Locomotive, Volume 22, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1852 — Page 2
RRESPOL,ISMI.
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YOTJB LITTLE KELLY. TO 0. W. B. 7 S'Sfiy' is creeping - .JT.? the' tangled, knotted wood ; Where the violet, blue, is sleeping, , Whfcre the willow, pale, is weepingi Jf.Iu such a wild and silent place, v ; , ' - We'll lay her form of airy grace, Her angel, golden, smiling face r We'll lay your Nelly. ;!j.v'. ' ' " Where the woodbine, high, is growing Round "the dark and old elm tree ; ; Where the soft wind, mild, is blowing, Where the stranger ne'er is going, There we'll let your Nelly be." For there will angel-forms be near . r , To watch your little, gentle dear, Then let your heart have nought of fear; . t For little Nelly. "Where the cypress, dark, is bending, Down in yonder shaded gleri ; Where the streamlet, bright, is wending, And its murmuring songs ne'er ending far from noisy haunts of men," -We'll lay your Nelly's lifeless form ' Twill feed the slimy, gnawing worm, While Heav'n keeps her soul from storm We'll lay sweet Nelly. G. S. B. . : Indianapolis, 1852. Editor Locomotivk: A ride of It leagues brings me to the principal sea-port town of this State, on the Pacific coast. You travel over a part of the great plain of Leon ; and after leaving it, you have the usual variety of mountain scenery. The road which I took led me through the small towns of Poseltaga and Chichigalpa, both of them Indian villages, presenting about the usuaT appearance of such places ; Chlnandega, the last place as you approach this one, is the most populous place of all, and surrounded by very pleasant and productive orange groves. I saw one large ancient-looking church, and the usual variety, of houses peculiar to the conn " w v nun pace mai me smau aetachmj?ht.nf Mty native troops, belonging to thjutionary party ta mad(5 rtrch ; rT1"rT ill II "hi Ill I thti troona mnrcliinff 0 r &. this State from the State of Honduras. The Honduras troops numbered four hundred, and this small band, under the command of a native captain, whose name I now have forgotten, re pelled'them and drove them back four times;' and when' they had dispersed them, the fourth time, itbey found they had no more ammunition, and then the command was given for each man to take care of himself, and thus, for the want of ammunition, this little band was obliged to let the Honduras froOps pass, and upon their approach to Leon, Gen. Munas was obliged to capitulate, and thus, for the rant of, "a little more grape, Capt. Bragg," lie revolution was immediately suspended, i ws also at this place that the National Confess assembled, composed of the iWBtaieV f Central America, but which, like most other things, has ceased to exist. This is th most populous, and, perhaps, the richest district in the State of Nicaraugua ; the manners of th people are a little more of the civilized kind, and their frequent contact with foreigners has produced to a slight extent a favorable change. Their orange groves anil fields are the most productive I have seen. The people are cheerful and happy, and they live and act as though care and tbe horrors of war had never visited them--but suck is the life pf the people here, and while onVday(!theyt engage in all the horror of civil war the, next you may tee them at the, grand fandango, - as though care never crossed their patnr5 At this place inmost of the business men of Realijo have their pri vats midinc icWe more healthy and more pleasant, Zxm 7 1 A abort ride of nine miles brings you to the place from which I write Realijo. Thisisomparatfvely gmll townoUina7roni tlSQ to from the fact that itu&ejnosl importa&porton thcatHr th steamers in the-cjfie trad wp.bTf17 frequently to fupply themselve with epal; and. thfougb the ienterprls f Mri Haa wag. good wharves have Seen wecleimd anch eonreniencei 'fstabHsheii as mate ft a bWeB lbrtmto''to&:bere'JXost-pia L foreigners ia em and they Womepanmeat,v , T-"-ra - infne couniry prjiwety-six K.JrTh- P"u that course "yr&h! hastenncn4. lumsejr.and at the game time endeared tanc i cstsera veryrhjgMy. Ilea;:, uuogaiiracuve to a traveller ;it is'abdnt'fonr aact from th port of tKs shipping Md yoti pasa np wd &amih,:&9KU:th nwtti -mall "i t-we?5 it iL cc?-i you almost ecstirjed mtzs?, cril Llac fc-I
hf, ?, Iraos? forelgniwthki hive been la the
ifigUsbmaa y.birtKand amknwIUfJ
