The National Banner, Volume 1, Number 5, Ligonier, Noble County, 29 May 1872 — Page 1
THE NATIONAL BAM{EB, Published Weeklyby JOHN B, STOLL, LIGONIER, NOBLE COUNTY, IND. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION : “beict]lyin Bdvance. . uviuiveiianiinsnbos +-52.00 B®This pafir “{:fmbuflud onthe CaphiPri m—‘?}e. its Proprietor bel hat it is for him ‘(;tmid»d advance pa”g.;c itt :au /Jofwc‘i't‘y%:;m . Anaa b oflo, £ oty Anxporson sending s o Ced vd acopy othe paper, for one year, free of charge. * ;
Lake Shore & Mich.South’n R. R. On and after April 14th, 1872, trains will leave | Stasions as follows: i GOING EAST: ; | '+ Sp.N.Y.Ex. Atbe.Ex. | Accom. Chicago..i...... 920 8am.... 585 pm.. . 700 am E1khurt.&.‘.....110pm....955 11 GoßheN, . oieei, 1987 (VLIOO7 {lO3B Millersburg.... t 144 |...t1086 "f“” 59 ‘ L1%0u1er........1fis v 1050 .T'.lBMpm‘ Wawaka....... 1209 .. .tllO2 ..}.12384 8rimf1e1d......1316 ...tlll2_ .. ;,,12345 Kfi:dullvflle....fim vee 1128 a 2 OB ‘ ‘Arrive atToledo 540 .... 2150 anr:;;. 520 ‘ : GOING WEST : . T01ed0...........1115 am.... 11 30 pm.. i.lk‘zo,am Kendallville.... 231 pm.... 237 am. l . 306 pm Brimtield ...... 1252 |....1251 ~4.32 | Wawaka....... 1300 [,... 1300 ..{. 384 L{fionier.;......fill sere R 0 i 3Ab Millersburg.... 13 34 o 0 1324 obe 405 Ga5hen......... 850 Vese 388 ohe 494 eßlkhart........ 415 -|..., 400 ..l 480 ArriveatChicagoB2o .... 750 . ....1000 | *Stop 20 minutes forbreakfast and supper. | +Trains do not stop. = | Exyi)ressleaveq daily both ways. | | Mail Train makesclose connection atElkhart with trains ;fifln! Eastand West. i - CHAS, PAlNE,‘Gm’lßupt.,(}‘leveland. J.N.KNEPPER, 4gent, Ligoxier. | -
Pittsburg, Ft. W. & Chicago R. R. g From and after Nov. flth.,lsq. ; i i GOING WEST. - i L Roldy, No 5, No 7; No. 3. ! Fast Ex. Mail. Pac Ezi NightEz. _ Pittsburg...... I:4sam 7:loam 9:3oam 2:3opm Rochester..... 2:52am B:4sam 10:42am 3:3Bpm A%lane,.. ... s:osam 11:45am I:3spm 6:lspm 0firv111e...;... 6:33am -I:s3pm 3:33pm 7:47pm Mhanefield..... 8:08am 4:22pm 5:35pm 9:46pm Crestline...Ar. 9:l6am s:oopm 6:lopm 10:10pm . Qrestline, ..Lv.'9:Boam 6:loam 6:35pm 10:20pm -~F0re5t.........10°53am 7:soam 8 28pm 11 :43pm Lima..........11:52am - 9:ooam Q.Mpg 12:43am ¥t Wayne..... 2:lopm 1] :40am 12:30am 2:55am Plymouth..... 4:l7pm 2:25pm 3:osam " s:loam Chicago ....... 7.20 pm 6:3ogm 6:soam B:2oam 1 ¢ GOING EAST. &£ . NoB, No 2 No 6, Nod. : ' Mail. Fast Ex. Pac Ez| NightEz. C0icag0....... s:soam 9:2oam 5:35pé 9:2opm Plymouth,.... 9:46am 12:05pm 9:ospra 12:40am _ Fi Wayne....l2:4opm 2:3opm 11:35p5,3:15nm Lima.......... 3:ospm 4:2opm I:42am{ s:osam F0regt........ 4:2opm s:2opm 2:50a 6:22am Crestline . .Ar.”6:oopm 6:4opm 4:2oamh B:osam Orestline ..Lv.ll:3oam 7:oopm ‘4:3oam B:3oam Mansfield .....12:06pm 7:2Bpm 5:00a 9;o4am 0rrvi11e....... 2:25pm 9;2opm 7;ooam 11;12am A11iance....... 4:4opm 11;00pm B;soath I;lspm Rochester..... 7:l7pm I;o4am 11;05a 3;37pm Pittghurg..... B:3spm 2{loam 12;10pth 4 ;45pm .. i . i Gir. Rapids & Ind. and Cmc‘, Rich. & Ft. Wayne R: R. A Condensed Time Card. Daily, except Smidaye. To take effect Januwary 18th, 1872, | GOING SOUTH. N 0.2. N 0.4, N 0.6, CGlam Lake....oaeeaeaes - {. 230 pm Reedcnfi...;.......... l 844 ¢ Up. Big Rapid 5........ 445 am 417 ¢ Howard City......... 540 & | 593 v Grand Rapid 5......... 7256 * 810&1}1 710 * Montelthis L.oe.iioie.: 848 ‘% 1135 *7 840 * Kalamazoo, A......... 980 ** IQOpr:: 930 * Kalamazoo, D......... /935 ** 600 a Mendon .-4. c cusd.-00.1080 ¢ . 700 4 Sturgls . clioi . Lalllo ¥ 743 ‘4 ,‘,Kengallvil'le Shvitio.ilg9Bpm. 910 ¢ "Nort Wayne........ 10. 1180 #lO3O * : Hort Wayne.....iiov.oo (100 ¢ i TJecaturs. i coivoisens (94T ¢ b Portland..oviecivico ook (426 ¢ 1 ~wdgcvme........,..... 