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Logansport Weekly Journal Saturday, February 03, 1866,
Indiana

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Indiana

Logansport Weekly Journal Saturday, February 10, 1866,
Indiana

Logansport Weekly Journal Saturday, February 17, 1866,
Indiana

Logansport Weekly Journal Saturday, February 24, 1866,
Indiana

Logansport Weekly Journal Saturday, March 03, 1866,
Indiana

Logansport Weekly Journal Saturday, March 10, 1866,
Indiana

Logansport Weekly Journal Saturday, March 17, 1866,
Indiana

Logansport Weekly Journal Saturday, March 24, 1866,
Indiana

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Fort Wayne Daily Democrat Saturday, July 03, 1869 ,
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Blairsville Press Saturday, July 03, 1869 ,
Pennsylvania

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Kingston

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Logansport Weekly Journal

   Logansport Weekly Journal (Newspaper) - July 3, 1869, Logansport, Indiana                                Publishers k mi th iU 21.  Per In JULY 3, 1869.  15.  Logansport Every H. J. a in are the only terms on the part of the Any other tenos must be by special but under no will the Publishers than three J. W. 7* MAKKET HALL at E. N. Market between the and Sixth given to diseases of Women and of square lines of one and SO cents for additional for three 1 mo. 2 3iiiog., 0 j 1 square 8 4 t inches k 1 4 00' i 50 6 60i  12 00, IB 00.  00  8 10 001 Il 00; 14 00 20 00 80 00 00^  10 00 12 00 ' 14 001 00 25 00' 4& 00  00 It OOj 15 00 15 00^ 20 00 18 00^ 25 OU 21 OOi 80 24 00{ 85 OU 40 OOj eo 0(1 60 00 100 00  (I per square for each to the party pub lishing and Funeral will be charged 50 per and Deaths are published an to promote private must be paid for at the advertising the number of insertions desired is will be till ordered and charged at regular yearly advertisements to be paid foi 15 cants per Nn however inserted for less than aboro Rates will be strictly to in all AT 17otaries No. Si Fourth Prompt will be all ncM to attention to all of and prompt and Probate done with and k ia Room 9,  on AT in aU the Conrt u. A AT LAW to all JT attention all of and done and no. 21 Vi Couri C. aid at Law omat s H. attention given to and S. ATTORNEY AT WUl la the and and Nearly Coart ON FOURTH North of IND. 1M18. lyio  A. D. and and the IND. Tbc destitute for every 76 J. near lie oii ull Acute and i hronic which In- tbw in or to ut nil the S. F. for former a of the i; if K. comer uf Ueer reek on tide ot IVer Creek Su for at the Aurll 6,1807. stf  to M. 83, and W. HENDERSON and and in all MARKET it CANAL in. ROW AT ESTATE 8t.,  T. A ATTORNEYS AT No. tl FoorU Conn 1U LoaAxsPOitT, A AIB amiL AND 0)'ilcr, 89 M. lOT above the found a good assortment of which he is prepared to make up in the most approved at shuit and on 186. 4I-tf  and 66 IND. ft T. and OTO H. of and In ali kinda Volley and do locali oa onr fur 1. uot paMmI liy any In Slate AH work Aunr tu Uie al lite B. AT UTA U Y CLAIM tl 8lrri, M. FLORY ATTORNEY AT Prompt will ta all lo his Couri B. it BMk V ot Co lad for of aav all of Momt I KalUM Mes ul mw and all i ImI ia Mtt lo. W W. H. ttp M AND TA n L is liM opened a to ali lu feto Um la ihm IB tbr iran In Um tlxt Salteri fc irait irto Im- a vi ami Ria tira t dune O Jbm I. W. No. aad 41 Fourth 14  will pay in and will find to their on Me Before 53 and 58 Fourth CASH RYE Bei CASH FOR STOCK 146.  act to authorize and encourage the construction of and and the reclamation of wet and lands by incorporated and to repeal all former laws relating to the same MAY ORGANIZE 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of any number of persons not less than being owners of lands or liable to be may organize a company for the purpose of reclaiming and protecting snch which Rhall have power to widen and make new channels for the whole or any part of any or water and to construct any levees and and do every thing which they deem proper to accomplish the purposes for which the company shall have been OF 2. Such persons shall sign articles of association specifying the names and purposes of the and shall elect from their number not less than three nor more than seven of tlie time and of which election the shall bo by notices signed by three members and posted in 3 public near the five days the but notice may be wavied by Vacancies in the offices of directors may bo by appointments made by the remaining TO HE OF 3. Such articles of association shall bo recorded in the offices In several in which any part of the work shall be and from the date of filling the same lor iu either of such such company shall bo a body with all power incident to snch and to consummate the purposes for which it was organized and to donations and anil sell and any lands benefitted by the work of the proposed and any person owning land supposed to be liable to be affected by said may become a member of the company by signing the article of The corporate of the shall be judicially and the company's record shall be prima facia evidence of its 4. An annual election shall be held by the company at time and place as the company shall for the election of of which 20 days notice shall be given by one week's publication by one newspaper of circulation in each county in which any part of the work shall be if such paper be published and printed