The Standard. (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 42, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 6, 1858 Page: 1 of 4
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CLARKSVILLE, RE1> K1VER COONTY. TEXAS, SATURDAY. NOV 6. 1858!
DBSTWiCTION OF THE NEW YORK
CRYSTAL PALACE BY FIRE.
f^r New Ynrk papers of the 6th inst.,bring
%t the particulars of thin deatruciv# oonfisgra-
liffn wlncli was briefly announced by telegraph:
Tho CryHtul Palaoo, thu sceuc of ao many of
Ike great public dem matrations which have
liken place in this city of late yoare, van to-
tolly destroyed last ovotiing by fire, aod the
HK i u'-w tiians of cimking rains. Not only
tie Palace itself, but everything that it ood-
taiard, was burned ap, and the exhibitors at
Ike Great Fair of the Atnerioan Institute,whioh
«u being held there for two weeks past, have
litt all they had in the building.
There is every reason to bolievelhat the file
tts the work of an incendiary, as it originated
ia a part of the building in which Itj> fire was
ved, but whioh was filled with inflammable
aaterial, the debris of the Palace, which was
■at in ao out of the way place, for fear of ac-
cident*. Tho fire was first ditcovcred shortly
lafore five o'clock in the afternoon, in 'the
aortbfa: t coruor of the building, a boat twe
kandred feet from where (be machinery was on
(ibibition. At thin time there were about
tkree thousand persons iu the bulling, mostly
women urn) children, who weto viewing the ar-s
tiolrs on exhibition. The building was ao large
that it proved ditlicuit to apread an alarm, end
it wan some time before the visitors could be
•trned of ibeir dungcr; and the danger to all
ip tho palace was tnmat imminent,for the flames,
wbou they got undet headway, spread with
fearful rapidity, and v if uisgij the vast
edifice was oue mass of glowing fire and flame
Ther.i worn eight hydrants in tho boilditig; but
the aoddonnosa with which the fire spread gsvo
tho ctnployos of the Amoricati lumitute no
time to use lllem; and alm'is before the hose
Could be screwed oti,lbe conflagration bad cade
such headway, that all stt'-uipr* to rave any
thing on exhibition, much loan tho building,
woro entirely usele**.
The scene in the I'slacr. during the progress
of iliu flinioa was one of indescribable cooftt-
eeiui'd to eeixo every "ne, and
as if ia the
Hofll VW '^D haf^pi^eayflUibi* ata kttltxl, to*y
_ A..
the bo VilJeriSi
their dargeroo* position well enough to providi
. Jor Iheirjj^UJBls'J The children acreamed,
lumen fainted, and tin ir dintract^d tnalo a>
tcadautn with difficulty found th« ir way to the
ioofH, Al the «uiM wo write there is no cer-
tainty bh to whether any lives are lost, b'lt if
all wh o wire iu tl u puiitco escaped it is little
less limn u tuirac c. Last night was to havi
been i ooBivrt night, and the managers es'tm-
ato Hint ot loaft 10,(100 persons w lld have
been present. Had the lire, therefore, token
Elaoo t! ,roo houri- later,there in acurcely a doub.
ut that thouiiaud* of liven would have been
lout, n all c 'Uld not have pntaod the doors be-
"tfrti the (tofllO foil
The pitch pinu which formed tho flooring,
Hairs bnd fratuew.irk of llie entire paiaoe, af-
forded a inost jnflaniiiiah'le pabulum for the
OOntLgrnti.'u to feed upon, aud this explains
the reason of iis rapid spread. The scene when
the fire was at its he'gbt, was cne (if fearful
mignift.teiu*o The huge dome was like a vsst
ball of tiro, and tho flume* leaped up Its side*
in great wnves of lurid light. At one tlmo the
Whole pclaou whs glowing liku a burning coal,
and vomuing up fire at a rate that would have
done ore .it to Vesuvius. All who witneeaud
the spectacle deolaro that it was one of those
things ruruly seen in a lifetime.
