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PIONEER AND DEMGDCRA’I‘. ~, ,777‘_-“.___.V-..——__—w~v————»~ ,_ 7 ~ "-7 _ ._ 7.:V—:rr:m_m @EVZDTEE Ti? ‘TG’JE UMWWEQ‘TS ©T" W;‘-\‘§"rfllfl©?©ffl “TERE3T©TEV9 PQLUTUQS‘S; EBTQQJW’EDTQ RUTNE“), £fl© @EMQAIL UMTWQE, :xp:__~.._.___—~~— —--~*'*'m"W"“ “w—-~—;;-~ —~»~-~---—-——~-- , H ...7 ~ 7 , , VOL. V. . (I): Want nub 13mm. 15 PUBLISHED 05' EVERY FRIDAY “ORSISG By EDWARD FURSTE. ”7—.— _. gum—mm ABWQME. For on par. 'l'lflll mm by mail or mken at the route,“ 00; Km mx “rumba, $3 00. Singlu WM”. 25 «nu ‘ Na paper lull be d'lnmmlnucrl, unhws at "I: olel. v! the pmpriehr, uulll all arranges un- mid. BATES 0F ADVERTISING. "'.' um.(l2llnelorleu),threulunnium, 5. '0 ovndeizlnnsl imrtiun.. . . . :1. mm! dedmelonuudc to yearly Idvcrtlu‘n. I“. m‘ner uf lu‘crtlffnl mutt be ulintinflly mnrked on “mm of Idyertm‘menh sent us, or Hwy will be gonflnned tlll fvrbnl nml: lmrgvd accordingly. Lr. nsnau. Hui-Ann Emu... “2 ; WW" .1"? :refi‘ln (Mr fll-‘funr‘hém. is Ifihur‘izllgl ":1" "' ° “Her irn I . menu-in Calilm-nin. p ' ‘5 ““4 Idvcnue. ’._.______ x ‘ PDETEEY; “Via-ob! [ll¢ {olluwlng nuldlmc odr tn (he Dolly, ls {rum my I‘ll anthology, wd wu wrlmn by the celebrated men. Thin pram in mid to have bcnn tranalnled hm y. , lw order of the Ifnlpcrur, an; ls hung up. mmdln gold. in the ll'mple of Jednln. It by Iln been unnamed law thr- Chlmwc and 'l‘unur ”mg“, wrilu-n on n plm‘k‘ of rich milk. and suppen- Min the llnperlnl Palace .1 l'rkln. It «as Immun d in» hull-I, In fullown. by Dr. Bowrinn. nnd i< all ”have 100'. nun-I! o! in oriximl luau? l. ' the million. I! I! n "(w vinyl-4950:, Ind A mid M w : ‘ - .. . . ”and and commit ._ lunar) y eur) read" 1‘ 0 Tnov Efulxu. 0::le \\'hv-Ie presence blight HIM doll: occflpy. nll motion guide; L'mhgmgvd through Time's all donut-Hm fight. Manly and! There is uu (‘.nd began: Doing nlwvo all Lclngs! ml; My one! ‘ Whom none can comprehend uml none explore, no llll'lt existence will: Thyself alone— hbnclng Ill—Arnmmrfing—ruling oh" ”when: we cull Had—and be now no more ! lalh sublime research. philusuphy I” mum on! the ovum deep—quay mum. “All!!! at the aun'n rap—4l:! God ! for 11102 M b no weight not measure—none can mannt Up in thy myrteriu; Reunif- brlnhtel! walk, I” kindled by Thy light. in vain may try To «me thy rounu-ls. lnllnltl and dirt; And [Night la 1.»: o‘er (bought cnu sou no hlgh, Em like put moments ln cumily. has final yrlmeul nothingnm dld'nt ml HM, ohms—then exlswuce—Lold, on Thee nullity ha It: {madman—all m forth Irom mew»! light, juy, lumen], Hulda—l“ lite, I“ beauty Thine. , Thy lard emu-d I", und Mb flute; Thy splendor am nil space with my: divine. M m, and wm. wt] ulmll M! Uluflou! Grunt! We (Mag. life sustaining l‘oleumle! Thy Clflll’ll the unmeasured linker-v- uuflonnd“ Cpllld by The. by Thee imle with brmh ! M II» human); with the end but hound, And beautifully mingled life Ind don-M hlwb mount upward: from 0.211: flcry hlazo, Soul- are born, so world. spring funk from Thee; m u the mngln in the sunny run, Shine round the diver mow. the paguutry or Mum'- bright army gum“ lu Thy ,rnbe. A mlllion ton-her. Hymn] Ivy Thy Land, Wild" nnwemied through tho blue IH‘II'. The] "n Thy powet, wcomplirh Thy command, All guy um: life, all eloqurnt with him. What slat” I. call them I Film 0! crysul “gm? A 3mm enmpnny of golden bur-mu? hp: 0! celestial ether burning my.” blight. spam with their joybul bum! But MAO those. at u the noon to night! “gun-drug: of water In the sea, All thl- mgnlflcuno in The in lost; “In! m u: nus-wand world: compared to Thee '.' “(will In: I. nun! lloaven'l unnumbeml host, M multlplled by myrluuh. Ind Amyed 1- ‘II the [lOl7 at albumen thought. lit-n mm In the balance walghul ‘lhk Thy (re-Incas: I: - Cypher brought Whammy. What an 1, men? Naughl! Outer! Yes, Thy wisdom and Tlry ward Cid-ll Thou mum at llh And good! Mqlmol my lplrfl and my Lord! “V “w. Thy love, In thelr bright plrnltuda “H u with an Immortal wul. to Ipflna 0!! h thy- ul Death, Ind bade ll wear 'l'h mm. of eternal any, Ind wln; Mun-l, light beyond mm mm when. In '0 “I Nauru—lo Thee—m wuwr there. 