The Erie observer. (Erie, Pa.) 1859-1895, July 30, 1859, Image 1

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    toit _Obiata.
Os I) POLITICAL JOURNAL
BY B. F. BLOAN.
t Twill' , MOO labs erg 11 rad Ii lava",
41, t. V • Copier. wilt be rat t. eas IMMIPos for Vls and
%AM., ISt* for ts.r• adobe.
• u• pubikeriber falls( to pay the 'ear, Ur
• II (e. ,beeantlaued WI Abe aneemeat mai pot si
• I
„r prf year, sad left eritb 11114VPIll olleerinit
ittlis Or ADVENTISM/3
r Yaws , liiloo or has make • squans-ligi
, ...... cook, $ 16 One quer, 3 booths 83 00
• tiro 100 One "a oen
• ter, 136 Des " 9 - $76
~„, „ l ucre a year, changeable at *bum $lO.
. ~a^'"'3 reviths, $S isissUts„ $6; 11 tseedht,
„l ou rs, t, 10 squaree—one year, 1007 6 seethe,
, $lB.
.4, sr.t, inward to the Detainees Directory at
„ allowed ler a Card, ever sit, sad
and Editorial witless, 10 sputa a Doll • bet so
twat es/I be lasertedesoortg the apestisi lietices
than ODe dollar.
t 7 - arrrlssots mad *tiers requiring Dopes' changes
t mama to will be allowed two squares, paper,
ror additional space, the charges will
„ I .r..portasu, and the drairtisbasate ass* be strictly
legiUmate bawls eop of the adrertiase. Pup.
tratedent adverUseaseits required a eihreass.—
/.., ~aril advertising will be presented half-reerly.
BUSINESS DLBSCTORT.
.k: ti3l ItY,
I,• ' 0r....L.mt Es litreareD Witill AID LifirlOßA,
~...., terma...f Frequit Orandirdy alas, ke—, Chase
4,.„, ci,,t, Ibuietra, Vialifik Shim, Pestand ocii
~,„..tir Cues; alio isiamktactant of rectillid AIM.
, , ' ou t Mr. Bourbon, Mokoardirlia, ke., Rood Hew% "in
In, t, %qr..; Rile.
, NcKOKOS de. CO.,
BOLISALIi DIALIXI It (1110elleItS aat
State Street, No. le emotes Block.
I'OLK,
r 4 Buur 613101ta, BLAlla 8001 Malt 1a171.14.1/Jt,
~rood 3tory of Itintierieneht'e Block, Erie, Pa.
Ellll WILSON,
Artwwwww & etarltaltl/0. AT LAW, trit•
street, oe. the Park, fa tbe American
. t o.l',tory of the building, occupied by Y. k
• .4 tit'. ter Ile will always be found In hie °Mar, cad
punctuatly alletoloal to.
k.l h311. 1 1:11, KUNDIU dle,
uounsaLt AJD KIT •I L ROC Lad
•n 11" u r, York, Flitit, Salt, $. la, WOO6l and
►ro, Nada aud Glass, at No 2 Vinsbea Stuck,
KIN IlialL11•31. LLI KILIEWG
toil , . Vt. AVALKKIt.
el AT - rotas% AT LA", ,S 4 ate, A 1...
prompt attention to the locating a Land
.rrsi t. and the pal meet of Taxes to the Matra of lige
and los a. alit &lan Oil altartirra for the purehaae
M S.s.mp Land. Er
-1
1.1 I tot A. E.
Sin-taws le T
a aurarrc ask and Wholesale and }trial! Dealer In
0.,g0 and lioniegue Straw Gouda, Artaticial novels,
.$llkA, Lace., and Eaahomabie Ytlßoery, Paragon
fronting the rark,Krie, l'a:Parenlar attention
...It. , Order*
k. I,‘ TON riTll
• AT11.101.1 A T I.a • -0111eir on Chroglaill
-11rvt, 1611")1111..,
• O DOI/ —2pdl
_
tlnTl h.
l .thLA.I.III4 in Clocks, %Vedettes, ilia.
Plated Hare, Looking tilawooot, liilt
,fl. ry sod Fancy reuktia, ruin
N rot Park near Brach st
`lit hot
R TA It.lltalass ID F ey
•1a13.• pre (:.wall, Uttreta, Wlttupy 1111 Clothe*, &C.,
tiro. Ws Block, 'irk., Pa.
1. Litt I:SPOILT.
111011.X101 AT I.AM —om jp Cont r ol
.
.r N • olirrgiir R llatier's Clothing Sion.
Strort
w it. t. iii 4 LIIKAITII.
A V 7011111? A? LAW-.. 011501 no ethstreet,
.., ..,1,...te the Court DOW*, Erte,l a.
1 •
N. .../ N(•L-t ill,
i .straitsmor 10 Stteart 4 Sutcistr,)
1
• • ... RITA IL itittl3olll?, COMP/ of State on.
• 1 ...., Ora it., 1 n Valuta, I itls..Dye litagia,Cilaas, Casophoor
, • ~. . ~“.1, ifrumb.-4, te.
11' I 3
P4Alr Cor SKL Lau 1. A? LAW.
c. .r 12•1 1. nmrWax .4 Romeo.reitra Block,
t cud the Public Aquae., I , r.r.
II It nt:N Il IIUTCHINtiON.
astolgSkTS •T Law.--00Ser in Roses
• ftrowtill Hnkl, sairs.:•es• on the
• • ,••• s
- r - Hut...Litwin is Nutisry Public and Gwlwir
' 1..• t., ,tor the siiirend States and Tsrtitorws
„. 0. W.
dr -
‘‘'. '""1
1 1 :sh il" rogT, oat«. n - ' 8 .11••••
• , , t 1)..0.11 side of the hot, Eris,
. k 1.1.1.% A.
n, TUS riumi—thhee lb New
t..ru,t hi I feineu.•.......• ..4 th.
Ito': Kitm d: !SENNETT,
AX RWTA Nairn ill Hard
r;wker,, Glasawarritad Saddlery, Nos. sad
Meek, earner of Filth and State streets. Pa.
N. A.
NI" CONSALY do SHANNON.
( Sacrament* Etecaest If Onskrp
....w.. ‘s English, German and American Vissdwareand
Alan, Nail*, Vimm, Iron sad Stood, N..
Frio, Pa.
f 'IE% L YTLE.
