.-•.. . • . . . . . . . .. . • . " '' '''' *- ..-- •• • ''',. •7 • •••:•,.•.', .'...:,•'..•.... ::....:1 ; ;.,:,...... -,•:',....‘ ~t....;:ii,t,, ,• •••4:ti•fr: c: ;% ,•,.;•,,1t:+0. , --:.,,,,.: 1 . ...7.-..;••,i•, c- , . p r l:. ;1 •-,: :: , ,,,- ...H .f:;:l.r.y ~ .,f , ,,:-c ; • z.,.. ‘ ..,,, , ..,..1 ~..,.,„•, 0 ,•• . 1 ...,!!...i . ~... ~: j. ...,.., 1 ,,.. I ---i . --. r. .. , ,, , - 1. .1 Ltyv.,...... . . ... . . I ~, .., l' -:s., ii......." . I_ ' ? .I', '''. • -"' '• 4 liil,,e'X'-. ) ..... ~. . ... - It !i " • '*. 0 :r.; . '. IL-. •:r ; , •'',.... ,!•••.. '-‘• ~, '.., - •,'-' .•., " .... 1, - 111 !.,. 1.. . 1.,.) -• 1 --- .; '‘- ' 4 . r 3i '....,1 . 1 : .: . I.'. .. ...--.. i ''., !%•";.......:. ; ' .r.:1 . .• i ' '•::' ..' i . ....',,,.. lit' is (. , ..... t....: , t: . . • . • . 's.' - •''-' '''' •'.'.'!.',. ..'.'! ).i .. ..•il ":i :,.., . k . I. . .:;7:1, . .: ~._, r, . ,1 . ' . .t : VI '.:.. ''' ',.....:'..-: - .1 :',r ,:. • .... , • _... ... ....... . , . • I .t. • •-.- . 3' . .. • . - I ::,..1.. - • I. :.. 10 . . , . . . _ d•Aks _ VOL. IX. Business Cards '• • F. W. Kl:4' 3 X", • attOrllC2 at Raul, Coudersport, Pa., will regularly attend the .Courts in Potter county. ARTHUR. G. OLMSTED, 3ttornep Comm cloy at Rain, Coudersport, Pa., %rill attend to all husint•ss entrusted to his care, with promptness. and fidelity. - Utlice—in the Temp.:ranee Block, up stairs, Maimstseet. ISAAC BENSON t.lttoriir.l) at iLatu, Cornmtsroirr, Office CONIPr of WeAt and Third streets L. P. WILLISTON, 2st o E,9 at 71, a iv, washor., , , Tio z i .Co., Pa., will attend the Courts in Pocer and :1116ean Cou n ties. A. P. CONE, • attornel) at 7L aiu , Wellsborougb, Tioga county, will r.egular ly itttelid [II, courts of Putter county. Juno 3, 1813.. JOHN S. DIANN, RttoritETte-omtriciar ariLztiu, Com - kr:Tort, t a., will alteati the several Courts in Poit, r awl *APN:e:,u, coanties. AIL linsitiei:sehtnistid in his care, will receive prompt attentioa. 011 ice ou :Al.iimstr,et, opposi!e the Culla IL!use, Coa , ler•Tort, Pa. 12,0[11)E it P 0 RT iitI , TE L, Pio4 . nit:Tun. Corner of 1;; . ,11 and ; , econd street.;, Cott der port, Potter Co.. Pa. W. K. KING, Draitoman, Coninliaitcrr, Seeert rl, .11• Ife , trz Co., Pa., Will attend to Int4ine-t: ror non-re:ident re.not.ible term;. itelerenee:i given if required. - P. S. Map, of any part of the County made to order. 7-33 EL J. OLMSTED, Zuctic,nov cr.ll Draftsman, At the office of J. S. Mann, Comler,port. Pa :Vila:01 YOUNG, "talatcl) , -maittr zura jJztuciev. work w aria ed. A ock of Wate and lowe:ry on igt:pt and for Cul! at the ,:ire of (10:1,lenTort, l'a. BENJA-3IIN IZE.NELS, 13iartt:niti). • All ‘rork in hi. !inv. dune to order and di+pa eh. On Wes: lie;ow Third, Couder-pon, l'a. . S i'i'ii & J E*, D ea; er:: in Dry Goad:, firoiterie-t, Statione ry. Drug: A:. Fancy arti c t. c .t t M.titt Conifer:Tort Pa. JONES, J ONES, Grocer• not Proil:itin Deater.._ Also. in Dry Gotodt. liardWare, ;loots and :41itte.r, and wirt,over n o m want to buy. Maui Street, Couder , port, Pa. D. E. OLMSTED, De;der in I)r.- Good:. Re (74):Iiiirr, Grocerie:, CrUchery, Coudiirzport, J. W. SMITH, Dealer in StoveQ, and iii ., nnfictliter of Tin, Copper, and :Meet-Iron 11 - ,:re. 31.1 in street, Comllr-port, Pa. - M. \V. 31.1\N, Dealer in Books, S, Stationery, 3lnsie, and :Hag ,zines. llain op,wsi•e N. %V. corner of the ittthl;c Coudersport, Pit. AMOS 6ur g oon. .side 31 ?thoi-e Couder:port. l'a. DAVID B. BROWN, rounaryman and De:der in Pius ;r. per end of .11a n'Aireet, Conderspor. Pa., JACKSON a SCHOO3I.AKER. Realer:: inDry .G nods, Groceries, Crockery, o,ndAeativ-niade Clo'lting. Main street, Cou dervort, Pa. ALLEGANY HOUSE, Sailiuel 3i. Mills, Proprietor. h ihe 'Wells road, seven miles North of Coudersport J• CHENEY, Merchant Tailor, and Dealer in Ready made Clothing• North of the public square, Coudersport, Pa. A. B. GOODSELL, r_ l _UNSMlTll,Coudersport, Pa. Fire Arms 1 ..... 