Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 26, Number 19, Jasper, Dubois County, 14 March 1884 — Page 6
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CifrlMl CYaniM. Nothing could bettor illustrate the prcut weakness of the Republican position than jus. the attempt now being neriously made of beginning anew the investigation of aooll d Southern outrage. That ouch a movement is again Mriou.ly rvcoraiuended by Republican party leader seem to indicate that all ipieiion of practical sftatemanship are of no account when a Natioual campaign is pending. and that the nartv mu-t now, as in the past.
pin it I'siih atil bpe to the capital that mav be made bv roving commttee of invet!gation. It is pulling hut a small e-ticuate upon th- judgment and intelligence of the Ain ruan peopie to imagine that they can be mmtimiallv niov.nl an 1 influenced by manufactured tale of Congressional committee., Mnt South to gather up campaign rubbish for Northern .tumpapeaker to retail and ditribut. If there were bo living question at Issue, quest in- of vitr.l concern to all section alike, involving matter of pub
lic an 1 ind vidiial interet; topic upon
Prealdent or a Republican President depend upon whether they are guided by wisdom or given to folly. If the former, they will save the country from mhv rule. If the latter, they will continue a littio longer in power a party whleh within two term has tamed the Presidential office with theft, purchase and assassination. - A'xcAum. locating thcnnslblUtr. Who is responsible for the Danvills homicides? Thi h a question to which the Senate Committee on Privileges and
Elections is about to address tlsell. Mr. Mahone assert that thia responsibility rests on the Democratic party of Virginia- the iarty that Includes a major it v of the voter and an overwhelming preponderance of the intelligence, morals, wealth and social Influence. The people of Yirginia,a represented
hv this majority, rise up ana repwwee
hi rettiMiiifiibilitv. Thev acrt, and
tne people, with few ex.-eptions, believe. that peave would have reigned at Danville, as it did elsewhere throughout ha state, in suite of unexampled ex-
whlch the farmer of the West and the asieration. if the colored voters hadnot
mechanic oi tne r.ast am win in-- been ueiuueu anu luiunntru ested. ami which have, to do with their faiS(. utterances of Mahone and ha
material welfare, it niijrht even then be satellite.
foolish to hunt up Miuply partisan and political Usues fr people to quarrel over, bat when there are such questions and the people are anxious to hear them discused and debated, to make Klitical pilgrimages South for no other purpose except to iutlame the public m nd with manufactured stories of election riots and political quarrel. c ms too intolerably foolish aud absurd for men of sens; to venture upon, Yet such pilgrimage are soberlv counted and made. im stnteinienVho are thought worthy of rreat orticial truts have worked tt em-
leive up into a wn,w nrw fervor, and have solemnly warned the yrnntrv ag,i nd the w.ckednes of the Southern Dcntocr;it, and urged the neee'tv of investigating th charges and rumor? sent from the South by Republican politician and Repuulieau newspaper?. The jrreat danger which mena.eii the peace, of the Union from thrf act of these wicked Democrat was feelingly dwelt upon, and .Senator Sherman, whoe heart always bleed for the defenseless Southern Kepublicaos, made one of his most impassioned.
appeals lor ongressionai mi?tiza" Senator Mahone, whose heart i alMj beavv with grief from the result of the recent election in Virsnia. and the action of the legislature In a-king him to resign his Senatorial scat, also rontr.b .tetl a sUrUing chapter of Democratic outrages and between these two the Southern outrage-mill was set in villi nt motion.
But just at the threshold of thi supposedly flattering crusade the champions are met with a very cruel rebuff in the shape of a letter from a Mississippi Republican, vouched for as politically straight and personally reliable, to the New W rk Herald, protecting in strong terms against the Congressional tour. The correspondent complains that when Mississippi Republicans wanted help in 187. and when Governor Ames asked for troops, the Administration did not dare to act be
cause of a prejudice which existed in Ohio against military interference in the Southern State, yet the very next winter the Boutwell Committee, with a full complement of Senator, clerks and stenographers came down upon them and took back two thousand pages of nrinted testimony, and all the benefit
the committee were to the Republicans could have been put in the eye of the energetic chairman. This correspondent even goes no far as to say that not only was this whole committee demonstration an empiv delusion, but two of the men implicated by the committee in the Ivnching of a colored man, were afterwards rewarded by their appointwont to lucrative clerkships under the Administration of which Mr. Sherman was so important a part. This sort of talk must be very unpleasant to the
Senator at the present luncture, and it must make his heart bleed afresh to see
tk obtecte of his natriottc regard so
Stiff-necked and obdurate just when be
im nana th noint of dot nsr them so
wniwti rood.