0! though! imbue! 0! vlqlo: bled! M Within: our cancuption 11l of Thee : , “‘.‘“ h! Ihldowed lungs fill our brunt, ‘N m it. lining! to the Daily. 0"“ Willow my lowly thought- can sou ; Think Thy pmw-Belng who Ind 300 d ; ‘Mhy vat worn. Adulre. obey. Ida" : " m “It tome In eloqmm nu man. “Hull lhll npuk in learn of unmade. A Bum—One of our Secretaries of the State for the United Sm", struck out a N made of getting rid of In intruder in ‘ Pll't-icnhr cine, It. appears that the doorkeeper of the Secretary's office In '.'".hbly Obliging, which proved quite the thing (or an ollce-seeker, who mnnagod “get in every day and bother the Secm‘ “’1 When the annoyance had continued‘ than or four days, the secretary stopped 3 'MM morning to tho doorkeeper, and "I! whether he knew what that man! “aeafter daily, \ Y's.” replied the functionnry, “In of-: "f. I suppose.” ‘— 1 Aims; but do you know what omen?” A o. “in ’53" :11, than I'l .. I tell you- I , Ie wants your The meetin next. morniu , between the‘ Miter lid the politegdoorkeepcr _ il‘ ‘0 '0 hue been rich, from the peculiar Film in which the intruder u- informed, In! Sectetu-y is not. at home!" I " ' ~ - my . :1 3‘ Mrs. Thorn, of Pub.) Altoh‘lhémlii I“. fecemly hung hem]! and chA-r to u' ““50 her husband r‘efnscd to take 1 l‘ ball at Jonesvillc. _ OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON TERRITORY, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1857. i From the I’etersbutg unit-u». llnteresting Ike-tum“ Revolutionary ‘, Men. i In the immediate vicinity of the spot il'rom which I address you these lines, liee~ ttown, Jefferson county, Virginia, are the ‘idilnpiduted and antique residences of' three 'lidislinguished Major Generals of the Ameri- Ijenn revolution. Within a radius of one; imile end a half lived long and weary iyenrs, Charles Lee, the sinister hero of .lMonmonth, Horatio Gutcs, the loser of "the battle of Camden and the Sonthcrui [,campuign ; and Adam Stephen, the early iifriend of \VASLHNGTOX. In this little vil~i lingo, on whose golden forests I am gazing ,(—nuder the shadows of the great. woods ‘there—rcmoto from camps and the fluehiugi ‘world, these three warriors rusted out thet remainder of their lives in inglorious re !pose, their swords in math eaten scubbni'ds,i ino more to be drawn. Here, if I mistake ,‘not, two of them died, and soon even these ilingrering memorials of theln will crumble iond disnppenr, as their figures are fading front the general mind ! ‘ ' Lee‘s house is a hundred pnces from the ‘little assemblage of houses called by his ‘nnme, and is an oblong btflding of static, iwith chimneys at each end and midway— ilow, \\itli u rude porch, depending, as it were, above the rough floor, and a few out lhouses. Gates lired somewhat further from the town, in a plain, undecoruted building ; and Stephen occupied a mansion, built probably by the earliest pioneers of' the valley, in which everything is small and confined but the fireplace. But that is neither small nor confined ; it is grand— enormous. Around it how many good companions must have gathered in the olden day, and what.ounds of revelrysliook tho rafters over head. You may read