevs, h4 bore twenty seven boys and threa- girls; io her seeqnd marriage, which lasted three years, !ie bore fourteen children three at the. first, five at the second, and six at the third confinement. - - EiRtT Itisrsq. I bold that it is not natural. AVitb men, as with pcas,'eaxly risioj u aS a mar-' ter of forcing. ,,.,.-.. .,- : '--,-. - - 0L9 Maid Wbat! nine-months old and cct wall jet! "Why; wbea I. wa a oaby, I went alone, at"six- oontbxi . Tonnjindignant tao;Ler Ci'O "And the been coaABversiace- , ,.. ""T . .- Teo HtCYwiex. wm abosf tdCirry .Jr. riohnson; she "told bim, with thagreatest t&z lUuhs Lad oca aa ancle who was bang- - wu.. At
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1858-07-27 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1858-07-27 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1858-07-27, Vol. 22, No. 14 |
| 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: 00000000003 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 7935.15KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0074 |
| File Size | 7935.15KB |
| Full Text | -m t -sot -.. - ' .", -" . . .. . "5 YOLUME 22. MOUNT YERNON, OHIO : TUESDAY, JULY 27 1858: NUMBER 14. IS FHI.tHTl KVT.'ar TVKShAT VOOSUTa, DT L. 11 Alll'EIt. Office in Woodward's Bloek, Third Story. TERMS Two Dollars por. anrnirti. payable in ad-iTance: $2.S within six months: $3.0ft after the X-Viration of the jenr. Club of twenty, $l,5t each. -o "- -.. ' ,r- '' BATF.S OF A H T K H T 1 M !l 5 i B j B j B o a o a i a f :r-s . - . n L7 $ c $ $ r. $ p." $ c. $ c. $ c. 1 00 t 25 1 7S 2 23 S 00 3 50 4.50 6 TO . : , . rare. - ,1 75 2 25 3 25 4 25 5 25 6 ftthfr 75 3 00 "3 ?are, - 2 50 3 0 4 50 5 05 00 T 00 9 00 10 4 ifMm, . .1 50 4 00 5 00 C 00 7 00 S 00 10 .1 7ir. rhayt.jrfil.le moutifi, $10.- '-iclfy,.:... .J c'h"i, c 4 M'fahli! ijnifi..,.,,.....' J eo'umK, cAanyerfc'e fnrirtcrlt,. ., 12 .. $ 1 5 ... 15 -.18 J coinmit, rh'tnitetthfe tHfirlrrltf. ., .2.T : I eotitmB. r4i';rafc quarterly, 40 Twelve lines -ef-Mioien. (thi.-t"t.vie) nrecoun-id n a yquare. : Elitoria'itice of avrtiomM." ''r calling - -attention f 1 entorpriffl uitonncii to ni'npnc inoi-" y wa ot c.rporati'ns, will be charged for at the rate of lOcenH per line. fJH" Special nofifes. tStfre mivrrisies. "r tnkins. 'precedence of regular ,alvcrtiseineut.-i, double usual "ratew. ' ' ' .jgp- Xotiis f-vr .meeting, charitable soeiotics, fire "companipf. Ac, b.ilf-nrice. ,-jt-if Marriage notices inserted for 50 H Pentlv '?5 cent?. .unle!! accompanied hy obiturrie, which 'will be charged for nt reenlar advertising rntosi. Adverti(emcnt!diiilayd in larg" type to bo "chariJed one-half tnoi'j than rcptular ru'rs. ff-fr-AU trauieot advertisements to bo paid for in a(lTance; '" Written for the Banner. Lines on the Death ufi. U. !IIc.- r MARY PINKBHTOX. '". In a far distant land en.-hrouded in. clay, . His palo lifeless form in silenco must stay. The frail, beautiful casket to dust muVt reign But the jewel iinmortul in heaven shall hino. ' From father, friends, sisters, a grief-stricken band, . He hasted away to a cold i-tratigcr land; " A trembling farewell to each loved one is givon; Ah! little thoughthe tbey would raoct butinhuavon. His broad noblo brow and his deep flashing eye, : 'Spoke a soul well refined, and an intottect high, And tho tear-drops that trembled . atlown hU polo cheek, ' .. Told deptt of affectioa no languago could speak. Oh ! how oould he leave tho dear friends of his youth? The companions so loved, and the home of hU birth? 'I low leave ihefair'irl w'uose yun heart he hd won t)h ! how could ht leave her till Ion ' ve.ui rolled on? Buthopo hove-red round liiiu, on bright bulmy wins, "Tbo nil vor-toiiguod syren whispered beautiful thius. The song of riuu treasures oa a far western strand, Whera gold dust lies sparkling liut b. iUt gloaiuiu and. - - ' Th Toil of futurity lifts: t his siht Fancy picture a vision, rare, clou lies and bright, Far down through the vijfa of time, he can see A homo of pure beauty" from sorrow all free; Wliero the bride of his he.irt. like an angel of light DitTures a halo of happiness bright; So queehlike her form, and so lovnty her face, Bho seems Ue embodiment of all eartlily grace, "'A few years of toil on- .Pacifi ' far strand. ri.h-Kt treasures from th jlitterifi j j"ari 1, v Then with love undiminished I'll li isto to my hont?, -To my sisters so doar, Uui no :uorj wjil I roam." Vaia dreams, yo havevanishod ! bright hopes ye have Sed ! Tho heart that ye (Tittered is pulseless and- dj.id. The eye that ye firvd with a luster so l;ep. Is now closed forever ia death's dreiluiloss. sleep, "Consumption, dread monster, like a fir?e. cruel thihi; Fr a while havered o'er bivtt, on p ile, djidiy win;, Then serzeJ, where tho w-:ll--jrrii of li'o is rencwui). Aud gorged, like a faloon, on is vietinrswarm blood. Meek, suffi-rin. and pale, ho laid down to die; Jo mother, tin i-ler, t- s-othe him was nij;)i ; Uut sweet comfi.rt be foan 1 in lii'de so prized. For treasures and gold fouud the poarl of jroat price. Now lifeless as roarblo he lies on that -shore; A'ale and silent he rests 'monj the glitterin g- ore; . He sleeps there in peace though his gay hopes Iiayo flown; El Dorado is vaauhed but hoavea is won. . . JlIXOWAT, June 15, 1853, . .. : - Hon - Wri .ten (or the Banner. Written at fht grace of Jior ichonlmalei nf the im - family, who