The Beaver County Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1853-1859, May 20, 1857, Image 1

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VOLUME X3plin-NO 2g.
BEAVER -AROVAk
in=ii
raurrato Ann Ptrixiisnau .
• - 31e , *- 3. WEYAND. -
TETtlitS—use DoLLsv. and FIFTY Csurs,yur
ettaitiiia, in envascs; dtherwise Two DOLLARS
m be charged. No piper discontinued, wit 1
arrearages.are settled, except at the option
r the Editors.
Advertinments inserted at Mb rate of 50 cts.
cr square, of fifteen lines for obi insertion
subsequent insertion 26 cents. A. liberal
i,lceunt made to Yestriy advertisers.
;"?-Letters and communication; by mail,
5!)all have pro - mnt, attention.
, IT Is lOL/0 ME I DIE
,
?,f,. diehard' Langhorne, a lawyer, was unjustly
'...z.mi.lemtied and put to death as a traitor, in the
I r ei iiiii of Charles IL Just before his eiecntion
he ...rote the following exquisite and reltiarlfit
-1,1: poem.j In tlie L language of the Quarterly
feview, ";. A poem it must be . called,, though it
• i; not in verse. Perhaps-there is not in this or
and (Aber' langungS, a peein which appears to
have 'flowed so entirely from the heart." .
1
' ....
".'
it is told me.,l must die :
- 'r - 0, happy news!
I .lle glad, 0 my soul,
- - .- ! id -- lice irr.lesua, the Saviour!
Aw.ll repot.
. .
cif he intended thy perdition,
Would he h;ave laid down his life for thee?
Would. he have called,thee with so mach love,
And illiimiOted thee with the light of the Spirit!
i iWould he have giyo thee, his cross,
,And Ten line shoulders to
l bear' it, with pa
' ti nee ?
t .
1 ..
1 It is told me I must die:
I 0, happy news!:. ' :
i Coale on, my dearest soul !
Behold, thy Jesus calls ` thee !
Ileprayed for thee upon` his cross;
There he exttinded his arMsto..receive-thee ;
There he boWed down his lleati f to kiss thee ; •..
There he opened ids heart to give thee entrance;
There he gave up his life to purchase' life ,fOr
1 1 thee. _ 1 . Jr, -
._..,
It is' told me I to
-,,.----- . .0; what happi
I ant going
. _.
To the place of rayl
: To the land of the 1
- To the haven of so 'urity ;
To the kingdom of peace ;
To the palace of mpod ; •
To the nuptials 4f he Lamb;.
, To sit - at the table fmy King:
- TO feed on the bread of simile;
- To see what no eye - hath'seen;
• To hear what no ear hath heard ;
T 3 CU3Oy what the heart of inert cannot Com.
prehend,
- ct 4.7 -• ;
o;l;llurimes . i. tst rattier 3 -
Bare pity on the most wretched of rail thy
children! . • •
I was lost, but by thy mercy found ;
I 1C.1.9 dead, but by thy grace am`- now raised
again ;
1 was gene astray after,.
vanity,
• •
• But lam now ready to appear befoye thee ,
0, my father! :
Come now, in inere,Y, and reeeiv,e thy Child !
...Give him Shy • of peace ;
• ttemit unto him all his sins ;
' Clotlie him with thy nuptial robe ;
I.'crtait him t have a place at thy feast
bind forgive all those who are guilty of his de a th.
THE LAND FEVER.
The following paritgraPh from the Phibidet.:
lila Enquirer, gives 'some, striking illustrations
of the prevailing / fever. To prudent teen, it is
sufficient to note`Oaese. facts. There raver was
I A land sieenlation, in this country yet, which
irli.l 'not result disastrously. , So solid ,is the
1'
tprosperity of the country now, that 'this may be
dess so i but that there is ' l to be reaction cannot
be denied . 1
This` fever prevails to a, far greatet extent
than most persons imagml. We-have hearofof
' several counties in the -interior of the State, in
'llvhich from one hundred thousand to three hem
• 1 dred thousand - dollars 1 hr l ive been raised . by
!agent's and others, and sent westward, tor the
purchase of lands. In Some - . cases, old farmers
- hae 'gathered their families, sold their proPerty
and directed their footatelqr to Ilinnesota, de era,
lianas or Nebraska, under a belief that they .
woultl speedily secure a large fortune.ln
others`, farms. and - other property hav4 betn
mortgaged, and Abe money raised, in this way
has been invested in land wanants; 'and !ivitli a
1 , •
unnlar. -
expectation. , , • • '.:
'
The reader may well imagine the evil results
~....
of this.wild and speculative' spirit. AlreadY,
Ibitter fruits hive been realized in 'various in-
S .Etances The wholething may be regarded as
Irn lottery, in which the chances of receiving la
!rile are as one to a thousand; The New
' , Hampshire Statesman littering us, that-in one 1
of the valley towns in Grafton county,Connec
,
ticut, no less than.s3o,ooq bevel been collected
iNcithin a' single : year, for thepurpase of _invest
\ent in Itiestern lands. The most of it was re
- I .1
pitted by men who did not emigrate, but merely'
41 1 bi•\ speculative purposes: Giber -towns have
,i followed the fatal: example. ./a desire to make
.. 1 I
..1 large gains, Orur other words, to *. make haste
to hecom \ rich;L•has so bewildered some people
I I that no ordinariiresperity is at all satisfastoty
l'lc tu them.. - \\,, ' ~_ ._ . - • - .
Seven DEnAdIY ant.
E 1. Itefusing,to take s newspapei.
, I
Taking newspsper emu not psyinkfor it.
Not - I;avertising.
gettin g marriedidthout fending the Frio
ter-ag6ll dolliz for publishing a notice;
•5: Making - the printing beep &loafing place.
G.
Reading the rusriu.script'ort the compost
: tor's case. - Y .. • ,
'7. Never paying your attbsMiPlionnntil the.
pablishei - goes. to the expense' and`'trouble of
asking for, it.