About twenty tivo minutes after the fire wis
first dihV)««red, tho dome fell with a fearful
crash, and the tiauiee made one final leap up-
wards and sunk to rise no ronfo. In forty min
nie from the breaking out of the fire the Pal'
ace and nil it contained wore totally dosiroyed;
and nil that m rk the site of this once pmod
building, are a /ew standing towers and a amo-
king huip uf ruius. i:
Humbar of Exhibitor* and their Loe*.
The lotnl nnmbor of exhihitora at thie fclr
was nhout 8,060 Of those no catalogue in*
yetb.- en n ado ont, an<. it is difficult to get kt
ao eatimato of llitt Ions of each exhibitor. Dime
of the articles Were, of course, of little or no
value, but the majority of the articles wero
ooitly, and a* they wero o.it insured, tho lo#s
will fall heavily upon tho exhibitor*. Tho av-
erage value lor each exhibitor would not fall
below £(00. At tliii rate 'be tntaVlose would
b* ns follow*:
3,9(>0 exhibitors, MOf) oacli, H,0fi8,000
Cost of building, 700,000
rewDted with ontatntohad
ru ***•*-** ^ iae lined
The itwue* of the Apoelka Mood oo a a
P'deatal* aad vara reogad la the fbni of a
MiDi-cirel*.
Kies''-MM*«Wm#the Aauxm At-
•eked by , Lioa, ettnaM very general atten-
tion, and was uaoally mirrounded by a groan
°f l« W* * ■pleodid work of art^aad
iu loee will be regrettaj. .
Ad eqoaeuiaa atatae of Waehiagtoo, life
awe, by Bar on Maroebelti. An imposing
poop and aiuoh admired on I owe! ttatue or Dan-
iel Webiter, in marble by Oaven of Loodoe
Lion aad boa oonatrietor h death ttruggle
Coioeaal group of a man atruggling with a
bear—a Very Ine pieoe of atatuary To addi-
tion to these were a Urn wwber of Iff* sited
hueu of O'Coaaell, Moore Father Matthew
and Washington, in marble aad nlaaUr To-
gether with etatuetteeof ajmpbs, dryade.aatyrs,
goddesses, dm. '."*'^7
The group of the Lovere Ooing to a Well —
Altogether, itt «a wrtMr, of atataary there
devtraetioa of
KW U h* ngret-
Vnrj little efort had jmfarn made to III
the picture gallery, and to#MaenUy in thi*
respato thafca '«to 4o not enter materially.
Fredericks, Onn«:«od some of the minor
photographista had p)«ed a few piotaree there;
end there were aevera) water ooior end orayon
drawings, as also tome danha remaining from
the old collection whioh had not been worth
removing Mr Brady, and several other pro
uinent artists, who contemplated exhibiting
their productioni, had not yet placed them in
the gtliery.
The body of an unknown man was found in
the rums at a little before 12 o'clock. Tbe
remains were conveyed to the Nineteenth ward
station honse. The disoovery of the above
body created considerable excitement about the
ruins, and from all aoconate it ia feared that
other* bare been loat aad buried beneath the
ruins. MM and firemen are hard at work re-
moving the rubbish, st far as layt in thci.
1ST t>e
ft is
lie found.
leported that two children are now mis-
sing. 1 he police are endeavoring to ascertain
tbu truth of the report.
L*e«rn or tb OaKxasL Ananai—The Rus-
sian team fri|pUo Oeweral Admiral, built by
Wni. II Wehti, was 'auorhrtd at New York on
ti t 21st Inst., just one year from the day on which
her keel was laid. Mure than l,0"Q ladiee and
gentleman were on her docks at the launch, and
lite wharves and shipping in the vioinitT of the
yard were crowded full of people. Probably not
l«ss than 50,000 spectators assembled to aee her
enter the water
As she passed down the wayt, tbs buge tim-
bers in which she wss orad led snapped and crack-
ed with a force that was felt all e««r the ehlp.—
She entered tbe water amid the booming of can-
non. the music of the band, and ten thousand
ringing cheers frfMn tbe thronging multitude on
deck and on shore. In a moment she was dear
of the wave, aid mee with a heautifal swan-like
motion from tba~plunge, leaving a wildernew of
paper floating in her wake.
