Erie weekly observer. (Erie [Pa.]) 1853-1859, March 06, 1858, Image 1

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    )RE, PUBLISH*.
YZT. r
Is yonsw,
7 on bor was .
M• maw
Ms ley
Sio mot yet
brats bag rt,
ilh is prow*
%boa part '
ul law*.
49 001 jet
.4 Laois oaal
peek A bowl lo.algbi.
red
as art my soul'a
So aot jet
uo & oats, WI them be
Vamps' of riper bliss ,
gbh pail shall IS le ter
4.1. Anima am:wand Is Ws
Go net y•I i
iVoNEING Eit_S.
"roe Ws/awe liosswhold Worts 1
.'go l•was d telegraph.olerk at New.
I had a week of day duty, and a
v o duty, alternately, Orratmats- eve
of aii sights in rim year n and
s pa cooped up as usual, in the
t reat staring instruments in
bog gaslight overhead, and a
•by my side not forgetting a
io assist ms in whiling away
, at Ne;stons were never
'here were rarely any for pri
J .l r, forrea, mostly, to the busi,
vsy sompany. That evening I
, 4pint l It went against the grain
micas eve, when everybody sloe
keeping holiday, and enjoying
Cary and I had been engaged
1 , sod, for any prospect of met
ric bc,Augaged for twenty years
',moister, Cary's father, was
/I A pay of buAiness, and mita
lei Iris daughter marry a fellow
Jai, seventy N and i 41 r ear .-1
Jaw sdriped Cary to give me up ;
, ot do that, be 'entente& him
isg the house; trusting to
—f .r they lived several miles
sul his gauss/
r Lineseter always invited a
proplu to his house on Ohrist.
pictured them there, daoeiog;
tt in her white moilin dress,
round her waist that I had
mooth - tiefore Weuld any
alt.erablg rear cross ber
kired among the gay eompany?
toicirted rival, Binka the draper,
dancing with her, and pressiiag
his arm. It that very moment, a
,leaf to be ipircie; so away I went
a fur cheege of scene
At night, with a keen breeze that
and dry through the telegraph.
head, and brmight to- my ears
l,,w4de soft "end sweet by dis
,rutinas waits Lanterns, flitting
long the wagons in the station
shoula of meo, and wild
rected locomotives, that seemed
ap and down, merely (Al keep
1,21 00 . such a bitter night, and
\sd anything particularly to
iffiee again, glad of each a
boars sped slowly ; each hour
the valorous tittle clock in the
tht name and went) one o'ol , tek,
e'elook I Uri grown tired of
heroine, sad bad •gain tweowe
-et en the subject of Blake,
1y the quick tinkle of the
A privets message:
~ to Mr Dart., 89 Rigb stmt.,
os bt tb• nail to-bight. All
I airtrf
,wed qu.er messages, tint this
► ha,l Peo I spelled it over
taut pl. It down eorreetlx;
oat ~L L ”utt of the priote.l formv;
.reci at the holt the time 1 bad re•
forty Qva--and ptaoed it in an
itty,aititt filth mtreet, was the reads
t br..m thr tailor, and was only
no g Goa l thr station.- Mr. Bream
lrtisests to let, and Mr. Darks
iotivir Having looked the ogles
at a rapid trot towards Mr.
Aided that Mi , Darke was
It •nmebndy was sending him
• I giaot also—but sertandy a
caravan Thera was a sight
'4f number thirty . pine w as
expoetaut of a message! It
tuck and stepped back W note
ib - litht in the aeeond -door was not
'amin e wa4 opened, a bead pop
vowe demanded :
life here 1" ,
VIM% t., know 7"
I. !traphie !Deming° fur him "
'it Wilt a enoment...
lter. sertatoly. Next moment,
Ls far as 'be chain woad ad ,
tfru tou.enlar band wan throat
T•o" Drake
I I
Osera the tote in
haw"
til; I whether any soower
tot.< •,r wt. w I WtiwW was 11101111 a
4f and 464 4 . 1 0 4 441J451/l. War!
rlatpturd
rl4.4*Xtiepll 441" f hi„ yoke, I had
rMr barite when I left number
tt u , I hall when I went I bad
tar oldlu e of hu, head when he
he window SVbetber fie was a
La ,Itt War! ;a 141 r matt or a dark
1) at a los. to know
• ndies front Newafttaa
rush the thatative in rather under
Ilse latter place at half part
1,,,,u1td Italf-paiit five, I
, 'op the platfor m , determined
other ate3titte ni"11
"
Irmo, it should out d part
• I 611( expected to fled Mr
• 1 1,ta. trate, but be was it , ' II )
44 4 110 e the train crawled
iral.a Ind, in another moment
8 .91 , t1 with those strangely
bu.i peso or plrfe.ur , in•
Ly eight N4l dwarf, Poe
.trattge (lily 441)r
L1P 5 1 .414 ; all the others bon/List!
a' from their frantic strut
44441 r .rats th e moment the bell
,trtrolog note Awl 41111...0
4141 Itmilern•ti •tyltsh ly dressed.-
1 11 1'4, ra, but with s 14'4 fair
lot be was fond of stroking sritb
lttal thumb anti finger II"
frau a first elms carriage, Hail.
p' r, who tonehed Lw en'.
Week portmanteau, gay« one
'lt broke into a smile again.,
down the platform, and, 101164
!HIT) folding doom emerged
'Mks swell kook liioe
si eusie
La tri s , adid to
.
myiself. where emit .blk ag—la tw
time of the musing? -*poet, Awe isms will he
open for above as how. I - V 4
Without waiting so eioasider whether it man
any business of miss, I probed thartiegio-eitafeld
lag door" after the trawellar.- .1 Reim Waking
slowly somas !belittle equate *strews o(thiesee
lien, looking from side to side, el tfeetkatnektig
which reed to take. Sedtiewlgaitark Igoe et
deli out liven bottled some prejeettee, and ed.
