Indiana American, Volume 25, Number 27, Brookville, Franklin County, 19 June 1857 — Page 2

EIDIAJA

AMERICAN

s4v

TO LIMBTT - , MV, ao rv.. twara , d PC r4 iuu tf. T. A. wTOODWI, Kdltör IHTJlAJIAFOtl. IVSLUIA. fRIO V Y JtTJII It. IMT HiMi ümi t or U . I Waeatectee Sirr. Kaat ef "44 fell' Meli I an, - eaeaetefc 1- II II LML J ..LH.I1- JL1 TD lAJTK CHaJtm rOlfSADOWl THI CA VAX fWinUHUMK tTJT The way ia which on peso of villainy i prrpetreted, indicates pretty clearly how mm V acccmnhahed. Tt in now manlC-t that the peoPJ. of Indboa hm : msvBiTeM mar ine peopie 01 muu 1 (tot bank phartrr faatened hpan thx for , the next twenty yeere, that they never de-1 .iA .nrf which in the manner f ite De 1 through die Legis !u'-ure. ud the pro oesa by ausok Iba eevarai htanuboa were iisjsniei l it ' tkw) bvUeat aud moat mmM tri uraoha of a liteiu eUqua of saeav

ij jeHli j "tin orar the rights of the j the peuple, in their preaent etato of civiliiapeoplo, vjf whleh we have any knowledge.-' tion, are about to need, relatively to the fathl whole aim of the thing, wia a moan mrr We may aeeuue, then, that the neaking fraud; a trick for personal nnda , amount of cultivated lands can not iaortk a design, not to advantage the Sute by wie j much more rapidly than tho population lasialaiion. hut to Prvrt the poware'of lac- j In all probability it cannot increase so fast;

tfftfjftm ig that Ute manager of ths scheme ! for the tendency of population now ie to tmla in euetody, shall be put into effect, so aaold rnknvmej There was thia in teW, j towns: so that tho proportion of agricultur. ne to render null and void an aot of Con-k;.-.u. alter lonff. caroCul al nooulstion ie diminishing So, alao, it i. 1 Kresa. Clta.e ateps forward to justify and

aad .textercua handäug of the Logialature, tea hill was worried through, by a aon tlrally lobby influence, that baa disgraced Indiana long enough. The Comraissionef and their toad-eating partner engrossed the j tock and sold out a large advance, and now Jastify their conduct a rather praiseworthy than er anrtdlt Tbey luve their pockets' well lined, and can very well afford to iperyi h fk mor wvaUr 8tot Capita engineering another swindle tbro' the Lag ialatur Ar! forthie. we ktt 10 doubt ill the plana a re earefally mamnng The same if! oenefed birdi of prey who have at me in femejllwoop snatched this rich mor.val to fatten upon, again darken the air and are aae 1 V a J. Malw tS 4sft Vf ciwitng hDOUT over our eae, iw-uj with their unclean ea taioneana oaase upon whaterar treasury wati may 0 epw-e ihaö rapacity When they carry ofl, and tiride their naxt harrest of plunder, it will iiotee Muatedbv a tew hundred thiiuaaoe, but bv milhone ie will aot b paltry I bank charter thiroblerTing it wifl be a dee parate plT for the homes and fortunes of the tax payers of the State av w wv . . e. 1 la 1 . i 1 It will be to decide who hall own this broad Statewhoshall poeeeea ite eotl. iu foreete, itefarme, j and cittee: whether the man who have earn- 1 ud and aaid for the tighte to live and breath J neur midst shall retain their rights, or ' n our mute snaii retain a.v whether to line the pookete and fotteo the j - a & I gailt)waw..rthy careaeee of a herd of rertm.u i-nelatin moneer the Dronerty hohler of Indiana hall be ao crushed Under a load of T.Ttox, that they will be compelled to sell oat and emigrate to eome State where auch villains are banged to the ; nrst tree that offars iu branehea ror auch would ha the reeult of the sffort now a-foot for inducing ths Legislature to recognise our liability to redeem the owl standing Canal Ifonate. Consider the load af taxation Already endured Various local pnrpesas of improvement, such af roads, bridges, courthouses, fjflor keamee, Ao, are bow teawsg cruelly oa the pocketaot the p iblic Many 01 our citiee and coufltiee have a iarge nil-1 road debt to pay otT, which will eventually I oocaaion the most eerioue embarraeemet j The State tax, including beyond the ormuary currant ex pee sea, a verv large aum for school rjurpoeaa, aad lor the discharge of aha yearly internet aw the public habt t av , together tooemaUtopayadequata-tiarie. to pubUc oflteers. The amlarie ooner or lav ter, must be raised for as they now stand, they are a reproach to the State Conaider all these elements of which the public bur-; den h oompoeed, wbmh eteadily increaae. and awear dlmir.iah. trace them a, they I . a 1 I al..4 akVaaa aaaa tkenn.lh aU 1. ""ma,".T mmJ termediate hind and foil with added weight upon the shoulder of labor, and then say, if instead of the final feather, you are ready to heap upon the toiling and aweating thousands, thia mass of fraudulent indebtedneee? If you do, look out fox an Exodus. The Weet will invite whtw-taxee are not con trolled by the mercenary cnUthroate who strut and boast as If they had the State of Indiana, with all ite people under bond and mortgaga We do aot pretend to reetrain our indignation upon thie eabjaok The fraud ia ao palpable, aad the evila are eo stupendous, I that wa oan find no laaguags to express our ! abhorrence of the men who are ready to

make money out of it We are mortified and the old among ua, remember that 1 ernor is denominated a traitor for wishing to thatMf Dayton, the late -publican run- 'among tin- firat thins thev hear.) from their fnt'or. e the lmv of Uno against murderers didate for the Vice Preeideooy, should have ; grand-fathers, fifty years ago, wa. how aad-, That the Marshal had a right to arraat permitted these cunning knave to make a ; 1y the timee were out of joint, and these , the men who refused to help catch the ne-eato-paw of him. We hope he mevy aever heard the eame from their grand-fathera, ' gr0, we have no doubt, for that ie the law; come to Indiaana again upon such an e and eo it goes back to the timee of Solo, that those men had a right to chain and rand. Th scheme is ia ite appropriaea do-; mon, and how much farther back, hietory carry away, a hundred milea or more, any meatio hands; men who lie ia the lobby j dos not record The world ia not getting citiien afsinat whom any alive bolder will aad by the tehhy te awim in eorrnpdon-. worea, it ie getting better all the time. There mai,e affidavit we do not queetlon "for that whoae moral eene ia ftupified; who hire j are roguee now, plenty if them, and there ja th9 law ; that theee men might then have

