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JAMER H. PArtltitit. Wit. U. Au_N.
BUSINESS CARDS.
W. W. PHELPS,
A O N E A A W
REDWING, MINNESOTA
51y
A E S II. A E
_. TTORNE7 CO UNSEL OR A LA W.
And Notary Public.
RED WIN«, MINNESOTA.
E EXTR A PA OB PENSIONS
Oflico in The Goodhue Volnntoer building
C. & J. E
A to & at a
RED WING, MINNESOTA.
Special attention eiven to the collection of
claims against the United Slates for PAY AND
BOUNTY of soldiers killed in battle or dying
in the service of the Government.
Oflie* in Brand's now building, next door to
the Red Wing Mouse.
_JtedWing, March Slh.lS'U. tf_
J. F. I N E
A to Ac or at a
RED WING MINN.
Oflico at the Court fTonse.
A to a el or at a
ROSCOE, GOODHUE COUNTY.
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C. aloClureof Kcd Wing, will assist" in all
cases entrusted to his cure in the District Court.
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the war, tor soldiers AKBEAB I*AY, BOCNTT MOX-
A N I E S
A O N E A A W
AXD
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,
Red Wing, Minnesota.
Special attention given to collecting.
OFflO ON MAI N S E E
n!52 4.0vGjly
E O E W E O
1
E
A E & A
Wholesale and retail dealers in
S A N E I I N E S
A I S 011,8, GLASS, A N I S I I E 8
Dye-Stuffs, Hair and Cloth Brushes,
PATENT MEDICINES, FANCY SOAP,
TOBACCO, S N
Perfumery, Red and White Lead,Zine Paint,fcc.
RED WINO, MLV.NEJOTA.
n!60 n4IvO ly
W E. A W I N S
JRaiuted\ Glazier
A
PAPER HANGER,
All orders promptly attended to and faith,
fnlly oxontod.
Red Wing Jnne 18(50.
FURNITURE.
On Bnsh Street, near the Kcd Wing Houso.
All kinds constantly on hand. Repairing
•T»nnd Turning done to ordor. Also, all kinds
Collins.
JOHN COKELL.
Cr."4°rt. STERLING- & Co.,
i»co«*iow to s. U. Foot.
Wholesale and lietail Dealers in
LE1TIER, & SHO
E FINDINGS.
Manufacturers of cvey kind and style of
Men's, Boy'*, Women's and Children** Boot*
mud Shoes.
Keparing done neatly and at moderate
prices. In the New Drick building, corner
Main and Plum streets. Come and see us.sickness
G. R. STERLING & CO.
'.. P29a n40:ly.
O. E
FASHIONABLE TAILOR.
A full assortment of
READ MAD
E CLOTHIN
AND
ii is in
constantly on hand.
TAILORING AN A I I N 6
doae to order promptly and at reasonable
rate*. Shop iu WILKINSON'S BL«OK.
Red Wing, June 5th, 18(1.
nU-lv.
E E E A E
S__0_3
N N S
Manufactured andforsale by
,-/., fi
4*** ABHTON. COG_L & BETCHER,
Near the Kelly House,
RW WING,
MINNESOTA.
nl5v«:ly
City Bakery,
ON BUSH STREET, RED WING HOUSE
CH_*S L. RCTHACHER, Proprietor
A good assortment of
FRESH BAKED BREAD.
Gafcea, Pie* Crackers Aev alwagao band.
Ye_»t Is always Kept.
Teas* who wish to have bread delivered at
their homta can leave their order*.
rr:i
wf I!
B«*V*-«_
""w,"i yijii W -,. nil HI.ii.. I •wum.au..•• I I I I I W I I I I I u.. I
W
9tUtM i«f^r|j.
LINES.
O. W I I E
Men of the Northland! where's the manly
spirit
Of the true hearted and the unshackled gone
Sons of old freemen do we but inherit
Their names alone
Ts the old Pilgrim spirit quenched Within us
Stoops the strong manhood ofour souls so low
That mammon's lure or party's wile can win us
To silence new
Now when our land to ruin's brink Is verging!
In God's name let us speak while there is time,
Now, when the padlocks for our lips arc forging
Silonce is crime!