lining, t u srfr(.?,or.tecL(aBTfhttrT6Jrr, Ik
I hug alitor th" ' a proffc - ioj&S&ate ' K :
Thusoa Will ie fromW letters thafl have ! t"-"" g'capars oi tsse estate, of carauguS a portion pfthe Wesferh Continent upon which the eyesf the world rd nowftaWed with great deal ?f iiaterest, and"oVer ?vhich Spam for many years ruled with an iron sway. But it has passed from her control, and I trust never to return. .-: Enn had ths etittae of Snnin ertt Ani if, Tr.v f I p.,; At length the measure ot ffooe was falL- ,-.- inaosnss pnests, wkb vnoffiendfog Mood 1 ""A Had stained tkU cwutitr? : g yoko Of iron servitude oppressed and gall'4-, Th children of tbe soil." Soutkey.) But when ;he had driven the people to the last Stage f desperation; byfher ; crimes i and- oppression, they threw off the yoke which so sorely oppressed them, and became 'Jwhlitibe" world calls a free people. I do not wonder that Spain strove hard to keep possession of this country, possessed as it is of unbounded mineral wealth, and the best natural resources on the Western continent; and even at this hour there seems to te the mantle of desolation spread over the very place I now filhJJbebeautiful heights, the orange and myrtle groves, cities, towns, and gardens all seem to, or do feel the blighting effects of brutal bigotry and murderous despotism. But from this point I. can look out and see the great pacific, rolling in all its grandeur ; and on the Western shore of the Western continent, for the first time in my life, my mind has been wandering all day to other countries on this same shore. But a little way up the coast is California, with its millions of gold, and the thousands toiling for its possession ; on the South, but a little way, are the beautiful plains and valleys of Chili, Peru, and other provinces of South America, and all around me thousands of hungry Musquitoes. To me the sun seems to decline to-night more beautifully than ever before ; and least I should spoil it, I will give you the description by Lieut. McGregor : " Behold how the sun, the apostle of light, is sinking softly and meekly, though crowned with preternatural glory, into the crimsoned sea. His light is shining not for himself, but for the earth, so darksome and so dead without his rays ! J3ehold how many a loch and mountain gleam and giwiu luiuugu me evening mist, as sunset m .a... 4.1 fit 1 tcsws uiem wun ncn gold ana purple l .Now is gone ; deep masses of indistinct shadv-. l. - '1 , . - wcr me snvery sea : ana now, buJor the rosy light that lingers on the skyifon the mountains brow, no trace remaAsfof the life-giver the Creator's derTHe is gone ; yet nature mourns himsarthf ocean, man, beast, bird ana ips&fT gPMira ; tUa ftu fk u .ni orrow: rise, with all his infinite effects at the very moment which, if delayed, would cost the life of myriads of rejoicing creatures. How weak and faltering is our vofuntery faith, compared with that which is instinctive ! Yet is the moral sequence of events as consistent and as certain, as those of night and day." But I must close my letter. The last rays1 of the Lieutenant's sun are really going. A pleasant sea-breeze, surrounded by tropical foliage, makes the evening a delightful one. The thoughts of home and friends corne to me with much force, and a fervent wish that they were here with me, to, enjoy this pleasant and quiet evening. Old Ocean's distant roar, with the occasional notes of tbe dove whose mate, perhaps, like myself, has strayed away from home, or what is still worse, fallen a prey to the fowler's gun are the only sounds I hear ; and as my friends cannot be here, and I thought of them, I felt like saying, in the language of the Bible "Ah, that I had the wings of a dove, to fly away, and be at home;" or, in the more poetical language of Mrs. Hemans : " Had I thy irings, t8ou dove, High 'mid the foreeou isles to ooou u suonr oms bj love. 8o ar, Would draw me Jfrtkwris, kemevarde, But with the close of day, I close my letter. You will hear from me again at Grenada, as I return ; and with my compliments to my friends, r I am, as always, yours; W. H. D. RealeJofNicaraugratt, May SOth, 1S52. Ma. Editor. There is an x6ellent moral in the article whieb appeard in your paper of tbe 28th inst., entitled ."My Wife's New .Fiiend." The- vein of. satire and irony gunning througb it is calculated to excite the risibles of the masculine fraternity k, for 'wbich of them has not, time M-t i0ntoaetied the' foibles. of the plher sex, a &ereV sketcbed ?. Soon after reading the storyircferred to, my .eye met the iollowing communication, to the editor of the New York Tribune, whicb I ' regret to say, is too truthful. I tale tie, liberty of sending' it to you, as another itustratfon f ."bigb life b'ove stairs'. " among a certain class of our country women. f It will also serve i as an .appendix to the article in your last Vliocomotive; beaded "Trying to be Geneek! teel.. r t . . ... ,f JkiVn , Wotei Autocracy J l ,lc .