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atseam Ten it*". "r D35TWSLL & SPXOE&, EDITORS & PROPRIETORS TIC TVTM 4DVKKT1SKR, fyfLlim IfNT lATOMAT lOUlM^ in TIPTO*. CBDA* CO., MWii EDITOR'S OFFICE COUNTING HOOM U Bwi Tu ni 4| WITH Tat CeMtr neu. TI1XS. Cmt I Tear, paid in advance, |1 50 do. witkia aix month#, 2 00 do, paid at end of the year, 2 Sti LtVcral deductions made te clubs of five or km to *M »ddrtM. H.1TES OF JDVXRTlSim. I sqnare 1 insertion, 91 00 Each additional insert'#, per sqaare, 50 I saaare months, 4 K) 1 de. 0 months, 7 "0 1 de. 1 tear, 0 do. 3 month«, 6 Otil S d«, months, 3 do. 1 y«»r» 1.4 column, one year, 1-2 .i n I U 00 t' 00 2li 00 4* 00 60 00 ct Br*rur m*k**i«|«iare. Ltw, Professional, and other rants, of lite u-irt, it«* p«r y°*r *5' aml 'or eikC® "'h' tioual line, 1. Half yearly and yearly advertise aents to be twin for quarterly ia advance. All a i vertis* menl* published until ordered on!, and chared arc-rin*)el. "~~TIPTON ADVERTISER JOB JS/OFFICE Hirtn# purclia**^ a goo md suffici^rit w (fctioi of material, the I*'ttUsber if »f*w pre bared to do nearly every u^cription «f Z A W i £iUlf TIK& 11 In a «atisfictory manner} and can forn^u at akort notice, Dcidi* Bonds, O I (1 1kl .1 K svery kind eKCc..!»'il wi i.ea!n«-ss a:il des fa'ch ——i Wi:LI.» hPKt.Ui Attorney at -Law AnH Solicitor in Chancery* «f llU« BI1«» mM fc**« w. rt 1 '7". v .»a.ui Iv «. 1 mivi yni-ctitC Tit-MI J0. L. FIAS. (rOkMKKI.T BSf 1'K.iRl*. ri Altonie)' aod C'ouii»t!llor At L§W i lumil) lurt a. cwf. tfi bt* tu* *'!J «t'i »«e r* oi-rtc*-!u kfc# ».«»• •mSAn«t *H*m'wr i v it ?. ryr H. 1'. PIATT, L»w- ATTOHNICV a\i. CVrsaru.o* .\T \I7 ILL Purchase and »elt U«»&1 Cstate, locate W Land Wiirant*, attend to the 1'avinent Ta*e*. lnvestigaii-ri ol title* conveyancing, Sc. l'*rucul»r Aiftuwou io 11-cuon*. All b'jK»u«M intr^UKl to car •. will b.- attc-udod with Piomp'.ue*a awl Fidelity. Office in ihc tjourt House witfi tue He corner, 'li^ton, Iowa. •. TRATM. J- cii.niHM. THAYEa Jt CARSKADDKN f|i)0 'U Gt^icrAl Land AcentP, Mu*/ "«. Burneti i Book Mart, OjfU* ovtr Btond Streift. I If UOltT. SI. LO\«» 11TSTICKOK mi: PKAC'Kaud Kotarjr Pub s' lit. Tip!"i, lo-\ a. IJXUSr.l, IT OTARV f.iidi U.x-'ie^tei. Iowa. OlSee ntt«^ Office. vinl-iy, join 11U BE it« ATTOHNKYt A N o u n s k i A W a i s e s i e n e n e a I i o n Cedar t/'ou.,ty. Iowa. i A A O N I i tyf nEAI.KK l.\ Dlil I'S V Mll!lSES% Xai1* Vtiul.H, l'aiul', I'ltx. til. -"1, '.ro'.-eriea. Candiea, !'»». Hardware aad Notions.— riptoii. Iowa. "1 _____ J, H. 00WEB, BROTHER & CO A N K 1 1 I S O E A E S I N E A N E k s i LAND AtiWTS. ^Pfrner of Clintoa aud \Vaafc:n?ton ?*ree nbv: ly t-"V CHARLES NAELLE Y. WIIOLr.SAI.r AN I1 MTMI 1 in ITAIKR BOOTS 8L fcHOE-, .111 ktmls of Hhicr 8feo« Findings, SaddU ry, Hard Ware, Collars and Hamoa. .Vain Sired. .Muscata*, Iowa, H*MU* «M. «..*«»»r«. fattf l« his k»rKVMa v«ll iu.fi t* IMNHI ikdr I n- PETEK r. SMITH, BooK-riMiiER !ii 1$I.an« Iuiok /ou'« Avr+itf, oypetite Po*t Oftiee. Mvioiliiw iipaUirs third »tor). rrintuig, Killing anil Bind ing of every description oM-cuti-dto onlii intue best otjic, on abort uoticf, ifid «u rwuouable terms. ... JS0" lllaak Books constantly oa hand. Old tooka rebound took binder's utock for sale. MM. -fi CLOVER HOl'SS, f. L. DOWXI^CJ, proprietor forarr of Wnlnutaml Stfonti Mrffts, Mi him: 10* A S^OAe* ot tb« fi^wn 4MB Htac* 1.IBM. •kmigr. B- (uii UmiiOkut* __ OOILV1E IIOVtB. Corner of Water Street w! Iowa .fpr 've. nvji Opvntit* the lintlroad IHpol, Muscatmt. Ion a. «EOKSE LOW, Proprietoi. rl^HK 'aoi'fciKi'wH, *u.cuU A jibuve |t.i]»uiyr Ht't'il, and rtsf'iriiiflhed *t iu OUAlrn^ut ko4 t»f» IHIUIh' IlldlHH'' Blkdain ti. »h ii •oitr* »»tlkfnclit»il Tbt out) vffif* i' v V%'r««^rn Compitny eiv to HI IITI. lion** Th« ft A»(I«TOR h»^, lAftfft «m tftliW i'lri i mm 11), TEMPERANCE HOUSE. PATTERSON FLEI!HI!W, TIPT0W, lOWi. A K O U S E BY R. 8. TUCKER. Cor««r U\nHzt ud jefferui 8trwt». low City, Inva. H. T. WfM.I&MS n, i„ it BlOSiSCti? a&'JSS* WlLLUMh A tU'UKi.BEn^KR, Proprietors Waterloo, lows, i U A E 1 JEm TTkt A. ik s y A :sr o E co :n BABTroao, cow*. Incffarattd Jl. I). 181D—C $500,000. THE UNDERSIGN.-1 MUIY IWON AP .OINTE' Ajfeat f«r thisol.i .t 11 rc!i «'•!•.•« ..