COUNTY UNION.Tlt;- PrescrTb Yriio TTnion, SolJiprs Vote AT^-Elections _A_s Well As Fight In The Field.'VOL. 1—NO. 52.DANVILLE, HENDRICKS COUNTY, INDIANA, THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1865,WHOLE NO.52.genfcicte (tounh, Pinion. D1M1LLE liARBLE WORHSJA* l5ti«rcxDt£XT C.tti»)i Jorasit, a weekly paper, is published every Tbnrajay by-LA WHENCE S. SAILER, Pro pr.TERMS:One Copy, one year - -On* Copy, six mentLs?2 I 00*S?cictr«., The Sieepinu Ciiild.m Lis ait lit a t.A 1-rtwk vrent dancing *ra its way, From Uaolc to valley lea ping,And by its sunny margin lay,A lovely infant sleeping. .The murmur of tin* peeling stream Bret* m»l sjmll which b»uu*J him I.ike tnnetc bWiatlditg iu his dream A Inllabv nrumid him*(T en l iuo# of Brevier roouu as lt;VIQU-ESNET TERRYBATCH OF ADVGKTISIAB.fitolen and Worker* 111 Subaru, 1 a-owk..*....................1 Square, 2 weeki,.... .............1 fojtiare, tt we»tka.. ................1 Beware, I month.........................I Square, 4 nionlli?.........................1 itqnare, rt months ........................I Square, 1 year ....... 82,f0 . 3,tHrales for Utrger ;ut»«rt uu**ioaievatni also ■h**nby the yearLegal AdlNtirciumn will be enarged seconding to the r-uc as r»taW«*hc*l by tlu* lot* Publiahor s CwnaqftKtmft. and those urdere.l by Attorneys iueerted' at their fev pen so and notdelayabU.Legal »ilverii*emehts in-- rtetl at ti e n-pense ef the Attorney ordetiny. and tun !«-lay »Ws far tin lng*J pJMoei-dnij.es. hfeumrttiMat time, In tu lt;nsa will pvnof of publication be eui-le traiil lUc a«lv maul is pnit.l for.ProlWumul or tm*inv*H e.mG, £-*».0rt per ye*r. when not e*. eu.xitu;; tivs lines.Pay me nr offerejgn oj* traiikifoi advertising required in nr •••-•itrail.These rule*, whM- -..-nr aw»l just »* v. lieve them to will he rigidly e lheied all cages.AMERICAN AND ITALIAN]M AIX 13 Xj 333 ,inrtlj-LTist enrnrt of the Public Square,It T* a lovely sight tn view, J Wulriu thii world itf sorrow.Clue spot which still retain* the ho® Thtivearrh from heaveu may borrow. And such w this-—a. scene*-) fair. Arrayed in enrniier brightness.And out* pour being resting tin*rv— Mae joul of radiant wlutejnera[over the eb air. ThJljIaek locks seemed grow blacker. ike» white I c tuples whiter, rtml tluj whPB. featrows.eyes to slowly close with ifipprassiblu and tor-taring anguish. VThere was a luuiut solemn pause [One glance*! at ntoiber—all seemed fuwe-struel?—till tlroT*d| who had urged jlum to sing laid betJs^iiJ gently upon his shoulder saytmu*'♦Charles! Churl™!Tneo onnm a h unrip thrill of horror [crept through form: the poor,[tried heart had cewVLjl* beat. Charles, The love-bet niyeHMwis jflpad.mtl Wars-Tlit* ttreaiThere have beaja?previous to uptr igttic courses of It U’tfir »h rough the long! elapse of *.'*.• lrtnrh.^m3 Wliat is genei'jlB^fnowio as the I\iU-ponncsian War, began n. * . 432,]DANVU.I.F, INDIANA,Keep c-instnutly oh lmiul, anil uuinufti.--••v*. «j5kWtffrivonTo out iheir vumliihcirurNltt‘1 ?Monuments, Headstones] c. o.,They guarantee their wavkntaii^bip to be ■toI if wot superi-r to any *«o»k t.hoi can be h.i-1 rl vow hero. They a-It thee** who wisli§ thing in their line U» give ilium n call i; mine iheir trcrk. mr2n4*ufWhat curd umies that s«ul to lrnven, W here vision* glide before ihet ?Fur wandering * ini lea of cloudless *uin M cr thy glad fcaisures bcdiuing..wu nut r tirnight—a forta *«f earth Allot s thine hour nf dreamisg !-mg*,Jfo h-.ji, a far ou unseen Thy aih-ut spirit iwariny.Now liear? the burst from golden springs, Whom ■ngelitwhe vlwring Au4 ivill. the pur* heliacal liming, Around tliesr Makar praiiting,The joi mis heart may join the WMg Ten *hjU'rnd Umgui-i are i vising!