Iterilliiised ere ` - those Ifa,ti are afraid of.
thooder],...{or they shall hesitatO, about getting
n"trio 1, ett4 'keep awai'frOti pOlitient meeting",
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••• --•—•--- __.„...l,_________.___ _
A , _ man --- TUN .1 1 6INDEXTER, CABS ,, -- v J.,
PI t l i tt l e Florentine story re ' tehe ' l e deliVered the opinion of the Court holding—
me the other day. 'One of our famotas 1 That neither-Ohio nor Kentucky can
American setilptorsi residing in that tie- •
demands!) abrogation of the Constitution
lightful city, whither - all the ' genius of
, and municipal laws Of the other, ara mat-
England and ' "er ' /C 3 ' seems to tend, was ter of comity: m debited and if a puma], eed as a
one day seated in hii'stetAio - at work on tat i
slave in Kentucky, comes into . Ohio by the
Apollo—for which,, by 'the way, be might
stand as a` model hiMself-e-wbett hiit Mien_ 1 direction ot: consent of his i4wtiere, even for
business purpose, the Constitu
tion wait attracted by A treuiendous tramp- ( a temporary
of Ohio operate on the condi.
ling of hams in his court yard. He looked i tion'and law!
tiger of such - person, and effect his immedis
out the window, and beheld.. a magnificent
gate eman c ipation:
wi
• .
carriage, thout. riders, drawn up before i s wh„ „. I
person, held in slatcry by
his door. Presently -a gentleman claimed - the / municipal law of the State in which he'
admission to hie studio, and announced
enine
uneed•etiros, once necomes free by virtue of the I
himself as the Prince di it—.
to give the - sculptor' a large cOmmisebe. little of another country or State, into which
by the
stat u es of the American that she had consent or his-owner, it is
His daughter, who been etruck by some ' lla k aea
see 4notin the p ower of the latter
• ever to reduce
wished to sitto him far her bust. She watt•bine again to - his former 'condition of seat';-
tulle, under any law which this Court can /
then - below en the I carriage. Wtei the
sculptor at leisure 1' i . Price' was itio'object reenniza as " lid- - ' .- . ' I
—all that was necestary 'teas to gr.atify, 3. Hy laws of Kentucky, a perien 1 - vhe 1
hi iis held and treated as a slave , has no cepa- I
_daughter; who was an invelid. l ,
The soglirtereezeireltmed hie willing ness to i cit y Y t / 2 make any contract amatever; and i
b eg i n t h e nor,t kiss/311.i, and the . prinee ,promesery notes :given 6 his master by him-
sureties tun him, iu the purchase
making a sign'' to his lackeys from the esiel i-6e l ' ad
dose they proceetW Ito lift. ti lovely girl , of his freedom, are illegal and void, its to
both principal and Snreties. 1
who seemed about. eigetem r oittof the ear!
*. A I ,
nage, ape 'Aro-her trf Their aims' caref,urlll4 Batexeuncer, .3—Tne ease made in
the pleading and proof is this:
Y • •
up the stairs to the I artist's studio. ,•-• Henry Poindexter, hold as it slat ein Ken
sculptor could not retire:Kele look of-eurprile - ' -
at this curious me l te 1e tee' 0 , 0 ,„,,,i,,,, „ artio. I Ink, executed together with his coAlefend
ultaly as th e lady,
4114 not 130 i the sl ightest ants as sureties, to the plaintiff, ,Anilerson.
who clahned u legal right to hold Lini, thii 1
trace of illness in 1 - .1- countcoancef. 'The
1 promisorzi note sued on in the Common !
Prince interpreted I.tieglenee add replied
to it. , / Plea! of Clermont county, in this State; in I
l'eriily daughter has" been paralyzed - in all Tutelar:aim of which note, and othere. the'
her limes,.! be said; e fur the - last two' i bintiti "gre.elti to e release Poindester 1
mouths It is a sad
ithing. She has had from the slavery, in whieltThe was hell, and
protng to give hi]] his "fice papere" - or
all the medical' aid fit Florence, but tvith- i o ,so Foon asehis uote,and I
o ut m il er. •• i . ,
The seulpter look again at the invalid.
1
other notes givers at the same time and for I
the same consideration should be fully paid.
Nothing more beautiful in face or loins
A I,Before the giving of these notes, Poitidex-;
could have been dreited by Phidies tr, with the know:edge and consent, mil 1
face like Cenci's beforeit-waseloaded with 1
the memory of crime,thaws ofl ri ch, lug- analallmrs 4 the tHeeelitne . of Anderson, I
Aeons, auburn hair, 11 nling ael tir e pile' had iu severel iestances, come into tha 1
, je- IState of Ohio, and after retuaiuitig, a short
face, with deepblue; eyes 4 trim ink
nests a fringe of the silkiest blac lashes. time, in doing the.errands on which lie was
sent, hail valunterify, fbut.probebly in it
Through her delicate ; muslin rebe he'leen- norance of his rights, returned - into Ken.
tour of a divinely moulded form were;•intii- Lucky and resume:his residence with An
•stedi and w h en the I P e n''' 6in " in a c eas t. der-on. After the, giving of the notter,
upon the .sculptor a Iropii glance, F i l ' e Let •
rei as t Poindexter, haltered - aevillile for Moles-son
ta
srlight, 'piereine as ; electric flit.,
ei for wages, awl, theu ). tock up his residence
bia heart,leap with .i mysterious resat , \
P e c °' ; iti Obit..
some indefinable eatuetrophd. - 1
The ease i
She sat. Th„culptor worked at Li 1
Ipodel like cue inspired, and a pang s e t a ruz e k . i milted to the CourCtrial and a judgement
was rendered for thadefendaute. The plain
his heart as the hour for her retiring appealed to the District Court,
The Prince and his lackeys here h$ agalt k i tiff 6 "
down stairs in their arms. The carriage i ants
which also pre judgement for the defend.
And to reverse that judgement this
'door closed on her, the!, her - es swept through iPe ;lion in „ Tot . i, prosmuted., , ' '
the gate. The sculptor did no tope wetek,f Two questions properly arise in this case.
• •
that day. 1 I ,
, `NI
I. It hi COUtVagfifiar,titite,
To-moretiff O g ee's' to eerret awaminageof effe' _ mew , / ..._ ~- .
w e 0 TIOLISAT
!‘ i t i is to be determined by the lex loci townie
he would shudder,•and say to himself;
and that by the laws of Kentucky,
is not love, but pity that I feel. She is a : lan e
1 where the note sued on were .executed, it
- paralytic I" I - . ;/•,L, I was' a validnote.
The next day the :same scene was re- .
1 ,
Now
what,l do no adroit,
grpting, f e 'ot t •e sake of thn argn
peated, with thiselifference, that the P rince meat - mit, hut wh-at On the
having
seen his daughter posed bly the er r-
I. centrary I (hely, that the lox /eq ie to de
fist, excused hilliself 00-the plea of a bu-i
-, n - , vide the validity of this - =note;. how' then
then
.
