Decatur Eagle, Volume 7, Number 3, Decatur, Adams County, 19 February 1863 — Page 1
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VOL. 7.
r «" ar s nc DECATUR EAGLE. Jwcid evsnr thur*day morning, by Spencer & Schirmey er. PI’BLMHERfI AND PHOPRTFTnRS. OFFICE —Ou Second Street, in Patterson\ • adding, over the Diuti Stuie. Term* of Subscription; One conv. nno year, in ad vancp, <] on If paid witliin the year. ] 50 If not mid until th*» v*ar ha« expired, 2 On IT’N’o pap»T mil he discnnti- nod until nil *•7™*/* are paid except at the option of the Viibhaher. t , Terms of Advertlßintr: Bqnare.ffen three insertion*, $J 00 Vtrh wnu «<<’’jent ins.*r*inn. 05 TTXn ••rrtsenienf will h#»derrd )p«« * tin oni nvnr ono «q«inro xvi]l »« I I>*l IT • lim. a* -tirra.. r* r , r F ylik-ll 'li*co>’pt. from the aHw rates. "»> fem. ?!’ «ydv ■rt!«'n, r . r) t,;. ) ,p rte( ] fora period |-»>*er’hrne -nornh*. Tfv <S ' -i«»« will he strictly adhered te nnlarall ircnmat.flnrm. 3On We ,tr* nr .nirml ? A dp’il'i kind® r r jn« in 1 pon 1 n n-1 rnrt<pvf*i j»|;n »npnH'rmrnt r»n«r»nnM * t6r*nw Hur tni‘pr' m! f.»r«b* onmIlTlbihn of Toh.’Vnwk. br'.no- n«»n* nud thr I*t out w*vlr«. rn fen] confi lent that nit’xfnrtion ran fir» crtvrn boti w»s fire “buct'"house/ Dr c a 111 r. Indiana, ** * ’ * «8i Proprietor. " ill ntve •. ttdUton, and tn ak'*** reason a nip D. V. CH VAI PEI?. uv x- fitrriaiinK Tn? r: a t u H . 1 n n j a N a . trOFFICR—On 'hr east -id' - i»f S*e<*ond Ot S-1 »ht» r,,r»-n f.ir.fjrrlv occupied bv J D Vilft. ' »•• ih jis a ‘ vi-nH ii£vin stiiiiiiikeh? ATTQUVF.Y AT I, AU’, pE C A TUR. INDIAN A . iP 1/" ’ t ’ , ' ! ‘ 'P " d »nm mid-id!'»iuii)(r i ?nFr *CE —— fin Mt* <t r ot i tt’ppdint«'l y the Audits’’* Office -wvlmi jo JAMES I?. 8080. Attornev and Counselor at Law. DfCjTun jynrAXA >F'r ff?F, in Itvcnrder** y-ji Will practice in the r tc of tl»p Tenth Ju •»«ic(.'d Ciroiit. Attend tn i| lt > Redemption of Mnd< th-p,iv.,.o}ff of T;tx s F tp.-< »il n: t* ilion will be <jir» n tothr cobt c i-ni of Rnnnftoa. Pr«*ion in InV claims against J 1; . Government N<>* 28. ]n62. \6-u42 P. V. SMITH ‘tnbrotype & Photograph tx ar> H-ttinw pcrmrvumtl v located in Th entnr and supplied hi-muds with everything that may be foui d in a FirM Clht-s Picture Gallery VTonld call thn a’tenttmi of nil who do«dre wood Picture at low prices, tp call a’ hi» room* in Houston’s Buildnfg. immediately over the Drug i Stare. n37-ly" JEFFERSON QUICK, nitAI.EK IN ’CLOCKS, WATCHES, MUSICAL HIT iU -IEWr-i, JE TELBi, &C., W. 'X CUR. INDIANA. ’Vite'iF- .J.‘-.T.-Irr. Musical Tnstru ■4«4*A, -t’.. ri-pu'riil on abort notice. S I )l’ — S.'cou 1 Stri'ot, iu Fr.iz.-eV law of tor. v n-n 41 VICKSBURG! I. J. MIESSE, ni his fine orxinkfuos’s. Defies the World! All other TJKE TNSTTTTTTIONS thrown in t-ho «h.t 1«d AII al COM PET ITH >N gone Iw the ROA RO- I* «* aok.iowledged by ail • that he can *ell a F» ’T'l ER ar'ide of f&j-y-r- Hn*nev, S iddh’R, Rridlos. Whip* and al! such like for LElSinon y than anv other ip Northeantcrn Indiana, without ‘Xrepfj nn ■fii-i w«.rkhal! war anted Io bo made o flhe rerv best m ceria!, ami made by old and expe riencp<l workmen. Bugitiea and carrinenc trimmed in the latest am! mo-t approved st vie. Repairing done <hj abort notice and at reasonable retos. TFGive ”r a call, ind we will e/MiHnce you nf the ’ ruth o f what wc my Wo T’XV CA«H so- ovr Rti'fk.and co”«oqnpnih’ PUT CHEAP ER Ihnn if we bnuL’ht on ’’TME; and of courae c an «»dl in proportion — X > T OOO wanted at thi> office r»n <tih*>crip!h a » 1 H* fore the !l«e r*Ui becree o»d.
