Carlisle herald. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1845-1881, December 02, 1864, Image 1

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    TERMS OF ADVERTISING.
Ono Square ono Insertlqn,.. z . $1 00
For each subsequent Insertion,
-
For Mo• eantile*Adver tisements,
.Legal.Notibes
Profes , lonal Cards without paper,
Obituary NO - Clues an. Communle,
time rel -ting to matte , sot pri
vate interests alone, 10 emits por
SOII PRINTING.—Our Job Printing Oflice le the
'largest and most complete establishment in tin
r ioun y. Four good Presses, and a general variety of
material suited for loin and Fancy work of erbry
kind, enables us to do Job Printing at the shortost
notice, and on the most reasonable terms. Persons
In want of Bills, Blanks, or anything in the Jobbing
lino, will bind It to their Interest to giro us a call.
garal
U. S. GOVERNMENT
President —ABRAHAM LINCOLN,
President—llvortnat limamat,
Secretary of Sta to—Wm. Q. BEW , ,E.D,
SPDrEdary of interior—JNo. P. Ustina..
Secretary ofTreasury—Wm. P. FRODIDNDEN,
B...Dratary„pf War—EDWIN M. STANTON,
Sacretary of Navy—rllnEoN WELLES,
Pn-it Master General—MoNraoway
• ttorney kleneral—Eray tan BATES,
Uhler J uatiee of the United S atrs—lteaeß B T.t:rEs
STATE GOVERNMENT.'
Governor—ANDllEW (1. CC nos,
Servo .111" y of State—Em SLIVER,
burroyer General—JAMES .'.
ditov General 111 .4,,F.S s En,
Attorney General-11'm. 3frarJuril
Adjutant Oiineral—A 1,. 111 . '4,0:1,1.,
Stato Troasurrr—llt.suy D. Moon K.
IlbtolJ u: tie of the ,upretnu Court—GEO. W. WOOD
WARD
COUNTY OFFICERS
President .1 udge—Tlon. Jaine. 11. (1 raham.
Agnociate duthres—llon. Michael Co. klin, !len
/high Stuart.
District A,torney—.l. IV. D. Gin e !,
Prothonotary—Samuel Shir,roan.
Clerk and Itorord,-I.:phraim tornrnau,
Itegister—Urn W. North.
High Thompson Itippoy.
County Treasurer—henry S. Ritter.
Coroner—David Sw.ith
County Commissioners—Michael Kant, John
toy, Mitchell McClellan,
Superintendent of Poor Tlon , e—Tlen ry Snyder.
Physician to Ja ll—Dr. W. W.
Physician to Poiu• llonso—Dr. W. IV. Dale.
BOROUGH OFFICERS
Chief Burgess—And
rtiw n Zit•irjer
Assistant ,olwet
Town Connell—HaNt Worll—.l. I). Ithlnelloart,
7oshun W. D. Gillelen, Ol•orge. Wenzel,
tVes[lVard—ll I. )10reay. l has l'aot.nt, A. Cattl
e:let, .111. 11. l'Arker. .Inn, I). President, of
Connell, A. Catheart. Clerk. Jog. \V. t),111 ) y.
High Ilonstabln e , alnuol Sipe \lard Constable,
Andros
„John ii ttshal I. Ass isth t Assessors, Jno
M ell, (h, S.
=ll
Tax Collootor—Alfred Ithinehnart. Ward Cnller•
tors—Eist Ward, Cho,. A. Smith. Wef,t. Ward, T
Comm Street Commi , sioner, Worley B. Matthews,
Joitiees of the l'oave—A. 1,. Sponsier, David Smith.
Abrm. Doltutr, 1101ff/in b.
Lamp Lightors—Chas. 6. )l eels, JII.IIII. Spanglur
CIICRCIIER
First Presbyterian Churrh,Northwest angle of l'on.
tre Sjuaru. Rev. Caraway P. IViott Paster.—Services
every Sunday Morning at 11 o'clock, A. :SI., and 7
o'clock P. M.
Second Prevliytrriarr Church, rnrnrr of South Ilau
,c,or and l'etnfret streets. ltec—lohn C lllts, past,
Sorrlces .111111011 ell tit 11 o'clock, A. M., and 7 o'cAork
P. M.
St. John's Church. (Prot El.Lo•opal) northea , t Ana
of Centro S.111:41 . 0. IZ,e t or ,
t Ito doe): A. )1., a:CU 6 P
Euglkh Lutherall Cho, 11, Bedf , rd, hutwoeu Mai.
11,1 l e nuti..r root. nee .1 t 6,11 Fly, Pastor. Ser
vices at I I 0 . (lock A. Crio,•l: I' M.
. .
flerte.in Itt•foroned Church. 1,;.71111or. net.. ea Ilan
over and Pitt stroats.
Servlcos at II 4 - I'vlo '1( A. )1., and
Methodist Church (first dinr,.o.) rom., of 11,h,
Iliad Pitt 61.n•ets. Rev. l'honi,ll. ,herlf.l.lc.
Services et I I (Velock A. \I.. /111(17 u'el.,ek I'. \I.
31 , ,thncliqt Chtirtth L=r-•uud chnr,..l kg,. S. 1
Ilnurtnatl, Past,. :ervires in Emory 11 E. Church ii I
o'clock A.. M., 111.1 :3 , 4 P. NI.
Churedi 0117.,1 ,ottth West corner Id Wyyt tiret.t
and Chapel Alloy. Roy. B. F. Bork. Past° . t , er,11•12,
at 11 a, ii., and 7 n.m.
St. PatrielCs Catl.olir Churrh, Polo(' et near East ct
Bev Pastor. Servooo. rr rry other Sub
bath. at 10 n'dook. 3 P.
lierman Lutheran ("burr', V , .1 . 11, (f rt.t, frvt n n.l
Ileponl ran:Ws. Rev C. Fritz°, laStor. 4enirns at
11 o'cluol: P.
is the nin y, Are uerv•sscq• lha
proper p.3rsoos aro reque•tud Waif) us.
DICI;INSON CULLEGI
Rev II el men 31..101int.0n, D. D., Pre,id n! and Pro
fuseer of M , Jr.d Science.
IV'lllm C. 'lVllsoll, A. M., ProfusFor of Natural
Sr:11,11,1111d Curator o' tho Museum.
Itev.- 1.11 t&
Greek and German Languages.
Samuel D. Hillman, A. M., Profit nor of ?lath meet
John K. Staymin, A.. M., Professor of the Latin and
French Languages.
