VOL 2. PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY - EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. S2.00 PER IIV ADVANCE. Gen. Walker and his Objects. For several weeks past, arid while f-at peace, but simply as volunteer emi Gencral Walker was obtaining marvel- 1 grant companies. In -this light, and lous victories over the Central Ameri can troops that were allied against him, ' and thereby establishing his sway in to the number of men who can be placed Nicaragua on an apparently solid basis, ! at his disposal But say that he can, the newspapers in these Northern States within six or Twelve months hence, cal have been publishing statements made culate on an army of ten thousand men, by general and other officers, who had j what obstacle could be then interposed been in his service. These statements j to the realization of his project of a great were, for the most part, adverse to him j Southern republic? The feeble govern 3nd intended to prejudice his interests, j rnents of Mexico and of the Central A It has been represented that in his ; rnerican republics could offer but little course in Nicaragua he has been anima- j resistance to his progress. Franccand ted principally by a desire to propitiate England, seeing in it the best means of the sympathies and secure the support counterbalancing the influence of the of the Southern portion of this Confed- , United States and re-organizing Central eracy,and that it was in that view he j American society, would rather aid and annulled the decree prohibiting the ex- abet him than otherwise, and as for our istence of slavery in Nicaragua. Those Government, it could have no excuse for representations are not borne out by interfering with the movement. Look facts. We have reliable information that ing at it, then, in this point of view, General Walker has not been operating Walker's vision of empire seems any--ith the views thus attributed to him, thing but chimerical. It is quite reli but that he has had -before his mind a totally uiflerent and more comprehen sive course of policy. We publish this morning several communications which may serve to throw light upon this mat ter. ; : The scheme on which Walker has km- his eve steadily fixed, from the first day 'on which he entered Nicaragua, has been to re-organise that and the oth tr little Republics of Cei tral America, and to form of them and Mexico a fed eral Southern Republic, which would act as a counterpoise to the influence of the United States, it was a grand and highly politic scheme. He circulated thereby, and very reasonably, too, to conciliate France and Ingland, and to enlist their governments in his support. That he has not been unsuccessful in this plan is evidenced by the good rela- " rwl It;aIT- fa'r.-.TS. ihn. hasp fTris- . . , , r.L ot Independence, that all created equal, cd between him and i.c ch.cers of the 1 ' . . . . . T passed decrees abolishing sin very in "English man-of-war lyiog in San Juan, Jj States ' to whom he had, perhaps, communica- " ' 4 , . . i Those decrees have not worked well, ted his views. ; . It was in furtherance ot that distinct , 've are to judge from the decl.ne in line of policy that he commissioned products, and from the present low con- General Goicouria as liiniste.- to Ene- land. TJiU-irflnnRi.mil. however, who , has gained much distinction as an ener getic and infisiintlal member of the Cu ban Junta in tbi3 city, does not seem to have completely understood cr appreci- ntml llMn'. wlnn TI'a b.nf crnnp. t.O x-- , ill- k . (U Nicaragua and attached himseh to the fortunes of the revolution there with the principal object in view of making li'nrt aod sidiservicnl . , .u to his own plan oi overthro.'ing Span-, , . , -i ' ish nomination in the islano oi Cuba. , Mr.-0.kni.ith and other,, who ha.l also ! .' joined Walker's standard, bad done so ut the With ihp comr rVIort in viPVV. - ' course 6f nolicv which viNnt. Korl , . 