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t?X3'H it'Wn L J l'-f '': i f ' .V -fV. - - .- ,V' V; r:V 4 1 I ( if' i-.V 'I y': , ? "r:: i i - - - -ISSt ... . - -" ' ' "' " ' ''; j .. ' ' M , - ' '1 ' " ' ' " ' ' . 'm' ' ;'!''- i ' . . i :' " "" : " " . ' "- ' 11 1 . ' : ' ' ! "' 1 1 " J'C- VOLUME 07- K ."- ??-. i .4J - i : . JTj Jiefnsn 3j6tnoct-t)t!e timet 05ct la TToAixAd' Slock, Ti.ird Storj .ii iU j , . .k- .' . , ; ; i ... ... "i'TfiRMS T ollnpr nm, payable In 4-$5,M wUnln tlx wontln: f 3,00 after tb t-JilraUon f U yr. Clubt of (tf , f 1,69 eaalu 4 m ; ' r' !;;: s , ' .- t : I1T1I r iiTiitimii 'I Is O B a n B e ' s- B o . ' f e e. 1 tjucn, W yaar. - 7 ar( r' CO I 23 'I tS.l 0v, " ft 10 I ?5 3 23 ijr oojs oorP 3 80 S 60 4 80 6 01 00, 4 I 60 U 00 5 OOIC 00 7 00'S OOilO IS 1 ?aaM. ttiuMM irMarirfvu. ....... ..- - 18 " z ' - , ) () ea9r6 ;rfrj...... -13 !, eAiy6 jarrriy... 20 1 tmlumm, akmngiabl quarterly, 45 jZirlr Uae of JlUIea, (thU lpa) areeona--d aa a aqnara. : . . ) , Editorial oUei of adrartUaneBtc, or ealliog Uastioa to amy anterprU lateadad to benefit Individuals o oorporationa, will bo ofcarged for at the rata of 10 eeaU Der liae. . . - Bpooial aotleat, before narrla(e, of taViajr -preoedenoe of refalar adTertnemeau, aounio uaai rate. ' . Notteoa far noetlag, abarlUbli teeiatlet, flro -'oiapaalea, &., half-price. ' ' i p& If arriag a aotiooe laaertod for 0 et ; Deatbt -91 oaata, aaleM aooootpaaied by obltaariew, which 111 bo charged for at regular adrertUinjr ratei. jAdTertieemeata dleplared la largo type to bo charged one-half mora tbaa regular rata. 0SV All. tr anient adrartUemeata to be paid for i Vadraneo. ' ; " ' '' - 1 ''""" - THE 4STRVMXG - - " IT i J. KCeAKHK. I boar the etaf rin g bbb! X who hare chaunted all my yeara . Their griefe and wrong, their hopes and fears. Whoso lowly roico and pen, Through weary days and sleepless' nights, Were oonsoeratcd to their rights I hoar their plaint again! I list their stormy cries Their slow and desperate daily trad-Their muttered watchword "Death or Bread!" ' I aeo their hungry eye! 'And well I know that, whence they come, "Their wires and babies. In misery dumb, Outdrireo them with low sighs. Thus, then, I plead their oanse! " They march not forth to wrong or spoil;' 'They claim but saffer.ence for their toil, Ere wolfish Famine gnaws! ' They will not lift marauding band,' 2for threat the night with flaming brand, Nor brare our sacred lawa But, coma tbey will to light? To Heaven's light! from squalid pens, From dwellings worse than beastly dens, ' From hunger, eold and blight! Fach sunken eye eaeh pallid eheek Eball thus with roico of thunder speak Oh, Christians, is this right? ' : . ' " T 1 charge you! bear thetr ery! To, who unto your Father said 'Giro as this day our daily bread!' Pass not those suppliants by! -Our Qod bath blessed you in the land Jtad yo as earthly stewards stand Betwixt the Low and High! Dsre not to shrink, or watt! But, gird your loins, O Christian! now; Go! learn where Want and Suffering bow! Go! ptur your Lore on Hate! flo np, where Wealth has piled his hoard, And tell to Dires, at his board, . That Lasarns keeps the gate! ; interesting 0;trictu. How Tecnmseh was Killed. The Western Christian Advocate of last week cod tains an obituary notice, by Rer. A. Wright, of the Ind. M. E. Charch. of Isaac Hamblin, Jrn who died at his residence near Bloom Geld, Ind., a few months since, aged abont - 86 years, air. Hamblin was a man of deep piety and unquestionable reracity. He was in the battle of the Thames, and the writer gires tb Allowing as his statement in regard to the misa.tr i i which Te- oamseh was killed: He sas he was standing bat a few feet from Colonel Johnson when he fell, and in full view, and saw the whole of that part of the battle. He was well acquainted with Tecumseh, baring seen him before the war, and baring been a pris oner seventeen days, and received manj a cursing from him. He thinks that Tecumseh thought Johnson was Harrison, as he often heard the . chief swear that ha would hart Harrison's scalp, and seemed to hare a special hatred toward him.' Johnson's horse fell under him, he himself being also deeply wounded; in the fall he lost his sword lis large pistols were empty, and he was entangled, with his bone on the ground. Tecumseh bad fired bis rifle-at bin, and when be saw him : fall, be threw down bis jjnn, and bound ad- for ward like a tiger sure of bis prey. - Johnson bad vonly a sida pistol ready ' for . qm. , He aimed at the chief orer the head of his horse, and shot near the centre of. his forehead. 'When the ball Struck, it seemed to him thai the Indian jumped with his bead full fifteen feet in the air; as soon as be struck the ground, a little Frenchman ran bis bayonet into blm and pinned bint fast to the ground. f . . - . Ccntat Tetweca Two Frc ji r r A. few weeks since some masons wera at work 5 .repairing HftlTJs, oil factory at jSomerrxlla, Massn wbea they bacama the witness of a singnlarcom-l- b ot abon;. aa boar's , duration, Detweeo' two ; BMJ,fftlm fro& "habitants of two pools m c; tb rwas,pf the bailding. ' They eame'forth from their respeeUra puddles aboat 1 1 -o'clock in the loreoooa; and approached each otber canilously, I aaea eyeisjg iba. other, antil tbej were about a foot ajrt, wlenliey jumped at each otber and commenced the f -bU-'- Tbej struck-, b.it, and L,Tjchal- fanaz-'jt a: J lc3L fall decided a Tosad, boti voaU draw cT and "puff for . mo-" pf 'Wwea tLey wouTJ ret"f w the eotabat., Aftet. aa boor spent ia Bninterrnptei f -bu'a-, With the xct;C3a-xf twv.'cr.ibrettrief r-.r-tss,-eacb j0ttrg. rvftawua el to LU po&l a.nl dUseared.' llei-ia ost." The gU iUelf was sir jala esoc--b, but the fact that h ws witnessed, butaot Inter-fered:witb bj thirty or ibrty frof pectators of all kinds and sizes, adds to the cbreltr of tbe in- cident., Our informant .says thai "at $ e begin- aing of the fight tb frogs assembled about the figVing ground from tbe sarrbundiog pools, attracted doubtless by the noise made by the combatants, and that they continued peaceable spectators of the "mill,'' occasionally interrupting it bj excited croaking, but at no time approaching the parties engaged in it nearer than within two or three feet. - When the contest was ended, they nearly simultaneously departed. Boston Traveller. '. ": -' ' i The Publishing Harpers. The family originally came from England and settled on Long Island, near the Tillage of New- t 1 T f : a e .a as v,oa. mi iatner ana momer oecame tnetoiiow-ers of John Wesley, and we beliere that a majority if not all the present members of .that firm belong to thfl Methodist Cburcb, and hare pews in the St. Paul's new marble Methodist edifice in Fourth arenue. Socially they are all excellent men. The senior James Harper, ex Know Nothing Mayor of New York, is fond of a good joke; and enlivens the company he may associate with by relating many a laugh-proroking anecdote. John the next oldest, is an excellent man, with a clear head, active habits and great business tact.'- Fletcher, the third brother, is a kind-hearted, pleasant and agreeable man: also laughs heartily at a good joke, and is, when not absent in Europe on business, the talking man of tbe concern, with authors, idlers and outsiders in general. Wesley, the fourth, we believe, is the youngest of the brothers. He is the local and active business man of the firm, under whose supervision all the mechanical operations of the house are carried on. He is quick, industrious, and of few words, but has a mind that is as keen as a briar. The "quarto" of brothers deserve great credit for their success. They.commenced iu humble but respectable spheres tbe eldest as printers; and James, the eldest, we are told, in bis younger life worked many a day pulling at a hand press in a job printing office. From printers tbey got to be publishers, and have arrived at the head of their business. Horrible Case of Salf-Xutilation. . One of the moal horrible cases of self mutilation we have ever beard or read of occurred at the rolling mill of Irvin, Linn, McCoy 4; Co. Milesburgh, Centre county, on 'Wednesday last. The particulars of tbe case as given by tbe Uol-lidaysburg Standard, are about these : A young man named Aaron I rely, who had recently been pardoned out of the penitentiary, where be had been hanging rouud the rolling mill several dajs. Nothing unusual was observed in his demeanor. On Wednesday morning, soon after the works ware started, he deliberately walked to the large iron shears, and before any one was aware of his design, placed his arms between the blades, both of which were severed about midway between the hands and elbows! . The horrible act was performed so coolly and deliberately that no suspicion was entertained of his design. When ques tioned as to his motire for the self-mutilation, he replied that ''hie hands had been the means of sending him to the penitentiary once, and be was determined they should nerer get him into trou ble again." He was taken to a neighboring boose and a physician sent for, who re-amputated both his arms, an operation which he :s said to have borne with a stoicism and indifference that astonished all who witnessed it. Be is recovering rapidly, and manifests the utmost unconcern for his arms. We doubt whether there is a paralle case on record. . Aid for the Irish BeviraL Ireland is again invoking the succor of the be nevolent. A great religious revival, it appears, acorn panied with most extraordinary bodily man ifestations, has lately prevailed in the Green Island. As many as forty thousand persons were reported to have attended one prayer meeting. Work, and secular pursuits and amusements were for a period suspended, and men were seized with convulsive pangs, which made the phenomenon a puzzle to the outside spectators, bat which are pronounced by some of the leading divines, who have examined them with attention and apparent candor, to be the work of the Spirit of God. Delegates are coming over to ask funds for the missionary work now going en among the Irish We doubt not that all those who feel an interest ia the enterprise, which we mention merely as a part of the news of the day, will giva it their support. Whether they have a revival, a revolution, or a famine, the Irish can always depend on receiving ai d from the United States. It may be well to announce that the delegates who are ap. pointed to lay the facts of the revival before the American people are expected in the Kangaroo, which is now about two days overdue. - - , Another Sara Patch Tool Dead. A man named Shields, in imitation of Sam Patch, who made bis fatal leap at Rochester, some years since, advertised to jonap off the bank at Niagara into the river. He imitated Sam Patcb "to the death,", " ,; ; .'''