Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, May 18, 1866, Image 1

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r 11,1eit &we
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osier • ethreeeiler itilleteit. The
-Adler; Oardbritqletia, here thee" hirefie
404104 116.1 14'hilltit.Osedek:UtiLati•
eireeeteeterieeleptheeseepeti eel to seine
biFfreeleereeirillibeite Wilhite • •Isweelc
wiatA Airdtelni 0011141i4krwrOp. Derr
Ins Otte salt, iisklii.ll6. idea Sof belt treehlret
abe toad Unites. a rekuee et week
which ezhibit it 'set widow
ow* revile heat. 11614 the filloehes
lisoakial DA
To la, eIF old tieloritabeerer
I Not a olio oit eels* b u e o ettye, mem
War In II Mail 0112 ibiellk
Or peeps Italy et the • door.;
The Isolentemeahtilmterchi Sean
. 7"11110 the toilet old Nowt *leered were -
WM bla olillifonalalLoMVasolasl gamin dir
tin old mks barroorawastaad la
Bold olglAtaninotar. liao~44a;
And load Mreeibtheetripphilips meek I
The white Areegh the elopilkesed :ttabrweys
meek,
Like stenteriamthwite thistrase trying to
With Ph e mid iipmsys they Ihia would
tell,
Of the Joys or woes.thaltworehanee betel
The many who amp In the home to dwell'
Of thersid old men who last moved sway,
tot an male awe thigh.. eirwltnot pay,
As he nsehoood, and reekostod U, o'er and o'orr
'Zo pay Joe maned oslingle ;nom
For • Adler o'er head, Im/A be Jelled ur
bd
, . •
Pros al bongrriso 111.4,14 "rips ft&
AY, What.' plUrallybees td lliy
, To dost biro mere Omar amass sap give r
With Its woes, dearth, sad Utypeitry worth,
' Ithen God bath thenthe who wide myth.
An elegant house for rials4l4
And furnished already, a ihasatiful set •
Of rbmwood and yule*, and plash, with the two
Large Lento reception-Asia cushionod In bine ;
A drawing room carpet, s loa with limn
And bouquets amass bled between;
Blob hangings of namable* able sad gram,
The ducat and clearest satbroilkwy Ines ;
And fawn-colorsd silk. Wawa with °magi
rad bins, •
Not.fadsd a famed, and equal to as
The parlor more plainly but 'mealy we
L furnished with golden and green broestelle ;
An ariary and oenesmatalm
Oi mast 'exotica apes the same
A library with the beet anthem rapist*,
The standard adMone, end abides Mil !Wits;
Tbeworkrofold-masMcndo westr whirr
Of the elegant drawing-roar Osseo, and
which
Were alerted abroad with much Islamic, and
ears
Originals mostly, with ;topple' moil rare;
Ah, that a oradltor'a doe
Should change nab a home treat old hands Into
new
Ab, pillfal too, that a fortune ones wads
Should be soattorod , at one* by -.orlon In
,
trade.
For Salo or to lot, • neat little plan,
Jag twelve toot but, with a garden spans,
Planted with roma and twangy kept,
With - boat lttt s gravd - watts smoothly swept;
With sweetbrior over. t►e doorway Waging,-
And over lb. wieket the °lomat Is clinging;
With windowi elm whent the nutlight fails
Thropigh snowy !bids um snowy walls ;
Through boughs with' manila fancy woof
O'er she low-potted Gothic roof.
•
A widow site la • morning cap,
With a mottling Infant upon her lap;
'Two years ago she was a wife,
With gladdestimpes of tar ovular life;
Whilst he.wbo then stood by her side,
In the-Grin Wang* of mealy pride,
Are one brief year was lowa, bad died.
The little home that was /Pose OMNI
; In her heart's memories, must)re solV d-r
To ply bey needle night and day,
Would not sues* tho oast to pay I
And the i llag of tha wily auctioneer
Mot lost, ea the morning, even here.
To be let at outlook house and lot,
•
Jolt oat of the city, a -quiet spot;
With many improvements ter and near,
Whom bilk and tads were. statute appear r ,
lint the rent Is highland 'as pat - of the way
Pow • ale* or a merchant. who every day k
Most slowly travel a mile or two,
And lose an hoar to his business due ;
fk, he Jost looks in, and pauses It by,
As tie far off, and the mat too b igh.
Poe sale, an stagiest onentry-esat,
With Its garden. and °stammer qomplete ;
therlver bank, Win in gothic stle,
• With blantlibl viewlifor nay a mi le;
And tastallsily liumbbed fw *may part,
• With many an exquisite work of art;
Its owner,poemesor of bibulous wealth,
Would travel abroad for his failing health,
Be ball tolled mid tolled for the prise of gold,
lib Alps amlasise snle wealth untold
Rom the Tropic illes,Ued the Indian seas,
HM wealth le bores on every bream;
Alas! Uwe easier far to gee,
Than hPlith rostMed tot/6 o'er-lard brain
He will go abroad, but to nod tooth,
Or Crag out jean to a ;Roistered room ;
Ah I pitiful too, that hit 000ntlees woalth
Can't pumbasi kook the the gift of hmath ;
He would give it all Gould it but restore
The cheerful flow to hit hearniUdif Oftire,
To let,. desolate, elleariou roam,
Lout like n than *lamb,
Hidden In asbeernuesaa gloom I
A }ink msk, on Ida *flaw la laid;
The tut months rept, le still unpaid,
lle the mother. yaps searoody buy
The brad for whislytie oklldrao
As she mita by SIN half-antJaptisned lamp
To stitch at eight la the noisome damp,
tl ma he mu bet born to sack weary lot,
cheerful pi was her fatharls eot;
She was not Nom** snob bitter pain,
Bat the wine-cop maddened the boa
train ;
'Alai pitiful too, that • living tomb
Should bold • heart in
Ah ! pitiful too, that the wary breath
Oaa bled the soul in • living Math.
"There are many mansions pmparad above,
And the only mat lan heart oT lens;
And tolling on, none, e'er may forgot,
In Hearse hi avers. how* 40 baled.
GREAT OPRECE• OP
HON. JEREMIAH . ) Sc BLACK.
Of fswwgJeawfw, i n a t u rriud Eta e t
fl g giroree; C , ..rodfaiso Cbmpinalloni."
(Comilla/114M* /aft jrcek .)
