e ' • • TNJ M „Aim • . • • " T OSE 4. A. J. GERRITSON, Proprietor.} FOR THE MONTROSE DEERXRAT A ME X£3 IX' OPL 'sr Of the Great Struggle between Liberty and Despotism for the last Hundred Years. 61:EAT BRITAIN ARMING INDIANS AND NE G ROES AGAINST THE AMERICANS Proclaiming liberty to the negro slaves of the South, and arming them against li their masters, are the measures by which the Republicans claim to have propitiated the favor of the Deity ; to hav A e won His blessing upon their cause, and croWned it with victory. Without disputing this claim, it is a very significant fact, that on turning over the history of the past, it is found that all the tyrannical powers of Great Britain, wherever they have at tempted to rule with arbitrary sway over any of the colonies of America, were in spiredwith the same heavenly idea of free ing the negroes, which they had brought from Africa, and sold to the co'ouists as slaves, and arming them against them, as the surest method of compelling obe diace to their arbitrary power. Thus, Robert Walsh, jr., in Lis work entitled Au Appeal from the Judgments of Great Britain respecting the United States of America, containing an Historical Out line of their Merits and their Wrongs," mentions among their wrongs the follow ing incident. He says: " Virginia refused to receive the Davi fmtion act of .O.iver Cromwell, and was liable to the displeasure of the Common. wealth. Parliament despatched a fleet, for the reduction of the Province, and gave the officers instructions to employ every act of hostility iu case of refractor'. PCSS, and to set free such servants and slaves of masters who should oppose the Parliamentary government, as would serve doldicrs to subdue them.'" "This was a parental expedient," says Mr. Walsh, -showing the antiquity of the feeling prompted the suggestion of Gov. Lyttleton, of South Carolina, in the de hate of the British Parliament, in 1775, ' that if a few regiments were sent to the Sow kern colonies of America, the negroes would rise and imbrue their hands in the blood of their masters.'" Bancroft says, "Lyttleton, governor of South Carolina, in an address to Pauli& ment, explained the inherent weakness of the Southern colonies, and with obvious satisfaction intimated that if a few regi ments were sent there, the negroes would rise and imbrue their hands in the blood of their masters. He was against concil iatory offers ; the honor of the nation re quired coercive measures: the colonists ought to be conquered before mercy was shown them. The House sustained these sentiments by a vote of 270 against 110." • Who but British tyrants in England, and British tories iu America, ever sane• tioned these measures against the Ameri can people ? Not a single Ameiican his torian ever attempted to palliate these atrocities, but with one accord have pro nounced them barbarous and wicked.— They have been held up to the whole world as evidences of the bitter bate Great Britain entertained towards the Americans, and the terrible and wicked revenge she meted out to them, for non compliance wj th all her despotic demands. Exciting their slaves to Insurrection, is one of the wrongs and outrages mention ed in the Declaration of Independence, which justified the Americans in absolv ing themselves from all allegiance to the British crown. These atrocious measures of arming the slaves against the Americans were passed in Parliament one year before they as serted their independence, and to thelion or of Great Britain one hundred and ten of the members voted against them. The immortal speech of Lord Chatham was such a sublime specimen of eloquence, as well as a plea in behalf of the Americans, that the children and grand-children of the revolutionary fathers were taught to; repeat it in the schools of learning, when studying the art of elocution and oratory., Both of the savage races in America, thei Indians and the Negroes, were called to the aid of Great Britain in her attempt to' subjugate America, as they have been called by the Republican party to their, aid in subjugating the South. Of course a person can have but little choice wheth er to be butchered by a black or a red barbarian. but it has always been con. sidered a more equal s and honorable con test of arms, when- the combatants were of the same race and :color. When Great Britain, therefore, allied herself with the Indian and Negro races in America, and solicited their- aid in subduing the AmeriCana to their will, many noble lords remonstrated against it. 'Lord Suffolk contended for the principle adopted by the Republicans, that " it is perfectly jug. tiftable to use all the means that God and nature have put into our hands." This, moving the indignation of Lord Chatham, he suddenly exclaimed, " I am astonished, shocked, to bear, such princi-i plea confessed--to hear them avowed in this house, or even in' this country. I • cannot repress- my indignation. I feel myself impelled to speak. My lords, -we are called upon, as members of his house; as mea- - as Christiins--to protest against such horrible barbirtiea, That Gati wad nature have put into our hands l' What ideas of God and nature that noble lord may entertain, I know not; but I know that such detestable principles are equal ly abhorrent to religion and humanity.