. ' .. The Niagara Falls Gazette ijti ' Yesterday (Tuesday) foyenoo'n ifr. Shields made his last jump. With tha in tea tioa of learning the direction of tbe current of the river; at the point where be proposed to j amp o Fridaj, ana also to inform himself ot the character' of the-bottom, depth of water, ici be jumped from an old war! - When he eame to the arfaca.-w are told, be called for belp. 'f He went down three orfour times aad disappeared. It is supposed be was taken with cramp when he entered the wa ter. We conversed wiUi bim late' tbe breriois evening, when Be detailed some of bis plans for the future, aad expressed cos&ienoa ia bis abil ity to perform moat any feat ia this line. ; His real acme was Patrick O'Conecr '; Us beloagsd is) Eoebester.-'-'-"'ssc ;iia -eie'' ri8'- " ' ' -- ,,, - - :- : :.'tf-- Eiscorery cf ti.To-aV- ef lrcVJLs'i- rs V ' " ' ' .- ' A Istter from Cairo, ia the Gms&uiiond, t&jt ll&,tlie ,Del1 z:' cf conversalioa ia iLat city, is tie discovery whieb "bas jurt beeij tnafe tj the well fatowa arclaeolexist, IL- llarieU. He baafbuVdaJTbebes,aAer ; Jong' and o'iSicult researches, the to mbstill Intact, of.Pbarob.Am-osis.. . The kiiiff is Ivinjf ?..mP'e: covered with large, wipgs painted pn iC vTiirty jewels of great value were found in the same cof. fin by the side of the king, as was also a batcbet of glcL ornamented witb figures in f speis lauile. ,; Some years ' ago M. Marietta bad - a similar piece of good fortune, in findingtbe tomb of Apis the jewel which now form lb -principal-ornament of the Egyptian Musenm of the Louvre. The jewels of Araosia, are still more .favorable, from their bomber and quality. This discovery of a royal tomb intact, is the most vsportau tone that 11: Marie tie has yet made in Egypt. iscdlaiij). iiimorons " Skewered by Elering Kopy-rigbts.l' ' . PRIZE ROMANCE. ' ; i 9IOSES ; TUG SASSTf . -i Or, The Disguised Soke. - .,. A TALE OF BLOOD AND TIIIXGS. s f .. - - . -K- - i 7-; ' : BT SJtTKMDS WaJtD. :- i. - CHAPTER I. r . J y . .MOSES. Mr storv ooena in .the classic .freestinks of Bosting. In the parlor pf aristocratic mansbun on Bacon street sit a lovely young lady whose bair is covered ore with the ;frusts of 17 sum mers. She has just sot .down at Pi any & is ainirin the oonlar neace called Smells of the No- o - r tion, in which she tells bow witb Pensive Tha wt she wondered bv a C beet shore. The Son is setting in its horrizon and its gorjus lite pores in a meller golden flud through the" winders and makes the bootiful young lady twice as bootiful aa she was be4. which is oonecessarv. She is magnifisuntly dressed up in Berage basque with Poplin trim rains, More Antique edges and 3 ply carpeting. Her dress contained 12 flounders, brilliantly ornamented with horn buttons, and her shoes are red morocker with gold spangles onto them. Presently ahe pressed her bands to her buzzum and starts up in a excited manner. "Methinks," she whispers in clarion tones, "I see a voice 1" A noble youth of 27 summers scrapes tbe mud from his butes io the hall and enters. He ii Httired in a red shirt and black trowsis which last air turned up over his butes, and his hat is bewitcbingly cockt on one side of bis classical hed. In sooth be was a noble child. Grease in its parmiest days near projuced a more gal lenter berow than Moses. The young ladv gazt-s upon, him for a few periods, clasps her hands together, strikes her position, aud rollin her l's wildly like a expirin iufantile cow, cries: : V "Hal do my l's deceive my earsight7 That frame 1 tbem store, clothes 1 those voice 1 it is it is me own, roe only Moses!" and he folded her to bis hart. "Mthiuks I shall swoon," the Bed, and pretty soon she swoundid. . CHAPTER II. . WAS MOSES OF KOBLS BIRTH J . Moes was foreman of Ipgine Kumpauy No 40. The 40's had ben havin a pleasant fite witb the 50' a on the day I introjuce -Moses to my readers. He had bis arms full of troffeen, o-wu 4 scalps, 5 l's 3 fingers, 7 ears, which he had chawed off, kc.f be. When Elizy (for that was the young lady's name) rekivered frc swoon, she asked: - i "How hast the battle gone? Tell men "Elizy," said the" brave young man drawing hisself up to bis full bite, "we chawed 'em up and smashed their old mersheen all to pieces!" "I thank the gods." she cried. "Thou didst full well, and bence4th I ware :. thee tn me hart of harts 1 And Moses," she continued, layin her bed confidently agin his weskit, "dost know I sum times think thatthow wastest of noble birth?" - "No," sex he, wildly ketching hold of hisself, "yon don't say so?" "Indeed do I," she sed. "Your dead grand father's sperrit earnest to me the other nite, and ses be, Moses is a Disguised Jukel"' "Yon mean Duke," ses Moses. "Dost not the actors all call it Juke?" she sed sternly. That settled the matter. "I hav thought of this thing a 4," sed Moses abstractedly. "If it is so, then thus it must be 2B or not 2B that airs the question! But oo more of this now.' Dry op. O life life, yonre too many for me ln He tore out some of his pretty yalter bair stamped on the floor wildly, and was gone. .'. - " v . . .'. CHAPTER IIT. ';" ;':' ' ' ;:thk pttixrr foiled Sixteen long and weary years bveelapst since the scens narrowated ia the : bust chapter took plsee.; A e. ; A -noble sbip' the Sary' Jaoe is n . France to ":,4merikr, VtbTOugb 'the sailin from naoasn t-Annai. ; a. pirut ship jstn a not pur soot of the Sary. Jaae. ,The apting .-of tba S. J. looks' fateeged ft as thongb ' be ' had lost all of bis parn'nts. "4 The Pirut ' Is clost' oV to bim, sb be is about given ia, when a fin tookln, teller in russit botes, and ev baffaJer jbvercB'nubes forred and sea to tbe eapting, set he, i ' 3 J -j ; ' "Old man! rfO f dpwrf staresi BetireytO be starboard bulkhead, Jle take charge " of (bis Boter? II "Owdasbos eos'' said tbe Cepting, wajl witb thee or X shall do "mur-rer-der-r-rr t f : f Scarce.lv es , the , noble feller, and be drew a diamond.' bi'ted ; sworoV. and est the eaptipgs wo u . .r-i --.t;..i..v.;-.-..-. ;Tt Jf? tl O that I should live to become a ded boddy! sed tbe eapting 5, be fell, to the deck. tj JJe ex pired shortly, afterwards beia fatally kiUed. : j vPepple," said the noble fellerritne tbeJoke deMeeW?;.--.?;'- trtvf : :tiii3.- "Old boa, me thinks then ext llowinr? se J e youth of. forty-9 .summers, ni, tbe . Juke cut eff bis bed likewise "Dont print any rerse on my detbin -,tbtu noospapers,"' screamed lie "on. fortait yno't Ba,rts be ; fall ed -on l!-3 deck, flbr' ifer da lie baant jerlT -. ;.-.'.. ; ; : t 'Pecpler continnered tie JeL?, MaToE2 Ifa save yon from yon tlaiJy and rrprbc";' ! ji- rzisl TTbst, ioe llertl A peck ciLr The Juke took thiemj andT bravely .mounted - tb'o Ijlbpoop,'. ' He threw them onto the towpath. ;. In a minit the leadins 'bone bitcbe'S to tbe . Pirut .TJote,' icq m along, stopt, and cummenced Xur lo devour the babJ "JTbe driye swore andi hollered atbim terrible, bat'be wouldn't budge aa inch, ''Wean-wbflo''tbeSarfwJan'e erv bosses Vn the leao jimft wm -fist leWfthV PirVv ikf-pf If? "One agin do 1 esckpe dethl sed the Juke between bis 'clenched teeth,' still on the jibpobp. CHAPTER IV..'1 ' ' . ,' ' T11K WAKD(KCaS BEtXRV. WAKD(1(ERS KEtl The Juke, was Mosps; "tbe Sassj,"-"Hehad bia in France about Cteen years, and now be was home An Tn Bosting He Tjad iVm trobble fa geTttng bisseif acknowledged as fTuke of France, as the Orleans P'ienasty and . Borebones were feriiest a'i bqt be finally, coiikered anc( now he had crossed the deep blue C to "git hU own Eliayl She knew him to onct, as one Uf h ears and a porsbun'df his "hose .bad bin thawed 'tft jiUVi fights with opposition' firemen durin boyhood's sunny boun i They? were marridid and went to France, to reside in their ducarPallis w,hicb ws gut tip regard lis" of expense." 'Tbey bad severial children, and lived to a green old age, beluved "by aljfbotb grate and small," aa tbe Poick sez. v The Pirot Captin was captured, tride, convic-tedj and sentenced to- read all the letters that Messrs. Giddlngs . and Wise shall- write for the eDSOoin4 years. . His ' friends are endeveria,.to git bis sentunce commuted to imprisonment for life', 1 hour in each day to be devoted to read in the Canada' papers. He sez this sentunce was worser than tother one was. . Still be don't care moch as long as he gits bis meals regular. - ' Th;l is my 1st attempt at writtin a Tail & it is far from beln perfeck, but if r hav indoosed folks to see that in 9 cases out of 10 they can either make Life as barren as the Dessert of Saraa or as joyous as flower garding, -my object will have bin accomplished. Adoo. A Scene in ft Printing Office. : ; A patron of a village newspaper. Once said to a publisher: ' ' , s 1 - "Mr : Printer, how -is it yoa bare not called on me for the pay for your paper? '"' ' ' "Oh." said the man of types, "we never ask a gentleman for money." "Indeed," replied his patron, "then how do you manage to get nlong when they don't pay?" - "Why," said the editor, "after a certain time we conclude that a man who fails to pay for his paper is not a gentleman, and then we ask him?" ; "Oh, ah. yesl I see, Mr. Printer, please give me a receipt (hands him two dollars) and please make m v name all right' on vonr books.' . Popping- the Question. -: ; ' The Cle veland Ptuia lDo7 Jlar a correspondent, one Artemas. Ward, who is Dot much on spelling, but powerful io description.. . He gives the followinjr-pisode in bis courting experience: Gentz Ime in a sad and sentettnental mood ternite. I lhawt . at ' 1st Id hourt the Muze & did so try to do, but the Muse refused to be koarted, and so me thincts I'll let my thawts express themselves "in prose' & speaking of kour ting ifrarnds' me' of bow I wojd & one Mrs, A Ward, which I decay will; interest the reders of yure valerable paper."- Twas-; a carm still nite in Joon, when al nature was bust &Ti&ry Zeffef disturbed the , serene silenee. I sot with the objec-k of mi hart's affekshuns on the fence- ov bur father's pastor. I had experiunced a kan erin arter hnr fur sum time, but daraunt pro. clame mi pashun. . Well, we sot there on the fence a swingin of our fete 2 and fro W & blush in as red as the skool house when it. was fust pain tsd, and lookin very cimpul, I-makeO dowt. My left arm wasokupide in bailunsin myself on the fence, while.myxite was. wounded affekshnn ately round her waste, i - ,-'. Sex I, '-Suzanner, I think very muchly of yu,' & I side deeply. ' ' -'l ;i "' Sez she, "How you do run on" , ; - Sez I, "I wish there was - windows to my sole sox y u cood see sum of my feelins." v- . ; ' I pawsed beer; but as she made no reply I continnered in the following strane: , "Arl coodyer know the sleepless nites I pars on yure accoant, how vittls bas ceast to be at- tractiv to toe 4 bow mi limbs are shrunk np, you wood n't dowt . me, not by no means. 