Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, July 27, 1866, Image 1

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    THE 41RHOIFIXION
City of God I Jerusalem I
why- rushes out thy living strewn?
The tethered pried, the holy mem,
The Itomaa In his pride are Mare!
Aged thousands, tees of thousands, !till
'Cluster 'round Calvary'. wild hilL
Still onward rollache Heins tide,
Thire rash the bridegroom and the bride;
Priam, beggar, soldier, Pharisee.
The old, thelyoung, the bond, the Tree ;
The nation's (Orient multitude,
All maddening *lib the cry of blood.
'Tis glorious morn—grow height to height
Shoot the keen snows of the light,
Arid, glorious ip their coetral shower,
?sleeve( holiness end power,
The Temple on Jgosildi'm brow
hookas mowlrisea sue below.
But wo to hill and wo to rale!
Against them sha/J eosin forth • wail;
And led!! to bridegroom =id to bride!
,_kor death shall on the whirlwind rids ;
Andewo to thee, respiundent shrine,
The .word le out for thee and thine'
Hide, h de thee India betteena, thou sun
Before Medea,' of blond be done
Upon that Tetoply's hpuyhty deep
Jeruaateme last angels weep;
They see dertrurtion's funeral pall
Illack'ning o'er Zion's sacred wall.
Like lemposia gathering on the shore
They hear the coining armlet , ' mar;
They see In Zion. hall, lir elate
The Sign thatardiiketh deeolate—
The Nol standard—Paean !pear,
The teeth, tile hate, the inaeserre.
They see the vengeance fall ; the chain.
The long, long age of guilt and pain
The exile's thous. d Jesporsie years,
The more than groans, the more than tears;
Jerusalem, a vanished na
Ire tribes, earth's:warning, scoff and shame
•
Still pour, siting the multitude,
Still rends the heavens the shoot of blood
But in the murderers' furious s on
Who totlen on ? A wesry man .
A cross upon hie shoulders hound,
Iwo*, his frame, one guehing W
And now he treads on Cali ary
What slava upoptbat hill Faust die n
What band, what heart, to guilt imbrued
Meet be the mountain rulttken food
There stand two t lethal., gnunt and bare,
Two eulpritn, emblem. of despair
Yet who the thirtl? The yell of Aetna
In frenzied at the siffereert name
Hands eleneheil,leells gnanhing,a eiders torn,
The curse, the taunt, the laugh or acorn.
All that the bitter hour re al clung, (King
Are 'round TI ee note, T 1,,... thorn crowned
Set, curled and tortured, taunted, aptfrned,
No wrath Ie for the wrath returned ,
No a enateanee littaher from the eye,
The 'offerer calmly waits to die,
The weptre-rood, the thorny rrowo,
Make on that pallid brow no frown
Al I. the word or olenth Ix gh en
The form is bound, the mill. urn driven
Now triumph, Scribe and Pharisee'
Now, Norman, bend the mm king knee!
The Cross is reared. The deed Is done.
There stands Messiah's earthly throne'
This 1111U1 the earth's consummate hour ,
For this had biased the prophet's power;
For thin had swept the conqueror's sword
Had ravaged, raised, east down, restored;
Persepolis, not., Babylon.
Fur this ye sink, for this ye shone
Yet things to who It earth*. broglite.t beam
` — Were darkness--earth Itself a dream,
Forehead• on wltieW shall erowne be bild
Sublime, when *On cud aUMAIriI (. 01 .;
Worlds upon worlds, eternal th Inge,
Hong on thy anguish—Ping of Kluge
Still !rout bin lip m mane btu gene,
Ilia lofty eye hes looked no scorn
No earthquake buret, no angel brand
Crushes 'the black, blaspheming band;
What may those lips by anguish riven ?
" Geri, be my murderers forgiven'"
Ile dial In whose high victory '
The slayer, Death himself, shall die.
Ile dies t by whose nil conquering tread
Shall yet be ...bed the serpent's head ;
From his proud throne to darkness hurled
The god and tempter of this world.
lie dies Creition't awful Lord,
Jehovah, anti, EteiMel Word'
Tv mum in thunder front the eklee ;
To bid the buried world grime;
The earth His loutetool ; Heiven'isthmus ;
Redeemer, may Thy will be doge
811:EC II 0 F
GEN. GEORGE W. MORGAN,
Delivered at the Democratic Conventton,
at Columbus, Ohio,-June 26,1866.
FeLLow CITIZIN. .—ln times of less im
portance than the present, I should not at
an hour so late a. thia.on an evetung so to
element as this, dentin you But,
this in no ordinary occasion We are living
in times of peril to our institutions, sod I
do not apologise to you for appearing Wore
you, though it Is toward the midnight. hour
And I propose to address you a, my coun
trymen, an American ciiisens, upon the
grave son momentous, questions witch are
to decide (or weal or for woe the destiny of
our touch-loved lend
SIX %KASS AO
Pardon me, my frtemit, for one brief mo
ment for recurring to nit erne but the other
day Six years ego the United States—aye,
the ('sited Statez—istentling (ruin ocean to
ocean, were In the enjo)ment of uttrimilled
prosperity Our cnnuurrce,ul point of ton
tinge,was the largest in the arm Id our non
ufacluros competed with those of France,
England and Germany, nod tine great grain
growing region of the West tea ocuatieere
millions in other dimes. Our country was
free front debt ; the rights of every citizen
were secure under the protection 4-14 e law;
tour flag was respected throughout the world;
and pence and. happiness with their holy in-
Iluences dwelt in every household 94 settled
upon our land lhohr - j
OUR AILT,VAI. 1:07MI1ION
RVlen the Republican party note into
Totrwer, In had only a nominal debt, and yet
to-day, measured by the mount of interest,
ours is the largest debt knowu among the
nations. Instead of being free from dobt,at
the ohms of Mr Lititolteendetinietration,
the nation's indebtedness amounted to the
appalling sum of three thousand million Jol
lore. And the present usurpation at Wash
'ildgton, which arrogates to Itself the titlebf
.the Congress of the United States,will have
unotimmed that Jebt morn than fire hundred
million dollars. And' why has the debt been
decreased! Raven° revenues beet collected
Tram the people ? flat taxation been re
duced! Taxation reduced! Why,citixens,
at this moment we ore more heavily taxed
than are the people in the despotisms of
Austria, France or Russia, and yet we live
in n Republic Yes, in a single yeer, more
than tiro hundred million dollars is taxes
WOO befh wrung from theent erprine,t he in
dustry, and the sweat of the people by di
root and indirdbi taxation And yet not one
•doller or that emir:mut 'amount hoe been
applied upon thipayment °tale public debt;
.but on the contrary, the debt has been ling
;monied more than half a billion of dol-
Jan.