/lon. James Li. Graham, LL. D , Professor of Law.
Her. Henry C. Cheston, .1 Prinripal of the
Grammar ...,ehool.
r t )J oliti flood, A,istant in the Grammar School
I).
BOARD OF SCHOOL DIRECTORS
F. (hrninan. President, .lant , -...larnilton, 11. Saxton
R. C. IVoodward, 110hiry I'. 11 unD.rich
Fert'y, ~1 IV. 1.11,y, Tr.•nui.l John M.•ssengt,
Meet on the Ist .Nloo.l,ty 01e....11 31,1111 at 8 t.'. lock A
\l , at Eduratll.o
coßl'ifitATP)NS
IS kNK —Prre.i.lent, R. 11. Ilen,l er .
eon. W. \I. Iteeteto CaNh and C. It. Pfahler
TollerB, NV. Al. Pf.thler. Clerk, ,Inn. Underwoo :doe
longer. 1./m.4:U,', It. M Preei.lent, It C.
Woodward, Sidles IVorelhurn. B r j e l ler , ;r o b I ,
!Zug, 'W. W. Dale, John D. Uarges , ,Imeph .1. Logan,
Jno. Stuart, jr.
Fins? N trulNkr. u 1, Samuel Hepburn
Cu-filer. Jos. C Ilnitur, Tel C. Brindle,
*wager, Josso NVni. IC tr, .1.,1111 Dunlap,
NVouda, John C. Dunlap, ,I•ale lir outlet. nu,/ 01111 S.
6torrott, Sam]. Hepburn, Direeturs.
CUNtnnal.kNn \ - Au.KY 12.111.1 , 0 AD SIP tsy
Frederick Watts: Soeretars nod Treasurer, Edward
H. Biddle: zinpeillutendent, O. N. Lull. l'at.JnAmm
trains three tittles a day. rarlikle A 1 , 1 ,1111110 alien,
Eastward, leaves Carlkle I CIS A. M , arriving nut Car
lisle fu.2o SI. Throu4ll Iraiva East ward, 10.1 U A. M.
and 2.42, 31. St estus'ard at 5.27, A. M., and 2.53 I'.
31.
CARLISLF. G 4s AND Co»p4>'s • .— President, 1,111-
nal Todd; Treasurer, A. L. Spory.lur; linty.; in London
ueorgm P. Watts, Won. JI. Boottnn,
E. M. Birlillo, henry Saxton. ft. C. NVuottn..trd, J. IV.
Patton, F. ilerduor and U. S, Croft.
Wel ETI ES
Cuml,rlnnfl St?" I 9,1., No. 197, 1. Y. 11. meet, nt
Marion Hall oa Lilo 211 and 4tll 'ruesdays of every
month.
Et. John's Le 1,. No 9•;oo 1 V 11. Meets 1.1(1 Thura
d a y of each 1,1,1111. at linden Ilall.
Carlisle Lodge No. 111 I. U. of O. F. Meets Monday
evening. at 'I rout's bnildin.r.
Letort Lodge No. WI, 1. 0. of CI. T. Meets every .
Thureclay evening in it ileum's 111111,3 d story.
FIRE COMI'ANIES
'rho Union Firo Company w, orvanlxod In 1789.
House in ',outlier between Nit nnd
The Cumberland Fire Compary wan Instituted Feb
18; 1808. House in Badfold, between Main and Pom
fret.
The pond Will Firs Company Was instituted In
March, 1855. Mouse in Ponift,t, licar Hanover
re Oro hook and Ladder Company was imitltu
tad In 1.859 . .; House iu Pitt, noar Main.
RATES OF POSTAGE
Postago on all Jotters of ono half ounce wolght or
under. J cents pro paid.
Poetago on the HERALD within the County, free.
Within the State 13 cents per annum. T., any part
of the United States, 911 route Postage on all iris
•loit pApers, 2 rents per ounce. Allvertisorl lettere to
be charged with cost of advertising
~~
'(fiIIiLLEGE.
THIS Institution ig again reopened and
11_ rcorganized,• with t' 'fall corps _ ot"reacliers 'Bnd
pr,reased thellitios , r4•Cnrilele, l'a. Young man por
putt us to maim a direct, appeal to you 'lapel:mit of that
Which slinntd"claim. ydnr 'first Consideration. In the
words of Iliat honored and talented ftetehman Henry
Play, II Ironing .man ,preparo. yourself , he business "-r-
Thiti bmnlnttically. a business Institution... RrarY
attlthinr in hero faught fo originate and conduct all the
Books and Forms pertaining - to actual buitiness,—thus
bringing thqqry Into . prin,t leo, and thereby,baving thorn
ptirsue tiro regular routine of thnCounting.house,
'PO r U
it SE '01? INS,TRUCTION,,
ouble Entry. floolcrkeeplug In Its various forum and
M ,H T - Mations, Including general Wholesalo and 'Retail
business, - warding', Commission, Exchange, Jobbing
end „Importing,. Railroading, 'titeumboating, Baniting,
Commerrialeatoulations, Penmanship in every tylo pt
the art, 'Phonography, &c. Olorginion's inns enter the
schooloat tailf the regular rates. Night 'eatiotli if . rdni 7
fto 0,1.%151. r , ,, •
l'or r further particulars call at the College Ito oms,
(Bin:nut's Building) or address
Soßct for a Ciroular,
1.Pe0l ! •-•A4 .
OQUMAN'S 'PHOTOMAPHid -
GALyaneyi
tdu latraot r oplicuilathe Natlthialliiinki In' Urn. Nett/
YIY, ;
. , .
&
milogo . .o.llAltlVONlOVS;lntrgducjyg the V 1
100 orybdir Woo im'evOry . instrisinony, , •
s:
p,AtION'Oja n5l: • • ‘, , '
ILAL EP; pA.V,IS, &
c 9., inletTo9l4PfAvoS for otich
'at nilbdiar cbid4t,loit• "
• -M. OvarBo,oBoooldi .
• •, JA-MlllB, prAAK. t3.olet A gppt.
