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" timi llJla-JllMyuu'lrllr1"1',l' 1 " rir""-L " 11 Wmin a "' mm' a' m ""aaa awn i ' j "T T' TTJ"'"' ' " "' n n -2 i1 tJ"-J"J"r-'Ck-S.-- -T- "" J-,s e-- 1BM- r ' VOLIJME 22. 1,: Pire!: Pirol! .! ;i . rpBS DKYOUElSa ELEU3NT bM gin rislted I our qaleWeity, at noonday, and has laid waste t M (sr TMiplM.dedkatod to the worship of the Mott Hljch the let Jhresbyterian Chnreh. - The effort of onr oltlion, aad the ekill. of cut ' J" Tire' Companies liare been baffled, and laoalderiae; ' Tufns mark the epot where once a aoble edifice reer " ' ad aloft its dome and spire, pointing to the "Hoase not made with hands, above, 1 The only sere protection agait casualties by fire, , , la to Oet Insnredll! ,CAI.t' AT THE GEN ARAL INSURANCE OFFICE. :'J ' The following established and reliable Companies bare their Ageney at MU Vernon, and are ready at all times to attend to the wants of the public: " ' " - : caprrau .- JEtaa Insnraneeo., IlArtrord, Cor.n..-$500,000 I Phoenix Ids ranee Co., " 200,000 ? ! ..Merchant's Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn,, 200,000 .1 ,VHjrm " too.ooo i THome Insnranee Co., New York City,.....;....00,000 Quaker City Tire Insnranee. CoJ, Phila......... 300,000 Merchant'e Insurance Co, Phila.,... ........ ...200,009 ridgport " Conn... 300,000 ' Tiie above' are all Cah Companies of the first . sta skiing, and hare complied is fall witn the laws of -Ohio. : . . , , . ; - Tbestnderaigned are also .prepared toTigrue Poli cies in' the following materiala; On Ctuk r Mtml rplan, as may be aesired: . .Ashland, of Ashland, O., Capital,.... .....J15e,00 RreblandMansfield. 0.. " lOfl.WXJ ':IlIaskingWBJ''Zanesyille, 0. " : 199,0 .- .All I nm t. ill K. mtn nit sKl v n 1 fsrnmntlv 1T1 n rfiaul - and PAID, at : the Oeneral Insnranee Office of the i Veregoing Companies, corner Msin and Chestnut Stay Mt. Vernon, O. JOSEPH C. DEVIN, jy20:m3 '- - Attorney at Law. Splendid Gifts! At 439 Whetnut St. The only Original Qifi Book .- ' - SUtr: G O. EVANS would inform hi friends and the . public tfct bis tar Q tit Book Store and Publishing llovue is permanently established in Brown's splendid Iron Building, 439 Chestnut Street, two doors below Fifth, where the purchaser of each book t the. regular retail price, will receive one of the following gifts, valued at from 2 -cents to $100: ' How. -55fr P'tntEnglish Lever Oolaatohes-WO 4)0 each 50 Patent Anchor ' " fftO " -40 Ladies' Gold Watches, 18k eases 35 WU 800 Silver Hunting Watches, warranted iT5 KIO J - .00 Parlor Timepicees......... T6 " ' .500 Cameo Sets, Ear Drops and Pins,.. 10 00 '600 Ladies' Gold Bracelet, 3 '00 to 11 500 Genu' Vest and Fob Chains,...... 1 0 0t T10OO Gold Lockets, large sise doble ease 10 00 " 2000 Gold Lockets, small site,-: . -S MS 100) Gold (Pencil Cases with Gold Pens W 1000 Extra Gold Pens, with cases and s h.Wers.... . ...... 3 M" 5500 Gold Pencils, ( Ladtes')... "2 t 2500 Gold Pene with SiWor Pencils,.. 2 50 " 2500 Ladies' Gold Pens, with Cases and 500 Gold Rings. (Indies',) -2000 GenrF Gold-Rings. ...... 2500 Ladies' Gold Breastpins, 2500 Misses' Gold Breastpins,........ .. 3000 Pocket Knives,. ... 2000 Seta Gent's Gold Bosom Studs 2000 do . P(vw RiSm T2000-Pairs of Ladies' Ear Drops,;... 8000 Ladies' Pearl Crraees, . J 5000 Ladies' Cameo, Jet r Mosaic Pins 2500 Ladies' Shawl and Ribbon Pins 16 0O Articles of Gold Jewelry, Gift Books, ftc, c, not enumerated t Ota Above, worth from 25 Cents to 25 dollars. Evaiis' new Cataloene, which Is' sent free to aW ipsrts of the country, eontsaas all the most popular 3ooksof the day. ssd tae newest publications, all of which will be seld as low as can be obtained at other tores. " -. Agents wantedSn every toww n tHe Untm.v Those desiring t, eim obtain full particulars by-ad-lrestng nlre. N. B.- Keiag l.raly Interested in publishing tooks, and buying frm ofher Wa'hcrs in immense quantities, fvr ab. I am enabled to make larger discounts to Country Agents and Book Dealers tfcsa ean be bad at any other house in the country. Any book pabliebed vn 1ke Vmted States, the retail price of which i one dollar or upwards, will 1e eat, Gift includ -d. on. roceipt .-of pablisber's prioe. An extra one dollar-Book and Gift given to any porson orderMig tea nooks ta be sent te one address. Send for a CtMtalvgae. Address, 3. i. EVANS, rnnlisher, : septriiuS - 4S0 Chestnnt Street, rhila. Dr. Ilunter'st Sledical Irlauual, Being an original and popular Treaties en MAN AND WOMAN, Their Physiology, Fanotinns and Sexual . Disorders of every kind, with never-failing Remedies for - the speedy cure ef diseases of a private and delicate character, incident to the violation of the Laws f Nature and ' ' ' of Nature's God. PRICE TWEKTY-F1VE CENTS i i , The Author of the shore NJC?.Hf friifJf. volume is a graduate, ami having devoted a quarter of ? a century to the tdy atnd treatment of Syphuis and kindred disorders as a speei- . v . -. 1 1 1 amy, na uas necome posses-x ; sed of most inraluable infor. nation in regard to the same, and is able to compress Into vade mecum corneas the very quinteeeac of medical science on this impq(ant subjeet; as there- -suit of the experience -of tbe moeteminmt physicians in Europe and America is thoroughly demonstrated in his own highly successful practice in the .treatment of secret diseases in many thousands of eases in the ity ef Philadelphia alone. Tettimomy of Prof? of Obtetrie Penn Cotlegr. Phti. f'Ds Wo arm's Mxdicai. Masrat" The author ' if this work, unlike the majority of tbore who ad-"wertise to cure the diseases of which it treats, i a ffrmduau ot tie of the best Colleges in the United ' States.- It affords me pleasure to-Teemmcndlmh"t'o "the wertf, ar te the eietim uf maJpracfietr us a :enecrnful a ni experienced practitioner, in whoseI1-0-OT and integrity they may pla're thepubsO'.ifi-'enee.- ' - JOSEPH S. LOXG'imiiE. M. T. :' 'front-A, Woodward if. D. of Penn.Ci!r(.iiit.j. PriL ; It gives me pleasure to add nry to-;ti;n -nv "- the r professional ability of the author of' ih ' St.Jlral !:ManuaW Nnmerons cases of Diseases f f ti-o Gen- 'Itar Organs, some of them of Ion? st.tn.1ing," have eome under my notice, in which his skill has been 1 'manifest In restoring to perfect health; in some in-stances where the -patient has been ci'rmJered be- ynnd medical aid. "In' the treatment of .Seminal weakness, er dissrranseinent ef the functions pro-deeed by' iSelA Abne nr Ejecete of venery, I do not kjjow his sp-ior in the profession. I have been.ac-qnainted W)thc th athor tsocne thirty years, and deem it no more than justice to him as well as a kisxinpas tatbA,uniroate victim of early indiscrs-tioTB,"to 'reconrrncnd'hinj as one, in whose professipn-' td skill and integrity they may safely confide themselves. -f ALFRED WOODWARD, M. t). ' Onn eopx care'y Enveloped, will be forwarded : free of pesUge ts any part of the United States for 25 cents or -4-'Copies for $1. t Address, post-paid, COSDE 4" CO., Publishers, hex 197 Philadelphia. Boeksellers, Canvassers 'and Book AgenU ' ' awppU4 on the meat liberal terms.'" -Uij sept21. : V r it 1 11 11 . 1 . ...' ). 1 1 1 ' 1 - .1 ' PHIT.T.IPS Ar CO J J t Strwet, PttUBwrxti, Psu "HGILASODRA ASS and $Uem FiUing Ja aU lts branches. VJi jtanaracoirers or KaUroad. Tank Valves, Steam Whistles, p team-Valves, Oil Globes, Quage Coaks,' aa&alf kinds of iniahed Braal Wovk. Fittings for I OaL Water said Steam, and dealers In ? t CHANDELIERS; PENDANTS, V And Gas Fixtures, trass eastings for Railroad Cars, Eteam Engines," Rolling MHls, do. Anti-attrition 'lletal kept constantly en hand.. Particular attention f IVpaid to heating by Steam, Churches, Court nouses, '"Cans, and allkiaks f poblie and private. bnlldings. , r AU orders promptly, atsended toat -prices lhat ('ianot fan to pleas. v-- 4 ," Pltssbwrgh, Ape. Mr. ' V- ' "' -:" 8 -"-- . . - asiJ kf, Uks - , U -rj i s en nana, tiandarevJiiseensneona and " r . Ooksw Clank -'rV. t.tMi - .'l . ' T V. . . . . T P'i IT- ? B74rtB' Ae-l at who! . r - ib, a.i c: A-'l kin Is cf Trading donwtd shott net.'! lon'a short noc I 1 , 1 -00 " 2 50 " 2 0 " 1 50 ' 1 00 2 50 " 2 5 " J Mt 5 00 : 5 00 " 1 50 f'- : IS rCSLISHSD STIST TUESDAY MORS 19 Q, ;.-' ttT Ii, HARPER. Oflcs ia 7oodward't Block, Third Story. "TERMS-i-Two Dollars per annum, payable In ad vanoe $S,&0 within six months; $S,00 after the ex piratioa of the year. Clubs of twenty, $1,50 each K'itii or isTsittitio: - O B B o 0 B o a 1 0 B o D c. $ c. $ c. $ . 1 savors, -i 2 gare. AA'l K 1 ( 4 AA It A 10 1 752 25 3 25 4 25 5 25 00 75 8 00 3 f wares. 2 60 3 60 4 50,6 05,0 00,7 00,8 00 10 4 sors, - 13 014 00 5-00 it oolr 00.9 0011 0 . 1 12 I quart, eangeahle mont 7, $10, et1cl. ..$15 J tolnmnt eXangtable quarterly . ............. ...16 ..18 t column, ehangerble quarterly,.. ........... column, cXangeable quarterly,.. ,.. 25 I column, changeable quarterly,. Twelve lines of Minien. f this type) are ooun ed as a square. - Editorial notices of advertisements, or calling attention te any enterprise intended to benefit Indi viduals or corporations, will be charged for at the rate or i cents per line . Special notices, before marriages, or taking precedence or regular advertisements, -double usual rate. : .t Notices for meetings, charitable soeieties,flre eemstatnes, e;, bau-price. Ssrriage notices inserted for 50 ets : Deaths 25 eents, unless accompanied by obituaries, which will be charged for at regular advertising rates, Advertisements displayed in large type to be enarged ooe-bair more than regular rates. STAll traaigat advertisements to be paid for in dv. Written for the Banner. -TO MY WIFE. THE PAST- 1 love the memory of the past, . " Each' sacred, bright and sonny hour, -Although they were 4eo sweet to last, BSiey liwe ia aUbeir magie pewer ! . It m pleasing them a, to call " tachireeord ef earr youthful days To life again and know, the pall -Of ehange elowds net their rays; : To trace through every 'line and word, A something abat bright and sweet; ; Sotie link so which our souls aocord, Vhcn'er that tone our spirits meet! Back through this vista, mind can trace - A tbousund charms of magie tone; Can read again fee smiling face SLhat dwells in some remotest sons ! ' Can trace along the chequered line, - 2'hat marks the outlines of the past; ' A something strikingly sublime, ; That must fvrwer erex lasts Some pVsasisig henr some ecial glee ome eoDg, aoaae ramble ty the'brook; Where marbling birds in ielod ' ." Gave life juI jqy te eveqr aoek; Some Towtrpfng houT with "her whose soul - Was full of life, a&d love, and glee, When every impuise rn etrtroll Was ail che boaxt could w ish to see. Hew eagerly fle heart will leap, To Bbnre again such joys ss these;, ; How watchfully the heart will keep The laar retuoaubcanea ef these leaves s It is Tor these I cherish still The memory of the fleeting past; For many ma hour of sunsbiae will Come krightaia up to make it last? And tbewgh tie future may be bright, . And many an hour see ui full of life ; The past atU! brings a holy light That shines above the din ef strife. SKrrtMBKtt 2 let, 1 80S. 1 1 OF E D WARD EVE E Err. Extracts fro 3 the