The Standard. (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 51, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 9, 1858 Page: 1 of 4
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VOL 14
CLARKSVILLE, RED R1 VER COPlTY. TEXAS. SATBRDAI.ViHPS. tRM. ,.Ji
ah
LIFB'8 compensations.
bappioe** of
Ibtributed u
this world is art Wo
*7
imagine; the rich
or the poor ail (he
nor
the purest
TW>
anally dial
Ew not *11 the privilegee,
urjrations. Thank Ood, the purest pleaaurue
Jj life arc those wbieh money eannot bay. The
trtiaan going from hia wearisome labor to hi*
homble home, a*he meets the lore lit stalls of
his wife, and takes bis fair and boa I thy child
■poo bis knee, knows a thrill of sweeter joy
tL. the moat lariab expenditures of gold upon
tostly stimulants oan bring the jaded mind of
the epicurean in pleasure The wild wood flow
en and tbe dew-drops aro not bought; the glo-
ry of suuaot and the magnifieoucc of the full
moon are free to alt. Tbe bluahing cheek and
beaming eyes of affection oanciot be purchased;
virtue and beauty receive not their glorious
riohes from the hand of Mammon; tbe intellec-
tually wealthy may Well hold in contempt tbe
baser coin of the world
It is true that the bridegroom workingmau,
,, br boars his bride to their lowly home,Tongs,
witb tbe impulse of affection,to attire her grace-
ful form in the same adornment* which her
Koder sisters use to heighten their charms;
it is a foolish, though generous impulse —
If be loves his bride, and ahe him, they need
noi covet tbo situation of these whose love of
ritalablp, display, und "pride of place" have
Bost likely driven out simple, heartfelt happi-
The radiant amilo of affection, and tbe
nesi.
clear glance of unsullied virtue, ait ornaments
tbow price, aud will make the Cm of o wo-
man beautiful even in its old age.
£0, the working man father, looking around
apou bin blooming children, is conscious that
their intellect is as keen, their pcrcoptions an
leady, those of tbe nabob's upon tbo next
street; and bo determines they shall have sim-
ilar advantages This is a noble ambitioo —
Bat, in these days, it is no reason why a man
ihould upend hit years in grumbling discontent
because be is not rich. Our system of 00m-
■30 schools places education within reaoh of
tbe humblest. With utiud and education, ove
ry son and daughter has a fair obance to
achieve repeatability in this oountry; and it is
a false ambition which would ucek tho power
and booor conforred only by money. Yet,that
ion or duughter may have yearnings afMn- tho
development of peculiar taUnts or genius; tbe
md may thirct to drink deep of tuo Pierrian
ipring of classical learning; may have a gift for
a profession (without whiob especial calling,be
has no*business to attempt competition in tho
overburdenod ranks of the professions;) and tbe
daughter may have visions of beauty, or bare
dreams of melody, wbioh call for her fingers to
iccomplish themselves in painting or mu.io.
With health, a moderate industry will bring
about all this, and still the aoul not fall a vie
tin fo the prevailing fever—tbe terrible cold
frier, wbioh scorcbca the sensibilities, and driee
up tlio aprings of humanity in so many hearts
There is still another class who feel yet more
(Wj the want of wealth; not for the potty
^flMtrc'1 of scuso, or the local influence it
VMM (ivo tbom, bat beeauaa they worship the
Bmatiful, and money would give them the
tMMia-of giatifying their exquiaite tastes —
£th souls aspiring after graoc, fitness, and
nty in all things,thoy hare to etragglo with
..-",4* details of lifo and povertv- Thsec are the
people of genius—poets, artista— man of di-
,x fine, unworldly gift*. They would eonvert tbe
' glorious Ides) into tho real, if they had tbe
Beecssary means. They are fretted by tho
coarseness and ugliness from which tbey cannot
nenjto, yot they are self-deceived if they do not
consider themselves among the mn*t fortunate,
as far oven as happiness, commonly considered,
goe.r Wo doubt not that tho painter in bis
aofumished carrot, with his coffee pot and loat
of bread, and his hard bed in the aame room
with hiin, is filled with a richer plcaaurc, as he
lit* aud dreams, and broods over tho creation
of bis genius upon tbo canvas before him, than
it is possible for tho wealthy egotist, who buys
it of him, to conceivo. We doubt not that bis
Art—bis beloved, worshipped Art—is more to
him than pyramids of diamonds. Ask him if
he would exchange himself, his hopes, bis
dreams, hia ideals,his fiuo perception" of buanty,
hit doop emotions, for the withered soul of
yonder Croesus, who has spent bis life in aocn-
ttulatiug bonds and mortgages, roots, aud in-
terest upon interest
And the poet—will ho eay that ho has ever
entered tho portals of any Piftb Avenue palaoe,
that oould begin to equal tbe splendor of tbo
unearthly palace* through which bis imagina-
tion daily wrlks? Will he givo up tho mate-
rials from which ho oouatruots thoee—gold of
tbo sunset, mnrblo of the clouds, silver of tho
•tarligbi, gems of tho dew and waterfall, dra-
peries of intangible mists and inexpressibly
lovely sbadowa, spray and foliage, with all the
delight which (hoy givo aud the beauty which
they suggest—for tho brown stone mansion of
the millionaire? Will he not say that bis day
and bin night dreaming, his fanclos, his earnest
' aspirations after tbo pure and true, his dc^p
sympathy with the heart of humanity, his
nighty store ol lore, his keen delight in all
that is fair, his broad and boundleas realm of
feeling and imagination—where angels walk,
snd visitants, more beadtlful than flowora, liu-
g*r to smile upon him—will ho not aay that
{Aeas aro bcyond'-price—a woalth wbioh be haa
inhcri-.cd from tho lather in IleavonT
Tho scholar and tho acientific man; will they
measure their pleasures along with those of the
seasualut and tho epicure? Yet, for wba no
GOVERNOR WAJJUffi AMD TH1 ELEC-
TION FRAUDS.