If "await, is the room receatly ereepi.-4
• u a Law Mee, and over the Stole of N.
u.,- I ,hv between the ROW House andttrewn'sHotel.._
11. VYFORD dc. CO.,
Dumas to tlot.o, Rank Moles,
It.. of Deposit, ke. Sight exchange. on the prin
ks' ciUrs constantly for sate. OffierPlo 9 Hoed Haw..
41.11 r .4,i oars,
tnio4 citoom, ar. CO-.
• lltnalut Lod blananrturen .f
r • &chi Riinde s Penal et in tee strop ronmerly. ,,, eupiod
INgb Jones.
1 . )LIWN,111;•
I
Deauck to Grommet, Pros-Wows, .Pro
rure, Vieb, Belt, (*Mu, Flour, Prank Nat; Glees,
Eitpoma,Woogi.en, Willow and Stow/. Wen.,
Terme Cieb. PA..* I.e. Nn. 4Wright's
strwei, 4 - doors above the Poet (Mee, time. Ye.
i LAIC k RATIABON, reo — ---.
. I. ......_
DiNetlll . l% Office is Beaty . 91....
LA
'ilea, oortlt aide of Public Sows, formerly crocupted by
Mo4(11 k CO. All work warranted.
G RAY 411 c NAJUILIit,
BOLRIALS Gamma, sod drsl.n lo
O pot laths °odic }Warder, shot. Com Rafety row,
Tobacco, Cigars, Platt, tol, to., kR., No t, Boom:! Moot,
:•tot.. street, Erie, M.
1E032
I OMNI HEMIN CU.,
rORWMILDI/1113 and Commission Merchants,
Iralvr. in Coal, Flour, Fish, and agent fora daily line of
pper Lake Steamers, Patdie. hock, Kno, Ps.
I DIRICILL,, MARSH,
aNt'IIOTC Itilta of Atraca Enguica.aclicrs.
a Agricultural inipaitocuta, Itailtrual Car%
tr Eric. Pa.
&mops's,
U
l" K.
YA6IIIOItAILII Dam HMS U., bud Aro%
,•,, A heck,k Wilson's &mill Illimiktnee. Itorms over
A , 1‘.7 . 1. Jevol7 Mom West Park, Erie, 1112r$Utelb
n; Anne to Order.ll
MMUS B. CUTLISIt.
A TTOltalIT AT LAIT, Colrazd., Erie County',
Collectleas mad Aber besisess attended to with
pr..gnptomil nod aspateb.
.1 01117 1 1 5WX14241( •
Ammo or Tux PZACR, Office lo Beatty's
I, .• MI PIE, Uri Wan, MA, PII.
.-
( StUUHKV As (ILA SY.
WaraLaaata Ortaosaa, and Dialers in
I...meatie aad la parbed Wilma sad Liquors, aJao &vans,
Tolaara, Praia, Play Oil, sal Agadta For Iladlits Buffalo
Ale. So. T Saanall Mak, Slade apart Mraa, P.
• N. it. 0411;101113T,
J
MIN W. ATRIA.
ldssOrmiernme., Wholesale sad Retail
i*a kW ill all Wads., Taney. Ihswing Kim" &added
mhos and DualacChalsa, Na. 4 Lai stow Mort, £r., ?a
11 %I"
al
ili ttalas ir' la Roots andSliona atilrbote
..,. and Ratall, at No. 13, Cadweirs Block State street,
r. re..,
f )1.014 ilk LOW.
ItsireseTWollaS St Wholesale sod Retail
1.-sire ID Well sad Miters hump of sopetior quality, !be
'q n . .pant sod best sow to nes. Shop on Twelfth street
0...., Pesch, Brio, Pa
rr Aqueduct for earrit=ter for family, farm or
e,hantrul purpose, for eels
I. W Otas,
DR. O. L. ELLI
D OT Rs? %
um._ ma
Fete* and Dwelling to tenth Part Row,
t.r.t week east of trie Bonk tootWhlgn.
July ICI, MIL
C7NOIMAN J. MOUTON.
Ai POSWAJIIPUta skad Gessainswiao NerebiD4.
"b" boa, line, &MUT ill 00114 Bali. rah. Mo. , sad
tuArr
mro 0111ZPIdit dr. KNII.LOGIG.
W4oLaiim2 and alio 4.1.". i. GreterioN
Pro.tatorui, tiMip Chaadiary. Wand and Rdles ware ka.,
lar . slats Street, is PONS, . ,
I,‘ NY! RE STORK&
ci Wm. A. 6ZIAorw. Jakket, awl ltiptail
144.1.er in every AstootpliAA Tortags W POWar iti M
"004, CarpoOnts, Oil Cloths, kid 114 i. 111. Mote
...root .4 mu, Nana Ps-
W 11.1.1A M
plum. moda.
oval Roods Ind 1 / 1 1101.11e 'Mtn, am, OM"?
mrertally Mar toirwmmo.. stmt. /Mt as.
.4. - 1.4 t, Grocery Mare id* PIN
DOW '
AMINIALT AT LAW Alai 3411WWIS Wit
e.
la taw onendOeseta of Wee Cleseity,
"`" a 5404.41 le ell buidassio•-
tr.ked to him hosimbe, *an as sa Attenerlbigtotrabo.
I 7 4/le, la &mph* Inedt, Grow sot Mgt
. 1 . Enr,
w . UN uf . Aril.
. - • Avresessr AV hAV.,-.4)1110moosel 118
wAsSerStellretmakasa lb* soft aka* eitake
I )11‘ t M Altar . S o tt ru
A .n.t, No, ZID Main Um; fl i.A. ailliksi X. Y.
, °news Ms ittialsos nalsolvely lo Ns Issalund a
41seamo of the 2• sad kr.
RC l„),„
B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR & PROPRIETOR.
VOLE TAU? 30.
au.COTT ar. %AMIN.
%Lamm in ail Waft et Coal, ail; Pimlve, noon
lks., its. Public Deek, bk. h. 61.
110011..
J. IL ll*2llll.
j BlLDini,
WIIIoLIMBAIJIMIJd VOW dear is an kis&
et seeliski Gnoa* sad assamegia RA* Vier,
=rot qsa, Ci=l.
Ntio' mid Tbeklag oprmite
Reed Holm, ilia, F.
SALE OF PEWS '
Ix WI. made oututon.
