Your Safety, Ha Directed Me to Crestline, November 1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Your Safety, Ha Directed Me to Crestline, November 1 THE DEMOCRAT A. M'CRECOR '& SON, OFFICE. Having lately received a nfe supply of JOB MAI ' ' f " publikueAs. EKIAL. ta now furcl.hed in a atyls equsl to any country office in Ohio, having TWO POWER PRESSES, TElOlS Or BLltSCRtrTION. - And a full assortment of tha fattest stylae ef Ty. U AitJ CASK, IJT AD VAHTE, $2,00 with the nanal facilltlea for doing work of every j description in the beat of style, and aa reasonable fcjj. failure to notify diontlruaoee at the end of as can be dona ta say first-cla- city ofiee. f will be considered Ihe the tiaae aubeenhad for CABSS, FAPZB, XSTSLOra, As., asm a new engagement or enhecriptlon. except at tha 2, 1868. 26. Always kept oa ' trKt paper will fa diaeonlinued VOLUME 35. CANTON, STARK COUNTY, OHIO, DECEMBER NUMBER hand. iCr. ler. option af tha publieh.ra. BgBaBaagnHreBBBB How Passengers Are Fed at Altoona. but beautiful colors of autumn. On THE FRENCH DETECTIVE. Madame's hand rested on it heavily. The secret was never Imparted to any VALLANDIGHAM. I is nothing, my top house is a look-ou- t for "Bah It friend," she one out of tbe employ of the State.and Sl)c pemocrat- - the of the tha exercise of his profession, Eugene said quickly. no one DIRECTORY. A correspondent of the New York of trains, who pulls a In else couln have discovered it. the watchman Laromie had passed through some wonder- At the same time he felt himself borne to The Chief Instructed me how to use Capital Extracts from 2 ribune a newspaper not inclined to beli-ror- his Speech at ARCHITECT. e to notify when the tables the floor by an irresistible force, and before this passage, and being still anxious give undue praise, gives the following food dish ful adventures, and been nearer death than he could collect his wits, which he did not for your safety, ha directed me to Crestline, November 1. OBNAMBN WEDNESDAY::::::: DECEMBER 2. should be prepared and the to success in fer- 1-- J PUSCHKBT. VLilN ASP description of accommodations of most men cared be. His have about him this time, he was bound gain admissiod to the bouse bo means I . i.i li..t.rar. Cantos. Ohio. Reference, F. the ed. The natural head of water is suf 'r. B. Arehitert, reting out and .bringing to light crimes of hand and foot, and left helpless on the carpet. ot learn could concern V aware. Canton. Porter. the Lo;an Iiouse at Altoona, where ficient for hosepipes over the roof.and it, and what l Cleveland. noetr a. McGregor, all kinds had won for him the bitter enmity Giancing up, he saw the room was full of ing you. 1 haa no idea or rinding The following, from the Crawford .SSES editor. passengers on the Pennsylvania Rail all through the house. The steam- - men. you mean PK--- (VAKBLK here. Tell me what is the County Forum, is good, if is after o HOXIB, ARrHITKCT. : of all offenders, both political and criminal it tbea-- t Doll(lln. 43a Wainal Street, Phllaih-lih:- YOU ALL road stop for meals heating, apparatus is in a separate "What does this mcam?" he demanded, ing of your being here In this way r" ni i tin 1 to a. Tod. in the city. They had repeatedly vowed tbe election: a mtit h " ' Otncs hooro--S to IX HKOTM.' Death of David The mountain lap in which this building, and the warmers are distrib- sternly. First cut those cords ked 1 will," vengeance against him; for they declared "It means, Monsieur Laromie," replied said Laromie. GRANT TO TURN DEMOCRAT. "P- C'levft. 'God works mysterious way." ' TT MYER. Architect, in a young and thriving town is seated, uted through the halls and parlors the lady, smiling sweetly, ' you will not was soon freed bonds ; OUio. Otlloe 1GI Superior St. that there was no chance for them while ie that He from his Now..my Republican friends, l la bo AJ.. land. KOOILAIfL'S GERMAN BITTER I, has an of about 1,100 feet are furnished in city style mee t." I Clo:bintr. St or, Ono of the "War Governors most no elevation These latter remained in Paris,. Luromie only laughed sup with after which, he related all tbat had have not said anything against Gen. Izziness om Koehler'a above level of sea. is on tawdryncss pas- Laromie's coolness returned to him, now happened to ted tlurlnff the Reign of Terror, has the the It abating only in that at their threats, and kept his wits about him him. Grant in this campaign. I have done in tbe the line of