Nobody to wbatevrr party be bel<**,aeew
to doabt that Ihe eloctU returaaofOxllord
precinct, and the three preoioou of MeOaa
oonnty Kanaaa, which Qoremor Walker re-
ceotlj rejoclcd ia <4fiotitioaj ud linilatod "
in faet totally fraudulent, and that, m a
were
aot
moral sense, the Governor was
perfectly
differeoo*
justifi-
ed in what he did The only differea^'aeema
o be, aa u> whether be bad tho authority, ai
Temtorial Executive, "to o hehiiul ik. ^
Executive, "to go bobind the
luroij and that txcrsiae a power wbioh sight
more properly belong u> th Territorial I<egw> I
laiure. We apprehend, however, that in a 1
atrictly legal and technical a* wall aa in a mor- !
al aeoae, Governor Walker waa not only juati- ■
fied, but bound to reject the fraudulent voting
lisU, aud that had he ahirfced that duty, or
Uanaferred it to another anlboritj, he would
then be open to the ceurure wbioh the ultra
men of both parties havo pawed upon him.
Ry the fourth acction of the Kanaaa Nebraska
act it ia declared that:
' The persons having the highest number of
Ityai votes in eioh of the aaid Council Diatriots
for members of the Council, afaall be declared
by the Governor to bo duly elected to the Conn-
oil; and the persons having tbe higbeat number
of legal votes for the Houae of Representatives
shall bo declared by the Governor to be duly
elected members of aaid Ilouae."
It is perfectly clear tbat in order 10 declare
who has "tho groatust number of logal votes, '
tbe Governor must determine wbieh of thorn
are logal, and which are not, just aa he is bound
to allow those wbioh he finds to be "legal."—
It is specially ordered that the olerks or judg-
es of election ahall bo sworn to do their duty
impartially, ao that they may be made aliena-
ble to justice in oaac they are found to have
abused their authority, oonnived at fraud, or
otherwise failed iu the "impartial discharge of
their duties, acoordiog to law." It ia further
provided that tbe returne, oertified by these of-
ftoera, ahall bear evidaooe on their faee that
tbey were aworn. Now it ia aaaerted by Gov-
ernor Walker aud Seoretary Stanton, and may
therefore be admitted to be ao undeniable faot,
that, in fbe ease of the fraudulent retnrna of
Oxford and MoGee oounties, thia important le-
gal requirement waa not obeerved, and that
thua, in faet, theau returns were illegal, even
had every vote recorded in them been that of a
bona Me oitiaen of Kanaaa. Again, it ia uni-
vcraally required at every election, that tho vo-
ting liatn shall specify the oCoes wbieh the oan-
didatea, whoae names aro thereon inscribod.aro
intended to fill. The namn of the Voters and
cf the oandidates wars entered 00 the Oxford
and MoGee county lista, but in no instance
were tbe offioea mentioned for whiob the can-
didates were to be eleoted. Apart from the
external evidences of fraud wbioh these returna
present, the above named delect bin itaelf
enough to vitiate the lists, and make U imper-
ative on the Governor to reject them altogether.
It is thus seen that in two mnet important par-
ticulars, on wbieh (he language of tbe law la
explicit, the rejected returns are manifestly il-
legal, and that Governor Walker and Secretary
Stanton had no right to receive them aa gaon-
ine. Were the names of the apnriona «otera
those of the residents of any straet in New
York, and their reeidenoea purely iaaaginary,
the voting liata would not have been more frau-
dulent or illegal both in fact and form, than
wore those Which Governor Walker rejected.