Moths ta bereby gives that la paesoaasa et • reaataites
of tha Waders alai Web,. sail tbs intim* -s by
the auxin ot / atlas, the Itillowbea Pons ST
Ph /TVS CHI:II2CH, EtttlC, twill bi mid at Putela Aattlios
at the Cliorak, oa the Mb day at My, JUL at 2 &ditch.
P.M. for the collection* of di* %mare of aareameata of
taies spirt the seam to May 4, 21110, sad elate at
No of ; Nome of Lous&
14w. ; Oiroora. i VII "' I Too. 1
7 i 14.Lo;1.1. i -- Wlll - , 4 - .1 . i ), =IY 9Y
30 I A. C. Jackpots, ' 66 r ."' 11 I 11 60
4 f J. 14. Walker, ISO I 916 i IP 011
60 J. Miler, I 130 11/6 1 116 101
67, .454a4 76 lb I 600
70 J. M. Doarlass, 106 ILI i 32 16
63 . A.. Boot% 1 136 21 1t II
-- i — • - ! ica.....i.,
Terms math, known oa day of Vale.
EH* July 2, 1869. WY. C. Mak
Seeretury of 1,12* Vattry,
F.
A. 1-101•TCF, mod- rk-,
Physician, Burgeon and Dentist.
Izmir/ow nazczer d da.
ERIE CO,
DR. L. having permanent) y !cleated , at
[ham 'MU, will stioad an calla la his
with prolopthesa. AU weal oreeattewe as thin=
preranard and warranted. &Mead lassitad tram
on to as will. meta.
12,3 33:Erb13.017510;
FRONTING THE PUBLIC BQARE,
ERIE, PA.
P. ELLIOTT, Proprietor.
THIS LARGE AND FLAUNT HOTEL
ilia been thoroughly repaired sad relkinish
ed, and is now ore for the reutpUos of repast
. 1 96 Board b Me Des, Week or /hod me no
sonabk terms, the Proprietor pledgla g liesssey that
no effort shall be wantrog to pre mteri tatssfachien.
try•Prirate Parties. Manor Pasta. or Visayan of
Pub& 84/1s will had the resoonnodattons at this Bowe
superior to any other in the eity and the charges as rso
soluble.
Eir Geed Stabling attached where porta trine Use
inmate., will always bad attentive bastlen to take Aare
at their Mama. May 6, 111160.016
-- --
Ew a l t For Chicago A l gae
_ And Intermediate Ports 1
ONE of.' THE PEoPLE'S LINE OF
Propolkera will Irma tide Port for Chico aad
latonswillata Port oft WiItiIPIESDA V and MA TIM
DA y it each work, wind and waatisre permitting ,
rar trot freight Of wings apply to
_ Itri.i J,c1 1 414, 15611.--42.tf.
- - -
NEW GOODS! NEW GOODS!!
FRENCH AND AMERICAN MILLINEaIi.
MEN. M. A. MORGAN,
ham jest Messed from New York with
hugest and moat coop/eta essorterteet of
FRE
atria styles of Pttraw Gond,.
BONNETS, RIBBONN, FLOWERS, &c., &m.
In short, every thin/ la the lllllibery Rae, which will be
POW wholesale or retail at prices that defy competition.
country Milliners supplied with Goods ►t New York
;owes, mkt* • small Commtasb►. As aim has made se
esagenwole to reativo Goods every two weeks, also oilers
peculiar Iroluonneuts to thane baying to sell aphis to
mole their purchases at her establishment.
llnieM. &eine to Inform tint Fab& that abe In
ed, by a new and beautiful process, to renovate s d Cob*
Vt.l• t •••16••••• 4.•
ra- Orders polkaed, and satintadetion warranted.
.twee Corner of Mate and Itlglith etreeta, Sri./ Pa.
April 16, 1649 --CAL
- -
NEW MILLINERY GOODS.
its. S. H. HALL,
Pesch Rt., aboi• the Depot Erie, P►
Hu just opened s mew mod spleadi4 Mei of
MILLINERY
RIBBONS,
.1111MMMIC11111.
he., he Abia s :BoNNICTS, RUBCORS AND TAMS,
enachiaw and hand-enwie, boan•t Prawn asid GM. nth
DRESS BONNKTT, PRESS CAPS, St IAEAD
Z4Vt.EllllllllO3=l
or the latest. Its lee.
Er Particular attenttea paid to relarlag. Wearldes
awl ' , teasing. Blfallaleri and Riding Hats tressed la tbe
moat taishlesable style. ,e 1
ar Mao, a seperiarleTt of ladles Fientery, together
oath a `steers' aasortment of Lady', Goads.
Afiril Y 3, IS .--46.3 m.
NEW GOODS!
SPRING AND SUMMER MILLINERY
MRS. M. C'URTIS,
Is now nreetrtng a Lamina Fall Al
soriawent of MILLINERY asid FANCY ROODS, erensist
hag of s great variety of White and
COLORED STRAW BONIMES, BLOOMERS,
And Children's Hats of emery style, Maker Hoods, Ploy's
Hats, /se, ko, Ribbons, Fk.wers, Roches, Caps, Head
Dream* Alesuadre's Kid Gloves, Boded, LOW Yens,
Irrvneb Cornelia and Skirts, Inaterlads of an kinds for tar
braider'', V blestleume, Laos. Appl,Spe and Preach Mott,
Collars, Sleeves, km.
roppliod with Goods at wholessals; she.
Maier Bonnet Blocks. Bleischlos and Preseing done In
the heat manner; alao,Straw noanete motored Drab, Brown
and Black.
April V, 11199
=I
GROCERIES, &a,
s ELLIN° CHEAP FOR READY PAY !
BUCK AN, SANDIO 1r CO.„
No 2, Wright's Block, Erie. Ps.,
;A 1 .11101.18•LX OA NMI
17a RS .721 isournows,
AT LOW PRICES:
GREEN. BLACK
ROASTED,
RIO COFFEE
SYRUPSRYRUPSArPMOLASSES,Ot_ALL GRAM
SiIAP. STARCH, CAIMLF.B, RAISINS
BAKING POWDKRB, PRIT10:8.
FRUIT. NUTS, .k.c.,
WRITE VISO,
CODlrletti
wed MACILRAILL
FORA,
BUTTER,
I ARP,
DUI UD AMMON,
WOOD nag
WILLOW WADS,
NAILS AND GLANS.
Together with • large saistitsil Dads of WOOS
kept i• • Grosilf Store, which we offer to, mil et the
lowest motet peke. CALL AND S US
BUCK AN. NONDIG A CO.,
April 11,1160. 110. t, Wrigan tkrek.
