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MODERN WOOING.
lie spoke the words that poets ppeafe,
Whea all the heart is all aglow.
With pulses strong as wnrda are weak,
But yet the maiacn ;iuuu;ht liiui slow—
She gaaticl npon ihe moon!
He tl.e a L*;.ed back, on coldest Fcent,
Aj'-i spoke of science, march of mind,
Cn betteridg the k$ intent:
Ae well have talked unto the wind—
■ She gazed about the room!
He then tried art ; she did not hoed,
. Or heeding, did not understand.
Bespoke of war, of ralar'A f»Mj
(At least 'twas not to be her hand)—
Sbfe gazed ur1011 tiie m0(ltl1-
A! iast^e spoken* city lot?,
All buiit upon and -taxes paid,
Of'i-.eal. siihurbrin vilin plot?; .
■These were ihe tiling that rous'd the maid
She look hia htutd and smiled!
ABRAHAM IN HIS TEMPLE.
1. And Abraham sat in his temple
alone ; all ihe kign fcrifesls wove far out
ia^the'WiWerneesfaadkfiee*! not of Abraham's tnelancholly and loneliness.
2. Abraham was sad fetid leaned upon
Ma band i his troubled heacf, then hem'tir-
mured " what feast 1 too to** the peppto
are wroth with me'/ My dear consort*
hast boon taken irom mo .and I am left
alone with the High Priests of the land.
Woe! woo, ifl meu"
3. And Abraham went into the housetop, saw 8 man piding fast npon an ass,
turn Abraham dia cry aloud : " Horace,
Horace, where goest thon so fast noon
4. And Horace answered from afar
and said: "On to .Kichmond! Onto
iliehmoud !"
5. "Verily, verily," crieth Abraham
aloud : ■'•'three times and one, hast our
great Mossy been repulsed at that gneat
eitv. :h>.v, nay. iioracc. that mighty
ebVis iinrnva-uablo; *'e have fillen."
6. Then Rora.ee shouted from af;tr and
saita : -Yea, yea, on to Kichmond.' —
Abraham came'dowa irom the house-top
and me iv;o ptered the mansion. Then
Horace smth.: "Knowcst thou that great
city, Fredricksburg is ours;''"
-7. "Ha 1 sayest thou so? Pi
whence didst thou get thy message?"—
sa$n Abraham. "THdst William Henry
tell thee?" "Aye, aye," saith Horace,
"verily, verily, Abraham, William iienry
is a grearaud good man, and spcalcolh
tho truth, I brmgVt tim dispatch, read
thou Abraham."
8.' 'And he handed Abraham a great
roll of papers and Abraham read aloud :
" Our mighty army hast been driven
across that great rive- and far into the
wilderness, ihey were slaughtered to a
great extent whilst crossing on the pontoon bridges." and Abraham let fall the
paper.
9. Then Horace said: "Bclievesttliou
not, Abraham, givest thou a grea* feast
and invite thou all tho High Priests of
t£ Sand'; doost thou as did the KiDg of
Babylon."
10. " Hay nay,' Horace, it may prove
as disastrous tb us as it did to that great
man. for already hast our guards been
drinking wine and arc drunk."
11. 'iNow this made Horace wrotti
andhe opened his mouth saying : "Abraham, Abraham, what sayest thou? it is
only Democratic priests that get drunk,
discharge them all, then victory will, be
oars—thine. Our army is mighty' and
must prevail. On to Richmond! Abraham, on to Pioiirnond!"
12. " Ahim, nay, Horace, I cannot do
ail that that thou wouldst have mc do,
send thee to jersey and bringst 'Little
Mack' back to his command; I am repented fbr tho great wrong I clicl when
I sent hitn hence."
13. " Gayest thou not so, Abraham,
never bringest him hither and our armies snail ever be victorious, and will take
Jiichmond as did Titus take. Jerusalem,
and destroy & million of men. That great
city must bo thine."
14. And Horace left - Abraham and
got upou his assand rode away. Then ■
Abraham arose and paced the floor of |
liis toniple; over and anon he shook his
head and said: "Ah! Horace is not a
wise priest, I must not.do what he say-
est; 1. must Abide by that great article
v.-hich our fathers have handed down
to us."
15. Then Abraham was startled by
a slight noise in the wad, and a hand appeared witing the words: ('Abraham,
thou hnf. strayed far from that great
article." And an angel came from the
wall and stood by ids side.
IG. And Abraham said "wife," and
the angel said "husband;" it wasatrau-
■sienl visit IVom Ids wife who hadstgone
iuto tho wilderness. Now Abraham
was troubled and reached out his arms
to embrace his w,tfe but she was gone.—
It was only vbbonoi'y.
IS. And. ho said '''amen," and his
voice echoed "amen ;" and he said,
"Al>olit!.onistsh.aveduied! fallen! amen!
amen!"
[From Vanity Fair]
Our War Corr«:spotHlence-JL.cttcr from Mc-
Aroue
Bear Vanity :—It is all right.
The rover is free.
'No manacles eonfme these thewy
hands. Ko chains clank dismally about
[hose svlph like logs. Me and Governor
Seymour havo triumphed.
Habqm CarpvEiA himself again !
Thc way.I got rid of that indictment
scrape is the easiest thing in tho world.
I filed a non-appearance in the Court of
Common Pleas, and put in a nolle prosequi. This was granted under a writ
of replevin, obtained by amicus curios.—
Of course when r,he ;/v/o ke se was proven
by the commission de lunaticoinquirendo
on prima facie evidence, a true bill could
not be found: so cuTAf.airit was unprov-
en, and I could not bo amerced pro falso
clamor suo without a corpus delictu.—
Hence the court decided me to boa part
of ihe iiudand, aud not liable to action,
either droitural or possessory.
This was gratifying.
I packed 'my car|iotd)ag and left.—
Thomrhtho ('omniercial Bulletin of Bos-
Lou hue reieiTod to my niter wanl, of
taste and ski!!, I wish to assur
entle publication that I had the skill
to get free and the taste to abandon the
perusal ofthe Bulletin aforesaid.
However, that is all right.
George B. McClellan's body-guard is
disbanded. Sic itur ad Averni. He said
most nobly in your city that he was
"still a soldier." Tho Administration
would like to make us forgot that fact.
Wo can't do it. AVhen Washington is
once more in danger we shall ho glad to
know that O-eorge still lives and wears
army buttons
Under my advice and encouragement,
Burnside will undoubtedly get along ve ry
well. I like him.
But 1 want AleLellan back—and I'm
Look UndBB the Bonnet.—Quite a ladicrus-
aeldent occurred at tbe depot of the Detroit and
Milwaukee railway on Sunday morning thi-.tslKuiWl
ler^e as a warning to fond husbands wbo are in
be imbit or giVfng tangible prflpftof tbeir lore
for their better halves in the presence of strangers.
On the norbYhs referred to; a Jdtffig married man
visited ttie Imin io meet his wile, who way ox pee ted
th'fr'om Grand Rapids. Mr. B. searched among
the paaseugerB J'or a few moments, and at last discovered a lady standing near the baggage truck
with ber back towards him. She wore, he thought
the identical clothes possessed by Mrs. so wishing
to surprise, and believing thut "stolen kisses are
the sweetest" he softly laiijiroacluid from behind,
placed hh arms about her neck, and gentle drew
ber back upon his bre^at, while his face went under
the bonnet, and upon her Kpa was impressed.
"A long, long kk-ri-.-ol youlh and love."
A slight scream startled him, and the lady tarn
ed upon him and confronted him with a look ot
intense iudignatioii at. thc outrage. lie discovered
for the lirst time that he had committed a grave
mistake. With evident embaiwmtuit be attempt-
HOLlDAYC_RCULAR.
A. ROMAN & CO.
Booksellers, SraipfSTters anil Pirt>-
lisEieis,
Nos. 417 and 419 iWoiitsfoniery street
("Loeotlllt'i; itlliUlill.Li-.)
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
ibix
at
hat rr
:ul thc
nt tii
-atte
genuine Mi?. 11
came clear to the astonished lady who had been yo
unceremoniously dealt witfi. It was but a moment
before Mr. and Mrs. B. suddenly ici't lhe depot in
in id
WE would um*-
Publi
'•ftWaowo-MntnjooniOT
tifuUj- bound a
GIFT BOOKS j&il ANNUALS
Foi* tin' oomlpg yvE-, temther with an ea tens**™ and
elegant ussi.ri.nieni nr J''orei;rn tend Domestic
PHOTOGKAPJa ALBUMS
YOR THK UKSTiOi; TAlil,."':,
anowaad [Aproved styles,**&+**%?•&? ^
!*,lin_jiurn iii exauisttfl tas», bound in the
'- vl, 'IV :-fv Mnruc.cn nr Velvet, willi Ci.ld-
plr-.U-dOr.'inr.i-MiUruut Cliisps, iiiul suit
:i.l)li! Tin- llnliiU.V, Mnn-iagi! ur
Birtlidaj Gifts.
Anto-JPlioto-arraiiJi Aiftiims,
Photo-Alb mittfi oS Pietures and
Foeiry.
F2i;>t.r-i-S.UlsJes and Prayer-BoolCfii
wftti
>flsefl
ihe i
lci'len
Moral :-
ToaBg n>eo>
alwa
^stoo
e node
■ the b
innet before
you ntUinpt.
tost
al tb
"nect
r swot
i/' and you
will uaouI a
,-imila.rmi
With Bb
hap.
THKR BltuW.V.
—Ai. a couIV:
ence raeetiii^
held
some
vii ere
i the :
oithern part
of om Stan
duri
ff the
great
evival
season ol 'a8
were present
a otb
ers, b
other
irown—a weak, ehy. but
no laid
■rably
'fm-ehanded,
1 and achild
R, E. RAIMOND
COMMISSION MERCHANT
'fio. 105 Front siroot,
(Between Washington and Merchant streets.)
SAN .KliANCl.SCO,
will give particular attention to the
Purcliase anti Sliijunent,
as well as to the
SALE OF IttiKilCHAlvmsF, AMU PBODUCE
T\ E. RAIMOND bavin;; been established in Sau
Ll. Fr^DCtsco aiooe IS*'',', and having been oou-
tinuall v etHja^ed iu the ('otnmij^ion businenB Ibr
Merchants aod Prodqews of tbe Southern an a
Northern coast of California, i.a well aw with that
of Oregon and \'.ri'.s>iin;;ton Territories, feel&eoafi-
dent that be will lie ably togive entire fntiinuetioa
to parties who may tint.vast tbeir business* to hia
care. Jyl6
going to Have him, u
You cant get mc eu
I ata the ntte busy
nor sleep when I lia
.id of
*.id, wa
" SUPERB FAHILY EIBLES
KLIaUNTLY ILUlliTNATim AX11 ILLUST11ATRD-
L-iiLh.-l wit.li mrw mul b-'iuilitul typn, on Un: iin.^t j>iif»'v
-unit boiiinl in tlie mnt-t subi; tan tial manner, with mas-
LveClaapawKJOraaiaenta.
HMiAYSC.ll BOOEtS.
CLAEK'S
IlieELSliEJE^GSLS.
THE CHEAPEST AKD BEST
ARTICLE
For Marking Linen.
For sale by tbo gross, at
J05 Montgomery street, Room No.
2, Sun Fiancisco-
eb2S W. HOLT
ml s
tithe
main
; Ulahjis,
plai
r-.iul Accurate Krtitlons of tlie Poets,
■ .Viti-y.ie.l'i-omTlomcvtr. the mode rj) Long
j-soi, Str8.BreftrDmg,itisB'ProrOto»1 Ot*. etc-
"•■iDARD AUTHORS,
ol iidve
ipeecb, whfij report sai
.boagbt of seeoriog tbe eootrol of broihe:
md bis tine bouse and lurm. In doe court
leed-laga, brother Blown was culled en to r
experience. As usual iie was lunohle and
speech. ■■Tie hud very little to say—ct
apeak to tlie edification of his bretheren i
lers-lhc time would be better occupied b;
incl.
And I hayt
litis to Kiel
inga on my:
I am
jcir, D
Futn
71 S
\yA V K Bl V N OVE LS,
liff-cen-t ,.:a\'E>ne,—h-ovn tive to lift
grpe Coj^es «f Firne Pictures
and Statwary-i
JWE\$JW BOOKS.
GEO. W. CHAPIN a CO.,
Lower side ol PtarZa. near Clay st
SAN FUalNr'IM'O.
J3nlPl,OYMEW1r~b*']FlCE AMD
GENERAL AGENCY.
Fn
Farm
iish all kinds of '
PS, Mining Oompai
dp for Families
.■a, Mills, Fuctorii
Hotels
, Shops
Also, '
Tleal
, thai
Agency, and attend to
Fflb22
Anti-Bhcumatic Cordial aaid Eiealttx
Kestoratiye
?TS THE MOST VA1 UABLE AXIl UNSPJO'ASSED REM-
Sp-Iv tor tUienmatisin and Gout tobe finudtn'the world
■nui "kti.i'vr. nl in*"-="tit. Tin- discoverer of tlie aliove*
, .,;;, . ,.. ■■:.. ,,i ii, tnfaHlWHtj in nil en-.= <*K of'Klieu-
jwitl"
cticat is ;
is as bad'
om
know oxaciiv, but 1 sliall after tlie nex
battle.