•muov. prepared to issue po'incson favoratiie tenos WCLI.H f*PI KR, Agent. Oilice in the Court House, Tipton, Iowa. TORONTO STORE. THORN dtf STEIN, Merrhant*. T.'rwt" h:ea. Th" above firm k^tj) cousianily oa ha id a fhll supoly ot Dry Goodie Groceries, Harditart, Clothing, //a't and Cap*, Bonis and Short, And all kind of (kradi needed by the Commuiity HcttLI.EY K Pill MFER, Dentist*, Ct'iar lotra. Have tke pleasure of annnnncin) to the eitf iens of Tipton »nt vicinity, that tLey have made »i rau^'i ni (i* thai ooe.t thi.m will b» in Tip- HI II .,!it Monday iu cai inoritb. ai -p»-nd «,.!• vte«-k iu Hie practice ol their proiexisitMi. A 1 f.p»'ratlonK»'utni^ted to them shall be exe-1 Ca cd in (he »noft w ikmun'iliH raaninT. SIGHT DRAFTS on N\ w Vurk can Iwbsd i tiie |au4j[ ofthe Subscriber in sum* to jnit jMirchaaers Certificates ol Depisit, and Diaits on the Office over Swetland un! Snyder'* lore WM. H. ITTHII.L I Tipton. Ian iarv 1, 'SO. jAliK» W. DltiLE¥. A'PTtl." 1BV AT UW, and JtMti'.a of the i'eace, Tijd^n, low a. g-y-Offi-e with the Ccim'y Jud^e in th C.iTirt H»u.-e. [2-') WIIJJtN I KK, BOOH BINDBTl, Ci'v .„• doer .— I 01 (!,»-'I 1)lank Books, of all kind* keptconrtant-, ly on ha!..!. Cb'.inties supplied with all 1 k i S o.* I,lank'' Recoirts and other btwlts tor County oificef, at short notice, 1 ncartx. D1RFCE lb DE4LKRS IN Culleru F'in y (ioodi and loys. OITut Ik 'nWI H! Nl T*n *e*T «lt •t.»ia ««s» »ti« n»»* AT Particular attention ^s?«u to all ainas i a i y DK. X. H. Tl'l-I.O«. 8 1 K I E U N K N I S Z*~ oFFICE-wllk Da. O. Gnx. aear Spnagdalc j. j. BiDi a. H. SA^ronn. RIDER & SAN FORD, 1, KKSOaa TO TUTTt.B A Hl'U.. WILTO*, IOWA. Wholesale a'i'l retail (!raler* in DRY (IOODS, «H0rEIES, Etc. Shots, Clothing, I ford ware. and all kind* of agricultural im ilci""iit«. Al-o (ien^ral For»'iwdiuj and Co-umioslou M«r^n^ tb- hitfh"** mirket paioe paid la kind* 01 Farmt-ro' Prxluce. independent XKT C. WOKTHAM. MORTHAM) 4U: Clocks Walrhfv aad Jffwfry, SU.l'ER I'"..'/iI Sl'Et'T.H LES, Cash for n if I V A U I N A Will Afttl Oek» frggH* Ukku 10 mi't it H« U»® Good dimpling. OaalbaM« rooM wni ti jci iLl« U« •I a lo of I be l« rs-?»red furn^'i th'a^s«fnmo It til who un) trftin il, mi BlUELKY HOUSE. O N I U A •#v» llovci. intlt MOI'H* whi»» wa» ln-4 ep«a*'t "5 ot U«C*I« l»« 'r M*y, 1«4 I Wil"*** 'IjJ WAbiu^ koaa. Hi U W»Mrrt wllfc •nllr« iHiatt'l-* Mfrpia# hM b«OM '"1 Mb lb wiii ftdu U» lt« CO**OH* Jobs H. Bireley, Prop'r EDWARDS & CARROLL, hlteot. and buperlntendent s FICB No. 10, Foirth •**/, aft, Uiadjral DavirBl^rt, ftwr*- i* all K I MED- TTST receivr 1.1 Mipplv of I)r. FITCH'S iriN-rs at the H- mdw.iv D-u,' s-"r* A. ClI.BKltT. for lar co. 'MEAT'M iiiiiE'r* By DAN I'AI KAS (Oppodte the Alurich Htiute, Tfpton. Iowa moruiag BEKF can be bad rejtularlv every »c^ T'-nnscash. Sun da J- exre] Wm. M*NrrACftra«fc S',,f D. Ross, Kelc« |M.-H I«»' HV/on, Mweatmt Co., lova. Will practice, on the ElecUc Sy«t,m. at W d on and vicinity. ktOTl' K i y s i i a n s & S u o n permanently Tipton. Au(i- l.ocatMl* i 5- '5ft JAME«C.TI:BSIEI1, s U i i E O practice iM Tipton and Vicinity. Office, la new bui,:«* .HreeUjr Court House, Tipton. I"«a 604'»*»"**" J."SNITM, PtlTWCIAN VNI 8UU'l-')Jf. Rochester. Cedar County, 1HW. Office at tne Lwa Hou^e, DAVIS Jlc( Alt*» TTORXEY 4- C'll'N^EIXOU 4 U i AT IAW. Z Lr.iar CouHtV- W iV all business entrusted to him, Will attend w vfith ft Iclity and di^.p«t. h. Office near 1!"' Mi' I i, 1 use. Skas iuK and BatlUng Saloon. JOHNSON, asi.HT or THE «"0S, s. a 1!le»,i Drug Store. {jter Chamber» 4 1 ev.'i itar*, it n W^ t%wxjH, u- *f» lUf, »**th «Uv If f©« »wi» k t, x4 an *11 UW tay Itmc w MA HON* & WK'* I a i O 1 1 4 Claries reu-souable. Tip'on, Press the Pag «f eat Cain* flllt.DIIOOD. •T FUL1V JOHNS**. Mow beantifel i» chiihood, So full of witching grace: The lineaments of heaven Are stamped upon its ftp*. AnJ life's inijrht, f*ire»t roeea* Are str»#Q upon us way, SbeJtliug urouud their fragrance, L'ispeUiag cares away. How loving, too, i childheoi It see inn that in its head Lo»o i» planted deep and flrtt, WUich forms of life a part. •Affection deep and fi-rvanl Ioe« o'er its steal Ciiiiiinuud's lo»c is such a lore NY, A» onl/ angels feel. AnJ -hlTflhooi is forgvlng, Fw,tv.is n n.iunM aff.nl, *un y smile, a joyous 'mfc, tptlal Brr.g*.mter t» an end. No Jt-ep aua lastiug lutred Can Hid a place to restj Ko malice over reigns withtn Fair childhood's happy breaat, O, childhood, blessed childhood, In rirtues thou cxrel: And innf»cer.ce so itching, Shall in thee ever dwell. onfidinif Is thy nature, Forgiveness is thy pride Love, love, is thy amtdtion, U li.'