And this ia called going behind tbo returns)—
Had be undertaken to judge aa to the qualifi-
cations of voters admitted to the polls by tbe
election judges, and to strike out those whoa
he did not ooniider fully qualified from the
proporly oertified polling book, be might be
said to bave tranaeooded his powers—"to have
gono behind tbo returns"—and to hate usurp
ed a power properly vested in the Territorial
Legislature. Had the votes been aetuallv cast,
the defects of form in the poll list, already
mentioned, were auAcient to invalidate them;
how much more so then when it is notorious
that tbe votes were never oast, and that tbe
whole sffair was a daring and monstrous fraud
by wbioh it was attempted to override tbe will
of tbe majority, and destroy freedom of elec-
tion in order to satisfy the selfish purpose of a
few unprincipled men When, under the gov-
ernment of Mr Reeder, tho out-«rv was made
against the so called "bogus Legislature," wo
said that it waa the buainera of the Executive
in the discharge of the duty imposed on him by
tho Nebraska law, to give certificate's of elec-
tion to thojc who had received tbe Urges' num-
ber of "leg l"'votea This, ol course, involv-
ed tlio necessity of determining wluttvotea were
legal, and whit were not For the eaae rea-
sons exactly that we condemned Mr. Itcrdtir for
having neglected this imperative duty, wo com-
mend Gov. Walker for having performed it
faithfully We believe that ho will be approv-
ed by the intelligent, tompcrato men of the en-
tire Union,, without distinction of perty, and
that at the South, where his oonduct baa been
most warmly assailed, when all the facta are
known, there will be few men fiMadto aanction
frauds, which no one has yet ventured to justi-
fy on moral grounds, and wbieh aro directly
subversive of tbe great fundamental principles
of the Demooratio party, and of the Kansas-
Nebraska aot—Popular Sovereignty.—[New
York Joar. of Commerce.
THE OFFICE Of TRS NATIONAL
INTELLIGENCER—MR GALES
A eorreepondent of tbe Obariaeton Courier,
in a recent letter from Washington to that
paper, tuna daguerreotypes our oppoaite neigh-
"In anr city, at the corner of 8erenth and
D. streets,ia a building net very notieoablo but
for the extent of ground it eevnra, and ite an-
Cleat and dingy aspect. Thia atrnoUre oan be
said to represent no order of architaotnre ; in-
deed, arehiteotual eleganoa aeema not to have
been thou«hl of when U vat designed; and yet,
the free of this old building bears the eatae re-
lation to the building iteelf as the free of an
old man beam to bis body; and that hat is fall
of character, aa the leeee of some men—eedate,
serious, venerable. On entering the door, you
find yourself in a low browed, emoke-etained
room, with discolored deaka and oountera —
All (be sppendagoa seem old-fashioned, even to
the aged elerk, who reoeiveo you with a polite-
n«* — alas !*old-faahioned too. If you oome en
bnsinese with the principal, you will fiud your-
self ascending a narrow and rather gloomy
flight of stairs. Having eeuimpliehed the aaoent
to the first landing, ynu pauae and enter a door
wbioh you are told ia the editor's room Before
a table covered with pepoN,pampiete, and man-
uscripts, aits a venerable looking man with a
pencil iu hia left band—his right has been par-
alysed for some time—in a thoughtful mood,as
if deliberating a leader, ot which, but a tingle
line is written. No one can glance at that
(aee and not perceive at once that it is that of a
rcoaarkable man. The strong features aud
firm mouth express benevolence, energy, decis-
ion, will—in snort, it ia a faoe more notioeable
for character than beauty.
"With the name of this gentleman, the idea
ot the National Intelligencer ia inseparableoon-
nected. For a long; aeries of years he haa been
ite conductor; and though baeked by a boat of
varied talent, he may truly be nailed its Ilk
and soul, breathing spirit aa a refining and uni-
ting
Itori
ting principle over that able journal. HU ed-
itorials are eonaidered by our leading politi-
cians to be oloee in argument, profound iu in-
sight, finlabed in execuUon, pure in atyle, and
as refined in thinking ss they are axouiaite in
diotion. Aa specimens of pure u)
English, thev might ttand as mode la.
pooee with bia pen quietly but
cry measure which migh '
the Union. In tbe 3e
fiX DO*
IX
perfect
He op-
Vj
of the piwty, of
which his journal ia the noknowledf*'
nent, be never admita himself disoouraj
pressed or diemsyed, but from every fill,.
to rise, like Antmus, with renewed vigor.