What! shall we henceforth humbly ask asthorities
favors
Rights all our own In madness shall we barter
For treacherous peace the Freedom Nature
gave 88,
God and our charter I
HEBE shall the statesman forge his human
fetters,
Here the lalse jurist human rights deny,
And in the church their proud and skilled abet
tors
Make truch a lie
Torture the pages of the hallowed Bible,
To sanction crime, and robbery and blood
And, iu Oppression's hateful service, libel
Both man aud God
Shal' our Now England stand erect no longer,
Bnt stoop in chains upon her.downward way,
Thicker to gather on her limbs, and stronger
Day after day
Oh, no inethinks from all her wild, green
mountains
lie
From ber blue rivers arid her welling fountains
And clear, cold sky—
Ocean
Gnaws with his surge*—from the fisher's skiff.
With white sail swaying to the billow's motion
Round rock and cliff—
From the free fireside of her uuhonght farmsr—
Frcm her free laborer at hift loom and wheel—
Kroni the brown suiitnshop where beneath the
hammer,
Kings the red steel—
From each and all, if God hath not forsaken
Our land, and left us to an evil choice.
Loud as the summer's thuuderbold't shall wa
ken
A people's voice
Startling and stern the Northern winds shall
bear it
Over Potomac's to St. Mary's wave
And buri'jJ freedom shall wake to hear it
Within her grave,
Oh, let that voice go forth the bondman sigh
ing
By Santee's wave, in Mississippi's cane,
Shall leel the hope, within his hosem dying,
Revive uguin.
Let it go forth The millions who are gazing
Sadly upon us from itfar shall smile,
And unto God devout thanksgiving raising,
Biess us the while.
Oh for your ancient freedom, pure and holy,
For the deliverance of a groaning earth,
For the wronrca captive, bleeding, crushed,
and lowly,
Let it go forth
Sons of the best of fathers! will yc faUer
With all they left yc perilled and at stake
Ho! onee a iiuou Freedom's holy altar
The tire awake
Prayer strengthened for the trial, come together
Put on the harness (or the moral tiglr,
And with the blessings of your Heavenly Fath
er,
MAINTAIN THE RIGHT
ptollmmm^ gftuTmg.
I E GUARDIANS OF CIVILIZATION
ON TH E RAMPAGE.
IMMENSE SENSATION IN PARLIAMENT.
[By lnteroceanic to the Chicago Tribune.]
The Honorable member from Mugwitch
wanted the floor. It was not often he tres
passed upon ihe time of the House. He was
a Briton ho thanked God, a bold Briton if
he might say it. who should not say it. fie
was clear upon the point of idolatry for his
native land, could mention little instances
of precocity in that direction that were his
torical and traditional family proofs of his
Tfitv" ^v
early leanings that way. [Cheers.] But he I this disemboweling execution.
was human if he was a Bruon, and agreed forgive England for tho part she is takin
with the old Roman that "homo sun nihil,
humanan ulUnvn a me pu!o." He saw in
Britannia one of the Guardians of Civiliza
tion. Turn your eyes across the ocean and
what do you discover there Such a lapse the treatment English women and children
into barbarism is painful. He held in his met with from the hands of the blacks in the
hand the latest dispatches from the war in
America. Good God had it come to this
that to the other horror) of the war between ilar atrocities here.
the North and the South had been added—! a certainty that
cannibalism {fame** motto*) Yes sir
ourselves to the investigation. He would
read from a paper he held in his hand[o re-
porter dr»f,s„ pin the gvUery and
vereiy chukd by the speak*.} His sp.nt
stood appalled at the news, he shrank with
seared eyeballs from the vision, but here is
the paragraph
"The most advanced brigade of Gen. Si
gel is cow usbisting entirely upon the
enemy! 1!"
Good God, is this the nineteenth century
when a brigade of fierce German brigands,
about their camp fires, munch as sweet mor
sels the tender limbs of Virginians, in tric
cesse {Intense excitement, two reporters of
the London Timet sxevon and faU over the
.jidlery.) Are we to sit here, while our breth
ren by blood in the Old Dominion are being
when soft intents are hunted like patridges men.
SSI .'.in- immmmmimmmimmmm
VOLUME 7, NUMBER 4. RED WING, GOODHUE COUNTY, MINN., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 1882.