-'r- «irnm wt rIMc. Pre cmpiion Law. We give below the poiuts which per sons wishing 10 make pre-emptions ate required to make to the satisfaction ol the officers at the different Laud Oifices: 1. The settler :nust never before have had the benefit of pre-eaiption under the act. 2. He must not, at the time 01* making the pre-emption be the ownejr of 320 JEW fjfii v Sit the Timj.-ranc* Uo se. 20 lj acres ol iaud any state or 1 erritory in 1 the Uuued Mates. Exchange O&oe!! 3. He must settle upon and improve la g0nd faith for his own exclu- siye use of beat.fit, aod not with the in- leullon Lasteru Cities casned. must not make, (l.rectiy or indirectly. American (.old firmed a .mall [fenrntm. (sell mg it ou speculation, and agreemeut UJ any way or inanaer with rtuy person or perscas by winch the title whcih he muy acquire from the United States utiould insure, in whole or in part, to luo beochts ol any I body 1'Ut himself. 4. He must be twenty-one years of age, and a cilize:i of the UniU 1 States 1 or if a foreigner must have declared his i inti noon to become a citizen before the proper authority and receive a certiftcatj to that etFect. 5. He must build a hottse on the land, live in it, and make it his exclu sive home, and must be an inhabitant of the same at liie tune of making applica tion for pre-emption. (Until lately a single man mighi board with his nearest neighbor, but the same is now required of a single as a married man, except that if named the family of ihe settler must also live i:i the house.) 6. The law requires that more or less improvement be made oa the land, such as breaking fencing, etc but pre-emp tions are granted where a hall acre is broken and enclosed. 7. It is necessary that ao other person entitled to the right "of pre-emptioD.resiJes on the land at the same time. 3. No person is permitted to remove from his own land und make a pre-emp tion the same Slate or Territory. 9. The sc'.tler i& required t»bring with him to the land office a written or print ed application letting forth the lads to his case ol the 1st, lid and 3J require ments here mentioned, with a certificate appended to be signed by the Register and Receiver aud make affidavit to the sane. 10. He is also required to bring with him a respecta !o witness of his acquain tance who is knowing to the facts of his settlement to make affidavit to the 4th, 5th, HU). 7th and 8th requirements, here mentioned, with the same set lorth on paper, with a corresponding blank cerifi cate attached lo be signed by the Land Oflke 11 The pre-emptor, if a foreigner, must bring with him to the Land Office, duplicates of his natuialization papers duly signed by the official from whom they were received. A minor who is the head of a family, or a vidow may also pn-empt their families beiug required to live on the laud. The settler is requested to file writ ten declaratory stale-rent of his intention to pre-empt before he can proceed with his pre-emption. ... .1 FEES.—1- The fee required by the Register for filing a declaratory state ment, is one dollar. '2. For granting a pre-emption, the Register and Receiver can receive fifty °*3lS'For duplicate of the map of any township, one dollar is requiied of the Register. [01ta.—The progress of the "Young Giant of the North West," has never ihe following figuies 1846, IS-18, 1 50, 1*52, 1854, Har 'ware More. NF. door below My res A- mt. AXiZI TBINQS«-NllUTnAZi XST NOTBINCK CEDAR Co. IOWA-SATURDAY, NOV. i 1856. ment is made only at the beginninjf off encb decide, we must put up with two uatil I860, when we predic. Iowa wili! send eight or nine members to the Na tional Legislature. Here will be a| chance lor patriotic aspirants Should the ratio of increase of the past Lei the men who fight for Fremont and Free Soil, pluck frvin the nettle danger the flower safety. A fortnight devoted to organization in every town —to can vassing every vote—to acquainting every elector with the true issue—to (substitu ting desperate valor for confident enthu siasm—to caring lor one's own immedi ate precinct—and the second great con test lor freedom in our National history will le won. To