Call Now! 1-888-845-2887 Hablamos Español

You have viewed 1 newspapers today. Please Register in order to view more newspapers.
  • We are retrieving your image from the archive...

  • We are converting your image into tiles...

  • Almost done...

You are currently viewing page 1 of: Danville Advertiser

Show More

Other Editions of Danville Advertiser

Danville Advertiser Saturday, June 04, 1853,
Indiana

Danville Advertiser Saturday, June 11, 1853,
Indiana

Danville Advertiser Saturday, June 25, 1853,
Indiana

Danville Advertiser Saturday, July 02, 1853,
Indiana

Danville Advertiser Saturday, July 09, 1853,
Indiana

Danville Advertiser Saturday, July 16, 1853,
Indiana

Danville Advertiser Saturday, July 23, 1853,
Indiana

Danville Advertiser Saturday, August 27, 1853,
Indiana

Danville Advertiser Saturday, September 03, 1853,
Indiana

Other Editions from Saturday, November 18, 1854

Alton Daily Telegraph Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
Illinois

Appleton Post Crescent Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
Wisconsin

Washington Daily Globe Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
District Of Columbia

Defiance Democrat Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
Ohio

Burlington Tri Weekly Hawk Eye Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
Iowa

Portland Weekly Oregonian Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
Oregon

Davenport Daily Gazette Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
Iowa

Mountain Democrat Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
California

Wisconsin Patriot Saturday, November 18, 1854 ,
Wisconsin

Embed Publication

Embed this publication to your website

NewspaperArchive
1854-11-18 for page-1
Danville Advertiser
Danville Advertiser

My Recent Searches

No results found

See all my searches

Newspaper Content on page 1 of:

Danville Advertiser

   Danville Advertiser (Newspaper) - November 18, 1854, Danville, Indiana                                in COME S 1-R  Saturday morning Masonic Hall of 01 per 12 for 1, 2, or 3 in sort and 25 cents for each 00  00  00  00  00 00 00  one column six twelve column six column twelve six column twelve Circuit and and other Legal be paid in advance or In no case will we tlie ol a suit for the printer's Attorneys will be held for advertising by them candid for office of $ 1 lo aud who are h in. ad copy the condensed account of the buttle of on 20lh of the United States Great Battle of ASm last a battle has been fought in the and the has drunk the blood of battle of is said to have been tlic most bloody battle since the time of The number of killed and wounded on both sides amounted to about ten Tlie took a strong on heights of the river and felt confident of holding it. But the resistless power and courage of the Allies drove theiu from it. At last accounts the Allies had reached of my horse by a chance I rode about to as far as the loss of our in doing I was often brought to a si and still by the difficulty of getting through the piles of wounded too often own poor The hills of Parkin fair time are uot more between and 1 400 Ihe enemy ly covered Avith human beings than were | upwards of 6,000. Had we had the UHs of death of R. Yice was chosen by the Senate di ted States the presiding iie lives far in the in whatis known aS TEN ou a batik witli liis Icg broken by a round SAKD DEAD seemed principally concerned a terrible and sickening sight of his gold I over the battle restored to 1 he say they weW and had no General to direct The officers displayed great and the men fought with a dogged courage characteristic of the Russian but they were utterly deficient in dan and Our loss killed and of the French ' For years he has attempts to get the mise restriction heights of the with dead brigade of cavalry we might On these mounds fdl i bavo converted the retreat into an utter 2;i96 Enghsh officers and and and taken some 5,000 wards of 3,000 while their trophies of extremity was covered with the bodies The troops bivouacked on not far from the of The 2d were sentin front as The cavalry the country and fell back at on their bodies in advance of the The tents of Lord Raglan's were pitched on a flat close to the and to the left of the hill which were ' lying the bulk of the killed and 1,400 gallant and of more than 3,00U of their fight Lord Raglan and his staff and the Duke of Cambridge rode round to the top of the the troops cheered them a thrilling shout of victory never can be The were flying in the might almost have heard its echoes as it -i rolled among the Our men had indeed done their work for the which commenced at 1,25 on oar was over about 4 P. in the actual close continuous fighting did not last two russian powers of The surgeons remarked that their tenacity of was very Many of them lived with wounds calculated two or three ordinary of the 32d Regiment on the field the time we hear just afier the He was right scarcity of the and the brain j that one the causes of this in large masses at the back of the head a disposition to from the front of the I saw men to extend their liabilities beyond the bounds of ordinary Yet we feel that there are other causes at work to produce the evils which aie now so widely read every week in the Kew battle at the of the the arrival of steamers to have a general idea that freighted with the precious be possibly they had tals from that golden and again we been told no quarter would be the departure of the Collins deplorable events took place in Canard lines for carrying with Makes is a singular that for the last six months the chief topic among business men has been in regard to and the chief anxiety which they have felt lies been in regard to the means they were to meet their The want of money is the root of much whatever the love of it may This young and growing country possesses within itself every element of greatness and Russians had sunk of their line in three or four to prevent the Allied fleet from ri fortifications are said to be very and well But the place will probably fall into the hands of the the Russians very soon came up with large in which case we may expect to hear of still heavier and bloodier St. ti e commander-in-chief of the Allied died suddenly of a disease of the and Lord our men were two or three of them AVere shot or slabbed by men lying on the and the ciy as this same California to pay our obligations in and for which in a great part be made in this country if were given to our manufacturing raised that wounded were spirit by the national The our There is a in- gold from California is used chiefly to pay the senior English then took that one was severely injured our foreign It is of little the a man to whom he was in the very act | practical benefit to the men of Baltic fleets remain at the of administering succor as he lay in and particularly to those circulated Prest of W. 11. for Murder of Allison and in Of all Streams 'the country North arid South on the Missouri the great generally that longest most j river rises in the distant eternal the 27ih June last | at a that the from its mouth this of Manne on j hundred half to the through its been natural and easy the a Its will make further attack English papers are filled with and accounts of ihc battle of the be it there was | of tha Gold gees and at one time to content ourselves with a wore soon con- as we and confined themselves to the The national government and the which always takes place on a j eign merchants now monopolize the gold One villian with a red coat i silver of the and while our from which we a on his I regret to I saw go up steamers are carrying it out of the by the correspondent of the London the regiments that loss fell principally on the 7th, 23d, and 33d the 55th, In these were directly to fire of the and came under range almost the moment the advance was Tiie Rifles got over the stream in such loose order that they were wondt in spite of t he tremendous shot rattled over Colonel Lawrence had his killed under Major Norco it's charger received no less than five mortal When the 7tb got out of the Colonel Yea found and his men at once under range of the battery before they could and were advance pell-mell against the Poor Monek and Hare soon The colors were lost for a for thrice did the enemy's shot strike down officer who carried but