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rv 0 ZL7TT -;J Vol. VI. MOUNT VEnNON, OHIO, TnunSDAY, JtUNTld 14; 1QOO. III If 1 JillilJ iVJlJi o 1 . u fo. a a: ,'n Campaiq Soxo. We copy a capital cui , tmlirn unnir from lha Den ol Mr. 0 toil mil, 0 New York.autboroftbe' Diamond Wedding," &i. It was written fur the Cliiciigo Press, "rings out grandly. HONEST ABB OP THE WEST. Aia "Stab Sfanqled Bawskb." 0 btrkl from (he pine-crested hill of otii . Mine, Wlltete tbe splendor first falls from the wings of Wie morning. And sway in tbe West over rier and plain. Kings oot the grand anthems of Liberty's warning! From tnufc-roltaYe Draire itawells toth aea For the nenule traVe rien victorious and free; They have eboee'n their leedeis, the bravest and best Of them all U Old Abb, Hdsssx Abe or ths Win. The snirit that foniht for the patriots of old lias swept through the land add aroused us lorever; In the pure air of Heaven a standard un fold Fit to marshal us on to the sacred endeavor! Proudly the banner of freemen we bear; Noble the hopes that encircle it there! Vi And where battle is thickest we follow the , crest Of gallant Old Abb, Hokbst Abb or the WkstI There's a triumph in urging a glorious cause; Though the hosts of the foe for a while may 1 be Stronger, Pushing on for just rulers and holier laws, Till tbtir lessening columns oppose us no longer. Hut ours the loud pan of men who nave i past Through thff struggles of years, and are vio-. tor at last: So forward the flag! leave to Heaven the rest, "And trust to Out Abe, Honest Ads or tub West. talwe the bright scroll of the future enfold! Broad 'farruk.and lair cities shalt crown our r devotion . Free labor turn evehthe sands Into gold, And the links of ber railway chain ocean to v , , ocean; (. , Barges shall float oh 'the dark riVe'r waves Willi a wealth never wrtmg frufn the sra'ews -Ani the 'ClnV. In ft'lbse ralo a!1) Vhe land shall he blest, Is o'or noble )i Abb, Honest 'Abe of thk West! Then on to the holy Republican sVriiie! And ngain for a Future as fo!r as the morn' ing. W1 .. . Fc the snke of thi t freedom u:ore precious than li e, , Kingo'nf the grand anthem of Liberty's warn Ingi Lift Vhe banner on high', while from mountain I'd plain The fchot rs of the people arc- sounded again tlurrrh! for bur 'cause of nil oausea the best lluirili! tor Oli Abe, Uonedt Auk of the West! The&iflS; God bl'e.'s the gil ls Whom preity ctlila Bic'nd with our evening HrSaiBs j Thejr haunt our li 'eS; Like spirit wiVes, Or as irtuida haunt the stream's". They soothe our jiains, They fill our brains Witn dreams ol sunny htturti 0d bless the girls God bless their curls, God bless our hum n flowers: ITEMS OF NEWS. 'SiNariAB Phenomenon Water Spodt 'andTornado. Stotms.like troubles, set) at td come in crowds. Last Trees was full 01 them and this week starts fair for a similar exhibition of elemental disturbancos. Yesterday evening we were visited by fearful tornado. A singular phenomenon was observed in tbe south east. A black cloud bellying down like a bag let drop from the tower end, a long tongue like a spout, which whirled and sway ed exactly as the descriptions say water spout d jes. It passed about a mile and a half south of the centre of the city, or just beyond &he outskirts, dealing destruction in itsco'irse All round iu the vicinity rail were blown about like feathers Urge tiees twisted round mat broken off, and hnces blown down. In few mutes it began to hail, and such hail atones toroo very rarely been seen in this region. All very large, and many of them fully -as large as hens' eggs! Luckily they fell very sparsely, or we eheatd have had few window lights and little fraft left. : The track of the tornado was hat apparently but three or four hundred tot fa widh. nd within ft the destruction has bo doubt been very great. IudinnnpoHt Journal, May 30th. A private letter from London, to a gan. leman in Albany, stales that 8ayers, in a confidential conversation with a friend, admit ted that Heenan waa too heavy and tno strong for him, and expressed satisfaction Ifutt he hnd com out of the ring alive. The writer aMs 'it is tbe serious belief of many who saw the fight, that bad not the blow by which Sayer's arm was terribly injured.heen warded by him, but fallen full on his head, it would have put a fatal end to the fight." We understand that a young married lady in tideway, in this State, a few dayt ago presented her husband with two sons snd a daughter the first start toward raising a family. We recommend this young couple to the favorable consideration of the Ohio Block Breeder's Association. IDLj' . - .- l ne uemorratio papera art an exceeding ly disturbed about the till of "Uonest Old Abe," which neighbors have lestowtd upon If r. Lincoln. No wonder they art disturbed and the sound la strange to them. Dishonesty has got to be to certain t thing in tbeii candidal for office, that tbey have no stoinaob, left for a Boats oat, San. Beg, THE GREAT 6TOEI4. June 3d, Town Dksthoyed, Over one hundred lives Lost. The Chi&igo 1'rei brings the following da-fails of the most appaling and wido spread ca Utility which on Snwbijr everting passed ovei portions ol ibwii and jllinoi the mo-tt Je atruotive in loss of life and property tbut hai ver visitea tne iiormwem. u says: From the best Information we liave heec able to collect ttiiis far. the triicH of the torna do extenas from the heart of Linn county Iowa, near Cedar Rapids, the present termin us of (lie Chicago, towa & Nebraska IUiltoar', in a generally nortn easterly direction across Clinton county, Crossing the Mississippi st Camancha and Albany, towns fronting each other respectively on the Iowa and Illinois shores and thence maintaining Its course to- wards the centre of tbe Slate, across White. side into Lee county, its latest ravages heard from up to the present writing being near Lee Centre. The entire distance thus traversed is up ward of 100 miles, and that through a popu lous and fertile farming region, dotted with thriving towns, some of which as we have be low to record, fell iu the path of tbe destroy er. To trace trie entire route, and set forth in detail the devastation1 that marks this march of the f arful messenger of ill, the catalogue of lives lost, of homes laid waste, would nil a volume. The tornado srem to have hacf its origin in Linn county, ah jut 60 miles west of the Mis- issippi river, about nightfall, its7 ravage! be ing as far as heard from, in the vicinity of Cedar Rapids. Thence it passed in a direction a little northeast, several times crowing the line of the Chicago, Iowa and Nehraskn Railroad. At Lisbnn station. sixty four miles west of Clinton, the depot structures were emolished, and a train of ten freight cars standing on the track, were lifted bodily from their tracks and dashed to pieces. Some of them were loaded -with grain, which was scattered broadcast for roJs. One waslnaded with lumber, which was carried and dtapeY&d many yards distant. A 'correspondent writes us from Dewitt, Clinton 'County, ttventy mites west of the riv'er, os fclli.ws: Boot six o'clock a Wrific hurricane pis sed One milo south of this pMace, tnkine evcrv thing in its course. The first house down was that of Kir. WilWm SmitV lost hi youngest child- then L. Lnwery's house ws all blown away and three injme 1; Henry M. Dire'o d . family saved; K G iV-ake. do., 'niiiily Somewhat injured; Hunry Dwire'sdo family saved; Mr. Pearson's house gone, himself and wife badly irjured, thiee children and 'mother slightly; Mr, Bocts' housn gone; G-o. Ames' hniiSe gone, Son injuK'd sITghtly; Mr. Wolrod. houso grio. Tnore wis seven persons in the house and Six thern were killed Mr. Wallace, hnuao, barn, corn cribs all Rone; family saVed; Mr. it itndd'a house arid hjrn gone; hiriiseif and wife badly injured: Mr. Foster and family, consisting Of frtur per sons visiting with him, were ail killed; live other pirsois abtut his house were also killed; Mr Burnett's house gone; his oldest daughter was omwhat hurt. This includes the iifo'st of the drittn'age or aBo'iit seven miles in its track, beyond which we have but rti-mors of disastrous effect. The whirlwind sSertied to commence about our fifties southwest of here and come direct for our toWn butai it wis within a aiile of here, l vesred tb ttie ea3t and left us just outside of its vor teX, and incroased in fury as it went east making a dull but heavy roaring. Large trees were' twisted like pipe stems,' and cattle,' hor-ser arid hogs in fact anything that had life was killed or mangled. Sortie of tbo wounded were timed from SO to 100 rods from where the bouses stood tha'l Itl'ey were in. As far as beard from there have been 16 killed , There were 11 dead bodies brought into town last night." The tearful marks of the progress Of the tornado are traced to the heart 'ol Lee county, with loss of H eal CtirJen Plain, Cotrio, and other points. Near tbe Utter place a farm bouse was torn to peiced And three Children killed. Some ol the Furniture, was carried to a distance ol three mild. A gentleman who was a passenger north ward on the Illinois Cvatral Railroad, count, ed seventeen buildings destroyed on tbe line where tl.t tornado cruaed the road. It is itn possible to estimate the loss ol property by this calamity. To