- -t o fSM xniToa o ths , t . tmbuks. " ' ' Your eorrespondent in writing from Newport, cannot understand why dealers ht wihe, ot ton, furs&e.i should procure 'more respectability than traffieera in pigs,;b&con, and lamberor why Mr . Wholesaler should take' npoir himself h'avgbtyfairs iff presence of the . retailers-repudiating in bis bumble eompanioft tbe proeess which ten by.ftep baa placed bim tn the eminence from which be look with such 'scornful' placidity' on amiss,: we will enlighten' hi understanding on a subject involved in mystery to kim kad-mli endeaf t to 'prove'' that, though correct in his tedmats' of the pretentious boasting of the would-be Mi-Mis be is m&ng in attributing to'the masculine what properly belongs id the female portion i . ' . . . ... .1' Ii J ' : " 7 . oar
bjKTtbat
&Tclose
the uprising efforts of his friend on tbe round be' below If y our, correspondent -will not'take it
TVS At i4cyua wiuncuon m society; wUb he So just tjf oademn$." . -1 " i. $ . v-p-f - 1 zr , wvu, L says Mrs. Jtfakes iBmlth iiepuDfieaas, ,is a- ntiment to wEich :ws fully subscribe,' and believe'lserto be the' ! riAcrat, the sole embodiment of all the upper-tendom tendencies of this and every other country. Her mind may be .compared-to & balanee by -whieb she is perpetually engaged in ascertaining the precise "notcV, on" which to poise "each individrual in the lcale of society weighing their merits according to the odium or respectability, she Attaches to the occupation of those who procure the means for her aggrandizement. It is to this dispostbn fve e all & petty distinctions m smhty,all th dtspordantlementsmhichrdmde b social isfimpact,,,,.,,.,,,..,,.,,.. Democracy is notof woman bom ;be principle is not developed in her nature or envoiyed by contact. , v . ..'.:.. v.From thfc,mincing step of the litde Miss to the measured tread of haughty womanhood, exciusiveness is appareaL v In woman you will find the concentrated essence of the monarchical prmeiple the germ whence springs all the wide-spread vils of despotism, the ardent advocate of all those measures which appeal to the outward sense, and by pomp and parade of circumstance, produce and perpetuate caste among men.; Circumstances do not destroy this tendency1; place ber where you will, and the disposition to elevate herself on an artificial basis perpetually manifests itself. It is by constraint alone that th fraternal relation is acknowledged, k That there are noble exceptions to this sweeping rule we cheerfully admit but insist that a Kisxeiui exammauon oi tne structure of society, will result in the establishment of tbe principle we have so unequivocally asserted!. - With men the tendency is quite the reverse. . In early youtk the Democratic principle manifests itself, and but for the intervention of woman would be sustained in the development of maturer yearst ;, A community of men would be essentially Bemocratie, , as in California. In that country the fraternal relation exists unobstructed by those distinctions which prevail whepe 'women rule. There the importance attacheto creeds, professions, occupations of evepy sort, are lost in a community of brQtberl4aterests, and one universal feelmgofLfeerty, Equality, Fraternity, prevailwrm where. Introduce women amon i, and the respectability attached to this or theological dogma would assume & bold Pharisaical front, ; Tbe professional man would no ionger compromise his dignity by "digging." The artizan, lawyer, pig-dealer, ano? broker, would each have bis position assigned him by these nice discriminators of the relative merits contained in each occupation. Society would soon be divided and subdivided by these skillful mathematicians in social tiesr tmtil it presented all those varied an4 repulsive features, which characterize it in older countries. This tendency in womao to exclusiveness, ak though m general bsed