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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1848-07-21, Page 1.R • TEN tlSILLINt1S IM aayaNCI. VOLUME I. (' TUE GREATEST POSSIBLE GOOD TO Tule GI$EATEST POSSIBLE NUMBER. (irODERICH, HURON DIS'T'RICT, (C. W.) FRIDAY, JULY 21, 184S. ) TWELVE AND St\ PEN1E sr TMS ;OD us TUk t Esti. N U 'BER SCHEDULE OF CONVICTIONS By Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace, within the District of Huron, from the April to tbe July Session, 1848. riga wig" PAI. N DATA or Narlu or CONvi CTINo Jrsricna. nye, Tor Pavatrr To am rale To 4 u■nt aro.. Fara u- D Naas or TWO Pnesmelil- TOa. Nasse Or DrsraNDASIT. Noble JohaetOos, (Phomas Soden, John McKinnon, John Longworth, Esq., Hugh Archer, Thomas Henderson, Jane Wallis, on the part William Aldsworth, of James Wallis, Eliza McDonald, Thomas Robinson, Samuel Grimes, William Van Egwond, Robert Govenlock, James Kelly, John A McCarthy, Corollas Hilmas, (William Jackson, James and Rachael Sttosun, Henry Rannta, James Ryan, Wi ham tlaunnell, 'John Welati, Juo'r., J. C. W. Daly, Esq., Andrew Miller, W. F. McCulloch, Esq. Mary Decay, Charles R. Dickson, Alexander Mitebell, Juba Fox, Robert Cruise, Jacob Eeriest, ')and Swanson, Eleanor Browne, '1'he same, Georg. Rana, Rohn Cruise, William McCully, Mary Smith, Thoma Moore, Mary Cbittock, !Mary Decay, ;Patrick Degoon, !Michael Kelly, ',John Haw, !David Burns, 'John Henderson, !Francis R. Bell, ''Phe same, :Frederick Parker, ;Wiliam McCully, Robert McColly, Robert Cruise, Alexander Jackson, William Clivcr, John Slack, Narvan or Tan Csaatg. TLreats, T'treats, Non -Performance of Statute Labour Threats, Non-payment of wages, Injury to Property, injury to Property, Mtedemeaour, Do, Assault and threatening language, lesa u l t, Viulent Assault. Defraud, Defraud, TLearing his service before the expi- ration of his engagement, Assault and Battery, Threats, - Malicious injury to property, structiun et the Highway, Assault, Robbery, 'Threats and Aigrette, Assault and Battcry, Aspault and Battery, Threats, Malicious injury to property, Assault, Certified to be a true Copy of the Records filed in this Office, Orrice: or T.n Craaa or Tia P.aCa, Goderiek, 12th July, ISatf. a From the Christian Examiner. PRESENT CONDITION OF IRELAND.* The res ournals named below are . in oppoeitare M this British Government t• Ireland. but with different degrees of an- tagorru. "'She Tablet" -is a paper In the eitereet of the Roman Catholic Church. and though English in its spirit and eittor- •h.p, it sympathizes with the struggles go- ing forward in Ireland; 1t deaoun^es the I Onion, it pleads fur Repeal; but a docs not commit itaelt to soy danger of legal pruaecu- trio. "The Nation" as a journal pledged ! violently to more than Repeal, -peaceably if possible, forcibly if it must be. 1t contains I much spirited writing, and reports of epeeehee, that defy tbe legal authorities, and deeps* all compromise. This is the organ of " Young Ireland," and of a portion of the physical -force party. Still, though it buts at republicanism, it dues not openly • avow it. It professes loyalty to the im- perial crown, bot dieuwns the rigbt of the imperial legielature to make laws for Ire- I land. The real purport of its views is, not simply repeal of the Union, bat the 'simulate nullity of the Unioo. Meagher lees leading genius. "The Nation" was strong enough tor Mitchell, or Mitchell was too strong for "The Nation," and so he set up "The United Iriebman." The United Irishman carries the doctrine of resistance out in its most logical cooai*taoey, and to its alsne.1 consegsence., It *pits ups. repeal, it cries for inelepesdence ; et calls not only for a national parl.ameet, but for national ■oy- ertegoty.. it laughs at " the golden link of the crown," sad holds no terms with