Decatur Eagle, Volume 6, Number 16, Decatur, Adams County, 22 May 1862 — Page 1

TII E I) EC A I U REA GL E.

VOL. 6.

' E E 33 DECATUR EAGLE. IS ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, BY A . J . IT ILL, Editor, publisher and ruopaiKTOß. OFFICE—On Second Street, in Patterson* building, over the Drug Store. Terms of’Subscription: One copy, one year, in advance, $1 00 If paid within the year, 1 50 If not paid until tlie vear has expired, 2 00 ff'.r’N’o paper will be discontii ued until all arreraijes are paid except at the option of the Publisher. Terms of Advertising: One square,(ten lines) three insertions, $1 00 Each subsequent insertion. 25 EFNo advertisement will be considered less than one square; over one square will be counted and charged as two; over t wo, as three, etc. O’A liberal discount, from the above rates, made on all advertisements inserted for a period longer three months. •L? The above rates will be strictly adhered to under all < jrcumstances. JOB PRINTING: We are pr<*par. d to doall kinds of job-work, in a neat ami workmanlike manner ,on lhe nn st reasonable terms. Our material for the completion of Job-Work, being new and of rhe lat est styles, we feel confident that satisfaction canbe given. ‘'The Work! Would be Better for it.’’ If men cared less fur wealth and fame, And less f< r ba«tle fields and glory; If writ on human hearts, a name Seemed better than in song or story; if men, instead of nursing pride, Would learn to hate it and abhor it; 1 I more relied On love to guide, The world would be bet lei for it If men dealt, less in stocks and lands, And more in bonds and deeds fraternal, Jf Love's work had more willing hands To link this world with the supernal; If na n stored up Love’s oil and wine, Andon bruised human healts would pour it; If ‘‘yours” and “mine” Would once combine, The world would be the better for it If more would act the play of lie, And fewer spoil it in rehearsal; If Bigotry would sheathe its knife, ’Till Good became more universal; If Custom, gray with ages grown, Had fewer blind men to adore it — If Tai* nt shene In Truth alcne, The world would be the better for it. If men were wise in little things— Affecting less in all their dealings, If hearts had fewer rusted strings To issolate their kindred feelings; If men, w hen Wrong beats down the Right. Would stiike together and restore it — If Right made Might In every The world would be the better for it. — A Steeled Heart. —“I am afraid of the lightning,” murmured a pretty woman, during a thunderstorm “Well yor may be,” said a despairiu lover, “when vour heart is steel. As daylight can be seen through very small holes, so little things will illustrate a person’s character. Indeed, character consists in little acts, daily life being tne quarry from which to build it up, and rough-hew the habits that form and stamp it. Do not waste a moment, not a second, in trying to demonstrate' to others the merits of your own performance. If your work does not vindicate itself, you canot vindicate it, but you can labor steadily on to something which needs no advocate but itsel. A Good Man. —“I plows, I sows. I reaps, I mows; T cuts up wood for winter; I digs, I hoes, and taters rrrows, and for what I knows, am indebted to the printer. I do suppose all knowledge flows right from the printing p*ess; so off T goes in these ’ere clothes an * settles up—l guess.” Ike was reading to Mrs. Partington, (he other day, an account of the inpection of a steamship by Government officials. and came to the paragraph: ‘They found her knees al] sound, though her breastworks were a little shakv.’ ‘lt is too bad. 1 declare, said the old lady indignantly. ‘that Government officials will be so immoral. Examining the breastworks wasn’t so bad, but feeling of the knees—how bad she must have felt.’ — Ike privately wished that he was examiner.