EXECUTION OF REBEL PRISONERS
IN CHINA HORRIBLE ATROCI
TIES ENGLAND RESPONSIBLE
THEREFOR.
The following account of the brutalities
committed on the Tteping* by the Imperial
i-sts, is from the pen of an Englishmen who
was present, in company with both English
and French officers and soldiers, at the ex-to
ecution, by disemboweling, of Taeping pris
oners
I went with the crowd to see the execu
tion of the Taeping prisoners that had been
given up for execution into the hands of the
mandarins by the English and French'au
or, what is the same thing, they
took no measures to prevent the ruthless
butchery of those they lent their aid to cap
ture, when, horror of horrors, how am I to
describe the dreadful scene, or will it ever
leave my memory Among the wretches
were young and old, of both sexes, and
ofcollected,
all ages and sizes, from the infant recently
born to the man of eighty, tottering on his
maiden from ten to eighteen. The latter
were pushed out by the guards among the
the crowds of ruffians assembled, and were
taken into the sheds and by places and de
bauched, and again dragged back by the hair
of the head to the Chinese guards, to await
From vaileys where her slumbering fathers fainted and were pulled along the ground to bring her up. It will be recollected the
Meirimacwas plated with ei^ht hundred
tons of iron, all of which it|is expected will
After along time in this state of excessive
torture, the executioner thrust his hand into
his victim looking him in the face all the
while. A young female, apparently about
I can write no more ot these scenes I
can now only regret forever that I looked on
the dreadful sight. I am no longerfitto be
a soldier. I have been in many battles dur
ing the last twenty years, and in the thick
est of the fi^ht in most of them, where the
rage and thirst for carnage is dreadful to re
flect on afterwards, but nothing heretofore
that I have seen or heard of, or even read of
could be compared to the dreadful cruelty of
a hf^n
cannibalism! The senses reel and fancy and cruelty could devise
at the spectacle yet we must nerve) a
a a
a
Pennsylvania
Delaware
Coluxibus--"
Raritan
Columbia ••••.
United States
Congress
PlyinoHth
Germantown
Cumberland
Dolphin
Merrimac
staff from the endente woman to the young! water, and it is thought can isily be raised.
their turn for execution. Some of them had ''b merns of the tide and steam pumps,
the executioners, who threw them on their
backs, tore off their clothes, and ripped them
from the lower part of the abdomen to their |ba recovered. The Congress and Cumber
breasts, which we-e cut off and dashed with'. land each had iron safes on board, containing
a curse in their faces. The bowels, as a| respectfully $35,000 and $18 O00 in specie,
matter of course, gushed out but the cut
was made in such a way, and so skillfully,
and with such cxpertness, that the intestines
were seldom injured.
the chest and tore out the reeking heart, among whom will be twenty divers, who
eight months pregnant, who never uttered a the vessels as are not raised will be blasted
groan or sigh at ail the previous cruelties she
had endured from the surrounding mob had
her infant cut out of her womb, and held up
by one of its little hands, bleeding and quiv
ering when at the sight she gave one heart
rending, piercing screech, that would have
awakened pity in a tiger, and after it had
been in that sta'e dashed on her breast, she
with a last superhuman effort, released her
arms from those holding her down,and clasp
ed her infant to her bleeding heart and died,
holding it there with such force that they
could not be separated,and were thus thrown,
together upon a pile of other carcasses,—
Another young woman among the prisoners
awai'ei her turn to be disemboweled, with
a fine boy of ten months old, crowing and
jumping in her arms, had him snatched
suddenly away from her, and flung to the
executioner, who plunged the ruthless knife
into his tender breast before the mother's
eyes. Infants but recently born were torn
from their mother's breast and disemboweled
before their faces. Young, strong men were
disemboweled, mutilated, and the parts cut
off thrust into their own mouths, or flung
among the admiring and laughing crowd of
Chinamen. But no more.