O'- ! Connell, to whom this phrase. we beliele,' is attnbuted. it scout Vretorts, aloe' mocks Conetlliation Hall with as much 'cora as it does conciliates'. It domande a republic at any cost, and with tierce ear- nestness it preaches the gospel of the pike. it tells the tag mamma of Ireland that they cannot be wore* oie and that with courageous hearts and a strong right head, they have the power to be better off It goes even beyeed a mere republic. It at- tacks tie pretest law, and distribution of property, reprobate* political economy and its theories, and instate on a reorganization. The edit.r, Jobe Mitchell, is the see of a Usmarise minister, esteemed by all as wbe hew him while he lived. tie clotted a good life, and a long awl useful ministry, a few year* ago, is Ili tow. of Newry,110 the north of 'related. Hi. mon, Jobe Mitch- ell. to eedoabtedly a young teas of fiats 1.1"t*, i t. de, aid dare, sed dim, -sed, if °fir^ Josg pesilawd for either, fortunesfortoo dam* the terbium .r the 'ca8old. Ito dogee.ee sa arid, boli, ISTn and coodenesd. 1f Msiagbes 1.41. Caceae of the eeefederates, letteb.RM tj ]iemse- tbeses of the democrats. The Tablet calls hem u lie Ira Dames," sad *e fee se stioowwgg and berates words, that notion modify aur eoaprolss, are concerned, the deteiatioe is not uesuitable. 'Vet those who iaow bis speak of him as singularly gentle is personal temper. it is not our age feaster torte either the pelittes or the perpoase of Memo jnereeln hut 4My etiggest came temashe on the erwM ser dine. of 'reused, pkysteal and serial. "behead.' and "Irish" *sere very simple • 1. Tbs Tdlrs. rasdea. M* 28. 1848. 1. 71s Nelms. Dobbs. Mar 213. WL l 71i Uoilal maw. Debits. Me >4 Alla• ar t• 1848. June 8, William Bennett Rick, Esq., J. P., To pay Costs, July 5, Do. John 13, John Holmes, E-q.,`J. P., May 37, A. D. Nagel, Esq., J. 1'. May 9, June 10, May 18, May 22, M ay 22, May 8, May Y, May 8, D. 11. Ritchie. Esq., J. P., Do. William Chalk, Esq., J. P., L. Meyer, Esq., J. P., Do. W. F. McCulloch, Esq., J. P., W. F. McCulloch, Esq., J. P., O. McPherson, Esq., J. P., W. F. McCulloch, Esg-, J. P., D. McPhersoo, Esq., J. P.. June S, O. McPherson, E -q., J. P., A. Helmer, Esq., J. P., ee. Wood, Esq., J. P., Jane 21, D. McPber.nn, J. J. P.,' W. F. McCulloch, Esq., J. P., June 29, March 29, John Sperling, Esq-, J. P., March 30, Do. April 15, Do. April 19, Do. April 19, Do. April 19, ;. Do. April 19, a Du. April ,9, Do. 1 April 29, •,Do. May 10, Do. June 13, Do. Jute 20, term., yet du they Stand f.,r very .comnh- eated things. Ireland, to an Anreneemine- agioation, consists ut space extremely limi- j ted; yet, from ua earliest history, that space has been moat minutely divided. ri{ would not in mere epace torn a leading State u( this Union. Yet it was once an' empire, comprising kingdoms, psioeed.nes, ' rhi.-ft'ainrie.. 'These k,ng•i.•r.us, •prfbrc- dome; chicltatorica had their re-peitive customs, laws, prejudices, with tho feuds. and factions that spring from such a tonsil- tution. Even now, Ireland has her pro- I vines, counties, baronies, in the civil ar- ragewent, with . archdioceses, dioceses, parishes, in tie ecclesiastical. The Eng- lish invaders found Ireland a country of manifold partitions, with a people as sub -I divided as its surface. /risk is a sural of most composite sig01.4 6cation also. W'e woaler at the igoo- I once of writers' on this coasts in their l strictures on American character. But$ surely the ignorance of our own writers o.' the character of ulher nations Is scarcely less, and much lean 8xcaable. 