The Beaver Argus. (Beaver, Pa.) 1862-1873, June 26, 1867, Image 1

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~. TILE BEAVER. Ait dITS t' ..
6
,BLisiiED EVERY wprrSirsiDei
?LI• -
TltErr
1 d ',acts building, on TILLED So
ra t'' °' '
. .
r ,,,,,ve11g-'•'' 4 . •• - • : :- ''.: '-'•' , • -
. .
~lICJ DOLTAES TER YEAR IN - AT/jaw& , „
1 .•••
• 1 coa t s ; of the paper will be hart:tithed, to
..-,:aglei - .
, i tni. atifire reltd . B each. . 1.--
'7,; ia al ' aiic a ii des on subjects of local or general-in -
_ ~':',.%pectfally solicited , To insure attention,
''' r l this kind must Invariably be accompanied)*
cots 0 . ,
' of the aiabor,'not for publication, bat 'as a
tv nam e
~ ,,,t yl a p iriet,•impoatti on.
Vitaelliad aniteenicatfons ahOnld be addressed to.
' ,y ; WEYAND, Editor krroprider,,,_.
•---- -------- 7 ---"-'-'*--7--'
:RAILROAD'S. - -
i -
Fir r6.; yr. WAYNE& CHICAGO RAILW4Y. •
• •
„....,,•,,d atter April 29, 1867.;Traica w4ll leave Stations
''' . ,, - .1,.... ,undays excepted)in follbava2 [Train leaving
..(- i4,1,4;d - at 4:50, P. 3r... leves daily.) ~- ' -
1 '• • rause 001X0 WXST. . •••t .
~ . -
. -- ---- 7 ---: " ---- E XelitEXP'ir- Ere*. Ear's
r - -- ; : , b 3-7 - urg
...--'"-----,
~., ; • _III 61,55 x 030sx 215rit 200 AX
y lorer ..... ... '• ..... r, 815,:. . 1000 ; 310
"''' ' ...... ...... 1 ,1 140 1222ra -•ffr 4511
?..". . ; ... .., .. .. .;11 . 110 ' esio , • asp .
A • 44la' c '' .' - 4,1122.1rx 150 - .706' , 08"
C'" t°n ....... ' ..... - ..
:' i P 23.5 sia no . ' 646 "
• lo,sillos. ............ ~ I . ,
'lle ........ l ...; '. 138 • 243 . J 3013 ,719
erm t' . ' ... . ......... I! 212 an slo - 7467'`
ri)P , -er h i 1 i ass i 560 1014 '. 920 -
.. ............ ,1 445 ,AV -1045' - '950
Creitline 1 .•• • • • • • 100 610 11100 1002
132 r7us ... ; .......... iii 635 .. 610', , 1185 , . /(mi ..:
fpper Sandeeky ....... ; e',l TA i ! 12204 1100,1
o 1 - ....... I! .. •• T.i s • 1251 -, Usli„.:
~w, ........
...... ,
....... 915 911 216 1280rns
. . 111 9 . oi : t. ............. i 1.0:11 1023 830 127
F„r W,sae.• ........... 1210rat,1145 , 520 800
Columtda ..' ........... 110 ITiOast 4104 , , . /146 . ,
''AVlNiir .I. ...... ' ...... r , 20 0 .121 - - 504 i 483 1
1: , ,,ar.,0th .. , ... . ...... , .: • .4 - 10 ' 220 q , 751 . mo ,
••-•‘oliiiito ............ '1.043 5 . 357 4 927' . 71.3. '
i
'a ,
- „;aza, .......... .... !• 7 00 ... 550 I 1120 910
l'i - LAINtt GOING I:Atlt. ,
-'- ' : '" ------ " -" • ---- : ---- '"EXP' S * 1 EeS. Ear's. Ear's'
L___------_— --.1—...
- c — bi ,,,, ) ,.....4,... ..
...... ,•,_ •/20..tx 10 4 4,h4 450rx i4Boax
••:'.14.1r110 . 4 :: .: .. ~..?!. .101 1250 - 627 ax 687
rravrith ..-:s.-.:- ...... .4'4 10:15 259 ' 810 829
v,... 1 .4.r .... •7E , • i.. 1133 . 420 901 • 940
1:••••••uabla .. , 4. :1219rx 531:1 944 • 1023 .-
„ r,,,i Warne •.'„J
.•,! 125 , 700 '- ICO3O ” 1185. %.
i•3olS'eit ••••, 236 ' 631 1136 1252rx
Lir a . ..... • .......... 11 =4 ' 950. Itr:34Ax 21,5 .
yece4.. .. '' ..... ' .... :.. 1 439 . 1106 . 141
' r i ,p,r Satiaii,ly :.,:..11 563 1185. '1
- 206 / 1 34 •
n„,...sra•• • 11 331 1216 pm 244 511
• .., j . • l' 0 05 1250 1 310-550
- c.,,,...1-e , , ii 625 f.XIO 840 600sx
11. ,.ud , ~; to 7 .. 230 346 636
i, , , , , ,,...... - • I 840 405 516 835
• ~,-.., fe . ' 'lt 907 • 420 540 9(21 -
„,,.. 1 .,,, t.. 0 943 . , 504 I 613 941
•l ii, a - ••• ; , 1001 ' 521 I '628 . 1000
.1-:••'a ••• - • ~ ilia)' 625 1 I 73D , 1115,
5161.. .. 1163 057 '' 71'9 ' . 114 s
p. , p' . i 125a11 8154 011). ~. 2151%
11:4. 4 .b. - 4 1 .
q•,; =0 950 • 1015 340
i .. .
____i_
I',:a.a4.',uen, New Ca•ile and Erie I Express' lea es
r„„, z , h .sn at 3:00 p: qt ; New Castle, 4:05 p . m; a es
6 rai: Neharzh, 6:45 p. Iletrtrning,4lves Pittab
ro z.
_t,„,:„...., ar. at N . . Cmile. 8:25 a.,,nrf Yonegstewno 0
1. 41 . 4 5!awn. New Castle and Pittsburgh Accorep o
-41:1.•,11,,5,:s Yo9nrstown, 5:45 a. m; New Cattle,l7:2o
: :o: zrri,o:•• at A lloglieny. 10:00, a m: , Returning,
:.t.'.‘ , . .1 . 11,•:booy• I:•.at p. m; arrives New Castle, 5:•2.)
•,..;.i. Young•itown, 7:20p. m. • : .
. .F. It. 31"1"ERS, General 214.1 Agent.,
. ..
CLESEI26;I) 5:, P, : BITItGIi 'RAILROAD: .
