Indiana American, Volume 12, Number 14, Brookville, Franklin County, 29 March 1844 — Page 1
A Mr
MM ! I - t 11-11
ItV C. F. CLAIIKSOX.
himi.i
-MISCELLAXKors.
0rH fOl-XTRV-OCR COIXT8V'
INTERESTS AND OVR COfSTRv's
FRI ENDS.
B"OOKVIUE' ankL,x .
Sin ami Philanthropy, ' ATRfETAI. E.
(treaty she leaned her Lead on his friendlv ;,! .ulder anJPobbedout. ' Oh. I wish I wa's A l i hat will my poor mother say wl.cn (she knows of my disgrace?"
EY C. MARIA
O II I I. D.
nt..t .
, ye can manage that she never : sjal I known replied he; and alluring her by h sl ope, he gradually obtained from her the ulE,0l,-';ai'ntewith .he-
She came from th. ..,. 1" . .7. ' "? ",,a? ,,er be comforted, and take
MS was a, ignorant or the dangers of a c y' a sDad r r "'iTi W U,al ,h silk the squirrels of her native fields. Sue had j K 7,!. ?e cu withdrawn.
black Hair. ffentl .; ji. . '"ij io ner employer, and
which shall be name?P ii,-,
long ago, a young girh the only daught-
lived
er of a widow.
POLITICAL
VOL. XII. XO. 14.
an J exclaimed, 'How handsome she is!"
ass.'ie grew older, the voting men
j;er wun admiration. She was nnn., nA
ineVO tills r.tlP f:ll:ra Hnn 1 t. ...
j i i . r tuc may oe resAnd torcd to boc etv. n iiMr.,i i.-..
,... i it ,. -;!- "-i-iui mmnonorta woman gazed on I wi see t hni ii, ..... :J , .. ... '"a"-
. . . iv,- , uiiiii cau 1 1 v n rrroofi i - ... : .i. i
movca io me city to earn her living bv cover-! ! -.i ...1, f.. .7 . , , . l,,uraw Uie Prosecu-
big umbrellas. She was hist atil,,. :',: ' i. .V ' . ' L "ou,a
b!e age, when youth is rAssin, into LJl ..tu!..!?-.111; .n?wn aH cirrumslaa
hood; when the soul begins to be pervaded by -;fcat restless principle, which impels poor .'.iumms to seek, perfectiou in union." At the hotel opposite, Lord Henry Stuart an English nobleman, had at that time taken lodgings. His visit to this country is doubtless weil remembered by many, for it made a
"rear sensation at the time. He was
Hie realm, de
was, moreover,
right princely carriage. He was subseouentlv I V 1 10 lxe. camber. The nobleman
a member of the British Parliament, and U E Z, P, a a p,ain old Q,,aker now dead. 1 thus intrude upon his 'luxurious privaAs this distinguished stranger passed to and I Ziul "''f"1 heard his errand, he blushed rrom his hotel, he encountered the umbrella ! Jv, . ",y admitteJ he tiuth of the girl, and was impressed by her uncommon ! f rl s st3,en,ent- benevolent visiter took beauty. He easily traced her to the on-site I l7lPOrt,1,,,1), ,0 'ar a testimony" as the
store, wnere he soon after went to purchase j ''V.' J' .r 1 1 Hie sin and selfishness of
ieciuitinsucha kind and fat!;.
- "nuuiaw me proseci tton. and said ip um.i.i i j...
i... .1.- i . V . ueau otherwise
gm.naatie known all the eirrlim.tn.