The General Admiral ie the largest, and no
doubt, one of the strongest wooden ships afloat.
No expanse waa spared to ssake bet as etannah
and durable as poeeibla. Her coat waa about
$1,260,000. She wiQ carry 72 Mna—viuSAO
inch shell guns (AO pounders) on the main deck,
2A long 80 poundsrs, and (1 Dahlgren't 8 inch
guns on the spar dock. The dimensions of her
hull are 820 feet long, fifty fire feet wide, and
thirty-four feet deep. She baa about two Ifths
more stowage room than the Vanderbilt, Persia
or Oreat Hepobllo. and one tbM mar* fhan the
Adriatic. Her bull ia aharp at the elide, foil to
the Bilge, with a round stern aad flat floor -
White and live oak, teak and mahogany have
ser and lam ex-
leen lavishly used, , .
nentlTt tlr'— 'f r—""j ' ^ the
metallic fastenings copoer and braas largely pre-
dominate Her traaee ie of lire and white oak,
diagonally strapped with iron hands, five inehee
broad ana seven eighths thisk, riveted to e*eh
other and to the frame, and fastened at the tin-
per and to an iron belt six Inehee wide aad 1}
thiek. which girdles the ship at the spar deck
THK MOTiiKB OF WATKRri.
Licat. Hahenhtm, ia hia letters fto« Chi.
aa to the Philadelphia Ledger, aeserts that the
Mississippi river, whioh we jail "Father af
w stars, is not to be compared to the Yeag-
ttr-K ang river, u> whioh he appliee the asase
of "Mt ther of Wetore." la proof of thie he
comperre the width aad vokime of the two
atreama:
The Mimissippi opposite New Orleans is not
quite six hundred yatds wide, with a mean
depth of one hundred feet, and a mean veloci-
ty of nearly one and a half milea par hoar,—
Thus a body ot water one aad a half mil e
long, six hundred yards wide and t*« hundred
feet thiok ia driven into the Oalf of Mexico
every hour. A little more thsa one hundred
miles from the month of the Yang-tae-Kiang
(the Sou of tho Pee) ia iooated the oity of Hi-
sog Yin. The river hare ^s 1,900 yarda wide,
has an average depth of niluty aine feat, and
a mean velocity of two milea per hour Thus
we have, he remarks, a body of water two
milea long, nineteen hundred yarda wide, aad
ninety nine feet thiek hourly nrgad into the
bosom of the Yellow Sea Compare tMt vol-
ume with tbe Aral and it will ha found to be
almost double Ware tho length af the greet
Ohincee water oourac oolv koown. the compari-
son might bo oompktod; hat that oanoot be
until tbe interior of China ia opmied to the
world. Iu oetimated length it three thousand
three bundled miles. Lieut. Habersham est!
