The people's journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1850-1857, March 27, 1856, Image 1

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.tjtitg'iintop . sciv — ._ istnetz
liVALlsi4ii EVERY THURSDAY MORNIE(I.
Adtance
Map subscribers,'
•OF ADVERTISING,
1 square, 0112 lines or ICsa, 1 iisertiOn, • $0,50;
41 • •lII ‘ I, • •
every : subsequent insertion, 25
Euli and figure work, per sq., 3 insertions, 3,00
Every subsequentlusertion, 50
1 eoltuins',• one year; -•' ' 25,00
1 solamn, - siz inonths, 15,00
Administrators' or Executors' Notices, 2,00
tt e i bpriffs . Sales, per tract, . •),50
isrofessional Cards not exceeding eight lines
iTaierted tor $5,00 per annum.
)• Al!. letters on' business, to secure at
minion, should be addressed (post paid) to the
Publisber. • • •
THE MAT EXODUS NORTHWARD.
The long-continued bold weather
has worked a great revolution in the'
course of trade.. The bridge of ice,
extending the whole length of the" Ohio,
has given new activity to a large, and
constantly grewing business.. While
the severity of the sea; - on, and the state
of the roads,, prevent the farmers Of
western Virginia and Kentucky from
taking most of their produse to mar
ket; some.of it 'seems endued with the
power of taking itself from market
quiet effectually. Across that friendly
ice away is made fur the self-ransom
ed to pass over. Jack :Frost himself;
in his old age,
,has become incendiary.
He- " burns frore," and that river,
whose past devotion to slavery entitles
h to at iea . st a first class Foreign Mis
sion, now thrown into chains, feels a
strange sympathy for its fellow-bond
sufferers, and reaches out its manacled
hands fur their aid. Along the whole
line where slavery and freedom con
front each. other,. scenes at e enacted
that remind-us of'the earlier flight of
Julia and her boy over the same river.
Should . the presetit cold snap continue,
there is reason to fear that it will snap
the fetters of many a Door bondman,
thus frozen into freedom. The under
giound railway, being below the frost
and snows, at present so troublesome
in the tipper world, is enabled to land
its passengers with great regularity
and promptness.
The Rev. Mr: Hunt, the temperance
lecturer, used tolell a story of a Vir
giuian,• slightly shattered in hisiutel
beet, who one day came to his brother,
a large plantei, with a most important
discovery: " I . have found out," - said
he, f. that the coons never eat any corn
only on the 'outside rows ; and when
we plant next year, we won't have any
outside .row." How to take care of
the outside row of slavery is just now.
one of the great problems of the age,
and one imperatively demanding a so
lution.
The New . York. Times asserts that,
since ISSO, not less than thirty-five
millions of dollars (S 35,000,000) worth
of slave:shave escaped from the North
am slaveholding States to Canada and
tho free .States ; a drain . upon the
proflts'ofslaverbreecling that few other
initutviat interests ofthe country would
Imar. Not is there any reasonable
prospect that the loss will be less in
years - to' tome,- The rapes that have
preated this state of things do not dis
appearor-grow-wenk.
' We well remember the intetest•with
which we first examined` the move
ment of a pocket certipais. Great was
pgr cfiildish wonder at the inysterious ,
power,yf 4.t.e North Star .io draw,cob
jeet4 toward itsylf. But since that day
it has developed a morel' power. • It
has become 'one of the-.great benevo
. lent forcesof the age. P.opts celebrate
. its praiseL
_ - B,llll.authropists bless it.. it
aspciate d in. our. thoughts with that
• Star in the-East• which guided wise,
teen to one "who -came to' open the
,prison doors, and to set at liberty those
that are liOund ..Isfot .: only iron, but
human beipgi, toagneti;e4 . by the love
of freedom, own its power.- 'While we
!rite, sceres;dieWb - ,by'AS bjfiueiite,
: ye basting-aoross our slavery-tainted
sod fo t>lo wl4lJed fpr - lied, where 'they
fled themselves !—that manhood
wlich lb; heard, and. never
Vieire;" In weariness, in - faintinds, i
as,
-
• Ot , r ' I cnr, 14_
• 3 i• 4 ,1 A "'"
. . • .
