SIA) kN, PI BLISIIERS /OW. . - (.)1111E 25, B USINESS DIRECTORY .101 IN F 1)1 41)11iE 'ALL Q■ t , I i'lt.lli, E CHAPIN 1.13" V. hr an .1 r 14. t I 'h" '""L' \ l'". ..""+!'" 1 1 ,0 W H SHEII)I.S. ,r .4Nris. rsesern Kr vss n's Howl 13114 ,, aw%1,1...1 h i,. tur ,tar ~,, P VPI V Price li"''' ' W 01.1)S k rulritirrft:lrer• Vle9l and • Fit< " l . L / t rre t a ": s . " l sotr terlil It 'la •srtr.r.),ire water 7 ,• prrr Ira re L FOX, . irr•iuna,n few burs 11 0.1, I f 1)R EMERY, V..‘, • fr., of.l ,of fo' fi r . G W TODD. WIN Cartrth. Terrlr. at Dew. 1•44 n a ...I i ! kJ 11 6 E" .: I.ii by. r Sr ISt %1 irk... 1,1. 1111 %ill, 1 11.1.0 100011 hi ItT()N S. ERIt()N J et b. a 1.•. I Mrt 4 . , Lt.t-• a. • I, / 11. Bni.twd, l'r.riuttle,k I ,tir .11.,0gy NO. 5 R I um.. L ) ll►L Ei.i.to'rr. - 1•=t1 IZZI SIR C 11110 W NEU, „ •, ", e 4 th•l ••v• Lair. I'd TARE,IIIpt E II k BEI.' fir R,.,11,th, Pr. ,• .14t 4.1, I r 0.4 I etrie ••I 1 , I , r rn0..1 I) KI)11'.\1:11.: 1) i) k% ILK Ell N. I'h CEM In= =II (;RAII \v, It .111 - h ith ~, Lrie Pot NV MO( lit ~„. -,," Pl,lll6lnklll, 1•11.,•. • • a • HrFri 1161..1, , ..,• • 11 NI ' ENT, 111)/ it ( ) 1 ) ‘‘. =II 1 , 1 yr Er r Two! 1S NI kI"S I'IN ~k ,e V% • f t' ffillii li .1 It EC I i; o• 1. 1,, 0.91,4r1. Melc ikeo, cheap Pub rear. ruckr; I .11 lc, t a, ....t of 111 , If.• l 11,11.1“ . . CM' g t STEW A R ~...•n: Reu,' Draleis io Fund nod •Luiplo II ,lief,. wilote.lllklP kr-yr! Bow, I to./ Brit,* it' e liar-, LIDDELL, INIEPLEIt & Co 11 0 .1.-I - LIILII q! (run Pence. Ilklig, ,leillii il.. ; er•. V/11.111 P.-F.'. P , ... t r-7 ~ctr•nr. I k I Pith. of 111 ,, 1.0er , ant .."4 , !WM. or. ke . 4 , itte to r. •. CLARK t n.O Ratan ItrAir , • ni 1.1, .i.pet• rid 1) 4 .r .11 V f1et.,111,..14' ' . 1-'rEilit.i..ll'i& It k brwr. tin.l Rev.; Iliiit t. t .•von. Protturc Fvf..ll[ . . “. A ,1,1 Mlullf \ I fP. I • • • av. .-t thaw.. WM S I, tN I I •fl 1 IX .11 r... Last r.Jt tier t^t, SANFORI) A P. sr,. : - • A 4 11h1 ettll OP Ole .4 • ' eke Yu V. Rev,' I HERoN Sit ~ PIITOII I kl—tirsl.le c• • „ ; ItUFUS 111'.1:11 $1 n L.i .t n ,1•1,11 n .1. 11 . 0 41111•4 A1.' ,1 . %AO, f t'ADI% ;- El.l „ a 1;1...\ 1.11 •1211. a. 1.11.. ra •• • 11,y, ars •• aCir r• • Iloiel I • invl.s, VI-v.. rinj. Jilurtlllolll 01 :+lati,liw =MI= KOlt(f E T LEH, 11 Al I.llll,l.;.fikfil. I ro• „ t. tiotnero tPkt.lo J()SI All K 1:1.1,1 If ;Ii ••• ' Sate dlr.., cI.I(TEIt BP.( fl 11 El: ur 80 — I I.so f • (Iv I etrats. Ace 6 kr..) ) r. i• J.l NI 1.. S I=ll/111 I=l 10. 444,, . 4 1 • y. . I= jt )IjN F.N 1.1 . fr.r• r ip r,...lffier in Vie 11•.1 I 11110 ,n^ ..II•1 %% flail. • I: - • JOHN 11E.11; • 4Vol fof M 140, • I f 1,1•:1)IU; 1., .1 \tut: oN MN =EOM MIMI I RI IZENSN\j:II; .\ 1.4) a, Kr a Is., ,••• sr rnads.• •th •.g. J I . .11 \g:-11 \I.I I=l 'lll - 11 - 3AI.S. ,l• II \ InUn!•. '.rs erur Ix( I, • St, 1100. fake. I'.. ''.llTll KSON N \ l„ • 06 ‘ , 4. A I W )it \ 14 ARY UDLIO rf r Nit e .I.k Iffl Ithiriurrwr,ght. rinnti:lrton And Tkyd .P.O IA 0, IPAIrt• 101 16 [.., I tar at rvrt 41.* J \\ I I( I;I. \ EMMEN OE T1NNI:1; A. .H 11'ill;111 " •• luras. • , 11.11 •.,,nr • ls. .1 I•:oi 4011 %ea , • •,1 iol . A part ' :r • •k curnrr r :I• c =I Fli 11 Eli tu• • ' =EI \k . 11'f! , 101 .. , • - •*1 v 1.1... Ihe UeVII .P 4 (11.111 N • ''••• • 1. "!/.1 111 it • I 1•401 , • ~ k . rnr• till oirrrts. up *taro Yn IL warr•n wed , ‘ , ll , t 1 1S 1....4.14 As. rec. r fur •ale by 11. r, IS. 1-34 Itl ks 11r, SI.4I•LAIR fr %I% •nn 6w. a 14ryr oaork In ■INi mkt.. at *60 . 11 IS 4- NrRT..N k 41'4111.411t nkt.VF f r r`k, ' 4 ". ' , 0.. •IM Fe 101,.. .411.:0% .4te. • 1••••••••••1 I.4),•Wa t remelt). Just re Aped IS -4- 4 a 41.4, AIR NI. it lwa r, , nig. f•icarbed 1 4 1irotH.8 . vet 5 loloe ,al 14 H..,11 A $ I i %A Iffy ._ (~)( 1 I klltlksa of 3-4 7 -- 4 -4 , ‘ , l '. 4 lt,•-•el,i -ttorting• • ad rthertmip. 1r,,,, 4 114 t' , Ilikf 5,, I 11.--i I IGU rd ALH EL HAI hi/. 4 0 :I1 , APAMIXRE, /glove 141tAmor Hata. split •441 war ' ' llo, Palboois, al Je re IA won% a aTtvrarre. ERIE WEEKLY OBSERVER =MI =ZE=I=I MUM MO I= MEMEL • EMEI =II 121 MEI I=l =MI EEO P NEW CiDOD S I , llt A 1 • , nn.l 61 .1tottirr , . . 1 , .riwarr. hr , kr ith wrrr I•urrhro-r , l • 11 l• I Ct. =I .1 I. Ar It • MEI 121=11•1 MEM EMI= 111., t•I • a‘ • , IMMO IMIM!1=11 rm. Y■ • .. Irau EMil qhc (i.rit Obstlt.ct, , PUBLIAUED EVERY ' , AI I RD kl BY DIIRLIN & SLOAN, T 11 floNi ALI. LETTER:, RELATINi, I f l NINE:m .lii/CLD BF. ADPREN•} OFFICE-NO. 9, BROWN'S BLOCK, ERIE. PA l'ru,t,ug ()trice, corner of State 411 B F 51.0.1 N, EI)IT 0 11 TE4iNI , If poi.' 1n kals An, . t. h•, $1 JO tf t pool .$2 har,t .1 . 9 , Any ~ l ii, s erltter pay wltL l th. )tar, the paper w ,I be .it , continutaian4 U.,: x, n.. ,t 1..1 e.itl‘ per Alieer IF:FINIS of' AJi\ El. 11•1 ti Per - • ixtevn r 1.-- •• ak • II •quart One 'guar ~ ne week, $ 5 (Inc ,t9tiare t $ 1 1111 Ont. " 2 Ino One A •• ntt or, " 1 I '• N' 7.. 7:^ar" Un equate a year. ,•hauKeul'i" It Ph- 04 u' . $5 .rotrds inserted In the liumn •• lit r• xt f.t per 1111,Uffl •tfr tr. SJ. Tw• liquaree--3 uo,tith.. $6 I; tH, fI I di, I year $l4 I Ine column, or .10 -11,131, n- -.•e. 'qtr. $.. 0 . 4 III..1•Its $3O. 3 month.. $I• .01 , 1tuary and Marra • n••h Enhit/..; tqr lwr xd•„t.. 1!IIIIZ=1 spy an , l Edit..riul l•ti,•• , I. Fir• c..inpßil av I -then tb. at.%a rare. 7:4—Nfort hAnt. r. hangeg In Oil it wirt•rti— nlefi t• t• I TN T.ll p. r, rand. • r $1:1 F..r rhe rhar vrl.l In nnd tti, ~l s•rti.emrnt• ['lnc he .tn••tly 'ht. Is ll . l , I t h rem., P vtri.•..t P in Ati, t..r tJr'N I,• ,t e 1 Iriy A -•• 11•• •1• r ' lu =EMI PAPER. HANGINGS! , ..1 -- ;.lzu _ ' V"' "' • ~. ~i‘• •- , , wiles ^A'd 3 0rit. .f.., •• • • • • : . r • - .• : WA! , a:.:3 window rap. r MIME Manufacturing 't ISM WIIO SAYS So! 1 4 `. R .1 • ,r. , • . ~p 1.6 •la , , ••• IN ts•-IIItRO r.ef tt -I,.fft .1 I 1141% l't IN LI It l'ark Ron, i.r.. , Watchman. Wharst he Clock: 11R ANGER. why trout.r our frif . ll.lo for thy tom. ir to :,1 , 1L1t.01 Alit; Ftille/, .t I:txd.l , I 11 111.1`1!'