tbe farmers it will be iui tnense. Cattle and stuck were killed in large n trail re bulb at lha homesteads aud at pam- or, intces, houses, oichaids and standing timber, all were destroyed alung the broad line ol the tornado's march. Fragments o siding, clapboards, Ac, were found at FjI. to, believed to have been carried from Albany, a distance of eight mites. The very auriact ol the ground was rent and torn m it by ploughshares, along the courat o' the destroyer. Oot eye witness stated that the turf is id many spots torn up. Out man back of CamaMh was brawn from bis bed a distance of tmtnty W A A. Terrill writes as from Sterling: In Culooa, four miles south of Bert, a Mr. Cogswell Is nearly killed. A Mrs. Rirdball 1 in a dying condition. Her child was killed Instantly. A Mr. Pike is dying, and bis wife is dead. At Lyndon the I'M of life snd property Is ystnottsev t?, A mm and wife are known to be billed, and many more art missing. All la excitement, and tbe whole town have gone into tbe country to aid the suffeitrm It is impossible to tell the extent of the storm and Its effects. InColona,Mr. Ooulder'a bous is entire! demolished, so' that one man can earry aay pieot thai is left. Mr. Wood had bli house onroofid, ami thrown entirely o(T the foundation. Mr Kiruball.s bouse is entirely destroyed. , The fencoV all over the country are blown dowtivan,d the crops are in danger of all being destroyed, , , It is believed that I' Is worse evrn than the Pans, Ellison, or I he Gale-burg disasters, . At s point seventeen niilrs west of the rlv er, the nsmeol which we are nut in possess, ion ol, wversl houses ere lorn to piocs snd frnm which scene a man set off on Sunday Iff , , i 1 . j evening, ridii.gjtst haste lo the hmi loan of Camanche. Clinton Co , for aid. He reach-ed it only to find tbe turned j bad preceded hiin and left the town in ruins. It is at this point that the most appalii lg (orcj of the tor nado was displayed. Catdariclie Is a town of about fifteen hundred mnalMtants, eight miles south of Clinton. It occ,upi "y leT8' P,'in or. P'ateau elevated about fifteen feet above the river, tb'e town Was built alone itUUleditl nrl.in h hrink f the MississlDui. and amnnarliit -..,.. n,tt , . ' . r.-.-v Ore western town, thH buing one otthe corn- paralfvely older points, an I lounded in 1337 . It bad numerous substantial buildings, and others in erection, and three churches. The tornado came upon Ounanche about 7 P.M. An eyo witness describes it in n pearance as resembiine an inverted cock iu broad point sweeping the earth in it, tearful march. As it cam a peju'iar moan ing sound struck the ear, heard even at soinu distance on either side of the track. Almost without warning it struck the de voted village, and in a track about a quirtor of a mile wide the tornado passsd across the very he4ri of the to Human pen or tongui utterly Tails to describe the scene of terror, of mortal peril and econv that en. sued. Trie ai K darkened tiv the tlm1r tv.lt ik.t trailed as a tn nkt,r nt !.ih r.n.n k. i.. 1 1 u II. bllO UC1T' ens, was (Illud with rushing torrents of rain, fragments of crushed and shattered buildiiura and cries, and sljriefis, and urayeh for help-All was over in less than three minutes, and where, ere thU brief interval, had stood a thriving village, all was now terror, dohola-lion, ruin. Not a single business building in itu town remained stunt!inr. The lariro three ory brick structure, the Miihinf It,, no built and kept by II. G. Sessions, formerly of Erie, Pa., was totally destroyed, and rHiiilir. e l a shapeless mass ol rubbish. In this budding quite a numbar of persons were killed.how tuaiiv had not been ascertained. Three Stores beneath the hotel was de stroyed with their CtinteniR. Tha tl,.,,.. burettes 61 the town were destroyed. A noble brick stittcture, nearly couiDleted lOr business purposes, three stories hiifh and one hundred feet liunt by eipbty Itet deep w lutany acdtroyed. Our correspondent II. Van Djvenier. of Clinton, Who VftrVd UVe scene on Sunday night, writes that 'Scarcely a house is left in an inhabitable condition tn C.uianclie, anil more than In If the population are without a place of any kind to lay iheit he Is. Tney re ertiirely destitutt', wltliuii: food, shelter r clolhlrig, except what they wore when they rusnea iroul the falling buildings lo save their lives " The entire length of Front street was a scene of ruin. The dwelling of Mr. Wol. dorf was demolished and Mrs. Woldorf was killed. Seventl dwellings standiris on the Brink of the river, were blown into the river and their inmates drowned. A large raft was passing at the time with twenty men on board. These were a'll carried into lha Rt m rwl drowned" tx(t tKe raft broken up. Manifestly attiid such terrih!e violence and ruin, the loss of life taunt have been soifou's. and It was so. One account places the numbar lilted over fitly. Up to 7 A. Jt. yesterday mornini?38' d"ead bodies were recov red from among the niius andere bw ideulifl.-J amid a Senna of griet and anguish that surpasses description Arf apt Picture.' The Memphis Bulletin thus baDDilv nic- a r tures the horrors which, until his deleal at Chicago, were linked with tbe name of Wm it. Seward in Driuncratic appiehensnins: We bave been told for years that the nbitb ought to ti'nite to (fefeai Sjward. Every time the democratic pack was hhnfflled, Sewa.d was turned up. Seward was lb the bacon and greens, and hog, and h6niin of the whole Southern democratic family, Tney saw Reward In their Clips', drank bira'in their wines' snd dresth'ed ol him between their shte'ts. When tbey had occasion to put the opposition down they poured a strong decoction ol Seward dowrt their throats'. Seward was omnipotent aril iihifjuitdus. Without Suward, the southern Slates wo'd have been lkt sacking doves. Well I Well I as fate would have It, it did act devolve on tbt south to kill off Seward. Wi ahall ha tomahawked with Seward 04 more. What will the Southern bug now ? We hold our breaths ai.d pausH n r a reply. Henry Spaght decended into a well In Unlontown, Stark eounty.last weeek. Wls'n about twenty feet down, tht sides caved io and killed him. A half wltted girl escaped from tht Conn State Prison. She was found, after a three week's search, living in a hiU abt had dug under a bay mow. During tbt three weeks she bad lived lb botV8,and subsided by milch, ing COWS snd sucking egg.- Mr. Charles Sheoherd: of frrantak N. V.' wss filling fluid lamp whilst it was lighted' The fluid took fire, burning him so badly that bsdied. His wilt was severely Injured, an I their dwelling was burned to tbe ground. A BVeoman sold into Slavery while his Kidnappers g3 free. One of those disgraceful deeds that characterize the Imrbarl.ra of slavery has just been pnrpelrated beneath the regis of Kentucky Justice. A free man has been sold into slavery. m .tuies, Wsjrgnrier a negro, was kldii.pped at Cincinnati end inken over to K mucky, where h and hii two kl In I'iperi wore arrester! ami ail put in Jul. Niono appeared against the kidnappers, for the facts had not become known to W iggo'ier' trienils. and so the kidnappers were released and Waggoner was advertised to be sold as a slavj for tbe Jail fees. Meanwhile Waggoner's friends on the Ohio side ascertained how matters were, and stirrtd themselves; Mo i lay last wa ihedoy appointed for the sale, Wagminer on a wiit of habias corpus, iys tli.it mOrn,jhg brought before tht mayor of Nowport, The Cincinnati Commercial, says : It was proved that Waggouer will born in Ohio, ol free parents, and tbat he bad never been in Virginia. John snd Uliza Whiteman apd Mary Miller testified" that they all knew Peter Waggoner, the father of James, since 1R52, and tbat both resided in Ohio since that time. The afU lavit of Joseph Thomas, lumber deaior, of Cincinnati, stated that James had worked for that person last Summer ; that during that time, Petjr came to visit James, and that they recognized each other as father snd soil. The affidavit of Peter was introd jced. but could riot lie admitted , in evidence according to the laws of Kentucky, but it. showed that he had been set free by tbn will of his master, for whom he was named, in 1828 ; chat he then, or soon alter, left Wythe county Va-and sailed in Ohio in 1831. and soon after' that time James was born in B'rown county' that S ate. The evidence on the other side did. not disprove these facta ; it consisted of the state ments of two persons recently srrived from Virginia in pursuit of a fugitive fiom Slavery that they knew Peter Waggoner, th e ftnme owner of Junes father, and that ho had been set free by that person's will in 1828; that the will had been annulled in 1853, twenty-five years afterwards. No record, however, of this was produced in Court. O ie of the parties also stated that he thought that James :esemblcd a negro he knew to have fill Iroin Jacob Waggoner, of Virginia, obout five years ago, but could not identify the lri8opcr. A letter was read from thealiedged owner aforesaid, vihich contained this very graphic description el bis lost chattel.: "lit is tal slim mail and lias a grate k wan. tity uv wite in his ize, and a do'iukast look. On ibis proof the mayor decided that Wag goner wa.s a slave, and driven toward: Alexandria for the auction