7 Wito WANTS VSAFE:' -
The 'whistler has obi laig• sin
MilianiltilS SAM which le will depose al = l fs
Cue or approted paper. W.
WIN A le, SUL-44.0.
IL L Low,
EVERY LADY.
rsess r = st rossias tally,sholat4 sash..
awe Wairdos Rabe awl Kal64
halr af the VULCANIZSD IND WW2 o=ll,
by shish bar hoods will to oorfectly ortod from is
. mot niodorod NM, ollifto mot to be Wid at
Drug Stars of
7 Apell 6, 1166 Caller! 6 IMO.
WRENCH SNOW WHITE ZIN
dry 6.4 regal la sidle Dom Vandie,terter
selats With at Ka. 6 •84 Boom
D
Jul 4, 11166. 11 -13. L. 1. WARM
PAINTS !PAINTS 1 PAINTS ! I
W hiss k irs skAsswillisiod Piss*
vase, /taw lielled Lawsw , 4o ll .
nue* Odive, Cisme sod hos* Mon
irsiry Was is Ow limo et Wires . raw
Kay 1:11. & MDICILJOIL
'UAW LANDS 2011 2212 25 KUM
,I,' Ines Plialadeliiis lidr Illinril MOM anis if Keg
Jwswy
mss li
g5 2=432 4 / 4 .4= 1101 ism le
• law beak illistilid lido I=l frail
all passe. aUM eisaistry saw .
IMO Pep posesimmt era is' me
no Alm& is &deli
art pow* eal=
uoVorel ."l"t
To dr lieri="biz
rtuatAtitida_ Ow 111111 1 4
(Br alloArels R. 3. Irma. bl , 1 1 • 14 0 1 .11 1 A
Alleale Omar. X•w Jensirs. alill ar
saattaraelsams. *_,,i ; I foe.
70,14ELT/LIR DUST9I24
Jr At WO CiArni a asas.
Tin
G. J. MORTON,
hibite Dock
Alight to this
city, toeioditig Ql th•
EEO
STRAW GOODS.
(RS. X. CURTIS
. .
AND IMPERIAL TEAS,
ov DI VVREPIT IS ILADVX ;
GROUND,
JAVA
ItAINIS.
BACON,
I=
MIFF=
dot in • moment the roam
That ins summer grows,
A robin sings ass trim
A twilight song otostatiy,
Aid the red, red lea at its fragrant beat.
Trembling so In &kir:ions path, •
Fell to the ground*lL a toddies *tart,
And the gram is with a edema Meth;
And • honey-bee itut of the Gelds delete?,
Heavily flying thelprisii ever.,
'Brushes the stem *s It passes by,
And others fail Idiom the heave leaves lieq
And air and dew, jns the night •is done,
Bare stolen the plasis every one.
Anil
17apithd.
The maple does not i,hed its leaves
In one totopestuens Iscariot rain,
Blot softty, when the /path wind grieves,
Stow-wandering c4ror wood and plain,
One by one they "rimer through
The Indian 8n0.4.'s hasy blue,
And drop at last on' the florist mould.
Coral and ruby and burning gold.
And sunset's gleam gorgeous dyes
Ne'er tri4l one &Wow Wes away,
Hut siouly o'er thooe'radiant skies
There Steals the evening cold and gray,
And amber and violet lingers still
Vihen stars are over the eastern hill.
Our death is gradtml,,like to Ikea* ;
We die with every waning day,
There is no waft of marrow's bream
But bears some heart-leaf slow away
Up and on to the mat To Bs,
Our life is going eternally!
Lesi of earth than we had last year
Throbs in your veins and throbs in mine,
But the way to heaven is growing ether.
While the gates of the eity fairer shine,
And the day that our latest treasures dee,
Wide they will open for you and me
Choice giteratiat.
DIVORCED.
A LOAF WROIDI TKO LIP!-BOOM. OW TOW-
rill
:CAN
ERY
I wish that I had never been born !
In that ease what else I would have been
it is difficult to say, but, certainly, I could
have been no worse off than I am at the
present time—the thirty-first day of March,
A. D. 1853. I might have sprung up am
kanebtxly else's property ; I might have
graced a garden po*ibly, as a cabbage-head
I---may-hap. as a flower which Mrs. Tomp
kins might haveplucked to wear on her
bosom, and then thrown away—oh I happy
thought.
But I am what I am; it is useless to re
pine--tmleas to wish I had never been born,
live till i die, unless f Commit suic' In
that case, I tremble to ask myself the giber
tion—what would:become of me ?
True, my body would go into the ground;
but I would certa,nly endeavor, in spirit,
to knock for admasion at Heaven's pearly
doors ; and 1 am lure Mrs. Tompkins (late
my wife,) would Meet me there, and pre
judice the keeper against me '.
My name is JOhn Tompkins, Esquire,
Mrs. Tompkins *bed to be my wife—the
lawyers tell me that she is not any longer;
and that she has re-assumed her maiden
Ve, of Snooks;
ery fortunate you say 1
Indeed it is. But I wouldn't care so
much if it wasn't for my little boy—the
dearest, sweetest, Tompkinest little fellow
that ever blessed your eyes. Ah, me!—
When I think of him, that heart of mine
waxes big with sorrow, and my breast
heaves high and low, and the muscles of i
my face contract, and my,Noioe trembles if
I speak, and somethingchokes me. ,
Dicl you ever have a littl e boy—who had
a little coke, and wore little shoes, and a
little roundabout I—the Oatter of whose 1
feet was as musical as thief - fall of the sum-1
mer rain in the wood anon the roef—the L
light of whose eye was *great glimpse of
ti
the beautiful—the tint 1 f red on whose,
cheektrwas as delicate as 'lf a master paint-' 1
er had dotted them— , w lOse hair was in
ringlets, every one of which was a pearl
bepond price, and held a hope that was ,
all your life ?
I did. His name was Edward. He called
me father I I loved him—my darling. my
only boy 1
It always seemed strange to me that I,
the unfortunate, should be blessed with
such a boy. I was afraid of him—jealous
of him and his welfare ; afraid, lest harm
should come to him and vice should breathe
upoti his white soul. Jealous, lest Death
should claim him, or Time draw away hum
me his love mid confidence. .
To be a father, and see a child slowly
breaking away from yoti, and forming new
ties, lend learning to forget you t If there
is a sharper dagger at the heart than that,
tell me, and I will use it to take away this
life of mine, that is so miserable.