dread defeat, and to realize tue fell influence of disaster, are often more favoiable lo ti e development of the soldier than to confidently expect victory. It wns this dread and realiza tion which nerved their opponents in Southern Iudiana and Fastern Peunsyl i'unia. Every vote lor Mavery iu those Slates has been brought out, but iher are lorc^s of Freedom yet in reseive,and there is time yet for a gether! strong pull all to Brooks. The Columbia Sit at Carolinian pub lished a speech by this villain,from which we make the following extract, as indi cative of the treasonable and theiving propensities of some, at least, ot Hen cent Jimmy's* supporters: 'As lo uiy position, am now,as I voai in 1S51, a co operative I)IS'J.VIO~\1 ST I think 11 best 10 dissolve the Govern ment under which we now live. But in doing this there is a difference of opinion as to the means to be employed. I be lieve that something is due our sister Southern States, who have the same in terest at stake us we—that we should be prepared 10 act with ihem ai wait on ih»iu, so that we may co-operate 111 the dissolution of this UJ\"liOLY ACCUR S E I I O A Mr. Buchanan, our candidate, ia Soon the great question of the Presi dency will be settled, and if on the sec ond Monday of November next, it shall be found that Fremont is elected, our course is plain. It is my deliberate opinion lhai we should, on the 4ih of March next, march to Washington,seize i e a i v e s o e o v e n e n O the THE.1SURY, and leave the conse quences to God.' It is a startling fact that very few per sons are fil lo be parents. Every sum mer we are rendered inelancholly by the terrible record ol the sad havoc death makes among our little ones. These deaths are mainly attributed to tf-e heat. This is only an indirect cause of the great mortality among our children. They do net get out-of-door exercise enough, par ticularly in the wiuter seaaon. The sys tem of keeping them inufHed up beside the red hot stoves, in apartments through which a breath 01 (resn air scarcely ever passes, luring the eold season, predis poses them to disease, and the moment the weather changes and becon es op pressive, they sicken and die. Children are also permitted to eat an abundance of candies, cakes, nuts, and other tiash, winch should never find access to iheir s been rivalled save by California. Her proud inarch in the path of prosperity, JS56. estimated, *00,000. Under the present apportio-ruent, our population would entitle us lo six terf of Congress .oma hs and many parents allow their very len der offsprings the use ot tea and These indulgences create best illustrated in rnorcid state of me system, which eventu- c0t Dower and wealth is best illustrated in f,.0 m()rcl rtal sties of growth in population in the produces severe sickness, and unless ten Year*, s nee she became a sovereign I ,he fons tituiion be paiucuiarly robust, State. The official biennial census shows .1.- 7* 988. 180,948. 19!?,'204. 290.000. 326,014. vated nerves, inem the But as apportion- whisky in X&nsu. It is reporte that a uiiserabla miser** ant, wben muJiitneJ by drink, in Kan sas, 'bet a pair of boots that be would bring in a free-soil scalp on his return from camp,'—'that he went out about two miles, and meeting a perfect stran- year be maintained, our population in ger, a umn from Illinois, iu a buggy, un 1850 would be 1,209,000 but this is not to be expected. We set it down at pro bably 0.000. The ciiy of Dubuque will, in 1860, contain in all probability, 40,000 inhabi tants,—A'orth West. From the N. Y. Titni-s, Oct. SO. The Direct Vole La HOTember. The Black Democracy are in parox ysms of exultation, Tiwir frantic cries show ho /real had been their recent armed, he shot hitn through the head.In dian like scalped hun, and returned with his blordy trophy, winning his wager.'