in such and if there be then by posting notice in three public places near the 5. of the directors shall form a quorum and shall and management of the business and affairs of the They shall appoint one of their number and shall appoint a and tuch other agents as they may sec fit; and all officers and agents shall be entitled to a fair for their The Treasurer shall give bond to the with proper penalties and for the faithful discharge of his duties and the safe keeping and prompt payment to the orders ot the Board of of all that may come into his the and Treasurer shall hold their offices for one year and until their respective shall bo and bo sworn to the faithful discharge of their The may administer all official The company may apply to the Circuit Court or to the Court of in terra or to a Judge thereof in of a county in any part of the proponed work shall be which Court or Judges as the case may shall immediately and tuch shall examine all the the or market value of may be them supposed to be liable to bo by construction of or by the of alt or iwrt of for right of way or other purpose of the or ot any or other quired by the and shall 1 make out iu tiie I States I all such in each and shall to each tract Itie full and entire of benefit which it the opinion of a majority I ot to tXe cojA qf the and I the which in the opinion of a majority of them it will and append to such schedule their affidavit that the same is a true assessment and return tiie same to the of the who shall cause it tu for record in the of the of the rounty in which the laud Is described shall and from the dale of filing thereof such shall he a lien oil the lands upon or fail to act as when the interests of the company shall in the opinion of the president require his appointment of such appraiser shall thereby be and upon representation of such vacation to such Court or Judge shall upon Uie the company immediately fill such vacancy by the appointment of a like disinterested who shall qualify and serve in manner and the same shall bo done when and as often as the company may that upon filing such schedule for record the Secretary shall give notice thereof by posting in a conspicuous placc in the and any party aggrieved by any such assessment may within thirty days thereafter appeal to the Circuit or Common Pleas Court of said And provided that any person who Is under legal at the time of making such shall have the right of appeal as at any lime within thirty days after the removal of such And provided that any two appraisers may perform all the services required by this and that all acts curred in by any shall be binding and COST NOT TO 7. Before the actual of the work be surveys of it and estimates of Its cost shall bo and the schedules of assessments returned to the and if the estimated cost of the work shall exceed the aggregate amount of tho the work shall not be 5|irther TO ItK DIVIDED INTO 8. Before the actual construction of the work shall bo the company shall divide the main line of their work into as many sections of not exceeding six miles in length as may be and each of such with its branches and shall form a separate division of the and they shall also appropriate and set apart as applicable and hold the same for tho construction of each of such divisions a portion of their bearing the same ratio to the whole of their resources properly applicable to the construction of the as the estimated eost of such division shall bear to cost of the whole and so much thereof as shall be necessary shall be applied for the purpose for which it was appropriated and set and the surplus may be applied to other legitimate purposes of the and tho work of construction shall be prosecuted as simultaneous on tho whole as may seem to tho Directors consistent with proper OF EXAMINATION OF 9. The owners of lands liable to be by the work of a shall have notice of the time and placc when and where the will begin the of and the assessment of benefits and injuries and of the order of which it shall be intended to proceed with the which notice need not specify what lands are to be examined or but may be general and addressed to the and shall be sufficient if published for three successive weeks in a published iu the county iu which the lands are and proof of its publication may bo made by the affidavit of the or publisher of tho paper n which it is or of the Secretary of tho OF OF THE 10. The Board of may order the payment of said assessments In installments not exceeding ten per per and payments thereof shall be made to the Treasurer in with such that no more be collected thun shall ill the of the Directors be for the legitimate of the Company in the of the work and Hint the main line of the Company's proponed work shall twenty miles in no part of the shall bo collected by the shall have given bond payable to the State ut with surety approved by the Circuit or or a J of a county in which the work or hoino part of it is conditioned for the to the of the of all money which shall bo received by fur of the bonds ahall be tiled in Iho office of the Circuit Court of the comily where it and thereof iu Clerk's office of such ill each of the other In which any part of tho work ill any person or by any breach of the condition of shall have an action in any competent for the recovery of all thereby by him or or a Ilk 11. Payment of of may be by the of the lien in any court of in tho same manner is