viewed towards him I could heard* 'teenuntr
of voices. Then the stranger took the porttitatn•
teen front the travelerstand, and the we nt on
at e rapid pee into the the town. Alf 'Ms I
saw uy the light of the station himPe. When
the two figures got beyond their infieeneei ' and
passed oat of view in the denser darkens. bclotid
and impelled by a vague feeling of curiciait7, I
drew my coat closer round me, and set off after
them at a stealthy pat*, taking the darker side of
ibe square as I went. I bad not far to follow,—
They passed into Higtt street, opposite Alltaber'
thirty-nine. A moment more, tad they were
both inside the house, and the door w4ia. "hat;
soother moment, and I maw a light shining from
Mr. Derke's room in the would foot is the freak
ffivingoo expeetattoe of seeing an.Ttldng more
I turned beak to the Ace, mid • Arms bearing
over a jovial fire, fell gradually into a dose, in
which Mr. Darke the travel*, Clary, a Meet Awe
awl Rinks the draper, were all mingled in fan
tastic drama s revolving endlessly in my weary
brain. What bad the telegraphic message to do
with thrtheadecen•'traveler? I sleepily kattiaa
king sylelf, et uttered' of • few missies; hat
without troubling Myself to find an answer. Bndt
deoly, a now ligtft buret npoe me. !started up,
throughly awak ; tied tearing ogee thedespateh
book, read over and over 'gam the fret part of
the tuessage: "Lettionfingers starts by - the mail
to night " "Well, whet kite that to do with
the hand-otue.traveiler?" - Why, this: don't the
traveller wear a pair of tightly.fitting •lentoe
colored gloves? and wasn't the outside seam of
of the first right finger en the right hood glove
buret open? This I had noticed as he stroked
his moustache. But eves supposing the travel
to be the Lemonengers of the message, whet
about the black dwarf? There was no btack
dwarf? He was alone. Yes, alone? Yes but
did be, not bave with him a lima!' blacdtpottaten.
tear, of which he teemed to takepartionbir care
refusing to let the porter so mach as take it oat
of the carriage for hint? A theory itigeotoes,
but improbable, I remarked to myself,' as I put
exit the gas awl drew up the Mimi, to admit the
struggling day.
My duty was over at eight o'clock. The Loo.
don train was about to start as I went. ap the
platform on my way home. Passing a group of
people standintnear a carriage door, I was sud
denly startled by a deep gruff Toler saying to
some one: "We *hall be off in half a minute
mire " "I would pick that voice from a thou
sand as Mr Darke's!" I exclaimed under spy
bread), as I glanced quickly round. The group
had dispersed except two pi loony "'man sada wo
11J/1/1, wbo were preparing to take their places in
the train The person whom I look , for Mr.
Dtrke was a bulky middle•aged was &media
a good t suit of black clothes. Re had black hair,
and thick blaokty .brows; his whiskers were black
meeting full aud bushy under his shin; his Noe
was pale and marked by ttle itteall : pott, and his
ey , s were - biack, bold and mantititt altorther a
fleroe fellow, whom it would beunwise tdenrage.
His companion's heel could not sew; it being
eoucealed by a thigh veil; Mu iodate& testa..diest
%ger. , tine could not be cadet shine tensity leers
old She was well, but wiser conspicuously it
tirv,l, having fever her silk dress a volumieous
soar). r ,bawl, c. mfortablc hokirsg enough cer
, tsiuly •on ae. Id Christsiyis morning. But. see!
As I live, she has got tin the very pair of lemon
colt.i ed gloves . that were w inn by the handsome
young dandy who arrivtd by the night mails the
pair with..ut doubt, haring the outside seam of
e first finger If the right band a little torn.
here, too, is use identical little black portman•
&esti, carefully parried, this time, by Mr. Duke
himself. /What can it all mean?
Under ordinary eirentostanees I should have
at once goon to bed and slept till two or
*h it
three o'ol k in the afternoon; but on Christmas
day, mirth veelling was not to be thought of.
So, hsuing b kluged, I put on my Sunday suit,
and left home lib the intention of taking a stroll•
into ibe country. Before setting oat, I went to
the station to see if I could - 'tido- -tai
net hider, a a certain
friend to socompt.ny me; whet whom shoulrl scow/Lug easpietiouely Tbe landlord's back was
tut et to tbe platform but Mr Chopp, the waste- hardly turned before • quick whisper was ea`
ble of Newstone. change d b etween . nmothy an d Mr.
Cboop. We
Mr. Choop is a small, wiry, satire looking man rrereli g htiu g our cigars when t h e 41 ° 1 ° 111 m° 2 **
with a sauntering and negligent ,air, as If be ed with the ale. He ' hewed ' us iuto a "will
were in want of sometbing to do. Mr Choop room, and we , left the countryman still smoking
bas a smiling open cee t aenenee . be weer , nil , bet at the door . He seemed to be a thirsty soul,
very much on the back of his bead, and general-
this countryman, for he called for glass after
ly 'Bliley.; an ample amount of shirt bosom mete ea" rapidly , " . lf fall/ determined
, on llatilif
log in hie qntet way, to invite the confidence of d'w° ll i n t he sher"st po ssible 11 °" ) . Re drank
every one But tell him something that irate
so witch that the land ord's big jug was at last
,
rests him; excite him—bring him oat of the pas- exhausted, and be lighted a candle to go down
sive into the active mood, and you will see his into the stellar to draw more ale. Hardly had
eves bermee keen and piercing, him teetbgliaten. this landlord reached the bottom of the cellar
snips
He e I.•oks at such a moment es dangerous sod full before the door was quietly locked behind
of mischief is a tiger crouching fat a spring. " I L ~ _
Mr Choop is a distant relative of, mine by mar. , r , - 44. • 4 e o °P's apathy rasished is a niement•—
eisge, and wssawere of the state of my affections. die eyes dashed,, hie teeth glistened, be looked
Ile team in the pasiive mood when I eeeountered d "a•ge"" " H OY" law ' s " g arde., " he whin'
him on the plittfone,-and looked the lime am. sred to me, "Ad take your stand hole, the
labia and mikes of men. window on the left. If Jim Riley jampa oat
„ Hew are .04 Ibis mondser s .ker said, sa t ii_
• ••-4.thoogli I don't think hell have tint--Icy hold
sb.etk bands ' "And how is Cary? Hare the °I h i °e'am d.e ti eh t° him t ill I come. Now , no ,
old man and you made masters up yet?" • quiet and sileat!" Mr. Cheep sad 'llmowy, cash
I *hook sty head disconsolately. palling out an ugly.looting staff, wept up stain
" Well, faint bean, you know," be added with Id. stealthily as two burglars, while I hastened
s smile "What brings me down here ? Bus'_ jut° the garden. ... .