The whole truth is these Congresfcmal tours uoon the eve of Presidential
campaigns are the work of performing MummiM. who seise noon the time
and the occasion to make capital for ' tfcawaelvs and their nartv. They well
know how cmntv and fruitless all such
Miaa'tatM are. but. trustimr to the cred
wlttv of some and the iirnotance of
mthmr hone to do a little toward the
oonsummatlon of the object in hand.
YImi Democratic Senators, with rare
WmwBt and wisdom, allowed Senators
BtMrmaa ami Mahone to unburden
ttminselTat of their load without inter
larenee, and the Republican Senators
mm a hodv were not ax enthttsiastlc and
mceited as mlirht have been expected.
The demonstration wa not grandly
success ul. ami if now t:ie poor (town
trndden are themselves indt.lVrent, and
would rather have the procession stay at koine, the benevolent Senator may , Sips, after alt, flwl it more advank to fold np their Woody shirts mind their own, baess.--jlmsr-som JteffMtr. CeM Vaela. Torn hy jealousy, iaSamed by thirst far revenge, honeyeombtd with cortiiplton dtotrntted by the people, the lopnoliean party, whh all R Pronawn. all itt monev and all its facilities
fir frmm, is powerless to win another
TissWoimsl tMcuon uirougn its own Thn Democrats are ooimr to elect the
noxt PresWeut. Thoy haw the now
MtetoahooiatmtlMnr own iianus. WlMther tlwr will oleot Demoomtk
far the Flesd of lL
Our Tovsf BMAert.
it will he shown that Mahone is ill
recti " responsible for the homicide at Danville: that the riot there was the direct and immediate result of hi teachings aud Inspiration. It U not charged that he intended that blood should flow, but it is charged, and will t shown to the committee, that he and his coadj .tor worked on tbe feelings and impulses of the ignorant and credulous until thev became infuriated and precipitated the r'ot -just such a riot a
nilgai 11: " Mahoneism wa turned UMtm to werk ; ttiii on such material as exists in
Virgin"8- . t ., Mahone is roponlbw for the disorder, out of which he is seeking tomako capital; but who is responsible for Mahone? We answer: The Republican Senators who hara:ned with him in ltMl, and the Administration which has upoeld him and made him its deputy for Virginia since that baie trade wa consummated. But for that shameful bargain and tbe Administration support which followed ;t l-ihone would have been as power
less for evil as he is incapable of good. And as that contract in the Senate was alike violative of precedents and decencv-an infamous innovation-so the Administration's backing of Mahone passed all the bounds of reason and propriety, and constitutes a chapter of political hlstorr which no good citizen will ever be able to refer to without nf hurnin" shame.
We do not suppose that the counniitee in it report will take the respond-
bilttv home to tne nepuom-an wo i tK. konmUk and the Administration, but
M fMCl M - th ,.lm. considerate indement of tne
iMonie h&a alrendr located it iust them
and there it will stay. 1TmMi
m - Tsltttcs and Heifarioa.
This U a Presidential year and we
hall aoon be in the thick of tbe cam
r.;n. a irreat deal of money win m
Spent DT tne pouucai pariirs "
contending canumaws muu. vuvrv " reason why it should not be placed where K will do the most good. We are told bv the great Republican engineer of tbe contest of 1880 that in Tnillana Camoaim that rear
a good portion of tbe money expended m "chancre the convictions" of the peo
ple found its way to the church of
which the Republican candidate was an honored leader. Wherever a church was found hampered with a heavy debt
and attended Dy a uenwcnnw cubirregation the debt was paid off through
tne Morton runa, sou in
were naturally grateful, w berever a gool number of Democratic voters were found of the right faith, without a m Hheral contribution was
planked down for the purpose of ereci-
imr rm. i iva? lrini i nut Ph. nnw '
cuted in conjunction with tbe President of Hiram College, and, in Mr. Dorsey s wonbe the "lonclr way" of the follow-
mr at tkat narticular faith was made
uiaiiaitt as noes oie." anu --uira
wore 26,01)0 of them in tbe State."