1.71„.t'' •••• • •
01V. •,. ,747.411 1'%14 4:4 r::: . • 41
71-M ; 1:1;
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• .‘ • . 1; Ls:, -•-•
're
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L . •-•
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Irt
a s
. . . . . .
cold and nakedness, in perils of robbers .
and in perils of the heathen,. do. they
urge their way,,., gay qrod, preserve
the poor wanderer, .and and. the kind
heart that takes hirn in and cheers him
On. .
$l.OO
1.25
When nature and the stars ,in .
course fight against .our institutions,
it is high time they shnultl be loolted
after. If our .Governmenn seriously
intend to put a stoptothe..aceties,now
enacted upon opr.soil, let them show
their sincerity by thawing ant the Ohio
At once. Then let them hang agreen
blind over the North`Star, and cutoff
the tail of the. Urs a. Minor, that ram
pant beast that roams at willround the
heavens, •
3 insertions, 1,50
‘: And bids the North forever know. its place."
While nature is unrestrained, while
the stars are suffered to kifidle nightly
their incendiary fires, something. more
than the stork in the heaven will know
its appointedtime,,and something bet
ter than the turtfe, - andthe crane, and
swallow,
the will observe the time of
.
their corning.
And sn . we phoerfully submit to the
rigours of this 'frightful winter, , and
admire that sUperintentlingprovidence,
" that out of seeming illeduCesgOod."
When; from Our' lonely room at mid
night, we rook forth upon nature, and
hear the howling of the winter's wind,
the gioonci is 6.1 i 'dispelled by the re
flection that this is freedom's huur—
the hOtir when the stars''shine, and hu
man beings, guided bytheir light, find
their lust trianhobd.
" The htinter now bath left the runei,
The•scatterett coveye unit secure."
And so, in lace , Of ridicals and fanat
ics, we avow• our love of thai :great
American Track Society that has
°paned a pathway.for freedom across
our soil, and guides the pilgrim safely
through it; • its unselfish•
"catholic basis." The'daily and nightly
issues of its steam ex-presses commend
it to the love of all the good. In its
managers and "Life Directors," " Con
gregational" or. otherwise,' we have
entire confidence, and, from our heart,
du wp wish them success.' • •
If, as it- is said; there is " honor
among. thieves," why should golile
quality be lacking in so many' little
boys ? • ' .
" Boys will be boys," said one_ in
reply to a remark of mine on thiSsub
ject. This Lknow, and do not desire
to see " old heads upon young should
ers," What I want is to beg boys to
be governed by honor, and honesty, in
their dealings with one another.
"'Why don't you lend your skates
and sled to the other buys When you
are not usitig them l" hilie asked,
and been answered, "Itecause boys
think nothing Of brealting ode . other's
things, and sometimes consider it smart,
and then laugh at you for being - so
green as to lend them"
But dun't they gay the damages 7"
Now•was my turn to tie fairghed at
for the absurdity Of my
‘! Pay damages! never !" This krute . d
harshly upon a mother's ears; nud . lll
tell'yott why. Because hr the 'first
placirl knew hOW much a bOy thinks
of his first sled, first.skateS, - aircfrirsi
pocket knile. Many rich . men who
I4ve iii free- - stiJne phlaces in Naw-YOrk
will colitss that they . never had
greater prize than theirfirit sled,' ' with
its biighi paint and well-ironed run
ners, and that the .. iicis'eis'it;ii' of iltates
gave•them many sleepless honrs - of 'de
light:: 'Now whew Eloya •knovii 8V wall
now much they'prize . their own things,
is it nut •ii . ery- much like atealii4:, to
carelessly injure t;uut!lFr boy's proper
ty aud.millie no effort to repair. the
Iv4s - •
"But how can asboy_pay, when he
. tlaa g?t, no money V' Ineac one .of my
readera„ oa4+ l pechap, immediate4r. v
, lie cttn,go homo , aucl teal his, lathe!
1 44.1,duue, and„ keg him to give
pia the, means of
,refaikteghis
11 his lather i .sepa,- fit_to ulnae hisxe
luest, he pen savehis pennies. All, he
has enough money able 0W64- or. he
'can' iialect'froieminohehis Vlitytirngl
DUPT.FA:TO .THE.P . R!I!1 . 6p e !..fo py,p,Emociwir t -Aro TUB DisitAitietvitthst RALITY','I,;.744III,#.