0. / -
,
iejand after Aliril 29, 867, tritie s. wilt leave Statio
ns
,1;i1,, ‘sa talk. s excel) ed) as followsJ • '
, I '
00 NG ROUTH.. t - . -
_ . .
i •< 1 1 - : Merl.IEXP' 8.; MAIL.. Accoi
t i,,,i0a1..........! ...... :. 6901.11 9.45r01 i ---- ,p3l
;- 'A Sava... .! ......... i 631 . 256 , 1 1 5'4 •.
•
.....,r, , 935 , ay) 510 ,
loo,roa .1610 1 425 • 516
Kaaa,•,• ' ` ... 11110 .; sip 600
Brant - ' ,1144 '", 54 . • . •• • •
17'.'., ,- iPc • 't , I 120 pi.. 74 ' ''. !•
. . ,
t 00 NO NOIVIII.I • .. ~. •
t
;.! :- 4, ~, • II MAIL. Rix's. Ai•ox .'
It 4
Weil, i';,.7.1. t 2. 1. ..... 1 850 Ax 412rx : ....
Pe ail ... '...:. .... It; 1022 , 1 •cr..61
Ulu , . ': , I , 11115 . A ....Z
1 . . ; 113sx
itiwt.a • ;' ',/fi'MP.II 648 ' • 810
411.0-oa. • - 11::16 716
850.
EtV.li: SlTt-tt t, 137 804 ' 1002 .
t'leNellt.el ' ' - 1 150 • 815 ..-1015
. , .
•
G. ISO rAirl"; 1 • ,
, .
. .
l' 11An.. 'Ear' el ' Ear's.. Accost
_ _._._„..,.._• ____...- --....._
- 1.4.11.41! .. , 4:Prat I. 550 AX 10405. X.
Brideepoil... .. -. ' ' 440 • •KG -' I 1950_ , - ...- - -
...
pj , ,,,b ff „ir„, 4 , -10.3 • ni..t. .1 1141
It t..1-vae . 'al 81'., 140ra 510 '
!if.
!... . 'lt rm. : 71'1
-It! 9P I
210 - 131 ,
;t• , li. 5.. . I . ‘fti..;
~ ' 820 1125 .240 -715 1
1025 " :350 . 1 .MO
• 1
. ,
co 50 WLST.
1 4 -- C - ' '.
- - MAIL. EXP'I4IIEXP'S. Accom
-- 2 ---
.. 4 i;:!.. „ 1 : ... .,:1.; ,, , .. .... . ~
„ ,_1751 . 1 pOrl 435rx'• ,110rx
•14. ,‘,. r . ;'. ,' • • ....... • "7;4 7:5 Pri 515 415 .
- . 4.1 , , 7.• ' ''; " 5 I ' 57 . 1 455
1t,„,, „le : . 5. ...
. ...
. t'l-
. :1i"
. 623
511
5'...a1 ,,, t0 - P. , . , ... ' : 'A' : : c_, - ;!;',.;• 4 ' 20, , .720 es)
t;
... n:1,,r1
~.,. .
.. . 1 1 5 . 29 • 818 ....
~ , 1 .
._ , ..... .. 12 m - 1 922
f"''' . . ;1125 . 630 I 915' .• • •
BRAS,(
BEM
, 1. 3 Arrivei
u. Daynrd, 9:55. .-
, N.:Philachilpttia,*2:so, V. fa
EIZS, Gen,rizt reekel 49114.
N. PI iitnl,•:phin.
BEE
\Ol
ONE
Tl 7. UNDEfISIGNI.
Infona hi? frien (14
and k(
I) WOULD .
and the. publ .
constant y
of
MMil=l
-
GE.NTL
•
I. Axii i CH ILDREN'S
Boots . nd
Wl' A L KIN 1S
• at the lowest pOsible4iricees In
It , htsEasten• made stock of Root mid Shoes,
vscps. ou lcm a large assortment of his iswu
us.l is prepared todo job work or repair
slucte-t ;Liaise. and as well as' n done
-hap county. •
tliC public for p4.4t favors in my laisiness:
that they mAy be cannoned. All
, vcrk that rips -will be rep
1. aired free of eliarsm.
;:i.;?;:to. • In..)BERT TA_LLOIsi,
J. W.
z + --
~A~~ILL;
PAINTER,
Brid gegtreet,Bridgewater, Ph.
T
~ '~
1`.. 11 1:1'Aia:o To, Do ALLKiNDs OF SIGN,
N,ikd 6 )nenental Painting. He la also ready
le paint Bug:lee, Carriages,' Wagons, ax.A.
' Lolce, and favorabte fermi. Furniture
Aje14 . 67:1ta.. ,
•
•INSUItANCE AGENCY. '
I'NDYItSIGNED HAS BEEN APPOINTED
t:•7 1,1
for t h e :Etna insurance- Company, of Hart
-111 3, 1 likmUe fir the Niagara Insurance
York. and
•the 'Enterprise Inauranco
• 11:11.16E,'.1,111n:
,illl pani , *inf•ure . dwellitars, oat-build
: •,• •• ••4 ,, , ' Marti fact•rries, ,i4e. :ha.. against 'lLltot . by
• torrrp. for five ;ears Or le. a. •
• ~.1O••ttio, tulju-te(l and promptly paid• Chen
• • otiorted. All inadneis cOnnected.with
Companies 'attended to, with dispatch
JOS. lrcLult.t. Agent.
littaver, Pa:
...._,.._
LAUI;IIING G A LS! . ' ..
'''F A
atoLL 11l THAT HAVE BEEN St IFFE.RING
~,: -T tld ip , is , ..rl, - , of toothache, and dread of ex
-- ':.tnd on niii.lind that Dr. Chandler & Co.
~..;'-:
.'y ta relieve iron by the usnef•the great pen
%.....'-'-IAVGI-11757G GAS--and make, their ezfrae
,•;:,o nr I ,l, a•nre.rather than of pain: •
•;,'S'l,oirratior,s performed In the hest pneistble
^.: • ":: a:reasonable terms as by any good D.31 / 7
..;•.:,i. Toestr.
• -I ',' la Dvav , e: g.etion, Poeheßtpr, Pa.
'V.
' ' • T. J. CHANDLER & CO.
-I,ll.l3lolrAti •
.\ti Fn
Rxmov:en HIS cuyritsso
)3,4,IINonISTING ESTABLISHMENT tq
el' o n r: t i rt n 'e l 4 e n w 6 Pii v ial:Ton.Vt. t"
.f: ,7,1t1r,..11;1-..'npportnnity of • informing Big
th e "ICI .enerallv. that be. has just re
...
.late and well selected stork.of
h6.t,:orkmee, to4t11 : at primathat
A ntclyoere.
ty,ottorder on the shoFteat notice.. All
japa67:3m
V,(A;:“ 4 . 9:N0;':: 26 ..
Greate 4 st
.
- •
Lamp IN
i Nelson #oessler's
Nest dOor to ii:ii5303141
BOOT; & . SHO ':
.n.ocn.rasir
A complete lin
•
• •
gam,
Arai large variety at FIATS a
feted at; Fri.
