Marshall County Republican, Volume 15, Number 38, Plymouth, Marshall County, 27 July 1871 — Page 1
Business Directory.
Physicians.. Urs Matchette Jb France, a. fa.c. a. i. PIIYWIOA? :. -.rivv Tot RB"N. ISD na doctor ivqwit rh'r patron 'o call t ly 1b th da t.. tnnre promri atte-nflon to patient In the couutrr. Si-acia! a'frution tii to Aronic Staaaaaa an I .rrar;e :rg-ry. Ofltre .'war opera, ' vlh ii d k Ntr in -.nataii attendant nn-l ' ., l- .. - i W. Jar!)' . H. I. a. ! rtrm'TAR PUT-I '!N and Op-r.tlre SnrW n offm hi ;r'f- tTpl rrr-ea rke t M.ir-Yili conn t j. In addition t t ia awiin'ii! ir Iii-' ca. m n to i tu- i-onuiry. l t-aoial tt"'''!! wi'l ha ei-ert to ritrafrr, tn. ii-Ome-t of em ci-al disease and diapaae of eaaala. JligM rxaltl in tan and .-onntrv projnprl at 'vide ! to Ctiar.. . office i.p raira ;.s -. rnar oni'-'ine ... .t!. of the hank. .1. S. I .eland. ,.! St'l.i.KcN. Ir... .. In.hnua f 5 ii"-hs io all call pr-mftly. n2ll T. A. Tcrtor, M. D. HM reinoveri to his new rei.riwe. one do. r ntli ol Iii former dw'-lliup, n e.iat aid.-- of Mi Mnn ftHet. brrr h hiy t a-ia'.-! il . ii.n'ed piolrasiubalSj. 34-jrl. A. . Borlon, DKNTI-T i i - -vr .1. K. Wrt..t . l:' ''tor. T--Tfc ectr-.-e t wltiiont pain. I.y the war of !tt. trör.a Px ! ' or l.ancMni: Ga Ttnk: from on tna'h to a fntl artt. cheap ikat the rfca and ioo. ran alt Bet t ! Ill . Office oi-co ail days ece;.t Mor daan 1 Tuea.;na, PTf7 i. T. Reynolds M. !.. HKOM.AK PhTi. int 0rrativr M!fn, nf ' Iii prof i tal a-.-ea tlfe rblsen t1-a.ifi o.;, i, rr"ii!-. line ciioir.T. ' B MfdSS lallie tr'-atni. nt ! .tl-e i -a ovmrn.-n ffa t he o-a-trr. apeeial friii ion ill tf frlwa ri Swrrer, rkxIraacicft f utiricil di-i'- ml "f I"im i . Stallt calta In t.wn and ronntrv prompter ' ..:.o: I. CkaMM aBWavaaaMe Othr iml ri-aV"i-i r.Mc of tftrbtv'an ir. tkre lrM.r 0t HeUiuk. IVvmouih, Ind. W Mr. lr. F. W. Cooper, HOSGOPATRIC PHYSICIAN. snl wi.L.vv of Ihr Inle Pr. K. W. Poop, aw, ! attention .f th p...j-I. to fact thit alt Intriida cvRtibiii:ir the practico of ir.rdiriiia and d-ii!irr in lcr 5Tr hnld' (Ur. a:id U.i: tho will m if tly ntfp-nri t aall ml W ml mat all '-liaaaark hat nfllic: tb- liiuwai atcm OrtK-c and re-id-inca firvi dt jr awttlh I All'inui friniture j tora. 2 ATTORNEYS. A TTOKNKY AT LAW Mri Nof Tat Tiai rc. 'tic--krr' tutr, PiynioutU, Ird. I V!T. - - r:. k. otr ( .(-tlna a "- i:r. s. rtMi, AttoTiu y at T.w. Jiiltffli Vi'V. u,i . r..v 4iti Oveu T'o! OlRce, in K minll's 5 -k. "iMot.:h. IlJ. ) '" CAB I . O. MCSMTLJi 4. Attornr .t Law. Real ititt - - - i .:irrtiuy .4.7' Mr, Ufnx Tn-Tsr in t!ic Qotarti af IkMt Mar nj' K ii'- ko. C:H - Ihm T! pat rt; :.- -f ." n BaaM -' laVM r n; tH CM Ml J '- 1! ' UN El.L, COnr.IX & VAEKELL VTTORNEYS T LAV. . - WIM rr. t. It M .rKll tid iniei Tora-; Maw. lb ewawy Cham via mll.d aaawa. All tui- ... .r. w t site to 'inc- ir. 'rM". ri-rr atwvDO 2"r. rUru TO. j-.n'-lj M. .V. O Rlafciafrta ATTKVKV ' w ard Ne ar Pihllf. Rc.oa want) . tnd. l4rr .Inhn fS. a- . ra- r- -. .f rla-.i as- i.t. ( .In w If ft I: .. . I t-n il iTi . -. p. i -t!..i j Ui. i k. flvni -V- C. . . 1. Cfll TC f. ITAnXRY 4rorXKT.,iilU Reairwtal aajti " t'alVc nj r-"i'. ri n.oiit. Tnd., a- tr icir. la Ha ! t cnqrt ot !Kartia!! ai.d -rtjin.nr r . I ir., .1 i! riv T-mpl rtt t nt lr ?. a IS BBaWJ f ... (lTt.,-rl Ir fcatri. r..; rdlWti&9 4 .; a .V irtl : ti,.H in . ;i . o.t;i - VtlrwIcBat. f., ;.-..i.-r .i't-minii U. n t'. ai tt!-jne-1 -.!"-t' i-fts.-j jut jrnar.tiar.lilpa -i n"-t 4 ..-a. at.''. iTfoM ....! ra. ira an BW BaVwaVTa.1 I a- Uta lakn "a!r-. It r . n . TU -;., at Ii o r. w. a IMbVi fTr V r M ossar & hess. APVritaHw,' '. .I - .1 t.B Ifik . mt n". : - I . . ! mi l y '4-'t laatt- ir-r .-. !l - Hal It IB. I i.' i ' ;i l r 'vi' ti- Braak d c-.. Ufr tilaaa ti et v. :.! -U rwa.il- t. Cf d- i. ... . f :Ur Vkyd -r bV ait .tad. jr. . t i. 1 urlv- , Notai i PnL - A rTfni.V.. i"aaa'lirii al 1 ft - and i)tV",il-l W-'C! - a A.fn i. Konron. fii4. Er- -i itiaui i aa fi rli to ti f aartmra. Ttt if.-. WaaaaBBrtaat a Kn Oal-! tT'o- uf So'.-ti T' Claim? tW !' ui iw. o..u-ilv. V-fc p,, aaaj jll t. r Wnr rjia, "; : niaifwa .7 1 ilinxon. . HTATty Pu'i.c. :iomaj . roi.-.e:-r af - . Anthorlj.d t'Är C!a:n Ai-ctl, Plyti ik. Inl. aVaaawaal iMaatiati '; a tin, art aaaaH -f R . :r., 'nryan:lnl:, ar..! the cl- !" - ;dirr' .'l.-iima fr P'aaiiaaas H':ntr ,-k fay, ar.d all otfo-rWir OVm. Of--. 0 HiHaifjaa attwat aaar Back x lwaa! llir.'.vaT ia. . MISCELLANEOUS. PETER STEOMAN, rOOT i SHOE MAKER. V r l , ,. r ii JUemM Lex Oft, ri.YV iTr. IM.UM, 'iOO Snl.stani MotpiBahafJe 9 rata. r4 fwraataniM ou hand, end m ote to ardar, ..p.c tally Irr ll.e leruirra. jyl'.-u I EUOENE l.KWIS. ah:orablc Barber & Hair Dresser, : UPOMia -ri.Kn. ci.ymo; ra. iml CHamm; Han Ctnncoa KuAi po.,in. . j ,.fe,iBK d4,u iu ti..-m.afi.i.rov-JIIAVING Hah Ctrnnto, Sham attte. jrl-jl G. L. BRINK, PLYMOrTH. IX!.. PROI'RIK TOR OF TH E PLYM ontU tnralsaftMfj Mill, an i saalrar in Lumber, Lath. Wabiut Ib d Stuff. A. , nth f ih- p. ft. xv. a ( ft k. aio. nur.if.rnrrr -iT Sl..i:rora. Brei-i-St? ktndaar.-i ! : - at prk-.aaa-rt ihau ne, bll 1H.ll .'II III twnl IwloV I! Cairea;o r'l .l! ink--e min the work i? a at nil. . 'i 10 la in., n.ir lu m :ie j.