PITTSBURGH GA Z E , E I• PUBLISHED BY WHITE:a 001 Eff=l33 'IO.'SD4.I'3IORNING, SEPT. 1, 11351.- garEEADING JIA TTEB W 14.1. BE POUND EACH' PAGE OF MS:PAPER. 1 RIGHT' SIDE UP. We ha. 4 retteser seen any thing 'more cheering sad - crecoaraging than the strong and almost niusnlxenus,,expremion aL, the.Arriericatt pr , . . . , condemnation of those who got Up the lett ... thi Peditiou against Cuba. flt to cella to that ex citement caused by the news of the exec lieu 'of..the fifty , accompanied as it, was by start s 'of Outrageous abuse of their remains, the' ups:, Wes of the , people were strongly exciteltbet , . . calm retiection,'sad More correct so counts of the affair, soon convinced 41.1 reasonable 'autt,lowerer mach we bad to lament, wit had floating tonompinin of. The tone of the ken, both North , and SOnth,„ with a Xery few excep tions, was soon in unison and harmony with law, and right, and common miss. 'rho abstirdity, to say . nol4ing of the wickedness, of an at templdir forte our dotions of government 405 the geeplo of Cobs was ao perfecUy palpable, that sobordwinded men of all parties., Whigs and D'etnotraa,„ , . :Union - men and Becessionlits, free aoilere and \Pro s -slavery men, ; all for once har- , . Mortised.. This thing of earizig to the people of another nations, anti of different habits and pre jodiees, "1k Democrats or die."' is so intensely rhlieitloty; to 'say nothing•else of it, that no one who iielitentls to think at all. gill attempt any long* to , defend, it.— . Propagandism of republicrinciples, how over, was Only a 'cloak use conceal a eery ditiermk object. • The clo , however, is flow L i torn to pieces ; and those wh goto Cuba with h a a r hcatilelafeat, , mast go in tit i t tine character of brigands, marauders and pirstes. They will no longer be allowed to 4. steal the Beery of heaven to serve the devil In Thelate ouulges commi ted at New Orleans are seallymore to be lames d than the tragedy et Envitha: , There the nati•naltonof has been ireply wounded. The viol••ee committed upon the Spanish Consul was a• outrage ; without a parallel i 4 any civilized nn on. io sionenent, no apology can remove the tan from the nation al honor; and its efieet will be to roll back the march of republicanism in crepe for years to come. That wretched ea' be , cited with irresistible force by the ad • tee of monarehi• • catiod arbitrary governme. t to prole that man 4.120: capable of self government. • • . Then ;the attack by thetiob upon the liberty I . 1 , of thepreis in that city is a other mournful IlTi _ deacck that some of our p ople are departing from' he great principles 'each lie al the very foundation of our free; inn . tntioll9. Thin law less spirit must be checked and if a wholesome public opinion cannot chec - it, the government Will be obliged to resort to n armed force; and then we shall present to e world that most menstroas of all anomalies a despotism under the form of a reptildic. 4.et the , people, then, , tido the government in any degree of effort the may be required to yet - anvod to this. propagandism, brigandlam, and hostile demonstrations - against our neigh , bora: Remember, that in a government like , ours, the Very structure of whiCh gives, force to • public opinion, unless the government feels the suit/cluing power of that force, it most neceeia. illy be weak and ineffici ent, • :Amongst a free people. ergumeot is better ' . than force. - 'Calm reasoning mint combat the passionate appeals; of those who would lead the , people astray. Demagogues Will spout, arid weak or venaLeditors will write and print the; most umeound doctrines, clothed in specious . phrase& that catch end tickle exceedingly the feelings of the ardent and unthinking. These poisembeisienammota must 'helmet and counter . acted br6usaon and truth,. or the days of our freedom and glory as a republic are ended.-1 This, we are happy to my, judging from the tone ' of. Our large exchange, free all parts of the ' cottony, loui - been Weil balamanhi_ ,d • but it matt we've:- eve-.6rvvel--curver-wweneriese - preseurveroserm m . the public . continies. Bad anddesogerone Ifteenens areexteasively it work,opeoly and bold, 17 in the South, slyly and stealthily here. Dem= - agogoes are trying to manufacture 4little popn- - lenity , out of it ; and to tlds end the generous sympathies and the fierce passions of the People will be wrought upon. Len them talk; for it is • a free country ; but let as not permit them, it e we can help it, terabtert our freedom,by tramp ling upon the La " which secure us in its enjoy . - • ment. A Lrort.