mer.tsofihe case, my friend rrplied Iaae Dy this kind of thoughtlessness, ma, you n creature is driven into the downward pa h who might easily have been saved. The good old man then went to the hotel and .nqu.red for Henry Stuart. The servant said his lordship had not yet risen. "Tell him
mi ui uiu ume. ne was a peer of m i . 1 " -cl riSP. i en him scendedfrom the roval line, and ! nLnTr! '3 of imPorta, said Friend ?r, a strikingly handsome man, 0ri J him h"", "T retUrned nnd conlt arris trr. n.. ....u '., i auclea mm. to the chamber. Tho i.i
u,i umbrella. i nis was followed up by presents of flowers, chats by the wa)--side, and invitations to walk or ride; all of which were gratefully accepted by the unsuspecting ,ustic. He was playing a game, for temporary excitement, she, with a head ftill of romance, and a heart melting under the influence or love, was unconsciously endangering the happiness of her whole life. 1 Lord Henry invited her to visit the public gardens, on the 4;h of Julv. In the
cr her heart, she believed all his flattering professions, and considered herself his bride elect; she therefore accepted the invitation with innocent frankness. Dut she had no dress fit to appear on such an occasion, with Ja gentleman of high rank, whom she verily supposed to be herdertined husband. While these thoughts revolved in her mind, her eye was unfortunately attracted by a beautiful piece of silk, belonging to her employer. Ah, could she not take it, without being seen, and pay Tor it secretly, when she had earned money enough? The iemptalion conquered her in a moment of weakness. She concealed the silk, and conveyed it to her lodgings. It was the first thing s se had ever stolen, and her remorse was painful. She would have carried it back but she dreaded discover-. She was not sure that her repentance would be met in a spirit of forgiveness. OntheevenlfuIIthof July, she come out in her new dress. Lord Henry complimented her upon her eleg vit appearance; but she was not happy. On their way to the gardens, he talked to her in a manner which she did not comprehend. Perceiving this, he spoke more explicitly. The guileless young creature stopped, looked in his face with mournful rep'oach, and burst into tears. The nobleman took her hand kindly and said, ".My dear, are von an innocent girir ' I am, I am," replied she, with convulsive sobs. ' Oh, what have I ever done, or said, that you should ask me that?' Her words stirred the deep fountains of lus better nature. "If you are innocent," said he, -God forbid that I should make you otherwise. Hut you accepted my invitations and presents so readily, that I supposed vou to understand me." -What could I understand, said she, ' except that you intended to make me your wife?" Though reared amid
me prouuest distinction of rank, he felt no incl.iiat.on to smile. He blushed and was silent. The heartless conventionalities of life stood rebuked in the presence of affectionate simplicity. He conveyed her to her humble Home, and bade her farewell, with a thankful consciousness that he had done no irretrievable injury to her future prospects. The remembrance of her would soon be to him ac the recollection v.r last year's butterflies. With her the wound was deeper. In her solitary chamber she wept, in bitterness or heart, over ner ruined air castles. And that dress which she had stolen to make an appearance befitting his bride! Oh, what irshe should be discovered? And would not the heart or her poor widowed mother break, irshe should ever know that her child was athier? Alas, her retclied foreboding were too true. ' The
irncea io her; she was arrested.
profligacy.
eriy manner
was touched
that
cn
tne VOUnff man's Iipii-i
He excused liimoir i,,.
nig that he would not have tampered with he girl if l,e had known her to be virtuous. lr,l do.n1a"y w.ong things," said he. but, thank Cod, no betrayal of confiding innocence rests on my conscience. I having always estppmprl ii ... b
. V, 1 "imt)1 winch man is capable . The imprisonment of the poor
6-", .uu uiuii.riorn situation in which she bad
uee.i lounu, distressed him greatly.-nd when
.saau represented mat the silk had been stolen
mai me giri Had thereby lot profitiVil A rim nl . ... a . . .
t.,,,,,, mU) rilld Wa3 ol-liged to return to her distant home, to avoid the danger of exposure, he took out a fifty dollar note", and of-
,.ay cr expenses. 'Xay." 5aid Isaac, "thou art a very rkh man; I see in thy hand a large roll of such notes. She is the daughter or a poor widow, and thou hast been
,u.,3 ui uomg ner great injury. Gue me
auow'.er."