the Pennsylvania Central es for luxury. One of them has serv that is too late. A clan suggests itsetr to me." ne for' a purpose. he is fit to be ectaclec ut breathed his hut, at his place of He declared his rcadiuess to meet them seems that I have been a very great added. He quickly explained to his it If EAST TL SCAltAW- - and foot of a steep as room summer, being "It President, long before his term ex- J. GEICJER. DRITOGIST, residence in Mahoning county. It Railroad, at the ed for a ball all wherever they desired provided, only, fool," said he, bittcrely. companion the design which at that O aa atreet. Canton, onio. Many it, pires I will be found supporting him. J GERMAN TONIC, would been a most grateful du- cent of the Allegheny ridge. left uncarpeted for that purpose, and "I agree with you, Monsieur," laughed instant presented itself to his mind. HOOFUHD'S have - they gave him fair play. honestly and cordially, against the into . WILLIAMS CO.. DRr01STS AStt on part, to lay upon travelers going westward, and arriv- a first-rat- e piano gives the music. the lady. xtegnard shook his head. lp.irip;r of the nartv whtrh ovn(vf.a tn rharniaeeuitetsaad Urnera. D. Deans ty, our his tomb Tbis, however, was the last thing tbat com- great It. c evening, for "Stand aside," said one of the men, It involves risk,' he said, !" n -- Oils, Pati-u- t laVclicini-e- Dye siun. respect, ine here at "lay over" elect him in November. Loud Palnte. - the tribute of if he had de they intended doing. They had fired at him gravely, be to you." . .i..- -. ii- . im. alal. etreet. Al tance. Prepared by Dr. C M. Jaekaoo, Philadelphia. ing forward. "Let me speak with him. "and may fatal cheers. And you will uot j -- the night, that they may see by day The Gorilla. have a Ohio. Preacrlplione prepared ai ail TlMtr IntrodacUoa Into thla sonntry from Oar anay served it, and to commend his memo frequently, without success, and had been Dv you know me, Monsieur?" he asked, ".Nevertheless," said Jjaromie, "1 right to cry out "Traitor" against ' say or Blent. occurred la picturesque scenery afforded in the "Yes," replied Laromie, "You are shall try It. First show me how to ry to the public veneration, if he had Lemercier, re- equally unsuccessful in their attempts at poi him ; you will have no right to talk passage. And when in the cars the Dr. of New York, Frederick Roulier known to the Govern escape from this place in case I find aoout his ryierizing, or nis - TAILORING. 1823. not forfeited all right to such a distinc- lecture , son. They had gotten up mock conspira- a step necessary, do as t uimore- iiaatin? next morning, they have nothing to cently delivered a in tbat cit ment as the President of a socialist club, sufh and then izlng, or Johnsotiizing you. You iecan-nominate- d tion. cies, with the hose of decoying him into of a pro- 1 you. TAILOR ABSALOM K1TT. AND TOEY CURED TOUB regret, much to be for. on gorilla, in which he stated that captain barricade, and a general ten him In Chicago; you put a we)l a KRCnANT peo but thankful the mn Regnard to 1 dealer ia Clothe. I'auimm etinK. Kea.iy The atheism of the American their power, but he saw through them in moter of discorder. These men, I suppose, showed him how work piattorm a sometning called a plat- Ac. .ae i The train 6tons in front of the 'Logan the gorilla was discovered in 1842, by and ai- - :ade Cloiliioic. janle FATHEE3 AND MOTHEBB, ple of this age, has been demonstrated instant, and only laughed at them for their are your confederates." the opening in the floor, then form into his hand ; you asked him en, Ohio. House,' not fifty feet from Its porch. Mr. Walker, and only two animals of "Precisely so, Monsieur. You have been. ran'ged the cords so that it would seem acceptance accep- ad will ear. yon and ynnr children. Tb.y are in numberless ways since the inaugu trouble. Siill, they had not abandoned the for an of it, and he aa long as as if Laromie were still bound by eea-B- away A choice and bountiful supper,' ele that class had been discovered in Eu for a time, anxious to capture us as ted, and, 1 dare say he would ac- PRINTING. eallrely different BHTHfrofD tha ration of Abraham Lincoln in 1861. hope of capturing him; and it was very cer- ; so could have be had praparmLlnua now mvJ 'n eounlry rope, one by Professor Davernoy, and we have been to secure you. Fortune has them but fixed them that he cepted the Democratic, nomination, aallrd kluwre or Toalca.