'I Gaze on this wast in form and - these sunken ize," I cride, jumping. np, A I shod hare continnered sam time longer probly, but nnfort&itely I tost my ball once 2c . fell over .inter, the- paster ker- smash, taran my close and. severely damaginmj-self genrally. Suzanner sprung to my assistance and dragged me 4th' in dubble qntck time Tben drawn herself np to ber full bite' se: ' ; "I wont listen to iyonr .iofernal. nooceiia eny longer. 7 . J set you .' say r rite-strata out wbat yon air driven t.:'- Ifyoo'-meaa gettin hitched I'm T';jf-ij .v-. : :' - . ... jaiYupBKierea .im .ir euvi ipr an pracucui purpose vand we wanLTto .the parson's at onctj and was imtsejitly made . ,--,; '" ' t Kit 7aaaaj Described by'Varioiis Preach '.- .AtithftraL1; v- s providence bas, so ordained i that only two women bavq a true ; jnterest in the happiness of tBAirHn:wwtotber -wA Ibo motber of bis cbildren.'Tlesides "these1 "twei" legitimate' kinds, of veihere jwtbmT between- tbij two crea-tqref pxeept vain j ecitomentjV painful !4p.d.idot dtlaonJOctaJituiSi.l ,-; .ct "la everyrthra; that 'women ' write there will be tboasands of faultsjigainst grammar but al ! so, to a eertainjy,. f-lwTf charm never to be fpnndJn ,be letters of rfleo.w-T-zdrifcjlaii-tosoii.'-.. i -y ;.. ..-.'' i.-AXfi ai Ctreat ac "rare teart' almost exclusively jtmonj; women;Tne4rTj''ftii happn?3 and inosf blessed JnomeEij ilpve arc of their ereatiiig.; and sot also ia friecisLsp epeci:y when it follows lottDudos,: v,! ; . . "A woman frequently resIfiU'tl'eijva fc!. a fc!j bot c&r.rct -resist tli Jots' sbe aaipvxLiZTJ Tee.'' a . . -:'.- ' ;'- '- - Tt ij a czir;rsal T-l3 triicli, ts fir as I Lzaw tU oats 'was ltoe itly brawl. $abifs' grprtment. bas ao exception, tbli gfe&rcea always resemble their toothers, who impress their mental and pbysicalmark npon their wniJZIicIuLi' I?vein a"w'oman'.li is a biatorjry laa man's sm episode Madam ide Stael.1 ' Tbere exUts with 'womeo ' secret tie, like that among priests ot the - same faith.; ' Tbey bate each other, jel protect each other's inter- "No'womaa, even the' most intellectual be lieves herself decidedly bomer.-i-StoAJ!. ' -';1 . "Men can tetttr3 philoeophize on tbe human hearty - but Women 'can read ii' bfctter. 7. . JtousteatL. T A .. 0 ; r-:.'o-.'t '. .:'. . "Only he 'wbsi -has nothingJa'- hope irbm a woman is truly sincere' in her praise."-Caia-lini. ' i . ,t . srO-,i---''-i'-' : ' n -A '-. "Most of their faults women Owe to as, while we aie indebted to thecal for most of our better qualities."- Lemcsle. ; :' 4 '" A ToncMn? Senn. 1 ""!' A French 'paper says' that Lucflfe Rome, a pre gin wun oiue eyes ana iair nair, pooriy but neatly clad,' was brooght" before the Sixth Court of Correction, under the charge of vagran- cj- -: :' ...... , " Does any one claim yon?" asked the magistrate. V. .. ., ' . .' . ; "Abl my good sir,", said she, "I have no longer any friends; my father and motber are dead I have only my brother James, but , be is as young as I am. Ob, sirl what can he do for n"?":, ; . ' :; , ; . : .:. ' lTbe court mnst send you to the bouse of cor rection.1 ' "Here l am, "sister here 1 ami do not fear! cried a childish voice from, the other end of the court. . And at the same instant, . a little boy with livelv countenance started forth from amid the crowd, and stood before the judge. "Who are you?" said he. ; W "James Rome, the brother of this poor little girl.". - - s .. ., ' "Your age?" . . '.'.' , ' "Thirteen." . - - '' , '. ' '" ".. "And what do yoa' want?" - , "I come to claim mj Lucille," "But bare; yoa the means of. providing, for nerr- . - (- ""Yesterday I bad not, but now 1 bare. 'Don't be afraid, Lucille." ' "Oh, bow good you are, James." ' "Well, let us see, my boy," said' the magis trate, "the court is disposed to do all it cad for your sister. But yoa most give as some explana tion." :;' .; ' . . " ;" ', ' ' "About a fortnight ago, sir4" "conhnned tbe boy, "my poor" motber died of a bad 'cough, for it was Tery , cold ' at ' home. We were in great trouble. Then I said to myself, t will be an ar- tisan, and when t know a good trade, 1 will support my sister. I went apprentice to a brush maker. Every day I ssed to carry her half my dinner, and at night I took her secretly to my room, and she slept in ' my bed,' while I sle.pt on the floor. But it appears that she bad not eb ough to eat.'; One day'she begged on the Bou levard, and was taken' np." When I beard that, I said to myself, Come, my. boy, things cannot last so; jfob must find someibiog better; I soon found a good place, where I am lodged, fed and clothed, and .have twenty, francs a month.' have 4J831 fouud a good woman, who for these twenty francs will " take "care of Lncille, and teach her needle-work. i I ctaim my sister." M "My boy," said-the judge,'"your condactis very honorable. However, yonr sister cannot be eet v iioeriy mi 10-morrow. "Never mind, Lncille,1 said tbe'boy, "I wil come and Tetcb ybd early to-morrow," Then turning to tbe magistrate, he said, "I may kiss her may I noUsir? " "' He then threw himself into the arms of his sister, and both wept tears of affection. '"' - ' - V -. Politeness. ' : ' - In politeness, as io many other things connec ted with- the formation of character, people ia general begin outside, when they should begin insidej instead of beginning with the heart, and trusting that to form the manners they' begin with the manners, and trust tbe heart to chance influences. The :golden:TVit contairs the very life and ' son! of politeness Children may be taught to make a graceful courtesy, or a gentle manly bow; but unless they have likewise been taught to abhor what is selfish, and always pre fer another's comfort and preasuro to their own their politeness will be entirely artificial, and nsed only when it Is their interest louse it. On the other band, a truly benevolent, kind-bearted person - will always bo dislioguisbed for wbat is pailed naU ve politeness, though,, entirely ignorant of4 the conventional form of -society. ' i ' Don't be a' loafer dont callyburrelf a loafer don't keep loafers 'cbmpay-J-don bang tboat loafing places. Better work 'Tiard Tor toothing' and board yourself, than sit around ' day after day or stand arqnnd - corners with yonr hands In yonr pockets. Better ' for your OwnflmiBdr bV iert jor yocr own. neaa n oetter . ior jour jmtb health better for yonr .own prospects, B ostle about if yoo mean to hae t any tbio to bosUe aboat for' Many a poor physician has obtained s real, patient bf riding hard to attend an im-aginajrx.one.tA. quire of ;b"ak: paper, .tied with red tape, carried ander t Uwyer s arm, ratTcro"" enroietiffl bis first 'case and, rakibis fortune, Saebia th worH; to hid that bath shall be givi en- s XJait d ronina ao i comp'ai nin 2i,keep XJ, and mind yonr chauceSi a;?..' : - - , ,f - ; We wdind 'jarlALa'"yda osa of every word that i3 not parfeciTy proper. TJsa tro.iC9;exr ; t uat would pnt V ; L! ,t- t 3 -tS3 .U1Z. Youknawr-t tiie,. t r-:: lecent 1-25."; 'It ciy-'-tHTcT t: v:::;rxied from yocr tftrts. Whetf 3-34' 'fo np j : I will .Iftj fil sc i. H; IcTjpa o-sitJ r etc 23 fr r.-7. r; . tl;'-car'e. jia'c"! civs ycc. 'ts -I .1 '. xaort. cal s:rrox. C:;l c;i LaTe ten U.' en s'.k,: aai "become deHrioas, ' In inese .mo meets tLey ' tave used the most rite and indecent language imaginable. When - informed of it alber a restoration of health, they bad no idea j of the paia they bad given their, friends' and , stated that tbey had learned4 and ' repeated the expressions ia childhood; - and, though 3 ears had passed since they had spokes bad word, the early impressien bad been indelibly stamped upon the heart. . Think of this, ye who are temp-ted; to nso. improper, language, and never, j disgrace yourselves. - '- : Special Dispatch to- the Cincinnati Enquirer over the liii 'ij.-'i-i r -.'.'UBioa. JUtB. " ' .' 7X022. 8. ,A. SOHGLAa AT. WOOSTEE, '. r ' ",ri5,000 PEOJiLE PRESENT. KntXamlattc Ileeeptlon along' trie iOOO" Person -iXeei' HinT at tn "Depot. Tr r; ' : : ' li -Wooster, Friday, Sept. 16. ' To the Editor of the Enquirer: ' '; - Hon. Stepheu A. Douglas arrived here at 13 l'o clock to-day, "and was met at the depot by some eigni or tea mousaoa people, wno -greeted his appear ooce by- the.. warmest demoOsiratin of grati heat ion ,aud regard. . On the line of bis route hither over the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway, heb wai greeted with the most enthusiastic receptions,- At nearly every etation delegations of the. people, assembled: and welcomed him with their plaudits. At Crestline the train was nearly three hours .behind time, in consequence Of the number of cars and tbe detentions; but the train for Wooeter was detained through the courtesy of Superintendent Moore, to enable Judge Douglas to fulfill his appointment".; "' ' At Crestline, the engines were doubled, and witb a train of fifteen cars proceeded snore rap-idly. . , ., .' : . .. . .. - .- At Mansneld there was enthusiastic greeting. The arrival of the train was announced by a sa lute ' from a six-pounder, an excellent band of music, tbe plaudits of hundreds, a ud the waving of banners, on which was inscribed, "Don gl us for President. At this point the brass, field piece, which bad been mounted upon a platform car, was attached to the rear of tha train, and after a brief pause went literally booming through the country toward tbe point of destination. At Woosier some eight or ten thousand peo ple were awaiting the train, tbe arrival of which, with, its distinguished ' passenger, was greeted with a national salute, the waving of banners, the music of three or four bands and the huzzas of thousands. ,-, Judge Douglas, with Judge Ranney, Senator Pugh and members of the Democratic State Committee, were escorted to carriages io waiting, ana proceeded to tne stand erected for tbe occa sioo, about (Bile distant, followed by at least ten thousand persons, who made the welkin ring with their huzzas; The windows of the build ings along, the streets were filled with ladies. who sainted the distinguished statesman with the waiving of handkerchiefs, which Judge Doug las grace tally acKnowiedged. .People crowded around bis carriage to take him by tha hand. while-cheer after cheer 'greeted him throughout the entire line of bis triumphant march. - it was an oration which no public man has erer receiv ed under similar circumstances. The town was alive with people, and an honest, earnest expression of regard was everywhere manifested..: vs . -. . -r ! -. : -r.'