Paoli Weekly News, Volume 6, Number 26, Paoli, Orange County, 13 March 1878 — Page 1
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PAOLI,' .ORANGE CO., I WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1878. NUMBER 26.
I ills'" i' I' ' " 5 rl k -- - t c r : I - - : y it f r i-'i t T r 1 "i ' i5 ftn 1 (ire ' H : ' ' ' r ' niwr ' 'nun ioff Lej-!-1, 1. ! r r. s ; r - ) , - !f 1' 1 ! 1 V . '! 5 t fl . ,n f ' ' ' r- 1 t" 1, Ai S t; e -' r ' ' f ("-;, On t . ft 1 ' . A(' ire. r; ' ! 5 -! A t t . t ! '. r : '" 11 - v l r'" r ; - . , r r . f ivf t 'iv-i)' I i i" i1 t. T" -.'i fr- o'er f- : Le iove I la ch-lbocd- witi-nR hror, On tita wood's! luiis he had often roved To fitUicr th Tiw-t-iown fi--ver, IntwiUM y with its treat; glow k . J .t'l-'yf.rU', 1 .ok ( 1 1 1 1' c oi i ' l.i ic. - . t, r j j it !. . ! 1 t ihe ra:u' T-i a d ' T'i' ' 11 low; rM br.t or.. of many lnnocut !-.& To r!'i.i I h 1 m b'ro'm t,w.
; n v : a A l tv: 'fi nt JL priceless worih r rt 1 f m i rth 1 5 .-if!. , I. us JTitcbei-L. f tub hoots or run coses. Tke leaven aro fading and falling, The wiad axe rorgh and wild, Tis birds have cwwed their -ailing, JUt lt ice ttfl you, my chart, 1 Th "k'-j day by day, as it '. :-, Doth darker and colder grow, The roots cf the bright red rocn "VS" ii 1 keep a'.ive la the moif, j An I when th", niat?r Is ofr The boi-bs will get new loaves, The qviaU c;se back to the clover, The ewsLlIow hdet Ut rtse eaves ; The robin ( on bis bosom The vost that is bright .ad mew, Ani tl,;e liveiiest wayeide b!eaoia Will fl in1? with etin ttiil denr. So, whtn ctue dr joy losen lis "rc Vl.t-JOUl ItlaiTUtT p'.cw, Thick b-jw thi root of the rosea Are if 1 1 alive ia tl.e mow I A .'. Car A CELEISItslTIZIi CASE.., BY T. C. HAKBATJGiH., YLen ilie li"5tof mca hung by cixeunifctactinl evitleiice ia complete, the name of Cilyin Tyler, tho miller cf Tewkesbnij, -will be fouutj thereon. One hiindied and Wo years Lave passed since occurred the particulars we are about to relate, eh J the mill which achieyed uuch notoriety long ego has beea swept from existence by the breath cf the fiery demon. On the night of Oct. 20, 1773, as eev-r--l r-"3 "rr- 1 c-i i--:m cr.fh, C.tluu "Ijltr ? it 1 I i i . i.'y tin 1 3 and said that the faithful watch-dog of ilie mill had diedia a fit, and was buried in tbo cf'Uar, whose walls were washed (in one side by the water of the race. The roiiler furthermore eaid that the tlog exhibited syraptoms of having been poifoncil, and when his daaghter cshed Lim if he suspected any on& he eaid "No,"nixl almost immediately wect to bed. This very eixcple oeeTirrenee--the J nth of a dog was to be commented upon end very generally believed by the highest ia that portion of tha realm. One month afterward Mrs. Marble gave notice to the proper authorities that her husband, a pn.rainent merchant, had ieerx missing for pix-and-t wenty days, an 1 that she feared that foul play had befallen him. The lady eaid th&t on tha 2Gih of October her hmband hnd left home &t 8 o'clock in the ereniag, mjing that he was going to Tyler'a mill, the owner of which, Ctdvia Tjler, w to pay him 000 of borrowed money, and the internet thcrc-on. "With the intention of coll'vtl tho di hi, i s ihe eupi'c.'d, Mrs. ?I'.r' '; c -!,tr!" ' ' 1 r - it t' he-. :e ; but hi id :- fc: t! e ft".igt.ivt.is.l day ci- ' d 1 tr i i an Le h 1 1 l ia t- ? i d It f I ui'.-j na-ar.r.o-1 1 ; r r'i to Jradca, Tt1 rrc he ,-. a. ii.a. r.. iv. vin - d a wet-L. It Tsaa P"T1" 'It' i " 'r. r Vir1 ' i 1,-1 a Irf tli re 'ftLLh w.h d.':i---d to c-trarje him from Li a family. Aft r V ! " - ' cf i' .t.is'iid sb- !'"', rr i ? . , ."I-". 1' r:v st" d t' i i- r r - r: i-. h r 1:' 1, till i ; 1 th i le ( :) h 1 I t m v ' -' . t ) " ' r . : c. ""-t, !;'', i ! ' 1 1 fttl mdl , f f ( ' , ,14' Uh t.'.l 11 ' t '' "I Cf it j 5 1 . t r- ; I i i