457 % 745 j ¥inchagter .. iiiccvaiib R} 814 ¢ Newporbiio, 00l .1612 ¢ 9104 Richmondi v a,. .0 .064 b % 045 ! | GOING NORTH. N 0.1.. N 0.3. No. 5. Richmond /... coeeoeees i Nlo4om}r 300 pm Newportoi..oicdcaiiie| L 1 YOO ¢ Winchestar .....oeeesss 1204p$ 421 Ridgeville...ooveva.ss 1285 4/ 447 ¢4 Portlanditi v cisine 10t Y Decatits iLviiii i i 247 ‘2 , Fort Wayne, A......... 8345 ¢ Fort Wayne, D......... 715 am 345 pm Kendallyille icciii . . 880 * 447 *4 51turfii5.....;....'......:950 48 1604 “I S Mendon. . iscceensses 1080 ¢ 646 ¢ | Kalamazoo, A.......... 11385 ** 740 * Ka1amaz00,D..........1145 ** 435 pm 700 am Monteith c........c.0:1220pm. 515 ¢4 748 ¢ Gmnan’p1a5..........‘210 9 650’“! 995 ¢ Howard C1ty...... ... 403 *- = 41106 * Up. Big Rapid 5........ 505 * + | 1215 pm ead OhY. oicoi, voviii 11242 ¢ Olanrliake. 00l i il 00 5
Michigan Lake Shore Rail Road. Condensed &ime card, taking efiect Dcccml:fer 25, 1871, GOING NORTH, GOING BOUTH, N 0.3. N 0,5 ST AZHONS' No. { N 0.4. 4385 pm 740 am.. Kalamazoo,. 930 am 725 pm 590 ‘e 8C ¢ [ Monteith.,.. 843 . 635 ¢ 555 933 ¢ Allegan. .... 804 ¥ 555 ¢ 689 ‘. 1040 **. H011and..... 704 ¥ '4BO ¢ 758 ¢ 1145 * Grand Haven, 609 % 345 ¢ B§4o ** 12 30 pm.. Mugkegon.. 530 ** 300 ~ F. R{MYERS, ! General Passenger and T%ket Agent. ¥T.WAYNE, MUNCIE & CINCINNATI RAILROAD The shortest and most-direct route fiu Indianapolis, Close connection with tralns on the Columbus & Indianapolis Railway at Munci¢. _. Departure and arrival of trains at Fit. Wayne: * . LEAVE. ‘SR ARR{VE. * ] ‘Express......... 510 am(Mail .......i....410pm Mai1............12 30 pm|Express.........9 45 ** TRY THE NEW ROUTE Indianapolis, Peru & Chi 20 R.R. '_[‘HE Great Through Line to IND APOLIS, Cineinnati, Nashville, Memphis, Louisville, Chattunuoia. New Orleans, and sll goints in thke south., Ask the ticket agert for tickéts via PERU RAIL ROAD. i . On and after January 1,-1872, two ?ai]y Passenger Trains will leave LaPorte as follows, Sunday excepted: Day Express leaves LaPorfle at 9 45 a m, and arrive at Indianapolis at 5 15 p mj 5 The Night Exgreas will leave LaPorte (Saturday excegted) at 1150 p m, and arrive at{lndianapolis at726am, . - Woodrufl’s New Improved 3 PARLOR AND ROTUNDA SLEEPING COACHES. Always on time, . ; F.}[P. WADE, Gen’l Ticket Agent, [ndianapolis.
Dr. l. LANDOY, LIGONIER, : Bondenrny 1 INDIANA , Office second floor Landon’s Brick Blosk. B i JAMES M. DENYY, Attorney and (‘,ounsellon at Law. ! Office in the Court Houge, ALRWDN, .- - - . . . { IND. 6-15 P. W. CRUM, Physician and Surgeen; " Ligomier, = = - ~ Ind#fana. Office one dggr south of L. LoW & Co’s Clothing bti&)le. up stairmt | s L[t{;lflh, 1869. _ID. W. C, DENNY,M.D,, Physician and Surgeon, LIGONIER, INDIANA, will promptlg and faithfully attend to all calls n the line of his profession—dayi or night—in own or any distance in the country&. ; ; G, W, CARR, 3 . Physician and S}J.rgeon, . LIGONIER, - - - - - |- IND.,, Willpromptly attend all calls lnérust,edto him, Office. on 4th Bt,, one door east ef the NaTrowaw | BANNER Qmu?. 3 i 3-48 Surgeon and Physician, ~ Office at Residence, | Ligonier, = « =« = I diana. 4 A.S.PARKER,M.D., HOMEOPATI] IsT, Office on Mitchel street. Residencelon East street, Office hours from.loto 12 A. M., anid 2 to 4 P, . - ativn KENDALLVILLE, INDIANA. Miy 3, 1871,° . i i —————-—-—-—-——‘-——._..__‘_______L______ i - 6. ERICKSON, M, D., Speclal attention given to the tdeatment of Chronic and Surgical j Diseases. flice hours from 10 o’clock A, M. td 2 o'clock, », u. Offlice and residence opposite the/Groes House, KENDALLVIEBOE, INDIANA, - June 1, 1870, : WM. L. ANDREWS, Y Surgeon Dentist. SLTYYPPSMitcheI’s Block, Kendallville: Allwork warranted. lnminatio#sfree. 241 : J. M. TEAL, . ‘ DENTI By i Corner of Mitchell 4nd Btate Sts., one block east of Pdst Office, room 3 the Kendallvillie Fruit flou'se, - Kendallville, Indiana. ?‘Allw rk warranted, +_Kendallyille, May 3, 1671 | ContineatalLifeTasurancs Company, i roms 'ORD, OONNECTIOUT, 5 Offiee in the Conrt House, Albion, Noble Co., Ind ATTORNEY AT LAW, : %.. INDIANA. :
dhe Natronmal Danner,
Vol. 7.