The learned ensue) el Khe other idde
will not Ibal there wait wiz' it kiiitk
misspells la 1864, for ibey bare reed NW.
lastierle, and Judge Orion's opinion bribe
prize even, and of *owns lbey know it to
be a settled rule that war cannot be said lo
este( where the civil °earls are open,—
eanp tlii ibibia - parar ne
cessity, for ibe). arg „:w.ll aware that it
would not be trip) In the pgmt .of , fact., - 7
~They will bard) ta.s tits grtlptiikv, SOY
ISlnd.ollseeensity sould ten vslitlll#
to iiiidiotoi tha,lttlir:Attd '.. A
i ~,
tijklont
riot although the-arso uoluamraittealto
4 / 4 4044, 1 10 ra
1 4014 11 ilatim Nb littOitiilll- :
toatameasity, for it, yat tt tiers vol r irar
WW,,,whetteleei ',Melt the, Waited - Stehle
Were a faktif*lt. lll bill ,00 1 , 0, " 4
mier lrel i l,9obkalkoill*TWOß amp:Awe
the el 'Touted .ttek- aviekt,rle te early
veicW's • •r .'
-• Duras. We do eat
Theo they 'tea. ssb
4e We
1,11, tee mildew else Is left: • 1. do
ft!!' r•Iisll from,
crecilleeszie• while Its likalutdassa held up
to th trirg~ee:, lift they-eutio steed epee
that De jkie
to 'popeetieelteleleelp er, I Irate
Doti le,jobatilthe. tithir )0441 1 1,4 1- 0. 1
•bees I,lte Seetriae th'iAliewleTlNWMlrt
idairoWeleee thrietirkOttAlit
• leouiehee+.eird is the, ileetalatetariteW
brill,Petblittllietilledlaildheato / deWlett .
etee.:alP. 114,140.14.7,0 1 0 1 014 1 4#
the Coestituffisrlieset AWbiliwillsoet44
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it heposee
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• - ITCC" 11 •
alppf, Tennessee, or South Carolina. it
COl 6 OO l O ll le r•Poolod„ .• or its operation
suspended in one Iltale Wades them lima.
in &mother. The north MI °pea, the to -
galdsation of 'Wety is intuit; the judge&
are on the been, and their
,prpmoss fig not
Impeded; tint theiralisrbdthilen ia
Why? Because, esy out epponenti, war
exists, and the silent, lap% teebniosi °par
ades of that feat is le deprive allocution
atiiints of Iber right to I fair trial.
That Weis at jurists and defamed' *lto
hold that the trial by is lost to eh,
ken sthrintribireaistenoe of war; earrunct
hum dearth°. tiporalsolly and ptirticatlP
to it. inland& eonmenunemit. The right of
trial by jury being gook,, nil' other rights
are gone with It; Moisture a man may be
omitted without an summation and kept in
prison during the pleasure of his eaptersl
hie papers may be smirched without a wag.
nut ; his property may be oonliaested be
hind his beak, and be has no earthly minim
,orredreu. Nay, in attempt et, get • just
remedy Is construed asp new crime. Re
dare not iron complain, for the right of free
spubh is genii with the rest of his rights.
If jon sanction that' doctrioe, what is to be
the consequence I Ido not speak of what Is
past and gone ; but in case of • future war
what result. willltrilow—froor jeur- • • • •
endorsing the Attorney 13 Vs view. 1
They are very obvious. At the instant
when the war begins, our whole system of
legal government will tumble into ruin, and
if we are not all robbed, and kidnapped,
and hanged, and drawn, and quartered, we
will owe our immunity, not to this Constitu
tion and law., but to the' mere mercy or
policy of those persons who may then hap
pen to control the organised physieal force
of the count ry. _
This eertahgp puts us in a"mont preeirl- 1
one oondition Iwe must hare war • ut
half the time, do what we cm Co a roi it.
The President or Congress can w ant ly
provoke a war whenever it *vita the pu apt
of either to do so; and they oan keep i a
hog as long as they please, wren a the
actual conflict of arms is over. When
peace woos them they can ignore her exis
tence; and thus they can make the war a
chronic condition of the country, and the
slavery of the peopWperpigoot. Nay, we
ire at the mercy 'of an protentate
who may envyue the - ession of our lib ,
metiei which we bottet.of so much ; be can
shatter our Constitution without striking a
single blow or bringing a gun to bear upon
ult. A simple declaration of hostilities is
more terrible to ud then en army fhb ban
ners. I."
To me, this moms the wildest delusion
at ever took possession of a human brain.
1 Ihr'tie ha one prinolpleatpolitlaal ethics
ore universally acknowledged than an
other, It it that war, "1 especially- civil
itsp a tems be JuMiled only when it is under
taken to vindicate and uphold the legal and
constitutional right' of the ppople: not to
trample them down. •Ile who carries on a
system of isholesole siguglater toe any other
purpose, must eland without exeunt' before
God or man. Lisa flog.' of war, more than
al any other time, yogic Ilitorty is in the
bends of pnbl t ie odious. she is there
in double (mit;•find, as 'they are citizens.
and therefore bound to defend her, by the
common obligation of all ollisens ; and newt
no they are her epeeist gourdiane--
"Who edit Id against her madmen shuttle door
Not bear the knife themnires."
The opposing argument, when turned into
plain English, means this, and this only ;
that when the Constitution is attacked upon
one side, its official guardian. nay assail it
upon the other; when rebellion strikes It
in the face, they may take advantage of the
blindness produced by the blow, 'to sneak
behind it and stab It In tits back.
TUN INTIM OF T 6■ CI 11141.11.011011
The Convention when it fumed the Con
stitution, and the-people wk th ey sdottted
it, could have irsd' we ' likeehse:
If they bad suppused and - ItwOoltropersto
only while perfect pesos emitterlnd, that
certainly would hero given us some other
rule to go by In time of war ; they would
not , have left us to wander about la • howl
ing wilderness of anarchy, without s lamp
to cur feet, or • guide Wear path Anoth
er thing proves their actual latent atilimore
strikingly'. They required that every man'
in any kind of public emplbyluent, elate or
national, civil or mtillary,' ehould swear,
withtutt reserve or qnsillierolon, that he
would support the Constitution. alurely our
ancestors bad too moth regard for the ;nor
el mod religious welfare of their posterity to
'items upon themlut oath like thai, if they
hrtitada end lk.vpitot:fil it to be biotin half
The.statis alas antler to support
the Consillutleifehi'eti tte that of •
witness to tall the 4kuti,in s , quirt, ofl4-
title. What would yob ikli)s
who should attempt I° 4rmiitePirS)Ort mitot
the ground that halal teelltled ;when idyll
war wee raging, dud lid 'lltirirjht that by
swiertng to • lie he titlgbt 141nsts 11000
.public or private object eonlsetted with the
.:,'l,O. ho, v *rest mom wHo mode Ude
vottalry ghat It heroes who won her
Alepeedesem and the eletesman who set
id hitt Llttilltlitlims•-bml se spelt notion
lo their Made. • i_lf*hhhigtoot delayed tha
lofty prilott / beidaw~nby ibe Piis.