— What! to attribute the sacred sanction of God and Nature to the massacres of savages! Such notions shock every pre cept of morality, every feeling of humani ty, every sentiment, of honor. These abominable principles, and this more abominable avowal of them, demand the most decisive indignation. I call upon that right reverend, and this most learned bench to vindicatZ' the religion of their God. I call upon the bishops to inter pose the unsullied sanctity of their lawn ; upon the judges to interpose the purity of their ermine to save us from this pollu tion. 1 call upon the honor of your lord ships to reverence the dignity of your an cestors, and to maintain your own. I call upon the spirit and humanity of rn) coun try to vindicate the national character. I invoke the genius of the Constitution.— Front the tapestry that adorns these walls, the immortal ancestor of this noble lord frowns with indignation at the dis grace. of his country. In vain did ho de tend the liberty and establish the religion of Britain against the tyranny of Rome, if these worse than popish cruelties are endured among us. To send forth the merciless savage against, whom ? Your protestant brethren—to lay waste their country—to desolate their dwellings, and extirpate ; their race and name. Spain can no longer beast pre-eminence of barbari ty. She armed herself with bloodhounds to extirpate the wretched natives of Mex ico ; but, we, more ruthless, loose these dogs of war against our countrymen in America, endeared to us by every tie that should sanctify humanity. "My lords, I dall upon your lordships, and upon every order of men in the State, to stamp upon this infamous procedure the indelible stigma of the public abhor rence. More particularly, I call upon the holy prelates of our religion, to do away with this iniquity. Let them perform a lustration to purify their country from this deep and deadly stn. " My lords, I am old and weak, and un able to say more, but my feelings and in dignation were too strong to say less. I could not have slept this night in my bed, nor reposed my head upon my pillow, without giving ibis vent to my eternal ab horrence-of such enormous and prepos terous principles;" ThiS speech of William Pitt, the earl of Chatham, was considered by all Ameri cans, from the ending of the war of 1776, to the, beginning of the war of 1861, al most 'eighty years, as the protest of christianity against the wicked measures which Great Britain adopted to reduce our ancestors to submission to her power. And yet Gen. McClellan was dismissed from the army because he wrote a letter to President Lincoln in which he uttered the same sentiments as these of the im mortal Wm. Pitt. He says, "This war should be conducted upon the highest principles known to Christian civilization." lie did not. desire to "lay waste the country of his protestant brethren—to desolate their dwellings, and extirpate their race and name." Not so with the Republican party. The editor of the Press, the organ of that party in Pennsylvania, says: "If we are in a war, let us plunder, burn and destroy, for war means plunder, burning and destruc tion." A member of the Legislature of the same State, Mr. Lowry, declared, that "if I were commander-in-chief of the army and navy, I would inscribe upon every banner that I sent into disloyal portions and into disloyal States, the inspiring and soul-stirring words, universal emancipa tion,' and I would give to the slave who would bring to me his master's disloyal scalp, one hundred and sixty acres of his master's plantation ; nor would I be at all exacting as to where the scalp was taken off, so that it was at some point between the ears and the top of the loins." An opposition member asked Mr. Lowry the question, "If a slave murders and scalps his master, or if a slave insurrection takes place, I'w,ouid like him to state whether the teachings of history do not inform us that the infuriated. passions of the negro, once aroused, will cause him to bring along,with the dripping scalp of the mas ter, the scalps of his innocent mistress and her children ?" Doubtless they would think the reward would be increased with every additional scalp. Mr. Lowry re plied that he said in the beginning of the war, that "the South would bring upon itself the horrors of St.,Domingo, and that the whole South would suffer the conse quences of its own act." And Mr. Lowry was anxious to aggravate these horrors, by offering the negroes a reward for every scalp taken from a Southerner found with arms in his hands. In the war of Great Britain against our ancestors, Gen. Gates, an American officer, wrote the folloWing letter to Gen. Bur ' Boyne: "Ilat the savages of, America Ahould scalp the unhappy prisoners who fall into their bands, is not extraordinary, , but _that the famous Lieutenant-General Burgoyne, in whom the fine gentleman is