Reg
(}he as a_crdl to examine our
•ouNeK
TIN W . '
• t
1 , 3 : (s) ilpll.l A 1
REI LEII IN ALL
Tin, CoPiier v.
Irrori. W. :
/ _
1I
tROPOSR REF.PING COiB
1 all kinds of TIN,,COP,P.II r.
WARE, which I will eon
•
Ar•Y'OE LOIVES
Tin Roofing, Spoutin
Done to ordek l in the best posnib
- shortest nett.
• r .
Ileing none but the best of mate
; but the best of ti
NOW
WE WARR'A'IsIT A
IMM
SPECTFUILY
generally, that
ou hand. a largi
SIIOTON TIIE LOP
16;
- BEAVER,
Give tie a Cant and
apanned ware kept con
- myr67:tf
JLTST OP
-AT
•MRS' . A.
• II
nery
ROCITES
A iEw-AND GOOD A.Bso
LINERY
including Silk; Straw, ard' Mc
Harem , every style and_qpality.
ers. Mallnes.; Laces. Straw Cent,
Amber and del, Bugle Fringe an'
• B.TAM PED
Constantly on hand, or etamped
FRENCH PERFORATED
INDELIBLE 'ST •
Suitable for Ladles• and Chil •
to waah on linen, cotton, c
Ilartag'recelved a
.NEW r
AND fl i tal /AIM IV
.• . .. . - . , . _
, ..
I-' ;' - -.1 • t• - •.. , .., -•-• ' I'. 4, ,_ ~,
•1 • ,
, .
~.
_.:••• "-,:. ~,,,',!".•., -, , ~ , ,
. ,
- 1 ,.....
....• /'\ • —7......______. ____ --_
..:-• - 1 • i _ • - • •
. r _ • . l • _, • . • - _ . .. r,_;,„,...' , ;4_,,1„, ,- •
....,•.• , 1 . • , _ .. „•,_, -• . :,.. . —.l ~. ..F.-,..-,. ~
.....,, , ._., .. .... .. ,',.,. . . ... 41)viRILTIMEDIEN101.
• • . -. : ---- • - ' '''''. ': -' - ' •-- -- '' --- .`.. - ''Z' '.- -- ''''' ''—-, • - .-'' - , -•• s• - ' ' l.--. ' ;?.."-. ''' - '' 4 ' - ' -'-' --''' -' ' ' ''' ''•Li ": 1 r r •'• `.,•=••‘•._.-' Z s i l li t r • i fia i L
,stassiiii•
• •
. _ ,_.
~,,.,
V•,-.4 •
~,•• - 40 • . .4- z . : r - • -
4 ' 4 ' l "•-- : • ••, .-,• - - : :,,,,,,
~,,, : ,•,:l -, 71 " P "
._ - . - 1 - - ‘, ' •••' • • Iltrar.e, forthit !AgenrtiOn.a9d i 1 9r ,.6.3 4 1 ~-Fillimilritbi•:.
, ' sett on SO cents:: A liberal, nistniun mai on
.
, , -, - , i /' +........, •• - • ,.. ' " •-,;•' ‘ : ,, 4 I •:: . - d 'i : .... r ',.. -- • ' ... -- *.
• • ' advertises*** ,*•:-: •.;*-;•.• ~_
. - •
.. ,
,„.„ .
..:..-
..
.•• . ,- 1 , .-- - . 1 -'- -': 4 z ' ' - :-' ' A mice:opuPs
TO ;Hz* of type awasarstly.k.
.-. . .
- .i.f 2 ! -". ', ' ' - z" • `
• - . 44 . '
,:. - -k`• «.`... .'', '''. 'J
i , ' - . * - •: - :'* -- * • --- 7
I ' • - , • i • • pasi"rtilOdartitid GOMIS iiivad ValtirtiM.Sli,
. • , •.I s- 4 .... ..• N 'f: ' ..1. - f 9-. . , --4 - -', i ., ,' • ''', -
.. 1 '., '
•
'•'. : : 1 • i , ail: - - -- • .,- , -.*:•4.- • ,f;:.,.%. ..,•:-.-•-' r r .. ' , - - .1 - -
-;,,
I
--AT--
I.
STORE;
IN Mal DIAZ
, ND. '
R,. PA..
1 ,
gs, Notions,
of which will bo of
%It :cost.
..! and judge for
RE.
RETAIL
VDPI OP
I • • * 1
f),
Sneet..
GM
ANTLY ON HAND
ND HILHET-IDON
PRICE'S!
& Job Work
rastuic.r, 'and at tho
',,WORII.
R 01
iike• e 7E;
•
p.t. l
-caw Moe, t.
aptly on hand.
0- ILNSHUTZ
NEDI
- OiIiKEWS
Store,
PA. =
Tr - .L!s . IA i!2 • ~L2l L . y k
00D8,
laarnini ta lkonnetekrd
and Tame* Crian7l,
Ornaments..,
, . .
GODS
Roam
7 "
iEMiI
tes`r.Ntit;3l
The Bettie ix
BY ROMUND °UNDO&
The days of Jane wan tmertY done, IL.1 L.
The Odds, with plenty &term,
Woo ripening; aestk the - harreot sun.
In frulthd Peranalranla t
- On %fra end degree, "All a wed r• - -
When witidaktrote hill eaddall„ .
...The &eat of coming tattle Ildl • -, -•.
on Frontal Fenneyhfrds t
Through Ffmyland'a bbtorldfrnd, _
ifith,basand temple, and a S i band. '
They burst i demo sad ' band,
Right fritoPennsyl ' I '
1 1 .
• In Cumberland's nansade rale
Washeard the plundered framer's wall, •
Andarery Mother's cheek Was pilot. • t
Izi Mounting Peassyllazda 1 ' ••-
, .
Wlfir taunt and Jeer and iiknit and song,-
Through rustle towns they passed along— _
A =lndent and braggart rong—' .
Through Peausylraninf
The ddlny startled hill and glen;
trp sprang our hardy Northern Merl.
And there was speedy laurel then,
All Into Pennsylvania, I % '.
..0
..The foe langhedbat to open Morn r
For "Union men. wire coward born,"
And then—they wanted ell die own
Zuit grew In Penneylrazda t • •
' • , • . • 4 •
It *as the languid tour of noon,
When all the birds were out of tune,
And nature in a sultry swoon.
" In pleas* Peruisylrania 1 -
When. sadden o'er the altinibering plain,
Red Bashed- INV battle's fiery rain r
The volleying cannon shook again.
Beneath that mime or Ina ban,
That illiteeteet the plain with altilaft Sell;
Well might the stoutest soldier quail,
In echoing Anesylmuila I
Then, Ulm a sudden summer.raln, .
Storm-driven o'er the darkest plain, -
They burst upon our ranks and main,
In startled, Pennsylvania ? .