Address of Edward Everett at the recent ilrse F air, heJd at Springfield , Massachaseits ifr. President voa rel wosli mt eH span a Sm mj ; practical attggstktM ik'ut seca ioa, though I do eoaiess, that, cherishing a sin cere sympathy in tk-e crVj-ct and In the exercuei) of the day,! have aJwavs rar3d the bone as the most bexalifal of the sutect race eX ani mala. I have looked upjn bin sls one of the raor useful, the must iutelligeot, of these ham-1 blerfMtrtners vf our lvi, atd, Sir, Lracifg the bio tory of ourlrare from tbe very eommDceraect, I So believe that tbe horse w estitied to a fir greater chare f the credit as a partner in the c.H'cera than a& uoreflectinr rami i.n willing to ail.iw.' Sfr deduct all i'.t trs beeti achieved directijr " indirectlr ti-o &. of the. horse in the way oficopveya'nc t home from place to place, diatant' jourueyirifls before tie power of tUiam was eo wonderfaUy applied to the purposes of locomotion, the dranght' of heavy burdens, motive power -connected with machinery, agriculture, war, ia all countries, in all ages deduct 41 Uiat h'a3bee a done! Erectly or indirectly is all these respects, by the aid of the horse, and what a stupendous abutment oa would, make from the m total .of achievement aud progress. Applause Then, Sir, U is . really startling to reflect oa the degrees of sagacity of memory, of generous emulation, of sensibility to kind treatment, which is possessed by these inferior animals, as m our pride of rational t nature we regard them. I remembered to hare read sot very loDg ago' an aut.entic account, of a charger, all fire and nerve, whom th sound of the trampet stirred almost to mad nesa, whose' farions imptv ttence to rusK'npod'iroaring'battortea.aad brist ling bayooets, could barfly be restraised by the most daring rider," who ' would yet permit tie child of twe yeari eld, who bad strayed aecidea-tally into the stablj to .port about bia k eels, and dstU'attliDgarV eaolested, between f;8?. .jW'hrfnfcT. li: l;aImot painful to CQnillM wbatbigV 4egrBe of jnUUectoal and moral power are vincr nl nIi wbbu1 'profagel.Call Jbrut4 Wasl' T'suppoaWUV .feSecUoa. tae oobls quaLUes of tha'bone. tiaeres d, I arryto -if, thaXUhUst of SMSVSSVVSM mis sss w y ww a w pv n t uifj iratirisU ct our 1actu, ceai' Dean (yriptnl poetrT. orsc most fascinating as well as the most revolting of books, to represent the) horse tinder that unap proachable cam ; which be givee. aim, as the wiser, the mere sagacious, the uoblerariimel, and to describe the human race under the disgusting character 01 a Yahooas an inferior order of be ings. I don't know, Sir, but you will think it 1 beneath the digaity of the occasion to allude to sueh a book as OuUiverfs ' Travels tiki yet it does contain, among many most instructive re marks, one of those passages into which the wis dom of ages is condensed in a single sentence, and which is more often quoted, at least part of it, at all agricultural and rural showsr than, pen baps, any other ia the whole compass of litera tare. "The man," says GulliTer, Mwho can make twoars of corn or two blades of grass grow on the spot where only one grew before, would deserve better of mankind and render a more es sential service to the country, than the whole race of politicians put together.. Laughter and applause. When this is quoted at agricul tural meetings by patriotic candidates for office this last part' of the sentence is generally omit ted. Renewed laughter. The noble qualities of the horse, seem, indeed, to have made an im pression upon the most brutalized of our own species. :I: suppose it is this, if it were worth while to attempt to account for the freaks of a madman, which led the Emperor Caligula to erect a marble stable, for bis horse, Incitattu, to provide him with an ivory manger, with housings of imperial purple, a. breast plate studded with diamonds and pearls, and then to elevate him to the dignity of the Consulship. This seems, to be sure, a mere freak of madness, and yet I am inclined to think that at that time it was a bet ter choice than could have been made out of the eoal courtiers and factions prsetoftans of the imperial court; and I believe, Sir, bad it been put to tbt vote throughout the' Roman Empire, then co-extensive with the civilized' World, they would have decided that they bad a better Con sul in the horse than in the Emperor. Laugh ter and applause. Sir, they bad been too fa miliar with the rapacity of the tyrants who chas ed each other over . the etaffe. daerer in hand. not to be pleased with the elevation of a ruler who .took nothing but oats out of the public crib -laughter a ruler, Sir, who, while the reins were with him, would At least have given ibem a stable administration. Renewed lau2b.ter.I I often saw in the streets of London and I believe the same thing may be seen at Barn urn's Museum in New York what was called "The Happy Family," a collection of animals, in a arge wire cage, most hostile in their nature cats and rats, hawks and mice, owls and wrens, mng together in thesev close quarters; t the tit- most amity and friendship. I asked the show man what was the secret of the operation by which he brought about these astonishing results. He told me it was persevering kindness. He did not say, Sir, in what particular way that kind ness was to be maaifested. I believe a part of it consisted in alwaysi keeping them supplied with plenty of the food they were fond of but it was persevering kindness. My experience led me to think that the amiable relations thus es tablished among the animals old not extend to outsiders; for I rather inadvertently pot my finger through the bars of the cage, when a large rat sprang at it with such rapidity that I drew it back a great-deal quicker than : I pit it in. Laughter and applaase. I assure you tbat my bosom was overflowing witb kindness toward every member of that "happy family not ex cepting the rat; but after that demorrstration on the part of the rat, I did not think it expedient to persevere. Laughter. :- :-v;-V'-v- I have sometimes, Sir, been . led to moralixe upon that trivial spectacle as of the success of the extraordinary experimeats of the Messrs. Rarey, and to ask myself whether we may not derive, front them a lesson which may be of ad vantage to as in our treatment of our fellow men. The best of books says "Go to the aa t, iIkmi siuggari; consider her ways and be wisej? Sir, may we a of go te tke fractious ard ungovernable horse, whose nature has been changed by these gentlemen, ad leara bow to treat our fellow men? Loo d beer Is - the nature of man, air, una -ira ot creation, is the nature of man so much mere fed urate Abaa that of the wild zebra and aqtaracd horse, that what changes their instinct, and - makes them gentle and q uiet would be all lost upon us? . I do not be live it. The Messrs. Jlarey tell os that it is not strong perfumes, it is not powerful drags, no, Sir, it is that ineffable charm,': that ever-to be-desired influence, of a 'soft' touch, kfnd words, gentle treatment. This, ifAw. . S irT is. the true subd.uer, this is the genuine ' oi I. of Rhodium that enable the softened brute to read a reproachful lesson to rational 'humanity, j Perse, vering kind uess, Sir let us , try iC Let us see whether it is not , like those - delicious eweet-meats that used to come from the tropics when I-wasa-boy.f You have seen Ahem, Sirjthe pretty white paper1 cases, ornamented with filla-gifee, and all around was tie inscripUoaj "Oood for sick people, but will not materially injure those who are welL" ' fLanghter. VSir; wSat if it should turn oat tbit. him .kipd gentle treat men t, which is good for caU and. dogs r for tt-bras, and bones would . have an equally saluts-ry effect epon baman beings?' 1 TThat ';. if it should turn out that, 'good for horses, it would not , materially injure fellow men and fellow ChrisUans? AppUasa.-: ISgbk ww not, Sir, be snore likely to agree wiOi' wacb otbe r, and be bappier wben V o!isagree If,-, instead of de-Uactioo and abuse 'of .tbotw -wio; di5e from us, we shoald approacb Jthent witb the language of good will and kind feeling? - - However this Way be, Sit; If Chere !s any oot who doobti that the; honeHoe, animal thai most pecrns uV on this t oc9ion--4sjiusoepti. bi of: thft. kindest feelios of oot satarel I think be would be- convinced ' of tl errbrXy a (most interesting anecdote of Elmund Burked- livips.in r?iirment oa Lif.Arta, a CeacodSelJs, ing his cows and horses: A friend jnan of rank and iafluence, bearing this story, and deem ing it of too much, importance to beleft aacor; rected, Lastenedto. Beaconefield, and apagM an. interview with, the view rofascerUiaijig'lhe truut of . the ntraor. . Entering into conversation with him,. Mr. Burke read to him some ehaplari from bis "Letters on the Regicide.",': Hia friend immediately saw, that- though , the eartbiyj CenV meat wasv verging - back to its native dost, the lamp of reason and genius shone with nadi-' miuished lustre.. He .was ; accordingly, 'more than satisfied as to the object . of hit. coming down, aqd .in a. private interview-.withriiML Burke told her what be bad come tor, 'and received from ber this, pathetio axplanation.:.'i2ir. Burke's only child, a beloved son, bad not long before died, leaving behind him a favorite Lorse the companion of bis excarsioos of basihess and pleasure, when both were, young and vigor ous. This favorite animal was of course turned out by Mr. Burke, the father, into the park; 'with directions to all bis servn&U that be shoald in every respect be treated as a privileged favorite. Mr. Burke himself, of coarse, in : bis ceorning walks, would often stop to caress the favorite animal. On one occasion, as he was takinirbia morning walk through th e park, he perceived the poor old animal at a distance, and noticed that be was. recognized by him. Tbe. horse drew nearer and nearer. Mr- Burke, stopped, vycu aim wiiu u most pieaaing iook of xecog- , l ?.r .1 . " 1. . - 1.' - - mtipn, which said, as plainly as words could have said: "I have lost him, tooj and then the poor dumb beast deliberately laid bis head upon air. uurre s DosomI Struck by the siaiarirv of the occurrence, struck by, the recollection of his son, whom he had never ceased to tnourn with a grief that would not. be comforted, Over- helmed by the tenderness of the animal, ex pressed in the mute eloquence of holy Nature's universal language, the illustrious sUtemaa ifof a moment lost his self-possession, and claim'nw his arms around the neck of his son's favorite animal, hfted up that voice, which had caused the arches of Westminister Hall to echo) tbe uuuiesi strains mat ever sounded within them. and wept aloudl Sir, this was seen, this was neara oy the passers by, and the enemies of rke, un appeased by his advancing years, by his laiUng health, by. his domestic sorrows. made it the. ground of a charge of insanity.