r '. i t " . r i m ;i f. 'Hr 1 P- I h? x.ho t t" " m r 1 ant 1 h;3 d..l.tr. irTirfd d. jj ji'ir tj rtthe r '11, arlvrdirly
r t, 1 1 r; . d for raurdvt. ..'nt c? L: srrct ach::a ' : 3 1 c -n t)rr p . I .he x.i t thr :-',y do.: (r.-ith. : ..o l It -j f " : h ' " it-.:f i : .at i der : ll.s-sf'idi TIr. :::rll.3 th- r ci Xh p:. Ij ;l-d viith Lira ia 11 3 I l cf hu'r. lie p. '1 thrs x-dll ;h,r I. ; "d-n, cnl tl e c nt dd 's fpTd.fi. vrr It ia the irex-c-'-" ' , 11 h ci1 T I fr-:a ulhr to ,lh 'Jdiey tvta j i h--d tle dirlDt.. 3 of the Vum l-Luu-e. but f.-rud nothing to reward their pains. . But, while the rigid search was going a 'outside, evidence was entangling tha tinfortunato miller in a network ' of til Si mate conviction. Not satiaded with the search alluded to above, the authorities ordered another. It was generally believed that the old mill contained the eeeret of the merchant's death, for no one believed now that he was etili alive. Calvin Tyler was released from jail, and ordered to direct the iiunters, among whom, this time, was Gordon, the poacher. The mill was searched systematically. The party began in the attic, and at last reached the cellar, where a terrible discovery awaited them. Barrels were opened and their contents emptied upon the ground ; long sticks were thrust into the grounljind the stone walls carefully undermined. A man was found who happened to be slyly fishing ia the mill-raca before the mill on the night of the 20th. lie saw. a man whom he recognized as David Marble, merchant, approach the mill; that the miller met him at the door, and and that the two men went into the structure together. After a while the fisher saw a light ia the mill, and heard a voice like the miller's say, " We'll settle all our scores here." Then followed two deadening blows, and all was still. Up to 11 o'clock Mr. Marble did not leave by the door which he had entered, but at that hour Calvin Tyler came out alone, locked the door, and walked homeward. This, ia brief,- wU the oiiJenccfcf the fisherman,' a "half-witted . fellow, .who eaid that his fear of being punished for stealing fish from the race had kept back the testimony. Other persons deposed to having seen the missing man going toward the mill; but the declaration of the miller that he had departed by the back doer was not confirzx ed. No person had seen Marble after he had entered the railh "What is this ? " exclaimed a fellow, moving a large box from a corner. His companions were attracted by a cry and saw what appeared to be loosened earth. " That is where I buried my mill-dog," the miller 6:iid. "I told my family at the time, end many tears were shed over him, f4-r he r.is a faithful animal." ; Let us see his r-m-dti. It will do ur cf him 1" The speaker was Gordon, the poacher, ani there was a hxk cf triumph in his small, dark eyes, but no one noticed it. "Dig him up, poor Browser!" said the miller, f.r.l accordingly the mm went to work. Presently one gave a loud exclamation r. aai i r...: r I " Good Gol ! toys ! Doyou call tint a cog t The Li cavdhn, which Li2 Calvin i clustered abc l2 CTKLV.d a 1 m.va hand, unlove - -1 i for a rr th ri i d then started 1 h r cf the t. fret r tlera-t to Cy. bvk wi Lh TT -? 1 a w: ..Ira crl d ' rt" t tl i:v did net in t: TWIT" he