mates that tbe wateta of the YaOg tea KUng
carry alcim in suspension,thereamritahle^aaa-
tity of about'thirty three and a third per cent
of sendimontary muter. Aooording to this es-
timate, l,9Nfl,aao,(HK) cable foat of mod is
hourly transported to the aea by ihia river, It
M<om quite incredible, but at the earthy mat-
ter discharged by the Yang tee Ktaatr oolors
the water* at iu mouth, giving to them the
n mo of the Yellow See, besides farming Itr
m< nee flata, tho emouut must bo very large —
The Ysng-tee-Kisng, however, beers no better
comparison with tbe A mat on, than, aaeording
to Lieui. Habersham, the Misaiseippi doe* to
•he CUa « litH. -4V A>- siatt, rot hNi
Isrgest river in ibe world, is one tlonsand eeven
bundrud snd aixiy nine miles in length in a
rlired lino, or, iuemding its windings, nearly
four tbuuaand wile*, while four hundred miles
from th« Atlantic it ia more than a mile in
width, and haa a velocity of three and a half
mite* per hour, and in mid-carrent ao bottom
is found with twenty fathoms or oae hundred
and twenty feet, i bit noble river, with its
tributaries, is eatimated to afford Mlj thousand
miles of inland navigatioa. ''
flan- Root 8iro*e.—The htereaee in Praaoe of
tbe nrixluctiou of beet root sugar is such aa to
b<> likely quite to dispense wiUi tba aanaatity of
roviviug tho elavc trade,for the aa&oot famish-
ing the French augar ooloaiaa with labor ade-
quate to the produ -tinn of the sugar aitIrt in
France Tbe amount produced in 1 ft61 waa
64,000,000 kilogrnmmos) in 1864, 77,009,000;
in 1H57, 88,000 000; snd this year tt will not
bo loss than 100,000,600. A kilogramme, it
will bo reoollectcd, i about two and a fifth of
our pounds. Tbe high price of grain baa attack-
ed the boet cultivation for three or foar years
past, but at present prieoe many new adventar-
ors will go into it. la fact, the hmaa mada is
gaining so fast on the colonial production of
sugar, that the Chamber of Commerce of Nan-
tea calls loudly for a protective duty in fav«r
of the oolomes, whotr sugar, it ia aaid, ought
to be enoouraged on aaeonat uf the largu qnan
tity of shipping employed in mususportaiion,
MARYLAND.
I/ouitvillc Oct. 14 —In Baltimore, Swann,
Am. has been ix-elaeted Mayor. BpoU. the
oppositon candidate, withdrew hia a ims^in aoa-
eequ. nce oT the iatimidtrinat of votare If
Bwann't ftiendt.
mandy and Britanay, the red pattiataU, taareaiy
desoending below the knees, the aberaoe of aU
volume of skirt, the hair gathered ia a knoi on
the lop ef the hoed, aad eursaoantsd by a high
nan. starched, end etUf aa baokram, Itowted a ca-
rious eoetreat with the trailing aad valuiaianaa
ritirta, ike hair foiling lew on the bank of the
head, tbe eimoel invisible bonnet, and the light
and delicate oolors which oompeee the tolletU af
a modern lady of fashion. The country matruna
and the high damns ware reoiproealty an otycet
of ourious inspeotioni aad both added m the orig-
inality and twenty of the ccnp d' mil at the mag-
niflurnt apeotacie (if the naval aad iaad aateer
taiuaienw at Cherbourg. The pocket haadhar>
chief which tbe Empreaa earned at the graad
ball waa one of Cheprua's with honadfol foea or>
namenta, a rare
"BUrni
water waye.
ike and
tbe rides
Leffingwol! {Tsnti-Lecoa
Coogrees by 6o0 majority
enti-Lacomptoa] it elected to
Geo. 8 llawk ine (Ooin-,) hie beaa elected
ToulUs, 81 788,000
TIiih cMimate may be a little too high, but
the item* aenm little enough
The Falaoo ia aaid to have cos' between
•000,000 and 700,000. Mr JoboW. White
who, up to a «hort timo ago.ira* reooivor,states
thai there wuu most of tho time an intursnce
no tlie I'alsce. In Juno lest, when he trens-
fttn-d it to tint city, he had an intnranee of
•100,000, or I hereabouts, on the esme in sev-
eral nf the New Ynrk compsniea. He accord-
ingly infornioil (lorptrnllcr Flsgg of tha fact,
who iiumodinial; hsri the Pulsctfinanrod in tho
*ann' compnuits, and, ha thiukr, tor abot)t the
tame amount. Should this bo the oase, tile
lo* on tbe l'alscc alone will bo about S400,-
000
The Mrrhsnic*' Institute will piia'sin a loss
"f over f10,000. Tbcy hsd a large amoont of
raluah'e mschinery in the engino-rooa. It it
thonght that none of it iw insured
The lose to tbe enntributprs, the msnagers
nf I he Institute estimate at over •500,000,
about 9100,000 of whioh ie known to he innar-
T lien were six hnndred more entries da-
rinjt the present svseon than at say prariaas
°nc for year*; withont doubt. tbcr fori',the lost
wuit be all «f, if nat more iban the shove eeri-
®*'*. Fnni slllbst we '.wees able to learn,
•* liitlo or nothing wa« caved; a fcw pi
•everal ~ewing macliines, and a'feW ca< #
out, but^n jirly everyihiag of value
▼orki of An Dsstrcred.