(.111 0,1111. 1 . 1 ~ .1* ICI( Ar• 1 441, Inl.lll. .1., i,1•1 Par k Rua I. .1 11 TI tl 1...11 it 1( 1( ) .110,4T0T , }4 1. ..1. , , e ; 1 4 , . 1 . - Tol IT T)E News Froni the Steamship City of Glasgow Great Elattle fought on rho Dattbo: Aroma., hard naa 13, r•-tkr • a'.ll vt 11 , 1.. , 1 -- 111l.•1•11p . '1L a- 1,1/1.1f3il w 11 4 .1•1.1.0 lice W.. I 1111:r...ells. n co/.1 ng good..,er. hrortihr io KT. , IT -T. 10.1.t'J L., ket • Is re, , atiliu et Img up a.. t•. , ' • 4 \ `Y:" 111,, !• rl ME r 1- vs I • If •- •-• JU•I$Ylk 1 , 11 PI, 111 1, .1,4. Imurt , u, nt • 1 I 1, .1 , • 1 L• I 1,• V"..0 •• ‘41•0 1•1• • • • .1 - • .r et!,•• If • 11l • m ( . 1 • Ilitlia: , • t fir ,3 QMIJ North "..re«torn Lnsur3 ofiL• . re, r. t• • t %.11 I NEIN . I r r•rr, ht , lkr A ri,, , •t M ti II & . At I'. J , l ' , I'•• I . :, in Meg .rge. & . nr , ..ch4., t .)4,i„r. ^ •• I Li, Iloa %Vin II h.• Orott. Baker & , Harris, Ilale & "I ,:101 =MI r J Ma: rt. • ' ul 4 . , ••••1.,•• liettr) I A IN ell. 11 11l 1 lra Pr MEE It/flll ,l ll . Vterkp., 1 0. I.er It t. bo.t. 1 11 /1) 1 / 1 61 wait tfh I it ,omit iotereoli Il CUPtilalt l 11 , 1.1 C ,lu11.1•18/ . 'II M1( 1 101114 Iv . • ,lli 'ow it , ra , . • r hip rtoCk betorr purr h r1.1,‘11.-1 t.rse. Jai., I: JAM. 111 ‘.ll P1711.E AJNEIERIOeN wrivr.s t 111 111.1 • •seril•cr• p • 0 pilot reet.sl,. rI I role llf • 1 - 01 - Pure Ant,. a,r Winn , " for medic eureo.e. t. oirs‘,,r,,!, cie :mit I alit. I t •••• 11l it .• OYt 1 ituu 0. The.e %V. 1., are the • •plire o• . • It •110”tik , 111 , 1. lire Fru, rare re, tat .rate 1., arrepl,errl, ft 1., I-5t -1 I . I \I It CHEAPER THAN WATER tale Tripoli. .R C:r p.01 4 •-10.1i, HI nth 14 r 1 ;1.; I r ;; , 1•11; .1.11 r. ;lg. I; r 1/•• .1 ;,-; ; ., I ,r sr;;;; I-54 I 'Cf You am Etv.iHing )' ' - 1... , „.„ .ere,” IA. %••• V lii,l`f U . . il 1 ,, 1 art:.l. UM IC .1 ., 11 lu lit 10, 1.51 Hats. Caps. :itraw Nds &c 11.ur •.1 OW 4.4(11. 111 lIIP PUMP rrrf 1.1.1 I 4,110,0 1.% Ilen•r• 1:4,1f1 AL to r ,on r. t.or • r 11.1-4,1 . lir )1,, hcre• he Mr 11. I. bet ;IN to Na.l Oh u [t l • hill , 1.1 Wm. 1111 I,S/ I K s II I NI 1 ..R N 51, epruag and Demmer Goods. HlYf SI. 4,, I tiro.' e H. , -A r w o. ,t4r L t6r tr/eFt and flied pr.l rl,w'A ril :•td, ph r wet)* .e.l their •terk •ii ~,,,, tk• c ud aliases, ,t 1,1%1 'hi 'WI - .olt 10.'10, , ottl, St`r.l.‘ I r t' , "'• ,'''• " ' 1 '...• I Urn, ti ; , Ci l r I • 10., than Pqr,, It, rt • , t' • r 'iv Th.., ..,irk 0 , 1' , ,,• .."o , i• f 0•. -....ti , in 0 irord , le C'ialigra..le. P.. 11.1 and •••t• ~r 1:. ,1 1 .1.. Ft' 4,k M ilri v• 4 ~It It ante Input. IS..r to VI, .1, 1. , , I Ir.-. It, le. n n• 1 Vtint", , , It. 1.1,4•.: , :at , .n. I 11,de. , : , 1, ~ ~„1„,,,,1 ~.1 %,,,,,,1 lie 1A.,. -I,un it .0 , 1 Intl hittirP,t. I II ~ I VI inv : Jrt Pel-• i , I 1.. , \ 1,, i ~C.,,pa. I o ,p p . 0 .1 1,,., rrtn-t, I ~ g ; .r 1 In I 1•, ,, , t, I. I,:h 011• nn 1 NI,. En c. Mitt. 111 Irsl-1 =3l BAPLEY h 1. 4 RH, Rr 1 ~I t . • I , attliero . „i• tot t tit • ) . • • rr II VI., Ow, h 411.1 1.6 , 111 ilir rnu , . mar , lii• Ae,., • brit. 114 WI 1:1 =I 11 r 117 0 7ITs.:'D 9TATT•9 HOTEL Asa mai • •• 1.".• rvart , Phaladelphs• • J M net.' ; nr.• 11 .• r , hait the pleasure t o ttt ft,rta tfiera.l. tit.. , to that !WWI. ~1 1."1 this Iluuse fur a 1,111 1, .1.,.,,, 1• uo' r,repatetl I,lr g turitle oh,. • .-t W ell k n to e0(1,11.• ne l'ne Iluu•r lid nirPiturehiiiir , eti tiiii 1..0111. 111, 1.,/e. 111,1 \‘ vrm•.Yud Ib. UV ,111 -11: •I,way• furl...bed I.llllb 114. and Illy 1....0 , 1.101 1 irsiibt • impel/ abyt 1.0 .11)..rt un tn• part •tl4ll bowl it , ...lie the. L .1w ! -otatv. ,qual ii ronrurt• to bit Hot.•l to .1, Quakpr v :Iv July • 1,54 —lyn• NOTICE. 111"HAR1 , t. III;RRuN hap porch:ow,: the lowing of nolo as B. Stilel tif The bu.tne*a 41114 , be heleatler roorlueird under the ulle of BC Htlillft..N. who will nettle all fie - e-ouote of the old Pia t. , • ErroN crw. Aug. 0444-1 R R 4; 1ii.a94401 I I Mal Akin ral A - rase loof/ yards &etch Guif halms. mural cheeky and deso table patterns. a r.xyl la cents to import. lit rti cent■ per yard Ma, 310.- I TISNALS • Fl /YES / I AMrIIOIII. OINIVENT.-Without doubt the very beat ex. Vernal ' , noel) ever let dixederred w toot/merle. lxleutal(ta. rilew and all kind. of iollantnoiw,/) 0. coda uri Han or Seas , to he had of Mayl7. 1%54 t' R"t't:Y• BR , /TM KR 3("At OK OM yards of Madder Presets. c..+44ra warrlntei. teat Of mosey Wooded, are Mite per yard Ato earner paw May Yards ad/AWL daddiatala pallose& M % t utu, per yard. at 11-3. 1111141.1 A& ILA 1 tri 'W MEE =EN= .. 1 / 4 I , ,J1...i• r OEM MEE ,- 2, nr - i c, IN lEEE =II it !. 011 • f, • M II I NI V_,• „ 'l • II A 1(1 , 0 K .1 J ,o 1 • 4. I .1 ME 1. x•rr . . I •-•• CEMNIESI =II J 1 , 1.1 i / r.• 11=I =Ell I •. 1 a 1• 1 It ii CEEB „ieltct LINES rho says —We defy any tasteful 10- %er ..f 1,,,k.t.r% to road the following hues. *about exclaim ing I.eauttful Mr -owl thy •mered 'mese keeps. My midnight dreams are all of the.' S le For nature then In silent sleep, An ! silence brouds o'er land and sea. ..h, f , r that .till, mysterious hour. 11.. w oft from waking dreams I start. , Co find the.• but a fari..r flower, ,hert.hed idol of my bean Thou hart each thought and dr emu of mine-- flat e I in turn .no thnught ~t F',r et er throe my dreams will Whate'er may km my fortune here I 4t not love—l claim from diet Only one Lam, a gentle tear May e'er West TllllOllll from above Play hrightly 'round thy happy heart. And may the twain. of peace and love Ne'er from thy glowing soul depart. Farewell' my dreams are still with thee Ha-t • , 11.. tender thought of me' N) or like summer lords may Sy. Ms hope. like summer blouma depart flat there's one dower that cannot die, Thy only memory in ui) heart No , lear4 that one flower'• cap may AB No sunlight to its leaves he Oven. But it will lire and flunris.h still, A. I:dtilte. , a• a aim( of heaven My .ul groci• thaw, unliked. unsought 0,,, n for me onc gmtle thought' Fap.orell' ftrewAll' no otT friend IS-tiroen u. blue rtverr 11,,w Anti b•r.t' a %Va. •nd plum extend tu..11 , , , wt., LI/ the .uulight Kt.,* I h.