lost aU eight of tte people, 01 tMcir right. , of their power, and of that fearful it digna '

tion, they may one day arouse We shall ! have tteen euch. It ie not etringe thit the do our part eo for as exposing this enor-1 rapid increase of population in this country, moua conspiracy goee, and in eihortiog . should increaae tho apparent number of the people, without distinction of party, to base and wicked men, but their relative namset their faces inflexibly againet every man ber ia decreasing There ia not half the who ia not entirely above the suspicion of 1 drunkenness or profanity, or Sabbath break lay complicity in it fane reeoiatione at ing that existed thirty years ago, ba propor-

all your meetings againat thie luaidiuua villainy, nevertheless dangerous onlv the moee eo beeauee your patty orgs' n no tuna to grind about it And what, van vols for Senator or Kpreentatie, swear him, as Haaaibal wae sworn in his hatred to Rome, to hate and abjure t hi new fraud and Its Mend ' mrnmrnm, TIW ALB AIT SAlDUta-Y 1AILA0AS Although the flret organisation by which thia road was to ha built has been diebaoded, we have reason to hope that the project of connecting the Lake and New Albaay by a continuous road wi'l aever ba abandoned. We are eure the people along the line art ready to go to work, and continue it wirk until the road is completed We recently traveled along a part of the probable Una of the road and wa find the tamer are willing to subscribe largely, as m dsaaKew, to help build it W doubt not ana hundred thousand dollars oould be raised ha Franklin eonnty, alo for thia rrpoaa

A NBWSPAPBR--CONTAINING LUTO IPBCIOATIOM

f The Cincinnati Railroad Record hit the

f.lleWW exodlent suWetion and flguro . Moptefl and oonntenahoad the infamous conXL i.a l:-v duct of the Shsrifl snd peonk of the Under

go we preeen w hu withdrawn million of iaoney from too ordinary business of Ue country and looked it up in the vaults ef the Oeveruaent r " Wo live in a tim. of sitraerdinery I j speculation Never befor was there known j

auch an exodus of formers in the nrv lands the he.d of, to appear, in behalf of tho Sherof the west Nswor before boo Oowsrnmeot ff of Clark county, te resist the sppliea- . a v ..... 1 lion for a writ of Kat-.ae rrpus to relieve Riven away such quantum of land. Nver . M.e.h.1 fTVs.,

were so many seraa IB the market, andjof never wsra prices of wild land so wall ineintin'l To experienced eyes all thia tends (O ana result, woicn sooner nr eior mu eome a bursting bubble We mean of the babble which hau been created by making new town 00 the frontier, and aellinp Gelände at the phoe of cultivated farms. In this etate of things it will be well to examine the eJementa on weich tue pnoo of Und nd tli irnnrnroiuent of Und denend 1 In 1RS0 w. had the kof al popolktion 1, in iouv w hm wo kusi jurjiumi. a Ute Untied Statea, end the actual ameuot of land cultivated and the amount of pro-1 ducta Thuaiuount of product deduotin aaed. tffre a anrnlui lor exnort ofonlvtea! r ... ' . . ; oar cent We may fkirly conclnde. then, I (hat the amount of land in culture ras about equal to what was needed, and what evident that tho amount of land cold can not safely exceed the aaaa ratio, although it will be absolutely much larger. It can not exceed tho same ratio, because the only real ultimate demand is for farming laud, aad if that ratio of increase be exceeded the demand oaasee, the price fall end land j 00000)91 drug . , - x. thf known -.rifintic of the country. in 150 the reeult er U followi ropulaUon .'1 ll..-.. CllUvtd Und.Mf - 11:1. ( . A t'sOalUvUt laoil, arret lOhee.ono Whole amount of Unit owned by ladtvteaai 4m,ifi4 Kt of Ircennt! lncro of population .Xp.reet. According t this we have the following of popoiion od oalti- j ntod lands Aua eel lacraaae of aopulauon Inet of raUlralnd UoJ, acre Inert of enaulU-4t4 Uod, sepss J.96S.0) 4.3IT, ee Atsveeet .... tfl.JTl.DOO Ten million of aerea per ennum ie the total demand for land at tho present time It is an ascertained fact It is the precise demand, ana no more a greai aeat more a a, may be sold but. if so, it must sooner or later overetoek the market Buoh we hold j I to be the aaM now, beyond question )D ( the year 1SA4 the eale of Government land amounted to T,000,000 of aorea, and the . land-warrants to a million more Since i , that, in 1 MÄ and 18IA, the amount disposed m a a. 1 1 t 1 T . . . Sk a 01 has smountoo to nooDie tnai 1 o wis . we must add a million or two aores diepoaedofby railroads. Thus we And that the annual aalee of land by the Government including the land-warraate is from 50 to 100 per cent beyond the actual de- j mani When we take this fact into view, in connection with theother facta, that population now tends to the towna, and that the foreign emigration ia now diminiehed, we oan aee at once that there ie a great land spec ulation on hand. When wo come to town lots, the Und bubble is utterly undefluable. Towns are laid out in Kansas and Nebraak t every half doien mile, and each one of them ie of course daetined to be the New York of the weet. TbJ land speculation is no new tning I nor n fa ,1 t has universally result-! ad In the bursting of the bubble, and proe- j tration of ala. and a period of dullneee j fory,arsto eome. We do not certainly know that the crisis has come , but we aee otth9 aftiinr storm Money ie scarce , jn the country town, where at Ulla time t t0 ba plenty. The people who go tlciW(d ftnd nciful ; town lote are ( M tt prices at lenst four-fold the value, if a . a a . I tne towna were to grow aa much as itm im- i bw 1 aginedthey will. These are eigne not to be mistaken in raxvAUurcx or cam Much ie eaid of late, of the prevalence of crime, from which it ia sought to be inferred that the world is getting worse all the time, inatead of better. We are alow to believe any euch a doctrine, for it is untrue. If true now, it baa bees true ever eince the days of Solomon, and by thia time the world should be pretty bad, if 'the former day were better than these, then and all the way down to the present We have no recollection of a time when soms folk were not harping on the degeneracy of the times, I alwaye were roguee, there are murderers I aad suicides and adulterer there alwaye tion to the population not hall, yet there is too much. Away with ' -trine that tho world ie getting wore uen are getting worse, and eome 1 . .ua have greater facilities for practicing devilment, and the facilitiaa for reporting crime, and keeping it before the people till they become familiar with it, are boreiaing, but crime ie not increasing, relatively, though 00a might judge eo, from reading the papers that omit a thousand pleasing incidents in social life, to fill their columns with the de. tail of murders and thefte and fraudsSome papers seem to think nothing lite worth reporting. Tns Canai Rams A western editor and his wifs wer wslkiag out in tho bright moonlight one evening The wifs was of sn exceedingly poetical aature, and said to her mate "Notice that moon bow bright, and beautiful.' Could n't think of BOtioiog it," returned the editor, "for anything lees than the usual rates a dollar and fifty-cents for twalvs line