Less engagement, bay i ng tear he woul d re •I / o d • r
i ota s t he . case . . ,
tern in time to- cuulut his daughter ham U nder the laws of Kentuck • a elm
Poor girl, although tbe,seulptor waso-mod- ,. '
palpable of coatrmt - ng , e can''
el 'of manly beauty e -flibrldeplorable condi. is
a safe - . / hold no preperty. He can acquireino 'gilts. I
•tien was, in tar -tather's opinion; - i IliS ,uatural domestic relations even are eg•
guard a o g th ai e n r s li t is ti e u nay ; l e t a h n e ti d c e i
p e!e t e e r a s . wh u i , : .. li -- iu ti t e t Doti. He has not a tight to the child be
has il begotten, to nurture it, nor to the wife
the room, and drove away iu his carriage. as chosen and cherished, to protect her.
A silence ensued- 'Tilte, iv e o c r u k l ea pto a r w d a a y re o d n not
, le ccor o og to the theory of those taws, the
look at his model. lint sTaVehelongs to the master as property, and
clay image withon 4 1 ritisine his eyes. still dese•ends to his heirs as real 'estate.. No
a silence. Then it stemmed as if a slight / co ntr act can inereane the liabilities of the
rustlo had filled the Venus A small white one or the porer f the ether. A eon.'
hand stele acres. id- 'mouth, mini a hUrnitigl
1 tra ct nt of emautipati impart to, the slave'
, kiss was printed lon his forehead. With
I
no legal right- null im
poses ons4he toaster
almost a shrink he leaped to his feet, an d no legal obligation.l ' • simply
, . LI:. ougatory
.
there, with bludie.sl crimsoning her pale! e d void ,h
time of the slavto pay
cheeke and alableier, neck, kuelte the P ara * rin n oneyin co - us - i e de P ra ion of such a con eat
.lytie,girl, kith her n'eautiful eyes inildoting Os aull. Being nul when made, no subse
--, ;
pardon. - f _ -
ale iaid, rque l qact of eruane pation on thepart of the
u I saw you a long time ago , ". maiteleecan impart to ii any new force. It
(an Italian women, ; when she oVes lit ir i ; l , t,hup results lotically from the theory of the
no half measure,) '1 and I laved you . 1 sieve code of Kentucky, that the note which
father was very strict with tue.; I : rt fer r ' ‘ a va ld e i the plaintiff , now seeks to entered here was
not move without hang, Witched. '
see
Lou liovalid there, And mareover, by chapter
1 impossible for Me to ru •ee - ytlu orl 93e ankle 9, of the revised Statutes of that
I feigned paraiyAL ' For two months I and which seems to be still in force,
l have scarcely moved. In his' pity tor mil c ' ioil ta a tc o ' c i pat i ou,
tionditien my. father relaxed bus surveilance I
1
of my thotious. . lit gratified every wish; except by ' deed,- or last will
, a d . testament, executed in -tionfurinity to
1 I its provisions . , is prohibited. So that,under
and, as an Mealid, I •eXeittel n°' su s ii P i h e a l° v n e I thelegislation of Kentucky, Poinflexter has
iby desiring le bee,bme youirsitter. never yet been legally , emancipated and
I som that I lore yllt. , If you do not ieturn 1
thereby rendered competent to contract
my love, I can only - die." , _ ,
9 Wr .- 2. tont, were it otherwise, could this note
IWhat answer grad; the American. e
I need . not inquire .
d on e found nothing i ly, when 'the Prince be cameo?, by 'judicial procedure in Ohio:
di B rotur
Ity ehe laws of nature, ail persons are free.
-- ne ' - nn
model
of_hi4 paralytic'' No !Inman being is bore, or can be born, a
the studio but t icla y slave.The laws by a stretch ' of courtesy
daughter. Th on ginal l was nowhere to be I
is a small 1 se enlled, of particular countries or States,
found. A few days afcbrwards,
•may subject certain pereions te.be held and
town of France,l - :he Florentine princes's
treated as the mere transferrable inetrutitents
stink her nobility in the name of an Amer-
of other persons. aud this - sub' t' h' h
, ) re ton,w ic
ican sculptor. l' i ' '
..... i. _ , cOnstitutes slavery, originating in force and
41, ed tt-hold by local laws which adept
lIMEM
st die:
ess
refit;
*ving ;
A MODEL WIRE.
p~
ter The Cleieland Herald, in noticing
the - passage through that eitv, hn their way
West, of a Mr.illasrserd, with- his wife and
fifteen dii/dreel says they were noted as
the finest ard , toatest looking specimens of
"movers" evei seen; They were from
Eltnira,'New work. The Herald adds :
" In appearance the flintily were a' rare in-
Stance of healtli,intelligenee and
The 313eet 'child was Seventeen years
and the yOungest was".at the breast ;
the motheri had; s look.of cheerfulness an.t
bodity, vigor that'vaany of our, city dames
of half heriyeasti might envy."
WOMBIeB .NOTE . ft.—The Superior Court
of New Finkhas decided, in full bench,
that th e' note -ofl band of a married woman,
lio'weiter-wealthy she may be, is utterly
valuelesS,!unlesi her husband is able and
willing to pay lit. In the case before tiro
COWS, the iwoutati, was sued for tbe value
of a notee4 6500, given for i board and lent
may g, decision of the. Court below
was reversal, and it ,was ruled that the wife
could not bite; WitueSs l againet her husband
So that alt notes of married women aro
Worthless, O4usift !' norms of invitation:"
- -1
~p- . .E4ygit..,: - ,.13A1 . ,.. w
1111
sTritRILE COURT OP OHIO.
frond,. and up:. . oy it, , AC.. Mtn
or sitnetion tho original wrong, may attach.
imniediately . after birth, as 'the effect bf
positive law tn derogation of natural right.