Politicians do not, as a rule, maite a
rwwi um nt monirr. Thev are ant to
jumnaer it on wormir nerw9 w
be tempteu oy iv inw i"ip"""troly good Republican, while recognls-
to secure his elation, must necearil)fM1 wNmttful ai the use to which it is
..nt &ftir It has left his hands. The In
.1.11. method of 18W) will teach him
Kmr tin can xnend in one v In such a man
ner as to satisfy his conscience wh.le Wtlnir hia election. He can ascertain
the religious lelief of the opposition voters and contribute liberally to the churches to which they belom? He will then have the wttiffaetion of knowing that h0 is hoping himnel? ithd religion at the same time. Churcbei J7:.t, unntu to hm encumliered with
heavy uent or to im snon m uuhmiiik funds will also find in Mr. Dorsey's
rerelation a happy methoil of rep learning their treasuries. The Democratic iwrtimi of their congregations can s-
cure iioerai am irom m cmiiivw candidates, while the Republican por-
nm mwht to be eouallv suceesstut wun
tbe Democratic candidate-. If elections are to be bought, the best use that mm he made of the mtrdiase money is
to spend it on the chnrobe. V. Y. World.
-.Tium im ft.000 Teelanders in Man't-
ik. iMMk.ikinl nt whom lire in tlie city
nt Wlitiiinmr. whore thoY have roooutly
pmyod an Mnndlo wrasn In tJwh- own Zm Thty art fcWoWteit. woft.
-tfltssil
Muitlnually be
fore mv eves through all the mist which
clouds' the debris of flooded factories, dank dwellings and mlrv street. 1 see
the oldest inhabitant, sitting wnuuiog, wtmtir.bmitn and srrav. m his gray
M.l ar.ihr.hMaten old houe on thO 4
river, surrounded by laeiorios mai au but crowd him into th stream. Hh, gramlpa. come and hndt at the flood. It's away up the wharf." Hio 'way. child. What do you know alHHit Hoods? I was here iu "32. Then there wan a tWd." And he keep on whittling. The ice-gorge have broken '-the bridge from llerr's Island is swept swav the rier I ankha shifted across
Duqucsne way," he read-! in the morning pa)ers. The whole point was underwater in comment the old man, proudly. 'There is over two feet of water In our cellar." his daughter reports. The old man glances out of the window and acknowledge that it looks like ra n. By and by he steps out of the front door just U see how much lower the water is than it wa nfty-two years .wv nd i,um into the river up to his
shoe tops. A tittle moist under foot, he admits, but, bleas you. naflood tospeak of compared with what he ha seen. Why would vou ijelieve me ; but thev wouldn't believe him. They have taken refuire in the second story, like selfish and sensible people. Slowly, snakily the brown water creeps into the room. Hi after the nun who has dare I to sneer at it. It is around his old knee now. He ha. six or seven din" reut kind of rheumatism, and they are- all plaving hop-lKJotcb up and down his hack, but he sits still ami perversely wonder if there will be rine enough
to let the coal out Which rethat thev don't bare
it,. thmv used to have in the
broad-horn days. The water laps tne
tioner newter ouuon on m mo
vest now. ne rises anu raw fondly around the record of which
no rime mninLsinefi ims tsiv v ast.a nvt
hi household for many a day. He sm'.les. It will hardly go back on him
n t.to .ii v. The water cnucmeu
him under the chin. What s thatr tiif
grav beard noaw oiu ujwh a word' begins to totter. The water springs
un and twigs turn w tne nose in puue iubilation. He flings out the other dripping hand to clasp hi dearly beloved record around the neck. The rerd isn't there any more. 1 don't (glug) care. It ain't fjlwgglertv) sigE" , (iurglerty, glug, swash, swash. The oldest inhabitant is done for. He has gone down with the record. But the tew little hubbies that mark his last feeble breath, a they burst, spit impotentlv out upon the triumphant flood--PUttburgh DispaltM.
Toueaaseto
Wttk
to m rou
YoumuT W and la books.