I wonder, now if I ever wronged my boy,
oy fearing that either slander or absence
would rob xne of hislove? Ido not, know.
He is away with his mother—the inlfYins
gave him to her. While I was asleep, he
was taken sway ; and when I looked for
him in the morning, it was in vain.
My pretty boy 1 I have wondered, singe,
that Eamon held its own, when I knew
that he was Joao.
He looked so like his wawa 1
Heaven knows I used to love her: I
know myself, Ido Ail; She was
ful. When I first saw bar, I I
could compare her to nothing bu
and I hope the angels have f 'ven
for it. 134 it beauty of face an form la bet
to be corn to beauty of multi--no, 1
I loved e i z i c r ) r nm—l . sw pro= o ss ell
as glad, her. The of
article I w hen the bargain was
pleted. magnitleent; the task* I
was putrid with seldidutess, and
Fenarid pamkon-all at the of
kir* which should have been
I (Silted her wife.
j' She mai neter contented. She'
much Inithe luxury of vit4 She to
'imagine herself tima ; and wans
oo . - . . notions intended to be piesiont
and ) , i ig. One" in a phitylkl stood
she • - , my hair, /A 11140111, I
Emily , ,- , her aff the . a, Xis 11 on
I t'll: I the
a e T-0 sad
alined
OW Ir sl at Wad her ;
and witdd We ser forgiVe me 1kr14 1,.
I will net
- U a r li E,
atinistocery 1
' .dirscalit!
MO II
thamakt . '
lire of Fairkand
eltare c irip
and
Nl.OO sow
. .
AND
I„ 1 ca.. ~.:1
VIM PA, SATIMA
Ell
D'o.
IT son* Mut moons.
Sr ISA.SO r. SIS.BOOIII,
Qi~
Whet
Once she
and than ss
she named
me haw it
to stem 1
neighbor Wm
to Wok '
so.
bar looked on
kink assuming
ing tears in her
and rushed over
sym With
live with mob a
And ao
The bet is, a
meanest thing
woman is a pearl
tires in being um
just as fresh afte
as when the war
in planning mei
worry kW lord I
she, never I Hu
to hold up a Bag
an article. He t
lair, she doesn't
knowing that o
with bar, becalm
the Bible saying
on a house-top, 1
man in a wide km
were as high as
uncomfortable as
still , I should mho
rather walk the
than inhabit a di
nership with the
I would comps
angels, and *or
of glory. I wool
to be kicked out
Lion, without a.l
I saki t were
great Mal ; and
say about It. Mrs,
=it; said I was p
ale and ues,
itark and chewed le
her health as well sr
her hair once upon
used a switeh in he
abused her boy(
tie
sea , that 1) That I al
thrulidi her with
dresses a week, an
into shreds a newts
because I deemed
80 On.
1 made no &fen
the whole proceedii
family should be is
so prominently, ani
papers and the peoi
it was--
How can I speak
er, have you ever 1
position ? Heavens
hau have, woe to r
ve, you are a an
the mark to shoot
whieh you live!
tic Madero
out
Once wore—l
Dorn l
I shall not linger upon the. trial-4t is
painful. %Aloe it to say, one itart,Ad' the
world was given to gm Tompkinsand the
boy, and I wee told to take the other. _
I would not have cared so much, bad
they given tne my boy. But they took bkn
away, and left me alone--a disappointed,
heart-broken man
Only a few years have passed since the
Move was written, &minor sorrow has made
me a boy, and will not let me be the man I
was when I inarriedillfrs. Tompkins. Do
yon wish to see me f
A permaturely old man, with gray hairs,
andleaning wearily upon a staff as he walks;
cheeks and fotehesd that are full of wrink
les ; sunken eyes, and s look of sorrow that
is habitual. Marks of iatettwerance upon
his face ; and an attenuated form, upon
which *mg loosely the oldest and most rag
ged of cloths& A volt* that trembles, and
that trenible, and legs that totter, as
if New of their burden.
I have but a little *ldle to live. Mame
no one • bat I do say that the divorce men
tioned has been the means of bringing me
down so fest. I left s mammon to find a
hovel ; I lost my boy, and my wifo:--and
there Is no one to takeme by the hand and
call me Mend.
And ut . y . boy t:
I mw him to-day--a rich man's step-son.
and be passed Me by with * frown, and er
look of scorn.
Oh I It was hard I He whom 1 would
barn died for, frowning upon me as he
mead upon any other old beggar'; and
drawing his broadcloth closer to lilt form,
as if sber I would coats-n*4re it with
my touch. How I loved him Y How I love
him now 1 He Di flesh of m
afies h, and bone 1
44 my bow ! I held him my arms and
rooked him toe deep ' wh eelhe was a child ;
and he put hie arms sronnd my neck, and
called me tither t
Ify boy I my ! I winder if he knew me ?
I hope not—kr the sake of humanity I
hope not and prs4 not. ; Perhaps they have
We him I arri desd---M may be true to
Me yet, and Wear in his heart a memory.
picture of me as I was when he slept upon
my bosom
Heave* grant it! If I may only meet him
2 .
in hen and have him recognise me there,
it is gh 1
the former Yrs. Tompkins—who is
agskr---rolled bytne in her crarrag.e
tn-dwy, and pretended not to know me. It
is all right. I shrink item her as she does
from me, sad draw my rags about me
ormsdll when I see her. I hope Ido not
. 1i5e .... ...2 do not want to ; b k
pt there is
bitter
my when I see her.
in get m o i s heset, and words
that g ter
If had not are of my boy 1
When she did that, she took sway from
me all of Bib's hap •- • • and made of me
the emeardand the • • -.- I am.
I hare traveled the , , , road on
the lightning train. ' , - jcwialty that,
widtoberotaairarak • • • sgs, fworldl
esl not ' inspect s deed , . to dug " Pop I
goes the trews;." ss to , to to be
I fetid now.
[ ' 4 1117 boy Imy boy r
a • • • • . •
sillad4o/ Hal imam 1 y, John Tamp-
king.
.A samieet Taiellr a silvery pad of
)enghter start me Head, got thu s ,
1 ISUN ,
I Men anima Milli pee* 8 0," aid
imy IMe willow= nee and endeavoring
be threw, me.. Were hot curling. 1
UM. that woes erne may facet or I
ti* ada rnorquitost- seem to be I
bob, endow- 1
• 1
lito,t., dm; JOhn what a'
dripplue Met , s the matter f
Idialkik-aw easerke
F Whirl Melly Surds a oaten
end imdleammilml ter! lopemed my
an
whin. and .