-1-.x Ai i GKO. VvOHK & Co , (sVovial Coinmi:ou Merfhanb, PI. FatfO VI II. ISD , Xlv HT ftltravH ou h and, at the Red xx a -h.iner. Hair, I. line. Cement, and I... ;.ri-. rXaater, wSicli all! I - mtM at Uislowo-t eaaw I. O. O. Fa iMsatrra L"Kf. Vo 91, m, rt ererv Tkara aar wwaaaattmaaaa1, assr Baak M Ws tfaM af-'-l!l!l UlT . J wmrr a.- a . . r. 1 7. ai.u . -..1 hi. uiri- IB-. Itarllkll lnt.:.all 'altf 1 I na-snv x Txtt, 9. a. P. If. Bo TT, Sect. t:( H ... I Meat Market ft Oil," EI MoORK, in iha Uta Or. We.t " .Bf. owe d --r aaaifcaf a. B Pkiti-1 r tii.eraim a nop . u .qieioean rirrei. keri ine rrx t-eatofall kinda ofJu.i and s.u.-rre, and at;i, t.r, amith Shop, u Miclopan at Wet. Vrf the er eawaa 15-io-tf-ayr SILVERSMITH A I ratlefOT mm sssiasnts Mas clif. a- ten of Marakuii c unty and ike iiii lie i.. ssoeral :. .it Jv. !-:ia avaui Im11 in P!rsMa,tli,aB't raTn at ai: im.-,. ,m a ie to- tore. VrVrate do..ra waat of Woodard ji ll.-loitn's Um d ;ire gto.-.., aout Ii Slds. taprifte atre-t. Pltaioaeh, Ysffkal: d.. In., a traws h ia pwsaieit' i do u k in in line in rTle rarv baat nwnn. r. and on Iir Iu oet reaaoualjle tents ' Br ear n.ur ait, , ii,,., sieu to the taMaing aiad rev itirtts Vatslics. All rrk warranted. 51ra hSI S csft. ' - 1 Mcurdy llouae, alrrTM tide P. Ft. A C r xVan-itah. lod Oi ti n :-t r 1 Win reai.i, M. Citrdv. Proprietor. af lanaite arr,.aim..tai n n
" and ?t fiday schools admhte I half-price." Dissolution of Partnershp j I brought uy a promise to pay issued by TVOTICE is hereby givH that the. our G ncrnmeut to the amount of twenty111 W,i "re ct nts, as I did not come under either er.oao.il. !r. ttiau Seeker wilt do bnaineae at of the exception!.. ftTld presented it to the Walaerton aaaaa aa here. e , . . , ail accoeot. aad rjv-a to v pal l t.. tbs rate nrm. guardian of the entrance, who, glancing f ant mncB obliged lo mj fellow citiieua and . m o-.lV( Kr fr-atlnnal rift nf rnmni-T aoaatrj folka for tbrtr kiiirt pa?ionae and taaaeSra aI me. gave me tmettonal Oll Ol Currency aoBtarraaj Ba aaa, i wi-h them nxa accaaa and an Insulting examination. ta,. '. r. tiTlliv nr. - if i o '
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BENDER 4 MILLIKAN, Editors and Publishers.
x of try. A Lay of Modern Rome A Vision. v r. BCCH N x RE p. Tili tri .iant pon. i. we battrMj n, u to tRe A a war. pnlilic. It tat wrilMi, Irtvcrrr. laat Fall in com bi luoiBiiuti ot the advent of Vittur Kiuaiiurl and fr rdom. Mk ii(am the Palatine. Auotti -r Cifa i-uni-.-a : r fcttct ly kiiiK.itid rntieror, B14 o t boat the druna ? .Stand la-k. Conarrtpt Fallirra, Lcava the aurient frum clear; Anothi-r lmn 3ente with lu t i.tra in here. Jove aak-nn tn iS J ap't-!, Ti'aenra 'htvn art hrand With spent bow, in hia m inliij; car, Bt üia I Al'olio at und ! Ttia arrow ahk-h tlie Got! ot light Sped 'lir.iueli ihe ilarkctied iea. f -it It rr:i hej th throned t'omiiao, And Baaa Ihr python diaa. Italia thr.Miirh her humiixi roada la Iii . rhiiiK lain UutSe hb vofi.i , no aa a en-"1 ii. ror, Bui ;..iie aelcviuvd b"me. fo her the grat d ol.i mothr'. Wiih jiew l .i tiic-a wakr ai. d ilirilla; She Kurland all her g.itt-waya ami array her aawrirtk tili. The- PabtiBv ila taorel it- -Tfaw C.-lian rread Ha oak. While with a atjaal tbeC ipilol. Throa iloan l ancietif Joke. The garden i ti th Eariaa A awreter perfume tlinr. And th tteed, upoti ihc Qnirinal Leap up a t.. y h.. ' v. ing . ACnab ailb fli arre and tnuaic aiaaja th rkactaa : the k'. Ai. ! t Ue li.rm uf I incinnatua Ou MM VMwM MflMak At. I r.-n he nlm Sraiely pake Wha.i flr.t he tiaifc i?ie throne, A i d ?ave ih- hi. -a it I iLer;y, !"t.i u.J acl-. jtue in 1.1 .- an. I . rv face i toward thr Caj iti l, t.a I. f, BaMta aaf the I tue. Ttii know ihr roatt I'nion Can .ul It td to K.'i i-; 51! n . TnrMi BBaf aVaaaa, l,a,l i.. ;he Tueran ("uiirt, Saeep aret tii pawa Hilivtai T thr l'.üUi. ..!: r.rU-. B"!'fn-. BBal , r. rta. With irrrai a cu !u faf-. And Venice ,jfh Krr' Had, tu iba bM i aw iitaaa sat. ftti and V. apc'ia i-p Th- Applan l:lli.ay ! fir, I n I 1 1 !- ai .J M .anii IIa B.v. l.i. u. i ope ike door. "Ihr:..- a. l.-orn" i ach vi.-fo'. Wlh lh ianr I If hia Mra, They who raat-iro t ii- --tr. To a rcnjilcJ r-elui. Ok ? a hat a epirffri eroanr the day, iV )iti e.'.ch roBera;iiia oa.l lno eafry ktri ot :u al Uat, Coot at W l..r .it.. de. fall i! kir.plo-.,. cr r-piihltr. W'j.j- ti r:i!e- frrrni m to lafaa te-e-h-wi ahy nan." you tili. Im im KiNtw u- ro. At nee. behol ! t.r..wu ui'insiry ..an;! tha feMaa Iain, The f etaeiaa 1. , bim r..n.tiirer apf adi Bei mi: .- By jn the atataVi BarkJaw i kaf t h- Pi aa I i nur 1 ik oi.trd to h-iw and i.rmjre, Th. pA'e of 111 ll.fi trr.rvra feit.a aa it ruaij hiaa. The f t:al tran.J. of J.W.I --e ralla Ii - r pal n t oi.e h; our - Trvia K.idriaa'i. t..:ul m liriug K-utha In ; ttarialaiBaw tilt) MMh Aiid Art no h ner f're-d ara Al fup. iaiil e n al.i:rr. Br::.,;, forth a ava-leirn rr.lkur To j : -Hin. rajaljine. RrMli-,r rWtrif frrtn the dark, U- r rh. in to eaitli Ua hnrtrd. An.! (Iiupie Trni Ii ind LiU-riy I'ril fai.i.uelrd aalk the a or Id. :: Via" It.Ha : Hi r I in I. t rtada ..l-rr.ad Tl.r laatoCaMl lt:ht al r reed ..in 1a Mm i-Wid.lv lkajB4 of God: The Learned Pis. A n'leman formerlv of PorknpoHs i 1 '.ui Ml eilt Ii tsia-t on hog, sends to the t' ""'v.y o-r its "t lubKo.ni" sketcben account of the ealebratecS learaad pi aSaM, sis b . wd, a.