/debt of 00144ft0 Who* We resigned •hb Doti
iiteim—that he het 1110fttlegkilor
: itf r of the Mill : titipitiool
• sim„wd throu4ll alfilawdoim4, !heti
liledetrmo Preildred aftdtttor=
414;_htfejlothd peldle fates to - :''
itebt*Wrdta iitiottwe Petuuylrools hi 11011 e l,
lik€l4,bt*Algpllj#l,llilol . WAS ab 03141114
by Thin.:'MVO iqty la.ftew /adv.*
1111ftyland,
..ord.* : 3 :' , ' lti wept& lair
Wadi a &metier ' ' or de adollei
Itildo at that titat,r'lt l i.6l lops;
izir a o l li re dal . 'riga
04tiftifttel *wormed od . .
... ,
• • llt tit la* Ms ifteereiteivis tald
a l hZeldwiWelliellne how tbet 004
Me military and naval power then upon the
fag. of the earth.- every tints upon the'
adribern • frontier: nptti the Atlantic Wes ,
bord, and upon the Gulf 'nest was in Oily
and hourly danger. The enemy bad gene.'
• trsted the heart of Ohio, New Y,,ork, Penh::
sylvan% and Virginia, were all of them
thrbatened Kota tie West as well as the
East. Tiis Capi4l won taken, •ttd burned,
and pillaged, and Orery member of the Fed.
oral Administrations was • fugitive before
the Invading army: Meanwhile party spirit
was bresklag but Into • astual Cresson all
over New Nagland. itodr of those Mates
refused to furnish .a, MSS or a dollar eve
toe their Gem defense. Their public authlf.
titles were ! plottlng the dismemberment of
the Onion, end indfilduals ,estoug them
were burning blue lights upon the coast as
• signal to the enemy's ships. But in all
this storm of disaster, with foreign war In
his front, and domestio treason on his flank,
Madlkon gave out no sign• that he would aid
old England 'and New England to break up
this govenuisent of laws. On the mintrary,
Ito and,All his supporters, though compassed
round with darkness andrwith danger, stood
faithfully between the Conntitution sod its,
enemies. - -
.!Teehhad it, and Bare It, or poi
, Wfrireere of thec.)
their ootemporaries
Mation and ii4 l
owl were hurled ;
their obildrou aim
them, and condo. ,
.'uliflentritirs until (buy,
fled on the stage o
14, A
rt
Nees of sad paid their
••Lived out the
Death A
To time and .A 2
Eir=si
and a t veneration wits already On its
way to e grave before this monstrous doc
trine was eonceived or thought of, that pub
lic °Mears all over the country oirghtNek ;
regard 'their °Adis WE war or a re
bellion was commenced. a
Our friends on the othemoideare quite
conscious when they deny the binding obli
gation of the Constitution they merit put
some other system of law in its place. Their
brief gives no notice that, while the Consti
tution and the Acts of Congress and Magna
%arta and the Cromon Law and ill - thet
rules of natural Jilt - Ice shall remain under
foot, they willrry American *Miens occur :
ding to the law of nations. Dot the law of
nations takes no notice of the imbibed. If
that eystem did contain a special provision
that a Oofernmest mighlehang one of Its
own 'lntone without judge or jury, it 'bald
still be competent for the American people
to say, as they have said, that no such thing
should, layer be done here. That is my an
,swer to the law of nations.
But then they tell us Shot the law, of
way must be treated as paramount. Here
they become mysterious., Dq they mean
that code of public law, which define the
duties of two belligerent panne 10 . one
'another,- and regulates the intercourse of
neutrals with both 1 'ryes, then it Is sim
ply" a recurrence to the law of nations,
which has nothing on earth to do with the
subject. Do they moan that portion of our
municipal clod* which defines our dudes to
the Government In war a, well as hisses T
Then they are speaking of the Constitution
and laws, which delare in plain words that
the Government - owes every citizen a fair
legal trial, as much as the citizen owes obe
dience to the Government. They are in
search of 'ad argument under difficultise.
When they Appeal to internationaljaw, It le
-silent; and when they interrogate the law
of the land, the answer is an unequivocal
contradietion of their whole theory.,
The Attorney-General tells us that all
persons whom lie and his associates choose
to denounce for giving aid to the rebellion
are to be treated an being JhemitAiesji part
of the rebellion. They are pub*weionniett,
end therefore they may be punished without
being sound guilty by a competent court or
jury. This convonient into would outlaw
every edition. the moment he is charged with
kr;
lititi iv
Ogre/11111. But political offenders
are pree y the class of persons" who moat
need the ' notion of a court and Jury; for
the prosecutions against them are most like
ly to i bd unfounded both In fieftstid law. Wham Innocent sr guilty, to amiss@ Is to
convict them before thesignorant end bigg
'tenon who ;stonily sit in military courts.
But this Court decided in the prise cases
that all who live in the enemy's territory
are ;dahlia enemies, without regard to therr
personaisentiments or conduct; and the
converse of the proposition is equally true
—that all who reside inside of our own ter
ritory are to be treated as enter tae protect
lion of the law. It they ielp tin/ninny
they Sr. eriminals, but theocannot In pun
ished without legal convictien.
MS maim or WU UOVIUJOOIT
Too him heard muith (au you will boar
moreitery won t ) atneeniug the natural
and iabereal rights of the Government to
defend itself withouf regard to law.. Thiele
'whelk? , fellserous, 'iln • dmiotisat the VI
IOSSIS is unesstrioted is thiamin be may
nee for the defense of his authority 'spinet.
the !pit:tittles' of hhi own auldoots or oda-
ard; sea that Is weasel, what Makes hint'
'liiieirlibt ' 10 in • Hilted iionayeby thy
prince to* eiaillhvi himself to a legal de
feasd'of blifgovensment. if he goes beyond
that, and etwitadta,9ogroostens on the rights
of the Pinitloji• Inotaki. the *tidal oompael,
relation his subject st frmis all dolt obllgr.
ththe„th h4t lolderi 14 0 111 ')W1 14 le. be
;ailed from his throne, or thew& to the
h
,laelror drlwrit Into oath. l'li;prfnetple
wee rillitrio: trait - I*mA in the °aura Charter
I. aid Anted 11. and wilii — ei Wanes:mead
'ini thi higheitt e*
.lalauthority lteroliest
the Queen of inasad rommot ring •`.llithi .
t
mos,
- ji kir treb le %Rd 'ere a moo- by her
41 _ ..tii, be' arrostittl under any
odedeiterri.,ll4bal be tree, OWN
4040 1 1 4 X"f lul'ii •
vre ;\„itiaiilin And.iihere
lbw the NISI llet(and
iii 4,,,
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...,
i..