died ncceieely within fuarieeu day. . r v ; IT KM. SLSAMtAH 6. BOOTH. Ti evening's ponsie, lonely honr, , The sweetest of the day. Vfhen zephyrs kiss the closing flower, As fades the sun's last ray. How sweet at eve in thoughtful mood, ' Through solitude to ro:B, TVlrcra BAugUt oa nature's scenes intrude, . And VHt her works alone. Tenia js tear drops freely abed, Os shrub and tree and i twor; t'l Uukl by the lone lepcr' bed, v BeosMtn. this wixxtUnd. bower. - -. . Fi youtaful forms, by death were borno, -fcT this loae resting place, . . -, . With scarce motnent'a warning, torn From weeping friends' embrace. Horn oft beneath thfs halcyon haver, . i childhood have they played; s llew oft when free 'd from ntudy's hoar; . . They from yon school houre strayed. By Cancy'a po-:il dip'd io dreajas, : Their path through life they drew, - " Alas! 'twas tint a meteor's glaum, A transient rainbow hoe. ' 1 ' ' a of Hy to tbU ebnrcb have come-f-i , Vf Hh tiearu oppretl by eart, - - Bat foand relief to Jesas' name. -- v s - , WhUe with His aainu in pmyer. '. Bnt they are gone 1 Should friends lament? " Ad pafat, eease to movrn; -.' They were no yours, aal Uod who lent, v. i l - justly Claim hia own. - ' ' .-' ; -- , - - - - - :.- - - , And widowed airter, brother, too, Ferbid tho Tie -wj sigh; ' - r- Xhoagti lone aod saJ, your way press t hrough, cTo- iae your Hads tm tilghi " Tkj soar beyond those rolling orbs, , deck the. axei of Jilght - . , T - Jlrrayed ia Heavea'a own promised garX t -t - j rrtn ot purejj white. v ." - JJ Jtm They tmlleJ to leave their tender tltt, : 1 To range tho plains or light? - - '-jp - Z'a t'. ''.c-- tlsert of dying cries, ' ' ;X ' ' la t.it tit intraloUsbi.4i 1 ' XL.-a ihej tard met oa that blest shore, 5 They're Jjiaed the holy throng" T. " i -'- -r toils and aaSTerioga er,! - l-irv Z tot. . - ..'J; ?' T 1 ii-7 r"''--: ,. t 1 A 2" t ST 6itial rocfcbings. j i .i i Putsnant o pablic notice, Defecates, repre-sMitlnir' the Democracy of Knox crinnty, met in Cnnvfnlion t the Cmrt House, in the city of Mt. Wrnon, on Monday, July 19th. lHo3. On motion of J times W'throw. E-q., D. C. Moxtgomkuv, Eq., was cho-on President of the Convention. Hon. Jacob Mkrbix, of Derlin township, and Jonv ; Mari.ow. Esq., of Howard township, were chosen Vice '" Presidents.;' and L. II AitPKrt, appointed St?cretry, It was then moved t!.t. n list of the townships lie caUiid over, when th followinsr oreiiile'nenappear-;'! anJ took-their;s ats as ..Delegated, viz: Jt'-Ht-m John S. MoCalmont, Win. Darlinp, A. c. Scott.1 ; ; v -. .-; BiilltrG. C. G i.uMe, G. W, GamMe. ; rrfii'o N. Ilr-diniton. JJjfor i r",.Mrii- A. R,Mihavt, Dr. IL A. ; : jmea Wiihrow Brown Tho? Wale, A!,mzo Barrett, TUos. shair-r. - . x . Howard John Mario, Anlhonj White, Isaac T. !ti'n. ll trritnn Moies W. Si hooler, Jon. McArtor, Moses Dudjeon. Cay Churlei Elliott, John B irss, James Panll. : :i ; ftrrjan -Jol.ii Sollers, Joseph Green, It. S. Tullo.ss. --1 VcatJ.'tf-'Ilobt. Miller, Mirliu Beehtell, John Allen. . College Abner Wade, Elisha McQueen, Ja cob Smth.. ' .Voijro H II. Youn?. I'ifciEUix Shipl'v, D vviil Porch, John Reed. RerUn 3. G. Williams! Johu Uuramel Jacob M'-rri'i, Mnris John Thompson, George Beers, A. Thrift. Jr; Clinton M M. ShipleyT D, C. Montjomery W. C. G i.ston. ' Muter Henry L iverinj" llcnry Knox, Vuleti";-tino Sh ifT.. " X-lf'trd Isiac P. Lirimore. Ml I llthurif Joseph Den mm. Liberty- Christopher WultT, David Bricter, John Koonsmau. Hdiiar John Lyal, James lleadington, 3. A. S.ivda'n. IKijac X. B. Ink. A. Darling. Jamos B ill. On in tion of JaCo' M-trriu . Esq., the de'e-patesj present from each township were author. , Zi to any vacancy in their respective dele g.itions, or to cast the entire vote of a township, in case of a partial repres-titailinii On motiivn of James Wi'hro', Esq.', the dle-gttion from" each township were auihorizcd to appoint one of their niiMther to cona'itute a c6;n m it tee to select DhIc ites to the State Con gressional and Ju licial Cooventions r The Committee thm appointed consisted of the folowiiir ire'lemen. viz: A. 0. Scott. G. W. Gamble. N. 11-idinjrton, James Withrow, .-Thos. Wdi, John M rlow, J01iatha.11 "Mf Artor, John B ss, R. S. Tulloss. Rjbt.. Milb-r, Jacob South, II. II. Yoiin, -David IVjrch, Jacob Ierrin, John Thoinp'!!!, V. C. Gaston, Henry Live:inr, Isa-ti" P. li irimore, J.weph penman,. Christopher W .l.T. J.h.i Lv il. A. B. Ink. ' On n niou of P. V i le, Eq.. the C. invention then proceeded tj uoiuiuatd a DnDcralic County Ticket. " : KOMtVATlOV F.ia ACDIT?It. - - - - The fllo viii jreujein.iii wvm in ninated as candidates for C mtifv Auditor viz: . Jnvph An ken v, Wiiliam Walk' r, S. P. Axu-li. I'll-; lir-t ball it. resulted as foil s: A ! en t ....... 1. . . : . . ........... .. ... ...... 3 ( W;tk-r Tl . VAxudU........ : ..... 7 Jo-i'pb A:i!f-?-nv, ot" II -rl in, havi i a nnj irity of all the votf-s e nf w is d 'e-l ir. 1 th .D-rn'oerat. ie nominee for Aadi'orj and on -iuoti:ti thif uomi-nation was ra i le unanim 'H. - 311 Kit KF. ; - " ' -; . 'The Ioil 'V.vin J jf-iitle-n ;- ?rn no ntaatg 1 for Slieri.r, viz. El.vtrd I!ily, D. C. B -a-h. Joseph Love. Absalom Thrift, David BrudJock, Thomas Wade. ' The balloting was as follows: 1st B wllot. 2d Bal. 3d Bal. :io Riley. ...... Beach ..... Love....... Thrift. .... liraddock. Wade . ... 8 .18 12 . 