1Ve won-, der author. of any intelligence should con- . found under one general Idea the reckless' men of the Nest wtthhthe orderly men of the Earl, -the ardent men of the South with the cool then of the North, -the men who hold slaves, with peculiar training a well as peculiar institutions, with other men who have no such training and no such ibatitutions. Yu( we are, ourselves, in much grosser error in our popular coneep- eon of the Irish. We have, in general, no notion of them but as exiles and drudges. "Irish" means with us a class of human! beings, whose womoo do our house -work, and whose mea dig our raidroads. Judging merely by the senses, we are not much to blame, fur these are the relations in which, from infancy, we are accustomed to know them. Wo •havo indeed heard of Burke, and Grattan, and Curran, with many other great names besides; we have a son of persuasion that these were irishauen; but when we try practically to consider them as the compatriots of mud -covered laborer in the bed of • canal. the contrast is too violent, and by 'no force of imigioatiog can we bring such extremes together. We, as a people, are intolerant of ragged garments and empty paunches. We would replan themes by dee nt lenient, sad we would 641 the paanehes with wholesome food, but we have oily sie.11 respect for thus. who come to us to tatters and who rush to us from lamins. We are a people wbo have hod no experience in physical tribulatios; and we do not understand the virtues or the votes whine such tribeletion eats prndoee. We do not keen the Warfel selfishness whish erceeding wait may geseraea; belt .either do we koow the bleared ebeata . which it may exhibit, the holy sslf-4.alat which it may manifest. As a cossegess.q the ill -clad and destitute If babe ie rep. sive to our habits and to 'our tastes_ WC eeefere,d ill-riotbing and destitution web Igw.wwrroe sad vase; for thus they are asso- ciated ameiag ourselves, and t:aet faaey w a rue saes seise tae ema.upsle smelt from the pow., of bidet sod he era pressions of exppeertience. The crowds that cross the .plastic to seek a refuse' here aro re general a ragged cot/trait to our' ewe wee covered 51ase e; net Ina r.,d. tot encased appears.ee, sees! heel w here to mese (1* hi.dred and immortal whish was, coarsely tib.ssaeled. Many of es leek este ly at the outside. We de cot Cot's sato Do. £0 154,13d, ll lb 4ed, wilb coaly ,£0 d0 .siwitheeela, the soul. We observe the crushed animal, , but we bold no converse with Mee. hidden' spirt. tVe have abundance of pity, but we t.i;1 in reverence. 1t is a t •ole h thing to judge of a build -1 ing by a brick; but the folly is yet greater': not to examine even the'brick,. 'nob so -1. ciety is bit.vcry partially represented by the p inions of r: that we -hare the oppor- tunay of seeing. 'l'hd btrticturu of. Irish society has been very variously and grey dually built up, and by materials from it. groat many quarries. First, there was the old Celtic race; then the Miler/inn; then the' Dante; then the Angio -Normans and .tog• lar-Saxons;then the Scottish colouisti-sent by the first Janie'; then the troopers of Cromwell and the boors of the third; Willain. Now each of these succeeeivei invasionsdepos,ted a new element of dim - cord, and attat,nl was lard upon stratum of rebellion and confi,catfon have proceeded' perpetual`slnfe aril, hatred. Bat among; the worst results we must regard that con- dition of things as the in -,at unfortunate, which transferred the whole coil of the na- tion ti. the hauls of strangers, and whit] placed over the people an alien an unrym-, whining aruetuc.racy. tVe have some ob- servations to make on this condition of things as we proceed. The English in the beginnieg found the Irish broken up among 1 themselves into coudicting factions. This, too, was unhappy. 