,„,„ to be sure . Th e f ac t i s ," my s t ess o us ly tat A mingled noise of sheeting and oaths, crows
king
me by the button, "there was a daring bur_ ed by a woman's wild shriek, the erase of a fah
glary committed last night at 'Neville, an 4, pep- nag table, aid then die 'Riedel , was Aug up,
arty to a largo amount was stoles. Fro. Infor- and Mr. Dube, daihisig madly through, followed
tuetiou 1 received half an hour ago by telegraph closely by Cheep. They same wilts grated all 1
I litiee reason to believe that one of the anodes most togitber, end rolled over in a Boras sting
plicoe, having in his peeeessicie a eonsiderable glen Hilt Mr Dario, twice ne strong as bill'
part of the stolen property, arrived here early opponent, via uppermost, sitting astride of Mr.
tin t teeming by the mail train. A slender young thertP• Only for use moment, for the Destiny
mart, fitabionably deemed, light gases moustache, arse were aroma his neck. I gave him a sW
viiieriug a pair of lattsos-oolorttd kidlovee, and din pull back with all• my stretigta. ab oa p,-
earryiug a small se mutate ' ,ow on his feet, whipped opt his handcuffs, and
•'Mr Darke's rind, by Jupiter!"
rk-pert
1 • Mr Dante safe and fast before dial itidfirt:.
" Eh, what do on tneatr asked Cheep stare • al could tebovet his breath.
ly, with Meaner ferret look that *aged -tlitlls At this moment limadzaPPeated,
at .'nee into another mate' Three wieureewafk= Mr.- Riley , as /ought to be
cal to pot him is possession iti all I knew': Mr. , hod marying, with
aul yi.
care, the small Masi
Choop ga v e an shams irsperooptible jerk with bin Portilasstrau 'Mr opened it, and I per.
'iambi and a tall, asgsinly , lookioir Wan, baying noised it to be half-ful of watches, Hugs, pins,
the appearaseaof a farad laborer is his beat °lodise, jewelry of mines kink . The woman's reit;
lounged-oil; I recognised Timothy, Mr Olitopia sow thrown back, showed me the midnight/
co9B•lential subordinath a tralreller, minus the moustache; a bold, forward
Mr ChM . " sent Timothy offte limber *kap • lig , ' Pod featured Imam, head* her alb
ie te make certain itupgrita; then Went Moore we with b ahiPlY llarata•we IMArguitid
p
1.
to the book* aim to ask of 'tin Ark whether I menrith e a L uroa, •
be remembered to whet statics. Mr Dark* end , 1 The ' era; melting 'at bialellar door, sad
his
cosipsoios were booked. .. Th e s l ee k l oo t e d tattling to bo let oat tong ilfore this, was miaow
~., wavy patelengerit by lest min, tbar. 6 weld 1 I'd 47 Timothy; sad may Mask hedeolted while
not possibly re4Mnber,
be behold...bow his guests bad suddenly sows to
to London Mr canoe but* think h through
th• s deeillei 00 to aa. 1 1 " 4 , , :_____HY M r . °l""P'e orders lea brought will
coin p us sy him I-- the telegraph; ease 0 11 1 111 8 his •"••• an d a lied axed "au we am , * beak,
ti'ehiek train bail hardly gilt Ws Tottitdes yeti. 'Omagh the darkening afternoon, to Vslartiod.
Hy &insulting a timetable, Mr. IMp Ansa Through Mr. Choop'e iadeistigible exertions,
oat essetle at what pert iif t rift tkaseigiiet the wboje of the gang of birsiare ws=li e l r y
to be; so, at his request, I ' ' Illit,iti.l etapt' wed. One of them lareedQueeal 3
i g.th to wh i s t / i t wa de sea c a s on , g lh - i b il w iaioand it then came oat that Mr. Kiley instils piss=
tie-eription of Mr. Theilueffbis rutrin . thy t rpotY 'of the Wearies le WSW& Ail, bad all
-i, ing the &was to its twarsheii Co heilowititi : .4. • engaged for aortae fisW Leek. is Wog his
11,e ',Amitosis is question usboidahtimi..., ilst‘ndulyto pick out the prosaism At 6 be tubbed, to
go •i• ..r of an bour we rapi vet tr c i
, ) Mcr, I "The e plans of thaw, and a.ressite the dots* 0
ire.o it.e been assrshsk‘at ra h /IM - : vs: nit 41. )1. - te'o644. tilikpaa* i l ieilasi.
'Arent% to
g ibe demwirkbeginwilkyjningereterie ; PO; 1 t 4 - rie14#111 1 :=11
it." ' dip lbir Nil poet at
"F -'s
,41 ~ ,
~
_,,, to eel' Aire ;the Mill
ban *Oise' 'bald . Choop, "411 . yes iiio
saver at whisk of them the was sad mamas get
• ito Itelegrapbed to four stations Wiliest sue.
eess; but the fifth 'sword,. 44 1fiw she Wields.
*hi you usessios reached here by eight A. M.
•trais." ,
' " 11l hit" you yet Jim Riley!" eselaitied
Mr. Clump, wish a grim smile. "livid my boy,
if you wast-wi see a bit of fug, and • like lie p
with liteckhe Mid me, you aremeleorne."
As the-clock struck twelve, we found issuelves
at Polerood iitatios—Mr. deep, rune*, and
mymilf. After making a few isquiriris el the
station muter, Mr. Choop gest Timothy is ate
Creedal, while be and I took another. Hr.
Lb 4p put cautious questioqa to several isdivi•
duals, but without gaining as; decisive Worms
dui. Neither slesTmsoiky—when we met him
—able to furnish any satisfactory iniellignes.
Mr. Moor eossidered for a few momenta: "Ii
must be as I have suspected all along," said be
at 1.11, "We shall and them at the Tea Tramps
Step oat, lads; best leg foremost." .
Wei left the village at a rapid psis, and still'
iteepiig oa the kith road, gos into a harms mou
lted
s oilus bi tz. Fields, dgrworre end trees,
- . y left behind; until at length we
'we'reut is.ou every side by swelling hillocks
of moor, which swept away as far ea the eye ,
ca
could reach sad boned the horizon wish their
sinuous, g lines . Following the guidasee
' of Hr. w e quitted the high read after a
times- and st to s halt under the lee of s
lilfghtsr hilkdir jibs commas. Mr. Chimp, tak
lag of his hiss, clambered up the hill, Sad took
a stealth siirvey over its sadimit. He the.
beckoned all to follow. Peeping over I fraud that
we were of the summit of a ridge of loastry,
tom which 'the road swept down into a small
galley, is the middle of which sad, sloes to the
high road, stood a small, square home. .
"The Tem Tramps. I dare wager that Jim
Riley 'spells wife are in that borne," said Mr.