.134 - 4
lows. tilrbt rikiroti, o
,Ilog_an o iciiiecontr:l
41.11 .K4A12 - 04' ' . nfIC RN. -
Oseervatiesettligi indolka.:-
"Ifa.w•Pitilire. , ' ~„ ; ,
~,
so* fiddli .. .iliitbninli lOW f
1 iteteirolf tkoweleri is the -uprise lo It.
Ifboly t hoteelvhe hold Oti aitkotity of
Gerioni4 . gdat ficelikeads behave In V
. . .
• ht
' 3
- azoimea awn *MMus vprzoir.,,
BbLLE
ONTE, PA., FRIDAY„ MAY 18, 1866.
, •
to defendpeelf VritheSt violating its own
laws, it emeriti Ike-needs of destruction in
its own bosom; 'l* lea poor, weak, blind,
staggerifig thing, end the sooner it tumbles
over thu better. But it kits a moot ellinient
legal mode of pvotacting itself against' all
possible danger. It is clothed from bend to
fool ins complete panoply of defensive ar:
isms. What abs' the perils which may
threatiit he existence f I am not. , able at
ii e
this moment to think of more than. th
wbioh I am about to mention ; fore
melon, domestic inrurreation, mutiny oft e
army- and nevy, eorntptlen in the sigh ad- -
ministratioo, mid -Lain, but not least,orimi
nal vlolattons of its laws committed by in
dividuals among.the kody of the people.—
Raab we not a legal mode of defense against
all these? Yea; military force ripes in
vasion and sapp insurrection; you
presefve discipline in the army and r.avy
by means of ootirtr martial; yen preserve
the pushy of the civil administration by im
peaching dishonest magistrate*, end crimes
are prevented and punithed by the regular
Judicial authorities. You are not merely
nom ;,. led to use these weapons against
..r anestilee because they and they only
are Justified by the law, you ought to
use them because they are re lininnt
eßvillable to be *bus
- hero, too.'
MEI
All any 0
Mare is another view of the subject
which settles all controversy about it. No
heroin bedig in this country can 'remise
any kind of public authority which is not
conferred by law; and under the United
States it must be given by the express
words of a written statute. Whatever is
not so given is with-held, and the exercise
of It is positively prohibited. Courts mar
tial in the artily and navy .are authorised ;
gbh are legarlastltuilons, their Jurisdict
lion is limited, and their whole code of pro
eedure is regulated by act of Congress.—
Upon the Idyll seurts all the juriadlotion
they have oreataave is bestowed by law,
and If one of them goes beyond what is
written. its notion is vitro sires and Void.—
But a military comnaluion is not a court
martial, and it i f not • civil court. It is
nut governed by the law which is made for
either, and it has no law of its own. With
in the last five years we have seen, for the
.gist time, self-eonstitatedtribunal• not only
asaming power which the law did not
- give
them, but thrusting aside the regular
courts to which ihe power wet exclusively
given.
What fa the nonseq 1 This terrible
authority Is Wholly undefined, and its exer
cise is without any legal control. Rudolf,-
gated power is always unlimited. The
field that lies outside of the Constitution sod
laws has no boutllary. Thlerry, the French
historian of England, says, that when the
crown and sceptre was offered to Cromwell,
he hesitated for several dayeand answered,
"Do not make me Log; for then my hands
will be tied up by the laws which define the
duties of that °Moe ; but make me, protec
tor of the commonwealth and I can do what
please;l no statute restraining or limiting
the royal prerogative will apply to me."-
1 Bo these commissions have no Iligal orl h,
and no legal name by which they are known
among the o itildrerc of men; no law applies
to them ; end they exercise all power for
the paradoxical reason that nortelytlonge to
them rightfully.
Ask the Attorney General wlist rules ap
ply to willitaryalommissiolurin the exercise
of their ammo& authority over civilians.
Come, Mr, Attorney. "gird op thy loins
now like a man ; I will demand of thee,and
thou shalt declare unto me if thou bast un
derstanding." How is a military_ commis
sion organised, ,What shall be the number
and rank of it. members? What offences
come within' it, jurisdiction ? Whet is its
code of procedure? How shin' witnesses be
compelled to attend it 1 Is it perjury for a
witness to s ervitor falsely ! What is the
function of the Judge Advocate I Does he
tell the members how they most find, or
doeh he only persuade them to convict? is
he the agent of the Government, to co*
mad them what evidence they shall admit
and what sentence they shall pronounce—
or does he always carry his point, right or
wrong, by the mere form of eloquence end
ingenuity What is the notate' Of their
punishments! May they noitfiseate proper
ty and levy Thies as wet's* imprisonand kill?
In addition to strangling their victim, may
they altititleny him the last- oonsinations of
religion, and refuse his family the melan
choly privilege of giving him • decent
grave? / •
To nem of these questions can the At
torney G I make a'reply,for there is no
law on the subject. He will not attempt to
"darken council by words 'without knowl
edge," and therefore, like Job, be can only
lay his band upon his mouth and keep si
lence.
The power exercised through , tlictiti
eounniukins Is hot only unregulated by
law, bat it is incepabl: of being so regula
ted. What is that you calm, Attorniyl
I will give Jam • definition, the correctness
of which you will not Wimp' to gainsay.
You assert the right of the Executive GOV ,
:11p116111Dt, without 'the Intervention of the
ludloiary, to capture, imprison and kill any
per-on to vibes thatdinvernment or its paid
depead o ;popc,„ Otiose to laette•-an' *l
tches. his, in Its very *some., is au:
polle'en'd - lambus., It is never claim litl or
tolerated seept
_bg,thoin govriodints
lad& denttbeireetntilde of allolati. It
has bees !Wolfed by dm great
-oppressors el mankind ever aloes the days
of Fiutred..• It operates la - different ways
the tools It Wieners eat saps the sal;
