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Fort Wayne Standard Thursday, June 01, 1854,
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Fort Wayne Standard Thursday, June 01, 1854,
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Fort Wayne Standard Thursday, June 01, 1854,
Indiana

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Indiana

Fort Wayne Standard Thursday, June 08, 1854,
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Fort Wayne Standard Thursday, June 08, 1854,
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Fort Wayne Standard Thursday, June 15, 1854,
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Fort Wayne Standard Thursday, June 15, 1854,
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Fort Wayne Standard
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Fort Wayne Standard

   Fort Wayne Standard (Newspaper) - October 26, 1854, Fort Wayne, Indiana                                Columbia Third Over 51 aad 53.  92*00 00 8 00 Ten - 15 00 in will be for the paper are to bl addressed t he Editor of ihe letters should be addressed to abar be paid to ensure L. at of Calhoun and Berry over June 8.1854. FORT M. and Counsellor at ND Solicitor in Chancery Office on the comer Main and Calhoun Fort Y AT IND. 2nd 98 Columbia Street M. Ind. OFFICE and residence at the corner of Cai loun and Wayne of the Palo Alto Mary F. West corner of Maine and Calhoun in Phoenix over shoe Leonard Dykeman will med as in toe city of Fort Wayne and M. E. over D. Drug June 19.1854. 52y  BOOKS. TRUMAN m third and fourth P. dealer Ft. w. morgan AND manufacturers anir Copper At Ihe Granite 79 Fort Ind. J. W. TOWNLEY and Crockery and 14, 1854. 38y  H. C. GREY of and Dealers Currier's Saddlery 71 under Telegraph for Skins and flUBBEL - Dealers in FOB New York Western Lake and Western Transportation Line on the Erie of a line on and and Miami Storage Baom for 100,000 of FORT my time I ask a boon of stripped ray hearth of many a half my joys and all my just for once to make And since thy hand must leave its locks to turn blood to what thou will to form and But spare my heart from growing know taken from many a mind Its dearest its choicest And only lingering left wise experience hitter 'Tis sad to mark the mind's wit grow dim memory take But spare my heart growing me to live with friendship And hope and love till life be Let be the first and final bids the bosom bound no That so when I am passed in my grave lie slumbering With fond may his heart grew never lor has many fine but nothing more beautiful than the BITTER All night beside his night with ken We sadly turned his aching And wished the would r little so thin and now half-closed with ihe wailing And cold November great trees rocking in the soon it all was The little heart that beat so fast Could beat for us no ere morn Us beams had his little hand He laid his and softly went Into the better the Teetotal We'll IVo drink no The vow Within our inmost hearts shall Till life's red tide shall cease to We pledge to drink no fairest hopes And by the burning sense of Which long our souls We pledge to drink no all our dark and By all our woes and wants and That mock all words and stifle We pledge to no by our homes of joy A thorny waste where Eden With discord and sin We pledge to drink no by our pale waiting Our starving children's That pierce where all that's human We to drink no stand in and And our galling chains weal or woe pledge and drink no A. kindles the fire of is the silken string running through the pearl chain oi all faults are little thieves that let in lighter than are levers in the building up of like may swallow a man up in a is rich who more than he on the is who spends more than he idle should not be classed among the they are a sort ol dead men who can't be glory consists in doing what deserves to be written in writing what deserves to be and in so living to make the world happier and better for living in is instruction written in the sand tide flows over i; and the record is Example b graven on the and the lesson is not soon is and thrives in secrecy and often secures its advantages before the mask of hypocrisy is thrown is tbe great but simple and the whole secret of in all government and as absolutely essential to the training of an as to the control of a mighty mourn for the young 7 Better the light cloud should fade away in the morning's than travel through the weary to in darkness and end in education a matter of impossible in a nation stratum is made up of a serf or slave ' are thei blossom andit be of thelaw lie in to me 9km HAPPENED to JOE S. writes excellent moral and palms them off the unsuspecting under the name of an admirable illustration of the Maine in one of his recent the substance of which we will transfer to our Joe Barker was and fond of strong His not large at were heavily taxed by the rum and his poor fed on the coarsest food and clothed in were left to struggle with Joe was even when his weakness he could not pass a rum He make excellent when entreated by his and break when tempted by the He did not read tho and knew nothing about Maine except what he gathered from the liquor Joe had under the monitions of his abstinent for a whole when with his week's wages in his pocket and his hot with the he sallied out in search of a His first call was at the It was shut In much he passed on to But was and Sprigg in answer to Joe's importunate put his head from an upper and surlily with More mystified than Joe started ftr Paul But there too all was dark and was utterly and commenced retracing his but not heod he run against a The rest of the story we will let Mr. Arthur tell in his own what is the matter ejaculated moving back a pace or and trying to relink the broken chain of his the old I've had many a cool drink here in my both as boy and and it never cost nie a nor made me more of a fool than some people say I am by Good Mr. Let us shake hands or just as you for old acquaintance I've been trying to get a drink this half but not a drop's to be got for love or The have all shut up it i hope your not on a strike Let's lifted the putting tbe iron ladle