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The Bennington Banner from Bennington, Vermont • 2

The Bennington Banner from Bennington, Vermont • 2

Location:
Bennington, Vermont
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OUR VILLAGE. The following communication we received Ivith your training and when you feel to speak from some unknown source. It embodies our a hitter word, remember 'ideas of the power of a Newspaper for good or; 7 "Tis, better far THE BLOTTER. THURSDAY MORNING, SEP. 28, 1854.

ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF MAILS AT THE P. 0. LUDLOW, VT. Xortliern Mail arrives, 2.17 P. M.

closes, 11.20 A.M. i T1T to ruic wiui man rear. evil. We recommend its perusal to our reauers. i 1 mi i Mr.

Jones, he is really the worst child 1 he appearance ol your unpretending sheet i i Lever saw. out, take tare, that cold has awakened some interesting reflections in my I withering sneer wiii kill that confidence and Mysterious packages.have been passing through our streets the past week, directed to our various Merchants. We are happy to state these gentlemen have returned to their places of business, with large assortments of gooils, light cl ots, hopeful hearts and await the arrival of their customers, ready and willing to dispose of their wares, "a leetie, above prime the cannot be suited with the Fall styles, we are no judge of Merrimack Prints and Bennington Stone Ware. The enterprising proprietor of Okcemo Mill, and no ahead citizen, "Mr Xi A 1. love, which flow like dancing rivulets from that to mourn, influence tor good or tor evil is it adapted to pi.

i little gentle spirit seared, and left exert! What consequences ot lasting moment i fnr sniriphnnv tn r.vo nw hie cnivit Will UC eUllllCUlUU W1L11 llJ Finding its way into -JlS hrnken his rVf snttninrl irith faaro onI t-i -i almost every family, it is read by ail classes, and i -n i those bitter words reiterated and ajrain the matter it, contains heroines snln'eet. nf! x- his hearing; the little light he has is crushed CI. S. Coffin" has changed the outside appear- lout. Tell lies does he sure he did'nt learn of his beautiful residence, to one more made on the minds especially of its young read- agi eoable to his taste.

We do not wish to whis- it of you What answer did you make to that TOastem arrives, 12.12 M. closes, 2.13 P. M. Mail for Tyson Furnace, Woodstock, arrives on Tuesday's, Thursday's, and Saturday's, at 11.30 A. M.

Closes on Monday's, Wednesday's and Friday's at i 2.00 P. M. or on the arrival of the mails from the North. C. S.

MASON, P. M. Election. Now that the election is passed and the result generally known, we cannot consistantly remain silent. We have in vain examined the various Whig and others papers of this State, for a solution of the mystery appertaining to the largo number of votes cast for Ryland Fletcher, the candidate for Lieut.

Governor. We have passed our word to be a faithful accountant and an st resessarily acquaint our readers with a true statement of the case. Our cotcmporaies in speaking of the late election, announce that i i Tin 71 7 '1 1 ers, and the character is shaped and moulded in i 'per very loud, hut we know of other buildings. no inconsiderable degree by its rf? WOoM 1-encfited and bo.i- TJ? .1, ixVnd when 3irs. lubby wastaking tea withyou, by a new eoat of lunt, Long boxes curi- It we could accurately analyze our mental 77 A 7 i i Hritfl vim not, nmtnisA ho should not.

harp, annt hpr ouslv shaped have riassed our sanctum since i i -i i i progress, ami ascertain now mucn we are inut'fjc! i Mump ot sugar, and in a moment you gave him Monday evening, enveloped in cloths of green, containing, (as we are assured, not articles for till-bustering expeditions,) but the necessary in- 1 ed to others for our opinions and sentiments, we iriTiP find firrfim I "inst ont lnmn mnra ehmilrl IIP QstnrlK lfcl nnthnna uuuul uuvviiiijinyu. Ill MS3 1UUUIW lJ UoCI vj t-! 1) "1 'Till 11 il 1 Fred said you promised to take him to the jstruments from whieh will issue ''sweet sounds, nuw mcuo uonig constantly communicated tvnllW(milp totheear. and (M-editablo to the irentle- 0 from one to another, somewhat after the manner i i mi 1 1 1 1 and sent him with Johnny lhorp, blackber- of a circulating medium the main difference i Irymg. while you stole on. a very step you made men who use "the riddle and the Uow.