- a UlhallJ to hi btMoson'i haaa a. turn Ibrawine. I might saythat I havH a laatc for wine. I do n; mean a taste for jiork, but liking to the ii.ing pig. To put it in plain Kngli-h, i lib., ii... i...., T-i... ... at a. . " ' ; ,uc ' '"K lv . , , 'be tool l. t h,-forest, meat and drin.. I St Mil J bfatt. I und-.-r-tani him. I an aaktsied at hi-wax-, and am filled wifh admiration of his sagacity. I was brought i t j " P ' oppon.unuies to wtaiy his character and appreciate hit traits. With due deliberation I assert that fxr -hiixx dne-s of observation, knowl- . . . , Ol enariCtCr, IOT inOUgfll Uli mem otj, your hg eXcel- all the other beasts cftbe rield and forest. Be is selrish. Well, looK-d at from a ra i tain standpoint, hoggy is sifHih But deprive I man of his hands and tongue; put in hhn a siomach that ail dige-t Mm roll's " Hi-tor.- of the Uuuited State.-," a stomach of great capacity and inordinate demands in the way of appetite; then build iqj tenees, shut the gate. ami, tarn loose yonr tu3, and what will become jI a man's generous impulse.-!, etc . They will go "whore the woodbine twiueiL" over the brie -took. As it is. with all his adxautages, man come-uearer to the hog in this quality than any other rational. As tie pig puts at least one foot ill the "oogii xvlitte 'jaUnt. so a man will , ari .. e i OCgnwle his JM)-.-.ssi ,n U) proot of 111ow nership. This is especially Hie case bit. xvife, and would be with his but tha. a- they grow older and stronger, he gnxvs older and xveaker, so : . . , . . , : the pig mastery predominates Hi the off nr"'nir ' ' , i W itli tWese tastes and ideas T was walk- ' . , ... ' ' i ng slowly along Peansimnia avenue, y, BCtt I sgw jiign of "Leamed Pig " " j done in huge letters upon t lie side of a boose. I read further afong that the adiTrifror. fee was "twenty-five cents ser vants, children1, ministers of the jrotrpef. ' AH ri4ht..,, h W motHnfng Bfl in
vitation to t-utor, ubl MUIingaiop;ciirilly, "Nn offi'nse. Cap, lutt counterfeits !" gravitate toward snipntitir swino Dtot auiiixinirly." Tlie rhi'ire lanp;uajt' of the doorkt-cjicr impress! mc (hpir. It wai n surprising as thu t!tluc ittl hi'ii. Ltaniing had soiid ujxm UM coiurrn.
1 et tend a rtxui that had omv Urn devoted to the sale of intoxicatiiur drinks T t i'.ii ptititt itui 1 fw . . 1 1 . . i- nil.) atatiara i
Itafated it COOaanr and Odor, wirk goinl as a human, and that dOf I iaanje umnuers ... w mil wen; caiieti res?ri!s recognized the spirit of de- ! Camomile woubln't be fairly out of sight j pectable ciW-cns waited upn the mayor ktails and talBf that .cr- afore Beu'd turn up. and come in spite of ami fld him that the hall would be de-
IV HI l Ittlll. A4 l.-a '''ill.. taj At 1 I. I One'-, nostrils curted DOC vaded the atmot-phere, mingling with the vile smell of old cipirs. The educated (.wine was not visible; but certain eminent statesmen, distinguished by their thirst tor knowledge, were of UM) audience. A consumptive young man Inlmied steadily at a hand -organ that gave us the air of "Shoo Fly." as if tm air of "Shoo Fly" 1 being jolted over a stumpy i-orduroy road In the pa'tm's of thi orchestra that came kindly tu our relief, we heard certain cnoix-s and gnmta, indira'ing tliat the learned bcai of tti.ksand bri-tles was epoalatf frrm his lalMMJaaa -tudles unto the known audi tftCB, When 'be room was sufficiently filled, the cou.sumpUve Drcbc.tra abajidoqeuhis I .-t. and, ging to the door, relieved the gentleman who had expraned the sage .ipinioh touching the tendency counterfeit currency had to gravit.i'e to th. learned -wine. This taker in of dimeand curious ja2ople :oe. iiej inabusln like manner to the counter, and rapping n the side, afiant) the editcafed prk. tinder the Mtbaa of "Hen." to come t'orth. A grunt of laoogBltloa ires the only response A hmder rap and a more imperati ve order broagiiti series of grunt-, that to thooe dcquaintetl wi h lioir-languarrr meanl a reiuin; i jiiee ; whercupoa the lecturer 1 "I reached under and administered certain ! blows tha. t.ronirtit nut at aauaaal and the learned siiole He was of the sp a known at the West as "saw-back," and de-crib 1 in the language of the regtoa a"slab -idd. 1 U2: -nou'ed, and spfatdle legged;" of the sort to brenk a att'l heart, if that heart was bent upon adding some adipose to the bone and niu-f le, 10 as to bnng ou' thv pork in iucicLtan'.x'!. onantitiec. He had. however, an intellecina! exptvain ofabace, and it ras really comic a! IB see the poor aninud snapping hb Jaws together with that emphasis jKeuIiar toan btdigaDt porkar, ahal all the while p. . int- f . . in l : -!-: Li toy Mil the holde a ol tne ri-'::n, "T ...'.ie ui.'. cent lernen," becen h. Mbit"r, ' this animal i- the mo.-t inulli- ( i geut and best edlcated h.g in the world. Then- be some pig-on pxbi'dt thll pn lend to be tt Heated pigs, ami I don't deny tla.it auch J". aoin farr. praims ; but edi cation. a and g ' titkinen, to te wonlerful. must have a sn'.hd lwt-is jn S. B. Sow what d I m-an by t-j. B. I mean ; ii I I aau tirain. Without the B. B. ..hat .-a fnin. let alone a bogr Why, hei an dic ited ass. 1 hi-hog. la Ii and gentlenn :i, ha- niiud be has cdicited mind. Re ean tel. the tinac of day. lie .-in phr. ; !; r L",u.-.i t any Congressman, f f" i ..ii I ' 11 the ie of un indix id-ial. - au please ifa v,' and aatonUli the gen tf-iiivu. And d m't he kiuxv lVcior xVeii. Bkayhe ha aVaaY But just try bim.