—A few days since e we took occasion to animadvert with some degree of severity upon an article in the Poet, the sentiment 0(' which we then thought, and yet thinlosetbrentlite of ell law; order, government. and, in shell, every thing that cenduces toddle peace and well-being - of society.', 'We showed to what enormities such .doctrines would lead, were they carried into practice. Driven to the wail, the Post, because it - could make no hence defence, turns upon the editor of this paper , • and utters the following grosa u And this wonderfollflourish is made'by one'' Who, is, . We believe, a nicmber of a band arganaed lor:the pinyon of trying to break up a company., atithomed to act in accordance with the practical Of a charter granted to tbro' by the State of Penn- vilronia, and who have never yet violated their charter, but who are 'obnoxious to certain, indi- Vides% because•they 'demand from all a very,: small:sun, for the use of property that Could , scarcely he dispensed with, and to which this'. company have the exelnaive right. Indeed we, hive . excellent information of the fact, that this " tame hypocritical ranter about 'law, order, goy emment,' expreised himself lately, on the sub-. Auto!' the property belonging to several corpo rations of thekind alluded to, in such a manner . ad-only the most reckless contemner of all 'law, governinent' would do." allusion, we suppose, is to the late Wild of the hridge case, the facts of which were re- Totted in tideland. other papers. • Mr: White, the editor was absent during all the rauStweek, paying the last tribute of filial piety sad affection to an ' ; honored and rm.- ruble went ; nor has he yet returned. Of 'course be did nothing to. provoke this mend'. accusation. The writer of this article can. only say that the editor charged the reporter etrictly,inhis hearingto make a perfecfly tial report- This much is perhaps due to thepublie and to, the absent editor, though It is with reluc tanceic notice snob tin absurd charge at ell. The editor earns to hare forgotten, in his eagerness '1 extricate himself from the awkward position in which we had placed ldm,or, rather, in which bitted placed himself, that be was in danger of putting himself Ina Position Millmore awkward. ; likis Otago is a very Serious one, and as false as , it is serious. After having delivered himself of the foregoing '' l slanderous charge, the editor goes on : • " And What is it, on our part, that has called • forth each a strain of natriotlo indignation , ouch an avowal of love for t.'law n , order, government?" It is simply this — . We hive virtually declared T r ;.'orir belief that a Citizen of the United. Statutes • a perfect right to go *here he pleases, without Ming in the least interfered with by thd govern ment ef hiecountry. And we have plainly stated our belief that the government of the. United States has done all that the public sentiment of • the country requiresof lt, when it seeks to pre vent, "math:allow" openly attempted within its a,vlew is infringe upon the, treaties and laws of the country without going out of , its way to search for poemble, or even probabk; cases of the character' described- The publio oentiment of our country regards the • Tight of each citizen to go where he pleases as . • perfect and if one. citizen pommies this right, • then the tame ric Is 'perfect in ten or twenty, 'ten hundred or t thousand." We have only c . plattldiscrap from a coned. erable tptantity ,of the same sort, to show what a =ions, medley of -lophistri and immense that • man is capable of uttering'. We : shell expend no "indignation" upon it. Hitalks of the govern ment daing that the public sentiment" of the country requires of lie forgets that there are any such things as a constitutor; laws, and treaties. tbriusimnes ot Milwaukle and.blimbialppi Railroad, westltem Mthraulde, kayo beencons - pleted, 41nd ate hew in iipention, and In three .