provided by for the foreclosure of and Uie sale of for the collection of mid payment of for injuries mortgage or mortgages upon said assessments lor benefits of lands or any parts or any other property of the pledges and mortgages may each provide for a sinking fund for the gradual extinguishment of the and such company may from time to time negotiate said bonds iu any market or at any rate of discount not exceeding ten per and after any such bonds liave been no action or proceeding shall bo nor any to any action bo By the company or any other person or the object or tendency of which shall bo to impair tho validity or or to depress the value of such any provision of law to the contrary 14. After tho expiration of three years from the recording of the schedule of assessments in any no action shall be instituted to foreclose any lien on land situated in such unless the assessments secured by such lien shall have pledged or mortgaged by as security for one or more bonds out and iu such cases no tract of land after the elapse of said three bo liable for more 4han its fair proportion of the assessments pledged or mortgaged as security for bonds oi the and required for the extinguishment TO BE 15. No or which shall have occurred or which may occur in the organization or proceedings of any or any of their agents or shall effect tho rights or of such company or invalidate the assessments of the nor any sale of land shall which be made under any foreclosure of any lien for the assessment provided the amount of the assessment shall be clearly set forth iu the and the schedule been duly and notice of tho recording thereof given as herein 1G. All members of any company which has been organized under the provisions of this act shall be personally liable for all debts contracted by the for labor performed for the ETC. Sec. 17. All or with any of provisions of this and all laws now or any time heretofore in force relating to incorporated companies or associations for constructing levees and are hereby but all actions now and all rights of action which have under any law hereby may be prosecuted to final judgment in the same manner as if such law had not been repealed and all corporations heretofore organized and now existing under any law hereby repealed and the several members shall bo entitled to tho benefits and privileges conferred and subject to the liabilities and restrictions imposed by this act. that nothing in act contained shall be held or to modify or in whole or an act act to enable the owners of wet lands to drain and reclaim where the same cannot be done without the lands of prescribing the powers and duties of the County Boards and County Auditors iu the and repealing all laws inconsistent approved March 11th, 1807,  81. An emergency exists for the taking of this and the same is hereby to take effect and be in force from after its Will of the a. of THE ACT TOOK was presented to me on the l Uh day 18(59, and the tinal of the Assembly took place on the day of tiie same and tho not having been acted upon within live days with Executive on the of 180!).  is use of the word is very yet except good mechanics and engineers attach a definite meaning to but regard it as indicating loosely about the power one horse would It when used in the sense under as definite as and means the power required to lift thirty-three thousand pounds avoirdupois one foot high in one A horse hitched to tho end of a over a pully one foot in placed over a deep traveling at the rate of about two and a half miles per or two hundred and twenty feet per will draw up one hundred and fifty pounds the same distance he The force thus exerted is called in a it being an approximation of the average amount of continuous power it is fair to demand of a strong If we multiply the weight raised hundred and fifty by the number of feet it was moved per and the product will bo the number of pounds which the same power would raise only one foot high in the samo length of thousand The dynamometer is an instrument made for measuring particularly that exerted in Those used in testing the draft of agricultural implements are simply very strong spring or spring graduated to indicate the power required to raise any weight reasonable at the vate of two and a half miles per When we apply the dynamometer in ascertaining the draft of if tho index indicates one hundred and fifty it is that the horse is required to draw just as hard as he would do if raising one hundred and fifty pounds out of a well with a rope over a pulley ono foot in at the rate of two and a half miles per and so for other Tho velocity at which a team moves is to bo as well as tho weight to be or tho load to be If a horse travels faster than two and a half miles in an while raising ono hundred and fifty out of a ho exerts more than one-horse If he walks slower than he does not exert a force equal to one-horse In ascertaining the draught of a plow or reaper and by driving faster than two antr a half per tho dynamometer will indicate more than tho correct and by driving the draught would appear to be less than it really is. In testing the draught of machines a team should always move at rate of two and a halt miles an or two hundred and twenty feet per which is the universally accepted rate with reference to which dynamometers are and an easy ono to which an approximate in with almost any kind of Many persons have supposed that three