1 .... , -r chalked out for hiuiself had no reference , X , u whatever to Cuba. It was altogether f, T. - wa . tsobiects were to open a cv "o,Ct outside of his programme. That was a , i . , i t x. i -u and field for slave labor, distinct matter, into which he had neith- ano ue er the inclination nir the leisure to ob-' But, as we have saidbefore, VaHceK tmdc himsclt He left it to the Cuban has no such intention His object is firs fillbusteros to settle for themselves; end to promote the social and commercial for his part, he had an eye single to the prosperity o Nicaragua, and evcntuaJy organization of.a great Southern Bepub- to organise, by the aid of Anglo Saxon, v . Pumnpan and American elements, the 1-e. -Vcordingly, when Messrs. Go.cou- ; g"' bHc. of Centra. "and Oanjmilh, and others, manifes- ; effect and wreicne.i y !cd their real objects and sentiments, he Amerioa and M.co on a -'ond out that he could not rely ' upon ensure ,he.r moral , phys.cal Po'.t -1 m,.nd. therefore superseded then, in advancement ,n he rank of P? 'ir respective fanctions as Ministers- nations. That .. an object .vorthy the Engla,ld and the United States.- best efforts ot the best men. N o -Hence some-of the communication, that ter how Walker may have fe It neces,. Mrecti"6 on Wa,k" : - - er honesty and ability. , 1 pni.mr.se. enti- Mr. Sonlo ltvov.r. seems to have y appreciTd and chimed ,n Wi.h lull Gpni ur , ti .a, thnt tn ' waiKcr s uiea. nc " th-..w.-.. .1 ..nthiPR" Lucille atone couiu iuu &j uijj"---- svmpaiiiiCB 1 pportofthe EngH .h .nd French mme t be -ured He . no, " " uiieu states, Ptiffngeu iu i'"u'" me Woi r ,i ; r,;s;n(r sud- . - on fcofmenandmoncy ;lo enable him o '"iftCl S T.eWh UIIU . .'-'". hnlrt k: j stnbl sh his 1113 iJ IU LI 1 1 LI Oil" , " f? -. & . "uvernment on a firm and permanent k0: - Under the incoming a 1 1 1 - n ft Y II I IIIII .I- i.nf fr i nn inrnni i .uui.",L""- nhstaele to l0n He will TmKablv find no .Iy hnu no oumuu, ryinff fft " i " n(, -,an 0f milita- i" ry colonization in Nicaragua. There is j. nothing in our ncautrality laws to pre- v mi x we cApeutuuus vvmcn may i be sent out from here cannot legally be j interfered with.: Thev will not have ' been got up for the purpose of making war upon a nation with which we are with' the inducements which Waliter can hold out, there can be no limit set able, and the chances in its favor are evi dently greater than those against it. As to Walker's edict, annulling, among slavery, it ivas not issued in the interest i t I of the Southern States of this Republic as has been represented. It was rather issued in the interest of thr (' K ' TJ?' Sress development Previous to the revoh;! 'v, in ?ich these Central American republics rhre.v bflf their dependence on Spain, slavery existed there in virtue of the common law. Its existence depend not on con stitutional provisions nor on written law, but simp! v on common usage and her natural hiw. But when the Revo-' liition was successful, its leaders, acting uiidei ibe innrei'Cv and exeeated ideas of the ohl French Revolution, and assuming in it. broadest, sense, the prin ciple evolved in our own Declaration uu.oHu.au.. - . . . in the country Numbers of the most productive estates in the republic have been c flowed to fall into utter neglect, and many of them which have been confiscated, ae now, to be sold-lor the i!ce of the government All that Wal- kerdid was to ann ;I those decrees, and Keruiu " Ieav3 tbe matter of slavery where it was before the Revolution. Probably its ef fect will be nothing more than theestab- lishrrsnt of a system of Indian peonage, V1"1- m ,L e n such as prevais in the South .rnerican u11 - . KepubUc b.nce tne design 01 v a. - m . 1'..t xLT J ker is to enlist the sympathies and sup- port of France and England, it is quite i L. I, TTnii not rncnri in a eviueuL mat no "w- ' mpas'TG so calculated as tiiat was to ren- meas-re.so ca.cu.a l der those governments hostile to him, it UCI & ena, anu ... ... , tie himself to be ,r.nd among the great benefactors ot tne race. . if 11C nnt rpnnsptoo In the meantime, let us not repose too . . ri.A. . r ... . i ...ontainnni thnse' b5. U- vhorn other fce ,(l))ject to , i r i. onii mnnv na.e cum- errors oiiuu&.i-f -!.'