#I4ONG. BOYS,
O°IUIOPORt POTTER, COUNTY- P / ISMICH 27, 1856.
wsoh .enough to pay for
,the hartu'-he
has even.if ;he has.to. give away.
a. very ~ precious toy : _
,If he Is, too pppr •
for as this and h a little,Yankee con
. .
•
,ttivance, perhaps he,tait mend the in
jnTed article and make it as georl,as
new. Hillis cannot be dpne, he can,
go to his playmate, and say he its 'ery
sorry for the accident, - and that he is
not able to - repay their diimages, and
'then . show • his" sorrow by iiipriiving
the firse chimee *doThicrinjtire d friend
favor. nOt•haveto Waitlong
for an opportunity to slew kindness
Which'is better than Money.
• • 'Phis is as mnch a young boy's duty
as it 'will be When he is a few years
-olde'r, and acCidentliinjures a borrow
ed horse and carriage, to repay the
owner for his lois. A boy 'who •will
.break another's 'knife, lose hie ball,
drop his new book in the Mud,' or
break his sled; and then laugh at his
playmate's distress, • or even refuse to
pay him in some way for his loss, will
' , b6 very likely lo -make a forger, de
faulier, burglar, •or perhaps Something
• A meaii unfeeling boy iS a sad hope
less sight. =Like a crooked, dwarfed,:
;young tree,' nothing - grand 'noble
'can. be :mitclis . 'of it. - Aga" . Will only
make'it More ugly 'an& despieit;
his too much the fashion among boys
to scorn gentle loving manners, or leave
their sisters to leain such ways, while
they try to be what they call-men.' A
boy who wishes to be a true man, ".- the
noblest work' of God,".. must • begin
while he is young to be honest honor
able, and "do ; as you would be done
by,." fur he_ will.. be . the .:same person
when he , grows up..that - he is nowi.only
stronger r ilarger, in ,mind and. body.
and 6etter, able to: do••gOod-
Let us by. .all - „means --have "nano,
ainong boy;." -
,• •M. E. W.
TO TEAOHItEd AND DIRECTORS
Many of the certificates .given to
teachers in this couuty,:have -expired,
or will expire on, or before, the Ist
day of June next.:. Some of those who
will wish to have their certificates're
pawed, will be prepared 1 trust -to
pass that 4' Thorough, „Examination"
wbich:will entitle •them to the ":Per
manent" or "Professional" Certificate.
Others :will at least be prepared to-re
ceive a lusher grade of the "Tempo
rary" Certificate.
Should it meet the 'convenience and
‘yishes of Teachers and Directors, 1
now propose to bold a : general Teach
ers' ,E xaming tion„ at Coudei sport,! the
fast week. in April. The time. pro
posed, Ts . iu view of the fact that. a.con
siderable number- of schools will prob
ably. open, the, first of May. The time
of the examination will be altered,
however, it' it is found expedient.
. Lie proposed examination is not
intended to supersede local or individ
•ual examinations, but to be made au
occasion of interest cud benefit to such
Teachers
,Directors and others,. as
may attend,
lu accordance with the above de
aild as a rnatZer of.general. lime;
rest, ome hints are giveu:below, as .
tu . the, kind and , degree of acquire
ments which 4 pe.rsou. should :,possess,
who,aspives,to 141.heaorable , .and prCt
lessionat standing, .as a Common
School Teacher... Tbelawenumerates
Qroograilly, heading, writing,Geog,
GFamtuar..and , Arithmetic, as
the, branches...which„must be taught in
every district,. The .candidate is .there
fore . usually. examined,: in.. all .these
branches, : if no. more.; likewise .in the
" 4,1 t.vr Sogie:briel re
marks therefore . _ ,made under
each .of these heads_:. , •
I.9Ltuography. Mader this :head,
the cauAtidato should :.be able to, , ex.-
plain tAlaustuke 91 allthe-elemeatary
bquads,ol,the.lauguage, .ltd the . office
of all ttie-leueres p 1 the.: alphabet,. and
characters _wed ,iu,wr . itiag. He :should
b.a.able ;o1 spell: words, -not :only, by
giving, the,letters.used iawrjtiog.them .
Aut. tigt sowttls of which thepate cola
;pqsedp; opoken-Lworducr l3ei.should
Oki? be able,tosruillse °llia/se words;
. .
by,theit: lgttops, ,Andsonn . ds, and
be acOnintpci, .witlx:tho,4ules of
with Iyarytnt : figthoyitierl in
:Orthography..