270'281 Flftlk strooi, above Oprtiqp,
j'A
25 00
00
7 00
From Chatok.rs' ',Milli, JOlll . lllll j
ON BANK-SERVICE IN CAN-
'5l - .7 - I , ^rotels'soM — lorth - ,
Political tuid ,ocial life in America
have been often described. The idio
syncrasies of the people—their hurry
impulsiveness, and extravagence—forni
the-staple of wir tourist:' books. All
travelers loole throu:di the same tele
scope, but through alternate ends. NI.,
Pull, resolving to write "a work" upon
the ngre,it Eepuhlic,” obtain.; a huge
inagnifying- 4 1.tss. and landiug upon the
pier at NUM; York. mounts the first wood
pilo 111 - 0 an olvervqtion Ile is of
course lost in,wonder and dedight, for
he has resolved to make a great Doctor
Derogate, who sets his eye to the big
end of the glass, and reconnoitres the
most insignificant country in the world.
Ile is sati,lit2d of this when he walks a
round his tripod, :cud looks back, through
the other end, upon the land of his na
.tivity.
But there are many things in Ameri
ca which neither Messr.s. Paid nor Dero
gate can see. Tice little phenomena which
furnish the best clues require micro
scopic investigation. They must be ob
served closely, carel ally, continuously,
and by those who Jr.-//—not thilic who
run. What, for example, can a flighty
tourist know of homes in the Ihr West
Ile sees the Kirests and praries, but there
are huts amid diem where men and chil
dren live. fie looks down upon vast
cities, whioh have sprung up in a night;
the smoke of their thousand hearths
curls toward him; the church-spires glit
ter beneath, the river and the shipping
cluster around; but, deep in their intri
eacies,abide strange beings—the lifise.
the wanton, the wretched. These have
not entered into our sage reports, though
criminal life across the Atlantic is one of
the most unique and individual manifes
tations of that afiThnitlous •society.
Crime is universal. It is the great
pioneer and. colonist. Cramped in old
and dense' populations, its restless in
stincts impel it to wild and far-of adven
tures. From the flight of Cain to the
exodus of'Britipi Conviets the 'men of
sin have beon , the founders of
,nations
They hew down the wilderness, throttle
the :wipers, and slay the savages.. Thou
come better and more timid folk to. es-
tablisli order and religion.; and su course
of time, tho' original knaves are canon
ized, and Sounding ppdigroe are tracod
to them': Just such ts' transition is tak
sng place now .srs Armerica. o young
Republic is still the great Alsatia:for the,
'01 . (1' Wo 1 0 i s; 1'1 1)( 3 TillY., disaffected
subject. -Tho enterprise of dui bountry is
00*
se likowise , is its:aggreSsivoness, its-pcie , !
no*, eld 7 '
snentis gainingithe:ascendaney, aqleast
in' die older 'snittleiniiiitS greatdoal
of Crime exi,s6 s , though . stis esceroised:in
new , and 'curious '•modes,.. prior ter this
present. civil was, o'cm : existed, no,
tional paper 'Currency in th'e' United
A. M. 7.11.7MMV1C,
CarllH,lo,.l!l,
VOL. 64.
RHEEM & WEAKLEY, Editors & Proprietors
ive,tinlll.
THE LOVE KNOT
Tying her bonnet under her chin,
Fhe tied the raven ringlets In;
But not alone iu the silken snare
Did she catch her lovely floating heir,
For, tying her bonnet under her chin,
She tied a young man's heart e, Rhin.
They were strolling together up the bill,
Where tho wind comes blowing merry and chill;
And it blew the curls a frolicsome rare,
All over the happy peach-colored fare,
Till scolding, and laughing, she tied them in,
Under her beautiful dimpled chin.
And It blew a rnlnr bright aFn hlraon
Of the luschide tosFin_
All over the cheeks of the prvttiest girl
That ever linpi iSI,II ell in roaming curl,
Or, In tying liar bonnet under her chin,
Tied a young Inan',, heart within,
Steeper and cterper glow the hilt
Mudd,. Incrier, chortler milll
The western wind blew down and played
'rho wilds t trick with the little maid;
As, 13 ins her bonnet under her chin,
I. , he tied a young man's heart
Oh, western w nd, do you think It was fair
play sorli Ire is with her flouting hair?
'l'o glndi ugly. 11laetudy do ) our beat
To Woo; her out the young man's breast,
I.ola I, hmi _ntaly tinned her in,'
hod kn0:0..1 her inouth mud dimpled chin.
Oh, Eller): Valle, you little thought
Au 111411' ago, wlieu you besou,;ht
Thin country lass to waig w HI you,
Alter the sun 1,3,1 4.1r,e.1 the dew,
15 tint perilous dau,er you'd be
As uu• LICd her bounut under her chin
A QUESTION
I c4e-e my e) es, and unto again
tod lloubo and color Creo
i {AI it.. 4 bUICLII 1411,10 011 thu 1111,11 iI t lawn
I=l
The) led gelantuith mourn for the suet
111. 11..t1, 11l tile
lotmer ro.ul L. 1,01 t LIU pOrlil
N‘,..ot. iu tne ,umulurOtt
I g Llii 011,11 lhr pot h 11,1 1.111‘,14i1 thu hall
lu th,, Ip14.11:5 LIJOpII.I,
ilall h.,1,11., nll.l Ulu I it... 1.1
‘,111,1u,h uj...1 the r.ool
M 3. I, nits Kt the "roil and plays
A wild ola atini.go alit(
I),Lint/1:3 pg a 1.11.111 yu,uul
(JIM Lilat I ,1111, I hul “g”
Softly I st nI t • her Lid
lit cal:ing Of in the midst ~ 1 n line,
'l,ove. I n as I hinhlng 111 In u.' sho say,:
=EMI
And then she pntµ Korth her bands in mien
She never slur. in the parlor nom—
]u perfect dny, by t
She sings a In: that the ang,•!, know,
Mit She I'VeT jhi uk of we!
C`~ `Y
Es r:~~.~.~11:s7s:~ i7:ti~~.
(:EnnnE ArAlm) TnwNsED
„ 4 4r
•
Sttes. Thousands of corporations, more
or less irresponsible, issued promises to
pay, and the monetary insecurity thus
engendered, gave license to all descrip
tions of fbrging and counterfeiting.