Address of democratic Members of Congress to the Democracy of the United States. Fellow Citizens: The perilous oondition of our country demands that we should reason together. Parly organi- ’ lion restricted within proper limits is a .positive good, and indeed essential to the ; preservation of public liberty. Without it the best government would soon deg. n I erate into the woist of tyrannies. If. despotism the chief use of power is in i crushing out party opposition. In our 1 own countay thlexp ii iem’s o ? th • I i st' twelve months proves, more than any lesson in history, the necessity of party .'irIganization. The present /Administration was chosen bv a party, ind in all civil acts and appointments lias recognized, , and still does, its fealty ami obliga'ions to i that party. There must and will be an ; opposition. The public safety and good ~ demand it. Shall it be a new Orghn'Zilion or an old one? The Democratic party was founded more than sixty years aI go. It has never been lisban ,ed. To- | 'day it numbers one million five hundred I thousand electors in the S.ates still loyal to the Union. Its recent numerous victories in muncipal elections in the Western and Middle States prove its vitality. ' Within the. last ten m-mths it has held State Conventions and nominated full Democratic tickets in every free State in the Union. Os no other party opposed to ; the Republicans can the *ame be said. SHALL THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY BE NOW DISBANDED ? Why should it? Are its ancient principles wrong?. What are they? Lt I its platforms from thirty tears speak: ‘Resolved. That the American Democracy place their Arust io the intelligence, i the patriotism and the discriminating jus- | lice of the American p >ple. •That we regard this as a distinctive feature in our political ereed, which we j are proud to maintain before the world, is the great moral eh ment in a form ot government springing from and upheld by the popular will; and we contrast it with the creed and practice of Federal, ism, under whatever name or form, < which seeks to palsy the will of the con I stituent, and which conceives no impos j ture to monstrous for the popular cred-1 ulitv. ‘That the Federal G .ivernment is one : of limited power, derived solely from the Constitution; and the grants of power made therein ought to be s'fictly construed by all the departments and agents of the Government; and that it is inexpedient and dangerous to exercise doubtful constitutional powers,’ And as explanatory to these the fol- I lowing from Mr. Jefferson’s first inaugural : •The support, of the State Governments in all their rights as the most competent administrations of our domestic concerns, and the surest bulwarks against anti -re- ; publican tendencies ; ‘The preservation of the General Government in its whole constitutional vigor as the sheet anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad. ‘A jealous care of the right of election by the people. ‘The supremacy of the civil over the military authority. •Economy in the public expense, that labor may he lightly burdened. ‘ The honest payment of our debts and sacred preservation of the public faith. •Freedom of religion, freedom of the press and freedom of person under protection of the habeas corpus, and trial by juries impartially selected.’ Such. Democrats, are th" principles of your parry, essential to public liberty and to the stability .nd wise administration of the Government, alike in peace and war. Thev are the princinles upon which the Constitution and the Union were founded; and, under the control of a partv which adheres to them, the Constitution would be maintained and the Union could not be dissolved. , Ts the policy of the Democratic party wrong that it should be disbanded? Its policy is consistent with its principles, and may be summed up. from the beginning, as follows: The support, of liberty as against power; of the people as against their agents and servants; and of State rights as against consolidation and centralized despotism: a simple Government; no public debts; low taxes; no high protective tariff; no general system of internal improvements hv Federal authority; no National Bank; hard money for the Federal public dues; no assumption of State debts; expansion of territory; self-government for the Territories, subject only to the Constitution; the absolute compatibility of a union of the States, ‘part slave and part free.’ the admission of new States, with or without slavery, ns they may elect; non-interference bv the Federal Government with slavery in State or Territory, or in the District of Cohinc a; and finally, ns set forth in tire Cincinnati Platform, in 1656, and renf-

“Our Country’s Good shall ever be cur Aim—Willing to Praise aud not afraid to Blame.”

DECATUR, ADAMS COUNIT, INDIANA. MAY 22. 1362.