May God
this war, and may the sin of the enormities
she has assisted in perpetrating on the de
fenceless woman, and innocent and helpless
Sepoy mutiny, it is truly wonderful that En
glishmen should join in or countenance si ra
it is now ascertained to
-and his companions
child, be removed from her door and after ure than does the dog. His seat yielded he|
i„ted and disembowel-'
a is a or a a
Chin9SB a it a
__ __ho
to
_..
a fen W
in a faintingfit,and was in that state car
ried away, and is now a raving maniac from
the effects the dreadful sight bad on him.
prevent intervention in favor of the rebellion
served oat in commissary rations to a brutal'. he had named a time so short that He dared
soldieri", and high born Virginians are being not make it public, and that such interven
devoured with hard bread Are we to pause tioa could not be prevented but by an im -closing
shall
loager?For what more shall we wait,!mediate response to Ui. caUform O O he to dirtanc. wl»en tlie tidier, rf
through Virginia brakes It is time to in
terpose the shield of Civilisation and call up
on Christendom, when SigePs red ruffians, challenged, when about to swear his vote in,
[are leisurely eating their way through the when the election judge angrily cried oat
hearts and homes of the Sheaandoah. Take off your hat, han't yoa got no re
[Here the ieteroceenic line was mteTnrpted.] spectforme aer God Almighty r»
DHU
E V0LU1
THE CONSTITUTION AND THE UNION, FIRST, LAST, AND ALL THE TIME,
iireat Wrecking Operation.
T. F. Wells, Esq., of this city, has just
completed a contractwitb the Government
by which he agrees to raise the vessels sunk
at Gosport Navy Yard and in Hampton
Uoads. The value of the property sunk
upon which he proposes to operate, amounts
over a million of dollars, and consists of
the following vessels.
120
St
gun ship
do
do
o
do
do
do
do
da
do
ld
do
50
50
50
50
22
22
24
4
12
Two new Rebel Steamers—Water Boat'
Powder Boat.
The two new rebel steamers it will be re
were all ready for sea, aud were
scuttled and sunk at the Navy Yard, in great
haste they now lay in about thirty feet of
The Cumberland lays in eleven fathoms of
water, and it is the intention of the contrac
tor to raise her by means of four while ships
of four hundred tons each, to be partially
submerged by being partly filled with water,
and then, after attaching to the sunken ship.
which will, without doubt, be recovered by
means of diving apparatus.
The undertaking involves an outlay by
the contractor of some sixty thousand dol
lars before commencing the work. He will
employ something like two hundred mem
will descend to the sunken ships in the
Wells & Gowen submarine armor. Such or
with gunpowder, and all the material that is
of value recovered.
The contractor is the same party who
raised the steamer Erie from from Lake Erie
in 1851. and has been engaged in other g„b.|
marine operations.
commence operations at once, and is to re
ceive forty-five per cent, salvage from the
Government in the value of all property re
covered.—Biiston Com. Bulletin.'.
We understand be is to!'
A DO(i STORY.
tells
'Burleigh,' of the Boston Journal,
the following tale of a dog
In the ancient and beautiful town of Chat
ham, N. Y., is a very remarkable dog
whose characteristics and behavior would
excite the admiration of the lov of dogs,
his honcr, the editor of the Nashua Tilegraph\\i0nQm
and mayor of the city. On week days he is
a dog of like passion and behavior with other
animals but on Sunday his peculiarities
and sectarian principles shine out. Unlike
the crow, he can count, and knows when
Sunday comes. He indulges in no pastimes.
He encourages no company and no familiari
ty. He says by actions louder than words
to the vain and trifling lace, 'six days shalt
thou play aud do all thy sports.
The iamily are all Presbyterians, but the
dog is a Methodist. On Sunday's he attends
the family on their way to church, leaves
them at the door of tho house of the Lord
where they attend, and then holds on his
solitary and unbroken way until he comes
to his church, which is a little further on,
when he has reached his church he goes up
stairs, and ha* a particular place in which he
sits and when an intruder gets into his place
no belle or madam of fashion who comes
sweeping up the asile of Grace and finds a
plebian in her elegant pew can give more de-
cided indications of acnopance and displeas
A CONFEDERATE FUNERAL.