And that will transpire pretty soon
The back bone of rebellion is a tolei
ably brittle affair. It wili break just one
more. You won't bear much ofit afte
that,
That is myprophecy. I never failed ii
a prophecy ; never told a lie ; never mix
ed a bad coacktail, and never agree'
with the Tribune.
Such is virtue.
I was on picket duty tbe other da;
on the furthest outpost. A rebel pi
was stationed "witbi
other side ofthe holl<
wall Jackson, o£ wh
heard.
" How are yon V I asked.
"Unwell, thank yon." he rem;1
« What ails you V'" 1 continued
u I woke up in a cold sweat,"
<;As howr" I interrogated.
"Alt along of nightmare/' be rejoined.
"Cause V! I demanded-
" Cause I dreamed McClellan was reinstated. If he was, we'd be licked in
mighty short metre. I'm going to pray.
Good bye."
■That's all. McArone.
|.;-yoiis and Cut
riiruoic nis*e?is(
tbe i'liy-iKiiuri
.1 ofihu Po»t»j in 1125 v
he arii
It was
von m;
i.
idded.
"I "Would Suspend It."—A minister
who is ofthe black abolition stripe, was
asked:. " What vail you do with that portion of Scripture that commands you to
pray for your enemies V What do you
suppose was the mAAExvi-'-r. reply '< Be
said: " I would suspend so much of the
Scriptures in these times." Is not that
a iich idea? A ■ minister of the GospeJ
suspending so much ofthe Bible as does
not H.-it Iri ni! What do you think of
that, reader? It reminds us of old Abe
Lincoln suspending so much ofthe constitution of the. United States as does
not suit him.—Frceport {III.) Bulletin.
ail tbe people Bay Amen.7'
lice osudH-J shot up Cuucert
s sort ol things Sunday'.
-Ti
3 to the L
opposition fre-
misville Journal
ive Stale. Per-
Ue ibe fulkuw.Hj
Disloyal Kepuclic.
queutly point with prit
aa a souad, patriotic paps
haps they will relii-b and
lrom that journal of Jun. G.li ;
" We oxpoct matting but evil from tbe radical
LJ,'jpul;l:cin:s. Tbey at-fi Ljss(.inl:.!(*.i!y disloyal. Tbey
call themselves patriots, and claim to be for profiu"
cutin;; tbe war lo the restoration of the Uiiiuo,
tbe,
id
ill be An
_N"car Sew Haven, recently, thc engineer ofa train discovered a man lying
with his head apparently ea the track.
The train could not b- stopped in time,
and the wheels took off tii- hat, leaving
the drunken man uninjured.
3o6!k Binders, Paper Rulers, and
Blank Book Hamif&cturers,
517 Clay find &14 Connnerciril str eta, between
Montgomery snd San^ra^e,
Sa:ts Fs'iiJsciscff.
j, Rill Heads, Brief Paper, &c,
* I.BoutnJ, and Piinted to order.
eountrv by letter or express,
iptlj attended to. aug9
ay dignity to'foHoW tlie mn*
ilie certifier les of pliysici.-.u
it* I.*; loo well known can be ba
who liaTelieen cured
en. anil who cm be
ige tlii-rrniptioin lhe
far
DiunkP Wnvi;;:
Ruled to ■■
BlaotBouka Bu
. 0
Orders from tl:
pro
D* :3Al.13
n rV'**^*.*'--
. . r a i J
Sueosssors to Hawkhurst &Son,)
IMP'O'&TBBS AND DRaLERS IN
WOOD AHD WILLOW WARE,
si I qu
if lie
rooms, Pails, Tubs, Washboards,
Cmirns. &c,
,ii to tin-in Ib want of medical aid,
t nhoold any otre CM4 tot wHl*»n twMnumtahoi
.lienleu ro^;i)*-*liirp the cures pf-vformed hy 'hi- roedi*
thev call'ul my ollice nnd I wili nhav tnpm eeriifi-
R of "trim merit, whieh have been .'•ent !o ine volim*
v, without applying (or tliem, or Uy Boring individ
'to grt them.
r-alebv DR. ADOI.PHUS.
IKnts. —Crowe 1 & Crane, corner of Clay and VruvA
;Teets—-Redingtttb feCo., Clay b
'a-sliington and Battery sts.. .-'an Finn cisco.
Agent for Los Angeles*
Dr. fl. K. JHYLES.
SCO V ILL'S
^x^.X^.S3^__.IP J&.1R. X XjXji-A.
-AN'ii—
STILLING-1 A,
BLOOD AND LIVEE, SYKUP-
"H"T la Mghlj rfcommemled by phyMci'aUB to e-.nre. the
Caneorons Tumiri
The true romance of thia wnr will cc
purer picture of chivalry than that which
(he knightly act; of General Burnside, ben
foie his CommSnder in Cliief to requ ipt tha
still be employed in his country's service,
his sword und niiliiary emoli
main on the retired lir^t un
rebuke to the lull list of t
pletfeed'tb dfaw iheir rttpi
and to tiir their lace and bu
He v
Fii;
diuiersigDe
tub.;
EDIW3SE.
rwparilla :
sut the head of the li.-t of wmB-
Keee is oku or-Tj::*.; WAt»the Monet goes.—
" 0 ;".;'.'■.;*.■■!-UV] ^ hrv/ii:- ootbiflg be iter to do iviiii its
money, lias invesied a large sum i'n a pre;:s, type;,
ink, and (inrtfe thbuBStid ■rel!ams of paper, and sent
the vholc to Beaufort. S._C., to establish ao anti-
A::.vv:y jo:***;*:;, u.cve, to be fivvn away, if it caimo!;
be ci:*v:i:r'v*; in any-other manner/' At Hilton Heat]
the Qorernment h <-iistniiiin;;a negro school; it has
a Btogje iso'ftrnot with ft hoase in New' York ior
cldUijng^or&O^OOp negroeSi itisieedin« fifteen or
tweniy thoapa^Ll Mgroefl in diilercut unlitay camtoa,
Avirii tbe sami rationa us are allowed to white sol-
dicjs.
or ie
i..le.— C!
Ooa Nkro.—It is related ol the bloody tyra
Nero, that he iiddled wliile Rome was burnii
thus showing his heartless indifference to the fi
of the nation. President Lincoln still cracks
jokes at the White HoUBe, Beeiningly unconcern
although the 11 a mes of civil war are destroying
country.
""Poppy. I'lfnoto why seme pistols are called
horse iiistAls.*'
";:\\vr.*. v.y f*vn ? "
" Because ijiey kick so.;'.
''Mary, put that boy to bed; he's srettin^ so
ehhrp he'll cut sotnehMfy yet, see ii' lie dont."
Tf a man marry
ehrewd ?
■i shrew is he eupjoied to be
A Wosrern paper, in d«Scrfbing tiie effect o
severe limoiJer .t.tiower, B$y§ : "A cow was stri
by livliiiiino; and instantly kill'ra, belonging to
yliage pHysIfciaa, irtlo trad a beautiful ouif. only I,
foHT d;.rV3. old." .
" NoncbalaDt means ibat peculiar indifferent '
look which is pjjt on by n;e:i v-Ai'j never pay when
dunned ior money. U UiouHl ba (OTlttennon8hell\
out.
What is the worse kind ol lare a man can live
on! Warfare.
V/ir-y ]-.. a newspaper nice aa arxjt? Because it
ha:> leatlcfr.', coluujris aod reviews. I
A Pn
-aid, n 1
if Pheb
igely pi
and until /'urt.hei
F O B
San Lais Obispo, Santa Barbara,
San Pedro and San Diego.
p.A .uni altar*,* Ilu; first ol"
U notice, the Meiumbip
'* S E U. ATOR,
T. IV. 3BELBY OOBMANDEB
WID Mnlvc- la-.-o trips jut inonlli on the Eoutlrm
Coast, leaving Kroadway Wlrarl,
On the 3d and 18th of each Month
AT 9 O'CLOCK, A. M.
I'-- BillB orLadiuK will bc furnished bj lln
PoUer ward.
For' ("Wight OP pasaage ajrplv orr board, or* at tin
office ol S. J. Ilenslev, rrorncr of Froot and Jack
son ntreets.
deer) S. J. HENSLBY, rrealdent.
v-.tfttt la no naltar remedy.
Blits, Md by
irr?rl..:rrrw*;]ON A CO., Asents,
I.KS, Ai>»lliccai-ics Hall,
It/can At,','., l.at* Angeles.
p. x. sea st,
Arrrrm* Off
A, SEH.B'B M .MCII,
OOCT & SHOE MAKUFACTURER*
of I'nrr.Anrrt.i'irr.v,
Wnrflionsa, !31ft C*;-.,,!,,,uia Kti„et, belo^
Bnfici j- street, r.ft>. Fruoelsio.
Constantly on in.,nd, a large itssoi*!etl stock of
Gentleme-,'S) l*adiea, Misses, and
'Children's Wear,
Of »Upe*.',0r tillable* r alM. l"*eiicb Call* licol I,c.?s
and Iloor I'ronts.
F. X. KAST.
Role Agent for Calilornia.
• ^-Country Orders promptly attended to.
Sltwek
VOL. XII.
LOS ANGELES, CAL., SATUBDAY, MAECII 21, 1833.
NO. 46.
Cos ^.ugcUs Star:
PUBLISHED EVEUT SAT011RAT MORNISG',
At the STAR BUlLDTNas, Spriuj^ Struct, L<.
Aii<;elcH,
BY M. II A MI I. TOW.
SubBorlplfons.pei
For Six months
For Tlire.e Mouth
Siugle Nnmbei
Advertisements inserted at Two Dollars per square
often linen, for the first insortion ; nnd One
!>ollar per square for each siibr-inqnent insertion.
A li-berat deduction made to yearly Advertisers.
San Francisco Aircncy.
Mr.C. A. Cit VNfl is the only auUiorizea agent
for the Lo^ AxfttiLKS Star in San Francisco.
All onl fir s hi ft at his office. Northwest corner of
Washington and SfirHome streets. Covernment
aMding, (up stairs) will lie promptly attended to.
r E R M S :
er annum, in advance.
.55 00
. 3 or)
. o m
Easiness Carts.
C. E. THOM,
Attorney and •Counsellor at Law
LOS AN'RELKS.
Office in Pico BuildingR, Spring street. jvrr
DR. J. C. WELSH,
P IE Y S IC I AIV AND S|U II« E O JV,
Office. OITY I1IWO fSTOItE,
Main street, Los Angeles.
Office hours, 9 to 12, M ; and 2 to 0, i-.rvt.
August 1. ml,..
HOTELS.
BELLA UNION HOTEL,
LOS A^QELES.
JOTIX KIiVU & HENBV IIAMTOEt,,
Proprietors.
TTIE SUBSCRIBERS baling lea^d the above
named Hotel, wish to assure l.'*.-*'r rii-:id.-i
■and the travelling public that th-v will *--i ! ■■■.voi*
to keep the Bella Union what it haa always liecn,
THE BEST HOTEL
IN SOUTHERN" CALIFORNIA.
Families can be accommodated with large, airy
rooms, or sails of rooms, well furnished.
The Bills of E;ire
■sbal! be inferior to none io the State.
All tlie Stages
to and from Los Angeles arrive at and depart from
ihis Hotel.
Tlie rear anil fill Hard Saloons
shall receive the most strict, attention, nnd the
-patrons shall lind that, this ho'ise will be carried
on 98 a first class Hotel ontiht to be.
Los Angeles, May 31, 1852.
UNITED STATES HOTEL.
3^_EEii:o. Street,
S. &, A. LAZARD,
IMPORTERS,
And Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
FiraiBcli, Engl .aii and American
Dry Gooi's.
Corner of Melius Row, Los Angeles. 1 02
PHINEAS BANNING,
POHWARDla\"f, and COMMISSION
AGENT,
New San Pedro and Los Angeles-
For the Lus Angblcs K'1,111.
F. P. RAMIREZ,
NOTARY PUBLIC,
Office with J. It. Sitchell, Esq., Temple's Block.
French, English, nnd Spnnlsli Tvatislbted,
Collections Made, &t_.
A. LEHMABJ,
PTaAtrS A1SD ORrVAMErVTrVI.
CARRIAGE PA1NTIM0, &0.
Inquire at John Golfer's Shop. miiri
On yon anow-capped Bummit, tow'ring lA-'At,
Softly -Sleeps the tvcning »ky,
Calm andek'ar, and puielj blus,
Looks tli.it vault of r.l'-uilkis.** Ijuu.
Evening siglis lier last 1'nr^wtll,
An sweetly tolls the vesper bell—
Deep>tobed echo hears the strain,
Anrl Softly sonde it back again.
Darker now the shadows grow.
As silence reigns in the vale below ; ;
The red man Keeks, in sullen niorxl,
lii.s cheerless couch in yonder wood ;
While watching o'er the distant town '
Night's fair daughter looks calmly down —
Now stillness, like the last dread etfeep,
Wraps fair nature wide and deep.
'Ha the hour of -hatlowy thought,
So fall -,v;|.h wit.clii**.;: fitiiey fraught— '
'Tis the hour that calms tlie breast-
And woos the weary heart to rest—
When the soul beats quick and high,
To soar beyond the dir^'mng 'ky,
Her owu, her distant land to lind,
And leave thfs exile land behind.