Recommended publications
  • The Color Line in Ohio Public Schools, 1829-1890
    THE COLOR LINE IN OHIO PUBLIC SCHOOLS, 1829-1890 DISSERTATION Presented In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By LEONARD ERNEST ERICKSON, B. A., M. A, ****** The Ohio State University I359 Approved Adviser College of Education ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This dissertation is not the work of the author alone, of course, but represents the contributions of many persons. While it is impossible perhaps to mention every­ one who has helped, certain officials and other persons are especially prominent in my memory for their encouragement and assistance during the course of my research. I would like to express my appreciation for the aid I have received from the clerks of the school boards at Columbus, Dayton, Toledo, and Warren, and from the Superintendent of Schools at Athens. In a similar manner I am indebted for the courtesies extended to me by the librarians at the Western Reserve Historical Society, the Ohio State Library, the Ohio Supreme Court Library, Wilberforce University, and Drake University. I am especially grateful to certain librarians for the patience and literally hours of service, even beyond the high level customary in that profession. They are Mr. Russell Dozer of the Ohio State University; Mrs. Alice P. Hook of the Historical and Philosophical Society; and Mrs. Elizabeth R. Martin, Miss Prances Goudy, Mrs, Marion Bates, and Mr. George Kirk of the Ohio Historical Society. ii Ill Much of the time for the research Involved In this study was made possible by a very generous fellowship granted for the year 1956 -1 9 5 7, for which I am Indebted to the Graduate School of the Ohio State University.
    [Show full text]
  • 1835. EXECUTIVE. *L POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT
    1835. EXECUTIVE. *l POST OFFICE DEPARTMENT. Persons employed in the General Post Office, with the annual compensation of each. Where Compen­ Names. Offices. Born. sation. Dol. cts. Amos Kendall..., Postmaster General.... Mass. 6000 00 Charles K. Gardner Ass't P. M. Gen. 1st Div. N. Jersey250 0 00 SelahR. Hobbie.. Ass't P. M. Gen. 2d Div. N. York. 2500 00 P. S. Loughborough Chief Clerk Kentucky 1700 00 Robert Johnson. ., Accountant, 3d Division Penn 1400 00 CLERKS. Thomas B. Dyer... Principal Book Keeper Maryland 1400 00 Joseph W. Hand... Solicitor Conn 1400 00 John Suter Principal Pay Clerk. Maryland 1400 00 John McLeod Register's Office Scotland. 1200 00 William G. Eliot.. .Chie f Examiner Mass 1200 00 Michael T. Simpson Sup't Dead Letter OfficePen n 1200 00 David Saunders Chief Register Virginia.. 1200 00 Arthur Nelson Principal Clerk, N. Div.Marylan d 1200 00 Richard Dement Second Book Keeper.. do.. 1200 00 Josiah F.Caldwell.. Register's Office N. Jersey 1200 00 George L. Douglass Principal Clerk, S. Div.Kentucky -1200 00 Nicholas Tastet Bank Accountant Spain. 1200 00 Thomas Arbuckle.. Register's Office Ireland 1100 00 Samuel Fitzhugh.., do Maryland 1000 00 Wm. C,Lipscomb. do : for) Virginia. 1000 00 Thos. B. Addison. f Record Clerk con-> Maryland 1000 00 < routes and v....) Matthias Ross f. tracts, N. Div, N. Jersey1000 00 David Koones Dead Letter Office Maryland 1000 00 Presley Simpson... Examiner's Office Virginia- 1000 00 Grafton D. Hanson. Solicitor's Office.. Maryland 1000 00 Walter D. Addison. Recorder, Div. of Acc'ts do..