Armed in 1860, absolute and eternal ’repudiation of all sectional parties and plat forms concerning domestic slavery, which seek to embroil the States and incite to treason and armed resistance to law in the Territories, rind whose avowed purposes, it consummated, must end in civil war and disunion.’ S ich, Democrats, was the ancient an 1 the recent policy of the Democratic party, running through a period of sixty veins —a policy consistent with the principles o' the Constitution, and absolutely essi-n- --’ tin! to the preservation of the Union Dies tile history of the Democratic party prove tfiat it ought to lie abandoned? -By their fruits shall ye know ihem.’ Sectional oarties do not, achieve Union triumphs' For six'y years from the inauguration ot Jefferson < n the 4h of March, 1801, the Democratic party, with short intervals. controlled th- power an 1 I the policy of the Federal Government.— i For forty eight years out of th -*e s x y. Democratic men ruled the country; lor fifty four years and eight mon’bs the Democratic policy prevailed Poring this period Louisiana, Florida, Texas, New Mexico and California were su'-c-ss jvelv annexed-to oar territory, wi‘h an I arm m‘'r« than twice as large as all ‘.lie ori-’inal Thirteen States tog-th-r. Eight n nw States were admitted uml-r e lie !y Democratic Adminis'ra'ions-r'.’ne under, the Administration of Fillmore. Fri m five millions, the population increased to thirtv-one millions, The R.-voluiionarv debt was extinguished Two foreign wars were successfully prosecute I, with a moderate outlay and a small army and naw. and without the suspension of the habeas corpus', without one infraction of the Constitufiun, without one unsurpi tion nf power; without suppressing a sinI newspaper; without imprisoning a single editor; without limit to the free.tom of the press, or of speech in or out of C >n-<-ress. bn* in the midst of the grossest abuse of both; and without tile arrest of a ; sintrle “traitor,” though the Hartford Convention sat during ow of th» wars, and in the other Senators invited the one- . mv to “greet our volunteers with bloody hands, and welcome them to hospitable . graves. ” During all this time wealth increased. ! business of al! kinds multiplied, prosperi Jtv smiled on every side. 'ax»s were low. i ■vageß were high, the Tsorth and the South furnished a market for each other’s products nt good prices; public liberty was secure, private rights undisturbed; ; every man's house was his castle; the ; courts were open to all; no passports for travel, no secret police, no spies, no ini formers, no bastites; the light to nssem Lie nencenhlv, the right tope: “on; freedom . f r ligion. freedom of «p ,-ch. a fr» ( , ballot and a free pr“ss; and all thia time the Constitution maintained and the Union of the States preserved. Such were the choice fruits of Demo- ■ i cratic principles and policy, carried out thrnti th the whole period during which the Democratic party held the power anil ndminis'ercd the Federal Government — Such has been the history of that party T’ is a Union party, for it preserved the Union, hv wisdom, p-ace, an I compromise. for more than half a cen'urv. Then, Democrats, neither the ancient principles, the police, nor the nnst history of the Democratic party requ're nor would justify i's disbandment. Ts there any thing in the present, crisis I which demands it? The more immediate : issue is, to maintain the Constitution ns ■ is is and to restore the Union nt it was. To maintain the Constitution is to respect the rigl'fs of the States and the lib- : I erties of lhe citizen Tt is to adhere fai'hfnllv to the very principles nnd policy which the Democratic party has profeqs. cd for more than half a century L«t its history, nnd the results, from the becincinrr, nrove whether it has practiced them. Wo appeal proudly to the record. The first step toward a restoration of the Union as it was is to maintain the , Constitution as it is. So long ns it was 'renintainod in fact, and not thron’onr-d with infraction in spirit and io letter, 'actual or imminent, the Union was un broken. To restore the Union, if is essential, first, to give assurance to every State nnd to the people of r-verv section that their rights and liberties an 1 property will be secure witht'i the Union under the Constitution What assurance so doubly sure as the restoration to power of that ancient organized consolidated Democratic party wlrc.h for sixty years did secure the property, rights and liberties of the States and of the propio, nnd thus did. maintain the Constitution and preserve the Union, and with them the multiplied blessings which distinguished us above all other nations? To restore the Union is »o crush out sectionalism North and South. To begin the great work of restoration through the ballot box is to kill abolition. The bitter wafers ot secession flowed first nnd are fed Still from the unclean fountains of

