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Bedford White River Standard Thursday, November 29, 1849,
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Bedford White River Standard Wednesday, August 08, 1849,
Indiana

Bedford White River Standard Thursday, December 11, 1851,
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Bedford White River Standard Thursday, March 18, 1852,
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Bedford White River Standard Thursday, August 12, 1852,
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Bedford White River Standard Thursday, June 23, 1853,
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Bedford White River Standard Thursday, July 14, 1853,
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Bedford White River Standard Thursday, December 12, 1850,
Indiana

Bedford White River Standard Thursday, December 08, 1853,
Indiana

Other Editions from Thursday, May 03, 1855

Alton Daily Telegraph Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
Illinois

Bangor Daily Whig And Courier Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
Maine

Hornellsville Tribune Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
New York

New York Daily Times Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
New York

Tioga Eagle Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
Pennsylvania

Wellsboro Agitator Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
Pennsylvania

Davenport Daily Davenport Gazette Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
Iowa

Daily Free Democrat Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
Wisconsin

Portage Independent Thursday, May 03, 1855 ,
Wisconsin

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Bedford White River Standard
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Bedford White River Standard

   Bedford White River Standard (Newspaper) - May 3, 1855, Bedford, Indiana                                MAY 3, 1855.  20.  ASD D. PEAR 8 O Silent THE OF AN OLD ST Marshall Billing at the table pouring out wine into a This surprised but the next movement surprised me He filled the glass about half and then he took a vial from his and X K D O L I. 1 II V II F K I PER TEAR IN T li I 1 i art c .i 11  s -i i 1  perly i- I I jr farin I uri any Fir Work li ami il frulli 11,i bv 0 i i vr 11' Ill G rai II fur Ihn und 1 c 1  i. F ir n it li tii lii but I us supply 1)1 lul 1 j dem m J 1 V in 1 I l i cure Irin un er 1: 1 i 1  Vil luti iif bul fi la the vv 1! 11 1' tu the a 1 1 ( jr li five tons per Ir un property h rv best is iron the firal yi to ci il Will be ready 10 m J ur Ihe in p 1--c.im Mf fur a crop uf A Soil ii tur from 30 lu cj aris ui m to the Ii i is in the milfey fit well wilted il put up as tor the ii wili In throe or four be turned and a ii i; is hauled in 1 the irr from 16 to 20 quarts of the ii put in a crup be demand for seed ior years has been greatly beyond and seed has dim. With one low cry I started back and seized my I was a the murderer of my A dim spectre arose before gallows in and I fled from tiie I make my way to removed the he poured its con- and from there to and Some years ago I liad command of a ship tents into the I could see his j there I took passage for I have engaged in the East India 3Ir first and it was as pale as A fearful not seen they native land While in or was named 3Iark flashed across my and as quick j Philadelphia I look up a He with me at Liverpool to as I darted into the My from New and there tu but on the passage out my male mate was just raising the glass tc his i my father had died of My mother having found 3Iar.sh;ill a most With one sprang forward and hid my both and dashed the glass from his and as it i Marshall stopped and bowed his head y. I gave him the He readily was shivered to pieces upon the he He did not shed tears but his J I could plainly that he sprang to He caught me fiercely | eyes were set and iri It a deaire 10 please limn by the but when he met my starling I to I noi he dropped hand and sank ' we had a 111 111:- lur proved back into his tiie I ever had do you ( sternly ilio ship's and his head made no re than ' 1 saw the upon ihe aud Two TET IN THE Bit or or six years a rich Louisiana i planter leaving an only a who was not quite seventeen years of a romance in real life together with her was placed has recently taken place in the the charge a who was of Thus runs the tantly to the Her At a Court some twenty years and her remarkable the paper young officer of the French met tention of many among whom was I learned that 2nd was charmed by a beautiful English | an accomplished young man from St. He obtained an and only wealth was his with her as often as he without handsome person and fascinating challenging the remark of His the won the lady's without the young lady's