--- Burke is gone; but, Sir, so help me Heaven if i were called upon to designate tbe event or the period in Burke's life that would best sustain a charge of insanity, it would not be when, in a gush of the holiest and purest feeling that ever stirred the human heart he went aloud cVf a eclt-o s dead es'si fovatlt fcorse. '-vOific'Srr, ivsnouia ratner be when, at the meridian of bis fame, when the orb of his imperial genius rode highest in the heavens, amid the scoffs of cring ing courtiers, and the sneers of hireling patriots, he debased his glorious powers to the scrambling and squabbiinga of the day, and, Born Tor the universe, narrowed his mind, And to party gave up what was meant for mankind, pCoavertioa of tbe Peril through. Spxrltu ':-- cUiSJZl. - Mrs-TLP. M. Brown, of Cleveland, Iectnred yesterday morning at the Melodeon, on Spiritual ism to a congregation of believera. : , . la noticing the objections ured by those who opposed their faith, she rpoke at so me. length of the allegatxn. that taeee pn;fyTations came from the Devil. : she did not care if they did eome from the Devil tbat was really no gronnd of objectoa to them, but if the Devil did communicate aach beautiful things as come to as through Spiritual media, it was an evidence that his Satanic maj esty was repeating of bis evil, and trying to get back to the Heaven from which be had fallen She bad studied the history of the Devil tally, and found from the Bible, tbe Shasta, Dd other sources, that after bis fall be had been confined in a deep pit, as dark ai .tar, but in after years the earth . was . created, and some of the angels pitying him said to the Diity, "Here the poor devil has, been dowa in this dark, pit so many years, why may we not let him loose on the earth which js empty?" It was accordingly done and the Devi) became better , ia his new borne, and had gone on. improving with the improvement of the worlds until now it was not unnatural to see him, trying to reach abigher sphere by teachiBg these beaafiful truths through spiritual media.- ;-: l'-? -y?;: V At this point of the lecture, a short and somewhat elderly lady sprang from ber seat, and with a countenance kindled by'passion Or possession, and limbs trembling with excitement, tottered to the front of the stagej and cast a small package at tn speaker's ; feet, exclaiming ia shrill and piercing voice: fTake ht epi ritual wreath, tii thine, the spirits .bid me give it thee" Witb these words she fastened from'the h, fblWed by the eyes of all the audience- thoagb no one had the politeness or the curiosity to meson pany bee down the stairs,; e 'package, whicb ' tbe fai lecturess opened y tWcioee of her remarks and . ahq wed, with jevident eatufaction to ber friends,' contained no other- wreath than si plain gold ring CWiw-tai Gazette . ' 1 ; .-- . ? GanTsIiaj oa thr ZlissluippL ? .i ' -Lifeoa the -Mississippi Is characterised by ex-traoTdiaary sesnes and incidents. ' It ' 'stated that on a recent occasion, a clergyman .was earnestly engaged in preaching to a , considerable audience at on end of the steamer, whiTeln the middle gambling was in busy1 progress1, 9an at (Jie other findcof &e'alopn- wjia jmusia aodvdar-..i ctng. ilany -of the- boats are fUtedknpyi ,js 'Jtbe inosfnaarcgniflcsint fyle, and amo&nt in &cf ; to fioatih patae'ltoftferi ccn- pie4; by5p()sputi and; pjwar3s j.Tbe epV -if cabin passage, frr-tn Newr Orleaci to St-Louls is about twenty dollars; rThil lr dec's pa3ia-- is of 66nrt oncTi Eheaps r. - 'A'lTthe leVliax't - wni c'ban es take place ia the inmates cf tla toa.t Interesting Bntidw a few weeks since, a steamer thai sailed, from New- OrleanVto SCLouis.1naa freight list tfiatT aiyuumi 9VVV1, IS. BHlUlviyu - Hit, fVCetpk of'l,aer V3enger vmoser:.'aadth'e baribj ; The iceiiw ''VporMcijy.ai nigh are full 6f excitomehCA inend foa 1 whom we gather these fact Inform us, tpat a'short'time since be bad 'occasion t5 traveT frorn few Orleans to- SC LottS; and a iy or two 4fier te: w on board ,w i .n wecame Mquamiea iiia.s mpae si .1 1 a. 1 . .I.j v L-'.i v, ' ' - . and unassuming young ' geutfaiaau, whose' man-1 ners were so mild itod cnnvenatlo al tbat htt anpposed be was.a youg lawyer, a phy cTaW'orpiir Tbe next day be discovered thai be wasene of tbe most itCcbmptisbed gamblers in the western rcmnt!.:i.S-:Uv.Vl- y ' f --! 1 " '- ; ': '' ' " , ' : ''; ''- ' - ; v '-- - f The Comet-; -;- . - lgcKKi tifisj -n Jpeeniauon nas oeen indulged io byjsiaby of lhe. newspapers thtougbonl the conntt-v about the Comet now visible, c from the lactot iu appearing, in th west abosst; eight ocioca m uie e vtowg, ami .stgain ia tn east at three; or ibnU ia tbet morsnngKibas been stated I : 1. . . j. oy aomowDawmiBous avomersi ias xnere are acter afiecUng our County interests in the elec-twodistisret Ckaneta. ;Tbe folio wing- extractI from tioa. orOur Connty ticket..: Fellow citizens, let a letter in tbe BeffsJo Express, from thpen of a us loofc a little at these things, and let "bieedin? vHjiumw jBs,;eij)iMa aau, jepioaes uiis laea. .lie says: .ji : ' - ' ..-.i ' ; The body in question i the "Comet which lias been aome.uma voje, and bas been noticed in most of the. newspaper , -It has notr reached a part or its orbit so tar north, that w its diarnal revolution- it Uoply .about fire honre; bfeloif onr horiaoni and-C09.equentlj.U. ia. well eeen in the west in the evening, and equally well iu the east in the-morning, and with tbe naked eye. As to what: particulaf Comet this ishere bas been.ai yes no laepuacaxjon or, n, ana, an : conjectures upon this Ptre; merely tile, may, or it may riot h'Ave been seen beforehand the same nncertainty exists with regard to the 'two other Comete (botk telescopic) that are now visible to tbo who poswrt the rc'quisito inatromenU for lilflTience. of :Femftl -Soeietw; ; It Abetter far von to- naaa an .vprunir orim'nr iwice in a ?ad j1, drawing room, even though; the longconvecsetions: stoTandyon: know tbe girls byjbetuttbaq in, .elub tayern, or.tbe pit of a theatre. All amusementa'of yontb to wbieb vir- tuous women-are not4LTlmitted..'reIy 6a.iL is del eterious in.theirnatofe, jAU menlwho avoid fe- m.la aomty have dflU jrceptkpgr and ara eW pidrbave gross tastes and revolt against what is pure , Your club swaggerers, who are sucking the butts of billiard, cuee all night, call iemale- society, insipid. Poetry is insiDid to avokel: beauty has no charms for a blind man; music does, not please a poor beast wbe does not know farimriit. one tune from another;, and as a true epicure, is J OI oar owa C0MO"- 1 hey have, by a o-bardlv ever " tired of water aaachv- and brown jority, determined to adhere to their former de. bread and butter. I crotes t I can sU for a whole night talking to a . well jregniatedr kindly woman, about her gud, coming oat, or ber boy at school, and like, the evening's, entertaiameat. . One of the ereat benefits man mav derive from womaa'a society is, that .be is honnd to be respectful to them- The habit s of good to your moral men, depend upon it. , Our .education make us the most eminentlf eelfish men in the world. : We fifbt for oorseW we push for onrra'ves, we - . ,. , . . . yawn for ourselves, we light our pipe, and say we won t go out: we preter ouneives, ana our ease: and tbe greatest good that'eomes to a man fv a rn n.ltw U tW K . tn 'r.V - ' v : . ir . , . . ' of somebody besides himself, somebody to whom be unound to. l constantly attentive and re- tptfaL t'''''-' J- V i -,,.: . m '''-" "'' - ; ': - , Woman' Power. Ttfaa ta barwHlinw alav. t ah K K-nA a ho self. But no sensible man of moderate meaner . . , . .... -.- , no man who has to work, and m willing to work for bii. livelihood I: might, perhaps, say no annaihl man iri ant. nnaitinn -ni(lra hi'a anf nnt 1 of'.- ball-room oe an opera-box however mech ... - , , , ne may uao to see uer mere, a trn woman i has much more chance we all know it of wm 1 ning any love that is worth her winning in beraBk making good this unreasonable, claim, own home in ber undress, in- ber little nameless every day unstudied graces, "sitting on a stile, loitering by a brook, rattling' in a railway car riage, or bnsy and. nocbnscioaa simid common householdd u ties, "than ia what the sex choose to consider the special scenes of their glories and their trinmphs. c I have read some whre,or bava been told,' tbat any woman, who removes from a gorsTon in -personal . attractions, - can make anv ma. propose to berb tbe cbanco of UrAlTJZin - - - S ju8 m u ouvmd im. Aina lur inoHiu.--1 I am iuclined with eome modification, to believe iVnnmiliating as it may seem t-fi noble i. T.-u i - t .,r. .i. v . v- " -"st " H"W . -nes nis j . ... - m . . . m bead witb an air of superior ennning bat I see a bim ataH eventa, a rsy TUm.-''A traA I woman, witb good figmVand Tkind heart, j salght book, bua easily : ia a fortnight.--;i?'aci .i, 5CQ, Spoil Va&zltoK-? Be alwaja telling her bow beautiful she is. tnatill iota W Tonne Jnd anan'n. 1... ...... . ' . - .-.-r.i dress. .r3 .5 .1 Allowber toreadotMtbing' but works of fie- j ! Atb iier nil riU acec)rubiinXs,bol none '.. . .,. V, . T7 : ,s t I Of the utilifaeaof lifev.-t c- ..n.-.f -;J Koep her tn the darkest ignorance of the crys. I UtaeSiOt JJnIceepiBgi , - i-c-u. I UlnitiatflAe-Moli.ndpto i iTotrengthen th latter, let ber bare a' lady . raaid.;r n l.iw yaja ix. itzi j I Uon m, marry ber to HDQastarieiyeBii who , iTecl er, to tTkti le better liia arj trFU of tntsresV. accrued n-MHVtlie Cobds lT:tbe.;7i:K, '?rr jT V,!VvTir eove. earned cf.the-Connty,, bvit VUala lerUiDkh&V e lti atclr. when sue is ' Given dr or Uod th . not, and let ber lie ia bed takicg medicine when D'." lSi3.;V ?'.--'. ". half an txjat-cStT?: CorexercIfieofili cotp' vJV irw s. ss-1 JO Uli. EUTZXlZZit. ' tloelj.csrriir tZ Ler.".-s:a.es3.A. i TLi bond veVtLV re3uli of &i fVTJs T ::el; And lastly, having given ber ca- estion of your. rights tj .7otxiztV s '..ic is ..,,1 'J ' T V" .v? rfr r , t x r iVotera of Knox Coiiinty. T 7 "-T - - - aw-. SsW4. . I XfcZft ftild by tthom the People's .1 .m, V V . W - - a r zr. axes nave oecn incTtCLsea, PfT , STUPPARY P4i1T? t . r . ' t - . , , 'R15APJijI CICCUIiATE ! " t . . , I - Tn iho! present auipaign,s the issues arrising npon general or national politics amount to but little, Sanaas and all ber wounds are diseover- ed to,be mere pin scratches,: and are completly healed But there are local issues of most vital interest. '.Tbe qoesUoa; of. equal taxation and equal and just, administration of the laws, to ,1 corporations and iudividuals alike, is directly involved in the election of Judge Bartley. Im portent questions are- involved of a local char 1 - . i nansas " and her humbugs, go for the present. " In 1852, tbe Legislature in strict compliance with the injunction of the constitution of your State passed a law for the purpose of securing equal taxation upon all. property in the State. By this law it wasendeavored to Uz Banks and other, .corporations as nearly as possible'like other inVestmenU and property. . The Banks set op the claim that they had secured by previous application to the legislature of your State an exemption from' such just demand on the part of the constitation and the people- and appealed to the Supreme Court of the State" to declare such exemption In their favor. The Sopreme Court, of whom Judge hartley' constituted a prominent active and efScient memberdenied to tbese 'corporation any sacbv unreasonable privilegej and held them bound to' pay the tax. : By an ingenn'ou' Contrivance the Banks got some of- there case into the. Supreme Court of the United States, when the silly," irrational and novel doctrine of the sacredness of eorpnration fcwwra and pnvileges,; bad assumed tbe char f cter of fo9il remain i and there ifwasde- inm' tat tfia Legislature, at any given time y"&jyviuK ot tnecpun v 1t" p,w wef tuccessors, even ot the f51 themselves for, all time to come to pass N-- t . -. - not pyersiateu. .xne oupreme vourt S very. meager majority dl.d make just such unreasonable and dangerous ec8KB- M b buprerae Court of Ohio, with JaasTe, r"ejs " prominent and active mem- Der'orff,tneni t0 their duty, determined since lDftl bl1 '? "egitimate place as the Court of ernir resort and the legitimate expounder lc - 8ion "d" bold; the. Banks to the payment of (their just portion of the burthens of government lfJud? BarUeJ " retained .on the Bench sueh '1.ereaiter De the .decisions ef your Supreme Court If J kld6e Pek " elected the Banks will escape and the people suffer. treople of Knox Count?; bow much do von suppose yon are taxed to secure to the wealthy men , who own the Knox county Bank this spe- i , . - - r j benefit, this unfair advantage? You wil Dno, " TO examine into if, that you pay back rf M - SW - - .