The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, May 29, 1874, Image 2

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EKEHSBUftC, PA.,
Morula, - - .May 29, 1871.
Wr. referred two weeks ago to tbe writ
ten application f Cen. Filz John Porter,
who was the commander of the Fifth
A i my Coi-ps at the scrond battle of Bull
Our Jioyal JS'ujttials.
lie maskable Feats of the Flood.
II. M. Brewster, paymaster at Ilayden,
Gere & Co.'s factory, had gone to tbe mill.
Mi l lir.G Ui' (OIMY iCniTTfE.
Tho numlicisiif th lu m emt . ( . i.:ity4"?om- 1
tnitteo are i c.i.i str l to :. t In tl.r i. i.iisd Jury ;
loom, nt tin- Ciurt Mouse i i I.licnsin i p. on
Mor.rtay. ir.c ir r ti l;i3 "t June at I o'clock, ,
1". M., tor t he tun pjH' ol sclc-iiiijr one person !
to represent t.Miutinu c outiiy in the next l in- '
crude State ofivo. I ion is nil to nnuint cu
lt i c s to inert li kc con fcree t rom Hlnir conn- i
;.v to (booee K trti.uloniil! f! utile to s::td Con-
A en :ioi. A .'so. tot liMif-n t such i.'thrr b is -iii
a tho Interests of the pnrty may icmam!.
V.M. H. Skc-hi i it, Ch. Dcm. Co. Com.
..l.ensbur;,', Mhj- i:. isTl.
Asahi.i. Mix, of Polkvillc, Ct., a upright- 1
ly youth i f 8i, was married the other day ,
ti Bella Laailn;. aged 1 t. Asahcl (of at I
Mix matrimonial this union of May and !
December is certainly haid to heat.
As loyal subjects we 'eel very much in
clined to offer our congratulations to the
; ruling house ol Grant upon the glory which lie ran for his Ine aim m a lew moments
Run. for a reheat inff of the conclusion or sboue around it yesterday in the success- after his escape the flood was twenty feet
verdict of ..he miliary court before which 1 ful ?nK,fti,!?1of1 one of 'Is Jancbes an an ! deep in the street, and the mill office and
, . ; ancient English house. e hope tliat Mis. i hank building, kuown as one of the linest ,
was trad in I8b2, for alleged disabedi- ; Algernon Charles Frederick Sartoris will I structures in Western Massachusetts, was .
thec of the orders of Gen. John Pope at j be as happy during her future life as she ! shaken in pieces and borne away like
that battle, and en Pope's charges and , has ueeuduring the years that have alraady ! leaves on the swollen tide.
' niccr.il Aim 1 , 1 . . . 1 . f . .. I . . 1
sreeilieations v-.is convicted and dismissed . ' !"'?,18 rcPme"
, , , , , i ,- -., to bc a velT genteel and sensible girl, and
from the army, A c have no kind ol in- J certainly since her family has emerged
tercst in this controversy, except to see ! from iU Galena obscurity, she has had a
coual and' exact uistite done to Gen. Por- J very plersant time of it at the capital and
ter. f course we know nothing person- ml2 over Europe ; and before that
- 1 ' . time, when her sire subsisted on the char-
m-.y about the difference m 1Sb2 between j iy of hi(J brotlier o. ville, she was donbt-
hiin and Gen.. Pope, who at that time Com- , less too young to be grsartVy disturbed by
manded the Army of the Potomac. Por- i the family tribulations. We sincerely hope
tor affirms that ho cau now, since the war j s,e wiU )i"d her Algernon to be all that
. , , A1 ,. ' . she now thinks him to be : but we confess
is closed, prove that his conviction was un- lo somo doul)ts about tho matten We Uo
just. If he can, w hy will not Gen. Grant , not trust these "bloody Enclishmen :"
allow a rehearing of the case. It could do I they are queer creatures, even the best of bank of sand. The dam was built twenty
no possible harm to either General 1W or i them'. a'ul.aie subject to strange vagaries, I five years ago, and had a twenty-six foot
,,. T . . ,n . A ; especially in regard to women. We think
ltz John Porter. The I ifth Army Corps ' r.r riietr,.. n.i m. rif ..f ...;
The Hood picked up a heavy boiler of
the factory, and hurried it rtneermonious
ly across the street into the yard of Lieu
tenant Governor Ilayden's house as though
it had been a plaything. The -safe of the
saving bank was found in the river to-day,
below the scene of destruction, but has not
been opened.
The devatation at Leeds is indescriba
ble. Only three houses on the east side
of the river remaiu in their original posi
tions. The water first struck the Nono
tuck silk dam, a solid structure, and
ploughed through it is if it had beeu a
Xi.f.i.ii: (Jkant. as was, on bein? asked
bv a friend at tho Fifth Avenue hotel, Xew I its leeent meeting in Harri.sburg passed j Then Bluebeaid was an Englishman, A.nd
Y...-V the d-iv after her mamace. how she strong resolutions on the subject, and ient
most of the other horrible husbands that
- , ntll'Kel'V llistm-V tril1 fif ilnvilltT lirwiu tie
liked her new name, perpetrated almost as , a menionai to the rresiuent t.i wu.cn us . . . of B'llverw- nrcsented to Miss
fall in the centre. It originally cost $50,-
000, and was refaced a few years ago. The
stor.e wall of tha mill facing the stream
was nearly swept away.
The mill was damaged but slightly, but
work w ill not be resumed on it for months,
j-ho.king a punas we ourscif did in last memoers, wno lougnt ttiuiei uen. i oner i Nellie by Messrs. Drexel & Childs. mo-': thus throwing many hands tvt of employ-
peek's F uk km an when she replied, '-It is . a!1,i know him to have been a gallant j prietors of the Philadelphia Ledger, which ' ment. The silk mill boarding-house was
S toris-fneti .1 v '' M iv it ever be thus at ; Soulier anil a irieuu oi nis couuiry, eou- i'""- " v.iiusiiiui sircei, winuow : loiaiiy wtrenm. -xn me inniti.t:a esc.ipco.,
,o,- :l,,fn1: Till!, tl.n ..null; vveil.T,? ! cllldft aS foIhjWS !
....... . . ..... ...V.. W.V. .. .. -J
Full inquiry into this matter is due not
for exhibition, we inwardly breathed a ! except Captain Vaughn and Miss Wood-
! prayer that they might never be diverted i ward, both of whom lost their lives by re-
fmm tlinir lanit imt. 1 1. ) t...-,.;.w r. ... t.ma volniLlac T!..-. 1.-,.1 ti.