• • thy Ipt,.•• ••• ..n !two. :sr b•a vi- 11.ko =I Prit ru•vn .rv . • , r. .1 I• K , th r n • 11/ • • "I • I "I .1 .5 1.1 :114t an.i I.y .wed 1. ,t. , - . k v tueet ni [ningle :11 the eluu•l \ .11 ed (mend, I b,, wg b w, elf ..i..irt li%•• roil mor e , . *et them tree I toloirle in the world of Thi• wn• an .Noltsoy to we— :so) w twid a la: a jay to ttior Apia illisallann. Mi \ ILLIGE STORY. ItY MITFORD urn enkl ut the .luster of cottages, and cot- Liz , like nowkes. vrhi.li formed the little street ~f Ililt..n ('rue,—r• pretty but secluded village tlie a rib ot Ii inipshire,--stixxl the shop of tt, K. nt, widow. —Licensed," :is the legend unpurted, •ttu c. lid t.:. coffee, tobacco and snuff.' . tub •eu, snuff, formed, however, •... ,1: the muffin', b.us morel/an di. •si r- K , Ill; whose shop, the mly reposi- I, mlet. nit e .dit have *kernel' an epitome „t awl luxuries of humble Iffe In le ,k111'14,11',--.1111i1..-, b4e1,11, sug.ir, mustard - ti , lin1•11 .1 atirnbo oranges, unl ; ..luz..rhread Cinekery ware ~ 1 her .1... r was, ' k latch 1.1 t •-r ~n ,uoilo•r,,l the :other; .111 1,1 i 1.ru,11..• and - r le rriug+ hung • .• bre ni, butcher's If ,IlPi It ' , AA/it 101 e,0nia.,,,,,n; and cu ..-- 1. a , .1 Wtll , i, th , whode tride it Hilton OEM N., A 1 .... mon i ,pol ) , the world n•nr fill with poor Judith Slo wa, a mild, a.antli. crag, noddle-aged woman. with a heart too ,oft for her calling She could not say t. to poor creature. who to her on a to seek broatlior- their-4bildren, w. r deep they miviitzlieatly he in her debt, how-ver certain it was that their husbands were, at that moment, spending, it the Check r. r r thi• Four llorse-Shoes, the money that -h hay. -lipported their wives and families; tor, in this village, as in. others, there were two 1 , 1; ti a If.- hmiKer., although but one ill-wens one hrlfpenny-worth of bread to I hi, intolerable deal of sack!" She could not at N..' a. It prudent woman might have said; awl accordingly, half the poor people in the par .-h night tie found on her books; whilst she her --It mil, gradually getting into arrears with her fttker, her grl ,'er, and her landlord. Iler family consisted of two childreu,—Mary, a poet;), tair-haired, smilling lass, of twelve or shirt •,.n, and li.,bert, a tine youth, nearly ten our (drier, who worked in the gardens of a neighboring gentleman Robert, conscious that his moilier•s wa' uo gainful trade, often pressed ia•r to i.:1% t• up tot-in,s.,, sell off her stock, relin qu,sh her house, and depend on his labor for her support; but o f this she would not hear. Many motives mingled in her determination: a gener ous reluctance to burthen her dutiful son with her maintenance,--it natural fear of losing caste among her neighbors,—a strong love of the house which, for live-and -twenty years, had been her home.—a vague hope that times would mend, and all come right again (wiser persons than Mrs Kent have lulled ren to sleep, with such au opiate! )--and, above a , a want of course, to look her difficulties fairly n the face. Beattie., ..he liked her occupation,—its pr •tty conse quenee, its bustle and its gossipry; and she had a sense of gain in the small peddling bargains,— the penny worths of needles, and balls of cotton, and row . of pins, awl yards of tape which she was accu.tomed to vend for ready money,—that ovebalanced, for the moment, her losses and her debt.; .1, that, in Tice of her son's pressages and warnings, the shop continued in full activity. lit addition to his forebodings respecting his Thoth, r, Robert had another misfortune;—the poor youth was in love. About a quarter of a mile down the shady lane, which ran by one side of Mrs Kent's dwelling, was the pretty farm liou, , orchard, and homestead of Farmer Bell, who OW e ldest daughter, Stis.an,-1 he beauty of the parish,—was the object ut a passion almost amounting to idolatry And, in good booth, Su san Bell was well fitted to inspire such a passion Resides a light, graceful figure, tuoulded with the exactost symmetry, she bad a Swilling, inno cent countenace, a complexion colored like the brilliant blosZma of the balsam, and hail. of a shining golden brown, like the fruit of a horse chesnut. Iler speech was, at once, modest and playful, her temper sweet, and her heart tender. She loved Robert dearly, although he often gave her cause to wish that she loved him not; for Robert was subject to the intermitting fever, called jealousy,--catuielessly, as be himself would declare, when a remission of the disease gave room for his natural sense to act,—causelesaly and penitently, but still pertinaciously jealous. I have said, that he was a fine young man, tall, dark, and slender, I should add, that he war a good son, a kind brother, a pattern of sobriety and industry, and possessed of talent and ac quirement far beyond his station. But there was about him an ardor, a vigor, a fiery restk - nem, commonly held miler to the natives of the ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 16,1864. south of Europe, but which may, sometimes, be found amongst our own peasantry. All his pur suits, whether of sport or labor, took the form of passion At ten yein old, he had gone far be yond ill his fellow pupils at the Foundation School, to which, through the kindness of the 'squire of the parish, his mother had been ena bled to send him; and be had even posed the muter himself:—at eighteen, he was the best cricketer, the best flute player, the best bell ring er, and the best gardener in the county:--aml, some odd volumes of Shakespeare having come into his possession, there was some danger, at twenty, of his turning out a drUMVIC poet, had not the kind discouragement of his master, to whom some of his early scenes were shown by his patron and admirer, the head gardener, acted as a salutary