- - - m ----- . rawennox uoaniy oanx fZ30, and some cents whicb b raised off -ron bv a dlrir-t ur i over to the tiank: 1 Tbis too your com missioners and other offi. 1 anxious to do, lest some one should I eome in who would insist upon standing the R.nt i. ,,:. f,. ik - . borrow the monev of the Bank tn nait! Should justice. Bartley be7 'elected so that the present organization bf the Supreme Court shall be preserved, the Bank never could have recov- lered that monev in Ohio. . And it is conSdenllv :::"r. ' .uHre'"e Y ...J .I..I.L. a.. . n it -. j ohksm uuw urvui2eu wouia noia too point Xht other way, and - wipe oat the most serious stain that rests upon her otherwise fair escutch- COO.- Wbatsar VOU, feUOW Citizens, did VOUr OUT :I?i0'?u:' P'j, P'Pnff bck this iwu luuuswu vuto nanurea ana ei?nt aouars and adding it to- vour taxes? Wm tMnlr nnt There were other difficulties in the wav of the wuica we oeueve wpuia nave been insarmount able had it been put to the test ' Another subject or two demands y onr atten- non. ; no Knows any thing- of the way our County's interest in the-Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark Railroad., is of ate managed in the a" - Tar I - V ... - st- nanas ot your present omces? Are you aware that yon bave beeh'payiag each Ton. for some : Tear 'naat! taKrCnt r iKrn. and dollars tax to pav interest on yourbonds, iaa n Payment ot tbat stock, while yon bare r w avuMvurbu va u ih-eiM: ctieav ot ta itepublican oartv. brtdin them moat solemnly to pay that interest, and the pria- axjanrsLv;.! r .... . . .- f ani-lerPt Ven ."e, in 1867. . I ''Tb Is true, and; not one step is taken to re: aairm th nartie tA kAn thV ',. , ' . F - -"i31-."'". with yonr aranty. .,,.-r .. Tbe foUowiog is a copy of the bond and en- P?111- beldby this county from as good men mostly as the State affords In . consideration -of one hundred Shares' of the stock of the Columbus and Lake Erie Rail itoad Company, transferred to me by tbe Coon- y .yarn miss loners oi .rnox uoooty Ubio,I prom "" w 91 lyOUnty, UODimittlOneri Of jlqox county aforesaid the sum of ifire thonss and dollars, on or before ' the first day of June, A. EV18ST with interest to be paid annually, on the first day of October, from and after tbe first JT Pr "f eaid. principal sum, r any part thereof,, may be mjkde utbe" OSce of the county Treasurer nf said county, in money or in tbe bonds of 'said i "J-ooa. vunuiy, lasxreu in payment oi saia county s to aecrue os thU obligation' shall be 'paid ta said ireasnrtr at a is said UUcefrr moner. Or by the board cf odcers. It ia strands. in-ecJ, interest, as they were bound to do. and that of hU: years not ay sof them' have : paid, and no steps are taken to compel t ben. We wnppose the'se wise Xlepubfican gentlemen, most uf whom are; lawyer tell cut, commission eranhalthw cdnlract is nnconstTtutional, and theybelieye fha'flllj subierfj ad arj going to Itet them escape ft Is believed these men have a bard bargain, but they made it with their ejwfyfpe-ra nod , without Titnpp Cpn or wrong on the parf of be oScerp pt this county, and should be required tolive-unto "t,-, Tbe affairs of our county in regard to the Springfield, Mu V. k Pittabargb- Boad are not much better.' .We are all the while paying in-terest at 7 per cent .on- the bonds issued to sub- : scribere in skis road,- while ths county bas the bonds of the best men in it, well secured by good mortgages on nnioenmberd real estate, to indemnify the people against alt loss, and to insure the payment of interest and principal aa they respectively fall dee. ; These men have also leag been in default, to the county, and we are. paying' tbe taxes' Consequent npon thisdefault-- . Botone of these men issued, and this case is allowed to slumber along almost for years. The commissioners and officers apparently paying no more Attention to it than if ifa concerned Engi land rather than ay part of America. Not one of them showed, interest enough in tbe case to attend the trial of it at last term; and some of them, we are informed have - been know to express themselves in great! doubt of 'the success of the suit a very good way to insure its defeat) Most of these men, too, are prominent Republicans, and we venture are: warm in their support of the Commissioner, (Mr. McElroy,) who baa thus mildly sued them. ! These men," ydur present Republican officers, promised. J to lesseat yodr taxes, and on the strength of this promise got into power. Have they done it? Look over your tax receipts and seer iThey will say they have built you i Court House. This job was bid off by a worthy citizen of our town who had just built our jail very much to our satisfaction, at $24,500, cash payment. There was ia the treasury at tbat time of the money collected from B. Higgios t Co, on their contract to pay interest on our Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark, or rather Columbus & Lake Erie Railroad Stock, -over twenty thousand dollars. IfTbft Sum was jot all aoolied 'upon (he Court House oou tract it should have been appuea mere or somewhere else, to lessen our taxes. , " T - "Fellow citizens, without respect to former party preferencei shoald we" Dot - look closely into these. thiugs? Oar taxes, are enormously heavy aod are chiefly of county and Township levies. We have the power, in our own hands to make the reform, lf we would ever get out'of debt it is no by keeping these Republicans 'in'office we will do it. For" it is an axiomJ with'them and their predacoasors that - pnblie debt it a -ffmi HartsooW, Wat. Beam, Ch. Wolff, M. H. Mitchell, Jacob Merrin,-Joseph Love, L. Harper, , , U .' Jonathaa Hunt," Joseph'Adatns,-Anthony Whit,. S. A, Soydani, Isaac Hadley, - 'J. Headington, F- McLain, . , D. C, Montgomery, . A.' J. Leek, T. Wade.-J - T Wm. J. Morton, M. M. Shipley, H, Levering, James Honey, COUNTY AUDITOR.. DEAR WHAT A lEPOUCW SAYS. The foUowIn? communication written bv an active and intelligent Republican of this country is worthy of the attention of every member of that party who is opposed to the monarchical doctrine of conferring office upon a man for Cfe,as attempted to be carried into practice iu. the person' ot Samuel W. Farquhar, the Repab. lican candidate for Auditor. . -Vi Against the moral standing and person al'qoal-ifieations of Mr. Farquhar for the office of A'udit. or, we have not, neither shall wef eay a word. But we do contend tbat ia this Republican government of ours rotation-in. office is one of its most admirable' features and. should never be Ipst fight by the people. . , . , Joseph Ankeay, the Democratic candidate for Auditor has never been " an office hunter or an office holder. He is a bard working mechanic a black-smith who may be found in his shop almost any hour of the day,-with bis sleeves rolled ap earning his bread by the sweat of his brow. He is, however, a very. inteJLigent man. and is just as capable to discharge the duties of Auditor, or any other office, with as much credit-to himself and the people of Knox 'county, as S. W. Farquhar. '.., : - ' But read tbe communication. - - j i( r For the Banner. M. HaJtPEB : I am well aware that the indi-viduaL who dares to censure the act a ef tbeYn ventions of hi s party, or who refuses to supper their nominations will be charged with .sinister-motives. But . this shall not deter me from-' speaking freely, in relation to the nomination fur-Auditor, by the late Republican convention.' The theory of our .Government . requires rotation in office ; that equality, may. be, maintained-and tbe purity of our institutions .guarded by continual reference Mo hi people rthehighesi-standard of political virtue. This principle, I witbmany others, consider, was Lineal corruptly discarded in -the selection referred to. I have songbt information from " the oldeti inkabitani as to the time Mr. Farquhar first went into office,, but "the memory of man runoethnoi" to that period, ; His "father was County : Clerk " forty' five-years ago, and Mr. Farquhar is supposed to have-commenced bis, career under him, as deputy. However this may fee, it is certain be commenced while quite a young man, and bas been quartered on the eotrnty, as DeputypChief Clerk, and-Treasurer, nearly : ever since. lhe pay thai he : baa received, will not probably, on a. farnisti-mate, fall short of forty tyre thousand dollara. Now, in all reason tiis ooght to satisfy tbe cra-vinrs bf the man, and induce him to rive place to other good ' meav as' M. , White, Castle, bad Others, who. bare quite as strong claims on' th Darty. iJot nol roUUca seems to . be Lis onlr stock in trade', and hence ba. stil thrusts himsel forward for the best offices in the gift of the people, while the wire-worker secure hie nomination. - When the convention assembled, this of ficious, class intxurned to rain .the. members tv suppot't Mr FarquhVj, .Proaaineet. among tba-rasons they nrged was this; The opposition par ty bad chosen m meet able and popular man and no one but Mr. F. cos Id beat tim, therefore be ought to bq nominated. . This procured his sue-cesaii Uai. I protest , against iucb -a -niserabl rule of action. In the choice of candidates, men 8b.onJ t selected, whonre cmapetest aid honest, and wbQ can - bring out thejull atT'enlb of their party, without any reference to ti rotes-tie nominee can pick np from tie TFr 'on. Cecanse in this case success wo.sJ te u ,.. tzr a of the'parly, im an. opponta .ne r w - Le a triumph of, the-mn in which I dor tot ebos to interest mvself. :I tbink, then, tiat as !!r. Tar. uiarfbugbt riot, in rikt or justice, to 1 tK candidate- hia name nia Da erasi i..-te) ticket. I shall do it, and 1 know sever! cllers, -
Object Description
Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1858-10-12 |
Place |