that's all' and if you don M find him dmnk : Swiss to bow before it. The Democratic a a Senator, w hy t ii: tij ate my digeg I anihotitics of Nexv York elevate the fon. that's all. Now, Ben. wide aWake, ; Pope's tiara, and xvaru American citizens old fellow; uyes of Delaware and my j that they will relu-e to honor it at their stick are myeat; antoailsh ummsb inlelleet-1 peril' And this i.-, Use party that belt d encrycl tgm us o h aa rg uteo-i I j !... h thv- je)plc of the Vnititl States to tu i.;. a." I give U UIktWl of the national go Tili- ar.ia ing 806 1 heavy Rngli-b cvi- mcutf deatlj itu, naeed Ben with the behV t that The cin-nniilaacei of the rvjceal prohl Oh exhibitor wa- sxx -earing x iolentlj . aud ! bition of the pa.-adc of the Orange and
iie aal ab mt hi - ta-k . with a chet rful elacrity that was manifested by aconfinMOasi txvi-iii'.i anil (antwtatins of the c iu
dal 9jptn dag , accomnanietl by a series of ' al'.i awe of the Democratic city goverfa. gruiiis that told rf hi- aniey. He give men! xxith pofitlcal Komani-ni : and the its the alxue with act a racy; ami aa for j other i.s that, in consequence of that alii ages, TI. i.' e.'iäi a.i u was perfect. lit anre, the indisputable rights olf American invariaMy l!u ;i,c . '.!ii ladies by n-porting j eilizeii arc deliberately s;,e:a;a:cd. The their years to be ahoal half the mimlx-r I facts aiv ven few and simple The Ot nature had ailowt d them, xv hile the men I angemen resolvetl to celebrate the anniwere Htdjl so ohl that the sting wa- re- ver.-ary of the battle of Box tie hy a public moved in the sbsunlity. His nw- ol i parad in the streets of the city. Certain
p ker and old sledge brongh! d'ovn the: house, they were so dcxtcrou. .m l perfect. After the audience h id retired, I yet Uiired oai -h; ihreshold. I was loth to h av. a spceimen of hog so entertaining athis Ben. To learn soiuethiug more, I approached the odd specimen of humanity, and earnestly invited him to a little refreshment at Harvey's. Consenting, we were soon scaled, anil I led him over his lager and oysters to the subject we were both so interested in. I have had in my time all -orts of table-talk, from hor-es to .-wine; but f ir the first lime had a full dish of hog talk. " Now, -my dear .-ir," I -aid leaning over confidentially, with m face braced between my two hands and my elbows planted on the table, "how Under heaven do you manage lo instruct a hog?" "Easy enough, Cap, when you once get the hang of it." "And how f The hang of it lies in the feed. The road to a hog's intellect lies through his stomach. A loxv diet with high culture is my motto." "And how did yon make this wonderful discovery f "Easy enough. I had a cousin in the show business, and he used to tell me how they edicated the animals. The first thing. Cousin Jack said, was to get your animals that had a turn for things naturally smart, you know. Well, 1 turned that over in my mind, for I was bound to make a raise. The old farm bad run under until it looked like a widow's well. While I was thinking about it, I observed a hog. He was the cunningest hog ever set on hoofs. lie belonged to an old nigger, and had an eye to cultivating our farm. Ef there was a hole he'd find it j aud ef there was no hotel he'd make it ; and ef he couldn't climb an ordinary fence or histe a gate, no hog could. Iiis only enemy wäs Uncie f-Vatnmy's dog 'Caromnile.' And here's where the surprising part comes fn'. Every Saturday Unci I Sammy went off and got drunk, and he was pretty sure not to turn up before Monday night, and that dog Camomile went along to Uike re of the oH rnuö. When the Md i
Count
PLYMOUTH, IVLAlESHALaL COUNTY, IND.,
man got into a fight on the ordinance of '87 he wa.s infernal uply on them ordinaiufs when lialf tight Camomile, who 1 dtdn't cure a COtH for the ordiniinees. hut did for I'ncle Saininy. went for tin- seat of the enemy's breeches. Rtf tliat's neither hen nor there. 1 observed that t lit. t hag was veiv ilktajUl u to our farm on Ihäia dai s, and I took to w ate hing him. I'll be J I . - . . . ... .. I hau red et that lug hatln t the rrn ot UM) wirk foihil -is a Iiimh:.!). jiinl that iloif ------ fa, f a - a . a a I Providence. One day 1 caught mm i aajaMag under lb. hush in the rrosroads, on a rise where he could see bätk ; way.-, a watching; and when Camomile and old Sammy were f.inly out of ight. hi gtVB . grunt and set out on a trot for our farm. And he talked to himself all the way"1 weht forthat hog. That int I'eeiud bea t took inc. I bought bim of h"; proiietor. the colored citizeu, for a ,i.Z of old rve, and tln-n I -e almia bis " di. iIhm, I ftstracd him 10 i a box, and 1 art him not ration the tWMatjr Ihurl hours. Yon ought to have heard that hog remonstrate at tha end of that probation I began with the alphabet and figures It VtU mighty slow at first. 1 n ally thought that sv ine would have ds-d at college. Bul aa soon a he got the hang of it, and knew what 1 wa -1 driving at, he did prick ' Bp amazingly. tell you. Itteod la give him stkk corn and rithermaiick all hours a day." "And you have done wi ll witbhiia r' "Haven't I f That hog Hen hai lifted a mortgage, built u new barn, repaired the old hooae, and put mir farm Darier fence. so aa to be hog proof, I teil you." "You'll make your fortune out of bim.'' '"No, Cup. The intellectual process ito, ll( 5 f'r h"g natur. He i- in a de ohne. The brain work's too much for Ikn. You see it ain't their natur. In Mother year hi '11 have pajied away among th ealightened fv.