— Some of our papers would convey the im pression that t.uch barbarity was charge able to the whole South,and it is publish ed and coinmeuted upon, in order to in crease t'te fury Of sectioual strife, No sane, sober man, believes that such an outrago would be approved of in any can party will be measured. Penusyl- Kansas, and when sober, would, depra \ania and iudiana, that voted so heavily ^ej as }ie 18i for General Pierce, are &a"ed by mea- such a crime. But he was drunk, aud gre liiujoiities. Let those Republicans whisky will convert anybody. North or who leet desponding remember that in South," into a devil, ncd fit "him lor any both ct these States tens of thousaudp among the Democrats support Colonel Fremont because he is a true Democrat jf tha Jelferson and Jackson school, but vote wun their old associates upon mal lear of canal, financial and doinestic pol icy within their own States. Eet them recal among their own friends the many woo, disliking the turmoil and excite ment ol a local election, will,at all haz ards. vole 'or freedom wben the true is sue comes up. Why, in one year the Free-Soil child has become a giant! A wise Providence, in momentarily stop ping the tide of resistance to Slavery-ex tension, is but giving time for the Hood to strengthen. The check of local de feat will banish that ruinous confidence winch infected the Republican ranks.— gtiudder at ihe thought ol I W a u v i U U u U i U 1 U 1 n u i w a I U v u a U i w ttie arsons, robberies, rapes and murders commuted by pro-slavery devotees on the free stale settlers of Kansas, reveal the fact lh*t Captain W hisky is the great author and instigator of mischief. Why will not our coiemporaries, North and South, unite in a crusade against this out I tw, whose character is so base, that no credible witness could utter a ward 111 his favor? Is it because they are ignorant of NEW YORK, an a* le, dignified and conservative states man, and I am assured, that, it elected, he will te faithful to the Suuth. Mou over, we should support mm because he stands pledged to a platform of principles which commands the approbation of eve ry true Southerner, a aud the medical treatment especially skil-1 Ohio exceeds either Ireland, or Scotland, ful, death winds up the affair conclusive- Jor Portugal, and equals Belgium, Scot Again, children are not taught the] land and Switzerland together. Mis- |y. ralue of frequent ablulion. There are souri is more than half as larpe as Italy, many children in our large cities who and larger than Denmark, Holland, Bel staldom or nevei feel water, except upon gium and Swiuerland. Missouri and then hands, faces and feet. With Sept. U0, 1856. To the Editor of the Delaware Express: Sin —In the town of Davenport, which we left about a week ago, the few who oppose the election ot Col. John C. Fre mont, do so on the grotrtid of his being a Rom'in Catolic. In order to be able to refute this charge we called on Col. Fremont yesterday So satisfactory is the evidence that he is a Protestant, lhat though constantly hearing political discussions, we have not heard since coming here, the charge ot Catholicism made against him. Yours 111 the causa of truth. A. OLIVER, J. A OLIVER. visitor going into a free school, in New England, during the halt-yearly examination, noticed two fiue-lookingj boys, uiie of whom had taken the first prize, ari the other the second. "Those are uvo fine-looking fellows," he said to the teacher "I suppose they belong 10 the higher class of society." ''That is not ihe way we class our boys," said the teacher, "we follow the old tnaxirn of handsome is, that handsome does.'— The boy who took the first prize is the son of the man who saws my wcod the boy who took the second is the son of a vice-presideni of the Uuitxl States." A special court for the trial of Free ribbous State prisoners convened on the 14th. Not one Pro-Slavery n.an had yet been ,a|d times that of England. Illinois would make forty such Slates as R. Island and Minnesota sixty. Mis s nri is larger an all New England.-— ener- llhaois are larger than England Scotland foul stomachs, and pores and Wales, and Kan'as is larger than stopped up by impure exalations, our both? This h, children ranuot expect to thrive when the and "Uncle Sam is rich enough to give dog-star rages. aM a farm." indeed, a great country, From tf»# Wtjrtfc Western ftfrttMaa Adrataw. What is a Man to PreachT It may seeai strange that a man should ask such a question, ici at first night the answer seem* to be plain—'Preach the gospel Yes, more, the answer would be, preach it in nil its features, run it civilized, much less Christian state. The! of our country, und such the tenacity ol al* w-»k» I tUoj*r, put in a ak|p» miserable villain who perpetrated the the members o( that party to thoso prin-1ninn.c&^^lUjn^r'^'kal alarm, ouajpare the leeung uovv with deed, wo venture, never was worth the ciploa, thut according to th^ir notions of «j/. Mr th-» tb.» vi.i. i-.r Tni- plant ttiat of February last *no©ag their ranks, price of a slave in his life not did he propriety, the preacher is placed on a ve- thick hi,.! firm I .ui^ri «1 iag and the amazing growth of the Republi- care a pin about slavery or freedom in rv narrow -Dlat^rm.' Iudoeduf politics. 