And
ruu are eleven,
With wrinsien or AmA vou hare baits and tOWS
And yon have nook with faytf jntnlfd I"
(if kins aatt 'i'""""!?'' d With ttitti of swnt pe 'ate Autuus of waked kaavs
And u can r. ad of -o'll fomaaf
Hf unktutwu ppw am
or loivlsn fruit and tteest ..... . M M.M
nr fiimou tiatik- foW
Uhv jia t.-attvats wUhjitk, stenar
tit UMMIIIS
And stitt row ask, my lJJraa ataMea, For MNaVtitin new and .strans. Ail iur youatthousMs and mncies
AbuutUi workl for caanse. maoihtn -ow an fndjnees or sweyt Hidda awar. m talk of and dream ever Warn you saw wU asleep.
llunUac m fairies In tmm
WhS'tKs same irouwed sjjThat lift to we. toy ?l'L?5r
Itor soaws new, worn wmwrwm And so yon ftnd tn all row aursety
Ohure4 fust a MUlatt
Arenas old way. And.too.yound that man to ms ts brodwrT Hist he'rt u heart i m'l'mMttuw,t Ttut ll anwr. each unto another And ti.t the esrth is round To aU the wnturie. lltttehoyaml naMao. You bold the threaJ awl clew, 1leat )owr. mtle heart, and eease your queslions. I know liSjfo. wiae
the worMTs sew
THR "SEVEK WOXttEIW."
lrwln, do yon iwsaenibe that
i.ni wa Ih Kahsanss a not was
ated by Demetrius among tbe craflsmenf' Yes, grandpa, he wan afraid tf psoitle wotikl helksf Paul a words, and then his trade of makiog silver shrines would lie gone," And what did they oryP" The mob cried great Is Diana of the Kphesians.' " " Yes, the Temple of Wans wn buM at Iho eommim charge of all th Aistio Kuten. It was four hundred and twenty-live feet long, two hundred and twentj-five broad, and was supported by one hundred and twenty-seven isdttnin of iarian marble; ean Humn was sixty feel hijrh and raeh i furnished iy a difl'eient King. This
temple wa burned on tne mgnt of Alexander's nativity, and wan then rebuilt. Diana wan believed to have fallen down from Heaven, and tho public games were connected with her worship Kspecinlly was the month oC May aacred to her, and a large manufactory grow up at Kphestis of portable shrines of Diana, which were sold U strangers and carried with tlmm o iournoys or set up to womhip in their house." , i . Von have now told me about fear of the wonders,' grandpa, "and If yon am not too tired T would like to hear
about tbe rest of them I am only too glad to sec yon interested m your studies, and will ww speak of the Colous of Rhode. Thai was gigantic statue of Apollo or tho the sun-god. It rested on mole on each side of the beautiful harbr of Rhode. d wsmi-Ia nasscd betwfH'n Hit braze
legs. It was over one hundred feet In height, and there were windlnj? stain by which it was ascended. The statue held in one hand a light for the direction of mariners, and it was comp.eted two hundred and eighty yeatv before Christ. It wa thrown down, presumably by an earthquake, and never rebuilt; but fragments of thei-tatu rem;n.xl tnv nine hundred years. At
' length a Jewish merchant oottrlit the
brass ant joaoeu hioc buhuiw v
with It.
Grandpa," said Irwin, as they were jnin hv the ooen irrate one winter
evening, " franupa, i"r: "The value of the bras was esttmaiee. tell me about the 'Seven Wonders of ; mwMrK At the present time thdf
nav uaRui w " " - r .71' r the island Has many i:nie uwnm
Perhaps you nau ocuer a jv ( . earthquakes brother FUfwbo ha, just ;mjT..Tow. mv son. what the
WilrLj. for I did word mausoleum came fr? ' ' 'He dont know, grandpa, lor i urn , . . . . rauu
-u v.i j I.., ttmlA atieh an inauiat- -
K II I Ml, WU " I I
The Cloister.
Tho cloister was really the Bvingploee of the monks. Here they pursued their daily avocations, here they tarnrht their schools, they transacted
their badness, they spent their time and
pitrsdeu ineir snrateB. awjR
nf Hit! bkrvest i
wonders that he knew anything about. '
"Well, oneoi tne ancieov -wmiimct
was tne Hanging irw w "-" Ion ...
"Did titer hang in the air nae vtw Brooklyn Bridge ?,r inquired Irwin.
"Uh, no; tney were t" ' w the royal palace, and were about four hundred feet square at the bottom, be
ing supported on several ucrs iu pww
arches, out ii one over mo "" -the top, which wa about wenty-nvc
feet ntgn, was coycrwu
Irwin.