A BUttf SUMMARY OP THE IATBST FOREIGN THX flOQUU Of THE TXIAMI I will art iu righta to try those Marshal ! TO, THX A LOIS I ODUIJUAOgBT Uli-

Oo'rnor Chase haa aenctiflisl. iaetilted. I, round Railroad renn io. in thair violent anl outrageous conduct toward the I ni.ed States Peptitv 1 rtrn. JS'the JJJ Msrahala, in the recent fftr hia instructed or requested General of thia State, who ia dtinagogu, u,at Chase ia proud of being at sheriff. We trust that the Preeident will order the Attorney General of the United States to appear in behalf of the authority and digni'y of the United States, so that a die tinct iuu may be joined and ths question settled at ones, whether the Sheriff can, up on oojrtM write from little State Courts, arrest and incarcerate officers of the Untied Stated for merely executing the write of the Courtf -f the United Statea Thia deeicrnation of the Attorney General, by the Gott rnr. t aid the three er four 1' Vers ft! uirslent to of Chaee the United G I and hia Abolition crewsgamat Statea Court Lai the war oome the sooner the better! 40r n."vr M or? outrageoua caae or reeialance to the authority of the rnite(J guut Jn Qthtr 0BM- faM been eome color or ehade of the pretext some vagueness in the law, or looseness in the execution ef the write; but in thia there is no such pretense The ground ia openly taken that a silly, unconstitutional, nullifying act of the Legielatnre, giving to State Court the power to iieue write of Kabu eorpus, aervioeable in every part of the State against ail pcraona, aa well aa officers of the United Statea at all other, having individ- . - -w BT T. - " - maintain this law. Nay, more, hs appears, through hi inKtrument, the Attorney General, as the champion and defender of one of the most outrageous, audacious and cowardly caaea of wrong, inault, end oontuaiely to the otlirore of die United State that ever occurred in the eosntry in which the offiCere, having priaonre Uj their custody, and nnder a lawful writ, were overpowered by force, were committed to a pestilential dungoon, end there kept until the prisoners oould Vi leln IwmlD tni)a off end lhn rnlnea! I b- nretendsd nwroH in l.ii ih.. Vff. lueJa were called upoa to appear and ahow oaue iheee act are not ouy juetmca, but the farther cuetodv of the Cniiad Statea officers is claimed and insisted upon, thro' I the influence of tome riüfige pettifogs re I who come hs Cincinnati to advertise them- , selvee for Abolition patronage, br denoonoing the arrogance end nturpation of the United Stetea Executive intheCourte of the I r 1 Är i'kaaa adJa Ik. Aiia..... Ii.. . aaeaai I 1 Union Chase adds the Attorney Genoral to them, and to-day the patriotic citiaene of ; thia city are to be aubjected to the disgust 1 of seeing the la we and fh tribunal; of this Government impugned, scoffed at and Hefled by the officer of the State of Ohio! It ie no question of the right of expediency of the Fugitive-slave Law. There are - e a 1L.1 . many 01 ua v. no ao not approve mat act approve but. still it i an act of Co mee and mut be enlorced. Jackson did not approve the tariff which South Carolina attempted to nu,if?- but h deelared that, sworn to exe4k MIA tha -t IST st Um fn.fkC.ll f. t I eft 1 1 K 1 aa v va m 110 set aiv iniiliiitiif IMIIIII inn lnd d The pnmi prrÄirient faM DO little of the decieion of the old llero of the Hermitage, and w can aasure the pee)Jnt demagogues and incendiariee, who have got up thia flagrant ease of traon Md r of theUnitad States author- . . . ... ,ues, that they will be compelled to euo cumb. and that, too, some time before the fall elections, so that they will not be able to dorive even any political capital out of ths scheme. Enquirer. We give the above from the Enquirer of ÜJ 10th( 00f mfty h m of the manner in which the Democratic party over-ride individual and state rights, to sustain the slave power A few years ago, when national legislation did not happen to rait Southern intereate and doctr'mee, "State Rights " was ths great rallying cry of the Ntional(!) Democracy, but now, that national legislation outrages the rights and sentiments of freemea, it ie Tuaao to aeaert and defend the rights secure 1 to every man by the American Constitution. Ths laets in this slave case are known Tl in v.:. i. j,,,. lT 8 Marshal, eome of whom are Ktntuckian,, (for the fugitive slave law BOt thftt Marehale or Comroii.ionrt for in a given SuUt eittMnei of thit fitatethey mfty liv- A thousand uiilee off, ) attempted to UM6 h ntgr0a, but foiled, became tho negro had toVen rfuge io ft 1, which he Mtnd himtmf against any number of eatchere, aa there wae but one entrance ' ln u ,h h h., -..i,i ffr.i -r..iv ti, war ' ejawaa eaeatw nv ' va ayaasaaaj WJ wwtait 1 e mw owntT of the houae and atbers, who were nreaent told the Mar. hale to take the man but they refuaed to help Balncd, they went to Cincinnati, more than one hundred milee, and obtained, or professed to obtain a writ againat the white men who refused to help catch the negro, alledging that they were harboring and concealing him. Thie writ they professed to serve, seixed the men, hand-cuffed them and were carrying them off, when a Sheriff stopped them with a writ of Kabeat corpus, for the prisoners. They refused to obey the writ, and aasailsd tho Sheriff and hia posse with evident intention to kill They were then arreeted fox assault with murderous intent, and now the Govbean lawfully mulct into heavy dauiagee, and probably imprisoned. t r no other offenae thin refueing to citch the negro, we do not doubt, for that ia the tew; but there ie do tew which juatifiess est of men, though Marshal, to art upon officer in the disohsrge of their duty, s those men did upon the Sheriff and hie poeee. They should have obeyed the writ of habeas eorpue and gone before the Judge. If there, they could hsvo shown s bona Jide writ from the Commissioner Court tosrrsetthe men, the State Court should hsvs given them into ths hsnds of ths Marshal, and to the tender raereiea of the fugitive slave law. While it ie a law, it must be respected by all the Htatee, yet ivsry flute hu i right to pro. tect ite citizen againet false er rest on false or asaumed warrants. II ad the court discharged the persona, lawfully arrested, there would have been a eonfliot of juriadiotion in which the State Court would have been wrong. We think that Fugitive Slave Law eontains lsteat iniquities not yet developed. This rij ht to arrest peaaaable citiaeoa for refuio to help catob a negro, and to carry him to the extreme part of toe Stats, and there to submit bim to a trial among etrnngore, without couneel, If be i too poor to employ counsel, is one of them It has other powere not yet railed into requiaition but which will be in dus time Meanwhile w hop the State of Ohio