I Armeies, March iOth, 1863.' '
Los An;
I e s .
will i
TIIE SUBSCfilBEE hnving leased the
l aboveestabJisbmeat, bjegs lea*.*i*to iii-
. foriattid piililic that he basrefltted and
peffflrEKsbed it Elimagbeat, mul that it
conducted iu (lie very best style. The
table will belibernlly supplied with everything
the market aff-Brda, aijd-every aare will be taken
to make the UNITED STATES HOTEL a co,„.
fortirilile home lor boartlepp.
Attncheil to UieHutel, is a BILLIARD ROOM
and BAR, where the heat ot liquors und oigare
are kept.
Terms moderate, to suit the time?.
Miners coraiat. from or to the mines ofHol-
_ coiEbe, -Pijtoffi, Moliave or Snn &abpiel, will tind
tfeis.H conveuieut place to meet their lrieDdc, or to
«Utnin deairable infoFraatioa.
A BAKEIir is alrto attached fn the Hof.el.
LOUiS Mi^SMER.
Los Angeles, November 81.I1, 18(12.—tl'
IR0OKLYII MIR,
SAIV THAXCISCO.
['Riirroi:
idn
THE FAMOUS P
well known ;uid ,\ I estB
begs leave to inform bip pati ■
that on and after the Stat nf
will remove from the old dil
' Broadwny. where he has -resided since June 1852
and will open ihat SPACIOUS AND SLEGANT
■8RIOK STRUCTURE, wliich wae built ftxpreasly
for a hotel, on the south-east corner of Sansome
.and Pine streets. The Building is (ire-proof and
supplied throughout with gns, anil water by the
•Chrystttl Spring Water Company, nnd every convenience isoHered at tbis Hotel"; the room.-; beinir
. all well ventilated, large aod cp tamed ion**, and 1
•do uot hesitate in eajing that the BROOKLYN
■will be second to none in the State. Merchants,
Miners, Traders and all others visiting the city,
are invited to come and examine for themselves.
The Brooklvn Hotel Ominibus will convey yon to
■4he Mouse free, aud if you do not like the accommodations it will cost yem nothing. The Omnibus
will always be on the whari'on the arrivaj ol the
inland and ocean si.earners, to take passengers and
baggage to the Hotel. Tbe Brooklyn Hotel is
■conveniently situated, being in tiie central part of
the city, where the ears of the city Ruilroad pass
the door every, three minutes each tvuv, to all parts
of the cily. There is a large Reading Room attached to the House oth} Library Contaiaiug 500
Standard Works, exclusively for tiu: U3e of its
puesits. Rooms will be let by the night, week or
month, with or without board; also, suites of
Rooms to families or others at reduced rates.—
The Taljle will always be supplied with an abundance of the choicest and best ihe market can afford, and no expense will he spared to set a fable
that will defy the criticism of the most fastidious
' epicure. JOHN KELLY, Junk.
Sau Francisco, Oct. 23d, 1862.-3id
OHOOS, MEDjCINES, AG.
"WHOLESALE AKD RETAIL.
APOTHECARIES' HALL,
Mali, street, nearly Opposite Comiiierelftl.
.Or. ££. :o- i&fli^XjiEiE.*
HAS ON HAND, and is constantly* adding to
one of the most complete assortments ot Drugs
Medicines and Chemicals, Sonth of Sun Francisco
together with al! the Patent Medicines of the day
Also a fine assortment of
Perfumery and Toilet Articles.
All of which he warrants genuine and of the best
quality; which ho offers, Wholesale or Ketail. on
the most liberal terms.
Physicians' Prescriptions compounded at all
hours, day or night.
H. B. MYLES,
LosAngeles, Julv 1. 1860,
FALL AND WINTER TRADE.
IMPORTERS OF
nr, EA
■G-lass-ctrare,
Frencli Oliiiia,;
Table Oiitlai-y,
CLOCKS, MIRRORS,
Plaited and Britannia Ware,
Have on hand and are constantly receiving a very
large and full assortment of the above Goods,
which they are selling m quantities to suit, at the
Very Lowes* JHarfcet Hates.
We call particular attention to our CLOCKS
SPEECH OF S. S. COX, OF Oil O.
Subjoined are extracts from the speech of S. S*
Cox, of Ohio, delivered January lotn. 1863, before the Democratic Union Association of New
York. "We ust of our readers a careful perusal
of them :
Gentlemen a New England orator, Tristram Burgess, once said, tbat "we were sutniiindud, protected and secured by our Contfiitutfofl, Irom the
power and violence of the WOftd,«efl homo wealthy
regijpns lire.by their own baniers-^lieltei-i.-d from tha
savages of ihe ocean. But a small insidieup. per-
Sev'ering reptile im.y, unseen, bore through ihe
loftiest and broadest mound. The water follows
its path, eiiently aad imperceptibly at first,
until at length a breach is made : and the ocean
u.-iiirtg in, fioeks aud herds, and men, are swept
by the deluge.**1
"Puritanism is the reptile, whieh has fcwea -boffttg
into the monad, which is ihe Cun.-titution Icbet-rh)
and this civil war comefl in like tl a di .on .o^
sea! Its ruefiing title of devastation will not be
stayed until the reptile is crushed and the mound
rebuilt. This wili never be accomplished until an
administration oblains control, which, in the language of Gov. Seymour, can grasp the dimes
sions and coairol tiie sweep of this war flood.
(Great cheers.) To Obtain such an adminifetratiun
the people will, unhappily, have to wait for sorce
two years. Mean while, v. hat new schemes of division may furih-'t' distract ns. My appreheiiMou
is, ihut before ihe people can ihiiieughly reform
themr-eives or the conduct of their government, anolher and tenfold worse civil si rile may be raging;
not the -South againsl ihe North : not slave against
Iree Slates, but ihe Nest fa nga'mst iiseH. I prav
God in his mercy to avert snch dangers. The
hatred not of New England, but of its arrogant,
-eUisli. Harrow and Puritan pi-licv, ilow dominant
in the I<\deral government, will, I few, never be
allayed nnnl its I.i ood is --lied iu our northern
States. There is but one policy which could have
stopped ie ; the laainiainance by tho Administration oftbe policy mat ked ont id the su miner of
1861. which declared uo war for cnnque-l-—no
anti-slavery crusade. This alone united thf Norlb.
This might have pre. erred that t::iity. lint I see
no hopes ol a return to such a policy. The bigols
of New England have their Chandlers in Michigan
and thi it* Greeley a in New York, arid the anti-
slavery pressure continues. Ittdeed it is dowquestioned whether any poiicy can now restore the
Union. Abolition has made the Union, for the
so.'') An arou-eri ;
madlv. and the re- i
Ikigiai-d, lb. aieichai.ts and manufacturers have
accumulated fortunes with Aladdin-like rapidity.
There wages are high and contracts abundant;
while the West, with the .Mississippi sealed, is
charged exloi tionate rates in tho transportation
of its produce, and in the price ol ils purchases.—
Ils people are nobbed by tariff and robbed ou what
they sell and what thev buv. Mr. ISeecber bas
boasted that Good has givei! the Yankee that intelligence that knows how to turn to gold all it
touches. [Laughter,J It is his insatiate cupydi-
ty, mingled wilh his Puritanism, wbich is new
making men study the uew Census; Wlficii makes
New Yurk wonder why, with a less population,
Ni w England has twelve Senators to her two!—
Ohio, too, ponders fhe fact lhat her popula ion is
greater, by 435,2.14. lhan live New Lngland States,
yet ihey have ten tr'enators while she has tv;o !
The West is begmuing to ask whether this politcal
inequa ity among the States, made for a wise reason, is io be ur-ed for her oppression ; whether to
that .source in aitribiitable the py.'i.i.J. legislation whicti
I'v-iUn-H manufiLKture nun buwnis tlie consumer ; wliich
hampfera the free interchange and enterprizt of thin
;rvrr.l .■:).■!!, -AAIIA. ■ V^V ,.i;;:,... tr. ^j... ,-,:,„ ,.(;V j I ! 1,1, „. \\l. :
world and given tn New England fabrics the monopoly'
■v:::o:-r; :■:!: niillioii.-r uf iva.-.ttci, fanrM.-r.-r. Whv are ive to
puy filty j,'-).- cunt*, 11,0re for good.,, ana lose htw percent.
on wheat, ami corn, acd port*,? Fifty per eeat.l I should
say ninety ^er cent., aijiling ihu cost of goki to pay the
fifty per cent, custom dulk-o. wbich tlie consumer at last
pays. To gratify one favored class and section, are laws
oi economy .su.s|;.cm]ed with tiie Constitution? Is free
trade good, when it takes off the duly and .li.p- tl.e revenue on madder and coloiimr matter, but bad : '*. ' ■'.- '.:.
ree cotto.-r and woolen tabpua ? I.= it right to tax IHinofa
■ iiisky until '.iie w:ui!jfii.ii'.i:.i*C; i-i >;i.o; p'ri.:. lit gi iitil v the
noinbeis from .Maine, and let the tarilf remain on wooden
ici-ews, to eir ri cli aKLodo j-lane cuinpan v ■ One is made
:: th-.: V,\...t anil The other in Nev.* Kngi.uid ; but is that a
■easou why the one should be burdened by an internal
'"■ n-tA.roy, while the other bears an external tax to
ester? Do you wond..r that, at public meetings West, it
-' the JlisHUfcjppi VmIIi-v shall no longer be
ethc-Uireat
no sign yet. Over three months are gon
of ils issue ; but where are the resultiii"
ery Southern man and woman a police force to guard
against an uprising of the blacks; but the gr»at rebellion
lives. The wnr goes on. Governor Andrews and the negroes may continue to dance their jubilees with their
'v.r::.. nm!. as usual, to contemplate its results with tlieir
h'*'.,':l.v ..:''-■'*-o'.l'r and ci-iminal nonsense to expect a re-
like thin to be put down by words—legislative or
' " '" drawn from the passionate and wild
bngland Puritanism, in press and
i of No;
*,„v
i.'.ath'rrr than yield U,\. ,_,.a,
these feu ten. New liugiand *
bloody strife of bro'.inn*:, \
rship over the morals of
is ready to welcome thia
' Every Sabbath you have a sermon from Dr. Cheever
(hisses) oemr.nst rat ihl-that c-ir fail ures io bai-1**- a>*.. , -,;..
* Uv-.u.-re of the sin of slavery, lie makes slavery ihe terrible crime of the world in
Lis own fancy nnd reduces Omnipotence to the task of
punishing us by war for its existence. He conveniently
her side to tbe battle, and that
by his foolish logic, with the
Lvoho!
iii, God i
t,
;,r.;,v
(- to Ya.
CU],i*
tion have made DiBuniorTl "fie* . ' I -ricds'in
way ol Re-Union ! l'eri.~h Now :.. . "*.. \, ■:,., '-ff.
may liv«,l " Tiiere is a tegead related of Bt. Iv- wre
As lie lay on the gridiron", conscious that he was s
cienily done on one side, he requested the cooks, if
too inconvenient, to turn him over and do him on the
other. I fear Ure West will never be ianonized, if it re-
qiiive* such double saciihces to reach the saintly cal-
l'rri*r,.;;r-i with this lo?ic, turn back to 1678, when Ran.
oalph cume to New hnglano irom the parent Gov
to find out the cause of the Indian war. Tbe fc_.„_
the (.i).-'-iiiiii"!it ol Massachusetts furnishes the coi ■-
tary. It ohio.ally oecku-i.-o that '■ these are tbe great k ■ ■'
provoking evils for whicli God hath uiveu the barb; rv-f
heathen commission to rise against them : For mer v-"**-
ir.Ji h.n-! irrrir and p.eiiwigs loade of women'n haii For
vr.m-ii ■■■■■o*.r ir. *__■ -orders of h.ri;-. a.„) f,::,.. c u 11! r. g (■■;r,i—.
[rri'i lnyir.rr ont \i.ol~ }■:_]?.;-.*;..,; ',;; .-.*,,;,];... Af.iffffAfE'Ef.
1'oliowJ::^; ,:•,;■?: ::*_;■: f shioirs :-.. r'-l r rv.;.:. ivl. )■ t,-_ 'f-rff-L
nc.-s in the people in not frequenting ihe meeting and
ot:.er-r rrorng away bi..f.,i*e ;],r- I,:■-...--.-:...'_- ; ■ ,-.,,-....; ■■_*...7'<_' *yf
snliering tl.e ('ankers to dwell among them, and to set up
then* thresholds by God's tb re.-hold.-, contrary to their
o.o 'av,-s aiid rer-.oJir; ions, wiih nranv suoh reasons.'"
