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.1111111 Mlilo 1 illuly wij IJIlJlJir ID XlO -LU it rp---"" ' w"''' 1 aMcoxJUT' vmrtisrora', onio, TiitjxtsiiA.Y, ootobbii io, loco. V-W- ir- ' TO" 6 Oo; " ' ' " - -- . . .. . . - ,., - ,. - - .., - . ,, ,. , WT-,. . ,. ...A i i. .,. ! ) : i Ml- Vernon DuHineav Card. W. H. SAM-. W. L. SIMONS 8app & simons; Attorneys at Law, . OFFICE-NO. J, Krihmn HoiioiMd, AprU-n23-y MT. VKK.NQN; ii. W.VANOi , W.O.OOOiriK" VANCE fc COOPER, ATTOBiiV:. A TVIA V , .. MT. VERNON. OHIO ' Office louthelistoornor of Muln and Chestnut sts -opposite Knox County Hank. aoptZO 'ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW mftiioiiii net AHA) NOTARY rUBLIC. , MOUNT VKKN0N, OHIO. OFFICE-Jiidson'i Building, Main Street Below ' Knex County Bunk. " CIIA8. 0. BONNET JOHN D. KOrSE iioNtir & notisE, ATTORNEYS AXD COUNSELLORS AT LAW AND SOLICITOUS IN CHANCER Y, 58 MAIN ST.; I'EORIit; ILLINOIS. Particular attention1 giyeri to Kbul Estato and Collection oasos throughout the Suite. nllt-ly , WALTER II. SMITH, Attorney and counsellor .. AT LAW, . , ,, MT. VERNON, OIIIO. Office on nigh Stroot, opposite the Court ITousc. foB2otf HENRY S. MITCHELL; Attorney and Counsellor at Law AND. NOTARY PUB Lin, , O fe'i'icE otH side Keri At BlAck; MT. VERNON, OHIO. kMMET W. COTTON. W . BANK. COTTON BANE. Attorney's & Counsellors at Law, Hi. Vtrmnn. I)hi ITTILLatidiidtooll business intrastod to thoir TT care, in any of the Courts. OFFICE, N.E.Cornerof Moin and GsnbierSts '6verI'ylo's.IorchantTailoringEstollisha.iont. Oot. 19th 1858. tf- ClIAHMCS F. BALDWIN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, . . .. MT. VERNON, OIIIO. ,.- ESPWill give particular actontion to collecting claims jn Knox and adjoining countios. ..'C. F. Baldwin ia also a Notiiry Publio and will ' attend to snob business as is authorized by his com ""mission, with promptnoss and dispatch. . . OIBoe ia "Miller's Block," oror White's Book "Store, fob25mB OSUOKN II. OLDKUYD, DEALER IN Weti'-ipapers; magazine, Cheap Litem-j, , . tnre, Ac. Back htiinbors of Papers and Magazinos furnished; .. All 'Eastern weeklies printed, and til books iibljs.hcd', ciin be had on application. ,0FFICE-4)n Maid street; opposite tho Konyon Hll.w. Mt. Vernon. 0; . - S PERRY & CO TI1 S. Fl'liA atb'filling tip with almost ' " l liUAl:;. N E f. GbODS, 'SVRY BUI?SSELS," Throe Ply nnd as- ssi Stu 31U . , . ijri. Carpets, Stugs; Parlor and Common n X.?. wit'stook is Wor and moro beautiful X)00tMatS,l t,.Hq,i,.kfW,h ,n- uanCIV nnil T1'3," uIL CLOTHS Ac. MEDIi ELECTRICITY, For th.spJedy V i"1"" bt di30ilsi ikillfully applied by Drs. Hu. a,! Dii'ranl. 6ffioe in l.r Bi i.uaro, opposi te 0. B Po . - Jul5th,lStl), im tt. 0. MONTG y&lERY, . 1 w m iar n :u ii ii n n c h u i - " L A V V if BANNINU BUILDING OVER MctllrrlN h SHOE STORE. n.m-x Mount Vorno I.";110- ... Snn,al attention Kiven to the t b. CU"" .r Cl.;.Tis. and tho purohase and solo of r. '"Vf; t haVB ,'?r sale unimproved lands a. fol. . Missouri, 605 a '"f,8 302 ncres in St. V""- Hcros in W.'8 Warren Couiifv. nissour AaK. SM1" nl... I.'i irnros and on e Mercer County, Ohio-. . ,';JL" J! PEB HANGER,- FANCT GlLBKR, Ac-. 4o,. Landscape Painting done ti Oi let. Pictures framod in Rosewood or Gilt, t bnsonahle terms. Stoncilinginpaporortnetaluo -tly executed. SHOP 10 Main St., Up-Stairs eti een Vine and Qambior Streets, Mount Ve:non( hi Deo. 3, '59,-n4mt. SASH, DOORS AND BLl D : J, At Anderson UANUVACTURER ANI bkALER IN A8H, DOORS, AND BLINDS, 'Gen. Jones' Wart House, High St., between 'Main and R. R. Depot, Mount Vernon, Ohio ALL KINDS of work constantly pn hands and warranted. All orders promptly executed. 15?" Dry Pise Lumber, Shingles, Lath) Jto.j alway ou hand. "April 28,li!5fl, i4TyJ DR. G. E. MeKOWN. 8tyi3-03T ID-STTI--5?, OFFICE OVER L. B. 'WARD'S STORE, Mopwt VERNds, Ohio. (Umiienai, ifei t8, Gambier Strtei:) All operations ill sUrgltt&l and mechanical DorHist-ry warranted equal to those of besteity ptacticei August 30, 18u0-n43-wl A.ADAMS, .iCI5LSj:iTXi: WISHES to Inform bis former customers and th Vpublie generally) that he has finished his new two 'story brick shop, at the old stand,on Mulberry streot "in rear of the KenyoB rtouse( and Is again at work -with a mil supply of hands, Better prepare- meu ever to accomodate his mant and increasing patrons. In addition to all other kinds of smith work;' knuitrtu inociat attention to Shoeimti and In this particular branch, he belioVea himself capable of giving entire satisi&otion to an customers; Donfiddtitly refers to the public, whom he has so generally serrod 4s to his ability in this department, Call at the sign of the "Vnloani Cave" and the 'Village Blacksmith.'1 June 14th tf no 31. '0. . baixis. ' o. cn.rB. DRS. HARNES & SdllAtFER) HOMdJPATHIC PHYSICIANSi ttr. fiarnss havitli( this flay formed aeo-pftrtnor-ahip with Or. Hchaefcr. formerly of Ooshon, Indiana, in the practice f medicine and surgery, rospootful-1y solicits for the firm a continuance of the patron-Age heretofore extended to hitni Dr. 8. Comes with the best of references, . Mt, Vernon, Aagust 8th, 18119. N. B. Alt persons indebted to th undersigned en book account art requested to call and make sot' tlemerH by cash of note before the ffrst day of OtUfi ksr next. 0. W. BARNES. August.!, I860, n40-tft ,. ' : DEVOB & BTJBBELL, KAXUrACtunHtts of AND diaLbrs It ' 8ASU, D00U8 AND BLINDS, Btart BTaaw. nnABtiT ovrosiTX thi ootat aobE) MTi VERNON, OIIIO. . Wlma- inofranle, door-frames, Ad.jAc, and every article Id our line required for hauM furnishing io the terf best style, and of the1 very bost materials. All kinds of sash constantly on hand, and all order Will t promptly tm4 satisfactorily exeeute.'.. 1 ' ly. 10. March 17th) I860, For the Republican1: THE COUNTY PAIR. BY IAHL EE1IN. Hiiro they oomo, tho young and old; bay and rich, and mook and bold. Throngs and troops of friends and foes; Faded, dark, or fresh as rose Children dance and play and scroairi, Maidens sigh or laugh or droaui, Studonts loiter, quit or smuko Ruddy farmors talk and joke. Work-worn mothers grasp their share1 Of the -ay's relief from' crtro,' See them come from hut and hall, Proud and lowly, stout and tall; Soo tho swaying, aimloss crowd, Hoar the laughing long and loud. Hero comes a luwyercold and shrowd; Intent to catch a client orudo, Or make of politics a1 trade,' Ere yot his hard-earnod laurols fado .' A noisy group of urchiiiB rude, Of niissos fair and youngsters lowd, Rush by in scrambling eagor hasto; For once resolved no time to waste. A gay coquette, with colors bright, Swoops swiftly by, with eyes all light, A conscious love-lorn swain beside A jonlous lover near, can hido But half tho tortures' inly felt, Though sniilosand Sows are froaly dealt. Ilore comes the school-girl's careless swing,' Whilo poalsof iiioriy laughter ring, From group to group, and looks askance," Betray by sudden stolen glance Lifo's mystery even then at work, Where only childish fun should lurk; A preacher grave, with revorond air, His boys load by, a happy pair, A hooplcss lady, mook and sad, Then ambles on, in satin clad, Shocked iuiich to hear the shout Of liridgot's beau, who's suro he's "out," And jostles on to find a place, Whore "darlint, dear" may soo tho raoo: Ah, thoro'san artist's voluinod eye. A thousand lights and shades to spy, A poet's soul outgloaming th'ero , And malting radiant all the air. A tottering, toothless, wrinkled man; Next hobbles on, just in tho van Of matrons sage, with bristling mieri, And graceful maids, with wits so keen. Now sauntering by, a buxom dame Recounts her last ycur butter's fume. And tbeii the furs a precious team, With canos and chains and pineh-bock's gleam, School-teachers freed from ghostly tasks; A holiday the laborer asks, And mutely tuils at Pleasure's beck, Fatigue which now, he'll little rock. Anoli the Icngthouiiig shadows full, Tho oft-ropeatcd pleasures pall. The careful parents seok thoir brood, Iuipaticut at their lingering mood. Tho premiums given, tho Wag6f$ paid, The finery spoi'ed, the matches made; Th' unconscious cattle homeward drivon, To whom (ho lioHi red ribbon given, Their 6nors load with lasting fiim'o'; Tho neighbors lend as lasting gaiiio. 'Tis ovor, past, tho yearly fun, Well-nigh its glittering sands have run, Prolonged ulono, by mom'ry ould,' Or hope, of future Fairs tho mould. . . For the Republican. TEMPERANCE AND FREEDOM- Editor RePimicANi-Peirhnps S ftw penciling of an "overland trip1" from the city of Mt. Vernon to this place wtf'il hot b uninteresting to the real-is of the itcpub'-licnn. Havlrii durini' the bArt week, frnitf l';e pleasure of such aj mrriejrj - will Irnn' ctlbe a few notes, not descriptivd Df nit-ural -cctiery, df bounding cataracls, ilnd golden sunsets; fdr; eVen had I the poetry; theK 81-6 otlier subjeclg that may more Jrotitabiy eiujjiujr uiy pen; xnose lor in stance at the iw "1 ' '"is, thoilgu perhaps Euy motto would ive better been '.'In- TKMPKRANifiE and treenom, lor it is oi iulemperabc. that I intend to speak. Rut I did hot like the antithesis; There are those in the good oil county of Knox, who, though thsy profess to be thorough-going temperance, and stringed I liquor law men, are ignorant of the prevalence of the crittie df drunkenness. 