ights to try

for their aeeault upon oitiren 01 oluo. iay oept so far as thsir assault was protected by At ,ho W

the Fugitive Slave Law If the Fugitive' Slave Law provides for such outrages an the Eq uirew and the Marahala claim at' Ik there is a remedy but submissson untf. the law is ropenled We would not advi resStence, nor a conflict of juriediction, but we believe every State should throw around ite oitisena crery possible eafo-gukrd against the madness Of thie iniquitoua act tteaca we approve the provision of the late law of Qhjo ia regard te is law, eecurring the rig hi Of AoAeoi eoty-ft td jevery iej W reated nnder the law, and otherwiae providing for ths safsty of it elttien. Olv the Sonth Its " pound of flesh "that hi M nominated in the bond." but allow it not one drnp of blood. A KAUB k taTTRDKEll ARMBT1T) Our readm rsmember how every act of; ertitltv in Kauaa which wm nuhlisheil laat as e wart . a wa t t k I summer was cal ed a U ack Menu.! ican lie 1 As thera U no political capital now to be made by deaying the facte of history, the 2?n?wtrer and its kith are now giving credence to Ute moat horrible of those bloody deed The following ie from the Enjiirar of the 10th int Prowr, the precocious young wretch whose infamous and insane act of murdering and scalping a Free-Siau man, during ths late troubles in Kansas, created so much horror and supplied the ehriekere with such an inflammatory theme, ha at last beon arrestted, committed, and bail refused by Judge Leoompt We hope he will ewing. It la time that eome person were hung in Kanena, where, under the pretext of Turthenng the ane or the other or the politioa) factions abandoned men gave full reine to their passions, and perpetrated deeds of the darkest j character. Fuget' history ia that of not a few' youth in the South aad West He was an orphan ho? who had been taken cam of by aomo Missouri planter, but very early proved so angovarnablo a charge that hie guardian was happy to get rid ol' Itirn lie went into Kannst to engage in the tumults of that territory, and wa prominent on all oocarione of rich .10c and disorder. Hie natu Ju M J:.a.,I ral propensity for hloodvhnd and combats, was Inflamed by the constant ianbtbing of the wretched poinone that are eold for spirit in the Western town. He wae alwava nearly intoxicated. On the occasion of the horrible deed for which he ha been committed, he had been drinking to great excess and at lew dogger;- propcM to bet with one of hie companion that he would ride out and kill aud scalp a Free-Stute roan . within a certain tima 1 ho bet was tsken and Fuget, mounting his horeo, rode out on the highway leading towards Lawrence, flourish ing a bowie-knife in his right hand. Every person hs met was stopped by him, and salted whence he had come, and if he waa "Pro-Slavery or Free-State." At laut he met an old man, who, in answer .0 these qaeriee, said that he was from Law rence and that he was a Free-State man, whereupon Fuget shot him through the body with a revolver, and then deliberately scalped him, and returned to town waving manded the wtgw and waa paid br his boon companion, with whom he had a grand frolic in celebration of his achievement As soon, however, aa the newa of thia bloody deed began to noiee abroad, Fuget tied into Missouri, concealed himself, ana, on recently emerging from hia hiding-place, thinking that hi crime was forgotten, he waa arrested by a Pro-elavary man, delivered into the hands of ths officer, by whom, we trust, in due proceee of lew, he will be handed over to the hangman. To hold any politioal party or people responaibl for auch a deed as hi. ia downright diaboneaty. This ia substantially as the affair was etated at the time, by the papers not ia the employ of the South. The begging of the Enquirer not to be held accountable for the deed, conies too lite. The pertinacity with which it denied it at the time, wae concluaive evidence that if true, it militated againat the party which made and surtained the law, und-.- which such murders were committed with impunity. It is too Ute to deny a party connivance at all the outragee which the Free State men in Kansas suffered. The burning of Lawrence, the destruction of the presses, the dispersion of the Free Slate Leg ielature by a government officer, the impri onment of Free Bute men, on falae charges these and a thousand equally outrageous proceedings, were either defended or connived at by the Democratic party during the oanraea, if in no other way, by pronouncing every man a liar, wLo believed them to be true. It ia too late to avoid the odium of such cruelties, by saying the party ia not responsible for them. Had the President desired it, and had the part) demanded it, not one in a hundred of the murders would have ooenrred. One tenth (he anxiety which ie manifested in regard to Utah outragee, would bare saved hundreds of valuable livee and thousand of valuable projierty. But there were hopee that free men could be fiigbtened from the territory. Itwasavain hope, and now that freedom ia likely to tri' umph in apite of ths government, thera ie an acknowledgement of some of the wrongs perpetrated to give that land to slavery DXYXtXOV OF THX HEW SCHOOL PRXaBTTJtHI AN CHURCH. Th- General Aaeembly of the Preebyterian Church (New School) whiob closed ite labor about a woek ago at Geratend, adopted aa usual, resolution expressive of the disapprobation of the chureh, of the system of American Slavery. Ths testimony againet slavery was the same in aubetance ae has beon put forth by that church for more than fifry years, but the pions slaveholdere can not and will not beir to be told of their etna so repeatedly, hence they withdrew, inviting ill Treebyterians to join them who wish to live in peace with slavery. The reeult will be that nearly all, if not all Southern Preebyteriina, will fuse in 1 General Assembly Souoth. The probability is thit in 1 few yeere, the dietinetion of Old School and New Sehool will be lost sight of in the shsorbing af&initiea end dislike on ths slavery qtiettion FiMii t SlTTOOa. About this time there is, in Weslsy Chapel, in this city, quits sn excitement in regard to the method hereafter to be observed in seating tho congregation, in that old hive of Methodism. A s great many of those who were moving in the building of (race Chureh, were memhem of Weeley Chapel, it wa propoaed to take a vote of the membera of the church in regard to allowing those who prefer it, to ait by families in that church ; the reeult of whiob ia not yet fully eacertiioed. At our latest dates ths majority is said to be in firor of the obinge ess s gfisT A writer in tho Journal, of Tuesday has eome sensible euggoetione as to the increase of rates of fare and freight on railroad It ia nonsense to so manage the road that every body but atookholder should grow rich by thorn Men who never contributed any thing but ourae and abuse toward building the roads, are the men who raaliie tb moat advantage, from them.