Our hero was - and in way a person to win the good will of the fair He was of a good and the was my as I recollected although he I 11  J (i He punctual to a Ml Siis to a he we near cur be to evening and t lid that if the wind fuir Ac I It I Oil i ut past in the reported land two 1 he starboard ' V. as 1.1,,. m lit civil and men I ever and his iie had been well and Yet was one sil l' 1 me not a rather I rii i puzzled I musi I al limes allow to line il ii tr My male was one 111 for one tree ft thai I ever lift IV ever spoke to His nnd 111 11- lew 1 rif Ill hop into ' I to bul I A and alter we had entered the our ul Point 1 WHS in my and I pushed Uie wine to him and asked him if he would a I had never seen him take but he had il up and planed it tu and there troni it the strong pungent odor I sat and gazed at 3Iirsliall in Ilie I laid my hand on his and him to my mil with as much kindness of tone as I could sani 1 am your I love vou lis 1 never loved a man out of mv km no. he you ask I I stay li you can some competent man to take my for my services tor m in are at an Vou have stayed my hand but you cannot A or my raz jr will do me moved nearer 10 my male and placed my arm his Pell f in and 1 promise that 1 will never seemed mudi moved by my for he and the tears came to his At iie in a subdued been a friend to and I have a mind to tell you the story of niy Vou Will never speak to and said as he no patrimonial youna lady was of England's privileged noble and This our lover did not know when begets and women are I could make any further reply | the fair girl returned the young the d lor ot the was | met or where er and the old man gazed upon and then the I hid alid al the same lime cast my eyes lowards dour of the j I had placed have had a come on Vou to lold said Marshall of on and then a wild are convenient for This was all and in at been saved irom crops grown seed is the ii the upper parts of tiie hope some of eur adopt our and ol the grain as it should h now a but can be en writing tlie c letters farmers on ihe One in 3Ionrc!e havt found any eja ii to 1': nor do 1 believe any oi ipp a se I think 7  and then he eves and ihe pale and his lips were glass from his hand on tlie and was broken into a are yon not I tip and my upon iia up with n faint the ond then can ihe bolter His face A moments my an correspondent or weii for wheal in trie the 1 r and to or e i 5.".':h:ng.' said he nullit do tiol a a it I not take ur looked at mo as he would lok me There was a in his and I lay your on me let me be doing what I that I must be governed by my own I tell me the mad but on the next day he and a severe fever sent in When he looked up there was li strange of melancholy upon his and his eyes were will be a he very short after a moment's he born in the city of New My was a very wealthy sat by son's laow he had recovered and of courre F was reared in the lap of agreeable he loitered lowards the He sank for theirs was a flirtation on las and his head on my a serious intention affixed to my my he 1 At length our heroine discloses her wishes as he up his They are and the mate about the daughter marry a merely a I had known start 1  without It is to held him off at listens to their in A first VVho are ho glaring wildly she feels nature's and r o wnich love She next urn Joshua aii your O i to her my my wronged for- loves the young officer with her me. O I abused know 1 you m But wiU not permit her to judge of her u all I am your I did j she can wait until she is of did not kill bui I lived and re- j the clergyman may marry them I sought the whole earth alter i have been aU up the you know and gentle daughter has a moments my mate held that old patient off and into his and then a sharp he sank back entirely in- with the all that night Luke raved like of her they were privately afterwards they removed to St. i where they lived together happily for a and a bright future seemed to be before At the expiration of a the lady having obtained her they returned to New Orleans to claim her fortune and live in the splendid old family They were coldly received by the who deliberately informed them that the estate had passed into other They at once applied to the law for and going through the protracted formalities of two or three fruitless they were led and obliged to abandon the Friendless and they returned to St. where the like many other tried to drown the remembrance of his disappointment in the fatal His wife entreated and admonished in A separation was the and called his father whan he and I saw old man bend him arid kiss him and I saw young man wind his arms around that aged form and cry like a so my mate's real name was lovers are to be for two shall not be considered an and the young lady shall receive the addresses of other the other the lovers are to be permitted to