110"• ry narrow 'platform.' Iudoed^if politics, the facts? Is it not, raiher, becausc they lude to some of the vile effects of slave- wish to niMkn political capital out .)f his villainies, and know thai his expulsion from Kansas would restore camparative quiet, or, at least, mitigate the horrors ol fraternal strife? Not a day passes in any of our states, that whisky does not induce somebody to dnsii out his wife's or his children's brains upon his own hearth-stone. No marvel, then, that it should make a man scalp his fellow, es pecially when encouraged and protected by partisan politicians. We don't be lieve that Ireedom or slavery in Kansas, bad anything to do wiih the recorded out rage. Whisky in Kansas, is the proper caption for these villainies. y i s o e o e e e o n e n o o s e ah The accounts (not fabulous) of in cqntui with their creed, nndol course is 'policial.' Should a preacher dare to assert anything against the traffic of free whisky,or 111 tavor of prohibition,it is •po lineal or should be say any thing against human slavery, or even polygamy,or any of the grosser sins oft he day.it is sure to strike then 'platform' somewhere,nnd the cry is, 'Down with the black coats they aie meddling with pouiics yea, more than that, should a preacher dure to al- 1 A I 1 I .f w«* aa in i»T\ei nf We would not insinuate that there is nothing in the issue between the North and South, calculated to excite th,# feel ings and provoke exceessea, nothing to btir the blood of good men and bad men on both sides Mason and Dixon's line. But we do mean to assert, that without the intoxicating bowl, scenes would not be enacted which would make a savage blush. We would vindicate our country men, both North and South, from the charge of being barbarians. Crusader. From the Delaware bxpreca. The Lie Nailed Again. We have received the loilowing note from Messrs. A. & J. Oliver,of »he Fer gusonville Academy, who are now tem porarily in New Ycrk, furnishing still farther proot of the Protestant antecedent and present faith ol Col. Fremont. ry. as manifested in the imprisonment of a young lady ui Virginia, lor no olher crime lhan that of teaching some little children of color the alphabet, he would be heralded all over town the very next d«y, as a 'political preacher and these very pious Christians, who, perhaps, hsd not entered a church for years before, would be clad in deep mourning 111 con sequence of the corruption of the church. Now, what is to be done? While it is true that 'preai inng Christ and ium cru cified,' and saying, 'Behold the Lamb,' is d'jing a good work, y»t in lormer years, we were taught to believe that n did not corcr the whole case. The apos lie Paul, hia day, taught Timothy to 'intekly instruct those that were opposed to themselves.' And our way of thinking formerly, was, that all men by nature, and especially such as upheld the vile pruuice* of slaveholding, aud whisky traffic, ice were sinners, and sinners steeped iu the deepest dye, and that be fore we would dare to say to such men 'Behold the Lamb of God' we ought lo tell them that they were traitors to God and his law, aud to warn them to 'rejient and be converted, thai their sins might be blotted out.' But tunes have changed and what are we to do Are we to con tinue the old landmarks of preaching opposition to sin, wherever we meet with the monster, or had we better suit our selves to political hucksters, and lei Sa tan take the world at once) Wt ihe former. A Terrible Fight in Virginia. Gov. Wise's militia had an importuni ty ol displaying iheir readiness to go to battle in defence of the honor of the South when the tocsin sounds, one day last week. Some desperado iu Ports mouth, Va., had the audacity to raise a liberty pole upou which he hoisted a flag morn:ng, at his residence, No. JG 9ih I bearing the name of Fremont. A sud street, and interrogated him in regard to .Jen