of , Adam Stephen in Spnrk’s edition of the ‘ writings of Wasmseron, and there you ‘ will find that, among the hardy gentlemen t who stood shoulder to shoulder with the 1 young chiet’ nt Winchester, when the Indi- , ans roruged the ”Hey it hundred years ' ago, was Lieut. Stephen. A lauded pro~ ‘ pricier hereubouts, ie doubtless resented the trespass of the Indians upon his grounds, stretchin towards the foot. of . the grout North ionutein—nt least we know that he did good service. He was afterwards an elective officer of the revolu tionary struggle, but left the army about the period of the battle of Princeton, dis gusted with something or other—end so come hither and lived and died. ‘ 0f Gates and Lee more is known. The story of the wonderful quarrel of' the letter 1 with Wnalnoros at Monmouth, you may t read in full in the recently published third 4 volume of Irving’s great work. It is prob able that. history will show that Lee was not so much in the wrong no the world ' supposed. That: he made n blunder in ‘ ordering his forces to retreat—and that lthis retreat very nearly ruined all the plans ‘of Wssms'cron, and lost as the bottle— this is certain; but it was probably on error ol'jndgment—not u want of' courage. In Lcntz's great picture, he sits his horse snllcnly before the chief, whose hot anger flames out. All that he did and said utter was sullen, too, unfortunately. High words —-indignnntcorrespondence. WAsuixut-ox, cold and hlughty—Leo ruging‘; then u court martial—suspension for u year—and Lee, in utter disgust, threw up his com mission, und come hither “to hoe tobucoo —thot being the best school for I General,” he said, with u sneer ut WAssxxorel. And here, in this Lpoor and obscure dwell ing, as I have sui , rusted out the sharp s irit of Lee, and fell into dust and oblivion. iglth few neighbors—no friends—sur rounded by hounds and horses, and making the chase is only occupation nearly—thus lived the Genet-nl, Ind died. One day, long afterwards, lays o tradition of the neighborhood, stmstrron sent his old adversary a note, saying thut he would cull on I certain morning and see him—that he hoped all past. contention and bitterness bud been forgotten—he was coming to see him u on old comrade in arms—u o friend. ! 0n the day fixed for the visit, Lee sent ‘nwny all his servants, pieced upon the :locked front door e psper with " No meet cooked here to-dny,” written thereon, end then followed his servsnu, lensing Wsen ”xerox to knock in vein. He never re< iturned ; end, with the passing your, the ieccentrie soldier grew more morose end irepelliug. The ground floor of his house ‘Wos divided by chslk lines merely, forming thus four compertments. In the first he kept his books ; in the second wss his bed; his saddles and hunting-gear in the third ; the fourth was used for s kitchen. He could thus sit in one spot, hesaid with grim humor, and overlook his entire household. Tired of his dogs and his silent misuuthro {’y nt hut, he cammeueed his Queries, olitieol sud lilitsry, sn nttockou Wm morox ; but the world declined listening to him ; and then, tired of life, the cyn‘ual spirit of Cherles Lee fled to other realms. His last words were : “Stood by me, my lbrsvo grsusdiers l" and so he ended. | A word now of the third of my tried ofl ‘wurriors. Horatio Gates came to the oldi . house yonder after the deelh st Cemdeu—i lthe Gems who had taken Burgoyne—' 1 whose popularity at one time overshadowed, 'Wssumcros‘s. But now, ell-l how felleu! i'l‘he breath of sn indignant public opinion 'hsd blasted him, and his Isnrols were nll {mud end withered. He hsd lost me ibuttle of Csmden—hsd been deposed