Gov. Haktka r ha, appointed Chief: ZlVl"VZ I fast table and be converted into missiles : ! its course took Selectman Quigley's house
Justice Agnew, Judge Ilemy W. "Wi'li v.i.s, 8..'rv,j tuw , r.ltli ot- tlieir counirv bv faith- i or wo "ave heard of such things. Mr. A. down the current a few rods, leaving only j
of 1 logacounty. Hen. llltatii - . aH.'.ce,
of (."learlield "cuauty, lion. Benjamin Har
lis Brewster, of Philadelphia, llo-.i. Win.
II. Play ford, of Fayette county, lion, 'atn
nel K. Dimmick, Attorney Geneial, and
lloti. Andrew T. MeClintock. of L'l.ernc
fid serviee and sacrifices. Treasonable is- , i- oiewair, wno was also one OI mo , ine oiu iu pari on iuu mte. niiuisii jiart j
nfl'e. t ion was also alleged against the army guests, was more discreet and gave the j Mrs. Quigley, two daughters, and Miss,
of tie Potymae, "that many corps of that ; bride a softer fabric out of his own stock I Maible, a teacher at the Leeds school,
n iny would not fiht." The vindication of i of dry goods a big $500 lace pocket j were sitting, having just completed break
Jeuernl IVrter will bo the. just vindication ! handkerchief. Miss Drexe", displaying an- fast. They Hew into the upper story aud
county, the Commi'ioii to propose ameud
iiitiuts to the Constitution, under the act
1 aSscd uy the recent Legislature.
oi me l -inn or,.;., iuumu ne u! ui ui mo , bounded coniidetice in tho amiability of
Vototna.-, and n.ak c.ear that the battle of j Sartoris, contributed to the housetiroa
! ;Ur".U'l ""'il1: I silver fork. Fortunately for the bride the
! i.....: r .ii ..;.t .i ...,i .I.. ! parcuts selected the tniests with care:
I'ltii.U l ll, .1 till t: 1 1. ii b iu.v. .....a .u . i , ,,,, . ...
1-4-
15.
O --OB
jltii.i.isn, Republican
Hon. David
member of Congress from tlie Ninth Dis- 1
t : ict of Xew York, died at the governmcut
in-Aue asylum (which, singular as it may ,
seem, is not the national oapitol) in Wash
ington, on last Saturday afternoon. It is :
said that his mind became unbalanced on ,
the 0iiant i.il discussion which has occupied j
s. much of the time of the present Con- j
gross. If lhat is supposed or believed to ,
have been the ruling star in the ease of
poor Meliish, the wonder is why Congress
as a body is uot a perfect and complete ,
Bedlam mentally, as it is practically, iu its '
daily ile liberations.
TilE lower branch of the Arkausas Leg
Ukiturc, as recently reeoust ructed by
icr and Grant, adopted a le.-olut ion la.t
Saturday, by a wte of IT to i, declaring;
that the two ladical United S'a'.es Senators
from that State, Clayton and Doiaey, ob
tained their seats by bribery and corrup
tion, and that if they do not resign within
h u. days the Senate will be formally ic
ijjosted to investigate the charges to be
p.-eferrcd ajait.st them. This is all sound
aud fury, signifying nothing. Neither
Clayton nor lursey will resign within ten
lays nor any other given number of d ays.
Tbey ae radicals and a radical Senate will
protect them in their sct, no matter how
conclusive may te tho charges which the (
Legisl.'.lo:e of Arkansas may pici'or agahiL
tbr.ll. I
a-- - s
ViA!i i . c-TO-N dispatch of Monday last, ,
slates that Hon. Henry Wilson, Vice Pics- j
ident of the United States, and who comes
from that iitteu.-ely biyat Slate, Massachu
setts, ippeaieil on tho floor of the House !
of liepreseutatives at Washington, on the J
"Wednesday jirevious, and was busily en
gaged in urging tho passage of the resolu- J
tior. rentu-riny Secretary Hichardson, of I
whom he spoke in disparaging and bitter
feims. That Kichardson is utterly inconi- .
.otent for the honest ai.d intelligent dis
charge of the duties of his high oll'co is not
denied. Grant says lie has the most un
doubted confidence in his ability and in-
tion and severe loss and that the battle was j l,iey a" a'0 make valuable pies
lost 1-i'eaase of the superior forces opposed 1 nts.
tj ui." I The President, it is renorted, gave his
- - - ! daughter a check for ! 10,000 and may
0. the closing day of the State Senate, ' have had several good reasons for putting
Hon. Wm. A. Wallace, one of the ablest ! his gift in this form. It is a choice form
uu iiii.seiiiimeuiai pareius auu also witu
ho escaped.
It was while they were standing here
that the main part of their house parted
1 from their tower of safety, leaving them
with a thin partition to fence out the surg
ing sea. Gazing out of a wiudow they
saw Walter Humphreys on the roof of a
house, that appeared as a ship on the sea.
Happily it floated near the window, and
Miss Nellie Quigley and Miss Marble
raised the window, grasped him, and drew
ana ccitainiy one oi n.e most laoeiwo ; , . . . . ... w K , - , ihn .. . , ,. 't
members of that body, delivered the fol- ; jt iuoks so well, is so easily written and ! stood out the storm, and he was saved.
lowing dignified aud biief, but well ex- ! so readily torn up when the guests are j Mr. Humphreys knew nothing of the way
preyed address to his colleague, many of . gone aud an examination of the bank- i he came upon tho roof. JI is family, a
whom had been his fellow' Senators for I a lh acc','t t( be 'ort. Wc ! wife and two children and an aged lady,
oj not of course include our revered Chief . were all saved. Mrs. Humphreys was sur
several years, Hon. James L. Graham, ot i Magistrate among those whose bank ac- prised by tho flood, and she and the old
couuts are habitually lean, for everybody ! lady took each a child and stood upon a
knows that it was the merest accideut iu bed holding the little ones above the waves
the world that he had oveidrawn his ac- that were clamoring for more life to des
count with the First National Bank of . troy. These women in saving others were
Washington, when that too well Cooked j saved themselves. The iron bridge was
institution closed its doors. A gentleman
who enjoys a salary of $50,000, and has
houses and lands of great value at Long
Branch, St. Louis, Philadelphia and else"
where, besides bonds and stocks to a larc
amount, given to him by a grateful people, j
Allegheny county, and Mr. Wallace having
been first elected tw elve years ago, and both
having been re-elected at every regular
term since :
lYivu-.ial friendships and party associa
tions of tho strongest character cluster
around the retrospect of my twelve years iu
the Pennsylvania Senate.