FOREIGX ISTBHVSSTIOS.—The Watkins
Republican, of the 27th nit., contains the
following:
"Hon. A. S. Diven told us, on Thursday
evening that he had the express authority of
Secretary Seward to tell the people that he
had assured the representatives of foreign na- hoth instances. So touched were the pris
tions, from time to time, that therebellion oners at the kindness of Gen. Mitchell, that
would be crashed out, and that in order Io- when they returned to their gloomy quar- at any former period. There is as much
ten they passed a series of resolutions, thank-
Sooth, and lhe defenders ol the Union coul_d
shake hands and fight by each other's side
General Mitchell, the Federal commander
at Huntsville, Alabama, in answer to a re
quest by his prisoners, allowed them the
privilege of funeral rites over their dead.—
Ameng those buried was a young officer and WHAT HAS BECOME OF E SP E
namesake of Howell Cobb. He was a brave 1*
young man, and of refined manners. Two All of our readers will like a sensible an
hundred young ladies of Huntsville strewed swer to the above qu stion—which is prob
his grave with flowers. jably asked during every hour of the day—
Col. Bernard McGinnis was a'so buried and we will allow the city editor of the
by the Confederate prisoners with funeral New York Tribune to gratify them. He talks
honors. The Rev. Father Tracy performed as though he knew what he was talking
the solemn services of the Catholic Church about:
ing the officerforhis kindness, and Gen. notes in the city and country as ever before
Mitchellforthe courtesy he extended, and
with the hope that the day might
A- TeTsa in Sierra county, California, was in acommon cause. The moral effect of come of it By what mysterious agency is
snch an event is greater than a battle.—
With this war brought to a speedy close,
how many thuusemb will exclaim "Oh,precious
that we had known each otter Utter before."
HOW E WAS ELECTED.
Two years ago, our friend H. E
who lives over in the mining district, about
Shullsburg, ran for the Legislature. "The
A: .*.. „f -i 7 iL^*'
district was close, and it requtred the. best
,,
th shaft leadim down inlo the hil one
hundred an feet waiting for
Soo he came and down th long ladderfifty-.
party went, till the struck the bottom, whe.!aml
separatind to follow the different veins or
lodes, soon they were all hard at work, with
pick, chisel and drill, digging, cutting and
blasting for the bright cubes of lead so plenty
thereabouts. passed around from
group to grou: pof men, joked with arid di
rected them in their labors till half past
eleven, when he very coolly put on his coat,
a.-cended the ladder, reached the surface
but for two days, no such man coald be
a a a a
roe 0 a or
drink at 's expense, and let the matter
drop—but he was elected.
FI 0.1I TH E LOUISVILLE JOURNAL
—Guenilla Morgan proclaims that he has
'raised once more" the Confederate flag* into
Iventucky. Yes, John, and you no doubt
flatter yourself that you have raised the
Devil.
—We must establish such a condition of
things in Kentucky that good citizens shall
a fear a %Q
—It is said that the laurels are all dying
out upon the mountains ol the South. The
tree of victory and glory cannot live in rebel
soil.
—It would be a great thing for the rebe*
authorities if they could raise guns by con
scription as easily as they can men.
—If Beanregard doesn't like to redeem
his pledge to water his horses in hell, why
not take him to the Hot Springs
—Let Great Britain intervene if she dares
and she will find that a cotton famine is
nothing to bread famine.
Tr
republican voters hard at work a hundred I0PC'S
feet below, wi no means of getting out till I
—Felllowcitizens, if you want our officers
and men now in the field tofightheroically,answer
go and show them how.
Morgan announces that he is 'once
more among us." Ay, John, and we are
once more around you
—It wouli be less indecent in a drunken
Senator to throw up his liqnor upon the
floor of the Senate chamber than to pour
tnafc floor a a
attends to the service with decorum, that the liquor inspires,
pays dogmatical attention to the words of Evidently this war must be fought to
doctrine. Every Sunday*he can be seen on the bitter end. If any of our people have
bis way to church—in foul as in fair—and been getting up extensive assortments of
his denominational preferences are as well olive branches, they may as well make fire
known are those of any gentleman in wood of them,
town.
calum-
—The next best thing to making people
unwilling to aid the rebellion is to make them
afraid to do it.
—Abe Lincoln & Co. are the powers that
be. Jeff. Davis & Co. are the powers that
want to be.
"It will be conceded that there is as much
money in the country now as there has been
gold and silver, and there are as many bank
Treasury notestothe amount of $300,000,
000 have been pat in circulation during the
lr_- UnllMVlnd th ^u, „,._»,-'! .»— ._._ ..
plain of a scarcity of money. What has be-
it absorbed from the channels of circulation?