Chopp "It liu notorious gathtring place for
all the rogues in the district.' ,
Mr Choop di:attended, and 'he sad Timothy
held secret iseusteil for some minutes. The.,
Timothy opened a small beadle—brought all the
way from Newstoniatid proceeded with / snub
gravity, to inditet himself Leto a wagoners blue
smock-frock, pleatifully braided and buttoned,
after the fashion In which wagoners delight. He
wet t turned up the bottomi of kis:intim truisms,
14 u to bring into more promisees' view his
laced up boots; the be gave his bat a push back
and his : hair s pull forward, sod set of at, a Alleg
ing paw in the direetiou of the Ten Tramps,
whistling the Plough-boy as he goes. Mr.
Moor end I passed the' pert half hour together,
awaking cigars andidiscussing !various matters,
with a. glance over the hillock every two or three
minutes to the direction of the ion
•" why nut wait till sight," I asked Mr.
Choop, "wbeu you could approach the inn with
.out being seen?"
" Heecure attar dark, we should be pretty
sure of ending half-s-doses rough customers
there, who would Make the matter awkward!'
"Then why cot take half a doses sees with
you, so ai to avoid all risk?"
•• What credit Would there be in that? Whim
Timothy end I fail, it will be time eausgb to
thing p boot eall•tig in other essistanee There
be is!''
Tisuotho Wag 4111Milefllie enulastAdia
ititientag 'r ling stay pips. While tr i =
ststeblug him, be took off his bat, , sad
scratched his head viptronsly; a second lime;
mull a third mu,.
•• All right:" Kahl Mr. Cboop "That was
the stifttsl. Le-tri hue your cap, Fred, and you
take my bat; 1 , h,o't, *ant Riley to reongeise I
me till I get into flee hues'. "
Review made'llo. transfer, we set of, Mr. I
Chi h li esthetic with, so assumed limp
ria l athy was still gawking bisetpe at the door I
wto.z we teaehtd tb.• inn
•• " &sine day, master "
" Very fine my ciao," replirdlHr Cboop.—
"What mart of i tap hark you got here!
" Oh, toidy lA, You'll foetid the landlord
honiewbvre insoide All the Ironies folk seem
co be gone out somewhere "
" Two gigues of your best ale, laadlord," ea•
claimed Mr. Chopp to a burly red beaded sum
with a villainous eountenattee, who ease forward
$i 60 A TEAR, IN MIV/44616
RIIV., SAYMAY:_,WION9, MA101'00858!
Three days Arter - Clbirtatiatinr day I matted a
net. Wow Mr. Lativister natio* usii to go over to
ireevine, as be vilified particularly to see me
Be realised me in his grave, quiet way, looked
me through and through from under ids bushy
..
eyebrows, motioned me to a seat, and (he then rg
" received yeAtesday moraingfrom Mt Choup
an secount *of certain evebj relative to the m
ima burglary oa say premises. -
" The burglary on your premises, sir!"
" Were you not some of it?"
• .4 I was, of coarse, awa re that a robbery bad
bee!' committed, hat was not aware that you were
the aulatur."
" Bash however, is the ease," replied M r
Lemeaster. ''Mr. ()hoop inform. tee that it was
through you be first obtained the clue which en.
sum - li ra t o t rac k and c apture part 4 the gang,
had recover a portion' of the stolen property, and
that he was much indebted to your oouragiyand
activity in the capture of Riley. Now, lam cot
" unllnatrul OM; you bare hag had a in t i m
/or my dengiamt, - which, I believe, is returned
by her, but yale are trot is a position to marry.
I will tell you *hat rn do forrt. I will take you
is an assittaatio my 5h0,401 a thaderste salary,
aid if I find that you bring into your new trade
that amount, op u i:l g ligenoe and activity which
I sal told you will advance you Accord•
ugly, and, peoriding you and Cary remain in
the same mind another yea I will not ebleot to
your marriage. Let me make our decision in
sorning. You will Gad Ow; in the parlor,"
I need hardly say, that both Cary and I are
very glad to see, M r.whceever he favors
us with. I call in your ( w l e al trtome, and brWgs new
of Lemonengerv; who, now that Mr. Riley Is
working oat his penal servitude, is 4oiog well u
a licensed hawker lathe hosiery seflNottiugham
line.
lin,.aiOß or A Ili 'Pt, —The Sen
ate of Tenessee has caught the Grow and Keitt in
fection at Washingtou, and "goes in." The Seo
*ton from Maury and Shelby, Messrs. Whit.
thieve and Walker, struck ups little muss to en
liens the latosototty. The Nashville Pa triot of
Timeday mys of it:
Mr. Wbithrotte rose to elcial of order. Mr.
Walker, 12terreptiag, said the gentleman from
Maim had risen to • pohit, of order, but was
Mding to the discussion of something
hittbrooe replied, that showed how little
be koowed about it. Mr. Walker rejoined that
Mr. Whittbrone had been drunk all the morning.
and wondered if he thought him so Mr. Whit.
thorns retorted that it was a d—d lie, where
upon Mr. Walker struelt him in the face with
&book and the parties olinehed They ,were
separated without material injury ...i either of
them.
PURCHASE OP SONOMA SIT THE GOVERN
SIENT.—From a private letter juet received from
New York, by a gentlemen of -die city, we make
the following important extract. The writer
is io Cali6►rnia, and doubtless ep.aks by the
Gard:
"There are parties of influence from California
and Arizona now in Washington; urging the
polobsse by our powwows' or the &ate of So
non, Mesico, and them is titt j tiattitt bos . that
/ the
administration will buy it- t i ft1 0 4 .1 0 . 494 01 Iwo 'qr.,
=log with that view ha , •
proposed bk. 4.41_ to : • ' ea
use to her, it being overrun by the Apia's and
other Indians, who are * terror to the inhabitants
sad however the troubles now existing in that
distracted rimblie may terusieni..;tl e govern.
;pent, if soy he egalilishe,l .it all, Mill nAed ca l
must hare money The parties urging this mat
ter want Guymon!, for a port of entry, fir with.
oat it, Aris )na sod the iodise ut country will he
of comparatively little value Tbei expt et to
get as far down se the 241tth takteg in a
put of Sinsloss."--31. Load, Dem
A few eights since a laughable affair occurred
cm the Niagara Pali, Railroad, between Buffalo
and Tonawanda. It was late in the evening, and
the ears Mopped at Tosawasda for wood and wa
ter. Some passengers got on there, sad after
the train started, Wine, the epaduttor, started
argued to **Beet fares, and take up tickets.