-a-ts of the paat.M "Way don't you turn him out to . . ertüt r" "t'au t do it ; tried, but can't. All tinnatural old sense has been tdicated out of the beast. He ha- such a haakorlag for intrllerpiral pir-nita th.iT he Cah'l thrive. No! that big's a goner mon's ti; pity." And tear rolled down the nose of the pntfessor. Whe'h -r thh eamr fr m hger ay love, a loeaof proiit, I orsihl not dei '....nc. Got tier's Crp in Ntrw York. Th;- Iemoorft ic ptirty t'ornierly stirrer defied 'he Amerlsna right of free speech at the command of the slave-ntasten i and noxx ia the city of New Y'ork it surrenders the right of peacefhl aeeetably at the summons of a religious mob. A party bred i: fcbject sub-crx icuce to slax cry hano eoiut'ption of the priaciplei of liiif Of of the luiulttn.ntjil lights of frce;i. n. kilc the Dem cratic ra w -paper- ;.:! i tu deny the e-;i .nce of the Ku-KIuv in tha8oMthern Sta'e-, the D- inoeraticntioiidpal imhoritfeä n the great city of the continent carefully foster a Ku-KhiX to xvbich they uuuand American citizens to yield. Th.- tynnt flceehf at JUtorf put hi-hit apoaiapale, and woajred inB.oti -tant Irishmen in the city of NewYork will serve, perhap, to shoxv to the country two things: one is the absolute Roman CatholL' associations thereu. ou re- dxed trJakt they xxotild attack them if they did ; and as thty did altai k them last year, and killed sex eral of the Orangemen, there was no doubt that they w LÜd keep their word. The Human Catholic party having thus distinctly announct" that they would make a riot if the pfooeaaion took place, the city authorities sum m lered, and forbade the procession. The surrender was under the unrtl pretext that processions in the; streets are not matters of right, bnt of toltration.and that they may be forbidden when the Ie.ice is likely to la- broken! That is to say, that every public parade of peacjable eiiizens through the streets may rightfully be forbidden if a band of desperadoe.- and assassins announce that they do not choo.-e to favor the procession, and will attack it if b appears. Upon this principle, if some French rtMah had declared that it would assault the Germans if they paraded on Baati Monday the authorities miglit rightfully have prohibited the celebration ! Of course, in the present instance, every liody knows that if the circumstance- had been reversed, and the Orangemen had dec lan d that they would attack a Roman Catholic pro-cc.-sinn. they would have lieen sternly warned that their blood would lie upon their o .Vu h ads, and the Roman Catho lie parade would not have been prohibited. Nor is the talk abnut the celebration of foreign events and the feuds and animosities o ' other lands less absurd If there weri Italians in New York xvho chose to pt-rpetuate the strife of Guclfs and Ghibellines, and to parade in honor of thefr respective heroes and events, their right to do so would be indisputable and equally indisputable Would be the duty of the authorities to protect those Italians pcac ably jtarading. The principle laid down in this ridicuious proceeding is that the right of American citizens peaceably to assemble may be arbitrarily annulled bv a police super
inteudent upon the threat of unlawful ( not recover power by s.teh cries and pofiidistnrbance of fhfe meeting. The truth is j tions and hope to act airs public contithat the police and the whole military dcnOe by departing from them. force of the 8tate exist for the poto-tion N w a the-- are rwtlly the same petf that right and Mmilar righta In th? ' pb'. i'b the Mime privnplcs. they hae
'mmmmmmmS?mm!!mm J very culmination of event liefore the ! found an insuXTable difficulty : the v can 1 purpose was rerentlv held la New York '
war and in the week following the execu-1 lion of John Brown ;i speech was an nounced in Philadelphia hrorj the then itUatiun of the anti-slaver.- movement. T1ie:riends of slavery in.-tantly resolved thai it slmuld m it take place. ThffJ patj c tiled the v alii It I v'utuul invita tions to a riot. They appealed in the pa- . . . . a i ; pew i tue mr ,i innanieu passion.-.. Liftiw niinibom Oi v iinl wen. oallra rv inonsirwi aou ine sireeis wouiu raai mnm blood i 'he did not stop the peech. But 1ft 1 a a. a a. 11 1 a . the inayor it .vas Alexander S. Ih ury replied t'a' although he deprecated the siM- 'di as much as any body, and wished with alt his heart that it niL'ht not ha de liverod. vei that the tight uf tha taeaher wa a fundamental right of an Ameiiem citizen, and th.it he. the mayor, was obi chatty Ixuind tinder his oath to pinteet him to the hM gaap, if it tmik al! the police and nil the militia at his command. suid-thai he ahnuld aectalnly o hfa duty, Theatt wen a tiaaaettdooj riot: but the mayor did his duty, aud the rioters were compiercd. It i- only iu-c ssary t compare this ac lion of Mayor lknrv in Philadalpahh tweli yiar- ago, wttb that of Mayor Hall on the I'.th of July in this year, to aee the aahtteace betweai a magi-irate who aMbatetw i he mob und one who is Mai red by it. The feebleness of the note in which Mr. Hull sought to prevent
the Orange jmn.de did not conceal hi- j sltows them to be '? traatvrOttky. evid'uit coti-eiou-p' ss of hie ditty. He j The Democratic parly, vainly trying td km ra as well as in body precisely what mlly Itself npna new llae, bnpas to oosv that itm, ahd what the w elfare of the test the election of lffH apöi the ques community h-manded : but be had j i ion of ci ntiali-i;ion. Hut let any si n.-i-neithteV the Courage tn do bis duty nor to j ble man a.k byanH this ve:y p.ac.ical have it and ne. Bttl even hi thi.Tam l qiiesfion. MIa it safer to tnii the Heptih ... .... . . . ... i I .. . .