All Uio statusry and painting*ia the Pslsce
- of course, ■ eatroyed. home of the slat-
woid very tine, and ranbiid high as +tHk
®l art.
The m.ist striking object in the atatnary de-
Ptrtmmi was th- Thorwald-eu group, n pra>
tenting our Saviour afrf^ the Twelve Ap^ tl<-f,
* iih wen greatly admired b all the
* AeiW Watearem*
She is planked wtith whAa oak, the
limbers being eoppw fastened throng.
and edge*. The a aaneheons arc locnst, bolted
through With iron and riveted. Her engines are
now being bnHt at tba NoveltyrWorkas tbey_are
to b. M inch cylinders, with 45inch stroke fir-
ing a maximum epead of 60 rtvo'atiao* of flic
to dtomS^S^hljjt
26 tons. Thaw are eht borieontal tabator botl-
ere, with 88 furaaoaa, toe amok* froaiiwhioh pa«-
ea off throat a largo telaaeapie ehhaaey. The
Ship to>Ia5lare4 by mean, of mataUie tnbm,
through wWohadoakey engine foresa fcneh a^r
^SnSu the totide-tl^aatride plaaWng of *
hull and all throagb tha ehip. It ie expeetad
that'tbe Oeaaral Admirel^ will make 14 knots aa
hoar ond«r fliiiWil*
A Steam ExcAVAToa.—Tke Cleveland
UadJdSUbre a .ten. excavator, rnvb-j,
ta oomnleting the em bark meat af tba
ins [
to Congreaa by 2,000
ture will ba largely ^
used ta aomplettag _
Cleveland and Brie railroad, at Ottatd. Tfca
«Wa were much aarpriaad at tbe great rapM-
i j wi'i wbtah tbe dirt *aa «tol*d to--.
f«rad ta the amhaakmja*. adbttaaaa of
one eighth of a mtU One
indefinite ^nmberof nmnre rcqu.mi to awb
exoavailm ttmpwWy Jj4
the embankment to ^
track-and awitoh aaar * JJ*
empty aara oai W raa ap to Jho Xtaobiaa tar a
<r>ek and inilantly aaather cmr ta raa ap to tnc
T^Ta ^lk is. Mot aaated twa^y
^taa mamwwaa, «are par
,w
"'.".TL.
goae over
rissssssaSaf^ta£
-ItliTaa frffliMBa.
Tha Legiela-
k nlrca on tha 4th. la
lisavenwonb ooanty, tie average majority waa
200 for the E ejmblieaaa. la Atchiaon aoan-
ty the Oppoaitiot. majority waa t' la <*t r-
son, tbe Kepablicane were didtatad. ffca
I democratic tfokot waa alee tod to Dmtohmt
county, la Lyktos cuanty, thn Bapabtiean
ticket waaaltotnd- '
its recant tataton atoptea a. iwntattoa aetwag
der-eo ta ohaarved by tha entire mamhmthip
under the jarisdHtUoa of tha Oread Udga of
toe Uaitad tttofv fV *
Divine Pre*UU^a, ft'
pority whiah h^att^ rba tofcrltotojtr
organiaatiaa aa tip Amcetoto MRMM. awe
SJnt tfaw Yorit wwa taientod ax toe toait y
aad * W ^
oarrtitig att toe pat^maaft t wim w
magnifieeat dtapUfthat Htota^j^ the
Kmpira City, and xday of KpMtaf aad rej<*c
ipg Uirooghrmt .tha.ixao. '
previna* tre^t. tM WHal
onmm< nooment of tha lav«ir
-On the 17th thare ware71
the Uaril| M-
b#f-
THI tAMIOMb
Our ehronielee ef the ma4m i^resT!