"Such is a hasty sketch nf the personal and
mental outliuee of the venerable chief editor of
the chief organ of the oM line Whig party,
(Mr Gnles,)whether we view him as the acute
critic, as the fervid politician, aa the high-min-
ded and generous man, we have before na one
of the ablest msn of the day. The journal, of
wbioh he is tbe nowlodoed head, wiekla a
powerful and olev j innuenoo throughout
the entire country. :
"And yet, good rea..e;, be baa still hi
honor in the hearts of all the pooplo about hi
The poor and unfortunate are more peculiarly
his friends. He arrives in Seventh street from
his residence in tbe country, in the same cosy,
oloee carriage, which hoc made iu journey
tbither daily for tho last thirty yeam, so punc-
tual to ita hour, that were ite driver and occu-
pant wanting, the horaet would doubtltae con-
vey the vehicle in eafety and atop, from tbe
force of habit, at the precise hour, before the
low-roofed building. Aa he paste* from hie
eerriage to the o*ca, the beggar for ooeu cea-
eee to be vociferous, ae certain la he of receiv-
ing a spontaneous gratuity from blm. Wtibin
he is quite likely to be met with the appeals of
a widow with one of thoae large families or
orphans, who feels certain of assistance from
him. For it ia wall known in our oitv, deer
readers of the Courier, that thia venerable man
is troubled with a melancholy oavity in bis
brain—a fatal cerebrel ceil, where aequieifiv-
ocee—is not 1 Narrow-bearusd and penimoni
ous people ehakc their beads oninuomdy, and
aay, that to aeo a man Waating his means en
everybody in this way, ia enough to make tbo
very stouoa "eiy out: "Doing eueh useless
things.and so mu«h, for other people, he ought
to remember tbe rainy day !"
"They forfet that it ia recorded of many
great mon that they were equally non-reteetive
of money ! Schiller, when be bad nothing
else to give away, gave tbe clothing from hi*
back; and Goldsmith tbeblanketa fron hia bed.
Tender and loving baoda found it necessary
to piok Reoihovea's pockets at home before he
walked out, and Aloxaader the Grant, in par-
celling out his spoils, left htmeelf only hops).
"A high intellect is a gift from God—a
dweHior-
gouerous heart is hie
legsplnee h Otsr
whom do God's anfsls hover? Do thev linger
sb<iat tho downy oooobee of thoee wilo have
won their way h) wealth, tl rough tcurs, and
'ifging
a foundation for the monument recently erected
_ over tbe grave of President Madison, die eoftn
Wer"purpiw are tbe'most'of ^"fortunes m'}*" .. Th" •PP*?™00
3aired, than for indulgence In good eating,^ood
rioking, rich clothes, a showy houae, and for
the means of rivalry, arrogance, and oetonta
tion?
A good foituno, "well
*•*1 merit, upon
nt upon objeeta of
the cultivation
art,
of the mind snd soul, npoo tbe poor, tbe aiek^ ]
nd upon the struggling nan or talent: open
the adranoemcnt of scienes and general intalli
«'a a desirable thing. But bow few an-
inire money forsuoh purpoece! . /"* J .. •
Take been, you who belong not to tbe throng
of the vulgar "great!" Reconsider Jtor-
«®«s, and see if yon have not came far tme
tbankfulncm. Preas not oc ao madly for the
guttering payment. Do you not ace bow yon
,®Ple out the flowers br the wayside? Why
be eo unmindful of their fragrance upon
_wr, and of the bine heaven over y*t
By
direction of the P<
*J tem of post-oflce delivery, nearly
few is now in tneeeeefWl
w New York ~
There have
arCL3-
£*0.1 Mm
in dHfarant parte of the dity,
I ■ '
J^ivnas bring aeked cf what-famat the Mte
- *■"" dangerous, anewwred,—M0f
of a slanderer; or tame, thai of a
thus described bv a" Richmond pa-
aborve the ~
remains i ,
per: "The board* placed
decayed, but 1,0 turth had fallen upon It, and
every thing appeared to be as when the cofta
was deposited there, except that the eofin lid
plaoe^ allowing n partial
Ae there wen wo neten-
inp to prevent, the part of the Md eovnring
the superior psrtitm of tbe body was uJaa4,end
several gentlemen preeent locked in mm
gentlemen preeent locked in np
remains of the great Virginian. The
ilaolf, of black walnut, was in frrfeet preeerva-
uon, and the interior wee nearly tiled with a
spades of moos, which adhered pertieneioncly
.rVhTwood beneath this, and partiallf bid-
den by H, were a few of the larger and harder
bonce' 4Kn fewer Jgw had fallen
enly part of the dhnleltn.Wfcieh _ . k
tfae eknll and pcrtkms of the cheek bew^ the
of tbe neck, +*+*
bonce of tbe arma AU eW of the upper pert
of thle body bed returned te dnai frmi whenos
St wee taken, and m t h* years saere e
of tbe hady will dieappear,until the ta
downy
way to wealth, tf rougb
cares, aud struggle*; or do they bend over the
pillows of thoee who wipenway the tears,oonsole
tbo earcs, and solace the sufsrings ot the dee
titutc? Let those aaewnr who have been rock-
ed to test by the memory of a deed of mercy.