united, with the soldier and the scholar, ehould bire,the savages of America to fcalp Europelurkand this descendants, pf guropearoj bay wore, that be ehould pay MONTROSE, PA., TrESDAY, SEPT. iO, 1861. a price for each scalp so barbarously taken, is more than will be believed in Europe, until authenticated facts shall, in every gazette, confirm the, truth of the horrid tale. Miss Warea, a young lady, lovely to the Bigjit, of virtuous character and amiableliispo'sition, engaged to an officer of your army, was, with other women and children, taken out of a house near Fort Edward, carriedinto the woods, and there scalped and mangled in a most shocking manner. Two parents, with their six chil dren, were al! treated with the same inhu manity, while quietly resting in their once happy and peaceful dwelling. The mise rable fate of Miss M.Vrea was particularly aggravated by being dressed to receive her promised husband, but met her mur derer employed by you. Upwards of 100 men, women and children, have perished by the hands of the ruffians, to whom, it is asserted, you paid the price of blood." Gen. Burgoyne replied by letter as fol lows: "Lest my silence should be con strued an acknowledgment of the t'r'uth of your allegations, and a pretence be taken for exercising future barbarities by the American troops, I condescend to inform you that I would not be conscious of the acts you presume to impute to me, for the whole continent of America, though the wealth of worlds was in its bowels, and a paradise upon its surface." What will future historians say of this Republican party, who have not only jus tified all the barbarities of the war of 1776, upon the Americans, but would have exceeded them, if they had had the power to gratify their fiendish revenge upon their white brethren in the South? The war of arms having failed to extirpate them from the face of the earth, they have sent the army back again to reduce the whole white race to a state of slavery, who re fuse to aid in the construction of a British Monarchy,—the very government which the Patriots of the Revolution rebelled against, and by their blood and treasure achieved the liberties of the Americans, which the Republicans are now taking away. That they are the same tyrants which our ancestors were compelled to fight against, or be reduced to the same condition of slavery which they are now forcing upon the Southern people, will be proven beyond the shadow of a doubt.— Those whom they designate as rebels, are rebels, not against the government of our fathorg, hat against the RAMP tyrannical and wicked power which attempted to subjugate the Americans to slavery in 1776. Let this power become firmly es tablished in the Government, and Amer ican Liberty, both North and South, is annihilat'd forever, unless recovered thro' another bloody Revolution. _.... Reflections for for September. TIIE DIINIPIIMENCE OF GOD Thou art everywhere present, 0, Al mighty God! Yes, thou art here, thop art afar off, thou finest the universe. Here grows a flower! there shines a sun; thou art there, thou art also here. Thou art in the breeze and in the tempest; in the light and in the darkness; in an atom' nd in a world. Thou art here in this flowery valley ; thou lendest thine ear to my fee ble accents, thou hearest from the foot of thy throne the sublime songs which ac company the harps of the seraphim. 0, thou who art the God of` the seraphim ; thou art also my God, thou hearest also the joyful notes which pervade the air from yonder lark, and the bumming of this young bee which flutters on the rose. Omnipotent Being! as thou hearest me, deign likewise to answer my request; may I never forget that I am in tby sight ; may I always, think and act as being in thy presence, to the end that when sum moned to appear at the tribunal of niy Judge with the whole world of spirits, I may not be constrained to flee from before the face of the holy of holies.—Storm's Reflections. Packing the Juries. Scarcely a Democrat appears in name upon either the Grand or Petit jury list for the next term of the Dauphin court— and not one of those residing in Harris burg (a Democratic city), is a Democrat. Whether or not this was done to prevent the conviction of the Radicals indicted for the recent thefts of: paper and records from the State Capitol, we, cannot say, but about the time of the arrest of those individuals, some of their Radical friends were heard to declare that they never would be convicted 14 A - Dauphin county jury. Several libel cases are also down for trial, on a change of venue, in which prominent Radicals are interested. In one of these cases John J. Patterson, a confrere and business partner of George Bergner, is prosecutor, and in another re spondent. It is considered the duty of a Radical court to protect its friends, and, when crime is concerned, to prevent them from getting justice.