IA Fumaxs Ppy. —One of the officer* of ihL M,tekrrel recently I a femtili-epy. He seareiifd her anil improvised himself in some diffi nltv with In r hoop =kirt Orpheus 0- K. rr con'inu'-s the <li-scriptii>n: VV’lu n lie poor tool of tyrannv was reI hasi d from this terrific skeleton, my i ho.' he looked bewilder, d a* one who I had just returned trorn the outskirts of [ civiUz but still Lis fiendish taste tor trunk inept clion was not conqu red 11 He returned totbeedjleol the wardrolte 1 ahi ss, drew forth an irnmence while nr 1 ; licie, and. saya'Le — ! Do my spectacles fl-cl a fiction, or is this, irdeed a Sihb y lent for the use ol the CiH'ft deraev ?’ 1 Al the motnen the excellent vountr ' woman hasiilv matched ibe article awav from him and asya she — You nasty thing—tliat’s my — 'here she .| blushed. 1 At time*, mr bov woman* blush i« the . impeiisl banner of virgin modesty thrown i otti to catlfli the brer z' tin t writs the sounds ol comi no rescue, and means — (rod is mr deb nee At other times ; i : .is ll e el. q'tent protest o( a fin" inlell U-nce which deprecates the test that Would turn all its hid len her titles to the j public eve. and no an* — 'Humility is ; horn of Genius ’ But in this case it ; was a lurid fl ish of anger, and roent—a petticoat. ■ the Hight Kind of Talk. The N> W York Express liC 6 ply to a | t hrealumtio article ti) lhe Ni-w Trilniti", sin s: (I the TrUnine means io say thia son,, of a discussion can not go no, and th*; Express can not sav this is m>w a war on *the pirl of the inwag, rs of if nrt for na'ton d uni'y, but for abolition, and | ihut the use of negroes as soidu rs in it, Lui nogravatea, prolong* and makes i it hop. less; <>r that Brest.!* nt 'Lincoln. I ! the Exruiive, is not the constitution ■is as < XJounded by lhe Courts, then we sav — This discussion snail go on. And now we ii-sriectfdllv a*li the | Tribune, * hat if rhe editors of the Express are kidnapped at’d incarcerated ; in a communir y like his. what ui'i hup . P"* I. The-ki fnapprng and it>care»e*ting inf Mr Greeley himself under lhe Law of i R-prisals 2 The shutting up rs the Trihun. ' office lit der the Law of R pr:«al*. f . higher law )A« ling as'.lie Tribune Is print 'd, tile Express must be printed i so,' In wh it case is it absolute y impossible to be slow and sure? A. In the case i" i a watch. Digbats savs it is a cnrmU* fact that ’ reckless captains are the most liable to wrecks. An editor savs th" only r< asrm win hi* hou*e was not bl< wo away duri g the late 0|,|,., WH s because there was a i lie»»-v mortgage on it. Win is our country in such a terrihl confusion and everything so unsettled? | A. Bi-canse lor two year* past we have be. n under Abe-Ltnculo (a l.linkm) gov ernm nt. I A matter of (act old gentleman, whose wif r was a thorough 'd.-strucli«>ni*f,. was awakr-md mi> of b.is sleep one cold night in December, will.; ■HiHbnnd! did you hear that noise? ' b's Gabri'l » coming! Il's lhe sound o’ ! his chariot wheels!' •0 pshaw, vol! old fool!' replied the good man. 'do you suppose G.hri.l is ■ such an a«s as to come Imre on wheels in such good sl. ighing aa this?’ The oil springs of peninsula of Upper Canada have all suddenly given out. For about thiee rears they Yielded an almost labnlous amount of oil and it seemed iro x susiible hut now there is tearcell' a W. II that yields a trD’h part of what ii did a short time ago There is a man in N*w A-ok so mean that he buttons hi* shirt with wafers He is the same old gentlemen who loots at hi* money through a m tghitving glass By this means he s*v* a sixpence looks as good as half a dollar. If yon observe a gentleman with his arm ar .und the waist of a voting lady, it is morally certain that they are nut married. There i* one advantage about a high wind and that is it enables v>u to s-e which of r< ur female friends have dirty stockings on. AA T hen vmir wife is silent, hrdd the bahv for Imr. Perhaps it is as mticb as she can do to hold her tnngne. i Never lake a nap in a railroad carriage ! Cos why? Tiie iraiu always runs over s]c<p«r».