.4eading.,Yll9 candidate, should
be prepared to:explain- the requisities
1 . 91 geo reading,, to read i .hirnself, in a
,proper•and.,gragefal: manner, and to
•criticiF9 the faults usually ~coMlnitted
in:13 : 4 . 17 . 4g; tiedeF AO. several heads
of articalatien,:pronunciatien,
..ieflec
,tion, emphasis. and modulation..
Writing: . .l3,esidea writing a fair
hand himself, the. caudidatt.i.shbuld be
able to point, out, tbe, : ordinary faults
of writing;
. and to, explain. how. f kill in
the art is to, be: acquired..
4. Geography. -An adequate Itnowl
edge of this branch implies, not. only
some -acquaintance with. Mathemati
cal Geography, an. ability to . explain
the : phenomena ,attendant upon . the
diurnal - and , annual . moLions of: the
earth, and to. giv.e., the, ordinary „de
scription of its natural and political
divisi9ns,,butlikewise :to -give some
,acouet of the
_more important .facts
.antl• principles of "-Physical. .Gpogra
.phy,'' as pertaining to .the the
'Water, the Atmosphere and the: Or=
ganized -Existence. of our planet.—
Some attention should:also•have been
paid to, Comparative and Statisical
Geography, and /to Chronology. and
History—,especially of our own coun
try.. .
51 Gran - mar. Under' .this general
head, the candidate would be . expected
to give somo account of.,the erigin,
history; and peculiarities of.the.Eng
lish Language ; .to analyze and parse
such.aentences•a.s_might .be proposed,
and to know semetbing about the
derigation•ap.d analysis of words, ;He
should also have a proper acquaintpice
with
. Punctuation, : Figures of Gram-
Mar lain:lll6l°de, Prosody, and ; the
general Art of.Cumpositien. In_ ad
diiion to : this, he should be able,readi
ly to detect and correct gra.mmatical
errors, and to give reasons for the cor
. •
rcctions. •
6. Arithmetic. .Readiness and pre
cision in the mental analysis of•, such
examples as aragiven in Colburn or -.
Stoddard, may , be expected of the
good school teacher. In, the soltition
of questions in Written, Arithmetic,
theye i should be ability to demonstrate
the principles - involved, as well as to
give rules for the.operations. •
.It should also be -understood that a
satisfactory examiaatinn in any branch
includes an ability. to> explain the Art
of Teaching, that - branch..
ADDITIONAL )311ANCHE8.
Algebra. Some knowledge of Al
gebra is quite ,useful, but in the .pre
sent condition ofour schools a thorough
-tratning.in Meotal - Arithmetic, .far
more important. Thix'fonndation for
mathematical ,attainments is not yet
appreciated t as it.should.be. • •
Geometry. The'simpler -elements
of Geometry may be taught 'even to
little children:and, the. study ,be made
a:recreation .rather, than: a taAk.. It is
very, Nell:therefore fortheteacher- to
.be able to teach: this branch.
Physiology. • • ,It is to be, regretted
that the ,Law does not yet require
this branch to he ; taught iu
Directors however may wish. it, and
every, teacherAhould know at least_ so.
much of the, science, as: wilt enable
him to exercise au intelligentpare for
145 own- health, and, that of his, pupils.
. : TheNatPral Sciences,.(;enerally.--
Some knowledge, of Natural
.Philoso r
phy,,Chpipi.stry, Geology, Astronomy
and,Natural History, is very, useful to
the ; tPt:chet t: et : bough 4,7nai, not
.be ;
reqpirpd give,instruction's.in them.
SuP ll .l.Knoniell&e• eMicit his , ewn
mind, sod,ippre47se:his.ability ,inte,,
rest and hqnefit, I* ..
.;.fLaTui: • - .Anlacinaintance witb_thia
language is more useful to the:teach•
et , than: any: othei beside his-'own.
enterslargfilt into-the' cenipesiticin 'of
the.Englibh:Tongue,- • - •
'MGRIC 'AIIG ',DRAWING.. These :no=
4omplishniont& arererobietnly usefal
tos , diet- tedoherfrtisti forniOr for 'the
otike Of) itritifioidg.riofteiiint
'64E41 tttiellatter.lti as
aid ~tOl itiStinetidn in almost every
branch . ciflitiulp. and means of
recreation for the pubpil.
anal . lutellec.tual Philosophy.