' A tittle woman, sunny man and
iss: Man gyets and rips.redU end dein
ir obielui p , e awry, upon her
u _ i
i -
, .. .
JULY BOy 1859.
Whys
, inifi a
as pledge
I was sew
• bream.
.4 ,
satoilterpieces tints,
le set, or let
•
I was *g
Aan, imrh s
sits desired ass
I did
'or**
T
~eserpi
d screw
bonnet,
see hits
sbe had to
hidelinitely I
is just the
• good
fibessever
and is
war of wards,
She is ingenious
wart 1 7 which to
of the battle ;
induces him
hasn't such
...16 people will
, they
will sym
say—well
woman. t i t
dwell in pewee
a brawling wo•
the house-tops
or AS
i of Death
t, in part,
Tonapkina..
woman with the
bead a mown
-• woman
. of mei
agetting
There was a
had much to
is her ono.
also, that I
smoked
t I pulled
,another,
4 I had
ke used to
refused to
twenty-four
once torn
simply
extravagant ! And
I was ashamed of
4 vexed that my
*fore the public
the talk of the
liras
I Dear reid
-4 in a similar
hope not ! rt.
I If you
man, and
community in
me's domes-
never been
that 1
' tiounteinettee stood lbekre me, tickling fay
' fags- with a strafe I M 'You're been drum
ing,lE you, re she asked, "dad
I've you:
you, and langhing at ,
setti g you. , It was so hinny I My
boy tity boo-oy i"tind a fresh peal of laugh
ter AUtied me out of my boots.
l i
" you Mrs . ` Tompkins?' 1 asked ,
sligh y szoilnng , and yet not entirely with
out influence of Morphemes. "Are you
my , ?If not whose are you r
"Y ts, I guess --.- ain't I?" and she looked
up • an arch expression. "And 1 mean
to be til—until--we get divorced r'
" 'eh, heaven grim!! will be a long
time ce r I said, fervently.
"Y 'ye been !winding about the last di•
vorce ease, I guess ; and fell asleep in the
chair,, I know," she siskL "Apd my ad
vice ie, leave the divorce uses atone here
after;, and then you wotilt take on so when
you ei to sleep. It's awful isn't it 1 1 "
And while I folded her to my breast, and
smoothed down the hair that was so beau
tiful, I told her it was, and said Lwac very
glad we married each other for love, and
hoped we would never allow a cross ward
to pass between us ; for such, little discrep
anus lead to great ones. I spoke, too, of
the importance of allowing good mule, as
well as love to rule in choosing a future
life ; deprecated the practice so much in
vogue, of "marrying in haste, to repent at
leisure." And I mentioned the divorce
cases before the public, as solemn warnings
to the unmarried, and practical proof of the
truth of the saying r "In selecting a wife,
young man—or a - husband, young woman
—let your heart and your sense have full
sway, and follow their teachings to the let
ter."
DAN Hu. E. Swaim' AND Hit Wirs.—Mr.
Sickles, who killed Philip Barton Ley for
a liason with his wife, having become recon
cled to the woman again, has published a
card announcing the fact. It is too long
to warrant. our copying it, but the follow
ing will convey to the reader an idea of its
spirit :
"I did not exchange a ward with one of
my counsel on the subject nor with any ohe
else. My reconciliation with my wife wos
my own act, done without consultation with
any relative, connection, friend or adviser.
Whatever blame, ifany belongs to the step,
should fall Slone upon me. lam prepared
to defend what I have done, before the on
ly tribunals I recognize exhaling the slight•
est claim to *indiction over the subject:—
my own conscience and the bar of heaven.
I am not aware of any statute, or code of
morals, which makes a. infamous to forgive
a woman : nor is it usual to make our do
mestic life a subject of consultation with
friends, no matter how near and dear to us.
And I cannot allow even all the world com
bined to dictate to me the repudiation of
my wife, when I think it right to forgive
her, and restore her to my confidence and
protection.
If I ever failed to compeeVend the utter
ly desolate position of an offending though
penitent woman—the hopeless future, with
all its dark possibilities ofdanger, to which
she is doomed when proscribed as an out
cast--I ran now see plainly enough, in the
almost universal howl of denunciation with
which she is followed to my threshold, the
misery and perils from which I have res
cued the mot Lotto) , child. And although
it is vr sad for me to isacur.the blame of
any in r :;111EInaittt
the _nit man who has ventured *easy to the
world an erring wife and mother may he
forgiven and redeemed, that in spite of all
the obstacles in my path the good results
of this example shall entitle it to the imi
tation of the generous and the commenda
tion of thejuat."
A GOOD THING IN Tilt STORY LlNE.—Sorne
years ago, a Cincinnati paper receiyed and
printed the flist_chapter of what appeared
to be a most thrilling romance, m the
expectation of being provided with the
concluding portions as might be needed: -
The chapter was very ingeniously written,
and concluded by leaving the, principal
character suspended by the pantaloons
from the limb of a tree over fa perpendic
ular precipice. It attract
il td the attention
of the presn and inqui ' began to be
made concerning the oontinution and the
&tea its hero. Day after day the victim
ised publighers looked for the remaining
chapters, but in vain. They never came
to hand. Finding that they had been
sold, and wishly4 to put a stop to the jokes
their contemporaries were cracking at their
expense, they briefly concluded the story
thus : ,
"Chispfer - .1/—Cbrictignua. After hanging
to the treacherous tree for four weeks, his
pantnloons gave way, and Charles Melville
rolled 'headlong over the yawning preci-
Pk*.
He fell a distanced five miles, and came
down with the small of his back across a
stake and rider fence, which so jarred him
that he was compelled to travel in Italy
for his health, where he is at present re
siding. Re is engaged in tte butchering
business, and is the father of a large family
of children."
SARRATARILN New ENGLAMID.-At a recent
meeting of the Boston American Tract So
ciety, Rev. Dr. Dwight, of Maine, said: "It
was an alarming fact that in four of the
New Ragland States, one half of the pop
ulation did not attend public worship, ex
cept on extraordinary occasions. and mote
than one-third of the descendants of the
Puritans have no more to do with the sanct
uary than the heathen. What was the
reason of this melancholy Estate of affairs?