Thus it wiil be seen that the original defects ic the Pu-
vir r, pair.;..,*,! have been copied to tbis dav. . Like lbe Chinese artist, when told io eopv a fine and costly piece of
porcelain to which some accident ],-,,.. hai.-i.enfe'd he UA-
lowedIhis instructions ,vilh such gren 1 skill and labor,
■.ti at ne cop.ed the crack *.*.*;j,eh ext ended the nho'" le-y'h
ot the model. * • * * irr Although th. averts of
1 *= 1 r tLKland,
!;,:v-d *■■:* - ::o ;■;■■■,, p'*niy ol their -'dear mother." the
i the
* But these econorr.ii
Congress. The evils r
but unhappily they s
Tliis is bred in the Po
liiindreds of year,- ;
a be i
The We
"■sts ;
do not
iced by
aggf&ndh
■ '"■■:-' detest beii -,- | Puritan politics, ti.ai vos should
be reinvirir-.: ■,% •;.,. .-■■„•.., and that the State sii on Id unite
its Junctions practically wiih thc church, for the propagation of moral and religious dogmas. y.,r these objects
tiir' irirvs of o-r.'omimy ar.'i Vie ilrelaLos of tmblic OrJiiion.
which ever look to the ink-,;::--!, of sections and men are
disregarded. He who fails to observe liiese laws unoer-
The
as illustrated in ihe cal
ton, last year, who wer
board of deacons, bccai
antitype in the cruel persec
in New England churches
: father and son, at Bos-
"sloyalty before a
e Demo
his of the Quakei
ita
■"-■-lor:: v ' I .:::■:*,. v. Tiiei'e wnV Yvi-x
:i general benef :[_:_. M:..,:.■:;; ciner.; i - hnJ a devil That belief prevails yet-outside of Massachusetts. The misera-
tle girls and
e fanatics of 1
1* Old v.
vn-.:. :
riE: the;
who spy
houses before godly I
the zealots of to-day—;).o-<- i
about to accuse and arrest tho
politics. (Cheers.)
* * * * * All that relieves New England from the
drvr-rrer-s oi these i-e;*r*i.;r.ci;ev ;s Ore r-r-.;!,.:,,, v,-[ ;.,.., r .,.,,.
sacrifice lor independence in the subsequent century
Though it is by no means clear that she would not have
rebelled against tlie best Covernment on earth or even a
commonwealth of angels, not according to her own no-
ions, yet tbe mother countrv gave her cause, and she
radicated it frlfcb spirit.
nd voted against Jefferson at
■6 him as it did Douglas. Sir
rst, and her press slandered I
ilelbr.ii. Her Josiah Quincys
present,
people m
("Tha
iinjlv ti
1 i 't i
nay. i: has already brought—crash aod cinifusfon wh'ei
bettet iviirids evolved beauty and harmony! It is ntr
truetliat New r.ngland is
dafB, thuudc
cause thev
closed the cl
ced the
, Butler
ninistry
ies. the Ini
" i denoi
It is not s
Lop-sided
ircr-matb
who rea i.s Hie I,-ibit;
tvef mind
It is n
Krr^lnmi soourd :,v:-a-
the L-nmn.
She sh.
of the reb"
ill's and h
build facto
which runs
benefit, a u
ore power
Vo:
the blan1
side or a questiui
of the cotton
tax, for her own
has the West? It
vill be huniiii,; ied
that " slarerv"
s me,, and Chris-
intend now to reus refute it. Be-
av.-.-lip through o
s etc ---ion cotton. She has. been the ft
cy from Ihe days of tlie Revolution to
Her Marseilles is a hymn of ay.olhef
■■. horse thief a~ J
v-;v
- had ii
u Ihe hud cities of Massachusetts
n.,1 tnrow oil itvaooliion incubus, while Portland and
New Haven already glojj in Democratic Congressmen.
***"-****„
At the M*wKnirlahrl dinner, not long since, Mr. Beech-
er took pride in these very characteristics. He "ir.'-v»Vr'ri
■re i*::;::;.-:- i.en.rrr-r* '• he :y-, s i \-,. rnr.*' -vin*** - - ■'■ •■-* *.,*-
Heome,
.■rn civiii/atioii, the pick■*,.'.-:;-■ of cr-a t i. :; 'laughter ■)
Chat to leave New England out r.f •;.,. Union ff"fn ft live
Ilie head ont nf the body." Ik-.,... vv, jd ,][e (i;rj
..-hit
rol
THE JVEVV HAVE A- CLOCK COAIP.l-
A VAB MA.VUFACTUUE,
(Fcmcr/y the Jerome Company,)
For w'nich we are
SOLE AGENTS FOR CALIFORNIA.
16 Saxsome Street, Corner Merchant.
o25^m Sao Francisco.
THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
Beginning of a Few Volume.
The dumber for Jaiuiiiry, 1803, begin
THE ELEVENTH VOLUME
Ofc tSae Atlantic Monthly.
FROM the commencement, in 1857, tlie ATLANTIC hi*
rapidly increase,1 in ciiviilatino, and it now has tl:
tbe tta tea ar d fie*B coon cte srmoDg the p< ople.
As & weBlern j:ian, r^preeenting the capital of
tbe tea-ding State ol thu northwest during liiese,
past fix years, I i.uve -aot boon anob&'ervaiit of ihe
aigns in that quafti v. I liave pi r-=istently oppoffd
all scbeDtes oi secession and ili-vi.*inti. i yet ot-
pos-t' them. But I ;un Ir.r v_eh:;:t\ ihe ttnpufeeW i
Sentiment of ihe West. The erectftrd W the States
wnt.r. d by tbe Misi-it-si'ppi and its liihutaiies iuto
an independent. Republic ; standing on ils own ie-
sources, mint nil and li gri cultural, with a Soil so
fat ihat if you '-tickle it ■.\:tii a iioe, it will laueb
wiiii a harvest;" [cheers] — a connertiou wilb
wrbicb; would besought by me Soatb and tlie F.&si,
yet cboosing Ior itself ns cheapest and best'outfet
io the sea: banded togelb'M. by rivers aad homo-
geoeity of interest—becoming something more
than a dream. It is ilie talk of every other western man. All fall in;o it, with a Inch iiy whicb is
ehncktiig to the olden sense of oatiouulily, I spe-Afe
of these i-clieme? only to disapprove and to warn.
Jusi aa m 1661, in iny seat in (Jonsirees, I warned
of similar sou'hem scbetnes, bat in vain. All
warning fell on f-odden hearts. In vain the lamented Douglas uiged ; in vain Ihe liable Crittenden plead. [Cheers for Crittenden !] New England i'annticisin made com promise impos-ibie. Let
lis^now be warned in lime! Aa patriotic men,
loving our wlio'e country, we must undersiar'ii the
sources ol tliis new discontent. The West protest
now, as New York and Pemt.-ylviuiia and New Jersey prolesied in lbe 'ast elections, lhat they desire
io aland in tbeUrh'n. protecied by the muniments
Constitution. Gov. Seymour [great cheers]
.ur-e oi' tlie violenei
i.-t. Pro u dim ni, tlint
ilislicd, i.*. n Fample
It in the
ri*.; :
ing tlie
hereby
y. ther.
bcci
cli into the
3d politics und bc^at
divided ami
. certain eia^s in ii, certain section
ve dninned forever. Speculation
in tiie organic political law, poinou-
riperities of seclions.
Following tin's, ;\* tbe lorrienl cove eqn.tiee of these i: idler law notions, came a volume -vhich [ hold in inv hand :
■■ Th'-* CorisiitiiiiiMi, <i. ProSlaverj Compact, or Extract;;
from tiie Madison I's pons, bv " whom think ven:- Wen-
dell Phillips I lu liiir, volume it was -sliowu.aB I quote :
" Tnat a ccinpi-'.miir-c was made between freedom and
slavery in 178ff; graB^ifig to tlie siaveiiolder distinci priv-
Ueges ;i,id }*retcetion for his slave properly, in return for
cer.ain commei-eial concessions on his part toward the
They proved aUo, th it the nation at large
"■■-'■ st. Thj-a i.rhtnii ofall tiie intelligence andee
:'■ -bind, which ciinies from Host en and is echoed from
Brooklyn, is 1 lie offshoot ef the same pharasaicai '■ant,
which has rurisj its own praises through its nasal ortran
for three hundred years. It ln-> assumed peculiar otlen-
siveness now and hero amidst the bloody strife, of which
Ipr<
e the source of this
thai hr.
ihat co
its Brtrt
of this
it willingly and wit
umc arc vlhcvri
Quincy Adams, cei
had its protection i
™ tatLtut'
at the
and entered into
In the same vol-
9 of Webster and
wing that slav.ry
and therefo
nda
.autiv
means much and well when he sav
ufaei
:ld 1
Id i
[C
WATTS' NERVOUS ANTIDOTE,!
ASTO PIIYSICAT, RKSTOIIAT1VE.
TIIE. MEDICA.L WONDER OFTHE AGE.—
Thc most powerful und v. onderfu! medicine !
ever discovered.
Wnt.ts' JfprvQVfl Antidote
Hhs cured, and will cure, more cases of nervou
disorders than imy other known remedy.
Wnlts' Nervous AlTUdote
Has and will cure Nervcus Headache, Giddiness
. Panning. Paralysis, Extreme Debility. Neuralgis
Chronic and Infl.-tmtnatory Rheuiriatistn, Toothach
&c. jfea,
"Wrttts1 KervotlS Antidote
Ifl an effectual remedy fbr Wakefulness. Its sooth*
ing and quieting itdlnence in remarkable.
"Watts' IVervons Ai.ti.Uste
Will cure Delirium Tremens, Nervous Trembling
gpilepsy,.Twitching ofthe Facia! Nerves, Convuh
•Btons, and Pulmonary complaints.
"Watts' Nervous Antidote
Will act upon that stute ol the nor
which prodnccH Depression of Spittle
Mind, Mental. Debility, Hysterics, el
•wonderful in rejaveaatiog premfttaice i
concclini; decrepitudn hrou*_;:it on 1
indulgence, that uuthing lint a trial oao eon vi not
the patient of its qualities. It is uol/j-ui cxeitatv
but s stren^tiiener, purely vegefiftbleaod bwmleea
like a slcillfnl itrcliite t bagina by laying a (inr
foundation, and gradually but incessantly add:
strength aud vigor until nothing is let. unfinished
Fo.r B-ile at retail by all Druggists. jy!93m
do not intend to he i
ilution-brfak'ine, ltlW-
ieeii-m ol New EiJple
odl
Ustiere in iirotiii,inS in its reiuiers,
Tlse Best Essays, the Best Stories,
The Be&t Poems,
Bjateai
Mrs. Julin )ff. Vum
I, Henry J, rdckermaii, VA. Va.-vvv'.\,
Mrs. A.D. T. vriiit.
pv, John Weiss, Professor A. D. Will
d is so
The foregoing
let ni Contributors includes
.•e, and
THK T.KAOIIV
« lVRITEIlS OP AMfeitlCA
■TERMS—3ft« -V
LAVl'lC ir> for sale by all Bonk ai
TICKIVOR * FIFXirS,
135 Washington street, Boston, Mass
nay. They will
brt-ak them who
tiled, however,
aetyrog, nevro-
tid 1 [A voi^e—
•vs.'} Nc. We will keep her
ior mid castfoitii tlie seven
liev; - ol e trrical, meddling and nionOfioliKing ag
prandisftnent lrom ■ this political *Vn^df.len.
[ Lanulit' r] From the soc'al and pnlitical ban
which Will be issued against this j.n?lilent section,
will isr-ue ttnether and a heller order oi things, under ibe Consii'iitiion.
I entreat tbe Democratic joiinpr men ofNefv
York net to ceumenance any of these schemes ol
drBmi-nibermeiit, which we oi ttie West will sirive
to repress ; but never cense day nor night, to warn
the people ofthe new rocks and Iresh breakers
which threaten. He who is ;i,0st falt&fpl in point:
ing tliem out in fmne, tbotrgh he muy be r-Wikid,
gives the best prOOl of.-iimle hearted loyalty and
will be approved by hia conscience and his God.
Denyinir till swnpaihy with any eclieme whieh
would in any way mut late the Republic, I boldly
declare to you tbese new and gunvin^ dangers.—
ji liaison Davis is aware of ihese things; and
eoutils lankly upon the weakness, incerliitriie ;'.ml
division engendered hy Che fatal errors oi this Ad
minisirntiou. Already Ibe DemOoHltie ni"gan ol
Cincinnati and the Repuhlicau or^an nt Chicago,
are issuing their Warnings in season. The latter
advises its Iriends in Cnntrress, that the fer mer
who is selling his corn for ten cents per bushel,
if lie does not use it for firewood, is not easily
satisfied lhat there does not exist, somewhere, a
wav [through which those who act for him at Washington may afford hitn relief. At least, he wiil. il
ihe relief cannot be instant, want to know iviiy ii
should not be prospective.' lie is pi-rlectly aware
that while New England is getting lbe Ijeucins. the
Weal is suilering the burdens of this war. In New
hell- It wound up with the demand : "No Union nitli
iiirAveholilei,-.:;
Perlmp» Wemkll Phillips may not be coni=i'.lijra>l by sonic
as a representative oi tlie Republican pavlv. Put ii clues
truly represent the Adm mint rat ion, »ilh 'its jne^irn. ration of liberty. Peek at the votes in Col gr ess on niy mo-
tion on yestetctoy. to lay on the table a. resolution by
Thaddeua Stevens to raise 150 000 negro soldiers, Why;
ono would judge ffom thfrt I'.-e- (vhfte riwft in tliis ennn-
try. like the fantee'e ci:. u-as "preitj neaily gineoift."
I v.\v.::"-, M- nn; especial tifTerenee between Be publi eaii
and the
r link..
:l.e srinirj
ii. Thi
.eout of tlie s
edog.
etrotistic nnd
r.y. his um irom rue Gospel It in
-.--"ration or the old Puritan ism, for
.r.-r. and rigid virtue!-. It come* from
n around Boston as Tran<--cen den tali sts.
s the devil, ps next is the New Yoisr
Tribune. Its most clever exponent nils Emerson. It haa
priests high arid lniv. including the great Channing, who
feists himself into the Senate room at Washington of
Sundays, to preach tlmt Abolition hate and retail such
■danderagainst tlie Democracy as the powers at Washington seem most to relish.