and if they remain lovers at the end of two they shall marry with full consent and The young lady consoles her anxious my a waa i and I heard the old man as he assurances that her love is thof u want mat and both my ho repealed in h ly ine I nut their to please and make me My father was a man of quick and and I had a as as his had a hery I you nre the mildest man I ever smiled and a shake of the iic count of is five 0:1 both 11 of v k and il a er- 11 u-'i; ui lu and ol the ami iru deep in. i it inches ii wai to be vOi Miy as ine n is ist 1 as one c ru 1 smooth and ti with a in our breakfast and t low 3 lu U 21 ,:ru  18T i 1 1 u 1 the effects of the blow he had Two whole days after Luke fled did he lay and the servants reported that he j was When he he told his ' wife the whole and having left his in competent hands he set out to search for his He traced him to and there he lost Eight long years had he been on the Sometimes going home to his and then setting out again upon his His wife still and she waited for the lot that turn of her and is no wonder that I his father to I came to love the and weep but it was only see liiat his I ceme to love the excitement which memory of the past that called up their pale His hand I saw no danger for aii my friends i I was sorry to lose my but I 1-ip out of my were in the same When I was a that others had a prior claim upon voice was mere my sent mc as supercargo I reluctantly gave him one of his Ii was at mv own ' Bridge 1  and I learned to love the thoroughly tested bv free life ot the But when I the age ot eighteen I was sent to From a passenger came up in the I remained there one and then I was cars from we have for the following of have a bad that wine there as us may yet him em- ' i not drink me lis 1'. to that the two absence will only serve to prove their affection for each other and endear them to one another still part. The English party return During a month they exchange letters such Of what a and bow full of terms of How poor language seemed to one our fair listened in vain for the accustomed postman's so well known to every He came The next day and the and no and thus many days and brought disappointment Weeks go letter came and hope became then consoled with her upbraided the young and urged the acceptance of a suitor for her waa thus that a true English heart should resent an months more the unhappy damsel writes and sends them in every in the hope of obtaining an explanation of this long None doubt becomes is She stifles the love in her mate stopped here and bowed his head particulars of a terrible tornado which swept ' on his and I could piam y see the over the region of along the line a desire of her ott upon trickling down his he resumed in a trembling what a fool I I returned to my 1 u t d 1 I w to iay out the my father upbraided me for my down uproot and twist The wul come words arose between but my and demolish chimneys by the in he came in and quieted the After Huge big as hens Rochester and Niagara yester day morning about 7 Brockport the wind was so violent o- I e i h ul IV e do and quieted the After Is 1 must be up to attend to I I remained at home some At re I became acquainted wilh a ached to question my further whom I thought and well 3-.r:i;ie bul his look and I made proposals of marriage to He cfT outer garments and it gave publicity to the and t red to his riate I was left alone it to my mother's Sne made ks I looked ai the b and then quines about the and she ascertained at the uf glass upon tne her was not J I wondered what ii was told me this in her own kind I have seen the girl for all my plans and and 1 was deceived in of tne one I I But my mother told my father and he was to speak with I was 1 hid boen indulging ill and been doing in no longer a desire of her she yields to that of her I will marry but since I let us be married was Fifteen years pass Our heroine is a Five years and lies ill unto calls her daughter to her my for 1 knew there - I arose to go pie pi eirly -u tu say ani the cows he ice nor 1  lue I hoped m let ior I 1 lj love his gentleness and 1 lo more of 1'. nave a laint but yet I c le was all al f made a ci of I received an r. iny lo r lo H K lake iu a V jii nave ready i ' ilu ij K j d e id laken of our D for m l c J ii ilie E 14.1-n fjc s al Can i 11;.ui ff lo wuti u 1111 K I read Albion Ihe blow was not ao | confesses that she had detained the but it was very obliged to light he had been 10 see to eat as eating mine i of it were by the hundred in such wheathe blow came Tne Our men on ihe of the lover of her heard one mither finds heaps of and also of is an All along in the vain hope of Ihe and the obtaining explanation of his pension the fences were strewn like Twenty years of disappointment were In gotten reading the ardent expressions of blown or affection