fiorid desariptioaaof the rithasm aad
of thatoUMnsaf thnladlna
faativliie* at
JSlaS
the tther oitiaa of Normandy aad >rii
nred by tha lam viaH of their Imperial
The nostamm af the amptoee ware I
on all oeahaioaa far good taste and at
area. At the brtnkfaat given tor too Qiaoew af
Knglaad on board bar yacht, the Kmpease
thia whim mualia, trimmed wito three ami
end Aounoea, a pale green ailk shawl,
with two deep black laoo to«aea
lane aad crap, bonnet, with green
Tba Imperial eoetame far toe state ball at Cher-
bourg waa a masterpiece of ftoaah milliaary—
The whim silk robe wne eatbreidered with braaoh-
c*i of Aowere in oolors aad guld, aad faatouaad
with lace of the raraat mature. Her Mtreaty
wore on her head the magnlfiecnt diadem of hrlT*
Haam and aasaralda which figared at toe Oairer
sal Kxhibitorn,wito neohiaee,bouquet de ooreaga,
and braoelem m mat oh. On na lamtlna ef wh-
ole! reeeptloa, her cuatame consisted of a mm
grey a!Ik dreae, lavUhly trimmed with black lace,
aad a ""
TBK BURNT 8TEAMSMP
and a whim ertpe bonnet, deoomted
On the Joarncye bar M^eety waa aa
etraw volored wrapper, (which pretec
the duet,] and won a hat aad feotbet aoa i«<ag
to the mauaere aad cuetoaw of traveling ladies la
England, who thus ptrovoklngly bide ttUlr pretty
leoca. The variety, gay eoioring.nnd piewreaqne
forma cf the onstumee of the peasantry « f Mur
an to the vicinity af toe baraiag
mttia, he o prnwd to he wnll foaa-
v _ . fkf (aot bark, ae reported*) arrt*
rd at Qaeheo oa Sanday, and proves to he tha
Catariaa, from Kngtond, havtng hoan fongr
three She rcporta, thai
at S a'cwnk, a a , on the 14th of Sentomhnr.
She fall to with the burning t
sft Wwll torn atamnt ia nth
■are, aad eix of the crew T hia increaaea tha
Oat af aavad to aiaety, aad redaece that nf tho
loat to 410 It lata be hoped that thicatiU
funuidahia figure may be ttill farther reduoed
ttumoRAii ManrtUiAM or rtra maawraa
We have ascertained the tolhwing farther
particulars from tho reeeaed nasaennere J
Tba wamp oa hoard the 111 famd veaael, in
oonatoMwt with the fire engine, wee aot in
working order. Some attempt waa wad* to
readtr u available, bat tho ffogrea* of the
flemea wattoo rapid The llfo-Hoaw wore hnag
ing amidahipa, oonecquontly it we> imtMaatbh
to gat at all tif them. Oae was lowetwl crowd
ed with people, but, being seised by tl.oee si
tody in the water, oaMiuHl aod swamped.—
Another Was au long Mag low wed that fha
paopla In tt sprung Into the aea to escape the
fiamta Near the forecastle, run.* were made
fa* to AhaUa oataide, at d to then* namher*
clung; but as the flame* progressed one by one
Mr* way, and found a wtterr are ve, On th*
bowsprit the paatcngem were laid out tier upon
ilW, plied one on top of tlie o^Krt M>metiuins
four Aa«p. Thia was a last reaourcc, and froui
this thtgr wsre finaily drfvca, until only one
HJMH amImi ttft tltii HW flatten A HH,I , b (
xwtqewawana ^rataf ws^natwtttwuu.