—Patriot. egrA Quaker gentleman, riding in :a carriage with a fashionable lady decked with a profusion of jewelry; beard. her complain of the cold.. Shivering in her lace bonnet, and. shaivl as light as a cob web, she exclaimed "What shall .I do to get warm 2" .. "I really don't know, l ? .replied the Qua ker solemnly; "melees , thee should pas on another breastpin!" , ' The Two Judges. In April last, Mrs. Jane U. Swiashelm, now one of the editorial staff of the Pitts burgh • Commercial, was . a regular corres pondent of the Cbambersburg Repository, At, that time the Allegheny repudiators had just selected Judge Williams, of Con necticut, as their choke fos a member of the Supreme Court of the State. Mrs. Swisshelm notices that fact, and thus speaks of Judge Williams I "It appears to be an acknowledged fact that the Pittsburgh bar is to=day as little burdened with brains as at any period since it was a bar—and no ,better evi dence of its appreciation of respectable me diocrity could be offered than its selection of Judge Williams for the Supreme Bench. In '4l and '42, when he was a law stu dent in the office of Judge Lowrie, I had some business in settling my father's es tate. He who was since Judge Lowrie was my attorney. Going to,the office one day, I found him explaining to Mr. Wil liams and another student a .point of law, and he asked me to sit doWri and wait. I sat down and had the benefit of the expla nation; heard the questions propounded by Mr. Williams and the other, and the going over and simplifying the case by the teacher. I sat in blank amazement, wondering if that little man ever, ever, .EVER, would get enough law into his head to make any kind of living by letting it out in quantities to suit customers; but he is sober, industrious, patient, and plod ding, and after all his dullness of compre hension, did learn a good deal of law, and I think that in any case which was well established by precedent, and which had been carefully and lucidly explained, and simplified, he could understand it, and would decide according to the best of his knowledge and belief. When he comes to a new field of investigation, the saints have compassion on the poor, fat, short, puffy man. 'What a time be would have wading, floundering—and what a muddle he would be likely to make of it! A man of active brains would not be likely to run quite as much to that substance most val uable in whales, and if the Republican party of Pennsylvania have no better mate rial ant of which to ranottfooturo a Su preme Judge than Hon. W. W. or H. W., or W. something Williams of Pittsburgh, they had better vote for the Democratia can didate, whosoever he may be, on the ground that they 0.0...... t-he worsted." In contrast with this notice of Judge Williams, of Connecticut, from one who, like him, is attached to the principles of the Radical party, we present the follow. ing tribute to Judge Sharswood, of Penn sylvania, from the pen of Hon. F. B. Pen niman, of the Pittsburgh Gazelle, a leading Radical organ in the western part of the State: "In nominating Judge Sharswood, as their candidate for the Supreme bench, the Democrats have made a-wise selection for themselves during the progress of the canvass, and for the people of the whole Commonwealth in case he should be elected. He is' as suitable a man for the place as they could have brought forward. Natu rally of sound and discriminating judg ment, his faculties have been matured by thorough study and a large and varied experience. His reputation as a man is unblemished. Indeed, he is a consistent and honored office-bearer in the .Presby terian church. As a magistrate, a suspicion of unfairness or partiality has never been raised against him." These are the two judges as represent ed to the people by attaches of the Radi cal party. The contrast could not be made stronger, even by the most devoted and attached friends of the Democratic candidate. Judge Sharswood is com mended for eminent ability as a lawyer, while as a magisti ' te it is said a "sus picion of unfairness or partiality has never been raised against him." This is high praise,. and, coining from a political oppo nent, should make an impression upon that class of people who profess to act independent of all party organizations, and cast their votes for the best men. Mr It is a singular fact tVat although Judge Sharewood has-Ipen on the -bench for twenty years, the,Radicale can only find fault with but one of his decisions. , -- This is a virtual admission that, all the others are right. As to what that decision was, every candid man must say it was right. If a man contracts for wheat he cannot be paid in bran; if be contractsfor gold or silver he cannot be paid in green backs at forty per cent. discount., If so, the provision for . the • payment of 5-20 bonds, in gold, may be revoked by an act of Congress. _ ar The Albany Evening Journal says: "A friend, who has frequently sat in a jury box, is an advocate of women suf frage. Vomen at the ballot box will be followed by women in the jury box. How delightful will it then be to serve one's country. The class of professional jury. men will increase wonderfully, and. there will be no objection to staying out all night on a knotty and: interesting case, either." —Of