About the middle of the rear oar, be came seems
• heavy looking premier, in a wool hat,
who was appareutly asleep. Wins put his hand
on the sleeper's shoulder, arid mod, "ticket "
The sleeper stilted sot, Nor letereriued his reg.
tiler snore, which was very much like the hark
of as aaastlimatie dog, mingled with a clam .
L"hire pesuliar cry. Wine gave the sleeper a
sty poach ie the side, bat the sleeper awoke
not, sad his anoriag became positively terrific.
As a last resort Winn palled him back and forth
is the seste, when be awoke, and looking up
witha Oae wasted to know what was wait
ed. Wien said, "ticket," as iraseibly as be could.
The straogergot up thout saying • word, re•
ustadibimsel4 and commenced a general search
of his paresis while Wise passed 00 to tiolieet
tickets from the neat beyond.
When he returijed, lel the sleeper was &deep
spin. Wino 'est slit again like- trooper,
and alibi .pieg thougli the same operation, be
flully ainaesseri hiss spin. The same *Queer
atlas treeseTed; aid obi same search followed,
Whin sll the while stealing by in a feline qt mind
which might be likeuti to a eat dealing' with a
dog—leek up aod Arms exploded. The stran
ger finally told him he had no tlebet, sod droped
right back iato s heavy sleep ague. Winn was
sow fairly enraged, sad jerking the stringer
about, invoke him 'pis, sod demanded "thirty
eests—iniek " The stranger yawnedleightfully,
and said he passed net, and went to searching
for his ticket spin. Wm gave the bell rope a
savage pall, sad went to the door and called the
brahemes-ia. The ears stop —the tire ass.
Riestrafter, when be rose op six feet
arid alma in his hoot., and lamed is proportion
bad thew asked Wilts what he- was pear to do.
?flutlf*,l*s yott wthar hinted WitO, rtie.
eriag,ailLour; "cue oan't. redo fa' nothing en
reline* eereitsity each a sleepy reseal as you
an."
" 641 a-sieep elan" ;aid the Yankee;
thoit I'd time* little fir so use io gettia riled
&boat it; bow made, ewe pityr""W kis pullieg
oil NAOS 1 , needle! of doable saes, end
from t h e Other sr -roil of liseknotes, almost. ea
thick u his leg, "bow much ter pity?" sinnerhing
the wimp Ics, and los, aid 20s, in bin flews,
"Thirty mem, "mid m Wise, with biseyes atm
ding wide eyes, with*, receiving; be "mooed
from the at sad started the tftie egg., amid
owe of the 4011.1 it yens of 'sub ter that ever shook
the pet eltieg rife immure modb. The ',leery
mss proved to teethe tiaperiatiodeat et the Nev
Beesed 044, add bad ant bees asleep st all.
Wits, Wm felt keine& shim
• ,•
arm". Citintim, thooleir Par m a. kw par •
abased ma- wale Bokottatd4 for $4 0 .000, 40141-
vita* 4 itarr.aimare aiaarriaal carter.
?big rbo *go WA emblem' s e "
boar. l 44imo too Joloiliboor•
••
Ul4 'i{paiitl~ ibuvertaa tato •
Am. Am* Ipheipleidiei4ba tesiimp,
-...- ..11111111,,,- -- --
A gold Conductor
'REPORT
SKLF4/T COMIIIITTEE OF ISE SENATE"
or`psww•A, AMU=
lIIIXO IX mINXIITIN MIL *edi t ISM
Mr. iluctiteLAW, from the Boleti Committee,
to which was r. feared certain resolutions relating
to die •adeineion of Ewes into the thaw) si
Beale,' mode the fallowing report :
thin the Caukamatise, is addition, to reporting
back I so the Seas the resolutions referred to
threw-Alm ow with reeemmeedation that it be
jetieerriteiy pampa/MI, and the other in am
. amended form-oleem itproper testate shimmied,
arm which their reties in founded.
So l pretesting* and vehemeat have been the
efforts to render this water* of admissioa ob.
noxious sod neripuhr, and 90 much is the pease
sod haritioey of the coustry revolved is a sunset
understanding of it, that your committee believe
that some eaaminatios of the subjectuln the
Legislature, to be followed by the ezpressiou of
its judgment, is the foss of a monitiou, wdl
4mbose the anise of may from false Mime ,
•sMos, and ham , * military eget open public'
*kn.
04r experiewe is Peuneynresis is making
land imeo4ng einstituttoos may be (manned• to
aidus le softies the dilioelties of this Kansas
question. Per that purpose seise referees. will
be ins& to our ow sonstitutiosid history Is
1776, is of a circular from the
CoMmietee of Safety of Philadelphia to the
committee of the several counties,Nieto/lug the
resolution 'of the Continental Co ngress of the
15th of May, members were 'whited from the
eemeal minded to a provincial conference, which
met in PhiladelPhieoa the 18th of June, and
adjoerned Sealy to the 25th of the same month.
This conference recommended the election of
delegates, to assemble in oonvention, sod form a
Constitution for Pennsylvaaia, as an independent
State and provided maser is which the
elections for tots purpose should be held. In
consequence of - this recommendation, delegates
were chosen by the people, who assembled in
C4mmutfon, on the 15th day of July, 1776, end
proeeeded to form the Constitution of tharyear,
without submitting it to a vote of the people or
; other process of malleittion. That Conititutibu,
it will be seen, had 1 revolutionary erigin, and
it continued is force fourteen . years, 'until 1790.
It contained some fault" which disturbed its
practical operatics. The Legilative department
wadded of a single body, sale colonial times,
and the Executive coedited of a Council and
President., the latter being 'elected by the joint
,onto of the Council and , Assembly. A council
of censors was also established, who were to re
view, from time to time, the conduct of the dif
latent department* of the government and re
port to the people any violations of the &instate
tion by either; end they 'were empowered, by a
two-third vote of their number, to call a Con.
ventioo to amend the Constitution. A single
legislative body., a plural executive, and a cent
social mused to criticise official action, but with
out power to enforce its judgmeat, were the three
capital errors of that Caestitution; and the
arrangement fee amendment through the action
of the season was found o, be Impracticable.—
' A majority was is favor, at owe time, of a Con•
f . vendee., sail at another, against ii; but at no
• ti,,ke multi au affemetive two triode . vote be
loft ed. lrasat p, nuder the preasere of nems
is ai fi:At momm il change, the subject was MIDIS
went meabes 0444. t rit,AgeyittL,
1789, In General Assembly, resolutions tr!re
adopted setting forth that alterstious sad amend
; mews to the constitutiou were immediate',
necessary; reciting from the Deotaration of In
depentb•Hoo the ioetertiou of. the right of the
people to alter ur to abolish their government,
and to ituttitute a new ens, and also the clause of
the bill of rights is the lieu existing eoustits.