. ; -The speaker's stand was erected in a beautiful grove, and. was sarrouoqed ,by at least: fifteen thousand persons, who were densely packed together in order to hear every word that fell from the hps of the honored guest of the Democracy. Jadga Douglas was introduced to the audienee. and received .with immense applause, the firing of cannon, and the . music-of tbe band. When the "noise and confusion" bad subsided, he pro ceeded to say tuattne demonstration which greeted him at the ears, reminded him of Scenes in bis own beloved Illinois. He fancied tbey: were all the people of bis favorite State, even Democratic hearts from Egypt. No man. could have been received with more nattering marks of regard, which be would : credit- to the Democratic masses as-- evidence that they cherished, in all their purity, the, principles' which bad so -long governed the Democratic party of the country, the only' political organizationthat could and would maintain the peace and harmony of the the National Confederacy. ' : '.: . Declining to enter npon the discussion of pure ly local mattfers, Judge Liouglaa proceeded to dis-cbss the great question of popular sovereignty, laying down the pnnciple that, so far as slavery was concerned, it was aim ply a proposition.. The Democratic party mai stained that. it was. local, and therefore subject, to iocar laws, and not to the r control rf Federal . legislation. To determine the question whether it was local or Federal it was only necessary to read the Constitution of the Doited States, and then administer to every man who denies the doctrine and oath to support the'Constitution. , 'f A slave Was a person held-to service or labor in a. State under the laws of that State, aad not by tbe Constitution of the United States, which provides 'woo , may be slaves, bow they .may . be held, and bow fugitives from services may b re turned to their owners. Slaves, were not held. by laws of Congress, but by local' legislation aod popular irill. . . :; . ' " - , ' ' Tbe Constitution recognized slavery as a local institution, existing by State authority and sub ject to bo- managed'' by' State legislation. , The people or a stale or a- lemtory must decide for themselves as thev bad tbe -right to do, whether they would have slavery or .not. -.Tha peeple of .Obio.bad decided they did .not want slavery, and that decision " was final, but there their power ceases. 1 ney- naa no more nguc 10 inienere witbt slavery to Virginia than the peopWof that "mother of States'had tbe right to meddle with any domestic. iostitntioo. of the people of Ohio. If Virginians should interfere in your concerns, yoa would quickly tell them to recroas the Ohio River And mind their own bosiossa, and if tbe AboUtioeUta of Ohio booll cross; the- river to steal slaves r interfere witb any local institutioa of Virginia, they would be sent back in. double quick time, admonished to attend to their own s'vSalriJ.'i-.T'' 4--x?vwvit- e.ias.-;s TtiS 1 tia great pnnapie of pepnlat sorer- ere'rnty. : : If the North, and ,tbo Sontb would act upon this there wonld be peace and harmony be-tweea every Slate of the Union.- '' " ' ! Gd.Tern6r-Chase- aad Uther- GidJings come Bowati thee, to T.IIilcis, and in . their speeches tey rroc'ita t:9 doctrine tat tse peoj-'e pf the Territories cannotbjtrusfd, l.at tliey will make Laa Un, liui intii atna r.11an.ror iiU Were wb 1 4I lijuaici.fiei . jo . a ic-uua lor tlS' "epia (i-rtry ctlcr jqicsticn but iisl cf t' wf "te ' wHte cerr, bt?t tayjWere not .to be tl.. negrct'etic lio a. ""r- .H to be troEtdd te.ce jrro q ; - TLy" seeded Ur Wu.i "a "Li..er- ittTLccci wri 1 cect:: rj ts ' 'a the "Trero popofatico, aJ tbey tifasa s pr"d-."t C 3 Ttirixori L;:j-l . . j 1 1 f&s Is to rrorern tv eir can c ?s- t. ; c nc cat. '17 a" aai'.oray couli Li f j ia C.s Fderd Co-ritt-r&B'-taT tilsrlie ' s.- i::r-rcw) . aj. j -" "'JBagaDooglailbeBlrk-ly reriewed tla : senons eontroverey between thaolonlfs ar.4 tt boos government, wbicb : wast in. t arj to U.-slavery question in 3firtnnin,.wben that State, than- Colony, asserted tha tight to say U;ler" or not she wopld regulate slavly to suit herself Tbe king1 declared the colonies the cotsendn prxK petty of the. empire, and :lbat every Er.glUbmao bad tbe right to carry his t??sres to Virginia, tsi1 to bold them in defiance ef local law. . . Tbe battles of the Rerc'llon fcr-ifaTbt ep-- govern their, own. -internal concerns. Tier 8e-- cured that' right and proclaimed their iudepen- uence. -;. . . ? . T . . The question was, "whether TAmerican Territc ries now are not entitled to the same rights as the colonies under Briush-institutions. Popular Sovere!gbty':proclalaied! that they: wexe, and claimed no more than thaU If we are not right now, then the Toribs of the Revolution werw right in resisting the action -of the colonies The Republican party occupy precisely tie same position, in regard to the rights of tbe Ter ritories, that George III occupied towards the Colonies. They proclaim that Congress bad sov ereign power over the people of "the Territories, and so did the, Kio-g their . doctrines were idea lc- The Republicans assumed that the Ter ritories were the property of the people of lhe States, because the Government-owned tbepub--lie lands.' If that made the Territories property, then Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin,-Minnesota, and other independent States, were alike tbe property w. w vji.iuuicuh lui ilo uflueu oiAici uwneo land in tbem alL'' But the fact Was, that the pec pteof a Territory were a political community of citizens, living upon their own lands, abd com' petent to govern themselves. . How long would! sak-etije lie publican 3 of the present Cay t unlearn the British -doctrine, and- learn the tr republican principles of a free government? v The Democratic party claim the lire Ires aile right of the people to govern themselTejs.' LWtesi formed" into political communities they,claisa'BO more than this. They do not expect sovereignty independent of the Government, bat 'key tiai-ns that they have the same right to regelate ther social relations that the- Colonies bad before 'tbe Revolution.: The Constitution gives CoigreaM no authority to interfere in the domestie eoacera of the- States or the Territories'"' After discussFng at considerabfe fcngla tbe QUestion of DODulaT lavprpirrm. .t il. n.L. of a people of a Territory, Judge . Douglas took up the reply to his recent article u Harper'0 Magazine, which has been auributed to Jud?e Black. - - , .- ? He charged the author with misrepresenting bim in stating that his' article in Harper vontaiu' uuf4ug wuri aani uiat tu one hundred and thirty speeches he made ia IU linois last year, he defended that Court is etery ona of them. He spoke with -great severty of the article attributed to. Judge Black, who be said bad written to Demoerau in lllmoie lasS year, to' vote for ; Abolitionists for Congress "io preference to the regular Demoeratie candidates. He would not bare .noticed this atUck bol that it was aimed at the friends of popular sovereignty. It was intended to reach Judge Ranney, the noble standard bearer of the lleooeralic party of Ohio; it was intended for thegaHaat Beker the candidate for Governor in Minnesota; it wa intended to strike at the eloquent Dodge, who- wa .eauing ut usmocratic tosts in lowaj it a a stroke at the candidates of the Democracy throughout the country, who stand w the same platform of popular soveregnfy. - Waea tba author of that pamphlet attempted to strike at tba uwwnue, oe maoe a wov at tbe entire letuo cratic party of the Northwest, - Judge Dooglas quoted some further stafemeefj ia the article of Judge Black, and pronounced them insidious falsehoods, put forth willfully aad with bad. intent. . . . . ; , ( ... ' He then proceeded1 to show the -itfon of tie vrlJ b regara 10 in queitioa ot alaveryj that tbey ' were pledged by aH tleir speeches, by their political sermons in the palpi l, toeome forward and repeal the slave code is New Mexico, and-yet the- people xf that Territo The RepublicaBS would prevent tbeir adopting such domestic re-relations. as thev miKtWs just and proper. ; If the people of New Maxicw bad declared agalnst'slaverv. 4-could bare forced the inatitntioo apoa tLem ' AneX were i w -f nouse, aod jaey made their choice. Upon them should rest tbe reeptsfli lily. ' A Republican in the crowd inquired whether j .M.k-iiuui IllSlllUlHJO. . ' Jndge Dotla replied, saying that be knew of bo tribunal on eartk that eouldlrr tba merfta )f the morality of slavery. , He dealt with it a , a question or public policy, if tbe people of Ohio believed etaverr to be immoral and irrtu' gions, they had a right to that opinion : If tbe people of Kentucky held to -the opposite belief they should be free to express and'exervtse their opinion without. molestation. . - Whew Kentucky bad so decided', be" would say to tha questioner, fjudge sot lest ye U jufa-ed." . Mr, Douglas, ia conclusion, sxhorUd De-mocracv of Ohio to CO mo Ota aVn nnm mm tn tViai Support of their ticket, to pot . the State once? more where she properly belongs, at the bead of the Democratic column. IH'nois stands the On. ly Northern State that has never faltered; thai bas never failed to cast ber vote for a Democrat" 10 President, she has never been 'eonauered and, God willing, she never will be. 1 '- r ' Give a little bope'tdlhe ether Stafa bv t. A a ai ffWaWtt sTVkaA vVnfvi- TAaaV.lt. ..U 1 1. r . entitled tc tbe lead) bring her forth from Re pub- IT . . a vv -r- saw SVf iBUMVOU IUID, JM W&V iicanism na. voaaaism, sura use year place at . tbe bead.) ,..... ... . Mr. Dobglaswitb Hbe remark that fie al war savea tne oest wing tor-the laaf, kxk Jndgm 1 - - . - 4 uanney try the ana and irfroduced bim to the assembled thousands as : the . next Governor of Ohio.,., . : . , . A wil l buzza echoed back the prophesy. j -Judge uoug las then retired amidst the cheer' ing of the crowd, tfie firing of eaeaoa and the Knsie of some halfdozen bandst. , He returned to town and took the tra'a tbie . evening for Washington, where he will lemaia until some time Jo October.r" b - :-' Jndge Ranney made m marked impressloa vry . OB the, immense. concourse in . speech of an boor, which was followed by an eloqoeat ad' uress trr senator Jroe. wao m speaktn? U 1 j- ..... - i . . . ; rx r .-. Our friend ef the Woodsfield Fpirit ef Eenioc racy, thus show the awkward predlcie- in which. tL Opposition are Uiely to get if tl?, succeed !e electing Gbo!son:' i v -r "Suppose Ghelson" should le elected, Tlsa suppose that "Davy ,n or "Raa," cr "l.'oa ' iloikl escape from ftis: master, and be c'nrei, and the captured and captors be trccrrt tefreGboI sob, as Supreme Jude, wbet wotli La doT . . " "He?bas wartactei ttea t!ives ft 5. t-l if cy any dec.o.vO cf Lis tLey I f -i a: Ubert. woulia't P-r-jctt e-9 C'-' wsrrsrtT ..f .- 1"!' , . " " .. ,-: . : ' : If GLclsra taoa'l male ls ' wirra: r I ty seB?!n tketa lck to sfavery, woulia'tD. :i rua Lii C--'j wivb a Lajce'.--.'IKiDe-ci'aoa . shou!l rssX::'-! ':r-: with a tsjbiet, wealia't To-n Crr-:i ' r,'OB",to a pnrer atmc?bere f- 1 ii'as tspf : r .', ' " IflCorwia khould tif.T Eo"-r. "r" .C:T1-bw and lis Oberiit :.- V ' ,
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1859-09-27 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1859-09-27 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1859-09-27, Vol. 23, No. 23 |
