Rensselaer Gazette, Volume 3, Number 14, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 July 1859 — Filial Love. [ARTICLE]
Filial Love.
A'plain old gentleman went wi'h his team, j to bring h me his sons, two young sprigs, ' who were soon expecting to grad-at ?. ! While returning they stopped at a hotel in i one of our country towns for dinner. The landlord, struck with the dashing appearance of the two gentlemen, made himself very officious, while he took the old gentleman, i from his homespun appearance, to be nothi ing but a driver, and asked them if they j wished the driver to sit at the table with them. “Well, Dick,” said the your.gor, aside to his brother, “as he is our father, and it i- hia team, and he will bear the expense, I think ; we had better let him eat with us.” “Yes, I think so, too, under the circumstances,” he '■eplied. “Landlord, give him a place at the table.” oO”The L indon Times, in noticing the departure of Kossuth from England under French passports, and the proclamation of General Klapka to the Hungarians, s ys: "The meaning of these proceedings is not doubtful. The Austrian army is to be attacked b yond the litn ts of Italy. The war is to be carried into the other hereditary dominions of Francis Joseph; not, indeed, by a French army—at least for the present—but i by a revolutionary propaganda, supported by the whole strength of the French, and perhaps the Rus.sian, Court. “The effect on the English people of this ’ new move will, of ccurse, be small. This country has determined on a strict neutrality. and a government would no more be alii > ■ ed to go to war to keep the Austrians in i Hungary than to keep them in Italy.”