Lion --;•"Tbat gefrearesseet is, or ought to be, in
stituted for the esonsuo beodit, protection aid
security of the people, Batas or oomesituity, and
not for the particular eucdueseem or edsmatage of
any single seas, family, or sat at isen,i . who are
part only of that conieouoi.y--sed that ,thp
community bath en indubitable, and unalienable
, cud iudeaasitile right to reform, alter, or abolish'
government in such manner as shall be to that
community judged mom conducive to the public
weal." From all which, as well as the astute of
i society , and the principles of government, it
manifestly appeared that the people have, at all
Limes, an inherent right to alter and amend
I the form of government is each manner se they
' shall think proper: sod that they are not and
oaanot be limited to any certain rule or mode
of accomplishing the same, but may make ethoice
of each method as may be best adapted to the
end proposed, and that, further reasons assigned
• the delay of the mode proscribed in the Con
stitution for amendment ought not to be ad
. witted. It was therefore proposed and earnest.
ly recoainteaded to the anises* of the Common
' wealth to take this subject into their serious
' consideration, sod, if they wavered in opinion
with the Assembly, that • Convention funs the
purpose of revising and altering the Constitution
of the State ought to be called It war submit
ted to thentirledber it would not be eouveulent
and proper to elect members of such Connution
at the meat general election, lied that, upon
their Omura being airlifted at their neat sit
deg, it would provide by a law the time and
place of the meeting of the Convestion, omit
for the payment of expenses incurred thereby.
These important resolutions were adopted by the
decisive vote of forty-one to esesoteen. At its
post session the General Assembly called a Con
rendes "for the purpose of review, and if they
see occasion altering nd amending the Coasul
nation of the State . "tThe resolutions for that
purpose were adopted by a vote of thirty-sine to
seventeen on the 15th of September, 1789.
These legislative proceedings result ed is the
Constitution of 1790, and would seem to stand
justified by the4easous assigned, aid by the fun
tber see r that athlete' the Constitution 0f1776
pi-emitted a mode of amendment, it did sot for
bid other modes; and that therefore the ordinary
)aw.ensitiag power weld sot initial, the WOOS
wiry promeding_efethasge. That Constitution
' of 1790 was protillesed by the Commotion and
Put in form by it, without any submission of the
imam:mut or any part of it to *popular vote.—
It remains in force till this day, a period of
sixte.eight years, modified only by certain
amendments to w h ich it has been sub•ecLit
1a 1825 a law was passed by the • ture
for taking the eases of the people upon ques
tics of a Commodes to make antendatems.—
The proposition was however rejected.
Tea years later--in 1835—a law was passed,
entitled "40 act to provide for telling a Con
vention with limited powers." It
. provida for
a vote "fie the purpose of seeertaielog the seam
of the citizens of this CommoawmdtV, on the
ezpedieoey of tolling a Convention of delegates,
to be elected by the people, with authority to
submit amendments of the State Coostitmtion to
$ of the poop* for their Qtr re
jeetioo, lied witk weedier orgi'tifirpotsers want
metier:" the vote taken is pumas°, of this
set wsi in favtiiii( a Couveatimo, end by the
subsequent set 'of the Vdtb of Marsh, 1836,
JO:Matra was made. for • elestial chi delegates,
foie the tedwissiou of the OftballMlSSolli
reed by them. Withastrpaushog to emit&
the pardealar reamss which aeleased'the Liss
lateincaml people, if hi ulcer that the Conves ties
pf 1987418, , abs weabern of Mali Imre sleeted
, irithinhismeelm chtesisum,gemessedealti
ed IOW& • ?burnout& iiell heel • low Oi mode
I=
sore abraiite the 'hid; imir"plitlhdr
tesenduseute Awes. They tmeld *sly *NM
propellants of aseodmieso, regoifisra vote to
give .them solidity,
Those einewinieets or 1888 were adopted, aid
th.. C.ustitstimi ofl7Bo, trash° 4lit changed as
thry , repailged old matter or istnochated iectit
Among 'Moe amendseetos was owe is wa r i
to future taesiimpots, *Web wow emulthiltes tier
10th artiste of the Ceomitution, and provides
that suieadments may be proposed la a inajority
of all asemben eleeted to eget ouse of the
asootel Assembly at two sueesseitts tisideOs,
which, upon being approved by 's sbh. ifelir,
will take awn Under this provides unitomend.
meat was adopted in 1850, and foist is 11157.4-i.
If this ptiovision regarding change In the Coo
'ligation, Amok' reeeive the same eonstrwstioo
did the protisien in the Constitutions of 1776, it
does sot furnish as exclusive/ mode of amend
meet ; and the Legislative power of the Si e sta is
competent sc soy time to provide for ealliag a
Constitutional Oonventioa, the powers of which,
whether geserit or epeeist sod limitodi will de
pend upon the law adder Whisk tbedelegotes are
chosen. And as this eeotiot or °several Co*.
stitution does ust forbid abet' Medea of amend
mons than that provided by it,' it is dear died
this d.,nstruotion must te seapted as the Mee
one.
lot the facts airy this-sketeli be applied 'to the
Couvention and Constitution of Uses., - sod
ditheultiee sod miseeneeptiant regardhog shim
will disappear The Vegiedantre of that Terris.-
ty passed an sot for taking the sense of the pie
Ole at so election in 1856, Upon the qiseetket,of
a Conveodoo form a Ooostiliatite for Kiwis.
Subsequently, on the 19th day of Yebrasty,
1857, the Legislature' passed • the law for the
elemion 'of delegates to the Convention.
The delegates were sleeted in viewof those
facts, and their powers were, of course, rani
and'omilar to those of our Conventions of 1776
and 1790—the only conventional bodies ever
.assembled lo this State from whose hands cane
forth an entire Constitution. The useeseary
consequence is, that the Constitution framed by
die Kansas Ot;iveuti.ni would be tiditketid ash.
jam only to the aoceptaace of Congress voider
that provision of the Comititatioo of the United
States which gives it juiiW,iction over the ad
mission-of new States It ie not a here
to inquire whether the slavery clause of in
strument stood upon different grounds from other
parts of it. If that be affaised i the answer is,
that it was submitted todecisioa. If tie.
no such legal obligation existed, r it das not neems•
sary to submit it, and the doing's was a volun
tary act of the convention, with- retsina°e to
political reason and 'public- expeetatkia, rather
'than legal oo k ree. Tian constitution, therefore
comes before Congress a laWful instrument, and
sanotiotied by ordinary legal and ooustitational
principles.