eaka'larirer nunc ever HMtendfjti nc4oy, t vmm wae Chp1 after .av hi Ah the Alumni, with their friends and invited guests, assembled in the Cabinet, where refreshment, niueie, fraternal greetings, and remiascQcea.of "$uld lang syne" detaieod tkeu) te a late hoar. ArraiiKeirtcnt wore made for another Reunion of still more varied interest on Wedneaggyj Jjtfer 1th, fof whjck provislori are already made Tftl Iteunion aha AJaeasi praaonUaet year, pledged thai, selves to attend, and they hereby saoet cordially invite and urge all their brethren to meat them once more ia the belle of ' old Aebury." 1 The appointments for the occasion areas follow Oration by .TOflKPH OLEVN, Eri , of Z"1 1 1 f ' '""'. ' Poem by JAS; M REYNOLDS, Esq , of Lafayette, InL Let all be present on, Wednoeday morn ing. S. A. JLATTIMOBE, Äec'.v of the Alumni. Oreea Onetla. Jnne 12, 1857. Nora. All the Cammencement exercises will take piece thie year as u ual. except thoae of the graduating class Wodnoaday, July 15, 0 a. m Pusines Meeting of the Alumni. 7pm Oration, Poem, and Annual Tlounton. 1 1 ..eh . OaxarKBiu o Irwl June 11, 1KA7 M Editor ; 1 write to etato eome facta, and make some enquiries in roforenco to Express Companies 1. It is a fact, that the certificates of the .VI mi Express Company, and so far aa 1 kr .other companies do not ttete noeit. y, the contents of paekages; but simply read, aaid to tonlain. ' instead of saying " containing' an much. 3. Aganm are inatrueted not to oouat the packog, or examine the content Tho it the pnrkiie fs lost, and you havo no certificate ehowrng precisely the content; it might bo ImpessiVle to prove It In any other way, and o it would be your los. Kow let me enquire why an fizpreee Company ehouid wih to give sueh an oaeire certificate? Ie it booauae they inknd to avoid responsibilty If so, it is much cheaper to send by msil. A lawsuit wo on hand last winter, in Shelby ville, and a roau was put to a great deal of troublo to prov that he had nent by the company, the things alledged Now Mr. Editor, I wish to know if an hotutt Express Company cannot be got up whose agents shall count and certify according to facto? Twice 1 refuaed to commit my business ,nto hftndB of " BP,M Wj Mf uee they would not certify aooording to foots. I believe hnndrede and thousand would pass through the hand of the eompaniee, if thoy testify or certify according to faeta Yonre, Ac, L FORBES m m m "Bxeeate the Law as Bverv Haaard." We learn, from good authority, that the Executive haa fully approved and confirmed all that haa been done by the officers of the Government iu the oaso of the Aoaaos corpus againat the Sheriff of Clark oounty tor the release ot the I'nitocl rtutoe Deputy Marshal, and instructed them to prooeod to exeoute the law and the write of ths United Statea tribunals at every haaard, and that all the power of the Federal Government will be employed to that end. Wo lourn that it i the determination to arrest all the parties implicated in thia ontrageoua and infamous resistance to the proeeaa and authority of tho United Statea Courte. If thie ie not done, wo hope the Executive will surrender it once, take down "ths Stars and Steinas,'' and deliver over all the authority and power, which were onoe wielded hero by tko Federal Government, to Governor Chase and Sheriff Layton ! On Enquirer. Ry all means execute the law. While It ia a law, the Preeident hie no option, he must execute it, horrible ae it may be. We have contendud from the first, that that Fugitive Slave Law authorises the Marshal to command any man, al any lima, to assist in the oaptare of a negro, undor the pains and penalties of biaobeyiug an ofloer, and auch will no doubt b tb deoiaion of the Court in thia case. Let it eome I Tho people of the North, who sustain that law, are fit for no higher post than the honorable one of running down negro, and then putting their handa in their pockets to pay ths expenaea of tho chase. There aro however a few noble spirits who will rot in prison, or die on the scaffold, before they would mors a hand or foot in obedience to a gov eminent negro-catcher. We know one who would. reeas efLeala M t bltweoS We have heretofore noticed the poems of of this talented lady, which have been collected by her mother and published in book form A large supply of them are now on sal at Merrill's book store in this city. Any enterprising canvasser could maks money by selling them. Speaking of her poetiia, the editor of the Ohio (Julhratnr as i In ths Ohio Cultivator of .Jsnusry, lt, 1N66, we published the last song of thie sweet minstrel girl, written for us only a tew days before her death. liar literary friend have gathered up her best poems, aud given them in this form to the public; they deserve an extensive sale. Poor dear Lou ! Mate ba left us a saver of beauty and good noes, and we shall nut soon forget her. The following! from .lane Maria Mead, Cleveland, Ohio : These poema form a beautiful volume For eweeineas of expression, harmony of rbylhme, and purity of thought, they Lave rarely been excelled, and yet thuy are but the tythes of a rich harvest that lteath, the spoiler has reaped. It i a most appropriate Gift Bong, an ornament, alike to the boudior and centre table. We hope the lovers of beautiful poetry in this city will at once supply themselves with a copy of thia book. gfg One of the be it Lore Peseta that the Methodists are ssid to have had for years in this city, wsa held last Monday evening, lu Weeley Chapel This speaks well for tho kind Christian spirit in which the difference of opinion as to family sittings is dieouncd But few, if my of the membre allow this question to disturb thsir religious enjoyment Thoy are willing to live and let live If a majority vote to allow families to sit together, the moot of the minority will quietlly eequiesoe, ind either elt with their families, or eepartely, as they please If a majority will not allow family sitting, we understand that some of the minority will quietly withdraw, and build a house with free seats but family sittings