H. 6. ZIMMERMAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office on Cavin Street, over E. B. Gerber’s 2 Hardware St ore, LIGONIER, - - - - INDIANA. August 17th, 1870. » _ : Ty covma, 0 =W Attorney-at-Law & Notary Public, : LIGONIER, INDIANA. Office, over Beazel Brothers’ new Harness Shop, : {Lavin Street. 4 . ] L. H. GREEN, Attorney-at-Law & Notary Publie. LIGOCNIER, - - - - INDIANA, Office seqond floor front, Landon’s Brick Block. " ID. W. GREEN, Justiceofthe Peace & Collection Ag't, Office with Dr. Lanond, second floor Landon’s ¥ Brick Block. il LIGONIER, - |+ INDIANA. 9
. E. RICHMOND, Justice of the Peace & Conveyancer, - Cavin street, Ligonier; Indiana. Special attention given toconveyl.ncin‘f and collections. Deeds, Bonds aud Mortgages drawn up and all legal business attended to promptlyand accurately. : i May 26th, 1869. ————————————— A —————— BANKING HOUSE of SOL. MIER LIGONIER, INDIANA. : Foreign and Domestic Exchange botght, and sold at the lowest rates. Passage Tickets to and from all ;{arts of Europe. Colilection Department has special attention.. Merchants’ accounts keFt on favorable terms. Money received on deposit. July 27,1870.18 4 . o.VvV.INxs, DEALERIN MONUMENTS, Vaults, Tombstones, . AND BUILDING STONES, ; LIGONIER, IND. April 12, 1871.-50
TEEGARDEN HOTUSE, Laporte, Indiana. V. W AXTELL, :|: |7 Proptietor. Laporte, April 5, 1871, L BATES HOUSE, ‘ INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA, : G. W. WESLEY & SON, - - PROPRIETORS. The Bates House is the largest and most commodious house at the State Capital. Indianspolis, Jan, 18, 1871.-38 e e et e LIGONIER HOUSE, LIGONIER, ¢ ¢ :ll: ¢ “INDIANA, LEWIS & KORER, Proprietors. This splendid hotel has passed into new handg, and hasbeen entirelyrefitted and renovated. Good Sample Rooms. Free Buss to and from the Cars. April 10, 1872.-6-50 l | | G
HELMER HOUSE, S. B. HELMER, Prop'r, LIGONIER, = = « INDIANA. This Heuse has been Refitted and Refurnished ; in ¥irst Class Style, Sl
. STOP AL THE KENDALLVILLE, INDIANA. - NEW COMMODIOUS THREE STORY BRICK Hotel, only ten rods trom the L. S. & M. 8. R. R. Deé)ot, and four squares from the G, R. R. R.— Only five minutes walk to any of the princ?a’l business houses of the city. Traveling men and stranrcrs will find this a first-class house, ~Fare §2 per aay_. s J. B. KELLY, Proprietor, | Kendallville, Aug. 3,1870.-14 - = I RSR » " Underhill Marble Works, Ft. Wayne, Ind. - F.W. UNDERHILL. i A.J.MATTISON. Ft. Wayne, March 22, 1871.47 i
0. T. SINMONS | THAS om:#um‘,\ . NEWGEM GALLERY! In Dr. Gants’ Building where he will make AGems Tor il il s 8 B 0 SGems for . ioi oo doi il Lo il oo IR llBGemefor- ... .. o A L 100 joGemefor L liiiiii oLI i i _1.50 GO! GO!! GO!!! ’Ere the substance fades. . Ligonier, April 24, 1872, . <‘t— = H. R. CORNELL, Is now prepared to take GEMS of a superior quality. Having purchaged one of the great American Ofticnl Company’s MULTIPLYING XEM CAMERA, Which has facilities for m ing 9, 18, 86, or 72 pictures, all at one sitting, thfinanon can now be supplied with first-clasg work at a trifling expense, within thercach of all. The foilowing aretheprices: 7 Pictures f0r......'r...........;...-..gl 00. 16 e e L L SO 32 g 8 ReS 00 70 8 ¢ j.w 4700, PHOTOGRAPHS THE SAME PRICE! Ligonier, Ind., Nov. 15, 1871. . ¢
JOHN GAPT’INGER’S HARNESS, SADDLE And Leather Establishment, - Has been removed o Gapg)inger &‘otsch’s New Block, (fe«metly Rossbacher’s Block,) KEND 4LEVILLE, - - INDIANA. Teo nighest glce {)fl.ld for Hides, Pelts, &c.,and sie trade sup,g red with Leather, Findings, &c., at lowest flg;ure b Lar ol April 6, 1870.-49 |
_HIGGINBOTHAM & SON, ; : o ) .qflm?,’/; A B} 3 : | /,: "';-_A),»’ %kfi. S plldese N '7/123':1’;'_"’"' et ///%/!% e A { | ,fl g - BT 1 ' ,«‘.\.( rr . .l',_\‘\- e e : ) - ‘}' Y LY g : NG T | U\ P A ’l; ' - EaS Watchmakers, Jewelers, ~ AND DEALERSIN ; . Watches, Clocks, JEWELRY AND FANCY GOODS Repairing neatly and prq’mftly executed,and : . warranted, . L Gold Pens Repomted at City Prices. Agents for Lazarus & Morris' Celebra}ed ' | Spectacles. i W‘Biin ofthebigwatch;corner Cavin &Fourth Streets,Ligonier, Indfana._gs .may 38,’66.-tf,
A. GANTS, \ Surgical and Mechanical Dentist, | LIGOH!EB. = '« INDIANA. = ~ 18 prepared g nbriE &> . / ™ f - R e IO P ‘ e ;eara justifies T im .in sayiug Lid M i ’ ?llvu: entlere sc:tn LW it of Kime's 'l'cl:; hfi E{,“' ‘ ¥~ Office one door north CITIZENS BANK OF LICONIER, . INDIANA, ' Our business|is the &xme as an Incorporated Bank. Depoai{.! accounts can be opened with us, subject to check without notice, and which we respectfully solicit. . 2 We issue Cerlificates of Deposit, payable on demand or at fixed date, bearing interest at currént rates. | =) 1 We draw Drafts on New York, Chicago, Toledo, and all Eqroresn Cities. ‘ Sell Passage Tickets to and from Bremen, ‘Hsmburg, Havre, London, Liverpooland Glasgow. i) BTE%US BROS, Bankers. LIGONIER CORNET BAND, " Bamg‘“n HERBST, Leader. # is now prepared to fur: pod muPIONIOR CONVENDIONG &2 oot .lic MtPIQ. ; '.‘r " . 4' ' ;34 - Ligonier, June 7th, 1871—6 m,
! : For the National Banner, THE LIBERAL PLATFORM. S AN ACROSTIO. o Give equal rights to each and every man— : Reform, that’s founded on the “liberal” plan. Each iesue that is dead, shall thusremain; Each new amendment, too, we will maintain. Light tax we agk,—nor yield free speech— Economy of rule will make it reach ' Yet, to discharge the nation’s heavy debt; . And, too, the soldiers’ claims we "M not forget, "Nor slight the orphans of those V\et’x":’lm brave— Defenders of the flag that.e’er shall wave, Bravely defying cruel tyrants’ sway. ; ; Reform the civil service too, we pray; One Presgidential term, with amnesty, Will best secure the nation’s liberty, Nor we’ll not frown on—Greeley and Brown. - . AARON STEOCRIC, 2 v et~ A — e Tre following touchingly tender dirge appears in the Detroit Post, its gifted author not favoring the world with his name: : - Grim death has taken darling little Jerry, The'son of Joseph and Syrena Howells; . Seven days he wrestled with the dysentery, And then he perished in his little-bowels. - It was the Savior wanted little Jerry, ‘Who suffers little children to come to Him; It’s probable now that he 's practicing very Assiduous-like his little angel hymn. Most mu:{ ‘twas wemingfin{lured little Jerry; His bottle seemed to damp.his stomach’s tone; But with the angels he g&t)s Ylumg and merry, For there’s no nursing bottles where he's gene.