"Suoh wcaknesees are the drapery is which
wc enfold eur nseoel-nien,, . 0,;
" , l S ' 1 J- —
EortKTttc DAMstL—Ths Andover (Maw-
achusetu) Advertiser idle n linrjf, ofn woman
belonging to that town, who had a felling out
with Vr husband, and M '
herself In the "great pond
waa not at Iret alarmed, hnt
appeared; toon, her bonnet anl shawl were dl
covered at tbe wnfet'e edge, ike alarm spread
throughout the neighborhood, and difligent
eearch waa instimua Several persons wire
engaged In dragging the pond; grappling ln>av
ware brought into requieiUon, but to no pur
to
CENTRAL AFRICA.
Wtfts Its in IvtUi MMl Owtitl AfHu.
^ g|^ irsrfciag
1, k neWTert: gtqwt
Notwithstanding the deahua of the world,the
immentc region of interior Africa, ever einoo
the memory of man baa been a Urrs iseoysita,
van wnata aa waa auppmcd, where no vegeta-
tion appeared, and where no animate or mani*
mate life oould exist The great daeert of Sa-
hara waa pictured upon eohool mspe, and tha
thrilling narrative of Riley and 0there, told of
horrid, unutterable barbarttiaj, (incredible be
fore the recent Rtet Indian atrooiUas had sur-
passed the dlreat tortures In the conception of
the mo.-t fertife imagination,) snd bad strength-
ened the belief of an uowatered, uninhabited,
unendurable tract of country, where enly tbe
oetriob, supposed to digeet flint-etonaa and sand,
oould exist After this land had for various
reasons bean eteeed to the vis itatioa of adven-
turare,and from the knowledge of the world,we
find that Dr. Berth has penetrated into iu in-
terior, and now gives an aooonm, wbioh is ev-
idently autbeutio. His nemtion shows that
tbe portion of truly arid territory la much more
limited than waa aupposed, and that even in
the midst of this tract frequeut oases exist,
where vegetation is Very considerable, and in
noma even luxuriant; tbn1 cotton grows freely,
aud is enun and woven by the native women
into oletn of a eharaoter much reenmblioK and
equalling in fineness that of the ancient Egyp-
tians. Amongi other orops which grow in pro-
fusion the sorghum is muoh cultivated, aud
from it, as well as from tamarinds, G uinea
eorn, Ac , they manufeoture an luloxiestiug
beverage. Sugar cane, indigo, varions grains,
timber, ground nuts, rioo, eeeamum, and the
like, are prod nod In abundance. Then, too,
the oountry is fell of Eajriish and American
goods brought up by tha Niger, which nforde
an iinintarrnptad navigable transit for more
than 800 milec bv the Benuwe branch, while
Its weetern branch, interrupted by rapids 860
ailet from the oosst, extends more than 1,000
milss bevond this point.
How felee our estimate of thie region is,may
be gathered from tbe writer** statement, that
the provinoe of Kano (latitude 10 aud longi-
tude 10) is "one of the meet fertile spots on
earth," a place alao of Immense commerce. U
exports per annnm 6,000 alnves. SO,000 loads
of natron; imports 8,000 camel loads of salt,
*0. Hrretoo la the point where the suppress-
ion of the slave trade U effectually toeommeuoe.
Tho Amerioan goods which now flood tbs coon-
try are paid for only by abvee and a small
nuantitv of natron, which go to North attd
South America Even the renowned asoua-
tains of the moon dwindled to a few ieolated
mounts, aud instead of a drv deeolated plateau,
we found wide and extremely fertile plains,lee*
than 1,000 feet above the level of tbe eea, and
Intersected by Innumerable broad water cour-
aee with searedy any Inclination."