tremor appears to have seized up in his religion. His reply was, that the. at' sertioii of his leirnr a Romanist, is entire ly without joundattov that he is nne,and always has been a Protestant. the people of the neighborhood, the May or summoned the Common Council to take the matter into consideration, the militia were ordered out and promply ro sponded 10 the call, ihe citizens turned out, drums beat, children were frighten ed, and women, we have no doubt, screamed, wlnle the negroes grinned and flyinr ST. LOUIS, A Oct. 18. letter to the Democrat this erening, dated Lawrence, 14th, say» Col. Cook at the head of 400 dragoons, had arrest ed 21U emigrants near the Nebraska line. The report that a writ had been issued for the arrest of Sheriff Jones is al.-1*. TERMS, $1 60 tn ADV^NCfc. •io«*crtb«l I.wi. TB imk F*n*i«•!,—IV?ia«« your Isdy readers u. iy *:»b to Ku w wmetiiM Mifetirtht' Vineji-ir r.-mt." Ttia informsi^n I to Iropirt li\m in? wu esaraiiiation, willfcj i c«mib, ... Lit J.ilv a frlenl ut me a rleoe'! through ail its lainiltcalions. 'hncourage ,t principles mgralted into tlie platlonn of the l»i iid. put th» lid on tb« jar, and left it la at least one ol toe great political parties perform iu a»v*teri."ii operatiotw ireese cackled. There was great cent motion in the region of the Dismal! Have they noi almost everyone o» Swamp. One man was knocked down in a barroom for having had the audaci ty to defend the right of n man to erect a liberty polo on his own premises.— Probably the desperate trretcii will be osiiacizt*d, like Mr. Underwood and ... CuSlly -,ce, art.fic- (, uisi(e embroideiies #nd bon()et# to th .**, sltaatt.-*! w I am. nta 'o lai.icrablu d'.« anc iiom a pLice ifh"ro ^oo-l TiBv^r can be procured. w*!*!*pieceI to w a s o a i e y s o e i n i s o u n i ty» is to lnvoine the exponent ofjro^pcl j*iurn li*ht mutated, limttid the ol ptaM 4r, W lh rebuke, exhoit, and admonish,' as the inj- ».--iv? vinjftr. th" latter wm sbaryt casu may dtinand. In short, reprove sin whenever yoa encouuter its tracc.— But. though duty seems to be plain,when governed by the old laud-marks, we seein in this community to have fallen on hard times. Such seems 10 b« the politi cal excitement in our midat, and such the for raak- ith pod tv^y, but vt-ry dark and turbid. Tan dims iotix calVd f-r common molaiwes I fee ordittglf tlVird I of r*l:t w.t fato wh ih I pi. 1 i |ouui i-f cUriliot suf tr. I pint o:' irolden syrup. AfltT flr*t stirrin? w'l| I poured tb» «we-t«n*d watf-r into a j^r.iiad s*t it on a shell about tight te-it tr .u th kit^k cn i-Uiva. with strict inj inctii u to snj girl nod to carefully 1 move it. I then placed lb" plant p'oce it In tb jar it WM d«tfc I i' I" krp preaching,the most we can do is to stand two pillou* more, and Ibis morning tound lk« in the pulpit, and cry, Heboid the lamb,' i hke ruHults. A i't«-r tfnvnr ha« *\|nh.4 a o-rUtn |«. irret: of !trt*n»?ih. the origin ti pi«*ce of plant rate away, and ibat cau«?H turbid iusl'a't of clew vinegar, which wa« tbccaae with that my friend s«*iit m*. While, each w of vfri'ku i» in* kint, a new plant Is ^rowinx, so that ou- oin hive ttl4 plt)iinaie of prcH-iUing to tb-Mr frieud* a nuoltMM. around which aa endless number of planU oan be gromi. A. X. for .anything beyond that scents to come v v v pouring off Un- can hivl Hourly a iftllo'i of li^bt coloted. llmp«d vinegar. I then est Currant Tree*. Hkfing noticed that currant I as well be made tress as shrubs, I ex clude tell you bow I have Seen it doae. ,nV |ather leaves 10 about hall branched well, and com. menc-d n warden, and among enlist tilings' set cuttings for current buabes.«~ I determined to experiment on one of those cuttings and as soon as it grew, I pinched off all the leaves, except lop tuft, which 1 let £,row The culling was about fourteen inches bug, and dar ing ihe summer, the sprout irotu this grew leu inches. The next spring I pinched off all ihn way up the first years' growth, so as to leave the lowest limbs two feet from the ground. It became a handiTtna little dwarl tree. When it came to bear fruit, it was more productive any other bush in tatak than the garden, and the fruit larger. ll was less infested with spiders and other in seels bens could not pick efl* the fruit, and grass and weeds wen* uiore easily kept from the roots, and it was an ornament insi.ead of a blemish.