ia .a unfertcnate situation. Before the search there were xsjiny who believed in his innocence ; bet now no cne held to that cphiion, and, foredoomed, the nnhappy xaan went to his trial. Ii was ia vain that his family testified to the miller's telling them cf the death end .bxaial cf the dog three days previous to Marble's going to the mill ; vain, too, the man's asseverations of hiainnoccnea. The finding of tho missing man's corpse in the cellar in the very corner where he had ,6 worn to the .interment of the dog weighed most heavily against him; and he was found guilty and sentenced to bo hung in chains. , ' !"; ' '.. " But a petition, praying the high court to ppare Li3 family the deep disgrace that wool! forever attach itself to them if the awful sentence was carried out, secured the punishment of decapitation, and the unlucky man was accordingly executed. He protested his innocence to the very last, and met his doom with much composure. Throughout tho region round absut Tewkesbury it was universally believed that the guilry had been punished and the honor of the law fully vindicated. It was noticed on the trial that Sir Percy Basket, a celebrated surgeon, gave it as hi3 belief that David Marble, had been dispatched by . one blow, .whereas the thieving fisherman had sworn to having heard two deadened blows in the mill on the eventful night. But the surgeon's evidense did not tend to help tha accused. The miller had said that he broke in the heading of a cask with two blows, in Marble's presence; but this explanation of the noise was not credited.' Shortly after the miller's execution his family left Tewkesbury, and all traces of them became lost. The mill was shunned ; by the superstitious, and another had to be erected to keep the patronage at home. " Although we have followed the miller of Tewkesbury to his death, the story of the crime does not end here. Three years after the execution, the Earl of Sudbury's gamekeeper fired at a poacher, and heard a sharp cry of pain. In the darkness, search for the thief proved unavailing, and the matter was dismissed from th-gamekeeper. -"J 3 d. Two days after,, a dead man was ' .d under a shelving bank not far frc .. .e scene of the shot. It was evident -at he had been dead for twelve hours, .dobody recognized him, but the piece of paper which had dropped from his hand told a terrible story ; it revealed a secret which must have haunted its guilty possessor like the ghoet of the murdered dead. The document contained bloodstains, and was written in a poor, ragged hand, as follows : I am Koswcll Gordon, of Tewkesbury, dying from a shot received by Sudbury's gamekeeper, and declare before God, and with the j adgmeiit before me, that -what I am going to say is true. Three years ago C&lvin Tyler was executed f or the murder of David Mart le, merchant. He was innocent. I, Iioswell Gordon, did the ded. It n-i ia tLis wire : I had aley to iLc in'.lltr'stack door, a-utl useI to get my ft onr by theft. I nw Mr, L'irL riUvl the vzill. v in the iiiill on the 2C;h. 'I!e irhder rVd Lira -:."0. The merchant went cut tho l ack way ; I fallowed anj s'.mck Lira once v.ilh & UtiOiou. Ha fell down qci'.e dea3. After the ml'.'t-r left the rrr'i I ca.rri-J tho boiyiato the cellar, aivl buried it where I had seen the miller put hi dead d.-;r three i.:;hts It fore. The d- I tk aay e.nd huru d it near my LokoO. I poisoned the anitnal, for ha loth ore J me at the mdl. I tr.ct 2Sr. ;ir! 1 'si r:.;i,ry an t girablcJ it away ia Lon-n. TLn ii true, for I will toon bt.r.i ttf.-re my G'xl, and I Cin't die with two n;:rdt r3 en i.:y piOu-h Col l.av mtrcy en my guilty mzJ. Hosweli, Goedon. TLu3T.-i the tr:..h f.adlytDld; but the inncrnt In 1 t il'nod for the guilty. Ju-d'nM h-:J fi: V.j oveitahra the poacher. Ia the idght, under the Lvi-k, ho dh 1 t.l"i the enne cf 3 T3 01 1 Ij kouI, unthriven by prie:-.t, r-.r. 1, ii we
Idi:-, 1 - T ' IJ3C It vras orJcred th'-t coh-3 w ived over t' m:-ler s t. r our. T.-'i c;h l I rir f r ( 1 - . ; - , .1 1 .. .. c ri'.lll'
-i . nsxroro.