I was sitting in the office of my jour
nal ono evening, when Detective Dal
lagan came in. He had promised to no
tify me of the first good 'tease" of which
he might have charge, and at present Ito
was on the track of a notorious offender.
by name Jules Ingram, a native of Mar
tinique. This man hail been chief' clerk
in the largest produce house of the \Vest
India Islands, where he had swindled to
the amount of' filly thousand chillers, and
had escaped to New Viirk. Ile brought
with him blank bilh,heads and drafts of
every business firm in the tropics, and
had deposited these at a hotel on the
(play. After a year of prodigious success
he was cau g ht in Missouri, and sen
tenced to five years' imprisonment. II is
discharge marks a singular adjustment
of time to crime. Within twelve
hoursa
after the 6)l7er recovered his documents.
the place of deposit was in ashes. He
renewed his guilty enreer immediately.
obtained five thousand dollars within a
week, and escaping to C a m i d a . throat
oned to plunder every A merican halt ker
from Portland to Galveston. He was
all accomplished pcutnan , scholar ;111.1
book-ketTer, WWI
details, soil lead so mastered
the secrets of the postal system. that he
could operate lay proxy and uhi,initon—
ly: Ile was belieied now to be dirrlliemg
Dui the frontier; and the hankers of all
the Atlantic rifles had sub.eril,l lends
for his appreheic-iini and untivictinn nt
)vhatever cc-t. A winwiti to Nvlcoa In
was atta 'tied, had beta] seen at
Lane. g,irc2 we4war i. II W,I, 111'1,1,;11)-
IC t11:11 iLc and dot (miser were nnt ihr
apart, and Balbi L .ill Iris lied Inc tt,
ceed northward Willa hint the sainc after
l,nti. that lie ini,2,llt I:ocp upon
:
their t ra il \V e tblii , Nred by rail the
valley of the I\ltdri.Nrk. and at lt“nie.
ambition , nient of n
:yew . !wand by telegraph. of a new
beat at IVatertitwn. on the
Mack river. IW;11 1 the 110:1,/
Lake ()Ilf;11'1(1. I I 1111111)11.1/I1',Ily Meant Ili
dwell wilhnnt Federal jurisdictimi, ap
pear periodically in the States, ahil after
each l offence, escape across the St. Law
rence. 'there was, I kurkeve., an. extra
litinn einliraeily the criine of
; Lut the ciirmalit les cif law, and
the jealousie4 ni Clan:nil:tit and Flute of
ficials, practically flitiitlletl it.
Iluillu '-
rut was .shrewd and bold ; lto delorlainutl
to entrap lii rant, ; h u t i n ;l ie
failure of iutri nc, to suizo and kidnap
hint any Ivhete upon Iltrci:2l) soil, 'rho re
ward would hr. tarp. ;mil the iltiti.icitive
had takcii him ilia . I
_ . !Cu the c.ipturp a new-T:iper wouriety,
1:d (.11,111,i,:zc ,)f' tho
ba.uliers. NVe (TO a Ellit.4l with 1 .,, NV I I/ •
pieces, and nic.int to hunt and ti,ll
he la 1:c horde r. 13n11:1 . 2.;111 1,(2: , ;111 t
writch the tele:_l raph , ta t lofts. ttth 1 I to
plity t _gilt pm] ,Iturt.,lll;itt aun n_
troutier rl and
us hall seen 111. 4 1%1111, Litt we end hie
filfelograph. It reiirc , cinted a small.
tholti A lli fill, grizzle wan. addifitcfl
to cigars and au fi)ii-elass. I tiniu,ffht I
could reco 4 .nize the original, if I raw
him, but hail qualm:4 to the repute to
be derived from thief-catching.
The. detective ' s lint prOCalltiMl WaS it)
forward a description of the fellow to
every revenue officer upon the t' , lnerican
bank of the St. Lawrence. The func
tions of these (lid not ( - imbrue° State
crimes, of which forgery was one. and
they were. therefore charged to detain
litrain fi e. • dcha•dng the currency—a
national offence.
After 'three days of provoking ill sue
oess, we traced the fltrger's female ac
complico to Cape Vincent, a paltry
American village at the junction of the
lake and the river. Ilere.she had mys
teriously disappeared; neither the return
rail nor the Canada ferry, nor any of
the border steamers, had taken her a
board; the conclusion of liallagan was
prompt and sagacious—she had met the
forger himself, and he had spirited her
away. The river
,was here seven or ton
miles broad s and divided • by many Is
lands Ingrain may have located him
self upon one of - these, — lnaby means or
a row-beat made his .passage to either
mainland. We acted upon the surmise
at once, hired. . oarsmen and a battettu,
and beat.up and' down the channel for
many leagues. It was rare sport to take
the silvery pickerel and muscolong, and
I would gladly have relinquished the hu
man prey for. these inoffensive creatures.
The skies Were cool and clear; the river
ran stqaddy s tieaward without a tide lolly
jug fantits'tlo„hluffs, fringed with.a strip
of heacb,:, and plunied with • black
leughed,Cedars.,•lThe panther and the
Indian 'were around its, as in:otdonial
thrya ovi' and then;'
d r. ) 4i P:k b,19•1111F • P* l3' 94
"agdly; ; an 4. wp • hrought,Aown
Wild goose frem; his drown in flin**.
,in trio
ideal—virild; solitary, boundlessu-4yet here
were we on. the piOndSt. LaiirendU with
.thclprositfacp4Ose oft capturing a jail,
bird.• ";FOr'a week 'effort,4 *ere 'fu , •
htile • t nre'weire . a few faritihouSeS Up—on
CARLISLE, PA., FRIDAY', DECEMBER (2, 1864.
the frontier islands, but we were satis
fied that Ingram harbored in none, of
them, and the configuration of the coast
was such that the exploration proinised
to be interminable. Di' the meantime,
the rogue attempted a third forgerylat
Ogdensburg, filly miles distant, and the
press teemed with complaints of the po
lice system and of Ilallagan.
It was on the twelfth day of our ad
venture that the detective, sick of care
and exposure, made over to me the boat
and out fit. The Waterman rowed me at
dawn to a cove within Wolf Island, the
largestof the group; it was a lonely place,
removed from either channel of the river,
visible from neither mainland, and out of
sight of every sail and habitation. I
made fast my line at three hundred yards;
the burnished bait skimmed the surface
like a star; the rower never tired nor
slackened, and before nine o'clock I had
taken a score of pickerel, not one of which
weighed less than six pounds. I was no s y
reminded of breakfast ; the island was
near at hand ; and as we pulled along the
border to find a landing, a turn in the
coast revealed a comfortable frame dwell
ing set, against a ridge of thick timber,
and flanked by a smooth beach. Smoke
wirier] Ileum its Chimney, a boat bordered
the strand, and a dog rose up and howl
ed as our oars awakened him. Directly,
a man and in woman appeared at the door;
the former walked down to the skiff, and
leaping into it, sculled rapidly away, with
out saying a word. The woman received
us shyly, but hospitably. She gave my
man the use of fire and kettle; and whife
he cleaned and prepared the - fish, I stroll
ed into the yard to regard the establish
ment. The wood grew tall and lorded
close to the premises ; there scorned no
approach but by the cove ; the dwelling
was almost without furniture ; neither
cattle, nor sheep, nor poultry inhabited
the barns, and the only sounds to brea
the general hu-h were those of wild birds
careening oterhead, ur the waters plash
ing upon the sands. A tore in the edge
of the cedars br,ught. me to a path, which
I pursued curiously till 1 stripped at the
brink of a p.n, l or inlet, wheie a raft lay
moored to the shoe. As sivail.tr chan
nels environed the dwelling, I concluded
that it sioodupon a suunll,separate
and had for this reason escaped our pre
vious notice. The woman was watching
me from a window as I ,:cturoed. ._:he.