3 .:io 21 11 1 8 25 On the third B illot, D, C. B -ash of Wayne, having received a majority of U the votes cast was declared duly nominated for Sheriff, and on motion the- nomination was made unanimous. ' PaoSECCTIXG ATTOR.VET, "John Adams, O." 11. Soribner and W. C. Gas ton were placed tu Bominatiou for Piosccnung Attorney." -';"'.."'- V -: The vote was as follows: . Adama... ..:..: ' '.,..'ii... '.... i,44" "" .. Schribi.r..:...Vi.i..;;;i...'.:....;..c.. Gaston.......... ............13 John: Adams, of Clinton, having received a majority of all the votes cast, was declared the nominee, and the nomination wis made unanimous. :r .' ..' ',-. .' ""';.-" COOJTTT COJIJItSSIOXCR.-- Tbe Convention proceeded to ballot for Coon, ty Commissioner. The following- nominations were made: H. II. Youny, C. S. McLain, John Welch, Adam Rinehart, David Porcb, John Uarrod. The vote stoodt ; : " 2t bal. . 2d baL . Yopn?, ..... ...............20 -35 . M. L Uii, .. ...17 18 Welch, ...w....... 9 "i: :"'-i ''--'. ;' .- ttiMeha,:.....wVi..... 8 1- Iv"rc' .; 6 5 "'"-- IIarrod,......v....rt w g ; itff IT, II. Young, of Monroe, wa DOtalnateJ OB th aec'ood ballot, and tbe nomlnaiioti was outde anauimoai ; " ;''"' -: '' --.- -.v. .v'-':-;:- .-CQSOSBsV,;. r-rv::; Dr. 21. Shaw- and .'James Heddtngtott' cre placed in ,iominaton-' for ihar o3ca bf Coroner. Theot stood afaUowi ,w . : : V- ghaw: 1 ' '''."-V '-.? ' - ...j : . .-.. ... .............. . , ... lt--lir . -.r- .i, - rriv.l W'-JJtimiMn, .....a..,., .J r. Dr. M. Shaw, of Berlin wa1 nominated, and tbe nomination made unanimous. DIRECTOR OF IMFIUM ART. John Bricker, and John Lyal were announced as candidates for Director of the County Infirmary. The vote stood: :' -- Bricker........ 43 , . Ly hV, e :.- ' 1 T John Bricker, of Liberty, was duly nominated, and the nomination' was made unanimous. " ' ":-'::" StlUVEVOit. E. W. Cotton, of Clinton, was nominated by acclamation, as the candidate for tbe office of County Surveyor. '- . '' REPORT OF COMUITTKE TO SKT.ECT DKt.KtMTKS. The Committee : to appoint Dleerates to the State, Congressional and Judicial Conventions made the-fifllowlnff reports - ' - ' Dcliafff to Stale Convention. W. C. Gaston, Wm. M-WiMiams, S. T. Critch field, I. P. Laura ore. G. A. Hall, Elie Miller. D leyifei to Congressional Convention. Rob ert Miller, John B l'TS. Thos. Wade, A. Bal. Norton., A. C. Scott, M. W, Schooler, Isaac T. Beam. Joseph Ankeny. W. J, Morion, Benj. B.ll. Saol. tsratl, C. C. 6 amble, John Adams, II. II. Y unjr. . ' . - ." - ' '. ' Delegates to Judicial Convention. G. A. Rfne hart, C. II. Scribner, Wm. Dunbar, Jacob Mer-rin. . ' .- "' - -" ' CEXTRAt, COMMITTEE. J. II. McFarland. Clinton; Robert Miller, Pleasant; ! Wm. McOiiin. Mil ford; A. B. Ink. Wayne; i Jno, S. McCamment. Jackson; James fledinsrfon, IliHiar; John Marlow, Howard; William Beam, Clinton; - : " tTsnal B ill, Morris; " ;, ... - ' " -.'-.-'--' W. C. G iton, Clinton; Thomas Wade, Brown. ; II, n. Youns oflTered for adoption tbe folloa-injr resolution: Resnfrerf. That the deleo-Mes to the Congressional Convention be and they: are hereby in strne'ed hv this roriventron, to oast tbeir votes tor Gen. Joseph Burns, ot Coshocton, as the first choice nf Knox county. Dr. Scott moved to lay tbe resolution upon tbe table. Lost, ; Dr. Scott then moved to strike out the name of Joseph Burns and insert that of Samuel Israel. Lost. ' The original resolution was then passed. On motion it was ordered that the proceedinss be published "in the Demorr if ic" papers, of the county. ? D C. MONTGOMERY, Prest. Jacoh Meuhiv, JoHx Ma auo w. . L.; Harper. Secretary." . J.v, ice Prests. )olilical. . From the Ohio; Democrat. To C. II. MlTCIIENER, E-q ,' Sir: As. Democrats of the 15lb congressional district ot" Oil io. and as citiz.Mis of Tuscarawas county, we lake this method of expressing our preference for you as the next Democratic can-ilidate for Couress,.aud request- that you will oermit the use of your name i this connection, We think, sir, that it isi-b tt risht thatthe Dem ocracy nt this county .should yet have an opportunity of voiinij f'.r tho man for C ingress in whose favor they have so unanimously declared o:i to former occasions in county coiivtiiui-ui, h man, to , whose fi lelity to nuc party and its principles is still worthy of our highest confidence and esteem. .' x . ; ' Very Respectfully, . Your ob'd't serv'ts, 1 -iij toon Ream, - "-"'' - -v a: U le . ;K . - . J liu v alter, - - : M V. R...a.n, ; : li. C. Bla. kUurn, . peter! Forney, Jacob M.z-t, . Philip Mizer,' - . Paul B uy, . G 'orrt S. Smith, Henry Ankneyy -; -"'-- L"vi Travis, . -'.;-V"; O. B iys"-i, - ' . Philiip Zi nmer, . ; E. T. B lXt.-r, : . .