.. - 1- .nr.ir.nt -any -. oianair. " . ; . j r 1, a rlpvintpfi from tne line which he . . i . i uas marsed out lor nimseii, uaiy , If, namely, the conslrt.ction of a great Southern repub- . u .u -;oi radft and lic.Uestineu to uC - . LEXINGTON, i NORTH CjIHOLINA, commerce of these United States. His actions may be liable to misinterpreta- i;on,ouiiney an, nevertneiess, tended 10 the accomplishment of this one grand nroiect. AVm Vnrh Hmhl A Lire Snake in a Live Man. A gentleman, whose name we did not learn,1 says the San Francisco Golden Eagle, arrived in this city rom Bird's for the purpose of procuring surgical ad vice in relation to the possibility of re moving from the stomach a large snake, which has inhabited that locality for the past fifteen years. Exactly at what lime the reptile was taken into the stomach the sufferer is not aware. He felt its presence in the vicinity of the kidneys many years ago, but the pains experi enced, although sometimes acute and troublesome, occasioned no alarm until two years since, when, one day, feeling quite unwell, he placed his hand upon his bowels, and distinctly felt the snaKe crawling within him. Since then it has attained a length of at least fifteen inch es, and a size round the middle of five or six inches. Its proportions can be pret ty accurately ascertained, as its entire shape is fearfully obvious to th touch. It is quite active, and possesst s an in satiable appetite, judging from the a mount of food art! v:.ler rnivVfi by the sufferer, wi-.t. - n . i:"Ml'v re with, 1 hirst, and j ' -1 uni fju:in iy - quires irom nree 1 o n-'H- i:ii3 o; nuni 1 ur.Jlv. 1 hrouy:h t hf - recijTnuie.iid:.! io-' o an Indian, he has lately found roi iieja relief frurn tl:e iru-f s-iiU i hirs. by drink itiix w :irr -hvrUy 'i i in i vnicu'ir. 11c ii.ts 'icu'e s';v X'i aS ft . torn pis to d ish-drjt- hfa " varrnin t by starv arion aiul tho tier tise ..f -titnui; nts On ore occasion, he rd-t dne'1 trmi' both iood and water for t.hreo'davs. In the hno oi bringing t lio-oeenpaiit to .sf .r e so ,.f terms. The first djv ; be snake , bean.e uneasv ; the sccom boislprous: and tbe third, furious, but still the man held out. ' ' At the end of the thin! (lav, hmvpvpr bis snakeship commenced an attack up on the wail of his prison, with what ap peared to be a tolerably full set of leeth, and the result was an immediate supply of food more agreeable to both parties. (!!!) As may he supposed, the man is reduced to a perfect si;eleton, under the extreme ;orture of mind and body pray ing upon him night and day, but he does not despair of finding a surgeon in the city' sufficiently skilful to make an in cision in the abdomen and. -remove the reptile. We have heard of similar cases; but Shi3 is the first that ever came under our own. observation and we hope it may be the last, for we have felt "all o verish " ever since ! Some years ago a man without family or relations lived in a county in Arkan sas, and was possessed of an estate worth $5,000. He went to New Or leans, and was absent four years without beyig heard from. The Probated Judge granted administration on his estate ivound it up and discharged the adminis trator." The man returned had been to Mexico applied to me -uugc - , property when in- open court the fol- lowing dialogue toow p.aet. Dead Man-U your Honor pleases 1 want my enects returned to n,e, see lam not dead. Court I know that is I as a man that you are alive and in court, but, as a court, I Know you are dead, for tbe re cords of this court say so, and against their veracity there can be no averment so says Lord Coke, and a good many other boots I never read. Dead Man But I want my property, and it's no matter to me whether your records lie or not. T am alive, have not transferred my property, and to doprive me of it without , my ':.? 't i -.-.i; st all law. Court -II you insinuate that the re- ! cords f this court lie, this court will , Dead Man Send a deact man to j-.h. - ! CowrZrMf. Shenn, r.ase Ur.s; appira- ihon ghost, or dro,d , spe:lk lo . lliee !-.efS So and . ... , i. , i. cnmothi(r innriiiK. iac - TU ..ii..rn ctllPl-r I O I. lIKil 1 -' " "concerned he ; - - , , and d d it he shouiu tu dead. and i r.i..- Intn ltnnr.irv anu u.cru. .. - ,nd spent all he .m-c in Mexico, and the rest. FRIDAY, DECEMBER. Cheap Ice House. An exchange paper furnishes. the fol lowing: - :: r -J , J;" : We will give you our experience with 1 a cheap ice house." Four years ago last. January we had one dug of the following dimension, viz : ten feet Rmrvmv thU I was In U'. A r. i ; V ",lu mm tiay , after getting it this depth, we had the bottom made into a bowl shape, and laid uw nau togs, across it; at surtacewe i-u a pen maae oi lojrs, around the edge people was not given at the ballot bos at tfy the height of four feet, and the dirt the late election. Party machinery elected that came