1- anumfacinred and repaired at his shop, ou thort notice. Marelt.3, •• . J. W. HARDING,- ' • Fashionable Tailor. All frorli'entrusted to his care will be done %lib nealneqs,"comfort, and bclOatkility.. Shop over Lewis illouif4 NOM pj;:voTED TO.,TIkE PRINCEVLES OF DEM'OCIIACY,.AITO THt - OISSEMINATfOg . OF 1110 . 1tALITZ:1:1TiiiATURE, AND - NEW. 5... THE 'PEOPLE'S TOURNALe • PULILISHRD EVERY THURSDAY MORNING. Terms—ln' Advance'' One copy per annum, 'sl.oo Village subscribers, • 1.25 • TERMS OF ADVERTISING. • Square, of 12 lines or less, 1 insertion, $0,50 " " " t " 3 insertions, 1,50 " every stibsequent insertion,. .• 25 Rule and figure wo i rk, per 5q.,3 insertions, 3,00 Every subsequent insertion, 511 etilumn, one year, 25,00 ‘‘ • dd Id • 15.00 „ " :• LOS column, six months, 15,00 A . di Id di_ 9.00 Administrators' er Executors' Notices,' 2,00 Sheriffs Sales, per tract, 1,50 Marriage notices 1.01) Profes-ional Cards not exceeding eight lines nserted for $5,00 per annum. All letters on business, to secure at tention, should be addressed (post paid) to the Publisher. THE FEAR OF BEING AN OLD MAID EY MRS. E. B. HALL. When I was a little girl, I was . a fat, merry, jolly dumpling, as happy as the day was long. PVC? ybody pinched my red cheeks, and I- waddled about with my doll in my pi.UMp arms, .find ins, fun in everything;•aad fully believ ing that my doll was as sensible as my snit.; and perhaps she was, almost. But, though I had a natural antipathy to a spelling-bunk, and uo fondness fin* spending a long summer's after noon in poking a needle in and but of a bit of calico; though I Considered patchwork all foolishness, and igu.s sets as utter superfluities; though I was called a simpleton for asking my mother why :die cut cloth up and , then sewed it together again, still, I was fond of picking up ideas alter my own fashion. Wlien - the wise people around me supposed I was thinking of nothing but My play; my two little cars were °pan to every word spOken in my hearing. And many were the words impressed on my memory, _which the speaker forget next mo ment. The talk, around me was my teal education; as it is of all children, send them to iVhat school you may. When I WAS ten years old, I had mie sister aged fifteen, and another seventeen; and, as usual with girls .of that age, they had a set of • cronies, some very like and some quite unlike them in charactei:. Oue. afternoon . , as I was tending my doll Ophelia, who. was sick in bed" ,heard a brisk dis cussion amoag these girls,. which, I may almost say, decided my fate, for life. The first words that caught my at tention came from an animated, re mantic girl. of sixteen . , scohling cau•:o the heroine of a novel she had just read was left unmarrie l l at the end of the story ! • What surprise was expressed at this catastrophe! what indignation ! - -One of my sisters did ‘ not seem .to sympathize .with this burst .of disap probation, and then — came •the pithy question, "What, would you be wil ling to die an old maid?" Mary said very vietly, "Yee.and sister• Ellen added, "So would I!" Then such looks of amazement and inct , .s.dulity. "You can't mean what • you say," cried one.. "If I did not know you too well to think you. a hy pe ocrite,—" said another. "Why, iti was =hut that all women should married!". exclaimed :"Then why are they not all married?" asked Mary, with her usual simplicity. . Eager and.hot'g,i•ew the controrver sy,•and I lost not a.word, while Ophe-: lia lay - flat on ber'itiff arms sticking out; and her croup quite • forgotten. ,Then first did I take notice of that terrible combination of mono syllables, " Old . Maid." In how. 'many different tones contempt,, dread, and deprecation, did' I heal. it tittered by those juvenile voices!, what, anecdotes came forth abaut,the cross old : maids,,and fidg,etty pld'maida,.494 ugly, and dressy ! :and learned, a.nd.,pi, nus,,and flirting, and mischief,-makingi oldmaids.. : ls7ever did a boyy . ,of . rp r gular fifty-year-old spinsters titt,2n. so COU . - DERS,I I . OI . tt, TOVltik .001,1.NTY,1-Pliq ,l 3lAY - • 29,.:1856;1 much scandal in:one•afternoOn as was ponredfortfi by theSe . blOominlioung Creatiies.