I i" v , V ' hullj circle cf frit liu net , v - "a i e fulj.. t v dlucu.-ic-n 1 j; ' '.nh- ire pM ttf th.i w.uld 7--- ' r " genius, ext t flh.-k-s. . uix", v ...j, 1 11 admitted to f tax. I ah no fc.l L s ah "-oc .rpiI-on with t.nj other r . " r t r 1 . u C.fi world has ever inown, qalta t t my surprise, about half t' ' 'J d 1 red ia favor of Byron. I wr 11 r lei ivcr to detract from Ci 'i 3 . Z t he was a man of CL.-.T"'"'"r ry 1' ies and true poetic ge-hui I tui st admd ; but that he wsj or is for, like alt' really great poets who have ever . lived, Byron 'exists at the present tima so far. above many of our other poeta as co be entitled to the preeminent place, I deny. ; I think a close study cf his best poems, and a careful comparison of them with the best work of a Beora of other poets, will lead the candid ' student to the conclusion, that Byrca's fame is more a tribute to what he 'might h&vc' been than 'to what' he really was. " A "great many accept Byron as the representative poet cf the worldalways excepting Shakspeare,-' who r has a world of his own above tha world . o! other poets because they happen to have a taste for such poems as his, and read but little from other writers. They skim over Longfellow and Bowell, and glance into the pages 'of. Browning ' and Bossetti; they real a little here and there in Tennyson and Morris, and, as is usually the case in a trivial, superficial reading, they fail to get interested in the author or his book, and set both aside as of but little account, and go back to ; Byron. ' They, can understand him; he never sets them to studying to find out .what he means."" '.''.,. Byron was a close observer ot the outward life, and those phases of it ..which are the reflex action of motives which were hidden from him. . lie studied men superficially, because he had not the power to look into their lives and understand the workings of the human heart. The finei. subtler emotions of the .soul were beyond -his comprehension, because they were wholly wanting in - his own.-case. . To understand the- emotions of others, we must feel them 'ia 'ourselves. Byron ' preferred to deal with the outward aspects of life, and leave the study of the inner man to those who had a keener insight than he had. Tennyson in his poems and especially ia "In Memoriam," which I honestly declare to be the truest poem I ever read, takes us behind the veil. We go down into the sacred chambers cf the soul with him and see the workings of the human heart, ; lie analyzes the emotions of sorrow and joy, of despondency and hope, of doubt and faith, and deals with the issues of life as only he can deal with them who has made them a life-long study, and who feela them in himself. - It is net so mueh the manners cf men that Tcnnypon looks at as it is the motives of mtn. He tries to understand th3 whys pud v.herefores of human experiences, and to know how this cr that result came about. These are the problems at which Le works, lief indies impnh-.es and purposes. Tho emotions cf the s:ul and Lriliicg pcrplciitfts all of U3 meet in striving for certain ends have the same fascination for him that the fr oil remains cf anichthyosauras had f.ir cr on i z" da, b'-rne in r fraying them, and trying to comprehend them, he feci 3 Lis own world expand and broaden Lto world. which belong to pe.-i r He gr, - :s, fnl rges i with the to Cu2. philcscphy cf arrow e r. 1 c f lr i. lie lie touches the 3 L : ,:t f Bj ron never d ll:r i a 3 is. " z. . "Ij he h cr, uor in 1.1 i thor. hti th.a " 1 1 .vo b : c -j , t z. - i 1 Byron ever co L jica h . J i.; I 'if.L. ey In; U3 tL t: ) L p 1 n :