was hatuhome, but not prepessesiting=a
fine animal face, a little dissolute, per
haps, and strangely out of place in this
bLak, secluded country. She was indis
posed to converse, admitted that she had
lived here hut a little while,and at length,
weary with ,;!/;,/,', took a yellow-covered
novel from a shell, and read in uneasy
silence, cy , in 1110 at intervals. The
Iv ;is midi y composed ; e pa'inting,ol
it. wetilil Lay • Lcen nnpardmiable.—the
hart. 110•. e.•:; ant! n.JL , the ‘‘•• ! 141 ;
eedals, tl,c •It.•sol;ife I,ltvii and \;iller, and
this Line, flisilionabie, sensual %;.m,an,
rea.ling a louse novel amid the ruin. 1
took down the few books from the shelf :
I I unt's Merchant's Magazine," a pile of
shipping hats, a manual of book-keeping,
a lot of business directories, a treatise on
commercial law --an odd library, surely,
for t ht»vilderness. Revolving these
things in my wind as I ate, I made a sec
wid abortive attempt to en,:age madame s
attention, and at last bade her good-bye.
"Row we to the Canada shore," I said
to the watcrtuan ; "we will spend it night
with the British 1,i0n." 60
lauded at a hamlet near the city of
Kingston, and proceeding to a tidy tav
ern, stretched myself beneath a window,
and essayed to read a newspaper. Dull
ness and fatigue induced drowsiness 1
was half-way into a dream, when the en
trance of somebody disturbed mo. A
person in a gray coat had taken up• the
journal, and was persuing it by the aid of
an eye-glass. His side and back were
turned towards me, but I thought I red •
ognized him as the surly odcupant of the
dwelling upon the dove. was small,
lithe, and gentlemanly ; and after awhile
ho took a billet from his pocket, folded
it, and lighting a cigar, throw away the'
remnant of the paper. A commotion of
some description now attracted him to the,
exterior, and before 1 could compose my
self to sleep Again, the noise in front irew
fierce and boisterous.. I found the straug
---er-wirang I who
had lately lost some horses,' und- were dis
posed •to r'egtird-:itil:':- : ,04" knewe
thieveS lie.; was calm:.tuadipoliie, and
having abashed them semewhat*,:Withdreti
to his vessel atid..puslied , inte'the .stream.
As he stood up in the bateau, and faced
me for_ thefirattinlni ; tin) ,001)Aotipn,rilsh
ad upon tiro that' this' titan and Jules'
grain ward , oiie`ll ri'he'p,h,o6graPti , ln the
possession•of Ballagary abuld.'have been
taken from no other facci.',.;the snmo
small, thoughtfuj„grizzle-hahcd.'Mati
gal:dq . , .
were: the eye : glaSSand
the eigori; andms,..with.a quick heart, I
. *4 l lO.l' O Y - eY,AO , 9iP4 0 , ‘4A1 . 9; ' 9 1, AO9
ladylon,tne : fonelymslqicl,cttme ttnreern.
:Of Oi°:'oA;OP*O'Pr;i4,kirol"s lii
otreat;
tsro`ttiortinimfile
ony. Ir.t eiMnPl (40.1ne-vins the forged!,
~
Another clue at tindo - diaOtilited
the billetwtirmlifolOielhadiightedi , hiS,
Cigar. •I On tered't bar‘rocint treinulOus,
ly, and took the remnant'fromilhe
the.blpod gushed to my face at the first
won.] ;
the sum of
hid 81:1118 , .
Unique Island
est Indies
-,- . o3o.paper was ablank bill of exchange,
lone of many with which the culprit had
operated.! I waited no longer, but sum
mohed my waterman; and, relieving each
ot6r at the oars, we reached Cape Vin
cent at dusk. It was not without re
motse that I confided my discoveries to
Ballagsn. I regretted that it had been
my_destiny to make them. The law had
its raidagents, of whom I was not one.
My.meditations might not be soothed on
bleA nights to come by the thought of a
miSerahle man whom my officiousness had
consigned to a cold prison cell. But now
thai the facts were in my possession, it
was.criminal to.withhold them. I laid
them before the detective as he lay in
bed, leaning his powerful head and neck
upcjil a muscular arm, and his sthall secre
tive eyes grew blank and expressionless,
and he listened like one deaf. It was
his professional way of denoting satisfac
tion.
"You must take the ferry to Kingston
immediately," he said ; "I will dictate a
telegram and a placard ; the one must be'
dispatched, and the other printed at once
upon your al ri cal. Write :"
I took up pen and paper, and he out
lined as follows :
"To all Brandi officials and residents
on the St. Lawrence : I, Pepin Petit, of
Fort Elie, Canada West, have lost eight
prime horses. The thief is known to be
a malt, grizzle-haired, intelligent per
son, ncar,tighted, and wcaring a gray
coat ; was last Seen near Kingston, and
is believed to dwell on or near - Wolf Js
hind. I will pay a thou-and dollars for
his detention ; he will doubtless attempt
to land between Kingston and )lontical."
I dropped the pen indignantly.
"This is a lie, Haliagan said ;
trick of your cralt ; I will have nothing
to do with it."
"1 place you under arrest :" thundered
the giant, dashing away his coverlets. mml
have notieed yOur squeamishness ; the law
will hold you as an accomplice of the for
ger; it is in your power to serve justice;
you refuse ?"how will public opinion -brand
and - confessed It.
My companion was remorseless as a tiger.