it tattoo tio . .l,l4o4.lbtgarls on may
44slikeitx, it momuse . ,.frobw rotiots_or
for°. • -• • -iwi• ••4 7
It eau soup • Asps Istrittese 4# Wyatt-
Jetfoil,
And wt tbi
41640. PP f4 , Y+ l 44lnuri apPoir .
1 , 0 2 ,1 0 : 0 1141 . 14 0 1 #4!=
'''rti - 70 . 4 • .”01 . 4ot;
„
.4040 Wto.loto , -,- —•-••
. CAMP. „
'Vidor tilt 014. Probe' taceiwoh,f,
vorittelaoh!oo of . woo .tttaw 1110' Vegail‘•
; gigiod kbg, ad ads vdoidde;
fla w ' the Forty to slcoOttumotto . a,,
tints 41od, firsittioilVig dui world, Au
lospoidobilopOwill , orovitr4boloaos• in*
0 1 0114 1 4 1 .4 1 • 4 0000:41 1 tIt9t : outios
*awl latito,lourk • it
kto r
9f*,- . 74,4414r4 14 441t1itirg ,
, • 100
totWWW two dragoons oar Ili wl7 (0
, •
the mice, of .Biberia. lb Turkey dm ier
hal order of the Suiten or'any of Ida power
ful. favorites will Amuse. man to he tied up'
to a each and cad into the Bosphorus, Ne
ro soopsed Patter and Paul of spreeding a
“pestilentenistatition," which they yelled
tha gospel. Its beard , theirdefense in per
son, and sent them to the arms. Aflerwards,
he tried the whole Christian churob in One
body on a charge of sattinefire to the atty,
and be convicted them, though he-knew not
only-theft they were innowt, bat that be
bilinself had eonunitted tl4lprime. The
Judgment wen followed by Instant aiee4.•
honk he let looms the Praetorian-guards upon
men, V/001013, and ohildren.to drown, butch
er, and burn them. Herod saw fit fur good
political reasons, closely affditing the per
manence of his reign in Judea, to punkah
certain possible traitors in Bethlehem by
Anticipation.. This required the death of
all the children in that city under two years
Of age. He issued biz "general ordh ;"
and his provost nierebill carrled.it out with
so much alacrity and zeal, thit in'one day
the whole land was filled with mourning
and lamentation.
Macbeth understood the whole philosophy
of the subject. lie was en unlimited_men.._
to punish for any offense
at all wastes broad an that which the Attor
ney General claims ffir himself and - his
brother officers under the United Stoles.—
But be wee more cautious how he, used it.
lie hod a dangerims rival, from whom he
apprehended; the most serious peril to the
"life of his government.% l The necessity to
get Alfa film was plain !enough, but he
equkehol i gfford to shock he moral sense
of the world by pleiding ifolitical necessity
fora murder. U. must
"Mask the business from tgecrimon eye."
Itoongdinly he pent for two enterprising gen
tlemen, whom be took into his service upon
liberal Pay-"mode love to *Lair assistance:"
and got them to deal with be acoused par
ty. Ild sated as his own jildgo adiboate.—
He made a most elegant at 4 stirritireviefort
to persuade his agents l t Banquo was
their oppressor, and bad "geld them so an
der florigne" that he ought!lo die for that
alone. When they agreed &art be was their
enemy, then said tio
,"00 he is mine, and though I could
'With barefaced power sweep him from my sight
And bill my wit/ Avouch It ; yet I awl mot,
For,eirtale friendly who embeds his and min*
Whose love I may lot drop , -
Poi these and ..many weighty reseons"
besides, he thought It best to commit the ex
ecution of his .1. 10 to subordinate agen
cy. The commission thus organised- in
Banquo's.ease set upon him that very night
at a convenient plitokbeside the road where
it will Chown he would be traveling; and
they did preelsely what the Attorney Gen
eral says the, military officers may do in
this country— they look and killed him, be
saute thole- employer at the head of the
government wanted it done, and paid them
for doing it out, of the public treasury.
=I
But of all the persona that ever wielded
this kind of power, the one who wont most
directly to the purpose and object of it, was
Lola Monte:. She reduced it to the elemen
tary principle. In f 8413, when,she was:
Minister and mistress to the• King of Bava
ria, she dictated all the meuures of the
government- The times were troublesome.
All over Germany the spirit of rebellion
was rising; everyintexe the people wanted
to seb a first-class revolution, like• that
whicb had just exploded in France. Many
tenons in Bavaria dialikedUp be governed
by a lady of the character which Lola Mon
t arbor., and come of them were rash enough
to say so Of coerce that was treuon, and
she went about to Pranishit in the simplest
of all ;Anatole ways. She bought Lervelf a
pack of English bulb-dogs, trained to leaf'
the flesh and mangle the limbs and lap the
life-blood; and with these dogs at her heels,
she mankind upend down the, streets of Mu
nich with i most Inejestle tread, and with a
sensa of oner which any Judge Advocate
in America might envy. When she sew any
pence whom see chose to denounce Bar,
a• thwarting the government," or ~ taming
disloyal Interne," her obkdient followers
needed bet a sign to make them 'arias at
the throat of their victim. It gives:me n:
speakable pleasure to tell you the sequel.
The people rose in their strength, emas he
down the whole machinery of ,oppreasion,
and drove all into uttermfast shame, king,
*trump:ft, doge, and from that time to this;
neither map; woman, Or beast has dared to
worry,aktkilLthe people of-Bavaria.
*All these are but so many different ways
of using the sotto-64 power to punish.—
il
The va dity is-Merely the mesas which a
tyrann eat government. takes to destroy
those hom It Is bound to protect. Every-
Where It is but, another construction on the
principle linhartemOrseless nmehipe, by
which despotism wveaks its vengeance on
those mho offend it. In a civilised country
it nearly always uses the military lone, bo
ttoms* that is the sharpest and surest, al
wall the best looking instrument that can
be found tor,/n& a purpose. But in none
of its forms can it ha Introduted into this
country ; we have ma room few it ; the
gronnd here is all pram:templed by legal and
free instll.o*. ^. .
•
.we imaktrowe ' ilitan sor snow Pews..
the odious Who have ' , power
lite d i ttli Um people Who mu Babb to
beoobto its victims then can be no relation
exempt that Outsider and'elive, The mai
tar map bo'klud and the Wove may be eon
tented in 1u Bondage ; but the man who
eau take your ure, or 'lwasaki your arty,
or despoil you °flour property at WM*.
eretios, Other with his own bands er by
please of hired twersear,'orte you and he
Oen lines reo r. i.e '414 ,litst. All , yen . kvs,
and all you ha* lasbeitskslier Wyss sad
eilibirts, urs his . propertyt t •
Ugai r let*auf isri It4d bleed. the
Attetisy-IleusAlcted title tight.otlisides'
tiscipiiT ste..4-Sll .00 1 4 eat be . mt. Wok
Mithiseed,ll6,Pllstalti "aspoil Id* to uss.