course not, if half the jury should be protty girls I _why-are in3ople who stutter not to be relied iln Y liceittle t e they are always breaking their word. • • more About the Radical Tax Plunder. The following article from the Pitts burg Dispatch (Radical,) shows how the Radical State officials are mismanaging public affairs and raising money to make np the deficiencies caused by the late Radical Legislature • Au important qeestion has arisen be tween the county authorities and the State, relative to the perional tax for which'we are liable under the law. In 1860 (the State tax on real estate having been repealed) our county con troller was notified by the State authori ties at Harrisburg that the personal tax assessed against Allegheny county for the current year was $7,990 20, which amount was, paid in due course. Nothing more was heard of the matter till the assess ment for 1867 was made, when it was found that we were required to pay $35,- 532 23, together with a balance of $27,- 543 06, claimed to be due on the assess ment of 1806, beyond the sum of $7,990 20 already paid. Mr. Lambert, not under standing how there could be any balance due on L 866, as the county had paid the sum assessed against it, wrote for infor mation on the subject, and was informed that the assessment was made, not on the returns of the county assessors, as in pre vious years, but on the basis of the United States census taken in 1860, and that in fixing the share of Allegheny at $7,990 20 a mistake had been made. .Mr. Lambert refused to pay the balance claimedfor 1860, but the amount claimed for 1867 was paid under protest by the county treasurer, Mr. Aiken, who, in a letter to the State authorities, set forth at length his objections to the claims of the State, and notified than that the county . would seek redress either at the 'hands of the Legislature, or through the courts. In 1866, if we recollect aright, the Board of Revenue Commissioners, by which these taxes were apportioned, was abol iabea, end ita duties treticfcired to a Board consisting of the - State Treasurer, the Auditor General and Secretary of State. This Board, instead of taking the returns of the local assessors, as required by act of Assembly, for their basis of assessment, took the eenam toterric of 18 . 60, by which the personal tax was increased nearly five hundred per cent. Acting tinder advice of the county solicitor, the controller holds their action to' be illegal, aud,the matter unless. settled , by the tegisj6.tnre, will have to come before the courts for adjustment. This large and unlooked-for lnerveacts 41 the State tax disarranges all the Controller's estimates for the yeae, (as he had 'to pay some $25,000 for which no provision whatever had been made) and will prevent him recleaning railroad bonds, to that amount which - otherwise would have been taken up. It also adds one mill to the tax levy, and as there is no telling' ow long the iMpost may eon. 'Mime, it promises to Become quite an on erous burden. It is believed, however, that the apportionment is altogether un warranted. Transporting Liquors in Flour Barrels, Dry Goods Oases, etc. All sorts of schemei are' resorted to by liquor dealers to furnish their customers with the prolicribed beverages, and al. though the members of the constabulary have proved quite vigilant, they have thus far failed to detect many of the ingenious tricks practised upon them. A gentleman who knows states that)b,e has seen,barrels of flour, apparently,-,taken away in, stores, which, in reality, were casks of liquor, with enough flour placed at the top and bottom of the barrel inside to give it that appearance when moved, one cask being firmly wedged in each flour barrel. Great care is manifested in giving •the orders to teamsters: "Call at and, get barrels of flour," but after the goods are loaded,l not prepaid, the driver is some times astonished to find that be is'not transporting flour, but rum or whisky.— Sewing machine cases, boot ' and 'shoe boxes, and dry goods cases are also called in requisition by the dealers, and it is as serted that the cellars &smile dry gpods stores are leased' for the purpose of con cealing liquois, the same being carried back and forth in the large, square cases generally used by dry goods dealers, so tbat the liquor might, be loaded -before the eyes of an ofticer without exciting suspicions. A few days since an express. man ine,eitied an order to call for a bog of currants.' While carrying it. across the city the box was rather roughly used; and a colored liquid oozed from the cracks be tween the boards., The odor that arose from the 'box was similar to that of Ma deira wine, although the driver delivered the box as containing cUrrante,-and -re ceived pay accordingly. In one instance, it is said, a barrel of whisky was conceal ed in a molasses , hogahead, and' hay and stones packed around, it to•make up the usual weight of a„hggshead of meioses, and it; was then. Sent to a grocer,, Who deals iiii the itrleilt on the sty,' probably keeping' a' small a tlio unt - o n 1 y ui