Coming to this body in the years of my
early manhood, at an hour in which tho
us.-ionsi)fiui'iivPM turbulent and stormy,
when hlo.'d Howed like water and the pow
ers of the people ver; stretched to their
utmost, tension to furnish the sinews of war,
repres.:i:ti:i a people whose homes are
aiiiiil you. muii i. tains, wiicre l lie jealousy
of encroachments ot pow
most intense and win
nurtured and in disaster always rinds a ref-
carriet away, and from this point tho
water poured down iuto the drowned vil
lages, beaiing on its bosom ihe form of
destruction. House after house crumbled
in an instant.
One house lodged by a large maple tree,
lower is always found j Vy a joke upon his daughter as fo give to
re liberty is born and her a worthless check : and we indiiriiant-
nurturei ar.d n. msaster always hints a ret- , ,e , as tte , unworthy of belief, the
imp ; with personal passions strongand de- ;f;f,:, . o i V i r i
chd-.mmnied bv tln soherness of years;, tiniatiou tliat S?rtons bad lu. fat her-in-
with politi al convictions that were and are !w s cuecu cenuien ueiore lie leu V aah
a part of my being, it would be scrauge in- lugton on the noon train.
d . il if I were not tound occasionally in accompiisuiug tuis marriage me heart
aroused to tho expression of the sentiments
of my people with feeling possibly with
bifterni'i-s.
As the passions ot' men have cooled as
tho days of ci iaparative youth have glided
into these oi' maturer age as broader and
I trust nobler view s of my duty to my peo-y.-,
to i ivy Slate, and to myself have come to
me. 1 Lave, with a .?al teuipVrcd with dis
cretion, sought to perform my duty as a
and interests in stone-quarries and other j and another dovetailed into au adjoining
valuable business enterprises of like char- ; building. Frederick Clough, a foreman at
acter given to him by the grateful quarri
ers, so wealthy a gentleman as this, wo
would not suspect of perpetrating so scut
tho button factory, heard the roar of the
coming Hood and hastened to Mrs. Bon
ney's house, and, as it were, commanded
all those present there to llee. Mrs. Bou
ncy obeyed, running to tho hills. Clough
seized one of Mr. liyau's childien, a grand
daughter of Mrs. Bonney, begged Mrs.
Mary Iyan aud Carrie Bonney to follow
him, but they stood fixed to the pot iu
terror and friirht. He lied w ith the child.
of the house of Grant deserves w ell of his They remained with another child aud so
country. He has set a good example to all i were swept away.
the fathers in the land, and has shown J The village chapel followed the way to
himself to be as great in conquering bus- j destruction. The current now reached
bauds as in overcoming rebels. He has i George P. Warnei's button factory, which
Jn the Jaws of Death.
A KAR VET. LOUS ESCAPE FROM THE QRIAT
FLOOD A FEAHFIL RIDE.
The maryelloiis escape of young Buunhtg
at Leeds has already been alluded to, but
his story is so intereseing that it is worth j
giving iu detail. When the alarm was .
given he was at work in the spool room of
the Nonotuck silk works, and. rushing j
out of the mill, ll is first thought, of course,
was for his family. He found that his
father, wife and three children had left the j
house. He shouted to them to run for
their lives, at the same time pointing to
them what direction to take. His wife ;
and children obeyed him and were saved ;
but his father, an old man of seventy-eight,
thinking that something Might bo got out ;
of the house before the flood reached if,
went back. In dashed bis son after him,
begging liini to leave the doomed bui'ding.
While raising one of the windows the '
floor gave way beneath their feet aud his
father disappeared from his sight. The
young man had just time to clamber out
of the window, and as the house tipped
over crawled up its side to the root just as
the building broke up, leaving him but a
fragment to cling to for his life, and on
he went sailing down that awful flood in
full sight of wife and children, who, as
they looked on in terror and agony, ex
pected momentarily to see him sink be
neath the surging mass. In a few seconds
his frail raft was crushed like an egg-shell,
but his presence of mind never deserted
him. He jumped for another, ami when
that was gone, for yet another. He was
hastening down with the current at ter
rific speed, and intent on the fearful task
he had on hand, never once thought of
the dams toward which he was hastening.
The first one is reached iu the aw ful crash
and jam. He is hulled seemingly twenty
feet in the air, to come down and be sub
merged for the first time far beneath the
waves. As he came to the surface again
aud clasped another piece of drift-wood ha
realized with an intensity unimaginable
by those whose lives have never been im
periled that another and higher dam was
but a short distance below and tnat he
had absolutely no hope for life unless he
escaped from the flood before that point
was reached, but fortunately the swollen
mass of water and debris at that moment
surged toward the shore, and seizing an
opportunity, which seemed to be provi
dentially presented, he clambered across
some broken roots, which served hiin as a
bridge, and with a leap again had a foot
hold on the earth. The feelings of a man,
who, like him, had scarcely a hope of life,
on finding he had escaped from the jaws
of death cannot be depicted. Only a coel
and intrepid man could have passeu tli rough
S'eit'S ami Iolttical Items.
There is one town in Connecticut that
is not afraid of the measles. It's Haddam.
The Erie Obtervrr calls Hon. John
Cessna "the gad fly of Pennsylvania poli
tics." Four girls were drowned at Ypsilanti,
Mh higan, cm Thursday, by the upsetting of
a boat.
According to the New York Mail the
wife of Or. Hehnbold has entered a con
vent in Paris.
Twenty-nine years ago this month
Sir John Franklin sailed on his last voyage
of Arctic exploration.
The Danbury JTeir$ man, who has
landed in Liverpool, writes : "I was sea
sick three days of the trip by marriage."
Michigan has produced a common rat
measuring twenty-one and one-half inches
in length, and weighing two and one-half
pounds.
At Iudianapolis, on Monday, a lady by
the name of Gebhai t had one of her arms
The Rock hip ham Va r. -that
a cat, with kitten- h'. r
Wm. Loeb, of HariUbu'J r V"'!1? to
is taking care of a .,. ";""jned
Mr. Loeb's
weeks aao.
luirri
i-..
c:,I1;.,lt
""t ?illlU,V
Tho -,
. . Wis ...
two or tuiee nays old l,ei. V M.y
me ear. &Le seems to be r,,.
. ,.. "'l""'ei as to -,,1..
-'"lT f t !
never swo.ru
dollar to any one.