But what is this Transcendental ism f Whence is it? It
is.-frih*!; fiom l.liiuloostan by Jlr. Eeecher's pickpocket of
crc*>t!cn. It is the emanation of Oriental speculation.
Thta tvitt] -vye. Tl.e smart Yantee has only plagairised
-,. ii:.t the A tvas ...;;tain. what (he Eralrmii'n believe.
This philosop'iiy cannot, be' ealleo Pantheism, for that absorbs -nature and man in God. It i.s nol .Materiali-ni, for
thii'* absorbs man and God in nature ; but it i.s the absorption of God and nature in man. and lhat man the Brahmin orthe Pnr if ;i n ! It believes in nothing Out the soul.
The sou! of ■■■!! b <],-■■■. , -,-■ -■ i;*.-r., No ma iter, xo COLOR
— nothn -■ bni the B»nl in mini ; he is all ; it is all. One
oLMhfs. C;-,.'; . -. _\'..* ■_•. i1L ;.;, tiiat ihe world would be
what it s!n old be, ;f he werje onlv as holy as he should
be. This is the nearest approach o'f this-sect tohnmilitj.
He being all in all—he holds himself personally responsible tor the ubiiquity of tlie ra rib's axis. Poyou wonder,
therefore. That ]i»> holds himself responsible for slavery
"-rolina? Another, Kmerson, holds that he (Emerson)
rythiurg; therefore he (Emerson)
therefore, that since be
If. tbat hi holds him to
a- that .v:*; ibing ir-—an
Is not
politics
law and the
■eveuue tax law on liquors spring from the same source.
\ea-ardless ol' the riglils of properly in the one case, or
he spirit, of a revenue act in the oiher. New Endr-vri: big-
it rv ever strives to cure men's morals try legal wait res.
iiis same fu unto in Liie bitter wai ers oi' civil su ite
In tliis m ■
tave Sowed.
on-lit to be eonsmieJ. aJn
ounael of the War Departm
e, the Conslit ution
icred. r*r nullified. The
Mi*. Whiting, a Bo ati n
■ Qir^ensBion of tlie war peW
iw.s the Puvilan ihiotrineby upholii-
Joverument to interfere wilh sla-
iiv other insiitiiiioi*. oonjdition r>^*
:h tbe subjectaof the United States
ch interlereuee biStHneS essential
defence oi public v,-elfure." It is
:■:■ trvse. tba* what is fnr the com
0 wejfare is to be decided by the
It being also understood that we
ng of a ii otber nml inferior easte—
lie infallibility of the Prabminicnl
.ist sucii doctrines that prochinrn-
(Ue. Oilier sections are ui't tri be
una]. Western nnd Border Sta ;■;■-
b,\>n consulted, the proclamation would never "we been
issued ; and by theii beta 11 never enn or shall be executed. GiyinK to lbe rebellion more vigor and unity ami to
fhe North discouragement and division—il will only be
potent far mischief, bv rendering the war a failure and
Union hor.ehss. Tills j, the direful r.esull of those iuter-
meetdHAg pnrttta of New England. But the pr iclaton ■ i:■ -.-.
was io end ilie war. How? Iiy the paper ami ink used
in its printing? By the latijruage written, cr the Eionnd
thereof? No—but as a military naeasaret Bewf By
stirring up blacks lo mutiny, and tli us stopping the supply of rebel labor 1 Well—two weeks are goue. We gee
s of Bor
is God ; lhat Cod ir
iseveryihing.
makes ibe negro a part
be bis ei|ual? Or thet 1
he is i Po vou wo! di ■
and seif-suliicienc'- of i
Po you wonder that und< , ti.:.- pfcil *l pby lhe Southern
lwin aii'i mind *.vere underrated V Vh.it tbe greatness and
strength nf Massatrhusetts and the North were oven,-ited?
I; was under these mooushiny delusions that Governor
Andrew foresaw the roads swarm with the myriads, who
never trooped to the war, and that Greeley' beheld the
nine hnndred thousand rush to Father Abr.-tham, who are
jet to rush. ******#*
In conclusion. Pern oc rats of New York, you have traced
with me the footprints in history of this inveterate foe
to our Pemocracy, the Puritanisin of New Engtend. You
have seen its bitter waters gushing in the wilderness
from Plymouth reek, ami running through history in the
same old channel, until its latest movement is for negro
eatancipajion. Yon have seen it poisoning the pulpit
and the press wiih iis dogmas. Ton have seen it silently
boring like a reptile into the mounds of the Constitution.
Yev have seen i ;v >.;. vie ;*•- ui'Vr ;: :.r e-.v.-'i i'vv liood :**,isj: ':-,<
—a sea bil owy With fraternal Hood. It has obtained
power, arms. We know how it has user"; them, and at
what cost. War has been called a wholesale grave digger
who works for wages ! V.'.ha t wage..': Ask the tserretaiy
oi' tlieTieasurv, now in vour city to raise new hundred.*
of millions. At what sacrihee/ Ask those who are bereaved, ami (hose who are wounded. Ask a quarler of a
million of Northern, uot to count Soulhern men. who
have* perished in the Held or hospital. Alas ! they cannot
answer. Tiieir rude graves in the distant !~outh answer.
Fori lines totter ; industry is palsied ; bankruptcy threatens, for spec ilia tion riots around your moneyed centres.
Thp t;lx gatherer, the embalming doctor, the nnr*e and
the army scavengers play their parts in Ihis great ilfswa
.uni behind it all slauds the gibbering fiend of Abolition,
deterniined to make ths war. began in honor ami palrtol-
,-m. eur'r in hate and disunion: It has already determined not to allow Ihe Peniooiaey to save the t. mon, or
to attempt ir, till they have made sure of its eternal destruction. - » •.»*•-■*. ---j.j'.!■ *-■
On the Tlne\ oniiireli 1790, an expression wns
prend on record a? to lhe pow'era ol the Federal
GovernnieiU on the snil-jeet trf Emancipation, maoy
of those who had assisted in forming the Constitution being then present, and aiding in this ex-
prespleo, KS fotloflfs :—
"That Congress has no authority to interfere in
the Knitmcipfition of slaves, or in the trentment oi
i hem." in any ot tba states ' it remain int; with the
several aWea alone to provide any regulations
therein which bnnmnity and true poiicy may dictate.''
Hildreth's History U. S. vol. 1, 2d Serief.
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Title | Los Angeles Star, vol. 12, no. 46, March 21, 1863 |
| Type of Title | newspaper |
| Description | The English weekly newspaper, Los Angeles Star includes headings: [p.1]: [col.3] "Lines", "Speech of S.S. Cox of Ohio"; [p.2]: [col.2] "The accident to the steamer Senator", "From the Colorado", [col.3] "Letter from an old resident of Los Angeles, now in the Federal Army", "The banker of liberty", "Light in the East", "Where Dan Showalter is", "The Visalia riot martial law", [col.4] "Eastern intelligence", "The last acts of Congress for the Pacific", "Santa Clara mines", [col.5] "Democratic meeting in Fulton County Illinois"; [p.3]: [col.1] "Proposed ammendments to the Constitution"; [p.4]: [col.1] "Exposure to the draft", "Ducking a secesher", "The character of the war", [col.2] "Yuba Dam", [col.3] "A terrible mean man", "Billiards". |
| Subject (lcsh) | Los Angeles (Calif.) -- Newspapers |
| Geographic Subject (City or Populated Place) | Los Angeles |
| Geographic Subject (County) | Los Angeles |
| Geographic Subject (State) | California |
| Geographic Subject (Country) | USA |
| Coverage date | circa 1863-03-15/1863-03-27 |
| Editor | Hamilton, H. |
| Printer | Hamilton, H. |
| Publisher (of the Original Version) | Hamilton, H. |
| Publisher (of the Digital Version) | University of Southern California. Libraries |
| Date created | 1863-03-21 |
| Type | texts |
| Format (aat) | newspapers |
| Format (Extent) | [4] p. |
| Language | English |
| Identifying Number | Los Angeles Star, vol. 12, no. 46, March 21, 1863 |
| Legacy Record ID | lastar-m358 |
| Part of Collection | Los Angeles Star Collection, 1851-1864 |
| Rights | Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery |
| Access Conditions | University of Southern California owns digital rights only. For personal, educational or research use contact: Special Collections, Doheny Memorial Library, Libraries, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189; specol@usc.edu; phone (213) 821-2366; fax (213) 740-2343. Contact rights owner at repository e-mail (or phone (626) 405-2178 or fax (626) 449-5720) for access to physical images. For permission to publish or republish material in any form -- print or electronic -- contact the Rights owner. |
| Repository Name | The Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery |
| Repository Address | 1511 Oxford Road, San Marino, CA 91108 |
| Repository Email | ajutzi@huntington.org |
| Filename | STAR_894; STAR_895; STAR_896 |
Description
| Title | Page 1 |
| Full text |
MODERN WOOING. lie spoke the words that poets ppeafe, Whea all the heart is all aglow. With pulses strong as wnrda are weak, But yet the maiacn ;iuuu;ht liiui slow— She gaaticl npon ihe moon! He tl.e a L*;.ed back, on coldest Fcent, Aj'-i spoke of science, march of mind, Cn betteridg the k$ intent: Ae well have talked unto the wind— ■ She gazed about the room! He then tried art ; she did not hoed, . Or heeding, did not understand. Bespoke of war, of ralar'A f»Mj (At least 'twas not to be her hand)— Sbfe gazed ur1011 tiie m0(ltl1- A! iast^e spoken* city lot?, All buiit upon and -taxes paid, Of'i-.eal. siihurbrin vilin plot?; . ■These were ihe tiling that rous'd the maid She look hia htutd and smiled! ABRAHAM IN HIS TEMPLE. 1. And Abraham sat in his temple alone ; all ihe kign fcrifesls wove far out ia^the'WiWerneesfaadkfiee*! not of Abraham's tnelancholly and loneliness. 2. Abraham was sad fetid leaned upon Ma band i his troubled heacf, then hem'tir- mured " what feast 1 too to** the peppto are wroth with me'/ My dear consort* hast boon taken irom mo .and I am left alone with the High Priests of the land. Woe! woo, ifl meu" 3. And Abraham went into the housetop, saw 8 man piding fast npon an ass, turn Abraham dia cry aloud : " Horace, Horace, where goest thon so fast noon 4. And Horace answered from afar and said: "On to .Kichmond! Onto iliehmoud !" 5. "Verily, verily" crieth Abraham aloud : ■'•'three times and one, hast our great Mossy been repulsed at that gneat eitv. :h>.v, nay. iioracc. that mighty ebVis iinrnva-uablo; *'e have fillen." 6. Then Rora.ee shouted from af;tr and saita : -Yea, yea, on to Kichmond.' — Abraham came'dowa irom the house-top and me iv;o ptered the mansion. Then Horace smth.: "Knowcst thou that great city, Fredricksburg is ours;''" -7. "Ha 1 sayest thou so? Pi whence didst thou get thy message?"— sa$n Abraham. "THdst William Henry tell thee?" "Aye, aye" saith Horace, "verily, verily, Abraham, William iienry is a grearaud good man, and spcalcolh tho truth, I brmgVt tim dispatch, read thou Abraham." 8.' 'And he handed Abraham a great roll of papers and Abraham read aloud : " Our mighty army hast been driven across that great rive- and far into the wilderness, ihey were slaughtered to a great extent whilst crossing on the pontoon bridges." and Abraham let fall the paper. 9. Then Horace said: "Bclievesttliou not, Abraham, givest thou a grea* feast and invite thou all tho High Priests of t£ Sand'; doost thou as did the KiDg of Babylon." 10. " Hay nay,' Horace, it may prove as disastrous tb us as it did to that great man. for already hast our guards been drinking wine and arc drunk." 11. 'iNow this made Horace wrotti andhe opened his mouth saying : "Abraham, Abraham, what sayest thou? it is only Democratic priests that get drunk, discharge them all, then victory will, be oars—thine. Our army is mighty' and must prevail. On to Richmond! Abraham, on to Pioiirnond!" 12. " Ahim, nay, Horace, I cannot do ail that that thou wouldst have mc do, send thee to jersey and bringst 'Little Mack' back to his command; I am repented fbr tho great wrong I clicl when I sent hitn hence." 13. " Gayest thou not so, Abraham, never bringest him hither and our armies snail ever be victorious, and will take Jiichmond as did Titus take. Jerusalem, and destroy & million of men. That great city must bo thine." 