    [Show full text]
  • Information to Users
    INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly fi'om the original or copy submitted- Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from aity type of conçuter printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to r i^ t in equal sections with small overlaps. Each original is also photographed in one exposure and is included in reduced form at the back of the book. Photographs included in the original manuscript have been reproduced xerographically in this copy. Higher quality 6" x 9" black and white photographic prints are available for any photographs or illustrations appearing in this copy for an additional charge. Contact UMI directly to order. UMI University Microfilms International A Bell & Howell Information Company 300 North Zeeb Road. Ann Arbor. Ml 48106-1346 USA 313/761-4700 800/521-0600 Order Number 9427761 Lest the rebels come to power: The life of W illiam Dennison, 1815—1882, early Ohio Republican Mulligan, Thomas Cecil, Ph.D.
    [Show full text]
  • President Lincoln and the Altoona Governors' Conference, September
    Volume 7 Article 7 2017 “Altoona was his, and fairly won”: President Lincoln and the Altoona Governors’ Conference, September 1862 Kees D. Thompson Princeton University Class of 2013 Follow this and additional works at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/gcjcwe Part of the Military History Commons, Political History Commons, and the United States History Commons Share feedback about the accessibility of this item. Thompson, Kees D. (2017) "“Altoona was his, and fairly won”: President Lincoln and the Altoona Governors’ Conference, September 1862," The Gettysburg College Journal of the Civil War Era: Vol. 7 , Article 7. Available at: https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/gcjcwe/vol7/iss1/7 This open access article is brought to you by The uC pola: Scholarship at Gettysburg College. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator of The uC pola. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “Altoona was his, and fairly won”: President Lincoln and the Altoona Governors’ Conference, September 1862 Abstract This article explores the long-forgotten Altoona Conference of 1862, when nearly a dozen Union governors met at the Civil War's darkest hour to discuss war strategy and, ultimately, reaffirm their support for the Union cause. This article examines and questions the conventional view of the conference as a challenge to President Lincoln's efficacy as the nation's leader. Rather, the article suggests that Lincoln may have actually welcomed the conference and had his own designs for how it might bolster his political objectives.
    [Show full text]
  • MS-017 Bickham Collection
    MS-017 Bickham Collection A Collection of Historical Manuscripts at the Dayton Metro Library Dayton, Ohio Processed By: Lisa P. Rickey, Archivist April 2011 with significant assistance from the earlier efforts of: Elli Bambakidis (2002) Helen Hooven Santmyer (1956) 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents................................................................................................................ 2 Introduction......................................................................................................................... 4 Biographical Sketch............................................................................................................ 5 Bibliography & Further Reading ...................................................................................... 10 Scope and Content Note.................................................................................................... 12 Box and Folder Listing ..................................................................................................... 13 Item Level Description ..................................................................................................... 16 Series I: William D. Bickham Papers ........................................................................... 16 Box 1, Folder 1: “Weekly Anne Gazette”, 1850 .......................................................... 16 Box 1, Folder 2: Manuscript story about California Gold Rush, Undated ................... 16 Box 1, Folder 3: W. D. Bickham: Military papers, 1861-1864