'Such men suppose that the Wdrk df ilia WffljJe'f-ance reform is nearly complete, and Without the aid of stringent law; Sadly are they mistaken; In Mt. Yernon the dram seller mat be driven Jby public scorn from behind his respectable bar td a den below the surface of the earth, bat not sd ih the small towns and tillages throughout the state. Here these anti-chambers of Hell yet occupy the first floor. Td begin with the town of L- , som. fiftjr miles from Mt. Vernon, how" the liquid fire of hell is dealt out with impunity at respectable bars above ground, and respectable citizens step up and drink; 1 will note that in the above place a tiacUkr who is a confirmed drunkard hasbeea employed for the past year in the publio schools, it being known to his employers that he was a sot. It was only when his superintendent refused longer to labor in connection with him that he was discharged. 1 will say incidentally that last fall thii mad was a member of the Republican party, a sealoUs otiej this fall he is a Duug-las democrat) and a regularly nominated Candidate for a county office in the eoiiilty of f A singular coincidence, and Strikingly Illustrative of the mannei in which true merit U feWafded by the de-trJodfaey, What is the influence of luch a townf and What will it be Until we haVe wtnperadceJaw? Riding out from this town one tVenlng In company with a friend, we saw at least a doled tiled Whd Were in-toiidated, some of theiti beastly tOi la thV town of Iofck- leVeB miles from ColdmhuB, we stopped for refresh-trjehtri. Stepping Into the public room of the hotel, the first thing wo saw was an object behind the bar dealing out whliikey by the dram to numerous ci'atomcrs who were standing around. Such scenes as we have named we saw enacted and re-enacted lit other villages through which wo passed, and all this is done in the face and eyes of christian people; fearless of the law and its con'seq lenoes. Doubtless there are thousands of such places scattered throughout our fair Ctatd, wiih their dramshops open to the blnze cf God's sun every day, proving that all our temperance laws are scarce other than dead letters upon the statute book. Is it not time that temperance men would awako from their slumber? The cause of Freedom is more prospnr otis. Everywhere one sees the indicaiions of a better day coming. Republicans throughout this entire region are enthusl astic oVer tho orosrietts of the election nf Lincoln and Hamlin. Poles lift their tapering tops high iri the air, and beautiful flags flutter in the breeze at every corner-In this county, Clidton, the Republicans expect to give Lincoln from 800 to 1000 maj'ority. Here the sight of a democrat is a rare one. They areata premium, and before the election will make valuable specimens for Bam urn. Tom1 Corwin is soon to be here to address the people, and all are anxious to hdar John Sherman of your neighboring district. Wide-Awakes have their weekly meeting in almost every township. Thus the cause moves glorious ly ott. Knowing your space to be valuable, t close, earnestly ishing for the success of both temperance and freedom in Kuox county. Respectfully, &c, M. D. Wilmington, 6., Sept. I5:h, I860. Forney on the Republican Victory in' reuusyivama-The Philadelphia Press thus coinments ofi the ejection of Andrew Curtin as Governor of Pennsylvania: "The returns of yesterday's election in dicate tho election of Col, Andrew Gregg Curtin, as Governor of Pennsylvania, by ah unprecedented majority. Mr. Foster's silence has assisted him, it would seem1, with no section of the Democratic party. The vote has been unu'siinlly large and the defeat sigularly significant. The returns speak in bolder and stronger S ion than we Cad write. There can now, happily, be no more baulking of the great question involved in the Presidential struggle. Tlie reasons' in favor of the combination against Abraham Lincoln, however they may operate in advance of that which is to be decided on the first Tuesday in No-vtrnber coming, cannot be effective when men come to choose between candidates, each of whotri represents a principal antagonistic to lie other.' "Now, we take it, there can be no more ifnion between Breckinridge and Douglas thah between two' naturally repulsive forces, fiach represents a distinctive platform. No advocate of Douglas believes, or affects to) ttaiieve, iri the doctrine upon which Ma jor Brilhh'inridge' stands; and no advocate df Major Kreckinridge believes, or affects tb believe in the doctrine ufon which Hi. Douglas stands'; The Southern Mends of Breckhndo'e; more frank than mo?" bf the friend of Doiiglas, declare as a central thinsr hat under no circumstances will t ey ever accept either the' Candidate or the creed upon which the regular De moeracy stand." A few days since, according to the Tinies, while 'John Minor Botts was in this city, he Was asked by a fcrsiiiber of the Ashland Association whether he wnuld make a speech in New York in behalf of the fusion ticket Ho replied that he would rather hot, and that if he did it would dd the fusion menmore harm thad good. When asked the reason why, he said: "I am going South to speak against Breckinridge and disunion, and how voald I do that after havirig spoked here in faVor of a ftisiori with that party?" He said ho had been fighting" disunion all his life and could not now dd otherwise he had lived ari honest man, and intended to die one. When asked what he considered the prospect was With regard to the electlohjhe replied; "Sir.tberti is not a peg to hang a ddubt upon that Lincoln will be elected. No man in his sedses doubts it' A SiNOoUft Bbt. Two gentlemen in Ohio, residing one in Carlton and oie id Miamisburg, have, bet a barrel of flour on the Presidential election. If Mr. Dottglaa is elected, tlirjgehtlehiaH residing in Carl-tort is to wheel his barrel of flour from there to Min'rhisburg, a distance of six miles, accompanied by the Dayton brass band; and if Lincoln is elected, he of Miamisburg is to take np his march' from fiOrBe with his wheelbarrow add fioiir. add march Id the musie of the band of hi town, and deposit the flour at the door of the winder", : Sofllebdd will sweat after the Presidential ele'ctlod, ' Elodtioa of President by House of Ropredontativee. n. J. Raymond, of the New York Times, in a speech in New York Upon the effect of fusion nguicHt the Republican ticket gave hie views as to the chances; in case the tied ion goes into the House, as fbl lows: Suppose the Fusionlsts, out bf their profound regard for the public peace, sua ceed in defeating an election by the people and carry it to the IIouso of Representa tives. What will happen then? Theelec-t'on ia to ha made by the present House. The members are already chosen. We know their position and can predict thoir action. Tho vote, as I have said, is to bo t (i lien by Slates, a majority of the del egation from each State deciding how its vote shall be cast. and each Slate casting but one: Florida, with its one mehiber, has precisely the samo weight as N. Y. with 33, or Pennsylvania with 27. or Ohio with S3. And the vote will stand thus: For Lincoln.' Connecticut Indiana Iowa , Maine Massachusetts Michigan Minnnxotr' Now Hampshire.., Now Jersey . I For Breckinridge. j 1Alubaina ljCa i 'ornia Delaware Florida Georgia Louisiana.. Mississippi,. Missouri.;.. .... Oregon South Carolina . New York 1 Ohio 1 Pennsylvania Rhode Islund, 1 Vermont 1 Wisconsin 1 tolas.... Virginia Total. .12 Total 15 Here are 1 5 States certain to vote for Lincoln, and 12 equally certain to vote for Breckinridge. Lincoln will thus lack two votes of ah' election, while Breckinridge will lack five. The delegation from Illinois consists of 5 Anti-Lecompton Democrats and 4 Rt publicans, and would vote 'or Douglas if his nanie should go into the House as one of the three highest candidates, of which, however, there is but little chance- But tinder hi circumstances whatever, after the war are waged upon Mr. Douglas nt the South, could Ill.nois cast Iier fote for Breckinridge. . Tennessee has 6 opposi liod members aod 3 Democrats and will vote for Breckinridge, in any con tingoncy. Arkansas has one Breckinridge and ode Doughis Democrat, and would probably vote for the former, thu3 render ing only fcur more votes necessary to his election. Kentucky, Maryland and North Carolina are equally divided between the Americans ana tue i cmocrats; and although one of two of. them might in an emergency vote for Douglas, not one of thetn could possibly Vote lor Breckinridge and the Disunion party which he represents. If they should, moreover, he would still Lick one vote. , How stands ihe cise with Lincoln? He lacks but two votes. Suppose one of the Illinois Anti-Lecompton Democrats should vole lor linn, tliat would give him the vote of that State; and lie would lack but one. Oregon, D,.lawi fe, Florida and California have but one member each suppose he should vote for Lincoln. Lincoln you see would be elected. Applause. Thus you see that, if the Fusicnnts sue ceed in parrying the election to the House, ihe will siitiply put It in the power of two itM, ono from Illinois and one from either of the smallest States, to make Mr. Lincoln President!! They cannot elect any one elso, hut they can elect himi Applause. 