`mon t hs time &boat eighteen miles more ran be finised..? Tho length this road will be about zoo miles, and the costOrith a heavy T ran, so ' tar as - constygetel, is only about $12,000 per tulle, The nutho#zed eeplaid ot the company. fa $3,0110,000, of whs.* neatly $1,000,000 hasbeen subscribed by the people of Wiecoocio- MR=MIPIS SairaMtx. I Whip of Kentucky lien. beaten ter flouerrioi, through limier 'Alin sepine. nue. It is tote hoped the Whigs of Pesnsilva- Ma will not follow the bad example.. • - The votes of all the counties but Ls:master are officially returned to the Secretary of State. The aggregates are' as follows Governor—Powell Dixon Powall's majority Lt. Governor—Thompaou WicklitT Thompson's majority. ;Tex. art a Ibis remarkable that while Dixon's vstc for Governor exceeds that. of hie associata; Thompf eon, for Lieutenant Governor, by. out, yet Dixon is defeated by 819 majority, and Thompson is !electei bra majority of 033. Wickliffe, the Democratic candidate for .I.t. Governor fell off 7,163 from. the vote given to hie associate, Pow ell, for Governor. A letter in the Trumbal,County. Whig, from New Park, say : 1 The Democrats of this city are in a most un-, manageable .muss.." Being deprived of. city, State-add Federal petronig,e, there is no longer any common bond of onion to hold them togeth, cr. Money has always been the leading element in their political campaign.; and they have ways had, heretofore, a chance at some Public" treasury; whence they could draw supplies, when their breathern in office could not funish edtfi tient off the "needfuL" Now, however, they are cpt off from all these sources of plunder on which they have so long preyed, and are com pelled to depend upon the voluntary centrilm-- Cons of the more hopeful, members of the par , - ty. Bat, inasmuch as nine-tenths of the party;' in this city, Is made dp of "Empire Club men," "Sock Boys," "Sbort Boys," "Shoulder Hit ters," "Sheaters," ei emus want, wbo , have al ways been accustomed to rqeive money for their minable services.in frightening respectable peo ple from the polls, the "voluntary contributions" are dishearteningly meager. As yet there has not been money enough raised to furnish the, ..nn4rrified" with a drink all mind: Some , ' thing must - be done, or the party ie,cleau gone forever. Nothing will 'save Locofocorma, but windfall from- , some source or - other: for - Ms "'boys" will never muster strong, unless they are drawn nut by.the smell of good liquor, and the. merry jingle of the "dimes." SCOTT. AILS . JOHNSTON ITEETTSIGS Am.course Eonwrz.—A public meeting wil beheld in the bbrough of Elizabeth, on Sawa day, the 13th 'September nett; at 3 P. M. At ,Nobleato*n, on Monday, I6th fleptombe at 2 P. M. At Sharpsburg, Tuesday, 16th inst., at 2-P , 11. At Setrichley, Wednesday; 17th inst., 2 P. M. At Bakerstown, Thursday, 18th inst., 2 P. M At East Liberty, Friday, 19th inst.; 2 P. M. At McKeesport, Saturday, 20th intr., 2 P. M. At Tarentunt, Monday, 22d inst., 2 P. M. At Peter Boyer's, Of iLeonard) Snowden township, on. Tuesday, 234 ins 4, 2 P. M. •At Joel Monroe's, Patton Tp., Wednesday, 24th last., at 2 P. M. At Hugh McCormick's; Esq. , Moon Tp.,.Thurs day, 25th root„ at 2 P. M.. At Jesse Plankinton's, Pb Tp.; Friday, 26th init.. at 2 P.' M. At John Cowontra, Baldwin Tp.. Satntday "_7th Inst.. et 2 P. M. At Wilkineburg, Wilkins Tp., Monday, 29tb (att., at 2 P, M. At Lawrenceville, Monday, 29th Inst., 2 P. M. At . Milos •Pearse's, Jefferson 'Fp., Tuesday, 30th hut, 2 P. M. At Clinton, Findlay Tp., Wednesday, October at, at 2P. M. . At Pen7svills, Thursday, 2d ciati. 2 P. M. At'&obet Upper St. Clair, Friday d October; at 2 P. At Ilene* Leaders', Turtle Creek, Saturday Ottaber 4th4 . .P. M. At thelate James Phillips',Robinevon Tp., Moe day, October Etb, 2 P. M. At Spaug's Mills, Shale, Tp Tueadey, Oct° her 7th, 2 P. M. At each of these meetings, our friends will be - addressed-on subjeots lailiortant to the great political interests of the country. Oar friends in esch.elixition district of the county are re quested to orjanista andirhsre our rasa to the polls. • By order Of the , Committee of Arrangement. Prrtssuman Crrr Mats, Augost 30th, 1851. . thi Editor of the &Artie : ' We hail before had occasion to notice the Butler County Wheat as superior in Quality: We this day purchased of Mr. Jacob