i It is imilltridelfwe may,mpe la the witlitt I
ItutotilAt übtiuld tool the tutottealty ottlyebur
veryliserwid. U. Amine is a theft
time. The third for %toed le an appetite
110111klirov4/31; Whatl : tnitoit i
Wat'e IPPT.Ahltrbi , Itettali4
Illobeepiarre rielideditlk twattt ildliiii ,
tit Werirlittt, bum", he 7sa• isr i elliO*i
ell toZttli . _ . v _ . 1 4110 , i *Vettee' l o44 ll
111 P i" SO ' w t"P •4l4ll4ola
" 1 4 1 9: r0t,
10 0Z,A billid = , k gfe. f t,
ism treieei , iiitii *AO
pew would Qom* ay 5. g
_l l ` line
beast, whatever was the frights! benevo
lence of ids nature. If you decide that the
Attorney-General holds in his own bawls or
'shares with others the power of life and
death over Us all, I maid to bIIFVOry , entlliOnt
in my interceurse with him; and I \PIM
you, the Judges whom'l am now addressing;
to do likewise. Trust not le the gentleness
and kindness which has elwate merkedlis
conduct heretofore. .Keep yolir distance
be careful how you approach m ; for yen
know fibt at what moment or by what sitriu
fie you may 'rouse a 'sleeping How -Ile—
Annhar the Istunetion- of •Soriptire .`fier
not near to the span who bath power to kill;
awl if Awl come unto him see that thou
make no fault, lest he lake sway thy life
presently fbethou gout among sitars@ and
wolkeat upon the battlement. of the city."
The right of the executive goverunient to
Will and imprison citizens for political of- '
fuses has not been practically claimed In
this country, except in MUM where commie , :
stoned officers of the army were the instiu
ments used : Why should it be confined to
them r Why should not naval ;floors be
permitted to share It f What is the rumen
that common soldierw and lumen afe 'rein
ded-from-altparticipation in the business 1
No law has bestowed the right upon alto
officers more than upon other persona. If
rTzen are to be hung up without that legal
trial which the Constitution guerantere to
them, why not employ oommissilne of cler
gymen, merchants, manufaoturers, horse
dealers, botcher., or drovers, to do it ? It
will not be pretended that military men are
better qualified to decide questions of feet
or law than other olames of people; for it
is known, on the contrary, that they are as
a general rule, least of all grid to perform
the duties that belong to a Judge* 7
The Attorney-I:lndira' thinks that a pro
ceeding which takes away the lives of chi ,
aeon without a constitutional trial, it most
merciful dispensation. His idea of human
ity as well as law is embodied in the Nitwits
of..military justice, with all its dark and
bloody machinery. For that strange opin
ion he gives this aurora reason: that the
duty of the trommanderdwehief is to kill,
and unless he has this bureau and theme
commissions he must butcher" Indiscrimi
nately, without mercy or justice. 'Admit
thfit if the commander-in-chief or any other
oftioetof the Government has the power of
do king, to butcher the peopl i e at
pleasure, be ought to bare somebody to ot'a
him In selecting hie viollbee, as well as to do
the rough work of strangling rind 'honing.
Bat if my learned friend will onle , conde
scend to cat his eye upon the Constitution,
ho will i.e at onee that all the executive
and military °asp are rilievied bzthe pro
vision that the life of ► cl(l shall not be
taken at all until utter legal conviction by a
court and jury.
111 001101.0.1011
You cannot help but "see that military
oommiselons if suffered to go on, Will be
used for most pernicious purposes. I have
oritioisad none of their pest-proceedings,
nor made any siltation to their history is
the last five years. - lint what eau 6e the
meaning of this effort to Midianite them
among us? Certeindly not to punish actual
guilt. All the end of true )ustiee are at
tained by the prompt, speedy,• impartial
triat whlikate courti are bound to give.
Is there any danger that erintl will be wink
ed upon by the judges? Does any body'
pretend that courts and Juries have less
ability to decide upon facts and law thee
the men who sit IC military tribunals? The
counsel in this cattle will not 'adult you by
even hinting such au opinion. Whit right
eous or just purpose, then eon they serve
None, whatever.
But while they are utterly _powerless to
• •
von a shadow of used;-thy will be Mu
nipolent it, trample upon innoienoe, to gag
the truth. to silenee potrietilm, and mush '
the liberties of the country. They will .
always be organized to convict, and the eon;
viet.ion i will follow the attormation as surely
as night follows the day. ThGovernment,
i
of ethirse, will scenes none he re such cam-
Mission except those whom fpredelermin-
es to ruin and deetroy. The aetraser tan
choose the judges and will (tensility *elect
those who are known to be themes' unprin
cipled, and—the-most ready tondo whatever
may please the power *blob gives them
pay, promotion, and plunder. - -,
The Willing value* out be foung.as easi
ly as the super serviceable judge. , The
treachorouispy and the base informer—
those' loathsome wretches whit, de their ly
ing by- the job—bill - itook snob a market
with abundant perjury, , forth* authOrities
that eipploy them will be be k nud to protect
as well gs reward them. A corrupt and
tyrannical Closernment, with lino* an an•
gine at lie command, will about ihe - wrirld. l
with the enormity of it/crimes. PlQzotria
may be by the arts of it smillgagat pang- ,
'hood, and urged on by the nuithums of a
miring cried, it Will be ,worse them the
Popish plot' or the IP tenth rovolutlon 7 -It
will be i eonthinatier of both, with Pengler
Tinville an the heath, end Tilts, Chapala
the withem's box. Yon oats' some us iiant
thin horribly ihie ' YOU alone See “Itimilie
no from the ua r or tho, death ..- i o list
fearful extent is the ''.6.;t67 of thlittlition
in your hthas„ ' ' _' . • '" I ' ''' '
—The New York chrinkittAltyAlate•
eats sap; "The wee it die eteektir
The ehureli that shall now war, to lOW
oolorod population of tie ooldolOi - will
make OUTS of • area pewter Ai., alat'frieek t .
Hs, aaTelleter ate WNW lair prin . ,
et leo, es en 4J 1," vondslus caw' l 4 1 .8 0"
ears it, eta eproolo*ii tielerieri
or end lieklag lie vet: books of the
Not tor the aslvtaloia of .eettle—ant YONt
o3ioultlett 4! Geire illakdOta—:blyt tlet
ye- '4looporsimmoro.iusd
. 1 . 490414‘.01
eon pleader witekibAl#l,lll4.
God help eneit,..0614140.1 - irlilkure i 4
`t.