| 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 | 7893.14KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0316 |
| File Size | 7893.14KB |
| Full Text | t?X3'H it'Wn L J l'-f '': i f ' .V -fV. - - .- ,V' V; r:V 4 1 I ( if' i-.V 'I y': , ? "r:: i i - - - -ISSt ... . - -" ' ' "' " ' ''; j .. ' ' M , - ' '1 ' " ' ' " ' ' . 'm' ' ;'!''- i ' . . i :' " "" : " " . ' "- ' 11 1 . ' : ' ' ! "' 1 1 " J'C- VOLUME 07- K ."- ??-. i .4J - i : . JTj Jiefnsn 3j6tnoct-t)t!e timet 05ct la TToAixAd' Slock, Ti.ird Storj .ii iU j , . .k- .' . , ; ; i ... ... "i'TfiRMS T ollnpr nm, payable In 4-$5,M wUnln tlx wontln: f 3,00 after tb t-JilraUon f U yr. Clubt of (tf , f 1,69 eaalu 4 m ; ' r' !;;: s , ' .- t : I1T1I r iiTiitimii 'I Is O B a n B e ' s- B o . ' f e e. 1 tjucn, W yaar. - 7 ar( r' CO I 23 'I tS.l 0v, " ft 10 I ?5 3 23 ijr oojs oorP 3 80 S 60 4 80 6 01 00, 4 I 60 U 00 5 OOIC 00 7 00'S OOilO IS 1 ?aaM. ttiuMM irMarirfvu. ....... ..- - 18 " z ' - , ) () ea9r6 ;rfrj...... -13 !, eAiy6 jarrriy... 20 1 tmlumm, akmngiabl quarterly, 45 jZirlr Uae of JlUIea, (thU lpa) areeona--d aa a aqnara. : . . ) , Editorial oUei of adrartUaneBtc, or ealliog Uastioa to amy anterprU lateadad to benefit Individuals o oorporationa, will bo ofcarged for at the rata of 10 eeaU Der liae. . . - Bpooial aotleat, before narrla(e, of taViajr -preoedenoe of refalar adTertnemeau, aounio uaai rate. ' . Notteoa far noetlag, abarlUbli teeiatlet, flro -'oiapaalea, &., half-price. ' ' i p& If arriag a aotiooe laaertod for 0 et ; Deatbt -91 oaata, aaleM aooootpaaied by obltaariew, which 111 bo charged for at regular adrertUinjr ratei. jAdTertieemeata dleplared la largo type to bo charged one-half mora tbaa regular rata. 0SV All. tr anient adrartUemeata to be paid for i Vadraneo. ' ; " ' '' - 1 ''""" - THE 4STRVMXG - - " IT i J. KCeAKHK. I boar the etaf rin g bbb! X who hare chaunted all my yeara . Their griefe and wrong, their hopes and fears. Whoso lowly roico and pen, Through weary days and sleepless' nights, Were oonsoeratcd to their rights I hoar their plaint again! I list their stormy cries Their slow and desperate daily trad-Their muttered watchword "Death or Bread!" ' I aeo their hungry eye! 'And well I know that, whence they come, "Their wires and babies. In misery dumb, Outdrireo them with low sighs. Thus, then, I plead their oanse! " They march not forth to wrong or spoil;' 'They claim but saffer.ence for their toil, Ere wolfish Famine gnaws! ' They will not lift marauding band,' 2for threat the night with flaming brand, Nor brare our sacred lawa But, coma tbey will to light? To Heaven's light! from squalid pens, From dwellings worse than beastly dens, ' From hunger, eold and blight! Fach sunken eye eaeh pallid eheek Eball thus with roico of thunder speak Oh, Christians, is this right? ' : . ' " T 1 charge you! bear thetr ery! To, who unto your Father said 'Giro as this day our daily bread!' Pass not those suppliants by! -Our Qod bath blessed you in the land Jtad yo as earthly stewards stand Betwixt the Low and High! Dsre not to shrink, or watt! But, gird your loins, O Christian! now; Go! learn where Want and Suffering bow! Go! ptur your Lore on Hate! flo np, where Wealth has piled his hoard, And tell to Dires, at his board, . That Lasarns keeps the gate! ; interesting 0;trictu. How Tecnmseh was Killed. The Western Christian Advocate of last week cod tains an obituary notice, by Rer. A. Wright, of the Ind. M. E. Charch. of Isaac Hamblin, Jrn who died at his residence near Bloom Geld, Ind., a few months since, aged abont - 86 years, air. Hamblin was a man of deep piety and unquestionable reracity. He was in the battle of the Thames, and the writer gires tb Allowing as his statement in regard to the misa.tr i i which Te- oamseh was killed: He sas he was standing bat a few feet from Colonel Johnson when he fell, and in full view, and saw the whole of that part of the battle. He was well acquainted with Tecumseh, baring seen him before the war, and baring been a pris oner seventeen days, and received manj a cursing from him. He thinks that Tecumseh thought Johnson was Harrison, as he often heard the . chief swear that ha would hart Harrison's scalp, and seemed to hare a special hatred toward him.' Johnson's horse fell under him, he himself being also deeply wounded; in the fall he lost his sword lis large pistols were empty, and he was entangled, with his bone on the ground. Tecumseh bad fired bis rifle-at bin, and when be saw him : fall, be threw down bis jjnn, and bound ad- for ward like a tiger sure of bis prey. - Johnson bad vonly a sida pistol ready ' for . qm. , He aimed at the chief orer the head of his horse, and shot near the centre of. his forehead. 'When the ball Struck, it seemed to him thai the Indian jumped with his bead full fifteen feet in the air; as soon as be struck the ground, a little Frenchman ran bis bayonet into blm and pinned bint fast to the ground. f . . - . Ccntat Tetweca Two Frc ji r r A. few weeks since some masons wera at work 5 .repairing HftlTJs, oil factory at jSomerrxlla, Massn wbea they bacama the witness of a singnlarcom-l- b ot abon;. aa boar's , duration, Detweeo' two ; BMJ,fftlm fro& "habitants of two pools m c; tb rwas,pf the bailding. ' They eame'forth from their respeeUra puddles aboat 1 1 -o'clock in the loreoooa; and approached each otber canilously, I aaea eyeisjg iba. other, antil tbej were about a foot ajrt, wlenliey jumped at each otber and commenced the f -bU-'- Tbej struck-, b.it, and L,Tjchal- fanaz-'jt a: J lc3L fall decided a Tosad, boti voaU draw cT and "puff for . mo-" pf 'Wwea tLey wouTJ ret"f w the eotabat., Aftet. aa boor spent ia Bninterrnptei f -bu'a-, With the xct;C3a-xf twv.'cr.ibrettrief r-.r-tss,-eacb j0ttrg. rvftawua el to LU po&l a.nl dUseared.' llei-ia ost." The gU iUelf was sir jala esoc--b, but the fact that h ws witnessed, butaot Inter-fered:witb bj thirty or ibrty frof pectators of all kinds and sizes, adds to the cbreltr of tbe in- cident., Our informant .says thai "at $ e begin- aing of the fight tb frogs assembled about the figVing ground from tbe sarrbundiog pools, attracted doubtless by the noise made by the combatants, and that they continued peaceable spectators of the "mill,'' occasionally interrupting it bj excited croaking, but at no time approaching the parties engaged in it nearer than within two or three feet. - When the contest was ended, they nearly simultaneously departed. Boston Traveller. '. ": -' ' i The Publishing Harpers. The family originally came from England and settled on Long Island, near the Tillage of New- t 1 T f : a e .a as v,oa. mi iatner ana momer oecame tnetoiiow-ers of John Wesley, and we beliere that a majority if not all the present members of .that firm belong to thfl Methodist Cburcb, and hare pews in the St. Paul's new marble Methodist edifice in Fourth arenue. Socially they are all excellent men. The senior James Harper, ex Know Nothing Mayor of New York, is fond of a good joke; and enlivens the company he may associate with by relating many a laugh-proroking anecdote. John the next oldest, is an excellent man, with a clear head, active habits and great business tact.'- Fletcher, the third brother, is a kind-hearted, pleasant and agreeable man: also laughs heartily at a good joke, and is, when not absent in Europe on business, the talking man of tbe concern, with authors, idlers and outsiders in general. Wesley, the fourth, we believe, is the youngest of the brothers. He is the local and active business man of the firm, under whose supervision all the mechanical operations of the house are carried on. He is quick, industrious, and of few words, but has a mind that is as keen as a briar. The "quarto" of brothers deserve great credit for their success. They.commenced iu humble but respectable spheres tbe eldest as printers; and James, the eldest, we are told, in bis younger life worked many a day pulling at a hand press in a job printing office. From printers tbey got to be publishers, and have arrived at the head of their business. Horrible Case of Salf-Xutilation. . One of the moal horrible cases of self mutilation we have ever beard or read of occurred at the rolling mill of Irvin, Linn, McCoy 4; Co. Milesburgh, Centre county, on 'Wednesday last. The particulars of tbe case as given by tbe Uol-lidaysburg Standard, are about these : A young man named Aaron I rely, who had recently been pardoned out of the penitentiary, where be had been hanging rouud the rolling mill several dajs. Nothing unusual was observed in his demeanor. On Wednesday morning, soon after the works ware started, he deliberately walked to the large iron shears, and before any one was aware of his design, placed his arms between the blades, both of which were severed about midway between the hands and elbows! . The horrible act was performed so coolly and deliberately that no suspicion was entertained of his design. When ques tioned as to his motire for the self-mutilation, he replied that ''hie hands had been the means of sending him to the penitentiary once, and be was determined they should nerer get him into trou ble again." He was taken to a neighboring boose and a physician sent for, who re-amputated both his arms, an operation which he :s said to have borne with a stoicism and indifference that astonished all who witnessed it. Be is recovering rapidly, and manifests the utmost unconcern for his arms. We doubt whether there is a paralle case on record. . Aid for the Irish BeviraL Ireland is again invoking the succor of the be nevolent. A great religious revival, it appears, acorn panied with most extraordinary bodily man ifestations, has lately prevailed in the Green Island. As many as forty thousand persons were reported to have attended one prayer meeting. Work, and secular pursuits and amusements were for a period suspended, and men were seized with convulsive pangs, which made the phenomenon a puzzle to the outside spectators, bat which are pronounced by some of the leading divines, who have examined them with attention and apparent candor, to be the work of the Spirit of God. Delegates are coming over to ask funds for the missionary work now going en among the Irish We doubt not that all those who feel an interest ia the enterprise, which we mention merely as a part of the news of the day, will giva it their support. Whether they have a revival, a revolution, or a famine, the Irish can always depend on receiving ai d from the United States. It may be well to announce that the delegates who are ap. pointed to lay the facts of the revival before the American people are expected in the Kangaroo, which is now about two days overdue. - - , Another Sara Patch Tool Dead. A man named Shields, in imitation of Sam Patch, who made bis fatal leap at Rochester, some years since, advertised to jonap off the bank at Niagara into the river. He imitated Sam Patcb "to the death", " ,; ; .'''