^atid coutttimid ^WPg*' twenty-seven] Ja. iii(crrit|i||id : l.r « short and' :K'VPi%ir iHvef ‘with the _ fallof Athene iu the yftar p. c. 405, decided] the fate of Alree!*# -eivilizatinu for all] tituc. It vfai* uol s^slrB wnr hi live strif t-*at sc use of th** wvj, though it was virtually so: for it wam$tweeu peoples ol [he ?.itno religion, tig* same t in ditto in .I he *.uuie laiijruutur-.-'pd lineage; and] toCarly all the states ^cre represented though feebly, iu one] n*-sctub!y, called]K. (SlXOEIi,JUSTICE OF Tin: PEACE.! BRITT A ITS Ul.MFK,)DAN1T1.I.E,.....INUI IN I.if null.S. I! L't ■ I1AN A N ,Yfo 00ARtER2HE?'0 ,»» t* tidetect dWUo'ecUtUttf.^.TEtjlNDlA^AGKNT For. T14HHOME LIFE INSnRANOE CO.,'AntlUor's Orrirt*, liaiti Dle, lnd-JOHN A. COMINOOR, M. D.J,-Hur^eon nntllt; ilisl;11' IU. iirai tf ih«- K* i* itti-1 Fart\ mil afteiifcti. f--t ..** Inn iu.l!iei-i^atrbaiJs,utk.ti llicui-.vi npj.roict iH.ilux!*-. B Office—3*J fits'. Washicelnji ai.reet, tw.liaiaJ?ayolU*.JOHN WITHEROW,ATTORMEY AT LAWfjNbNotary Xloputolio:DANVXIiX.E, INDIANA*OPFICK—Nn.ib «i Utof Bubfteasxr: i. mm;.m This lovely song. a«Imiiv*d the tvorh ^ ve-r ft-r the beautiful siuiplieJty of it! i jiTonls, it)* easy, flowing and expresaivi lueiody, has received tui udditiutial ituj,e-Tt* great civil .Hhi'-h dcl'-rmiue ^through the Ion;Claitp thy hands meekly over the still breast—they've no more work to do; close the weary eyes—they've no more tears to shed; port the damp lock?—there's no more pain to bear. Closed [alike to love's ktud voice and calumny*: stinging whisper.j O. if in that stiTl heart you have ruthlessly planted a thorn; if from tliat plend-eye yon have carelessly turned a way; if yostr loving glance, and kindly word, aim dnspiug hand have euroe, all too late, then tiod forgive you 5 No frown gathers on the marble br«?w as you gaxe—-!ito scorn curls the chiseled Up—no flush f wounded feelings mounts the bine-veined temples. .God forgive you! for your feet, too, mu?t shrink appalled from death’s cold river, your faltering tongue ask: ‘-Can this be death?—your failing eye linger lovingly on the sunny earth, your elarn-r hands feel its hist feeble-flutter.O, rapiu-ious grave! yet another vie im for thy voiceless keeping! What juo words *f greeting from the bouse-ihold sleeper^? X* warm welcome from a sister's loving lips? No throb uf pleasure from the dear maternal bosom? Silent till flt;1, if tbesc broken limbs were never gathered up! If beyond death s -well 1‘ flood there were so eternal shore for the struggling heart there were port of peace! If athwart that lewwri»K spr:i°s of1toMiUatnl, tLu ir b9i.mauess of uauoidt-ide. ft And mtu^lit beyThe groat civil war by which Rome]hough feebly, iu one assemoly, ■•nilcdljj he A mphyctiynic (*%iucil. Had in theg * )ly in pate fcietivnls, whMi, like the dev, ji.-h fcstlviiU, had a^fijitix' and preserved, to some] cxlOaks P^asted by* SQbinuELs.—It is a curious circumstance, and not generally known, that most of the oaks which are called spontaneous are planted by the squirrels. The little r.aiinal has performed the most essential service to the British navy. A gentleman walking one day in a wood belotigtog to the Duke of Beaufort, near Trevbouse, in tbecoua ly of 31 on mouth, had hb attention di verted by a squirrel, which sat Tery composedly on the ground. He stopped to observe his motions; in a few moments the squirrel darted like lightning to the top of the tree beneath which he had Wen sitting, lu auyustaut he was down with an acorn iu his mouth, and began to burrow in the