- THE PRESIDENT vs. CONGRESS. Once in four years the American people grow wild over the excitement of selecting a “ruler” for the Nation, but it is not unsafe to saythat the average American voter is very gravely mistaken in his ideas of the branch of our co-ordinate government which really rules the country. Itis generally taken for granted that the President is the party who shapes the entire desti- ¥ of the country and he is lauded or condemned as the current of opinion among the sovereign people may dic< tate. That he is generally responsible for the political conduct of his administration is ' true, but cases have arisen and are again likely to arise where a President is a mere cypher in the political affairs of the nation.” The controling power is really vested in Congress, and when that body chooses to exercise its prerogatives no power can prevent it, It is, therefore, far 'more important to the friends of good government that they should get con“trol of Congress than it is to elect a President. Political office seekers naturally turn their eyes to the President from the fact-that the successful .candidate is quite likely to carry with him a majority of Congressmen who will do his bidding and thus render. his administration a personal one.” By this means the one man power has been established, and the people have learned to look upon the President as in fact the National ruler. That this view of the case is not correct s justified in the fact that Andrew Johnson, with an opposing Congress at his heels, was but little better than a dumb ornamental figure-head on the national ‘ship of state. In a search for the seat of real power in the government it will be found that the Executive and Judicial branches are at the complete: mercy of the Legislative trunk, and ‘that Congress has very little less than Supreme power. What, then, is the correct policy for aparty to pursue that desires to rear its-principles on government soil? ' Clearly, it is to gain control of Congress, for in fact this is the only way of making success certain, If necessary, it is well to sacrifice the Presidency to secure the Legislative department, for it is Congress thatlevies and disburses taxes and ° controls the army and navy ; in short, if mistakes are to be corrected and reforms .inaugurated Congress alone has the absolute power to do it, It must be apparent to every Democrat that a Radical President with a Democratic Congress i 8 in every way preferable to a Democratic President fettered and controled by'a Radical Congress. It is therefore, clearly the duty of Democrats to-work and vote with a view of carrying the Congreqeional Districts and obtaining power'in the Legislative branch of the government, and the men or measures which will be most certain to bring about this result should receive the hearty support of all Democrats who love and revere the principles of the political organiza~ tion to which they are attached. :
During & recent discussion of the tariff question a Republican Congressman admitted that not less than three hundred thousand able bodied men are now drawing pensions from the government through the tarifflaw. Thege three hundred thousand pensioners are employed in the protected industries of the country, and perhaps it would be more appropriate to say they are given a bounty. for enlisting in the profitable work of making salt, iron, &ec. The tariff exacts about fifty cents a year from every man, woman and ‘¢hild in the nation for the support of Pennsylvania iron-manufacturers. In’ the aggregate this makes a handsome bounty for the fat Pennsylvanians, but it is rather unpleasant for the other members of this Federation ; the deni~ zens of Pennsylyania get agout $2O, 000,000. more than their pro rata share. Salt and pager are other notable illustrations pf the workings of our present tariff. The salt bounty amounted to $2,350,000, of which “$900,000 went to the Onondaga Salt Company alone, The paper-makers of New Ean%)laqd. New York, New Jersey and ennsylvania received over $17,000, “000; $10,000,000 of which was -exacted as a contribution from other States whi ke mamulcinrers ofwozfi ‘goods secured a bounty exceeding $5O, 000,000 annually, of which- over $2O, 000,000 are callected by the seven States from the remaining States of the Union. Massachusetts alone received $7,000,000 from other States. The cotton bounty is estimated at $51,000, % 4&‘o%{ rhich 1 MMW 817, 000,000, and . Rhode- Tsland-$7,000,
LIGONIER, IND., WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1872,
To Make a Fashionable Woman, Take ninety pounds of flesh and bones—but chiefly bones—wash clean, bore holes in the ears and cut off the small toes ; bend the back to conform to the Grecian bend, the Boston dip, tke kangaroo droop, the Saratoga ulo{:;,v or the bulifrog break, as the taste inclines; then add three yards of lines, ~one hundred yards of ruffles and sev-enty-five yards of edging, eighteen yards of dimity, and pair of silk or cotton hose with patent hip attachments, one peir of false calves, six yards flannel, embroidered, one pair of balmoral boots with heels, three inches high, four ounds whalebone in strips, seventeen Eundre‘d and sixty yards of steel wire, three-quarters of a mile of tape, ten pounds of raw cotton orjtwo wire hem=~' ispheres, one wire basket to hold a bushel, four coppies of the New . York Herald (tripple sheet), one hundred and fifty yards of silk or otherQdress ‘goods, sive hundred yards of point lace, fourteen hundred yards fringe and other trimmings, twelve gross of but-. tons, one box pearl Yowder, one sau‘cer carmine and an old hare’s foot;one bushel of false hair frizzled and fretted ala maniaque, one bundle Japanese switches, with rats, mice and other varmint, one peck of hair pins one lace handkerchief nine inches square, with patent holder. Perfume with attar of roses, or sprinkled with nine drops of the “Blessed Baby” or “West End.” Stuff the head with fashionable novels, ball tickets, play bills and wedding cards, some scandal, a great deal of lost time and a very little sage ; add a half grain of common sense, three scruples of religion, and a modicum of modesty. Garnish with ear-rings, fingerrings, breasi-pins, chains, bracelets, feathers, and flowers to suitithe taste. Pearls and diamonds may be thrown in if you have them ; if not, paste and ginchbeck from' the dollar-store will 0‘ < e
Whirl all round a fashionable circle and stew by gaslight for six hoars, ~ Great care should be taken that the thing is not overdone. : If it does not rise sufficiently add more copies of the New York Herald. - This Sieh_ is-highly ornamental, and. will do to put at the head of your table on grand occasions, but is not suitable for every-day life at home, being very expensive and indigestible. It sometimes gives men the heartburn and causes them to break, and is certain death to children, - If you have not the ingredients at hand, you can buy the article readymade in any of our large cities—if yon have money enough.—Chicago Post.