‘Our Country's Good shall eve? he cur Aim — Willing to t’raiee and not alraia to Blame."
DECA rill, ADAMS COUNTY, INDIANA, FEB. 19,18113.
i UNMATCHED HEARTS. BY DAISY HOWARD. Sitting with closed eyelids, thinking of my dead past. The intervening years gli lea ray, and iny thoughts wander in , a sinlofl.itent dream over the days that seem so fair—the days that throw up only a sunny side to the poor pilgrjm standing on these sombre shores, looking down the white pastures where of yore her light feet wandered pleasantly. Ah, me'. The . light feet are tired now; footsore and weary in their race for lite, and a worse burden than Christian bore, has been laid on slender shoulders. Among the many thought pictures • drifting past me. comes that of a young life that opened beautifully years ago, but ' which has since led down among the ' | shadowy cypresses. I Before me rises a vision of a young girl ■ dark-haired and slender. She wore a white waxen rose in her shining hair, and on the small hands snowy kid gloves,—, .' That was all that proclaimed the bridg.— . I can rein.‘tuber the very expres-ion of [ the cahm grey eye s, and the deep thought [look they seerrted to ■ send into the future ' —the fiitme that seemingly lay so fair an 1 smooth along her life path. Smiling. ■ friends stood around her, and one bent above her whose fuse seemed full of love Would it suffice for the grand sbul that lay shttnbering within the young girl s ' breast! She was b.it dreaming now, coasting, as it were along the shores of life. ! 'i’liat she did no'love’hn man wi-h I whom her fate was linked, I knew. She' was bound to him by the ties of friend-; I ship and association she had grown used ito being set apart for him. She lined j him. friends were willing, nay, anxious, 1 ' etc., elif. Well, they started thus upon their lifeijourney; tai-ing things tmon trust, as many another pair have done before.— i Year* passed away, bringing the changes ' i passing of years ever brings. In the heart ! of Marion they wrought many changes, but few’ in the heart of her husband. His i soul had its fill growth years ago. her heart, was yet in the chrysalis. ‘What a kind husband Marion Haywool ha*! he is such a good provider, I and so steady.’ I So he was, but utterly unmited to the ■ . high-souled, gifted Marion. Few knew the grand soul that was waking in the young girl's breast the so il that would ■ et. throw off its shackles, and see life as jit was—and those few trembled when they saw her mated to good, kind, eom- | mon place George Haywood for they, ' knew j ut how it would be. That George Haywood did not under-' I stand the woman who walked the earth ' i path by his side, was evident from his i puzzled looks and manner. lie wonderJ ed some times at the stormy eight in her eyes an I the restless, questioning manner wondered at her sitting with parted lips and quick-coming breath over some dry, 1 mnsty boo'*, or gazing with rapt vision i out into the glory ot the sky. Ah! the i eonsti uelion of the two hearts were wide--Ily different and could not blend She should have let the sky alone an I 1 turned the lock upon her hook*, and then she would have been better suited to her ( husband. -1 Ah, she could not,. The hand that ( fashioned her, made Iter just what she was, and sheco ild not change her nature any more that the leopard can <’iange hi* spots. Ha< not the same kind hand made the tofest-bird to sitig .most' tmnicallv, whilst the- caw. w.v. of th" raven send* the shivering through one's vein;.’ George Haywood wa* an earnest business man, strong and practical a good man for some good ordinary woman, but an unfit mun for the genius-laden, .eaglehearted Marian. I repeat, he wa ■ a good mar.; jn.tt inch a man us •.» e nesd iu qtiau-. titie* in this practical, working world, but there is sin somewhere when such a nature is linked with one of so high an order a* Marian's. There is sin because it is impossible that due parents, at least the rno'ber. who for years has watched lhe unfolding of the young life, should not know the order ofit. She must know