1 This, then; is to be the grand result of this great Fusion movemem! The whole aim end object of this coalition is to prevent the American people from electing Lincoln, in order that two members of Corigress may have that privilege! Now this may b'e their lho'de bf saving the Union, but it is hot mine: It may suit the pur poses of an Administration that has made Useu Infamously meniofable by its corrupt use tf publio mono'y to control the ao-tion of Conrrre? thus to bfih'sr. the Presi dency within its r.p; but it does' not accord with the principles oi our uovern-merit, nor consult the will o'r the welfare iff the American people. For vif part, I should dread the day which should stake sucii momentous results upon such a hazard; Advice to Republicans. Whenever you bear a squat, sov. Democrat claiming that Douglas add his party are favor of a homestead bill, just ask him to show you tho plank in the Baltimore platform that says so, or commits his party to such a measure. That platform was framed to represent the sentiments or Douglas Democrats, and it received the ipccial indorsement of Doughs hitiiself id his tetter ol acceptance, The great Homestead q uestion, second in importance, only to the slivery issue, is ignored In the Douglas platform. How is it with the Republican platform? Is the Home stead dodged or opposed? Uert Is what is said: "That we protest against any sale or alien ation to others of the Fublio Lands held by actual settlers, and against any view of the Homestead policy, which regards t'ae settler as paupers or suppliants for public bounty; and we demand the passage by eongress of the complete and satis actory Homestead MeasUrS. which has allready passed the House"." The nlrt that expects the Douglas party to piss the Homestead bill is a poor deluded dupe, wickedly imposed upon by dishonest leaders, who know better' and it is the duty of Republicans to Search tidt these si mpU alluded tdnBding Democrats, tod explain to therU the truth of the matter, and Open their fyei td the fraud that Is being" practiced upon these victims of misplaced cobtldence. Chi' eago Press sod Ttibnei Extract from Linooln's Spooch at Columbus Last Fall. I wish to say something now iri regard to the Dred Scott decision, as (loalt with by Judgi) Dunging, In that 'memorable (I e ha to' hotwueii Judgo Douglai and myself last year the Judge thought Ut to cummeiico a process of catechising nie, and at Fvecport I answered his questions, and propounded some to him. Among others propounded to him was one that 1 have hero now. The substance, ns I remember it, is, 'Can the people of a United Stales Territory, under tho Died Scott de cision, in any lawful way, ng'iinst tho wish of any citizen of the United Slates, exclude slavery from its limits, prior to the formation of a State Constitution?' Ho answered that they could lawfully exclude slavery from the (Jnitod States Territories, notwithstanding the D ed Scott decision. QThore was something about that answer that has piob ably bee a trouble to tho J ml go ever since.CTj The Dred Scott decision expressly gives every citizen of the United States a right to carry his slaves into the united States Territories. And now there was some inconsistency in savine that the decision was right, and saying, too, that tho people of th territory could lawfully drive slavery out again. Whonull the trasn, the words, mo collateral matter; were cleared sway from it all tho chatF was fanned out ol it it was a bare absurdity, No Zeis than that a thing may be lawfully drivenaway from where it has a lawful right to bt. Coming Over by Hundreds in New xoric. Fusion; bargain and sale, miserable trade and cash transaction are doing their perfect work of opening the eyes of the electors and sending them by hundreds into the Lincoln ranks. The following changes en masse meet )Ur eyes' iri to-day's exchanges. In Kccreville, Essex county, 208 Ameri cans publish a manifesto comirg out for Lincoln, and entering a manly protest against the Bfooks-Coger fusion. In Bethlehem, Albany county, 43 German letnocrato have givon their adhesion to Lin coln over their signaiu-es. In this city the process of change amounts to a revolution, especially in the uernian wards. The constant accessions, Amounting to scores daily, to the Wide-Awake organiza tion, now come daily from the Democrat!0 ranks. The lantern, the hat and tho cape are mado the evidences of the now and living faith. Push oh the glorious work!- Bi'ffafo Advertiser. A Novel Remudv for Consumi'T.on. A n-niRr in ihe Nnrwalk km lit Hector de scribes a visit which he paid lasl month to a lady at Toledo, Ohio, who takes six live frogs a day as a remedy for consumption. She was ecomended to do it by an Englishman, wau laid he was cured in that way. In six weeks this singular mcdicino has restored her from a state of great weakness to strength. The visitor saw tho lady take a Ii vo frog from a ar and swallow him whofp, without chewing. Her daughter also did the same. Suppose ho should take a toid some day in mistake! The Washington Constitution has repeat edly published the following statement, made by Senator Trumbull, and challenged denial of its truth, yet it remains undisputed: Mr. Douglas called on Mr. Covodo. a Republican member of Congress from Pennsylvania, and reques'ed him to go to Trumbull and get him to agree that he, Mr. Douglas, should be returned to the Senate hy the Republicans of Illinois, and in consideration thereof he would fight I ho Republican battles In 1860. A dispatch to the New York World snys that the Republican Association at Washing-tori city has found it necessary to close its doors while (ireparing tho programme lor the grand demonstration on Saturday night, owing to the perfect rush . of outsiders to the rooms, desirous to join the party since the election ih Pennsylvania and Indiana. They have over 1,000 members now, against 300 three months ago. , Cnptftre of two more Slnvcr. A despatch hasbeea recieved from Norfolk, bearing date September 2t, stating that a brig, name unknown, but supposed to bj the brig Storm King, had arrived at that port, in charge of Liout. A. K Hughes; U. S. N, thirty-one days from Monrovia. She was captured by the steamer Sari Jacinto, on the 8th of August, about two hundred miles off the Congo, river. She had 619 negroes on b'St'd, who were landed at Moato'vi1. The fclino despatch states that tho prize ship Erie was Captured by the Unitod States steamer Mohican, on the 8th of August, and had arrived at Monrovia with over 800 negroes on board. She was id charge of Lieut Donegan, U. S.N. . . , . The following are the facts connected with these vessels, as far as can be gleanod from tour marine lists and shipping register: The Erie is a ship of 47(3 tons, was built in Warred R. I.; in 1819, and is supposed io be owned in New York; Sho cleared from Havana Some Utile during the month of April last lor the Rivor Congo.. At the time Bbe wa.s cothmAaded by Captain Knudsort . The Stdrnl KAi provided that "is the names of the other captured Vcssol; is the brig that our readers will recollect Caused Such a Sensation here in the eajly dart 01 Bf llkst Mar, id consequence oi escaping from the charge of two of our Deputy Marshals, or, is Was alleged at th time .bribihi the Marshal 8 to re port that they could not find her. after they had been sent to Search for and Stop her. Rembrandt Peale; the eminent Painter died at Philadelphia on the morning of th 4th 'ost., in th 83d year of bis age. EiTeot of the Rccnt Elections' iri the South. AronsTA. Oct. ll The receipt of the election news from Pennsylvania and Indi ana has created a pro'onnrl semation monr all parties. The Carolinian! are msanting their bats with cockades'. in his speeeh at Hamilton Iri this 8tale, Douglas said: 'When I came to Ohio I looked upon it as a doubtful S' ate, but now t have no doubt but it will tot for ME 1' What dots b think 6f Ohid bf this time? MR. EWmftS SPEECH. We badUsldail giving tbJsjJpiy"T Ewmo, delivered at Chillioths, Ohi'bW;c,' , ( Tj w' " t. 2Dlh ult., entire (h'is week, bdt find that our limits will nut allow uS to do so. We must thmefore content ourselves with givjfitf-., Xtracts iro.nlt.( , ;.,, Since the dissolution of tho Whig pnrtJrl 1851. Jfr. Ewing has taken no active part io political matters. Not fully agreeing with thii Republicans in all their distinctive prin ciples. and disagreeing still mors with the Democracy, he has stood aloof entirely from politics; But tho itsues of the present cam palgn huve consttifuied him once more to eon-for with his lollow citizens upon their com mon interest;and this view addressed a lure meeting at Chillcolho, the place df h's resi-dencj, 1 lis exordium and referenc&to the Presidential candidates wore au follows: f'Mt FllIKNDS AND FELLOW CrTIZKSS am heie to Address you by the invitation ol your republican Central Committee. 