Lord Henry handed him another fifty dol-
.... ..w.c, uuu siniiea as lie said, "Von tinder
,ur ousmess well. Ihit you have
nuoiy, ana i reverence you for it. If
; ever visit Kngland, come to see me. I will give you a cordial welcome, and treat you like a imMnmin ' ' J
'Farewell, friend," replied Isaac. "Thouoh much to blame in this ofiair.thou hast behaved nobly.-Maycst thou be blessed in domestic
...v., u..u nun.-no more with the feelings of
poor gin?; not even those whom others have betrayed and deserted." T lint il.t .
".mij, me gin uaa euiiicient presence of mind to assume a false name when arrested; by which means her true name w as kept out of
...c newspapers, "i did this" said she, "for my poor mother's sake." With the money given by Lord Henry, the silk was paid for, and she was sent home to her mother, well provided with clothing. Her name and plr.ee of residence remain to this day a secret in the breast of her benefactor. Several years after the incident I b
. . - iviii-
ieo, & iady called at Friend Hopper's house and
nsRcd to see him. W hen he entered the room he found a handsomely dressed young matron
wun a incoming roy oi hve or six years old.
iMieiose to meet him, and her voice choked
as sue sam, -i nena Hopper, do vou know
mer He replied that he did not. She fixed her tearful eyes earnestly upon him, and said
i on once helped me when in deep distress."
uui me good missionary of humanity had helped too many in deep distress to recollect
tier, without more precise information. With a tremulous voice, she bade her son go into the next room, for a few minutes; then dropping on her knees, she hid her face in his lap. and sobbing out, ' I nm the girl that stole the silk. Oh. where should I now be, If it had not been for you?"
whig songs. air, "Auld Lang Syne." Leave vain rPgrpls foreirors past. iNorcast the ship awav; But nail your colors to the mast. And strike for UAKHYCLAY. From him no treason need be feared J our cause he'll ne'er betray; hat name to freemen so endeared As that of HARltV CLAY! No vain abstractions fill his head, I o lead his heart astray; I or every noble promise'made, Is kept by HARRY CLAY. Then lei not treason's hated form, Thus fill you with dismay; But gartering strength to breast the storm, Stand fast by HARRY CLAY. Rise bravely Tor one eflorl more Your motto thus display; Protection for our native "shorp, Sustained by HARRY CLAY. And o'er our gallant Chieftain's grave, I ledge we our faith this day; In weal or wo, no change to know; Fill triumphs HARRY CLAY. CHORUS. Till triumphs HARRY CLAY, my boys, II It nmnl,. Itllinf ... . i. ' ' I
V'-,?1 r Wo' no change to know, Till triumphs HARRY CLAY! ri XE.-"T!ie Hunters Chorus." From hill and from Valley They eagerly sally, Like billows of ocean. The mass Is in motion. The lines arc extending O'er mountain and plain; Like torrents descending. They hurry amain. The Gathering! The Gatherum ! N e'll be there! We'll be the're' There I There ! There ! Kach eye flashes brightly; Fach bosom beats liglitly,' The banners are glancing, And merrily dancing, While proudly the standard Of Liberty floats, And the music isswellin" Inspiring notes. The Victory ! The Victory ! That we'll gain! That we'll gain ! Uain ! Gain ! Gain ! Again we assemble The traitors shall tremble! For strong as tho ocean. A people in motion! The Ides ok Novemrer, The day of his doom, He long shall remember In silence and gloom. The traitor! Tho traitor ! He shall fall! He shall fall! Fall! Fail! FALL!