We felt the old ancestral thrill!
Frain siiS to sem transmitted still. • •
And Amen far Freedom with a will. •
In pleasant Pennsylvania!
The breathleis striet--the maddened toil—
The sadden clinch—the sharp recoil—
And we were masters alba soil,
In bloody Pennsylvania! 7 -
To westward fell the beatentoe: • -
The grew! of battle, hoarse and low,
upas heard anon, but dying slow. L
In ransomed Pennsylvania! -
flon'-westward. with the sinking alai,
The eland of battle, dense sad den,
Flashed into tire.--and all wow iron
In joyful Patuisylranht I 4
Bet *hi the heaps of loyal slaln,l .
The bloody toll! the bitter pain I
For those who shall not stand again
• In pleasant Pennsyliaala
Back, Comb Mei readmit valley finds,
Put Sod the toe, in frightened bands, .
With broken sword., end empty hands.
Oat ofildriPentisytrardal
. ,
A PROVISION FOR TIIRTZL-PUNSERENT OF TILE
CONFEDERACY-MR. NASECETIIIDEIS HIM A
•PROFESSQESUIP IN HIS "izikTrooT." - • •-•
POST OFFICE, COR7PBpIIiT X ' ROADS,
(Rich IS in the Stait'uv Kentucky.)
• May*, 1867.
To ll... Tenon Davis, late President(l4 , the-14e
&uthern Confederacy :
The undersined, yoor ardent admirers who
follered willinliyoor lead in the late toui.the
South took after addishnel rites, wi c h unfort
nitly resultid in the loss uv sit.h uv 'em ez we
lied, hog leave to tender yoo, ez a testimony
uv their 'esteem; the presidency nv "the Ham
and ..Tapheth Aendemy for the developMent
uv the intelled nv. all races irrespective uv coin!, uv rich I hey tba honor to be one•uv
,the Fackulty. ' •
_ We worshipt yoo before yoor ontimely cap
cher in female apparel, for the dignity with
with yoo bore yotnrlf doorin yoor prosper
ous days,yoor manliness doorin yoor long,tm
constitushnerlnetrcerashen in a Fedral bars=
tile, and yoor hawty thotigh eilent asserihen.
ttv the natral sooperiority
. of the floin
)(An doorin_ ) the annoYin
,Proceedin with
ended in yoor triumphant release f m yoor
abashirpersecooters, and we feel tha in yoor
hands the interests iv the institoot ill be en
tirely 'safe.
Many reasons impel us to tills course :
First. We assoom that yoo are poor ,in
this world's goods: Tioo, yoobed oceans; uv
money passm thm the Treasury doorin the
fmtisidal struggle forced onto-us by the North,
but vat cimuce hedyoo,for steelen, with Ben
jarain and Mallory and them fellows with yoo
who bed lied the benefit of practice doorin
Pierce and Bookannoms Administrations.—
A man coodent make days wages peculatin in
a treasury with them men hed gone through.
- Second.
.Too wood•be nv benefit to ns.—
With yorm name at the bead riv our faculty
the Nolifthern Democracy wood shellont Cher
stamps with a liberaity never before witness
°, and the Instifoot wood be endow°l heftier
than any sinilliar instushen in; the 13onntry.
The King's name is a tower ny strength.—
Remember that the Dement/24v the North
give the ignm ' exit VallanddWO, in ten
cent contributions. Ef they d i do ths t f for
him and sick, wet wooderit they - do for_yoo?
The . greater swallers up the lesser. There
never willtm seek a thvorable opportrxmity
for yoo to become a ten center, wick !Astro*
equivalent to bele a bed-center.
Ez a matter Iry course'yoowill hey °Week
ahem- Emowin what they will be we miser
em in advance.
1. The ineoutplAte state us the .Tastitoet We
acknowledge that it isn't in etch a' state' uv
completidms ezi we coed desire. Not to put
too fine a pint onto it, it aint built at all. But
the corner-stun is laid. There'l a good deal
in that. A corner-stun is agood thing. , The
corner-stun uv the Institoot is laid. - From
the layin nv corneestnns great results follow.
President Johnson laid a corner-Wan at -Chi
cago, and yoor release followed. Ile 'Went
get very ht into the effecaltens uv the people
North, but lie ght yoo out uv Fortress Hon
.roe, Jist let us thug our banner to the breeze
with the name uv -"J. Davis" onto Mind how
quickly rood the means. to' finish the Insti
stoot be fortheinnin ! Ah in4cedi There
wosd be tournaments held all over the South
in US behalf. The Knits ny - the Sore Eyes
will tilt agintie Knight nr the the Cropped
Lan, i
Ears; the Eni lit uv the Bang wood
d
run a' coarse Sod be glorified a fist the
knight:lm tha Released Chief , benefit,
and the 'Queen tic lnv and beaux's , wood bid
em, more terretitlY than ever before, to lay
their fish poles in rest and rust their course
at the Ingy Rubber Teithinr, Rings and do
Beatet, w
2usisv.,
than.
wood
and C
-wood
'behalf,
tta r
and
Au..
bin 1
Bout)
an f
h i Vnrt
• 'talk
stigessiirs
This
DAMS
and
lied 1
shot
That•
co*
done
hev
my m ina
ther
oonsin 1~i~tl~F!~.
to
it•was fa
the ecataticdalife nv
wet agony it win to
stances over which •
trole, to relOgnise I
but had to do it.
wawa and imeatid
eggstremely probabl
over the await ay '
WWl' day—wel .
powers` and States_
this nigger bizola is
Brown 3 sole with lb
saws' year& Yea
in yoor pror mornis
peribranume
Certainly.. Oa the a
lerlafteir tb=
they
Wtc7cdc their well-4
men. Prichsely so.
is over, probably we
and ez Caucashens as
old, the goYernin bias
sB. Pay. this he
be stated. Yoo must ct i
faith and take Nrat
triboosbens as low ee,
in counterfeit post
no oljeckshen to '
people it pants just
lived on it for some
eked - out the kiln al
hold from the
shens shood be
atter my Ilyin is
Johnson dead, nut
stead? Do you hi
let yoo -suffer ? •
yoo ez welt eit for
officer who wood
ded with a pasiisle
perdded generous
principal sufferers
gilton the . Confedt
he, wood make pot
I hey ansered al
wick you kin urge
some nv the reasce
Or COI
!midrib
bte t a
Stale
Us*
1111
A full year k
the Demokrntie
before you kin ,
din that event
• rirdent lit'
it and he sue
'lateral proeliviti
be hez killed but
ently folded up - ti
street hez did tt,l
all nv em. Lee hez
uv em. There's si..._,
in the cheeftain ny a tin snecinsfu. ,
ez the Northerners call o ur Itrtiggle in.
rites, takin the Presi l e ey v• a college, n
seekin shelter in ace en is groves, in trainin
ei d
ri i
the noble young m n Mai seckshun,, an in
stint!' into em a mor rfeek knowledge v
the doctrin nv States es and a higher v
rens for Virginny, ade ,perhatrid of ablis - 1
ism (ivich is all t t hat 4 outbern yooth h a
call to know) and a litt n rifled cannon f 1:11)
a tyranikle governm ntj!to teech cm artille
practis. That's I the dodge for yoo.. e
haint got the academic grove for yoo to ' lk
pensively in at the *lite blur, a mnsin n- 1
to the enventfnlpast,lbUt we kin . easily ni, ve
that center-stun is; lit ezryshifted. ez
Democracy.