and devotion which they He had been to a Olid bis face d and step was the und time I ewr him so by wine 1 entered the room he asked me where 1 had and 1 him to me H - asSed wiu I and 1 li tiie young oi wilom 1 have spoken He ihen loid me I must see the giri uo 1 resented cum and ne to turn me out ot doors I disobeyed mm. He upon in Hie and I l i thai I to 3Iy mite i answered and or 1 have cons I did not ri jp to old man w is verv was under lence of lor 1  anJ I at once loo far in ils power myself for kicked by spanky m luy large trees t off at Near Niagara several larire trees were across the railroad Three or tour h in lhal were blown a got va the curs ai Pekin that limber in his wo had been damaged to extent of or fifteen hundred N of the ex tensive car of Pierce i. Co as almost entirely about Too building was of s mie 20J leel and ab jut TV A number oi were and Tne end oi lue Was and and the inj A in I le keeled and objects of the of some 36 pages having lately fallen into oar purporting to be a declaration of principles by the we have concluded to pirate upon it for a few at the hazard of by that eminently anil vindictive vulgarly called for thiis their A few weeks since we coped a series of resolutions from the same neer two columns of our paper were supposed to present the the principles of this organization somewhat ill To-day we draw upon the body of the Report for a few more thoughts and and present them below for what they are A. have now presented a brief review of the chief questions which led to the embodiment of the American ' They are of whole scope of its Whilst in the waning stage of the old political the country has been distracted by the growth of new created to nurture many startling of pi pular some of the others the peaceful relations o our Government with the rest of the all of them tending to the of sectional the instinctive sense uf the brought into became more reckless and dissipated j hi Driven at last to the r. h wife applied for a obtained and retired to a This restored the man to his he abandoned his former returned to the and became an industrious and respectable few months the lady received a letter froth the son of her former informing her of his determination to make full closing with an appeal lo i her to his misguided and come to New Orleans and enjoy her j She at once complied with the generous and all her together with the accumulated was restored to necessity for a Great American obedience to that call party has already and has entered upon the theatre of Is It comes to silence the clamor of to check the career of pernicious to rebuke the busy el selfish Its great purpose is rt cail the ita I anil approved principles of and to express the authentic voice of the American in favor of a thorough lean We mean that the tace ot all and of nil Americans shall govern their own j aid that every genuine American interested ishall take its paramount place in the counsels and of those comes the part of this most management of the public affairs shall be extraordinary The young man offered We desire to see our internal his hand in and plead with all the earnestness of impassioned He reminded her of all their childish i of his deep anguish when she became the wife of of the long years of his silent All these remembrances came up before her and gratitude plead eloquently in his but at last the wife triumphed over the She thanked him and gave him her simple told him that she had loved but and could never love and entreated him to take back all her and permit her to return to the Finding her resolutions the young man on condition that she would postpone her return one He immediately wrote to the former who was ignorant of what had offering him a first rate on condition that he would come The letter was signed by the principal of a known who was apprised of Jhe .As ent took passage for New He presented himself at the place designated in the and at once made himself known our labor our genius our and commerce guarded and sustained by an intelligent American des re to see the children of our republic educated in American sentiment and and fortified by the wisdom of that sacred Book from which our ancestors drew the of the moral and religious freedom iv hich they infused into our civil detire to see the right of suffrage consecrated ill the veneration of the people as the bulwark of and protected by laws which shall for ever preserve it as the peculiar medium through which none but genuine American opinions and sympathies shall find expression in the functions of to see the federal constitution faithfully administered in strict accordance with the of its all constructions American party feels the responsibility of position it has hU He was conducted j full well the kern opposition it has to to the residence ot the generous from