Bei, atilt it, remains true,Ahat the absolute
arc equal freedom of all persons at birth, is I,
a ftindintarprinciplil A American •ineti-1
tntiins, proclaimed with independenee, and
incapable of abrogation. This 'principle
was, by , the ordinance , of 1787, impressed
on the Soil of Ohio, before there was an or
i gat ized community *itbin her' limits; it is
fundamental in her, organisation; always
I embodied in her constitution: and her laws,
ha policy, and the convictions, the morals,
'and the religion of her people, are instinct
with its spirit. •'• 4
The moment any person comes within the
writorial limits of Ohio, his personal rights
are' ascertained - and;determined by the eon
stitution'siad laws of Ohio. 1 There is -no
eiCeption to this rule, save in the case of a
person who, being held' to service in .anoth
er State, escapes into tbi.. 14 such a case,
the cOnstitntion of the United States de
clare that the,frigitive' "shall he delivered
i , - •
up on claim of 4;kt-tarty to whom such ser
vice br labor may be due. i,. i'':-.. '...
r -.in the-ease now beforWihis ' . o,out, there
was, no escape ft•citn,,,,tic
,y ,th , hick,
l'i,oinde!r.ter esuMiato ~
, ",•„ott; several on,
easioni, with'tbeYe44l,lo, At by the 'order
of the plaintiff:
~...80...- p " 41r.' ji!ellwas be.
yond the reach of e t l*; ,-, law which had
enstaved him, anti 11!it to, no claianl :as a
re
till
Ingi`tive servant. .1 •c o
„. hg. .he be`ciitMe
entitle& to the ' f l ir t' !fit 'of the '6...vies's
prohibition of Slat'aerfifoiiiir - fitaie - ebri s rt.
cation. To all'inteonflitid- poripestit whett;
soever, he was ficei !Iffil*dirtlotiand strictri
was that of g fritetnank htslnvisteril by asn
seating to his , coinin4ilyrdat be heist , to have
consented to ,ais !free,' , -
i , , 4 which,',;tatiether
he consented orinettt; ' estaiblishorl ;by
law . And being initss..free,,-164rever, he
might go or be taken ukt,notagahrbe
enslaved by any ~..tw .0! -this dam can
recognize as vallil. ', ? ' .:, .;44---.;" 4 , ' ~'
If a portion held us - e ului:beltivng'bt
# 4,
or sent. into Ohio' for /Mar
.4 ,44011 r e,
taio his rAtus-as a s ave , the' the same
j i ,
-1-, ' , ,
thing muy be done t ko a , du a ,week,, a
;
month, l a year, a lifittitnei'datidhuS this, ,- a . ; . ,,
in
stitution, the sliameiaLskur e6ti trY, land the
opprobium of Clirjs,fettcloui,bo vivally .c.s
.e.e
1 tublis li ed on a soil sotiearlyce o fte n, and so
( 'solemnly devoted!to alrsolute 1 d
out . •
From the declaration of ~ ode endence
until very renentl, it was.. never
. uestiOa-.
l ?r
e4"tnat, in the I) itej.lStatlaei peasoraonee
legully free is always:, free. ne!sloctrine
his been' I regardodl'as a part f '.;toterie. l an
'efininton law. Ciitirtt, have cliff , rlsl arr i to
facts; which consiiture a; itl4 to ,freedinn,
tout have almost tritk one mind, c l oncprred
in the doctrine that; "riU.Man Owe 'free, can
!
he agaiu onslavol its.eepi.fo - -cr not.' In my
—r
jo.lgmentand such 1 Mole standro e , -
the jtidgmcoial,olef l imo. hr: ;he ti'.; India
bers of this court7V4indeiter haviug'come
into a free state OtLergise than 1 tiy escape
ta..:l I free ; and hiving thug become free,
coul.l not again beleduceallt slaverj'---
Anil this opinion lgoverlis tile etisiou -at a
majority of the Ci;lutt.,; because if free, the
note gtveu to constderatton ~ f e uanCipaiien
. , ; ,
was without coultderatme at II therehre
void .;, 1 , - •
t
flirt it is slid ttiat: the uotelwas: at least
given ; id considerittionl of a I compromise
and release of a dd i utilful ch i tin], mid there
fore is valid. Notip; tire promise was
Made, by PoindaltoF while under' , durea,
tint areugfull dureis, in-; eonideration of
TlelcaSe from that tt'surpcd;lldo tini4n, and
therefore imposes ti,J valid;dhli , ation either
iu murals or in lac". ' 1 la:l n as ns on . Con.
tracts, 319; Maysl vs Cincivati, it O. 8 !
It., 2 6 3. r , . ,
1 We are aware l u iat in Kentucky ichasi,
been decided that ' ipersool'he‘d asp a h!ave I
;
in, that State, who" !imp havizi heen taken, for i
a tempOrary port o f in o a Free Statti, 1
i
and brought orsoulTng ba Ar. again, is not
.therehe__ py, ir; u ',.111*- higi i's' . ernan i . lA'
_to,
and it is urged tillat int: toe al sc.,
of inter.)
national acid iuteritate no it requires us I
to recognize and enforce this rule. The
lear and sufficient answer to
,this elahn is,
that Comity is not al matten i to he demand- 1 . , •
ed as a right, else t,vvould cease to be com-1
ity. 'Like courtesy ianong . irtil ivid nal 3, how
far the principle oli ,county shall be le ; rried 1 .
ill coy case or elas , s ,of case, ,i ni . the liis- I
eretion of the Stale ; calnul I n . t ir 1( . 4 , X , 'T- I
rise. : And no State 'of theletv i thzed world I
t hus ev er felt ittelfi bound; td parry the doe-1
tripe of,coreity to the extent o subverting
it. 6 Darn establishol,l I polici. I
1 The policy of Is.:leutucliy i s to l uptiollir the '
Oahu's of inastets4 ;Her ; :clerks upholding
, this Policy, rads it , O recognszolany obliga.
i
tido of . comity o , therwiie, to enforce the
, Onto 'ratio' of fro stn, Collin vs. Auierica,
9, B. Monroe; 5 r, ) . 1 1 i
The fundamenta ;I organic aiol linreinitted
policy of Ohio is ). tustrirai the rights of
rueo;; and her tri unals, gi'vin , just e ff ect
au this policy, l.l 1 t 111 , ..A. ernii Lts , tum:lves
1 - • •
i l
to boknovol by in • plea of con ity, to turn
asidefront the plitin path it prescribes to th e:
support of the ; I k'otuelt'y rule of slatery
This policy of Ohio is hers ,by irtuc of her
it
Own sovereign Ch,nc:. She wil , trust. nev
er perma it to be called in ques ion If she
does she Will denbtless tied sui abb.. orgstis
for the utteranecl tf liar Uttered will, but as
,in hu mble inciii k ber of this C.
Cr consent to Ifeebtiae the 111 . 0 rum of its
1
surrender:
At , : Asyrrgiik PuitrosicY.--!--The Paris
i •
corrcipondent Of theißoston Atlas furnishes d
,I. 1 t I . .
the following singular deseription of a sin
Lg,iilar! person:l4e, att a recent ball in the Tu-
, - 1 4 , .
illenes': - ' ! ' ' 1
The Duke of Brbuswick was in diamonds!