Now,upon questions of public or political
right, he whole country apd all its inhabitants
ire soder LAW, and judgment must be gives . in
favor of that part, or individual wiwise posit ion
stands statiotied by it. If our system' were not
so, through all Its parts, it would be weirthilees,
iand speedily dissolved usihr the breath of revo•
lotion, or be struck chine by the strong arm of
foreti Nor is this con fiuou of things Inconfpat
, ibis with true liberty sod freedom. Curs ystem
, bus stoieditot. facilities' for amendment, change
L and reform, in conneetion'with power to enforce
the existing laws and rights, pail!, sad private.peas
°mutt cOlk_ol their ;
foss, i dtwm strith at lair tir of tititiet,
vibe than by legal sod orderly modes of wood.
Meat, are ;met fur frogi governments, and cannot
lung cuslatais them.
lb. lawful anJ regular character of too pro
, (*Wings lot the fortuatioa of the Kansas Coasti:
tuum, and the validity of that instrument as
presented to Congress Itavtog been shown, and
, the argument illustratod by our oweeonstitatioic
al history, 1t remains to notice some of the lead.
l ing objections heretofore made, sod to give them
a fair
Ist. The Objection that the Constitution is on
changeable Until 1864, is billy answered by the
• citations already made from Peonsylvaais Con
stitutiosal history. We may conclude that- the
same power will exist is the peopid of Kum.
to °bangs their Constitution through a regular
process, as that exercised by our owe people in
ciousgiog the Constitution of 1776. The oases
iu e alike upon the question of power ' and ail one
is solved by the decision of the other. Any one
who accepts our Penosylvaaia practice se regular
land lawful, wilt not doubt that, uponidenissiou,
the people of the new State of Kansas will have
power, through a Cupventicus, to amend or &sags
altogether their fundamental laworetaininglo any
: case its republican form This poster stands
arm" the solid foundation wheio our fathers
placed it, and upon gener.il grounds of 'reason
, where a Constitution provides fur its own asedod
, went, the mode or time so provided cannot be
exclusive, unless others are expressly prohibited.
. Every presumption should he mode in favor
! of the popular right in legal instruments of goa
-1 eroutent, and the power of changing them must
Iremain entire , utiles' expressly limited or forbid=
I deo. The Kansas Constitution does not forbid
' ametidioeuttefore 1864, and it does manila a
declaration of popular power over Constittitione
similar to those qnoted by our L 06110,1100 of
; 1789; in a case precisely similar to the present
one
'ld. Upon the firil adjournment of the Kam
sae Convention without its submission of the
whole Wastitutiou formed by it to a vote, ob•
jectico was ,made to it upon that ground, and a
eoustitutiouni philosophy, altogether novel, was
produced 'upou the ooutasion, to sustain that ob.
jectiou i by Robert J. Walker, the Governor of
the Territory. It may be found expounded at
laige in his subsequent letter of resignation, and'
it constitutes the material point in the memoir
of Mr. Secretary Stanton tit the Territorial-Leg.
islature, on the Bth December, 1857. It was
this, shortly stated—that the people cannot make
or amend a Constitution through agents, sorer.
eig, being "inalienable, indivisible, a unit,
and incapable of delegation," in whole or in part.
The practical result arrived at by Governor sad
Secretary, from this doctrine, was the itivilidity
of the Lecompton Constitution,
without a popu•
in vote upon the whole of it. Aesop a; if pity
seem, all this is spread. Out in official, dominion%
and constitutes the leading ground of objection
by Governor Walker to the Constitution, as
stated' by himself. Nothing more untenable,
sad. more opposed to onstitatiosal principles, as
understood sad ranked in this sonata, could
be prodined. .
Dnbtkes under oar Repriblion gene, the
people are sovereign, and Contititions most pre.
end from them, bat they would no be
sovereign if stripped of die power of
arab or representatives to in t for thew Gov.
Walker Ones no authority for his doctrine, a.
(sept himself. He says be stated ilia an addNN
is 1838,. and again ins pamphlet gins to the
enmity its 1828 it is Dot parostved bow ite, rept
tattoo can strengthen it, altd the 'absent* Of
weapons onion it, eel Mike yam, eetherity
spins it tiro most isigOlty sad etwolusive.—
Sick authority is foroiabei by tiro Cloottiosion
of the United fitnes,:eld ri g a tiistwt Poulain •
ales. The barmier woo by Oommodebil
tboolostio of *Mob.dobtotoltlp timt
laigbaliteria. WiIIIOSIONI by. , Wiftathafas
io sash Butte, wiesledt %robot yorpos.
4 1 ,
No part d i gs & traroobinittod •ttri - partia l
Ic , vpropeesil enON
11111011FIThik Itahisiilool,4oAPTheitg !rp,
1•11
, B. F. sWAN,
amoratialies a •w• ' *, 044' *' '
pokes to the INA . et ~._' ' 4 : I "' . •
relating to neeedneets' : And am , ,
._
...
ruby, toy amendesest , whet/ester I hitt,N : ffsti
'by L e or Vouveletione is .
d file *4but Haw es htalliProPootid b;7 - 11,.
of b o th Hammes fir amigos., or Itk • Courtlit-'
Wild by Poll oi tren, Wei
e usu rious ,
4-
Lighldwkwe tiro•thirds of Suites. , -,.- a
this
12 0 sits be mesa the sogestp ,
or Pena on e da fated through their .
is ' member, to' the Clooveetit
for Med, Are „Ocestitadois of the Muted Bowe
that on three commons they haeoratiffed !FP*
mete to it through their Legislators, ad that
by the fifth article, to the exesudow el Thitit.
they have boned timososelen, any Won,
sent say be proposed by Coupes, or s
AOilea (males °Wide rutrietiotte,) sad 7
Legislatures, or Coovestions : is thaw foto* at
the States. The onlyfrom 1140 poorer
no
of amendment is, that ima betiowie4
of its equal repromatadoo in the Senate. ~ Aid
is feet, with the exemption or State represoptatift
it the Senate, any and all parts of tha Owlisdar.
tios may be ohaaged, spinet the opposition and
protect # Penneylvaeia, if other States and Cos- •
goes gave it adesrate support. Site be. beam*
herself by becoming a party to :the Coacta, sad
arrant be relieved from her obligations by say
relined philosophy, wbetherproceediug from sea
of distinction or not.