Abolitionism That fountain must br di ied up. Armies may break down the po-wi-r of the Confederate G ivernment in the S>u h, but the work of restoration can oil.; be carried mr through political org mi?: lion and ' In- ballot, in the- North undW In this great, work we cordi.ally invite the co operation ot all nv-n of every pil’tv wh I are opposed to the fell •pi ■ abofitio'rt. and who. in sincerity, drsir - the Constitution as it is and the Union as it was. Let lhe deed past bury ii.s dead. R J'v. lovers ot lhe Union, the C ms:iiu'inn an t Liberty, to the standard of lhe D moei utic party alr ia lv in the tiel I and confi Ln’, o' victory. That party is <le- naui al and p-rsisient enemv of all.diiion. Up io this question its ecoid an 1 n I’ional organize ion, how- ver it no y hIV' h- n at times wi'.h p irtioulir men or in pu ttcillar States, is clear an I un.] l-s'.io lable. From the beginning of and slavery agitation so tile perio I ■•! ttie i lust. D muci’aiio Nati mol Convention, it |,is lici t but one inregard to it L’t the recur I speak : “Retolvetl. I’iiat Congress has no pow er under the Constitution to interfere wi:h or enn’ri‘l the domestic institutions •it the Several S' ales, an I that such S'ales are tiie sole and proper j i lg-‘s of every t ing appertaining lio ir n.vn off Jis not pioliibi'ed by lhe Cotistiiutimi; that all . ffo’ts of the Ab iliti mists or oth'-rs m id ■ to induce Congress to interii-re with qu s 'ions o' -laveiy, or to take incipient steps in relation lli-reto, are Cahulaied to lead • to the m >st al ieni ng in I 1 ing-rous c n -i q tences, an 1 mat ail such elf >rt.s have . merit ible tenl‘>n'y ’■>< dimmish the happiness of the p opl‘- and el> l ang-r the ' stability r.n 1 pernrin n> y o'the Union, and ought not io be countenance I by any friend o' our political institutions.” Upon the- • principles alon", so far as r-dili-s to slav. rv, can the U’i“o, as it wis. be restore 1; and no other Union, exleapt the Unity of Despotism, can b‘ maintained in this nountry; m-d this last we will resis’-, is .nr fa’hersdid, with lour lives, oui fortunes aid ois sacred , honor. • But it is said that, you must disband 1 the Democrii.io p irty “to support the i Givernment.’. We -inswer that the Democratic pirlv his al.viys sup orted the G ivernmeii 1 ; and win!.- it wis in power preserved the Givernni nt in all its vlgcr and integrity, no' bv force and arms, but by wisdom, soun 1 p >!icv and peace. But il never did admit, an I never will, that this administration, nr anv ; administration, is“thr Government.” It hal ls, and ev.er has held, that the Fed -r---nl Government, is lhe agent of the peoph!of the several States com posing the Union that, it consists of three distinct departm(,n ig—tlm legislative, the executive, and the judical—each .qu dly « p ar t o f the G'V“tnmen''. an 1 eq i illy entitled to the confidence and support of the States I and the people, (in 1 that it is the dutv of every pr'rm' so sustain the several de'payments of t' ie Government in the ex ; erc'se of all the constitutional pow-rs of each which may be necessary and proper for the pt-fS’rv ition of the G ivernment. ; in i's principles and in its vigor and intnoritv, and to stand by and defend to the , utmost the fl t>» which represents lhe Government, th ■ Union and the country In this sense the Democratic party has alwavs sustained, an 1 will now sustain, the Gavernmsit against all foes, at home i or abroad, in til" North or the South, oP‘ n or concealed, in office, or out of office in pnaC‘4 or in w «r. U this's what, the party mean by sup- ■ porting the Government, it is an idle i thing to abandon the old and tried Democratic party, which torso many trials' suppoited, preserved an! maintained the Government of the Union. But if th-ir real ptirtuwe bs to aid the subverting our present Constitution and form of government. and, under pretense of saving the' Union, to erect, a strong centralized despotism on its ruins, the Democratic party will resist I hem as the worst enemy to the ' Constitution nnd tlm Union, and to free government everv-whero. We do not propose to consider now the causes which led to tlm present unhappy civil war. A fitter time will come hereafter for such discussion. But we remind you now that compromise mi’e your Union, and compromise fifteen months ago would have saved it. Repeated efforts were made at the last session of the Thirty-sixth Congress to this end. At every stage the great mass of the South, with the whole Democratic Union party offered certain amendments to the Constitution — and chief among them the well-known “Crittenden Propositions,” which would have a vested civil war and maintained the Union. At every stag", all proposed amendment inconsistent with the sectional docrines of the Chicago platform were strenuously nnd unanimomlv resisted and defeated by tlm R-pnbliean party. The “Crittenden Propositions” never received a single Republican vote in either House. For the proof we appeal to ihe journals of Congress an I to lhe C inarcssional (Robe.