. ' .. The Niagara Falls Gazette ijti ' Yesterday (Tuesday) foyenoo'n ifr. Shields made his last jump. With tha in tea tioa of learning the direction of tbe current of the river; at the point where be proposed to j amp o Fridaj, ana also to inform himself ot the character' of the-bottom, depth of water, ici be jumped from an old war! - When he eame to the arfaca.-w are told, be called for belp. 'f He went down three orfour times aad disappeared. It is supposed be was taken with cramp when he entered the wa ter. We conversed wiUi bim late' tbe breriois evening, when Be detailed some of bis plans for the future, aad expressed cos&ienoa ia bis abil ity to perform moat any feat ia this line. ; His real acme was Patrick O'Conecr '; Us beloagsd is) Eoebester.-'-'-"'ssc ;iia -eie'' ri8'- " ' ' -- ,,, - - :- : :.'tf-- Eiscorery cf ti.To-aV- ef lrcVJLs'i- rs V ' " ' ' .- ' A Istter from Cairo, ia the Gms&uiiond, t&jt ll&,tlie ,Del1 z:' cf conversalioa ia iLat city, is tie discovery whieb "bas jurt beeij tnafe tj the well fatowa arclaeolexist, IL- llarieU. He baafbuVdaJTbebes,aAer ; Jong' and o'iSicult researches, the to mbstill Intact, of.Pbarob.Am-osis.. . The kiiiff is Ivinjf ?..mP'e: covered with large, wipgs painted pn iC vTiirty jewels of great value were found in the same cof. fin by the side of the king, as was also a batcbet of glcL ornamented witb figures in f speis lauile. ,; Some years ' ago M. Marietta bad - a similar piece of good fortune, in findingtbe tomb of Apis the jewel which now form lb -principal-ornament of the Egyptian Musenm of the Louvre. The jewels of Araosia, are still more .favorable, from their bomber and quality. This discovery of a royal tomb intact, is the most vsportau tone that 11: Marie tie has yet made in Egypt. iscdlaiij). iiimorons " Skewered by Elering Kopy-rigbts.l' ' . PRIZE ROMANCE. ' ; i 9IOSES ; TUG SASSTf . -i Or, The Disguised Soke. - .,. A TALE OF BLOOD AND TIIIXGS. s f .. - - . -K- - i 7-; ' : BT SJtTKMDS WaJtD. :- i. - CHAPTER I. r . J y . .MOSES. Mr storv ooena in .the classic .freestinks of Bosting. In the parlor pf aristocratic mansbun on Bacon street sit a lovely young lady whose bair is covered ore with the ;frusts of 17 sum mers. She has just sot .down at Pi any & is ainirin the oonlar neace called Smells of the No- o - r tion, in which she tells bow witb Pensive Tha wt she wondered bv a C beet shore. The Son is setting in its horrizon and its gorjus lite pores in a meller golden flud through the" winders and makes the bootiful young lady twice as bootiful aa she was be4. which is oonecessarv. She is magnifisuntly dressed up in Berage basque with Poplin trim rains, More Antique edges and 3 ply carpeting. Her dress contained 12 flounders, brilliantly ornamented with horn buttons, and her shoes are red morocker with gold spangles onto them. Presently ahe pressed her bands to her buzzum and starts up in a excited manner. "Methinks" she whispers in clarion tones, "I see a voice 1" A noble youth of 27 summers scrapes tbe mud from his butes io the hall and enters. He ii Httired in a red shirt and black trowsis which last air turned up over his butes, and his hat is bewitcbingly cockt on one side of bis classical hed. In sooth be was a noble child. Grease in its parmiest days near projuced a more gal lenter berow than Moses. The young ladv gazt-s upon, him for a few periods, clasps her hands together, strikes her position, aud rollin her l's wildly like a expirin iufantile cow, cries: : V "Hal do my l's deceive my earsight7 That frame 1 tbem store, clothes 1 those voice 1 it is it is me own, roe only Moses!" and he folded her to bis hart. "Mthiuks I shall swoon" the Bed, and pretty soon she swoundid. . CHAPTER II. . WAS MOSES OF KOBLS BIRTH J . Moes was foreman of Ipgine Kumpauy No 40. The 40's had ben havin a pleasant fite witb the 50' a on the day I introjuce -Moses to my readers. He had bis arms full of troffeen, o-wu 4 scalps, 5 l's 3 fingers, 7 ears, which he had chawed off, kc.f be. When Elizy (for that was the young lady's name) rekivered frc swoon, she asked: - i "How hast the battle gone? Tell men "Elizy" said the" brave young man drawing hisself up to bis full bite, "we chawed 'em up and smashed their old mersheen all to pieces!" "I thank the gods." she cried. "Thou didst full well, and bence4th I ware :. thee tn me hart of harts 1 And Moses" she continued, layin her bed confidently agin his weskit, "dost know I sum times think thatthow wastest of noble birth?" - "No" sex he, wildly ketching hold of hisself, "yon don't say so?" "Indeed do I" she sed. "Your dead grand father's sperrit earnest to me the other nite, and ses be, Moses is a Disguised Jukel"' "Yon mean Duke" ses Moses. "Dost not the actors all call it Juke?" she sed sternly. That settled the matter. "I hav thought of this thing a 4" sed Moses abstractedly. "If it is so, then thus it must be 2B or not 2B that airs the question! But oo more of this now.' Dry op. O life life, yonre too many for me ln He tore out some of his pretty yalter bair stamped on the floor wildly, and was gone. .'. - " v . . .'. CHAPTER IIT. ';" ;':' ' ' ;:thk pttixrr foiled Sixteen long and weary years bveelapst since the scens narrowated ia the : bust chapter took plsee.; A e. ; A -noble sbip' the Sary' Jaoe is n . France to ":,4merikr, VtbTOugb 'the sailin from naoasn t-Annai. ; a. pirut ship jstn a not pur soot of the Sary. Jaae. ,The apting .-of tba S. J. looks' fateeged ft as thongb ' be ' had lost all of bis parn'nts. "4 The Pirut ' Is clost' oV to bim, sb be is about given ia, when a fin tookln, teller in russit botes, and ev baffaJer jbvercB'nubes forred and sea to tbe eapting, set he, i ' 3 J -j ; ' "Old man! rfO f dpwrf staresi BetireytO be starboard bulkhead, Jle take charge " of (bis Boter? II "Owdasbos eos'' said tbe Cepting, wajl witb thee or X shall do "mur-rer-der-r-rr t f : f Scarce.lv es , the , noble feller, and be drew a diamond.' bi'ted ; sworoV. and est the eaptipgs wo u . .r-i --.t;..i..v.;-.-..-. ;Tt Jf? tl O that I should live to become a ded boddy! sed tbe eapting 5, be fell, to the deck. tj JJe ex pired shortly, afterwards beia fatally kiUed. : j vPepple" said the noble fellerritne tbeJoke deMeeW?;.--.?;'- trtvf : :tiii3.- "Old boa, me thinks then ext llowinr? se J e youth of. forty-9 .summers, ni, tbe . Juke cut eff bis bed likewise "Dont print any rerse on my detbin -,tbtu noospapers"' screamed lie "on. fortait yno't Ba,rts be ; fall ed -on l!-3 deck, flbr' ifer da lie baant jerlT -. ;.-.'.. ; ; : t 'Pecpler continnered tie JeL?, MaToE2 Ifa save yon from yon tlaiJy and rrprbc";' ! ji- rzisl TTbst, ioe llertl A peck ciLr The Juke took thiemj andT bravely .mounted - tb'o Ijlbpoop,'. ' He threw them onto the towpath. ;. In a minit the leadins 'bone bitcbe'S to tbe . Pirut .TJote,' icq m along, stopt, and cummenced Xur lo devour the babJ "JTbe driye swore andi hollered atbim terrible, bat'be wouldn't budge aa inch, ''Wean-wbflo''tbeSarfwJan'e erv bosses Vn the leao jimft wm -fist leWfthV PirVv ikf-pf If? "One agin do 1 esckpe dethl sed the Juke between bis 'clenched teeth,' still on the jibpobp. CHAPTER IV..'1 ' ' . ,' ' T11K WAKD(KCaS BEtXRV. WAKD(1(ERS KEtl The Juke, was Mosps; "tbe Sassj"-"Hehad bia in France about Cteen years, and now be was home An Tn Bosting He Tjad iVm trobble fa geTttng bisseif acknowledged as fTuke of France, as the Orleans P'ienasty and . Borebones were feriiest a'i bqt be finally, coiikered anc( now he had crossed the deep blue C to "git hU own Eliayl She knew him to onct, as one Uf h ears and a porsbun'df his "hose .bad bin thawed 'tft jiUVi fights with opposition' firemen durin boyhood's sunny boun i They? were marridid and went to France, to reside in their ducarPallis w,hicb ws gut tip regard lis" of expense." 'Tbey bad severial children, and lived to a green old age, beluved "by aljfbotb grate and small" aa tbe Poick sez. v The Pirot Captin was captured, tride, convic-tedj and sentenced to- read all the letters that Messrs. Giddlngs . and Wise shall- write for the eDSOoin4 years. . His ' friends are endeveria,.to git bis sentunce commuted to imprisonment for life', 1 hour in each day to be devoted to read in the Canada' papers. He sez this sentunce was worser than tother one was. . Still be don't care moch as long as he gits bis meals regular. - ' Th;l is my 1st attempt at writtin a Tail & it is far from beln perfeck, but if r hav indoosed folks to see that in 9 cases out of 10 they can either make Life as barren as the Dessert of Saraa or as joyous as flower garding, -my object will have bin accomplished. Adoo. A Scene in ft Printing Office. : ; A patron of a village newspaper. Once said to a publisher: ' ' , s 1 - "Mr : Printer, how -is it yoa bare not called on me for the pay for your paper? '"' ' ' "Oh." said the man of types, "we never ask a gentleman for money." "Indeed" replied his patron, "then how do you manage to get nlong when they don't pay?" - "Why" said the editor, "after a certain time we conclude that a man who fails to pay for his paper is not a gentleman, and then we ask him?" ; "Oh, ah. yesl I see, Mr. Printer, please give me a receipt (hands him two dollars) and please make m v name all right' on vonr books.' . Popping- the Question. -: ; ' The Cle veland Ptuia lDo7 Jlar a correspondent, one Artemas. Ward, who is Dot much on spelling, but powerful io description.. . He gives the followinjr-pisode in bis courting experience: Gentz Ime in a sad and sentettnental mood ternite. I lhawt . at ' 1st Id hourt the Muze & did so try to do, but the Muse refused to be koarted, and so me thincts I'll let my thawts express themselves "in prose' & speaking of kour ting ifrarnds' me' of bow I wojd & one Mrs, A Ward, which I decay will; interest the reders of yure valerable paper."- Twas-; a carm still nite in Joon, when al nature was bust &Ti&ry Zeffef disturbed the , serene silenee. I sot with the objec-k of mi hart's affekshuns on the fence- ov bur father's pastor. I had experiunced a kan erin arter hnr fur sum time, but daraunt pro. clame mi pashun. . Well, we sot there on the fence a swingin of our fete 2 and fro W & blush in as red as the skool house when it. was fust pain tsd, and lookin very cimpul, I-makeO dowt. My left arm wasokupide in bailunsin myself on the fence, while.myxite was. wounded affekshnn ately round her waste, i - ,-'. Sex I, '-Suzanner, I think very muchly of yu,' & I side deeply. ' ' -'l ;i "' Sez she, "How you do run on" , ; - Sez I, "I wish there was - windows to my sole sox y u cood see sum of my feelins." v- . ; ' I pawsed beer; but as she made no reply I continnered in the following strane: , "Arl coodyer know the sleepless nites I pars on yure accoant, how vittls bas ceast to be at- tractiv to toe 4 bow mi limbs are shrunk np, you wood n't dowt . me, not by no means. 