thn of all was young and her heart had known no it was the of her She took these letters with and went to sought information from the Minister of of him who was Lieutenant in the in 1834. The authorities replied the of that time was now and that he was in one of the southern departments I The widow wrote to the General that she was at and desired to see He i leave of and hastened to i meet ihe All is and our vers are To be the General i is no longer but his manners have the same and his elegance and style lessen his appareat The lady carries her inadmissible forty years as if they id tne and ins lutle son seriously bered but The latter twenty years latter railroad car j on ine track was lifted bodily the c some four Two accused him of trampling upon j before ihe cime off Nia | The National Intelligencer publishes a he me bringing shame upon his alter it bad | letter from the illustrious I is maddened and I spoke and were supposed u have i February 3, and addressed to quickly and What I Bridge the blow was The letter speaks in was the writer of the letter waited to receive His name waa and he was conducted into an elegant he met the woman whom he had neglected and woman who had been forced to leave but would not quite give him few days the city newspapers announced the marriage of estate was the lawful and the reconciled made wiser and better by are now living is good to turn sometimes from the cares and turmoils of and contemplate human rising up from the depths of misery and casting aside and reaching that standard of p and which so faw Caban them to leap upon the of The end labor millions of spindles April IS. or amidst the dust and whirl of The whatever they that | bright he is in God's appointed have been given to Commodore McCauley | moulding and fashioning the rude met with the is of the whole materials ot nature into forms of We readily be- | usefulness and He has only to feel lieve them to be and as well heart that he approves and lated to prevent future aggressions on the prin and that he is when part of the Cuban as to resent | the Star-spangled Banner is to The most reasonable version of the j under it and by it. it is but a instructions that McCauley of a painted yet what is to to the Captain General a i associations cluster round It test against the detention or search of i in glorious triumph when charm on the Stark had it at Warren at Bunker Gates from the conglomerate of all fragments and of the old effete Democratic and Whig with their alien names that were once hallowed and had a Errors it may attain elevation from its swelling such matters are unavoidable in all great popular movements and but they are not its principles nor its high and will be National in national in American ID all it claims as belonging to its brotherhood and entitled to all its rights and any every no matter to what party he may have ao matter in what he may pursuit he may be whether in subduing the ti ling the levelling the filing up wielding our the din and bustle of crowded sailing on the digging in the on the idle streams that flow from our mountain ne me. was three stale and I immediately gave He brought up the boil and in his certainly seventy years of and pair as I conversed with a shaft of aud he struck me with fhe men commenced work on of which has been exert him a and I found him one of his As I received that blow my blood ran off when they | d by the of Lieut. I was the and some were blown 1 currents and and the and upon my struck like doing more or less terms of the influence on men whom I ever met. boiled like molten 1 was the gale and some were blown 1 currents and about nine o'clock iu the My father cane and I seized one side to the other one tjon of winds at different seasons and in there was carried a covered and expressed a desire to a chair that stood near me. I lifted it with escaped being blown over into the f ferent Baron Humboldt also representation of body of the which was followed ai a respectable distance by two figures designed to the Mary and Mary evening all the ceremony of interment wooden figure was gone the ensuing morning minutes before lu Cxi ail c deui writing to ilie N. V. Ihe above undei of ibe i Thursday the ceremony of ihe was gone On w was more like a Sabbath than any dn I hare before seen in there was a and gorgeous in w iu the My father cane and I seized one side to the other one tjon of winds at different seasons narrowly escaped being blown over into the ferent Baron Humboldt So I showed him to his state room j both ray and with all my maniac might f The wind howled and screamed forms Maury in bis letter that - of Prussia desires to give to him a small apartments leading out from the carpet like a In an instant I was j the workmen said it like Hell let of his by presenting to and only large enough tor a good