1 be long to no existing party. I am attached to none; but to the Union the States their liberties and Iaw9. I cune not to arouse your enthusiasm in behalf of any man or any party, but to speak my own free thoughts, and the conclusions of my own judgement, as lo the conditions of our couutry, and tho course of all that are o; en to us which is most likely to tend to i.is permanent prosper ity and peace. I will sp'oak something of men, but more of principle and policy. And it may ba proper fur me to say, in the outset, that I have made up my mind to vote foi Abraham Lincoln. I know bi:n personally, and am satisfied with him. He is a man of nninieachedintegfity sufficiently acquaint ed with the recent history f our country and the mon and measures which have made up that history. I am satisfied wi'.h iu's man though I do not place him in advance of all his opponents. Join Bell is his equal in per sonal qualities, of large experience., the el-dor statesman, and if we could make him' our Presidont, I would considtr him a very safechoico. I know him much more inti mately than Mr. Lincoln. I was in counsel with him daily for many months io time of trial, an 1 besides my confidence in the slates man, I have for him a warm feeling of per sonal Iriendthiji and regard. Bust's can- notjet tho vole of Ohio. ILs ticket is but a disturbing element in the canvass. The contest in this State is between Lin coin and Douglas, end between them I cannot hesitate for a moment, and, indeed, I hare novoto to throw away when such is the contest. As a statesman, Uoaglas has shown himself inconsiderate and reckless. The extreme agitation of the country for the past six years is due to his restless impatience for notoriety. He is politically answerable for all the terriblo atrocitieseonserjuent upon the repeal of the Missouri Com pro raise. Thoy were embodied in-the repeal, and the eye of a statesman could not have failed to discern them there. He sat a complicated machine, which he understood not, in wild and do-structivo motion, and his sola merit is, that he attempted, but knewjnot how to check or direct its movement. Experience of the past does not warrant lis in believiti; that tho republic would be salt under his guidance. It would be odco again P roion guiding the chariot of the sun. Mr. Breckinridge I know only S3 a gentleman, and as such I esteem him and believe him stainless. He has no record as a statesman, at least known to me; and he s'ahds as the repieteritative of an extreme sectional pafty.Wbo'se opinions and p'il. cy tend strongly to disunion, Besides.Lane candidate for Vice President, is. 1 think, little worthy of that h norable position. My opinion of his personal merits will be found at large iu a speech deliveied in the Senate of the United Slates, Jauuary 7, 1851, on the Bradbury resolutions, which with accotn panying documents, is in AppendiJ th' Coii-jressional Globe vol. 23, pages 67 03. Th's wil i suffice for tl e personal merit and status of the sevcrul cand. dates. After reviewing the slavery question at soma length, and dissenting to soma positions of the Chicago Platform, Mr. Ewing clo-ed with some general remarks upon, the canvass and the prpbub'lo result. , Ho said:, , (, , 1 have little doubt of the election of Mr. Lincoln, lie is an old whig, lie has had his training in a highly conservative party, of which be was a calm, considerate and reasoning member. And though he has passed through a fierce conflict, in which the aggression of slav,erv was the subject of attack and dolerispk. I dolib't not that the feoling wnicn mat connici cxcuea Das pisscci away, .1... t Ik. R ... ili I-..: :J L: : id and that from the first to the last iri bis ih augural address and ih his final mcs"oge he will show himself the President U tbe nation, not of section, or a party. Fo tunately, he will not be thrown upon an extreme party for support. The conservative interest nominated, and that also will elect hiiii. ... Mr. Bull, if I mistake not, will b ivo bdt a small support in the Northwestern States not because he is less worthy thiii Mr. Lincoln, but because he enters the banvass with no prospect of success before the people; and it IS the partol wisdom to attempt ihe good trUt Is practicable not that which is impossible', indeed it were wise 'or l ho especial friends bf Sir. Bejl to support Mr. Lincoln here; and Sho w hi Sri that the conservative interest on which he may rely is strong. But especially a contest against him Is unwise on thoir part. If the election go td the lioils'e. the chance of Mr. Bell for success thele were greatly irrpioJ by the fact tbit he has friends and well wishers among the supporters of Mr. Lincoln. A irairi of twenty cars left Cleveland after the celebration, with an Irishman bn board who refused to pay his far, and whd was put off at the first Station. To tie revenged; he ptilled out the cbnnedtihg pin, and the train went 19 miles before St was discovered that two can full of prlJ bad been left behind. ,r'(i, ' klnvWil Se'fi.'!- Another slaver r u; f t. oat itti-ii.! , ,caDtu American steamer. imrvarvel deuhilea' is owing to the great numb of llevs niratesl on the Africahrunrl'ir'lh't , sia&S-traU on the Africanrunrl'ir'th't , slav'ejrad. policy of the DomoxijonjiMstratlonril, Hard to Cruise id Au3: Ms nw wiUW , out stumbling upon full frtightstl AmerioSri- ilave .ohip-i.so plenty have thev bucome a'ctei lbs sucooruriA opening (7hJ accursed iyofcratie South,' the Erie, fiftv miles off the mouth of the Congo river, aadt four jays out. She bad nine bunder,! sljieson board, and was taken by th Vtf; . . sleauSrtMohican, Lfeiit. Dunningtoni Thii ner-uftS were pt-rfectly inked whotakn another ovjrUo lne Kev. Jn "RoS. JHrent it 3Jo'n''Th 9 w oisposnjon made of Ibefir; clapoji'Ly .. ; Y their n uanut., wig, ariouiea ana oa ajuii . , , ; ; ( lm ever their deliverance Twnty-niiri mca oci ore a landing was effected ajy . . . . & I'aiiM ru"V i.. ; i 9 The Erie has arrived at NVw" tfl'lkS. three important looking persons, supposed t bo the captain and two mates, who have been handed over to the TJ. S. Marshal. Th ere, who were foreigners, wen allowed to tk French leave on the coast. Th Eri waa built, in Rhode Island in 1840. The officers o: tbe slaver' Orin, Jost triad -' in th U. S- District Court at Boston, for b-' ini engaged in th slave trad, were en-' tenctd od the 5ih as follows: Thomas Morgan, part owner and com-msnuer, $2,000 and sent tojailayear. B. J Chamberlin, first mate, sent to pflboh" two years, and Wm. Dunham fnt to jail for twonty-one months. Tbey were hot triU under tlie law making the slave trad $dcf; no slaves being on ihe Orion when cap'tured. At Chaileston or Savannah, iiiesi' slavi) traders would have been discharged with tbV exhortation to go and sin agaiu. A Question in the Singer Rule1 ofThrea' Senator Douglas spoke in fifteen towns inf Maine, end the tflicial results of tb lata? election in those towns ibowla net Republican! gain of l,3a8. fn Ohio, he spoke in eight towns. How much, at the same ratio of increase, should bo the net . Republican gain iri ihos eight towns. 0, S. Journal . Flood.of the Cleveland National Democrat1; is trying to cipher bttt our problem; bath . don't give the precise answer. Ho makes' a pretty good fist at figuring, only he oughtn'l to call us Republicans haid aurOM. Her uf his answer: Everywhere that he has made speeches; the Black Republicans, to whom he gv aid and comfort, have mad large gaines. Cora1.' irdj; West, hi stopped at Erie Pa., and then road a speech. , Th result is ah Abolition! gain of 1 100. From thence, be made a short speech at every Railroad citation where the' train stopped, in every one in which there ia' an Abolition gain. In this eity he mad a long speech, aiid the ie,ult of th election shows an Aboliti in gain of 1.300 ih round1 numlwrs. In company wiih Herschel V; Johnson Mr. Douglas spoke at Columbus and there ihe Abolitionists gained near 400. At Day Ion, Mr. Douglas mad no speech then the Republicans are defeated. At Cincinnati he was to sick tod hoarse or too something else, and he did hot address th crowd, ani Mr. Pendlctin is re-elected td Congress. Lincoln Pyramid ' ' The Republican pyramid looms right up in graceful proportions to 178 eleotorai votes for Lincoln and Hamlin, as follows! 176 ! OHld. 10 W i-MAINE..ILL LI SOt 8 INDIANA V E . R MON T-M t C. U I O A N-. N E W YORK. NEW JERSEY. W 1.8 C 0 N S IN. CONNECTICUT MINN E 8 0 T Ai R " P 5 ISLAND .K i L V A N I A ai a o a U HUSETT8 at an tt . J r. w u a M P S H I R Interview bijtween Linoolri and Sew ard ( Th following pleasant bit of gossip it froin ihe Chicagd c'ofHspbbdvuca bf that Times:, "As frJi Mr. Lincoln, i never saw bird b fore, but am now prepared to declare his pictures gross libvls. Mr. Lincoln Is not a hand-' soma In Sli) that is, his fact ii not handsome, certain! ,Sut ii ia a far pi aant to look npon -an honest Ioj, with a dnamy y and a pleasant, genial txpression.awkward in ma. ner, tall and Mooplng in figure; h Si yt a man whom you would iustentlr pick out among a crowd of strangers as on whom yoi could trtisl. As Governor Seward waa io! Springfield sci.roely fifteen minutes, and f-r about ten of the fifteen was engsgerl in talking td th crowd, and fur th other flv in introducing his traveling party to (h PrU dsht-td-be. with whom ti at do tlm in.'i versed Unheard by it least a doacn litnr;' ' it Is fair id iupM ihatno very dechiv ar-: ' rangamtnts wr 9ected In regat lu uitlrii Cabinets a. atat of tb cvi I . LrlHiii wbioh th . Democratic press will rird ask. highly IrhprobabU, bdt Dtverthel 4 faoi " ' While hafid-aheklu at Wifton tha atl, Jay a romahtlfc tilissof siiUen Iniiated' on kiol mg Mr; Doojlas. tie sabml ad, bat had gallantry nough to nmov hk cigar Irout ai! Bps, Then wm ao ttors Itlwbg tUt 4f . Ii " far X'- 'I ft'. .Hi". ' "'
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1860-10-18 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1860-10-18 |
Searchable Date | 1860-10-18 |