• . Two (.•ir .- three': - .filentla of my mother,-whom I had always .cher-_ ished in my innocent affections, ber: cause they talked , SO pleasantly and were so,.kind to ,trld; now appeared like neW persenagea. • • "Miss Z.. was so ugly, she never, could have had an . offer!" Miis Y..drossedao shabbily, and wore green spectacles, to look literarY." • Apaamissx.c was. for ever talking about Sunday-school . and .so ciety meetings," and on. • You may be sure that the next time theseladiCs camp t 0. .. our house,, scanned very closely the face of Miss Z., a face that: I had alivAys loved be fore; but new . I. saw that it_ was ex ceedingly plain.. I looked hard at Miss Y.'s drab-coloied bonnet and shawl, perceived that they were' old fashioned and ordinary, and Alm . her green spectacles looked pedant:ie. = Then Miss X. beside whom I had al ways SqUeezed in up i on the sofa, en con' aged by her kindly smile •and de lighted with her conversation—how uninteresting she had Itecomei They were old maids! • It must be observed that my sisters —right good,,sensible, domestic girls, thcy worc—had no par in this bewil derment of my young ideas. They. were in the minority; so I took. it fur granted they were in the wrong. Be- . sides, what children are evor as much influenced by- what is uttered in the faMiliar voices of their own fmily, as by words of comparative straners?— Take care of what you say at a friend's house, with the young folks_ catching . up every random sentiment you drop,. 'Many a judicious mother's morning exhortation has been blown to the moon by some light diuner - -guest,lvlio did not after all mean to. give his real opinion, or whose opinion was not worth having. And now, [ assure 'you, my- educa tion went on rabidly. It is perfectly marvelous,. in how many ways, and by what different sortsof people, a young girl.is taught that it is a terrible thing to be an old maid. Fools mover show their folly !note than in their hackney ed jests tqmn this topie; . but what shall we say of the wise folks who sin' almcist as often in the same Way"H. What shall we say of the refinement of him whols gentlemanly'in thought and expression on all subjects but this?— of the humanity and 'Chivalry of him whO assails the defenseless ?L—of the justice of him Who tales a clhs's with Ilia faults Of iiidi'viduals, and wounds with that' meanest of wearMns 7 L—a sueer?or of the Christianity of him who indii•eci:ly censures and ridicules one of the arrangements of Provi dence 1 I learned my leSson thoroughly, for it came me in some shape every; week. 1 read it in every .novel and neWsPaper, aud heard it :from :•every The very men who spoke. trtith . and sense on the subject, sometimes. ueutraliZeil 'it by an idle . jest . in some' moment of levity, and, the. jest Arove. out.the truthfrom my heart. 'At 'eigh teen I lived only• . for the ignoble , per pose—l cannot . beartiasaY-7-of getting married; bat What could have been the• riding w,ish. of one wlio bad been taught by society to 'dread celibacy ‘vorse. `be trayed it everywhere. I dare ..rsaY"j' wasduly,lauglied , at, :• • At last, quaking on the verge of •and twenty, .1 bad • an . offer=-a absurd pne.. Years' dolder than mY,.lover, had ten , timesas much ,sense probably, except on one :point: I knew, thatbe.:wa's Prather- wild," as the gentle , phrase • goes. '•• In:''shOrt; neither loVed•neor respected : NM; but I was willing' tO.nikrr y. him, because .then 1 shouldbe Mrs.. Somebody, and Should .not -be :an •old :maid.: ! My parents said positively: Of course r thought illeMunrOsonable" and cruel, and madeliniself yory, rul4- ; eralde; vas something .tO Ikve 'fad 9/iel;',,of any ; kind, and my, lips were notAiermetically;:sealetk." I Iskur.several! confidant§ ViPltd-toidc.idaiis - i that all my acquaintances should know the comfortable fact that I had reftife'd • I went . on with iticfeasting - ntiOaSl: riesslt..fevir yeaii loinger; Seeking , li - owto be Usefulfbiti•Ying to find 'out ,for'What good puipesel was Made.