'fad it been otherwtre, -lad the Irish been mac, -had they been concentrated into a national integrity, a. the Saxon. were when tVilliam the Con- queror gained the battle of Hastings, then either the invaded would have repelled the invader, or one would bars absorbed or ex. terminated t'ie other. Neither of these re- sults followed; and the ltlange paradox is accordingly exhibited to the universe, of a progresitre physical amalgamation of the bone and sinew of -Ireland with the bone and sinew of Britain, carrying along with It an unceasing. an undying batred of its government. It is, therefore, very absurd to speak of the Irish as if they were a @ a - µlc, simple, pncustive, usastxed race. The very contrary is the fact. Perhaps there is not a country on the whole earth, so limited in its dimensions, so complicated is its populatiun; ■nal this, not only in lbs elements that still continue seperate, but also i. tease that hare mingled and coa- lesced• It hes been common to ascribe the agita- tions and disorders which so trequeotly con- vulse Ireland to the impatient and turbu- teot passions of the telt, to his whereat love of battle and drstarbence, to his unruly and rebellious disposition. No peewee wee ever mere false then thin sot osey telt witboot proof, but sermon proof. The Odle w sol especial rebel.; and, indeed. they DOM' have been. The districts 1b Ireland moat truuNssome to Retain have always bees these which the British colonized. - AIM thee it has been from the days of l tiongtrow le those of Mitchell. The re- gime es which Cromwell found M. berteet task .ad that re whteb ho left the most atrocities memory, was teat wbicb bad ill popelaY.0 Iaom Koeh.h bioid. 11 England has dune Ireland wrong, Providence has brought a cbastistng retribution on her, by manse e( Iwo own children. The sins of Eeglie% tethers are not merely rented on tear chili/free, bet ter.w,gh there ehiler.w the viesuti.e costae*. TIPS moat ssnswis- wry page of Cromwetes campaign is Ire - led ta t►st wbicb open at Urogbeda and 1 • t1 IS-• air Ae, 5s, LI costs, Ss costs, 18o 9J, i3 13s, Americas. Forthwith, Twenty-one days, Forthwith, Forthwith,. Eight day., Eight days, Furtbwith, TN casts, t Ir 5s OJ, Inc Within one month, and costa, Costs tis 3d, £0 3Ss 0d, costs, !Paid down, ea 3.1, do. 1'r tad, do. 17e Gd, do. in one month, el tial, lar fourteen days, ill 1. OJ, Geste 17. 9d, Cents 174 6.1, Costs 17s OJ, Do, Townies ram eves aT aa.Tla7s. Town Clerk, Prosecutor, RUM ASKS. 'Bound to keep the peace one year. Do, Time given -one month. .Bound to keep the peace two years. Paid. Treasurer, Paid. Prosecutor, Ter•asurer, fleaaurer, Clerk b:. Constable, Dismissed with Coots -Paid. lenut proved -with I coats, Dtemiaaed with cores -charge not pruvtd. Da.iniesed for want of evidence to support the information, w1th costs. !Entered into recognizance to appear at the next General Gaol Delivery, Huron District. l{Dismtased with costs. Tot paid because not levied by -War- rant, Entered into recognizance. - 'Dismissed -parties settled. • '!Ordered to remove ilia ub.tructiun. R ers, (redoes case. iUesau.factonly proved -settled be- tween the partici,. Constable, IEuterod into Recognizance. ConatebleandTrea-Parties fought while in a state er surer, - drunken insanity. Do. ( Do. 1 in two months, I !Entered into Recognizance. • ;Unsatisfactorily proved - Defendant ' agreed -to pay costs. Assault complained of was unjusti- i -Gable. DANIEL Li'LAR.S, (leek of the Truer, Huron District. concl4Sa ,n tt exford... Likewieeete 179 1798„„itequeatbed memories of rankling irritation, the et/duties whichwheat enter tbe con - ch the desceudaiite of the injurers filet, and which longest seaweed it, were were as unable to forget as the desceo- those wherein the desceodanta of the dant. or the injured; which the descendants British chiefly resided, " Wexford taught of the injuiera were more unwilling to for- . With desperation, and fought to the last; give. Wealth that is acquired by violence and Xrnegar Hiil, with lia broken wiodmill, - is widow spent with wisdom. .Economy