14. And Horace left - Abraham and got upou his assand rode away. Then ■ Abraham arose and paced the floor of liis toniple; over and anon he shook his head and said: "Ah! Horace is not a wise priest, I must not.do what he say- est; 1. must Abide by that great article v.-hich our fathers have handed down to us." 15. Then Abraham was startled by a slight noise in the wad, and a hand appeared witing the words: ('Abraham, thou hnf. strayed far from that great article." And an angel came from the wall and stood by ids side. IG. And Abraham said "wife" and the angel said "husband;" it wasatrau- ■sienl visit IVom Ids wife who hadstgone iuto tho wilderness. Now Abraham was troubled and reached out his arms to embrace his w,tfe but she was gone.— It was only vbbonoi'y. IS. And. ho said '''amen" and his voice echoed "amen ;" and he said, "Al>olit!.onistsh.aveduied! fallen! amen! amen!" [From Vanity Fair] Our War Corr«:spotHlence-JL.cttcr from Mc- Aroue Bear Vanity :—It is all right. The rover is free. 'No manacles eonfme these thewy hands. Ko chains clank dismally about [hose svlph like logs. Me and Governor Seymour havo triumphed. Habqm CarpvEiA himself again ! Thc way.I got rid of that indictment scrape is the easiest thing in tho world. I filed a non-appearance in the Court of Common Pleas, and put in a nolle prosequi. This was granted under a writ of replevin, obtained by amicus curios.— Of course when r,he ;/v/o ke se was proven by the commission de lunaticoinquirendo on prima facie evidence, a true bill could not be found: so cuTAf.airit was unprov- en, and I could not bo amerced pro falso clamor suo without a corpus delictu.— Hence the court decided me to boa part of ihe iiudand, aud not liable to action, either droitural or possessory. This was gratifying. I packed 'my car iotd)ag and left.— Thomrhtho ('omniercial Bulletin of Bos- Lou hue reieiTod to my niter wanl, of taste and ski!!, I wish to assur entle publication that I had the skill to get free and the taste to abandon the perusal ofthe Bulletin aforesaid. However, that is all right. George B. McClellan's body-guard is disbanded. Sic itur ad Averni. He said most nobly in your city that he was "still a soldier." Tho Administration would like to make us forgot that fact. Wo can't do it. AVhen Washington is once more in danger we shall ho glad to know that O-eorge still lives and wears army buttons Under my advice and encouragement, Burnside will undoubtedly get along ve ry well. I like him. But 1 want AleLellan back—and I'm Look UndBB the Bonnet.—Quite a ladicrus- aeldent occurred at tbe depot of the Detroit and Milwaukee railway on Sunday morning thi-.tslKuiWl ler^e as a warning to fond husbands wbo are in be imbit or giVfng tangible prflpftof tbeir lore for their better halves in the presence of strangers. On the norbYhs referred to; a Jdtffig married man visited ttie Imin io meet his wile, who way ox pee ted th'fr'om Grand Rapids. Mr. B. searched among the paaseugerB J'or a few moments, and at last discovered a lady standing near the baggage truck with ber back towards him. She wore, he thought the identical clothes possessed by Mrs. so wishing to surprise, and believing thut "stolen kisses are the sweetest" he softly laiijiroacluid from behind, placed hh arms about her neck, and gentle drew ber back upon his bre^at, while his face went under the bonnet, and upon her Kpa was impressed. "A long, long kk-ri-.-ol youlh and love." A slight scream startled him, and the lady tarn ed upon him and confronted him with a look ot intense iudignatioii at. thc outrage. lie discovered for the lirst time that he had committed a grave mistake. With evident embaiwmtuit be attempt- HOLlDAYC_RCULAR. A. ROMAN & CO. Booksellers, SraipfSTters anil Pirt>- lisEieis, Nos. 417 and 419 iWoiitsfoniery street ("Loeotlllt'i; itlliUlill.Li-.) SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. ibix at hat rr :ul thc nt tii -atte genuine Mi?. 11 came clear to the astonished lady who had been yo unceremoniously dealt witfi. It was but a moment before Mr. and Mrs. B. suddenly ici't lhe depot in in id WE would um*- Publi '•ftWaowo-MntnjooniOT tifuUj- bound a GIFT BOOKS j&il ANNUALS Foi* tin' oomlpg yvE-, temther with an ea tens**™ and elegant ussi.ri.nieni nr J''orei;rn tend Domestic PHOTOGKAPJa ALBUMS YOR THK UKSTiOi; TAlil,."':, anowaad [Aproved styles,**&+**%?•&? ^ !*,lin_jiurn iii exauisttfl tas», bound in the '- vl, 'IV :-fv Mnruc.cn nr Velvet, willi Ci.ld- plr-.U-dOr.'inr.i-MiUruut Cliisps, iiiul suit :i.l)li! Tin- llnliiU.V, Mnn-iagi! ur Birtlidaj Gifts. Anto-JPlioto-arraiiJi Aiftiims, Photo-Alb mittfi oS Pietures and Foeiry. F2i;>t.r-i-S.UlsJes and Prayer-BoolCfii wftti >flsefl ihe i lci'len Moral :- ToaBg n>eo> alwa ^stoo e node ■ the b innet before you ntUinpt. tost al tb "nect r swot i/' and you will uaouI a ,-imila.rmi With Bb hap. THKR BltuW.V. —Ai. a couIV: ence raeetiii^ held some vii ere i the : oithern part of om Stan duri ff the great evival season ol 'a8 were present a otb ers, b other irown—a weak, ehy. but no laid ■rably 'fm-ehanded, 1 and achild R, E. RAIMOND COMMISSION MERCHANT 'fio. 105 Front siroot, (Between Washington and Merchant streets.) SAN .KliANCl.SCO, will give particular attention to the Purcliase anti Sliijunent, as well as to the SALE OF IttiKilCHAlvmsF, AMU PBODUCE T\ E. RAIMOND bavin;; been established in Sau Ll. Fr^DCtsco aiooe IS*'',', and having been oou- tinuall v etHja^ed iu the ('otnmij^ion businenB Ibr Merchants aod Prodqews of tbe Southern an a Northern coast of California, i.a well aw with that of Oregon and \'.ri'.s>iin;;ton Territories, feel&eoafi- dent that be will lie ably togive entire fntiinuetioa to parties who may tint.vast tbeir business* to hia care. Jyl6 going to Have him, u You cant get mc eu I ata the ntte busy nor sleep when I lia .id of *.id, wa " SUPERB FAHILY EIBLES KLIaUNTLY ILUlliTNATim AX11 ILLUST11ATRD- L-iiLh.-l wit.li mrw mul b-'iuilitul typn, on Un: iin.^t j>iif»'v -unit boiiinl in tlie mnt-t subi; tan tial manner, with mas- LveClaapawKJOraaiaenta. HMiAYSC.ll BOOEtS. CLAEK'S IlieELSliEJE^GSLS. THE CHEAPEST AKD BEST ARTICLE For Marking Linen. For sale by tbo gross, at J05 Montgomery street, Room No. 2, Sun Fiancisco- eb2S W. HOLT ml s tithe main ; Ulahjis, plai r-.iul Accurate Krtitlons of tlie Poets, ■ .Viti-y.ie.l'i-omTlomcvtr. the mode rj) Long j-soi, Str8.BreftrDmg,itisB'ProrOto»1 Ot*. etc- "•■iDARD AUTHORS, ol iidve ipeecb, whfij report sai .boagbt of seeoriog tbe eootrol of broihe: md bis tine bouse and lurm. In doe court leed-laga, brother Blown was culled en to r experience. As usual iie was lunohle and speech. ■■Tie hud very little to say—ct apeak to tlie edification of his bretheren i lers-lhc time would be better occupied b; incl. And I hayt litis to Kiel inga on my: I am jcir, D Futn 71 S \yA V K Bl V N OVE LS, liff-cen-t ,.:a\'E>ne,—h-ovn tive to lift grpe Coj^es «f Firne Pictures and Statwary-i JWE\$JW BOOKS. GEO. W. CHAPIN a CO., Lower side ol PtarZa. near Clay st SAN FUalNr'IM'O. J3nlPl,OYMEW1r~b*']FlCE AMD GENERAL AGENCY. Fn Farm iish all kinds of ' PS, Mining Oompai dp for Families .■a, Mills, Fuctorii Hotels , Shops Also, ' Tleal , thai Agency, and attend to Fflb22 Anti-Bhcumatic Cordial aaid Eiealttx Kestoratiye ?TS THE MOST VA1 UABLE AXIl UNSPJO'ASSED REM- Sp-Iv tor tUienmatisin and Gout tobe finudtn'the world ■nui "kti.i'vr. nl in*"-="tit. Tin- discoverer of tlie aliove* , .,;;, . ,.. ■■:.. ,,i ii, tnfaHlWHtj in nil en-.= <*K of'Klieu- jwitl" cticat is ; is as bad' om know oxaciiv, but 1 sliall after tlie nex battle. And that will transpire pretty soon The back bone of rebellion is a tolei ably brittle affair. It wili break just one more. You won't bear much ofit afte that, That is myprophecy. I never failed ii a prophecy ; never told a lie ; never mix ed a bad coacktail, and never agree' with the Tribune. Such is virtue. I was on picket duty tbe other da; on the furthest outpost. A rebel pi was stationed "witbi other side ofthe holl< wall Jackson, o£ wh heard. " How are yon V I asked. "Unwell, thank yon." he rem;1 « What ails you V'" 1 continued u I woke up in a cold sweat" <;As howr" I interrogated. "Alt along of nightmare/' be rejoined. "Cause V! I demanded- " Cause I dreamed McClellan was reinstated. If he was, we'd be licked in mighty short metre. I'm going to pray. Good bye." ■That's all. McArone. .;-yoiis and Cut riiruoic nis*e?is( tbe i'liy-iKiiuri .1 ofihu Po»t»j in 1125 v he arii It was von m; i. idded. "I "Would Suspend It."—A minister who is ofthe black abolition stripe, was asked:. " What vail you do with that portion of Scripture that commands you to pray for your enemies V What do you suppose was the mAAExvi-'-r. reply '< Be said: " I would suspend so much of the Scriptures in these times." Is not that a iich idea? A ■ minister of the GospeJ suspending so much ofthe Bible as does not H.-it Iri ni! What do you think of that, reader? It reminds us of old Abe Lincoln suspending so much ofthe constitution of the. United States as does not suit him.—Frceport {III.) Bulletin. ail tbe people Bay Amen.7' lice osudH-J shot up Cuucert s sort ol things Sunday'. -Ti 3 to the L opposition fre- misville Journal ive Stale. Per- Ue ibe fulkuw.Hj Disloyal Kepuclic. queutly point with prit aa a souad, patriotic paps haps they will relii-b and lrom that journal of Jun. G.li ; " We oxpoct matting but evil from tbe radical LJ,'jpul;l:cin:s. Tbey at-fi Ljss(.inl:.!(*.i!y disloyal. Tbey call themselves patriots, and claim to be for profiu" cutin;; tbe war lo the restoration of the Uiiiuo, tbe, id ill be An _N"car Sew Haven, recently, thc engineer ofa train discovered a man lying with his head apparently ea the track. The train could not b- stopped in time, and the wheels took off tii- hat, leaving the drunken man uninjured. 3o6!k Binders, Paper Rulers, and Blank Book Hamif&cturers, 517 Clay find &14 Connnerciril str eta, between Montgomery snd San^ra^e, Sa:ts Fs'iiJsciscff. j, Rill Heads, Brief Paper, &c, * I.BoutnJ, and Piinted to order. eountrv by letter or express, iptlj attended to. aug9 ay dignity to'foHoW tlie mn* ilie certifier les of pliysici.-.u it* I.*; loo well known can be ba who liaTelieen cured en. anil who cm be ige tlii-rrniptioin lhe far DiunkP Wnvi;;: Ruled to ■■ BlaotBouka Bu . 0 Orders from tl: pro D* :3Al.13 n rV'**^*.*'-- . . r a i J Sueosssors to Hawkhurst &Son,) IMP'O'&TBBS AND DRaLERS IN WOOD AHD WILLOW WARE, si I qu if lie rooms, Pails, Tubs, Washboards, Cmirns. &c, ,ii to tin-in Ib want of medical aid, t nhoold any otre CM4 tot wHl*»n twMnumtahoi .lienleu ro^;i)*-*liirp the cures pf-vformed hy 'hi- roedi* thev call'ul my ollice nnd I wili nhav tnpm eeriifi- R of "trim merit, whieh have been .'•ent !o ine volim* v, without applying (or tliem, or Uy Boring individ 'to grt them. r-alebv DR. ADOI.PHUS. IKnts. —Crowe 1 & Crane, corner of Clay and VruvA ;Teets—-Redingtttb feCo., Clay b 'a-sliington and Battery sts.. .-'an Finn cisco. Agent for Los Angeles* Dr. fl. K. JHYLES. SCO V ILL'S ^x^.X^.S3^__.IP J&.1R. X XjXji-A. -AN'ii— STILLING-1 A, BLOOD AND LIVEE, SYKUP- "H"T la Mghlj rfcommemled by phyMci'aUB to e-.nre. the Caneorons Tumiri The true romance of thia wnr will cc purer picture of chivalry than that which (he knightly act; of General Burnside, ben foie his CommSnder in Cliief to requ ipt tha still be employed in his country's service, his sword und niiliiary emoli main on the retired lir^t un rebuke to the lull list of t pletfeed'tb dfaw iheir rttpi and to tiir their lace and bu He v Fii; diuiersigDe tub.; EDIW3SE. rwparilla : sut the head of the li.-t of wmB- Keee is oku or-Tj::*.; WAt»the Monet goes.— " 0 ;".;'.'■.;*.■■!