from ‘ Ihe commend of the army 0! the South, to imske way for Greene ; over his heed low- Icred a heavy cloud of public execrntion i} almost, and Congress, it was said, had pre‘ pared its thunderbolt to strike him. But [the bolt never fell. The sad soldier’s sor irow was respected. They left him to die ‘iu pence here—enough punishment that the jniugnilicent drama of the Revolution was played out, independent of one who had enacted so splendid a part in the earlier iuets. . These three old wooden houses are the . visible remains of three vigorous livesm-in them, to the musing eye, the spirits of Gates and Lee and Stephen hover around them still, speaking in every whisper of lhe pine tree and the oaks—those ancient oaks of Ihe noble. English looking ‘ ehase,’ which murmur yonder beneath the window —~through whose lengthened vista appears the lone mansion ofGenernl Adam Stephen. |Here, within gunshot almost of each other,‘ these men of history reposed—though not, happily, we must conclude—after all their‘ struggles. The current of the Opequou, resonant in old days with savage shouts, and dyed with blood, murmured by them, and perhaps spoke to their minds of other days—typifying human things which ever bud and tLow, and change like the skies of autumn yonder—the gorgeous leaves whose colors vary with each day. —————<o>—~-- »-——- Revonnmxnav hummer—The hero oi the following thrilling story was embodied in the person of a stout blacksmith, eye, an ihumhle blacksmith, but in his stout frame, hardened with toil, throbbed as generous ‘an impulse of freedom as ever beat in the masons of Lafayette, or around the heart of mad Anthony Wayne. It was in full tide of the retreat that a follower of the American camp, who had at least shouldered a cart-whip in his coun try’s service, was dragging a baggage wa gon from the field of brittle, while some short distance behind is body of continen tnls were pushing forwhrd with a body of British in pursuit. The wagon had arrived at a narrow point of the by-rond leading to the south, where two high banks of rocks and crsgs, srislng on either side, aflorded just space‘ suflicicut‘ior the passage of the baggage wagons, and not an inch more. His eyes were arrested by the sight of a stout, muscular man, apparently some forty years of ego, extended at the foot at‘a tree at the very opening of the pass. He was clad in the come attire of a mechanic. His coat had been flung aside, and with his shirt sleeves rolled up from his muscular am, he lay extended on the turf with his rifle in his grasp, while the blood poured in a torrent from his right tog, which was bro ken at the knee by a cannon ball. The wagonw’s sympathies were arrested by the sight. He would have paused in the very instance of his flight, and placed the wounded blacksmith in his wagon, but the stout-hearted m refused. “I’ll not go into your wagon," said he. in his rough way/fiber. I‘ll tell you what I will do. Do you see yonder cherry tree on the top of that reels that hangs over the road? Do you think you can lift a man of my build up there? For you see neighbor,” he continued, while the blood flowed down from his wound, “I never meddled with the Britishere until they came trampling over this valley and burned my house down. And now I’m all riddled to pieces, and haint got more than fifteen minutes in me; but [lve gotlthree balls in my cartridge-box. and so just prop me up against that tree, and I’ll give the whole three shots, end then," exclaimed the blacksmith,“l’ll die.” The Wagoner started his horses ahead, and then with a sudden alert dragged the wounded man along the sod to the foot of the tree. His