Mr. Baker. Miss Hill, and assistants, arrived in town on Monday evening. The Musical Convention bllVS LilC 1ULLCX IB CM11L111UU11 NclSClU" 11 Ulll ,1 I'll 11 ,1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 0 'the elulds pleading: Iook was there. every leaf ai vortisod to bo lia don tins week is now in se li.ii i i -1 1 1 1 nana to nana, ana no wnere nnas remg pephy or song of bird, was to you the voice sion at the Baptist Church.

A large number it was not a wmo or jj ree ooi victorv. nut i -i u. ,11,1 a. of your cheated child echoing your heart, vT it! tnn lirncu rnirnt thn Morn r-nnaif nr it (Trrn.if .1 a 1 i -t 1 I id "becoming the property ot each mciiviauai into Moth her promise." Whig vtctory. If it is not a victory of Wings possession they come, and yet of being vnn or ,1 na iT-io-i 1 .,0 A ,1 1 0 JJid you ever reflect that the pe and iree feoilers.

what is it I Are the nress i i 1 peace offering Kepi- iu peipeium ciroumuHU. iud ncvui vmi wrfiftTlt 1 lim vonr rotnri, will not o-ild o'm- especially the Anti-lcmpcranee opposers, ft.vfh!J 1 are attenuance, ana oy the present maica-tions, it promises to be an occasion of interest, and profit. A more extended notice will be given next week. Political somersets having been the prevailing fashion of late, the brute creation have caught the infection, and the Horse of r. (1.1.

Howe, backed off the bank near the new wheel attached to Okeemo Mill, but we are happy to state, was taken out, without any serious injury. J. A A UI" llcllt cllU IIUICI at VIIVC i5jliu .) 1 -II I 11 1 i -j willing to acknowledge the fact, that the broad principles of temperance are spreading in oldVer- tne error your cnnu uiscovers xne aeiormity on their mission they travel on silently doing Hugh any noige their work, influencing mind after mind, elevat-i c. -i nnB .1 ,1 1 1 ,1 -1 ,1 1 n) illlVL VUU OLLU 111.11 1C11I UiiUVUCiW f'llLlOC mnnr nror TI1017 hairo I in rr Ion th chominnns rit -1 1 iJl ting or depressing the moral sentiments, ana Ur i it: i xi x- ft Mrs. lubs is at the door, and Mrs.

T. is not a iuis cause, exeneu incir luuuence io eieci men i jpu: Kft, it ui oil A very tortunate horse, as the cart to which he was attached followed him. The new wheel whom, in their silent progress, they reach. And then, if it be true, (as philosophy teaches us,) that every idea the mind entertains, though welcome guest that day. By and by Mrs.

Tubs calls again, you answer her enquires as to your whereabouts on that occasion, Why really 1 can't remember just now, tako care that little mirror plavinir with his picture book is catching for a time it be overlooked or forgotten amidst which we mentioned, is daily progressing towards completion, Capt. Fitch has already armed the monster, and is busily engaged in adding the necessary equipments. The Captain drills his company daily. The daughter of Mr. El nathan Sawtell, left this place, attended by her husband, on Monday morning, the 25th for California.

We wish our friends a prosperous and pleasant journey. California needs many more of the same stamp. Letters, received occasionally from our Ludlow friends located there, contain the gratifying intelligence of their continued health and prosperity. Dca. Andrew Pettigrcw, one of the first settlers on South Hill, died at Plymouth, on Monday morning, the 25th inst.