Although the PAclzt.. be
,not familiar
with the roccived theories upouthese
subjects, still lie. nmst
_have sume .cor
-rect practical knowledge of the laws
of mental -and moral development, and
would•do well to read' to Somer . short
approved areatiea upon these branthes
of science...• , •
;Logic.- The..teacher. should know
how-to reason ; and will -find much
help from reading Wheatly,•
or some other appoved • author 'upon
the.subject.. . .
Prefressional -Reading. No one is
supposed. to be 'qualfied to discharge
,the.duties of a Physician or Lawyer,
who has never- read a Medical -book,
or a treatise •upon Law. It can hard
ly.be imagined then, that any one will
be entitled-6- rank as.a Professional
School Teacher,- who -has never read
some such books as those-which' Ab
bott; Hall, - Emerson, Potter; Page,
Mayhew, Northend, have Written
• . .
.upon the subject.of common school ed
ucation. .The good. teacher _may also ,
be supposed •to take .one or more
Periodicals devoted to the interest of
his - c.alling. J: B. PRADT,
Co, Sup't.
. .
CuuderspOrt, March 15,18 x&
A EURQPBAII ; CPAGRESS.
Ifthe.rumar brought by . the.A.rabia
that:Russia!demands the convention of
a general. congress; should prove' true,
then such a declaration move ought
to be conoile3e4 as a tnasterly;act , on
the part: -of. the; othetwise decrepit
Russian : diplomacy. This is simply . a
cheek aimed 'dt. England; as - fionisßo•-
naparte can few, if any; real 'ob
jections to sucti.a4eeision. Tliti Con
gress will ofsourseitake place inPar , -
is, to the great delight, of French
amour :propre . .It will attract numbers
of diplomats; interruediakies 'and traii
'ors.' means . a current ofgold
from all parts.Of the ,world . will Set to
ward:Paris. The manufacturer and
the shop-keeper will 'find' rich and
pay booty, and, the Working classes
and day-laborors additional, rewardi.
The central advantages mill be difius
,over the country and,' -as interpreted
by the creatures of the usurper,
dound.te.his glorY. As we . . haie he-7e - 7
fore said, his fame asleading.the Peace
Conferences or the sessions of it Euro
pean Congress, will be' made to 'sun=
p ass Itliat of his cle. E verytlii ng,
tberefore,,can tend only
..to increase
and,strengthen the hold: of Louis •
polOon over a majority of Frenchmen
of all claises and parties ; and accord=
he must 'hail with 'pleasure
Congress the probability of, which a
month ago he himself suggested. .
Francis Joseph, too, carnicit object
to participate in "'such a Congress,
composed of EilroPean monarchs or
their attorneys - and representatives,
where Louis *l'apoleon and Alexander
11. will sustain the prOminent =parts;
Where on6i kings will be' perforniers,
~. •
'
and where'word theliberty trill not
be breathed, except, perhaps, in , con
nection-With British Free trade. The
last - hope of the liberals and of the
nationalities will be stifled by , its
ceedingS. All this will aid the Haps
burts,:and, iu a word, the . Congress
will be as absolutist and conservative
as was the treat - one of Vienna 'or the
.stnaller Of Verona.
Russia, 4n/ending such:a Congress
and promising en,her honor to abide
by its -decisions, ' - probably 'does not
run any risk that it w' ill' tut n against
her; Louii itafoolecin, in" Ids 'celebra
te' d.,apeech at;,,the . Expoiition _of ,last
year, appealed to the, opinion - of .ti,
roper. itud• ;by: this—the :opinion or
Fraqee included in it being stieli es, lie
perpaits—::the Old ,Iffkif , llo 'Oil
1.-• France fil t ranit'sio ,iitill 'yery,likly„liq, - eed 7
,firmeit. , I " f4s4. 994.141;01 iniprobabla
'the more as thetemtists. a near re * .
latiOnshili
. betweett•'''tbe -bephews of
Afqx r an" 'At. OrOugit'hiS sister, the
sto
drand Ilnehisi 4 teiebienber ' and
Lodi: Napaleen,.- 5 At 7 li , Congress',
- - 1 1., . 7. ...
; .. ,'- '4 ' if ' 74 . 72 7 .