Well. Matisolu was king of Carta, and, aftT his deatlu his widow. Artemisia, erected a magniceat tornt to his memory. Indeed, it wa so wonderful snd surpassed all other structures o mu"h in its appearance and grandeur, that the n:m Mausoleum came to he the generic term for a etly tomb. It lemained standing for a number of centuries, and then was dem)ed iiy an earthquake. In lfrt the Knights oC Rhodes built a castle from Irsgnwnts of
the mausoleum, and a late a mr.
'RhS "ftS wbicfc TTre; flow: i NwTn under the a?Pk7 of the JintJXrlf UlWi (iovemmeut, ound the sde of
co-operauag anu wbwwju. rule, knowing no privacy. "But a monk alwava lived in a eelir I think you
wUl be inclined to object. Tbe sooner you get rid of that deludon the better, l'ntn Heorr TL founded the Carthusian
" ' . "Jf . . m
Abbey of Wltham, in 117S, mere was no
.,..h thin- known in England as a
mnnk't ArIL as we ttnuerstami tne term
It wa a peculiarity of tbe Carthusian
wUr whm it was nrst inirouuceu
it was regarded as a startling novelty
for any privacy or anyuitng ppiu-"
ing solitude to oe toieraieu m a mwi
mrv. The Carthusian srstem never
fniind much favor In Enerlsnd. llie
I lajrthnslans never had more than nine
homes all told; the discipline was too
rigid, tbe rule too severe, tne loneliness
too ureSAHUl ior our unim nnmt In the thirteenth century, if I
mlKiaV nnt. tkeea were, onlv two mon
asteries in England in which monks or
nuns could boast oi navinganypriTnoj,
era, shrubs, ana even rg ifu-.V mh ad the lundamntal
"How did tne peopm w u ."TTlV.rr ' a r.iir to
densf" imiutrcd irwm.
'There were fount&tu ana a targe
reservoir on the
Wh.... , ;",:.-," j - ..n.,.- u Ktit one more
ran tarougn un ny rTUM' " ... . wd. and I know
two portion, or tne ciiy were pTmidsT for our
a stone oriuire. m uiit - -
. n n.uin mm ; !-hi.r said tnev were tne mosi mar-
nrnnii vruui in uwtum w i -f
jgUsh
i itmi udcni minv. wiw .c
I onUtnes of the building. Acwmllng to
tradition. Artemisia mingled tne asnes
Urn, supplied with wa- of Msimo.u witu uer wine, sow !r brntes Tbl, river frier wonder.
nected by a
mentioned in the Hible, and the walls were noted for their height, thickness
ami swength." ... .
" What was anouter oi mm wwmbw,
, i. . 1 U.. mm tku aotMilohrcs l
"Well, the mares a Amumna w u,
the first lighUoearing tower mav we hare any record of. It was built of White stone, and stood upon a craggy rock on the island of I'baros, near Alex.,IkI. in Kvnt. It was three hun
dred feet high, and its light could be
velou of the fieven wonders,' anu you have not spoken of them yet." Yes, vou are right. Ill Pyramids required the labor of thousand of men
jfor many years, it ts supjmwhi mm.
the sepuicnreso meivincw.
They are in several group, some instance from each other, on the banks of the Kile. There are about forty of them, many being small and in a ruined
condition. The great pyramid ot Giieh, or Jecaeh, is four hundred and
E? l?v iE; lS r. st i fifty ft high, and cover an area of ft ttPLS? thirteen acrls. "V' of the hum stones
uwn
that its beaming summit mign j
seen for three hundred stadea,- oriorty English miles." "Who built tbe Pharos?" It was twelve years in building. Sosiratus was the artisan, and he Im....lil ut. name bv inscribing: It
l!S1 ,.ass ri iknV AWtl tS tlirtt
into, any place whew they could enjoy upon the lniaros; but It wiw crecte.1 unl SrV retirement: any private der the reign of holemy' IMiiladelphus,
study such as ever- boy nowadays. In i.l nf anv nmlanaion. exnectS to
have provided for himself, and without which we assume that nobody could md and write for an hour. Sinettenth
weigh Sixteen hundred tons each, ami drsunred hundreds of miles from
the liuarry. It is cstunaicd that H would take two thousand men three years to bring one of th Stine t the Pyramid, and it must have required much mwhanlcal knowletlge ami great power to lift such enormous stones U their places in the Pyramid "These stones rise slep-like above tiaeh id her. and are rat Iter hanl to
Century.