Such is the character of the Cametitatioe
making sad amending power sa iffintrated
_by
,tbe Constitution of the United States; ;
_nd .
when we tarn to our own Fiats, the easeigetrel• ,
ly clear. Both of our State Coaatitatimo were
formed by Convections, neither were submittei
to a popular vote; sad we are Heim at this mo t
meat under a Constitution so framed; and is is
manifest that a Beat Coaatitittion might sow be
established throng a Conventioe,sa the same
manner and having equal validity with former
ones. The notice of ibis objection_becoosee Us
portaat when we consider It as an assigned nes»
of the difference between Gov Walker s ad the
National Administration, leading to his remiser
tiara, and also as the reasons stated by Secretary
Stanton for convening the Territorial LegtAstue
in in 1857 and recommending to it the poesy of
,an so t f or o rote tb be taken on the Leeceserou
Constitution. It is directly connected with the
conduct of those olgoials, and distinctly .P. 114 for.
ward by the latter as the ground upon which the
vote in January upon the Constitution could be
justified. Witham this, awarding to the admis.
sloe of Mr. Stanton to the Legisature, there
would have been no legal protean for the 4th tg"
January vote, and therefore the fore* to he se
piped to that vote will, *tending to him, tispiad .
altogether upon the monoclonal of the objesdoeq,
but as we have demonstrated that tire objefitilla II
wholly groundless—that not only is it nOt 4llo.
tamped by authority or reason, but it is a - Rer_ l 4 l
condemned by the high authority of the CossZo
lotion of the United States and of Ptensylvaala
—the whole fonadation for the Janus, rote is
destroyed, and it stand' without validity, Owes •
and sleet epos the Constitution *Oast labia it
was directed. Lad at the same Poe the politer
of the Adtniniitration, as against the. Governor
and Secretary, is vindicated, and thaw odious
Condemned, upon the ground selected oy them
selves. It is undisputable that the people in
selecting a Commotion to fors a Constitades,
may, and do, &slept* to them the whole power
neoessery to establish it, unless there be some
esCreased limitation. ,
Navin thus shown th e anseauttle nature 14 dre
position assumed by Messrs. Walker andlitantas
upon which they threw their official anima»
against the .Constitutional party is the Territory,
and at !lie game time demonstrated the futility
of dot January tote by the Wino of the mesa
assigned for it by :he MOO who raanmeaded it,
and whose official sot soused it to be taken, we
might conclude this part (rf the Hobjeet, bat the
warmth with which the 4th of .lentiall wets it
pressed as as independent objection to :!' 4O 0116.11•
color —
Cities will exam semethiag far th er ea their !
sad it may be eoalidently asserted,
not -u
grounds,grounds, that only was it without le effect
upon the Constitution, bat was is i wholly
irrelevant and void. No Legislature is the sous
try ever assumed jurisdiction ever the formats»
Of ratification of a Constitution, cxoept uplink los
express delegation of power for that rupee;
mad the assumption of such power by, a me
mutative body, in the absence of express t,
must be, of necessity, an usurpation, aid its mos
relating thereto, wholly sold. The taking of the
seam of she people on the.question of manias a
Cas voodoo, and providing the legal facilities for
electing the delegates nets up», the presideetamd
necessity, but neither reason extends the
legislative power to the subject of format, Z r
and ratification. If this were not so, the Logi&
nature might remove Constitutional restraints up.
on itself at its own pleasure, or assail ether
departments of the government in their , juAs- •
diction; and in the ease of a Territorial La
gislatues, might extend its owe existence, or
lain power in the heads of its own party agolos rip t
a oonstitution obnoxious to them. had.theestoil
reason will apply against accomplishing Alte rate •
ends directly through a liopulu" vote. I.traLkp
the Legislature cannot do threugh,others what
they are prohibited from doing themselves. .'lf .
the Leemplos Constitutioe was a valid imam
mot prior to the 4th of January, which has bees
proved, it would »idiotic so until the power Id
the petiple, Wing reiptlarly., through well-es
Bohai sad well known legal forms and •
*build einead it, Or 11014011 to stwaistAi its _
Certainly, this out only he done Cut the
t ot ooastitational provision through a. pvtder
'
Coaventioa where deliberation and delay Write:
cure wise a nd jest *banes. Tbideittisetion of
a Constitution after it is epos made, without *be
substitution of another, was never Wine. Leard
of in the United States, and such an attempt bee
no foundation either In reason or law The sea
who would assert the power of our Legislature to
submit she Constitution of this State to s public
rote, and upon a majority given afgainetit, at
it should standiandled and destroyed, would be
justly regarded as folliah or insane. No Busk
i revolutionary principles exist is our po • sp.
1 tem, and we may bops the time will . long
distant before they axe admitted or
3d. The objection wade to adaustioa i tillitit
has probably bad most elect spoil public o #l lo %
is that stated in Gov. Walker's , letter at 74.
nation, after hie »petition of looligis l 4 l lomlite
eigaty, already refuted. It is, that a lap put
of the people of the Territory had DO
to vote fom the delegates »Abe 4 4 1=1
Couventios. If this mete true* point 04' iliset
and to tkOODDIat seggiste4-4 aiii4sea crinties
counties of tbe 38 composing the ' war e
wholly disfranehised, without fank or , of
their owe—if the Territorial set " far
the esurns, registry . of votes, and
the election, was so usierfastly *abutted is
objects were wholly or ineialy f , . .
that witboat fault or neglect of thows
1
a ' t h en, indeed, would it appou O , ut&
i reasonable to bold those tweed se the
balm to be bond: by it, and to WWII Itilipp
them by Coagootal stoeptanoe. This *joie
doe involves disputed suotentiof feet, and she
Comemitteu,. bevies carefully examined 14-4ot
=- te \ mthentasially deny its torus. The
eis i i wbOb it testa have bees Nil ado
gesionsiymill *Waft Mated, while otbedillak
isolift *W il 4 for --tl'•
ibtairbeel ,4 6 ‘ l = ll wit t op
WI
addli ..- liel'ir :I s ter
twist
, 'sfseessustaintollloll4 _ 1.141101
A.
ECM
11•2
NUM R 43.
4 d
WM