is' remains to this hour a nu menu, of cuuragu as iouctethe offspring of virtue as of labor. We a ivanay c -that, and .t:,at alone, well, and a monument of deepa.r. Let es now take a rapid sunny of the wleeti we gain, pot alcuply by tau, but by two broad a:vinous of Irish auuety. We honest toil. Let -oar. burly W , men imagine begin with the aristocracy. And by the that they cam grow rich -by conquest. It Id aristocracy we mean, principally, the own- nut merely a crime to assume such a post- ers of the sod. We mean, in general, the tioo, et is a fully, a delusion; at sea blunder. la,idlords,.aed their immediate kindred.- Memos' dearly purcha-ed treasure is that Most of thee. who hare Iortuoes sutlicient- : which is acquired by the sword. Tbc high. ly in. live in Eog:aod, or on the Cone- est price for land or gold is blood. Every neat, deserting at the same time their coma- nation which has gained either, un such con - try and their duties. The greater number dittoes, has perished by them; and it -d e- ha•e Inherited their estates by conquest or served to perish. The ancestors of the ' confiscation; and they have Dever become' Irish aristocracy, from the Catholic Nor - native to the land that gives acre luxury,' macs to the Puritan Cruwwellsans, thus ob- 1 but that denies life to the wretched 'nen tarred their propety; they lett tt to their Who till it. Accident has made thew Irish, children, ato,ng to it the penal legacy of i and their life ta a lung regret fur being so.prodigal extravagance and profligate babies.' They scourge the uobappy nation in which Our deacnptiun t. general. We know I they have bad the misfortune to bear them. that among the gentry of Ireland there are The members of this class who have to many and noble exceptions; and being ex I stay at home because they are not rich ceptrons, they have uur gicater admiration. enough to go abroad couatiiute the local The most common virtues become rubliwe, magistrates, and till cutlet ut the influential local utfices. A large majority of the claim is utterly bankrupt, insolvent uver and ever. Most ot *beim teen kayo but the same of property; fur what are called their estates he under piles of mortgages and en- cumbrances. Debt has been heaped upon debt, by each generation in it. Lurie so tbat lit would be as puzzling to a lawyer W dis- cover the original possession, as it would be to a geologist to ccscribe the primitive coo - teen of this planet. Entails, and other artificial conirvances, have lung kept plates le families, and held them trout the last action of the law on the part of credi- lers. But even 11 they could be sold, they would afford only a uuserabie percentage en the sums for wbicb they have been, ewe after ewe, pawued. 'There is a story of aa Irishman who travelled over Eaglaud woe a pg of p.culiait mgaclly said buuyancy.- Tbe pig was lean, Mak, and rough; but sbe had the vigor of a race -bone, and the elasti- city of a greyhound. Walls rbo despised, and gates could nut cuoune her. 'ler mas- ter, each morning, west' little space on bis road, wbeo she was alter boot, and each morning they began a new day boost lune{- ly tu g[e°thet Availing Merrell u( the aminal e ex etsOae1 qualities, the fellow sold her at every stage of his journey, being certain, at Serb successive ate, that be would have ber to bell again. The pug which was they so of- ten sold wa,probeety, nut honestly come by et first. Thi, elastic manual is no bad re- pw.estatrve of landed property 10 Ireland; we leave it to the imaginaUun el our readers to find out the analogy and to apply 1t. Nature has its laws in .ociety, as ir,efre- j.ble as thee. tt has in matter. Not is .ee5 rase morn than in the other ear there be any permabent vwuuen a them. Rose or late, they vindicate tbeuiaelver. A state of thtage like that whlcb we hate Just de- scribed ea.nut last- 11 wort die of its owe cerruptio.s, or it neat explode, by the force of a remit a that hes reached the limit of sectoring capacity. The ancestors 'uf Irish landlords bequaetbed thorn breed Sassoon, but with there they beluesabod tales to abet .bat were written sed cooled with blood, guarded by • system art legisia• toe that was sbocking to buloanity. 