hundred represented the same that a team would exert when dragging three hundred pounds along on the A horse can haul six hundred pounds on the hard ground with but he could not draw hard enough on the dynamometer to mark more than two hundred and fifty or three hundred pounds except for a lew The power of a man is estimated at that of a Si wai the scene this oi another of thoHO so horrible to contemplate by Henry for several patt in anil on the was taken tu tho 2 o'clock this in a state ol lie was placed ill one ol the cells he have began to make to take his for on the visit of tho ol about an hour he wiu hanging by 1 his 8tispnders to the of the cell 4iiilti us were Immediately to without can be as to the cause of filial lie a lew weeks ago to the hanie deed by taking a large ot which was by the timely ol lie was and leaves a who resides a lew doors of the on A jury a verdict of tienili by by his own may KV UT oo TO 41 lor the amount by an action in a like court ' such of benefits less amount of injury And when and often It shall | be necessary or desirable to any Und for the correction of any or to enable the company to appropriate any part I of the sanie for of or ' any or other Hal lor the construction of the i and and as often i at it shall be by the pany to make a of I any or of land for any said shall upon j i and so from time ' to and as often aa. they shall be and make asd of the and such shall bo filed i for record sball constitute i shall be and sball in all br governed by the same and the force and effect as the original assessments provided And if any as OK 12. The Company may any or oilier toy the ribelli of or the of proposed first paying tho county treasury of the county where the land is for the use of the owner of the tho amount of damages assessed by appraisers to him MAY UK 13- Any Company whose work shall be to cost or may issue with or without not exceeding In the the estimated cost of the which bonds may be of any and payable at any time and anil bear any amount of interest not exceeding ten per per payable annually or semi and may secure the payment by a pledge or pledges h-man while nt was til an of one the by a While he was there his was taken from him next being at another be a take snuff out ol ile turned to and man blue with golden is taking out of my you know he not a ' Take said the man is of first do not care for his the my box I'll go and ask him foi said his Is Sumlay The enameling of female faces and busts is now a branche of masculine and is quite A on Broadway devotes a good deal of time and attention to this line of while a man called Susson imitates his The process of is somewhat The belle who would enameling go is first examined with a and any rough hairs or fuzz which exist upon the cheeks or bust is at removed with or medicated or or Being thus tho checks or bust are coated with a fine which is composed of or white or other ingredients made into a and pleasantly scented An ordinary coating of enamel will endure for a day or but to render the operation of any per the coating process has to be repeated twice a week for varying according to cir and the circumstances of its The penciling of the so as to render the contrast between them and the whitened face more is sometimes in the enameling process while the eyebrow is also trimmed or shaven just as Ihe on a costs a good deal of gold to be The of en but the average list of the various stages is about as For enameling the lace to last once or from SIO to for enameling the face and bust from for enameling the face to endure one or two from to for enameling the and to last about the same from to for Is for six keeping the face in a well from to 1350, and lor keeping the face and bust both in the same pleasing from to .So that from Its very cost alone should become married of the Fifth Avenue two belles of the Metropolitan a well known and three or four prominent young ladies of Madison are at the present most of the darlings ' but Ihe fashion is be at will bo nut only on but on the and Future talk of New England as the hive of I put this prediction on and I won't wait ten years to see it that California and Oregon are going to almost rival New England in I believe With all the hundreds of millions lu the lands fronting the Pacific stretching out their as they toward this country for all those articles that can bo manufactured you will see the infant manufactures of the Pacific States leaping forward with the gigantic strides with which our country has Illustrated its entire history in tho annals of tho Have you thought how wo are swelling iu population as I did two or three weeks and looking back and modern I found no parallel to it. Tho advance of this not alone in its which has more than doubled every ton but iu the increase of its which is even more valuable than gold and has been six times more than Great nine times move than ten times more than and is destined to give us a hundred at the end of the and beyond it our nation is to in its in its in its terrible in its in its and in its what I dare not attempt to predict to It is to come if we are it is to if we are it is to come if we arc true to from Orient to from mountain to from to from Maine to the Golden the future of this great if only wisdom and light and shall guide shall bo beyond tho portrayal of beyond any words that my tongue can express to you upon this joyful the opening of the new history