, . .
k " 4 " who oortwoot i - -
tillbi4ollat oglluatdididlisidisVord
glen' 11160;Iriiinillos
bier the blood moilly:''thbo '•*
yllometle
*soy *bib 'Au) ,
Viola liliklkekseriti "Online vial %fir,
rear 111411111111104
rf3es.9 llB idt:41.14 ""al
141 ' lim n*
ftibu balmaire rgi aloft
mu Jol l ity 4ida: 4
roklosmOvisan
One of the but thing we have read slim
Tic dolorabia corrospoadent sent 'us a de
scription of • contraband wedding Is one of
• similar character deserib&l by the local
I ot the lgefulrfleyister sad A &craw% II ap
pears that a negro couple had been living
togelher for some years as mats and wife,
kat •Vidattt de circumforenire ob de law."
fry disagreed,lieeparated, and the
~_
jpi laid' her case before "de Bureau,"
wk ' he chirps were hoard, , and thunlio
aid lis Dinah nemesi a / a wed tobtessondati, 1
Its order to do tare that the sinterun was
properly atesoted, the maple ware plowed
order a military guard, aid marehed or to
%qui!, Btarr's ellioa. Arriving there,/ Ma
omoxr of thll•gusrd remarked, "'ticks,
hotel a Maids for you Mmarry."
" All right," replied the patient, "Jost
step in the book nom.""
The couple and the ofßeer followed hits lo
the room in the rear tr( the front Mlles, and
after expliiaing the duties dad.obligations
of married life, the squire requested them
to Spin hands.
Bride.—" I iota% range to do {t, I doesiet
want to bab nu nto do wid dat nigger."
Groom.—" I isn't 'tioslar 'bout marryle
wid de gal. I tiegbetbabbed de Weneh.':
This protest oyened the squires oyes irk.
%two full moose to the baronet." He asked
what was the meaning of it, when the rep
resentative of thq Burson informeddbe Jas.
doe that fhey were ordered by the Freed-
men's Court to be married, and he oame up
to is. the sentence executed.
With this understanding Yuptioe Starr
told the '•bapPz soople" to Seim hands,
whiOh 114 did after much periusaion, and
the following moue sashed:
-- Juitiee..-..••thi - yoa take this man to be
your wedded husband, to loge, cherish,
obey," /to.
Bride.—.. No I doesn't—not each I
dOesn't—l wouldn't hib O four seresiot full
ob slab trusb."
. .
Freedmen's Bursan,— ,, Yes we da..ellaire
we take him—go on WO b:keeremony." .
feeties.—" And do yit.telts 4ltis women
to be your wedded wife, to tore, cherish,"
do.
Broom.—" r lola ye dot I isn't 'flouter. I
Isn't hankerinfarter de 'crow.' I kin lib
widout de ole pl."
Freedmen'i Bureau.—.“ Certainly we eke
'take her—eraourse we do—spits us to ;
single Ovals Hum up Ile 'oasis,"
Justios.—" Then I prononoe you ell mug
and wile, and day the Lord haveiterey on
your
-- ---
THE T 601.8 OF OESPOTISI/ AFHANI
OF),EGAL JUSTIOE.
A bill Is now pending In Congress called
“tbs•Kentuaky bill." It Is to esseturthe
Wear ecnpus net of 1863, so as to ye tweak
and 'mama the ;military tikere from meatkiora
praernotion, for rata performed while they
were wielding the almtmed pavers of milt
tory tribunals and subordinates. -
Great society sod baste are being man!.
fasted In its passage, so as to shield the
Kentucky • seoundrels against whom thou
are some throe thonsand cases pending.
An exchange rays ;
• The military commission moundrels and
their myruddoni, informers, astatine;
marshals and the like, who during the war,
invaded the dwellings of prima* aims ;
who dragged lemmata men babes their Ir•
responsible, tayonet-proteited tribunals;
tried some on false tbstisany of subsidised
. wituessak—pimp, thieves, robbers, burg
lers,counterfeiters, assassins and other hi
feral outlaws, oonvlated them on trumpted
up chutes and consigned them MAIL, pen
itentiaries, battles, end Vie sailowl—these
eowardli culprits, no that they an no lon
ger and shelter bed pfottioll'Oe feat re
tribution of Matagmt. justice end elimani
humanity, are tremblingly seeking security
of person from the equally lawless Tailgate
who are bolding built carnival at
ton.
Thaflt will pass, tortillas as it is In in.
Motion', and unwarranted as It is-in consti
tutional law, we have stn ressmable right to
grieetion. The. pesos, the property, the
eowasely-hottles of the culprit-teole, all
mike appeals tote Shielded limn the right,
eons retribution which is threatening them
and which they gushingly fear 1 That this
gang of unstrung misoreaste sea sow, kind
of i'itirtad from the "Wks and sulfa" whlgh
henceforth surely await them in °len siltie
ty, we do not question ; that they desert, it,
we bare not the charily to affirm. •
MAD Talmo* Excassmiloy.—d wtilar
desertblag do Lusatia Asyluseat Black
weirs Island, says : fare Is a welkin *bow
Joy du depdwd• at bat sadist lbw bite
boadwul ibtld was on booty EtwoOlt 'Adak.
was woldrad. Going down to do abort tfo
sty day, as Whit wish of bolsi seam tbs
Waved ddeots dot lay batted beosatb!Uas
.bas, owidsody', ohs - WHIM then ,badtait
ikon, a truest wfike , lod tido up
sod wand doli: /to lagbid of
doid
Joy partudd4 bar kosout--ookliwo maw,
rig Pat CTIPIe. • 44aytar bog bawl'
tblda,goltbAlti l 4 o ll, 4 o# l 4l# l,4 o4taut
- 1 1 • 0 11 ", Al* *lllo4 l o*
6 04f1p 9r riosi 0 0 ,iltiegkOt
pltsw -*irk sw eu ay Intik Um buslatod
awl sou mos sod wows bur tale„ In Lops
4° "‘”Vili l f 44l cr t44l . l l l oo7l 4 lokolgiii
ataran intorita, viva*
roin.lbei . ;:viiiNtribparair W. • tipaiiiiire .
*eats ..A,V(.II, , WAI N _by
limo ill/4*Na* *lila It=
Is time bares t
so& kill a ildts:**** 111 -'lsmi
lt i sit
drd Itior"l#l.6o4o,4o'ill#4*"'
**Ma&
IRE
• MOW:
1[1" " •
Bdi. • is. .!• !
lioneridd
Wllll4ll hr'isevidi Shia.
11 WWI is
.• .velations aad left so is
imak similskir mash I
ask vardebadiladtat .
ME
EMI
Tisrearit AVM
AO IN
I ;,
Total... 1•••••••••,
. •••••
d 0 4 1. 40 1.
14011 - 4/01 llen la
notblynoyanit'll ' l4lrM7plitio.,, Mbar
as WV 6 9 1 1 1 0 1 Th Audit, WWII; Ka.