Ah incident recently
falo, N. Y., showing th
an engineer rnav feel f,,
lfS j;,
x-i-Kno,!
his
f !-.
1!,
1 "-'"IT.
O-I.
w;is
taken good care of his gentle daughter, as
it was right that he should do. He was
unwilling that she should encounter the
troubles which attend the moneyless, and
s- -nator. It in .ill these years I have said j ol wnicn ne nan sucn a woeiul experience
or dune that which has wounded any I most ! at the period of his life intermediate be-
siucerelv regret it.
Thw social and personal ties that bind me
to those !:o hear me are of tho dwpestand
tip' purest, the recollections of companion
ship with those who have passed to their
avocations in thy busy world, are grateful
and refreshing, and tho memories of those
who have passed from earth are cherished
w ilh tei'dcrness, love and respect.
Poi.tTroAK. In political circles it is be
ing whispered that ol
I'.iair, and
will he the
the Kepublieau nomination for State Sena
tor in tin lllair and Cauihria district.
Should the i;n leinen named enter ihe can
vass, it is said that either one. or tho other
will undoulitcdl v secure th coveted irizi
tegrity, but, if the dispatch referred to bo : over all competitors. Th statement is also
true, the Vice President diiters vciy mate- advanced that no other Itepublieau in the
' district could be elected, save ihose nien-
rially with tho "Second Washington' m f tione,i.
that particular.
tween his forced retirement from the army
and his rc-eutrance into it at tho outbreak
of the war. He relentlessly refused to
permit his fair daughter to marry her Al
gernon when he was poor ; but cheerfully
barkened unto her prayers when the elder
brother considerately died and made her
suitor the he-r of the ancestral acres.
Love in a cottage may now be considered
to be, iu this country under the ban of of
ficial disapproval ; and every parent will
that ( 1. Job n A. Tjmn, ot t ... i 4 a i -n i r - j
Hon. Sam. Henry, of Cambria, ""dersUi d that he wi 1 have failed of do
two most formidable riyals for i .'? whole duty by his charming daugh-
Wk welcomes to our exchange list w ith
extreme pleasure the first number, as we
liopo wc may have the privilege of doing
aL subsequent numbers, of a new Demo- ,
era tic weekly newspaper styled 27t! (Wi- ,
i onirtrlth which has just been establiahed ;
in Philadelphia by that eloquent, fearless ;
and at all times faithful champion of Dem
oe a ic principles, Hon. Wm. II. Witte,
who has the ability and energy to make .
it a live journal and one worthy of tho
most unprecedented patronage. The new
c.indii'ate lor public favor is an eight- ,
paged sheet of si columns each, aud con
tains 'more U'tful, intcicsting and well
written original and selected reading than
any paper that comes to our office, and is
only ?-i. )'"i per year in advance. We hope
its success may bi3 such as to induce the
of
The foregoing paragraph is taken from
a recent number of tho Altootia Daily Tri
bune. It is a most singular confession and
not at all complimentary to the radical
party in this district. If it is true that ei
ther John A. Lemon or Samuel Heniy can
defeat all other radical aspirants, and if it
should tni ii out that neither ot them should
be nominated, then, according to the 7Yt
btiue, a Democrat is certain to be elected,
for it says that the statement is advanced
that no other Republican in the district
could bo elected, ''saee thone- mentioned."
ter if he permits her to marry a gay and
haudsome fellow just suited to her miudif
he is uot also rich.
It srives us the extremest pleasure to see
how prosperously the bright and amiable
daughter of our President sails forth on
her career of married life and to know how
comfortably she is going to be made on her
sail across the ocean. The captain of the
vessel has given up his cabin for her bou
docr ; it contains but one bed, aud that is
was totally ruined. The alaim had been
given and the employes, except Carrie
Bonney and Evelyn Sherwood, escaped.
These two became bewildered aud started
for home, when they were swept down the
current.
One little boy came floating down to
Leeds on a board, from somewhere above.
Luckily he steered for a little knoll, not yet
covered, and throwing away his board he
climbed to the highest point of the knoll.
Still the water rose and only a spot as large
as a table remained, when the water reach
ed its greatest height and the plucky fel
low was saved.
The widow Knight, 80 years old, and
Jerry Ward, who was helping her out of
her house, were carried down by the cur
rent and were seen nw more. The widow
Shaw, aged 75, was carried by her son-in-law,
Deacon Tiiton, into a tree, where she
fainted. Mr. Tiiton held her weight until
his strength utterly failed, when she drop
ped into the seething flood.
A French Canadian, pointing to two lit
tle boys, said, "I had eight children, but
only those are left." He was afterwards
made glad, however, by the news that a
bright little son, thtee years old, was res
cued while floating down the liver on a
a sofa bed that no one would suspect of i mattress.
being a couch ; then it has a looking-glass A baby was seen sailing down the current
and liqueur racks and chandeliers and ever i in its cradle : but it was soon engulfed
so many nice things, and "the roof is fret
ted gold,', or at least painted in the shini
est china gloss, aud gilded 6o as to look liko
that gold which her husband so luckily in
herited, and without which the happiness
of the young couple had not been.
We greatly fear, however, that when oar
young Princess gets to England, complica
tions will arise which diplomacy may not
bc able to settle, and that may necessitate
a war or becomirg an empire, in order to
Doc? the Tribuni mean by the latter ex- arrange tho difficulty. The question that
pression that both I.emn and Heury should i troubles us is, whether it befits our diguity
-nt
as a
uiiteau
issuin.' of il l ie V
a weck'iy journal.
J'.r.lV L. Su'. mvn, a member of the
late J.cgi .--.hit ure of this State, from t.au.
cast-ir eoui.ty, was shot and seriously if
not Bioilally wounded on Saturday last, at
Wr.shingt 'i', in that county, by Jacob
Wit'.mer. Wittnirr was abusing his wife
be elected ? We p.esunic not, although
it says so iu plain language.
It is too soon yet to discuss the Senator- !
ial election in this new district, for the very ;
plain reason that tho term of Col. Lemon i
will not expire until the eud of the next i
session of tho Senate, and Cambria and :
lllair cannot elect a Senator until the leg- j
ular election iu November 1ST5, and then ,
onlv
bcr
torial districts for Senators to serve for
four years. This change is required by
the new constitution, and all wo lnvn to
as a nation that the daughter of our Presi
dent should give precedence to any woman
in Eugland. The samo difficulty has arisen
between Russia and England, for the Czar
is not willing that his daughter, who mar
ried the Duke of Edinburg, should yield
and never seen more. A boy six years old
floated down froni Leede clinging to the
roof of a house and was finally rescued.