-? ' Andrew Creter, ' E. N. Manning, . M.. Hajran James .McCiure. ' ' ' S. B.ers. r: ':: John W. Rvluey, :. R. H. Nujren, -. . ; " ' Thomas Baxter, and others, ; GevtLEME.v : Your request that I aiain offer as a candidate evinces that you have strong faith in the justness of Tuscarawas baviHg Hi candidate, and while I accede to the reqnest. aud thaiik v'ou tor your expression of coiitjJence. lef me say that 1 consider fidelity to the party a duty whicli every democrat owes, and for which he is amply repa.d in the protection the democratic ortrauiza lion gives him in bis freedom. The judgment of- tnaturer years confirms my belief in the opin ion that next to beiuj; a gotxl citizen, it is my duty and that of everyman who desires the per let-uity of this government, to be a democrat.: The principles laid down by Thomas Jefferson and which have become the urticles of the dem. OiTatic faith, ;f carried out nnkes of every dem ocraia good citizen and a supporter of tbe cou-atiiutioii.aud laws of the land. The high character and influence of the democrats whose names are appended to your communication, indueej rae to ass a in e the position of a candidate: sLbject to the approval of the district loiiveution. .Twice already the democratic conveution of Tuscarawas have expressed their preference, and sent vtii delegates to solicit a caw didate licatcd in this couuty, but our modestv in part, and the respect we have for the democracy of the other counties, on each occasion led ds to give our support first to Knox county Th 5t and to Coshocton in 56, rather than press a nomination for this cou nty tin willingly from them. . In so 'doing, atid exhibiting that courtesy to them which ia dae at. all times from . one democrat to anotW, we believed and still believe that they would on the first proper opportunity reciprocate the favor. Had the democrats- of - Tuscarawas acted 'ike the Hubs at the gates of ;R me , rode into camp with the" sculls, xtf slam enemies at tached as trappings to their -"horses, they "niTght have extorted a nomination Va '.56.' Uutvthey wre' not "barbariaes. On" fhe"- cojairary thir wTioTe history demopstrate that ' tliey'are Cbrfsi iiaif deraocrats"ever reailj to; tiphold the demo. crntTeannef and be'wi'h the foremost ''iw "winning a vietory, and the last io appropriate tfs reV eaduto themselves.--; -Br', their example in 1S56' the democracy were" taught bow to conquer tha 15A'Trict, f- ! rw v. . , example on the part of others may enable the democracy to keep it. s . Passins; to other matters, I deman'l the atten ti'n of the 900(T democrats of this district to the peri's that beset Hi a id ihe duties we owe each one to the other, and all to the great party of our faith, it is of all the parties . that have arisen Oil this continent the only one found capable of maintaining a National reputation, and. uphold uig by its owii own organization the government we- live under, Tke. away to-day its' disci p'iue in National, State, . Couuty and Township orgaiiiz ttioiis, th whole civil fabric of the American-Union would tumble to pieces. Is there a man living among you who believes that the present government could have survived the internal commotions of the last three years, With the republican party in the' place occupied by the democratic part) I Th it parly, - with many good and great "men .in it, contained nevertheless all tbe revolutionary elements that have. so fearfully agitated and alarmed every patriot, and brought us so near the precipice otter which all free governments before ours; have rushed head long. None-but the great democratic array could stay tho avalanche, and though mangled "and torn in the eoiiflict it.did stay it, and we owe this moment all we have of civil and religions. liberty weowe our escape from civil war and bloodshed in every State wo owe our personal freedom and protection of our property all all to the wise counsels of democratic party and Us organization. . But what do we see! Scarcely re covered from their defeat, th rebellious leaders are again gathering their hosts, not for a com biued attack, butfor a guerrilla war upon the democratic party. Only six..years ago they assumed a National platform maintained - the southern States in their domestic institutions adhered to the fugitive si tve law, and were ready to hang u democrat if he chaeged them wi tt' sec. tiotialism. That was a combined attack to wrest tho government from tiia dem ocraey, rmt it failed. Four years later they dropped the South and mado a combined attrfcli to elect a sectional President." It. failed.: Next they male a combined attack to defeat the democracy by sectional legislation; in which they so perilled the govern' meat.. It failed. Iii three pit'-hed battles they have been beaten,- They now betaku themselves to the mountains and propose carrying on the war by lying iu ambush and roliing stones down upon democrats, and crushing them where least expected, while marching to the support of the Union Their scheme is fully developed by the Cincinnati Enquirer as follows:. : "The Sciikmb ur tub ...UtaiJuLTCAX3 to Elect the Next PuKsi hex j ok thk Uniteo States Exposed.--'Wiih'to, the last few days develop ments have been mtvle tSat show the existence of a deep plot upon tho part of the opposition to secure the next President by throwiug the election into the House of Representatives, to be chosen in part ibis fall. It was arranged at Washington, to our certain knowledge, at a meet-in;? of the leading Republican' and "American-editors und : other magnates of tho party, who were present by invitation. D -.spairing of beat ing tho Di'moerajy before the people in 18i6, bv a fair contest upon principle, they have resolved to bend all their energies toward securing the House of.1 Representatives, - which U generally voted for with mt a thought that. )ti addition to its other duties, it may Jiave to elect the President of the United States: " TUr gHme"1s to run Republicans' in Republican districts 'Ameri. cans' in American districts to the South to en conragfj tho running , of bolting Democrats and Independents' in Democratic districts to divide the Democratic -strength and thus elett Rpubli cans. -.and so secure the; I louse to a certainty. "Having o'it lined a'.in-ij itity i-i ihn House..'t'he-oppo-iiiou will fun several candidates for Presi-deiit iii 'put tin? forward iheir sirongest men in each loc iliiy, witli the; sole puroose ot pre venting a choice by the people of 'that office, tn which event the election goes t the llousu. to be elected this fail, which, by their intrigues, previously, they bad carried. This, we know, is their game, arid it-'. explains the '.