The Ezell.° Inspector end Assompr come
)prowling around likd thieves lu the nigot,to
pry into your affairs, and you cannot Mau a
reoeipt,exeoute a deed or a Dole without 1111,
iteehing a stamp as a hedge of your threat.
sued serfdom:
TOO 1111nIAMIX Ooacea ontrnit 111.0110108.
And what like prodneed thls dread °alma,.
ity T Who is responsible for this fearful
.change! In 18W) there were four candidates
for the Presidency—Dell, Douglas,Breokln•
ride and Lincoln. Hod Bell, Douglas or
Breakinridge been elected there would have
beea..4l war. Why ? Beeause they stood
on national plattovma—beoauss they were
all pledged to stand by the Coestilutioa.—
But there won o fourth perty,wids Mr. Lie.
.coin as its candidata A sectional parry,
organised in dellansa of the warning of
Ifashington—orgsnizod in avowed boatilaty
to the South: And what Rlll the object of
i * •
qTal
k t)
,i t ,t I L " 44
-I 1°
E
VOL. XI
hitt Stational party' lit Ilia inugliage of
hot eoeittetatly bail to In, Thothlem Stevens,
to objdet woe to break up the futuattions
four Government in order that another and
different dtivernment. might he built Ilion
s ruins
Well, , a gigantic war WOO the result, and
II its dread calamities—with its half mil
on graven dried with the beet and bravest
of the °illicit en of the North and West—three
hundred thousand orphanv of our auldiere,
lied the two hundred thousand maimed men
and boys, whcettre left as end monument of
the war,sre all chargeable agittn.ta the lead
ers of the sectional Republican party, and
it few leaders of the South. lint the latter
Imrc been terribly punishetrby the scourge
of war Their lands have been laid waste,
their loonies bare been reduced to rislies,anil
the grave. of tlteir children exist as sad me
mentoes of a fallen cause
But while the people of the 4,4; have
been thus terribly punished, t guilt heigu• agi
tators of ilia North, grown rich from plum
der and audacious from impunity, are still
euthroned in powin,autl they have the inso
lence to declare that the minority shall gov
ern the majority, and that our free slstem
Timm give way to a consolidated despotism
For be ic ft ton Ille, eitilefls, to wish to
arouse your passions or esette your preyed,
cos Ruh. out the Contrary, I appeal to you
as my count ...yet., as Americans. to not WO
becomes good otisenrottul to reecue our in
stitutions from the rum which threatens
thelti.' I do not alt. 11.1 here to-night to plead
the cause oh site people of the South They
were overthrown upon their own field eqsal.-
tie . but muumuu manhood compels me to de
elate thirst their capit Outwit to 011 r arum—
the ethuirable manner its which they accept
the situation, abut ask again to be taken,
back into the brotherhood of Ilte,Uninn, lb
as noble as their bearing wee heroic dm•tig
the our—still nor Own heroic soldiers are
the first to yield ho theta this mend of
lice
Now, eilitenx, dint seebs4ion in the `Soot It
ne been overthrown, to It not both wsso and
not that the J 1.411111011 usurper?, pt the North,
ho, ntoon7 oNter nettrpattonchavo arroga-
tad to themselves the control of the Union
should be driven from power; and
that the people themselves,in their sovereign
capacity, should again take charge of the
I Administration of the Government '
In ell free canntrien pnLhoul portion will
and should exist: hut' he is a mistaken, if
not a imilman, who stoke to create a great
er love for party than for our country An
yet,it us Only ibis word party—Way:tart lean
tyranny which makes machines °fine°, and
forces them to mental bondage, more igno
ble and more corrupting then wan ever negro
shivery—it is only, I say, the malign iodic
coos of this word party which has prevented
the usurpers who droy—not lead—the Re.
publicene, from being driven from power.
My friends, you say dint you are in favor
of the resdornt ton of tile Union—how, that.,
ciit you net with men whose avowed purpose
is its destruction' You say that you ore
opposed to negro suffrage—how, then, eon
you support the usurpers who propose to
nip ne upon Ohio the penalty of partlaplis
fra loch isement —I o reduce the representn t ion
of Ohio, lit Congress—unless you will con
sent to make negenes your social and petit
mat equals Alt, yo.l nay that your party
loin not declared fur negro suffrage in tie
platform. Very true, but dui your platform
of lust yent declare in favor of negro suf
frage So; and yet the election once car
ried, every Republican member of Congress
from Ohio, and ilid iteptiblicen members
from l wenty-foui States, by n two-thirds
vole, carried bills through. the so-called
Mouse of Itepresentetives,to confer suffrage
on the negroeu of the District of Columbia,
and the negroes of tlie territories And now
my counirytnen,beliering ne I dojo the pa
triotism mid intelligence of the greet body
of the American people, irrespective of par
ty:l appeal to you to follow the pet:sloth,
lend of the patriotic °nisei.; of Wnshington
and Ot egos and Nehmska,to rise above par
ty, slit.' and in B.lllg our institutions, by
hurling the usurpers front power And
why, Ohioans, will you not exclaim, 411
hail Washington! All bail Oregon ' All
hail Nebraska! All hail to the young but
glorious trio—our frontier sisters of the
mighty {Pest' [Cheers ]
But you say you don't like lo act with
Ole Democratic party—you don't like the
name of Democrat Then for your country's
sake, for your ehildren's sake, for your own
sake, call yourself what you will, but rote
and not a illi those who seek to save our
country from bankruptcy—our institutions
from lots/ rum,• •
But why not, without evasion, not with
the Democratic par .! During its admit,
istrutton oft a ire of our Government,
during a per f more than sixty yean,
ours was the happiest and most prosperous
land on earth. We were triumphant in two
foreign ware, and the treason of Burr, the
attempted insurrection of filmy, and the
threatened nullification of Mx. Calhoun,
wen all conquered by simply adhering to
the Constitution, without shedding one drop
of blood. Ido niql say this boastfully,lbut
in the vindication of history ; forlin Dem
ocratic party require. no elndieekon ; its
record is our country's history. Look around
you—hon few are those in this Vag assem
blage who wore not represented during the
late terrible conflict by father, brother or
son And yet Franklin county gives more
than two thousand Democratic majority;
and as it was with this, so was it with every
other county In Ohio. But you say, it
might be better to organise a new party.—
But why a new party I In point of num
bers, the Democracy were sever so strong as
at the present moment, nor so well orgeni
-Our names describes the character of
oar free institution/I,mnd while other parties
have risen, &Perished for a brie/space, and
then died and passed away, the Democratic
petty has eoutinued,_to live, beam:re-di
principles are Woee of eternal justice; be
cause its life is theJife of the Constitution,
and while It exists the Democratic party
cannot die. And yet Ido not claim Infalli
bility for the Democratic party, for Demo
orate are only men, and all mortal men gre
liable to err. But in its principles, 1 Jdo
claim that the,Dentooratio party is infalli
ble, and it site principle which constitutes
the difference between parties. Then, bon
pennant I:likens—ion who truly love the
Union, as we agree in principle, let us act
together.