Of the large family of Leeds, all were lost
save the youngest child.
How a Bot Saved Many Lives. The
Spriugfield Ue-publican says : Tommy
Ryan, a 15-year-old lad of Williamsburg,
displayed unusual resolution and presence
of miud for one of his years, as, by his
promptness, his own family as well as
many others were saved. He was in the
village near the town hall, with his father's
horse and wagon, when the approaching
wave was discovered, and, his first thought
being to save his mother and younger
brothers, he drove with great speed to his
precedence to the Princess of Wales, who t home neat James' woolen mill, where ho
is only the daughter of the King of Den- gave the alarm, lie then thought to save
mark. 1 o pacify mm, the Queen has of
fered her youugest daughter as a bride to
his son Alexis : but the Czar and his son.
protesting their high appreciation of tho
y for -? year, to bo followed m Novem- , vaUle of tl)e peace offerinff dcciino the
IST'1 by the election in tho fifty Sena- j sacrifice ; and we are waiting to hear
whether they are going to war abotit It
Jo placate America, Queen Victoria
would doubtless offer her rejected daughter
to Colonel Frederick Grant, provided we
( j - - - piv.lUCU TTU
at the residence or her parents, w hen Mr. say on the question referred to by the Tri- I consent to change our republic into a king-
i i- . . ii l . T -l , .
Shu man. v no uvea in tne ame inngr, en- i nunc is, -tnat sutticiaut tor the dav is tho ora ana mass nysses its neau. ihe
J - i.j j i-.i i- ,- .
to red the house and ii.td tired to protect
Mrs. WiUuior. The villain, w ho was beast
ly drun, thereupon shot Shumaii with a!
pistol "! t'.o abdomen, the Lv.51 lodging in
t he s;:ne.
VA haMi no words severe enough to cx
ptVM our contempt aud, utter detestation
of :i i ian who will habitually cany a pis
tol hU person. T!iero is a stringent
nid ; veil kiiuwu pe.ial tdatute of this State
j. yist it, and yet even in our own peace- '
abla neighborhood almost every young
ruf'iin sport ; concealed revolver. Wc
Iiavi hail 'oi', but fortunately not fatal
expeiieneo of this infernal and cowardly
custom in our own usually- quiet town.
Our decided opinion Uthat a man who scJi'.t
t revolver io another becomes equally a
criminal with the latter if ha use Wfot-illy.
In thU community, al least, no can nu
lcs.i liu is a b.ie and airaut towaid wi'l
any a. pb.to'. We arc certaiu that no
.Kiif ': iri'luhi-JS tu the Il.l'e't, but ...idy
jo vl.o aud lul-'i io.-,
evil ihorcof.'
young man would doubtless be willing aud
60 would his sire, who is accused of hav-
v........ , -r . ing aspirations that way, and to be aiming
1 Hlttf.U.Nr. B u.l.OON- Asf F.NSKlN-.-A o':..4 . r D 1 -
St,,, trom Reading, Pa., view to makin!, it hereditary in his familv.
Ho is also educating Fredeiick to kingly
T - -.: . r..i.:.... i-
. i ... , , ,, ' , -".tuns. ao n lit; oi, luviii uaniou uo ijiu-
a trajzc ba atUcl.ed o a ball.,,, the ! motea him overthe head of older officers
letter to the .V.
giver; a t la ulmg account ot the ascent of
n Shearer, :ronaut. a few days aa-o. on
Jo
the lives of the operatives in the silk mill
at Haydenville by driving in advance of
the flood, which he succeeded iu doing, ar
riving at his destination about tho same
time as Collins Graves, who gave tho gen
eral alarm through the village. His moth
er and brothers iu the mean time barely
escaped death, as in their flight they were
obliged to scale a high rail fence. The
children got over in safety, but the moth
er's strength failed just as the waters came
up upon her, she fainted, aud was with
great difficulty dragged to a place of safety
by her little sou.
Globe containing twenty thousand cuuic ; i i i t i r i -.
r t r i , . ii, i n.. -iiiy ad ets ijlm joaf around our large cities,
teet of gas. Just as lue balloon ascended. ,;,u ,i t,.. i n ...t..-.S
.... U1LU 11111,11 IIH Ml 111 lltlL 111! .Illlllllll. . ... v . .. -
roni storm commenced, followed byaic,i.mff ,,! i,?.. I white, stood at the bedside, saying,
, itlc galo of rain and snow. Shearer ! '1 I UP' Eft P immediately yoJ are
A correspondent of the Binghamptou
Republican is responsible for this story :
"On Whitney screet, last Friday night,
just before 12 o'clock, a family of five
persons were saved from death by the
mother dreaming that a woman, dressed
a
terr
, , . . . , j . , i'".vuii Buppuca uiui. ocui,i.u onci ui.ui.
was c oi in scam, circus ure., uuu must i n r -j.
have been neatly frozen. On striking a ! J 1 n"' " S?mS ?
height of live thousand feet above sea ' '?. f ?'e L"
north-cat at a nr fi, ,-;
luwaius i no juuug rriuce
ps for the further reasc
disobey the official regi
level, tne uaiioon spea noitii-rasi ai a nr fi,
fright ful rat ? of speed, the snow falling all ; Uoy al Vs 7or the fuTher reason
the time. He managed to pull the valve . tLftt htt inUjds to1disobev the offi:Jr(llru.
lations aud marry his daughter to a poor
navy lieutenant. So marrying her, he has
the consolation of knowing that she will
never have a black eye from the impact of
a silver cup. Lancaster Intelligencer.
rope, and after breaking tho rope and an
chor, he managed to secure the balloon to
a tree and lauded in safety, though badly
biui.scd.
Gov. Baxter has highly complimented,
in general orders. Miss Allie R. Stewart,
of Little Rock, for acts of courage and
darinnr i.ei formed during' the late unoleas-
antness in Atkama5). Brig. Gen. Barton !
recommended her appointment as major
and aid-dc camp.
. "We have often wondered whether there
is a pemm in the country who does not
know and appreciate the value of Johnn,
wauted ! On reaching the foot of the stairs
she found her lamp, which she had left on
the table, had exploded, and all that was
near in flames. In a short time the fire
would have reached them. ' A few pails of
water extinguished the tire. The woman
in white was gteu but a momeut ; where
she came from or where she has gone is
still a mystery."