This ! ,persoti!i4 a Man some sixty_ years•old;
but, by dint of false teeth, painting, false
hair, ! steel corsets nd cosmetics, he looks as
!, ! piough he might p 4 a thOusand , yearB old1;, 1
It o
you look in vain; for marks of any agl—he
! has effaced them kand i he 'appears as tf
AMight
,have -been `a ! eoti t emporary of
bet, or a contemporary. of NapMtion. ! At
the Tuillerks hall he wore a wig which
y
was ten times. darker in color than lamp- I
black' or cbcity ;i a green frock at, so coy : .
! , . , gold' . ~,
creel .witu niuroinery , { that no' , oue I
!could have''guessed:. of whit eolor it. \Vit.: ,
red:t! 1 _ , 'CI t I d , 11 .,„ . ~ ,• ,
,•
pan a itoil CI % . r,!, ~. I Ltil 14. , . c01r
iII r - -
and tile - famous di aloud ; - aat aud diawoud I
r •
.:,.,
cpaok.tis which kiiiltd, at the great exhibi.
Rion ;• he wore on his breast fourteen orders!
,
tut diaruonda! Illis! shirts coat a -hundicd!
dollars apiec e •• ' . 1 , ! ! ,
.. r I I
Stir e vrenue
Many awkward, la
they Irave. ail beu
knew: notner earJ i
eleir*ust. They
the Beare's ciare,ar
vent and lodgmon'
infant in auger,
ioacti!•you,vent hie
tieer,the °halm,
within reach'. Stri
the time he'l wears
come' a little bull,
le for fight as oak
had been taken to
hfothers' i reme
oi:d the ahildiel
*
fIiAY
'FripmlMyt
reins, anli-awi
deer , was ti \ sl
just abed'
his'
wy der
Or atee ! „lst
hil: - 1 tiles'
had tigelltrip
baleirtee, turl
e
side, bOttit '
'late j . a swift:
ibeTinsbe4 at,
- . elleas;',t4 . at e
fimnd myself
titC. puilt tnt,
40eti , ::i . ir4o!,
at'S iidiltiltil .
ttiOn••orsttipid
IlOn - ids fiee. ! ,
ted the. pulp,
we 'Went,' li,k
sii oi, fly in i , i
'. ik
I ,M ypu ma
I l frOtu aide, • n
subsiding, I
overhead in .t
and.' with snia
1" - sleev Cs and
'{brows becam
nod my face I
1 brit h• ; .i.iut,lit.
a beard sudde
lowed 'by, the
1 WII H ' : gat herin
.•• :`,1 . • z••• , , fr , _••;
,hrt jf n:7l ~• !:," •lii4-
:+ing ;mother" ivert urn as We, dedeendvd the
slope below t e house, brit on reaching the
level of the loohio, l I fo e und no, difficulty
,
in keeping' m balance, and bonen to enjoy
.
the exercise. IMy deer struck out, passed
the Otheis, rid soon I ;was alone on the
track. In the gray Arctic twilight, gli
ding noislessly and swiftly over the snow,
with. the lowlliuts of Minenioniska dimly
seen, in the ilstanee befe're rue,-1 bad my
first [e exp !twice of Lapland traveling.
It wa deligh fully novel' mad eXhileritiag;
I 'thought o g'Afrage i " ,and the on
"Kulnasati y reindeer," and ~ Brant's 1
"Arctic Love ," and ;whatever else there is;
of Paler plitry; and ur,ged my' deer. with
shouts, and ever once looke4 { behind mei
until Iliad e imbed the Opposite shore and
reached the linage. My erimpanions were
then - nowhe ,' to be seen.; I. waited-some
rime before „they arrived; Ih-tasted's deer
having becon 4 ,fractions und• run hack with
him to the--10 use.. His crinisfinface shone
out from its • kite: fraimi:of icy ,be'
`ls I
shouted : to in , i ,‘!_Thpre is;trothing equal to;
thisexceptrii ing behind a righ,whale when'
i r0u dg411 .... 4 4 ° ' j l 4 . 7 ii a l l ih w e 4 spili C Trfl al yi A rlg tzi ov il er . •
We novel rhea "-.2_ , 1 L . j
village, t flyin„ l aroun many sharp corperri,
nut this Ifo rid co pari;tively easy. work.
But for the &atm I hadltaken in, which
nips began t. melt, got on finely, in spite
of the fallin lflukes, which . beat in ,Oar 'fa
c'ss '' Von 3Uch in his journey through
1 1 ,ii‘plarild in I 307,
..speaks of- Mnioniska as
I 'avillfage w th an t n, 'where they have Sil
ver spoons." ,We storped at a house which
M. Wolley .rated ;as the, very beading,
but it prote to •be tuore i recent structure
on the site ,I the old in s . The . people
lociked at I = ^us with curiosity on bearing
we Were Am ricians. They knew the name
of America , , a did not' seem to know ex-,
nary , whore i t was. ' 1 ' '
On leavinl the house, w bad to descend.,
the steep ba ,it of tho river I put out my
feet to stead the,pulk, an', thereby plowed
a cataract o fine' su w • into my pee icom
pletely blip ing me.' The;lpulk gyve is fly
i
ing kap fro' i' the , steel ip.teh, flung me,
oat, and the deer, eager t, . Lanka fer home
dragged me by the !arms ' di ali3ut twenty
yards before I, could arrest' , inn,‘"l'his was
the worst ri seri3rall, iiii, far'from pleas.
anti' iilthou r ,h' the temprature:. was only,
zero. Ireolteci l llinue a ga in without fur
ther mishap fin i shed exec 'd, soaked with
melted snow, anO• confide' t (limy ability
ti
to •drive reindeer• with al the more p4c
.
ace: I 1 , 1
--
ME
not: tl.at tbere ate so
igainly men in society—
) trained by women ; who
d for the holy nature of
ave been Made bitter to
d that bitteries‘ will find
somewhere. Strike the
•••
tnd he will, if he cannot
,Passion by bekting Iho
)1. any - , inanimate 1 thing'
to hint repeatedlji,aud by
aboas,:he will 'have be
with
as
that
.douto ,- -
rally if especial pains
ash him.the art of box
' •
that yonir manners
ill
.
185
_4 ,
,_.. :: id .