CANDOR. ; Henrv Ci.ay.-TIic following eulogy on As we are alw ays willing to submit vur acts Mr- L'lay is by the Rev. Dr. Capers, of South to the decision of hriiesl and impartial men, Caro!"la-. The Baltimore Whig savs if there bo should a party be willing to submit to a l.ke r T'? tU l''S the nPPrnac,,in? contest, who tribunal. We codv the folWin, r , ' f ,ukpw"m. w 'im to read the follownti v y fol!owiS flw''i n.g beautiful eulogy upon Mr. Clay. It was Dol a -Newspaper, a neutral paper printed a, Fonom,ced by thc Rcv. Mr. Capers, before the 1 biladclphia, known and read by almost everv M convention of Alahanu. last year and man, woman and child as a neutral rarer -'- we "ecd. ECar"cly bdd, thut it filled everv bo-
3""'n 1111 ,,1C "e or patriotic and nerved ev cry heart with the resolution to do his best As there are doubtless many of our leaders who do not know T.Ir. Capers, we will stale tor their information, that he i, 0ile o xig
u hi iTCiuncrs ueionging to
Tho remarks are fair and candid:
THE FALL CAMPAIGN. The Xominadons and Character of the Candidates.
The two political parties are mustering
-..,,1 h M.l,.1:... I.'..: . 7 ""b"K
nmii.. c . . "-"'"si j.riM opai cnurrii. uiui itmi hn
ber7fir." "a"of one of the most Cogent men, is .,lPdedhv
two dollars a dand io, ' IZZ " ,1 " "!oim upon Henry
sands of il
vo.uu .',iuiuis, now iioidin
Clay:
' I have insinuated.
be most active .i ,i "7: " -T"? 1 . " '",s . """" lllnS ""eJ Democracy.
- ""uaidaui;. us iiiou? n llirv' Wlin i nnlite "7 l )...'
anticipated victory, and were dotrrminn.! ,'f iV, . , " ' "S" e scenes
- - aivi I'l.itii 1'iiiprpii t 1 1 ii a iiA
f tin uilT
tlat the (cninle of
-very basis by tho
And
'" '"s "IJK'II Ul,l lip ciiin i.inMr ;. ,.; r a i .. '
The democrats, a, vni Bi,iTi ' - !' I , ... ?"u.rew uie Urc;i. a,'J her casts
has .ddP, lv W , t " "ulK '"sn mcu .w"n "I! of war. What Patriot
: " u """ eauer, net knowing what heartbeat not will, painful anxiety when ih
ty ttie I r bnne .,.i t... ., . ' ii'iougn-
wl,i, n MnV" w ?PMcJ t' Capitol, and the a.mics ofihe Gorn.
.p..- v.. i'i'iiuu lllill. J II ImlllPtKn ncuoni. mnnt ti-nr ... . 1 . x
blae. marshalled ! "7. T " l. uru 10 Dow 'e traitors' or
tiptheline or March in B i 7 ' : ' '7 " ' ? i.pme of their rath-
Tabernacle. wl.Prp " "7 " " " , evenuui hour-the old li-
were foi nd L "lv Anon . ' cou,eu- n 01 democracy howling for the blood of clndin.S idie, Ti .Tv 1 Tl ln, frce,r'c o3-and the Goddess of Liberty iiiiuing i.iaies. The ladies smi ed and weep ii" over the scon.-i Ii ; "u"' waved their kerchiefs, the gentlemen shouted, ' evemfuThour-one el? hrl. v and 0 'C tiroke0;" nj ihref -r So f,r ,bP .voice from the ghost of Washington exclaimSo far, then, the mmtenng opens auspicious- ed: -sve the L.mon! 'Twas ri -rciusbd v ith ly lor the wings. They ore full of spirit and 111E tears blood or voi r tither" zeal and intend to employ tho means so sue-' 'Twas Clav, sir, that matchles statesman j-essrul y resorted to in 1910, the machinery of tla! bearing in one hand the olive branch of aaies, log cabins, live coons, and song singing, Peace, and in the other the sword of truth and to gi ro animation and enthusiasm to their ' liberty there he laid his ofT-riti- and there he meetings. As the people appear to bo fond of u il1' l,'at burning and impassioned eloquence these things, it may well be questioned wheth- congenial will, his exalted nbture-in the er it is not proper to give them to them, and nam0 of liberty, and in the name of the bloodwtietlier principles so tangibly piesented are 'tained spirits who purchased it, he bade the not better understood than when incorporatcdin faring sons of Democracy sheath their swords to some abstract notion, which psenrr. nti,n and i:ot wieak them in it,i,i.,.i r,