block, An i j'uictii.n was got out, and while the sherilf's party was maring Alexandria, Col. Siually, with one of his swiftest borsjs overtook tin iu, and acq tainted them ol the fact that un injunction was iu pursui.. and that the pany holding it were noi i'ar behind, lie i hen to ik the ne gro into his buKtO n'i pushed aboad, but eri the injunction party reached Alexan' d, la the nigra could not be either seen or beard of. No one in th i place had either se n or heard of the sale, bdt tbe sheritf s party told ih'e injunetid i patty that Dr. J . Q. A. Foster, of Newport, had purobisdd tbe negro for $700, giving his note for that sum Sudorsed by a man named Wilson. Senator Ea'e da Democratic Ddotrinesl During the discuss on ol tbe Jctf. Davis r solution last week. Senator Hale said: I think the Senator front Texi haj done great injustice if he thinks trial the passing of the amendment introduced by the Senator from Mississippi, Governor Brown, wou'd stag ger them in the least. I think thry would take it as a good pious Mohammedan takes the Koran "it is written." laughter. end if these resolutions, no matter what they aie,are sent out as Democratic, the regular thing, untainted with any cecession or an thing of that sort. Ido not think he w,ll lose a vote for the Democratic party in the State which t bate the honor in part to represent.' Sir, he does riot kriow the. tried fldelty of those men. Laughter. I do not think yod bin pass any resolutions upon this subject of si lvery that would s-.agger them in the least. I think if you passed these iesofu'ti6nS,iio matter how strong yod put, them, the next D Bloc ratio Convention in New Ilimshrie will resolve that they had always be on their sentiments laughter.; that they now, and ever had been, unalterably fixed in the support of the vie wi that bad been laid down by the SjnUor from" Mississippi, or the Sana tor from Texas.no matter who; and that this' was doctrine the had alwa'ys contended for, and only had been opposed' by .Federalists and Abolitionists. Laugnter. Mrs, Millard, ol Poughkepsie, while walking in tbe streets of that city a fewdtys since was attacked furiously by a but), Tbe enraged animal rushed at her and caught bar on bis horns, threw ber up, caught her again as she fell, again tossed bar in the air, wbtn she 'ell under the leetofa horse. Sht was taken op insensible, much bruised and eat, but ber injuries' will oot prove fatal. THocBt,Eso?'oi.lf Boat. It is ss'ld that Mr. Jimmy.Buchanaa ticlaimedT tht other "When will my troubles cease t have had Douglas, Walker, Forney, Covode anl poor Fowler on band; and now comes another infernal cargo of captured niggers to add to my vexation." Theodore Parker, tbe distinguished New England Divine, died at Borne on the 19th of May U now the D Jinoorata Beooive the Nomination of Lincoln. There Is a terrible panic in he ljiiimocratic emp. The nomination' of Mr. Lincoln at Chicago is almost universally acknowledged to he the very strongest thut r 0 ild ponihly have besn made, snd the danger that threa' yes th ovenjirow.next Nveiriljir of the D'lnocratio rule at Washingin Is regarded as imniinant Ths nominal i m of M' Lincoln :i' astriin.-, one," a;s th. Poslon Herald, a j ramp'irt Diinnortio sheet of the D oigla- scno"i, -and a ill 01 uiltti'ilt todJ'eat. Those who flatter themselves (hat the Dmf-rn are to walk over the Pi evidential Miif-se(iwHh ease, will Rail thems Ives rpstalien," "There will be a great exclt.-ment throughout the aud." siys thit orgi'i ol arisiiwritic Dun w racy, the N. 7. Joirnal of C unmef-e, in v- irtent alarm, "and 'wigwarqs will be built now as log cabins were in lfliO." "In Mi' Lincoln they have presented a gentleman, who will poll nearly every vote in the Republican party," says the N Y 8unday Times, another exponent of Democracy, which warrs its party that thxir day Is up unless they immediately quit quarreling and t li firmly for the great contest. ''The nouiina. tion of Mr Lincoln at C licago is a formidable one probably more than would be (hat ol any other man who hoi twea nauud in connection with it," aays that rankest of negro-driving sheets, tbe N. Y. Day Book. '.'Toe nomination of Lincoln and Hamlin will bi received with immense enthusiasm in the West where ihey can hardly fail to make.a clean sweep," echoes the N Y. Sunday Atlas, another ext onent of the Democraticpro-slavery creed. "Lincoln is a man not to be despised," cries the Rochester Advertiser, with an appeal to arms to its Democratic Soldiers. The Louisville Democrat, Douglas, pro nounces the nt ruination of Linco'n at Chicago the strongest his party could havo made, and says, "we have regarded L uc'oln since 1858, as their available man, Douglas has not met as nearly his match in debate, whether iu argument or lact, as be did when he met Abraham Lincoln iii d abate in his own State. It is plain thai rhis ticket is not io be asily beaten, and it is idlo to' undervalue its' strength." Tbe Lous tille Couritr. which is a Guthrie paper, does not see in Mr Lincoln's nomination an argu. inent in f-vor of taking Douglas at the Baltimore, but declares tbat "his nomination by the Baltimore 0 nvention eoiild only result in the defeat of his party." It justly says o' Lincoln that "he will probably unite the, strength of Sswardand Bites, and with les8 qualifications for Prohident than either, he is the most formidable candidate his party could have srlecled." it is thus that the conviction is everywhere spreddmg and taking root in the ui nds u( all, Democrats and Republicans alike, that "lion, est Old Abe" is to be our next President S mote it be. We rejoice at the pio-pect before tisui hgltr day a, lor our Country under tbe high-minded and freedom-loving ou'spic-s o! his Republic n nil). , . t n"" Lincoln Among the Children. The following inciueiit, .nays, jai-ierday's 7Wiue,wiil exibil Lincoln (u oneof those uu-obstructive acts of goodness which adorn his lite. Tbe circumstance was relaied by a teacher from the Five Puinttt', House of fndus; try io New York. ;,0ur Sunday School i the Five Points wad assembled, one, Sibbatb morning a few months since, when Ioticed a tall and remaikable looking man enter jhe room and take a seat anion us. . Uejlsiened with fixed attention to our excerciscs, and his countenance manifested such genuine interest, that I approached him, and suggested that he might be willing to say something tn the cbd-dren. He accepted the invitation which ev ident pleasure, and coming forward begun, a simple s ddress, which a't once fascinated every little hearer.and hushed the room Into silence-His i anguage was strickingiy beautiful, and his tones musical with intense leeling. The little faces around would drop into sad con viction as he uttered sentences of warning' and would brighten into sunshine as he poke cheerful! words of promiaa. Once or twic he attempted to close his remarks but tbe im perative shodt of 0on!" "Oh. d ) go on!' W'iuld c.nn,wll him to reauuw. A I' looked upon int gaunt and stneway rreme ol ine granger, and marked his powerful head and determined feaiures.now touched into softness by tbe impressions of the moinont, I felt an irrepressible curidsity to learn something moie about him, and whet he was quietly leaving the room, i begged to he's his name. He courteously replied, "It is Abra'm Lin coln, from Illinois!" Laid at Last. The ghost pfJoh'ii Brown which p.ayed su:h pranks with grave Sena tors as to make them dream of convicting nor thern Statesmen of complicity with tht Har pers Ferry raid, it is hoped, bal been laid a1 lasti Senator Mason's committee, which was going to make an todol tht Republican (Jirtr has lahored fong end resulted in nothing True.Hyatt remains in jail for refusing to tea tify that be Knows nothing, It is to be hoped that this shade of John Brown, woo't dis turb the cbivelry fer some time to tome. The long labors of the Committee all end (a smoke. SbL Beg. Saturday ad Interesting eersmon too? plact( at tht old Livingston Mansion. A geatleman named Lerqw, aged 75, was mar riecf to i beautiful girl of 18, named McLel-laod, who resides near Hudson. The old man is worth $100,000. Frederick Douglas bu ttturned to the United States. He came unannounced, and bad been boms sevsrat weeks before tbe fact wta knewa to the poblio. Henrj Clay and the Chicago Platform. The Louisville, Ky., Journal' I publishes the following c mmunlcation from a Kentucky Ch e ira delegate : OKNTLKMRit : In the Jourtiatt article of the 19ih, cotninenting on the nominttion of Mr Lincoln, at Chicago,' particular attention a Inwu to the latter clause of the sight section of the pUtfnrm previously adopted, which is d noiMei-l in the following terms : ' Tim thu lit ii'i'ijti pir'y renews with fiesh intensity its vows of hostility to the Sou b-" Y ur attention U respectfully called to the following pascages from Henry Clay's speech, es in the Senate in 1850, placed in the jux tipositi m with t le parallel passages of the Chicago platform : Ikmy (wt'fipffeh in tin $e,i;ti, ISoJ. I takd it for granted that what I have said will silis'y ths Senate of that first irulb, tbat slavery do s not exist fhere by law unless slavery was carried there the moment tne treaty was .ratified under the operations of t,ho constitution of the ( nited Slates." llrnry Clay't ipmh in tht Haiute. 