tit.inv ri'i't n ci.v tue prou- iauisi rue j surrender of I he lights of a free people to a ndlgtoQS mob xva- so unanimous and Lnrilgnant that the Tammany Ring rax ftightened. and the Governor waa called . ..iiuf la, to reverse the whok But the i'act- will ant he Ibrgottett. We have constantly .-aid that the character ot l e'.-nitic rule can best be studied la the city of New Yo:-k. and the event- of the recent Onrou oeJebralion HlUbtrate it to ..,. hole C'Mintry. ine most sacreu J - ana m 1 right- of free aost-ud-ly and of religious liberty were ytelded by tin must 1 senfative Demecratlc authoritv in the country to the mcv threat of religioaj riot ; and oidy when driven t. it by un overw helming public indignation did the aw V Aaa - ' a. a 04 ä Governor lntc:'F.rc - protect i -m of rc-iceaV- citizens. I aaa k1 baa It always been with the Democratic 1 sirty. la the old daya It mobbed Araerlcan citltcn. peaceably aaat added to pit i 1 he rtgni ca every inn. nt man to personal freedom. Koa it fflspeftea dganta ..ace.Myv-en.bling to celebrate the an liversary ot an nW iriah battle. And i i . . 1.... i ....... . UK.- l.- iH.1 ;(.- ..; coin -nitre n.e ui of Roman Catholics. Does not -cnsü lc men think that si. oh a parly may he safely trusted with a government which rests upon civil ami rcligb'U- equality t The Failure ot ihc New York Departure. The new departure of a political party uv j. e. i i i ean hardly be called taKceasfal If the whole party docs not depart. A uew de parture is otherwise a were scbi-m ; and Mh the movement of Mr. Yallandigham and hi- frit mi- mu-t now be considt-rcd. Ii has divhlcd tb party Imstead of unltlag it. It has been nowhere, not even in Ohi., where it xvas propose'., received with naanraaity aad eothaalawn, while it ha- elicited the most positive protests from able 1 nlers. At the Tainmanv performance it vas, indeed, urged by Mr. folin Quincy Adams, who i-. however, a
cbartered libertine hathe party which be VUiti. ,nv liri.llIm.nt. recently' joined; and be is the sault gay Woman's rights have been the one abMen'or who, in one of bis many 1 sQihisag thraiB. Mat forth by writers am! to the brethren, adrtaed hi- new love, the I lecturers.for the last tpiarter of a century; Deni'.cratic jxarty. to la-gin by being dem- j bat man's rights, like the heroic men of oefBttc, w Inch was very Btttch a- it he had I ,hc revolution, have seldom received even
advi-ed the Neponset Ktver lo BOM me other way. The Demornilie lirt.v haa. a . . . . Ml a I never been democratic. It used to call itself the poor man's arty and the xvo. k ir.g nian's party when it had its cruel heel planted upon ti e hearts of millions oj poor working nu n, to vx houi it denied even a right to their manhood aud to com nion humanity. And even uoxv the attempt to .take a new departure by aserting the lights of men under the con.-litu tion has produced serious differences in I he par.y. The difficulty is one that we have more than once ventured to suggest. A patty is not amaaorssl bg it.- pii.fes.-ion- merely, bit by the probabilities of its pel fom.ance Biirahai Irora various roaahittfatitaaa, If in thi midst of the war if at CUeatgo in I instead of crying out for surreuder to the rt liellion. the Democratic party had pronounced for a vigorous prosecution of the war, the country or the Republican party would have replied: Vet) well, fall in." But if the Dcuvwraiic party had retorted that, having declared for the war, it ought to have control of the government, even Sherman and bis men lost in Georgia would have heard tin shout of derision that would h ?ve rung through the loyal land. While the leadership and general composition of a patty remain unchanged, the pro fe- ion of a different purpose is not jx-. -uasixc. What is the significance of advice to a party to ln-gin by Ix-ing democratic? Plainly thai it is not democratic noxv. A nd when a rvw departure is demanded, w hat isitbuta confession that the old position is untenable r When, therefore, we push the inquiry to the end. we find that th'se w ho have always sustained slavery and all the infamies that sprang from it, who wished to retain in re -const met ion as much of the rom of civil hate as possible. Who wished t forbid equal suffrage aud to perpetuate class privilege, who confusedly and aggressively aJaerted State sovereignty against national supremacy, who palliated and justified the rebellion, and derided and perplexed the government of the Union, have at last derided that they can-
JULY 27, 1871. Hot iersuaile Ukiiim ives.and they can not 1 persnade the country. A platform, as these gentlemen all very well know, is i usually conMderud tobe a tub to the w hule. Its object is to amuse, and possi- 1 bly lo deceive. It must ay neither too : much iur loo little. 11 must not uisappoint the advance nor dismay the rear. 4ad, whatever the phttibna Mtya, it derives all its significance from those who stand behind it. it l- lik the word of a man. f !ii- diameter confirms w hat he 1 Mtya, it is enough. But i' i- also enough if it does not. The tK-niociatie surrender platform at Chicago in 1884 w:t aa exact epnionof the party anthacttt The country knew that the party wished to surrender, fm party character sustained the platform. Hut the same character doe- not sustain, in the -ame aehee, the new departnn jilaU'orm. The utmobt that it conveys i- a shrug and a grim.-ice that "we can't help ovraelvea, and so we iiccpiii-iv." What reason wa- there, if Mr. Vallandigham had lived, and had been nonuuak for Goveritor of Ohio upon bis OWÜ platform, for any man w ho voted against him during the war to vote for him now 1 i i.-s poaitioa was not one of convicliou, but of compulsion. And w hat w as true of bim is true of the attempted new attitude of his parly. The question always lemaiii-. why trust the men who wen. distrusted ye.-terday bcadUM thq tkcltve to day that they will contend no longer! The change itself neun r.artv oxen with this cent i-iHyin-tendency, cr tin Democratic party, with its State sovereignty dogmas And beyond and above all this. Ht. attcatioa jwlticli htmosi people all ever the land will a-k th' iii-elve- i-. whether it is wi-e to abmdon a party prhaae traditional aaaaw is lilvrly. union, and fair play, which rep resents tha pottthnü oTtuatai of the intelligence and the moral chat-utcr and j purpose of the country, which has the : A meiicsm ct.n science U-hmd it- ..vrxf.. m.,Uj, .tnd to favor a nswtv who-e rrawtl. t'e.nal polity is -lax cry and inequality, ami whi h represents the ignorance, the prejudice, iml the boalilitv lo the I nion ( n,a ,tij L.Xi,, bj tj,c rtmnjtrt - An ahx . liuu ia uol a L,JUtc it of f ' f . j ,a prüf j Tt , j Lilwecn whal air beliCToil ! to Ik convieiion-; and thev are somrht , alll Ibaukd not in the rhetoric of the Con vera loa, but in the career of the party. lo seusiile RepuOican asks a vote for i,js ,,arl,- ,,n tht. .-oU11,i that it has betm j unjrv,ruilv ui.e that all its inswamws bare mmufmM of tflaatH its confaaaa ail aibtIS have in-pin-d iCJipect ; r (,.irU1( UT ,,. (1))e. HSix u U)OU I . , ,. ,. irr.....i ,i,!lf ,i1:1, ' " ' ' .