Neff, of that !pointy, one hundred end sixty bushels of white !Wheat, relied in Butler county, for which we paid bhp 68 cents per bushel, being from eight to nine cents aboee the ptice of Mediterenean Wheat. We would recommend to the farmers of Alle gheny county, to mil on bin. Neff, and get their . See Wheat! Could we procure large quantities of each What, we could then compete with the Western New York flour, which is Bold, in phils delphia, (as well as New York alai Bastin) mar ket, at a considerably higher price 'than any Perizorylvanla Wheat Flour. Yours, WELMARTA & NOBLE. • WAR-21LAVERY--TRTILEPRIMIICR. War is an evil but it is tiometimes necessary. ft may Cost life and tram:l:re--it may suspend every used pursuit; it may mates farmer from his plough,, and the smith from is form it may, lay waste fertile fields, and burn cities to ashes.; it may tun murder and rapine red-handed upon the people. And yet good may result. A na- don may be thus redeected from the thraldom of bondage; a despotism may thus be overthrown; a republic reared in • its place, and long ages of peace and - prosperity may supervene. In our ewn history we realise Abe truth. The war of the Revolution wail thttr, great price paid for the peace of to-day. Omtemplate the greatness of the Republica Count, if yd.tt can, re shiPs which carry its commerce— L "Far Lathe breeze can bear the billow's foam Enumerate the, teeming myriads who till' its fields, who people its cities; go sboardlthe float ing peaces which, bird like, skim its lakes; en ter thereil can which rash at the speed of fifty miles in hour on its railroads; and then remem ber that these things grow from the ashes of rev olutionary fires; their germs were Maur fathers' blood as t r o ttnehed in torrents at Lexiagton and Bunker •I War bean evil—but it is not el ways an unmitigated calamity. Masai is an ev il , 'social, moral, politiCal.— We loath and sbliorit, and norms} that it has a being in our country. • Iris repugeant - co jeatioe and humanity that man . Should property to man; that he should bay and Se him aa . if he were a chattle—that he should drtts hifizth the fields, and goad him with the Ludt as if he were . a beset That he should 'dun out the light of ' intelligence from his brain, sad the light of salvation from hie spirit; that hi should sell the husband from the wife, and the wife from the husband, and the mother from the babe that is. life of her life I It is horrible!'.Nor does it suffice to say that. • majority of manors are hu mane men, and treat their slaves with Manus. We know that they.all have the power to treat them with brutality, and that some. of them ex ert that power. But slaspry is not an unmiti gated evil. Terrible as it is, it has some re deeming features. Hopes aria. in our breast 1111 we'crmtemplate it, that It may result in go od to the long oppressed and degraded negro; that the sorrows of the fathers may, e productive of . joy to the children. Emancipated from their chains they may yet return to their father-land, bowleg with them the. grime of chrlatian 0t4.1- =lion. Recent disoosenes reveal the gratify. ing truth that the interior ofdPics is a delight- • ful and healthy, country, abohnding in fertile lands, maiastig.rtmers, and magalficemt forests,— Who shall say that cities, and villages, and churches, and school-houses will not one day ex . istin the now desolate idiom,. "Where Aftio's sunny fountains' Roll down their golden sands I" : But Intereperancels ext =mitigated evil; there Is malting to reline the blackness of its darkness; it hie never medlstely or immediately beenlpro, donate of good, and it never can be. It is (only evil and that continually; a fiend which exceeds .inbidemumetta Milton's picture of Bin. It ruins the health, it wanes the property, it blasts the reputation, it poisons enjoyment, it blunts the perceptions, it marhtlsr ln'k" a bey of home . itfili: the land the prisons with culprits, the scaffolds with con victs, and Bell Itself with Immortal souls I —LI, its Gault. . - - FACTS WONT= 'OS COSSIDILEATION. While the Free Tradeadrocates are , boaatingof foraigil markets for the Products of our land, we are Forting/7" as much foreign praltice into our court uwe are - exporting. .mat is bolt of broad-cloth, (asks a writer, )but wool and