Where are the rich reservoirs that hold the
treasure Who is the happy man
Who will strike the vein that shall yield a
**mm
Vt. -I.-1 !H jgjH
^sssimr^nrnm
plentiful flow of the white and yollow car
rent agam-'i«_jsI*-n«ed»-no-pro found! "skiff to
penetrate the fact that the money is in Wall
street, in-this-.cify/m Stale street, in Boston:
irtotnferv
A
&,.• _^__^i m, i_ ,,, whose ind'flriatic%ringskiH enabled
root forward to win. The profits to be do- «*. ,.
._,,-! i. __ ._ .. .i,- ^,, tlKiin to eroatp the pfbseht panic'by cliveit
nved from an election were nothing, but tho
a «r ,!___* *_ ,i in,g 'the coawe-of «,fte dircuhttidn of"So nfrom
idea of defeat did not allow any stone to rer -. .-• .. -BC
.„,:. „n.,...„,i ... Uhe legitimate'channels of trade imo their
mam unturned bv either pary to secure ai ., ,„.
:. „i pooke»«K':
_. -v ?..
(I
J,lown
vote. J—— in the mining business, a:id .„ :4
,. -.^ _i,-.._ jWartmgerot preihyurns. the men wh
at times employs a number of men, who
dipkwn
so the day before election he engaged
the
hero it remains quietly
.4otnibleadvar:cev,''silver'and gold have I none
each on will1 ah-vw hand„sk
filled with postageois
stamps*_-'Lt
.'-• .bri'ilfi»
I •''••*.».-•"_ «. .L "*i _. it to: oblige vou with it at a very reas
and delve in the bowles of the earth for his
profit
about fifty republican voters to work for him
the forenoon of Tuesday, and go to.the polls
inethe afternoon. Being prompt pa.y hle ha^
no difficultydithirty
getting what J^lphe wanted
so bright and earlv Tuesdaye morning,
.. .,.y •&. pryirfg them out wi'hout apologies.—
three goo republicans stood gathered around
Jfew: shari»••
w% tfiese men to
terms? We answer by cheerfully oping the
stamp*:, receiving them without relapfaifce,
Handle ihj» stamps carfdlly, ke^pthem clean
aad prevent th^tr ndhesion, for they arc re
ally mone}' that will stick to honest fingans
unless decidedly-'' manipulated. In a few
weeks the silver and gold coin will come out
of their hiding places somewhat depreciate-.!
\. ,.".- t&,.
The Warronton correspondent oftiio.JY7.
drew along breath and with the help of two! ^'ork Ilni\l sends the following amusing
or three friends in the secret drew the lad- paraphrase of a part of the third chapter
der up after him, leaving fifty-three good of Matthew, written by a soldier in Genera1 Nathanhjl Wells, aged ninety-nine years, and
avmY
1-
I 3 a
7
the ladder was replaced I Taking two sec- preaching in the valley of Shen.indoah„
tions of the ladder off to have some new
a a
2 A
rounds put in, he left for the polls, a mile Union is at hand.
distant, and when the votes were counted at
3 3 is IlQ at Triis
night, to the surprise of his opponent, Prophet Stanton, ying, th yoic? of
had forty-two majority
An hour later there might have been seen
fifty three able bodied men, each one bearing
5
come
8. Brin" forth fruits, therefore, meat for
repentence.
9. And think not to say within yourselves
—we have taken the oath of alle^iatico and
are disciples of abraham, therefore not sub
ject to contribute to the stores of tho federal
commissary for I say unto you that I am
abie of these troops to raise up children un
to Abraham, and you milk? shell out.
10. And know also that the axe is laid
unto the root of the tree, &c.
VEiiY LUCID
That valiant wit, Orphrus C.Kerr, of the
Mackeral Krigade," after describing a fierce
equestrian combat between' Villiatn Brown,'
of the United States of America, and Capt.