I it; must know its needs and what thepcrI section of the fall dower will be else has [she filliled illy the mother-mission given her from above. As the years passed a little child came to them a tender, fair child life the nio- . ther, whose idol it was. Then was de- ; monstrated that saddest of all things, ‘ . where the mother-love is stronger than the wife love. ; If her husband was ill. there was an i anxious solicitude ami much tender watI ching over him. and bathing of the broad - rugged brow, and smoothing of pillows ! for the aching head. Bat let sickness Lay i its hand upon the little fair haired Grat cie. then came the quick ang'ii.'h of inI tense love the pale lips, and the trembi lings and watching! of the physician’s ' face. Once the dark waters of the river ;of death rushed madly by their dwelling, i bearing away many little houshpld pets , from their neighbor s houses. Its dark sleggi-h waters sounded long in their ■.'ears, and on.'night in their swellings, ■ they reached even to their,own door, ’ mooring the white feet of their little Gra- ( cie over to - the other shore, where the w alking wa* more secure. Mr.-inn watched with a startlin'" ting'd-h dlook, •■The pa. ing of the sweetest so d That ever looked with human eyes.” j When the last brenth flattered out from the baby's lips then the husband ‘u ned ' agha-’t from the ang ti*h of the wild sor,ro*f<jl eye*. ‘Gracie is better cared for now than she was in our horn-?. Don’t grieve Ma4r . ■.; ■, <»f riai). Still the same look of dread dispair. and the sane stony tearlessness. .< leorge could not und r-land it. He wa* grievled for the passing away of the little fair 'thing that made hi* home so plea-ant, I but he could not understand the tearless ( anguish in his wife's eyes. : ‘Why. Maddie. girl. I cannot, nnder- ' stand this grief. Last winter, when I lay I. ° . ill unto death, you wept some but it was , not a sorrow like this.’ Marian could not tell him that this little life just ended wa* a thousand time*' 1 more precious than his: she could onlyturn away self coni icted fiom that hour. She knew then that George Haywood i wa* not master of Her heart that one i shining curl on the lowly little head of Gracie was more precious to her than her husband and the know ledge that so suddenly swept across her soul, only added to her sorrow. What could she do to right it! What could a poor tempesttossed do but be often upon her knees be- ■ fore the l ather who is ever more merci-, ful than our fellow man. There n as sin somewhere. Where did [it lie! Not at her door but at the door of her parents, whom God had given charge concerning her: the uioughle*s shepherds who had parted with their beamiful one without other knowledge than that he to w hose keeping they had Consigned her was well to do in the world After the little golden head was laid under the violets, things seemed to settle back into their old way: seemed' for nev- ■ er again, on earth, was the shadow lifted from M r ein's heart, or (lie blissful uncounsiousnefis that had made life tolerable. restored. Th"days that had been wt.nt to pass so goldenly and soft, were sicklied o l er, 1 and oh! th ■ wearmess and strife—the bearing of heavy burdens and heavier heart—a«-hes that ibllo.ved in their train' who. hit tli<- eye of the All-seeing can compute them? The Io- o that bad been la tsbed upon her child wa* now turned in upon her . own heart, and for want of a legitimate outlet, was the cause of much aching and tears. Tn tlie*elonely hours her thoughts turned to hew mother, »o far away. Alioutthis time a letter win-ged its way to that mother, a letter which lilled her I:'-art with -orro v Sh ■h id em a' the tfrho of Gracie's death, that the modier-loi e was the strongest, fc-ling Ma' ian s heart had ever known, and sh • had questioned much of her wisdom in so early and nnthiiikly mating her child to good, cofn-mcn-place George Haywood. Ab, sad mother! had you learned more of your