Tbe people are apparently of various rsoes
He eaye: "I waa struck (In tho neighborhood
cf Yoia) by tbe beauty and symmetry of their
forme, wbieh Were entirely expo ood to vfe#,Md
by the regularity of their featnree, which arr
not dieflgured by incisions, and in some had
notbiu of what la called tk* ntfto type; but 1
waa am more atfooiehed at thrir complexion,
which was very different in diferent individu-
als, being In aome of a glossy black, and in
other* of a light copper, or rather rhubarb col-
or, the intermediate shades being entirely wan-
ting, although the black sknde seemed (o pn -
vail. 1 arrived at the coneluilon that the oop.
per oolor was tbe origlsal complexion of the
tribe, the blank shade being due to inlermtk-
turo with surrounding nations "
In olimate the thermomoter ranges from 40
to 114 Fahrenheit. The extreme beat being
morally accompanied by a lowering sky, ron
dered it ospeeially debilitating Disease wai
freanent, by which both cfBartb'* companions
died, and he himself bad leveral attacks of
fever. Rowel dlBeultles and various com plsints
ly elephantiasis and the Guinea worm,
lated the o*tl ee In a peculiar provinoe
one in every three at least had this parasite.
ftt religion, Paganism and Mahommedanism
both flourished, but with seerecly an exception
Dr. Berth passed as a Christian, or rather as a
non-oonformlit with t|a feshiooahlo local be-
liefr. There seemed to bo little danger of per-
sonal vialouee during the travel. The natives
acted very generally in a proper manner
Theee volumes are full of Infermstion, and
thoee 41s coveriee are of greet importanoe to
Europe uad to us. This suooeeeful journey
and its results wilt but pave the way m a
thorough exploration and Mttlement o' Centewl
Africa by the English nation As soon ss r.he
troublea in tbe Ruet are queited, Africa will be
tho land of peemiee. In varisus potota larye
settlsmeuta will he asnls, trestles effected ware
cot ten and c^me. gtuwn, rise and Ivory and .11
LOVE OUR*.
Tha Cineiuaati\
relation to what I
liahed ta (he We
Our Western
noted for ite ad«
practices The
in-vcted, during an
to eta very, is now
t or
it
% "Love Own." It
of social revolutionism
Berlin Height* in Eri*
purchased property, and
range menu to demo
tbe beauty cf their
grain* etehanged for English manufactures —
The country interveoing bet s een tho seelitine
traversed by Dr Berth ia the no thwtet and
Dr. LtvingMooe in the couth wW he exploited,
the Niger will be ngidtt sessndid, tbe wbnle
oountry mapped out. Commerce and Cbrieti-
enity will permtnte benighted Africa—[Now-
«rk Advertiser. r.
Viiuiae Weauinu or jr.wxutv: —"If
truly refined woman tin
in the conntiy, or. in e
«•
m in Europe, wmni jewolnr
in a watering plase, it tfifi
'n JT
mm,*.
and ths anxfen* one* wure ahout to rive up In
despair, When, fe sod fcohnll, the fl i^S ap
peered, anfe and sound. She hod Wen eeatM
it 1 thicket, overlooking Ine whole aw, end
congratulated herself <m having coeee it ever
them. _ : .
'« tii 1 i> ■■■■■ (nil : t. J,
Aw Oubawwuw Bau «r **** 7*,,
lo baa liswt Wtsafud 4 f
nefeetergeef Mtg
mm
cuuistaasni,
all their tmm* „
and then display their uugfevod honda. Iu
it is eoostdcred, by ariMnerutie fssh
the highast degnw, to
on tbe forvflnflwr.
even vulgar. Very seldom, *nd
1 of the «MM*t nrnasstiy, will n
let it be said a ladv—In Europe
hand in (he cpen air, or tittting
11, or plan evening party, h n ball-room,
la the theatre. Hire, in Amcricw, the
A —-- - —- — * A a 11 n'f si cm.
SJT!H5SlSur,'E^
ceded to them the name of
MM' V
(|H,'.!ir'iM7fM ,msm **M
htm dhTtZSk of
t--i,i< iisnahan
H) eiseib nf Iffr hetdc he
hat tl
a Lwre Cim'
trfOhhki.
ia becoming quite
of illicit doctrinee and
Uw" principle ^
led failing relative
to aucstious of ,*
polliiea\ nature. The
iwpnrtnuce, In that
nf what ia termed
a community
n organism! at
tyf that th#y have
f aow tnalMMr ar-
id their own livec
tioa " There i*
believa, la their
reformers, be-
' the r*vw la-
to tbe taepira-
' ly fevnired.
nd bold
any law, or
1* least tram-
iactanoe the
in vogue
by theen
, beoause,
's aotlon it
•"
•any
tl a
■eel
as the morn 1
visit «f Dr 1
cut
llimlted j
lag especially new, 1
.They an like sit
lie vera in *,4rituali*m, al
lions of tbs Bible asscoos
lione with which they are
They reveres individual in
that society ha* no right lo
to luatall any custom which
rnels the individual notion.
laws in operation, and the
relative to marrisgs, are oouail
"reformer*," as tyrauniosl and
once married, a man 'a t r s woi
thene*forth fettered They
law*, and all other* whiob prevent
individual frasdam.