Klghtecti ptreons gat hold uf theehala fortohtg
tha bowsprit stay, and clung to ti till 4 o'pl of
the following morning A aanman elamhared
fmm the atny to the twweprit and found thare
, - , ... . - Wnaa probability of extingahihibg what fire
I iirriiallrrt ' -* -■- Utaaa jltigfag to Ote atay to dip twitioa* of
which ienarhans toe maal*xanlalt«lt,,^' 5n ««*t nod '
to him. Thie Waa done, and the fire
far aahdaad na to reader tbe howimrit a plan*
of comparative safety. They remained there
itU the boats Cram the Catarina pickod tlumt
Th* following is tha statement made by An
dfwr Efcnfctdtt, a Swodiah paMeagfr:
" About S o'clock V M on the 80th of flop:
l^auimn agLjta Aam kabJim tMfl iM'lwaaMl a^tlka
^^Bw Wlani fWk (M1
•a*
trimming
the Km press which Wparkap* toe aitotttqulalta
specimen of that maaufoctare that Franus has
aver produced. Tbe pattern ta uf naa shall* Men
eed with aquatic flower*, eo muah la reH "
tbey appear detached (torn th* tissue,
* iHR5r •
oombtae* etrength with axtraor Inary
TbW trimming, together with a thawfi.
splendid daeiga and exacntioa,wne headed to
Msjssty In aoorbeille, embroidered with the arm*
of Caan, in gold, nad deeotntsd with ptlltfto
speoimeaeof *
KXTBA
mm
IK,
tor race!
a two hn
It to fall!
With yoar
the eotomaa
Oar
the modna
M
Jal |
end to tot,
Al
naer
different
Atti Ae.
^jaetieo
>... ■
tolerably
to on, thia
bit eaperi
toiH*
chip*, gad tow |fc*
the wiudwariiato
8KSSION OF|
■TURK
Ou tabbing
breaking
lime I ww
[iitiSr
fames coming up
tlire.) or four fe I I
**• tha
Hriagtoni
Iwaiitoto
fflm
Seme of tbe pnpere era
priety of aa extrn eecolon af
and, a* aiight baaap*ntod, there fr
of opinion Far ear own W 'top to*'
aware that the pablie totareto la likely to eaf
for detriment for tho want of lagiaintive notice
until the next regalor meeting) an have area
ao rennoo aarigaad whiah, of itotN; tot regard
aa of MtSctoat weight to ltotlfy th* M#*atl*a
ia calling that body together, aad waare lata
that ao emergnaoy has ariaaa whioh mtoht aot
. f,Mta*naa wahel • ——a- - to
iWi wiWil WW pVVNM Mr VHI II
last to taeaiea Th* MMHtikitltofl
have
wta
tlie
toe power of the Oovernor la eoavaalng the
Lcgitlatara to ex'tnordtatoy titaaicaai aad
thoagb thare ia praetiaally ao Hmit to hia Mi
cret ion, nad be might aalMw that at aa tof
treordianry etteaiea whiah moet men woald
look apoaacfoltiag withia thaccmmoa raa *
events; it la yet to^e prraamad that Im
be governed by a aaaad dieeretioa la th*
o> eo importaat a pawar
Tbtn u maniliitlyjaaah JMidl rfkfUtolaB. tot *f #
TtCM. tba Iftwi akufl Hiitr ihtilrifa mm/tfhm Ww HWrof# WH1 nam
ia Ttxaa, the towa apoo
thoroagh revieion and amendment.