=
Once upon Vitae, I read of a gallant ship
which put to sea amid Vie perils Op fearful
worm. A hurricane madly swept across
the waste of water ; the angry thunder burst
with convulsive shocks and"the lightning's
red erre painted hell on the sky." The
brave ship wee soon dirnantled , her hut
weeks were swept away ; coning., and bin
ken must, formed a tangled nuts. upon the
decks, and the survivor. of the crew had
abandoned the deck, but the lightning's
flash revealed a solitary unit. stnniling by
the shattered helm, with chart in It and.try
iug to keep the ship above the wares, but
determined that if she\ perished, be would
not enrsive Sit now, too, in 'lilt terrible
storm which threatens lo engulph our IMO i
tuitions, with the Union chard in his hands,
4ndrear Johnson stands by the holm, de
termined that while he tires the good ship
Constitution shall in safety surmount the
storm [Good, good 1
We of the Democratic party stand by this
national pilot, not because lie belongs to our
* party , not because we elated him , but lie
-04115,1 he is right; and will not you who did
elect him, stand by Jll/111.1011 and the Union
for the same reason
need 1101 003 to you. that our 00•10
01011 10 compu+ed 01 three branches—the
executi VI, legislaijjc and judicial, and that
no act dim besonfe 'law °oleos It receives
the approval of the President, or II passed
over his head by a two thirds vote by both
Volt.. of Congress Yon also k now kite
the (4.1,011111t0n explicitly dpec,lares, thavrin
resolution or rote which requires, the cam
otirrence of both 1100508 0701 1110 veto And
yet the junto at Washington, composed of
Repretteniatice• front twenty fiN 0 Staten,
who hive usurped the rights anti powers of
thirty six State., who have panned resolu
tions, the object of which is to change the
fundamental law of the land, and have sent
'them In ihe States, without the approval of
the Preablent, and in flagrant •iolation of
the letter and spirit of the Consittutton
Then, Republican citizen., it ia-for you to
determine whether you prefer to stand by
Aldrew-Johneon, the President of your own
°home, or whether you will take side, with
the conspirators, who aim at the subversion
of your liberties, by the destruction of the
Coast itutton
LEM=
Now, my countrymen, let toe ask you,
whether it is from desire that this Constitu
tion and Uuinn of Mrs shall continue to
exist as formed by our fathers ; or is it
your wish that our country shall be reduc
ed to Ills anarchy of Mexico, or the despot
ism of Russia, or .Austria?
It is laid down as a maxim by all great
political writers, that there is but one of two
methods of dealing withea rebellion The
first may be called, the Plutonic, and, the
second the Christiin plan liy theflrst pol-
icy tali entire race of people who rebelled—
incluaing men, women and children—would
be totally exterminated, thereby forever
preventing that people front again giving
trouble
The other policy in heeled upon the idea
that a great eonr4leion never taken place
without a eorretoponding cause, and that
when the canna in removed, thin' quiet and
older, and individual and public rights
should be restored And by this moans
make friends of those who before were ene
mies.
All writere.agree that there is no noddle
ground—you toast be either as cruel and
relent less as the moot ferocious savage; or be
as forgiving and generous its a ehristian •
nod any at i letnpt Of a middle policy to cer
tain to lend to dinastrov consequences
After a war of thirty years between Sam
ciao and Rome, we are told by lavy, that
the Roman Senate resolved to combine both
consular armies and put no end to the war.
But by an ingenious straiagem of Pontius
the Samnite General, the Ramat armies
were Induced to pass the I'nnadine Follett;
and became inextricably involved between
two defiles, while the army of the enemy
surrounded them 'the Romans defied the
Sainnitem to battle, but the Wier knowing
that their enemy most surrender or perhili
from otnrro , ion declined the combat Pon=
hos called n council of war, which was un
able to agree as to the true policy' to be pur
sued By common consent, the elder Pon
this, father of the commanding general
alike distinguiehed for wisdom an for valor,
was written to for his advice—lie being
thought too old to visit the camp. The old
atateentan replied: •.Make , the Romans
your lciends. This can only be done by n
generous policy: for they are as brave and
haughty as ourselves. Then, instead of en
emies, make them our friends, and Sam
nium will become doubly strong—for we
will then not only have our own strength,
but also the streoffh t of Renne s " Ilut,,,the
Sammie' were unequal lo an not of magna
nimity—they must, at least, have the pleas
ure of muttony the Romans Old Harem
nine l'ontius was again consulted, and thin
time he was hauled to the Samnite camp.—
When told that the council had rejected his.
advise, be said : "SlllOO, thee, you do,
know how to be generous, you must Barn
to be oruel, The Romans must either be
injule our friends, or die. If too die.
eitqt for you to be great, braping generous,
then be wise, by destroying the enemy
whom you refuse to make your friends, and
although you will reader the name of Sam
alum infamhus yet you will'aecure peace
for several geperations, for Rome will be
left without
But the Brannites, incapable of a great and
generous sotion, and shrinking from the in
famy of • barbarous one, with the instinct
of mall natures. resorted to a middle, and
consequently, to au erroneous policy. The
Roman army was not only deprived of its
itices,,,,But, even to the consuls,their soldiers
were stripped of all their olothing, save a
shirt, and thus degraded were compelled to
pass under the conqueror's yoke. With
shame upon their brows, bit vengeance in
their hearts,the Consular armies, naked and
.1 rmed, returned to Rome. What was
the result? All Rome—the very women.
and the little children, yet in theiemothers'
arms, all cried aloudfor death or vengeance•
And instead of Rome becoming the friend
of Remittal, as generous treatment would
have made her—instead of Roman and Ram
olio embracing with the embrace of broth
ers, the war again burst forth with a more
direful fltry, and only ceased after twenty
five yearn of carnage, upon the total des
truction of every Bainnite lowa and city,
and the total eatirpstliou of the Remelts
FT7.r;TN,T , T77"Fr''‘'"'!=rv
BELLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY, JULY -27, 1866.