face was to the advancing troopers, and while his shattered leg hung over the bank, the wagoner rushed on his way, when the doomed blacksmith proceed ed coolly to load his rifle. ‘ It was not long before a body of Amor iceu soldiers rushed by with the British in pursuit. The blacksmith greeted them with a shout, and, raising his rifle to his shoulder, he (picked the oremost from his spirited stee , with the exclamation— “Thst‘s for General Washington !" In a moment the rifle was reloaded, and again it was fired, end the pursuing British rode over another of their fullen ofllcers. 'l‘lmt’s for myself,” cried the blacksmith, and then, with a hand strong with the feel ing of approaching death, again loaded, raised his rifle —flrod his last shot, and an other soldier kissed the sod! A tear quiv ered in the eye of the dying bleeksmith. | “And that,” he said, with a hm, voice, lwhich strengthened almost into a shout, Vie for mad Anthony Wayne!" i Long after the battle of the Brnndywiue ‘was past, the body was discovered a niust ,the tree, with the features frozen in death, smiling grimly, while his right hand still "grasped the nevenfaiiiag rifle. I " A'nd um. died on of the mound bravo‘ mechanic heroes of the Revolution; bmve‘ ‘in the hour of battle, nudtuuhd in um hour of retreat, and undisnayod in a» non aunt of duck. \ ll The Whigs of the South- l ' The Washington l'niun, in an nrtit-le t adilrcsml to tho \Vhiga of the South, ni'irr. ‘lrecitinfi the full of the National \\'hig PM“ City byjboiition, and the llopcit‘Saltuss of til; ~',reunion 3 the Northern and Southern; F, wll‘ r' 'ii' 5 the following advice: I ll “it wen” to m, therefore, tlmt tlr ' Whigs of the South have this, am; only; Ithit, nltcrnn‘iro beiorc than in lh-- present, L‘lcrisis: They are to chome whether llicyl :H will unite with the Whig pnrty ofthe .\'orth,l ‘."o‘7 indentificd with the nlmiitioziilts, who, a; have declared an interminable and exter ‘lininntirg war against the whole South g‘n'ho dcnounrc the connitution an “a com ,lpnct with hell," solely because it rcuog» ll nisrs and protects the rights of both whigs " and demon-rats in the sluvcholding States— ' or with the democracy of the North, who, i whatever may be their nb~lrnet opinions, . have on all occasions respected thocc rights, and still stand ready to sustain them ' against the assaults of nboiitiouized Whig ' gery. This is the alternative, and let them 1 choose. Let them beware of vague dee _ larntions and platforms without bottom, , either signifying nothing or intended only : to deceive, concocted at Whig-abolition ' know-nothing conventions at Philadelphia, Cleveland, or elsewhere. Let them look , to their nets, not their professions. They ‘ ought to know by this time that there is but ono national party—the democracy— and that there is no other now in oxiatnnoo that. will stand by them in rolling back the ware of fanaticism in which every other party is now completely immersed. Above all, let them beware of the know-nothings; ’ disguise themselves ns‘they will, the cloveu foot appears. 'l‘hcy on only abolitionists and npostute Whigs or democrats in disguise, l and a masked enemy is of all others the ‘ most dangerous. We repeat, the alternar ‘ tive in before them, and let them choose.” I We entirely agree with the Union in the i picture it draws of the Whig party. It I has broken down, utterly and forever, be- 5 neath the overwhelming force ofnnti-sluvery. I For many years it tampered with abolition, 1 and nursed it in its bosom, yet, unstained , by the mighty influence of Cut and War area, it held together. But the demon hon risen upon their graves, and blasted the ‘ ob'octs of their laboro, hopes, and otruggioo. ’ Alliliation with Northern Whiggory now, i is impossible for any man or party in tho Sout‘hv.’ thatél‘ilon lam range oeronTth orn . on o o no f Unionfllflto ml for twbenioc’rilh: Party, and fearful of its overthrow, adviooo thorn to unite with “tho Democracy of the North." Will they heed the advice? 