There's another, rell.son w, y yoo shoed o
it. The edjucashriellinterest nv the Soth
shOod be entrusted - to them Pz knows how
manage an, and i l mltO rt edjucate. We do ''t
b i t°
want it too common; 'lt's too much pow r.
I knot the power ther Is in it. I'm a nt
the only one here nil* klu rite—were t er,
more it wood hurt my standin.
l*Ok• at wet misscellaneons education • ez
dyne for the North. Non England Ise cl oud
bustin with education-41*C black cloud . hea
step over the Mirth; and all over that eosin
try,its drops hey felliin the !shape nv whoa's,
Academies and collegr nd sich. Consekent-.
Iv. here's no Densocm thin% and the hevier
ehe.showey a 16•3ality I 1%191 the less Delia
eracy titer Is. In yonr. ds it wood beanie.
r t m
Niggers woodnt git it nor pber -whites, but
the sons uy the, chivalry, a the dominant
race, they alone wood trealtheflowery paths
with y. 00.• 1 1
We haven't tho society atlthe Cross Roads
in wick yoo hey • tin accustomed to more,
but wet nv that? Latit;
nv the
that yoo
are here, and the Dem nv the North
will make this a plase sulnmer resort aisd
nv winter mreashen.l This will' be t et
Mecca—your's will be the !shrine at ch
they will come to worsi. i
Then come. To Y the Cross
opens her arms, and offers her bosom for on
to repose -onto C i o i lne ?, Erect • here y r
awn andyour tires. ill anitahamed N en
Mayon take the hkgbait, Owe - in its in
gii n
reparashen uy thew n i g l '; they did you o
yeers ap. • ,
On behalf of the t ttO
• ft-n*l.Eu* .1 Natoli, P. H.
(Which is Peetmaster),landlProfessor in the
Ham and Japheth•F Academy for ihe
development uv the tellek nv all
uct
irrespective nv colorr
i • .
p - loi Passau,
- ' G. IV! >I Bascom,
, 1
. mark,
Hufin cPEvrEn;
. . ~ I his
. .
. • frizz , 14. GAvrrr,
I mark :
. -
Administrators uv the; I;stlite nv Abi •ek
Gavin, late deceased. 1 -
A C A - ,1 361/T.-4A.n editor In Ala-
WWI. having road an article in Hall's Jour
Oa' of Hesitit, advising. that husband and
wife should sleep in - : .: rite maw, says
Dr... Hall can sleep hail sad • where he.
amiss, but, for Maw he intends to sleep
when! be can defend • wife against tha rats
and all • other "mein foes _ls long 'as he
-has got one to defend_
•
TRIG man who never
could better his paper,
marry th 6 woman who ,
loolgang-glam..
Rsivtr.ty 'jams"- a
serves. ' - •
A
HMS
26, 18In
,
The B evy Daniel `
(}. ILsUery 'gives the an
nexed aminet or the various lasesqf then word
fn our SNOW Bibles:
bathe New Teetanaent, of thimmaroon ver-.
sloe; Ithmarigliala • word "Heir is rade to
stand for grelmtlotly diffementGreek words,
words that hire no pomdble. connection vilth
each and not tile elighteit nieembhance
in sound ?rimer: By necessity the re:To,
!fingliela rerdealrma confound in LL mind
and mord imailai the Gar places and con
ditto= trhicil sacred writer tare care
flgly .dhartilelied by three very. differed
'rho duce wenie c art -Ik#o, '
Midge is used eieven times in the Nevi
Testariang aderiria twelVe 12) times: and
2i Maras but (1) 'once.
The word Hades is pmperly identical with
the English word "Hell" initsmienal mean
ing, beibre it hadacquired its present signiti
cad= as denoting the place of future punish
ment. It denotes the unseen world,* or
"the spirit bmrl," the place of deputed
*elm, lxith good and bad, and • without any
reference: to their character or relative - con
dition. •
nun
not • gay
gi
t i ; to
~
MIN I
1::: -
‘.; it • b
1 Will. p oint out all the places (11) in whkk
Abe word Hades itsod; marking in einti . tent
the .word which bansktes ii.: -
(1) Nat 11; 25. "Thou, Ciii)erattem, shalt
be brought down to m^. •
not
(2) Mat.the
18. write ot Adz shall
zairagdost
be( 11 Luke 10; 15, "Thou. um, shalt .
•
down to ha" .
(4) Luke 16; 23. "In Adt he lifted up his
eyes"
BOW (5) Aeu
4. l , •
27; "Thou .wilt not leave my.
in 5
or) Acts °; 81. "His soul was not left in
Md." I
() Ist Cori 16; 35. "0 graee, where la thy
o v r ie r i TigU th. ”. it 18.. 1"I have the keys of ft& and
(0) Rev. es 8. "His unite MIS Death, and
H followed with him,"
• (10) Rev. 111:4 18. "Death and Hell (WW I ,
ered np the dead." '
•
(1I) Rev. ikk 14. "Death and /toll were
east into the lake of Arc."
Of these (1) andliflure the same, and de
iota that Capernawn, which had been very
rosperons, stolid die out, go downto death;
At man is dead when his spirit is gone to
vies It has been exalted, as it' were, to
sty; ibr its mickedneas it should go dawn
be, place of the dead. ;The prediction wax '
lied; the'city perished, died out, ind he
`se locality is unknown:. . ,
(2) we have • the e prediction that the:' .
•h of Christ will never die nut, never
4tinet.. When a man dies Ind hi!t.
oes into Hides, then "the gates of
prevail against him, but It shall not
th the church; It; shall I continue ta
ph'o4,4Cis dead. entree
and conversing with' Atrraltani;
Una, is also in Hades, t hou
lam br
4P .I ,do needi •
pparables ,
s but it is . WAD
there only in spirit, MSbody being
the grave awaiting the resurrection.
cannot be in the placerotfuture and alter-
Al punishment, for men go thither after the
resurrection, spirit and body together. Dives
cannot be suffering from real fire, for only
his sPirit is;there and not his body..
In (5) and (6) therels reference to the spirit :
of Christ being in Hades, the phice of depart-•
ed splrits,betWeen his death andresurrection.