A Qeoi, MeaHhyJmake Story. In North Carolina there is a reptile known as the joint snake. When attacked It flies in pieces, each jwece taking cars of itelf. A darky attacked one of them the other day, and to his
utter atnasemcnt it broke ai up, eacn section jumping oft in a diflerent direction. In the course of -an hour he
returned that way and was wueny
anrnsed again to see it all togctiier ex-
ceut the tail piece. Aiier waning iow mfnutes he aw the tail coming up to join the body, taking sharp, ttijk litth jerks. It cattle nearer and nearer until
with in a tew incites oi in iiotw-mm"-
ter snake, when it gave a sudden jump and hltebed on in iu proper place with & fu reaemhlinir the twppinn ot a cap.
Tin. iimrkev kaockeil it to nieces several
times, and each time it came together amin. He carrletl his amiMmment too
far, however, in throwing the tail part t thm anake across the creek, just to
w. he said, "how lonir it would take
It to catch up," but It never caught up
Ttuisnaka. with its three KHnbt, was
earrieil to the house, where s new tail is htMrinninn- to ir row to replace the lost
one. A gentleman who knows much about this singular spedes says a head will grow on the detaehed trunk, and then will he lira anakM initawd of oho.
Ok ( a ) Z
H, C. JWi, the same King wno own. mantled the Septuaglnt or Old Ita- . . i. -1.2... u lit. IlolInHK.
vSionl ThTKSS. or lighusc I climb, but with the aaitantT rf two or wm TlJminat J buge wood : r&T Atr day. .us- m;iMri ween warned top of the 'tlaeli 1 yramid. a iw uays
mimv w ,. ' - j w i t hmmnl m minuter MV that. OS he
"LTirZr bUt 1 .01 on its topmost Uh, wi
coal or wood tires that
rominent headland." "Well, grsndps, what was the next
of the wondersr
The Olympian Zeus, or um wiossai
statue of Jupiter at iiympia. wmon
was the last great work oi iHMtias. u was a seated statue, made of ivory and gold, and, including the throne, it was
Ity-liv ieet n neigiu. j.o H't KnSlt on the nioile of the Parthenon ht
tnoinot kUmhi with his
companions, they une the okl !xoloey, Praie Cod from whom all hie-
tags now,' ami m nver nwc like dinging ft ih spirit and truth as whi'n standing there,' "i wih I could ee some nt the wonders of the worid," sakl Irwin. "JHy son, thi tmt think because. ytn hay ikH traveled far from hoine that vow have never .en anything wowler-
m www mi ... M m . i .1.11
. i. h. , m ' i .i sft. r ..uj wdAuinar tw iha urwme-ssi'
Alliens, Jupiter was conuereti i . ZruAmtt vtm
klfiar and father Of the giMls, anu sup- mj - ""X. 4-iii ZSfSSS!' un vcrsaFtioWer in the i can not look out tipon this beauful
arth and sir- H Kv th f5"'. ,h"
thunder ami lightning, am tne worm And the culm were supposed to beuwler
his control. TItis sUtue was erecieu lietween K. C. 49 ami U and in A. D. Mi it continued to receive the homage of Greece. Kplctetus ssvs that It was considered a misfortune for any one to die without baring seen this mulfrnimo of Phidias.'
I u tK. msnv stars
i tun worMiin oi MMUfwi tw ' t - . . . t i
versa , though his name varied withihe c? ZTukr , i ' iU nT and etHintrv that sacriliced to him. You mteratkmof tm Maker of JJfJJ
sav with Uie i-aaunisi.: nmm er'Thy heavens, the work of Thy - fnrs, Uie mOou and the ars, Which hoti hast ordained: whsl le man that J'. Uostrftn
workl, or tip to Uhi sua.wtoon and W$t without seeing work which are far grander than anything wlurh man has ever matle," "I have always wen ths things, grand tm, anil tiiey do not Keem mi very wonderful" "True, hut could you snd 1 took out to-night lor the Hrst time at the ful m: whtnh ta shiwlnsrso brlarhtly, and
thai spnrsie in iiw,
perhaps remember umi wiien ran wem,
to liVstra ne lounu a mmpiw w w.jr, beforn that eity. Jupiter was generally represented as seated on a throne hoWing thun ierbohs in his raised hand, a sinW in the other w!Ui an eagle at Ms mot.