'Munchausen,' of tho Southern Confederacy,
closes as follows: 'Mai' says 'Villiam'
gazing severely at company o, regiment 5,
as it came pouring forward, 'has the South
ern Confederacy concluded to surrender to)
the United States of America What the| Jflfk.
was, my boy, I am not allowed top'011
say but you may rest satisfied that a tiling
has been done which 1 am not permitted to
divulge and should this lead, as I hope it
will, to a movement I am not suffered to
make public, it cannot fail to result in a
consummation which I am forbidden to
make knows. But if, on the other hand,!
stroke I am restrained from explaining, you
ment, has a fine dog, who has be^n present
with his master at all the battles in which
the Third was engaged. At the action on',
James Island he was wounded by musket
was presented by some workmen at the Print
Works, upon which was engraved this in
scription "Ours by adoption. Dog Ned,
Irish Co 3d N. U. Vols." On another part
of the collar was engraved the Stars and
Stripes', supported by the shamrock and th^
Goddea& of Liberty.
kerst, bankers and thepeoplU generallry com- bow they should spend their next hollidaylof invasion, or*to bej^med to otir army in
fT„cgallarit
of value by the clipping and sweating pro- monthly disbursements cannot be less than
cess, but they'will come out without a pre $2U0jQDa The rapidity with which vessels
mium. "lars being overhauled and repaired is fre
., --,. I quently .astonishing.
A N_„Y APOSTLE IN TH E SHGNAN-j Gov. Toi has notified the people of Ohio
DOAHi that if the? State's quota of troops is not
raistd in forty days, drafting will be resorted
to
??.n?ral
saying, iepenl yo, for (he army
?jP 1'{on °f '0'
a lighted candle, emerging from a certain I 4, And the same John had his suite about!had lived under the stars and stripes.''
hole in the ground, like ants from a vial of,h5m'
a a
molasses, profaning fearfully.and vainly seek- quarters, athd his meat wa* gathered from thejj.it for the.war or go to work ia fliemarvest
ing for the man who "pulled up the ladder,"
of
found. Concluding they had been sold in'Loudon, and all the counties round about tha country was never in g'-euter demand or
the miners! Sulphcr Spring
6. And were sworn of him upon the con
stitution, confessing their sins of secession.
7. But when he saw many of the blab
bers and brawlers come unto his orJjal^hc
said unto them, "O, generation of vipers,
who hath warned you to fleo from the wrath
one crowing in the wilderness—pre
ye the way for the Pcp3 make hii ptthsjan.1 that before h.3 died he requested the old
straight. jlhg to be brought, that ho mi^ht die as he
?v«:3 '.-::*
WHOLE:fflJMBER- see.
(f I'M 107? Si
B55
A leUer frtm Gasinltar of tht* 30th of
May,„_}_f*hei!rebeJ=8fer 8tfr_pter was
was--a*illriniportj .fvnd'irKf -sold, as reported
j» tKeErigland papers.sdi i& ttruq
The '-Orfy-'dT ^Mv^Ybrf^forfiverpool*
to6U S609/O0TJ specie:* And the Borus
eia? fe* SJu8i!f_rpfon* ^ftd'^Hamburg, took
$22S,0OO»in speci^
exploits'of 'the Irish officers
and regiments fn,!the American war are
eagerly.c,opibd'byJtlle papers' \aTlrefand, and
Urtitf^fflmm &'$$ hero is
proudly narrated. This''has already stim
ulated a powerful tThibn fpplyi^ throughout
the entire etmritrry.
ODB lads look ex-Presidents Tver's son
prisoner near Harrison's Landing last week,
lie Was upon thd silver mounted saddle
Odn.'*Rcqtt took ffom Ssnta:An'^and pres
ented to (he late et-President.
THE rush of businessestill continues at
the 'Brooklyn na'\y yard. There are now
some 3700 men employed everyday, and the
AM AGED COUP:,E BCMED TOGETHER.—
his wife, ninety seven, died recently in Corn
ville, Maine. They had traveled life'sjour
ncy together, about seventy years, and wera
buried in one grayi\
SAM HOUSTON AGAIN DEAD.—The Boston
Pot says: "A gentlonun who arrived in
this city or Saturday, from Texas, states
that Gen. Sam Houston is positively d?ad»
&cf3iellan sadlle for his head-- Ifti.sns, go to work—do something. En-
dwellers in Virginia. Jfi. M. Your country demands yourscrvices,
Then went oat to him Fauquier n:vl -font cry out "hard time?," far the muscle of
better paid for.—Pj-e,s.