We scorn to reply to the charge that • tlm D mineralic party is opposed to gran i ting aid and support to the Federal G >v i eßamint in maintaining its safety, integ--1 rity and constitutional supremacy, and in i favor of djsbandiug our armies an 1 sue- • climbing tn tlm South. Tlm charge is I libelous and false. No man hasadvo a'ed I anv '-uch prop i-.itious. Doinoerats rec , ogniz“ it dutv ns patriots to sup • port C i ■ Govee?nm‘’nt in all eonstitutional i ' neces.-ary and proper efforts Co maintain • its safely, integrity nnd constitutional auI thoiity; but at the same time they are in- ■ fl xrbly opposed to waging war again* any ol the St ite<, or people >f this Union f in anv Bpirit of oppression or for any pur-’ pose ol conquest or subjugation, or of ov»rtbrowing or interfering with the rights r or established institutions of any State.— I i Above all, the I)‘inocr alie pariv will nor support the Administration in any thihg which looks or ten Is to the Toss of our i political or p rsonal rights ai l liberties or a change of onr pres nt dt moi-rntical ■ •orm of government. But no, Donicrats, it is not tlm sup-, • P'irt of tlm G ivurr.m mt in restoring the - Unmn which the party in [lower I quire of vmi You -.re asked to give up your • principl-s, vour policy ami your p.rtv, amt to stand bv c e Administration of the , I party in power, in al! its nets Above all it is demanded of you that you yield at least, a silent support to their while i policy, and t > withhold all scrutiny into ilmir public con luct of every kind, lest vou shoul I ‘'embarrass the Adminis ration ” N nil are thus nsked to renounce one ot tlm first, principles an I the chief sc- ■ carity of a D-m rcra'ic G ivernment—the right to h"! I public servants responsible; 1“ their m ister the people: to ren !er tlm repri-sentative accountable to the consti- ; t i-nt the ancient and un loubted prer >gaciv:- of Americans to canvass public nma s ir.-s and public men It is this “high C'lnstitui jonnl privilege” which Daniel Webster deci ired Im would “defend and ■ x ‘tcise within the House and out of ihe House, and in ’dl plan's in time of war, in time nf peace and in ail times!” It is a right secured by the Constitution —a right inestimable to tlm people, and lor- ’ mi-fable to tyrants only. If ever there was h time when tlm existence and consolida'inn ->f tlm Demuera- ' •ic party upon its principles ant mlicy was a vital necessity to public and private liberty , jt js now. Unquestionably tlm Constitulion gives ampie power to the several Departments of tlm Government to carry on war, strict ily subject to i's provisions, and in case : if civil war, with perfect s-cnrity to citi zens of the loyal Stales. Everv act nec- ' -ssary lor the safety an] cflitiencv of lhe Government, an 1 for a complete and most vigorous trial of its strength, is yet wholly consistent, with the observance of every [irovision of that iosfunmnt, and of tlm laws in pursuance of it, if the sole motives of those in power w -re the snpp es- ' sion of the “rebellion,” and no more - —■ And yet the the history of tlm Ad ministration for the twelve months past has been, and cpntiues to be, a history of re peated usurpations of power and of v join tions of tlm Constitution, an 1 o f the pnb. lie and private rights of tlm citizen. For tlm proof wi- appeal to facts too recent to need recital here, and too flagrant and heinous tor the calm narrative which we propose. Similar acts were dene atvl a ! like policy pursued iti the threaten e l war with France in tlm time of JoTiti Adams, and with the same ultimate purpose.— But in two or three years the p- opl<‘ forced them to an bono'ahle pm c ■ ail, Fr ince : rebuked tlm excesses and abuses of pow- ’ 'er vindicated the Constitution, nnd turned over the Federal oGvernnnent to tlm principles and policy of the Democratic ! partv. To the “sober second thought, of I the people,” herefore and to the ballot ’ box. wo now anpeal when again in like teril with our fathers. But if every Democrat concurred in the oolicy of prosecuting th" .vnr for the subjugation of the South and for tlm sub i version of her State Governments with' her institutions, without a convention of the States, and without anv overt ureß for 'peace, wi should hist as resolutely resist , ' tne disbanding of tlm Democratic pariv Tt is the only party capable of carrying or. a war; it is the only party which ban lever conducted a war to a successful issue. and the only party which has done it without abuse of power, without molestation to the rights of anv class of citizen*-, an! wifi, due regard to economy. All this it. has done; all this, if need be, it is able to do again. If success, tlmn, in a ’ military point of view be required, the I Democratic party alone can command it To conclude: Inviting all men without i distinction of State, section or partv. who - are for the Constitution as it is and the 1 Union ss it was, to unite with un in this i great work upon terms of perfect equali ’ ly. we insist that — ■ Tlm restoration of the Union, whether • through peace or bv war. demands tlm o continued organization in 1 success of lie Democratic partt