Captain Aide-de-Camp to Sir G. passed the fellow who bore and e was enabled to restore them to the gallant They are torn to pieces with The 33d, crossed the stream headed by Colonel mowed down by after round of shot and The Major Captain Lieutenants and Ensigns Siree and fell in a few Lieutenant Montague was killed the STIRRING more than 14,000 of actually engaged with the divisions never lired a The victory won by and 2d opposed to at least 20,000 and the number French who dispose d of 20,-GOO of the Russian was in like with the bulk of their The critical moment was al the advance of the first and tl at advance was Bight never to be As they up the the lines of the black were they nearly as straight as if on end the Light Division complained that tlie men of the Guard s were losing time in dressing up as if on parade when have been supporting exposed to such crushing the Guards were running up they fell at last the anxious at bf one seemed inclined to retire Ms men only for a to but was diverted from doing so by ihe advice Sir Colin They their advance up in and rent through by after a momentary rushed into the alid Fusileers for the honor of being first and eagerly for the honor of a wounded who was rolling on the earth in the rear of the 7th and before he could say a he as fast nearly as it comes the little that remains is locked up in the and is drawn his rifle the wretched only when government debtors and Colonel Yea rode at are to be or ten millions of to cut him but the fellow excused himself by declaring that the This was to Santa Anna for a strip of worthless territory in While the government the best currency the single of inhumanity I saw I hj the the people possess the The government has one and the trade with foreign governments and the system at have injured our manufactures and ruined our We have no national except in We might have a good currency if Ave encourage home Save the millions which we arc weekly sending abroad to enrich the merchants and manufacturers of and to develope our own beautiful brass by this army with and animated by angry although the enemy had unquestionably endangered their lives by acts of ferocious Many of tlie Russians liad small crosses and chains fastened round their Several were found Avith Korans i in their most probably recruits from the Kasan of the had portraits of wives or of mothers or inside their The privates Avore the little money they possessed in fastened below their and tlie in their eager after the often caused the painful apprehensions that they Avere about to destroy Last night all these poor wretches lay in their nothing could be done to help The the the cries of despair and Avere a mournful commentary on the exultation of the victors and on the joy reigned around the bivouac fires of As many of our as could be possibly picked up ere the set Avere conveyed on stretchers to the hospital ' of the others were provided blankets and covered as they lay in their The bandsmen of the regiments in the most indefatigable hour after out and carrying off our after tile after night had faint lights might be seen moving over the frightful marking the spots directed the steps of some searc of a or the pillager yet stalked about on his horrid One man might be seen resting on one with the arms extended in the form of taking the brow the lips very firing at an enemy stamped on the face and fixed there by for a ball had struck this man in the Physiologists or anatomists must settle the Another was lying on his back Avith the same and his raised in a similar the Minie musket in his hands Another lay in a perfect his head resting on one of and his feet on the but the back raised above it. Many legs or were trying to down to the Some of the dead lay with placid on as though they Avere in some The poor fellows had a notion that our men would them if the eye of tlie officers were removed from An old who sat smiling arid Ave are paying millions every year to the in for railroad Ave have beds of coal and iron our own soil be use by encouragement from the tional But Ave pre fer to pay tribute to the keep ourselves The platforms of the dominant in Congress have decided protection of American and outlawed a national currency except for the this things to there to be no A new party has sprung up the past whose peculiar distinction is opposition to foreign We of no foreign influence more pernicious to the this great land than that makes us tributary to foreign and manufacturers for the almost necessaries of and which is making a constant drain upon us of tiie precious which to them gold and leaves us may be considered by the progressive as behind the we assert that the could befall our land be the a good tariff and a national Twenty years of experimental economy upon currency and have left us wit 1 an innumerable spawn of local notes will not pass current a hundred miles from they are and are received by the community as husbands do their better for Twenty years of experimenting upon the currency has given gold to the and notes to of are daily informed by notices in the shop of brokers that they are bought inside from ten to twenty per Such is the people's while the have We hive heard in years gone by of the General Jackson Ave were impressed with the glory of the If tlie United States Bank Avas a it was an angel of light in comparison brood of smaller monsters which died since ' - now in in the has been At honor of the On We the 20th of a Missourians and other people there to attend the Among the and as he is a candida election to the U. S. of the specchi a sketch of which we fi in the St. Louis c the Parkville Luminary of the It contains statements of a ch extraordinary that Ave regret published verbatim as quest the of our Atchison mounted an made a He commen to the beautiful country wl now beginning to be so amid was ni the how introduce tiie Nebraska svith tb clause in it. A. said he is entirely devoted ro the int the and would sacrifice but his hope of heaven to advance her He tlie ought to be had his public to vote fdr no organization that not this feeling in his he to be chairman of the Senate on Territories when a was to be With this he bad interview Mr. him of what he of a for- Nebraska like what he to vote and that he would like to be Chairman of the Committee on in order to introduce such a and if he could get that position he would immediately resign as Speaker of the Judge Douglas requested to consider the and at the expiration of that