I will I,ot, citizen*. insult your pninotism
or your intelligenoe, by ni.tliing
cation of the moral of this'lrgend ol history
Hut, let me ask. whether in the event of, tir
becoming iii•olsed in wnr itgniti4 Fr
and Englaitil—,vtl, their sisteeo lutteired
'seeds of war-4111..1,er, In such an event,
we would 1,1 arty st.ronger by ti tying °levet;
of (as r own :410104—our cintntryinen, who
n o w extend to us the lintel of reconcilillloll
—nrrat t ..,l gigs. lust us n 3 0110111 um • W hat
would knee boon the result of the hue war
brad Enginoll anti Frunze born untied with
the Confederntos
Is it not wise tv tie gen...mi. are WI. an
menu Ihnt we are afraid in he jllBl
7112 CONNTIttiTION MUtur ASI. MIA!, 'lc
PKIVIKUVRio
ThIS M4lllllO Spirit of 11101111 , 111 . ;r1.1 emu i:
meta of Indrem JSck+on, tor without the
ZOlll4lllllllOl there C:1111 ho no Union.
Then, ettisens, the only unention which
we have In Izsk ourselves 111, ore we' wmally
of being free' For if we ore no worthy,we
will all rise . aho•e inure parttime consi.lin
tie.. and think, and net, and vole for our
country alone
For Illy owe p tri.eitur.,rtsy heart in full
of hope' 'through the gloom of the night,
I are light bre tking,not from the east, lout
frotirthe far off, I u yMing. the glorious
neat (tor eolleirymen from the hunks of
the Nlinnianippi nod the %11.sollrl. frorn the
pooko of the Itacky Ilutuitaina and the dis
tant shores of the Pectlie,lty the light ntog'o
final) they Seed &lad tudioga of gre.ti joy
nod-burl on hope' Who, then, man hour,
dares In despair' Let Ito place (1011fideltee
111 (7011 . 11g0011110P8,1111.1 the patriotism of our
people, and nil will yet he well'
AWFUL SCENES IN THE SOUTH--
Women and C1.'111'471 Limy from Sairrati.
—Amine ur Neoryou and .Ifaharna 06.er
rat lons am( Experirners of •••• Eye Wane.
In this femme stricken region—the Vonsa
Valley—l passed n II tnb, of cabin., iiroott'r
which were half a do,m nearly naked chil
dren, but did not stop .at any of them till I
hail reunited a point about three miles from
the edge of the valley Several children,
ranging in ago froth four to twelve years,
and clothed only in what is wt cocoon for
an, under garment, wore sitting around.,
while two, females were, with - etneelated,
countenances, picking some wild vegetables
in the vicinity, from watch to make a meal
for themselves and suffering children I
could not mistake their oorttlinion of desti
tution, even at a glance. But I determined
to hear their story from their own lips, and
I accorlingly, halted my horse, and asked
one of the families:
••Mititam, could you accommodate me with
a dinner to-day I"
She paused a moment, and I repeated the
quest ion
"God knows," said Nils, and tours began
to trickle down her cheeks, I would
not turn a stranger and a traveler away,
but there Lee not been an ounce of meal in
the house for five days; we and our chil
dren linen lived entirely during that period
upon boiled green' with neither salt nor
pepper "
!low many obtldren hate you • " I
asked
Three, suit this lady two
• small, as you nee We have no way Is live:
we cannot eren get need la plant nor gar•
dean. how we 111 C 10 lire, (loch only
known "
••Are your husbands dead "
"Yes, boils were killed in the arm) "
'Do you never go into the valley plants
lion for it'd ' I enquired
••les,Wlllii is the use rood with
empLn
lie She repented, ••tehtit is the tese .• They
can du nothing for us ; they hate se.trcely
anything left, with which to help them.
eelyes With families to look after, how
earn we mien n livelihood! •
"But," I suggested "t lie !maple of Ten
nessee, Kentucky, and the other Stales
bare contributed liberally to aid you "
"Yea ,- she responded, but we live .1 rat
away. flue nearest point ill which we can
get anyibing,ialluniere•ille, n kink is Iwen
ly I will have to carry it on Ay back,
and I am scarcely able to walk alone ,
tried to borrow a horse dow''n m ihe valley,
but the man told me that the last home he
bail, hail been taken by a negro, and that
the agent,. of the Freedmen's Bureau, bad
decided iLal the negro 'should keep it, and
I woos compelled to abandon all hope "
I hod taken the advice of the gentleman
who told me to provide myself for the jour
ney, and had in a sack a peek of meal for
my horse, and in my saddlebags corn bread
and bacoh for two days lat once gave all
I bid to the family, knowing that I could
reach Ounters•ille the following tlay,or even
that night, by fast riding end my horse sub
met on gross, of which, all along the way,
there was an abundant growth. I had in
tended to travel but a few miles each day,
but now I determined• to go direct to Gun
tersville, and make daily trips in the coun
try, returning at night
I have seen expressions of gratitude un
der almost every circumstance. A hundred
times have I seen the dying soldier on the
battle-field breathe out bin last breath in
gratitude for a drop of water to cool his
parched lips ; but neverlid I see' no much
fervency as On thin occasion; never heard
I more eloquent prayer than al that moment
fell from the lips Of that suffering woman
At this point I left the scene. I could
endure it no longer. I had heard of the
suffering of the fatine striaken people, but
raver never dida for • rampant picture to
myself a tithe of the horrOrt spfead out be-
Imme.
I=
was the next pereon I addressed. I bad
passed all the buts for three miles, not de
siring to give my nerves a seoond shook,
that day ; but on the road I met an old, de.
°Tepid female, clothed to a worn wrapper,of
°oarse domestic, oarrying on her back •
sack, in which was halls bushel of meal.
"Madam," sold I, "you are voided, are
you not you are 100 old to oarry ouob o
load
~ 1 have toted it eighteen mile ; clear from
Guntersville," said she.