We say in the creed."He &seceded into hell;"
meaning that he really died as any; other man,
and his spirit, like all human spirits.' went
to ]laden; 'but his spirit was not left there, but
came back on the third day and was reunited
to his body in the resurrection, as ours
at our resurrection: . I- 0-
Inn) the word Hedes is rendered genre,
iyerylimproperly. At the resurrection, when
all spirits come out of Hades, and all bodies
from their graves, and there are no more
souls shut up-there, "then shall fbe hroughttO
pa.ss the saying, death is swallowed up in
tory; O,:death where lathy sting? • 0, Hades,
whtue is thy victory r No, more death
and no more use for a place , of departi3d
spirits. ; .1 ... •
In (8) Jesus Christ; who is othe ro_errection
and the life," says, "I have the ke Of Hades
and of Death" and so at thel resurrection,
when he calls all the,dead to life, it will be as
Hall spirits where in one greatidreteon call
ed and ail bodies in another, called
Death. or Grave, - as if iteopenecithe doorsand
reloaded them. • •
In (9) Death is personified as a man'riding
on apale •horse, going forth totheslaughtevof
men—to kill them by famine and pestilence.
Mules is also personified as following after
Death to gather np the spirits as fast as Death
weld kill. - -
In the great picture of "Drath on the Pale
Horse," the expression "Hell followed with
him." is absurdly represented by imps and
devils flying all along through the air. The
artist' no doubt thought the hell of the devils
was me ant, when in truth it has no relation
whatever to Satan and his angels.
In (10) again Deathand Hades are repre
sented as two persons having control, the erg)
over the spirits and the other overthe bodies.
of men. At the resurrection Hell or Hades
will deliver up the spirits ,of the dead, and
Death or Grave will deline up their bodies,
so that they may be united and thus appear,
soul and body together, at theljudgment seat
of Christ.
In (11) Death and Hell, otthe Grave and
Hades, are represented as piArsons having
charge of the dead. As there !is to be ne more
death, so there will be no more need of these
pent)* and torepresent this in a striking
manner, they are spoken of as cast Into the
fire and 66 destroyed.
•
The serand of the words translated
is Gehenna, which is used twelve (12) times.
This word means "Vale of Hinnon." When
'used literally it denotes a deep glen near
Jerusalem. In heathen timei. It had been the
place for human sacrifices and idolatrous sver
ship. Here was the fiery Moloch where
dren were berned. .
Bv.the Jews it was made the receptacle of
all Ake filth And offal Of the city, and its name
bee a 00001 ofall that was horrible and
vile. In. this filth' worms_,were generatea,
*lda suggested the "undying worm" of I.
tuntorment. Fires, ere kept perpetually
burning to destroy the filth=-the unotiencha-'
Me Are which became a A; re of perpetual
lornamt. , Here the dr' of 'malefactor§
were cast 'sifter execution. 4
So the nuneitieliasaa beisi4ne figurative, 51'
figure punishment and of capital punishment
also. If a Jew should in anger, or by way of
waning, threaten you withilehenas. or ,the
fires of Gehenna, ho might I either mean; to
threaten you with bell, or nature punishment,
or with death by execution.' As we say; "If
the , man'pea on In hia evil I courses lie will
come to the,!gallows:" so a 'Jew ~ m ight
Be will come to Gehenna.? ,
" Gehenna is used in the following places:l
(1) 3lat. 6; 22. In danger of h'df fire."
f
.1d in editer host' he
gone out West to
never looked into a
tkrlything bat pre
.HELL.
l.''i:Eiftfibli . shed: 1818.:
(FrOni the 3Diseautee
A , tienk Pt ail Hi 'itd God. •
.
Our readers - will rcluendiC that,iparty or.
Scottish emigrants passed- th „ - ugh this.eity
tho other day, en iotile-,for ito a fts Minneso-
M. An incident of ti. some v hat innraistie
Denim Molt 'place in cam* :with irr, oc'
4he familiesa of the party, whch ire...Wilrrl .e
i--
'late, as it may interest our readers. Y ; j
•
The_ family cOnswa. or he.i l . father ..and •
. . I,
mother and three, daughter„. the eldest se,
young lady abouteighteesly , Mofagi ' This
~, . ,
. young lady nen awe of ext , prdiccayheatt
,
(posed a m
for . of faffith I
as • ; ~ . Ty. - t 'was
really itrisst to lookapo' ' .It h 4.1 The iielffir
"
oat arrivingheie about ti. . put up at the'
Newhall Ifouse. The old ~,.. ticulan'sallied .
I out after dinner to get. 4 gl - . pf,e or mihrqu...
kern and-her citizens . 1 1.1efor . , pursuing 'is
course any further Westward. ',lle hap . ; g ..
to encounter a -young . folio -Country .- a,-
who had preceded him- - .to t' corratime
six ,years iga, had whais now. enga edlubus,
Ines* here: The two soon - . 'cam uecinaints
'e& and' were nut lotsg,in b. ming 'friends:
After a long eonversatifin th . olff-Ontlentan
invited hie num-found friend p . te the rooms>
I - isihich' the fatally w peen orrng. '' . , The in,
citation was accepted, d . o young man.
formally introduced. :', . 1 •. • ' •
ert ili
But, alas for. ,C3i .ad fired many *
a dart at his heart, tut 4 o .. - a fell luirree
lessly fromhhirand he .. inetuneeith:
ed. But a Single glance fro" the. kparkilng;
bewitching eyes of theyounbcauty,_ fairl
staggered him', and from the . oinent of h is
introduction he was in lov. deeply, and
desperatelyin love, thathis witsforsook him, -
and it was only by a desperrit .-effort that, he.
could ,regalni his self"compostire. One bathe
; lor friend supped with the s farnily, and grad,-
' rally he: became more communicative. The
hours of evaning.fied swiftly by.` " , All Me .
bachelor scesned - to see Wasthedardlingheausr:
ty of the daughter, all he.••seirMed,to hear.wfsa t .
her silvery
; voice pr ,elear, tringing , laugh
At last . the Cline for a Sep ration &sm.-,
The family was to leave the , ty oat the mop.-
raw, for Minnesota; and he mgt needs bid
them adieu. .But haw could e litarro sepa- - *
rate. Perhaps forever, from t e-only woman
he had ..ever loved, even for short a time? ,
Hew-east a loss, but quickl made up' his
mind as to his course of :tett , i .Calling the .
young lady aside be frankly oid her e f the
I'passion with which she haclin,plred hinCeint
entreated her, at 'least, to give hiseeite due ,
consideration.. Thqoung..huly answered by
.Joni ni to her ather. _That individual
'was very much itAtonialsed at; the tnfn affaiii
had taken. • He had not antielpatel-suel a
i. result. However, as his daughter appeared.
t.to-ee as muchunder the intlaenee of the blind
Ygoct as the young man': he .i i edsed to think
' over the matter istal,givc h s . answer to-think
morrow. .• • - , ' -
'' - • '
-
1 . - ' . A, t the earliest dawn-lie upatul'amundi
Not to be liickeit. . ' and watched the properrime to call and learn
1 i • 'II - 4. • his destiny with the greatest mpatience. , At.