One of the heavy campaign argu‘ments of the Radicals will be the large reduction of the public debt during Grant’s rule. . From'the loud manner in which these partisans talk it might be inferred that the President paid the public debt out of his own pocket, but voters will be likely to remember that | “we the people” pay the debts of this government. We lignidate such claims by paying exhorbitant taxes on nearly every thing we see, eat, drink or wear, but probably we should feel thankful that even a small portion of this fund is used to pay the national debt.- Our money runs the gauntlet of a long line of official thieves and if any part ofit gets into the hands of our creditors it is a matter worthy of congratulation They might stcal the whole of it, whereas they now steal on-lj’r about one half. Upon the whole, we are not certain but that Grant deserves some praise for the unselfish modesty of himself and his friends.
' The growing hostility to the Grans dynasty is noticeable in the number of Republicans who &re daily coming out for Greeley. If it is Bafe to form an estimate from our local indications, fully one fourth of the Republican party of the country will support the Cincinnati nominees. We hear of Lib eral Republicans on all hands, and every man of them with whom we have talked is ready to form a compact alli ance: with the Democracy and go to the polls hand in hand to work for the snccess of a united National, State and County ticket. If wise counsel brings about such a union of forces it will sweep Laporte County by a majority which will appall the servile tools of the Grant faith. ‘Besides this, it it will unite the conservative elements in a powerful organization which will hereafter work together in harmony and control the destiny of the country. A
The chirping and singing of the cricket and grasshoppers are frequently spoken of ; but tgey do not sing—they fiddle. By rubbing wings and legs together—each in a manner peculiar to their spieces—these insects produce the sounds which characterize them. Perhaps our best insect instru~ mental performer is the katy-did.— Each wing contains a little tambourine and by the opening and closing of the wings these are rubbed against each other, and produced the gonnd of katy-did-she-did, which can be heard at such a long distance and gives thg insect its name. These sounds arp.said to be useful in enabling insects to find their mates ; or they may indulge in them. for their own gratification, and to add to the general harmony of nature, . e A beautiful yo;u:g lady of Boston who had sllowed the tendrils of her heart to twine fondly around a strapginggreu conductor on & horse ear,had &ut&etmt;u;m mmfly": i , o Wi bkl fros: her, mfidflm%fifldfi“ %fi&m&mm i “W‘: h;fl mmgcm %fi--“Xou want to nok down enuff stamps vardin before sunday or i will put an awning over that girl's eye the next time i meet her in society. . You heer me'” : 3 : : s ,
|, Curiosities of Animal Life, . 4 “There can be no doubt,” writes Mr. Darwin, that dogs feel shame as distinct from fear, and something very like modesg. when begging too often for food. A great dog scorns the snarling of a little dog, and this may be called magnanimity. Several observers have stated.that monkeys certainly dislike being laughed at, and they frexxebtly.i‘n;vent imaginary offences. In e zoological gardens riyjuw a baboon that always got into a furious rage when his keeper took out a letter or book and read it aloud to him, and his rage was 80 violent that, as I witnessed on one occasion, he bit his own leg till the blood flowed.” All animals feel wonder; and many exhibit curiosity, the latter quality affording omnunity for hunters in many parts of the world, to decoy the game into their power.— The faculty of imitation, so strongly developed in man, especially in & bar- ' barous state, is present in monkeys.— A certain bull-terrier of our acquaint_ance, when he wishes to go out of the “room, jumps at the handle of the door ‘and grasps it with his paws, although be cannot turn the handle. Parrots also reproduce with wonderfal fidelity the tones of different speakers, and puppies reared by cats have been known to lick their feet and wash their faces after the manner of theirfoster mothers. Attention and memory also are present in the lower animals, and it is impossiple to deny that the dreams of dogs and horees show the presence of imagination, or a certain sort of reason is ‘also present. Animals also Fro,fit by experience, as any man realizes who sets traps. The young are much more easily caught than the old, and the adults gain caution by seeing the fate of those which are caught. Tools also are used by some of the higher apes.— The chimpanzee uses a stone to crack a nut resembling a walnot, and the Abyssinian baboons fight troops of another species, and roll down stones in the attack before they finally cloge in a hand-to-hand encounter. The idea of property is common also to every ‘dog with a bone, to all birds with their nests, and: notablg ‘in the rooks. Nor _can a certain kind of language be denied to the brute. The dog communicates his feelings by barks of indifferent tones, which undoubtedly raise in his fellow dogs ideas similar to those passing in his. own mind,—Edinburgh " Review. ‘ - :
Scareity of llonug Men in Ofee. Diogenes; three thousand years ago, ran obout Athens looking for an honest man, The historians have forgotten to say whether he found one or not.— We fear a similar search now would only terminate in results equally unsatisfactory and obscure. - The taint is on both.and all parties alike. The Tamany rascalities in New York have - their counterpart in the whisky and tobacco rings, the General 01’({3! ring, ete., etc, in which the goliticians of the other side appear to pe deeply implicated. Never was Mr. Calboun’s portratare of the ““cohesive power of puglid plander” go apt to impress one as st the Eresent time. 'The plunder in his day, owever, was the merest bagatelle, compared with what we see now, while she plunderers have multiplied in the same ratio, ‘Men in office appear to have lost all moral sensibility, while honor and honesty areceasing to have the same meaning that they formerly had. : ' : ;
This cannot go on for ever. We cannot always “run” this government, on a system of politics divorced from morals, That is the very system that is in vogue at this moment in all the States, and in many of the more important departments of the Federal Administration, If the people are not great fools, they will upset that system, and insist ugon having a better one in its place. Candidates for office must have charaeter. Just now, the rule geems to be to get on with as little character as . possible. Why should not the public, in the aggregate, be as particular about the sort of men whom they select to transact their business in Washington or Alban{ as that same public is, individually, when it has to choose servants for its domestic household? The public must take a livelier personal interest in the choice of its servants, and not delegate the duty, as they do now, to the hack politicians. In that way, honest men enough, and men who will not.rob, nor take bribes, can be got. If thereis any other w?; we should be glad to have somebody point it out.—N. X. Bulletin. -