-UV] ^ hrv/ii:- ootbiflg be iter to do iviiii its money, lias invesied a large sum i'n a pre;:s, type;, ink, and (inrtfe thbuBStid ■rel!ams of paper, and sent the vholc to Beaufort. S._C., to establish ao anti- A::.vv:y jo:***;*:;, u.cve, to be fivvn away, if it caimo!; be ci:*v:i:r'v*; in any-other manner/' At Hilton Heat] the Qorernment h <-iistniiiin;;a negro school; it has a Btogje iso'ftrnot with ft hoase in New' York ior cldUijng^or&O^OOp negroeSi itisieedin« fifteen or tweniy thoapa^Ll Mgroefl in diilercut unlitay camtoa, Avirii tbe sami rationa us are allowed to white sol- dicjs. or ie i..le.— C! Ooa Nkro.—It is related ol the bloody tyra Nero, that he iiddled wliile Rome was burnii thus showing his heartless indifference to the fi of the nation. President Lincoln still cracks jokes at the White HoUBe, Beeiningly unconcern although the 11 a mes of civil war are destroying country. ""Poppy. I'lfnoto why seme pistols are called horse iiistAls.*' ";:\\vr.*. v.y f*vn ? " " Because ijiey kick so.;'. ''Mary, put that boy to bed; he's srettin^ so ehhrp he'll cut sotnehMfy yet, see ii' lie dont." Tf a man marry ehrewd ? ■i shrew is he eupjoied to be A Wosrern paper, in d«Scrfbing tiie effect o severe limoiJer .t.tiower, B$y§ : "A cow was stri by livliiiiino; and instantly kill'ra, belonging to yliage pHysIfciaa, irtlo trad a beautiful ouif. only I, foHT d;.rV3. old." . " NoncbalaDt means ibat peculiar indifferent ' look which is pjjt on by n;e:i v-Ai'j never pay when dunned ior money. U UiouHl ba (OTlttennon8hell\ out. What is the worse kind ol lare a man can live on! Warfare. V/ir-y ]-.. a newspaper nice aa arxjt? Because it ha:> leatlcfr.', coluujris aod reviews. I A Pn -aid, n 1 if Pheb igely pi and until /'urt.hei F O B San Lais Obispo, Santa Barbara, San Pedro and San Diego. p.A .uni altar*,* Ilu; first ol" U notice, the Meiumbip '* S E U. ATOR, T. IV. 3BELBY OOBMANDEB WID Mnlvc- la-.-o trips jut inonlli on the Eoutlrm Coast, leaving Kroadway Wlrarl, On the 3d and 18th of each Month AT 9 O'CLOCK, A. M. I'-- BillB orLadiuK will bc furnished bj lln PoUer ward. For' ("Wight OP pasaage ajrplv orr board, or* at tin office ol S. J. Ilenslev, rrorncr of Froot and Jack son ntreets. deer) S. J. HENSLBY, rrealdent. v-.tfttt la no naltar remedy. Blits, Md by irr?rl..:rrrw*;]ON A CO., Asents, I.KS, Ai>»lliccai-ics Hall, It/can At,','., l.at* Angeles. p. x. sea st, Arrrrm* Off A, SEH.B'B M .MCII, OOCT & SHOE MAKUFACTURER* of I'nrr.Anrrt.i'irr.v, Wnrflionsa, !31ft C*;-.,,!,,,uia Kti„et, belo^ Bnfici j- street, r.ft>. Fruoelsio. Constantly on in.,nd, a large itssoi*!etl stock of Gentleme-,'S) l*adiea, Misses, and 'Children's Wear, Of »Upe*.',0r tillable* r alM. l"*eiicb Call* licol I,c.?s and Iloor I'ronts. F. X. KAST. Role Agent for Calilornia. • ^-Country Orders promptly attended to. Sltwek VOL. XII. LOS ANGELES, CAL., SATUBDAY, MAECII 21, 1833. NO. 46. Cos ^.ugcUs Star: PUBLISHED EVEUT SAT011RAT MORNISG', At the STAR BUlLDTNas, Spriuj^ Struct, L<. Aii<;elcH, BY M. II A MI I. TOW. SubBorlplfons.pei For Six months For Tlire.e Mouth Siugle Nnmbei Advertisements inserted at Two Dollars per square often linen, for the first insortion ; nnd One !>ollar per square for each siibr-inqnent insertion. A li-berat deduction made to yearly Advertisers. San Francisco Aircncy. Mr.C. A. Cit VNfl is the only auUiorizea agent for the Lo^ AxfttiLKS Star in San Francisco. All onl fir s hi ft at his office. Northwest corner of Washington and SfirHome streets. Covernment aMding, (up stairs) will lie promptly attended to. r E R M S : er annum, in advance. .55 00 . 3 or) . o m Easiness Carts. C. E. THOM, Attorney and •Counsellor at Law LOS AN'RELKS. Office in Pico BuildingR, Spring street. jvrr DR. J. C. WELSH, P IE Y S IC I AIV AND S U II« E O JV, Office. OITY I1IWO fSTOItE, Main street, Los Angeles. Office hours, 9 to 12, M ; and 2 to 0, i-.rvt. August 1. ml,.. HOTELS. BELLA UNION HOTEL, LOS A^QELES. JOTIX KIiVU & HENBV IIAMTOEt,, Proprietors. TTIE SUBSCRIBERS baling lea^d the above named Hotel, wish to assure l.'*.-*'r rii-:id.-i ■and the travelling public that th-v will *--i ! ■■■.voi* to keep the Bella Union what it haa always liecn, THE BEST HOTEL IN SOUTHERN" CALIFORNIA. Families can be accommodated with large, airy rooms, or sails of rooms, well furnished. The Bills of E;ire ■sbal! be inferior to none io the State. All tlie Stages to and from Los Angeles arrive at and depart from ihis Hotel. Tlie rear anil fill Hard Saloons shall receive the most strict, attention, nnd the -patrons shall lind that, this ho'ise will be carried on 98 a first class Hotel ontiht to be. Los Angeles, May 31, 1852. UNITED STATES HOTEL. 3^_EEii:o. Street, S. &, A. LAZARD, IMPORTERS, And Wholesale and Retail Dealers in FiraiBcli, Engl .aii and American Dry Gooi's. Corner of Melius Row, Los Angeles. 1 02 PHINEAS BANNING, POHWARDla\"f, and COMMISSION AGENT, New San Pedro and Los Angeles- For the Lus Angblcs K'1,111. F. P. RAMIREZ, NOTARY PUBLIC, Office with J. It. Sitchell, Esq., Temple's Block. French, English, nnd Spnnlsli Tvatislbted, Collections Made, &t_. A. LEHMABJ, PTaAtrS A1SD ORrVAMErVTrVI. CARRIAGE PA1NTIM0, &0. Inquire at John Golfer's Shop. miiri On yon anow-capped Bummit, tow'ring lA-'At, Softly -Sleeps the tvcning »ky, Calm andek'ar, and puielj blus, Looks tli.it vault of r.l'-uilkis.** Ijuu. Evening siglis lier last 1'nr^wtll, An sweetly tolls the vesper bell— Deep>tobed echo hears the strain, Anrl Softly sonde it back again. Darker now the shadows grow. As silence reigns in the vale below ; ; The red man Keeks, in sullen niorxl, lii.s cheerless couch in yonder wood ; While watching o'er the distant town ' Night's fair daughter looks calmly down — Now stillness, like the last dread etfeep, Wraps fair nature wide and deep. 'Ha the hour of -hatlowy thought, So fall -,v; .h wit.clii**.;: fitiiey fraught— ' 'Tis the hour that calms tlie breast- And woos the weary heart to rest— When the soul beats quick and high, To soar beyond the dir^'mng 'ky, Her owu, her distant land to lind, And leave thfs exile land behind. I Armeies, March iOth, 1863.' ' Los An; I e s . will i TIIE SUBSCfilBEE hnving leased the l aboveestabJisbmeat, bjegs lea*.*i*to iii- . foriattid piililic that he basrefltted and peffflrEKsbed it Elimagbeat, mul that it conducted iu (lie very best style. The table will belibernlly supplied with everything the market aff-Brda, aijd-every aare will be taken to make the UNITED STATES HOTEL a co,„. fortirilile home lor boartlepp. Attncheil to UieHutel, is a BILLIARD ROOM and BAR, where the heat ot liquors und oigare are kept. Terms moderate, to suit the time?. Miners coraiat. from or to the mines ofHol- _ coiEbe, -Pijtoffi, Moliave or Snn &abpiel, will tind tfeis.H conveuieut place to meet their lrieDdc, or to «Utnin deairable infoFraatioa. A BAKEIir is alrto attached fn the Hof.el. LOUiS Mi^SMER. Los Angeles, November 81.I1, 18(12.—tl' IR0OKLYII MIR, SAIV THAXCISCO. ['Riirroi: idn THE FAMOUS P well known ;uid ,\ I estB begs leave to inform bip pati ■ that on and after the Stat nf will remove from the old dil ' Broadwny. where he has -resided since June 1852 and will open ihat SPACIOUS AND SLEGANT ■8RIOK STRUCTURE, wliich wae built ftxpreasly for a hotel, on the south-east corner of Sansome .and Pine streets. The Building is (ire-proof and supplied throughout with gns, anil water by the •Chrystttl Spring Water Company, nnd every convenience isoHered at tbis Hotel"; the room.-; beinir . all well ventilated, large aod cp tamed ion**, and 1 •do uot hesitate in eajing that the BROOKLYN ■will be second to none in the State. Merchants, Miners, Traders and all others visiting the city, are invited to come and examine for themselves. The Brooklvn Hotel Ominibus will convey yon to ■4he Mouse free, aud if you do not like the accommodations it will cost yem nothing. The Omnibus will always be on the whari'on the arrivaj ol the inland and ocean si.earners, to take passengers and baggage to the Hotel. Tbe Brooklyn Hotel is ■conveniently situated, being in tiie central part of the city, where the ears of the city Ruilroad pass the door every, three minutes each tvuv, to all parts of the cily. There is a large Reading Room attached to the House oth} Library Contaiaiug 500 Standard Works, exclusively for tiu: U3e of its puesits. Rooms will be let by the night, week or month, with or without board; also, suites of Rooms to families or others at reduced rates.— The Taljle will always be supplied with an abundance of the choicest and best ihe market can afford, and no expense will he spared to set a fable that will defy the criticism of the most fastidious ' epicure. JOHN KELLY, Junk. Sau Francisco, Oct. 23d, 1862.-3id OHOOS, MEDjCINES, AG. "WHOLESALE AKD RETAIL. APOTHECARIES' HALL, Mali, street, nearly Opposite Comiiierelftl. .Or. ££. :o- i&fli^XjiEiE.* HAS ON HAND, and is constantly* adding to one of the most complete assortments ot Drugs Medicines and Chemicals, Sonth of Sun Francisco together with al! the Patent Medicines of the day Also a fine assortment of Perfumery and Toilet Articles. All of which he warrants genuine and of the best quality; which ho offers, Wholesale or Ketail. on the most liberal terms. Physicians' Prescriptions compounded at all hours, day or night. H. B. MYLES, LosAngeles, Julv 1. 1860, FALL AND WINTER TRADE. IMPORTERS OF nr, EA ■G-lass-ctrare, Frencli Oliiiia,; Table Oiitlai-y, CLOCKS, MIRRORS, Plaited and Britannia Ware, Have on hand and are constantly receiving a very large and full assortment of the above Goods, which they are selling m quantities to suit, at the Very Lowes* JHarfcet Hates. We call particular attention to our CLOCKS SPEECH OF S. S. COX, OF Oil O. Subjoined are extracts from the speech of S. S* Cox, of Ohio, delivered January lotn. 1863, before the Democratic Union Association of New York. "We ust of our readers a careful perusal of them : Gentlemen a New England orator, Tristram Burgess, once said, tbat "we were sutniiindud, protected and secured by our Contfiitutfofl, Irom the power and violence of the WOftd,«efl homo wealthy regijpns lire.by their own baniers-^lieltei-i.-d from tha savages of ihe ocean. But a small insidieup. per- Sev'ering reptile im.y, unseen, bore through ihe loftiest and broadest mound. The water follows its path, eiiently aad imperceptibly at first, until at length a breach is made : and the ocean u.-iiirtg in, fioeks aud herds, and men, are swept by the deluge.**1 "Puritanism is the reptile, whieh has fcwea -boffttg into the monad, which is ihe Cun.-titution Icbet-rh) and this civil war comefl in like tl a di .on .o^ sea! Its ruefiing title of devastation will not be stayed until the reptile is crushed and the mound rebuilt. This wili never be accomplished until an administration oblains control, which, in the language of Gov. Seymour, can grasp the dimes sions and coairol tiie sweep of this war flood. (Great cheers.) To Obtain such an adminifetratiun the people will, unhappily, have to wait for sorce two years. Mean while, v. hat new schemes of division may furih-'t' distract ns. My appreheiiMou is, ihut before ihe people can ihiiieughly reform themr-eives or the conduct of their government, anolher and tenfold worse civil si rile may be raging; not the -South againsl ihe North : not slave against Iree Slates, but ihe Nest fa nga'mst iiseH. I prav God in his mercy to avert snch dangers. The hatred not of New England, but of its arrogant, -eUisli. Harrow and Puritan pi-licv, ilow dominant in the I<\deral government, will, I few, never be allayed nnnl its I.i ood is --lied iu our northern States. There is but one policy which could have stopped ie ; the laainiainance by tho Administration oftbe policy mat ked ont id the su miner of 1861. which declared uo war for cnnque-l-—no anti-slavery crusade. This alone united thf Norlb. This might have pre. erred that t::iity. lint I see no hopes ol a return to such a policy. The bigols of New England have their Chandlers in Michigan and thi it* Greeley a in New York, arid the anti- slavery pressure continues. Ittdeed it is dowquestioned whether any poiicy can now restore the Union. Abolition has made the Union, for the so.'') An arou-eri ; madlv. and the re- i Ikigiai-d, lb. aieichai.ts and manufacturers have accumulated fortunes with Aladdin-like rapidity. There wages are high and contracts abundant; while the West, with the .Mississippi sealed, is charged exloi tionate rates in tho transportation of its produce, and in the price ol ils purchases.