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BSTTC m - . in go from New York kost Minn , ig 7fi hoe $M H r John W. Spencer hak been oppointad Posamastar at Hieing Pun. ttf VVstermelon hats mads their sp pearanoe in the Savannah market MTThe eomet is vieable just before daylight ia the Northeeat lair The bog cholera ie spreading over Now Jey VTundred of hogs ark dying daily. MeT'Whitrtdge, the painter keepe oeer not in that liquor etore, you may be eure of fxV Compliments are the coin that we pay a man to his face saroaame are what we pay hia out with behind hie baek. A" Counterleif new cent pieces ars in circulation, intended no doubt to mix with the genuine in lagre quantities ftmf Mrs M. O. Heek man a sister of exPresident Tyler, died at hia residenoe an the 2d inat MsT" The Ticksburg Whig speaks oneourK'ingly of the prospeote of the corn and eottsn crops in that region. MeTVl wney-tW camels are to be employed on the wagon road te the Pacioe. it is intended to teat their capacity tar endurances ffa From our Hyraenial department it will be aeeu that our old boy, Peterson ia married. W always thought he would come to such an end. MsTK. A. Hall, keepe a fine steck of goods at the store formly oeouppied by Jame Hall in Odd Fellow'a Building, and a voYy olever man ia there to do the aelling Maf An interesting letter sppesr thin woek from our old Governor friend Graamuok. Read ii lie has got bravely over hia Itemooraroyratbor he wont be led to believe in bogaa Democracy. National Divimok. The National Division Sons of Temperance met on the 8th inst, In Providonoe R T. Ryaunanitnous vote it has adjournod te meet in Indianapolis on the second Tuesday iu Jinbnry 1858. sekT There is a coatluuons railroad eon section from Bangor to Jefferson City, in Hiseouri, over one thousand seven hundred miles, and it i traveled in three days Thie ia pert of Ptick'e "gjfdle round the earth." " 'J A' i Ja nit tif Bao. Ecdt, of the Korth Weitem, is opposed to demisemi-qusvsr singing St oampmoetings. If we had no more music in our throat than be haa, we would oppose that kind of singing sll ths tima 19 The Democratic Convention in NewTTampshire bfcve nominated Amos P. Cuto, for Gorvernor. The resolves sre to support the Dred Scott decieion, again -t thoreatriction on rum-selling, and complimentary to President Buchanan. ngT'The Trustees of the Oldenburg Turnpike Company, have contracted for the huildfngof a bridge across tho West Fork of White Water near Kimble's Mill. There is nearly etock enough subscribed to build it KT" Alter, of the Ahalbyville Banner, is a very vain man ; he thinks Wilkinson oan make a party picture from his face Vanity of vanities ! See here Alter, did you evsss Judge Testf When hs dies you may hope to be preeident of the Ugly Club. None of your ineinuationi. AW The euhuro of grapes hss beon introduced with aucoeaa in ehe vioinity of Fort Madison, lows. Ths wine made from the Iowa viaeyarda is described aa equal to tangworth's beet A Mr. Stempel haa bought soms nine sores on the bluff on the west aids af Fort Madiaon, and haa sent out some fh 0 hundred grape-vines the present spring. BW We regret to lesrn that the wife of Rev. Williamson Tswsll, died suddenly on Mondsy morning in Madison. Us waa absent from home at the time. He had left home, but for a few daj before, leaving her in good health. The stroke was Buddes and nnespeeted. Hi haa the eymnethy of a thousand acquaintance. A Gmut MisTAir. The idea that some people have that nice summer cats vests, pants, and the like can be obtained any plane, ia a great mistake. In our paginations we have found none ao good and eheap, aa at E. A. Hall' a ander the Sentinel otfloe, in the Capital House building. Don't mistake ths plaes snd get into some one-horse $hop where you will hsve to pay doubls price for an inferior article. ljaT The suit between the Cleveland snd Pittsburgh Railroad and ths relatives of a party kilted upon the road, waa decided before the Supreme Court of Ohio, at Steubenville; on Friday last Ths accident, by which the man was killed, secured near Stoubenville eome months ago. The daceased was deaf aad dumb, and standing spon the track and did not bear tho approaching train Dnmagee to the amount of f 1 .ftftO was rendered for the complaint. Hgr A celebrated lecturer on natural philosophy was one evening dilating upon the powers ef the magnet defying any one to name or show anything surpassing ite powere. An old gentleman accepted the challenge, to the surprised lecture, but he nevertheless he invited him on the platform, when he told the lecturer that wome wa the magnetef magnet for if loadatene on the table could attract 1 piece of iron for a foot or two, there wae a young woman who, when he wae a young man, used to attract him thirteen milee every Sunday to hive 1 chat with nerr Hsf Abraham R Ten Eyeek, a vsnsrsble and estimable citizen of Albany, is dead He Wie born befor the Revolutionary Wsr, snd hia life haa been an epitome of the hietory of his native country. For sixty year be hs been 1 citiaen of Alsbiny, hiving eteblihed a bookatore in that city in 180ft. In 1820 be retired from bneineee upon a competency acquired therein. With the constancy and contentnent characteristic of his race, he remained for sixty years an inmate of the dwelling io broad way whiob b first took poeeeaion of on arriving Io tin city. gejrJsmee Blake, Esq., of this city, in 1 recent apeech it the Flir ground, remarked that when the timber wae cut off of Washington atreet, they (the old asttlere) eel to work eome two or three hundred "niggere" to ut the loga ia two and to keep the hasps burning. Quite 1 populition of ths black race at SO early a period. Tel, reader, it is true that they were black sometime but wer not "bone snd sinew," nor living 'eritr,' bat only loga laid upon logs and then at on firs. 80 you aee the "old folka" were not slaveholder after aU, if they did hav 1 good many "niggiii" ti Ml after.