-.interest' they take iii the Congressional elections so-m to take place. Democrats, tberefiire, should remember that, in' oas rug their ballots for members of Congress this fall, they are electing the men who may, possible choose the next President of the Uuited States. - - ; - '. thisj view of the case the election of a mem ter ot Conjfrrxs !ecoine.s a matter of importance to the whole nation; and onr lriends in the different districts slioul I fully ijndefstanl ihe cou S-'quences that may flow . from their defeat or success on that oSneer, who is, in a certain contingency, a Presidential elector'' By running Hale or Sumner iii the New Eug land Stales, Seward in New York. Cameroii of other reuegades in IVnns I vanla, Chase in Ohio and the west, and a Southern man in the Slave S ates, they hojKj to prevent an f-lectioii of Pres. ideut by the people at large. If thrown intothe House each State would: have one vote without regard to her size or population. , A simple ma jonty 4f Slates wou'd secure the election of a President from among the throe highest candi dates. The defeat of the democtara ibis fall iu" a single congreasi.-nal district iu any one State, may give that - S'ale a majority of Rqiul.licah Congressmen in its delegation, and (hereby carry ibat State for a Republican President in ISCiO, (no matter bow great might be her Democratic maj nty,) and secure his election. The staying away from the polls of a single Democrat in our own or other district in l.So.-s. may. defeat the Democratic candidate in the district; defeat his party in the State delegation, defeat his State in the House of Representatives unl fiually defeat a Democratic President in 18o0, wiib a prospect oi reopening tut tne commotions and strifes ot a slavery agitation more alarming than ever before. unnjiug iu its train dissolution, anarchy and the extinction of the only fre government now upon the face of the earth. - . - . These "are the peri's now menacing the democratic party. They are the perils menacing the whole- people of the; United States, and it behooves us all thatln what we ebaU do, and in what we shall leave undone iu the 'next hundred days, that we do not some . one of us care lessly, br in ' a;' mometit brpassTon ' become the i;it rumen t of defeat to the democratic patty of toe vaioisfor years to come. ' In becoming a candidate it may be expected that I define my position on the difference of opinion between Mr. Douglas and the democrat, ic Administration. I will do so iu as few words as'possible, ,. We all." know that along, with the shows that enter our towns" there are' a number of. side shows, one : offering' to lefe yoa see the auaconda, another frizzly bear, a third a giant, all tor a dime a piece., ..Now. when -I go to the showand notice, these , side tenu, I come to the conclusion that they ail .belong , to the. man that owns the btg caxvass, and that he haiTdivided oflf his curiosities simply to humor tastes, c It so bapp-ens that the democratio part j . now bav a little giant, aud in arrangiug their curiosities it was thought, beat, toput Jiim-in, a tent by farm-self, to show to those: reput4i;ans who co: Id not stand to see all the, democratie giants -at once"; 1,'ain p posel. to deception, and will here pie e myjelf ihat if nominated Jand elected Iill get and the 'old bucVgiant in lbeb:gjerit.'-' " V The reej nt happy settlement br. a dempcratie CoheTess ot the alaviery;agttatioji by the "passage; of Eiigfish's Conference 'Bill remive? that d;S "CultT from the sKu! lers'I ofi the ddlhocratic par. iyr'-Tta end,;:-"' t 'fJr;:n.i ?.ccoiBf!;s5-;?j ters in their own cfiarge, - and framing such or-ganio laws as they desire without interfernce from any quarter. So that democrats have no longer any real differences as to the rne'ans tbey never had; as to the end desired a free State. We are therefore how all Douglas men and all Buchanan men, aud more than either, are all democrats -atandin? on a common plat form. By respecting the. rights and opinions of out fellow democrats as we would oiir own by preserving harmor.y and good feeling in our Conventions, and bringing up the whole strength of the party to the support of the democratic nomfnes by acting in good faith with one an other, and mainfainin? in ail its viof our National -or-ranization, . the Dem'Kcratie partv will prove is iuviucibli? in overcoming the perils of the future, as it has those of the past. Respectfully -'- CHAS. II. MITCIIENLR - July 15, 1833. VERMONT CONVENTIOB". On Friday, July 21. a gang of fanatics lost to all sense of moderation, " virtue' and decency, met in Rutland, Vermont. As theso people are only one remove more extreme than our Ohio fanatics, We copy from our New York exchanges sortte passages from their delirious and disgusting ra-vings, in order that it may appear