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 |
Type | Text |
Description
Title | page 1 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1860-10-18 |
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 |
Type | Text |
File Size | 4456.71KB |
Full Text | .1111111 Mlilo 1 illuly wij IJIlJlJir ID XlO -LU it rp---"" ' w"''' 1 aMcoxJUT' vmrtisrora', onio, TiitjxtsiiA.Y, ootobbii io, loco. V-W- ir- ' TO" 6 Oo; " ' ' " - -- . . .. . . - ,., - ,. - - .., - . ,, ,. , WT-,. . ,. ...A i i. .,. ! ) : i Ml- Vernon DuHineav Card. W. H. SAM-. W. L. SIMONS 8app & simons; Attorneys at Law, . OFFICE-NO. J, Krihmn HoiioiMd, AprU-n23-y MT. VKK.NQN; ii. W.VANOi , W.O.OOOiriK" VANCE fc COOPER, ATTOBiiV:. A TVIA V , .. MT. VERNON. OHIO ' Office louthelistoornor of Muln and Chestnut sts -opposite Knox County Hank. aoptZO 'ATTORNEY AND COUNSELOR AT LAW mftiioiiii net AHA) NOTARY rUBLIC. , MOUNT VKKN0N, OHIO. OFFICE-Jiidson'i Building, Main Street Below ' Knex County Bunk. " CIIA8. 0. BONNET JOHN D. KOrSE iioNtir & notisE, ATTORNEYS AXD COUNSELLORS AT LAW AND SOLICITOUS IN CHANCER Y, 58 MAIN ST.; I'EORIit; ILLINOIS. Particular attention1 giyeri to Kbul Estato and Collection oasos throughout the Suite. nllt-ly , WALTER II. SMITH, Attorney and counsellor .. AT LAW, . , ,, MT. VERNON, OIIIO. Office on nigh Stroot, opposite the Court ITousc. foB2otf HENRY S. MITCHELL; Attorney and Counsellor at Law AND. NOTARY PUB Lin, , O fe'i'icE otH side Keri At BlAck; MT. VERNON, OHIO. kMMET W. COTTON. W . BANK. COTTON BANE. Attorney's & Counsellors at Law, Hi. Vtrmnn. I)hi ITTILLatidiidtooll business intrastod to thoir TT care, in any of the Courts. OFFICE, N.E.Cornerof Moin and GsnbierSts '6verI'ylo's.IorchantTailoringEstollisha.iont. Oot. 19th 1858. tf- ClIAHMCS F. BALDWIN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, . . .. MT. VERNON, OIIIO. ,.- ESPWill give particular actontion to collecting claims jn Knox and adjoining countios. ..'C. F. Baldwin ia also a Notiiry Publio and will ' attend to snob business as is authorized by his com ""mission, with promptnoss and dispatch. . . OIBoe ia "Miller's Block," oror White's Book "Store, fob25mB OSUOKN II. OLDKUYD, DEALER IN Weti'-ipapers; magazine, Cheap Litem-j, , . tnre, Ac. Back htiinbors of Papers and Magazinos furnished; .. All 'Eastern weeklies printed, and til books iibljs.hcd', ciin be had on application. ,0FFICE-4)n Maid street; opposite tho Konyon Hll.w. Mt. Vernon. 0; . - S PERRY & CO TI1 S. Fl'liA atb'filling tip with almost ' " l liUAl:;. N E f. GbODS, 'SVRY BUI?SSELS," Throe Ply nnd as- ssi Stu 31U . , . ijri. Carpets, Stugs; Parlor and Common n X.?. wit'stook is Wor and moro beautiful X)00tMatS,l t,.Hq,i,.kfW,h ,n- uanCIV nnil T1'3," uIL CLOTHS Ac. MEDIi ELECTRICITY, For th.spJedy V i"1"" bt di30ilsi ikillfully applied by Drs. Hu. a,! Dii'ranl. 6ffioe in l.r Bi i.uaro, opposi te 0. B Po . - Jul5th,lStl), im tt. 0. MONTG y&lERY, . 1 w m iar n :u ii ii n n c h u i - " L A V V if BANNINU BUILDING OVER MctllrrlN h SHOE STORE. n.m-x Mount Vorno I.";110- ... Snn,al attention Kiven to the t b. CU"" .r Cl.;.Tis. and tho purohase and solo of r. '"Vf; t haVB ,'?r sale unimproved lands a. fol. . Missouri, 605 a '"f,8 302 ncres in St. V""- Hcros in W.'8 Warren Couiifv. nissour AaK. SM1" nl... I.'i irnros and on e Mercer County, Ohio-. . ,';JL" J! PEB HANGER,- FANCT GlLBKR, Ac-. 4o,. Landscape Painting done ti Oi let. Pictures framod in Rosewood or Gilt, t bnsonahle terms. Stoncilinginpaporortnetaluo -tly executed. SHOP 10 Main St., Up-Stairs eti een Vine and Qambior Streets, Mount Ve:non( hi Deo. 3, '59,-n4mt. SASH, DOORS AND BLl D : J, At Anderson UANUVACTURER ANI bkALER IN A8H, DOORS, AND BLINDS, 'Gen. Jones' Wart House, High St., between 'Main and R. R. Depot, Mount Vernon, Ohio ALL KINDS of work constantly pn hands and warranted. All orders promptly executed. 15?" Dry Pise Lumber, Shingles, Lath) Jto.j alway ou hand. "April 28,li!5fl, i4TyJ DR. G. E. MeKOWN. 8tyi3-03T ID-STTI--5?, OFFICE OVER L. B. 'WARD'S STORE, Mopwt VERNds, Ohio. (Umiienai, ifei t8, Gambier Strtei:) All operations ill sUrgltt&l and mechanical DorHist-ry warranted equal to those of besteity ptacticei August 30, 18u0-n43-wl A.ADAMS, .iCI5LSj:iTXi: WISHES to Inform bis former customers and th Vpublie generally) that he has finished his new two 'story brick shop, at the old stand,on Mulberry streot "in rear of the KenyoB rtouse( and Is again at work -with a mil supply of hands, Better prepare- meu ever to accomodate his mant and increasing patrons. In addition to all other kinds of smith work;' knuitrtu inociat attention to Shoeimti and In this particular branch, he belioVea himself capable of giving entire satisi&otion to an customers; Donfiddtitly refers to the public, whom he has so generally serrod 4s to his ability in this department, Call at the sign of the "Vnloani Cave" and the 'Village Blacksmith.'1 June 14th tf no 31. '0. . baixis. ' o. cn.rB. DRS. HARNES & SdllAtFER) HOMdJPATHIC PHYSICIANSi ttr. fiarnss havitli( this flay formed aeo-pftrtnor-ahip with Or. Hchaefcr. formerly of Ooshon, Indiana, in the practice f medicine and surgery, rospootful-1y solicits for the firm a continuance of the patron-Age heretofore extended to hitni Dr. 8. Comes with the best of references, . Mt, Vernon, Aagust 8th, 18119. N. B. Alt persons indebted to th undersigned en book account art requested to call and make sot' tlemerH by cash of note before the ffrst day of OtUfi ksr next. 0. W. BARNES. August.!, I860, n40-tft ,. ' : DEVOB & BTJBBELL, KAXUrACtunHtts of AND diaLbrs It ' 8ASU, D00U8 AND BLINDS, Btart BTaaw. nnABtiT ovrosiTX thi ootat aobE) MTi VERNON, OIIIO. . Wlma- inofranle, door-frames, Ad.jAc, and every article Id our line required for hauM furnishing io the terf best style, and of the1 very bost materials. All kinds of sash constantly on hand, and all order Will t promptly tm4 satisfactorily exeeute.'.. 1 ' ly. 10. March 17th) I860, For the Republican1: THE COUNTY PAIR. BY IAHL EE1IN. Hiiro they oomo, tho young and old; bay and rich, and mook and bold. Throngs and troops of friends and foes; Faded, dark, or fresh as rose Children dance and play and scroairi, Maidens sigh or laugh or droaui, Studonts loiter, quit or smuko Ruddy farmors talk and joke. Work-worn mothers grasp their share1 Of the -ay's relief from' crtro,' See them come from hut and hall, Proud and lowly, stout and tall; Soo tho swaying, aimloss crowd, Hoar the laughing long and loud. Hero comes a luwyercold and shrowd; Intent to catch a client orudo, Or make of politics a1 trade,' Ere yot his hard-earnod laurols fado .' A noisy group of urchiiiB rude, Of niissos fair and youngsters lowd, Rush by in scrambling eagor hasto; For once resolved no time to waste. A gay coquette, with colors bright, Swoops swiftly by, with eyes all light, A conscious love-lorn swain beside A jonlous lover near, can hido But half tho tortures' inly felt, Though sniilosand Sows are froaly dealt. Ilore comes the school-girl's careless swing,' Whilo poalsof iiioriy laughter ring, From group to group, and looks askance," Betray by sudden stolen glance Lifo's mystery even then at work, Where only childish fun should lurk; A preacher grave, with revorond air, His boys load by, a happy pair, A hooplcss lady, mook and sad, Then ambles on, in satin clad, Shocked iuiich to hear the shout Of liridgot's beau, who's suro he's "out," And jostles on to find a place, Whore "darlint, dear" may soo tho raoo: Ah, thoro'san artist's voluinod eye. A thousand lights and shades to spy, A poet's soul outgloaming th'ero , And malting radiant all the air. A tottering, toothless, wrinkled man; Next hobbles on, just in tho van Of matrons sage, with bristling mieri, And graceful maids, with wits so keen. Now sauntering by, a buxom dame Recounts her last ycur butter's fume. And tbeii the furs a precious team, With canos and chains and pineh-bock's gleam, School-teachers freed from ghostly tasks; A holiday the laborer asks, And mutely tuils at Pleasure's beck, Fatigue which now, he'll little rock. Anoli the Icngthouiiig shadows full, Tho oft-ropeatcd pleasures pall. The careful parents seok thoir brood, Iuipaticut at their lingering mood. Tho premiums given, tho Wag6f$ paid, The finery spoi'ed, the matches made; Th' unconscious cattle homeward drivon, To whom (ho lioHi red ribbon given, Their 6nors load with lasting fiim'o'; Tho neighbors lend as lasting gaiiio. 'Tis ovor, past, tho yearly fun, Well-nigh its glittering sands have run, Prolonged ulono, by mom'ry ould,' Or hope, of future Fairs tho mould. . . For the Republican. TEMPERANCE AND FREEDOM- Editor RePimicANi-Peirhnps S ftw penciling of an "overland trip1" from the city of Mt. Vernon to this place wtf'il hot b uninteresting to the real-is of the itcpub'-licnn. Havlrii durini' the bArt week, frnitf l';e pleasure of such aj mrriejrj - will Irnn' ctlbe a few notes, not descriptivd Df nit-ural -cctiery, df bounding cataracls, ilnd golden sunsets; fdr; eVen had I the poetry; theK 81-6 otlier subjeclg that may more Jrotitabiy eiujjiujr uiy pen; xnose lor in stance at the iw "1 ' '"is, thoilgu perhaps Euy motto would ive better been '.'In- TKMPKRANifiE and treenom, lor it is oi iulemperabc. that I intend to speak. Rut I did hot like the antithesis; There are those in the good oil county of Knox, who, though thsy profess to be thorough-going temperance, and stringed I liquor law men, are ignorant of the prevalence of the crittie df drunkenness. 