....low kr do, you live from here," I
aired.
••Nall • mile."
"And you have carried this •11 the way
from Guntersville: hod you no one to
send P
air," said the, '4 bad two sons wflo
lived with me, end two more who bed fami
lies living neer. 'They were all killed in
the war,and, the wife ut one of them isdeall,
'and I hail to take care of hip four children,
Ike °ldeal of whom 'weight years of age:- I
had to carry tine clear trim rbintc.r.miir.or
Warr: "
linutened by tut ropolly 00 poestble to
01101,r•Vtlie, ttntil renehttl the town annul
'Ditto Ight. I Intl expected to rind the
country over to *linens i4e ttethol cotoltilun'
of the people . but I Intl no need of that
I Intl Oct. eely re.tebod the Siert in the
morning. before I 10111 representMlT, from
eVOty section within circuit or thirty stoles,
fro n iehioli I ctlulti obtain - as true it Omni.°
of the prev.illorg destitution Its Witt poesilile
frum an extended tour through the mytn
lomi
PIM! woy
Palle 1 wax otanaing in Ant of the ho
tel, I was approached by a 'piddle aged tb
male, who inquired of Igo where was the
place al winch rations were denli sill latakhe
poor I prattled to Ille hOnae, hot before
She departed I naked,
❑ow for Jo you live frourigiere •
Thirteen miles." mall she
• Is there touch suffering t here I in
quireil
Yes. err, you hare no Oen. of 114 en
U. you go ...lough here tiinlte•e you'
• le!, etrmettongh to keen tet from dying
—that IS 1114101 of ..• ; .get a little meal—
ow blew eke; oleo we tlonot expect , we
are glad-lo get enough [twat to Loep us from
dying
"Where does this relief woe from • ' I
sAced
••Bome from Tettnesser, and some fr
Kentuck y "
•'llow du you get It out home •"
tiarry it on our books; we huts no
litirses. They were token from us •luring
the war by Fedeini soldiers who passed
through out country Cr any were left du) ,
hate been 1111.01 out la the uegroes by the
agents of the littreau. who uronose to pay
for them but net••r do it "
••lluoe not the FrOC4/0/01/ a Bnrenu bey
you a well no the negroes , "
..No: we get nothing bitt what the people
of cool ions 01111. sintered less than ours be
4(OW upon .14 '.
"Do you ever come litre gild hull nothing
to.give nut! '
"Yes, sornoi intr., I !Now' a woman who
Come sixteen tittles, otter having lived three
days witheut anything, as site . gtive the
small mitt she hod to her childreq,and then
gut nothing. and had in walk all the way
home She has since died
"Are there ninny oases of starvation
among you ?" t next inqqired
.yes; the other day a woman
walked 17 miles here for some food for her
' Befriend four children, and she rot a peek
of meal ; but she was so exhausted that she
died before she got home She was found
kg the road-side and buried, and the neigh
hors went to her house and found ono of her
children dead."
'Why don'. the men come after the pro
yhdons 1" I asked.
-Why, there is not one man in ten fami
lies." Wire the response: ••they were all
killed, or died in the war "
NO MEAT "TOUST
I mel a boy about tblrteen years of age
Carrying a peek of meal, and I asked
.• !low far do you lure from the city"
Five midea "
"Are the people bad off there V
"lee, we Ists•e lin.ll to live on Ilse corn
until given us; we hive had no meat in
our horse since Itagust List, and the Lord
kilo we when we shall linve any more "
"Do you get corn meal enough s '
•
"Nu, tor ~we thou I average mare than a
perk II week,and Ihere lore four of Its in the
Gaudy '
.•Where is your fol her
was killed al Nll4llOll Ridge
—Aro iloe people armtiol y ou as bad oil 1118
you ore
Vey, air, some are worse otf ; and only
a few are better oti '
—Boo did you get along before the wy '
••%'ery wall , we 11.11 k good house, bur II
WWI burial by ihe Northern soldiere,ond ov•
eryibing we had was .rr.ed off by then, "
••What did you do '"
"We had, a little farm, but our horsed
were token slang will. everything else, and
we are now too poor to buy others or get
implements to work with In plane of the
ones destroyed when the soldiers went
through our country "
I could fill columns with particulars as
heart-rending as these. I conversed, with
at least no hundred persons during my
may. which lasted until the morning of the
4th of June, and all of them trace aimounts
as doleful its those narrazeil
I mode inquiries of different-parties well
informed on the condition of affairs. and
:hey estimated that in five counties south
of the Tennessee river there smile at least
twenty thousand perso n a bordering on a
state of starvation! —Correspondant phtcaga
Trabeme, (A twill tow)
LLTTNR OF PILKIIIOUNT JOHNSON tis TUN
TAMMANT lista. Dareessur:—The Fallow
ing is the letter of President Johnson decli
ning nu invitation to be preseni'st the cell'.
bration of the Democricy at Yeoman, Hall,
New York, on the 411. of July
Execurivs Mckstoy,
W•stnittrrow, D. C , ✓ltfy 2, 1866.
Ellt—l thank you for the cordial invita
tion of the time-honored Society of Tamma
ny, to participate with them in the celebra
tion of 'be approaching anniversary of our
National Independence.
The national tone and patriotic spirit of
the invitation inert my hearty approval.
They aro indioationeof growing sentiment
which, now that the bitterstrlfe of civil war
has ceased, requires • renewal of the pur
suits of peace, a return to the Constitution
of our fathers, rigid adherence to Its prin
ciples,oincrcasid. revirence for its sacred
obligalinqs, a restored,-invigorated and per
manent liaipa, and a fraternity of feeling
that shall make us, as a people, one and in
dissoluble. There ass be, for the pairiot,
no higher ditty, no nobler work, than the
obliteration of the passions and priljudieslf
which, resulting from our late sanguinary
conflict, have retarded reeonelllatlon and
prevented that complete restoration of all
the States to their oonatitutional relations
with the federal government, which is es
sential to the peace, unity, strength and
prosperity of the nation.
Regretting that my public duties will
not permit me to be present at your celebra
tion, I am, very respectfully yours.
Assam Josses:l.
To the Hon. John T. Hoffman, Sc.
—Swimming is one of the regular bran:
ohee of a Honolulu female boarding school.
A profemorablp In ope of those institutions
would be a very desirable ”posiab.'
NEW ENGLAND THE BIRTH-PLACE OF
NULLIFICATION AND SECESSION.