inf acrco ega"r.rt taortlity. On th contrary, Le enaohles it and recognizes it es tho true standard by which to Judge the perfect manhood. .... , I do net b iy th at Tennyson is the representative roct "cf tho world." I only taythat Le is in2 :lely superior to Byron, and 'I think ' th juugmeat of careful readers and all thoughtful men will bear me out in the assertion. .. . .- . .. ....- SHiocxoy, Wl. , . TIlE'-MOllllOJiS- OF-'fTA-E.' . What the JPall If all "Gazette ironically calls "incidents cf the holy war. of the nineteenth century", are vividly described by a correspondent cf the-Boa-don Daily Kcws, who accompanied the Russian army from Phillippopoiis to Ilermanli. Le saw the foodies of Erdgaorian peasants with terrible' wounds ia the head -and neck, sometimes mutilated and disfigured ; women and infants, children and old men, both Turkish and Bulgarian, fallen in the fields by the roadside, half-buried in the snow, or lying in the pools of water. It seemed to have been one long battle between the peasants of both races, in which the dead were counted equally for each ; but, while many Gf the bodies bore marks of violence and showed ghastly wound s, the great proportion of the women and children were evidently frozen to death, for they lay on the snow as if asleep, with the flush, of life still on their faces, and the pink skin of their feet and hands still tinblanched. ' ' Side by side with these, many corpses of old men, full of dignity even in death, lay stark by the wayside, their white beards clotted with blood, and their helpless hands fallen upon their breasts. From the muddy water of the ditches tiny hands and feet stretched out, and baby-faces, half-covered with snow,' looked out innocently and peacefully, with scarcely a sign -of suffering . on their features. Frozen at their mothers breasts, they were thrown down into the snow to lighten the burden of the poor creatures who were struggling along in mortal terror.
A. TUXJE HERO. John Barron, the Dexter (Me.) Bank cashier, deserves ' a monument, for in these days of rdeond.ing . and. ..crxd-cz-. zling and rehypothecating it is no small thing for a bank eiaeial to lay down his life rather than betray a trust. The brave man was discovered one morning not long ago, lying in the vault of the savings bank, handcuffed and. gagged, with a rope around his neck. He had been attacked by three robbers on. .the previous afternoon while replenishing the fire. Tha assailants evidently expected to find the safe unlocked, but the doors were closed and the funds of the bank were protected by & combination and a time-lock. They put a rope around the cashier's neck, struck him on the head and threatened to Mil him if he would not tell them the combination and enable them to open the safe.. He would not betray the pr-cret. He preferred to die rather than help them plunder the bank. So they locked hira up m the vault to die of suiTacaticn and his wouneif", and ran away with the charge in the till and tho mency in hi3 pocket-book. Course, Lersisrn and fidelity such as he displayed outlet net to be forget ten vdth tl a mcm;rg newspaper. Doubtless his last thoughts in the agony and darkness of the vault were cf the vi;a and children who were waithg fcr h's return. If they need help the bankers of 27 err England and New York ought to rrdre an ample fund for their bene 11; and the grave should not remain unmarked. A. TTEASEL'S ATAC:Z O-V A CE1Z,D. For gome weeks Mr. Tierce, in ho lives in i n eld brick Lou: 3 re :r the erred in Gtorgelcwn, has he .r.l a pecuhcr recke. f t nieht, and dieovc-edthe gradual lc: j cf eh:." "i.i. lie c .e to the- c : eechr th.d it"-era-i L made by rati. Friley ul;ht ho and his wife wrre aw: hened by a tharp cry cf dl . ; : j frera th c:lb z 1yAzlT z ILri? d in v Li A th ir rcll ird-rt T.3th.;:;j, 2Zs. Tl r:"?i ar'l'.l.l ti j : '. 1 dhe.iT.:. .1 a wt.-.l at Lii c hd I'd thr. h C ' .hh r th t rre 1 r, Idi h'.j 1 ..J, he threw it to th j L e - r. hil 1: z it - :e. A fe-r r r .