Farmers aud stock raisers have fre
quently told us that they have seen very
good results from giving Sheridan'! Cat
airy Condition Powder to cow and swine
before aud after they drop their young,
Anodyne Linimtnt as a family medicine? The powders put them in good condition,
it is adapted to most an purposes, and is 1 and give them stren
the best pain destroyer that cau be itbed.
give them strength to care ana pro
vide for their suckling'?.
k metis, .sue liir.t-o.i i
, v . 'ifi I'p ...
j - - - ,.it iiir ai." i. 1
upstairs, and was verv e ' t i
auopicu young one a!o:i- wi-K ,. J
her family. D ' n fc :.u
There is a gentle man
Southwestern Railroad vr.''? .C'J
Ga.. who has thiiteen !,,.; -i , " ' 'T''
clothing for them by the wu"'S.
when last in Colu'ml us 1 L. V' '" . J;
yards of calico, 100 of l;., ,
pairs of shoes, and other "!' ,t" ",:''f'-s
tion. Unlike many fathe1Vj' '1' ' '
one daughter, he paid cash f,,,'" i'"1'
chases. Thouh an old i,.;lU i,''' , :
-s - - -- 1 1 L M II l.r ,
t.i . ir .1:1 . . . i . : ... -.1.... 4. i !.., .... ; . I . i . 1
uiiiwn oil winie uii.eiiipi.ioji uctiudsiuit; uuw i.nnu iiiem a, I 1,,,
Willi irmirj.u-Hpr flVr KlVfil'll an ,,-..l. . .
, "j t; . . . . . .. ", .ii.u
j I wo boats, containing thirteen ralts
mcn, came into collision in Flat Rapids,
near A rn prior, Ont., on Saturday. Both
boats capsized, aud seven were drowned.
Brigham Young has begun to be made
: a grandfather-in-law. In a few years it
: wiill be necessary to calculate the Prophet's
; family connections by geometiic progies
, sion.
1 The wife of Mr. Frederick Dingee, of
; No. 1815 Memphis street, Philadelphia,
gave birth to three male children, all of
I which were living, and at last accounts
. were doing well.
The repoi ter of the New Yoik Herald
succeeded in witnessing the wedding at
the White House by disguising nimself as
j a colored waiter and assitiug as eateier at
the breakfast table,
i A curiosity is shortly to be placed in
j the Ordinance Museum at Washington,
1 consisting of a Federal and a Confederate
j bullet impacted in the air, which was picked
I up before Petersburg in 1804.
! William Banker, a conductor for the
last twenty years on the New York, New
! Haven and Hartford Railroad, was arrested
; in -ew ioik on oaturaay, on a cnarge oi ; rnre in inai sort oi astuteness wl,y
I having embezzled -"i, 000 of his employer's ; to be distinguished f:.in kr.averv" "
funds during his term ol service.
A Boston man and a Titusville (Pa.) ;
maid had a little quiet dance all to them- ,
selves the other day. He did the dancing i
while she applied the cowhide, aud ho i
doesn't dance attendance on her any more, j
Neither does he iusult Titusville ladies as '
much as he did.
The total loss of life by the Mill River
disaster is now known to be one hundred
and forty-seven. Some idea may be formed
of the terrific force of the rushing stream
r . w i.
i 1
.III f II r I H IMtO ilrllifr t..1.
rtaiiroaii was m lI,...i .. i - i
- . "".en wav . .
on. un iju.iung, trio engine
tlie scene when the si. id
and jumping thiou-h :i -A ju;,,.v ...
into the cab, and backed the ( .,',."
what tinged, out thmiil. tl,,.
tire to the tiack. Mr. Goldiiu-,;, ..
severely burned about tl,e vS'
the bcxly, and as so..ii as ti e r
stopped lie jumped fiorn it. s
Probably the "worst tl m
!eeu was ine uouge hy which
Legislature of Pennsvlvanin r.l.
laws for Philadelphia. 1 ;,.; ,
by the new Constitution fiuln p,'
cial laws," they passed !:., f, .
over 000,000 inhabitants."" a,.,i ns
only one of this class Pl.ilutl-j'l'.!
were in effect special acta .f ';,
though not coming wiihin c i;i-;'
prohibition. We ha.e et t i ;
biKly of men surpassin.' ihL-
f:.
The New York ,7n
long list of Nellie Graiu'
ents. It says : "The j n-i
at abuot !jO(i,000. Genti.il
' his daughter some ni'crLi
I what he should give her
cost. Her choice wa a sir
i one of white lace. Mrs. (.
i mediately to the wife of .
; Brussels, Mis. J. P. .1
i friend of the family, piit;.
that experience, and possibly Mr. Dunning 1 of death by the statement that the fissure
a f
i a:,!
ur Yi.
s. r;n
lie ,
in Eu:
could not but for his experiences as a rafts
man in Canadian waters. He had been
swept half a mile down the river and was
utterly exhausted by the intense strain on
mind and body, nerve and muscle, yet as
he lay on tho bank for a moment to get
breath he could not suppress a smile at
tlie appearance of a man who escaped
from the flood near the same place by
seizing hold of the limbs of a large tree on
the bank. Fleshy though he was, this
man went up that true like a squirrel, and
did not stop till he was at least thirty feet
above the water. Mr. Dunning describes,
as the most appalling incipient of the mem
oriable ride, the heart rending screams
and groans of women and children in
houses that were swept down with him
and seemed to be beneath him. He says
they will ring iu his ears till the end of his
life.
in the ruined barrier shows that the flood
must have started with a volume one hun
dred and seveuty-five feet wide and thirty
five feet deep.
The jury or inquest into the cause of President Tyler took a hii.le t
the handsomest to 1 e had
gardless of expense. The i .---;; U
such as has never before f .:i:,d i;4Vi.a
other hands than thoe of i'..al,Y.
Nellie Grant's weddi:.- 'w as 'ti,?
1 . l i . l :.. .i ' ,i , .
inai ii.is idKcu pmce 1.1 i:.e o iiile n
The Champion Corh Crop of Nebras
ka. The soil and climate of Nebraska are
most favorable to farming. Indian corn
grows luxuriantly, and the smaller cereals
also thrive. The productions of Nebraska
do not appear in the U. S. census reports
before 1SG0 ; and then the whole corn pro
duction of the Territory which was much
larger than the State, its western limit be
ing the summit of the Rocky Mountains
was only 1,-182,080 bushels" In 1870 tho
corn crop of the State of Nebraska the
western limit of which is the base of the
Rocky Mountains was 4r730,710 bushels ;
and the Agricultural returns of the De
partment at Washington for 1873 give
the corn for that year, which was a bad
year for Indian corn, xt 21, 000,000 bushels.