out of the hole was thrown j James Buchanan. The despotism of the up and rammed around the pen ; this pen i democratic party is as detrimental to the increased the depth to fourteen feet tru? interests of the country, as the despo The part in the ground has no walling tism of Henry viii, whose word was law to of any description When filling, we . the interest of Ai'a country. James Bucha have a small quantity of straw kept be- nan was aware of lhis Tiy l,ower when tween ihe ice and the earth. Fifteen he casl of his individuality and declared wagon loads will fill my house, and it ' hlmsf lf uthe Plaforra f Pny. The , . . - i people that could not be reached by corn- has leen empty but once in four years, i 4l , . . . , . . r.y , J j mand and threat, had thei credulity abused and that was m November, and then it j by the venal prCss of that party. Thus was emptied by, taking out cart, loads at J we see a patriot and stalesrnan whom the a time for extraordinary purposes. After people preferred above, all others cast" aside the bank was thrown up around the pen, for an amUtinus politician. Webster, Cal we set in four blocks at the corners, and huun. and Clay lost nothing by not being laid upon them two courses of logs t wen- called to the Presidency. Neither does tyfeet long; they were cut this length this bright example of pure patriotism lose in order to throw the eaves some six inY g,ory b' bein2" defeated. His course feet from the ice and thereby secure it i:i t,,H UlH favass has aJed new chaplets from the intrusion of water There was left sufficient space between the lens to adn:? free circulation of air. The w ! h ive erumhled vrv little more he fjvnt ye ir tha;., ever since, and this w' i c; UNed bv rats. We p:id a workman four dollars, for putting on the roof, han ing doors, &r.. and this was the tvhole .i:st. 7 save the labot of four farm hands, two days, digging and putting op the lo;s, and the cost oi materials. Vortliern Democracy. Locofoco papers hove persua- I n d d the people of the. South that at the North the democracy only, weie true to the South. How far this is from being : true is maniiesteu oy ir.e elections in I -rt i i x i .r ii INew iianipsnire ana e.gni oiner oi ins . Northern States which voted for Fierce ,qo mnA u,.. nnw vntrd fr.Vr.nnt New Hampshire, that always stood up or the party, until a regular free soil candidate wes put up, and then its de- moeracy gve way. Then it is the South. against Look also At New York. It is in the strong Locofoco counties of the western part of that State that Fremont's strength lies. The New York Day Book says: "The tremendous abolition vote in all the old strong Democratic counties ic ilized life to the doors cf our dwellings ? Northern New Yorkhas .not only start- Afe not ouf hearth-stones guarded by holy led and astonished the Dom-crsts ot this foms conjugal, parental and filial love, the section,, but surprised and confounded corner-stone of church and state, more sa the old politicians of every class." j cre(l than either, more necessary than both? Upon which the Express remarks: ; Jt our temples crumble, and capitols of " True ! True ! Especially in St. state be leveled with the dust, but spare our Lawrence, where Preston King seems homes! Man did not invent, and he can to have transposed over to Abolition the not improve or abrogate them A private . , tx k.,n KM;n. Tf shelter to cover in two hearts dearer to each wnoie uemocrauy, uuUy a. ........ v. the Southern Democrats thinK oi tnese, . . , their Northern allies. Hosts. . . i i ,.rftntrpn vvilh fat hoCs, on their rur cvt;i " i - " 4win(,. to market. How many , through, we do not know. j Qf Mb , sc(e bnlg thev pass along. The Spartanburg (S l,IVI, - lrt rf fnrtv reached I ii UlUM ouyj u - j - ' .u... i ict -ppL thn first ot the sea- i . . i . c. i vA nnor. son, and were sou. at v ter cents cross. Vs iville Aeivs. ter cents, gr ..n Snmlav last, a man f illtf"'! Xjl'- ' J named McLean, was arrested charged rh pu tie obs'-ruetions on the North " ",Lo.:i ,n.l afterex,min,- JIIlMIHii . tion before several Magistrates, was committed to prison in default of bail, to awit his trial at the next Superior Court for this County, in May next. Salisbury Herald. At the Davie County Fair, held at lavie ivouniy r an, m-... Farming'on, Jos. uutnrei. receive . .. . ii : l 4U. nremium