-a ' -aaaa. parte contains the Lrn ;it mass of loyal citizens w ho horn -tlx believe in equal rights and would honorably maintain them, w ith the irreal multitude of intelligent and indu-trious people wheee good taajar eaourta iheitt'tbal those who tried to destroy the government ten l aaa i n ntrn are 11.it ! ho-i- xi Im .linr' ' m. ... , , , i 1 ' 1 1 il ii. .w V rid I Kua i n inn tirml.. un i a conviction w hich are not likely to disturbci! by th UndObl vociteration ol new policies and principles and departan s upon the part of their opponents. aa- .T- -s -t , t. iXIataatV O JTe-lXJiJ tn T-TTQ ka a . BY MISS I. YD! A WOODSON. Gf.ntlkmkn : In bringing this subject before you, I shall not attemot to analyze or make any rational display, bat ; aimplv ty mention a few facts to subsptna pa-sing thought. Vou smile, perhaps sneer, at the idea that man's ri-dits need ... . . . .... , vindicating, ion tiuiiK you stand ou so firm a basis thai you cannot be moved; ; )Ut liaten a moment and I will -how how this basis is slowly but surely giving xvay. You say have we not always had the tight of government, socially and politically. Perhaps in our own country you bave geneially, in name but not iu reality. All sensible women have things entirely their owa way ; by a careful con cealmen'. of this fact and xvith all due def eietiee and submission they need BO stronger cord, than the line fibre of a spider's web to lead you. Of this you an not .-er.sible. but "Where ignorance is bliss 'twere folly to 1' wi-e. Eve did not command Adam to eat the apple. Bo indeed he never would have rtonsentet1 to taste it xxith that kind of argument. Sh. told him it xvas really ven- nice, that she bad tasted it, and he bad o- iter try a very small piece, rand after all there must have lieen some mistake about its being wrong to eat it, thai she should not enjoy it at all unless her dear Adam participated; aud thus - lccceded iu having her own way. Haxc not all Exrcs daughters been equally sucivssful f Much has been done toxvards forcing from you, those natural rights, in w hich you have been endoxved with BBpertor strength, and there wfll be sad coofttatoa in society if you do not make an cftvrt to maintain thnn. Nearly all the institutions of learning are now open to woman This is as it should be. She is not your inferior in intellectual ability, but you must not iermit her to carry off the laurels. She is fast learning the professions, and a shingle hanging out with Dr. Susan or Matilda printed upon it, is not aniong the things which have not been seen. Soon Miss Ida, attorney at -law, will be sending out her cards, and the Rev. Anna Maria will be pastor of your church. In business" too, thev may be shoring you aside. M"d's 'Smith and Jones proprietors of that large wholesale establishment, Madam Brown and Sisters, of the largest retail dry goods store on Lake street, employ all lady clerits except in the errand departtnent, in which boys will lie employed, the work being too laborious and menial to suit girls. And this is not all', they are clammeringfor oiffmg A BM9ting for thi
Vol. XV No. 38.
when one speaker ttated: "If the ik vi Congress refuse woman all legitiniat : lights of citizenship, we shall proceed to call another convention exprcly to frame j a new constitution, and to elect a new ! government, complete in all its parts, and ; to mke measures to maintain il as eifert u- !
ally as rr.en do theirs, and shall be in he aats that many notion which, in past every way a lhaj and hb re scicntif c , ages, wen; counted esutial, arc mere developmei.t of the govermental ile:u W I higotriu. aiid stuxratilions. The. uuttcrimean treason mean secession, and on a ! ali-m of the old tlu ologv which modern
thousand times grander ireafc than trat I that of the South. Wean plotting revo lution. We Wftl overthrow this hogurepublic and plant a government ol ; righteousness in its stead. You call thia ranting. No mtiter the seeds of revolution an being sown, and rest assured, they aill not all fall in stony places. All Hew ideas na .e had Tb ! leader-. Did not ".John Brown's body lie mouldering in the tomb w hile his soul w ent man li ing on" until every American -ho e was ; mam ipated." You see a little truth in this do. von? A ray of light is breaking upon your vision, Then exert yourself to h'iij your position in all Its (tepartnfent. Provide for your own bouaeholdj in a gfjacral, pkeasant way, that will rive -ati
iai tion, and not in a penUlioOS, selfish "by a higher ideal than you judge me;" manner,' w hich gives womau more the and in thi-, we do not d' ubt he lalle the feeling of a raaafj than an equal. Her truth. Great a- his success has been, it rights meted out in thrs kind of measure i has evidently neither made him presumphave contriuuted largely to her ambitious, I tuous nor intolerant a-pirations: to Irospaw upon your j Whet hr Mr. Beiir her will Staudas high part of the work. Don't flatter your-.-hes j in the future m, he does in the present ithat you cau let woman have all bar 1 psVwBHM, 4Saart1rtsaB4ani It it given to few right- or wron-- If she is to uetemiiiicd, j , " i-'reHt Doth with ,hl-'ir cotempoand yon take her place wnicli you think I ,ies !"d with iosterity. The qualities so tanch eataer. Why : you " could bp beet 1 o ted to attract at one period may more ontcr into or appreciate the r-rnSaefl j create an impression to be transmitBwlmntia nt Brnaiarara'a sastfea. tkraai v.u 1 wtd V another. It is doub'ful w hether be
could stake a baltapa excursion h) tin ! moon, or take a journey to the aotth pole iu a lark cam e. Now mv brothers, 1 hone vou are suflicientiv arou-e d to a ' 'sense of your danger, to gird on your I armor and prepare for the conflict Who will be brave enough Ibr a leader. You must ri-i'iirtn. You must hold meetings, ami consider the cause of all this disturbance. You must appoint a conventinti aad aead delegates. You must com; :" mise xxitli your dangeiou- ;i-ters. Make a treat x xx i;h them. Do all that is your duty. Don't think vooraelves tecare in yoar CaUrtles, mod suffer your.seh es to be defranded of ynttf righ.s bj inactivity :id Indifference. TliC.boVO C! Caaay xvas read at the fact coatHteaocBseni exercises of the Valpariso Male Ihd Female College, and wh -n xve tak.- into eon-ideratiou the fact that the a l iter is a delicate girl of It years of f1?s-I? mny weregamei as a law eMort, and worthy of one of maturer years. Henry Ward Beecher. In a recent "Lecture-Room Talk," lb v Henry Ward Beerber informed his beareis that, if he lived until next Octolcr, he will have been the pastor of Plyn Church Ibra quarter of a century. In . . a a aa.'.a aa. respect 10 ins ministration, ne sua: n i wa- not rivet! me to follow any beaten ! I ath ; I have had to preach whal ha- been given hie not always the beat, not consistent with it-elf or the same from 1 eriod i" pi ;iods in all tilings.1 In Ihete ethrasea, Kr. Beecher ha- undoubtedly scribed bfmself with grea. accuracy. It v;ii not gixen him to follow any beaten path; in other words, hi- individuality Is too strong to admit of hia becoming an imitator of others, or the t-rx He follower of any school, either in mtuiner or matter. , He has had to preach what ha- been given him : that is to sav,hi8 preaching baa been the outgrowth of his own feeling- and the results ol his own reflections. "Not always the best :" for he has. at times, 1 Ota taken captive by temporary causeof popular excitement ; preaching under their inJlueiue. sentitnetits as foreign to bisbetti r -pirit as to the sjiiri' of the gOf jh-1 ; aiid inconsistent with that which he prcaclu .- under happier auspice. Scnu limes be has ra-hlv plunged into the tMhw of prevailing fanaiici.