About twenty yeant.agn, Abraham Doolit- last he hauled to the old eht eman. -Ife was
tie ~ was transplanted .; from Harvard Univer- received cordially, and preen tad tuthe yhung
sits t o , one of . the Southern States, for the , lady as her accepted husband, the atter hays
.. ,
..
purpose of assuming the' editorial control of I lng learned that he bore the . lost irrepioachs. ~
, able character- At tills In joy. knew., nu
a violeOt party, paperj c wltereitopne had ever i hounds. and he embraced a .d showered idea
71311-w A tit tii~ f'47the. ' Pa,t47 41191,yi after the *am his affirmed . dc;Vridle abc
..: - . ..
..- .._ •an • ta -itaaatity,Of pistols ', - soCoteltifg tO btu - fondly. - ''• - - -.-- .-1 1 - ---''-. ''• --12.1
. ,
"Rifttrlie-familrhad4cibea• . . Sti
~• .1 I . icily of Vrwie--kniV. prevented ' the As re --- wa a . o - nt . much aim : t „ e va -a te
dick-Ivey of 'certain principles, and fetie l " l-1- ---- i proceeded at erste to the ho •of a clergstrusit-'
tie freedom of speech in . a style perhdps notirand were made one fl esh not glare than Wen
so: elegant as efficaCions., Doolittle Was a ; ty-our hours after their first meeting.. .
onnecticnt exotic. lllelias highly educe-' In the evening the pare to parted . from
td. .was impetuoust,',breve, yet—with the their daug ter and newly-f and_ son-in-law,
eharacteristie canal
g. of
‘his;
tmoo _ osirerni ; and starts for the Vi_'est
O , rh c the .brid e and
O f
his own interest. He took hold of the pa- 1
T i
a bndegroo started for a bri f toter to
return
te Nlagl'.
re, a d the Hodson. hey w
few w er with a determine lon to make it " semis - I -Pails
Cable to the cause,"and serviceable he did in a cks to this city, in d the bride will
Snake it. - 'The oppasing mndidate was a bad . grace. one . . f the most fashl usable - . circles in
tellor s 4-a duelist. a dram-drinker; alo er. of i the c i ty . b y her beauty.-
, poker," and a decided votary of Ve siL,- I-
Doolittle dared what no editor had it _
id
he said so. The day On which his article Op-.
'peered, the candidate entered' the editorial
chamber. . p i j ! 1
I n "You are Doolittle. the elitor of this 'pa-
Per ?" holding a coPy of the sheet in.liis
and. 1
' "I .
am." , 1
1
, 1 ' .
"You have libelled / and insulted me; and"
;(drawing a large knife)' "I have come for
yoeirens." '-'•. '- -
I. "I
-beg your periling ;mid . Doolittle: "I
,am a stranger to your customs, and perhaps
have taken a license *Melt. in this part•of
the country, is inexcusable. Such is,l think,
;the' fact. Suppose we compromise the mat,
Mr?" 4 • . 1 -.
alrerj., well,". said the bluff Southerner,
n'll klek you, and you shall make a full re
traction." ' I`
1 -
"You'll what ?" said Doolitttle, quietly.
'"Kick you." 1.
"You insga upon that little privilege?"
"I am u&siterahlyl fi*ed in i my, rleterini
.'nation." 1 1 4 r
1 ' "So ' am 1." said Doolittle, firing' a horse
'pistol, as big :We blur ---
derbtiss, and shattering
the Southerner's rig it leg"not to be. kiekorl."
1 He held his situation six months; was stab
hed twice, shot three cline:, belaboied with a
'bludgeon once, thrown into a pond once, but
ho was never kiekdfd. During.his six months'
- experience he :killed two of adversaries.—
These are facts:-
' ' •
I 1
( 2 ) Mat. fc Zi. "y . .-40.! cast into lady"
' l3)Mat. 5; 30: "Body = -cast into hra."„
4 . ) iiptt. 10; Vzi. "De s troy soul and lxmly in
(51 Mat. 18; 9, "Cast Into hl-fire."
(t) Mat. 28; lii:' .More the child of he ll"
4i) Mat. 24; 38. "Escape the damnation of
~,
...„
', (B)i i Mark 9; 43. "Ilavfng two hands to go
into eIL" - ..'•
(9) Mark & 45. “T0 go idto ka.” . .
Aip Mark 9; 47. "To be cast in 'to hell
fire . _
~. 1,1
, 1 i f (11) - Luke 1% 15. arcitrer to cast into
WI
1 6. 1
(0 James
) 8; Tongue "set on ,fue of
.
hay.
l' Inhere Lenny single word Which glenotci
`the W ea of the finally' . lost it is. Gehenna, and
It
1 , -
It'will hem . Iced that the / word / Gehenna
is used only on by any butlChrist himself;
andlthat .he ti. - it scarcely at4l . lLe s seept
In one . .. reck--the
.-, "Senn On the,
lilonnt.." ' : 1 . ,
, .In:examples ( 6) and (12) the word! keg, is
used denote ,exceedingvileness and wicked
ness.
I - In' (4) pun
u
and (11j I thing plainly futre
- -
, _ sung
ishmeni leiniended. Aliether - in the other
plarieri capital punishment or future punish
Merit is intended,i leave Ito the judgment of
the Mader.. • I
I think in - several_ instances, on; ford.
Moms to say that ho foreertain Senses,
punish with that punishment Which, in his
kingdom, Is equivalent to Jewish capital min
lament and the casting of the carcass to the
Warner and the tires of Gehenna—whatever
punishment that may be !
Awe looked at all , the.places Where
Gebenna are used. There re. -
e word 21rrtarna. It is used only
once, and hat in a verbal form.
'2 reter 2 - 4. "God , spared not thel angels
:that signed, but cast them down to hig, and
dettrered them into chains of darkness to be
['reserved unto judgement:"
This "Tartarus' is the place of the , fallen
angels, and is neither the "Hader" of , deli ar-
Liettapirits nor the "Geherimt" of the ` . finally
lost.. :• ; - • •
• Hew certainly. .the. mere English reader
meat cesiramd throe three entirely distinet,'
ideakivordi, and places.
If the translators'hadjus trarisfmred• these
'words Into our English version instead ofl
translating' them all by the-One word'"hell.:„ . l
they would have dime; a *Lear thing , and by
,this time the three words . Brides, (krbenna,
dntl Tartars!, would have boomer domesti
elo44 with such words as Pentad eht; Bishop,
Bencen, &Literal. 11 3 11 0 10 -Jah, d 12 ) 1 nY •atia'
, ors., • '
Those who read their Ertglia Bibles wenld
do well , to compare these references with the
books they usually read?and write, on 'the
;weir opposite the word "bell" or grave , in
eacit the letter h, or g. or r, according as. the!