Mount Vernon (Ohio) Knox County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1858-10-12 |
Searchable Date | 1858-10-12 |
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 | 1858-10-12 |
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 | 7876.83KB |
Full Text | " timi llJla-JllMyuu'lrllr1"1',l' 1 " rir""-L " 11 Wmin a "' mm' a' m ""aaa awn i ' j "T T' TTJ"'"' ' " "' n n -2 i1 tJ"-J"J"r-'Ck-S.-- -T- "" J-,s e-- 1BM- r ' VOLIJME 22. 1,: Pire!: Pirol! .! ;i . rpBS DKYOUElSa ELEU3NT bM gin rislted I our qaleWeity, at noonday, and has laid waste t M (sr TMiplM.dedkatod to the worship of the Mott Hljch the let Jhresbyterian Chnreh. - The effort of onr oltlion, aad the ekill. of cut ' J" Tire' Companies liare been baffled, and laoalderiae; ' Tufns mark the epot where once a aoble edifice reer " ' ad aloft its dome and spire, pointing to the "Hoase not made with hands, above, 1 The only sere protection agait casualties by fire, , , la to Oet Insnredll! ,CAI.t' AT THE GEN ARAL INSURANCE OFFICE. :'J ' The following established and reliable Companies bare their Ageney at MU Vernon, and are ready at all times to attend to the wants of the public: " ' " - : caprrau .- JEtaa Insnraneeo., IlArtrord, Cor.n..-$500,000 I Phoenix Ids ranee Co., " 200,000 ? ! ..Merchant's Insurance Co., Hartford, Conn,, 200,000 .1 ,VHjrm " too.ooo i THome Insnranee Co., New York City,.....;....00,000 Quaker City Tire Insnranee. CoJ, Phila......... 300,000 Merchant'e Insurance Co, Phila.,... ........ ...200,009 ridgport " Conn... 300,000 ' Tiie above' are all Cah Companies of the first . sta skiing, and hare complied is fall witn the laws of -Ohio. : . . , , . ; - Tbestnderaigned are also .prepared toTigrue Poli cies in' the following materiala; On Ctuk r Mtml rplan, as may be aesired: . .Ashland, of Ashland, O., Capital,.... .....J15e,00 RreblandMansfield. 0.. " lOfl.WXJ ':IlIaskingWBJ''Zanesyille, 0. " : 199,0 .- .All I nm t. ill K. mtn nit sKl v n 1 fsrnmntlv 1T1 n rfiaul - and PAID, at : the Oeneral Insnranee Office of the i Veregoing Companies, corner Msin and Chestnut Stay Mt. Vernon, O. JOSEPH C. DEVIN, jy20:m3 '- - Attorney at Law. Splendid Gifts! At 439 Whetnut St. The only Original Qifi Book .- ' - SUtr: G O. EVANS would inform hi friends and the . public tfct bis tar Q tit Book Store and Publishing llovue is permanently established in Brown's splendid Iron Building, 439 Chestnut Street, two doors below Fifth, where the purchaser of each book t the. regular retail price, will receive one of the following gifts, valued at from 2 -cents to $100: ' How. -55fr P'tntEnglish Lever Oolaatohes-WO 4)0 each 50 Patent Anchor ' " fftO " -40 Ladies' Gold Watches, 18k eases 35 WU 800 Silver Hunting Watches, warranted iT5 KIO J - .00 Parlor Timepicees......... T6 " ' .500 Cameo Sets, Ear Drops and Pins,.. 10 00 '600 Ladies' Gold Bracelet, 3 '00 to 11 500 Genu' Vest and Fob Chains,...... 1 0 0t T10OO Gold Lockets, large sise doble ease 10 00 " 2000 Gold Lockets, small site,-: . -S MS 100) Gold (Pencil Cases with Gold Pens W 1000 Extra Gold Pens, with cases and s h.Wers.... . ...... 3 M" 5500 Gold Pencils, ( Ladtes')... "2 t 2500 Gold Pene with SiWor Pencils,.. 2 50 " 2500 Ladies' Gold Pens, with Cases and 500 Gold Rings. (Indies',) -2000 GenrF Gold-Rings. ...... 2500 Ladies' Gold Breastpins, 2500 Misses' Gold Breastpins,........ .. 3000 Pocket Knives,. ... 2000 Seta Gent's Gold Bosom Studs 2000 do . P(vw RiSm T2000-Pairs of Ladies' Ear Drops,;... 8000 Ladies' Pearl Crraees, . J 5000 Ladies' Cameo, Jet r Mosaic Pins 2500 Ladies' Shawl and Ribbon Pins 16 0O Articles of Gold Jewelry, Gift Books, ftc, c, not enumerated t Ota Above, worth from 25 Cents to 25 dollars. Evaiis' new Cataloene, which Is' sent free to aW ipsrts of the country, eontsaas all the most popular 3ooksof the day. ssd tae newest publications, all of which will be seld as low as can be obtained at other tores. " -. Agents wantedSn every toww n tHe Untm.v Those desiring t, eim obtain full particulars by-ad-lrestng nlre. N. B.- Keiag l.raly Interested in publishing tooks, and buying frm ofher Wa'hcrs in immense quantities, fvr ab. I am enabled to make larger discounts to Country Agents and Book Dealers tfcsa ean be bad at any other house in the country. Any book pabliebed vn 1ke Vmted States, the retail price of which i one dollar or upwards, will 1e eat, Gift includ -d. on. roceipt .-of pablisber's prioe. An extra one dollar-Book and Gift given to any porson orderMig tea nooks ta be sent te one address. Send for a CtMtalvgae. Address, 3. i. EVANS, rnnlisher, : septriiuS - 4S0 Chestnnt Street, rhila. Dr. Ilunter'st Sledical Irlauual, Being an original and popular Treaties en MAN AND WOMAN, Their Physiology, Fanotinns and Sexual . Disorders of every kind, with never-failing Remedies for - the speedy cure ef diseases of a private and delicate character, incident to the violation of the Laws f Nature and ' ' ' of Nature's God. PRICE TWEKTY-F1VE CENTS i i , The Author of the shore NJC?.Hf friifJf. volume is a graduate, ami having devoted a quarter of ? a century to the tdy atnd treatment of Syphuis and kindred disorders as a speei- . v . -. 1 1 1 amy, na uas necome posses-x ; sed of most inraluable infor. nation in regard to the same, and is able to compress Into vade mecum corneas the very quinteeeac of medical science on this impq(ant subjeet; as there- -suit of the experience -of tbe moeteminmt physicians in Europe and America is thoroughly demonstrated in his own highly successful practice in the .treatment of secret diseases in many thousands of eases in the ity ef Philadelphia alone. Tettimomy of Prof? of Obtetrie Penn Cotlegr. Phti. f'Ds Wo arm's Mxdicai. Masrat" The author ' if this work, unlike the majority of tbore who ad-"wertise to cure the diseases of which it treats, i a ffrmduau ot tie of the best Colleges in the United ' States.- It affords me pleasure to-Teemmcndlmh"t'o "the wertf, ar te the eietim uf maJpracfietr us a :enecrnful a ni experienced practitioner, in whoseI1-0-OT and integrity they may pla're thepubsO'.ifi-'enee.- ' - JOSEPH S. LOXG'imiiE. M. T. :' 'front-A, Woodward if. D. of Penn.Ci!r(.iiit.j. PriL ; It gives me pleasure to add nry to-;ti;n -nv "- the r professional ability of the author of' ih ' St.Jlral !:ManuaW Nnmerons cases of Diseases f f ti-o Gen- 'Itar Organs, some of them of Ion? st.tn.1ing," have eome under my notice, in which his skill has been 1 'manifest In restoring to perfect health; in some in-stances where the -patient has been ci'rmJered be- ynnd medical aid. "In' the treatment of .Seminal weakness, er dissrranseinent ef the functions pro-deeed by' iSelA Abne nr Ejecete of venery, I do not kjjow his sp-ior in the profession. I have been.ac-qnainted W)thc th athor tsocne thirty years, and deem it no more than justice to him as well as a kisxinpas tatbA,uniroate victim of early indiscrs-tioTB,"to 'reconrrncnd'hinj as one, in whose professipn-' td skill and integrity they may safely confide themselves. -f ALFRED WOODWARD, M. t). ' Onn eopx care'y Enveloped, will be forwarded : free of pesUge ts any part of the United States for 25 cents or -4-'Copies for $1. t Address, post-paid, COSDE 4" CO., Publishers, hex 197 Philadelphia. Boeksellers, Canvassers 'and Book AgenU ' ' awppU4 on the meat liberal terms.'" -Uij sept21. : V r it 1 11 11 . 1 . ...' ). 1 1 1 ' 1 - .1 ' PHIT.T.IPS Ar CO J J t Strwet, PttUBwrxti, Psu "HGILASODRA ASS and $Uem FiUing Ja aU lts branches. VJi jtanaracoirers or KaUroad. Tank Valves, Steam Whistles, p team-Valves, Oil Globes, Quage Coaks,' aa&alf kinds of iniahed Braal Wovk. Fittings for I OaL Water said Steam, and dealers In ? t CHANDELIERS; PENDANTS, V And Gas Fixtures, trass eastings for Railroad Cars, Eteam Engines," Rolling MHls, do. Anti-attrition 'lletal kept constantly en hand.. Particular attention f IVpaid to heating by Steam, Churches, Court nouses, '"Cans, and allkiaks f poblie and private. bnlldings. , r AU orders promptly, atsended toat -prices lhat ('ianot fan to pleas. v-- 4 ," Pltssbwrgh, Ape. Mr. ' V- ' "' -:" 8 -"-- . . - asiJ kf, Uks - , U -rj i s en nana, tiandarevJiiseensneona and " r . Ooksw Clank -'rV. t.tMi - .'l . ' T V. . . . . T P'i IT- ? B74rtB' Ae-l at who! . r - ib, a.i c: A-'l kin Is cf Trading donwtd shott net.'! lon'a short noc I 1 , 1 -00 " 2 50 " 2 0 " 1 50 ' 1 00 2 50 " 2 5 " J Mt 5 00 : 5 00 " 1 50 f'- : IS rCSLISHSD STIST TUESDAY MORS 19 Q, ;.-' ttT Ii, HARPER. Oflcs ia 7oodward't Block, Third Story. "TERMS-i-Two Dollars per annum, payable In ad vanoe $S,&0 within six months; $S,00 after the ex piratioa of the year. Clubs of twenty, $1,50 each K'itii or isTsittitio: - O B B o 0 B o a 1 0 B o D c. $ c. $ c. $ . 1 savors, -i 2 gare. AA'l K 1 ( 4 AA It A 10 1 752 25 3 25 4 25 5 25 00 75 8 00 3 f wares. 2 60 3 60 4 50,6 05,0 00,7 00,8 00 10 4 sors, - 13 014 00 5-00 it oolr 00.9 0011 0 . 1 12 I quart, eangeahle mont 7, $10, et1cl. ..$15 J tolnmnt eXangtable quarterly . ............. ...16 ..18 t column, ehangerble quarterly,.. ........... column, cXangeable quarterly,.. ,.. 25 I column, changeable quarterly,. Twelve lines of Minien. f this type) are ooun ed as a square. - Editorial notices of advertisements, or calling attention te any enterprise intended to benefit Indi viduals or corporations, will be charged for at the rate or i cents per line . Special notices, before marriages, or taking precedence or regular advertisements, -double usual rate. : .t Notices for meetings, charitable soeieties,flre eemstatnes, e;, bau-price. Ssrriage notices inserted for 50 ets : Deaths 25 eents, unless accompanied by obituaries, which will be charged for at regular advertising rates, Advertisements displayed in large type to be enarged ooe-bair more than regular rates. STAll traaigat advertisements to be paid for in dv. Written for the Banner. -TO MY WIFE. THE PAST- 1 love the memory of the past, . " Each' sacred, bright and sonny hour, -Although they were 4eo sweet to last, BSiey liwe ia aUbeir magie pewer ! . It m pleasing them a, to call " tachireeord ef earr youthful days To life again and know, the pall -Of ehange elowds net their rays; : To trace through every 'line and word, A something abat bright and sweet; ; Sotie link so which our souls aocord, Vhcn'er that tone our spirits meet! Back through this vista, mind can trace - A tbousund charms of magie tone; Can read again fee smiling face SLhat dwells in some remotest sons ! ' Can trace along the chequered line, - 2'hat marks the outlines of the past; ' A something strikingly sublime, ; That must fvrwer erex lasts Some pVsasisig henr some ecial glee ome eoDg, aoaae ramble ty the'brook; Where marbling birds in ielod ' ." Gave life juI jqy te eveqr aoek; Some Towtrpfng houT with "her whose soul - Was full of life, a&d love, and glee, When every impuise rn etrtroll Was ail che boaxt could w ish to see. Hew eagerly fle heart will leap, To Bbnre again such joys ss these;, ; How watchfully the heart will keep The laar retuoaubcanea ef these leaves s It is Tor these I cherish still The memory of the fleeting past; For many ma hour of sunsbiae will Come krightaia up to make it last? And tbewgh tie future may be bright, . And many an hour see ui