1850 " I must say that he. idea that tninkan tit. upon the con summation of the treaty the Constitution pi the ITni e I States spread itself over tbe acquired Cnuutry and Carried alnnir with It the institution of slavery is so jrreconcjlaMe with any comprehension or any r ason which I msv possess, that I hardly know how to meet It. " Utnry Clny't fpfch in tht denote, 1850. " While lam willing to stand aside and make no legislative enactment one wy r the other to lay itF the Territories without the Wi'mot Proviso on the one hand or without an attempt to Introduce a clause for the Intro duct ion of slavery into the Territories, while I am for nje-ting both the one and the other, I must say that I Cannot vote for any express provision recoirniiijnir tha Tight tocarry slaves there.' Seo 8th Chhign Pla' . form. " The normal condition of all the 'erri lory of the United SlaUs is that ol freedom' " Taction 7.'A Chleago PUtfnrm' " The new-dogma that the Constitution of Its own foice car-rios slavery into all or any of iho Territories ol the United Statei. is a dangerous po ideal heresy, at variance with the explicit pro visions of that instru inent itself." Sec. to Chlcagn Tht J"rm Jjatt CIhum " And we d. ny the aulhnrity.ofConnres--or a Territorial Legislature or of any indi vidual to give legal existance to slavery in any Territory o the United States." Now in these ,in both alike, we have tbe three fundamental principles lail down : First, that slavery does not exist primarily in ,he territories by law, and as a consequence that freedom does S.'eoidly. that the Con-s'iMitinn d'os not cirry it there. Thirdly, that it should not ho legislated thorn. it'cenily the American Slaver WildS're. was captured by one of our war steamers with a cargo of A'ricans on board, and the negroes re now in uie custody ol the Untied 8ttes at Key West. Tbe captain and other officers were brought in as prisoners, but instead of bi; gtgidly, held for trial under the violated law of the fjnited Slates for Piracy, a Key West dipitch of the 1st says "Tbe Captain ol the Wildflie.was to-day released on his own recognizance." , Can any of our reae'ers interpret the follow-ing subscriftion with which a witty school-boy lately diiected his letter to a friend? Wood John , .:., r . .. . MllSS. . . H I . , Fearing they may tot, we give tbe solution of the spparent senseless direction. It is John Undtnoood, Aiulovir, Sliunachueett. . That is. John is under tbo word wood, and John is over the word Mass. Smart! IIb fVorjt.b be Fsbb. Yesterday aliernoon a runaway negro was discovered iu the upper portion of ope of the .buildings on the Bas-cbuill rico-rourse. On being approached by the city officers be sin wed battle, and made a stout resistance until shot hy offiour W. H. Shelton, when he was captured and brought to the city guard-house, where his, wounds were tendered by a physician, He is owned b) Mr Tborp; his situation is a very precarious on, Mobile A lverliter, r 7 , . Jacob Huffman end bis wife, of Windsor township. Rkhland county, were poisned laat week' by the use of apple butter which had been kept in cheap earthenware jars. The acid had dissolved tbe lead from the glazing in sufficent quanily to cause very serious illness They both art slowly imp.oving. A S mth Ciroiina paper thinks it a great sname that somi of the young '.mta of that State have married New England girls. We tbonld'ot wonder if South Caroline were to enact a Iiw dlyorcing all such of her bob and woman as bare married Yankees. A terrllio bail storm has visited Kokomo Ind. Tbt hail stonn wore so large, and fclj who aucu vioienct, iuai toe uueatea Ui woocen smewaua The Japanesehave been out shopping in Washington. One of them bought for forty dollars a tckny or watch worth five. "Roo seel" be exclaimed, "Tokay bo good. No wurtuurdam, uxtor, be say." A, terrible tornado, accompanied with ioss o, lift.passed through Cattaraugus eounty.N. Y. nay aotb. No Time for Compromise, ' The Fiohmond Inquirer states thus faiilf the ground of tbe difference bet ween the we sections oT the democracy!' . , A Ittllt mors, than twelve months ago, the faot was Itilly derelepod, that a large portion. of thenoilben democracy btd accepted, ani and were readytb insist upon an interpretation of tbe bincinnati platform altogether" at yarij ance with the interpretation understood and,. tcted upon by the aouthrrn doinoerjuiy. Thus a dlreot eonuict of opinion was produced. On the one band, it was insisted . iht the Cincinnati platform recognised the uneootroll. d power of each territorial, legislature to establish or abolish the right of property is( -lav s in the respective territories of thi Union. vi On the other band, it wu intiste thal '.f J.u,t intorpretatioa of tht platform on tlus point recognise the right of slave property in ihe territories asn existing rightguer. anteea by tbe Constitution.and tbat the pow er which Congress, could exorcise, either im.- mediately or through its delegates, tbe teril-tirial legislative, assemblies, waa the do war coupled with the duty to protect suck exist ing tights of persons sod property. Haying thus stated the issue that districts the Pemocracy.the Enquirer proceeds to rem ment upon the abortive attempts ihatbave been made, and are being made, to reoorcila the difference: Here, as in every similar instance of differ ence, n- any political Isadora and presses wore ready with suggestions of; compromise. We tnougnt men, wnat we know now4 tbat tbls was a case in which both principle and policy precluded all nijddle, ground of compromise.! Indue.., we saw but one possible ground e compromise ha( which suggested tbe re-en- actment oi, tne uncinnati platwrm without any reference wha.:evor to the point ol disputcd interpretation. Such a , compromiss as this, we were utterly unwilling to adipt. We foret-aw that its adoption would result in' nothing less than the deiLca iration of the party through the perpetration of t double deception, Vi foresaw, too, even were suchi deception's possible it could pcly be made practicable through' the nomination for tht Presidency of some man cither too tijiid oi too dishonest to avow his opinions on the point at issue, Aliogetiw, un reeogm'ttd tht policy of comprnmUe at too equivocaltobe homtC, too timid to be prudent, too telfUh to be safe. Here is a full, explicit, positive oonfirmatida of all that tht Republicans have charged la relation to tbe Cincinnati platform that it was'a double dooeptipn,'uneqiijyocal,disbones snd base. But aside from the importance of such tn admission, by so high a democratic! authority, it demonstrates the impossibility of a compromise upon any ather basis ex cept, an open surrender of the Northern to tbe Southern democracy. Nearly all the indications we have from the slave States are of the, same character, foreshadowing a widening of the breech in the Baltimore. Convention, or a' total caving-in of the free. States. . Here is a complete snd positive' admission by a high democratic autiioiity.cf all the Republicans charged on the Cineinnati Democratic Platform a dibonest "double deception. The breech widens anl compromise seems impossible. . "Jiarmony" on the President ., ,..M"Harmqny" the correspondent of the , Mel bile Register, tells very funny but very oil travagant stories on the President, as witoe the following. l(TheJapanese toys will amusetbe .Prtji dent for a fe w days, and that excitement will drown the remorse the President mua'. feet a the Tall of his agent Fowler. What an unhappy old bachetort , Had Jecms married young, be never would bare bocouia in bis old age the remorseless, vindictive old grey hound tbat he is. - ., , Last Saturday bis steward asked the Pros': ident what be should buy for dinger on Sunday. Tbe President was writing sad re plied: "Sanders, (3 d d- ra him." "Sir,,l asked the .President what lie would havo for dinner on Sunday 1" . ''Ike Fowler, ano.her treacherous bound'.' Baid the President. . .'.'I am going to maiket, sir, arjd 1 asleep what should I buy for dinner on Sunday!" Oh! AM Yus,(l ooder'stand. Buy fifteeia' pounds of beef, tcgdtr, and cook it- rare, almost raw, with plenty of blood in it Kow go. "tea' sir, 1 will do ss tbe President wish es." You will discover by this .oopvesatwn (bet ferocious state of ,be President's mind. , . "Do you lovt and adore your country. M Asked a leading Washington pbysidaa ei a Iloosier Douglas delegate. ( . , "tfod knows I do," was the honest reply. ''Would you wish to sea your beloved President of the United States ia a lunatie Asylum. ' ' "God forbid." i . "Then doo't vote to nominate DougUs, fer SO sure as he is nominated tbt sensed ef the President will leave him, and be will go ra' ring mad, and bite everybody.? ' , , .. Tbe Douglu delegate stared, b'nt said eery a word. A yoong lady named Martha. Work, rj4 ding wit ber parents lo Cast Oranly, Cos-oectlcut, poisoned herself ljy taking praaeas) acid two days before the morning fixd ' apoa ss ber.wtdding day. Her intended bosbaad wss Mr. Walter Loomis, Of Windsor, tod the match was a desirable oae. Miss Work bore an unblemished oh'aracter and the rash act la' wrapped ia mystery. - ' ' , A shower 6f frogs anri toads' receirf di-' ttended ra t& Ttciaity ef Pert eni.