L.Tltg irraoTo itAcapharir..
, .. i l 1 .
budge -C. • from . Lapland . : * TIM hero of. the-folibwing't rilling-story'
i_ i ; •
A t. , : i04 1 4,V er , hiat i l il ie
was ' embodied in tine person a st,cout
;led Cite signal tt =start. litY i . ) l ll 4 B ' n ,V l l .I ,Yeo . 41:* dmtehh),:biaokstnith,
rang, ' '-wift iditnill, who bad but hie Meet framir-.'hattieth 4 . with oily"
bnrus;,Ludwig., het, off -,first ; throbbed , with as generoui'arCimptilse of
i
' stt.ili gleaii, dt shed around & e l4 m
ah 'i ve iV e
at n ihi ;bolotit of ial64. °lkui ci wa de di l li t Ve Fa yette or around the he or mad Ant o r
to catch ,lhe, ineath which
~ ..( 1 .,Pat,...i1tL4Pa1 t ice..R..411.% y, i
ptitir m - Li. was' swaying trosiae to . T to rail tide of the qiiireet 'that a
over the' tow: ' It; ' was Ito follower of ihttAmerican cam who had
.reseatinart .of the, cataatro. I least shouldered, ti , cart-whiP in 'his country"*
ors my mind, biit'l 4:1,5 pow. service ) , was dragging, a baggage ;wagon-',
, lit. In another i eeon d.j.. from the , t9eid-.ofb r ittre;;while,. ispre short
ollinginalthe le om snow, with' distenee behind, a biali of Continals were
'm upward hiside' me. ' , The I Peadwillklivfxrdrr with,a-body.ef Britialtin
. 'attaelted - 1to:Iq arla.)!was parson.. !- •1,, , . . r ... ,‘, 1 : 1 ...;. z. :
iNiekiti4 l '.7i•itYiiir = extitieS= :,..,-..3.Thejsragori. ' alit at , a onrrow,point of.
surprtse'(bnt nn syinpathi) the bylidleatlingtiljlail3erithiwherc4l4
,got up, shookmYself, de,- high banks of reekaand.erig i l, ; :•arising off
and „cialitnenced again Off! eithei side afforded just apacejsuffteient for
the wind' , down 'the hill, the 1 the passage of the baggage wagons, - aild not.
my Cabe 'mai blind:DA me:— au inch mere. -
si t l r The d l 4'l l tr u htrl i w ea i P ri s d. beQuuLdeuilgy ! sto i ll l t ia m e u ) 3 re c s u l i s a e r re-Ifiresteti by the si l o of ~,,
roan, apparently sonic forty
ouud myself off the road deeplyearslof age 'extended at, ihelont of a trea t
e sno baked ant blinded, lot thr 'very opting; Of; the p i tiss. Ile was
lo r
1 en is in, my peeketl I clad in the coarse attire of a Oniechanie.—
iesoin. Mt' beard add eye. His emit had been -flung Tide, and bis.l
.e n g s: n an tti t, y tie,* lb , it f e r , osine ll i d t_sl e snaeosw ;li ar shi m r: s h l:e i v a e y s
(~ .rx o t l :n e d ,d e u pl ,
b fr n on th , e h o 'is
1. .
f m ts a i s t z hi lar.
loking ba t ek, I-saw as white I.Tiflo l ii his grasp, while the blood "poured,
ray emerge l front a drift, fol- i in, a toraecti frem---hisT right leg-which
st h o j i m it s li til e f dt ti o p f a ' f ß re 've h i st i, thwi t ride was broken at the knee by ti_ anon
. 611,1 ,
1 The wagonorrii Sympithies were' arrea,
1 tail by the sight., lie (would have paused
in , I the very, jitistanel . -- ttf his flighy : and
piretal, thei . w'rernded" ...blaekspith in his 1
wagon, bittdhe stout-,.hearted man reful
sail ' 7 1
, ini-nq go in your - wagon'.' said he, in 1
his rough way, '.but I'll tell you -what I
will do. . Doou see yonder cherry tree an
:the top of th at rock that hangs over the
road? Do you think you tea lift a . man I
of my build up . there?, For
,y - 141 . see neigh= 1
bar," he columned, while
.the, blood , now ,
el down his ,wound, "I never meddled
with the'Britishers until they came tram;;-'
litig over the valley and d fly hells°
do n. And now I am .all riddled to!
pieces, .and hain't gat more than. fifteen
in
minutes in'e ; tut Fie got' three balls 1
in my eatridge-box,,:arl. so just prep me I
up agaiest,that tree, atll'il give the whole!
threeahots and then," exclaimed the . blaek- 1
smith; "I'll die." - •z - ' 1
The wagoner ,started his hoises ahead,,
and then with a sudden effort dragged , thel
wounded along the sod to the foot err
the tree.' His face was tdwaidS the,aidian-i
eing troopers, and while I bis shattered - leg
hung over the bank, the'otagener , rush
edl on hie,w4, when the . f:doraned black
isniith proceeded coollyto load his . ritle. )
It was not long before a ',body of Aineri- ,
I with a shOnt,inh" - AAA'tid io!ner: 1
1 hi's ' shoulder 'he '' picked tll
• , • foremost
frOm his spirited
„steed, with h exeldrua.
Lion--I1 I '
~ -_ ' i '
, ,
"Tbat's for Gen. Washingto-
In a moment the rifle was - rt
I I
again it 'was , fi red, and the p o
ish - rOde : over another of thei
ir. "That's kW myaelf,"" Cried the black
-1 stnith„and then, with a hand, s tronglwjth
the feeling of approaching d'e• tb, again
loaded, raised his rifle—fired hi last shot,
land another soldier kissed the sod lil A
, tear quivered in the evn ofthe 'd ingblack
(smith. , • ;
I .• • l j;
, ''And tha t " be said, with a tisky.voiee
,I
which strength e ned almost into clout, "is _
for mad Anthony. WaYurl I 1 '!' '
Long after tho battle of .Ithe Draudy
wine was , past,,lbe body was; tdireoiered
against the tree, with . the ftares'fro
zen in death, smiling . grimly, 'while' his
Tight .hand still grasped the ne v er tailing
et!
'rifle. , ' • 1 :\l r , ..