'Such men suppose that the Wdrk df ilia WffljJe'f-ance reform is nearly complete, and Without the aid of stringent law; Sadly are they mistaken; In Mt. Yernon the dram seller mat be driven Jby public scorn from behind his respectable bar td a den below the surface of the earth, bat not sd ih the small towns and tillages throughout the state. Here these anti-chambers of Hell yet occupy the first floor. Td begin with the town of L- , som. fiftjr miles from Mt. Vernon, how" the liquid fire of hell is dealt out with impunity at respectable bars above ground, and respectable citizens step up and drink; 1 will note that in the above place a tiacUkr who is a confirmed drunkard hasbeea employed for the past year in the publio schools, it being known to his employers that he was a sot. It was only when his superintendent refused longer to labor in connection with him that he was discharged. 1 will say incidentally that last fall thii mad was a member of the Republican party, a sealoUs otiej this fall he is a Duug-las democrat) and a regularly nominated Candidate for a county office in the eoiiilty of f A singular coincidence, and Strikingly Illustrative of the mannei in which true merit U feWafded by the de-trJodfaey, What is the influence of luch a townf and What will it be Until we haVe wtnperadceJaw? Riding out from this town one tVenlng In company with a friend, we saw at least a doled tiled Whd Were in-toiidated, some of theiti beastly tOi la thV town of Iofck- leVeB miles from ColdmhuB, we stopped for refresh-trjehtri. Stepping Into the public room of the hotel, the first thing wo saw was an object behind the bar dealing out whliikey by the dram to numerous ci'atomcrs who were standing around. Such scenes as we have named we saw enacted and re-enacted lit other villages through which wo passed, and all this is done in the face and eyes of christian people; fearless of the law and its con'seq lenoes. Doubtless there are thousands of such places scattered throughout our fair Ctatd, wiih their dramshops open to the blnze cf God's sun every day, proving that all our temperance laws are scarce other than dead letters upon the statute book. Is it not time that temperance men would awako from their slumber? The cause of Freedom is more prospnr otis. Everywhere one sees the indicaiions of a better day coming. Republicans throughout this entire region are enthusl astic oVer tho orosrietts of the election nf Lincoln and Hamlin. Poles lift their tapering tops high iri the air, and beautiful flags flutter in the breeze at every corner-In this county, Clidton, the Republicans expect to give Lincoln from 800 to 1000 maj'ority. Here the sight of a democrat is a rare one. They areata premium, and before the election will make valuable specimens for Bam urn. Tom1 Corwin is soon to be here to address the people, and all are anxious to hdar John Sherman of your neighboring district. Wide-Awakes have their weekly meeting in almost every township. Thus the cause moves glorious ly ott. Knowing your space to be valuable, t close, earnestly ishing for the success of both temperance and freedom in Kuox county. Respectfully, &c, M. D. Wilmington, 6., Sept. I5:h, I860. Forney on the Republican Victory in' reuusyivama-The Philadelphia Press thus coinments ofi the ejection of Andrew Curtin as Governor of Pennsylvania: "The returns of yesterday's election in dicate tho election of Col, Andrew Gregg Curtin, as Governor of Pennsylvania, by ah unprecedented majority. Mr. Foster's silence has assisted him, it would seem1, with no section of the Democratic party. The vote has been unu'siinlly large and the defeat sigularly significant. The returns speak in bolder and stronger S ion than we Cad write. There can now, happily, be no more baulking of the great question involved in the Presidential struggle. Tlie reasons' in favor of the combination against Abraham Lincoln, however they may operate in advance of that which is to be decided on the first Tuesday in No-vtrnber coming, cannot be effective when men come to choose between candidates, each of whotri represents a principal antagonistic to lie other.' "Now, we take it, there can be no more ifnion between Breckinridge and Douglas thah between two' naturally repulsive forces, fiach represents a distinctive platform. No advocate of Douglas believes, or affects to) ttaiieve, iri the doctrine upon which Ma jor Brilhh'inridge' stands; and no advocate df Major Kreckinridge believes, or affects tb believe in the doctrine ufon which Hi. Douglas stands'; The Southern Mends of Breckhndo'e; more frank than mo?" bf the friend of Doiiglas, declare as a central thinsr hat under no circumstances will t ey ever accept either the' Candidate or the creed upon which the regular De moeracy stand." A few days since, according to the Tinies, while 'John Minor Botts was in this city, he Was asked by a fcrsiiiber of the Ashland Association whether he wnuld make a speech in New York in behalf of the fusion ticket Ho replied that he would rather hot, and that if he did it would dd the fusion menmore harm thad good. When asked the reason why, he said: "I am going South to speak against Breckinridge and disunion, and how voald I do that after havirig spoked here in faVor of a ftisiori with that party?" He said ho had been fighting" disunion all his life and could not now dd otherwise he had lived ari honest man, and intended to die one. When asked what he considered the prospect was With regard to the electlohjhe replied; "Sir.tberti is not a peg to hang a ddubt upon that Lincoln will be elected. No man in his sedses doubts it' A SiNOoUft Bbt. Two gentlemen in Ohio, residing one in Carlton and oie id Miamisburg, have, bet a barrel of flour on the Presidential election. If Mr. Dottglaa is elected, tlirjgehtlehiaH residing in Carl-tort is to wheel his barrel of flour from there to Min'rhisburg, a distance of six miles, accompanied by the Dayton brass band; and if Lincoln is elected, he of Miamisburg is to take np his march' from fiOrBe with his wheelbarrow add fioiir. add march Id the musie of the band of hi town, and deposit the flour at the door of the winder", : Sofllebdd will sweat after the Presidential ele'ctlod, ' Elodtioa of President by House of Ropredontativee. n. J. Raymond, of the New York Times, in a speech in New York Upon the effect of fusion nguicHt the Republican ticket gave hie views as to the chances; in case the tied ion goes into the House, as fbl lows: Suppose the Fusionlsts, out bf their profound regard for the public peace, sua ceed in defeating an election by the people and carry it to the IIouso of Representa tives. What will happen then? Theelec-t'on ia to ha made by the present House. The members are already chosen. We know their position and can predict thoir action. Tho vote, as I have said, is to bo t (i lien by Slates, a majority of the del egation from each State deciding how its vote shall be cast. and each Slate casting but one: Florida, with its one mehiber, has precisely the samo weight as N. Y. with 33, or Pennsylvania with 27. or Ohio with S3. And the vote will stand thus: For Lincoln.' Connecticut Indiana Iowa , Maine Massachusetts Michigan Minnnxotr' Now Hampshire.., Now Jersey . I For Breckinridge. j 1Alubaina ljCa i 'ornia Delaware Florida Georgia Louisiana.. Mississippi,. Missouri.;.. .... Oregon South Carolina . New York 1 Ohio 1 Pennsylvania Rhode Islund, 1 Vermont 1 Wisconsin 1 tolas.... Virginia Total. .12 Total 15 Here are 1 5 States certain to vote for Lincoln, and 12 equally certain to vote for Breckinridge. Lincoln will thus lack two votes of ah' election, while Breckinridge will lack five. The delegation from Illinois consists of 5 Anti-Lecompton Democrats and 4 Rt publicans, and would vote 'or Douglas if his nanie should go into the House as one of the three highest candidates, of which, however, there is but little chance- But tinder hi circumstances whatever, after the war are waged upon Mr. Douglas nt the South, could Ill.nois cast Iier fote for Breckinridge. . Tennessee has 6 opposi liod members aod 3 Democrats and will vote for Breckinridge, in any con tingoncy. Arkansas has one Breckinridge and ode Doughis Democrat, and would probably vote for the former, thu3 render ing only fcur more votes necessary to his election. Kentucky, Maryland and North Carolina are equally divided between the Americans ana tue i cmocrats; and although one of two of. them might in an emergency vote for Douglas, not one of thetn could possibly Vote lor Breckinridge and the Disunion party which he represents. If they should, moreover, he would still Lick one vote. , How stands ihe cise with Lincoln? He lacks but two votes. Suppose one of the Illinois Anti-Lecompton Democrats should vole lor linn, tliat would give him the vote of that State; and lie would lack but one. Oregon, D,.lawi fe, Florida and California have but one member each suppose he should vote for Lincoln. Lincoln you see would be elected. Applause. Thus you see that, if the Fusicnnts sue ceed in parrying the election to the House, ihe will siitiply put It in the power of two itM, ono from Illinois and one from either of the smallest States, to make Mr. Lincoln President!! They cannot elect any one elso, hut they can elect himi Applause. 