earth with his paws. After Jigging a tuiall hoi# he stoopeddown and deposited the acorn, then covering it, he darted up the tree again. Ina moment he was down with another, which ho buried in the saute manner. This he continued to do as lung as the enticman thought proper to watch him.The industry of this little auimal is diriwucd to the 1-nrpose of securing him-self against want in the winter, a-t»4 asu s probable that bis memory is not sufficiently retentive to enable him to remember the sprits in which he deposited every acorn, the industrious little fellow no doubt loses a few every year. The few spring op, and are destined to supply the place of the parent tree. Thus is! Britain, in some measure, indebted for her mercantile greatness to the industry and bud memory uf the *quirreU—Afcr-y's Jfuseatn.itscd to Le a rvptilike and passed into aB S^“ London was visited ou t*:*turJuy. [tlesputfasni, lasted, v.lfe varying fortutie^.BJau. ID, by one of the densest fogs iuj^lhrough tw«*ii!y Ner^ ^oul L?- tlt;Rtho memory of the present generation.—v. :J2. Thtc :.• a war betweeuBLocomotinu of every* sort was perilous Ctlit; uHgurehs and ,r ra*be^military r htefs, w!: ^the p«lt;«p!c :iuu 1“ pular .'uTragouukuown. The qult; was, whether the Btus lu its popularity by the following WBb* domiuaut pieidcnt. s.iid.to have occurred in Murv pIF03, ! .lr f/’ '!*aUlj. ’ Rtt* the Foinrttnnrr .5 A jfm.ill select eonjjKiny had ass»;m*6b -1C*0*' whom they^ 'Wc«l in a pleasant parlor, and were gailyb! bc Uvttcr altcrn chatting and laughing, when irtall voUtieracam° au*• r- -“v.*as a cMbu-' 1. VThcJn-itii entered, w peculiar ](C*i uud! air ip»tau*iv arrested atunlioa. ■ol’iiiany^jr j. nufi*-u,jUt r,r'rt'tIS '4thc G iWtft licbidl bin, ndigt betu efln the tdigarc!I Le w id com•it uhtcb dark-huiiitl vi.ii-utnptiveul ■xj—alteu have. 11 is lock* were as black]ias jet. and huiig walhiitfly Ui/’Ui a ft*iu::icL , » ,, ,* tii collar. -Rh cv a Wcru large andB'b® comtuonl, cul!n§|Saiu the t uvahcrs aSxii3*roW b.,- nucli a one a tl^mn l(uMd-tcdled n?«tn m-.refxvc.^TTn? f..r \ . v .* Ins V■lifYtiig look* a easu.il observer v.uulil'^f - , }t divide'. U^ond horm™iinj4yjp; ) .-uncf 1 him i. man uf u.. *»* 'H’. U1*d'tW bt,n■ * w*'p- vh r*fw*- *«-f *it~ commons on «Ire]the cs.tretue. Travel by river, road, !alined to repr*:senlB.ind rail ceased; but instead of the cus-their favcritcs.Btornary rumble of ceaseless wheels -soves •’.’yuly wereBUhouts and voices strove together iu the *,ou to be deeiuC‘^giuisl, like those heurd by pilgrims iu the] a senate shoulWA'alley of the Shadow of Death. Thebe' iu the eommon-Bwere Tonh at random by belated abide (who votodfitravalors to avcri coHhiou tvith others ugh some UiiliuryfiivUo might be within nu imh of tl.CT ‘J make dicta tor.Wu oses, but whose proximity thoy cbtria* undnubtcdly be-Konly know when they loomed out of the ^ ire necessity, i tEl'uliginous gloom like giants of tlie betrt^ii one tyrant fludWBroefccp, and ran them down. Gculte-Roriatoera* y provedfimen gomg bornowurd as they supposed, verfl, gt raveled iu contrary direction*, and atre-it idtiHnrar of Englnnd.Bl.ist only rvaelied th« ir anxious Iwiuilies walt;f[l»y a series of arduous calowlatious uudrtdis audgefn.rts of memory—holding hard by the yct in0t!t holy.' There is a pleasure u• O ..I!.- ...tinting • — 4____ * . 1 ■.•n intellectual -pnwyiluther aatl it *1-^Tjgsiid ho k*i *7*gcaom l.«n» lv. valid t. ok 1.V°5!N (,a€»»S^=- ••»*.*«•'*ho look*. went The ruaada h« orwar.l, Wkm! !* ihe eompnuyj seat. One or two thuught-I as they whi.