check. Laded, so strong, at oche time, was the poetical furor, that sock a catas trophe as an entire play might, probabl7, have ensued, notwithstanding Mr. Lenoombe s judi cious warnings, had not love, the muter passion, fallen, about this time in poor Robert's way, and engrossed all the ardor of his ardent temper ament. The beauty and playfulness of his mis tress, whilst they enchanted his fancy, kept the jealous inability of his nature in perpertual alarm. He suspected a lover in every man who approached her, and the firm refusal of her fa ther to sanction their union, till her impatient wooer were a little more forward in the world, completed his disquiet. Affairs were in this posture, when a new per sonage arrived at Hilton Cross. In addition to her other ways and means, Mrs. Kent tried to lessen her rent, by letting lodging and the neat, quiet, elderly gentlewoman, the widow of a long deceased rector, who had occu pied her rooms ever since Robert was born, be ing at last gathered to her fathers, an advertise ment of "pleasant apartments to let, in the airy village of Hilton Cross," appeared in the county paper. This announoement was as true as if it had u .,t formed an advertisement in a country p tpk.r Very airy was the pretty village of Hil ton Cross, with its breezy uplands, and its open common dotted, as it were, with cottages and clumps of trees; and very pleasant were Mrs. Kent's apartments, for those who had sufficient timep to appreciate their rustic simplicity; and sufficient humility to overlook their smal lness. The little chamber, glittering with whiteness; its snowy dimity bed, and 'fresh sheets smelling of lavender; the sitting room, a tiought larger, car peted with India matting, its wining cane hairs and its bright casement wreathed, on the one side, by a luxuriant jessamine, on the other, by the tall cluster musk rose (that rose of which Titania talks), sending its benches of odorous blossoms into the very window; the dower court underneath, full of hollyoaks, doves and dahlias; and the large sloping meadow beyond, leaping up to Farmer Bell's tall, irregular house, half covered with a' flaunting vine; his barns, and ricks, and orchard;—all this formed an apart ment too tempting to remain long untenanted, in the bright mouth of /nest. Accordingly, it was, almost immediately, engaged, by a gen tleman in black, who walked over, one fair morn ing, paid ten pounds as a deposite, sent for his trunk from the uezt town, and took possession .on the instant Her new inmate, who, without positively de- dining to give his name, had yet contrived to i e . zoo alt .bas paeiltiollll 101.1.1... Mi ni Merits 5 "51111- . plc etioniug' could devise, pr o red a perpetual own., of tostoniruent, both to brrself and her neighbors lii- was a well-wide little man, near upou forty; with a consideraile terseness of far ' tun-, a forehead of great pour, whose effect was wereased b) a slight baldwas on the top of the i l-,01, and au eye like a falcn Such an eye! it ...ewe(' to go through you—to strike all that it i , sikisl upon, like a 7.oup dr-aleil. Luckily, the •-i ranger was so merciful as, is generally to wear -pectacles; under cover of wildly those terrible , ~),,, might see and be seen vithout danger. His habits were as peculiar as his appearance. ' He was moderate, and rather fanciful in his diet, drank nothing but water or strong coffee, made; as Mrs Kent observed very wastefully; and, bad, as she also remarked, a great *umber of heathen ish-looking books scattered about his apartment; Lord Berner's Froissart, for instance; Sir Tho- COW Brown's Urn Burial, Isaac Walton's Com plete Angler, the Baskerville Ari to, Gaulle's Faust, a Spanish Don Quixotte, an interleav ed Philoctetes, full of outline d inv. The greater part of his time was spent out of doors. lie would even ramble away for three or four days together, with no other companion than a boy hired in the village, to carry what Mrs. Kent denominated his odds and ends; which odds and ends consisted, for the most part, of an angling rod and &sketching aparatus; our incog nito being, as my readers have, by this time, probably discovered, no other than an artist on tie summer progress. Robert speedily understood the stranger, and was delighted with ths opportunity of approach ingso gifted a person; although he contemplated with.a degree of generous envy,'which a king's regalia would have failed to excite in his bosom, those citeld'sesirres of all nations, which were to him as sealed books, and the pencils, whose pow er appeared no less than creative. He redoubled his industry in the garden, that he might, con scientiously devote hours and half hours to pointing out the deep pools and shallow eddies of their romantic stream, where be knew, from experience (for Robert, among his other accom plishments, was no mean "brother of the angle"), that fish were likely to be found; and better still, he loved to lead to the haunts of childhood--the wild bosky della, and the sunny ends of lanes, where a sudden turn in the track, an overhang ing tree, an old gate, a cot tag e chimney, and a group of cattle or children, had sometimes form ed a picture on which his fancy had fed for hours. It was Robert's chief pleasure to entice his lodg er to scenes such as these, and to see his own via. ions growing into reality under the glowing pen cil of the artist; and he, in his turn, would ad mire and marvel at the natural feeling of the beautiful, which could lead an constructed coun try youth instinctively to the very elements of the picturesque. Ageneral agreement of taste had brought about a degree of association, unu sual between persons um different in rank; a par ticular instance of this secordasce dissolved the. intimacy. 