— :Neither:was I looking for a cbmpan-, ion WhO could sympathize with my Vetter aspirations and' elevate m y 'whole character, for I had no ' , right' views marriage . : was simr..4r . ..'g . a 7 " zing about in aniiotis - suspense .iipun every unmarried man of my ac4ifainl, tanee, for one who would lifenin'Outnf that dismal Valley 'of Ilurnilidtion.into . , which I felt MySelf descending'. I met Apollion himself there, - with the cluestiou'on his liPsjbelieve I should have said." Yes.". . . • At thirty-six I wore more pink rib ands than ever, was seen eyeryWhere that a respectable , women Could go, wondered why girls went into companyi, so young, futind that I - was growing. sharp-faced, and . .- sharp 7 spokew, and was becoming old maidish in the worse sense 9f-the word,, because I was be tomiug an old maid against my ,will. I forgot that : voluntary celibacy never• affects the temper. . • - -My sisters, be it 'remembered,-were older than I. They too were :single. Mit they had lived raore domestic lives than E had readtewer works of fiction had beencultivuting their own natures and seeking to make everybody around there happy. And e'verybody rever ence, theth and loved to look upon their, own pleasant conntenances 7 4 . mean 'everybody worth pleasing—and. they were very happy: '• At ,last our. good payouts 'died, • and left each "of us a; little independence. Within a year I was Married. . . I was married for my money. .That was ten years ago, and they have been ten years of purgatory. I have had bad luck as .a wife, for my husband and 1 have scarcely !oriel taste in common. ILa wishes to live.in the country, which I hate: I like tht" thermometer at 75 deg. which ho hates He likes to have. the children brought up at home instead of at school, which I hate. like music, and want to go to concerts, which he hates. Ho likes roast pork, whiCh I hate, and I like minced veal, which ho hates..:• There! is but one thing which we: both "like, and that is what we cannot both though we are aIWayS trying for the last word. • . I have had bad-luck - as • a. mother; for two such huge, selfiSh," pasiiCfnate, unmanageable .trays "never taruiented' a ledbk; woman 'since- . boys. begaa. ~.1.,. wish I had called them 'both Cairi: At this moment they have jus quarreled' over their marbles. Alor 'mer has turn olf Orville's collar, acid rville:has ap- - e plied'l4 Colt-like heel. to 'MortiMer's ribs ; Whilath6 bahy 2 . e.iietira;itflify, lap„•wliUneVer sleeps moie . thaii a half an hour at:a - tirne,'ana ! : Cries all' the time she - is:awake; hag I.ieri.toa4ed by :their din to scream. in ,chorus. -,-. : , I have haOhadTluck,as ahousekeepety fur.l . neyer - kept . even a cliarnherrnaid • more than ,three, - weeks. -And as .to Cooks, I look back bewildered onthe long. phantnstuagoria of faces. flitting: stormily, through my ..kitchen, -as a mariner remembers a rapid subccesien of thdader bolts:and hurricanes in'the.' Gulf Of 44ietiY . t . iyibeW Chambermaid': Thounced•aut of! the ::roorrk .: yesterday,,, - flirting her 0 tistiar and •ID uttei:i lig; I qi,eal old inaid"nftet'raltl"'juit beentite i 1 ShoWed. I WI a table - on which I could write iliTut,''• with. „pay .finger, ; in:the dust,_, :-.,• .• • .: ..-,2„. . ,: .... .!•.... • • i , rnever sea inYl3 . p,'ltaiTS+ - sisters, and, then glance in the,tnirrin at my own odctverous,.lopg,.dglpfal-yLigge, but wishing myielfan old . maid: Ido it every day bf:inflife. ' . Yet fial . fof,rey seN marry, as, aid; .r.-not,fot love,.'33ut fear. 1:-.