for a hog, 21 months old, fiOO lbs. And . . r y-l - 1 Max. utnreii :..mrnr nnpa vpflr old. weiehins i for on 1'" 470 lbs. G. W.' Johnson received the . i t M.m;..m at thA Plowmz Maicn, as ne III. did other premium, for catt.e and SW,e ,8,n wire as ...u7 r., The Secret of Yorrrn. A laoy nev i i i . c K n 1 rnL-a until she . erfc..u..unr- .B- --" I has had her portrait pd.uicu. 12, 1856. , milliard Fillmore. . This is a name that will go down pos terity as an example of true-patriotism, when the political arena presented none tut men seeking personal agrandisemer.t re gardless of principle and country. Millard ri.,lnore, logh standing as a defeated can- didale ft,r lhe highest office in the gift of a free people, stands higher to-day than the President elect. No man living enjoys the respect and esteem equal to the defeated canJldale. j The real gennine to his brow, and whatever may be his future destiny, will enshrine his memory in the rifTections of his country-men. As a rolem porary well says, when that fierce Northern horde, by which he was surrounded, ' threat ened destruction to our beautitul and glori ous political fdinc wben th(ir victorious legions commenced their infamous march t wards the overthrow of all that freemen hoi dear, it was Millard Fillmore who first stood up in their midst and rebuked them : it was Millard Fillmore, who, Leonidas-like at the head of the Spartan band, met them at the lJass of Thermopylae, and saved the rns'itution nnd Union from desecration. It is true that a more fortunate rival, by pursuing a course of 'masterly inactivity,' grasped ih reward whicb righliully belong- - F. .o -v- lmi!: Krnpntli n Kiirlnpn of tliimrs. will n!- "" wasrrauJ,u" re,lcmu,;r Uldl 11 Fillmore who saved the country Irom pjlaek liepublican' rule. All honor, then, to FiLLironE, the honest and inte! Never had '.any party a leader of mere gallant bearing never was cny patriot more idiamefullyjsacrificed ! Well may it be said that " Republics are ungrateful. Sehna (Ala.) Reporter. ' Home a:id Vforaen. j Our Homes r. hat are their corner stones j but the virtue of a woman, and on what does social well-being rest but in our homes ? lYTnci tvft not trace all other blessings of civ- : i.,.i,:.,u ...na ln n inr innn an in i k wiiiiu. iiiyii v xa w . - ' . exemue me proiaue vyv --;r being ; seclusion enough for children to feel that mottier is a noiy peculiar name mis . ...... . t 1 i: tk! in i . or.,1 l.oro ia ihP hirih-n ace oi everv ,erre. thought. Here the church and state - . . ' m. for their support. O, spare our i , t The love we experience there .ives us our faith in an infinite goodness; llUllica . 1 --- - the purity and disinterestedness of home is our loreiasie iiiiu caiuot ui In relations there established and fostered . . .... . . . f , we II lit! I III '- ii 11 4ti do we find through lite tueciuei soiace anu r -What .iini flprve J j . . . . . . , i 4Untrn ...i.nm o KiriVi. inenameconipa right gives us: vji.t momer f i,L:,. ..omnanions. We who , J . . . .1 l ........ t have played on the same nearin, unucr u.e Pf he same sntile. who date baeU to the same sec, and season of innocence and h . in whose veins runs the same blood, do we n.t find that years make moreimpor t..u the tie that binds? Coldness may sep, r.ue d.uerent 1 . i ,l;..i.iA V. i those who can love anu.n rrr to hve at all. must ,t,A .4v;W.la lo .mr . .. .. ..... . -lkp -hom God himself ,ave are whoI mt ke ' c.,1i..cr dni - strcWpM i. any an ..ww. y y in our , ; pennn. fecAan PA 11 CJkk'l'x'C. . - - - - - - . u;.,rr htwHe liked his eI- )ride, js reported to have7 renarked Why ereraa! r l . be only half ,rVp see. 1 tooK ner ior i - i dash me, if she m only a tar - hes a tar-tar. Ced to a southern lady. J. Van Buren is cp NO. 18. ' Slickers' Ilible. We had a glimpse, a day or tvo since, of a Shakers' Dible, a book not ofien allowed to be seen by the 44 world's people." It is entitled, "A -Holy, Sacred, and Divine Roll from the Lord God of HeaTen to the inhab itants of the Earth, Revealed into the Soci ty at New Lebenou, Columbia County, State of New York, United States of Amer ica." This edition was published seven years since, at thc-Shakers establishment at Canterbury, ICckv Hampshire, and the publishers say that as they have no regular printer among them, the mechanical exe cution may not be perfect in