From it pungent opnech recently delivered
uy Wit II W Hanna, of Indinnn nt Lou
isville, Kentucky. lit' Innke the ronowing
MEM
• N 111116.111011 was horn on the. very 'Sap
of the same Now England States whose pill:
pus are now so prolific of austhemosagoinet
secs++muiet e, and whose men end women
doily sopphieate Atonality fiod for the sweet
privilege of washing their hands in the
blood of Jefferson Davis [Voiees—••That to
so, that's so," and cheers I The history
of the eynorry bears meow in this slate
merit, and no man eon oiteeessfully deny it
Lel us nerd over a few pages and see how ii
I hold in my hood the adarese published
by the famous convention held at Hartford,
thimiectient, on the 15111 day or January,
ISIS Masiiachipietts, Now Ilanipithire,
Conneetteoh Rhode Island and Vermont
were nll represented it. that convention
Among the names of those who represented
Masmchuselts, I see the name of Samuel
Sumner, who, mom likely at the some lime,
transmitted his. name and hi. treason to
Charles Sumner, the prevent Senator from
!hilt State [l.aligliter and applause ] But
that wan ilonlifilens before the•Stithncr ftimi
ly had %`/wised to make. , treason callow;
[Great laughter ] If you ,will indulge nte.
sir. I will remd a single extract from that
address:
• Event. may prove that the douses of oar
ealnmittee are deep and permanent. They
nist, be found to proceed not merely front
she blooluese of prejudice, pride of opin
ion, violence of party spirit, or the entifit
Ilion of the times, but they may be traced
to implacable combinations of indi•idnale,
or of glatbs, to monopolize power and office
and to trample without remorse npon the
rights and intetevts of commercial rest in,"
of the Union Whenever it shatl tippetnr
that these causes one rntlical and permit
nest, a Reparation by equttable arrangement
will be preferable to nn alliance by con
straint. among nominal friend, but real en
cones, inflamed by nwtord hatred and jeal
ousy, and inviting. M intestine ilivintons,
contempt and egressions froniabroad '
Ilere, •ir, the right of a State to secede
from the Federal Union was promulgated
ttt New England as ninny as fifty years ago
A GOOD HIT.
The following racy examtnntion of a. can
didate for adinmion to the bar is taken from
the Western Law Journal, and in decidedly
a good hit :
'•Do you awoke, air 7"
••lime you a awe cigar 7"
"Yea. air," [Extending a ehott eta ]
, •Now, mr, what is the first duty Vs law
yer ?"
"To collect fees "
"Right. What is the second ?"
"To motase•the number of his olients."
"When does your position towards your
client change*"
"When making n bill of coots "
"Explam
"We then occupy the antagonistic post.
lion I ansurnit the character of plaintiff,
and he becomes the defendant."
"A suit decided, how do you stand with
the lawyer conducting the other side
Cheek by jowl "
••Enotigli, sir, you promise to become an
ornament to your profession, and 1 wish
you success Now,are you aware of the du
ty yon owe me*"
"Perfectly "
••De‘cribe it"
wit is lo ash you to drink "
"BO suppose I decline*"
Cniulidate scratches his head
—There Is no instance of the kind on re
cord in the booke cannot answer that
questlon "
•lou tire right, and the' c infidenee with
which you make the Orsertiou shown yo
have rend the law attentively Let's talc.
the drink, out I will sign your certificate'
SHORT OF MEMORY
The abolitiontat a, in addition to their me
ny oilier- fauna art of late acquiring one
which 10411tilea rather convenient: Th ey
arr ' fuswy ()MI tnrrn . Some of the must.
,portant thins in the history albs world
—to ings that transpired almost within a
year, they are either losing recollection of,
or getting en confused on the subject, as to
get them completely reversed For instance
many of them are wow fully of the notion
that the' Copperheads succeeded in the late
presidential election, and that Johnson was
elected by the Copperheads,that hie admin•
istration is a Copperhead miritinidffation,
and that all the officers [mar him are Cop
perheads They forget that they elected
Johuttou , that the Copperheads had no
hands in the matter; that hundreds and
thousands of Copperheads were maltreated,
denounced, mobbed, and some even mur
doted for refuting to vote for Johuson.—
These same abolitionists who only one year
ago shouted so loud for Johnson--rod voted
as they shouted—are now filling their lot
peroapd running their legs off to find op
portunttie• to abuse Jffithion, tbe name as if
he had been our candidate and were now
our . President. We tell them in seriousness
and,good faith that tAry voted! for Johnson
and elected him. Don't they recollect when
be was on Mitr ticket with Old Abe ; that
they burnt ile and organized Lincoln and
Johnson Loyal League'? How very short
their memory is.—Br.
—The following purports to be a medloal
puff: "Dear Doctor—l .ball be one hundred
and seventy-fire years old next October. For
over eighty-four years I have been an invalid,
unable to step, except when moved with a lever.
But a year ago I heard of the tiranionlar Syrup.
I bought a bottle, smelt the cork, and found
myself a man. I can now run twelve miles and
a half varitiouf."
—!}lope hey' been taken In Louisville
towards the election of delegates so the
Ph iladelph la. Coavention.
—A robber's care 'ban been discovered
in Cornwall, New York,fitted up with beds,
cookiog utensils,
31
--The wire worm isiii7troging Virgin
ia °out, and the potatoe bug la eating the
Virginia potatoes:
?
—Th Worm. or Greene oouttly,
Po..havo n ' isd General Grout for Pros
Went lo I .
ss-•
• --Brownlow it o rattle-snake, with the
retitle at the wroth' end of him.
NO. 29.
GOOD TEMPER
There's not a (longer thing on earth,
Nor yet one half v., dear;
Tie worth more than disiinguish , d birth
Or thousands gained a year
It lend. the day a nesoilelight,•
"fie Virtue's firmest shield ,
• And adds more beauty to the night
Than arle•liti eters ran yield.
% /It uinketL pot ert3 umteu t,
To norroar, whispers yens..
It is a gift from h !Cut •
For mortals to increase
It meets) 1111 with a Mile at inurn,
it telbe you to repose. ,
A Mower for peer and peasant torn,
an everlasting rose.
A charts, to banish grief away,
To snatch from brow the rare,
Turns tears to smiles, makes dullness gay
Spread. gladness everywhere.
And yet 'lig cheap AM summer dew
That gems the lily's breast;
A talisman fur love, as true
An et er msf) . pufsresed.