We had no reason to look at a distance for
heathens; they were in our-midst—in the
forests of Maine—on Cape Cod and the moue
tains of New Hampshire."
One reason for not attending church is to
be found in the fact that people think they
can keep posted up on politics better by
reading political newspapers at, home than
by getting weak doses of anti♦+lavery at
meeting. If preaching could be restored
to the spirit of Christ's time the people
would "bear it gladly."—Laconia .Danocrat.
Gamuts Etaiiticma.--There is no peo
ple in the world with whom eloquence is
so usiveresi a gin as the Irish. When
Leigh Ritchie was travelling in Ireland,
be pained a man who was a painful spectacle
of pallor, aqsalkw, and raggedness; His
beset smote him, and he turned back. "At
yoq are liter qt," seal Hit c hie, w ith v in e
degree et peevishness, "why doe,t, " you
4
beg r "Sure, it's begging I am, y'.
honour." "You didn't say a word." ' 0
mom not, ye 4: honour; but see how I.
skin is speak* . through the holes
trousers, and the bonesciying out
my skin. . Look qt me sunken/ .. -
end the basins that's stariu'
, i‘ l me eyes.
Ilan alive! Met it beggin' I with a
hundred - , , - ?" '
$1,60 Pia Ainruir int ArmiNcit.
(_ I 4 I
Wasnmovon. July 18.—Attorney Gene
al Black has, in compliance with the re
quest of die President al the United States,
, rendered an opinion is the case of Chris
tian:lfterst. a native of Hanover, sad who
end rated to this country in 1841, when
he was about nineteen years of Aw.
nisi Moen was recently madethe bean
of a ecannuudeation to our minister at Ber
lin, who was instructed to demand the re
lease at Mr. Ernst. •
It appears that he was naturalized last
February, and in March, after procuring a
regular prospect. he went beck to HMO
vete on • temporary visit. He had been in
thsx-vilhige where he was born, about three
weeks, when be was arrested, carried to
the nearest military station, forced into the
Hanoverian army, and there he is at the
present time; unable to return home to his
faaaily and business, but compelled, against
his will, to pedbrm military service.
The Attorney General says that this is a
use which makes it necessary for the gov
ernment of the United States to interfere
promptly and decisively, or acknowledge
that, we have no power to protect natural
hied citisens whenthey return to their na
tive country under any circumstances what
ever. What you will do must, of course,
depend upon the law of our country, as
controiied and mgdified by the law of na
tions, the Constitution of the United States,
and the acts of Congress.
The natural right of every free person
who owes no debts, and is not guilty of
any crime, to leave the country of his birth,
and, In good faith, and for an honest pur
pose—the privilege of throwing off his nat
ural allegiance in its place—the general
right, in one word, of expatriation, is in
contestable. I know that the common law
of England denies it, that the judicial de.
cisions of that country are opposed to it,
and that some of our courts, misled by
British authority, have expressed lthoug h
not very decisively) the same opinion.—
But all this is very far from settling the
question. The municipal code of England
es not one of the sources from which we
derive our knowledge of international law.
We take it from natural reason and justice,
from writers of known wisdom, and from
the practice of Civilized nations. -
All these are opposed to the doctrine of
perpetual allegiance. It is too injurious to
the general interests of mankind to be tol
erated. Justice denies that men should
be confined to their native soil or driven
away from it against their own will. A
man may be either exiled or imprisoned/
for an actual offense against the law of his I
country, but being born in it is not a crime
for which either punishmentean be justly
inflicted. Among writers on public law,
the preponderance in weight of asithoritY,
as well as the mejority in number concurs
with Cicero, who declares that, the right of.
expatriation is the firmest fosmdatkm of
human freedom, and with Bynkershoek,
who utterly denies that the territory of a
State is the prison of her people. In prac
tice no nation on earth walks, or ever did
walk, 4 the rule of common law. All the
countries of Europe have received and
adopted and naturalized the citizens of one
another.' They have all encouraged the
man States hive conceded t e existence of
the right, by making laws to regulate its
exercise. Spain and the Spaniih-Ameri
can States have always recognised it.—
England, by a recent statue (7 & 8 Vic,)
bee ,established a permanent system of net,.
unitization in the very teeth of her common
law rule. France has done the same, and
besides that, has declared in the code Na
poleon (Art. 17) that the gu t = a '
Frenchman will be lost by rut ion
in a foreign country. There is no Govern
ment in Europe or America which prac
tically denies the right. Here, in the 'Uni
ted States, the thought of giving it up can
not be entertained for a moment. Upon
that principle this country was populated.
We owe it to our existence as a nation.--
Ever since our independence we have up
held end maintained it by every form of
words and acts. We have constantly prom
ised full and complete proteetion to all
persons who should come here and seek it
byrenouncing: their natural sllegisace and
transferring their fealty to us. We stand
pledged to it in the face of the -whole
world. Upon the faith of that pledge mill
ions of persons have staked their most im
portant interests. If we repudiate it now,
or spare one atow of the power which may
be necessary to redeem it, we shall be
guilty of perfidy so gross that no American
can witness it without a feeling pf intoler
able shame.
Expatriation includes not may emigra
tion out of one's natural countit, but nat
uralization in the country adopted as a fu
ture residence. When we prove the right
of q man to expatriate himself, we establish
the lawful authority of the country in
which be settles, to naturalize him, if the
I Government pleases. What, then, is nat
uralisation ? There is no dispute about
the meaning of it. The derivation of the
word alone. makes it plain. All lexico
vaphers and all jurists define it one way.
In its popular etymological and lawful sense
it signifies Me rie t apang a foreigner and
clothing him with alt Me privileges of a native
citizen or atilijeet.
There can be no doubt that flat
Lion does, pro facto, place the nati
adopted citizen In precisely the
tions with the Government uni
th(
t so far as the e;
the
live. excel
tine law
kis'ammicy, d ` dor ata
t**l _ a bitaatimoberr, and dm
cods we administer to Ibmigases is a de•
talks maul> awe. '
L There luive boon, 1110 WO nay, 146010
• "•'• • , • { ••• t
die • •• •• • •• f•• • • ' fobs •T• irniteet-
acrta r galal OMM
within tie !vow
his set of` nadmilisation maybe - -• as
a mere nullity, and he will immediately
cease to have the of an •kmerican cit.
lien. This mend trose Ithassolems
dation to rest upon (and Its sdvosates do
not pretend that it JIM any) swept ;the
dognsa which denies eitegetimm.the4right
of ellgeitiMion without the ooneent,s' his
native soviweign—and thMla uittenalde, ea •
I think I have already shown. •
Neither) is this view siwort i al a Z the
practice of, tierworkl—' 7 l , te
• our neutralisation laws are opposed Mit
their wheal, ant arwelisehrthehreepress
words. The States clikutope
ale rac
tiically committed against It. WO ern':
went would allow oneti a ts e in 'acts
to divide his allegiance nit se an
other sovereign; for they all ow that no
man can serve two mute's. In Eure ,as
well as here, the allegiance demanded of a
neutralised resident met haveheawilways
understood as exclusive. There am not
many mom on record, bat what few we find
are uniform and clear.