—— Now I wounl prop so thai curraut cut tings be set in rows aloul four or fitre (eel apart eoch way, (let them be long and straight ones,)and trained into trees. —Michigan Farmer. Baofeelidiog in 014 Age. Did it ever occur 10 you that Chrisliaui were more apt to Lacks'ute and fall into open sin in the latter pari of iheir relig ious course, than in its earlier stageal— It is a startling aimouucemen'.but I think you will find ti true. Look nt all the ca ses ol backsliding recorded iu ihe Bible. Did ihey not, every one of them, occur late in life? There was David. In th* days ol his youth aud early manhood, a pattern of tailh and devotion, lu advan ced life, guilty of murder and adultery, and sull later, of pride and s lf-couceii,iii numbering the people. Look at Moses. The gre*tsin of his life committed when just about to enter the promised bud.— Look al Hezekiab, the 'gocni king Heze kiali.' In Ins early days zealous und de vout. The last fifteen years of his hlu (a special gift from his God, and there fore onu would think te be specially eou secrated to him) bringing 'wrath upon himselt and upon Jerusalem.' So,too,with Jodiah. £0, too, with Jehoshaphai.-— And loo'-, around at the cases of grevious backsliding within our own observation. hem occurred late in life? I mean after ma ny years ol Christian profession. This fact (is it not a fact?) seems to nie 10 teach several lessons of deep and solemn importance. 1. It accounts for another fact which Professor Hedr.ck. Two volunteer com- lurced iiselt ioio «..y alien u 1 11,h• 1 ny •uiuiurvi vviu ^i i put on active duty to guard Ul,uu'vU: Thai incase ol very many o ust liberty-poles, which was I panies were the ciiy ajraiust liberty-poles, removed the next day by the Civil au thorities while the stars and stripes were The bridal arrangements, hnjmpjrfi I cent troussea of the bride, &.c., iu view of the approaching marriage ol the Prin cess Roya! of England at Berlin, at tract so much attention that i indreJs aTe actually going from Ldndon ta witness iiiled with sthem. There are six rooms s al the head. The Richmond En quirer, in commenting upon this »tead last neat, aud bringing reproach up iui affair, sava '-No Virginian can lead °n his ihe nariauve of ihe affair without a blush 7 in an1 arrestei. by order of Geary. gloves, body and table linen, diamonds, Tenitoiy. Russia" is forty-three times the size of jewelry, shawls, mantles, and toilette 1 new slaw state out ui the Ind Tern •ranee, -md one hundred and thirty-eight implements of every description, color Dry and material. Thirty persons have been engaged during several months ou the embroidery, 120 needlewomen have worked on ihe different articles. Wealth.'-'The !in you lesre your children when you dfe, the mole ihey will have twenty years afterward.— Wealth inherited should be the incentive to exertion. Instead of thai, title deed to sloth." The only money that does a heaviest and m..«t I numerous mats came Itile iu life. God, iu i.is teuder mercy, sends the trials l« I save theiu fioiu falling away from their eff8 ™rded of shame." It would be well for the!and, confirmed by observation, ought to honor of the Old Dominion if sue 1 were »hey advance ...e, the case but the blushes of the JLnqui are for the wrong cause. .Iiiniie and more walchlt themselves. Parish Bible, an I dtslu Visitor- lUl .Vetff Botrh of Slave Stat*.—A Ut ter-writer thus decides the possibilitiea for new slave states, if either Fillmore or Buchanan are tiected to the Piesid»*ucy. .'i n w slave states out of Kansas. 'J Mew slave slates oui ol Nebraska. 3 new slave stales out oi Texas. new slav. inn-s out of Wasiiiagtoii. 2 new slave spates -vi! of Oiegou. '2 new slave s .'in of the N. W. 4 new slave stales out of New Mea. co, 4 4'it is the tit w slave slates out of Utah. 8 u«w slave- statin out of Minnesota. I new slave tta'e out South Califor •is. 3 new slave states out of Cuba. adiiiiiousl slave slates. Supposing that Kansas should be hat to freedom, the above estimate is reason* man good is thai which lie S bit*. II iheir is ngL'. iu making Kausas earns himself. A ready-made fortune,! slave mound, the same right will carry like ready-made clothes, seldom (its the I the institution into the ubov« trriiiuficth OMIH late possess!! n Put i n•: RtiiWictit.