'I Gaze on this wast in form and - these sunken ize" I cride, jumping. np, A I shod hare continnered sam time longer probly, but nnfort&itely I tost my ball once 2c . fell over .inter, the- paster ker- smash, taran my close and. severely damaginmj-self genrally. Suzanner sprung to my assistance and dragged me 4th' in dubble qntck time Tben drawn herself np to ber full bite' se: ' ; "I wont listen to iyonr .iofernal. nooceiia eny longer. 7 . J set you .' say r rite-strata out wbat yon air driven t.:'- Ifyoo'-meaa gettin hitched I'm T';jf-ij .v-. : :' - . ... jaiYupBKierea .im .ir euvi ipr an pracucui purpose vand we wanLTto .the parson's at onctj and was imtsejitly made . ,--,; '" ' t Kit 7aaaaj Described by'Varioiis Preach '.- .AtithftraL1; v- s providence bas, so ordained i that only two women bavq a true ; jnterest in the happiness of tBAirHn:wwtotber -wA Ibo motber of bis cbildren.'Tlesides "these1 "twei" legitimate' kinds, of veihere jwtbmT between- tbij two crea-tqref pxeept vain j ecitomentjV painful !4p.d.idot dtlaonJOctaJituiSi.l ,-; .ct "la everyrthra; that 'women ' write there will be tboasands of faultsjigainst grammar but al ! so, to a eertainjy,. f-lwTf charm never to be fpnndJn ,be letters of rfleo.w-T-zdrifcjlaii-tosoii.'-.. i -y ;.. ..-.'' i.-AXfi ai Ctreat ac "rare teart' almost exclusively jtmonj; women;Tne4rTj''ftii happn?3 and inosf blessed JnomeEij ilpve arc of their ereatiiig.; and sot also ia friecisLsp epeci:y when it follows lottDudos,: v,! ; . . "A woman frequently resIfiU'tl'eijva fc!. a fc!j bot c&r.rct -resist tli Jots' sbe aaipvxLiZTJ Tee.'' a . . -:'.- ' ;'- '- - Tt ij a czir;rsal T-l3 triicli, ts fir as I Lzaw tU oats 'was ltoe itly brawl. $abifs' grprtment. bas ao exception, tbli gfe&rcea always resemble their toothers, who impress their mental and pbysicalmark npon their wniJZIicIuLi' I?vein a"w'oman'.li is a biatorjry laa man's sm episode Madam ide Stael.1 ' Tbere exUts with 'womeo ' secret tie, like that among priests ot the - same faith.; ' Tbey bate each other, jel protect each other's inter- "No'womaa, even the' most intellectual be lieves herself decidedly bomer.-i-StoAJ!. ' -';1 . "Men can tetttr3 philoeophize on tbe human hearty - but Women 'can read ii' bfctter. 7. . JtousteatL. T A .. 0 ; r-:.'o-.'t '. .:'. . "Only he 'wbsi -has nothingJa'- hope irbm a woman is truly sincere' in her praise."-Caia-lini. ' i . ,t . srO-,i---''-i'-' : ' n -A '-. "Most of their faults women Owe to as, while we aie indebted to thecal for most of our better qualities."- Lemcsle. ; :' 4 '" A ToncMn? Senn. 1 ""!' A French 'paper says' that Lucflfe Rome, a pre gin wun oiue eyes ana iair nair, pooriy but neatly clad,' was brooght" before the Sixth Court of Correction, under the charge of vagran- cj- -: :' ...... , " Does any one claim yon?" asked the magistrate. V. .. ., ' . .' . ; "Abl my good sir", said she, "I have no longer any friends; my father and motber are dead I have only my brother James, but , be is as young as I am. Ob, sirl what can he do for n"?":, ; . ' :; , ; . : .:. ' lTbe court mnst send you to the bouse of cor rection.1 ' "Here l am, "sister here 1 ami do not fear! cried a childish voice from, the other end of the court. . And at the same instant, . a little boy with livelv countenance started forth from amid the crowd, and stood before the judge. "Who are you?" said he. ; W "James Rome, the brother of this poor little girl.". - - s .. ., ' "Your age?" . . '.'.' , ' "Thirteen." . - - '' , '. ' '" ".. "And what do yoa' want?" - , "I come to claim mj Lucille" "But bare; yoa the means of. providing, for nerr- . - (- ""Yesterday I bad not, but now 1 bare. 'Don't be afraid, Lucille." ' "Oh, bow good you are, James." ' "Well, let us see, my boy" said' the magis trate, "the court is disposed to do all it cad for your sister. But yoa most give as some explana tion." :;' .; ' . . " ;" ', ' ' "About a fortnight ago, sir4" "conhnned tbe boy, "my poor" motber died of a bad 'cough, for it was Tery , cold ' at ' home. We were in great trouble. Then I said to myself, t will be an ar- tisan, and when t know a good trade, 1 will support my sister. I went apprentice to a brush maker. Every day I ssed to carry her half my dinner, and at night I took her secretly to my room, and she slept in ' my bed,' while I sle.pt on the floor. But it appears that she bad not eb ough to eat.'; One day'she begged on the Bou levard, and was taken' np." When I beard that, I said to myself, Come, my. boy, things cannot last so; jfob must find someibiog better; I soon found a good place, where I am lodged, fed and clothed, and .have twenty, francs a month.' have 4J831 fouud a good woman, who for these twenty francs will " take "care of Lncille, and teach her needle-work. i I ctaim my sister." M "My boy" said-the judge,'"your condactis very honorable. However, yonr sister cannot be eet v iioeriy mi 10-morrow. "Never mind, Lncille,1 said tbe'boy, "I wil come and Tetcb ybd early to-morrow" Then turning to tbe magistrate, he said, "I may kiss her may I noUsir? " "' He then threw himself into the arms of his sister, and both wept tears of affection. '"' - ' - V -. Politeness. ' : ' - In politeness, as io many other things connec ted with- the formation of character, people ia general begin outside, when they should begin insidej instead of beginning with the heart, and trusting that to form the manners they' begin with the manners, and trust tbe heart to chance influences. The :golden:TVit contairs the very life and ' son! of politeness Children may be taught to make a graceful courtesy, or a gentle manly bow; but unless they have likewise been taught to abhor what is selfish, and always pre fer another's comfort and preasuro to their own their politeness will be entirely artificial, and nsed only when it Is their interest louse it. On the other band, a truly benevolent, kind-bearted person - will always bo dislioguisbed for wbat is pailed naU ve politeness, though,, entirely ignorant of4 the conventional form of -society. ' i ' Don't be a' loafer dont callyburrelf a loafer don't keep loafers 'cbmpay-J-don bang tboat loafing places. Better work 'Tiard Tor toothing' and board yourself, than sit around ' day after day or stand arqnnd - corners with yonr hands In yonr pockets. Better ' for your OwnflmiBdr bV iert jor yocr own. neaa n oetter . ior jour jmtb health better for yonr .own prospects, B ostle about if yoo mean to hae t any tbio to bosUe aboat for' Many a poor physician has obtained s real, patient bf riding hard to attend an im-aginajrx.one.tA. quire of ;b"ak: paper, .tied with red tape, carried ander t Uwyer s arm, ratTcro"" enroietiffl bis first 'case and, rakibis fortune, Saebia th worH; to hid that bath shall be givi en- s XJait d ronina ao i comp'ai nin 2i,keep XJ, and mind yonr chauceSi a;?..' : - - , ,f - ; We wdind 'jarlALa'"yda osa of every word that i3 not parfeciTy proper. TJsa tro.iC9;exr ; t uat would pnt V ; L! ,t- t 3 -tS3 .U1Z. Youknawr-t tiie,. t r-:: lecent 1-25."; 'It ciy-'-tHTcT t: v:::;rxied from yocr tftrts. Whetf 3-34' 'fo np j : I will .Iftj fil sc i. H; IcTjpa o-sitJ r etc 23 fr r.-7. r; . tl;'-car'e. jia'c"! civs ycc. 'ts -I .1 '. xaort. cal s:rrox. C:;l c;i LaTe ten U.' en s'.k,: aai "become deHrioas, ' In inese .mo meets tLey ' tave used the most rite and indecent language imaginable. When - informed of it alber a restoration of health, they bad no idea j of the paia they bad given their, friends' and , stated that tbey had learned4 and ' repeated the expressions ia childhood; - and, though 3 ears had passed since they had spokes bad word, the early impressien bad been indelibly stamped upon the heart. . Think of this, ye who are temp-ted; to nso. improper, language, and never, j disgrace yourselves. - '- : Special Dispatch to- the Cincinnati Enquirer over the liii 'ij.-'i-i r -.'.'UBioa. JUtB. " ' .' 7X022. 8. ,A. SOHGLAa AT. WOOSTEE, '. r ' ",ri5,000 PEOJiLE PRESENT. KntXamlattc Ileeeptlon along' trie iOOO" Person -iXeei' HinT at tn "Depot. Tr r; ' : : ' li -Wooster, Friday, Sept. 16. ' To the Editor of the Enquirer: ' '; - Hon. Stepheu A. Douglas arrived here at 13 l'o clock to-day, "and was met at the depot by some eigni or tea mousaoa people, wno -greeted his appear ooce by- the.. warmest demoOsiratin of grati heat ion ,aud regard. . On the line of bis route hither over the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway, heb wai greeted with the most enthusiastic receptions,- At nearly every etation delegations of the. people, assembled: and welcomed him with their plaudits. At Crestline the train was nearly three hours .behind time, in consequence Of the number of cars and tbe detentions; but the train for Wooeter was detained through the courtesy of Superintendent Moore, to enable Judge Douglas to fulfill his appointment".; "' ' At Crestline, the engines were doubled, and witb a train of fifteen cars proceeded snore rap-idly. . , ., .' : . .. . .. - .- At Mansneld there was enthusiastic greeting. The arrival of the train was announced by a sa lute ' from a six-pounder, an excellent band of music, tbe plaudits of hundreds, a ud the waving of banners, on which was inscribed, "Don gl us for President. At this point the brass, field piece, which bad been mounted upon a platform car, was attached to the rear of tha train, and after a brief pause went literally booming through the country toward tbe point of destination. At Woosier some eight or ten thousand peo ple were awaiting the train, tbe arrival of which, with, its distinguished ' passenger, was greeted with a national salute, the waving of banners, the music of three or four bands and the huzzas of thousands. ,-, Judge Douglas, with Judge Ranney, Senator Pugh and members of the Democratic State Committee, were escorted to carriages io waiting, ana proceeded to tne stand erected for tbe occa sioo, about (Bile distant, followed by at least ten thousand persons, who made the welkin ring with their huzzas; The windows of the build ings along, the streets were filled with ladies. who sainted the distinguished statesman with the waiving of handkerchiefs, which Judge Doug las grace tally acKnowiedged. .People crowded around bis carriage to take him by tha hand. while-cheer after cheer 'greeted him throughout the entire line of bis triumphant march. - it was an oration which no public man has erer receiv ed under similar circumstances. The town was alive with people, and an honest, earnest expression of regard was everywhere manifested..: vs . -. . -r ! -. : -r.'