    [Show full text]
  • City of Girard Comprehensive Plan
    City of Girard Comprehensive Plan May 2017 ~ DRAFT ~ Prepared by: Trumbull County Planning Commission ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS City of Girard Trumbull County Mayor Commissioners James J. Melfi Frank S. Fuda, President Mauro Cantalamessa City Council Daniel E. Polivka Reynold Paolone, President Steve Brooks, 1st Ward Planning Commission Members Mark Standohar, 2nd Ward Lewis Kostoff, Chairman Keith Schubert, 3rd Ward James Shader, Vice Chairman Thomas Grumley, 4th Ward Mauro Cantalamessa, County Commissioner Joseph Shelby, at-Large Frank S. Fuda, County Commissioner Lily Martuccio, at-Large Daniel E. Polivka, County Commissioner John Moliterno, at-Large David Barran Jeff Brown Kathleen O’Leary, Clerk of Council John Mahan Richard Musick City Planning Commission Darlene St. George John Sliwinski George Finelli, Chairman James J. Melfi Jerry Lambert Planning Commission Staff John Latell Trish Nuskievicz, Executive Director Shane Burkholder, Planner II Rental & Zoning Department Christine Clementi, Executive Assistant Rental/ Zoning Coordinator Nicholas I. Coggins, Planner III Julie Edwards, Economic Development Coordinator Rich Fender, Planner II Mitzi Sabella, Administrative Assistant Cheryl Wood, Project Aide II - Housing Specialist TABLE OF CONTENTS INVENTORY Introduction ................................................................................................................................ 1-1 Background and Context ................................................................................................ 1-1 Planning Process ............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Tod .B'amily and Connections
    Some c.A.ccount of the History of The Tod .B'amily and Connections Compiled by John Tod in the year 1917 HISTORY OF THE TOD F A:tv1IL Y ,, ' ' ,, •, , ) . '. ,.,, .,.,.,, __ jl-' ·)" :,;, ' ....~ ,,· ,/ ' :1 : .;.:,.,, , :~ . ,,,-<:, : .·1 z ',,,, :•:-\ ~ I, / '•,'• , ..•,; ,, . ,. ;1/, ..... Fifty Copies of this book have been printed of . which this Volume is Number TO THE MEMORY OF MY BELOVED AUNT SALLIE TOD, WHOSE LIFE WAS A RAY OF SUNSHINE TO SO MANY PEOPLE, THIS BOOK IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED. CONTENTS Page Robert Tod .......................................... 1 David Tod-1746-1827. 7 John Tod-1755-1777... 17 David and Rachel Kent Tod. 19 Samuel Tod-1775 ....... .-. 21 Isabella Tod-1778-1848................................ 23 John Tod-1?80-1830.. 33 Charlotte Low Tod-1782-1798. 39 David Low Tod-1784-1829. 41 George Tod-1773-1841.... 45 Sally Isaacs Tod-1778-1847........................... 55 George and Sally Isaacs Tod. 65 Charlotte Lowe Tod-1799-1815 ............. ·. 67 Jonathan Ingersoll Tod-1801-1859. 69 Mary Isaacs Tod-1802-1869 ........................... 75 Julia Ann Tod-1807-1885. 77 Grace Ingersoll Tod-1811-1867. 83 George Tod, Jr.,-1816-1881.. 89 David Tod-1805-1868. 93 Maria Smith Tod-1813-1901. • . • . 121 Smith Fatn.ily. 123 CONTENTS Page David and Maria Smith Tod ...................... ~ . 130 Charlotte Tod-1833-1868. 131 John Tod-1834-1896. .. 135 Henry Tod-1838-1905. 139 John Tod-1870 ....... ~ ............................... 143 Henry Tod, Jr.-1877-1902 ................ ·. 145 George Tod-1840-1908 ........................ ·.. 149 William Tod-1843-1905. • . 155 David Tod-1870. 159 William Tod, Jr.-1874-1890 ........................... 161 Fred Tod-1885. 163 Grace Tod Arrel-1847 ............................ ~ . 165 David Tod Arrel-1878. 166 Frances Arrel Parson.
    [Show full text]
  • 12/05/2005 Case Announcements #2, 2005-Ohio-6408.]