' Tlm preservation of the Constituti’n deI man ’s it; Tlm maintenance of liberty and free d'-moer 11 ic a I government demands it; 'The icsiora'i >n of a sound system of interna) policy demands it; Economy and honesty in public expenditure*, now at t'm rate of tour million i ot dollars a day, demands il Tim r,.;iid am imulation of an enormous and n- rin ineul public debt demand it—a public debt already one thousand millions of dollars, and equal at lhe present. rate to England’s debt of a century an I a half in growth? Tlie heavy taxation, direct and indireel. State and Federal, already more then two hundred millions of dollars a year, eating out the substance of the people, augm-'iiti lg < very year, demands il; R.-duCi d wag. s, low prices, depression of irvle, d.-cay of business, scarcity of work impending ruin on every side, de inands it Ami, finally, the reslor-ttion of the concord, gr-'d feeling, and prosperity of former years, demand* that the Democratic party so ill be maintained and made victorious. Sev > t Tliousiitiil I'ederala aud Rebels Killed, and Sixteen Thousand Wound'd . The Pittsburg correspondent c f the Chicago Time* writes as follows, under -late of the 2 J, in regard to the killed and womided at die battle of Shiloh: The work of burial is complete, and the returns show over six thousand kii- - led, of whom lour tbousa .d and fonr hundred were rebels. Il is difficult to account for this, but the rebel dead are undoubtedly double our own number. In estimating the mortality, the fatally wounded must be added to this number, swelling it to over seven thonsand killed in the battle. In addition, there are eight thousand of our men in the hospital*, who were wounded i.i lhe battl". We have no means ot knowing h«w many of the enemy are wounded, but undoubtedly the number is as great as ours. Seven thousand kill'd and sixteen thousand wounded, gives a total ol twenty-three thousand men disabled in the great battle ot Siiiloh, iti • Slaves of South t'arolinii, Georgia ant! Florid I Declared Forever Free. Headq’t; Department '>f the SopthJ Hh.T 'N llkah, May 9. | General Order No. 14—The three Stales ol G“rgia, Florida and South Car- ; olina. comprising the Military Department otihe South, having deliberately declared themselves no longer under the protection ot the United Stales of Amerii, and having taken up arms against. : the United States, it became a military necessity to declare martial law. This was accordingly done on the 25'h day of April, 13C2. Slavery and martial law in a free country are altogether incompatible. The persons in these three States, Georgia, Florida and South Carolina, heretofore hil t as slaves, are, therefore, declared forever free Everybody will rejoice that there is now a prospect of an * xaliange being effected b tween the gallant Col. Corcoran, of the New York 69th, ' ho has been a prisoner since the battle of Bull Run. and a rebel officer o< the same rank. The leading rebels are rivjning awav from Richmonl. Jeff Davis is reported to have gone to Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Gov Johnson s enforcing his proclamation in Tennessee, ns will be seen bv our Nashville correspondence. A Union soldier had been tired on bv a couceal-d Ice. is Murfreesboro For this twelve Secessionists were arrested, including a brother of Mrs Ex President. Polk — Two hundred loaded guns bad been found at Murfreesboro- Gov. Johnson will put a stop to bushwhacking. The Tax Bill in the Senate. Washington. M iv 15.—The impression is gaining ground that Mr. Simmons schedule of a t.x bill will be substituted by the Senate for the House Bill. It is stated that al bougb lhe Finance ( on'mittee agreed to n port, the House Tax Bill, a muj irity of the Committee are opposed to it. Mr. Simmons’ hill preserves the machinery of the House Bill, but proposes ti. raise 8266,000.000 of revenue; 8100, 000,0:10 from a tax of one half of one per cent. 0I) R |) sal •*. and the balance from a tax imi spir its, malt liquors, playing cards tobacco, oils and licenses. These ar" the only articles specifically taxed. It is , gnierallv believed that this programme for a revenue will prevail. It must ba happy thought to a lover th t his blood and that of his sweetheart ■ mingle perhaps in ‘.be same inusquito. A man with n long bead is ‘not »eiy ’ apt to be headlong.

NO 16.