1 bey • TILE POOR MAN.. (iso grant the poet man constant hrdth, To toil for daily breed; He has so earthly wealth, Aud utusl be clothed and fed -- The promise pace will Ruud its lata 7be turd withhold his bile - Great Parent! heed big pveous case Aod guard les cottage tire. Thou carest fur Ili, little birds That own oo earthly bird - Thor caret fur toe Hocks and herds That crop the Bowery sword- Ilear'st the young verse wheu they cry, Heed'st the young lion's roar - And wilt reward th.- poor mar'. sigh, And meek petition, mere. Then- grant the poor man etc.tant health. And strength for earthly toil. With sweet cou:rnc, the dearest - "wealth Of weary mortal Ino:;: And grant hie power to rale his - mind, To owls affection's •way. And aurae the ciurm.er.tr-is;ee.l To smooth his pilgrim way. THI,u, Lose Foar.vru.-Lost wealth may be restored by iodes- ery,.flw wasrk.( Siestab rageiord- Sy temperance, forgotten knowl- edge restored by •Iiidy, alienated friendship smooched into forgeuul- sesr-even forfeited repotaign wen by penitence and virtue. But wbu ever again looked epees his een- imbed hours, recalled his . sligtued yea., stamped Wer with 'madam. W sliced lions the record d eter- nity the blot of wasted time 1 Time twice loot never cam be re- called. As Caaar,usT R•Toay.-(fie day laiely,in a towo so the Mears., a Mixon damsel, smnewhat furr.w- ed in the lace by 'hemmers of the 1small-pox, accosted a well-knuen painter with-- Tam. are ye goon s to gin a paiut ? " 'fhe knight of f the blush, being well stored with t mother wit, iu,tancty replied,- • U•e-ed, 1-a-a-aJiq ye've w -a -air. need o' a p-p-putlie first." see and our cars bear l But ,they are not Conc to the grave of centuries; they were but sown in the living suit of.centereee, and now they arenpened into a heavy' hit - vest of a Inuit Week and bitter crop. Wu cannot understand present events wiltfuut understanding their historical cuaneetfoe, and least of all can we understand those of liclan,l.. :did to es. capecialtr,,.young among qie i.at:,ns, the (*ample ,art our alderau important. As it is, the femme that history teac',e., doe. not seem enttiely needless to us. Recent as is our independ- ent exi.teecc, we have one far rlo the pathway of the Old World, and, instead of looking to It 13 a beacon, we seem rather to fuiluw it as a star. It IS more our model than uur waru;ng; we study the lesson the wrong way; sad its ru 1 wc' .1dwe ?, do nut i L n that wrong way oitrun the instruction. - We, too, have our- oppression., and err in- justice. C•.der the very shadow of our Capitol, while the weals rings with grate- tattoos which are to stir with Joy the heart of France, a mob gathers to crush free thought, -.-thought dedicated to the widest liberty and to e,e^highest humanity ; nae. at the very time that shouts of cxecrattun were sent acrobat the broad Atlantic ; 1r blast a fallen monarch In his exile, ty- whet the oppo.ne vices are all but umber- rants sub hearts harder than the hearts of sal. tVbeo neglect and oppressiuq ut the the tigers were tearing or their human poor spread over land, sputa un which they ! brothers and urtera fruit) the revue of'heir receive some degree art care and kisdoeae ap- native affections, consigning t:.eul toa ,lav - pear as little Leen.; bet !hey aro Edens t0' ery compared with wbicb their former a desert. We speak of the Irish gentry as slavery seemed freedom -dead to their ago - a cls!, -and as a class neither their -origin ales uf spirit -chaining them worth tun that Cor training, neither their temper nor did out gall ball re terrib) as the iron that circumstances, tit them to conciliate, to had entered into their roue -and mel b.cau-e. faster, tar to titterer° the masses that mit- ' promp'ed by insects which God and nature rinsed them. 