SUICJDE.—A, largo Newfoundland dng in
Chicago committed suicide a few davs ago by'
jumping from a third storv window, on ac
count of the Mayor's pr„amalion ordering
the destruction of all dogs after the 'first of
(July. -No uog minis city will ever be found
guilty of a like act. ." :uvm
WELL DONTE.—-William B. P-obasco,Esq.,
of die well Lnown firm dri'yle'r, Doiicisoa
& Co., Cincinnati, gives three young men in
their employ $1,200 and guarantees them
their situations after the war, for the pur
pose of aiding them in raising companies for
the war. There ought to be a number of
such men in this city.
Tun cost, of raiding soldiers under differ,
ent State authorities vary much. Tn Mich
igan 1,00J men cost $2^000 In Iowa,
1,000 men cost $27,S35 in Illinois, 1.000
men cost $12,603 in Wisconsin, 1,000 men
cost nearly $100,003. There must have been
a "heap of plunder" in the latter State.
A few days ago a baby was taken to chnrca,
to be baptized, and his little brother was pre
sent during the rite. One following Sunday
when baby was undergoing his ablutions and
dressing, tho little brother asked mamma if
jnt0
*"k'J
0
0
the strategic movement which I am not at i'evt *so," hiccupped Samuel "and between
liberty to describe should be followed by ab'
ant mc
0 a
7 Willie to bo christen
0
mo'tar
9 0 eo
jjj,a
IIOKOS COJTFECRED ox A Doo.—Captain while engaged in war, are feeding not only
Allen, of the New Hampshire, Third regi- our own armies but Europeans.
Bov SoiABEBS.—During one o{ the late
battles at Richmond Union boy, about
fourteen years old. brou-ht in a rebel of hlsfkdy, "you see,-my father died detested, and
own age, and asked at the quarters "where 'e*{ several little infktels, and I want io be
tbe priso**erT»bo_ld be taken." On b_ing]appoiotci their executioner.'' -s^"h
told thai he must be lodged at a certain place] A Foagfo* BuciMKSrT—_ fJimrBAtnt TO
not far'-distant, the two Hrtle fellows walk- iCo_»Asi.—Hi* proposed to ra«e a regi
ed oft" together with their arms folded round ment of foreigners resident fn (his city, to
,e*ch other like jolly schoolmates consulting act either as a protection to the city in"case
—Escniay P»t,. Virginia. The regiment 'm to be*command-
«doa,t
I
8 a
baptized
twice?" "What!" returned tho j'oung rea
soner, with the utmost astonishment in his
earnest face, "not if it -don't talc the first
time P*
"Wjivy Samuel I am astonished said a
very worthy acon. Didn't we take you
short time since "I be-,
&
W
cvc
'r
a
S8 h« deadest take in you
heard of."
will find the effect it woufd not be judicious Tnt: reports from Europe .are that the
in me toset forth will produce a consequence'grain crops will probably be short.. That ia
which the War Department denies me the good news for us. The hunger of the West
privilcdge of developing. ern w«rs i^ a pledge for their good behav-
aj nz
i5ps,
balls in two places. lie is now on furlough g^jg
with his master in Manchester. A a
gjgj jj^j.
WCf
GOOD 1 New York Pott pleads
earnestly that the many hundred assessor-
as^iant a**e«,*r»uip» and collector.
a I Mw a
be
a 0
a W is is
a tht a
,.
flitd W a
a 0 tht) a a 0 a
fully avaided l_nkig their country's battles,
but are clamorous of reward.
A old lady walked into the office of a
Judge of Probate, in Massachusetts, and
aeked
"Are you the Judge of Reprobates
"I am tb» the Jn^lge of Probite."
"Well that's it I expect," quoth the oia
ed by Col. Jerome Garibaldi, a nephew of
Ksw Vena, Jury 2G. fjttlyfjjhe*^ wfwwe-rrival wwhioticcd in the
Tbe*tean»hip Great Eastern sailed thkmigcrprf99 dav* since TnrtfcSonel is
tnornm,forLiverpool taking $600,000 wKftrtfring tft*W*«rrr authorfzltioii from
specie. Wtebmtten.—X. Y. Ify'sti.