. ; -The speaker's stand was erected in a beautiful grove, and. was sarrouoqed ,by at least: fifteen thousand persons, who were densely packed together in order to hear every word that fell from the hps of the honored guest of the Democracy. Jadga Douglas was introduced to the audienee. and received .with immense applause, the firing of cannon, and the . music-of tbe band. When the "noise and confusion" bad subsided, he pro ceeded to say tuattne demonstration which greeted him at the ears, reminded him of Scenes in bis own beloved Illinois. He fancied tbey: were all the people of bis favorite State, even Democratic hearts from Egypt. No man. could have been received with more nattering marks of regard, which be would : credit- to the Democratic masses as-- evidence that they cherished, in all their purity, the, principles' which bad so -long governed the Democratic party of the country, the only' political organizationthat could and would maintain the peace and harmony of the the National Confederacy. ' : '.: . Declining to enter npon the discussion of pure ly local mattfers, Judge Liouglaa proceeded to dis-cbss the great question of popular sovereignty, laying down the pnnciple that, so far as slavery was concerned, it was aim ply a proposition.. The Democratic party mai stained that. it was. local, and therefore subject, to iocar laws, and not to the r control rf Federal . legislation. To determine the question whether it was local or Federal it was only necessary to read the Constitution of the Doited States, and then administer to every man who denies the doctrine and oath to support the'Constitution. , 'f A slave Was a person held-to service or labor in a. State under the laws of that State, aad not by tbe Constitution of the United States, which provides 'woo , may be slaves, bow they .may . be held, and bow fugitives from services may b re turned to their owners. Slaves, were not held. by laws of Congress, but by local' legislation aod popular irill. . . :; . ' " - , ' ' Tbe Constitution recognized slavery as a local institution, existing by State authority and sub ject to bo- managed'' by' State legislation. , The people or a stale or a- lemtory must decide for themselves as thev bad tbe -right to do, whether they would have slavery or .not. -.Tha peeple of .Obio.bad decided they did .not want slavery, and that decision " was final, but there their power ceases. 1 ney- naa no more nguc 10 inienere witbt slavery to Virginia than the peopWof that "mother of States'had tbe right to meddle with any domestic. iostitntioo. of the people of Ohio. If Virginians should interfere in your concerns, yoa would quickly tell them to recroas the Ohio River And mind their own bosiossa, and if tbe AboUtioeUta of Ohio booll cross; the- river to steal slaves r interfere witb any local institutioa of Virginia, they would be sent back in. double quick time, admonished to attend to their own s'vSalriJ.'i-.T'' 4--x?vwvit- e.ias.-;s TtiS 1 tia great pnnapie of pepnlat sorer- ere'rnty. : : If the North, and ,tbo Sontb would act upon this there wonld be peace and harmony be-tweea every Slate of the Union.- '' " ' ! Gd.Tern6r-Chase- aad Uther- GidJings come Bowati thee, to T.IIilcis, and in . their speeches tey rroc'ita t:9 doctrine tat tse peoj-'e pf the Territories cannotbjtrusfd, l.at tliey will make Laa Un, liui intii atna r.11an.ror iiU Were wb 1 4I lijuaici.fiei . jo . a ic-uua lor tlS' "epia (i-rtry ctlcr jqicsticn but iisl cf t' wf "te ' wHte cerr, bt?t tayjWere not .to be tl.. negrct'etic lio a. ""r- .H to be troEtdd te.ce jrro q ; - TLy" seeded Ur Wu.i "a "Li..er- ittTLccci wri 1 cect:: rj ts ' 'a the "Trero popofatico, aJ tbey tifasa s pr"d-."t C 3 Ttirixori L;:j-l . . j 1 1 f&s Is to rrorern tv eir can c ?s- t. ; c nc cat. '17 a" aai'.oray couli Li f j ia C.s Fderd Co-ritt-r&B'-taT tilsrlie ' s.- i::r-rcw) . aj. j -" "'JBagaDooglailbeBlrk-ly reriewed tla : senons eontroverey between thaolonlfs ar.4 tt boos government, wbicb : wast in. t arj to U.-slavery question in 3firtnnin,.wben that State, than- Colony, asserted tha tight to say U;ler" or not she wopld regulate slavly to suit herself Tbe king1 declared the colonies the cotsendn prxK petty of the. empire, and :lbat every Er.glUbmao bad tbe right to carry his t??sres to Virginia, tsi1 to bold them in defiance ef local law. . . Tbe battles of the Rerc'llon fcr-ifaTbt ep-- govern their, own. -internal concerns. Tier 8e-- cured that' right and proclaimed their iudepen- uence. -;. . . ? . T . . The question was, "whether TAmerican Territc ries now are not entitled to the same rights as the colonies under Briush-institutions. Popular Sovere!gbty':proclalaied! that they: wexe, and claimed no more than thaU If we are not right now, then the Toribs of the Revolution werw right in resisting the action -of the colonies The Republican party occupy precisely tie same position, in regard to the rights of tbe Ter ritories, that George III occupied towards the Colonies. They proclaim that Congress bad sov ereign power over the people of "the Territories, and so did the, Kio-g their . doctrines were idea lc- The Republicans assumed that the Ter ritories were the property of the people of lhe States, because the Government-owned tbepub--lie lands.' If that made the Territories property, then Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin,-Minnesota, and other independent States, were alike tbe property w. w vji.iuuicuh lui ilo uflueu oiAici uwneo land in tbem alL'' But the fact Was, that the pec pteof a Territory were a political community of citizens, living upon their own lands, abd com' petent to govern themselves. . How long would! sak-etije lie publican 3 of the present Cay t unlearn the British -doctrine, and- learn the tr republican principles of a free government? v The Democratic party claim the lire Ires aile right of the people to govern themselTejs.' LWtesi formed" into political communities they,claisa'BO more than this. They do not expect sovereignty independent of the Government, bat 'key tiai-ns that they have the same right to regelate ther social relations that the- Colonies bad before 'tbe Revolution.: The Constitution gives CoigreaM no authority to interfere in the domestie eoacera of the- States or the Territories'"' After discussFng at considerabfe fcngla tbe QUestion of DODulaT lavprpirrm. .t il. n.L. of a people of a Territory, Judge . Douglas took up the reply to his recent article u Harper'0 Magazine, which has been auributed to Jud?e Black. - - , .- ? He charged the author with misrepresenting bim in stating that his' article in Harper vontaiu' uuf4ug wuri aani uiat tu one hundred and thirty speeches he made ia IU linois last year, he defended that Court is etery ona of them. He spoke with -great severty of the article attributed to. Judge Black, who be said bad written to Demoerau in lllmoie lasS year, to' vote for ; Abolitionists for Congress "io preference to the regular Demoeratie candidates. He would not bare .noticed this atUck bol that it was aimed at the friends of popular sovereignty. It was intended to reach Judge Ranney, the noble standard bearer of the lleooeralic party of Ohio; it was intended for thegaHaat Beker the candidate for Governor in Minnesota; it wa intended to strike at the eloquent Dodge, who- wa .eauing ut usmocratic tosts in lowaj it a a stroke at the candidates of the Democracy throughout the country, who stand w the same platform of popular soveregnfy. - Waea tba author of that pamphlet attempted to strike at tba uwwnue, oe maoe a wov at tbe entire letuo cratic party of the Northwest, - Judge Dooglas quoted some further stafemeefj ia the article of Judge Black, and pronounced them insidious falsehoods, put forth willfully aad with bad. intent. . . . . ; , ( ... ' He then proceeded1 to show the -itfon of tie vrlJ b regara 10 in queitioa ot alaveryj that tbey ' were pledged by aH tleir speeches, by their political sermons in the palpi l, toeome forward and repeal the slave code is New Mexico, and-yet the- people xf that Territo The RepublicaBS would prevent tbeir adopting such domestic re-relations. as thev miKtWs just and proper. ; If the people of New Maxicw bad declared agalnst'slaverv. 4-could bare forced the inatitntioo apoa tLem ' AneX were i w -f nouse, aod jaey made their choice. Upon them should rest tbe reeptsfli lily. ' A Republican in the crowd inquired whether j .M.k-iiuui IllSlllUlHJO. . ' Jndge Dotla replied, saying that be knew of bo tribunal on eartk that eouldlrr tba merfta )f the morality of slavery. , He dealt with it a , a question or public policy, if tbe people of Ohio believed etaverr to be immoral and irrtu' gions, they had a right to that opinion : If tbe people of Kentucky held to -the opposite belief they should be free to express and'exervtse their opinion without. molestation. . - Whew Kentucky bad so decided', be" would say to tha questioner, fjudge sot lest ye U jufa-ed." . Mr, Douglas, ia conclusion, sxhorUd De-mocracv of Ohio to CO mo Ota aVn nnm mm tn tViai Support of their ticket, to pot . the State once? more where she properly belongs, at the bead of the Democratic column. IH'nois stands the On. ly Northern State that has never faltered; thai bas never failed to cast ber vote for a Democrat" 10 President, she has never been 'eonauered and, God willing, she never will be. 1 '- r ' Give a little bope'tdlhe ether Stafa bv t. A a ai ffWaWtt sTVkaA vVnfvi- TAaaV.lt. ..U 1 1. r . entitled tc tbe lead) bring her forth from Re pub- IT . . a vv -r- saw SVf iBUMVOU IUID, JM W&V iicanism na. voaaaism, sura use year place at . tbe bead.) ,..... ... . Mr. Dobglaswitb Hbe remark that fie al war savea tne oest wing tor-the laaf, kxk Jndgm 1 - - . - 4 uanney try the ana and irfroduced bim to the assembled thousands as : the . next Governor of Ohio.,., . : . , . A wil l buzza echoed back the prophesy. j -Judge uoug las then retired amidst the cheer' ing of the crowd, tfie firing of eaeaoa and the Knsie of some halfdozen bandst. , He returned to town and took the tra'a tbie . evening for Washington, where he will lemaia until some time Jo October.r" b - :-' Jndge Ranney made m marked impressloa vry . OB the, immense. concourse in . speech of an boor, which was followed by an eloqoeat ad' uress trr senator Jroe. wao m speaktn? U 1 j- ..... - i . . . ; rx r .-. Our friend ef the Woodsfield Fpirit ef Eenioc racy, thus show the awkward predlcie- in which. tL Opposition are Uiely to get if tl?, succeed !e electing Gbo!son:' i v -r "Suppose Ghelson" should le elected, Tlsa suppose that "Davy ,n or "Raa" cr "l.'oa ' iloikl escape from ftis: master, and be c'nrei, and the captured and captors be trccrrt tefreGboI sob, as Supreme Jude, wbet wotli La doT . . " "He?bas wartactei ttea t!ives ft 5. t-l if cy any dec.o.vO cf Lis tLey I f -i a: Ubert. woulia't P-r-jctt e-9 C'-' wsrrsrtT ..f .- 1"!' , . " " .. ,-: . : ' : If GLclsra taoa'l male ls ' wirra: r I ty seB?!n tketa lck to sfavery, woulia'tD. :i rua Lii C--'j wivb a Lajce'.--.'IKiDe-ci'aoa . shou!l rssX::'-! ':r-: with a tsjbiet, wealia't To-n Crr-:i ' r,'OB",to a pnrer atmc?bere f- 1 ii'as tspf : r .', ' " IflCorwia khould tif.T Eo"-r. "r" .C:T1-bw and lis Oberiit :.- V ' , |