full of life ; The past atU! brings a holy light That shines above the din ef strife. SKrrtMBKtt 2 let, 1 80S. 1 1 OF E D WARD EVE E Err. Extracts fro 3 the Address of Edward Everett at the recent ilrse F air, heJd at Springfield , Massachaseits ifr. President voa rel wosli mt eH span a Sm mj ; practical attggstktM ik'ut seca ioa, though I do eoaiess, that, cherishing a sin cere sympathy in tk-e crVj-ct and In the exercuei) of the day,! have aJwavs rar3d the bone as the most bexalifal of the sutect race eX ani mala. I have looked upjn bin sls one of the raor useful, the must iutelligeot, of these ham-1 blerfMtrtners vf our lvi, atd, Sir, Lracifg the bio tory of ourlrare from tbe very eommDceraect, I So believe that tbe horse w estitied to a fir greater chare f the credit as a partner in the c.H'cera than a& uoreflectinr rami i.n willing to ail.iw.' Sfr deduct all i'.t trs beeti achieved directijr " indirectlr ti-o &. of the. horse in the way oficopveya'nc t home from place to place, diatant' jourueyirifls before tie power of tUiam was eo wonderfaUy applied to the purposes of locomotion, the dranght' of heavy burdens, motive power -connected with machinery, agriculture, war, ia all countries, in all ages deduct 41 Uiat h'a3bee a done! Erectly or indirectly is all these respects, by the aid of the horse, and what a stupendous abutment oa would, make from the m total .of achievement aud progress. Applause Then, Sir, U is . really startling to reflect oa the degrees of sagacity of memory, of generous emulation, of sensibility to kind treatment, which is possessed by these inferior animals, as m our pride of rational t nature we regard them. I remembered to hare read sot very loDg ago' an aut.entic account, of a charger, all fire and nerve, whom th sound of the trampet stirred almost to mad nesa, whose' farions imptv ttence to rusK'npod'iroaring'battortea.aad brist ling bayooets, could barfly be restraised by the most daring rider," who ' would yet permit tie child of twe yeari eld, who bad strayed aecidea-tally into the stablj to .port about bia k eels, and dstU'attliDgarV eaolested, between f;8?. .jW'hrfnfcT. li: l;aImot painful to CQnillM wbatbigV 4egrBe of jnUUectoal and moral power are vincr nl nIi wbbu1 'profagel.Call Jbrut4 Wasl' T'suppoaWUV .feSecUoa. tae oobls quaLUes of tha'bone. tiaeres d, I arryto -if, thaXUhUst of SMSVSSVVSM mis sss w y ww a w pv n t uifj iratirisU ct our 1actu, ceai' Dean (yriptnl poetrT. orsc most fascinating as well as the most revolting of books, to represent the) horse tinder that unap proachable cam ; which be givee. aim, as the wiser, the mere sagacious, the uoblerariimel, and to describe the human race under the disgusting character 01 a Yahooas an inferior order of be ings. I don't know, Sir, but you will think it 1 beneath the digaity of the occasion to allude to sueh a book as OuUiverfs ' Travels tiki yet it does contain, among many most instructive re marks, one of those passages into which the wis dom of ages is condensed in a single sentence, and which is more often quoted, at least part of it, at all agricultural and rural showsr than, pen baps, any other ia the whole compass of litera tare. "The man," says GulliTer, Mwho can make twoars of corn or two blades of grass grow on the spot where only one grew before, would deserve better of mankind and render a more es sential service to the country, than the whole race of politicians put together.. Laughter and applause. When this is quoted at agricul tural meetings by patriotic candidates for office this last part' of the sentence is generally omit ted. Renewed laughter. The noble qualities of the horse, seem, indeed, to have made an im pression upon the most brutalized of our own species. :I: suppose it is this, if it were worth while to attempt to account for the freaks of a madman, which led the Emperor Caligula to erect a marble stable, for bis horse, Incitattu, to provide him with an ivory manger, with housings of imperial purple, a. breast plate studded with diamonds and pearls, and then to elevate him to the dignity of the Consulship. This seems, to be sure, a mere freak of madness, and yet I am inclined to think that at that time it was a bet ter choice than could have been made out of the eoal courtiers and factions prsetoftans of the imperial court; and I believe, Sir, bad it been put to tbt vote throughout the' Roman Empire, then co-extensive with the civilized' World, they would have decided that they bad a better Con sul in the horse than in the Emperor. Laugh ter and applause. Sir, they bad been too fa miliar with the rapacity of the tyrants who chas ed each other over . the etaffe. daerer in hand. not to be pleased with the elevation of a ruler who .took nothing but oats out of the public crib -laughter a ruler, Sir, who, while the reins were with him, would At least have given ibem a stable administration. Renewed lau2b.ter.I I often saw in the streets of London and I believe the same thing may be seen at Barn urn's Museum in New York what was called "The Happy Family," a collection of animals, in a arge wire cage, most hostile in their nature cats and rats, hawks and mice, owls and wrens, mng together in thesev close quarters; t the tit- most amity and friendship. I asked the show man what was the secret of the operation by which he brought about these astonishing results. He told me it was persevering kindness. He did not say, Sir, in what particular way that kind ness was to be maaifested. I believe a part of it consisted in alwaysi keeping them supplied with plenty of the food they were fond of but it was persevering kindness. My experience led me to think that the amiable relations thus es tablished among the animals old not extend to outsiders; for I rather inadvertently pot my finger through the bars of the cage, when a large rat sprang at it with such rapidity that I drew it back a great-deal quicker than : I pit it in. Laughter and applaase. I assure you tbat my bosom was overflowing witb kindness toward every member of that "happy family not ex cepting the rat; but after that demorrstration on the part of the rat, I did not think it expedient to persevere. Laughter. :- :-v;-V'-v- I have sometimes, Sir, been . led to moralixe upon that trivial spectacle as of the success of the extraordinary experimeats of the Messrs. Rarey, and to ask myself whether we may not derive, front them a lesson which may be of ad vantage to as in our treatment of our fellow men. The best of books says "Go to the aa t, iIkmi siuggari; consider her ways and be wisej? Sir, may we a of go te tke fractious ard ungovernable horse, whose nature has been changed by these gentlemen, ad leara bow to treat our fellow men? Loo d beer Is - the nature of man, air, una -ira ot creation, is the nature of man so much mere fed urate Abaa that of the wild zebra and aqtaracd horse, that what changes their instinct, and - makes them gentle and q uiet would be all lost upon us? . I do not be live it. The Messrs. Jlarey tell os that it is not strong perfumes, it is not powerful drags, no, Sir, it is that ineffable charm,': that ever-to be-desired influence, of a 'soft' touch, kfnd words, gentle treatment. This, ifAw. . S irT is. the true subd.uer, this is the genuine ' oi I. of Rhodium that enable the softened brute to read a reproachful lesson to rational 'humanity, j Perse, vering kind uess, Sir let us , try iC Let us see whether it is not , like those - delicious eweet-meats that used to come from the tropics when I-wasa-boy.f You have seen Ahem, Sirjthe pretty white paper1 cases, ornamented with filla-gifee, and all around was tie inscripUoaj "Oood for sick people, but will not materially injure those who are welL" ' fLanghter. VSir; wSat if it should turn oat tbit. him .kipd gentle treat men t, which is good for caU and. dogs r for tt-bras, and bones would . have an equally saluts-ry effect epon baman beings?' 1 TThat ';. if it should turn out that, 'good for horses, it would not , materially injure fellow men and fellow ChrisUans? AppUasa.-: ISgbk ww not, Sir, be snore likely to agree wiOi' wacb otbe r, and be bappier wben V o!isagree If,-, instead of de-Uactioo and abuse 'of .tbotw -wio; di5e from us, we shoald approacb Jthent witb the language of good will and kind feeling? - - However this Way be, Sit; If Chere !s any oot who doobti that the; honeHoe, animal thai most pecrns uV on this t oc9ion--4sjiusoepti. bi of: thft. kindest feelios of oot satarel I think be would be- convinced ' of tl errbrXy a (most interesting anecdote of Elmund Burked- livips.in r?iirment oa Lif.Arta, a CeacodSelJs, ing his cows and horses: A friend jnan of rank and iafluence, bearing this story, and deem ing it of too much, importance to beleft aacor; rected, Lastenedto. Beaconefield, and apagM an. interview with, the view rofascerUiaijig'lhe truut of . the ntraor. . Entering into conversation with him,. Mr. Burke read to him some ehaplari from bis "Letters on the Regicide.",': Hia friend immediately saw, that- though , the eartbiyj CenV meat wasv verging - back to its native dost, the lamp of reason and genius shone with nadi-' miuished lustre.. He .was ; accordingly, 'more than satisfied as to the object . of hit. coming down, aqd .in a. private interview-.withriiML Burke told her what be bad come tor, 'and received from ber this, pathetio axplanation.:.'i2ir. Burke's only child, a beloved son, bad not long before died, leaving behind him a favorite Lorse the companion of bis excarsioos of basihess and pleasure, when both were, young and vigor ous. This favorite animal was of course turned out by Mr. Burke, the father, into the park; 'with directions to all bis servn&U that be shoald in every respect be treated as a privileged favorite. Mr. Burke himself, of coarse, in : bis ceorning walks, would often stop to caress the favorite animal. On one occasion, as he was takinirbia morning walk through th e park, he perceived the poor old animal at a distance, and noticed that be was. recognized by him. Tbe. horse drew nearer and nearer. Mr- Burke, stopped, vycu aim wiiu u most pieaaing iook of xecog- , l ?.r .1 . " 1. . - 1.' - - mtipn, which said, as plainly as words could have said: "I have lost him, tooj and then the poor dumb beast deliberately laid bis head upon air. uurre s DosomI Struck by the siaiarirv of the occurrence, struck by, the recollection of his son, whom he had never ceased to tnourn with a grief that would not. be comforted, Over- helmed by the tenderness of the animal, ex pressed in the mute eloquence of holy Nature's universal language, the illustrious sUtemaa ifof a moment lost his self-possession, and claim'nw his arms around the neck of his son's favorite animal, hfted up that voice, which had caused the arches of Westminister Hall to echo) tbe uuuiesi strains mat ever sounded within them. and wept aloudl Sir, this was seen, this was neara oy the passers by, and the enemies of rke, un appeased by his advancing years, by his laiUng health, by. his domestic sorrows. made it the. ground of a charge of insanity.