he couM such a as he which would at the same time with his own sense of right and the he resign of the Territorial in and exert his influence to get him At the expiration of tije given Senator Douglas to report such a as had had supported and those who had the in the and remarked that northern Democrats came up nobly to the hut Northern Whigs liad proved recreant to the cause of justice and Southern he acted as they should have he was sorry to two exceptions voice in the crowd here called Boll and he these were the one Whig and one for the poor they had made a false he might say he had a fairer chance for that high honor ihan either of American people loved and could appreciate the acts of a man who openly and above-board voted according to the will of his without regard to political Atchison alluded to the ry question as it is now being agitated in our and closed by expressing his contempt for abolitionists and their and said ho would hang every one that dared face In reference however to northern men settling in Kansas he said he knew there were men among who would be as far from stealing a negro as a southern man and his remarks only to is a glance at some of the points in Senator Atchison's appears from the above that Douglas Avas the mere of and that he agreed to fulfill his demands after It Avill be seen that not word is expressed in regard to as an object to be accomplished by the That was a mere It also shows that the idea that the Missouri restriction Avas in conflict Avith the compromise measures of 1850, has been advanced by Douglas and his was not thought of at the and that therefore it Avas an like the The object to be attained by Mr. and he has the manliness to Avas to permit the spread of slavery into the This is he has affirmed it time and and it was ivell known to Mr. Atchison during the interview had with Mr. in And after thinking the subject over 24 agreed to it. He agreed to betray his constituents in much less time than Arnold did to betray his Mr. is in fact the Vice President of the United He presides over the deliberations of the and yet he says in the above speech ENTIRELY the interests of the to the interests of the but to a particular of it. How short of t ie true patriot does he fall he thus and hoAv unfit to legislate for the people of the whole Nor is his his manners any better than his He vulgarly calls two of the most distinguished of the body over he miserable We mistake much the irit of. John Bell and Gen. if ey don't demand an explanation of his language Congress and is not denied by Mr. the should no longer to preside over their in. the guise of a sent i and is fed by the influx of an a and important are the while being blew amon - - - arid Laramie Loup and body of Mr. j and Elk ' Platte passes so mutilating him that he I the width of whole territory Mrs. Avas of taking its nVe in In she died next the bottoms are broad and I. made for and although the in 6f in his box a letter .to O. F. from a Mr. of on matters concerning his pecuniary have travelled hear its source and have seen bold and thick veins of the purest coal in many fine cool springs in its varied thus received evidently had fallen ahd on the margin of the is wrong and the re- some of are of valuable it handed it over to Milies medical who communicated the matter .to | Xo country is known contain Captain Hcke and Marshal abundance of as this once suspected that the letter was from H. the alleged On Monday Mayor Capt. and Deputy Marshal Lee left on the cars for and arrived at the on Tuesday and after making diligent found out that Willets was clerk in the drug store of a Mr. and the name of its are of the elk and Tens of thousands of like a huge black thundering approach resounds in echoes like the earth may often be seen while passing up these For a route to the the great National the great Valley has no Ki tnc name ot vv that can in any way its On Wednesday morning the j and generally acknowledged by the assistance of the deputy procured a for until they had satisfied themselves he Avas H. About 8 they went to the Arrison seated on a chair with his back to the reading a The and Mayor Snelbaker at the same time placed one band on each calling him by announced that he Avas their Arrison started his and appeared greatly then declared that Arrison Avas his and at first objected to accompanying but after a few moments he The news of the arrest of Willets as the man soon spread through the town of and much excitement Avas but an entire to have him brought for examination Avas by the two hours after his had him and on his Avay up to the Mississippi on the steamer J. to Rock they took the cars for this arrived in Cincinnati last at 7-.\- and lodged Arrison in the street Station Arrison is very He Avas under a strong guard the of last It Avill be remembered that the Grand have already found an indictment against and the probability that he Avill have his trial at the present term of the Criminal His brother has been in the city several searching they found a book and other papers Avith his name plainly When he left this city he Arore heavy which he has had shaved since his He had been in the employ of the about three and had always managed to avoid distance it pierces the country and its peculiar and even makes route stand out in bold the only practicable route to the to China and the Through a great portion of the of this the soil is of. and and that probably be densely populated and brought to a high state of that grain and vegetables may be raised to feed ihe hungry thousands annually pass up the river to Utah and New The fact that more than two millions human beings have passed over this road within the last six is alone a sufficient argument for the importance of this and the great destiny that awaits this extensive and public high There are already aska editor of the Omaha Arrow tiie description of his of we iii though not as upon stump of our fallen Our cabin is partially and near it Ave have selected a shady from have interwoven a and delightful A rustic seat formed of with the grass for a an limb as a table lipon portfolio We have been scrambling the gather some of the delicious and juicy plums that in mlA profusion around The reverberating echoes of the axe of the distant the noontide anthem of the falls upon our ear aa merry In the upon the we see the approach of a lovely sion Avith its clicking and clouds of steam and far in the back ground we have the great over which broils