81 50 A YEAR, IN ADVANCE Robert bad been, for above a fortnight, more than commonly busy in Mr. Lseeombe's and hot-houses—so busy that lie even slept at hall; the stranger, on the other hand, had been shut up, during the mme period, in the lit tle parlor, painting. At last they met, and the artist invited his young friend to look at, file picture which had engaged him during his al e sence. On walking into the room be saw, on easel, a picture in oils, almost finished. The style was of that delightful kind which emblems figure with landscape: the subject woe HaPeer tying and the scene, that very slaying meadow —crowded by Parser Ball's tall, angular hoe*, its vine-wreathed porch and ehimuse m a i tt l ir: walnut-tree before the door, the a homestead—which formed the actual ENIC from the windows before them In ground was a vague, piled with lab serrovaand by the farmer and his fine fsmily,ass tasking, some loading, some raking_ after, ill intent on their pleasant business. The og jc ellogliged in the field were young Kanto and 48 Harry l ßell, an urchin of four pan wbo ands on tier knee on the top of thti wpm, etc dad : v esthed with garlands of 0110.1116V4111,1 wad wutt treed, poppies and egnillowoo. Ii the front, looking up at Mary Kent and her little brother, and playfully tossing to them the lock of hay which she had gathered on her rake, stood Susan Bell—her head thrown back, her bonnet half off, her light Old lovely figure shown, in all its grace, by the -pretty attitude and the short dress; while her sweet face, glowing with youth tad beauty, bad a smile playing over it like a sunbeam. The boy was nodding and laughing to her, and seemed longing—as well be might— to escape from his flowery bondage, and jump in to her anus. Never had poet framed a lovelier Wier of rural beauty! Never had painter more felicitously realised his conception! "Well, Robert!" exclaimed our artist, a little impatient of the continued silence, and _gifting the expected praise, "well?" But, still;Robert spoke not. "Don't you thick it a good subjectr contin ued the man of the easel. "I was sitting at the window, reading Proissart, while they were car rying the aftszoop, and, by good leek, happen ed to look up, just as the 7 had arranged them selves into this very group, and as the evening sun came slanting, exactly as it does now across the meadow—so I dashed in the sketch instant ly, got Mary to nit to me--and a very pretty nymph-like figure she makes—dressed the boy with flowers, just as be was decked out for the harvest-home—the rogue is, really, a fit model for a Cupid; they are a glorious family!—and persuaded Susan"—at that name, Robert, un able to control himself longer, rushed out of the room, leaving the astonished painter in the full belief that his senses had forsaken him. The unhappy lover, agonised by jealousy, pur sued his way to the Farm. He had, hitherto, contrived, although without confessing his mo tive, even to himself, to keep hik friend and his mistress asunder. He had no fe4ra of her virtue or of his honor, but, to Robert'l romantic sim plicity, it seemed that no one (Add gaze on Su san, without feeling ardent love, and that such a man as the artist could never love in vain. Be sides, in the conversations which they had held together, he had dwelt on beauty and simplicity, as the most attractive points of the female cha racter—Robert had felt, as he spoke, that Susan was the very being whom he described, and had congratulated himself that they were still ansquainted. But now, they had met; he had seen; he had studied, had transferred to canvas, that matchless beauty; had conquered the timid ity which to Robert, had always seemed uncon querable; had won bet to admit his gaze; had tamed tat shyest, ooyest dove; had become fa miliar with that sweetest face, sad that dearest frame—Oh: the very thought was agony In this mood, he arrived at the Farm; mild there, working at her needle, under the vitje wreathed porch, with the evening can shining full upon her, and her little brother playing at her feet, sat his own Susan She heard hts ra pid step, and advanced to meet him, with a smile and a blush of delight—just the smile and blush of the picture At such a moment, they increas ed his misery; he repulsed her offered hand, and . poured forth a torrent of questions on the sub ject which possessed his mind Her innocent answers were fuel to his frenzy: "The picture: had he seen the picture? and was it not pretty'—much No. pretty, Abe thought, but everybody called it like: and Mary and liar 77—wee be r`-- I tuem: tt am a wonderful thing it was, to make a piece of Wilk - vas so like living ereature,.! and what a wonder ful man the Strange gentleman was: She had been afraid of him at first--sadly afraid of those two bright eves—and so had Harry;—poor Har ry had oried. but he was so merry cud so kind - at neither of them minded sitting to him now: And she was so glad that Robert had seen the picture! she had so wanted him to see it! it was too pretty, to be sure--but then Robert would not mind that. She told the gentleman"— "Go to the gentleman now," interrupted Ho bert, "and tell him that I relinquish you! It will be welcome news! Go to him, Susan:— your heart is with him. Go to him, I say:" and, throwing from him, with a bitter laugh, the frightened and weeping girl, who had laid her trembling hand on his arm, to detain him, he darted from the door, and returned to los old quarters, af the Hall. Another fortnight passed, and Robert -till kept aloof . from his family and his home Ills mother and sister, indeed, occasionally saw him; and sad amounts had poor little Mary to give to her friend Susan, of Robert's ill looks and worse spirits. And Susan listened, and said she did not care; and burst into a passion of tears, and said she was very happy; and vowed never to speak to him again; and desired Mary never to men tion herto him, or him to bar, and then asked her a htintired questions respecting his looks, and his words, and his illness; and charged her with a thousand tender messages, which in the next breath she withdrew And Mary, too young to understand the inounsistencies