upon false pretensions we do not wholly repudiate. ; The principle w recognise is good in itself, when properly teamed, conserv ative in its tendency, and promotive of the best interests of society. : But without restrictions and proper limitations, it is subversive of very. u.vnuiuj uwmuhi, mu; uaugub nun ueauiy evils to the maintenance and perpetuity of ourKepublican institutions. The diversified employments of men afford them but little leisure to pry into the character, condition, and occupation of their neighbors, Money is their God. Give them but the means accomplish; a certain amount of ousmess m a given time and all the world is alike to them, save, indeed, that be who' pays the most money with the greatest promptitude is the best lenow, De neroDDer or parson. But let a woman's keen scent be put upon the track, and what is the resul t ? -' True to bee instincts she discovers the condition of all in ber immediate vicinity, arranges and asserts their relative position, and if, perchance ber husband's best customers, those on whom she depends for the bread which sustains ber being, should be th vendor of boots and shoes, while her lord sells tape and -broadcloth, she immediately consigns them to the. category, of dight -acquaintanees, or no acquaintances ttt alLRegardless of every social principle she . puts herself upon her dignity, indicating by ber haughty looks and reserved deportment a resolve wbieh forbids all social equality . pray; what 'or who makes, th difference in an honest employmentin a country like urs, where there ar no heriditary distinctions 7 . - The answer is obvious enough to those who understand the nature of woman. ; it exists, mainly in ber brain. Accustomed to the. narrow sphere of domestic duties debarred from the legal' exercise of her; abilities'; shut out, from those employments which ennoble the other sex,woman seizes npon the-occupation of her husband father and brother .as.anieans.of self-aggrandizement, and revenges, h wrong she: receives-by infficting a stab-on, lbs socialaaid political insti tutions of her country- a .- , 4, - The remedy for these formidable evils we wUl leave for a future chanter' - . We will briefly remark,.ttwerfar, thai let her Become well informed in'm&tters :of state and fi.-. nanoe educate, ber into the theory of 8elf-go ersment of -equal rights direct ber: mind from tbe channel of vulgar distinctions SoVhicV the are perpetually flowing! i teacKher that ther real glory of an American woman consists.-nit in th skill-with trhich she- manages berlserrants,. ttf prevent.their entrance in and out of frontdoor. or in the adroitness with which she builds an airy, v ub pivtiiujuus iounuuon9 . uusmess but in' 3 clear, jeomprebeasiYe,ieoneption of her reiatit position to society, to the world at large, as & dauarhteof one trait HemibUe. andsiia will htor:ha UM titm in, which to .erests unnec easary- sjnd.xclisn disUnetions r-f ;.. I? tP new-uTBt vosn., ABfett 19, 1653. ' Hal 'Esjjtdai-.r VasfVery Agreeably 'surprised t6ee the nama of Jobn Taffe ftanounaed ia your; last t?aoes as & candulat fnv TAwftsWn A ". i Permit me,, thrbsgh your "columns, 4a say, that I h&ve known him from his childhood (he bsk native of this county,) that be Is every wr qnalinedLto mak n good A$?ssor, be being well edvcaled; honsst, aad prodpt la business; ? Xkly i&g Hrtiofke on his own eier&ns for las fcuppot t
exclustvdyl be respomjibiiiiyof infduciegthose
and" professional education, the people may safely tely ca bim, sbonl4 Be b elected" aaicfire, efficient officer. T . .-- . Old Crnxsir.. City library aitd .Heading Boom AssscIaUsiu
campaign, not only the elegancies and -refine ments, but many of the most valuable privileges and Immunities of every-day'life, are too apt to be sacrificed upon the altar of partisan strife. In our exyagantjseal toTbe Wgarded' (be mbsC ul-t wr vi, pouHcjans, we xorges 10 mauige iae reciprocities of honorable men; laboring ' to effect "a complete opposition of political interests, we prostitute everything that is sacred, and sever every I tie .which bindsus together. literary vandalism constituto : charge: to which'we cannot plead the general issue - There is a thrift and a power in the march of American principles and the growth of American greatness which not only challenge a parallel in the histbry of the world; "but seem to trajaseend the ordinary rules of philosophy. If we may judge tbe