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1860-06-14 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1860-06-14 |
Searchable Date | 1860-06-14 |
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Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
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Type | Text |
Description
Title | page 1 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1860-06-14 |
Format | newspapers |
Submitting Institution | Public Library of Mount Vernon & Knox County |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
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Full Text | rv 0 ZL7TT -;J Vol. VI. MOUNT VEnNON, OHIO, TnunSDAY, JtUNTld 14; 1QOO. III If 1 JillilJ iVJlJi o 1 . u fo. a a: ,'n Campaiq Soxo. We copy a capital cui , tmlirn unnir from lha Den ol Mr. 0 toil mil, 0 New York.autboroftbe' Diamond Wedding," &i. It was written fur the Cliiciigo Press, "rings out grandly. HONEST ABB OP THE WEST. Aia "Stab Sfanqled Bawskb." 0 btrkl from (he pine-crested hill of otii . Mine, Wlltete tbe splendor first falls from the wings of Wie morning. And sway in tbe West over rier and plain. Kings oot the grand anthems of Liberty's warning! From tnufc-roltaYe Draire itawells toth aea For the nenule traVe rien victorious and free; They have eboee'n their leedeis, the bravest and best Of them all U Old Abb, Hdsssx Abe or ths Win. The snirit that foniht for the patriots of old lias swept through the land add aroused us lorever; In the pure air of Heaven a standard un fold Fit to marshal us on to the sacred endeavor! Proudly the banner of freemen we bear; Noble the hopes that encircle it there! Vi And where battle is thickest we follow the , crest Of gallant Old Abb, Hokbst Abb or the WkstI There's a triumph in urging a glorious cause; Though the hosts of the foe for a while may 1 be Stronger, Pushing on for just rulers and holier laws, Till tbtir lessening columns oppose us no longer. Hut ours the loud pan of men who nave i past Through thff struggles of years, and are vio-. tor at last: So forward the flag! leave to Heaven the rest, "And trust to Out Abe, Honest Ads or tub West. talwe the bright scroll of the future enfold! Broad 'farruk.and lair cities shalt crown our r devotion . Free labor turn evehthe sands Into gold, And the links of ber railway chain ocean to v , , ocean; (. , Barges shall float oh 'the dark riVe'r waves Willi a wealth never wrtmg frufn the sra'ews -Ani the 'ClnV. In ft'lbse ralo a!1) Vhe land shall he blest, Is o'or noble )i Abb, Honest 'Abe of thk West! Then on to the holy Republican sVriiie! And ngain for a Future as fo!r as the morn' ing. W1 .. . Fc the snke of thi t freedom u:ore precious than li e, , Kingo'nf the grand anthem of Liberty's warn Ingi Lift Vhe banner on high', while from mountain I'd plain The fchot rs of the people arc- sounded again tlurrrh! for bur 'cause of nil oausea the best lluirili! tor Oli Abe, Uonedt Auk of the West! The&iflS; God bl'e.'s the gil ls Whom preity ctlila Bic'nd with our evening HrSaiBs j Thejr haunt our li 'eS; Like spirit wiVes, Or as irtuida haunt the stream's". They soothe our jiains, They fill our brains Witn dreams ol sunny htturti 0d bless the girls God bless their curls, God bless our hum n flowers: ITEMS OF NEWS. 'SiNariAB Phenomenon Water Spodt 'andTornado. Stotms.like troubles, set) at td come in crowds. Last Trees was full 01 them and this week starts fair for a similar exhibition of elemental disturbancos. Yesterday evening we were visited by fearful tornado. A singular phenomenon was observed in tbe south east. A black cloud bellying down like a bag let drop from the tower end, a long tongue like a spout, which whirled and sway ed exactly as the descriptions say water spout d jes. It passed about a mile and a half south of the centre of the city, or just beyond &he outskirts, dealing destruction in itsco'irse All round iu the vicinity rail were blown about like feathers Urge tiees twisted round mat broken off, and hnces blown down. In few mutes it began to hail, and such hail atones toroo very rarely been seen in this region. All very large, and many of them fully -as large as hens' eggs! Luckily they fell very sparsely, or we eheatd have had few window lights and little fraft left. : The track of the tornado was hat apparently but three or four hundred tot fa widh. nd within ft the destruction has bo doubt been very great. IudinnnpoHt Journal, May 30th. A private letter from London, to a gan. leman in Albany, stales that 8ayers, in a confidential conversation with a friend, admit ted that Heenan waa too heavy and tno strong for him, and expressed satisfaction Ifutt he hnd com out of the ring alive. The writer aMs 'it is tbe serious belief of many who saw the fight, that bad not the blow by which Sayer's arm was terribly injured.heen warded by him, but fallen full on his head, it would have put a fatal end to the fight." We understand that a young married lady in tideway, in this State, a few dayt ago presented her husband with two sons snd a daughter the first start toward raising a family. We recommend this young couple to the favorable consideration of the Ohio Block Breeder's Association. IDLj' . - .- l ne uemorratio papera art an exceeding ly disturbed about the till of "Uonest Old Abe," which neighbors have lestowtd upon If r. Lincoln. No wonder they art disturbed and the sound la strange to them. Dishonesty has got to be to certain t thing in tbeii candidal for office, that tbey have no stoinaob, left for a Boats oat, San. Beg, THE GREAT 6TOEI4. June 3d, Town Dksthoyed, Over one hundred lives Lost. The Chi&igo 1'rei brings the following da-fails of the most appaling and wido spread ca Utility which on Snwbijr everting passed ovei portions ol ibwii and jllinoi the mo-tt Je atruotive in loss of life and property tbut hai ver visitea tne iiormwem. u says: From the best Information we liave heec able to collect ttiiis far. the triicH of the torna do extenas from the heart of Linn county Iowa, near Cedar Rapids, the present termin us of (lie Chicago, towa & Nebraska IUiltoar', in a generally nortn easterly direction across Clinton county, Crossing the Mississippi st Camancha and Albany, towns fronting each other respectively on the Iowa and Illinois shores and thence maintaining Its course to- wards the centre of tbe Slate, across White. side into Lee county, its latest ravages heard from up to the present writing being near Lee Centre. The entire distance thus traversed is up ward of 100 miles, and that through a popu lous and fertile farming region, dotted with thriving towns, some of which as we have be low to record, fell iu the path of tbe destroy er. To trace trie entire route, and set forth in detail the devastation1 that marks this march of the f arful messenger of ill, the catalogue of lives lost, of homes laid waste, would nil a volume. The tornado srem to have hacf its origin in Linn county, ah jut 60 miles west of the Mis- issippi river, about nightfall, its7 ravage! be ing as far as heard from, in the vicinity of Cedar Rapids. Thence it passed in a direction a little northeast, several times crowing the line of the Chicago, Iowa and Nehraskn Railroad. At Lisbnn station. sixty four miles west of Clinton, the depot structures were emolished, and a train of ten freight cars standing on the track, were lifted bodily from their tracks and dashed to pieces. Some of them were loaded -with grain, which was scattered broadcast for roJs. One waslnaded with lumber, which was carried and dtapeY&d many yards distant. A 'correspondent writes us from Dewitt, Clinton 'County, ttventy mites west of the riv'er, os fclli.ws: Boot six o'clock a Wrific hurricane pis sed One milo south of this pMace, tnkine evcrv thing in its course. The first house down was that of Kir. WilWm SmitV lost hi youngest child- then L. Lnwery's house ws all blown away and three injme 1; Henry M. Dire'o d . family saved; K G iV-ake. do., 'niiiily Somewhat injured; Hunry Dwire'sdo family saved; Mr. Pearson's house gone, himself and wife badly irjured, thiee children and 'mother slightly; Mr, Bocts' housn gone; G-o. Ames' hniiSe gone, Son injuK'd sITghtly; Mr. Wolrod. houso grio. Tnore wis seven persons in the house and Six thern were killed Mr. Wallace, hnuao, barn, corn cribs all Rone; family saVed; Mr. it itndd'a house arid hjrn gone; hiriiseif and wife badly injured: Mr. Foster and family, consisting Of frtur per sons visiting with him, were ail killed; live other pirsois abtut his house were also killed; Mr Burnett's house gone; his oldest daughter was omwhat hurt. This includes the iifo'st of the drittn'age or aBo'iit seven miles in its track, beyond which we have but rti-mors of disastrous effect. The whirlwind sSertied to commence about our fifties southwest of here and come direct for our toWn butai it wis within a aiile of here, l vesred tb ttie ea3t and left us just outside of its vor teX, and incroased in fury as it went east making a dull but heavy roaring. Large trees were' twisted like pipe stems,' and cattle,' hor-ser arid hogs in fact anything that had life was killed or mangled. Sortie of tbo wounded were timed from SO to 100 rods from where the bouses stood tha'l Itl'ey were in. As far as beard from there have been 16 killed , There were 11 dead bodies brought into town last night." The tearful marks of the progress Of the tornado are traced to the heart 'ol Lee county, with