--- Burke is gone; but, Sir, so help me Heaven if i were called upon to designate tbe event or the period in Burke's life that would best sustain a charge of insanity, it would not be when, in a gush of the holiest and purest feeling that ever stirred the human heart he went aloud cVf a eclt-o s dead es'si fovatlt fcorse. '-vOific'Srr, ivsnouia ratner be when, at the meridian of bis fame, when the orb of his imperial genius rode highest in the heavens, amid the scoffs of cring ing courtiers, and the sneers of hireling patriots, he debased his glorious powers to the scrambling and squabbiinga of the day, and, Born Tor the universe, narrowed his mind, And to party gave up what was meant for mankind, pCoavertioa of tbe Peril through. Spxrltu ':-- cUiSJZl. - Mrs-TLP. M. Brown, of Cleveland, Iectnred yesterday morning at the Melodeon, on Spiritual ism to a congregation of believera. : , . la noticing the objections ured by those who opposed their faith, she rpoke at so me. length of the allegatxn. that taeee pn;fyTations came from the Devil. : she did not care if they did eome from the Devil tbat was really no gronnd of objectoa to them, but if the Devil did communicate aach beautiful things as come to as through Spiritual media, it was an evidence that his Satanic maj esty was repeating of bis evil, and trying to get back to the Heaven from which be had fallen She bad studied the history of the Devil tally, and found from the Bible, tbe Shasta, Dd other sources, that after bis fall be had been confined in a deep pit, as dark ai .tar, but in after years the earth . was . created, and some of the angels pitying him said to the Diity, "Here the poor devil has, been dowa in this dark, pit so many years, why may we not let him loose on the earth which js empty?" It was accordingly done and the Devi) became better , ia his new borne, and had gone on. improving with the improvement of the worlds until now it was not unnatural to see him, trying to reach abigher sphere by teachiBg these beaafiful truths through spiritual media.- ;-: l'-? -y?;: V At this point of the lecture, a short and somewhat elderly lady sprang from ber seat, and with a countenance kindled by'passion Or possession, and limbs trembling with excitement, tottered to the front of the stagej and cast a small package at tn speaker's ; feet, exclaiming ia shrill and piercing voice: fTake ht epi ritual wreath, tii thine, the spirits .bid me give it thee" Witb these words she fastened from'the h, fblWed by the eyes of all the audience- thoagb no one had the politeness or the curiosity to meson pany bee down the stairs,; e 'package, whicb ' tbe fai lecturess opened y tWcioee of her remarks and . ahq wed, with jevident eatufaction to ber friends,' contained no other- wreath than si plain gold ring CWiw-tai Gazette . ' 1 ; .-- . ? GanTsIiaj oa thr ZlissluippL ? .i ' -Lifeoa the -Mississippi Is characterised by ex-traoTdiaary sesnes and incidents. ' It ' 'stated that on a recent occasion, a clergyman .was earnestly engaged in preaching to a , considerable audience at on end of the steamer, whiTeln the middle gambling was in busy1 progress1, 9an at (Jie other findcof &e'alopn- wjia jmusia aodvdar-..i ctng. ilany -of the- boats are fUtedknpyi ,js 'Jtbe inosfnaarcgniflcsint fyle, and amo&nt in &cf ; to fioatih patae'ltoftferi ccn- pie4; by5p()sputi and; pjwar3s j.Tbe epV -if cabin passage, frr-tn Newr Orleaci to St-Louls is about twenty dollars; rThil lr dec's pa3ia-- is of 66nrt oncTi Eheaps r. - 'A'lTthe leVliax't - wni c'ban es take place ia the inmates cf tla toa.t Interesting Bntidw a few weeks since, a steamer thai sailed, from New- OrleanVto SCLouis.1naa freight list tfiatT aiyuumi 9VVV1, IS. BHlUlviyu - Hit, fVCetpk of'l,aer V3enger vmoser:.'aadth'e baribj ; The iceiiw ''VporMcijy.ai nigh are full 6f excitomehCA inend foa 1 whom we gather these fact Inform us, tpat a'short'time since be bad 'occasion t5 traveT frorn few Orleans to- SC LottS; and a iy or two 4fier te: w on board ,w i .n wecame Mquamiea iiia.s mpae si .1 1 a. 1 . .I.j v L-'.i v, ' ' - . and unassuming young ' geutfaiaau, whose' man-1 ners were so mild itod cnnvenatlo al tbat htt anpposed be was.a youg lawyer, a phy cTaW'orpiir Tbe next day be discovered thai be wasene of tbe most itCcbmptisbed gamblers in the western rcmnt!.:i.S-:Uv.Vl- y ' f --! 1 " '- ; ': '' ' " , ' : ''; ''- ' - ; v '-- - f The Comet-; -;- . - lgcKKi tifisj -n Jpeeniauon nas oeen indulged io byjsiaby of lhe. newspapers thtougbonl the conntt-v about the Comet now visible, c from the lactot iu appearing, in th west abosst; eight ocioca m uie e vtowg, ami .stgain ia tn east at three; or ibnU ia tbet morsnngKibas been stated I : 1. . . j. oy aomowDawmiBous avomersi ias xnere are acter afiecUng our County interests in the elec-twodistisret Ckaneta. ;Tbe folio wing- extractI from tioa. orOur Connty ticket..: Fellow citizens, let a letter in tbe BeffsJo Express, from thpen of a us loofc a little at these things, and let "bieedin? vHjiumw jBs,;eij)iMa aau, jepioaes uiis laea. .lie says: .ji : ' - ' ..-.i ' ; The body in question i the "Comet which lias been aome.uma voje, and bas been noticed in most of the. newspaper , -It has notr reached a part or its orbit so tar north, that w its diarnal revolution- it Uoply .about fire honre; bfeloif onr horiaoni and-C09.equentlj.U. ia. well eeen in the west in the evening, and equally well iu the east in the-morning, and with tbe naked eye. As to what: particulaf Comet this ishere bas been.ai yes no laepuacaxjon or, n, ana, an : conjectures upon this Ptre; merely tile, may, or it may riot h'Ave been seen beforehand the same nncertainty exists with regard to the 'two other Comete (botk telescopic) that are now visible to tbo who poswrt the rc'quisito inatromenU for lilflTience. of :Femftl -Soeietw; ; It Abetter far von to- naaa an .vprunir orim'nr iwice in a ?ad j1, drawing room, even though; the longconvecsetions: stoTandyon: know tbe girls byjbetuttbaq in, .elub tayern, or.tbe pit of a theatre. All amusementa'of yontb to wbieb vir- tuous women-are not4LTlmitted..'reIy 6a.iL is del eterious in.theirnatofe, jAU menlwho avoid fe- m.la aomty have dflU jrceptkpgr and ara eW pidrbave gross tastes and revolt against what is pure , Your club swaggerers, who are sucking the butts of billiard, cuee all night, call iemale- society, insipid. Poetry is insiDid to avokel: beauty has no charms for a blind man; music does, not please a poor beast wbe does not know farimriit. one tune from another;, and as a true epicure, is J OI oar owa C0MO"- 1 hey have, by a o-bardlv ever " tired of water aaachv- and brown jority, determined to adhere to their former de. bread and butter. I crotes t I can sU for a whole night talking to a . well jregniatedr kindly woman, about her gud, coming oat, or ber boy at school, and like, the evening's, entertaiameat. . One of the ereat benefits man mav derive from womaa'a society is, that .be is honnd to be respectful to them- The habit s of good to your moral men, depend upon it. , Our .education make us the most eminentlf eelfish men in the world. : We fifbt for oorseW we push for onrra'ves, we - . ,. , . . . yawn for ourselves, we light our pipe, and say we won t go out: we preter ouneives, ana our ease: and tbe greatest good that'eomes to a man fv a rn n.ltw U tW K . tn 'r.V - ' v : . ir . , . . ' of somebody besides himself, somebody to whom be unound to. l constantly attentive and re- tptfaL t'''''-' J- V i -,,.: . m '''-" "'' - ; ': - , Woman' Power. Ttfaa ta barwHlinw alav. t ah K K-nA a ho self. But no sensible man of moderate meaner . . , . .... -.- , no man who has to work, and m willing to work for bii. livelihood I: might, perhaps, say no annaihl man iri ant. nnaitinn -ni(lra hi'a anf nnt 1 of'.- ball-room oe an opera-box however mech ... - , , , ne may uao to see uer mere, a trn woman i has much more chance we all know it of wm 1 ning any love that is worth her winning in beraBk making good this unreasonable, claim, own home in ber undress, in- ber little nameless every day unstudied graces, "sitting on a stile, loitering by a brook, rattling' in a railway car riage, or bnsy and. nocbnscioaa simid common householdd u ties, "than ia what the sex choose to consider the special scenes of their glories and their trinmphs. c I have read some whre,or bava been told,' tbat any woman, who removes from a gorsTon in -personal . attractions, - can make anv ma. propose to berb tbe cbanco of UrAlTJZin - - - S ju8 m u ouvmd im. Aina lur inoHiu.--1 I am iuclined with eome modification, to believe iVnnmiliating as it may seem t-fi noble i. T.-u i - t .,r. .i. v . v- " -"st " H"W . -nes nis j . ... - m . . . m bead witb an air of superior ennning bat I see a bim ataH eventa, a rsy TUm.-''A traA I woman, witb good figmVand Tkind heart, j salght book, bua easily : ia a fortnight.--;i?'aci .i, 5CQ, Spoil Va&zltoK-? Be alwaja telling her bow beautiful she is. tnatill iota W Tonne Jnd anan'n. 1... ...... . ' . - .-.-r.i dress. .r3 .5 .1 Allowber toreadotMtbing' but works of fie- j ! Atb iier nil riU acec)rubiinXs,bol none '.. . .,. V, . T7 : ,s t I Of the utilifaeaof lifev.-t c- ..n.-.f -;J Koep her tn the darkest ignorance of the crys. I UtaeSiOt JJnIceepiBgi , - i-c-u. I UlnitiatflAe-Moli.ndpto i iTotrengthen th latter, let ber bare a' lady . raaid.;r n l.iw yaja ix. itzi j I Uon m, marry ber to HDQastarieiyeBii who , iTecl er, to tTkti le better liia arj trFU of tntsresV. accrued n-MHVtlie Cobds lT:tbe.;7i:K, '?rr jT V,!VvTir eove. earned cf.the-Connty,, bvit VUala lerUiDkh&V e lti atclr. when sue is ' Given dr or Uod th . not, and let ber lie ia bed takicg medicine when D'." lSi3.;V ?'.--'. ". half an txjat-cStT?: CorexercIfieofili cotp' vJV irw s. ss-1 JO Uli. EUTZXlZZit. ' tloelj.csrriir tZ Ler.".