-pered that]the question do r-jrails, and counting the number of tura-jiues or of lamp-post*. for the lamp* ^ -oselvtw- W* nj J thcoyh i bey t\ or« fn.'t. Gin- wits for ont o completely beat by G v though tn# -ges epmpa Iny was cnllod upon to- supply fsfo uiglu:-lumpiioo. in otic I’nhappy po-;not mortal, I would, lovik for it In the trong, convalsive emotions of the breast, rheu the soul has beou deeply agitated when the fountains of feeling are arising and when the tears are gushing forth in crystal streams. Oh, spwak not harshly lu the stricken one wcepHg in silence I^rcak not the deep solemnity by rude laughter u* intrusive To Despisenot woman’s tcarA—they are what dak her an angel. uot if the tierheart of manhood is sometimes melted t* tears—they are what help to elevate bin bove the brute. X love to see tears ot flection. They are paint*-! tokens, balrnnosophleal Facts.Thunder can be heard at the distance of 30 miles.Lightning can be seen by reflection it the distance of 200 miles.The greatest artificial eold ever produced is 81 degrees FahrenheitAir la about 816 times lighter than wafer.During the conversion of tee into water, 140 degrees of heat are consumed.Water, when converted into steam, increases in bulk 1,800 times.One hundred pounds of water in the Dead Sea contain 45 poanda of salt.Electrimry moves with a greater velocity than light, which traverses 200,-1)00 miles of space in a second of time.The explosive force of closely-con-fioed gunpowder is six tuns and a Lwlf to the equard inch.Mercury freeze* at 32 degrees Fahrenheit, and becomes a solid mass, malleable under the hammer.The greatest height at which risibln clouds ever exist does not exceed *.eu miles.Heat rarifie** air to such an extent that t may b^ made to occupy 5,500 times the space it did before.Hound travels at the nUnef 1.156 feet per second in the air, 1.DG0 in the s afer, 11,000 in east iron, 17,000 iu steel. 18,-000 iu glass, and Irorn 5.637 to 17,000 iu wood.The violence of the expansion of water yihen freezing is sufficient to cleave a [lobe of cupper of sueh thickness as to require a force of 28,UU# pounds to produce the eauac effect.The pressure of thw atmosphere upon every square foot of etirth amounts to 2.868 pounds. An ordinary -sized man.SaCBEIX * S3 til TK.Uts.—There is 3 acredness in tears; they are uot u mark if weakness, but of power. They speak more eloquently than tea thousand tongues. TLey are the messengers of overwhelming grief, of deep contrition, jof unspeakable love. If there were wanting any argument to prove that man supposing his surface to be fifteen squarefeet, sustains the enormous pressure of 40.110 pcuuda,Assuming the temperature of the interior rf the earth increases uniformly as we descend, at the rate of one degree in 46 feet, at the depth of 50 miles it will amount to 80.000 degrees Fahrenheit— a degree of heat sufficient to iua all koowu substances.cars—an awful pleasure. If there wer* oboe on earth to bcd a tear for u.e, i muKl be Joilr to live; ault;l if uo otje light weep over my graver I .could a*iu peace._-r whcth-r copmtuiional govern me ntgmen, Btfbtlng themselyes by penny can* vu.- a j- -ildt* boon to the English race lid let. flonudcrcd towontcd doors hourt^ 3‘fl. B.tr upenvd in T042 and lt;’oritinult;*d3lt;Bfcr the fixed titues C*f JtjHygrr, and at] * v*u ip- It wonld^probably ksvnHmid night rung up affrighted? fa in HiestJr rlwft tfint-. LitrTfif * * * - -....... ftr.Ul....! tnRobbi.sa thk Vieoin.—A thief ha just been tried fur stealing candles fro: [the Yirgin'ts altar iii Santa Croce. IT. Iwr.s cmiglit in tlfe act by a monk belong ling to the adjoroiug convent, who coo.al lliin t n 4 h ri TitrtPlMAC rA f flii