They paint Justice blind ; her ministers
are all, too keen ; but this man had no
heart, he could not comprehend a scru
ple; he despised a sentiment or a fear;
if his newborn babe had stood between
himself_and Jules lim . grain, he would have
trampled it down. I compared hint only
to kbloodhnund at the end of the s:Tiit;'
half-dead with fatigue as he was, his jaws
were quiverinm;; time tracks of the game
were fresh, time smell of blood was on his
nostrils, lie was up and alert! That ni 4 hr
the trains on the Grand Trunk Railway
carried handbills to every river side village;
the Canada shore was mrlosed against the
forger as securely as the Americium shore
had already been. Horse thieving was
not less h_mineus than murder, where live
stock constituted the sole riches of' a peo
ple; they would watch for Jules Ingrain
like savages nourishing a irmhwa. lie
would have but three alternatives: to take
to the forests, at the peril of being de
soured by panthers; to drift upon the
broad Ontario, and perish by storm or hun
ger; or to follow the current of the river
among the Thousand renowned Isles, dar
ing the passage of the rapids, until over
taking seine European vessel in the gulf,
he might bid farewell to the New World.
I slept little during the night, and sought,
the quay ono hour before daybreak, that
I might take the first ferry for Cape Vin
cent. The steamer bad not-come in; and
as the air was very cool, I resorted to the
furnace of a tow boat just firing up along.
side the wharf; the deck hands were all
gathered at the windows, peering in the
darkness towards the American shore.
What aro you expecting, boys?
asked
" The asliohiashun fur the .pertektion
of property in hoses," said a grimy eo•
gineor, "has gone off to the island to burn
otit a boss-thief. They been a suspeetin'
hitt' fur a week; to-night, a fellow
from Fort Erie brought, positive proof.
Wo area lookin ottor ttao blaie."
In 4 few momenta, the sky
'ligbtod, up; the woody,•
, outlines of
the island , wererevoaled flickeringly";
, shad-
OW,e,of flame were reflected:,across the
broad; dark current-I: and soon we made
'out a blaoksobjeet ad vatioirigin the glare;
it was •the forry-boat, und-the first man'to
6t9p,ash'aro tvps.Ballagan .:
"Our friend bas eseapednie;" be said;
"",he le,ft.tne a . ,94rious paper by lila lady,
who, unfortunately, has no dwelling at
present, and haie• given her sbelter in
the• . , , ,
I tot& 'die - Mite in my hsnds;,,tho ; wik r
tiug was (Roar and beautiful r as if engray.;
MEM
EMI
aim" , ni • .c, .11 , !
/0 tne iicteenve _dtappzn9t at'
Vincent :—I would respeciftillY tilrgidet
tlintyou ani:doing lyburklPa di 0 Wrong,
not:tri tity injusticthc :If you Capture' e;
you make, say,!:thrEe: )tiliontliattrdollays ;
gi v 9 , PP fair, - Pl l 4 )s' . P.°ls>!anO.:‘l l i
give tuy o]( a.lTaagdroO 41 1 ,9Porillif 9114rp.,
arid 'you' tivon ty / Llibusan ac t . 101 , 1 ..
estproposition; consider it: I '1 know that
NEM
My first contributions to the Canadian
journals were suggested by Ballagan, and
appeared next morning. They were in
tended to inflame public sentiment, and
related certain fables of Ingram's feats at
running stock out of the colony. On the
same night, every fireside from Toronto
to Quebec was made acquainted with the
fugitive's personnel. Vengeance was
sworn against him wherever two boors
met together. The farmer in the field
kept one eye ever open upon the river;
each canoe, barge, smack and steamer, was
subjected to espionage; the whole fron
tier was hunting down one man. We
knew that he was adrift in his bateau,
for now and then somebody would espy
him for an instant gliding along the edges
of bluffs, or sculling through fields of ma
' rine-grass, or vanishing behind a woody
cape of island. Thrice he 'attempted to
land, but the country-ft 1k drove him back
with execrations. The dairy-maid would
not give him a cup of milk ; the Indian
refused him bread and fire ; once some lit
tle children turned his boat adrift, but he
•
swam astrelmn and recorded it. Thu.,
friendless, hungry, and at bay, he moved
forever northward towards the cold gulf,
till, having entered the romantic territory
of the "Thousand Isles,'' we lost all tra
ces of him. Our voyage through this
most picturesque of archipelagoes was
rendered thrice entrancing by the adven
ture which had developed it. There are
said to be literally a thousand islands chts
tering in the brOad neck Or estuary of the
St. Lawrence Many of thee• can scarce
ly afford foothold to a bird; others sup
port a single miniature tree; some sustain
huge masses of rock, piled in eccentric
forms, and holding in their crevices the
palms of climbing vines; a few are large
and heavy with turf and woodland, and
all are verdant as spring. A voyage a
mong them is like the reading of a poem
or the passing of a dream; ono seems to
be far ;AWL in a balloon, gazing at the di
minished land and sea; for were there
but little folk to inhabit these ping}- con
timents, we should have Liliputia indeed.
Here, in the winter, the drift ice heaps
up crags and monuments, and the floes
and crush up in Kammer, as if they
would bear the Thousand Isles away to
their Arctic home ; the wild birds bring
forth their young upon the surface; the
cold spawn of the fishes grows warm and
vital beneath ; the striped and spotted
snake lies among their debris, charming
the sparrow and the blue jay ; and the
wolf passing from land to land, halts here
in the dead midnight to howl. Not a
human being tenants the Thousand Isles ;
they are sprinkled here in wondr Jus irreg
ularity ; the d._,ep river winds in and out
among them as it' lost or tarrying ; and
the tourist passing by is reminded of some
tableau in the hielodrarna, too beautiful
and unexpected to be real.
In pursuit of [grant, we explored ev
ery islet of this region. We found a gun•
dred traces of him, fur he was forever
flitting to and fro—now the embers of his
fire, now the echo of his rifle, now the re
port of sonic alarmed fisherman, whom the
fugitive had p issed lik 3 an apparition.
One day at sunset we haw him—a ragged
haggard, hatless being, standing upon a
rock scarcely larger than a man's hand,
with the waters.ohurning around him,
and Lois bmeau at his feet. lie was sharply
outlined against the red sky, and he stood
in an attitude of despair, leaning wearily
upon his rifle. I thought of the Wander
ing Jew, or the last Indian of his race,
halting on the brink of the Pacific. Sud
denly he beheld us; gnashing his teeth,
and lifting' his clenched hand, lie leaped
into his vessel, and sculled away like the
wind; we lost him in the darkness; and
saw him no more fur many days.