his'store, and secreting the rest in hitt or some other .friendly. neighborgrhotise.,-,Boofoa -Tray. —President -Cab'ral- of bonlinica has sent a messenger to - Washington, with in. strnations ko,sweptr the.offer of our- gov ernment for the p?rehase of..Sawaa% on Om /eland of Hayuilor $6,000,000. xxiy, NUMBER 37. Shall the State bo Overrun with rde. gro Paupers? The Delaware Republican (Radical) says " the negroes have a right to vote now In every State - or the Union under the Civil Righisbill,r adalt, 'will "proudly - and joyfully Join in the appeal to Congress to enforce the right." Long ago we stated that some time or other the Rads of Penn sylvania would take that position, and we say now that, should Judge Williams be elected to Supreme Court in October, they will immediately after so declare.— The election 'of • Williams would give them a majority of negro partisans upon the Bench, and hence such a decision as they desire. As at present constituted, a majority of the Judges of the Supreme Court are adverse to negro suffrage. This fact has kept the Rada' quiet upon the subject, and prevented them from endeav oring to push negro suffrage under the civil rights bill. The people can rely up on it Opt the election of Williams Will be the signal for an attempt, both through that Court and the Legislature, to give the voting privilege to the . negroes. And if the Rads succeed in their design, hund reds of thousands of negroes will immedi ately flock into the State from the South, to vote and become a tax burden upon the people—for thousands of them would fall upon the counties for support, asthey have done hitherto upon. the Feder al Government. If the farmers aro wise they will nip this design iu the bud by voting for Jndge,Shars wood. m , • Cabinet Changes in WaMists& The Radical journals are, obviously at , a loss wifat to say of the Cabinet changes at Washington. In their perplexity they scrupulously and timidly avoid direct at tacks upon . General Grant, an — ti content themselves with reiterating their abusive charges, against President Johnson. Bat they persist in ignoring the fact that the removal of Mr. Stanton, and even the re moval of General Sheridan, and of other commanding - generals, involve only a change of men, and not, of measures.— There is no issue involved is any orihese changes, except the prospective one of such tat interpretation of tli'rec6nstruc tion measures' adotited by Congresses may prevent the disastrous,consequeneee of the / establishment, in this country, of negro, and Puritan domination— The issue will be submitted to the people of the Jnited States ; and if the citizens of Ohio and Pennsylvania in' their next elec tion decide against, a domination of the piebald, complexion, we shall have little doubt as to the ultimate result.—N. Y. Herald. 11§r Judge WilliarUP, of 'Connecticut, the Radical candidate for, the^ Supreme Bench, is a disciple of the higher-law.doc trines, and believes that a judge should fashion his opinions 'in accordance with the political notions of a majority Orthe people. A majority in Republican -.Alle gheny declared in favor of ‘+ repudiation," andof that question ever came before the Supreme Court of this State, in the event of the election of Judge Williams, the lat 4, ter would be compelled to decide the question in favor of the repwlators. So said, substantially, the convention that nominated him. flow can any one who believes in the binding obligation of a Contract vote for such at, candidate, on such a platfortu? Mr The New York Times' says' "it should be political death and dishonor for any man orarty to suggest repudiation, and there should be no attempt to fainil w mrize the public mind with so disgraceful an idea: In view of, .this , strong pre sentation of the case, w e again call upon Jude Williams to give the public his opinions, on the Allegheny repudiation moyement.He is a candidate for public office, and.thii votere have aright to Iwo* what:position time when his party attempted to repudiate the bonds of the county in which he,resided. Will Judge Williams respond? , _ —The United ;States Supreme Court once deeidedithat anegro could uot 'be a citizen ,of .the- United States. That de. cision .has never been reversed by tbeSu promo Court, hence. Congress (which boa no authotity to reverse a decree of the Court) cannot lawfully give citizenship to the, blacks. —lt is stated that Barbour Lewis brought One thousand negroes in., one boat 'load from Arkansas to vote in Ten neasee. Many of therrethoukht theiteder tificates of, registrati.on *ere._ deeds for forty-acre lots, and arepu_ch disappointed , at the ivalcion• o up —Miscegenation' is going,on rapidly at the "hub of the univerae.” The 13ostOp Gazgite OVA *it .no less than a dozen black men have, taken white wives at Op 'west 'end 'of the'eity. ' 3 = l iAir diamond Volidies ;diamon . d," Says KGerman writer, *so ratio is tlirm4o by Truly. , And. we ins,raddiois dminAnd Ants dismotp1 1 . SO, 3 1 .4* 1 . 1 afifteceil by mia. --Nivevil'habit it noveriootiirovetbi yielding to it.' E=SMOMMI