-for . fear' of dying-old' maia. ]- -A '`' 2-'; -, . Ttier haei;,id .ll .l ''AH ay; whose idl4 C'tp" , this chieyQUO;for,am(l.oilis.mdko 3Q much bility._ EMI • ;Frota the AT Y. Tribune; INDICTMENTS FOR HIGH .TREASON. - LiiftENCE; Kai sas,lllliy 6:1856 Affairs'are be6ornitig More . excitiog in this section eierY day:"' seena'ilas , if the tools of the Administration are . determined tb leaVei no Means Untried ofannoyidgand I persecnting the Free= State' people. An - important move rent to thisend has just taken place, in the Meeting Of the 'Grand Jury of this bistikt, which took'place on ciaY'nethis'Week.•' :The proportion of Feeti state'te - thiiSeof Slave, Siate cit-: iZetiS of this l Distriet iS nine of the,l'or nier to one'Orthe latter; 'as copied from. the . poll-liook . ; and , 'of eighteen jurors summoned, fourteen WerePro-Slavery, andfoirr Free-State s men. The -Jury was selected and summoned by Jones, Who, in : additien to being Sheriff: of Douglas COUnty, holds the office •of of. Deputy, ; United States Marshal for I the Territory... The Jury haying ,as-, seanbled,JudgeLecompte charged. . diem'nearly : as follows. [l give only such portionsas have a bearing on the . Free-... State movement, and Can sustaitti this and all that follovis.in reference to the proceedings of that Jury by, the most positive proof:1 • , "'GENTLEMEN: You are assembled to consider - % . Vhatever infringemsats of law.may . come under your notice, and . yi3orkidglna' judgment dictates against'those wham you:lT:ay find to have been guilty of such infringement. YOurattedtion will naturally be, turn-, edloward . an ifulaWfol, amid before un heard-of,• organization 'that has been formed ihrour . thidst, pupose of reSiSting'thelaWs of the.thiitellStates. 'The - exciting:state of aff,,iis makes it linipOrtaidthat you should deliberate calmly, and above all have respect to the oaths that you have taken, • and with out fear or favor ,of any party, or of, men, whether high or low, to mete. to - all the justice which is their due.. You will take into consideration the .cases of Men who are dubbed Governors, men who are (lobbed Lieut-Governors, men who are dubbed Secretaries and Treasurers, and men who• arc dubbed all the various other',/übbs with which this Territory is filling (and there arc such men) and will .fiod bi.llsin ac cordance with the following instruction. [I give below his exact wordS.l This TetritoTy, was by an . act .uf Congres.s„ so. far as its Atithutity is . from the United States. It has,a Log, islatnmelectediik. paronance. of that, .organic act. • This Legislature, being. an instrument .of Congress, by which it governs the t'err'itory, has passed 'laws—those laws, therefore, ,are :of. United States authority .liid ipalting t . ( is e, the United States makes laws by. proxy, employing the borderers of Missouri : ,to make the laws, inasinuelt . as being a way out West it is inconven4 ientfor her to -corno herself.. • Tills is - the meaning that - I deduce &oar the Judger opitiiuhi) - and - all that - ircsist •tile - sClaWS'r,sistthe',pi?wci and, duLlidr,i ty ofthe : UniteilStates,_aud.are, thero- • fore guilty.• of , high treaSon:: .Noti; Gentle Mon, ifyou fined that any lierStin . ,hare resisted these lawS; theniriut you, under Your.oathe, find bills - against such. persons for high treason. It ,you find that.no such. resistance has been made,' butgliatcomhinatious have .been for, .634 for the purpose of resisting them, and i ioiy4luals of:influence and netot !iety.hcvc been Aiding and abetting in; I :such c,crabinattous,thun mak,. you 'still. fuld for, constructive 'treason; • "'the courts' -have .'decided .tha.C.to con. - ititutute treason.the-hkuv_uced not be 64. t,. The :learned Judge .thozi , alluded• to` the - sliooti47, of Jones; intimated that . alittle' - iaitis' . the jury . . . , `inightfaid, some gi9Fe tt:eason . cases ':there. .!lie .also.7.gave knher, new.and . - -enteirtaining. 