of 'ore, pitied Ind comforted, and thought it "passing strangp." In the meantime, misfortunes, of a different nature, were gathering around Mrs. Kent. The meal-Man and baker, whose bread she vended— ' her kindest friend and largest creditors—died, leaving his affairs in the hands of an attorney of the ;text town—the pest and terror of the neigh borhood; and, on the same day, she received two letters from this formidable lawyer—one on ac count of his dead client, the other in behalf of hisliving client, the grocer—who ranked next wining her creditors—both threatening that, if their respective claims were not liquidated, on or before a certain day, proceedings wugt be commenced against her, forthwith. It is in mei a situation, that woman most feels her helplessness---especially that forlorn gesture whom the" common people, adopting the pathetic language of. Scripture, designate by the expressive phrase , "a lone woman! ' Poor Ju die r sat down to cry, in powerless sorrow and rain self-pity. She opened, indeed, her hopeless day-book; but she knew, too well, that her dept ioni could not pay. She had no one to consult; for her lodger, in whose general cleverness she had great confidence, had been absent, on one of his excursions, almost as long as her son; and time pressed upon -her, for the letters—sent with the usual indirectness of country convey ance, originally given to the carrier, confided by the carrier to the butterman, carried on by the baseman to the next village, left for three days at a public house, and finally, delivered, at Hil ton Cross, by a return post-boy—had been near ly a week on the road. Saturday was the day fixed for payment, and this was Friday night! and Micluelmas and rent-day were approaedungl and unable even to look at this accumulation of misers, poor Judith laid her head on her fruit less account-book, and sobbed aloud. It was with a 'tangly-mingled feeling of com fort in such e eon and sorrow so to grieve him, that she heard Robert's voice at bar side, ask ing, tenderly, what ailed her. She put the let ters into his heads; sad he, long prepared for the blow, soothed sad cheered her. "All must be gives up," he said; "sad he would go with her the next day, to make over the whole property. Let us pay, as far as our mesas , mother," pursued he, "sad do sot fear, b atsome day or other we shall be enabled to discharge all our debts. God will spud ea honest purpose. In the meantime, Mr. Lae oome will give us a cottage—l know he will— and I will work for you sad Mary. It will be rearethiag to lire for—esmodikif worth fee. Be earakerr4 deer RAW ' He stooped, as he said thie s sad kissed hsr, and when he arose, he saw Susan standing op posite to him, and, behind her, the stranger They had entered separately, during the conver sation between the mother and the son, and Su san was still unconscious of the stranger's pres ence. She stood, in great agitation , pressing Mary's hand (from whom she had heard the sto ry), and immediately began questioning Mrs. Kent, as to the extent of the calamity "She had twenty pounds of her own, that her grandmother had left her—but a hundred! Did they want a whole hundred? And would they send Mrs. Kent to prison? and sell her goods? and turn Mary out of doors? and Robert? Oh: how ill Robert looked! It would kill Robert! Oh," continued Susan, wringing her hands ''l would sell myself for a bon4woman—l would be like a negro-slave, for one hundred punk!" "Would you?" said the stranger, advancing suddenly from the door, aid pro ducing two bank-bills; "would you? well! we will strike a bargain. I will give you two hundred pounds for this little hand—only this little hand! ' "- - "What do you mean, sirr exclaimed Mm. Kent, "what can you mean?" "Nothing but what is fair and honorable," returned her lodger, let Susan eroinise to meet me at church to-morrow, and here are two hun dred pounds to dispose of, at her pleasure, to night. "Susan! my dear Susan:" "Let her alone, mother!" interrupted Robert; "she must choose for herself." and, for a few moments there was a dead silence. Robert stood leaning against the wall, pale as marble, hie eyes cast down, and his lips com =p in a state of forced composure. Mrs. her head turning, now towards the bank notes, and now towards her son—was in a state of restless and uncontrolable instability; Mary clung, crying, about her mother, and Susan— her color varying, and her lips quivering—sat unconsciously twisting and untwisting the bank notes in her hand "Well, Susan!" said the artist—who had re mained in tranquil expectation, surveying the group with his falcon eye—" Well, Susan! have you determined?"' The color rose to her temples, and shs answer ed firmly: "Yes, sir! Be pleased to take back the notes I love nobody but Robert; and Robert loves me dearly, dearly! I know he does! Oh, Mrs. Kent! yon would not have me vex Robert,your own dear son, and he so ill, would you? Let them take these things! They never can be so cruel as to put you in prison—you, who were always so kind! and he will work for you, and I will work for you: Never mind being poor! better anything than be false-hearted to my Robert!" "God forever bless yon, my Susan!" "God bless you, my dear child!" burst at once frond Robert and his mother, as they alternately fold ed her in their arms. "Pray, take the notes, sir!" repeated Swam, after a short interval. . "No: that will not do," replied the stranger, smiling "The notes shall be yours--are yours —aud, what is more, on my own conditions:— Meet rue at church, to-morrow morning, ed I shall have the pleasure of bestowing this ;Amy hand, as I always intended, on my good friend, m lye u rt eir. he w re n . om l ita . s . , ,, e ., a ,,i w n if o e t o e f x m chalwe y own a e t ven hom fo e r , you; and I ate quite rich enough to a-- .1 self the luxury of making you happy. Besides, you have a claim to the 'Dopey. These very bank-notes were gained by that sweet faro! Your friend, Mr