isborl—Helf its retie then, is an immediate product from the soil--and the other half in the beef, mutton, pork, dour, eggs. boon, Inlik,and cheese consumed vltna the labourer is at work making the cloth, But suppose the goods are made of cotton, and the same thiug. pound of cotton oats the English manufseturererlo or 12 Sews, and it comes back to as hkgoods worth TS7IOIIII prieta, fro= Sixty „.i ceit.o to one hundred and fiLty, In. the. falai eti es; the additional saw. all give:it:vie by British Labor, fed by British fum ing pruduce, employing British capital and hav ing paid British taxes. They will find that miMontrof dollars are paid '.to support our. army, hundreds of thousands to pay, for our foreign intercourse, light .hourrs and coast surreys, all of which are themselves right enough, wore it not that the very men for whose special benefit these millions are expended, refused protection to prevent the importation of tirry witutiss 'of agriculatuthl productions which come in here in the shape of inanafactures as we have already shown them." To change such a ruinous policy—n policy which most drain the country of its silver and gold, and ultimately of its wealth, will be to rote the irhi g 6,10 —place in power Whig Legislators. Whig Cpegresamen, Whig Governors •and Whig presidents—friends of a high Tariff—those who • prefer to encourage our home manufactures and producers to those of foreign countries. Do this and the millions of bunion now carried out to Europe as balance of trade against as by almost every steamer, will be carried back again—for floc relief of all classes and those engaged in all branches of business. who.ithe now 'driven to he wall, owing to the contracted state of thb mo• ..ey market. • Surely it fiehooves our people to look into this matter,—and if they do co, divested of pejudicr they will SO what a regular humbug free trade ie. "Tea FIL.I.IIII,TIKUS:"-7 4 ,big tern is not gene rally understood. It was familiarly used in the French and other languages, as leseriptiire of a class of adventurers of all , lations, Who during the last Miff of the serenice th century, infested the West India Islands and coasts of America, for the purpose of piracy, abd who were in Eng lish more commonly termed Buccaneers. The term is derived from the Spanish name of a light 'boat, a vessel then in common use' in the West Tor boor BRICSBAT.—The Liocofoco malignors are certainly hard pushed to find charges to prefer egaiuot Judge Jessup. Having been cornered Sr, their.malicious falsehoods relating totile alleg int connection with tho defunct 'Susquehanna bank, they find it neccessary• to introduce some new charge against him: Hence Buchanan's orgrin, the Pennsylvanian, shuffles the cards, 'When lo! the terrible charge is published to world, that Judge Jessup is unfit for the Supremo Bench in consequence if his having given much at tention to the breeding of Horace! There is no chance for the. Judge now---bis case is despevate, hopeless! The .German farmers -especially, in the interior of the State. who would laugh at our Susquehanna teams, will go against a Man upon whom such a serious charge rests. Sitsque.hanna i!er. To AARE. ARTITICIAI. N1611111:1. AND :Wove.— .The following is the condensed specification of n patent grented to Salim R. At.. Clair Messiah. and published in the May So. of "Newton's London Journal and Repository of Inventihns.'• The material of which artificial stone is made is Plaster of Paris. After. it has been prepared and Of the right shape, it is dried in a room et itlant Sfiv; When it is completely dry it is im mersed in a warm solution of borax and glatiber -salts, prepared by dissolving one lb. of borax ands quarter of an ounce of the salts in one gal lon of water, as a ratio. After.the eastiog is thoroughly wet in ;this, it is removed to, the dry ing room and exposed a heat of 2500• Pah., Until all the watery parti are thrown off. It is then permitted to get neatly cold, when it is im mersed in a strong hot solution of bores., to which has been added one. ounce of strong nitric seid • for every gallon of the borax solution. This Silv - er 6oin Wastes. leolution is kept quite warm, and the castings TUE highest price will Le paid for every. kap tinit until they arPOOMplittely saturated, when . ,Itterritticon of si ps Cots, at the Machantie stn of A-. WILMINP O, they are taken out and dried, and found to base „,,, ' eoroer of Market and Thlrditreert, sequired a marble like hardness. A day or two after this operation the Castings are slightly heat- „,-, EVening Session. i 1 K , CHAMBERLIN'S COMMERCIAL ed and covered over with II thin coat of Canada balsam tiiiimfvotl In turpentine. after which they c..oet,, u s i . i t lirie'rgo" . . , Tra - ....llr;z7ilVeis=,.T."