future by thepast the time will not Soon come, in the upward tendency of our common country, when the American statesman may sit down and peaceful iy unroll the page of science, and traverse. Alike the deserted fields of Plato and Aristotle, and the green pastures of Bacon and Locke, without incurring imminent danger of being efimmate4'aV'au excrescence upon the body politic Whatever may be the ultimate destiny of this nation, progress is the only deity, which, for untold succeeding generations, will command the undivided adoration of the AngloSaxon mind! Let the rescript not go forth, in the noon of the nineteenth century, that we are destined forever to be pent up between the despotism of the Canadas and the anarchy pf-Mexico! Sr?teirtotrittmph in the anJnimTation of vice, and liberty erect her throne upon the ruins of tyranny so surely as grey-? haired superstition and venerated pageantry will find their grave in the recognition of the principle of the eternal and universal equality of the rights of manso surely as there is a Being who "UudSe &e earth in righteousness, and punish the arch transgressors of the race of man so surely will the time soon come when the flag of E Plunbm Unnni will wave in triumph, as it wgfy, from the' --'frozen ocean of the north to the orange fields of the south, and from the stormy crest of the Atlantic to the placid bosom of the Pacific! Wonderful as are these events, we may reasonably indulge a hope of their consummation. Nations invariably reach the acme of political power and grandeur, long ere they -.-compete, for the higher honors of literature and science. Greece ! had challenged the united world before she became the tutor of Roman eloquence; and Carthage was obliterated from th face of the earth before the deeds of JSneas were sung by Virgil, or the forum of Italy resounded with the voice of Tully. England became the mistress of the sea and-the land, and' dictated ierms of peace to continental Europe, before her poets, her historians, and her philosophers, eclipsed the glory of all the masters of antiquity. When the'storms and the revolutions of the present century will have passed; and tbe now divided interests of the American continent shall be merged in one whenthe glorious flag of our country shall wave from the "Halls of the Montezumas" and the ramparts of Quebec, as securely ' and proudly as it does from tbe capitol at Washington when the mighty heart of North America shall beat the common destiny of the brotherhood of manthen,1 and not till then, will be erected that splendid 'temple of liberty, learning, and the arts, around which the shades, of Confucius and Ptolemy, of Plato and Seneca, of Bacon and Brougham, and of all the recorded genius of the world, wQl bow in sOent admiration. ' 5 .We are too impatient' to witness the end. .for which'ProVidence ' seems to have desiffued'us: 'fi' !i . .- :-3 . O wemoretoQ rapieuy to farm our scholars, perhaps too intenselylM ;; preserve the 'political; legacy of our fsltheWIn the general rush of the innumerable competitors; for fame, it is too 'often forgotten that religion; mayj ? desecxatedhte'rature' jetarejd, 'asd,polities,eoTrupThe . librariesqf this country, - as may well be. supposed, have hardly approximated the extent, the magnificence; and the i Value at fhose of Great Britain dna Europe More bisnes are quoted; t is probaole,' in, tba.f 0ecjinnd I'all of, the Roman Empire! than can be found in all the libraries of the United State$V More; books have fallen a Jprey to the flames of bigdtry Jkglanda!one than are now oia .le the Kteraryrepoatnes of this 'country. The venerable Vatican the sacre4 receptacle of the Hassle lore of Greece nd Borne, the m&auscripts of the Greek sadLatinfathers'the miserable Latin of the middle 'ages,' and the polite Italian, of Dantefurnishes " the connecting links o.the ancient an4mo4ern worlds; and the rich est legacy of antiquity. to snan.-;u X -J ." )rYe have,:however,i eiTccted giganticf steps id the' collection the preservation, 'and"' the practicalization of the literature of our country. -Ev ery stats haswolibraiyjimd.ftssociations ;ar$ ?r?-nce, Gre?i. Britem,and tbe"-United' States ' may bo placed in tbe bands of tbe Wbole people'. Vith& uttsr ciiaraeter, is ths Qrvr LisaAayn KAniKs Eooa Assocsatios of Indianapolis,- cs-
bicbt"nor only tla - text-books -of ' history ahri sefcnceVbuiike pmoctlcat InmoledjsiA Gemany.