| The Bounty Law. The late law in regard to bounties -does not, include soldiers who' enlisted for three months. Under the law the accounting officers have decided as following:. All soldiers who enlisted for _three years, between May 4 and July 25, 1861, and were mustered for three years prior to August 6, 1861, and were honorably discharged, are entitled, if they have not received the same for such servics, to $lOO bounty, Soldiers who were discharged for promotion are not entitled to the bounty, as such a muster out wasnot such as was contemplated by General Order No. .15, 1861, under which the contract _was made. Where soldiers were en= listed and ‘Tmen& as above, and died ~or were killed in the service, . their heirs having received, or being entitled to receive, the bounty thder the aet of July 22, 1861, are not entitléd to " this bounty. Where soldiers were enlisted and mustered’ as above, and have died sugsequent to dinohu‘:; their heirs are not enfllfiird to._this bounty, for sha reason tbnnxucgum y, and is on,lyigqyabl‘_e‘lfcfl he parties named in the law or :-3:‘ ngggr which the _contract was made, Soldiers entitled to this bounty are mtmm to bounty under act of July 28, 1866, and vice date extended the time for filing elaim Rader SA¢ As ‘:fms&m s - was limitied to Janushy 13, 1871 by fi%fimm&am& mita*g:i | be constdered ‘without refil-
What to do if the Clothes Takeé Fire, . 8o many accidents are daily occurring from broken kerosene lamps, and clothes taking fire from&u hts and fpex fire places, thatthe following, which we from an exchauge, deserves attention : Perhaps three persons out of four would .rush right up to the burning individual, and begin to ffli with their hande with out any aim. tis useless to tell the vietim ‘to'do this or that, or call tor water. In fuct it is- generally best not to say a word, but seize a blanket from a Zed, or a cloak, or Ax'woollwfabrlc—if none is at hand, take any woollen material—bold the corners as far apart as yon can, stretch them higher than your head, and running boldly to the , make a motion of claeping in £ arms, just about -the shoulders. This instantly smothers the fire and saves the face.— The next instant throw the nnfortunate person on the floor. This is an additional safety to the face and breath, and any remnant of flame can be put out more leisurely. The next moment immerse the burnt part in sweet oil.— Next f‘ some common flour, and put itont t:] b;lrn. al:;nt an ix:leh in thickness, and, i ible, put the patient to bed. Let thgoflzut'remain until it falls off itself, when a beautifal new skia will be found. Unless the burns are deep, no other application is needed. Dry flour for burns is the most admir-~ able remedy ever proposed, and the information ought to be imparted to all. Dredge on the flour till no more will stick, and cover with cotton batting.
A singular and borrible accident was | recently investigated before the courts . tn Cologne, Prussia. One day lastfall the house of the peasant Franz Bucher was deserted. save ‘b th:edproprietor himself, who was n{van in years and crippled with rheumatism. He had been in the habit of crawling into the large oven where bread was' cooked, to sleep. :On theday in ‘:e;l-f tion he went into his accustomed sleep-ing-place, where the warmth soon alleviated his pains and sent him to sleep., Toward evening the servant entered, and seeing the old man in the oven, told’ him to come out, a 8 he would get warmed up to much, He refused, and retired to the rear of the oven, pulling the doors together. The servant, think-: ing the heat would scare him, allowed the cooking to go on. - The result was that toward evening the man was found ' baked to a crisp. The servant, when' brought before the court, declared ohe“ had completely forgotten the old man* and was merely condemned to twenfour hours imprisunment, ’
A Monster Institation. - It is said that the New York Grand Central Hotel is ‘the lgrsen in the world. It ecan accommodate - guests enoughsto stock a good sized town.— The building contains fifty halls, fifteen buudrefi windows lng two thousand doors. The carpeting alone covers a space of seven acres, and the marble tiling embraces an area of one acre.— The steam pipes employed would extend in a straight line twenty=-five or thirty miles, There are ten thousand gallons of water on the roof ready for constant use.in case of fire, and one bundred and seventy-five feet of hose on every floor. The cost of furnish~ ing the house was upwards of half a million of dollars, and there is not & room in the vast establishment that is not the perfection of good taste and convenience. Board varies from $3 to $4 per day. ; : o
. AFight with an Alligater. A Starke, Florids, letter to the Savannah News, sends to that p‘?m the following account : On the afternoon of the 20th, as Mr. William Kelley, ‘an old citizen of Bradford county, was returning home from Starke, he espied an alligator basking in the mud by the road side. He dismounted and, taki .a hatchet from his cart, ;ppmum _ the reptile for a fight. - In a twinkling of an e{e ‘his fegt were knocked from under him, and his leg caught in the mongter's mouth. Being an old man, the fight would bave gone against him had not a colored man by the name of George Ruff, who happened to be pass: ing along, despatched the alligator with a pistol. Mr. Kelly’s leg was considerably lacerated, so much so that it is probable he will never again attempt to chop a Saurian with his little Kmhet. b :
A Demeeratie Ticket Ruineuns, It is monsense to talk about a democratic ticket. There is noum:¥ but mischief in it. To us of the South it means ruin, because it means -the re establishment of gmgectin radicalism for another Presiential term. . Should the Democrats, nlningeadberence to party sbove everything else, put 8 ticket in the field, with any prospect of suocess, it doee not mriiu & prophet to. foretell that the two wings-of the ng;b lican party will be reunited; if both Greeley and Grant have'to be thrown aside and a new candidate taken ’B In mthid R Af ¢ i ,movement w 4 bvotghfi. suddenly to s elose.—~Richmond (Vo) Whig. . s | . A Just Compliment. The Rochester (N. Y.) Democrai pays the followil:s compliment to Hon. J" C. Kerr, of lapa: “Free tes and coffes! have not much affected the tariff discus-: sion 'which has been all the week going' on in the House, except to make the pro - tectoinists Ww snd the free traders more scrimonions. . Michsel C.Kerr, o{f"xa‘dhu; dhfi'm*f::s ‘ imm : n : of the Ways and Means: on the democratic side of the House. His hesd is a 8 clear ass bell.. I never knew an interruption to throw bim .one ‘bair's breadtli from the line of hisargu-' ment. Kerris still one of the best specimens of & democratic lic congressman.” | -
80 )ers in thils country ma: Wy iphopds s o s gy Py eevtdnmm-oy. .'&qhmhdmd the demoe c”rfl! to.be desd; snd that they cannot support Graut be-. cause mh unqui%ona’l Mpflhm suppose o Yoy recle fifl “Wfitfiufii ‘from the canvass, a 8 18 threatened'to ?;‘q-%i these ‘“;lor' ‘::fl Tt slowe owpend s Ahunion
- Coxorewati, May 8, 1872, Dzar Bir :—The National Convention of Liberal Republicans of the United States have instructed the undersigned, President, Vice President, and Becretaries of the conveation, toinform you that you have been nominated as the canaidste of the, Libersl Republicans for the Pundencg of the United States. We slso submit to you the address and resolutions unsnimously adopted by : the con: vention. Be pleased to signify to va-your scoeptanceof the platform and nomination, and believe um% truly yours, - G2oRGE W.JULIAN, Vies President, Winriax E. McLANR, ) o ] Jorx X. DAVIDSON, Secretaries: J.H.Ruopms, =~} To Hon. Horace Greeley, New York City.