1' AtOthus died 'one, of the the, sand brave
me6lll;6lc heroes of the ReVeluti On; brave in
the hclor of battle, Undauntedl i n the ;hour
of retreat ; and Jlundidmayed in he moment
of deatb... - , , , • ' '
;
s.—A eorrospo
ourn
I writes
i
ai, writ
IT
the sth :_I 1
is i, a great ph
ile annals of tra
run with mere
, The great ein
general opetiin
la, and the , filli
d bitsiness be
elii of the I f
ern ereial s i tfe
Pith! Dods.;l
thin the boun 1
: tO [tote that
Louis than
bpttter; an . ,trw
nisville, with
I t , u:tli r tlA s
.411 lour or a,
; wr,:, ,-.... ,- ,aLial l
m
, 1
some idea of
le iolnach." I I
• h 1
Si , Lou
1.
ianapo)isl..
, t:,:.,.Li.sotti..i. Lo 5,1,,0,
1 ever, in , t 1
ecu soe4e
eseTiptien
'as, and th ,
I,id,Nebra/3
,
has lineteas.
. The! iyhohi
ond.H'.aild I
1
blockaded I I
be il l nfely w
truth 'were
(lone in . 8 ,1
Cincinnati
tirrow in
ci ti
tat',; '6'ol
Elio ipa='c
.thorn to fo
business do
i 'I
i rimorsays.-1. the recent-par
elections is .E.gland, the wo
o have been u usually active.
Ituasell contributed much to
i
c
.'sic! -el' tion, by visiting .the
ling b oot hs with her smiles and
,-, ong' t (I: eledtort. Lady Mil
is helie, ed'eo hive carried the
hirihusband Or' Maidstotte.;—.
t
exactly ciarass for him,\ but
the 'alecti4n `sh wa 4 constantly,
; t the town; e also was most
, e nomination nd during the
le,i ,,
.
a. the 010 unable to res 7
,anY'.,loitger a e throw up tho
her'`hotel, and addressed the
t • ,
week; winch e erybody agreed
thadihe r hashand's, delivered
tiiiiiw ds • trout tho same
. .
i
1.,
LADV p
liainentary,
rneu semm:
14tly, Joh
her Ibusban
different po
conitesies a
fred Elope
election' of
She' did, n
all tkrotigh
driving nbo
active at i
pviiiag ; I a ,
train bagel'
window of I
utoiriin a s
TrAs [instal
immediate
placc,
IMII
I
A BAUTITUL SIGTIT.---Dul
severe Weatber r , the birds ba(1.1 ( 1
obtain"' food +for subsistenee. , (
the residence of Lion. Win. S
sorkin .i this Village, On Mondai
. ay, morning last, we aim me i '
hundred bircs; of ull species
'robin - lin_the wren, Which had 1
`table spread before them-in ti
Millet and other (en them) deli
season.'- It was really ,a' lam
beautifd sight ! They looked i
young turkeys, sucks and chic
Sion
the hospitality
1
Sion, and (then would fly , fre
1 , , , , - (
bra - ecb 'in the thick. ,shrubb
sit:4h* . aid chirping - as thoui'
organ-g.rind4r, to spay for the ,i
past : which,_bad been rsctvcd e
They , have fouudog,nod- quartet
numbers 'seem to be( idcreasink
,by instinct. They will be car.
bany (lir, .I'.)
,Papei. •
1 i .
• dent of Ale In
as follo6 fro
ace at - this time.
e, has this city
andiso of every ,
,gration to' Ran- ,
og of that State
fond ,
up of lowa,{.
precedent.-
, vee, Firit, Sec
ts - are literally
elieve i:• should
s of reason and
pore business is
til Chicago and,
ver' e I to`slightly
tbe two latter
ill [be safe. I
,L;.: I:irius within
.
1 . :111, , en,ugh m
the amount, of
• t' -.'
44eorge . Hudsbn whom
•
1847 i ,christened Abe " Rail
and, who, it is 'said, owei4.ll
been re-elected, a . member o
for §underland—thlis jetting t
defiance, for, according to law,i
.not to arrest for, debt
Jerrold has written a savage ai
subject, in which ho declar
e
House of Commons is thus mai)
refoge or the knave, the trick
charlatan, and urges 'aseforni
'
members of Parliament on the
as honest men. • j.
extutpoktes - lo
cowards,- draws ant the ,facn
'wino and iigenibus . and makes
dustrio . us. ' M ach y be;paiel
adsoratty4 iint'tho worst of it
friendi. • : • --- • '
. : -sRE
~~,:' ;II~P, I~td~~~OBQAPI2dTYQR
MEI
1
;The-peculiarities which ‘- Uoasiittlie - MU
animal of " strperiar Order,"TireTgdod :ors,';
ganizhtinn, good bmiea, 'firnicular iseriesi, l l
itarg circulation and lgood ; temperamrt. -, '
a :
he inper,,trient of mats: la shoal; Iv ,
th ii - Colnt: '-i'An animal of - "difierenEcoloinl
ip
always possesses 'super - 104y; of, tempera-'I
Mt a r::" Aniin'Ulebariag . tbe tptalitieinbovd 1
en erateditidtirit of a very •I high 15W Of 1
pe r fection r ii respect
,to their aitf,:- for", :
g vithltiertitttidti.- - ,--- '';'' • '' I • .. - - i t
, - l'e ofttin 'hear of_ arilutitis'-:Whieb • are` \
"'oyei - fed?'l . - It is a teiti Which! is 'fie ,
qut' rii ed`i •(i • twen f ' ' 'l
- s •rt isparage t (r..!_anttr.a_ii
wlitUlkareYeoly of. the firstAinsl:, ' ' 'l'
Orter , feediiilii;feedilig lar l exeess, Wilthi
orit;rogard ;to the nirktyarid4ltins;.or .
Ilsill
al:11164,1, It yravints.kewth and :indtreeli
ilia 4ie:" Tkellitd••;areilits pf - OinfersetgniV
iler - b!iirateViiiiitreer4woWogimidof? - 1
;4pgt'teedifie .--2 -Ttiri , axe :rabie;ediiiipiiiiiill.
flu, over-fed th a n I l arge ones.l::' ~ •: . s' - ii,l l .