Two weeks had now been consumed in
this singular pursuit. At last, Ballagan
became troubled and doubtful. It Was
possible for Ingram, changing his position
every night, to loud us upon a wild chase
for a year. Ile could plunder barns and
river craft for nourishment, and fish and
game were plentiful. Desperate, in view
of ihe penalty of his offence, wo know
that roving among those green islands was
oonsenant with his adventurous nature.
Fresh from five years' entombment in the
jail, and hopeful of guilty gain, he would
leave no artifice untried to retain his lib
erty; and Ballagan feared that,he would
surrender himself to the Canadian author
ities, when . t4cleVicii of Mr: Pepin Pet•
it, might be manifest,. Ono,dey, at Ales.-
Andrie Bay, we received a dispatch from
a station far down the river; Jules In
gram. had been seen near the 'head of the
First Ranirf; he had foiled US; and with
. • •
along Start,, was Making hie. way : ; yigor
ously toiyarde.the„ciulf Bt, Awrprico.
Every Istroko:ial, the, oars was:a)new hope
to"hini;- in tisnoliouril'he would t`pass 'the
Atnerioan lino; and'. 4ien' '
tenfold." Ballagan
aotod with- his usual- decision ; -we took
III) 'ok 1 15t:444, 1 , and Shod'
Xt , ;Was: l l 3 isinikb ,v 1 491/,..WQ.1 reftellga ,the
head of' the.rapids, and , 1481itl Was 'forbid:.
ben, toiderietind- them in the dailtiegd, the
vessel 'halted at a quay r and-watteif ail";
mormpg. it was a.gyanc steamer ,7 ", a
floating palacte"----ancl having walked with
%I
1Q I\a
TERMS:--$2,00 in Advance, or $2,50 within the year
Canada and the States are alike shut to
me, but I still live, and I never will be
taken alive. ig INGRA M."
Ballagan up and down the cold prome
nade deck, listening to the roar of the
waters, I wearied of his impatience and
retired so my sumptuous state-room. :
was soundly dreaming; my heart was
back among the• Thousand Tides, and our
wild search was all forgotten, when raps
upon my chamber door brought me to my
feet. It was Ballagan, and I knew by
his blank, sphinx-like countenance that
something was to ensue.
"Come out at once," he said, in deep
unimpassioned monotone. " Help me to
launch the boat ; you are to go on the
water with me. No flinching 1 or, by the
Great American Eagle, your life isn't
worth a rushlight."
A premonition of danger crept coldly
upon me; I knew that he saw me falter,
but I did not speak. I marked 'in the
gray dawn from the windy deck the aw
ful surging of the rapids, tossing their
foamy hairs into the sky, blending their
sprays in white cataracts of mist, and
dashing upon black rocks, imperfectly re
vealed, as if meaning to wrest them froin
their everlasting bases. The whole wide
St. Lawrence was a fierce, tumultuous tor
rent, boiling„ and churning, and clamor
ing The boles of some huge tree were
passing down the current; and I marvel
ed to see them tossed aloft like reeds,:the
waters catching them as they fell again,
and hurling them high into the air, till,
passing from cascade to cascade, they
emerged at last a miie below, bruised, and
scarred, and broken. Of what advan
tage would be a man's strength struggling
with such an clement? I'haroah and his
host, with all Egypt at their back, might
have gone down in a twinkling there.—
Traditions " existed of Indian hunters
whose skilled hands had guided the canoe
through the same flood, but no living
Twin had dared the experiment. Huge
steamers went down shivering, and some
had been torn into splinters, while sailing
craft of all descriptions made the detour
by canal.
"Do you see something stealin,g along
the margin yonder ?" said B dlagan 'to
rue. "I Lave remarked it loran hour."
I took his proffered glass and recog
nized distinctly an approaching bateau,
and a wild li.lure in a gray coat sculling
in the stern. It was Jules Ingram. Ile
was malting energetically fur the Canada
shore, for he seemed to have an intuition
of his proximity to the rapids ; and aver
and anon, as he advanced, his face was
turned to re,!ard the steamer distrustfully.
"Crouch here by the gunwale," said
Ballagan, 'when I give the word, run
out the lines of the I atenu. I shall have
the oars ; take you my rifle in the bow.
Be cool and steady, and obey my orders "
No soul was astir upon the vessel : we
watched the guilty man with our hearts
in our eyes. It required no effort of his
to drive the bateau toward us, fur the
velocity of the current impelled it at rac
ing pace At each instant the dawn grew
brighter ; at each instant the victim drew
nearer. We marked him with - the naked
eye, at length—a face like that of a wild
beast, half furtive, half ferocious, and
gaunt with hunger and anxiety ; his griz
zle hairs, uncovered, shaded his savage
beard, and his inflamed eyes glared cav
ernously from their dark, deep sockets;
his clothes were rent and stained ; his feet
were scarred and bare ; yet with all this
wretchedness, the attitude of •th© man Was
that of pride and defiance ; it was the con
sciousness of deserved misery, for which
.he could not apologize, and which he had
determined to endure.
The wharf to which wc‘were moored
kept him out of view of the rapids till he
had drifted directly beneath us, and then
the
_,danger broke suddenly upon him.
Ile seemed stricken dumb, and the oar
quivered in his fingers. At the same
moment, Ball,gan called out to me to loose
my line. The boat dropped like a bolt,
we clambered down as hastily. The do
teotivo seized the scull, while I crouched
with the rite at the bow, and pushing
away in a trice, we had almost collided
with Ingram's vessel before be was well
aware of our presence.
It was a pause of a second: The
wretch give one fierce glance at the shore,
the steamer and the cataract, and then
with the impulse of despair, struck od
boldly for tho rapids
He had not the strength of Baliaga'n,
but he was a better hand with the - oitr.
His hairs blazed in the wind; his' 'rags
fluttered, and his eyeirdistencred,till'their
pupils grew small antiglitiiteerink
men worked withthe energy; of death;
the one to , 6veitalre 'and' capture before.
the slaiochad pulled'them in';
to intimidate . ,!portuiPS, liia . :soolAnod, of
engtilfliig,both, or failing,. to mahe. that
so lt ilj . l,anee a terrible reality.