` ..:..: 4 : : . ', Oir: ,l', I t
~ A.S7I ',.....,, .s. ,
,;..-,, :,
~.i.it!,": 7 ,
.*'',.... iv....
Y 1 /7';:, , - , .:Z1 7 .,. .
IRE
ems
Rdisia-Will find inbif German
as well as Italian soveleigns friendly
disposed, and : of courr,br.4iplotriats
will not propose :anything the least
distastetul to the - trench Emperor.
It is very likely . t 1 at Maisie - day
`tiffello
lug that the same be done biEtigland
with respect to Heligoland:l Tlaie b
land, menacing the whole: of GermanY.
domineering over all her northern es
tuariezi, was detached from -that.-contit
ry by. the Treaty' or Vienna, and; . ita
possession by England as an armed
stronghold has caused .continual nit
! easiness to German auverigns .as. :well
tai.to German. patriots. Who .knows
-but the Russian diplomats may go.:a
step further, and suggest or claim, la
the name of the equilibrium of Europe
and of the securty of Abe .Mediterra
nean States, the dismantling of -Gib
raltar and Malta, to all of which Franco
Spain, and the Italian
. Statee,:aboso
all, Naples, will fwd--no- objectiou.-7- -
England has no friends: imciriethet
Continental Powers, and this last
.Wirt
t
has contributed mightly to lower the
prestige once exorcised by her; -While
the offensive_ language of her prate
and her politicians has. created much
irritation. Prussia and other Geripau
powers,. Doninark, Naples, Greect,
Tuscany, Austria and Siain; will seize
the occasion of such Congivsa. to
. .
repay England for old offenses. Eng
land seems . to be tiwaie that her j:tOst- .
: tion'brfore Stich a body would be isu.
latOd, where Ale could rely' only nis
Portugal and Coburg,- or in some 41u
.
gr e on Sardinia, since Sweeden
probably follow France. The new.
by the Arabia, therefore r reports truly
that the idea of a Congress has aronie4.
great uneasine s s among English states,
:rnert,.and. that
,Lord Cowley lurrie4.
from Paris to. London fornewinatrno;
hone.
Do RzunT.---The true motto for lifts,
is to do right and let the tonsequence4
take 'care' of thcinselites.' It is 'all
sheer vanity to strive to'accotpcnedata
yourself at every point to the white'
and notions of some other persori,.eit::
try to square your ideas to'pleaie
or that sect or party. Oa the se:Ck;' :
of mere personal gain alone; you*
inevitably be the loser ;' and Once To:-
ing tight of your integrity :and Ind.'
pendence, you become :the slave . i4
petty tyrants,
,and make for yourseii"
burdens heaVy to be borne.
Do right—though' you have on
Mies. You cannot...escape:titer : a by
doing wrong. ' And it is littlo gain t l
tiarteiTaway your honor and iutegvity,
'and diveSi yourself of moral courag ll
t'o gain 'virliati
abide by 'the "irtitif=frosvn ilbwo:, afl
opposition; and rejoice in the feOlin;
which must inspire a free aridindelau.-
- dent •man.
-Love.—The. imperishable,
haustible,. unapproachable nature:
in...thiA—that
millions of lo vestal ics that have ben . ;
written have not one whit abated ilk!:
immortal interest that there is in
rudest and stupidnst. love story. An
the rest of the wretched thing may - bos
the most dismal twaddle, but you caic
help feeling a little interest, Whem'yo.i
haVe'orice taken up.the book, :is' to.
_
whether:Arabella will ultimately. -
re,-
lent in favor ofAugustus ; and whethi4
that wicked creature, man-or woman:
whois keeping them .. apart; 'Will teat.
"seen be *disposed
daiusej was : asked 77.“ Witegt
a Indy and a gentleman live quarrei r
ed, and each other considers the'other
at fault; which Of the . tVir 4 o;ight _bat
the toward a •recondia
atioel". `Her reply was,
..",the,.ke 3;
hearted and the wisest of the tvre&
: SSaeaueki ,Registet.
a potato vine: sax pet. b e g xs,
leagth. There , was. a:+fino- yield'
potatoes at - the hottem.
St. Louis, Feb."1.2.;-:arhe
- Sa arrived at Liaeiet.dinet.
oa Saturday jest.
.The_ snow ierfilleen,
fuettleep an the:. plaine.• The- woo.
waril bound mail vratoblitod tb *Wt.
.4 .2,2# .
MI
ENE