: , Jfurrfl cf tho Human Emiy. While tha gastric jaica has a mild, bland, swoetl&h taste, it possesses' the power dt ' dissolving, the hardest food that can be swallowed. It has no iafinesco T'hatever ca 'the soft and delicats fibers. of tha living stomach, .nor upon the diving, hand, but at the moment of .death it. begins to eat them away with the power of the" fdrccgest acids.' " '''"'--! There ia dust on sea, oa land, ia the valley find oa the mountain-top; there- is dust always " aad' everywhere; tho atmosphere is fall of it; it penetrates the noisome, dungeon-and visits the deepest, darkest caves of the, earth;, no palace-door can shut it out, no drawer so secret m to escape its presence;, every breath of wind dashes it upon the open eye, yet that eye is not blinded, becauseunder the eyelid there is incessantly emptying itself a fountain cf the blandest fluid in nature, which ep reads itself over the surface of -the eye fit: -.every winking and washes every atom' of dust away. Dat this liquid, so mild and so well adapted to the eya itsejf, has some acridity, which, under certain circumstances, becomes . so decided 3 to be scalding to the skin and would rot away the eyelids were it not that along the edges of them are little oil manufactories, " which" spread over their surface a coating as impervious to the liquids necessary for keeping the eyeball washed clean as the best varnish is impervious to water..- ? , . .. ,-: . : The breath which leaves the lungs has been so perfectly divested cf its lifegiving properties that to re-breathe it, unmixed with other air, the moment it escapes from the mouth, wculd cause immediate-' death by Buffocation," while if it hovered about us a more or less destructive influence over health aud life would be occasioned. But it is made of a nature so much lighter than the common air that the instant that it escapes the hps and nostrils it ascends to the higher regions above the breathingpcint, there to be rectified, renovated and sect back again,' replete with purity and life. Blow rapidly it ascends is beautifully exhibited every frosty mornt - -- . . . -.. - - - - - . : . , Bat, foal and cleedlj as the- expired air is, nature, wisely economical in all her works and ways, turns it to good account in its outward passage through the organs of the voice, raaMng of it the whispers cf love, the soft words of affection, the tender tones of human sympathy, the sweetest strains of ravishing music, the persuasive eloquence cf the finished orator. If a well-made man be . extended on' the ground, his arms at right angles with the body, a circle, making ' the navel its center, will just take in the head, the flnger-enls end the feet. The distance from top to toe is precisely the same as that between the tips of the lingers when tho arms era extended. Tha length cf the body is jurt six times th-t cf the fret, while the dh Jauca frora the edge cf the heir ca the fere head to the end of the chin ij oae-tcath the length of the vhcle id dare. Cf the tixty-tvo rrimiry element:; known in r.".' :r?, only t:hh".a ar? found ia the Lumen bo !y, cal cf the-'s seven are m-:! -ilia. Ir:n is fcanl in the Llcod, phcrr hrru? ia t' e br'hn, lhafiher.e ia the Lih h..:--i ia tha L.r.: -, f.ad da?t end ches in all! ITct only the :: a eighteen hunrta eh. racnl', bat the v hcla eixtv-txa cf vthleh tha univcrte ia m i-Ie, have th'.ir t :. entlal L-s in tha freer