loss of H eal CtirJen Plain, Cotrio, and other points. Near tbe Utter place a farm bouse was torn to peiced And three Children killed. Some ol the Furniture, was carried to a distance ol three mild. A gentleman who was a passenger north ward on the Illinois Cvatral Railroad, count, ed seventeen buildings destroyed on tbe line where tl.t tornado cruaed the road. It is itn possible to estimate the loss ol property by this calamity. To tbe farmers it will be iui tnense. Cattle and stuck were killed in large n trail re bulb at lha homesteads aud at pam- or, intces, houses, oichaids and standing timber, all were destroyed alung the broad line ol the tornado's march. Fragments o siding, clapboards, Ac, were found at FjI. to, believed to have been carried from Albany, a distance of eight mites. The very auriact ol the ground was rent and torn m it by ploughshares, along the courat o' the destroyer. Oot eye witness stated that the turf is id many spots torn up. Out man back of CamaMh was brawn from bis bed a distance of tmtnty W A A. Terrill writes as from Sterling: In Culooa, four miles south of Bert, a Mr. Cogswell Is nearly killed. A Mrs. Rirdball 1 in a dying condition. Her child was killed Instantly. A Mr. Pike is dying, and bis wife is dead. At Lyndon the I'M of life snd property Is ystnottsev t?, A mm and wife are known to be billed, and many more art missing. All la excitement, and tbe whole town have gone into tbe country to aid the suffeitrm It is impossible to tell the extent of the storm and Its effects. InColona,Mr. Ooulder'a bous is entire! demolished, so' that one man can earry aay pieot thai is left. Mr. Wood had bli house onroofid, ami thrown entirely o(T the foundation. Mr Kiruball.s bouse is entirely destroyed. , The fencoV all over the country are blown dowtivan,d the crops are in danger of all being destroyed, , , It is believed that I' Is worse evrn than the Pans, Ellison, or I he Gale-burg disasters, . At s point seventeen niilrs west of the rlv er, the nsmeol which we are nut in possess, ion ol, wversl houses ere lorn to piocs snd frnm which scene a man set off on Sunday Iff , , i 1 . j evening, ridii.gjtst haste lo the hmi loan of Camanche. Clinton Co , for aid. He reach-ed it only to find tbe turned j bad preceded hiin and left the town in ruins. It is at this point that the most appalii lg (orcj of the tor nado was displayed. Catdariclie Is a town of about fifteen hundred mnalMtants, eight miles south of Clinton. It occ,upi "y leT8' P,'in or. P'ateau elevated about fifteen feet above the river, tb'e town Was built alone itUUleditl nrl.in h hrink f the MississlDui. and amnnarliit -..,.. n,tt , . ' . r.-.-v Ore western town, thH buing one otthe corn- paralfvely older points, an I lounded in 1337 . It bad numerous substantial buildings, and others in erection, and three churches. The tornado came upon Ounanche about 7 P.M. An eyo witness describes it in n pearance as resembiine an inverted cock iu broad point sweeping the earth in it, tearful march. As it cam a peju'iar moan ing sound struck the ear, heard even at soinu distance on either side of the track. Almost without warning it struck the de voted village, and in a track about a quirtor of a mile wide the tornado passsd across the very he4ri of the to Human pen or tongui utterly Tails to describe the scene of terror, of mortal peril and econv that en. sued. Trie ai K darkened tiv the tlm1r tv.lt ik.t trailed as a tn nkt,r nt !.ih r.n.n k. i.. 1 1 u II. bllO UC1T' ens, was (Illud with rushing torrents of rain, fragments of crushed and shattered buildiiura and cries, and sljriefis, and urayeh for help-All was over in less than three minutes, and where, ere thU brief interval, had stood a thriving village, all was now terror, dohola-lion, ruin. Not a single business building in itu town remained stunt!inr. The lariro three ory brick structure, the Miihinf It,, no built and kept by II. G. Sessions, formerly of Erie, Pa., was totally destroyed, and rHiiilir. e l a shapeless mass ol rubbish. In this budding quite a numbar of persons were killed.how tuaiiv had not been ascertained. Three Stores beneath the hotel was de stroyed with their CtinteniR. Tha tl,.,,.. burettes 61 the town were destroyed. A noble brick stittcture, nearly couiDleted lOr business purposes, three stories hiifh and one hundred feet liunt by eipbty Itet deep w lutany acdtroyed. Our correspondent II. Van Djvenier. of Clinton, Who VftrVd UVe scene on Sunday night, writes that 'Scarcely a house is left in an inhabitable condition tn C.uianclie, anil more than In If the population are without a place of any kind to lay iheit he Is. Tney re ertiirely destitutt', wltliuii: food, shelter r clolhlrig, except what they wore when they rusnea iroul the falling buildings lo save their lives " The entire length of Front street was a scene of ruin. The dwelling of Mr. Wol. dorf was demolished and Mrs. Woldorf was killed. Seventl dwellings standiris on the Brink of the river, were blown into the river and their inmates drowned. A large raft was passing at the time with twenty men on board. These were a'll carried into lha Rt m rwl drowned" tx(t tKe raft broken up. Manifestly attiid such terrih!e violence and ruin, the loss of life taunt have been soifou's. and It was so. One account places the numbar lilted over fitly. Up to 7 A. Jt. yesterday mornini?38' d"ead bodies were recov red from among the niius andere bw ideulifl.-J amid a Senna of griet and anguish that surpasses description Arf apt Picture.' The Memphis Bulletin thus baDDilv nic- a r tures the horrors which, until his deleal at Chicago, were linked with tbe name of Wm it. Seward in Driuncratic appiehensnins: We bave been told for years that the nbitb ought to ti'nite to (fefeai Sjward. Every time the democratic pack was hhnfflled, Sewa.d was turned up. Seward was lb the bacon and greens, and hog, and h6niin of the whole Southern democratic family, Tney saw Reward In their Clips', drank bira'in their wines' snd dresth'ed ol him between their shte'ts. When tbey had occasion to put the opposition down they poured a strong decoction ol Seward dowrt their throats'. Seward was omnipotent aril iihifjuitdus. Without Suward, the southern Slates wo'd have been lkt sacking doves. Well I Well I as fate would have It, it did act devolve on tbt south to kill off Seward. Wi ahall ha tomahawked with Seward 04 more. What will the Southern bug now ? We hold our breaths ai.d pausH n r a reply. Henry Spaght decended into a well In Unlontown, Stark eounty.last weeek. Wls'n about twenty feet down, tht sides caved io and killed him. A half wltted girl escaped from tht Conn State Prison. She was found, after a three week's search, living in a hiU abt had dug under a bay mow. During tbt three weeks she bad lived lb botV8,and subsided by milch, ing COWS snd sucking egg.- Mr. Charles Sheoherd: of frrantak N. V.' wss filling fluid lamp whilst it was lighted' The fluid took fire, burning him so badly that bsdied. His wilt was severely Injured, an I their dwelling was burned to tbe ground. A BVeoman sold into Slavery while his Kidnappers g3 free. One of those disgraceful deeds that characterize the Imrbarl.ra of slavery has just been pnrpelrated beneath the regis of Kentucky Justice. A free man has been sold into slavery. m .tuies, Wsjrgnrier a negro, was kldii.pped at Cincinnati end inken over to K mucky, where h and hii two kl In I'iperi wore arrester! ami ail put in Jul. Niono appeared against the kidnappers, for the facts had not become known to W iggo'ier' trienils. and so the kidnappers were released and Waggoner was advertised to be sold as a slavj for tbe Jail fees. Meanwhile Waggoner's friends on the Ohio side ascertained how matters were, and stirrtd themselves; Mo i lay last wa ihedoy appointed for the sale, Wagminer on a wiit of habias corpus, iys tli.it mOrn,jhg brought before tht mayor of Nowport, The Cincinnati Commercial, says : It was proved that Waggouer will born in Ohio, ol free parents, and tbat he bad never been in Virginia. John snd Uliza Whiteman apd Mary Miller testified" that they all knew Peter Waggoner, the father of James, since 1R52, and tbat both resided in Ohio since that time. The afU lavit of Joseph Thomas, lumber deaior, of Cincinnati, stated that James had worked for that person last Summer ; that during that time, Petjr came to visit James, and that they recognized each other as father snd soil. The affidavit of Peter was introd jced. but could riot lie admitted , in evidence according to the laws of Kentucky, but it. showed that he had been set free by tbn will of his master, for whom he was named, in 1828 ; chat he then, or soon alter, left Wythe county Va-and sailed in Ohio in 1831. and soon after' that time James was born in B'rown county' that S ate. The evidence on the other side did. not disprove these facta ; it consisted of the state ments of two persons recently srrived from Virginia in pursuit of a fugitive fiom Slavery that they knew Peter Waggoner, th e ftnme owner of Junes father, and that ho had been set free by that person's will in 1828; that the will had been annulled in 1853, twenty-five years afterwards. No record, however, of this was produced in Court. O ie of the parties also stated that he thought that James :esemblcd a negro he knew to have fill Iroin Jacob Waggoner, of Virginia, obout five years ago, but could not identify the lri8opcr. A letter was read from