My .senses wore marvellously -acute:
there was no tiny moving thing in.nature
which I did not observe; the iN'srittoftif
passing chip' moving 'On the
waves; a little flab 4ottering:o„ f49„EPIP'
face; a, distant -hawk, .swpoPinif
spook. in the-, ally th (+Tacking , the boat,
and the erack.of a , aplay,in•tlio , otir'potiat
carved devioo updir the stoehof the rifle;
first tin lin a m";•:th e• O 'britin'ti faith hip
upon theStealliei . ,'indP4saO,ilkoa , 7ll4c`,-
4 vAng upon' deck. It, Wag .thollialcening
of oval' en ergy--pvol
ilduionisliing map glory s of that or-
gacisui which a momont is 'ici'''shiitfei
forever
had still -,hope,- for we' '4lidiilOat
smoothly upon the, nurrent. It mist
that we were gaif4s he'
dared not tteritih--viith- liii - crimes upon
hip:,head; he,meant to ,eattapet. Abe s cats=
raot. Should-I stop his career:with-Vie
rifle? I lifted:thdbrightbinTel, Witktßur
'
r din. half-way in my heart; my net:ol;4ora'
taut as wires; I could have dropped 11:im
dead at his helm as readily as ono- wings'
a Cron. ) . -He saw'me glance ddwn the'
gfoove, and his. face froze my blood : it
was mine reflected all the agonies of man's'
nature pleading for life, life, life!
"Do not fro, boy l" cried Ballagan, be
tween his teeth; "I will,take' him alive.'
or die with him I"
On, and on we galloped the two :oars
men with black faces wrenehing-tkelwat
ersapart, and I could hear the hard
breathing of both-till the roar of the river
'absorbed all sound ' , So quickly ran my
thought that tlikened the noise of the
waters to human speech, they seemed to
be shrieking : "Drowned, drowned, drown
ed l" and the cry rang out so sonorously
thrilling that I caught myself repeating
it. ' I wondered if each drop of water had
not identity, and the waves a community
of intelligence, and every cataract a like
ambition, and that ambition now my
death ? Still I saw everthing. There
was a rocky island covered with trees,
just in the edge of the rapids; that was
our last salvation : if the boat passed, it
by there was nothing loft for hope. Al
ready the spray was lapping us ; the wa
ters were hearse and thirsty ; I looked
at Ballagan with dry, mute eyes, an 4 saw
no mercy there.
NO. 39:
"Pray, boy," be saidlL"pray fpr us
both, and hold fast I am going down
the flood."
The Island passed us at a wink. I
felt the boat lifted bodily, and the earth
seemed to leap up and crush itas fell.
Again we vaulted aloft, so far that in the
terror•of tho end I had time to note on'
the crowded decks of the steator ono
Woman praying with clasped hands, and
another who had swooned ; the planks of
the bateau were bent like withes of straw,
the wav , :is gushed from stem to stern ; I
was lifted from my feet--and--hurled -a - ,
gainst Ballagan, but he stood at the oar
like a rock ; I saw through my drenche'
eyes the forger as rigidly fixed ; his ves
sel moved like a winged thing, rather of
the air than of the element; and even in
this time of despair, his face Was dark and
haughty. Something stood amid-stream
as I gazed—black, jagged rooks, and we
were hurled upon them. The craft seem
ed crunching to atoms as we struck; it
it rose vertically, and the foam gushed in
at the bow. I knew that this was all.
Once more I marked the white waste of
waves, the vanishing islands, the flitting
banks_and trees and dwellings . ; and, As
a soft vision of home blinded my wet eyes,
I called upon the name of One mighty to
save and clutched the cold planks, and
knew no more.
— A - thunderbolt apparently awakened
me, and a terrible weight was pressing
upon my chest. I was lying in the bot
tom of the boat, now half-full of water,
and l3allagan was hold ing me fast with
his foot. I could scarcely see his faco
for smoke ; but a moment revealed' him,
standing grimly erect, with the rifle at
his shoulder.
"Rise !" he said, releasing me ; we
are fast sinking. Bear a hand with the
oar, and give me place in the bow."
1 staggered up tremblingly ; we had
passed the rapids ; they were churning
begind ; the felon glided on before,
but 1 marked that the scull was splin
tered in his fingers, and he was wring
ing his hands in pain ; the bullet of the
detective had broken his oar fairly at the
junction of shaft and paddle, and his arms
were palsied by the shuck. In a twink
ling he leaped fur •the seoond oar, but ere
lie could employ it the bateaux collided,
and, ho met Ballegan at the gunwale
knife in hand. The detective, clubbing
his rifle, struck him a powerful bloi,
which stretched him prostrate like a dead
MEM
The hunt was over; the folon was oap•
tive at last, and as we headed his launch for
the shore, our own wont down in ten
fathom water.
We landed upon the southern bank of
the St. Lawrence ; and Ballangan, with
his usual promptness, decided to under. ,
take the wild passage of the adjacent-rot
est, in preference to returning by steam
er, with the . prospect of trouble from
provinoicl officials. I have not the space,
to describe many exciting irieidkinti of thitt
'journey. We kept southward`for threp
weeks, traveling on foot, and poico p
habitation at the foot of the Adirondtto ,
Mountains in the_State_af Now_ rcirk.,...
Jules Ingram was duly inditedilVti fete
bills of forgery; but the hardsiiipii`of hie
frontier exile had boon tocFgte,at: f0r',41,0
feeble constitutio . O.'`Allo died i . l , lq4aok:,
coal and - self reliant to
Pallagan earned nioney'ortough.toira
.tiro from the poliee'bodyi hirltas found
loietu,s : Inthe tkiiisent givil ii wghbut
,tlie interregnitm s wo—bcd :Ike.qUOAL
laughs over the fate df . Pepiti Petit, Fiygi r
• thee etitlibent atook-dealei; , '
.in 'the Coder RapidsZa'ccOntipanitclll,,tito
unknown'
.
.
' ' --It is Ststed ,, quO tlid oo . Op18:pf It' Loh' -
'n39};(l ankliiiplita ; a ' fOrril.)o attack from
iiyant 0, A n olirky r day, aititill !:l s,l:toridag
Etnd,Admiral - Porter. - I , ' , ~.- ,
,xle c Tlurl9vi- Weed issaid to 3p pogo
:ti4ting; 11 Q /: t 4 .3 PlirOW9
jilltPlltVocer, „ 7f he gets it heivili make
lt truly,,,national , paper:,
ca.:ll. ITQ l 3O$y; of y Harrisburg, fwba.
has bamoonneotod with thbpresar94ttilat
pity -- /f°P°ffF"ol , : lo * -- f_o . !/ rbY
9 .,40, Plidfg.,lll , l4iVX4
crushed to aja.liy.:
zum,Throe &nit notes areiciliO . '-isille4
shortly by the government:
' . st