under the spout as he did and it down with a strong Out gushed the crystal looking clear and even in the feeble It filled the overrun ils and went splashing down the was something pleasant in the even to the dull ears of and there was a feeble awakening in his mind of the dear old memories of and the early times when he was a better man than hia mouth he placed tha and drank a pure draught of Just as he removed vessel fi ora his and had taken a deep a hand was laid on his shoulder and a friendly voice than was ever found at the Diamond across and a thousand times better into the I'm glad to see you returning to your old friend and hope you will have no occasion to desert Friend Pump is worth a score of your What a blessed thing that you are forever rid of their friendly rid of said What does it all mean neighbor What have they Has any one been not exactly but didn't you know that the old villain Alcohol died last What I don't understand And poor Joe Barker looked more bewildered than Died How Joe is it possible you don't know the Maine Law went into operation in our State Maine Joe took off his old hat and laid one of his broad hands upon his Maine Laid I heard taik about it on last They said it was a dreadful outrage upon our over at ilie and so I voted agin it. What it Will it shut up all the just what it has done You can't buy a drink of in the whole don't tell say I to that? couldn't make it out no 1 thought something strange hao All shut Spi igg said it would be the ruination of the town if the law I rather guess he thought there was nobody left in to be And you are sure tavern in town has been know was the decided I'll run home and tell But won't she be away the excited creature as fast as his feet would carry Betsy When she found that Joe had gone off with all his week's wages in his she felt like giving They were out of meal and and the children's shoes no longer kept their feet from the For she had not a garment but what was patched and until scarcely a whole breadth of the original fabric She had laid it all out in her how she was going to spend the four which her husband told in the he be paid for his week's It very small sum when she set off against their many needs she had apportioned in sum in his and she tlie were ten to one he Would not have the half of it not and Prediction bv Mr. Rev. Theodore the well-known clergyman of New at present sojourning in this in a communication to the Rev. Thomas refers to slavery and the Fugitive Slave and to a remark made to him by the late Mr. not long before his Mr. Clipp says the distinguished on one said to Slavery cannot live long in the United It will have run its race by the end of the next one hundred and fifty or two hundred Slave labor is too expensive to last In a populous community it must ever be not only in its bearings on their pecuniary but also in many other in such a state of free labor is far and will consequently bo According to an eternal law of in the long most expensive an J unpropitious forms of labor must be everywhere superseded by the least costly thing in old woman said when she the a a three a into the she it over and and noticed how torn anil worn it fit for the than anything let it fall into her and bending over the table by which she was her face in her She did not ber feelings of despondency had in them too much of hopelessness for she sat the door and her quick ears recognized the font steps of her Her heart fluttered with a new while half the oppressive weight upon her bosom was His so early and was an augury of That he had been she doubted but there was a ground for believing he had not wasted the money she so much She did not raise her head until Joe came up to where she was in a tone of exultation which he could not Good There's all my a cent he a of silver coin upon the table What do you think? Old King Alcohol's I've just heard the you said Mrs. looking in wonder and bewilderment at her excited a bit of answered as he threw his arms around his wife's and kissed drunk he as she pushed him don't you know that we've got a Maine I've been to Gilbert's and and to they're all shut Tompkins told me that a drop of liquor be bought in the whole Ain't that good news for old girl I'm as glad as if I'd found a new I never could pass their doors without going in for a whether I or Somehow or other I help Is it all true what you exclaimed Mrs. now pressing forward upon her and her arms around it all true of as I'm a living Thank was the wife's sobbing as her face fell upon the bosom of her but weak and erring month from that and what a change was visible in that humble And not in theirs but in thousands of other dwellings throughout the from which prompt legislation had driven the vile all its attendant crime and Model Portland Advertiser a communication describing the conduct ol a hackman in city towards a lady in which is worthy of high It that a respectable lady residing in New on her way to to visit her of hei purse containing all her in the car between Fall river and Being almost an entire in this she was in great but recollecting the name of an she through the agency of the the use of a hack to proceed to the house of her On lier arrival she found to her that the house was shut and her friend away on a Here she was in a strange with a hack under a journey of one hundred miles before her and not a cent of i he hackman observing her apparent addressing what is the have lost my said and have not cent of said the that is all your I can soon help you out of it. Where do you wish to the said me take you to n where you while I to the and tickets for your passage ami said the lady in great -I tell you I e lost my a id pay your easily got I will lend you just as much money as you want to finish and you can send it to me at your an offer of course surprised the lady not a She had traveled a good and had never met with such a case She had been acquainted with hack men all her life but this was the first time that one ever offered to lend her or even trust her for his She looked in his was an honest and invited accepted his and was driven to the Commercial where she refreshed In due time