thealiedged owner aforesaid, vihich contained this very graphic description el bis lost chattel.: "lit is tal slim mail and lias a grate k wan. tity uv wite in his ize, and a do'iukast look. On ibis proof the mayor decided that Wag goner wa.s a slave, and driven toward: Alexandria for the auction block, An i j'uictii.n was got out, and while the sherilf's party was maring Alexandria, Col. Siually, with one of his swiftest borsjs overtook tin iu, and acq tainted them ol the fact that un injunction was iu pursui.. and that the pany holding it were noi i'ar behind, lie i hen to ik the ne gro into his buKtO n'i pushed aboad, but eri the injunction party reached Alexan' d, la the nigra could not be either seen or beard of. No one in th i place had either se n or heard of the sale, bdt tbe sheritf s party told ih'e injunetid i patty that Dr. J . Q. A. Foster, of Newport, had purobisdd tbe negro for $700, giving his note for that sum Sudorsed by a man named Wilson. Senator Ea'e da Democratic Ddotrinesl During the discuss on ol tbe Jctf. Davis r solution last week. Senator Hale said: I think the Senator front Texi haj done great injustice if he thinks trial the passing of the amendment introduced by the Senator from Mississippi, Governor Brown, wou'd stag ger them in the least. I think thry would take it as a good pious Mohammedan takes the Koran "it is written." laughter. end if these resolutions, no matter what they aie,are sent out as Democratic, the regular thing, untainted with any cecession or an thing of that sort. Ido not think he w,ll lose a vote for the Democratic party in the State which t bate the honor in part to represent.' Sir, he does riot kriow the. tried fldelty of those men. Laughter. I do not think yod bin pass any resolutions upon this subject of si lvery that would s-.agger them in the least. I think if you passed these iesofu'ti6nS,iio matter how strong yod put, them, the next D Bloc ratio Convention in New Ilimshrie will resolve that they had always be on their sentiments laughter.; that they now, and ever had been, unalterably fixed in the support of the vie wi that bad been laid down by the SjnUor from" Mississippi, or the Sana tor from Texas.no matter who; and that this' was doctrine the had alwa'ys contended for, and only had been opposed' by .Federalists and Abolitionists. Laugnter. Mrs, Millard, ol Poughkepsie, while walking in tbe streets of that city a fewdtys since was attacked furiously by a but), Tbe enraged animal rushed at her and caught bar on bis horns, threw ber up, caught her again as she fell, again tossed bar in the air, wbtn she 'ell under the leetofa horse. Sht was taken op insensible, much bruised and eat, but ber injuries' will oot prove fatal. THocBt,Eso?'oi.lf Boat. It is ss'ld that Mr. Jimmy.Buchanaa ticlaimedT tht other "When will my troubles cease t have had Douglas, Walker, Forney, Covode anl poor Fowler on band; and now comes another infernal cargo of captured niggers to add to my vexation." Theodore Parker, tbe distinguished New England Divine, died at Borne on the 19th of May U now the D Jinoorata Beooive the Nomination of Lincoln. There Is a terrible panic in he ljiiimocratic emp. The nomination' of Mr. Lincoln at Chicago is almost universally acknowledged to he the very strongest thut r 0 ild ponihly have besn made, snd the danger that threa' yes th ovenjirow.next Nveiriljir of the D'lnocratio rule at Washingin Is regarded as imniinant Ths nominal i m of M' Lincoln :i' astriin.-, one," a;s th. Poslon Herald, a j ramp'irt Diinnortio sheet of the D oigla- scno"i, -and a ill 01 uiltti'ilt todJ'eat. Those who flatter themselves (hat the Dmf-rn are to walk over the Pi evidential Miif-se(iwHh ease, will Rail thems Ives rpstalien," "There will be a great exclt.-ment throughout the aud." siys thit orgi'i ol arisiiwritic Dun w racy, the N. 7. Joirnal of C unmef-e, in v- irtent alarm, "and 'wigwarqs will be built now as log cabins were in lfliO." "In Mi' Lincoln they have presented a gentleman, who will poll nearly every vote in the Republican party," says the N Y 8unday Times, another exponent of Democracy, which warrs its party that thxir day Is up unless they immediately quit quarreling and t li firmly for the great contest. ''The nouiina. tion of Mr Lincoln at C licago is a formidable one probably more than would be (hat ol any other man who hoi twea nauud in connection with it," aays that rankest of negro-driving sheets, tbe N. Y. Day Book. '.'Toe nomination of Lincoln and Hamlin will bi received with immense enthusiasm in the West where ihey can hardly fail to make.a clean sweep," echoes the N Y. Sunday Atlas, another ext onent of the Democraticpro-slavery creed. "Lincoln is a man not to be despised," cries the Rochester Advertiser, with an appeal to arms to its Democratic Soldiers. The Louisville Democrat, Douglas, pro nounces the nt ruination of Linco'n at Chicago the strongest his party could havo made, and says, "we have regarded L uc'oln since 1858, as their available man, Douglas has not met as nearly his match in debate, whether iu argument or lact, as be did when he met Abraham Lincoln iii d abate in his own State. It is plain thai rhis ticket is not io be asily beaten, and it is idlo to' undervalue its' strength." Tbe Lous tille Couritr. which is a Guthrie paper, does not see in Mr Lincoln's nomination an argu. inent in f-vor of taking Douglas at the Baltimore, but declares tbat "his nomination by the Baltimore 0 nvention eoiild only result in the defeat of his party." It justly says o' Lincoln that "he will probably unite the, strength of Sswardand Bites, and with les8 qualifications for Prohident than either, he is the most formidable candidate his party could have srlecled." it is thus that the conviction is everywhere spreddmg and taking root in the ui nds u( all, Democrats and Republicans alike, that "lion, est Old Abe" is to be our next President S mote it be. We rejoice at the pio-pect before tisui hgltr day a, lor our Country under tbe high-minded and freedom-loving ou'spic-s o! his Republic n nil). , . t n"" Lincoln Among the Children. The following inciueiit, .nays, jai-ierday's 7Wiue,wiil exibil Lincoln (u oneof those uu-obstructive acts of goodness which adorn his lite. Tbe circumstance was relaied by a teacher from the Five Puinttt', House of fndus; try io New York. ;,0ur Sunday School i the Five Points wad assembled, one, Sibbatb morning a few months since, when Ioticed a tall and remaikable looking man enter jhe room and take a seat anion us. . Uejlsiened with fixed attention to our excerciscs, and his countenance manifested such genuine interest, that I approached him, and suggested that he might be willing to say something tn the cbd-dren. He accepted the invitation which ev ident pleasure, and coming forward begun, a simple s ddress, which a't once fascinated every little hearer.and hushed the room Into silence-His i anguage was strickingiy beautiful, and his tones musical with intense leeling. The little faces around would drop into sad con viction as he uttered sentences of warning' and would brighten into sunshine as he poke cheerful! words of promiaa. Once or twic he attempted to close his remarks but tbe im perative shodt of 0on!" "Oh. d ) go on!' W'iuld c.nn,wll him to reauuw. A I' looked upon int gaunt and stneway rreme ol ine granger, and marked his powerful head and determined feaiures.now touched into softness by tbe impressions of the moinont, I felt an irrepressible curidsity to learn something moie about him, and whet he was quietly leaving the room, i begged to he's his name. He courteously replied, "It is Abra'm Lin coln, from Illinois!" Laid at Last. The ghost pfJoh'ii Brown which p.ayed su:h pranks with grave Sena tors as to make them dream of convicting nor thern Statesmen of complicity with tht Har pers Ferry raid, it is hoped, bal been laid a1 lasti Senator Mason's committee, which was going to make an todol tht Republican (Jirtr has lahored fong end resulted in nothing True.Hyatt remains in jail for refusing to tea tify that be Knows nothing, It is to be hoped that this shade of John Brown, woo't dis turb the cbivelry fer some time to tome. The long labors of the Committee all end (a smoke. SbL Beg. Saturday ad Interesting eersmon too? plact( at tht old Livingston Mansion. A geatleman named Lerqw, aged 75, was mar riecf to i beautiful girl of 18, named McLel-laod, who resides near Hudson. The old man is worth $100,000. Frederick Douglas bu ttturned to the United States. He came unannounced, and bad been boms sevsrat weeks before tbe fact wta knewa to the poblio. Henrj Clay and the Chicago Platform. The Louisville, Ky., Journal' I publishes the following c mmunlcation from a Kentucky Ch e ira delegate : OKNTLKMRit : In the Jourtiatt article of the 19ih, cotninenting on the nominttion of Mr Lincoln, at Chicago,' particular attention a Inwu to the latter clause of the sight section of the pUtfnrm previously adopted, which is d noiMei-l in the following terms : ' Tim thu lit ii'i'ijti pir'y renews with fiesh intensity its vows of hostility to the Sou b-" Y ur attention U respectfully called to the following pascages from Henry Clay's speech, es in the Senate in 1850, placed in the jux tipositi m with t le parallel passages of the Chicago platform : Ikmy (wt'fipffeh in tin $e,i;ti, ISoJ. I takd it for granted that what I have said will silis'y ths Senate of that first irulb, tbat slavery do s not exist fhere by law unless slavery was carried there the moment tne treaty was .ratified under the operations of t,ho constitution of the ( nited Slates." llrnry Clay't ipmh in tht Haiute. 