whither "great numbers of the Black R -publicans are tending. If the leaders of that delusion in Ohio will pe ruse. these extracts, and theti in a contrite spirit resolve to sow no more the sneds of these awful and'disgiisting doings, we may hope to be spared exhibitions of this character in out own State. Otherwise, the disease will have its course, and we shall have all sorts of blasphemy and incontinence opca'y a! vocatel am ing us as it is in Vermont. Abolitionism, or fanatical Black R'j publicanism, which are. synonymous, is the root from which ihesa banefjl plants plentifully spring. Statesman. A few o f the Resolutions offered slavery. Resolved, That Slavery is a wrong' which no power in the Universe can make right; therefore any law, constitution) court; of government, any church, priesthood, creed or Bible, any Christ or any God, that by silence or oiherwise,'authorizei man to enslave man, merits the scorn, and contempt of mankind. V The SihbaM. ' . Whareas, Tho Jewish Sabbath is confessedly abolished by the Go? pel Dispensation; and : Whereas, Tho same authority sets apart no other day to be similarly observed, therefore Resolocd, That all efforts of church and priests to enforce our "objervahce of. the Christ in Sab bath, as of Divine appointment, is a flagrant vi olatioa of individual risrht, and. must be prosecuted in a dishonest disregard of the spirit and positive teachings of the New Testameut . The liible. '" -,-.;": . Resolved, That nothing is'true or right, and nothing is false or wrong, because it is sanctioned or condemned by tho Bible; therefore the Bible- is po werless. to prove any doctrine to be true, or any practice to be riglit, and it should never be quoted for that purpose.-Religious Worship. Resolved, That the time and devotion Spent in teligious services can confer ho benefit on an Infinite and Independent Power, aud can therefore be of no virtue. . Maternity. -. Itesoloe That the sacred and important right of woman is her right, to decide for herself bow ofien, and under what circumstances, the .shall resume the responsibility and be subject to the sufferings and carei of maternity; and man can commit no greater crime against his child, again3t society, ai.d against humanity, than to impose on her a.maternity whose responsibility and suffering she is not wiMing to accept aud endure.; . - , '. Mrs. Branch on Free Loot. .; - Mrs. Julia Branch, a, pretty young woman from New York, not yet thirty years of age, thusex-preSsed-JierseTf wiib rejrard to marriage and the maternal relations, in the course of a long speech whjch see med especially satisfactory to her hearers: ,..,'..- :' ; - .. - -'-.,-' " Woman must strike theF blow iF she would be free and become the equal of man. Yoa speak of her right to labor her fight to teach her right to vote, and lastly, though not least, her right to get married; but do you say anything about her right to loos token she wilt, where she trill, and h-jw hs will? - , Byroacur3ed his m.ither for his deformed feet; and there are thousands and ; thousands of children cursing the sacred name of mother for their deformed mental and moral conditions. I , Mrs. Gage, Mrs. Rose, Mr. Wright, and others, j go back to the mother's influence, and go a step further back, and say il is the marriage insiitu-turn thai is at fault. . It is ih$ binding marriage j eertmonyihai keeps woman degraded in mental and moral slavery, She must demand her free dom her right to receive the equal-wages of man for dier- labor hc. right to bear children when she will and by ' whom sht will. , s I believe i a the aVoiute freedom of the afTac-tions, and that it is woman's iPrivUege, eje her right to aceept or refuse Jtny Iov that comes to beeiShe should betki ruling powtr in all mat 4ert of' loo, and when her love has died oat for the man who has taken her to his heart, she is living k lia" to herself, her own nature, and to him, if she cootiaue to bold aa intimate relation with him. 1 ' : -4 ' V : . - , . , 4. !..', -. - it - - - ?-.;-':,- ;.;:." What is marriage?, ; Is -it the linking together of twolovinghearjsia holj,;sacred ooiou? Nol TbW is seldom tba easa when compared to the many ihousanda epon thoasaad of narriages of 'coavenience.'n.VomeQ ara bought are paid for, as the negro;.. sla is. . She ja estimated - aa a thing f barter, for 'man cottots tbe cost of bis intended wife as deliberateljas if he thought of keeping a cow, si dogv or a pig-i i : :i : M may ' t ave ' taken '.-an ex tre me question but" cutj crcr'tay''swa. side of the as uy oipi, definite form, statiag what conjugal lofe is, and to how few or how many an isolated household may be limited to. I will read a resolution that I think would bear more directly on the mar riage question: .. - Resolved) That the atavery and degradation of woman proceeds from the institution of marriage, that by the marriage contract she loses the control of her name, her person, her proper ty, her labor, her affections, her children and her freedom. What an Ohio Gentleman thinks of Marriage. Jiel Tiffany of Ohio,; indulged in some .very plaiu spoken remarks. He thought that the people didn't properly distinguish between love and lust, and that "free love" was but another name for free lust: - Men marry wivos thathey may be of use to them, and after marriage, when a man finds that she is not perhaps so useful as he