— Ils people are nobbed by tariff and robbed ou what they sell and what thev buv. Mr. ISeecber bas boasted that Good has givei! the Yankee that intelligence that knows how to turn to gold all it touches. [Laughter,J It is his insatiate cupydi- ty, mingled wilh his Puritanism, wbich is new making men study the uew Census; Wlficii makes New Yurk wonder why, with a less population, Ni w England has twelve Senators to her two!— Ohio, too, ponders fhe fact lhat her popula ion is greater, by 435,2.14. lhan live New Lngland States, yet ihey have ten tr'enators while she has tv;o ! The West is begmuing to ask whether this politcal inequa ity among the States, made for a wise reason, is io be ur-ed for her oppression ; whether to that .source in aitribiitable the py.'i.i.J. legislation whicti I'v-iUn-H manufiLKture nun buwnis tlie consumer ; wliich hampfera the free interchange and enterprizt of thin ;rvrr.l .■:).■!!, -AAIIA. ■ V^V ,.i;;:,... tr. ^j... ,-,:,„ ,.(;V j I ! 1,1, „. \\l. : world and given tn New England fabrics the monopoly' ■v:::o:-r; :■:!: niillioii.-r uf iva.-.ttci, fanrM.-r.-r. Whv are ive to puy filty j,'-).- cunt*, 11,0re for good.,, ana lose htw percent. on wheat, ami corn, acd port*,? Fifty per eeat.l I should say ninety ^er cent., aijiling ihu cost of goki to pay the fifty per cent, custom dulk-o. wbich tlie consumer at last pays. To gratify one favored class and section, are laws oi economy .su.s ;.cm]ed with tiie Constitution? Is free trade good, when it takes off the duly and .li.p- tl.e revenue on madder and coloiimr matter, but bad : '*. ' ■'.- '.:. ree cotto.-r and woolen tabpua ? I.= it right to tax IHinofa ■ iiisky until '.iie w:ui!jfii.ii'.i:.i*C; i-i >;i.o; p'ri.:. lit gi iitil v the noinbeis from .Maine, and let the tarilf remain on wooden ici-ews, to eir ri cli aKLodo j-lane cuinpan v ■ One is made :: th-.: V,\...t anil The other in Nev.* Kngi.uid ; but is that a ■easou why the one should be burdened by an internal '"■ n-tA.roy, while the other bears an external tax to ester? Do you wond..r that, at public meetings West, it -' the JlisHUfcjppi VmIIi-v shall no longer be ethc-Uireat no sign yet. Over three months are gon of ils issue ; but where are the resultiii" ery Southern man and woman a police force to guard against an uprising of the blacks; but the gr»at rebellion lives. The wnr goes on. Governor Andrews and the negroes may continue to dance their jubilees with their 'v.r::.. nm!. as usual, to contemplate its results with tlieir h'*'.,':l.v ..:''-■'*-o'.l'r and ci-iminal nonsense to expect a re- like thin to be put down by words—legislative or ' " '" drawn from the passionate and wild bngland Puritanism, in press and i of No; *,„v i.'.ath'rrr than yield U,\. ,_,.a, these feu ten. New liugiand * bloody strife of bro'.inn*:, \ rship over the morals of is ready to welcome thia ' Every Sabbath you have a sermon from Dr. Cheever (hisses) oemr.nst rat ihl-that c-ir fail ures io bai-1**- a>*.. , -,;.. * Uv-.u.-re of the sin of slavery, lie makes slavery ihe terrible crime of the world in Lis own fancy nnd reduces Omnipotence to the task of punishing us by war for its existence. He conveniently her side to tbe battle, and that by his foolish logic, with the Lvoho! iii, God i t, ;,r.;,v (- to Ya. CU],i* tion have made DiBuniorTl "fie* . ' I -ricds'in way ol Re-Union ! l'eri.~h Now :.. . "*.. \, ■:,., '-ff. may liv«,l " Tiiere is a tegead related of Bt. Iv- wre As lie lay on the gridiron", conscious that he was s cienily done on one side, he requested the cooks, if too inconvenient, to turn him over and do him on the other. I fear Ure West will never be ianonized, if it re- qiiive* such double saciihces to reach the saintly cal- l'rri*r,.;;r-i with this lo?ic, turn back to 1678, when Ran. oalph cume to New hnglano irom the parent Gov to find out the cause of the Indian war. Tbe fc_.„_ the (.i).-'-iiiiii"!it ol Massachusetts furnishes the coi ■- tary. It ohio.ally oecku-i.-o that '■ these are tbe great k ■ ■' provoking evils for whicli God hath uiveu the barb; rv-f heathen commission to rise against them : For mer v-"**- ir.Ji h.n-! irrrir and p.eiiwigs loade of women'n haii For vr.m-ii ■■■■■o*.r ir. *__■ -orders of h.ri;-. a.„) f,::,.. c u 11! r. g (■■;r,i—. [rri'i lnyir.rr ont \i.ol~ }■:_]?.;-.*;..,; ',;; .-.*,,;,];... Af.iffffAfE'Ef. 1'oliowJ::^; ,:•,;■?: ::*_;■: f shioirs :-.. r'-l r rv.;.:. ivl. )■ t,-_ 'f-rff-L nc.-s in the people in not frequenting ihe meeting and ot:.er-r rrorng away bi..f.,i*e ;],r- I,:■-...--.-:...'_- ; ■ ,-.,,-....; ■■_*...7'<_' *yf snliering tl.e ('ankers to dwell among them, and to set up then* thresholds by God's tb re.-hold.-, contrary to their o.o 'av,-s aiid rer-.oJir; ions, wiih nranv suoh reasons.'" Thus it wiil be seen that the original defects ic the Pu- vir r, pair.;..,*,! have been copied to tbis dav. . Like lbe Chinese artist, when told io eopv a fine and costly piece of porcelain to which some accident ],-,,.. hai.-i.enfe'd he UA- lowedIhis instructions ,vilh such gren 1 skill and labor, ■.ti at ne cop.ed the crack *.*.*;j,eh ext ended the nho'" le-y'h ot the model. * • * * irr Although th. averts of 1 *= 1 r tLKland, !;,:v-d *■■:* - ::o ;■;■■■,, p'*niy ol their -'dear mother." the i the * But these econorr.ii Congress. The evils r but unhappily they s Tliis is bred in the Po liiindreds of year,- ; a be i The We "■sts ; do not iced by aggf&ndh ■ '"■■:-' detest beii -,- Puritan politics, ti.ai vos should be reinvirir-.: ■,% •;.,. .-■■„•.., and that the State sii on Id unite its Junctions practically wiih thc church, for the propagation of moral and religious dogmas. y.,r these objects tiir' irirvs of o-r.'omimy ar.'i Vie ilrelaLos of tmblic OrJiiion. which ever look to the ink-,;::--!, of sections and men are disregarded. He who fails to observe liiese laws unoer- The as illustrated in ihe cal ton, last year, who wer board of deacons, bccai antitype in the cruel persec in New England churches : father and son, at Bos- "sloyalty before a e Demo his of the Quakei ita ■"-■-lor:: v ' I .:::■:*,. v. Tiiei'e wnV Yvi-x :i general benef :[_:_. M:..,:.■:;; ciner.; i - hnJ a devil That belief prevails yet-outside of Massachusetts. The misera- tle girls and e fanatics of 1 1* Old v. vn-.:. : riE: the; who spy houses before godly I the zealots of to-day—;).o-<- i about to accuse and arrest tho politics. (Cheers.) * * * * * All that relieves New England from the drvr-rrer-s oi these i-e;*r*i.;r.ci;ev ;s Ore r-r-.;!,.:,,, v,-[ ;.,.., r .,.,,. sacrifice lor independence in the subsequent century Though it is by no means clear that she would not have rebelled against tlie best Covernment on earth or even a commonwealth of angels, not according to her own no- ions, yet tbe mother countrv gave her cause, and she radicated it frlfcb spirit. nd voted against Jefferson at ■6 him as it did Douglas. Sir rst, and her press slandered I ilelbr.ii. Her Josiah Quincys present, people m ("Tha iinjlv ti 1 i 't i nay. i: has already brought—crash aod cinifusfon wh'ei bettet iviirids evolved beauty and harmony! It is ntr truetliat New r.ngland is dafB, thuudc cause thev closed the cl ced the , Butler ninistry ies. the Ini " i denoi It is not s Lop-sided ircr-matb who rea i.s Hie I,-ibit; tvef mind It is n Krr^lnmi soourd :,v:-a- the L-nmn. She sh. of the reb" ill's and h build facto which runs benefit, a u ore power Vo: the blan1 side or a questiui of the cotton tax, for her own has the West? It vill be huniiii,; ied that " slarerv" s me,, and Chris- intend now to reus refute it. Be- av.-.-lip through o s etc ---ion cotton. She has. been the ft cy from Ihe days of tlie Revolution to Her Marseilles is a hymn of ay.olhef ■■. horse thief a~ J v-;v - had ii u Ihe hud cities of Massachusetts n.,1 tnrow oil itvaooliion incubus, while Portland and New Haven already glojj in Democratic Congressmen. ***"-****„ At the M*wKnirlahrl dinner, not long since, Mr. Beech- er took pride in these very characteristics. He "ir.'-v»Vr'ri ■re i*::;::;.-:- i.en.rrr-r* '• he :y-, s i \-,. rnr.*' -vin*** - - ■'■ •■-* *.,*- Heome, .■rn civiii/atioii, the pick■*,.'.-:;-■ of cr-a t i. :; 'laughter ■) Chat to leave New England out r.f •;.,. Union ff"fn ft live Ilie head ont nf the body." Ik-.,... vv, jd ,][e (i;rj ..-hit rol THE JVEVV HAVE A- CLOCK COAIP.l- A VAB MA.VUFACTUUE, (Fcmcr/y the Jerome Company,) For w'nich we are SOLE AGENTS FOR CALIFORNIA. 16 Saxsome Street, Corner Merchant. o25^m Sao Francisco. THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY. Beginning of a Few Volume. The dumber for Jaiuiiiry, 1803, begin THE ELEVENTH VOLUME Ofc tSae Atlantic Monthly. FROM the commencement, in 1857, tlie ATLANTIC hi* rapidly increase,1 in ciiviilatino, and it now has tl: tbe tta tea ar d fie*B coon cte srmoDg the p< ople. As & weBlern j:ian, r^preeenting the capital of tbe tea-ding State ol thu northwest during liiese, past fix years, I i.uve -aot boon anob&'ervaiit of ihe aigns in that quafti v. I liave pi r-=istently oppoffd all scbeDtes oi secession and ili-vi.*inti. i yet ot- pos-t' them. But I ;un Ir.r v_eh:;:t\ ihe ttnpufeeW i Sentiment of ihe West. The erectftrd W the States wnt.r. d by tbe Misi-it-si'ppi and its liihutaiies iuto an independent. Republic ; standing on ils own ie- sources, mint nil and li gri cultural, with a Soil so fat ihat if you '-tickle it ■.\:tii a iioe, it will laueb wiiii a harvest;" [cheers] — a connertiou wilb wrbicb; would besought by me Soatb and tlie F.&si, yet cboosing Ior itself ns cheapest and best'outfet io the sea: banded togelb'M. by rivers aad homo- geoeity of interest—becoming something more than a dream. It is ilie talk of every other western man. All fall in;o it, with a Inch iiy whicb is ehncktiig to the olden sense of oatiouulily, I spe-Afe of these i-clieme? only to disapprove and to warn. Jusi aa m 1661, in iny seat in (Jonsirees, I warned of similar sou'hem scbetnes, bat in vain. All warning fell on f-odden hearts. In vain the lamented Douglas uiged ; in vain Ihe liable Crittenden plead. [Cheers for Crittenden !] New England i'annticisin made com promise impos-ibie. Let lis^now be warned in lime! Aa patriotic men, loving our wlio'e country, we must undersiar'ii the sources ol tliis new discontent. The West protest now, as New York and Pemt.-ylviuiia and New Jersey prolesied in lbe 'ast elections, lhat they desire io aland in tbeUrh'n. protecied by the muniments Constitution. Gov. Seymour [great cheers] .ur-e oi' tlie violenei i.-t. Pro u dim ni, tlint ilislicd, i.*. n Fample It in the ri*.; : ing tlie hereby y. ther. bcci cli into the 3d politics und bc^at divided ami . certain eia^s in ii, certain section ve dninned forever. Speculation in tiie organic political law, poinou- riperities of seclions. Following tin's, ;\* tbe lorrienl cove eqn.tiee of these i: idler law notions, came a volume -vhich [ hold in inv hand : ■■ Th'-* CorisiitiiiiiMi, |
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