Lescombe, Robert, has purchased the Hay-carrying! We have had a good deal of talk about you; and I am quite certain that he will provide for you all "No," continued he, interrupting something that Robert was going to say—"No thanks: no apologies: I won't hear a word! Meet rue at church, to.morrow! But. remember, young man, no more jealousy!" and, followed by a glance from Swish, of which Ro bert might have been Jealous, the artist left the shop A New Opponent of thil[no w Nothing Organizatioa. The New York Chap /mom, the leading organ of the Protestant Episoopat Church, come« out with a very strong article against the Know No things. The following extracts will show the spirit in which the subject is discussed, and the reasoning of the Churchman upon it: "The Know Nothing agitation is precisely of the nature of those popular excitements which, when they , L , lttn full domination over the public mind and heart, give birth to civil convulsions, blood and crime. It has already in serious pla given rise to scenes of violence and disturbance of the public peace; ~ad although we have no ap prehension that it will go to the extent of unset tling t h e f oun d a tio n ..f.oelety, yet it is precisely that mixture of true and false ideas, saletary and pernicious principles., convictions of eo na el e tt ea and impulses of prejudice and hate., which all history teache- at-. the stuff whe' such is sues are wrought ' • • * • We have no objection to the repeal eft the na turalization laws and the limitation of the right of voting to native-born citizens—with a previs ion, if it be desired, for planting by special legis lation that rigia sml Abve that of eligibility to certain offices, in special cases Bet as to the rest, we have nothing but condemnation and re probation to express of the whole Know Nothing organisation. This organisation invokes to the polls thespirit .of religious fanaticism and theo logical hatred. It proposot to wage a polities] war against the Roman Catholics—"war to the knife"—a war of extermination waged, as we un derstand, by political weapons. hatred to the Roman Catholics, as,sueb, this appears to be the deepest source and spring of this movement This, at bottom, is its most essential charicter Now, we have nothing to say in favor of Ronan ism. We would do everything to cheek the progress of Romanism, to work indeed its utter extinc tion, if that can be properly and fairly done. But we would put it down by the force of truth and argument, not by political proscription and persecution. Persecution is both wrong in prin ciple and foolish in policy, as well as inconsistent with our eminent pretensions to behalf of religi ons freedom. Persecute any error of faith or opinion, and you increase the evils you see, the dangers you dread. Beside., if the Know No things wage political warfare against Roman V a . that. foreigners, how can they consistently help waging the same warfare against native born Roman Catholic citizens? and how doe,. th a t Ault the genius of our institutions How will the sense of the nation sustain that? • • s • • • • but bet not laud among' the reasons for re probating this Saw Nothing organisation it is a seeret association, league, or brotherhood. Any merit organisation--no matter what its objeete, no matter how good and important they may be —any rook organisation designed to accomplish its objects by *sting on the elections, by wed ding politiesl power, is, in a free government, aisobtevons and dangerous. Suchorganisationa are the very things most liable to become the terrible engines of fanatics or unprincipled vil lains. We want among as no 'Etas Oates Po pish Plots no Lord George Gordon Biota. They would disgrace the country and humane the pow er we would overthrow. . is. Aam ooreismos is nations sold for marry, bis ewer bight, with it. B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR. NUMBER 18. ' f'roto die Sr,* Oeseraer- X.c.rfs, &J_—h SOL liar The 11-wipe/Us% donates of the espriabe Om% delivered yesterday et Piteteargh, u oho Orono Cate—a came of momentous euesequosmo to the Chlor see County of lirte—wo pebitsh to-doy te r Balm at N ap peared to the Pitsakotrith U... of this esonaing. ezooptioa of the Cotoo, it is lamed by as o hy ge other paws to Pennsylvania, or elooortemeo. The Great Erie Railroad Cu.. DECISION OF THE SUPREME COURT. , OPINION BY CHM Mir Mal MACK ; LEWIS J.. DISSENTING. •upplemental Opinion by Jude* Imerria Attorney tiosotal 11 4 111 7. Tb. Erie owl N. E. L it. Co. OPIN 10N. By Burt. C. J.—This cane reptime es b din a construction to the charter af a *Ma sarporap. tiun. The frequency of such mess narrator surprise. when we reflect that ca act eiliempeen tion is and always must be interpreted by a rail at simple. that no man. whether lawyer oe I=l, can misunderstand or misapply it. That company is authorised to do by its set of &lion, it may do ; beyond that. all in ads nee And the power mud be gives in plan seri, or by necessary iinplication. All poems not gleam in this direct and unmistakable manner as with held. It is strange that the Attorney GemeaL or any body else, should complain against a mow ny that keeps itself within bounds. which me al ways thus clearly marked, and equally strengths' a company which • happened to trastsgems dime should come - th the faintest hops of be ing sustained. In sky hat Wh im} to work with. sin ••• • • can be elitism par red or disapproved by :c or inferential reaNii iuf. If you lumen corporation bed osetein pnvileges, show us the words of the legidelnite oonfarring thew. Failing in this, you mum give up your claim, for nothing else can possibly avail you. A doubtful charter does not emit ; become IMMO. ever is doubtful, is decisively certain avian the corlf pcnti Lose or injury cornea to any body is maw quence of an ignorant disregard of this prialipies it is not our fault. We have done all that Is ne lay to impress it on the public mind. and to wan" corporations of the danger they might incur by At obedience. We enforced it to the utmost Baia of Pennsylvania rs. The Susquehanna Railroad Company vs. Sesnisssy old Erie Railroad Company, The Penney/wait BLS road Company rs. Canal Cossonsasionern, The Consmosinsealth vs. The Franklin Canal sflagsmsys, and several other cases. All of our precleasisems an this bench occupied the same ground. The be trine is maintained by the Supreme Cant et the United States, and in many States - of the Utica. Even in England, the justice and necessity of it are universally acknowledged and acted apes.