-m : and sctiietnncs, aooarentlx distrustful of the tendenev ol i - ,- i. ... , . . , these fanatici-nis. be has extricated hiruKlTfrom them. He lias lieen alternately ladical and const rvative ; the tendency to eoaservatism iucrca-ing with the sum.of hia experiences. Mr. Beecher is probably entitled to the rir-t position as a preacher, m America, perhaps in the world ; and yet the grounds of his entitlement to this eminence it might not lie easy to define. He is not a great theologian, in the sense that Calvin and Knox, and Butler and Edwards and Tax br wi n.' great theologians. He hat BO consist nt -y .-cm of philosophy ; and hence bis teaching has not lasen, from to time, iu BflSsOB with itself ITis mind Is synthetic mthcr than annlytie, and is leas logical than conriracflTc. He ts close ob-crver of the surface of human thing-, not a deep Investigator into the spiiugsofthebutr.in activities. One of the Sources of his eminence ha - been thai he has cheerfully accepted the facts of his mental constitution, and has not attempted to nirke himself other than that for which -Ii wu- constructed. Another source of hi-eminence is the activity of hi- sympathies, through which he is placed m mpport w ith those whom headdresses. Inimical as this magnetic oimlitv U to consistence, it is undoubted ly an clement of power. It establishes a chain of mutual influences.through w hich, if the preacher sometimes leads his audience, the audience as often minli'ties the deliverances of the preacher. It confers a spontaneity agreeable to both parties ; but the origin of which both are alike liable to mistake. A great deal of the inspiration supposed to be divine is human: or, at least, passes throagh UiMipetlod human channels with an effect not favorable to its infallibility. It is this activity of the sympathies which, Wattle it has been an element of hts Influence, has also been the cause of his errors. He has at times, preached for truth the passions of the Pry mouth congregation ; not knowingly, we believe, but nevertheless injuririously snd to the disadvantage of his own ultimate reputation. Another source of Mr. Beecher' s eminence is a style simple without feebleness, ami eloquent without oration. In this l.-tipoct. he stands, in our opinion, un
rivaled. That clerical argot which U fditional in the profession, thbac Ufa tf bcripture and generalitieri with indefinite meanings made use of to cover the waat of ideas, he avoid altogether He haa ideas, and he delivers them in terms that are perfectly conlpreherilile The com-
won notion of common sense, he fills cx- ! actly. Like Kinney, whom, in this reai jer-et. he nrseml!es. he tells plain truths in a nlaiu manner. The efidence of hh tk crrity he a fiords in the nirectn ss of bi-addrv.-s and the disttuciUeas of his propo-.-itioiis He ircncbe like a matf to men . Uke a rational being to rational beings, and makes his teachings attractive bf makinz ibem comprehen-iblc. Another Miiiroe of his eminence is thtt he n-c. gni7.es that the world is changta able. and. in geueral w isely, conforms thought has discredited, he rejects. While Le does not hasten to accept all the hypotheses of modern science, he manifc-te no um :iine-s at iu discoveries, snd bss no fears that religion is to be fxtingui&h ed or the divine rule subverted by chemistry or geology. Without elaborating tha doctrine of total deptavrty. he accepts men as ''upeifect ; not deeming that, by their imperfection, they are any the less entitled to his ayaapatlatei and good offices In -bort, hei- aboge-minded, liberalmsn. w hom theology bus not been able to dwarf. ur a Nexv England religious education to indurate. Mr. Beet her professes never to bare ome up, i:i his performance, to his own couccptiono. " I judge myelf," he says. i : .avt.a .... -- . . ... ui.. ita is iu.iwi;ü s..x rejiui ion-) 10 iuc uu.aui j inetatttra of the world. Like the public journalist of the period, he is a man of to-day ; living iu tiie present atmosphere ; a very admirable ephemeia ; bul still an' t phetoara. Ckietft It 1 1 HMaa Whitlingd Houston county, (ia., has a regular Kuklux heu. She kills all black chickens aa I oh as hatched. Thoae famous eBÜkTOc rtatues the Ycaaa rf MHo ami the Polyhymnia were ilcstmyed in the partial conflagration of Äc Louvre. A kadj wHler lajfi n aowa as a funds-m-utal principle of morals, that unmar.i'.'d men ihrrTlhi always live up to their engagem-'nts. Why is a woman tying her corset like ! a man ijjrukinc to droxx n care Because, in a? fafiaf herself, she becomes tight. Out of thirty thousand v. teTf.es in the Mercantile Library in M. Louis, ovcreeveuteeu thousand are never called for by w bddt A gentleman in Massachusetts, from the Ufa to ;''c Kti of May, realized sixteen hundred dollars net from the sale of strawberriej grown on six acres of land. The Earl of Shaftsbury ist'! to say that UI une i i. 4 .. 1 ...I . I- : -a . . ,, , . , , .v.to x uat religion l-mat : asaeuaiauy. "Th..t tea of sense never tell." replied the eati. Twenty -five hundred women, convicted of setting fire, or attempting lo set fire, to building., in Paria, haxt Urn sentenced to tian-portation to Nexv C'aiedunia. "It is a striking; fact." -ays a physiological writer, "that nMMl per-on- want to wei.li more than ihev do. and measure ! tlltlI. h,.lhh h, ir mtm as if 8 m,u xverc pig. valuable in pOBaaOthsa to his heavincj-." A carpenter, being aakid for a riddic, propounded the following: "I picked it up; 1 couldn't find it I put it down and wcut along w ith it." No one could guess it. It was a spl'.uter in his foot. The State of Michigan contain five thousand one hundred and eleven inland lakes, covering an area of eleven bundled and fourteen miles, beside a water front on the great laki - of more than eighteen hundred miles The table on which the Versailles peace preliminaries were signed has been, presented to Prince Bi-m.ir . as a mrutenir. It has been placed in the reception room of the princess a small silver plate telling its historic significance. Rabbi Lilienthal, of Cincinnati, says he can proudly and conscientiously assert that Judaism can adapt itself to all the progressive ideas of our age, and that that ancient religion i- filTy able to come up t a all just demands of the modern liberal state. Fyrsign weitere think that there was very little to choose betxvecn the conduct of the conquered Communists immediately before their overtjiroxv in Paris and of theconquerors immediately aller it. Massacre was the leading idea of both. Many yonng children and half grown girls are afflicted with curvature of the spine, w hich is produced, the doctors affirm, by requiring hem to practice several hours a day on the piano, without any support for the backs or feet. Benefits or L.rc.iiTER. Probably there is pot the reim te-t corner or little J Inlet of the minute blood vessels of the ! body that does not feel some wavelet frvin the great convulsion produced by hearty JHEghssr -baking the c ntral man. The b.ood moves more lively probably its chemical, electric, or vital condition is -tiuctly modified it conveys a different ii-ipression to all the organ:- of the body, ::t it visits them ou that particular mystic journey, w hen the man is laughing, from what it does at other limes. And thus it is that a good laugh lengthens a man's life by conveying a distinct and additional stimulus to the vital forces. The time may come when physicians, attending more closely than they do now to the innumerable subtle infhi! aces which the soul exerts upon its tenement of clay, shall prescribe to a torpid patient, "so many eals of laughter, to be undergone at such and such a lime," just as they do that Ihr more objectionable prescription a pill or an electric or galvanic shock.
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