The oommualty at Berlia Helghte
to aumher eigh'y strung, iaeludmg I
milec. Among their eatabliebmeuis it
wbioh ia conduotod on the vegetarian
dropatbic principles, and which thev hi
pleaaed to dunominate the "Love (Jure
not intended, a* ite name ludioatea,to cute
meet holy of paction* in the human hccrt,\e
hut, by proper treatment} to eradicate tha
nisr nclions of love, or the duties ef love.
other word*,regarding all minda but their
dlceeaed In reference to matrimony, they
pouc to cure thorn who favor tham with I
patronage by a practical application of ike dee. .
trinea of free love. 1
It ie mid that some oppMitloa has been \
manifested to thi* patent mora) refer* Institu-
tion in Erie county Men who have wives
they lava, and women who have hnebanda they
esteem, and parents who have children apon
whom they bestow afectloo, fear tha inlnsnas
nf the Love Cure. TLa have met sad express-
as their disipprobatlon but as yet havo felled
to affect tbe Berlia Helghte Hotel, the
"reformer*" have pleated themselves upon the
"higher law" principle, and regard all opposi-
tion psrs*sntin, Ho fer titey hold theirown;
and ihey will continue to do so,until tin novel
ly of the •reform' dies away.
We lean from ths tienduaky Register that
a deeeeot was made an thie 'Vtec Love' esteb
lishmeot, and I. 8. Tyler, A, W. Smith, Mary
Dam*, Mar^ Lewisj 8>ph maik Powers, Ho-
of the mytterie* of tbfe
but it wnenot ttil 1868 tl
eooiated with the Turkish
tiag the Mosque end
Above aad below ground,
lion and
Dt.l
I*'
survey I
xanletc antiatm . .
ount Mortah. The writer of thie aHiefe, l*,
associate oapaeity, bad unlimited aeoem^t
the aam* time, 'lie true, wo wore not exaotty
I'WQgrfaad aa UbriatiAVs, during these visftRI
nor yet aa human, being*, in th 'a)||li of tkg
swarthy eunuchs, tbo conservators of the h*r
rem, hut were called donkey*, and were sab-
Jceted to a meet thorough ablution in the ifn-
" n adjjoii "
maur m 5A</a, an adjoining hath, wnere w*
submitted to the perholling, soaping god flay,
iug, with a melancholy ntrionane**, in view of,
our new being, wbieh, eo fer ac former oovar-
ag of the holy was concerned, frae liMfally ai
ide, in which we departed |ro*t this fimbuc of
Meefem regeneration. Eotariag on# of tha
westera gaSaa, of whfrh ,|lilaw|[
wending our m} beneath th* graceful eypress
aud dellwte aeatia, in *tooking, feet, we a*oen-
del tho platform on which ihc Meeqn* stands,
onoc crowned It, was, long osnturis* hack,;
dragged hy the victorious Saladrn, for weeks,
tk rough the ctraaU of Jorumbm, 1 ani the ca-
ll iu enoloeur* weahad with race wnte^to olsaoss
it of Christian dsilamant.
the*r*m fee k*srmt new I
Aa Iraa yehe is en Ihy aeek,
Aad bleed h
and Thomaa Wright, were brought he
lore the Mayor of Banduahy, on ahargi pf
adultery, prefewed agalnal them the Register
all respectably drcaesd, wars
nstaohcMMd whickers, end leng hair.
t
The
heavy
Of the women,three in number two were~drem
ed In JHoomar oeatumc, ths other in ordinary
long skirts. Tbey ail wore ibeir hair in long
curls,aad with the exception ef Mr*, M. L*wts,
looked eheerfel and even doflaut
She Is ths wife of Mr Harlow Lewis of
Skcaeetelec, New Totk, a gentleman of high
reapaotablHty, le fem two yuetu of age aad the
teeth** of three ehlldr*u,the youngeat ef whom
her
run,the youngest
a little fellow of Ave
before tbe'Court.
A number ofi month* elac* ah* bename ac-
quainted with E. 8.1 vfer, at the homo of her
busbend ia Bkeaeataie*. Tyler waa a Free
his stay
bover, aad during bis stay at tbs house of Mr
Lewis, Succeeded In making % convert of the
fetter's wife, who came with him to lferlln lo
October last. She came before the Court,
having evidently been in tear , and with traoee
of sorrow noon her couvtcaanoe. The father
and husband of Mra. Lewi* are alao here, urg-
ing on the proceedings against th* Prco Lovur*,
with a view of getting her home egsia, though
ahe aa yet pen"latently refuses to accompany
tham.
The examination of wltoeem of Horntr was
concluded at 11 <'clock A nam of testimony
waa elicited, thawing the prloaiplse of tbe
FwOLo- - * - -
in .