— But ire do not mean to discuss the subject user a gain. The lawyer who is not already familiar with the numerous authorities upon it. to be found V ee ery book of reports. will probably never bosom so; and the citizen who does not believe it to be a most salutary feature in our jurispradoma, hardly be convinced though one rose hem the dead. Our duty iu this case is. therefore. not &MINA one. If the words of the defendants' aheitar. understood in their • sense. NNW !he Mlle complained of; or if there a treesseary asi Zem• don of the power to do those acts. sad Bar. ttri hands by constructioi. We cannot. • MP" limits set to their privileges, because they lave 1 found them incouveuiently narrow. We have as more right or authority to stretch an old act of incorporation than we have to make a new ems.— In either case, we would be usurping legelativw power, and granting away from the stats privileges which she has seen proper to withhold. The bill complaina--lst, That the Westminster minus of the defendants' railroad is not when Iles act of incorporation requires it to be. 2d. That it is so cous:rucied as to impede and obstruct the free use of certain streets in the city of Erie. ad. 'l'hat it also obstructs and impedes the free use of a public road laid out from Erie in the direetiam of Buffalo; and 4th. That the defendants have cads a contract by which they have surrendered the the control of their road to a foreign corporatism. 1. The act of incorporation authorises the de fendants to build a railroad from Al barami Ern Go seine point on the east houudary of die township of North East. The defendants' owned insist that the word front should be taken inehasine ly, and that a road from any part of the borough to the proposed terminus ad gym is a emphases with the law. -4 4 en the other hand, the comma he the plaintiff insist that it must begin at the Wm °ugh hue, and not elsewhere. Our withal he With the, defendants on this point, hut we think the ar gument on it was rather beside the purpose, share the terminus of the nulroad is neither at the lime of the borough nor inside of it. Cow' from the east, it passes the erusteni boundary of the & Im o at a distance of nifty rods south, and NUS OM 1111 Mile rods further, in a direction precisely parrallel with the smith hue of the horough. and :here= nr connects with the road built by the F 'anal Company to the t loin line. Certainly this is not a literal compliance with the act of i 6' meoec. ration. Making a road from a point selected • the defendants themselves silt) rods seta of dos borough. not corning within that distant* of die borough at any place, is nit making a road ppm the borough eastward. is there anything in the peculiar cireumstasoxi of this case which will jelli fy us in treating this infraction of the law other wise than as we treat similar violations of tidy when committed by codipanies I We shall *as. What I have said concerning the borough of Erie. refers to what it was when the act of ia corporation was passed. In 1848. and helm, the defendant's work was made, its limits were ex tended so as to include the place where the ter minus of the railroad had been tiled. At a stiff later period. the borough was incorporated te a city But we are very clear that this alienation of the borough lines did not in the least thaw the rights or obligations of the railroad eommeey. All laws must be executed according to dis sense and meaning which they imported it the time of their passage. A line which did net exist until 1848. could not have been id detailed of the legislature in 1842. The made in the charter of the borough le ni" ft ra r l d ia l fenda,nts' chatikt just where it was beim. The amendment of one is not to be taken es a op &dement to the other. If t h e east Wends:, bee of N ortb• East township " had been shadowed or ob literated. or differently named by an act of de-, seinbly passed in 1848, the tiefeadesme eseild here very well that their right to lame di. eastern terminus on any part of the towashiplas as it existed in 1842, was anot yaltered or or taken away. The law the degas. ants to begin their railroad at the borough of We as it then was. and that command is in MI kw notwithstanding the change which hasissee mob in other antler& this viands& of the chatter SD trilling Mat se can overlook it ea the principie ef de masa The counsel of the company hoe not sussed dal it certainly it is Dot. The plow at *dish the terminus should be established being redmily sad partiodezly designated by the act of of hoer poratiaa. in words which oatcake begs. Obis. all other Oases, whether sear or hr. 1116 surely excluded a if they bad bees afar* fire bidden. If we eau& bold oomponsee te maim compliance with their &sten, we ousel bey them at all. In some situations. OWL !et_stit we eon sea this any be ow of drad.)fhw sod *eft of shwas the road to be beat ein=r oftapietely defused - by flotation el day reds a nifty ales. The divectom meet hare theftol that tlq weld gain s point of Ivseat Tahoe Miss by &amen thew tertawaft. a else day are* would lid have restated spot itia the teeth d iV law. And they sort hare beet eelleftail l 11111, that the Ligtielastre bad more imputed now ha calking them to the borough, or dm day would bate aught sad pt ea amandeneet le tbeitilloaer. This alkali was probably ieftwded or a adeß laladidttab ore six vomit