in t "t."1",11' whcnever attempted to be gras- Vr9' 1Iis '"aJate was obeyed, the old lion of
, . uv-mutraii, wnen they cmplovcd democracy ciouchcd in his
uie same aid, were astonishingly successful. restored and the Union saved
andaI ivecoon"i-n9n,0i,.. . " "-' ,t""1 l, l"Me " execra-
.i.ucuiuu iiriucipies as a "whole ho." Song singing is decidedly to be preferred to rows
ier way to the store n.t .t.t
t.iere she refused all nourishment, and wept incessantly. On the fourth day, the keeper called upon mc T. Hopper, and informed him that there Sa!,VV?U1ggir,in Prison vho appeared to - utterly friendless, and determined to die by nation. The kind-hearted old gentleman nimeaiatpl irt iioi- ,
1m i ' -V...W ,u, -,ij,auu., ne louna "er 151112 on the fl.inr nf
When her emotion was somew hat calmed, she told him she had married a highly respectable man, a Senator from his native State. Having a call to visit this city, she had again and again passed Friend Hopper's house,looking wistfully at the windows to catch a siaht
in nun; oui wnen sue attempted to enter, her courage failed her. ' But I go away to-morrow," said she, "and I could not leave the city without once more seeing and thanking him who had Kivcd her from ruin." She called her little boy, nnd said to him, ' Look at that old gentleman and remember him well: Tor he was the best friend your mothereverhad." With an earnest invitation that he would visit her hanpy home.
Thomas II. Benton. The New York Tri buneof theOth tilt publishes the following ex
iraci irom tins gentleman's speech at a meet
..iMu ui luanciiesicr, near St. Louis, on the
nil mi.: "The election of Gen. Harrison was car
ricaoy Bribed votes paid for with suspended bank notcs-by raise votes, given by people who did not exist by imported voIpi rrroA
oiaie ny stimulated votes, chair
euig uieiruress and name twenty times and
oting as oltcn and by changing tickets after the vote was in the ballot box. By tt.ese and such like means, the election was carried; and judicial proofs have since fully established the
ucpraainsr facts.'' The editor of the Tribune in reply says:
iur. ucnion! each of the above observations is a deliberate falsehood and you are an unqualified villain! We dare you, we defy you to produce judicial proof, or any thing like it, of what you assert! You know vou cannot, and you have lied, deliberately, viiful-
'ee burled in her hands, sobbing n, if " ad crve,t -God bless you," she bade her
her
! benefactor farewell.
I My venerable friend is not aware that I have I written this s'ory. I have not rublished it
-an wouta break. He tried to comfort
lou,u 0Dlain no answer. .:r ' sa! 1 , . .
P,7t , x , "-?f Per.- ix-Z my wish to glorify him, but to exert a i hefr1" WV-hprna.V U C ."leonerrilnfluence r. heart of others; to eeZrtohVi: J; " 111' .a io my might towards teachin-; -ciety how to
am ni!
,ue as ihr lather. T11 m n iKrt u. a
thou hat taken this silk, let me know oil aoout it. I will do for tli
?LjAMOs IvENDAi.i.has written along caning article about Mr. Clay's duelling, for the hasten market, in the form of a dialogue between a Minister and Deacon. We are no apollopist forduellihg;but the cant and hypocricy of Kendall is too palpable and clarinu to
escape notice. The part he took in sunnortimr
(en. Jackson, and his known n-ininiitv e
Thos. II. Benton (two practical duellist 1 n
candidate for the Presidency in 1SW, ore the best commentaries on the hollow-heartedness of his canting twaddle
face is as white as a sheet, and we fern, f.r,,.,
a perfect contrast to the blackness of his heart.
lie wishes to turn Van Buren's notorloiia u nul
of moral and physical courage to account in the coming contest, by falsly attributing his quiescence, under insult, to religious influence! Out upon such arrant hypocracy. Wabash h.rprcss.