the worthy hackma returned with the Handed her a ten dollar her to the her on her his name was G. to be found ot the Commercial and wished her a pleasant It was a timely and Ihe reader if he for a moment place himself or in the predicament of ihe and they will be better able to estimate its keeper of the Commercial House where she rested and absolutely refused to take one cent from on being told of her but the kindness nf the hackman had made it unnecessary for her to avail herself of this Boston Power of start on the voyage of We flatter ourselves that we are abel to meet We confide in the strength of our We trust to the sincerity of our oun Guileless do not mean in the sense of sincere and suspect no fraud in is not the of It is the unhappy w. rk of the influence that comes into our notwithstanding all our efforts to resist it Irom long with the insincerity of The world flatters and a thousand adapted with consummate skill tothi Professed friends meet us on tlie and assure us that there is no The the the the the the invite us to tread with them the path of and to doubt the of experience and We feel confident of our own We suppose we may tread securely a ittle We see to danger We lake another step and yet ' thinking that we are saie We have tried our virtuous principles thus and thus far they bear the We could retreat if we we mean to retreat the moment that danger comes But who knows the power of Who knows when danger shall rush upon us so that we cannot There is a dividing line between safety and Above thundering the river spreads out into a and tranquil All is and the current flows gently and even a light skiff may be guided in You may glide nearer and nearer to the admire the beauty of the and looking the ascending spray of the and listening to the voar of the distant and be happy in the consciousness that you are You may go a little may have power still to ply the oar to reach ihe But there is a point beyond which human power is and v. here the mighty waters shall seize the quivering and bear it on to swift So perishes many a young man by the power of You may drink asocial and you may be safe may be may without You may go to the you and be Vou may be and think you may go and be safe You are fascinated wit scenery the the and jougo The the s is not such as you saw and heard at the fireside of your not such as a mother ould not quite such as you would wish a sister to cannot help perceiving that is indelicate and But you will be sensible of less and ess horror at the indelicacy and profaneness is a point where no young man is safe and where no unconverted heart is secure from the power of 1 need not describe the One allurement stand None have been injured by staying from such But many hearts have been broken as the result of a visit to such a place of Child's Love to little when was asked where it said the what makes you wish to be said Christ is replied the said a if Christ should leave said the will go with time before its it expressed a ( to have a golden crown when it what will you the golded will take the taid the cast it at the feet of not such a to use the language of die a hundred years to Youth climbing a look up never for in doing the a fall is So in life uim to keep company with those above rather than those beneath you in intellectual in goodness and Emulate your superiors in every thing noble and that with wise men shall be fellow who picks his way no doubt has something sharp in his drunkard's nose is said be a warning us of the little water that passes has a man a right to scold his wife about his coffee he has more than sufficient exchange paper asks very innocently if it is any harm for ladies to sit in the lapse of replies that it all depends on tbe kind of ages Those from 18 to 25 it puts down as I can't help exclaimed Clerk of one of our lawyers will take papers without my knowledge I can't help expect some of them will steal my head some of these One of the the older members of the who was present at the and heard exclamation of instantly order to constitute oi some value must be little fellow who had commenced read the asked his father if the word prefixed to the name of the Representative in That little fellow has a mind for have soon it stated that a man who will do more work in hour than a a This opinion of a who says that cheerfulness is the best he a is extraordinary how dreadfully mantic a little dose of matrimony makes When git Is get married substitute ton for shirt and dumplings for and pickling for polkas for blushes for flirting and Johnny Jones came o'er the and 1 won't have Came o'er the a courting his old beard so newly Johnny's rich and I am He tias gold enough in Land of acres many but 1 won't have his locks are Ha. and 1 won't have Though he dresses rich and his old beard is newly Johnny says with looks ot If I'll come and be his In a carriage I shall and I won't have has a house so and won't have Johnny swears it shall be his old so ly shaven What care 1 for house or Ian 1? What care I for a rich old man? I can work with willing I won't have is a I won't tell his nor where he's living Oft he's coming here to and 1 will have young and tall and Well knows bow the bread to I could spend my days with and I will have Sept. 19.  