child's inner nature, her inner life—•' taught the young heart to make you her ■■confident—this might no' have been.— The wi-dom came too late to save Marian but its influenced the fate of the younger sis'ers. still safe in the home-nest. ‘ The letter ran thus: ‘•Mother! Dear Mother', My heart i* aching, atvl the unutterable loneliness of mv days and nights sicken me. O mother! mother! I am yearning for your presence I—longing 1 —longing to look into your kind eyes — to feel your kis*e* upon my brow and •closed eye*! ’o be gathered close to your heart. Mother, the gqul?n b tt’fpi e ips and v’oilets are clustering over little Gra I cie's.head, and tjie full moon.of summer shimmers its gold upon her grave, and ! yet you have not found time to come to | me, I O mother,' come! com? I m‘e-1 you, sweet inotlier, never more than now ’ I am so tired, mother, so very tired —j ; Shall I tell you n hat the trouble is! Will ;it easi my heart?., or will it only pain, ryomssT O mother, lam full of sorrow! full of sin! The soul that a little time ago I was cahn and secure, ha* strayed into deep waters. Never mind the tears mother, just read on to the end. Do yon 'think me so very wrong mother when I ' tell yon that I do not love my husband a* , I should do. 1 loved Gracie a thousand ' times more and never knew about George ‘ till sweet Gracie came Then the untold , Jove that came with her, made me think ' I did not love George well enoitgli. But I tho ighl if was becaiue Gracie was small and tender that I felt -o much tend -rnew and anxiety for her, and I was content again. But now, 0 mother, I know Ido . not for I grow weary jyf his presence. I am glad when he leaves me! restless When I hear hi* coming footsteps! *> ' mother! cover your face, a* lam doing, j for all this is very dreadful. Omy moi ther, whnt ails rpe? Uqw can I bring the I old love back? or was it ever here! Comfort me If von can, for I am very wretch-' ed." We will not follow’ the young lite fur ther. A word to the wise is sufficient. ] O mothers! in whose homes young daughters are growing up, be wary. Do . not hold yom self abxtf from th-ni teach them to make you their confidant teaeh' them to come to yon with, their trials and disappointments, tlieir hope* and joys.— . Do not set up a frgid wall of respect between yom draw very near to them — look beyond the surface, study the inner, life —its needs and bearings. If a.suitor covert* the sweet flower you have reared do not part with it lightly: bid him wait - remind him that mofst flowers arc more' beautiful in the full blossom than in the bud Compare the two natures, study the needs of lhe two hearts. Remember the purer nature see that it is mated fitly. Mea r > the two" souls! This is a matter of life and death. A little do e insight, a little watching—he may deceive von in the matter of morals, but not in the general nature. It is not enough that you watch tenderly over your child from infancy to girl hood that you give her an education teach her to 'daflee, sing and win all heart by her beauty and grace. I know that 1 this is tho common mode of rem ing our beautiful American tgirls, nml then 1 know -it is quit., as co:mn >n to send them drifting put o:i the sea of life without comi pass <«.' rmider. Blessed beyoud all peo- ■ pie are the few mothers "’ho are vigilant ' unto the end. Oh. if mothers wbiil 1 but be mme 1 ‘ worldly nl" lia-i. riigu po.-Uioa. how nrnJi wretchedness might be spared thousands 'of women who grow weary of life ere it* noon is reached!—women in whose hearts peace is a stranger, who wear the white rose of silence upon pale lips, till this fever, called living is ended. Thon friend* fold the pale hands and lay them to rc*t and th? flowers grow over their tired eyes, and ’hat is the end. If the few foregoing words ca'ch rme mother's eye- if they strike with the sharpness of Ithuriel s spear to one mother's heart who is now sleeping upon her labor will not be in vaiu. ' - -- V r»eW» rt * A silent tohg ie is a prize worth having
A TAX feUBJkCT OVtBUV MKD A PERU*AL of lhe new ThX-Isw might, fl"A<lunr lu suppose tl.at the treHsutl’s J ting.l* linl tapped every valuahle th’hg -i* a N-ivvinber tfust tbtlches everv l--nf Jin a l»ir"*t. But an i lea lias oceurred to |ut '.hat may be o’ value — not to S<-cre-lary Chase, tor lhe avails ar.- nol mien.led .tor, the naiipnal Colins — but to llm '.general pub ic. ' I' will he ciineed<-d that every tn*n who l ei j.ivs I lie social bb-ssings of this life is , ti.omd lo bear his proper share of respons.bllnv and to i i.niribu’e to the general ( good: lie has no right to live for himself ' ilon" unli-ss h" a-tjitre society and a!) its help* and hnmat'liies And shut htm!