Wolf win"
Bat lam • outnefog sum! Didart I make
warspentban;gatlionowned Deamenstp, and,
mob .tatopperboada," mad, p strong for
the ljnio• f Yon bolt I • Hatt
the fools .» dead. 80110 ,_ 1 / 4 21
'ar*L-titallet fliai were kind.' Aid didn't
get theevogeouvesltibilvi 100 t 9 •
pregame "filltit , f Dimitaint -1/den, If
I only 064 (iii siad !biro -
what tidies ate Vein elevati.itoadfl
Astatine* 414 sh I pln far boandint, and
go Walmaang antliatriollem hadyloy4 , /plg
on.loyaWf Ibsen nit I Oh Intl Glint
pli , syhains la*
fallen AI illpnatiat w tim boo mad lbw
coupons eaLtbwwld.lfk f No* awe re..
my saikwhilt misitry I .
takkatia-orart wit to keep• out of tit
war kiaselltamdituilmo alien to p.
bound's laticfetplard 'am I -yen goy
they want tolyilno . 4 .
Item ail ditlaitialeMitiwientfea
TO noe I: VIM. sigalkeleleglos I ,
JAW
• ' semstiliti
000\ilfleffiel
drowatiod.
And aoptyplettamtiarinad'ars
eame.boadt. 43ad'a larva. I sold Mad
put my manatrikSillids• Bmdi °mai
ten to awning And I npoolderwl. to
"tidsp." And I add Wulf to tho'oeldloral
And I got thaw bounty Mosel a . b erg..
And I Iliad town quo*, and made a. edoe
little haul,by kkat. - Aad I put my nab. in
bonds.
NO. 20;
Bands art inne-old rosewood with gilt
edge. Let melee. I have now one hun
dred themenfiltilliza in government beads.
Irow I lore gillitixerneeent / It Is flatbed
the on. evireilleise on r These bails test ,
age me eigliiipie mat. hums! Ii geld.
Inglit-per eel 'isiChe eau- bemired , lisidlusel
dollars 1..1114140R theuleud. Mei 1 get
In gold. worth akiely-In to fairies per
teat. premitae..... Male wakes in grarabosks
the snug little ma - of shaves theessed
dal
lare—reald.asaabers. - • '
Madabelevoiing *fit Is I dee't have ease
lent or
Willi Seel . •
• This aa. Iw o , Oirvorsuiooki do world
over SSW - it 4 aim hold boodo—poem} "
pay nu*, 1 1 11..iszypilkoiror don't- Wier .--
am ,Udoitti eat NI one red Goat to—lot
mo moo,. . f ; , . .
To Foo OtA4lll - 101i1INIP1
To pay**Tomat ozposoio I
: To rizrrig i s" so 1 " -
To pad/ oi I
T° TV , T.,,Mi1l . O4l : ...,":;,
To isite, , * -1, • . . it,
'.,,
To: poi • ' :, : ; :,.. 4 4 t, .....,
To Isk
_ilWAl . llo_it 0.1441,"" I'l4o-
orllll64o4,iionla
or ovon laiuMite/. :".."..'-t: -, .` jor,' im."
• :: ' ' 1:
imiiii„
:1 La Illik .
11 - 4 . 1 g.", , lite lorisotbmiCifte
Si.k lo '- - - 'Wm" errs, the
War never world have bias nisi. Asa
the salamis'
bog jokooftkovroos.
Yea Pet "'in - jibed tinekby bentboi. of
00111 W CidlielikliMla tbi piespaty—ltie
wed eabobo:MObt.toßn. And h Wised
tows bdYs,slly , beads. eoweke bonds, Atute
bondsMue kind of bonds, Asa
no sold.'iit Aber Wimp to get linatomy to.
pay tentstba.. Andl us Minot beegbb tie
bonds diplomat. And we me tile
"volunteers . " assay to go to woo. AM
while Oleg mok.sose we AM s rood Vim
AM we. ioltteir,fbnee .bap to the wine
of seldkeno..: Anderein. our bounty stew
M bask. -', r
And liatporMifl !Lo solpir . tombola
Areal as 1 04,4 111 4 Ili' tr. work.i.olklM.
takoll t.••1 1 4#014,1 1 , .lor P a *W i d e ! , 1
' Isn'tifilse:';.: ,
rib. A-J-4' tilos' yips t.7iir, 5i)44:14 ,
woo bokaciii Ina inis,wopicluyik•
taiirsift: . 'I/141616 4ii:i1011 to whosi*w
wzoiiojA, .. k : i 444 - Www*,
sett . : 1 ';',, . tAkillifto iiiii "
And PP "'
'T ' . ka AT itellitiii‘.
W.baa 4q', . '• . .4a A 1 , 01 ippoo 'ea
pay die , T ' I;kiri whet a pail rpm
iniiiiiiii - r ''•, • •
Ms "iiii! ," t• ;oat iiiTqijoi: i
didn't itypielir, Ot bliakAuke*Obit.
how I . 4ltraCiltiliiiilio
•
And *het Igetriii ;moo 4 , 411 A.
soy olgiditskli* wiliss4 fifilefliky
set :as • biiriassi lie pie 1 .14 at
tbaa mregaiiA #l,li irrels, We aro& No libel
wcat/a 4 ausaiati heimiedstAi is
Iwo. dab oikrligit brililm.
no paki ou ,. if -: ad* mil,
.16±e
mum bigurb e i siiiii ,„... i ___ .. " 6,l *" .
ables rit.oool4 . au .a ama yle
11.1444t a 1a t I # - -•,.: I . =
4101 k", • _•; Ilhill Irritr , , •
1rg,04 - *.4 910 0k. . : . Ailmi •
les*, . ' ‘1' ,,,,
.__"' •4 1 t 01 •„' -
114 mi zifr
p's aiat4'ii4l*-11.100,agn,
; 1 40lieratips*er - Viiiiitli.tt'krt .
. MA: ' 1 1 * kOltirkP i ll o 0 1 10 " . .
4 ""TY00,1404 1 z4 6 n* '44i4:. ii*
AiOri 1 0 0 . 1: P s° 44` - 'hok II •
mirik ',Rib* * 1 101 , r 1 0401 0
r` I OAA. ,f+ 4 !, ?Born 4411 0
.L' o rk. 1. ' 21 11 4=4„ ki , t '
• Tri. ,w.
rint ,-, • :....!t rie ....' . , ,64 -, ,: t aser i ,
*X L * 44:44, is& tiroAop, . War
wki :',1114041611 eir - ifs% 114 , : i•
itiliii%iii*Uis,`;*nr4h,'" 60 kOri. :
iisto4firr, MOM* ' .ogitopri.. -
. . 1 " ........ .
thdijkgeoevisaiimarbui
, swilliiikliOWOo ix - Owici t iv': , - , rX, .
( - 1116 05 41 t10 ..1 11 ! ..; _ i _t idb ...".'ll
MEI