Hints to Young We like to see the girl who isn't afraid to soil her while she shines with in tbe parlor or ball scrubs the kitchen floor it smells as sweet as new mown and does up linen so neatly giving it such an exquisite everybody admires it. Who sneers at the at the fair girl in the close dress of in the fur and earns hev None but the starched up in silks and is only fit to squat on a piano stool or flirt with dandified girls are truly for they can't their afternoons in they can steal an hour from the morning or evening for a and when they do put on they look just like as the other sort of females are and are they less for pa and ma didn't pay for rich shawls and pretty their no less beautiful fingers earned the money to purchase How many of them support aged parents and helpless how many of them submit to confinement and only to come off conquerors at by gaining the of worthy t i whom they make excellent and industrious it Costs to Make following extract from the Parlor Annual deserves a careful perusal from husbands and fathers as well as wives and It furnishes a key to much of the misery we find in the childhood and girls are healthy and capable of fatigue as for the very good reason that regarding it equally necessary to give them has kindly done and because they romp in the open and thus obey the promptings of unsophisticated Yet our are much more healthy than and even young Take the families of merchants and business the purse-proud nabob on the one nor the hardy on the how stands the matter? The men are accustomed to a degree of bodily they are busy with bales and boxes among draymen and they are driving about the warves and streets all their and bodies fully employed and go home with a well-earned while their wives and of on the same platform of respectability as have dragged the wearisom hours of the day in listless idleness or sedentary and approach the table with an appetite that almost spurns the repast other hands have and fill their anxious husband's or ears with complaints of a thousand which perhaps nothing but a summer at the springs or watering places can Poor they have not been properly Fashion would pout its contemptuous lips and toss its brainless bead at tbe idea of useful toil for the daughters of a But the same fickle goddess 7ias no objection to tho father or son going into the store and laboring all rolling packing and unpacking for is all very but she denies to the daughter any part in the household because it vulgar and and consignes her to the practice of worsted and What matters if if the son's hands be his chest and muscles his face bronzed by the sun and and with firm but the daughters must be pale and with soft white to be worthy to with the sons of who are every day just like her with like Flower loverd ot flowers should remember now that many fine varieties are ripening their and it the best time to secure Put them up in neat mark their names legibly upon and put them away in a dry and next spring be glad you have this slight The Missouri difference of elevation of the valleys of the Missouri and the Mississippi has been The level of is one and Mexican of the Mississippi at in the same only hundred and Seasonable plants taken up and other wise preserved toing winter after this better taken in. There are tree and similar too or in cases is that be kept very in cellars there is some day and - a they to as dry as possible without the In the soon as all danger of severe frosts is they may be transferred to their summer where they help to give variety to the flower and a few choice sweet pets should now be taken care as their fragrance is perfectly and the flowers come in Where they are to be grown in they if be they can be potted at and in succession to the warmest part of the green where will flowers all the Where there is a stock on and frames to a portion should be planted in a one or two ligat from six to nine inches wUl afford a large quantity of flowers in the early spring They require protection Some of these should be potted for winter and some seed sown to come in should be kept near the are plants always in demand for out To succeed well with roses during they require rather more heat than is given wher 2 a small house exclusively devoted to this is seldom the best must be done which the means will by p ving them the warmest part of the Any plants that have been in their pots all the little furnish flowers up to They should be anil shifted into large pots where and slightly they can then be introduced into the warmest part of a few should be at once taken irom the borders and the remainder may remain in as long as there is a chance of obtaining a The best sorts for winter flowering are the common of course inferior in beauty to many the Bourbon family stands next Remontant soon as the plants arc no longer useful for they should be taken dried a a stored away in a dry They require to be kept dry or they but be kept near any heating or they dry and borders as the flowers die be cleaned and spaded Where manure is at and the soil is some should be added at the samo gets well incorporated by looks tidy during and expedites the work so much when busy spring comes round dug in the can be worked than if left till the Oct. 3,184.5  singular piece of composition is a literal copy of the sea letter granted by th j Congress to Captain January 2d, 1785:  most Pu Wise and Prudent Cotin as also and Regents of all the good cities and places whether Ecclesiastical or who shall see these presents or hear them read the United States in Congress make known that Thomas Captain of the ship called the is a citizen of the United and as wo wish to see the said Thomas Truxton prosper in his lawful our prayer is to nil the before mentioned and to of them where the said Thomas Truxton arrive with his and that they may please to him with treat him in a becoming permitting him upon the usual and in and tij navigate and frequent the passes and territories to the end transact his business where and in what manner ho shall judge whereof wo shall be willingly In testimony whereof we have caused the seal of the United Stateci of America to be hereunto DAVID Chairman of Congress in tlie absence of his Excellency John this second day of in the year of our Lord our Lord one seven hundred and and of our Sovereignty and of more the Not one hand iii enough in a but what an Not a ring has ftir it is is a great Not when it brings a thief to the The world's a long Not the sun goes over it every is a great way to the bottom of the No i it is but a stone's friend ia best found in Not there is none to be The pride of the rich makes the labor Of the Not the labor of the poor makes tho pride of the visitor lately into a school in Ne w England during the est noticed two fine one ot taken the first prize and the other the are two fine looking he said to the suppose they belong ta higher class of That is not the way we class our follow the old the sonof the the one who took the second sob of of tho  

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