*i it up in a solitary wilderness, where woimiti’s voice nor ciiildliood's s.mg can lever fall upon his ear. The (ireal Creator I has inti tl'tlked hiiinsn interests that ; any man comifintl a crim" Rg-iinst Divtn|i’y when he would si-'X* the ci-m’orls ' •itid tdessinge wfiile ahneg uing the du,jd"S il! S ici ll life Htl‘l be lirconus übnoxjious to penally Human liw can )u>wjevi r. but pariislly interfer. ; but the good of th" Community ilemand.* that all should be done that ean right<ullv be done in this tegard. As ihe criimnaU ill view i li»V" no heart sii«i eplibilitie*. they nrj-U tie touchetl in th-ir dnlv sensitive point. — the pocket. In this b.li-f and wi’h a lull C"n*i«’inn ot lhe justness of th* 'punishment, we prop-sea fix on Bic'iI. I rs. proper toned slrtcd to the sinoniit I income. We would have evi ry muniI cip ditv appoint a rn-nmission to assess ( .-wry man v 'h«>u’ good i xeuse or proven ili«q'ia!:ficalion. is mean enough to prefer Single hie to ill" Wedded slate; I the avails ot the assessment to be appropriated to lhe’relief and support of pour widow* and fatherless childri n Hr his means an aibqtrit" punishment won .I be mlhcied upon .its. nifers, and a v isl amount o c un'orl be secur -d to - many whose no ans pl living now come mainly from lhe families of right minded men who have bet n w illing to assume i lie corse and r. apor.«ibifiti»s ol that .-state whid) in - nr.-* the greatest amount O' good to the greatest numb- r, and withoti' which the race would either perish or become so base nnd degraded as to call for another ib-luge to sweep it from the lac" v( t'ie eartli. FkCkssi Nis I Lets -ta — Tas repub* i licaii members of the Illinois Legislature tearing the afiop't >n of measures f>v that body incompatible with tlieir radical and fanatical views bolted their seps on Saturday with a view of leaving tin- L-g'slature wiihont a quorum for ihe transaction ol business. In 1860, the same act commuted by the South Carolina members of the national Congress, w.»s the initiative ot a bloody, disastrous and ruinous war; it was denounced in unmeasured terms by the v. rv men who now follow lheir precedent, and their ostensible reason that they withdrew from that body because they b lieved their rights would be in'rir.ged upon by the m j rtty, was ridiculed by tlieir pie-em imitators, an I considered as bin an i xcus" to pr- ci pi ta t e the doubles of the cuunliv. Their act ol leaving ths i I-gisla'.ive body ot the country was revolitionary; time has developed this, f'he act ol these republican ’eciosionis's in thus destroying the quorum of th* Illino.* Legislature is also revoluliouarev an I tiioe mav < ev. lop" the (act The Southerners left Cohgres* with a quorum for the transaction of business, but theso repuhltoan* have virtually done away wuiirle lilinoi* L'-gi’lature. They have fell lllini'i* in a state o’ revolution—without a Legislative body —and liavrr done s.i without a shit low ot reason. Can ; lhe people detect art v difference'“in the enorn.itv of th* crime as eommit'ed by rhe Smith Carolina seceder* in 1860 or by Hie Illiimis se.i,di-rs 1863? 'Die excu*e given for tl.i-. otb-nce is just the same —'lie fear of the m>.j nity tiy the minoii y — both un louhte Uy without foundation, hut on a question of right, the i former must have the advantage. That there were some grounds for tearing «n . inlr'ngerncnt on the rights and itisii'uHons of the S ulii on the accession ot the r-pnblican* to p-iw-r It is been evidenced b. tl.e rei-ent policy ol that pvrtv tn the • xcercise 01 Chat power; but that lint 1 r'-pitb!ic»us had any te-non to fear the : power of the democratic element of the . Illinois L- gi*l pure acquired through th" • ufl'ruge* of ths people.—-X'npt a’ it mihgi be ex-rci ed to investigate l! • • fr mds p-rpeirated by them under the i specious cloak of <xcessive patriotism • nn I L?t do - to'ln-Union —no sann man i-m h" i■’ ’ner d '-i tfelbxe They taken a step that mav lead to terrible results, — fet’licm b> held fearfully responsible i fol it. —?? H’ajfne Sen. 'Mv son would you suppose the Lori's prayer coiil l be engraved in a space na larger Hiayi tlie area of half dt i<?' Well yes father if a half dime is as largo ! in every Godv'a er>» as U M in your* *’>ou’- lour '.:tai S.’
NO. 3.