'explanations of 'Ake na iiire all of . tAich ljis ,little:TidenCe;aave„4inea"ttputien and no doubt :were highly' idease . d ;with, hie Thetis' poitits l • ardi linp 4 6lrtifif: l 'tpoWthe r iiitilrelef'highLteeitieu, 464 • tentle'liffisis . ly guilty of it. Incredible as the above IN Ell ME ME may seem, it is, nevertheless, as exad asi can frpm memory make it. and .I as sure yeit it Made a deep impression on my memory; But " the half has not been told." The juri:rotiio room and then 'commenced a . runiting political discussion, prominent which were vile, denunciations of. Robinseu; Reeder & C 0.," and ". the; • d--. 1 Abolitionists!' generally. After indulging in this harmless amusement, for a time, the question was fina;ly i asked, !. Shall we find bills fur high. treason against Charles Robinson, A,,, Reeder, \V. V. Roberts and Deitzler 1" . (Sec. of State jtrq tem.). After discussing the matter for , time, it was finally :couhluded subprenas should be issued fur .the above named iudividuah—that they) should be brought to Lecompton-as witnesses, and then. they wfiuld_ tqamt them." - - Thi4.was done; but unfor tunately their men wbuld nut. obeytigek suminons7-ou,. what growl& r.1.,_/141;_41 2 , not learned. The-jury then, fbaud bills against the indiyiduals".abovjk l named for high treason. • " • • —3 •ThuS the matter rested until; hill evening, when a Deputy United States!! Marshal came to Lawrence armed witti:l a warrant commanding him to hritig-'r the body of A. H. Reeder befure his honor'Judge Lecotnpte, as being ~its contempt'olCourt, not having obeyafr the previous summons.. Deputy. Marshal walked into the room where). the:Commission were holding a scssiOn.r; while Gov. Reeder was questioning w. witness, and cutninenced• reading iio warrant. His viiice 'faltering -some what; Guy. Reeder said " GO on, ditt't be - afraid." The officer having finish. ed, Gov. Reeder said he" claimed pniz' tectionof that article' in the Cousthit- •". tion that exempted menibers of House of Representatives from arrest. for such . offenses," and asked thy .ophiion e of the Commission. What. followed you have al ready' heel inferra4:" ed of. What the next step will be the wisest cannot predict.. 1 think—and I ani nut alone iu iny opinion—that affairs 'are assuming a far more serious aspect. :7 than Kansas has yet seen. Some are 1 confidently expecting a general out-!. - . bleak. wituin two weeks. I should not: r be surprised, myself, to find these pre, dictions verified. One thing is certain. I and the conviction is deeply planted, in every heart here, unless •the righr ofsuttrage, office thinking; freeispeuk-• 7 'jug, and iree writing is speedily settled upon the principles of equal, justice civil war is inevitable.. r ly enscucsed .in their eastern horne t ,.., 'smile as they may at this assertion, bua. put them in Kansas and let them re main here 11)4y-eight hours as things. , ate now, and they • will endorse . ill • opinion. The object ache Pro-Slave ry party here is: palpably evideurro, every mind: First,:t/tcy toish, to shodt...a _Goo. Reeder, and they Jodi y . thAy cao,:- 7:: - second, they tither wish to, break the the investigation of the Commission, .• or,.by.makiiig these arrests, cause ilito • Commission to report that. we won t o obey law.. .11.1, either Case. they %venial ...it accomplish their object. In the first' : they would delay a report until atter the Presidential. eleCtiim, and, in thoOl - Other, have that 'report in 'thUtr' fiivo't;.;'- Whother . they succeed in either is to be detemitied. The Uisited State; •' ;troopiare round`' u•Cca4ioit. 'A 'few. days *aincf : !weie: j bee, .tiv6r‘tye pittfriei kiP 3fr 0:6 ' 1: Glorietis services ! States ht% become the CsCU'it'itrzitit-' , - • ~;!: derers-,—er flag protects assassins, dirt "ttilbr irs , piuteCtiini to ietiocent: "peaceful men.' *BusT vv . tcur... EVERETT A:ND ward" Everett was .entertained a; 'dinner herece /caving, Bostpr4. Judge .51.0ry . gve as a, sentimerit..„ Genius ju}e , to.berewarded wheys Ever eft goes." Eicerett respordoill equity and iurPiltrad . eactyi,„„i no efforts can raise them abov . 9fust ii .., Story." =ZZI ;...- 1 1 . ..: ; 7 40 . '; ,';-.,' - ME 0 , ;.^efier • . r • IMMIEMI Ing El