-s:a.es3.A. i TLi bond veVtLV re3uli of &i fVTJs T ::el; And lastly, having given ber ca- estion of your. rights tj .7otxiztV s '..ic is ..,,1 'J ' T V" .v? rfr r , t x r iVotera of Knox Coiiinty. T 7 "-T - - - aw-. SsW4. . I XfcZft ftild by tthom the People's .1 .m, V V . W - - a r zr. axes nave oecn incTtCLsea, PfT , STUPPARY P4i1T? t . r . ' t - . , , 'R15APJijI CICCUIiATE ! " t . . , I - Tn iho! present auipaign,s the issues arrising npon general or national politics amount to but little, Sanaas and all ber wounds are diseover- ed to,be mere pin scratches,: and are completly healed But there are local issues of most vital interest. '.Tbe qoesUoa; of. equal taxation and equal and just, administration of the laws, to ,1 corporations and iudividuals alike, is directly involved in the election of Judge Bartley. Im portent questions are- involved of a local char 1 - . i nansas " and her humbugs, go for the present. " In 1852, tbe Legislature in strict compliance with the injunction of the constitution of your State passed a law for the purpose of securing equal taxation upon all. property in the State. By this law it wasendeavored to Uz Banks and other, .corporations as nearly as possible'like other inVestmenU and property. . The Banks set op the claim that they had secured by previous application to the legislature of your State an exemption from' such just demand on the part of the constitation and the people- and appealed to the Supreme Court of the State" to declare such exemption In their favor. The Sopreme Court, of whom Judge hartley' constituted a prominent active and efScient memberdenied to tbese 'corporation any sacbv unreasonable privilegej and held them bound to' pay the tax. : By an ingenn'ou' Contrivance the Banks got some of- there case into the. Supreme Court of the United States, when the silly," irrational and novel doctrine of the sacredness of eorpnration fcwwra and pnvileges,; bad assumed tbe char f cter of fo9il remain i and there ifwasde- inm' tat tfia Legislature, at any given time y"&jyviuK ot tnecpun v 1t" p,w wef tuccessors, even ot the f51 themselves for, all time to come to pass N-- t . -. - not pyersiateu. .xne oupreme vourt S very. meager majority dl.d make just such unreasonable and dangerous ec8KB- M b buprerae Court of Ohio, with JaasTe, r"ejs " prominent and active mem- Der'orff,tneni t0 their duty, determined since lDftl bl1 '? "egitimate place as the Court of ernir resort and the legitimate expounder lc - 8ion "d" bold; the. Banks to the payment of (their just portion of the burthens of government lfJud? BarUeJ " retained .on the Bench sueh '1.ereaiter De the .decisions ef your Supreme Court If J kld6e Pek " elected the Banks will escape and the people suffer. treople of Knox Count?; bow much do von suppose yon are taxed to secure to the wealthy men , who own the Knox county Bank this spe- i , . - - r j benefit, this unfair advantage? You wil Dno, " TO examine into if, that you pay back rf M - SW - - .- - - m ----- . rawennox uoaniy oanx fZ30, and some cents whicb b raised off -ron bv a dlrir-t ur i over to the tiank: 1 Tbis too your com missioners and other offi. 1 anxious to do, lest some one should I eome in who would insist upon standing the R.nt i. ,,:. f,. ik - . borrow the monev of the Bank tn nait! Should justice. Bartley be7 'elected so that the present organization bf the Supreme Court shall be preserved, the Bank never could have recov- lered that monev in Ohio. . And it is conSdenllv :::"r. ' .uHre'"e Y ...J .I..I.L. a.. . n it -. j ohksm uuw urvui2eu wouia noia too point Xht other way, and - wipe oat the most serious stain that rests upon her otherwise fair escutch- COO.- Wbatsar VOU, feUOW Citizens, did VOUr OUT :I?i0'?u:' P'j, P'Pnff bck this iwu luuuswu vuto nanurea ana ei?nt aouars and adding it to- vour taxes? Wm tMnlr nnt There were other difficulties in the wav of the wuica we oeueve wpuia nave been insarmount able had it been put to the test ' Another subject or two demands y onr atten- non. ; no Knows any thing- of the way our County's interest in the-Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark Railroad., is of ate managed in the a" - Tar I - V ... - st- nanas ot your present omces? Are you aware that yon bave beeh'payiag each Ton. for some : Tear 'naat! taKrCnt r iKrn. and dollars tax to pav interest on yourbonds, iaa n Payment ot tbat stock, while yon bare r w avuMvurbu va u ih-eiM: ctieav ot ta itepublican oartv. brtdin them moat solemnly to pay that interest, and the pria- axjanrsLv;.! r .... . . .- f ani-lerPt Ven ."e, in 1867. . I ''Tb Is true, and; not one step is taken to re: aairm th nartie tA kAn thV ',. , ' . F - -"i31-."'". with yonr aranty. .,,.-r .. Tbe foUowiog is a copy of the bond and en- P?111- beldby this county from as good men mostly as the State affords In . consideration -of one hundred Shares' of the stock of the Columbus and Lake Erie Rail itoad Company, transferred to me by tbe Coon- y .yarn miss loners oi .rnox uoooty Ubio,I prom "" w 91 lyOUnty, UODimittlOneri Of jlqox county aforesaid the sum of ifire thonss and dollars, on or before ' the first day of June, A. EV18ST with interest to be paid annually, on the first day of October, from and after tbe first JT Pr "f eaid. principal sum, r any part thereof,, may be mjkde utbe" OSce of the county Treasurer nf said county, in money or in tbe bonds of 'said i "J-ooa. vunuiy, lasxreu in payment oi saia county s to aecrue os thU obligation' shall be 'paid ta said ireasnrtr at a is said UUcefrr moner. Or by the board cf odcers. It ia strands. in-ecJ, interest, as they were bound to do. and that of hU: years not ay sof them' have : paid, and no steps are taken to compel t ben. We wnppose the'se wise Xlepubfican gentlemen, most uf whom are; lawyer tell cut, commission eranhalthw cdnlract is nnconstTtutional, and theybelieye fha'flllj subierfj ad arj going to Itet them escape ft Is believed these men have a bard bargain, but they made it with their ejwfyfpe-ra nod , without Titnpp Cpn or wrong on the parf of be oScerp pt this county, and should be required tolive-unto "t,-, Tbe affairs of our county in regard to the Springfield, Mu V. k Pittabargb- Boad are not much better.' .We are all the while paying in-terest at 7 per cent .on- the bonds issued to sub- : scribere in skis road,- while ths county bas the bonds of the best men in it, well secured by good mortgages on nnioenmberd real estate, to indemnify the people against alt loss, and to insure the payment of interest and principal aa they respectively fall dee. ; These men have also leag been in default, to the county, and we are. paying' tbe taxes' Consequent npon thisdefault-- . Botone of these men issued, and this case is allowed to slumber along almost for years. The commissioners and officers apparently paying no more Attention to it than if ifa concerned Engi land rather than ay part of America. Not one of them showed, interest enough in tbe case to attend the trial of it at last term; and some of them, we are informed have - been know to express themselves in great! doubt of 'the success of the suit a very good way to insure its defeat) Most of these men, too, are prominent Republicans, and we venture are: warm in their support of the Commissioner, (Mr. McElroy,) who baa thus mildly sued them. ! These men," ydur present Republican officers, promised. J to lesseat yodr taxes, and on the strength of this promise got into power. Have they done it? Look over your tax receipts and seer iThey will say they have built you i Court House. This job was bid off by a worthy citizen of our town who had just built our jail very much to our satisfaction, at $24,500, cash payment. There was ia the treasury at tbat time of the money collected from B. Higgios t Co, on their contract to pay interest on our Sandusky, Mansfield and Newark, or rather Columbus & Lake Erie Railroad Stock, -over twenty thousand dollars. IfTbft Sum was jot all aoolied 'upon (he Court House oou tract it should have been appuea mere or somewhere else, to lessen our taxes. , " T - "Fellow citizens, without respect to former party preferencei shoald we" Dot - look closely into these. thiugs? Oar taxes, are enormously heavy aod are chiefly of county and Township levies. We have the power, in our own hands to make the reform, lf we would ever get out'of debt it is no by keeping these Republicans 'in'office we will do it. For" it is an axiomJ with'them and their predacoasors that - pnblie debt it a -ffmi HartsooW, Wat. Beam, Ch. Wolff, M. H. Mitchell, Jacob Merrin,-Joseph Love, L. Harper, , , U .' Jonathaa Hunt," Joseph'Adatns,-Anthony Whit,. S. A, Soydani, Isaac Hadley, - 'J. Headington, F- McLain, . , D. C, Montgomery, . A.' J. Leek, T. Wade.-J - T Wm. J. Morton, M. M. Shipley, H, Levering, James Honey, COUNTY AUDITOR.. DEAR WHAT A lEPOUCW SAYS. The foUowIn? communication written bv an active and intelligent Republican of this country is worthy of the attention of every member of that party who is opposed to the monarchical doctrine of conferring office upon a man for Cfe,as attempted to be carried into practice iu. the person' ot Samuel W. Farquhar, the Repab. lican candidate for Auditor. . -Vi Against the moral standing and person al'qoal-ifieations of Mr. Farquhar for the office of A'udit. or, we have not, neither shall wef eay a word. But we do contend tbat ia this Republican government of ours rotation-in. office is one of its most admirable' features and. should never be Ipst fight by the people. . , . , Joseph Ankeay, the Democratic candidate for Auditor has never been " an office hunter or an office holder. He is a bard working mechanic a black-smith who may be found in his shop almost any hour of the day,-with bis sleeves rolled ap earning his bread by the sweat of his brow. He is, however, a very. inteJLigent man. and is just as capable to discharge the duties of Auditor, or any other office, with as much credit-to himself and the people of Knox 'county, as S. W. Farquhar. '.., : - ' But read tbe communication. - - j i( r For the Banner. M. HaJtPEB : I am well aware that the indi-viduaL who dares to censure the act a ef tbeYn ventions of hi s party, or who refuses to supper their nominations will be charged with .sinister-motives. But . this shall not deter me from-' speaking freely, in relation to the nomination fur-Auditor, by the late Republican convention.' The theory of our .Government . requires rotation in office ; that equality, may. be, maintained-and tbe purity of our institutions .guarded by continual reference Mo hi people rthehighesi-standard of political virtue. This principle, I witbmany others, consider, was Lineal corruptly discarded in -the selection referred to. I have songbt information from " the oldeti inkabitani as to the time Mr. Farquhar first went into office,, but "the memory of man runoethnoi" to that period, ; His "father was County : Clerk " forty' five-years ago, and Mr. Farquhar is supposed to have-commenced bis, career under him, as deputy. However this may fee, it is certain be commenced while quite a young man, and bas been quartered on the eotrnty, as DeputypChief Clerk, and-Treasurer, nearly : ever since. lhe pay thai he : baa received, will not probably, on a. farnisti-mate, fall short of forty tyre thousand dollara. Now, in all reason tiis ooght to satisfy tbe cra-vinrs bf the man, and induce him to rive place to other good ' meav as' M. , White, Castle, bad Others, who. bare quite as strong claims on' th Darty. iJot nol roUUca seems to . be Lis onlr stock in trade', and hence ba. stil thrusts himsel forward for the best offices in the gift of the people, while the wire-worker secure hie nomination. - When the convention assembled, this of ficious, class intxurned to rain .the. members tv suppot't Mr FarquhVj, .Proaaineet. among tba-rasons they nrged was this; The opposition par ty bad chosen m meet able and popular man and no one but Mr. F. cos Id beat tim, therefore be ought to bq nominated. . This procured his sue-cesaii Uai. I protest , against iucb -a -niserabl rule of action. In the choice of candidates, men 8b.onJ t selected, whonre cmapetest aid honest, and wbQ can - bring out thejull atT'enlb of their party, without any reference to ti rotes-tie nominee can pick np from tie TFr 'on. Cecanse in this case success wo.sJ te u ,.. tzr a of the'parly, im an. opponta .ne r w - Le a triumph of, the-mn in which I dor tot ebos to interest mvself. :I tbink, then, tiat as !!r. Tar. uiarfbugbt riot, in rikt or justice, to 1 tK candidate- hia name nia Da erasi i..-te) ticket. I shall do it, and 1 know sever! cllers, - |