MR. GREELEY'S REPLY, New York, 20th May, 1872 . GENTLEMEN :—I have chosen not to: acknowledge your letter of the 3d instant, entil I could learn: how the work of your convention was received in all parts of our great country, and_ judge whether that work .mg'mvpd and " ratified by the masses of our fellow-citizens. Their response has from dl:y to dsy ;relched me through telegrams, letters, snd’ comments of journalists independent of official patronage and indifferent to the smiles or frowns of powere. The number and ¢character, of those unconstrained, unpurchased, unsolicited utterances, satisfy me that the movement which found expression at Cincinnsti has received the stampof public :rpto‘nl and been hailed by a ‘-?ority our countrymen as the -harbinger of a better day for the republic. I do not misinterpret this approyal asespeclally complimentary to myself, nor oven to the chivalrous and justly esteemed gentleman ' with whose name I thank your convention for associating mine. I receive and welcome it as & spontaneous and deserved tribute to the admirable platform of principles, wherein your con. ,vention so'tersely, 80 lucidly, so forcibly ‘set forth the conviztions which impelled and the ‘pnrpom which guided its course. —a platform which, casting behind it the wreek and rubbish of worn out contentions and bygone feuds, embodies in fit and few words, the needs and aspirations of to-day. Though thousands stand ready to condemn your very act, hardly a syllable of criticism or cavil has besn asimed at your ‘plozform, of which the- substance may be fairly epitomized as follows :
- 1. All political rights and franchises, which have been acquired tb;rongh our late bloody convulsion, must and shall be guaranteed, maintained, cnjoyed, and respected evermore. e 2. All political rights and franchises ‘which’/have been lost through that convulsion should, and must, be promptly restored and re-established, so that there shiall be henceforth -no- prescribed class and no disfranchised caste within the limits of our Union, whose long estranged people shall reunite and fraternize upon &e brosd basis of universal smnesty snd pfl]‘l su me‘ a 3 8. That, subject to our solemn consti-tutional-obligation to maintain the equal rights of all citizens, our policy should aim st loca! self-government and not centralization’; that the civil authority should be supreme over the military ; that the ‘writ of Aabeas corpus should be zealously upheld as the nfggurdo& personal freedonf'; t::t the in_higeidml» citizen 'lhol:lg enjoy the largest liberty consistent wit Jl?l’w order, and thlt,ther'&nhall be no gnedenl subversion of internsl polity of the several States and municipalities, but that each shall be left 'free to enforce rights, and gromot_a the well-being: of its inbabitants by such means as the judgment of its own people shall xrescribe 4. There shall be a real, and not mere: ly asimulated reform, in.the civil service of the republic, o which end jt is indispensable that the chief dispenser of its vast official patronage shall be shielded from main temptation to use his power selfishly, by s rule inexorably forbidding and precluding his re-election. o - 5. That the raising of revenue, whether by tariff or otherwise, shall be recognized and treated as the peoples’ immediate business, to be shaped and directed by them through their representatives in Congress, whose action thereon the President must neither overrule by his veto, sttempt to dictate, uor presume to punishk by bestow: ing office only ou those who agree with him, or withdrawing' it fromi those who 6. That the public lands must be sa~credly reserved for Qecug.tion- and acqui sition by cultivaters, and not - recklessly squandered on projects of railroads, for which our. people have no present need, and the fire'm!'atnre conmi':tt:tolo; of ,whics , is annuslly planging us into’ deeper und deeper tb;.eno{i foreign indebtedness; 7. That:the achievement of these grand purposes of universal bemeficence, is expected and sought at the hands of all who :Pprove them irrespective of past iflflq-]
8. That the public faith must be maintained and the national ,cred::ereuned.-,, 9. That the patriotic ‘devotedness and inestimable services of our fellow-citi-zens, who, as soldiers and sailors, upheld - the flag and maintained the unity of the: republic, shall ever be gratefully remembered and bonorably zequited, . - . ' These propositions so ably and forcibly pmfifo; in ‘the platform of your convention have slready flxed the attention and commanded the luon)-oh‘h;fqflmjori- | ty of our countrymen who joyfully adopt them, as I do, as the basis of a true, bene- ' ficent national reconstruction ;of a new departare - from ' jeslousics, strifes, snd bates, which beve nio longer adequatemotive, §l¢ eye? phquij;!_q t,gre'agxt. in%to‘mtni, | mospbhere of peace, iraternity, and mutual : g;)os will, "{n'wihldo the M\‘-fie&dbh‘l of deesying orgenizations flourishi menac--ingly their ‘sruschbous;, snd: angrily .ivstraigbtened. .Ia vain do tj;gfigbiga};a:ipfi of parties, ence vital, because rooted in the vital needs of the hour, protest against: straying snd bolting, :denounce men no-i wise m‘:giilmt.u‘mgoqmdm ‘ ‘. s "!x Al y 3 Na.'! R S 3 sodruin. lam confident that ?bs Mvfi < can people bave already madefinzum their own, fully resolyed that their brave: o g el L ‘tinct_understending ihat, if elected, T sball e the Presideat, not of & party, Wt&mwuinm your. nomination, 'in the confident ; ’?34 -the . masses: of our :icountry, North, and 4 f S b them, WM ave; been. Gk b AIORACK GREELRY. | & Goorgefi.w.lgnlfi‘h;: ,-_ "‘Lfi‘ i ; T B it T] b b 8 vian ¢ *“"'“m"‘"*“‘ 20 hhck: atthefirstchance, @~ =~ =
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No. S,