1 Now, every argument, every fact, which . the Union urgoo to allow that the Northern 1 Whig Party io unfit for Southern moda tion, appiioo to the “Northern Democracy.” What in their pooition? It in noodlooo to oito the past, when the preunt, with it: momentum isauoo, il upon an. The Deno- . erotic Party at the horth wno certainly | true to the South and her constitutional i righto. When the war of abolition broke t out, they stood faithfully and monthly by , no. In agitation which follows tho I iutrodnc ofAnli-Slavery petitions into 1 Congress, they made common com with 1 the statesman of the South. Nor did they 1 yield, until, man after man, they were col. down atheino by the omvard sentiment of , abolition, and until the South itooli' aban- - doncd its own cause, and loft them oxpoooil - to tho shaft: of fanaticiall. Ilia o truth ' . thich cannot be concealed or denied, that I bad the South been true to hemlf in that early struggle; had she Ere-outed to tho 1 . North the simple iuuo w ich her Cannons I . so strenuously urgod, of abooluto nonintor {crouco with slavery, or diooaion, and ana- , bled her friends at tho North to fight abo- , lition on that alternative—she would have . cruohod it than fororer, and saved horoolf, I and tho country, from on agitation which I have oince rent it. But tho Democrat: of , the North found thomoelvoo battling for , the South, yet deoerted by her—resisting aggressions upon her conntitntional rights, I to which aha wu already oubmltting, and i , thus, asoail'ed by abolition at homo, and - daoerted by the South they gave of tho . thankless picldal otrugglo. ‘von nn- i , rot—whom reoolutiono, aiming the , rights of the South on tho oobjoct bf olavo- . ry in clear and bold terms, were tho bannor cry of tho staunch Doinocraoy all ovor tho , , North—oven mums, after yearo of ro , oistance, finally abandoned the «one. Tie l , history and memory of ouch men otand II . , living monuments of shame to the weak and , miserablo connlolo that then prevailed, by , which tho South ucrlhced, at one blow, her ‘ righta and her but Moods. Ber conduct ‘ i then taught Northernmon a bitter lesson, . , never to be forgotten. It made thomcaro lean and indifferent to the righto of the ' South, because they now that the South ', honolf Ins indifl'urent. It did more. It taught. them that the South might ho bo [ trayed and trampled upon with impunity. _ It encouraged them in tho treacheronn course, oince oteadily pursued by the North ' to the South, of specious compromises, and ’ lair pledges, made only to be violated. XI ' taught them that she might he appeared . and quieted by the shallow-st quibb es and i concession; But while it enforced those icasono upon her friends, it made her one-| i mics more absolute and intolerant than over, and fanaticism felt that it could pur , one. under cover of the Union, and without , danger to it. its Ichemeo of destruction. . it is needless, now, to trace the consequen ’ice' of the repeal of the Twenty-first itule,] [and Lh'u first snblninaion of the Southl i.\holition has entirely dismembered the] Why”r party. All ndmit this“ Has it spurt-ll the Donlou'ntic! Did this party, ‘ which \\'its so long sound upon the Uonltitu itinnul rights of thu South, not succumb to l‘tin‘ powvr oi'Anti-Sluvery‘.’ Did its Nor- I thorn lenders stnnil firm in the recent storm ’Wilifil has :‘Wept over their suction? The fpth‘iliml and language of its li-ndcrn, CASS ‘nnil hornmss, in the Northwest: inst full; [furnish the reply. Appnllcd by the force inf .\nti‘b'luvery, they pronounced the Nubrnsku Knnsns Bill n Free-Soil menanre; nnd Uuncrul Cnss asserted lhnt under it slavery could not enter these Territoriee unless first established by low—n construc tion fatal and perlidioue to the South. Nor did these concessions to Abolition are l them from its inry. Gonerul CASS has been I inslructed by the Legiulnture of his own I Stnte to vote for Abolition measure; Gen~ I erul Sumtns has been turned out of hit lent l in the Senate for voting for the Nebrenkee ‘ Knnsue Bill. The Democratic party, nll l over the North, has been overwhelmed. Ind ‘ a majority of eighty-six in the House ofi Representatives hue been enpplnnted by In 1 almost unnnimonl delegation (Tom the I North pledged to the whole programme of Anti~Slnvery. Is this not all true? Has not the Democratic party It the North uho ed the into of the Whig? Whnt In- I pééfi'r benefits, thorelore, does uifilintion I with it oiler to the South? Cue it bent. i hack Abolition? Suppose I coeiition be tween lts Northern and Southern whip oeu succeed in electing n President, will it ‘ thereby lessen the {one of Abolition in the ‘ North? Will it not be only postponing ‘ the ”evil dny?," If "the Demoerucy o! 1 the North" were in A condition to relly any 1 power It home,—it’ their laden, Gun 1 and others, had not deserted the‘ Sonth—- 1 then the wunmls oftho Union might have I some force. But when it eppeern the: the . Democratic party bu become nbolitioniud. I like the Whig. or lutpotent for support. to g the South, in it not the madnes- oi'folly for 1 ‘Southern Whigl to rely ntdn them? The 1 true and only course for t e Whig: o? thh 1 South to purine, in to unite with the Demo creta of the South, upon the Georginnrnln I form,—in 3 common “on to b In Southern Union. lfthere be u puny et 1 the North rend to recofllu her rights, the unnamed, they on t u come to '.‘ udthe South, lfeheenubnhqitt the ma .1 °flmlwtgvmttoA . ' e mpe e ve—g-oulßl‘h or . ‘ union. By he: 5 bonus& on 3‘! like the prdltlom whether the‘ thrice-m 1‘ Mewithberexhteneo.‘ Shellie. i Union “podbleuhe flint-”rem-n‘ her-elf. "Our rights in the Union, orb! ‘ dependence out of il.", Let this be the ‘ motto of Sonthernmen‘ of n_li Men: ‘ ‘ ‘ -.—<.._——-—. ‘ can: lend]: ellle muttgi The hnnuhold books, at we»! ' nmonget mnny thing: thntnremdflrm i hie, cont-in much thnt'bem “WI? 1 the eupernfitione whieb ttell 45“ currently um. ‘ The Bald-ye Qt! Aymb. unkind-In polm ‘ the Britt-h MIA-nun czar Isz 1 plea of whet were, It on ti ', m , ‘4 .1 mm in commie many; ”he M lamented the-enema. w." lit-mix 1 To 8. a a trap-motel ‘your eye vi mdo “(”1)”: i 7b nah Mal ”’lth hrt u ‘M—i- Toke In barb. and Wain” w.“ Mark “W'- -.: :..;I.::'('.. For Era—Ml: ml hi thotonzhly done, then Iklmfi flu fl”? nuoint the eye: when you go to bad. " ‘ To Set SIM S' Mia—mi.“ ment of the gtll‘yof :‘bnllo It!!! the “(3M- . 1' henna, ad nnoylt your cyan. . z . For an Mum—Nisan“ d bond. and write this than word. Maul". Alter tho, be "it, at than: V Cnlindnn, Cnllndnnt. ' To 80: Wm:.-—Tnkn Antn’ e“! M the blood of n white henn‘ mynt flit {we therewith, and I'll!