a brace of quails and a duck for our mid-day Our rude hammock hangs high over our head in the branches of the a retreat from bite cf the at evening great The rude village of the Avith a acres of and other stands by skirt of the far away to the upon the banks of a clear pure stream of nature's choicest Those sturdy sons of the prairie forest have just returned from their to see the Great Father at Washington has They look sorrowful and for they are soon to leave lands and graves their foi to sojourn and lead their children upon the land selected for them by One of the employees of the Tribune office gives the at the Press department of in the To the Editor the Y. Allow mo to give your readers statement of Avas done in the of your on and the 26th and 27th commenced at 4 o'clock oii and in Thirty hours AVe had and mailed one hundred aii i eighty-two thousand four hundred of Tue or r. - 1 hundred and sixty-four thousand loute a chain of trading posts Bv the at short the portion of the blank paper Avas Thursday and of of the distance to the and 'the electric influence of the late treaties will soon cause these vallies to fill Avith farmers and and rises the smoke of the Indian lodge or shall soon arise the steeples and lofty dwellings of populous cities and And instead of the twang of the and fearful of the the clack of and the cheerful song of the and hum of business and soon be Omaha that the best Board of Health is sji are springing up in various parts of the young On the besides Leavenworth there are near the mouth of Independence and Kickapoo atthe end of has a very good site and always a good Its situation is and will afford many fine lots for building residences and business There are fine springs of the limits of the country in its rear is rather o' being the divide between the of Missouri and those of Kickapoo city has an elevated situation with a good landing will be Its surface is gently but not too for building It is well supplied Avith springs and has plenty of timber in its It is said that stone coal and building stone abound in the On are Douglas Tecumseh and perhaps other places laid City is first above the forty miles from the Missouri line and about thirty from this We no information in relation to but presume it is a good Boston is the focus of and is a It is known in the territory as They have already some two hundred men ia and about the to build up a manufacturing It is miles from of and thirty-five from this place Tecumseh City is further up the on the north has a good site and a fine country We have heard it described as a spot of rare It by the name of is told of an Irish newspaper foreman called to hini from the composing Ave six lines tb a replied tlie Soon after came a second have killed the still Avant two ye of gives the following account of the crops in that the cereals have matured and yielded large and so Avich the Our crop Avill reach about 279,000 abou t 35,-000 to 50,000; the yield is very and of at 400,000 There will also be a large yield of and pumpkins have yield the largest crop to the acre I have ever seen grown in any part of tiie Our turnip and rutabaga cannoL fall short of 400,000 buL these are mostly fed to our catilo during the subjoin the following United States native and as political in the of at State and agents in 10 Post Office 11  278 500  80  really do think that should at least have a full share of public is the difference between schoolmaster find an engine trains the and the other minds the Sale of Lots tx a paragraph going the rounds of the papers with the above of a recent of lots in the proposed town of opposite that no title a baubee can be given for the property sold on that at high The site of tlie proposed new town in question is upon lands ceded by the Indians to Uni ed States in trust for their own and of course to be sold by the General The sellers profess to give only squatters pre-emption the Attorney has y declared not thing lauds The lands in question yet been even surveyed under the authority of the United Those who paid to the parties selling to be Avet and Had paper been all in one pile it have reached the bight of seventy it be twenty-two thousand eight in cubical about seven hundred and five and a superficial if all spread would be about forty-two and a lineal would reach about one hundred and twenty-six and W. Foreman of the Press Richmond Palladium shouts out over the glory achieved by old Wayne at the late State and After stating that the Judges fit the great entry at Springfield votes to Meredith's Wayne county and but three to Clay's Kentucky Mr. Holloway takes on the great question is partially that though has not beaten the United it beyond all controversy tAat tlie United States cannot bexil a glorious Who is not proud of the We have felt some pride in our majority of more than four thousand votes for a seat in but this triumph of against the proud States of this is the source of much higher For our personal success we feel lumbly but for this triumph of Mr. ive feel like far Old county of the to The in the best and the finest cattle in the Tlie fullness of her fame like must be ruled out of the as so that counties may have a friends Avere conversing a young named very but decidedly averse changing her One it not strange she does not at the Avill never her favorite forbids Does not Keats thing of beauty of the some kindlings and make a I Mr. Murphy used the last bannisters then go to roof and see virtue their is in a a reduction of the floors Queer people those young man of good standing honorable liKly of the he fdr feller F Avill find to their cost that is not a think Pd sleep 1  

Browse our 120 Million papers!

Browse by Surname

Newspaper articles about more than 99 million People!

Browse Alphabetically

Choose the Membership Plan that is right for you!

Unlimited 6 Month

$99.95 (-45% Savings!)

Unlimited page views for 6 months Learn More

Unlimited Monthly

$29.95

Unlimited page views for 1 month Learn More

Introductory

$19.95

100 page views for 2 months Learn More

Subscribe or Cancel Anytime by calling 888-845-2887

24 hours a day Monday-Saturday

Take advantage of our Introductory Membership offer and become a member for 2 months only for $19.95!

Your full introductory membership payment will be credited toward the cost of full membership any time you choose to upgrade!

Your Membership Includes:
  • 100 page views for 2 months
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!