expected, and his ardent love evaporates, he regards his wife too much as a thing of pur chase, as he would a horse or an ass. The women look upon the men in the-same light, and make a- calculation beforehand of what wc a husband is to be to her. Thus marriage be. comes a matter of bargain and salej Men and women are not married in a true sense. This is what the marriage relation undoubtedly is, and yet the Community uphold the system. Such a union of love, but of lust. When a man finds in a woman all that his soul yearns for and when a woman finds a man who is the full embodiment of all her desires, if that man and woman unite under those conditions, then they are truly married. . : The Freest rj Tret Lovers. Mr, Thomas Curtiss, a young and ardent gentle man ft'em Pennsylvania, expressed his sentiments. They were ratherer btarlling. He said, after some preliminaries: Our friends Mrs. Rose and Mrs. Gage have told you that they ar married. - So. am I although I have not been married twenty yeats as - they have been. . I " married myself to my wife, and she married herself to me; upon the express understanding, not that God sanctified it-r-we did not want God in the matter not that it was sanctified by magistrate or priest, be-causo we cast that idea, aside, as none of their business but because we saw we could in marriage better fulfil our highest and best use, and cay our happiness to the fullest extent, When we were married, we expressed that sentiment; and when we agree to separate we shall accom. plish that separation without the help of Ood, or priest, or magistrate. We don't want the consent of either of the three. ,, We do not want to bo united because God unites us; and we will hot be separated because God separates us. We wilt act apon our own judgment and opinions eacn. respecting tbe impressions, not what I state, nor what she states, but the impressions which are for both, and which are the common property of. alt, and, as such, to be nsed by men and women. ; Horrible blxsphbmt. In the discussion of the Slavery .qnestion which followed that on. Free Love, Mr. Curtis made his second appearance. He. quoted that resolutton which declares that "any Christ or any God that, by silent-e or otherwise, author ues man to enslave man, merits the scorn awl contempt of mankind." Curtis inquired "who was this God that people talked about? If he was the all powerful being he wis represented to be, why don't he go down South and put down Slavery? He desired to ask this plum ply now is it that you don't do your duty ? . With what consistency could : men worship this God. whom they considered all powerful when he neg-Iccted to exercise his power for the extinction of Slavery?" Henry C. Wright observed that, rather than give up one of his children to slavery, in order to save the Union, he would ''sec the Union d d to everlasting d J." Emphatic! $n(crc5fhig .uictir. The Coricubinae of the Plaio. . Not aloxxe- in Utah, nor nmoDghe Mormonr do the passions of men enslave and degrade the one sex, and barbarize the other. - .. ; An intelligent writer in the train of the peace commissioners Mate that tho system , of buying and - selling Iu Jian women is . carriod on all along the Plains, among the traders and frontiersmen, as a Tegular, established practice.. Almost every hile man along this route has an Indian concubine, purchased, in the case of joung and beautiful equaws, at as high aprica as three or four horses, though old and ngly ones may bo had at a much, less cost. Once sold to the white men. ber-iodian - relative renounce all further interest in her, and not. merely her per son but her life is at the disposal of her owner. When a white man: gets tired of lis slave, he ships her of? and gets .another. .The children of these unions are totally neglected by the father, and grow p as they may under the care of thr mothers.. At all the , forts , along this route, the young . officers, settlers,- and all that can afford it, keep their squaws. Si. . Louis JVetes. '..--.' r-..TV ' .-- ".-- . ... ' -"- Terrible ; Accident ' from " a Zlowinff Ma-... , chins. ! - A yoonjj man. named Healy, residing jn Fal- aington, Bucks county, Pa. was almost ins medr ately killed a day or two since,, by a mowing machiaei which was operating, It. appears' that something had got wrong with tbe knives, io attempting lo fix which, Mr. Ilealy sat dpwn in front of them. The machine.; was in gear at tho time, and something occuriog which started the horses,; the nnfbrtanate man was literally cat.to pieces in isvn instant. .-..Both. of bis legs wera cut elf above the tnees. After the tsach tne bad, pass64..over, hta.ha. cried. ttrtt'-'-, -which called lh attsation of a boy wor' ia nnthar nart eF sthe f!eldj The-b an"fhr bp?n. but before1 a'ay had arrived the tinrortuoa. man red: The doctor, with equal candor an I c . lesy was aead.?. TO tnVcnina ir cr.e that tad been! rented tLItra.perr.aly.iinmaterisd- t V.x ta t;s u U3 .; U.