Dea. Pettigrew estab the mass of material collected there, will one reflect it mme day day be revived, and, combined with other ideas, recoUects that you enjo5no(1 it upon him to rc. will form a part of the moral and intellectual; Mfg not you character that is to shine in splendor, or sink mU he heard you jm oW can estimate the importance that nQ bugIness tQ Qut f)f those ideas and sentiments only be 'eceivedJ you Majy? Betsy and Willie? which may be fit, and useful as materials to neimi -i i There was once a little child ot your own Wiouiiiiii uifcu vile riuiua mi lhjuuiu uiiau ucni" i 1 -i i who was pressed to a mothers heart, reared? i i 1...1 1. 1 1 to known to be opposed to the prohibitory Law, (until compelled to follow the public sentiment and support such candidates,) are they, we ask, still unwilling to account for the large vote cast for Ryland Fletcher, the Temperance and Free Soil candidate Perhaps they will attrib-bute it to the universal detesation expressed by the people of this State against the Nebraska Bill, and the party sustaining the present administration, if this is the case there before them, like Hamlets host, arc the 2000 votes for Fletcher, over the ticket, according to the present accounts. The mystery can be solved in a few words Ryland Fletcher, was, and ever has been a staunch supporter of the Temperance cause, this fact combined with his Free Soil sentiments, followed by the manly letter containing his views, was the real cause.

This vote is the voice of those "who will be heard' and the whigs having an eye to the "main chance" embodied his name with others sound on this question, in the State Ticket and a singular circumstance, significant of the feeling on the temperance question, was discoverable in the large majority of votes received by those candidates who had openly and unequivocally adopted the temperance platform. Public sentiment on the question of Temperance is daily advancing, and its ranks receiving largo accessions. This subject will cause political wire pullers, and pilots of the party ships, more trouble than Free Soil ever did. These twin brothers, the sons of humanity, and 4- 4-1 tt -w n.4--v,l tt-i11 1 of mnl Itr rroflmi jana wnen tne little pouting lips, ana nusn-Nor need it be told, how powerful an agency cheek threw out their threatenings, that meek the Newspaper exerts in this work. bved mother, quietly calmed the storm, weekly visitor.

Due respect is paid to it, on its My Dear parent there's a mine of love in that arrival. It is greeted as a particular acquain-1 beating, rebellious heart, spring it aright, tance. Its very name becomes a house-hold touch it lightly mother that touch unimpaired word. It is consulted as an oracle. Its teach- wni remain through life, and eternity will reveal ings are law.

It shapes the morals and forms the impression. Fred'y has the croup and while the opinions of the families into wheh it gains his feverish eye is upon you, he hears you say-admittance. How infinitely important, that iisjtake this Fred'y, good medicine He quaffs the inculcations be in accordance with the principles, the loathsome compound, his mild blue eye looks of a pure morality and a sound christian philos-1 up with its feverish glare, the little head lays lished, and for many years was proprietor of the first, and only store on South Hill. He conducted business on the place now occupied by Mr. Ambrose Adams.

Dea. Pettigrew removed to Plymouth, and was there also engaged in the mercantile business for many years. His mantle fell on his son Mr. Andrew Pettigrew, the well known merchant and respected citizen who has lately closed his store in this village. The general health of the town is good, peace and continued prosperity dwell with us.

Business is flourishing Merchants, Mechanics and Farmers, are actively engaged in their vari. ous persuits, and in fact all available labor is in demand. ophy. Benevolous. back upon the pillow, and a silent tear Children.

from those closed eyes, rolls down the fevered cheek. Look upon it parents, it is the tear of Who does not love children The little In-an angel coming from a broken heart Look nocents, possessing that innocence that thinkethJuponit, and when the once sprightly limbs are no evil, ignorance that apprehendeth none palsied in death, and the narrow home is clos-hope that hath experienced no guile. Why, led, remember the child entered eternity with FOREIGN AND HOME NEWS. An Engine driver in France has been sentenced to six months imprisonment for having carelessly run over a man and killed him. The company were sentenced to pay the costs only as they showed that they had made provision for the victims Widow.