sized I kneeled down oyer that prostrate but The sustained and a wash and with there was no Presently ' the slightest and no vibration was spare room enough to and there came a convulsive movement of the when the gale was at ita highest was a sultry and I left the 1 but it quickly passed and then door ooen at his he was as motionless as the chair which lay of woe were thrown ihe chi 4,3 3, and broken by his I spoke to but he In Middlesex CS were suddenly not I lifted him to a and a wife having left her in favor were with tin kettles At ten o'clock my mate came on i chafed his but not a sign ol life j another the people got a supply of tar ed to their tails were set loose in the him on by the light of the could I I knew that I bad killed land and after covering the erring and business was resumed with the I could see that he was my sunk down upon my knees by his | tore down their and gave sad He answered me only in and wept and them twelve hours to leave for parts the evening there were and with a uneven I was aroused by a step beside The injured husband was present he went After ho gone i and on looked up I saw my She j at the and was those 1 went about the ship and gave asked me what was the but I could langage of for keeping not She stood over the body of posted a went towards the her and I remember that the word in. On my way I passed along the larboard i ' broke from her and then she sank State of the and as I reached the fainting upon the I started up and have issued a circular calling upc a the which was built up over the gaied upon Once more I felt I vessels on the and beyond the jurisdiction of on any pretense will notify the Governor if thus deemed aggressive by the United | Greene in ihe and Washington bore be our vessels shall be j j stood its ample when from If the protest and notice ' sealed our independence on the be the Commodore upon the I It is as it was first recurrence or the of our nationality sink the aggressing O ir will be advised not to notice | and above we desire to see hail of every Spanish but to U.s on and proceed on their if the Spanish as the bright links of a chain shall resort to j has no and to this before all the dore McCauley will forthwith the j wu pledge our unalterable faith and the as an If these be the American Louisiana papers continue to c. of the Thousands of cattle hs from hunger and high ihe pondrons of temperance to see that the new is What induced me to do so I but it did not His not hut I stopped and looked and eyes were hall and they heads the Wealth of survey of now in is said to show that the Provinces are richer in most except than even tiie the of the Prussian Minister at a medal designed as a re ward for distinguished works of The Baron also sends to Lieut. Maury another that which was ordered to be struck by KLig of upon the publication of Both medals are of gold and are beautiful in design and N. Y. Times to the Cabin war will be no Spanish cruisers may be a little is If there be any more EI Dorado insolence on their possibly they may find themselves at the bottom of the ocean in doable They will deserve be they are more moderate than has been on our is to be used only in regard to future and not for the purpose of resenting acts that have been It will be that the though they require a notice to the Cuban authorities as preliminary to an attack on a special vessel of do not contemplate any as heretofore to the Government of The issue a good story of New It seems that shortly before the a man from a country town who had always been known as of the had some business in Concord and was consul ted by the managers of 'the as to how things were going in his ' taid are blue with money do you any perhaps it The waa that was put into be made with the of went The neit day the It has been suggested that General have exceeded his powers and in directing the Spanish to overhaul American vessels without limits of the jurisdiction of In his solicitude for the protection of the Island from American he has given cause for complaint on the part of Americans who were pursuing their ordinary It may be that the home upon being informed of the character of these will be prompt to disown the acts of Gen. and to prevent their a person writes to another for that will formation on a stamp it la to tt high Pure agent of the Democracy to tell his and .to say how it was that some should be we have attended to has got He he is chief cook and bottle washer to the pesky oldest person in N. is a who is 102. The oldest man is Mr. A. who is 93. A Mr. who died was of the same Years ago we heard it mentioned that Mr. made it a rule to eat and never to pass his plate to be helped to meal after he had been served was mentioned to account for his age Md but pn this subject the  

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