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UTAH.—Our dates from Salt Lake are down to the 5th of April. At that time the most active measures were taken by Brigham Young for the consolidation of his power, with a view to preparations for an organized resistance of the Federal Government. The Gentiles were being driven from the Territory, and Young was carrying mat- ters with a high hand. Among the persons who have been compelled to leave, at last accounts, were Judge Stiles, U. S. Marshal, and the U. S. Surveyor-General, with his family, beside a large number of emigrants, whose presence had become distastefull [sic] to the heads of the Mormon government. Intelligence had been received in the Territory of the growing feeling of the Administration againet the tyranny of Young and the defiance of the Mormons, but the news does not appear to have extinguished the hopes entertained by the Utonians that they will still be able to hold their own. Under the head of Pennsylvania we have recorded the arrival of another large addition to the Mormon force. These people will arrive in Utah early in July. In New York the Mormon Church is now placed under the direction of President Appleby, who is ordered by Brigham Young to take the place of President Taylor, recalled to Utah. ----- mm. nnasMT. tn sturaay an amaavtt . wsa filed aireitiat two vounr men eons of i as . era . ä v . a wa . two of our moat respectable eitisena, charging them with robbing the western mail The mail earrieron tho route was also implicated Hail was accepted by Mr tTnlted State Commissioner Res in the sum of fSOO each for the young men of thia place, and $500 for the mail carrier, for their appearance at the next term of Court, and a preliminary sxsminslion waived MT A largo framed man. thirty years of age, named Ilartehorn, of Kew.on I'ppor FaU'. Y. was awskened last Saturday mor ning by s stinging pain just above his 1-, bow, ladiating from a small rod spot. On Searching tho bed a email blank spider was discovered where hia ars bad rested. His walling rapidly extended down the urn. during the diy; on Mondsy he was lieacd with s psin in I i bowels, which ooutinuad with frightful t i-v.-r.t until he died, sv.5 oclock onion or oaxAT mes 8ono Of tho greatest nvn tho world lift ever produced, either iu . W - W r- I snoiont or modera timos, wore of vary humble aodobecurn origin, Coliunbue, thediHcovercrof A-merica.xvn1-iheaonof a weaver, and a woaverhiuaelf. Horner, the great tvreok poet, and the prinoo of ancient poets, wus a beggar. Dejnonthcnen, the great Grecian orator, waaibotton of aoutler. Oliver Cromwell was the son of a brewer. Benjamin Franklin waa a journeyman printer. Ferguson, the Scotch astronomer, waa a shepherd. Edmund llalley, an eminont Knglieh astronomer, wai the son ot a aoap-boilor, at Shoreditch. IJogurtb, the celebrated Knglieh painter, was put apprentice to anenraver ol pew tor pout. Virgil, the gneat Latin poet, wa tho Mun of n potter ; and lloraco, of a ehopkeeper. Hhakspearo, the groatest of English dramatic poet, was the son of a woolataplor ; and Milton, the groatcat of English epic poets, waa tho son of a money -scrivener. Pope was tho son of a merchant; and Dr. Samuel Johnson, of a bookseller at Litchfield. Akenaide, the author of that elegant poem. -PloaH-uroa of tho Imagination," was the son of a butcher at Newcastle. Kobort Burn! wan a plowmau of Ayr shire bcotlaud ; uroy, tho ingliah po et, the aon of a money -Rcrivenor, aud lloury Kirke White, of a butchor at Nottingham, England, Hloonifiehl and Oiiford were shoetnakeri; and Addison, Goldsmitii, Otwav, and Canniug were sons of clergymen. Tho preaent Lord Lyndhurst, tho Lord Chief Justico of England, was the eon of the painter Coploy, and an American by birth. This list could be doubled, but it ia unnecessary Tbeae examples show that there is no Mate or condition of lite, however humble or obscure, from which talents and geniui may not rim by individual exertion, to eminence and din tinction. Particularly is this tlu caae iu ourown country, where there is no nobility, and no privileges conferred bv birth, and whero the road to tho highest offices and ths proud eat distinction ie alikoopen to all. THAL OF MAYOa WSITWOBTB. Paul H. Dennis, local mail agent in thii city, haijuat been sent ont on a hunt alter the largest spoeiroe n of game, with not what we believe, and certainly what haa not proved, the beat kind ot'ummnnition. The Mayor in all hia length wna up beibro Judge Drnmmond on Tuesday, upon a complaint preferred by the sharp set mail agent, tor stealing the government mail bagnf There had Boen a aearch warrant, and ntimerous wacks at the Snmmit were emptied of their peaoefnl sjtrricullural products ami bronght to town by tho Wal mail agent, to be turned to damning proof airainst the ex-M. C Tho sacks in question were the coarse WW. . duck sack, or bag, used for tho transmission of "Pub. Doc'a." to members of Congress, in which Capacity Long John bad received adoaeai or more ol them. It waa shown in evidence that M. Cm never return those sacks Thit Judge Douglass had never return od them in any caae; that they passed by common acceptance aa envelopes and woro not considered mail bags nt all. Thui 'bang' wont Mr. Dounii'guu, and not a feather waa dteturbod.--Tho Mayor cam off with flying colors Judge Drummond rofuaing to hold him to bail. The Court room waa crowded with spectators, and tho farce waa a taking one. Chuwgo Prtu, MAKRIKD On May S7lh, by Hv Jno. W Keeley. Mr. Isaao N Cassom, of Johnson county, Is , and Mrs Ei-iiabsth Pcaeaxi., of Brookville. By the same, at the Valley House in Brookville, May 2Hth, Mr. N. Mau.i and MUs K J. WiLoanxia both of Franklin oouDty. BytbeMme, on the 7th of June, Mr Oao. T. Kmitu snd Miss Basar Van Mktrb. both of Franklin county In Fort Madisou, Iowa, Juns 2d, by Rev. I. P. Teter, Wat S PiraasoN, editor of the Weetern Independent, to Mrs. Wnffoso E Mai. as, of Virginia. On 8unday morning, 14th inlt, by K v J. Calloa, Rev. Mttro M. Hack, of Leavenworth Citv, Kaasaa, to Mia Lor mi an a 1. OasxN, Indianapolis lad. zxxx. In f3ineionati, on Tuesday the Wth mat. Mas Java t'AxrssLt, wifs of Will in m Cawphell. of thia city, aged about M She had long been i oitigen of thai plane, lad fw wer nor beloved by their sequel ntanoee than ehe