i
iailkhed a year c r twe sbce, under the 'direction " ani by mjans of tl j money : a few enterprising geitleraerf ol Marion county. Like others who", hayekeneimilat tasks, the projectors of this library "did not anticipate eU the difficulties cjfy'w their wajnor all the advantages of isrhkVthey might hafe&J:led themselves. The Association, nevertheless has steadily advanced in importance and character, and it now ranks
Among the proudest literary monuments of the ptate oi Indiana. It is only necessary that the constitution remodeled, and the institution placed upon a somewhat different basis, in order to insure its triumphant' success. '-.- HEOV ...At4 ihe reolar meeting, to be held onTriday evening, he 8th of OftoherTil U propoer4o consBef 'a re-organizatiotf of the- Asspliauon, and att; eordially;'invtted-iQ 'attend.-' V$:iy.. i i j We cannot urge too strongly upon the citizens of Indianapolis, aad-bfHarioji' 'omCy.erb priety of according a Vherat patfinie&i Id the ln stitutbn. Nothing can, b'- oTobviotial than that it affords the very best facilities;' nordnlfiicj the general student, the farmer the manufacturer! and the mechanic, but to ;the members of the learned professions, who have neither the tins nor the means to expand , in 'the exploration bt, the cumbrous and not always well assorted Ik braries of States and universities. . V Gso. P. Boslu , , IndlpolUt SepU IS, 1858. TH E LO CO M OT I V I. SATTJED AY, SEPTEH3EE, 19, 1852, LOCOMOTIVE JOB PBTJmSG OSiTCX , WE are constantly making additions to oar tsKmKt o Job Type, ud hTeno JtesUatioflJii jariitg tbatw hare a complete and fall an assortment of sew and good Book and aob type at eaa be found in the 8teU, rsnderiag the Loeono Jv office a complete . TrT BOOK AND JOB OFFICE. We are prepared to ezeebM In the tteafesf amd beifr manner. In a style that, will compare -farerablj with dt priutinr done East or West, and on the moat reasonable terras, All Kinds of Job Work: 5ook Cards,.. . .Receipts, Pamphlets, Labels, Blank Sotes, Catalogues, Rt Tips, BUia tadhigV ' - f Ctrealare, sai Heads, Drsr EecelpU, r Policies, Cheeks, ConWt BiUa'j - v Programmes, . Hand Bills, Posters, And Clanks of Every Description.': JT7 We hare oa hand a svperior article of Eastern FamrWt workmen, withthe advantage of 17 years exoerleBeef oart of - i; t " jiufinuws are cntCHcat the titno in th aIRm. do- a targe portion of the work fearsetves, we gvarsnty all work Bbtul.il is. b ti K -.i 1 .? " in Kew York and Paitedelphk, and " Book or Job beartnf our Imprint oor work speaks for KT Oideri frtisf a Istanee rai be ptotantrjr aUeaded to. and accuracy guarantied . ... fTV , IQOffio MeridiM ttrett, Unatdlitely ots. the ELDER Sc BAEKJriSS. jCiTThe City Council bave detenninid commence a regular system of buHding ckterns, ' to supply the city in case of fire. By an ordinance passed attbO-last meeUngtSe old planet the city paying, hi street scrip, Jbi the improve-' ment of ftvitreetsy lf iibc1islied--t1ie'T-owiier of property tnti berealter be required to improve the streets in front of their property at their rwy expense, and tire money heretofore applied for this purpose will be expended in building cisterns, together with any money the oitisens may vote ns an extra tax. f The cistern plan 'will be commenced this year, by building five, in diJEe ent parts of the city, as-wiH be seen in the pro-, eeedings of the council. 1 ' ' Sew Goods. Stacks and piles i of fall and winter goods are now being brought toWcity, in larger quantities, and finer and more varied assortments, tban ever before. - By reference to our advertising columns, our readers can keep tbe run of those reeeJiri-rib crorWfa. rm tw'a tv' k . o o w m permitted naffie ttat'Lhaefc Andersons bave a most oxteusivo'a'rtinent !o( everything, for country merchants M:3?axrisbtH6rn, and Seaton St HolmanTiave tbeif nVtocks, andiln tho shoe lmei 'fembYacingf ffix WdlessVferiety, Me ftugmYcCiboT pwoik'fWriisi tag to.,ffo&;k sortment selet fromis incb btte?;thaari small stores and the, prices are put it the lowest Kving figures, 'regulated by onrpethion. -i -.vi-d?-. 07 iliilei-Oa lasi Saturday, Ud named Ha:rtman;Jiibout' twelve .years Old was ra oe by. the carr on Ibolladison Toad, nearhe depot,: and died on Sunday in eonseqnene of bis hi-i juries. This; if brother to -the bot that Vat killed about a year agr.- neiy simA place. We understand mbscriDtions have been. mad tcfScient to: jtisth Fort Weyns i and; Southern RaHroad company to put their lies nnder contract f?xa-Mui-ciq M Wayne, and let tills J ' straight line; u&d steady e-sployment and coed, wares ihh city, If ther ar any m other plaees-futof ;Th City ConncD or UadisonIrscf.; tavee. solved to subscrib for S0,COO ttock in th projected 'railroad froia tLla' place' tQ'Fbelhnrle Good Ikks Cdxnlu Spirit, ' :''. ' lit
tnmne -grading atd ctubbissrri be