'They Dever bad power over ; had Implanted, they ruught that freado#, the bearta rt the people; and ;bat power ul ' (or welch God and nature had designed Coercion which they unto puaseased they : thein. Wbat a mockery it this!! Wbat have nut teased to love, thuueh they hays right hare 'loch men to bout at Louie Phil- ter ever lost It. We mean, especially,' lips, cuntraeted with when, ir,ei. 1'hiUipe e* . their uiunopyiy of political influence. Their , an angel of eget t What title have ,.,,ch puwer as prupeetots they yet bold and love; I men to vociferate acclamations kir liberty v they du nut fail w use it either, and ill taws i Liberty is but insulted by their praise.- iRae badly as ever. Becoming, as we have We, toe, Seem in a fair aay to enthrone iNCeo, deeper us uebt with cacti generation, , the soldier, and to idolize the eeeNd; to give i 005 auticipatiog the income art the other, strength the place of vetue, aid victory the - their tastes and desires have, in the Satire place of right. But let us not be deceived. I order, been growing more costly. They God is more mocked by nation with mem- ? may havo become inure refined, but they ; nay than by udivldu.d•, and totems, ■s islet bare become more expeossve. The I well se individuals, wi11 reap according to i deadly conipeuuuo lur land in Ireland roti- I what they a0w. We ma) dr -spies the le -- bled Meru to raise rents to Ulu higlieal sum sun 01 tenors, but we cannot retie -e ors Mat human latter can produce, and to pre.* law; and the. las is scale ea Went ill the r.• - dawn living to the loser% condition that cords of all ages. triune and richt i.,ak•. !human nature can endure. The tenant I. no account 'l time; Itiry are ru,t.I,, aid 'Call upon the ragged rod, to tar (ruin its eternal; !heir cuua.q,euc,•a may nut he it ' bosom payment ter les waster, and at - stalely seen, bit They 510 out lord - ea,, laps for bun.elt. lo the latter he alw.y• they a net 0s5 0 limier. swleceeds; and Shen Me tails to the gunner, (ro BE alanxu,:nrN ova Ilk&r.j the msalar, by means ul arrears, holds III 1 his bands the puler to expel bear!. Tee - - - - - "steer •pends no capital on the roil; sic LO('JS N,%POLk7DN, ibeen, nu houses or offices, he finisher ns _ implements; he pursues no experiments 0r m .oa Napoleon Si. born 5 1408, and agriculture, he dues not instruct the was the son 01 Lied Nap.rleun Beeaparte, I tnant, steer by tjeury or eaanpill; alas King of II,,Iland, and ut Mortes.. ea Beau. s tame some year .►rue thee other. leaves mannas., the daughter tat taw fwopres• Jos. - the tesint •1 hut warty, the mercy test phase. le ISIS, when the welter Bonaparte many • taodlurd •buss is to turn inbo od. laruily w• eapatriated, bra soother fewlsrth wllh me.ther aowan, a uur cou.,eeusaeo. biro and lis only hrulber Irni, Pans 1,. Sw,t- kwr such laupruvemente as he feu rtrujg4'u aurland. `dere. he reesl'ed a nuhlary ed.ta- u bi• poverty to make. im. frons General Defewr, end rcmasn,.l 15 N'e tane:y ,Dane o1 uur reader■ (-emptiest- 'tenet until 1830, when, with his brother, he tag about the evarlaating hi.toncai refer- Lined the Italian patriots, s -bo had reined eases lar aerostat for the elate el Ireton!.- the rlamdard ul ineepeudenec, .Mer haven( Why, we 'swerve item. saying, -why 11... bulb psrucs,•I.ted 1n several engager....•. reiteraliee ul reallere Met are 1050 Ie bee his heather Sled lar (0n.egei..ro u( Will rIY„e rare ul commie., to txptaeia wbat owl eyes tat WI rcrvice, sod 1.0 sues after Tutted 1