MOMB 8.
One Alberti,- a Frenchman, nautraliscd
here, went back and was arrested for an
offence against military law, whii*none
except a French 'abject could commit
but he was discharged when his national
character, as an American citizen, - wen
shown.
A Mr. Amther, a native Bavarian, after
being neutralized in America, and liv*g
here l'or many years, determined upon re
turning:to his nativecountry,and resuming
his original political status. The Baviu•*n
(~41
Government wife:. from ignoring his: t
undisation, expressed a doubt whether e
could be re-adopted there. it ut the m t
decisive fact which history records is 0
course of the British and American v
ernments during the war of 1812. TlO
Prince Regent proclaimed it as his dewr
mination:that every native-born subject)of
the British- Crown, taken prisoner whilo
serving in the American ranks, should
tried and executed as a traitor to his
ful sovereign. This was undoubtly rig
according to the common-law doctrine
The King of England had not given
assent to the expatriation of those •
If the Prince Regent had a right to arr I
a nantralised, Englishman, Scotchman,
Irishman, in Canada, (as the of If
over arrested Mr. Ernst in his donuninio
and compel them to fight for him, he
tainly had a right to hang them for fig
hag against him. But Mr. Madison det
this whole doctrine and all its COELvetita
ces. He immediately isided a counter pr l
huntion declaring th* if any nautrali
citizen of the United States should be !!
- ;
to death on. the pretence that be was b '
a British subject, two English prison
should suffer in a like manner by way j
retaliation. The Prince Regent's procia
tine was never enforced in a single i
priciple which our Government su
fully resisted under such cirpumstances I
scarcely be submitted to now.
' The' application of these principles to he
case of any neutralised citizen who rem no
to his native country is simple and P. y
enough. Ele is liable like any body else to
be arrested for a debt or a crime, bu he
cannot be rightfully punished for the . •
performance of a duty which is supposeil to
d i
grow oat of that ally ' which he ts
abjured and renounced . If he was a rt
er from the army he may be punished w Pll
he 'pee back, because desertion is a cri e,
On the other hand, if be was not mutiny
in the army at the time of his emipat on,
but merely liable, like other members of the
State, to be called on for his share of Mai
tary duty which he did not perform, I be
cause he left the country before the time for
its performance came round, lie cannot
justly be molested. Any arrest or deteu
toin of him on that account ought to re
garded as a grave offence to his adopted
not actually , serving, may'be called a desert
er if he fails to' report himself? These aro
questions which need not be discussed un
til they arise.
But it may be said that the Government
.n 1 Hanover has a right to make her own
laws, and execute them in her own way.—
This is strictly Arne of all laws which are in
tended to Kant«, the obligations and pun
ish the offences of her own people. But s
law which operates on the interests and
rights of other States or'people must he
made and executed according to the law of
nations. A sovereign who trguiplempon the
public rigths of the world cannot excuse him
self by . pointing to a provision in his own
=mope code. The municiple code of
each country is the offspringof its own sov
ereign's will, and public law must be para
mount to lo cal law in every question where
local laws are in conflict. If Hanover would ,
dma a legislative decree, forbidding her /
etoe
uponthe
take awit
any atterm
who has
sen wonh
prompt
-Hanovi
regulation
of expat
people wl
ditions.
existed in
it was Vic
away, tin
the unite
his act of
Sing of H
not. He
if he viola._
forbade Sin
then 1b laws of the two countries are oi
confi t, and the leti of nations steps in to
d• aie the question upon principles and
r es of its own. By the public law of the
otid we have the undoubted right to na
turalise a foreigner, whether his natural
sovereign consented to his emigration ur
not. In my opinion, the Hanover Govern
merit cannot justify the arrest, of Mr. Ern.?.
by showiug that he emigrated contrary to
the laws of that country, unless it can also
be proved that the ormintil right of ex vs
triation depends on the consent of the
tural sovereign. This latter proposition, I
am sure, no man can establish.
- m . wi sd
e n a
other.—
hal been
citizens
not en
owever, po
`her way.—
President.
J A Southern paper, after noticing a
dangerous wound received, by a man in
sliding from a haymow on to a pitchfork,
states that medical preparations were ap
plied to the pitchfork. and Übe* been care
fully wrapped up and deposited in flannel
to aid in the healing of the wound. Thi.•
kind of cure Was quite fashionable about
two centuries ago, and medical writers bad
it was attended with the advantage
for while the hie skill 01)
the instrument, Nature, more skillful,
healed the wound. .
chinas
eruor. end
rote for
Bat
exprew
they cer.
citizens m
we hare
lasses, or
between
Md. Warr bent on nuttnammy, look
more than skin dep for beauty ; dive
farther than the p ocket for worth ; and
search for temper beyond the ifoo . d humor
ofthe moment--remenaberiim at la not al-
7 771 eeenn
every lend
country in
of them
ways the most agreeable partner eta ball
who foram the :nest amiable pottier for life.
Virtue, like wine flowers, blooms often
&hest in the shade.
it:acted.
bat both
al obli
awn.—
citizens,
In
One of
ow Not long since a religious society in
Connecticut meet, to decide artist coke they
should paint their meeting, house. Setup
proposed one color, and some another. At
lost, said one, "I mare that wapaint it
ruin color, for Deacon Ilmith had his face
painted that color fora nunibiti of Years,
and it grows brighter and bright& every
M"
P
, and te:
-4 OubOX*
.do did wotorcek
tie which bound
IS. 'Mom the shady Qiisker, William
Peon was intreetamd to fib* H, be kept
'elt his kat. isirritind PonzOssioUtlie socKt
astmed motaireb,- is tits eusbmt of
this
noon far only opei pepSQll to be ;over
act ot, Ono r and tiro 'Ns , midday took
°this Wit.
k I "
II
1