Greek-Word in that place's "liadff4," "gehen-•
'Tattantr. ' .
• ' • ' ' guid I I
I I • • 'exed A l ive.
• 1 I.
Considerable citeinentAtrevails in the•
township a Rives, in this county, over tile
,
supposed litiqiiiit of; a woman in that towi-
Ship who was di e at the time of bethg,cont
-1 •
Itiitted to the grave.; l The affair ii related tti
,
us as ,follows : . l• I .
' The wife of a mechanic unified Tfollenhick
;was about Logic° birth to a chllel;aai a phy
igiattn from this city; wits &led. To lessen
1 the pains of maternity, he administered Chlor.
',dorm, the patiettt sank into a deep sleep s aid
Was soon deliverNof a child. Tile physicidt
returned to tow; inq visited '
the; sick woman
Ithe next day. ' he had not, awakened froi
the thee.the chlomform Nie; given, and at
the time of his Second v i.&t.WAS appareUtly
lifeleas. The 'doctor pronounced her dead. r .
The corpse was prepared for the, grave, but in
1p i
ing the body n the coffin it was notleell
; tha the back Of the deceased was quite wa
'ap rm,
I the face 'appeared flushed. The 'coil*
kept three days, whett,-en Thursdaif latif,
it decided th bury it.: The funeral pro
on on Matted for-the cemetery, and wheii it,
;bad arrived at the grave'4 the coffin, was °pea
led,. and a dallilmeO umi3Oiscovereii on the
' fri of the inmate. • - The remains were «invest
ed a, neighboring-house. iulti another Jack
son physician Sent far. ; Re arriv'd at 'the
el of Um ,day, and. after ; an' exaMinat ion . of
the iswpse, pronounced life extinct,. 'Via Imr
ialWas`then puiceoded with.
' Since that time the matter has been discus
sed In the vicinity, and many are of the Opin
ion that the bidy auffemi the awful fiite of
being buried alive. Considerable excitement
prevails in the neightxtrhood, and thetiffair
is id he investigated. • The -body will , he ex
humed and' the myst,ry solved. ' WO forbear .
,any remarks, and suppress the names of the
,physicians-mentioned, until,the,-affair i,gelear
ed up.--Jackson (Mirk) Quiz'''.
...
la
. . .
i
• 1 i -
blvb.. alas,
• xlMikeUhitalitietbs assudoisisohl'
'Me publisher reserve& Oso sigh
ilseuieuts Assn one piste Isk "the.
whenever IS I desirslile to do' s°.
"Adiertisessoks should bit huhdeill
noels kshisureLlisertion id that, weal
MEI
1 .
-4. A MODEL CompOsrrioii-f n Indiana pa-
, ,
1 pqr gives the following i:s.s. on "The Oa," -
just aa - it came- from the' en of on of ita
conTributors; , , . - . , ' .• '
:;'Oxen is a very slow 'Rohn 1, they are good
tOtbrake grourid n - 0.1 •i woo d dialler Alain'
t hitrse: if they didn't harc kqlick, Which
makes' sa, . is
,Avind colieeted in rt.bupli -which - makes'
it lngerser to keep amoeS-", than- an ox.—
if there was 'no horses' the people . wood have
to
IL
wheal there wood on a whealbarroL. T
w.
it would take • them two or' three days to
'weal a cord a mile. .Cows. is uSebil to. i
litoe, lien! Soar -mty that if they had to by
tether or an ox they wood pe a cow. . Mut I
think -when it corn' to - have their tits:militia Of
a mold mornin they wookg, :Wish theyWasnt,.
for oxen:dont generally Wive to raise f , ad v elk.
if I had to be•enny i wool drather be, 11,1tef
fe I . but-if i coodent bei a heifer and had-tit b i
a heifer. add hcd- to be - both IP wood be an
o . H : -. . ''IA so St ! rizEte." -,
. ,
. • 41 11.
.
hat'Entrou rx Ilits.vu I.lnx.der the abeve
, ,
cation' an exchange gites- a long obitua •
n lice of lt deceased brothi.r etiltoi. • the fel
hiring is the closing paragrapy l :
~.
'Should we not then rejokiNhat. otir late
friend orthesciasors'and quill is ifi heavenly
In that paradise tiecrv . of' 'mere Copy' will
never again fall upon his distracted cars. -
There his etifi yitient will no,more he - inter-
nipted .by ' di' growls, of. the unreasonable
subscriber, o the dunsof the paper maker.—
There he will enjoy entire freedom frifatt the
detractions and misrepresentations_ o • politi
csitopponenta, and the caresses of atithitiou:
political aspirants. IR , that.hiest abode he
n } more tolbe troubled "with illegible Menu
se ript or abominable poetry. li - o • rival all
tors will there steel his thunder, or his items,
and typographicil errata 54111 know hint'no
more forever." - ,
I=
A COLOIIEP witness was ekautinalin ea
; IVashington City court, to prove the idcuti
tY, of white man the other day. • . •
;District Attorney-I)id -you; soe the itran;
I sets' him:" . • '
"Was he a white man?"
"Don't know, sir." •
I DistrickAttorney—po you telLnai'yon saw
,thentanatd can't say, Whether he was white
orj black? .
'•
. • sir, I !ic di 'tun, hit iltiret so. itnany
white fellows calliu? . . tlents;elves niggpr.4 round
here I can't tell one ‘ front ,
Witneis dts' up*lsrip:l---explauatidri st4i.ifac
to y.- . '
4 •
... , , .
'1 dfin?t cane "8o j.mtten s hbOut the bugs,"
su ft Mr..Wmimly to the head .41f the genteel;
p l ivati , , family in whit:ll.lle r sides., 'l!ut• the
l'at. 'is,. mart!, I liFoin't got tile blood to'sparg;
y'oit 1 . 146 thatr , yourself.." - • : .' . , .
.--- •.. . . ~ - 1' ' 1 ! ri 1- • - .
,•-.Tosti Itir.i.t.tkilis Wes the following good
c
, tlyiee . to . contrihuto s. ''Don't write Only
-on one „aide of the onnosl; f ript . , and don't.
%%li , much onto. tint . 1)9 't, send, o'manti
skript unless yon can, read it iyOurt;elf," 1
1 \* ' • -
• .
• 11.0 isA ,w sherwonal n the
,n est, cruel,
Person in the -nrl4. ? • s ept rse :lie. - - daily,
‘cringi men _hoz.
.? • H '
• t
tu'tiligge ads x:
to art* . ,
.Zt
a befole;llll4attlar,
:a piper:, 4 : ,
MIA
=in