i. llUsjaBBaa

SCUB CABXL jwc friesfwsroimSa Habeas Corpus Tried Before Judge Leavitt ifrrs ns 1 liu'fiaaLusHo writ of habwaa corpus aued out before Judge Lea via to procure tho relonae of the U. H. Mar halft, wbo waruhald umi 1 UUi procm, fbrviolalingSui CUÜ, ugh, pursuant t luiioui-ntm nv. an rutr outiHol for I MuiHlinll, ntutrt thai, aftsr tho ttfliilu it fw tili Sheriff vare rend, he' Vtshed sah prtdhity to jtrommt rtbuUuitf IcsUiuui.y. ,Mr. (iooci, i-ounecl iir Sheriff Lay ton, pro poHi'd to road ibu uffidavit ot Hiram Guttftdgo, one of tho rronw attested by the United 8tiU Deputy Marshall. Mj-. rugh objected that Mr Outt ridge stood in ruteuipt Wore this Court by hht non-ipncaranretid hip affidavit should not be rend, lie) mgarded it na similar to the caic uf Passraore Wiliiauison, whom Judge Kane bold in cöntotnpt. . , Jndge Leavitt thought the oaves were not similar, and thai ihr ubi - tion, though it wight go agaimt Mr . ..a 7 . v . ttuttruigo s cfrllltliiy . Hid in 1 tut HirairiHt hin ndniinsihilitv Hi C . w ckiuU to annul tau iifiiiuony 01 ne nartioa arrualea by the Vnitetl Statea Marshals. It will bo remembered that on the former trial Elliott, 1 s. Deputy Marshal, sworv that when the arresrte were made, Uie warrants were read, in lull, that v,Ikii called on by a Jatie of tho Peace, tin jn imiiinü hin, to cgamJne the wurranta, and he 6ft cided that they v.ti .rreet; litat when ovorliiluu. the L. r. oOiccre tte Od no viorent langoage, shots were fired by ol tho T. S. otBccrs rrtnr that tiiore wan no vk Sheriff al Yiciinu. and no announcement of that several plon before etl the fire, iuV-0 to Uta iat thrrcwaa h authority v. la li lUid made by Sheriff Lu ton Cnmpton came up witl 1 hese jiotnt- were to In- ilisju'oveil uy W . i It ft alfidavit wliub wtiro roaa. Hirnm (tutlridgeoaedthatren urriMited.'tlio warrant was not reatt .nd the. V, B. M ar"l.nlM rt-tiiswl to toll him flic clnlivc, but Haid lUv u . do soot Urbar.:.. AfMunt irot Hanire Kowlcr to ak what tlie dinrgv wan. howler did- t-o. but OfMm4trterdeed. saying thc shoiibi know at Vrbana. They nturled to go tlu re, but hadjne only five or six miles, win n tliev turned off towui'd the aouth, instead of west, to lrrbana;that they were followed by two of Mr, (JuLtiidgc s nei -bors, who wished to know what was going to be done with their irieads. These persona following wer Meaars. Kutan and Colwoll, that one of the V. S. Michails (Churchill) went back and demanded why Meaars. Kutan and Colwell were following. Mr. Colwoll was struck by cm of the Mnrshslls. and struck at throw times The Marshall aaid several times, aa thoy went along, that no writ of habeas corpus should be served while they were alive. All the U. ti. posse wori under the influence of liquor, Ch urchlll leant of any. They refused to let the friends of tho prisoners ace tin in. a also they refused 'tiquire Clark. When Sheriff Layton came up with tho U. 8. posse he said he had a writ and was the Sheriff of that county. Mr. L'onipton, who assisted the Sheriff, was tired at twice btstbre he tried to fire in return; Sheriff Layton was badly beaten, lroin two to tivo men being on him, and aa many on Mr. Compton. When Messrs. Kutan and Colwell were ordered back, affiant begged them not to turn back as ho was afraid he was going to be aasaisinuteil. Saw Taylor, one of the prisoners, seised by the hair of. the head, hand -cuffed, and ordered to keep his d d Abolition mouth shut.' A. P. Joiner testified to the circumstances of (I uttridge's arrest, hia asking what he was taken for, and the refusal of tho United States' Marshall to toll. Kunsel Hyde testified that he was urreatod at Mecbanicaburg by Elliot, who read a line or two at the top, .md the same at the bottom of the writ, but did not reud it all, and refused to let it be seen. The affidavit detailed the going to Urbana, the turning off when they had gone fbur or five mtloi, the ordering Kutan and Colwoll not to follow, Kulan saying they were going to see fair play,' the striking of Colwoll, hi drawing bis pistol, Squire Kutan preventing hia firing it, tho Murahulls drawing their Cistols. and Taylor begging his neighare not to stop behind. The affiant then auid one of tho Ignited Statea posse sci.cd Taylor's arms, another his hair, and a third his throat while they handcuffed him, and went on to detail the auault on Sheriff Layton ( and M r ( oinptoii, uihI the remark made ley one ut luv posao that -theae men (Lavton and Compton) must bo d d I'oofs to attempt to stop them a... a ..- with two mon, and the next time thoy would not "trot off so oaaily .' Charier Taylor, ono of those arrest od by the U. 8. irasae, made afldavit to very nearly the same cin umhtances as the laut affiant stated Heard ono o! the Marshals addrss Mr. Kutan with, "Whut the devil arc vou following uaforT' Kutan laid, To see Juetice dono to my neigwbor." Amant iippealtid to Kutan not to atop behind, lie (affiant; was then seined snd abuaed. Chun hill said, "G dd n yon, put these handcutts on. AAftOt up pealed to acqttaintancs whom they passed to get a habeas corpus, to ascertain why he was hold. Churchill said they would obey no habeas corpus. AtHunt then detailed the beating of Sheriff Layton and Compton. Compton was struck and shot at before he brow his pistol, which did not go off. Sheriff Layton was badly beaten. Churchill said "they would not submit to a habeas corpui, and a regimont couldn't take them." Affiant concluded by deposing that he only wiehod to konw the charge againat him, and that hi Is a peaceable citiaen, holding himnelf amenable to legal process. Twonty-eeveti others testified to the same fact as above a "I wish you had been Eve, " said aa urchin to a woman who waa proverbial for ber meanness. " why aof' "Bocauao vou would have eaten all the apple, instead of div.ding it with Adnm. ILLINOIS LANDS. NA1K esranf M tllli.nl las WBtSk t. ua.ia for rn prevatrt. A ttOODWIN,

THE BJD