A Catital Hit. -A Whig county conven-
u.Mi, rvcenuy nein in Illinois, passed the fol
his lair peace was
and rumnuaipc ni,i ,
, ....v ...v 1. 1 t.-Sviici; oi laaies is, more conducive to harmony and order than1 that of paid bullies.
r j - T lcn ) , uvna in inv i'OllIlirV. Ullfl r nn
' ' 'l in v
country 's God. I said it then, sir, nnd I say it now, Tearless of the contradiction, that such an instance of tho power of mind over the darinc passions of despotism w afc never before exhibited to the world. The edict wn nnt,i.i,
- Ill t - ill. SINGULAR IWUnu 1 y ttarrfnt s,-npd-t,lc 'U Hon of DemocThe ... ,I:M'LLAIUJl?M0,- acy grasped u in his paw-but one stroke of i ,ai'',n,ol, torrespondencc of the',',a, ovcrpowerinff eloquence before which Ihiladelph.a Ledger says:-"Therc is asingu-iR" ticmb!cd nnd dctrois lowed nmde thp lar rumor in town, which for some reason or! ero of New Orleans quake on his throiT ard other that I cannot decipher, is gaining confi-' restored to; the polluted altar of libcrlV the dencecven among the belter informed circles.1 Wood-stained edict whirl, he had scized"wi"7 iii! tlv" PT n1 VB,VC,jr lhatMr-Va nnren flight. I repeat it. fir, such an instance o will, bej ond all doubter question, receive the ! he power of mind over the daring ration of regular nomination of the Democratic Nation-! despotic had never before been exhibited to al Convention, at Baltimore; but that mi thai! 'he world: There w.v a wreath of civic re occasion some one will get up and read a letter 1 nown-a halo of immoriai glory around the from Mr. an Duron, declining, for the sake of, "row of Henry Clay in that hour which Pre-
r r ' "i-i-i'Hiiiicnuing ; i,i'iu renei as iho greatest
iur uie oiuce 01 1'resn cut of th tt
States. The Democ
'"MWlllll W VJ Cll I IUII
then, will, without further COI11 111 Oil f nnminilrt
General Cuss, who will receive the support of
v.iuut, inc liiciimoild lllioii rer. 1 tin IVnn.
sylvanian, and in short, all the lead in.t ionrn:i1
on the Van Buren side."
4-k bfM
the purest patriot, nnrl il.n : '
. .... ..v;- nm-1IUIIIII1UUS statesman in the ui.i verse. Talk of Calhoun sir, as the great Hercules of mind and spiritgreat indeed are the powers of Hermes h
great as the Hercules is, the lion of Democracy had him bound in cord? of hemp, and whetting his bloody fangs, he was ready to tear the Herculean giant into a thousand atoms. Talk of Webster as the great master spirit of the age-great indeed isWebiter, but he was thcre.sir.and greit'as he i, he had not the heart to approach the open jaws and bloody fangs of the how ling lion, nnd bid him stay his .wrath. 'Twas reserved for the noble dariii" of Clav An. !.,. I :...,..' '
nny require to be renew ed
rrt.
1 ne eosi win lie iinwards of four mii'iAn. rr
noiiars- the contract stipulating that the whole is to he manufactured in Russia, for which purpose extensive facilities have l.r
the workshops being granted free of rent the pay of the workmen to be no higher than that which they have been in the Imbit .r
mg, nnd a judicious system of policy rstablished to protect the work. This is strong and gratifying evidence that the talents and inles-
rii) 01 our countrymen are properly appreciated abroad. Licking Valley Kegisler.