'LETTER FROM WASHINGTON. w WasmnarongD. €., April 11,772, - . It will not be denied.that the capitol of the United States is the best place to intelligently observe the égolit_icgl condition of the country, of which it is the seat of ¢ government, snd I fully realized upon arriviog in this city, the truth of the eandid admission that the present administration is powerful in influence, and. can only be overthrown by the combined ef! forts of all honest men, prompted by a sense of duty and feeling of necessity for the preservation of their liberties. “‘But I believe the hbfiljmform move: ‘mefit&il,libee’gufl to the-“emergency. If theelements of opposition te the re.elec. tion of Grant will unite, there can be no -doubt of his defeat. * *" “* It the democratic gxfly exercise 'wisdom and prudeuce, and all will be well. Let the Chicago. Times, whose unwarranted and unauthorized assumption of power. to. dictate and declare during the FrancoPrussian. war, prejudiced” thousands of Germans against.-the party, that always ‘earnestly and liberally maintained and protected their rights, and the New York Day-Boak, which by its indiscreet publi: cations teaches Bourbonism, and. battles ngainat -practicabilities, be compelled to yield to the good sense and wishies of the masses. - Edde autee
I said the present/ administration was powerful, not L%p\ie’of its moral, social. or intellectual th, but because of the continuance in office of many thousands, dependers upon the re-election of General “Grant, which, to them, is a’ “pecuniary necessity.” Sy Pl - The first thing to attract my attention gf_on reaching the capitol *was - Senator _ lorton being carried in his chair by two negroes from the Senate chamber to a room near by, upon the door of which I read, “Foreign Affairs.” Physically ‘helpless on account. of moral indiscretion, he is borne from place to place in a chair by bis friends. 1 entered the room of the Senate and looked around’ for the prominent characters of the mation. Senator Cole, of California, was addressing the Senate, while the President of that body —Colfax—=and Carpenter, were in earn- - est conversation at the chair. Sumner, Sberman, Saulsbury, Stevenson, Casserly, Tipton, Conkling, Thurman and Cameron ‘were attentive listeners. Po_meroy,%lmr, Hamlin‘and Howe were writing, and Wilson, Morrill of Vermont, Fentori of New York, and Stewart.of Nevada, were walking about the room, talking and otherwise ‘lending confusion to the scene. The rocking chair of old Parson. Brownlow was vacant, old age compelling his .almost entire absence from participating in the business of the Senate. . -
' ;Behurz, Trumbull, Edmunds, Sprague, - Pratt, Harlan, Logan and Garrett Davis ' were also absent, and in further descrip--tion I am constrained to say that Carpen--ter and Stewart are the nfeanest looking men in the Senate, while Frank Blair does not impreéss the observer with much ‘favor. From the Senate' I went to the /House, where civil service reform was un_der consideration upon the $50,000-ap-propriation. Through the ceurtesy ot Hon. M. C. Kerr, I was' admitted to the House, where I witnessed with much in. terest the exciting debate in which Ben “Batler of Mass., Garfield of Ohio, Sargent of California, Beck of Kentucky, Potter of New York, and Holman of Indians, took part. . - - The Democrats favored civil serviee re. form, but expressed little confidence in the yretenslons in the President’s advocacy of that measure, and regarded the apropriation ds* increasing the . corruption and of the ‘administration. - Mr. Beck, of Kentucky,. called the attention of the ‘House to a number of instances in con‘nection with civil service, which evidenced the corrapt and fraudalent practices of high offices of the government, and said that there was no dispositicn on the part of the administration to correct these abuses. ‘ He referred to the Assistant Postmaster at Washington, upon ‘whom he openly cbarged corruption, and said that not. ‘withstanding the knowledge of the same by the administration, this man was continued in office. Mr. Beck represents Henry Clay’s district with the same earnestness and fidelity that characterized the political career'of his great predecessor, and for men of | integrity and ability, Indiana may. well boast of its democratic representatives, —Kerr, Holman, Voor‘hees and Niblack,~~and this credit is conceded to Indiana by Washingtonians. “‘The breach is widening and ‘Democracyis bopeful. ;| o H.
. Greeley. “Let the dead bury the dead”—Amen. On the issues before the country Greeley isp;ig:fi"d&!’d’ inmixi? "—".‘.‘S"u"‘ e O to stealing 1 atlits e is-opposed to briberysnd corruption. He is opposed to giving officesto totally un- - qualified men for office. He is opposed to keeping a standing army in the South--ern States ‘to ‘hartass:the people and eat out: their substance. “He is opposed to | military rings, and to railrosd rings, and to all other nz’ags to swindle the people. He 18 opposed ‘o filling all the offices of /the: Bovernment with His ewn and his wife's nehtoi;m':;'fle o.lz opposed to the- - of the writ of Aabeas corpus in time of profound peace. -He is opposed to carrying elections by the bayonet. He is oppoted to showing: the white feather when: John Bull begins to bluster a Fittle on the Alabamw# el#ims. He. is opposed to political proscriptions on account of opiaions honestly entertained. He is oppostd o the policy of administering the government that will quadruple its expenses i fle epaco: o fiyé or s yeurs ‘Being opposed foul thcso Bifngs bemast ‘necessarily wwmf'a@u in favor of an honest Coni “admifl;:t;nmii?l« geueral - pent. ‘Heo igiin favar. of hounest.men for public . 0 _.He Isin favor of I s have omsocé.éow w&%fi% A from-the South, sad letting the civil laws -goveir-the people. -He is not paiyin fav. “9:{44 tisin favor of lettig men vote a 8 yma oi¢ i fivor ‘of giving ‘all the States their jost rights uader ‘the federsl constitution, and when be becomes ?rfim;%l!;fi“fm- no infringment of the same. *Heis ip favor of tbemWw Prédidlent. “He is T “of the: gkf-! Mfl;;h@w his ‘hfi%:‘“dcgg@%?@ tion, in life, .He Tasiers and’ adversity by his mf?&gm ..,:rl..’c.u“ A‘{ n | ‘l' | and:is mow inafllaent circumstdnces. He h. AVOr of our sepublica: w: A 0 SATARAL DIPONEIRG . She goustame ke Tt ot i ¢ Nee. O naed-! (3 s E b o~ ‘3!{ gk - 5 ‘Q-;m i i g O ‘F’ “fi#fl‘ T i:» e T e g ' 5 s*:‘\@- ir T oty r e E T fiTR i ‘JQ?*"' :M" e A‘i’;fi'%;‘? 3