As PlUitAbei 1.11161/W. through the cloud,
When threarning storm begins--
Al music 'mid the tempest loud,
That still 1m sweet way won.—
As spans at, arch across the tide
Where w v., conflicting, foam,'
Sit come, this seraVh to our sole.
This angel to our home.
What may this Wondrous spirit be,
With power unhiant before--
~ T his charm, this bright divinity
Good Temper—nothing more.
Good 'Temper—'tis the china est girt
That woman homeward brings.
And can the poorest peasant lilt
Tin bliss unknown to kings.
_ .
THIS, THAT AHO THE OTHER
—Et cry bird pidaiirit ail with ita lay, astie
Ily tha ben
—A nicer chain around allog's neck will
M 1 keep him from barking or h tmg.
—lt is understood that Clement! Sick!es will
cept the inismion to the Hogue
—Kirby Smith is in Lexington, Kentucky,
o gum.' of General ham Preston.
Arnoutn• —lt to not the arntsb upon
rriage that gives it motion to strength.
—lt i• stntal that the Confederate tleneral
Early is preponng.► Itedwry of hot campaign,
—Sidney Everett, son of Edward Everett,
him married bliss Kitty Fay, a Volition Wrens
—Neither Wee curb, taletteieth, (aloe calves
or ei en false eyes are se lieAe false trgues
—Ueneral Lee thinks he 1.11 hare three
hundred students at Washington College next
session.
-.-4-17 , 1te JOUrtleyllloEl pluton:Ml of hleosphte ,
Tennessee, demand et: dollars • day after the
10th of July, -
—The wheat crop of -North Carolina it said
be an averageone. Corn and potatoer prom
. alarge yield.
—Senator reseenden lost half him property,
aFluding his •doable papers and library, by
he Portland are.
—The Cosmopolitan say. that Hon. Milliard
Fillmore and lady have just left Part. on' their
way borne to America.
—An old lady being asked to subscribe for
a newspaper declined on the ground that when
she wanted news she m►nulactured it.
---Tkp Republican Convention of the State
Blaine on Thursday passed strung resolutions
favor of negro suffrage. Stick a pin *era
—A nosegay is assily 'obtained. Four
brandy toddies • day will soon put you in the
way of one that will astonish all your friends,
--Senator Lane died at Leavenworth, Kan
sae, on the 11th instaht, front the streets of the
pistol shot be inflicted on himself the week be.
—A car tinier in New Ork•ns killed •
man by striking him on the lead with • loaded
whip, for tutting on his car Ath • cigar in his
hand.
—President Johnson has handed to Bishop
otter, of ti.itith Carolina, his cheek for SUMO
n aid of the Theological, Institute in that
I=
—The negro troops on the Red river to
Texas are enjo)ing a carnival of robbery and
murder. They have become a terror to friend
and foe.
—Hon. J. 11. Kea t on, late Confederate
Postmaster ileueral, was married on the 31st
ult., to Mien Mollie F. Taylor, of Anderson
county, Texas.
—Kossuth has, it to mid; ieveard a great
number of Inritations front Hungarian. to put
himself at the head of a revolution in Hungary
now that the war has broken out.
—The " National Johtmon Club," Iron
Montgomery Blair, President, and the "Nation
1 al Union Club," W. Randall, President,
jtav been oonsolidated at Washington City.
—A man In Philadelphia has been sentenced
to four years Impiisoninent and die payment or
$lOO fine for biting off • policeman's none. Ile
will hare a long time in which to chew his Lite.
boy at Or!mum. Massachusetts, lately
coughed up the leg of • porcelain dull. It had
been in his lungs foE seven Jean, and all that
time he was thought to be ill of consumption.
—Robert Carrol, of Vliinnamac, Indiana,
has • natural curiosity— a singing mouse. It is
small., and almost jet black. It sings like •
Canary bird, and is the wonder of every be
bolder.
—The tears we shed for those we lose are
the streams which water the garden of the
heart. Without them it would be dry and bar
ren, end the gentle flowers of affection would
perish•
—The Nair Orleans Picayune aneouncee
the arrival there of the Moans Able, from 81.
Louie, laden with provisions for the suffering
poor of Alabama, to whom, it says, they will be
god-send.
—The receints of lumber daring the lilt
week at Chicago were 18,329,000. The demand
from the weei,►ad retuthweet .1111 contineee
ai
eeedtngly active, and the market thew. no eigrui
of abaternenL
honored—A Vienna eorreepood•
eat of the New York Mersa save that Gemmel
McClellan is the only foreign military other of
say note who Is allowed (memos. at the Aus
trian military headquarters.
--If we would have powerful minds, we
meet think ; if we would have faithful hearts,
we must love; if we would bare ionsOlee, we
must labor ; and them three—thought, love and
labor—ineludeall that Is valuable In 116.
—By alb- gaallllaa may a fool be knows—
sager without owe. opewat without yeah,
amp without ototive,hequtry without ea af
loat, putting Bust to u amigo?, mud treat Or
hopseity to dioethemato betwees u Mead sad
ftw.
—Often se it has lass, ehtuged that Gamy
la in favor of neva andrage and neve equality
he bu yet dulled It. Let every voter re
member that.
Should Osnry be skated Goveraor, tha ad.
figre l
a biL 'ansayirsais wi ll vote for hi. snow
9.
—The post mottos. szassissation of . nal
girl, steel seven Olin, who died la EstitieholiN
Conn., renroslod oho fast• that her death was
mums' by particles which had boos Netts from
her liner nails. Thsy were resliewod, sad
etlekint into the Ades of bar stomach, sassed
nieorstion, mad dead sausol.
CLYNIA AND THE Sokimps.
The Disunionist', ever sine. Mr. Clymer''
nomination, have been heralding far and
wide the charge that his record in the State
Senate, daring the war, a it *games the sol
diers. That !hie was a •iliainous dander,
without the least foundation in fact, was
well kuown'to every person wbo had kept
himself posted in legislative ploceedlngs ;
Hut the messes of the people, and especially
the soldiers thmesselves, (who, while ka the
army. had but Wilt tipporturally to 'once
closely the doings o$ each mend: of the
isegielatore,) were not posies!: tad as a
consequence a great many accepted this
hue mad cry as truth. The editor of the
Bedford 0 rattle, himself a member of the
Legisisturejuswever, takes the eland
down in the following pungent and conclu
sive style:
•'\ nice little dodge. gentlemen, cromlech
yott nt, hut it Would be more creditable to
you, though steno eerefeierble, if you would
icsore . n little higher regard for the truth !