they aea reoeivc naif at (he haada of
laborimm aad expericaaad maa; bat 'aa aa*
woald think at aa extra am lea for that kiad
of work. The haae a< the aoaatry k the !**-
hMt
tariare every Stole to to* Uaioa, aad wbieh
gives aearemy any lato time eaoagb to h* 'ta*
ted by exparieaea, or for ana to
mum ?"■ H* nfMVBIIOBy won H
ut giro plaee to aaotber. LaW-miklad
nipcvfiTv wVfinvn, BDQ WW nm<iw
jatsi
*H*U ftWJ, (ton
b* eaearid that *maa yeed ocmmwttoiiato with
the ooet ta b* ieoerrea, ana be aOen«piiebed
la« imiMLa fka f ariilfllBf ^n/nri Iniiiiii
UJ OOHfffllHlg IU# ^*1' I ■VllfFto ontlll ■
la aar "eira eptoinn toa preteat -'Iflto^lBjip
«ww«na aaaaaa nivv^mvMi w^w* w^^w mw a^^wa^rv
uf nam bora who a^ey th* oxcimmta* toe
gjf toU^ llkto MUollflMllti --tit tonafl
tbe sarviee. W* hop* thmt their atpir*t>tai JM*
will m>t, ia^thie hmtaaea, b* gratified —Crmjt- m
toy towliato
eU AffUe )
Twe Oaaata aara
a- t.M p|w^
IfilUH, ■■ WvaaHrp,
O Williams * Oe .haviM ea I
wAOTrr
iTSTeidlJS
Ui ium* om
iMMWk'M
tho arm, palled blm btoik from tlto rWia«,ah
aaked him whet ha waa gtdng to do . Tha^
toln a aaawcr Wne to tho effect that he did not
hbowwhatha waaahoat The captain than
raa aft, aad I l**t tight of him, being on th*
for* part af. lit* ttoaml, among the great bulb nf
Ut* psaesegsr* I mw toat the fire leer maid
rapidly, aad that it threatened ue in an ntrfal
manner. fhaaMMafme •ere to cleanly ptoia
ad, that they wtoe pmdtltig oao another over
board. 1 mtacgej to got m for a* Ibe rape
rigging, aad eelehiag Ceid
fiat to aa *ya b*it
diag, eo aa to b* aWe
from the water. I succeeded ia
about ton minat** after thr fre had hrokeaoat
While In ill
lag (mid to a rape,
With thia react
ait to il about
n. aad aboat three qttar.
the fire had broken oat, 1
totW 1
til the
wfoto'iiad Wteln* mm«| ***rbeMd Mi
trd dda, and I aim ia gnat daager
knocked off by the yard, which bang
kimimm*
toa rimttog wee I
if aoytoiuK waa
dd of, 1 obeerrod
being knocked off 1 y tbe yard, which bang on
thatod*af «b* oowel, and fitft Into the aea only
(sMUagareaM
-1,1-4, I |feak|l(fl
swam to I
wee bwrai,
to eee IfawtHag
for hold of, 1 obeerrad the end ef thameiremmt
atiekiag tboal twj fo t out cf the wntnr. The
on th* top end of it meat hare g
In the aererw. ^lUt myecif down and
• Kfilm tnftflflrtfiml in
wp T" w.„~
1 caw three DCIBO
itffhri vtoiolby ropca, and
rapt to (Mto of thaw , who
I palled him to aM, aad
JjUl mm^ygfitoi^fl|mA 'Mto *
wi wpvp wmata W • rw*
Waeawa aambto of
diidnuc ike our hi (li
^wavnm wwwga -a'
ed aM|(y arvttnd wbanave* the
apbar stem Toprercat tolMW
izs
an to the •'
tan)-
w fate*, -•-■rfffla
1,
MSSKI
N*!'
■
■rMm&
'•<■1 tyiM'wt.
'SMm
l'i£
•9mn
fotol
•toa to
ato, ball
anmmwi'. ju. taoi
'xmm
;
/• 1. ;*
[ v/V"SV:Im|
to
[7> jrt J sWuM'sillai
Tax tarn
BMjt
ittot iwinthtid* torn
Free
UM^aten
ui i
Oe the aigtit af JMardayr too'fito^"
ataa aamed 3n*to*^tor d*#W«MW:
r..^a^ -t^k ses hues-toea.ta
nod fltovrlewd, |to
JU, freight a*e« t
feu. ltp**-to* .
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De Morse, Charles. The Standard. (Clarksville, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 42, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 6, 1858, newspaper, November 6, 1858; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth234188/m1/1/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting The Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.