-i jciri. i .a - Judge Lyncli in Indiana. A liaa Tarrci and Feathered. A married man named Coons, who is respectably connected, was tarred and feathered on the nightof the Gth inst., at CrawfordsvUle, Indiana. The Lafayette Courier of the 7th, has the follow-ing particulars: ;";'";- . It seems that the gay LDtharo has been in correspondence, for some months past, with a re-spectable young lady of that town, and had pro posed an elopement, to which she consented. Uf arrangement, the deluded girl was to go to Lade ga, on the pretence of visiting some rclatires, and he was io follow tho next day, aad joining there, leave together on the first train, for. the South. Accordingly, on Monday she went down to Sadega, and was followed yesterday morning by tbe gay deceiver. In the meantime the people of CrawfordsvUle had got wind of the affair, an informaP meeting of fifty, or more citizens was held, and a committee of five resolute men "appointed, with instructions to proceed atones to Ladoga and take Coons into custody. The committee left on the evening train, and arriving at Ladoga, captured him and brought him back ou the 10 o'clock train last night.-They were met at the depot by a .large crowd of citizens, and the guilty wretch was escorted to, the court house, which had been lighted cp for the occasion. Judge Lynch organized hi j cour, and Mr. Coons was put upon his trial. Eighteen love letters over his signature, and addressed to jhe young lady whom he bad sought to victimize, wero produced and read to the multitude. No other-evieence was needed, mid after a few speeches bad been made by prominent citizens! the lights were suddenly extinguished Coosa caught and dragged to tho court 'house yard every stitch of clothing torn from his back, a bucket of warm tar poured over his head, and a bag of feathers artistically applied. ":..." y A morodiideous looking object, eays oar informant, cannot be imagined. He was coated from head to heels. The committee took him in charge and escorted him to tha outskirts of tho town,-where they humanely provided him with a suit cf clolhing, and by a vigorous application of soft" soap and lard removed the tar and feathers. He was placed aboard the train for this city to day, and leaves by the Valley road lo night , for Coli-fornta.Highly Important from Utah Peace Ds-. clared Mormons .Evacuating the City. From tho St. Joseph Oazcttc, Sth. In tho. afternoon cf yesterday, 7th instant, the Salt Lake mail arrived in this city, for the list time direct from Salt Lake City, it having heretofore come from Fort Scott. We aro indebted to Mr. George W. Clayton, the gentlemanly conductor of the mail, for highly Important intelligence. .'". - The mail left Salt Lake City on Saturday, 19th of June. The Peace Commissioners, Messrs. Powell and McCullough, had arrived safely. Young acd the rest of the Mormons, wiih the ax.-ceplion of some forty or fifty, had evacuated the city and gone south to Provo. . Tho city looked, almost completely deserted. Peacn had beet; agreed upon, but on what terms - our iuformaut was unable to Iiarn. On the 20th, the mail party met Co!. Johnston and bis commond at Echo Canon, about ten miles this s:do of Weber river. The command was stretched oat on the road Jot . more than a mile in length ;' met Gen. Harney and comnranJ encamped just beyond Fort Laramie. Col, May and command 33 miles this side of Laramie; met a large body of infantry at Ash Hollow. Major Emery was encamped on the Big Bine; met an other command at Fort Kearney. The mail par ty encountered heavy rains on South Platte, about 40 miles beyond Fort Kearney ; bad to swim the Platte. The Weber river was also very hi;rh. The gras, the entire route, was lumriaut, and never before know to be so good. The Sioux Indians were scattered all along the rotltt?, but friendly; met largo trains cf prot ision wagons from Plattee river this way, all proctessing finely. Going put pn the 1st of June, the party encountered a Bevcre snow storm, and a heavy snow fell at Fort Bridgeron the lO'.h of June. Extraordinary Eirth. It is statod , by liurdock that the . wife of a countryman in the Moscow district, Russia, had given birth to sixty nine children at twenty seven -.confinements four times r four 'at ot. birth, seven times three, and sixteen times twins. In the year 1809, the Vienna, newspapers cou tai wjJ the. following announcement:: - Maria Ann Helen, the wife of a poor lioeir weaver in Neufercbenfeld. twenty ! years mar-, ried, bora at eleven confinements thirty-two. children twenty-eight. living and v tbar dead;, twenty-six were males and six female?; all werd begotten by Abe man, and nursed by herself. She had at her last confinement three children; one living and two dead. Her husband was a twin, she herself ono of four. Her mother bad twenty .three children and died during a coo-r finement with twins. Tbe greatest number children ever produced at one birth appear to. have been six, all of? whbaa were boy, and dead. Tho woman who g-ave birth to then bad . been twice married, and had already given birtV to forty four children; daring her firot marriag , which lasted twenty-two yevs, h4 bore twenty seven boys and threa- girls; io her seeqnd marriage, which lasted three years, !ie bore fourteen children three at the. first, five at the second, and six at the third confinement. - - EiRtT Itisrsq. I bold that it is not natural. AVitb men, as with pcas,'eaxly risioj u aS a mar-' ter of forcing. ,,.,.-.. .,- : '--,-. - - 0L9 Maid Wbat! nine-months old and cct wall jet! "Why; wbea I. wa a oaby, I went alone, at"six- oontbxi . Tonnjindignant tao;Ler Ci'O "And the been coaABversiace- , ,.. ""T . .- Teo HtCYwiex. wm abosf tdCirry .Jr. riohnson; she "told bim, with thagreatest t&z lUuhs Lad oca aa ancle who was bang- - wu.. At |