A French critique upon Mrs. Stowe's Sunny 3Iemories closes his second article as follows "From London, Mrs. Stowe came directly to Fred'y Jones you naughty boy just see howja parents falsehood on his heart you have turned my work basket upside down 11U111UUU1 UIIUICUICU, ill huuiuiujv cmiuma i.i. i ii lli il -ii and this thread, and silk, all snarled together strength and that party fostering them will, of I i take that beeswax out ot your mouth instantly Eventide, by Effie Afton, is the title of a new work we received from the publishers, Messrs Fetridge Co. The following extract I'ICIl Wm7 JUIW lino 1 1 ,1 1 iiere; siu uovvii ui mau ciiuii, uuu uuui you from the Author preface, is applicable to this raris, ana irom tnis moment her memories cease are not of the "somerset kind," but move season of the year, Reading Public, we to be sunny they present a very slight interest indeed.

She seems to have left all her enthusi steal upon you mid the falling leaves, and lay Eventide at your feet. Also, from the same, a Treatise on the Camp and March, construction of Field Works, By H. D. Grofton There was quite a heavy frost in the vicinity of Boston, on I hursday night last week. At Rowley, the thermometer indicated one degree below freezing point.

In this village the pota-toe tops were killed. Musical Convention Scene. First class steadily forward. The bug-bear that this subject must not be carried to the Polls, has lost, its powTer. Our editorial brethren may dance to any tune they please from the great viol of Democracy, or Whigery, there is a time coming when they will be happy to join in the song and chorus vibrating through the ballot box.

'Emancipation, Freedom from King Alke's Old Yarmount has spoken out in meeting" on the great questions of humanity, and while she abrogates the extension of the slave power, she would also remember the slave of appetite the victims bruised, broken, bleeding, slain by this monter Intemperance. The blood of her children cries to her for vengeance, and through the ballot box she reiterates that cry. May our sister States take heed and listen to the voice of their proginy. asm in the sumptuous dwellings of English aristocracy. The fact is, the Faubourg St.

Germain did not make the slightest advance to her the French people was very indifferent about her, and our political celebrities did not bestow a thought upon her. So Mrs. Stowe is out of humor in her race and sorry views upon France and the French. After having visited the Louvre, Versailles and Mabille, () she languidly hands her pen over to the Reverend Beecher, her brother, who sweats blood and water to spin out the second volume, by the aid of. compilations made at hazard, and a few innocent views of his own.

"Let us then say adieu, without regret, to Mrs. Stowe, and respectifully advise the authoress of Uncle Tom's Cabin to abandon her Sunny Memories of Europe, and give us a worthy match to the admirable work by which all hearts were so keenly moved." The deaths in New Orleans, for one week to Sept. 19, was 340. No further apprehensions are entertained of any riots. The police being in sacred music stand up.

How many kinds of stir for an hour Pshaw, my dear woman; the idea of that compound of chain lightning, and springsteel keeping that position one hour. See you that little fountain within, from which arises those pure sparkling, frollicking 'ideas well, you can no more wall them up, than you can quiet Niagaras roar vibrating in Heavens vault. Those explorations in your work box indicate the bumps, and reveals the character he possesses. And if you will be a little philosophical, you can engage your angry thoughts, by taking a peep into the future, and catch a glimpse of that young explorer on the craggy heights of Mt. Blanc, surrounded by fire and smoke onEtnas summit, flying kites o'er Pompy's pillar, or perhaps sailing on an Iceberg, accompanied by a Grizzly, in anxious delight exploring the renowned Simses Hole.

How your pride would oreflow from your swelling heart when he returned, having shaken hands with Sir John Franklin, and bringing the gratifying intelligence of his safety? Try a little philosophy metre are there: "Three, sir long metre, short metrei and meet her by moon-light alone Thackery says, that a woman's love is just like a lithographer's stone, that what is once written upon it can't be rubbed out. This is so. Let an heiress once fix her affec-tioes on a stable boy, and all the preaching in the world will not get her thoughts above oat-boxes and curry-combs. Shame is like the weaver's thread if it breaks in the net, it is wholly imperfect. Cy- ranui de Bergerac.

Pleasure can be supported by illusion, but happiness rests upon truth. Chamfort. insufficient, the Mayor has called upon the citizens to aid in sustaining the Laws..

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About The Bennington Banner Archive

Pages Available:
53
Years Available:
1854-1902