Ili° record of Mr. Clymer which you ore
eirsulming, Meteors. pro
variention (Twit beginning to yid Your
object is to prejudice the soldiers mad their
friend, opine, Clymer, by rnierepreeeming
hie noun while! . In the Senate Mr Cly
mer in no instrooe Toted ngninet the inter-
est, of the soldier. Ile ruled fur Mt amend-
went to permit *olden• to rose an lA. army
We will bind ourself to pay to the chairman
of the Disunion Hiate rommiliee one hun
dred dollars on gold, if we cannot %how Mr
Clymer's name reeorded in favor of that
amendment The record which you prii
iinee in that of 181:1, when the Denioerale
used to vole for Mr vormderatoon of any
measure rotlttoe.l 'in the Senate; beeeume
ibefpeaiter or the" lam Senate Jtad usurped
the clair, and those rho voted to proteret rah
legislation recognized his usurpation as a ngh-
got act, which 11.0 Denmorals could not
Ind would not do. Dui otter the election of
lew Speaker, the very same measures
411 eh the Democrats refused to consoler so
tg as the chair was occupied by a usurp
were voted for by Mr. Clymer and his
associates Let it be undefatood, now and
henceforth, that the record of Vr Clymer,
published,Sty t.be Disunion State Committee,
nod OWN being scattered over the country,
is a mere garbling of the proreedatge of the
Senile, and fails. In any fostance to inform
the reader that it was only during the usur
potion of the choir by the Speaker of the
former Senate, that Mr Clymer refused to
vote for the consideration (mark you, not
on the nwrili, but simply for the considera
iron) of any matter introduced in the Sen
ate. and that after the usurpation was at
an end, he (Mr. Clymer) did vote for the
interests of the soldiers throughout, and
en celled some of the .•Itepublican" Atm
aloes to account for not doing tie some.
Gentleinen, we wantoand will have fair dea
ling in this matter Yon are trying to play
an unfair game, and you trust to popular
prejudices to bear you out in the trick. But
we appeal from your false and garbled state
ments to the record Welt We say that we
will pay one hundred dolls,n to gold, to coy
man who asks us, it we cannot show by the
record,' that Mester Clymer seta] far the
smendatantia give the soldiers a right to
vote in the army, and that he also voted to
Inmate the pay.of soldiers in the se rvice.
Here is a standing offer that will not be
withdrawn during the camilaign."
MAIITI/01. 81111TIIMIT.--001. Galloway,
of the Memphis Agaland., whose Wore la
as gentle as It Is brave, thus alludes to a
reoent tribute paid by Southern women-to
the memory of their gallant dead:
"It woe d touching and beautiful thought
that prompted our Southern wirnee to IRK—
sport the anniversary of the surrender for
wreathing with flowers the graves of our
noble dead. Mother Nature appreciates
the holy motive, and each returning Spring,
with noiseless footsteps, will acme with bar
(direst flowers to the shrine of sacred mem
orise. Yes, upon that . day the sunlight
will linger more lovingly near the lowly
mounds—the twilight deco will fall more
gently upon their turfy beds—thelsoft night
winds will murmue more musically around
their mossy pillows—am pale-Awed moon
will throw her silvery beams, like s t balo of
glory, on the still, solemq earth; and the
silent stare, like calm, angel watchers, wilt
keep their sad, holy vigils above the peace
ful and. Then, while Southern women
live and Southern flowers bloom. the names
of A4llO/1 and] Focuser cannot fade
from the earth.. Weep on, ye tender night
'ows ; the ead that wrnps their clay le wor
thy of your holiest tears,•O, heavenly night!
Let thy song be softer, bird of the wild:
I wood. for It Is meet. that thy glad notes
should melt to sadness over the g
departed worth."
A NATIONAL PECTElas.Thei Richmond
Tomei mikes the following suggestion
'here ie, w• believe. Will a PAR'
in tha rotunda of lb. Capital at Waah
logien, -which patiently serails its inevita
ble tale in the form of some hideous daub
of • national painting. It is lb. panel
next to that. fantods "shin piece," where the
talent of the artist nes exhausted in paint•
tog the well•dereloped legs 6t the signer's
of the Dehbtration of ludependenee. As
the Jacobins areijdubtless..proud of the late..
triumph of American valor "over a feeble,
old and helpless prisoner, let Congress ap
propriate $llO,OOO for a gigantic painting of
the 'Placing Elitacits upon Jeffarspo Davis." '
It is a magnificent subject for . an:sectim. •
plished artist. The cold, damp, cheerless
cell, the small Iron bedstead, the fragment
of mouldy bread; the overturned tin imp of
dirty water, the bold menu& of a dozen
stalwart, armed soldiers upon a beide old
Paleper, the heavy manacles and the up-
UMW illadka•batataar of theltereulesn black
smith, Ire splendid materials for a great
national ploinra. As a certain pootio li-•
cense is allowed to artists, Head-turnkey
Mileenhould be Introduced, looking at this
noble and inspiriting exhibition of Ameri
eau valor end kumenlly, through a double.
barred window."
Tama or IT —Via Preoduam's Bureau
wblob was passed by the radical Geary
party in Navel% but fortuastely vetoed
by the Troaldwoh, proposed to spend about
one hundred million dollars annually for
the bone& of tit. Masks. ThM would have
bees at the rata of- about IN per howl for
ea* whits maw wow end o►lid la dm
°matt, or gloat >6 for wish voter sans
ally. Alf the sapport of tin et peen. Jehs
W. (Mary is is favor of 'mahlhdi OW bill a
am,--iterithror. , _
Charlotte Oustetra gill abortly eel.
*brats the 110th aselvereary of her birth.
nosy tomato Is to hif '4oth :rest. Kole
B►tewa is 24. .795, Doss Isll6. MM.
too Celeste IA 61. Mrs. Jame bilged
is 66. Salts Deodet Barrow big:. filith
eau Mosbeek ) 27 Areal* hisei2lB
Reirsole Iffre Mrs. Versos Is ties* TO,.
Mn. J. 12. Allen is 22. itiiddismilksSiipiss
Is 22—sud Is rousgem ..14411110081r
en the stage. Puss is M. , Mato gaNiot
26. Maggie Mitchell 80. '
-414At0 Awl ord4 hi 0 "
the pottosro right w getoolk