1850 " I must say that he. idea that tninkan tit. upon the con summation of the treaty the Constitution pi the ITni e I States spread itself over tbe acquired Cnuutry and Carried alnnir with It the institution of slavery is so jrreconcjlaMe with any comprehension or any r ason which I msv possess, that I hardly know how to meet It. " Utnry Clny't fpfch in tht denote, 1850. " While lam willing to stand aside and make no legislative enactment one wy r the other to lay itF the Territories without the Wi'mot Proviso on the one hand or without an attempt to Introduce a clause for the Intro duct ion of slavery into the Territories, while I am for nje-ting both the one and the other, I must say that I Cannot vote for any express provision recoirniiijnir tha Tight tocarry slaves there.' Seo 8th Chhign Pla' . form. " The normal condition of all the 'erri lory of the United SlaUs is that ol freedom' " Taction 7.'A Chleago PUtfnrm' " The new-dogma that the Constitution of Its own foice car-rios slavery into all or any of iho Territories ol the United Statei. is a dangerous po ideal heresy, at variance with the explicit pro visions of that instru inent itself." Sec. to Chlcagn Tht J"rm Jjatt CIhum " And we d. ny the aulhnrity.ofConnres--or a Territorial Legislature or of any indi vidual to give legal existance to slavery in any Territory o the United States." Now in these ,in both alike, we have tbe three fundamental principles lail down : First, that slavery does not exist primarily in ,he territories by law, and as a consequence that freedom does S.'eoidly. that the Con-s'iMitinn d'os not cirry it there. Thirdly, that it should not ho legislated thorn. it'cenily the American Slaver WildS're. was captured by one of our war steamers with a cargo of A'ricans on board, and the negroes re now in uie custody ol the Untied 8ttes at Key West. Tbe captain and other officers were brought in as prisoners, but instead of bi; gtgidly, held for trial under the violated law of the fjnited Slates for Piracy, a Key West dipitch of the 1st says "Tbe Captain ol the Wildflie.was to-day released on his own recognizance." , Can any of our reae'ers interpret the follow-ing subscriftion with which a witty school-boy lately diiected his letter to a friend? Wood John , .:., r . .. . MllSS. . . H I . , Fearing they may tot, we give tbe solution of the spparent senseless direction. It is John Undtnoood, Aiulovir, Sliunachueett. . That is. John is under tbo word wood, and John is over the word Mass. Smart! IIb fVorjt.b be Fsbb. Yesterday aliernoon a runaway negro was discovered iu the upper portion of ope of the .buildings on the Bas-cbuill rico-rourse. On being approached by the city officers be sin wed battle, and made a stout resistance until shot hy offiour W. H. Shelton, when he was captured and brought to the city guard-house, where his, wounds were tendered by a physician, He is owned b) Mr Tborp; his situation is a very precarious on, Mobile A lverliter, r 7 , . Jacob Huffman end bis wife, of Windsor township. Rkhland county, were poisned laat week' by the use of apple butter which had been kept in cheap earthenware jars. The acid had dissolved tbe lead from the glazing in sufficent quanily to cause very serious illness They both art slowly imp.oving. A S mth Ciroiina paper thinks it a great sname that somi of the young '.mta of that State have married New England girls. We tbonld'ot wonder if South Caroline were to enact a Iiw dlyorcing all such of her bob and woman as bare married Yankees. A terrllio bail storm has visited Kokomo Ind. Tbt hail stonn wore so large, and fclj who aucu vioienct, iuai toe uueatea Ui woocen smewaua The Japanesehave been out shopping in Washington. One of them bought for forty dollars a tckny or watch worth five. "Roo seel" be exclaimed, "Tokay bo good. No wurtuurdam, uxtor, be say." A, terrible tornado, accompanied with ioss o, lift.passed through Cattaraugus eounty.N. Y. nay aotb. No Time for Compromise, ' The Fiohmond Inquirer states thus faiilf the ground of tbe difference bet ween the we sections oT the democracy!' . , A Ittllt mors, than twelve months ago, the faot was Itilly derelepod, that a large portion. of thenoilben democracy btd accepted, ani and were readytb insist upon an interpretation of tbe bincinnati platform altogether" at yarij ance with the interpretation understood and,. tcted upon by the aouthrrn doinoerjuiy. Thus a dlreot eonuict of opinion was produced. On the one band, it was insisted . iht the Cincinnati platform recognised the uneootroll. d power of each territorial, legislature to establish or abolish the right of property is( -lav s in the respective territories of thi Union. vi On the other band, it wu intiste thal '.f J.u,t intorpretatioa of tht platform on tlus point recognise the right of slave property in ihe territories asn existing rightguer. anteea by tbe Constitution.and tbat the pow er which Congress, could exorcise, either im.- mediately or through its delegates, tbe teril-tirial legislative, assemblies, waa the do war coupled with the duty to protect suck exist ing tights of persons sod property. Haying thus stated the issue that districts the Pemocracy.the Enquirer proceeds to rem ment upon the abortive attempts ihatbave been made, and are being made, to reoorcila the difference: Here, as in every similar instance of differ ence, n- any political Isadora and presses wore ready with suggestions of; compromise. We tnougnt men, wnat we know now4 tbat tbls was a case in which both principle and policy precluded all nijddle, ground of compromise.! Indue.., we saw but one possible ground e compromise ha( which suggested tbe re-en- actment oi, tne uncinnati platwrm without any reference wha.:evor to the point ol disputcd interpretation. Such a , compromiss as this, we were utterly unwilling to adipt. We foret-aw that its adoption would result in' nothing less than the deiLca iration of the party through the perpetration of t double deception, Vi foresaw, too, even were suchi deception's possible it could pcly be made practicable through' the nomination for tht Presidency of some man cither too tijiid oi too dishonest to avow his opinions on the point at issue, Aliogetiw, un reeogm'ttd tht policy of comprnmUe at too equivocaltobe homtC, too timid to be prudent, too telfUh to be safe. Here is a full, explicit, positive oonfirmatida of all that tht Republicans have charged la relation to tbe Cincinnati platform that it was'a double dooeptipn,'uneqiijyocal,disbones snd base. But aside from the importance of such tn admission, by so high a democratic! authority, it demonstrates the impossibility of a compromise upon any ather basis ex cept, an open surrender of the Northern to tbe Southern democracy. Nearly all the indications we have from the slave States are of the, same character, foreshadowing a widening of the breech in the Baltimore. Convention, or a' total caving-in of the free. States. . Here is a complete snd positive' admission by a high democratic autiioiity.cf all the Republicans charged on the Cineinnati Democratic Platform a dibonest "double deception. The breech widens anl compromise seems impossible. . "Jiarmony" on the President ., ,..M"Harmqny" the correspondent of the , Mel bile Register, tells very funny but very oil travagant stories on the President, as witoe the following. l(TheJapanese toys will amusetbe .Prtji dent for a fe w days, and that excitement will drown the remorse the President mua'. feet a the Tall of his agent Fowler. What an unhappy old bachetort , Had Jecms married young, be never would bare bocouia in bis old age the remorseless, vindictive old grey hound tbat he is. - ., , Last Saturday bis steward asked the Pros': ident what be should buy for dinger on Sunday. Tbe President was writing sad re plied: "Sanders, (3 d d- ra him." "Sir,,l asked the .President what lie would havo for dinner on Sunday 1" . ''Ike Fowler, ano.her treacherous bound'.' Baid the President. . .'.'I am going to maiket, sir, arjd 1 asleep what should I buy for dinner on Sunday!" Oh! AM Yus,(l ooder'stand. Buy fifteeia' pounds of beef, tcgdtr, and cook it- rare, almost raw, with plenty of blood in it Kow go. "tea' sir, 1 will do ss tbe President wish es." You will discover by this .oopvesatwn (bet ferocious state of ,be President's mind. , . "Do you lovt and adore your country. M Asked a leading Washington pbysidaa ei a Iloosier Douglas delegate. ( . , "tfod knows I do," was the honest reply. ''Would you wish to sea your beloved President of the United States ia a lunatie Asylum. ' ' "God forbid." i . "Then doo't vote to nominate DougUs, fer SO sure as he is nominated tbt sensed ef the President will leave him, and be will go ra' ring mad, and bite everybody.? ' , , .. Tbe Douglu delegate stared, b'nt said eery a word. A yoong lady named Martha. Work, rj4 ding wit ber parents lo Cast Oranly, Cos-oectlcut, poisoned herself ljy taking praaeas) acid two days before the morning fixd ' apoa ss ber.wtdding day. Her intended bosbaad wss Mr. Walter Loomis, Of Windsor, tod the match was a desirable oae. Miss Work bore an unblemished oh'aracter and the rash act la' wrapped ia mystery. - ' ' , A shower 6f frogs anri toads' receirf di-' ttended ra t& Ttciaity ef Pert eni. |