suLfdancts cf oxygen, hydr- gen, nitro gen ana cars - i" r. r . 1 1 ceerc vi, M e r:h!t3 1ed ' r, p cm cf ch:, 1 t A Lvcui' i. iC-ii ;.: '7 C .1 v j r.r 1 - it "j r i t - .... . 11..! '& I' e, .3
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r . a ' " 1 c --; r ', i j t- . ',1 , r ll ' U ' . . : h An4 tl.ry ho hue lj,'.a- I 1 rt fri-n the q' . r.; f-".t 1 ; An I iLif -who Laie rtnti ,1 a: If. 1 f -'.i t e tl-' rs -, Sha'l ti troit tj th" 1 cut of tH r--t.! Oed-r.vf a p-iace ; A Itf y iauj-ih UirOE-h tl ,,.:.- c ! The e-i.l r anii lis a UiitT f.f fA cow iieLnE Tue mn-mrih "Tua "earliest tubular bridge Th bridge of the nose. ' Bsactt without honesty is like poison kept ia a box of gold. ' :. -: What da the "best name fcr, a-walker ? Why, Cumming, sir, of coutf' . rxAip garments have been very fashionable "this winter. At a recent ball every gentleman's coat was chocked. A "cobsestosbesi says : " IIow ' Kellogg became as tar in the iati:deal world aShe pitched her voioaad thca stuck to ih ; .."Ma," said a smedl boy, approaching his. mother, and exhibiting unmistakable symptoms ' of a severe pain ' ia the bowels, "do green apples grow in heaven :"- ' ' Ensons in a poiitl.d ox.u: n t.i Titusville, Pa.: "Th- Chair... r.-Tha Chair will not diepnb- tho : - : villi Mr. Carter." "Mr. Cat'r Tl Cl ir had better not unless he L.itJ L'eeit on"." Tho Chair did n-1. 'A vo un a lady Lad coquetted , 1 t! victim was completely exhu 1 . h 11 v rose to go away, th.ewhi pvtcd t i i' -j accompanied him to h.e deer, " I s h .11 ba at hozao ; I Jxt f'rr. I c " "vg." " So shall I," he rriU'J. ' I"i rather not, A'PrBst'M tajJ, . - - r Tho trafSes jmci rejecting; , . " How saw, my 3- ar," K.i 1 "t.-, " ' -t fr! Conceit rn ft t a . . i 4 7 I do net with t' rti:'!a yon, ' Kor yet 10 make a pus, iut; 'Bst tbetr I surdj f..-.; . I t-.u 3 u t . , - Were fond cf any iaa.tin.r, "Yes, genth-m-n, ce;. ,. 1 coursed said a jidih cl .thh ; " if ycu want a pair cf ' pants, ttep right my j-.'.ntry; i a ve: well, j" 't tr.'.J ray veetry; and if a co 1 ". - , -T 1, show these gentlemen into the coterie. This war, this way, gentlemen." A Westeen ttutrp n.'.cr, ia the eoureo cf one of Lis ipe.ch .. , re 'a ih " .1: "Gentlemen, if the Ih.;: yfix c n wc-r an inkstand, 'and tho hall clou !?d c.mopy of heaven and tha levrl gr- and of our y earth . wor a hett cf p ; r, I couldn't begin to write ray love cf country onto it." -.. A cEieFcaATF.D B.i gh di j by " ' 1 . coriirg ir.tothe L. lr "i rf t. ; . M- a f-.-y meant s aft. r he 1.:. 1 ti h- 1, x ''--l fir, ,h; ; f.'hl ;h g t'.r . ,:i tha clenched fing-rs cf cneherT;'! - rddy cr-a I th-.l:, t-ck cut t" T---. I ;i : i - 1 . . . ' i - - s - 4. iv 1.. I t... 1 ft x ... A r... c:::xrzo rcerihd is a clZerJj frequent refer n " 1 .-!.": re .oa-tr:.fa 4 -i.i it I c re :y," 1 f:nd c: t er:,t pe:l-g 1 : r ti-i... u Vuu iu utj f. t ; i. i.. i -3 ..... 1 -:r yj a v hen 3 c 'Tr . da 1 l e 3 I'm r. , eri --d rg-ia." mer , v, oven v : .1 : c i 1 ' r b- lr g i:i r. h a r. i - - - -. - i 'if ' Vj.j, f - I T 1 ..... 1 f '"'l 1 " "'( " ' "" ; - - b--1 J , ft- .... I it..J.'1.? i . " "