    CASE ANNOUNCEMENTS AND ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS December 5, 2005 [Cite as 12/05/2005 Case Announcements #2, 2005-Ohio-6408.] MISCELLANEOUS ORDERS On December 2, 2005, the Supreme Court issued orders suspending 13,800 attorneys for noncompliance with Gov.Bar R. VI, which requires attorneys to file a Certificate of Registration and pay applicable fees on or before September 1, 2005. The text of the entry imposing the suspension is reproduced below. This is followed by a list of the attorneys who were suspended. The list includes, by county, each attorney’s Attorney Registration Number. Because an attorney suspended pursuant to Gov.Bar R. VI can be reinstated upon application, an attorney whose name appears below may have been reinstated prior to publication of this notice. Please contact the Attorney Registration Section at 614/387-9320 to determine the current status of an attorney whose name appears below. In re Attorney Registration Suspension : ORDER OF [Attorney Name] : SUSPENSION Respondent. : : [Registration Number] : Gov.Bar R. VI(1)(A) requires all attorneys admitted to the practice of law in Ohio to file a Certificate of Registration for the 2005/2007 attorney registration biennium on or before September 1, 2005. Section 6(A) establishes that an attorney who fails to file the Certificate of Registration on or before September 1, 2005, but pays within ninety days of the deadline, shall be assessed a late fee. Section 6(B) provides that an attorney who fails to file a Certificate of Registration and pay the fees either timely or within the late registration period shall be notified of noncompliance and that if the attorney fails to file evidence of compliance with Gov.Bar R.
    [Show full text]
  • (Fifty-First Annual Meeting) : the Saga of the Paddy's
    PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS (Fifty-first Annual Meeting) THE SAGA OF THE PADDY'S RUN STEPHEN R. WILLIAMS INTRODUCTION Thinking over the varied interests of our Academy audience, and the infinitesimal area in the field of zoology in which I might claim original knowledge, it seemed evident that were I to speak along that line tonight it would bore even the other zoologists. There is however a matter of history which should interest you all as members of the Commonwealth of Ohio, which I have had especial opportunities to study from original sources. They say every man who is born has one speech in his make-up, and I hope for your sakes that this is mine. You realize that we all have a good knowledge of the things of the present, and a fraction of what went on forty years ago which our parents knew. By the time we get to our grand- parents, our fraction of their unwritten knowledge is a small one, and when it comes to great-grandparents, unless it has been written down where it may be read, one is exceptional if he knows the names of those eight persons, and can make a fifty per cent grade in answering the questions as to where they were born or married, or of what they died. The modifications which produced the stage on which this history was enacted, the Paddy's Run Valley, have been taken from the Bulletin on the Geology of Cincinnati by Professor N. M. Fenneman. THE PADDY'S RUN VALLEY Preparation of the valley for the first settlers dates back to the time of the receding Wisconsin glaciation, perhaps 20,000 years ago.
    [Show full text]
  • Hay, John. Inside Lincoln's White House: the Complete Civil War Diary of John Hay
    Hay, John. Inside Lincoln's White House: The Complete Civil War Diary of John Hay. Edited by Michel Burlingame and John R. Turner Ettlinger. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1997. White House besieged, James Lane and Kansas, 1 Threat to Lincoln's life, 1-2 Ward Hill Lamon and Cassius Clay, 2 Guarding White House, 2 Maryland, Baltimore, troops, Scott, Seward, 3 Massachusetts in capitol, 4-5 James Lane, 5, 9, 13 Baltimore secessionists, 5-7 John B. Magruder joining Confederates, 5 Chase and confusing of orders, 6 Cassius Clay, 8 Food shortages in besieged Washington, 8 Delaware, 8-9 Southern newspapers and letters, badly written, 9-10 Jefferson Davis and Lincoln, Confederate constitution, 10 Lincoln and troops and siege of Washington, 11 Dahlgren, 11 Lincoln and strategy, 11 Benjamin F. Butler and Maryland legislature, 12 Carl Schurz, , Lincoln, 12-14 William F. Channing, slavery, abolition, martial law, 12-13 Suspension of habeas corpus, 13 Indians, 14 Virginia Unionists, 15 Baltimore, 16 Ellsworth, 16 Fernando Wood, Isham Harris, Lincoln, 17 Lincoln and Maryland secessionists, 17-18 Hannibal Hamlin, 18 Cairo, Kentucky neutrality, 19 Brown, Orville Hickman, abolition, slavery, 19-20 Ellsworth, Zouaves, 20-21 Jefferson Davis, secession, right of revolution, 21 Anderson, Robert, 21 Dahlgren gun, 22 Ellsworth Zouaves, Willard Hotel, fire, 22-23 Carl Schurz, fugitive slaves, 22-23 Secession, habeas corpus, 28 Lincoln and cotton trade, 30-31 Benjamin F. Butler, Fremont, Wool, 31 Seward, 40 Emancipation Proclamation, 40-41 Salmon P. Chase, 40. Charleston, South Carolina coast, 43ff Fort Pulaski, 46-48 Florida, 48ff African American singing, 49, 58-59 Lincoln, Meade, Gettysburg, 61-66, 68 Lincoln and soldier punishment, executions, 64 Salmon P.