all its parts." We imagine, however, that some printer had a hand in it, from its neatness and accuracy unless, indeed, it was printed by inspira tion. It pretends to be a revelation, and the testimony of eleven mighty angels is given who attended the writing of the roll. One of the angels is named Con-sole-teac-Jao-mon-shue, and another Pre-line-finam-ves-ten-va-ren-ve-na: According to the angelic injunction, the book must be printed and bound by the Shakers themselves, to pre vent its sacredness from being poluted by profane hands. The printing was done at Canterbury, but it was found so far neces sary to deviate from the Divine command as to go to Concord to have the volume, bound, there being no book-binders in the establishment. It is bound in yellow ac cording to the order from on high. The book appears to contain passages from Scripture, altered, amended, enlarged, or curtailed, with original additions or improve ments as they probably deemed, to suit the peculiar notions of the decip!es of Anne Lee. It is a very curious volume, even more re markable, though of less pretended antiqui ty than the Mormon Riblc. A copy is or dered to be sent to every king or potentate in Christendom-and t one sent to the Gov ernor of Canada, some time since, was re turned or refused. Lowell Courier. A Certain Cure for Felons. We are sure that all who have suffered from a genuine bone felon will thank uSj for making public so simple and yet so ef fectual a remedy as the following. In thousands of instances, weeks arid months of the most intense suffering have been en dured,, allowing of neither rest, by day, nor sleep by night, and when a cure is at last . ejected, the finger or thumb is often de formed for life. As soon as it becomes ap parent that a felon is making its appearance which is known by a continued" soreness and pain proceeding from the bone, and sometimes evincing but little change for the worse for a week or two, take a strong cord of any kind and wrap it around the finger, above the afflicted part, is tightly as can be borne. Keep it in this condition until the pain can be endured no longer. Now loose the cord, and as soon as the pain caused by the cording subsides, tighten it again. Continue this for several days, or until the felon is completely blackened and killed. , We have known several persons who had . i i been afflicted with felons to try this remedy with success in fact we have never known it to fail. The cordings stops the circula tion, and thus the;sore has nothing to feed on. and soon dies of starvation. -We have faith in this remedy, even after a felon has , :.iki F.rrlmnfft. mniiK cuusiuci tuit uutivuu. - ' a - . ' , r :: . , 0t, - Bt HOGS. i ne lxiuiaviiic j uui ii tn, m. v.t. ...... . i i COV' We heard of no sales yesteruay. , v- ...,,.; , i nkmoa Ar I'.n . kiilpd 1500 head ;iimhsuu, '""1U"' , j - , . An l A VT 1 Ar XT V . I I 1-lllllIIICUL.l.lA ye y -" ' ... ,. kiuing last erening. T o., anu wc uCi.cc , were also killing yesxeruay. 18th, says :Hogs soldWday at from $5,65 to j , . rr.L ,t. ; e5,80-e5,75 the leading price rhe mark u ni .rot snmptl ahrm tone. pacKers ci ,y.-y . , . M , i... i L .1 a n t t a ntrinrf lrt l iIR ' bemff muisposeu iu "r""" i , n i uJnr nf nrnducta. Ureen ' dullness and low price! j ,nllltoViiiited extent at 4 J, 6J. arid VI itlU w. f - 7 If au. Qm. ( sldes and h, &m drorers arpackmg hogs in prclcrcncc to HAllinn a'l nrPSPflt nriCCS. i " r. . f ,umrxni -Uc.f d pWrangmg from v5 to SO 50 per 10U pouiids net, lor pacing H.w- . C t.: .iixtitioi The Baltimore American says: Mr. i" Buchanan's letter to Cahtornm, in l:vor oi the construction of the Pacific Bailroad vsl.n iit in time for was Sflll IW a.. .j influence on the election, n publisl but too late to bo : i i . n.iKliehri before the elec- ! rece.vcu uti m.u tion. 1 he consequence is auiiit iw ' strict construction anti-improvement Derao- jcrats are very much 'exercised at the ma- ! 'ni, einninniii Tvnnnirer. the nceuvre. me mciiuiaii j-.hu...., rt ': I. nnmrer inn j leading Democratic paper in Ohio, denoiin- of , ces the letter soundly. A Washington cor- i . - Vl. TV'. - n.. n respondent oi the iew ion, i uu MJ. the letter has produced quite a lermeni a mongthe Southern Democratic politicians." The wind was very boisterous yesterday

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