These figures exhibit the rapid progress
of agriculture in Nebraska, for what may
be said of corn is equally true of other pro
ductions. In the fertile soil and genial
climate of the State, coruyieldsabundant
ly, and is a safe crop. There are broken
lands where, year after year, tlie produce
has averaged 80 bushels to the acre ; but
this is outdone by the champion coru crop
of 1873.
The affidavits on which the $50 premium
for 1873 was awarded, have just been pub
lished by tbe State Board of Agriculture.
The owner was Magnus M. Nelson, of Cass
county. His champion crop was grown
on a field of thirty-five acres the second
crop on tho same ground, which was prai
rie broken in 1871. The .plowing cost
? 1.25 per acre ; the planting 4o cents ; the
culuivating $1.80 ; tho harvesting $1.25
total expense per aero $4.75. The yield
was an average of 91 j bushels per acre, i
which was certainly worth uot less than 40 j
cents per uusuei on tue larm. ine varie
ty of the corn was the Mahogany ; and the
weight C3 lbs. to tbe bushel.
the llliamsburg reservoir disaster, met
on Monday at Northampton, Mass. Mr. '
Cheny, gate-keeper, and his father, testi- j
lied to the discovery of leaks long ago. A j
member of the reservoir company was no- j
lined of its condition, but he attributed the
leakage to springs. Nothing was done to
strengthen the reservoir. j
About one hundred and fifty families, j
comprising seven hundred persons, are re- j
ported as actually destitute in tho -Mill
River Valley, aud further investigation
shows that the needs of the devastated
district have not been magnified by general
report. The contributions thus far amount
to about 05,000, of which ouly a little over
18, 000 has been paid over.
At Seymour, Illinois, on Thursday,
two brothers named Fleetwood were con
victed of the murder of a little German boy
one year old, and were sentenced to the
peuitentiary for life. The evidence showed
that they enticed the boy iuto a field,
where they beat his brains out with a club,
cut his throat and then threw the body iuto
a creek, all for two dollars.
A young woman in Walla "Walla,
"Washington Territory, recently married a
man against her father's consent, w hen he
i.- .1 i. .l . i. , i ... r i
Uu .: iiwu. l... u.KI im u.g.t...y, Wli taken in and done fn ly
alleging mar sue naa a nusoanu namea ; i,.,, ,. i, r,, 1 .
Smith living in Nevada. She got over
this little difficulty by sweariut? that she
,nW !ii-d u-ttli S i n i 1 1 . i litm mitr and 1
. . ' he was sufficiently encounm.a
marcueu on wun uer nusuanu. i , - , ,i ,.
r,., , , .,r ,. . I upon the people commenced c:.
The woman s crusade at Washington, . i .1 . 1 , .
t- 1 . ,- te .-' him. A centleman break. ui
z 1 1 v 1 :i v 1 a. rtirwtni. t i-" i ii 1 1
sum at the beginning of bis te;;n, U:t
soon died, anil towaid tl.f ;..::, 1
his term he again inai 1 ietl. Y. i
.. r;.c ti..A.... ,.r c.,.,. v 1. . .
. .11 isn lAiuuci. 01 .irii l"ik.
.1: .1 - - 1 . , -T-.
I lives, auu is miicii esiecnitj. 1 ie a.
!. -.1 ;.. ... , .
I iiioojr iimiv ii.icj ijoieiii in i. ii ,. . t. ,i. . i .
' l-r-.'f. t .t 1 r.li 'it tlir T-l,it.. ,m-i -. - ..
brilliant event of that time. "He
1 ter of President Tvler v:i i', . i
uitiioiz 111a 1111 iiiiiot-iiih in r r . ' 1 . .
I office to Mr. Waller, of Yi.- :,:.i.
them have since died, kav.i.j jr. r.f.s
An employee in the Kivs V:': 1
at Fall River was smiMu:: tier
the thiiu story with a mop the
when he backed up at:'v.!st a ii !; .i
dies wide that passes thro'-.j-li tit-r.
liquely, thence over a sh ift xA :
T 1 1 1'lll (T ll triA IlOitl' flrrdin I 1,
moving at the rate of t hi t-e qua -t-?
mile a minute, and the 1:1:1:1 ci"
down through the floor: bat bof.'-;
the floor of the second story, he r i'.a. .
another belt that was rmuii:: ia 'J:
posite direction. The sudden leverx.-:;-him
upon the floor, but he a ia -The
mop, however, tipped ii; ti.;ie'
and was broken all to pieces.
The people of Ware; -"-. h..l "T
it i.:.i:. -
v, 11.7 oioi3;.rii 10 ot i..t
C. 11 vrvf 1 Itll I111U1C lillLIN 1 1 . '
was willing to move to aterio.-,
l..lliilA..tltf .0iMH-ll'f-l!.
The pioneers of California have always
credited Colonel Marshall with the discov
ery of gold in the land of Ophir, but the
San Francisco Chronicle has found a wo
man who claims the honor. She is now
living wiJi her aged husband in indigence,
though she clings tenaciously to the nug
get of gold, whose finding set a world in
motion and peopled a wilderness. In 1847
the couple, who had crossed the plains
from Missouri, were at Coloma, El Dorado
county, the husband being engaged by
Marshall in the construction of a mill.
Mrs. Wemmar (such is the name of the
Chronicle's heroine) was always dreaming
by day of finding gold, the glitter of mica
in the sands of tlie rivr bank probably
suggesting the thought. Marshall aughed
at her. Once he found a nugget, aud,
thinking it mica, handed it to her "son.
saying, "Take this to your mother and
tell her to boil it in her soap ; it's some of
her gold." The nugget was so boiled,
but instead of dissolving in the lye it fell
to the bottom, bright and glittering as
ever. Not until this aud many other nug
gets that were subsequently found were
scientifically tested, would Marshall believe
in their worth.
much opposition has come from tho j
churches themselves pastors and leading j
members, that the active crusaders have j
recently taken to praying for that class, in- !
stead of the dealers and venders. Several 1
large prayor-meetings have been held, id i
quite an excitement prevails as to the policy j
indicated.
In a recent suit at Detroit brought j
against a me insurance company uy a ;
widow to recover a policy of five thousand
! dollars on the life of her husband, who '
j committed suicide while laboring under i
mental derangement, the jury brought in a
verdict for the plaint Upholding that no in-
sane person can make or break a contract
where the rights of third parties innocent j
of any wrong are involved. !