    [Show full text]
  • Abraham Lincoln Papers
    Abraham Lincoln papers From John W. Forney to Abraham Lincoln, October 24, 1864 {Private.} Philadelphia, October 24th 1864. Dear Mr. Lincoln; Before starting upon my last campaign in this Presidential election, I take the liberty of asking you to read this letter — which will be presented to you by my son, John W. Forney, Jr., — on which I beg of you to ponder upon the views I will express to you. You were nominated and elected as a Republican, and you owe your seat to the division of the Democratic party in the two national conventions which took place at Charleston and at Baltimore. When Mr. Buchanan made a test of the Lecompton and the English bills, I foresaw that the slaveholders intended either to force one of their creatures upon the Democratic ticket for President, or to divide the Democratic party, and so to divide the Union; — but I had no idea that they would make your election a pretext for the separation of the Republic. Nevertheless I was extremely anxious to bring them to the test, and 1 hence I did my uttermost to strengthen Judge Douglas in his honest antagonism to those who were his personal foes, and to prepare him for the bold and manly stand which he assumed after your nomination by the Chicago convention, in 1860. His tour through the Southern states, in which he insisted that your inevitable constitutional election would be no cause for an assault upon the Union, awake[n]ed all my sensibilities, and I was not surprised at the close of it, when you were chosen to the place you now so honorably occupy, that you should have paid him the tribute which such unselfish patriotism deserved.
    [Show full text]
  • ^24.DE^Wilpm.PERRY
    FOUR GENERATIONS, DESCENDANTS • PERRY ^24.DE^WilPM. Calibrated Their Fiftieth Wedding Anniversary. MRS. PHILIP LEPPLA. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Leppla of this place celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary at their pleasant home here last Sunday. Owing to the recent death of their youngest daughter, Mrs. Carl L. Gale of Columbus, which occurred a few days ago, the affair was celebrated in a quiet and unostentatious manner, only the immediate family being present. This aged couple were united in marrirge at Canton, Ohio, November 6, 1854, by Rev. Herbruck, a Lutheran minister. Mrs. Leppla, whose maiden name was Louise Ittner, was 16 years of age and her hus­ band 26. Thirteen children were born to this union, three dying in infancy; the eldest son, Godfrey, died about three years ago, and the youngest daughter, Mrs. Gale, three weeks ago. The eight living children are Mrs. Wm. A. Gerber, Mrs. C. Kaemmerer and George Leppla of Columbus; William and Charles Leppla of Barber ton; Mrs. GK W. Weimer, Mrs. A. G. Schmidt and Philip Leppla, Jr., of this place. There are nineteen grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Mr. Leppla was born in Bavaria, Germany, May 13,1828, of Lutheran parent­ age, and came to America in 1849, locating at Winesburg, where he carried on the business of blacksmithing, which he followed until about ten years ago. Mrs. Leppla was born at Winesburg, October 6, 1838. In 1859 they located in Millersburg, since which time they have made their | home here. Both are enjoying good health, active for their years, and are spend­ Here is a picture of four generations in the direct line, all bearing the ing the latter days of their lives in a quiet and pleasant manner.
    [Show full text]