Mr Berry
nlty, and three of tbe arisimsf*, Mr. Smith,
Mrs. Ifem* and Mr*. Le«la, who made an
avowal M tbe poin<t<—uftbcdullngly avowef
their repudiation of th* legality of tha amrrieg*
and the right of aAnily « sttraetional oehabi
Ittlna
*, but very little bearing on th* «e*e
Among the witcccee* examined were
a prominent member of the fiater
three of tbe nrisonsfs. Mr. Smith,
: 4|B'fllBM>MaWh '
11 "V •' .H - :aiP-rr..7 .4 'P-
Br m* fewwil;;. r>b
A*k *m ae aaorei the meoeaaajr draw ll* **ai
The etewd amy steep frcmh*e**a and, take fee
Wltfc feld tefeid, *f msustela e gf cape, (*haps,
Oat, 0 teef*^4, wheel h* «sacpmnl feeef
A*h ssaaoasere. M,(
ft
lleaa thy hrew.
k
stBHaWWtt' ffVA AMrmm tkf ffmeal V
A•• BVniMl w*wWB| Maw vTVBB Wi WmwglI
thee difet njMt a* drma, :.i
Aad aew thy area* i* *a th** laid,
b**r****nt'tt:tbyefe«*.'' - ,
Tha Moaqu* of Oeo*r (*o ealled from th« Oal
Omw)i* the flncst piece of Saracenic archil*
the world—octagonal in ahane, aa
by feurapaefona deor*, feel eg tho car- so
fete. Thia lower part of tbe building
it (coal with white marble, tinged with blue,
(fragments, porhepe of Bolomeu s Tempi*, fer*
meriy tcoupylng th* *ite|) tha upper part is
iflhtfclfl id lit ■MlngmtMl BflMlilatn m||k Itianrlll.
I™*"1 wgg wWfP^^M^n
Hons, inTurkiah, (ran the Koran, abova,ferm
ing a ainkular am
launanrp&d In
f mmmmt ■" • -
* ft- —
,V« . JrMI6i-
■
tvV ?m. ■
'wtK jJlyt r; .J?1'; '
wh-'WRK; "'W
m > rma
wnnopt": \¥ J
rII't* ' V
and beautiful mosaic, the 4am*
symmetry and baenty, and
WWW g W I 1 I .-WWW . U-WW'T'WJ www* waxw ~w I w—w --
. titM VI L - —-i A. L fe IMIIV MAftk f
u. Id, .nwi .L
wasmanlfettod, and th* Ark *1 tha 0 veoant
rcated Th# Moalen tradition napaotfeg, iW
El Sakera (or Holy Stone) ia, thatU fellVom
heaven, whtn the spirit or propba*y eo *i*o-
ood, cad that th* anaianta propheefed from It,
Md Utal «p# Ihl*'feck tat'the
JfevidV
numbering oTthe people, slaughter*!, till Cfed
feommaaned him to put bfe itmd ggrii'htl*
tha thaath th«>*of.' Ai th* time «TtM Begi-
Jemtalem, th* nfene
it whereunen the An-
tell what
fluiah tbe wi
'lygflkM1
I MM I
ranf the
bed to aeoomptny
gel Gabriel prawated it,:by foreihly holding lL
[tbe mark* of hi* Ingere arc atill Mown,] uatil
th* arrival cf Mohammed, who, by his prayare,
ixed It forever to thecpot Upon tbic rack
you aro alao tbowo t tha print of the
foot Tho Moaqno 1* aaid to aonteia tl
sassaj
granata* of l)*vM, and tb**gddlo of 1
u w«II a* an etigfoa) oour of the Rot
auiMClttasas *-* ~ ~: mkuk -na■*> ffLaaaM ^ A
pirCuHHVK PVfflV ol WBMVl 1FI iPOi iWIV
A well of il«<ug water Is nlaofM
believer* ere mid to drink. A green slab of
marbl* i* shown, whiob huthe mark* of eigh-
teen nail* of dnet—three of wk)ah tlli re-
0,1 He other* having dl*anp*afed at dllfer-
times, to mark ths eomplttlon of osrtain
: wbsn tha last tehee Its
lime will bo oompletcd
world will have eoam.
■Miiianiat Ht tffiki} j®*g
■■mVVIBi WW 4MBVV ..... ,v,
Immense cnkwtiwaMfe'tkMl rock
aenib aaat
ueaflrm the *
origin, aud
year* ago
•ketch, of nmny
th* andeanr*—such a*
wi
Idea
warklng'i
WW,
friends no
the fulneas of
•nd of tbo
grow* *
the ««5 nf0 e
1 ■■
1
Bav* a aew claim to thtir <
'tha«u|fecf.|
■v ^ %. ,• v
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
De Morse, Charles. The Standard. (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 51, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 9, 1858, newspaper, January 9, 1858; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth234146/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.