- ere kept warm until the turpeinine'is driven ott. ' ‘ ''''`o•l 4 %., ,, Trm''' , L. 17..."" T 1,. 'Pr , E....0.1 % n Pl' Various colored substances • may be used along ....:4 ; ;;,:ft:t: u n'o - e'e.ire - ei - 7 - a . e:afa r' ' ar ` In ' '.- ' with th e materials specified to color theertlficiel " l''''' - °'' `'l° b" '" 0 ° c'''''.."'Tm , L'... ''..z. taxoetnit at 1 o ettxt, P M. bey' marble, each as indigo fur bltm:and othei soh.' .‘„ , , - 11, ( , RI-. MEIN 'S PA RA DE. --Span gles, Ito- . statism for other colors. The Marble may also s .. Lee Frtn itt,ckle• t - In lex •TY A be streaked end beautiful i ly variegated, —Selen ft,- rtetr .l,', t .::at.t. ' i „,,,, f j • i'& i . e. wue,l_S N .4ner.ron. , .e . It ITANNIA TEA WARE, -Communion p ware, Cpstor,CaullesUct,Tablo Cutler, ...I.Karts at TUC Two Sas.l.s.,-When a rakish youth goes ill Itattla Lon, Glreadolee. Ilse Chen.letlere 'Wald., astray, friends gather around him in order to ; L . 7: 2, T Txxv n ryru • , i s i , .., °"''''O':l'o . mvdm. restore him to the path of virtu, Kindness is w,i 0., ii. ¶11.005 . I.lllbPd upon him to win W. back ofi'olo to in- `MALL tIOODS.- Just recd, pe rim, . nreence and peace No one would euspeet that 11 4 s• a. A. ethos a C0..3. lAtratt,..• tuttt r o..i tett,bo o t;', he had airy sinned:. Btu when a p.oorconfiding In.:: t end parettlttto , :ltle etvleet • If : lox. Tabs atlfra , girl is betrayed, she receives the breed of ixi. Il a rt=2,'are'.:bade;:ft trox'tZir t :h .. 'l'.l,;l l ..,...iZiar.. a ety, and is henceforth driven from the ways of i - ••• ,4 .. . . __ .. virtue. The betrayer is honored, respected, AJILAIN BLACK S I-1.. KS. —Meerut & esteemed, but his Alined; heartbroken victim' //VP ,ir !MP bare ji. toed a rplerultal apeortotent el sees there is no peace. for her th is side of the ' ~:,',2,',.i la Y , TM-V 2 ? - .,, r, "-, ,-,."....., ,grave. Society has no helping heed for her, , sere Llke_ ram eI:D. eepl 1 -1 , HENCII .MERINOEILAM. I II.O.B. 1 1 E MIL Attnilh-nrMAAPM Thrgitug-"- -- '' . %rer --- ' — ithitelir A &owned:LW: to heaven. There is deep wrong:hi them, and. I fearful are the consequences. ; .. , 1 4 108. RENT—The Se•eond and Third „..21 ,Nothing truer th en the foregoing ' witi eMr ', ic ,..„„ ''',.,„,,,`',.,,.' r o r i'''''''''''" N '', -,t 4 . c. „'' . 1.",...,6,, u v01"'" written. The facts. slated are worthy of the ' rapt corner Market anA ThIPI sta. consideration of the philanthropist or reformer ; , PK e I - L m SBUltell AND NEW CASTLE. On what principle is it that an erring female as . , driven fromhotne arid friends,. and all - ety ft r.,,,, FALL A ItRaNGEMENI. :: . 'for human beings, while an equally e g n k ile !In connection 'cilia the Ohio and Penna.. Radrnad.; hi 'permitted Ri retain 143 station in society, and, g0n.81.....„...-;,z;:sz,t : even to boast with impunity of his vices'' On : What principle is' it that woman--ay, velum, THROUGH 111 6 HOURS. • ''-' for she is were first and foremost and most zeal- " DASSENGERS will take the 10 A. IL train Ins to decry'and persecute the unfortunate of , 1 I,7.7l,tteeiSikttent4t. c, 3 a c.,,, t . her sex—on what principle is it that she'showa . on arrival at Neer Prl t rbtort. at 11 , , A.M.dall v . t aLl' vi n , no mercy to an erring sister, while her sweetest. atir..7.•Zwle,rat4.U.,,,_._, „ r. sr_ . .. . _... smiles ate lavished upon an equally erring reale? ' Br i, hi ,,,, ;,,I. t he l x , t rr,,,,r. ' "1 ".:4 . t ,t t . e. at New Fatal...hut. the as s +, a s . One would suppose that the possibility of bee , m... 7 e., 1 '141; 0 .1 failing -would teach her to extend that kindness ' For ihrottglt ticket. apply to tt A,nt. coo. PARtI o N." t to another of her sex who has 'strayed from the ' J 'Pla Itailrodtep. C. lIIDM CLI.. Water torteil path et virtue, which she may one day want , 2 d.wsatene M