Dcei.! On Tupsd
Pl .. V. J -.. ..i. l.l?1, HI
vuiuury. .nr. KVan. Kdilor of I Vi,l
sentinel, and Mr. Hammer V.Mmr r ti,
t ... - J yj i i v A icksnnrfTh Wlitf f.,-i. j..t ...
lowing resolutions: ?e,olred. Tlat wl ! duelli ZX-ZZ 1 " T
prove of Gen. Jnot. j-i-....- ..... ... '
DOMESTIC INDUSTRY. The Greatest Mechanical Jnb . mriMJ..
ken. The Baltimore American states that Mr. Thomas Winands or that city, together with Mr. Joseph Harrison, have secured the contract the lamest of the kind PVPr ni:n1f in llin
world for furiiishins Locomotivrq m.,t i,r I do the deed and it was done.'1
then cars for the railroad now constructing in " Russia, between SI. Petersburg!! and Moscow. ATuuching Incident A correspondent of
1 lie llOUdWI he about nnr l,.,lrn.l " 'l' orK lAClllllfT I'Ofcl. urilo. Tr..
. .wu, Bi,,iiLi,lu IIUJL p I . . . . J ...... aiu.t. ong, the number of Locomotives to bo built I v nstiington, relates this touching incident at
is one hundred and sixty-two, with ten-! l,ieI,lmcri 11 the dead of the Princeton: dery for each: and the number of'burthcn cars! "The most affectionate incident that I obis five thousand three hundred, toirpihor wiiti served durins the
duplicates of such parts of the machinery ns' red nt the door of the vault, when the'bodv of
to hear." When they were alone Eenerat mt nence . tuners; o - "Ckson. declaration con- wuna. They fought with pistols al ien par, he put back the hairLm ier temples i C0 ,n' Cachin "C,C,y h?W t0f S Zl i f 1S32' ,hat a Jhe first fire did "ol take lie is hand kindly on her beautiful l eT ni ! "St4Ul ?? Pf mn b' U,C T0,c ?f 1 Xscfid, o Jf 'K""'1'?'!? WM "" wt t soothing tones. '.Mv child consider' lheAneJ Love- an Vclul to the people, and might he so con- m the shoulder, at the third round he cut his 'thyfather. Tell me all thou hast done, i stituted as td rbv.ate Constitutional objec- cloth .it the small of the back, and at the fourth
Complimentary. A political editor calls a . . i mi . . t
i . - ."tt .. i nmnu wr a coiiicmporary a soap oouer. me oiner re-uaug.n,-.r. and I doubt notihat I
OUt. if I H. In- . -. 1 . I ' "nil ihS uis miaijic, uui auui, tuot
. .in
A f .
dHliC'.llty.
well known to the community that his op
tions."
Why is a lady's bustlp like a romance?
cause it is a tale of fiction founded on a Went
" t -
v-iiiiiinouoreiennon was about to be !erofi-
icu wiiinii us uarn recesses. Two little sons of the deceased officer wcie among those w ho followed him to the grave, and the youngest a child of eight or ten years of age, clung to the coffin in the bitterness of his anguish, t.Jl it was found necessary to withhold it by force. To his almost infantile preception, this was probably the first complete relaxatiou of the invocable departure of his parent. Of the awful change of death he had an in. stinctive, but vague conception, but at this moment rushed upon his young mind, the firtt consciousness of a paitins w hich knows no rc-
turn, of a sleep that knows no waking; the ng-
onj oi uiai moment was the tcrific induction of his childish heart into the sorrows the sufferings and the trials of life. "And so have ended, as far as the world will concern itself, the scenes of woe which followed the dreadM accident on Wednesday. Let us not desire to lift the veil that covers from the common gaze the grief of those whom the pomp of burial cannot comfort, whose woundn it hearts mir ivmnntliv o n n n l. 1 if
i fire Ryan fell mortally wounded ll.mm.i-J
MbntoMsK and glanced Origin of the Oman Race.-U answer to Be-;!!0h!"brca!,, "eexp.red in a few hours, the profound remark. "We were all children
Vrii S -." fUf v me byonce,'Wh.t puzzles me," said a child of 5 i .Mr, t ratt, who was present on thn ncr..inj r- ... '