“ H'M [We' wonder whnt‘lfw ' ’ .A perfume manna! helm m n! thu flan-wort and violin-root. and ‘ nnd mllcllt, "Hianw-t. all it availabkfw ”We. _ ‘ Tn nah Folk: nae-4 Black—lnt 018 011110 into n lump, Ind pnt thereto no powder of ground glint, Ind Il‘lu l! “It'd all tint be about wlll neon Nut u hyp tinns. .. . . - 15 pub the Fun Fin—Tm tho M m of A pig. Ind tln yolk of n hall-build egg; nix thou wall motion Ila limb dried bny or Intel lent. powder, ad m it to the face. ‘ V , Charm for that Mac are Mad. Mm. or Beast—Tho h-lr being out all, by botany to the mould ol tln head : than vrlu th vordt on n plea. of W“ Autnnbngoo, Tegrngrnmmnton.” And give the put, so diseased. Tu Pram! (be [hit f ram Faaini q".— ITukc the ushcs which you hue o tuned Iby burning the skin of n serpent, mix that lwell with the fat of a bear. and anoint the lhend. Ital.- 801 l leeches in I new pot, innd collect the scum, anointing whnt put {you please. ‘ To make Marley Spent Mara—Mike I ‘gurse of mole’s skinne, Ind write in It \ eelnbnb, helm. Cuiphu, with the blood ‘0! t bum; and lay I good penul- ln tho high uni: for the space of uni-1| and m luigms, uml urwr put in in the purl; ud Iwhon you will give it, uy, ' Yuk cl Vito! NO. 12. iulghly llaortlnt flagellum—M ‘ cm or Grum- Mary. The New York Time: hu 3 apecinl dil patch from Washington tint given some important information a to negotiltionl in progress between our government and thlt of .\‘cw Granada: The President has cans cd to he submitted to the government of New Granada I formal proposition for the cessiou to the United Slntes of muuioipd control over the Panama Railroad route. lhe cities of Aapinwnll and Pnnaml und I strip 0! the territory though uhlch the road plum, lullciently wide to inure the pro tection of the route from future violencc. The precise form of the propoeed ceeeioo has not transpired. The desired object may be secured either by an shsointe ces sion of soverci nty and territorisl domuin, by e lease of the territory to the United Siltee perpetually, or for a term of years, with the right to exercise undisputed mu nicipal control over it—or by e. eimpie treuty stipulation that the United Stntet shuii have the right to stetion o mililsry force upon the Isthmus eofloieet to ph serve order and protect the trensit route. It is a mistake to supgoso thet either of these pro ositioue con ict with the Cieyton Buiwer lgenty, which uppiiee to political and not geogrephieei Centrel Algeria, and therefore has no reference ”New th~ nadu. From such informstion se 1 con tether. I em satisfied that the President's propoei tion in not for en sbsoiute ccssion of sover eignty end territoriei dominion upon the Isthmus. but [or e tmty Mame of perfect midpol power t , ‘leh restrictions upon the power oil-the I‘m _ Government olNew Granule with reference to the ’l‘rsnsit route seehs'il give to Wis fed, with respect thereto,- tree: emetse 1e! til the powers ofssmnigety In the p teetlou sud develop-est of America leg tsreste, without yielding no the sctusl sow; ereignty by none. In short, we ere tn' have the enhetence of the thing without the nsnte. The National Isstdfignav, m to the sene‘sebjeet, .phm- w comm-om costume-0.13m” the Reiko-d Home; I! ‘ the Pscile, doubtieus, directed mg of our covenant u the W 0 vista; eooe lee- by ”but.“ u... eitheu M’hihl yell es tender tum“ } an" M "W . " ”m'h‘i'gm' a; ' use. b' ’ ' , _ V inseam-evens wet the . Govern-en el NW ass-eel ' ‘ ‘or WJMW . 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Isl-ed LW""‘ nine, end nouns ve‘ m” it "nibble for the W. . * hen been Mulls!» I“ . . imriementl :3 th e “I. eh cat, s 0 ‘ horn-nee hut-g sste u"- it will the M 1“, not “find to to the W 9! ‘s' Peel-"lo” to roce to W proliect the Interests 1! w I ' . _ ...V -' at: .3- Henry Word WM“ an eye to the meta chum; Rd ‘- iivered e speech (W* ‘b Fennel Hull, Baton, he I!!!“ the heude‘onse umountttm’ 4" (in: I u nm‘ i