A hunter near Mason City, Iowa, killed
a white pelican the other day, abiid of the '
Mediterranean waters. Tho Repuhliran
says the fowl measured 8 feet 4 inches from :
tip to tip of wing. 5 feet 4 inches from beak i
to end of tail, its beak measuring 20 inches, i
with a white "top-knot" on its head 5 in- ;
dies in length. Its pouch is a curiosity,
; measuring jo inches across. 1 tie body is
1 a most perfect white, with the top of the
j wins jet black.
I A number of Indian skeletons have
j been exhumed from an ancient graveyard 1
! near Clarksville, Tenn. The foreheads
! are receding, and the jaws and nose very i
j prominent, uulike the features of any tribe
I known to the earliest settlers. Flint wea- '
I pons and pottery w ere found, and the graves 1
j were closed above and below with fclabs of !
j slate stone. Strangely enough a leaden '
; bullet was found fastened in the shoulder j
! bones of one of the skeletons.
1 MM T . , ,- .
I me utit r-ufi an puonsiies an acciunt
keeping eucoHiaged him by !!
fm-iiitnt-p. for which he !';ive a: t v
Others encouraged him by .'::'
small sums to meet inuucihate ei;
Some of the bankers enc-urges! ' !-:''
counting $4, 000 of his pajur. w lie e
started oft'to move his factory.
time nothing has been fe:i "' ;-f
him, and the factory hadn't lo-:! :
The people of that tlourisiiiuM ''';r;
are disposed to regard tlieir i:..-c
as a Waterloo defeat.
After all the arresi ti :: L
made of persous supposed to !
Bender family, who conuiu-"11
murders in Kansas, all of t!:.r. ..
still at large. The person a.v--
recently as the elder Tu mIc..
was reported, had been satisM.''1;
titied, proves to be a rienit-r.tr.i
the name of Koch. 'Ihe "::::) .
for Labette county, Ka:
description of the seni"i
the criminal is desci ib d
an intelligent counteiuu:'
in nowise the vagi ant -o t !.!'
for members of the l'"-1' u" - 1
adds that allof the Bci.dsi.-.
ing their fiendish natiue. :q ; i
ami pleasant in their u.ai: : -: -
are supplied with mi-vey.
that they will be lou.ui
fools or vagrants.
A wiiiideiful cave 1
near Pine Grove. C.-l.
Stokes. Jamieson. .i:nl
for about a mile hm! a
found chambers hcaati: ,
stalnt ii-s; ami st.ilr. L :' 1 "
s. i:
:..k:- u
:l :: -V-- '
ac.i-i.
i, 1.
L !.;?
V.is
of water leaping fro
parent ly bottomless
i the 1
! : m
of the capture of the notoiious California emitting sulphurous pv.
t
u Snnday, at Weymouth Landing,
Massachusetts, the body of an unknown
womau, apparently about thirty-five years
old, was discovered in the water, with her
bead wrapped in a carriage robe, which was
tied with a clothes-line aud fastened to a
heavy "tailor's goose." On removing the
robe a bullet wound was found in the
bead. It is thought the murder was com
mitted in Boston and the victim carried to
W eymoutb.
outlaw, riburcio Vasnuez. This desoer
ate robber has for years been the terror of '
the Pacific cost. His exploits and career
rival those of the bandits of any age. A I
price was set upon his head, and only a
few weeks ago the Governor offered a re-
ward of $8,000 for bis capture. He was j
surprised while unarmed, and though badly t
i.ii -,. . . rfi
wuuuueu, ue win prouauiy live to grace a
scaffold.
The Mill River disaster has set soma
of the Connecticut people trembling for ;
fear certain of their reservoirs may give i
way. Ilamden and Westville are partic
ularly anxious, the dam at Wintergreen i
Falls, belonging to the Fair Haven Water
Company, being so situated that if it
should break away the destruction of life
s :!!:.! I"
...le-'
r i'
in
it. -
1 nAl I. ..I- li -l rid iei tlie H.'
highly magnetic. 0;,e
carried a hatchet had it
! from him by a niaciiei
I ho Miiifil mid the coin
i the party wasuiiableih-t-' ' V
who had on mmei-- .. cC,u'J
which were tilled with r'"ii""' jiCp
' with difficuity. and h.M-1'"'1;' n.Jj::
a portion of the ll.nr umr . . ..
i found himself siuhleioy .eii,
! unable to move. He
leave his boots there. ,
In the Roman t .,,b.ri
Baltimore there are saiJ l , h is
urea than in any ' f.a
.minhv. .lewei.cti .."s -t J.
hah
silver c
and property in the estv;lle valley would monstrance
be terribln. Th Statn 11
dalniatKiues, roo , r e
During the prevalence of a bail and
ram storm Tuesday afternoon, a barn oa
the farm of Mr. George Ellis, a few miles
rrom Baltimore, was blown down. Mr.
tlhs, aged 45, and his daughter; Mary,
aged 18, who were in thfl ha.-ii t .v,.
--'' mv bllllVf
i were both killed, being terribly crushed
aud mangled by the falling timbers.
never done much to piovide against disas
ters or this sort.
Amoug the resolutions adopted by the
Catholic total abstinence union, at its meet
ing iu New York on Wednesday, was one
declaring "that crusading excitements,
legislative expeiimeuts, and political agi
tatiou offer poor hope for completeness of
reform, aud that the only thorough pro-
I uiuiiion must come through self-prohibi-I
tiou, enforced by individual conscience, for
i titled by God's grace." This resolution
covers the whole ground, and friends of
temperance w ho steer by its counsel '.Till be
fnenis of tempeiance indeed.
ces all "'ar :..i,ies,'
.s, clalK'iatc :s(!e.s
.latinues. recaei-. f
Mioii ven. a- , i.v pits
eiitsareallcait'-.-j
acleandsac.xstfL.;J
ds are le1 - p.-f
s,,ie?i!dcacrozf f.J
pies, benediction '' .efui:v p;
i.. ...1..,. iit.i c.ii-
SllCill c-iu."
iii its taberuac
tl.o ornaments
Among others, the ,.1
.nnti used by Arci "-: :cai?B'
five years ago occi.r.es
.-l ... il,.. neh uiltrea - . .
a-, swi "s. u-.-,
ucj."-'-s- r-.-c.Ti thee-", ..I.
Il...nrillt. Lie" l" , . MjJ'.E
are shrines of treasures , c9t
Mlver ornameuUoi i ,
which rernise th re.i.an
tLe,e ate a-rbier-"' ' r . ;
each duuns hi-- 5 ,',c
,.(' HI"'