1 This, then; is to be the grand result of this great Fusion movemem! The whole aim end object of this coalition is to prevent the American people from electing Lincoln, in order that two members of Corigress may have that privilege! Now this may b'e their lho'de bf saving the Union, but it is hot mine: It may suit the pur poses of an Administration that has made Useu Infamously meniofable by its corrupt use tf publio mono'y to control the ao-tion of Conrrre? thus to bfih'sr. the Presi dency within its r.p; but it does' not accord with the principles oi our uovern-merit, nor consult the will o'r the welfare iff the American people. For vif part, I should dread the day which should stake sucii momentous results upon such a hazard; Advice to Republicans. Whenever you bear a squat, sov. Democrat claiming that Douglas add his party are favor of a homestead bill, just ask him to show you tho plank in the Baltimore platform that says so, or commits his party to such a measure. That platform was framed to represent the sentiments or Douglas Democrats, and it received the ipccial indorsement of Doughs hitiiself id his tetter ol acceptance, The great Homestead q uestion, second in importance, only to the slivery issue, is ignored In the Douglas platform. How is it with the Republican platform? Is the Home stead dodged or opposed? Uert Is what is said: "That we protest against any sale or alien ation to others of the Fublio Lands held by actual settlers, and against any view of the Homestead policy, which regards t'ae settler as paupers or suppliants for public bounty; and we demand the passage by eongress of the complete and satis actory Homestead MeasUrS. which has allready passed the House"." The nlrt that expects the Douglas party to piss the Homestead bill is a poor deluded dupe, wickedly imposed upon by dishonest leaders, who know better' and it is the duty of Republicans to Search tidt these si mpU alluded tdnBding Democrats, tod explain to therU the truth of the matter, and Open their fyei td the fraud that Is being" practiced upon these victims of misplaced cobtldence. Chi' eago Press sod Ttibnei Extract from Linooln's Spooch at Columbus Last Fall. I wish to say something now iri regard to the Dred Scott decision, as (loalt with by Judgi) Dunging, In that 'memorable (I e ha to' hotwueii Judgo Douglai and myself last year the Judge thought Ut to cummeiico a process of catechising nie, and at Fvecport I answered his questions, and propounded some to him. Among others propounded to him was one that 1 have hero now. The substance, ns I remember it, is, 'Can the people of a United Stales Territory, under tho Died Scott de cision, in any lawful way, ng'iinst tho wish of any citizen of the United Slates, exclude slavery from its limits, prior to the formation of a State Constitution?' Ho answered that they could lawfully exclude slavery from the (Jnitod States Territories, notwithstanding the D ed Scott decision. QThore was something about that answer that has piob ably bee a trouble to tho J ml go ever since.CTj The Dred Scott decision expressly gives every citizen of the United States a right to carry his slaves into the united States Territories. And now there was some inconsistency in savine that the decision was right, and saying, too, that tho people of th territory could lawfully drive slavery out again. Whonull the trasn, the words, mo collateral matter; were cleared sway from it all tho chatF was fanned out ol it it was a bare absurdity, No Zeis than that a thing may be lawfully drivenaway from where it has a lawful right to bt. Coming Over by Hundreds in New xoric. Fusion; bargain and sale, miserable trade and cash transaction are doing their perfect work of opening the eyes of the electors and sending them by hundreds into the Lincoln ranks. The following changes en masse meet )Ur eyes' iri to-day's exchanges. In Kccreville, Essex county, 208 Ameri cans publish a manifesto comirg out for Lincoln, and entering a manly protest against the Bfooks-Coger fusion. In Bethlehem, Albany county, 43 German letnocrato have givon their adhesion to Lin coln over their signaiu-es. In this city the process of change amounts to a revolution, especially in the uernian wards. The constant accessions, Amounting to scores daily, to the Wide-Awake organiza tion, now come daily from the Democrat!0 ranks. The lantern, the hat and tho cape are mado the evidences of the now and living faith. Push oh the glorious work!- Bi'ffafo Advertiser. A Novel Remudv for Consumi'T.on. A n-niRr in ihe Nnrwalk km lit Hector de scribes a visit which he paid lasl month to a lady at Toledo, Ohio, who takes six live frogs a day as a remedy for consumption. She was ecomended to do it by an Englishman, wau laid he was cured in that way. In six weeks this singular mcdicino has restored her from a state of great weakness to strength. The visitor saw tho lady take a Ii vo frog from a ar and swallow him whofp, without chewing. Her daughter also did the same. Suppose ho should take a toid some day in mistake! The Washington Constitution has repeat edly published the following statement, made by Senator Trumbull, and challenged denial of its truth, yet it remains undisputed: Mr. Douglas called on Mr. Covodo. a Republican member of Congress from Pennsylvania, and reques'ed him to go to Trumbull and get him to agree that he, Mr. Douglas, should be returned to the Senate hy the Republicans of Illinois, and in consideration thereof he would fight I ho Republican battles In 1860. A dispatch to the New York World snys that the Republican Association at Washing-tori city has found it necessary to close its doors while (ireparing tho programme lor the grand demonstration on Saturday night, owing to the perfect rush . of outsiders to the rooms, desirous to join the party since the election ih Pennsylvania and Indiana. They have over 1,000 members now, against 300 three months ago. , Cnptftre of two more Slnvcr. A despatch hasbeea recieved from Norfolk, bearing date September 2t, stating that a brig, name unknown, but supposed to bj the brig Storm King, had arrived at that port, in charge of Liout. A. K Hughes; U. S. N, thirty-one days from Monrovia. She was captured by the steamer Sari Jacinto, on the 8th of August, about two hundred miles off the Congo, river. She had 619 negroes on b'St'd, who were landed at Moato'vi1. The fclino despatch states that tho prize ship Erie was Captured by the Unitod States steamer Mohican, on the 8th of August, and had arrived at Monrovia with over 800 negroes on board. She was id charge of Lieut Donegan, U. S.N. . . , . The following are the facts connected with these vessels, as far as can be gleanod from tour marine lists and shipping register: The Erie is a ship of 47(3 tons, was built in Warred R. I.; in 1819, and is supposed io be owned in New York; Sho cleared from Havana Some Utile during the month of April last lor the Rivor Congo.. At the time Bbe wa.s cothmAaded by Captain Knudsort . The Stdrnl KAi provided that "is the names of the other captured Vcssol; is the brig that our readers will recollect Caused Such a Sensation here in the eajly dart 01 Bf llkst Mar, id consequence oi escaping from the charge of two of our Deputy Marshals, or, is Was alleged at th time .bribihi the Marshal 8 to re port that they could not find her. after they had been sent to Search for and Stop her. Rembrandt Peale; the eminent Painter died at Philadelphia on the morning of th 4th 'ost., in th 83d year of bis age. EiTeot of the Rccnt Elections' iri the South. AronsTA. Oct. ll The receipt of the election news from Pennsylvania and Indi ana has created a pro'onnrl semation monr all parties. The Carolinian! are msanting their bats with cockades'. in his speeeh at Hamilton Iri this 8tale, Douglas said: 'When I came to Ohio I looked upon it as a doubtful S' ate, but now t have no doubt but it will tot for ME 1' What dots b think 6f Ohid bf this time? MR. EWmftS SPEECH. We badUsldail giving tbJsjJpiy"T Ewmo, delivered at Chillioths, Ohi'bW;c,' , ( Tj w' " t. 2Dlh ult., entire (h'is week, bdt find that our limits will nut allow uS to do so. We must thmefore content ourselves with givjfitf-., Xtracts iro.nlt.( , ;.,, Since the dissolution of tho Whig pnrtJrl 1851. Jfr. Ewing has taken no active part io political matters. Not fully agreeing with thii Republicans in all their distinctive prin ciples. and disagreeing still mors with the Democracy, he has stood aloof entirely from politics; But tho itsues of the present cam palgn huve consttifuied him once more to eon-for with his lollow citizens upon their com mon interest;and this view addressed a lure meeting at Chillcolho, the place df h's resi-dencj, 1 lis exordium and referenc&to the Presidential candidates wore au follows: f'Mt FllIKNDS AND FELLOW CrTIZKSS am heie to Address you by the invitation ol your republican Central Committee. 