•-• , is 1;
• :
' - ..f the food, that is given td an+ ainunatin
I siii NI to his nature, and in qdantity ; Otis-,
fiesLhis wints,it il - eipee.ter3; of contise s tbat r
:
['sue an animal will be
i ;more'healthy,:ana•
'twill grow fastq and larger than ;he would I
lif le were - otherwise fed. It is doubtful i(1
lii, can be 'shownthat it is disehsed Or irreg
uhirly feei --- i . ~ .;
.;_,
_--
1 , ' Forbeef _and
_pork, that animal is to .
r h, sea, as, the-most ratted). 4 Which admits
t
of Isi mirst rapid, growth-. 1•• ' ' '
, , ; .- . 1 ..-
1 1 Itlegf , 'io
,*r-Vations r dm led 'to matte, as ,
~t , ppearS'iiiiliklhose • who. ateAppointeckas
Jo(gels Torit'il'redlog the premiums at some
four 'i
ogrteultural eihibitional are required' i
1 ?
to ice the reasons, which; influeiwill theirs
deeision, that all -ruay ',understand- .4.lre '
hi
grdtinds upon which the - award, is trader—. ;
These the committee cannot k niye with with •
intelligence br acCuracy; -unless • they aro
thoroughly posted in thdt-besiness. :They
m
indst be well acqoainted,t not ereW With
the organization, benes,- musele, i neive,Air.!
l 'cul l atiou, (teg of the diffeien t l 'animals I fire
sented-for examination, but 1:M •of.the-tok.,
iier;ament of.ealf and ,its effect upon-Abii-,'
general system ' of the 'animat 1
1 ;This is not.generally ,riwie'r tood ,and can;
belearned only by careful study and-patient,.;
inquiry.- -phi() Farrndr. I:1 ----,- ------,
1 i THE CB
' ; I '
OPS
i. 1 ,
I Coming
,from illtars,the the-other day, 'in-'
111 - , day time—haying gone*iwri without
in' Jr light on - the' subject. fither , than re ,
;•
cent paragraphs, oar own •among,'tliern,
nail Cnieagb quotations; we Were glad to se?
hers land • there, 'fields of glorisusly green ;7
ytheat,2,- and to hear. some of I farmers say '
that ; below Springfield it •coald. hardly:l ; lAl
be hr., and that good weather was no* the
piy requirement for a; free? crop, ' Abare ;
ritigfield inch fields are are more likejaial _I
gel's visits,than'is desirable. I Yet ? With a
korai season hare for spring grain, which of
ottraeors.beare._'tirere is less fear that buck,- 'lr
in, too, It --equently.Bloyinttgauk k. ! ---; '
7ynies.' •,: : ' i . ,I. ' • : '
I WIts.AT.--.4,tile there ` is I a failarc_ of
the wheat evil) . generally this 'year,' it
having been destroyed ;lry:the
i -seventy of
Idm winter, _ t ere are ytt some ; peces pr. ,.
;:.
Ifit . rlds that are 1 °king finely. Junes Sap
"pergton; FA , of this county, has 5111 acres
i loakingswell, aed_giyiog promise of a good 1
crop. Ifiri groend' was well rolled with
1 the roller, after being sows and harrowed.
I
to the rolling he intrribetea the 'preserve.
I - tion of his wheat.— Windhester (Ill) (Aron-
ice: , ' '
' I The • Cambridge (Dorchester cern:ay ' ,
41.) . Democrat, states that ,the
, 'recent
'vans have had a ; wonderful .effect upon
the crops of wheat in that county; and
betwitlistanding the: :general coniplaints of
its injury by the seyeriwjnter, -thatsjears
nal' would - not be aurpred,,, if large crops
'should , be ~ made. ' The;• far in ers arc
busy, throughout' the? county,- planting
corn. tr; • • - ~ 1 ;
1 IWe aolavorited with a tobacco plinterirOM
Henry - county yesterday. He informs of
that Sine thit late
_rains the plants have
come out finely,,and l Ithat he
,will have
More than IM can _ nsg. This was pretty
e
much the sain, - caso. with other plaritos in
~i s v i c i n ity 1 1 , • 1
this . t , .-` •
' A . gentleman'who visited Breirnsbore,j
5}
esterdayoold us that he was surprised at-
t e fields of wheat and grass. c Since the'
i
i te n
e t b oi e 4 y
we b li a t e e r r sr ,b un a g t ,
h u e p
i a s s c i a f u l f :s d : fe m , ii: t gi .h
a ci i
'• hey are of course backward, owing to the
; I the season is ayorahlo-from this ont. im-,
; ense cropa; will be made.—Louisellid
}
071197Ltc 7
. .. 1
Ti r. Cuois Iltruovltkia . --We learn from
reliable sources that the crops of wheat and
pther rains al so;
. tobacco, all t hrough: the
I;Green fl .
yer , D . starcts,loek better
and they
'l4.re more promising tklaU they have been
for "years. The'condition• of the grciend.sla
r It ore favorable for abundant crops p than had
been known 'for - spree.; time: ' The • wheat
never isoked - finer, -a n d the impie.4sion is,.
;general that the yield of that staple prod;
rid, not only - in, that district, but through+
aut Kentucky, Will be 'both - --abunditnt and
'df the choicest 'rquality. This is cheering
dews for consumers.—Louisville - - Cour.
,
=MEI
fallen
rag the late
rd trials ta
In passing
duel .Totitt-
Wand ues
e% than two
Akan I the
a bountiful'
ro Y e ntab s o 3 a : ! the
f t
ke so many
eas. They.
I Of tile wan-
61'04: to
1.5(f around,
'li,' like '• t4'
ountifitl rre!
p to - ttwin i ,
,-.40 the 4
i ii . 4flukukh
-A fbi.;7;4-1F
Punch, in
li g,
ay _Kin"
00,000, has
Parliament
a bailiffs at
n bI..L.P. is,
1 , Dauglis
tick on the
, that - the
l i aa house of
ter and the
as ta Om
'ne t footing
1,,
A SEKstaei: ,YtallEft,.—The Sunday Atr
Wt says that: a gentleman. of great
/law. York, ;btu who has never;
Mingle much inlfashimiable society, recenti
lY settled $15,1)00 a year I . oti a daughter
itelu seeking
married to his satisfaction. In
ing uf subject to stfriend the otli.
9F dit.9, be ren4efliza he was to do
the same by his i otber daughters, on one con!,
ilition; that they married' respectable,.up+
right and industrious young men.) Ha did •
not care how poor they were, they were
only of this description, and their charael. - ' .
tete would beer investiation.! Itere is a
proof;that there are some sensible fatherti --
144 though theyihappen to bp wealthy men
' •
dejects
ties of tba
the idle in
in favor of
t it kap no
xr.;.Sigipson 'amp the ladies do not set
pn-oepa for the gentlemen LA', more; they
,
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I 1
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1 1
1
=II
MEN
EMI
' .1 . -
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INE
7. , s
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NEM
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