1 be long to no existing party. I am attached to none; but to the Union the States their liberties and Iaw9. I cune not to arouse your enthusiasm in behalf of any man or any party, but to speak my own free thoughts, and the conclusions of my own judgement, as lo the conditions of our couutry, and tho course of all that are o; en to us which is most likely to tend to i.is permanent prosper ity and peace. I will sp'oak something of men, but more of principle and policy. And it may ba proper fur me to say, in the outset, that I have made up my mind to vote foi Abraham Lincoln. I know bi:n personally, and am satisfied with him. He is a man of nninieachedintegfity sufficiently acquaint ed with the recent history f our country and the mon and measures which have made up that history. I am satisfied wi'.h iu's man though I do not place him in advance of all his opponents. Join Bell is his equal in per sonal qualities, of large experience., the el-dor statesman, and if we could make him' our Presidont, I would considtr him a very safechoico. I know him much more inti mately than Mr. Lincoln. I was in counsel with him daily for many months io time of trial, an 1 besides my confidence in the slates man, I have for him a warm feeling of per sonal Iriendthiji and regard. Bust's can- notjet tho vole of Ohio. ILs ticket is but a disturbing element in the canvass. The contest in this State is between Lin coin and Douglas, end between them I cannot hesitate for a moment, and, indeed, I hare novoto to throw away when such is the contest. As a statesman, Uoaglas has shown himself inconsiderate and reckless. The extreme agitation of the country for the past six years is due to his restless impatience for notoriety. He is politically answerable for all the terriblo atrocitieseonserjuent upon the repeal of the Missouri Com pro raise. Thoy were embodied in-the repeal, and the eye of a statesman could not have failed to discern them there. He sat a complicated machine, which he understood not, in wild and do-structivo motion, and his sola merit is, that he attempted, but knewjnot how to check or direct its movement. Experience of the past does not warrant lis in believiti; that tho republic would be salt under his guidance. It would be odco again P roion guiding the chariot of the sun. Mr. Breckinridge I know only S3 a gentleman, and as such I esteem him and believe him stainless. He has no record as a statesman, at least known to me; and he s'ahds as the repieteritative of an extreme sectional pafty.Wbo'se opinions and p'il. cy tend strongly to disunion, Besides.Lane candidate for Vice President, is. 1 think, little worthy of that h norable position. My opinion of his personal merits will be found at large iu a speech deliveied in the Senate of the United Slates, Jauuary 7, 1851, on the Bradbury resolutions, which with accotn panying documents, is in AppendiJ th' Coii-jressional Globe vol. 23, pages 67 03. Th's wil i suffice for tl e personal merit and status of the sevcrul cand. dates. After reviewing the slavery question at soma length, and dissenting to soma positions of the Chicago Platform, Mr. Ewing clo-ed with some general remarks upon, the canvass and the prpbub'lo result. , Ho said:, , (, , 1 have little doubt of the election of Mr. Lincoln, lie is an old whig, lie has had his training in a highly conservative party, of which be was a calm, considerate and reasoning member. And though he has passed through a fierce conflict, in which the aggression of slav,erv was the subject of attack and dolerispk. I dolib't not that the feoling wnicn mat connici cxcuea Das pisscci away, .1... t Ik. R ... ili I-..: :J L: : id and that from the first to the last iri bis ih augural address and ih his final mcs"oge he will show himself the President U tbe nation, not of section, or a party. Fo tunately, he will not be thrown upon an extreme party for support. The conservative interest nominated, and that also will elect hiiii. ... Mr. Bull, if I mistake not, will b ivo bdt a small support in the Northwestern States not because he is less worthy thiii Mr. Lincoln, but because he enters the banvass with no prospect of success before the people; and it IS the partol wisdom to attempt ihe good trUt Is practicable not that which is impossible', indeed it were wise 'or l ho especial friends bf Sir. Bejl to support Mr. Lincoln here; and Sho w hi Sri that the conservative interest on which he may rely is strong. But especially a contest against him Is unwise on thoir part. If the election go td the lioils'e. the chance of Mr. Bell for success thele were greatly irrpioJ by the fact tbit he has friends and well wishers among the supporters of Mr. Lincoln. A irairi of twenty cars left Cleveland after the celebration, with an Irishman bn board who refused to pay his far, and whd was put off at the first Station. To tie revenged; he ptilled out the cbnnedtihg pin, and the train went 19 miles before St was discovered that two can full of prlJ bad been left behind. ,r'(i, ' klnvWil Se'fi.'!- Another slaver r u; f t. oat itti-ii.! , ,caDtu American steamer. imrvarvel deuhilea' is owing to the great numb of llevs niratesl on the Africahrunrl'ir'lh't , sia&S-traU on the Africanrunrl'ir'th't , slav'ejrad. policy of the DomoxijonjiMstratlonril, Hard to Cruise id Au3: Ms nw wiUW , out stumbling upon full frtightstl AmerioSri- ilave .ohip-i.so plenty have thev bucome a'ctei lbs sucooruriA opening (7hJ accursed iyofcratie South,' the Erie, fiftv miles off the mouth of the Congo river, aadt four jays out. She bad nine bunder,! sljieson board, and was taken by th Vtf; . . sleauSrtMohican, Lfeiit. Dunningtoni Thii ner-uftS were pt-rfectly inked whotakn another ovjrUo lne Kev. Jn "RoS. JHrent it 3Jo'n''Th 9 w oisposnjon made of Ibefir; clapoji'Ly .. ; Y their n uanut., wig, ariouiea ana oa ajuii . , , ; ; ( lm ever their deliverance Twnty-niiri mca oci ore a landing was effected ajy . . . . & I'aiiM ru"V i.. ; i 9 The Erie has arrived at NVw" tfl'lkS. three important looking persons, supposed t bo the captain and two mates, who have been handed over to the TJ. S. Marshal. Th ere, who were foreigners, wen allowed to tk French leave on the coast. Th Eri waa built, in Rhode Island in 1840. The officers o: tbe slaver' Orin, Jost triad -' in th U. S- District Court at Boston, for b-' ini engaged in th slave trad, were en-' tenctd od the 5ih as follows: Thomas Morgan, part owner and com-msnuer, $2,000 and sent tojailayear. B. J Chamberlin, first mate, sent to pflboh" two years, and Wm. Dunham fnt to jail for twonty-one months. Tbey were hot triU under tlie law making the slave trad $dcf; no slaves being on ihe Orion when cap'tured. At Chaileston or Savannah, iiiesi' slavi) traders would have been discharged with tbV exhortation to go and sin agaiu. A Question in the Singer Rule1 ofThrea' Senator Douglas spoke in fifteen towns inf Maine, end the tflicial results of tb lata? election in those towns ibowla net Republican! gain of l,3a8. fn Ohio, he spoke in eight towns. How much, at the same ratio of increase, should bo the net . Republican gain iri ihos eight towns. 0, S. Journal . Flood.of the Cleveland National Democrat1; is trying to cipher bttt our problem; bath . don't give the precise answer. Ho makes' a pretty good fist at figuring, only he oughtn'l to call us Republicans haid aurOM. Her uf his answer: Everywhere that he has made speeches; the Black Republicans, to whom he gv aid and comfort, have mad large gaines. Cora1.' irdj; West, hi stopped at Erie Pa., and then road a speech. , Th result is ah Abolition! gain of 1 100. From thence, be made a short speech at every Railroad citation where the' train stopped, in every one in which there ia' an Abolition gain. In this eity he mad a long speech, aiid the ie,ult of th election shows an Aboliti in gain of 1.300 ih round1 numlwrs. In company wiih Herschel V; Johnson Mr. Douglas spoke at Columbus and there ihe Abolitionists gained near 400. At Day Ion, Mr. Douglas mad no speech then the Republicans are defeated. At Cincinnati he was to sick tod hoarse or too something else, and he did hot address th crowd, ani Mr. Pendlctin is re-elected td Congress. Lincoln Pyramid ' ' The Republican pyramid looms right up in graceful proportions to 178 eleotorai votes for Lincoln and Hamlin, as follows! 176 ! OHld. 10 W i-MAINE..ILL LI SOt 8 INDIANA V E . R MON T-M t C. U I O A N-. N E W YORK. NEW JERSEY. W 1.8 C 0 N S IN. CONNECTICUT MINN E 8 0 T Ai R " P 5 ISLAND .K i L V A N I A ai a o a U HUSETT8 at an tt . J r. w u a M P S H I R Interview bijtween Linoolri and Sew ard ( Th following pleasant bit of gossip it froin ihe Chicagd c'ofHspbbdvuca bf that Times:, "As frJi Mr. Lincoln, i never saw bird b fore, but am now prepared to declare his pictures gross libvls. Mr. Lincoln Is not a hand-' soma In Sli) that is, his fact ii not handsome, certain! ,Sut ii ia a far pi aant to look npon -an honest Ioj, with a dnamy y and a pleasant, genial txpression.awkward in ma. ner, tall and Mooplng in figure; h Si yt a man whom you would iustentlr pick out among a crowd of strangers as on whom yoi could trtisl. As Governor Seward waa io! Springfield sci.roely fifteen minutes, and f-r about ten of the fifteen was engsgerl in talking td th crowd, and fur th other flv in introducing his traveling party to (h PrU dsht-td-be. with whom ti at do tlm in.'i versed Unheard by it least a doacn litnr;' ' it Is fair id iupM ihatno very dechiv ar-: ' rangamtnts wr 9ected In regat lu uitlrii Cabinets a. atat of tb cvi I . LrlHiii wbioh th . Democratic press will rird ask. highly IrhprobabU, bdt Dtverthel 4 faoi " ' While hafid-aheklu at Wifton tha atl, Jay a romahtlfc tilissof siiUen Iniiated' on kiol mg Mr; Doojlas. tie sabml ad, bat had gallantry nough to nmov hk cigar Irout ai! Bps, Then wm ao ttors Itlwbg tUt 4f . Ii " far X'- 'I ft'. .Hi". ' "' |