of the American his article on Prof. Smyth has the following somewhat fanciful tradesman iu walking gives signs of folding measuring and taking down The ponderous arm and heavy fall of his hand the nervous grasp with which she adjusts her gives unmistakable evidence of a factory Travelers who visit the field of Waterloo are accustomed to enter their names in a This book has been kept for many years by the same and with wonderful accuracy he is able to designate the visitor's nationality simply by inspecting the Much more easily can the profession or nation bo detected by the Tho grave the phlegmatic the vivacious and sanguine the reserved and formal the inquisitive impetuous and self-confident each betrays the gait in his style of The sailor rolls when on as if our trim planet sailed The soldier marches even when no longer under The bends the knee as if every man he meets were a p: The lawyer steps boldly and The clergyman as if the street were his or as if mindful of tho snares and spread for the The waiting clerk is known by his and graceful Wo distinguish the coxcomb by the careful manner in which he drops his foot and picks his way along the a by his measured Students dally and children doctors hunters teamsters gossips ghosts and aldermen the Central St. seats in a man's are not usually supposed to be and very few would have sufficient impudence to walk in Every man's home is is his and when there he is shut in from the and has the right to make his own domestic When the privacy and of the family is made the basis of church wrong is The church is not merely a social it is a divine intended to be the common home of all who love and the place of instruction for all who desire to love After mature we have come to the conclusion that the Central Christian Advocate can not be silent upon a disastrous evil without incurring The in imitation of other churches which had grown adopted tho plan of having New England did more than all other sections to force this bad habit upon the and now it is remarkable that Boston is tho first large city to declare for a Boston Methodists of grown in graco and to save the people they vote for free We do not any church for having any more than we would blame a woman for dressing in the The fashion of exclusive scats in God's house has bad its it is going into outer and our houses of worship will soon be as free as the light of who were the last to adopt pews and operatic may be the last to banish but they are doomed to an ignominious and Boston lias the honor of initiating the new as far as Methodists arc The actuated by the wisdom of the never admitted pews into The who have always been thought have recently made the very strongest protest against Several bishops have urged that tho free seat system should be adopted in all their Tho and Presbyterians are moving upon the enemy's and all along the line we hear the let him Wo never heard a tenable argument in favor of and we suppose most people will be willing to adopt the more liberal and reasonable If tho purpose of tho church organization is social and personal then wo might have not only pews but and ice cream and but if we really intend to bring sinners to we must make salvation acceptable to The very idea of exclusive seats repels the multitude and is the main barrier which keeps the people from the Being invited to preach for of our city now we were astonished to find free seats and free congregational It was about like an old-fashioned Methodist Church before pews and choirs hail been a good choir which leads the and does not monopolize wo have no but a paid quartette doing tho music iu a church is out of all character a ridiculous imitation of opera and a wondrous piece of New England made us take the wo hope she can persuade us to abandon of the device of communication America had caused the bed of the North Atlantic to be explored by the soundings to a depth seldom exceeding three there was reason to conclude from the investigations of Dr. on Cotidal that a depth of nine miles was attained in the South Atlantic and from the separate computations of Airy and that a somewhat greater depth occurred in a part of the course of tho which washes the coast of greater portion of the seabed is within reach of directed by the superior skill and great perseverance of modern scientific A depth of six miles is said to have been reached in one small tract of the North depths of nine or ton miles in the deepest of the sea are from tho general proportion which is likely to obtain between and Thus the data are gradually collected for a complete survey of the bed of the among other at concerning the distribution of animal and vegetable life the wine and brandv of California is at least which a of good vineyard land than au of y earl v of wine and worth about if 16(i,HK),000 at quiet and leave it to me to get back the place of this tho went after his friend to dine with bini the He and he entered said bave brought rou your snuff dld you Mt it the the did noi wish to make so I his al of tbU product is representing a value of from to 11 1 that the wine of California inside ol ten years will equal In value the present gold and that it will rise when the State 1 to a yearly value of all the wild range of accepted maxims there is it for more thoroughly abominable than tho ones as to the sowing ol wild at it on what side you mid I will defy vou to make anything but a out of it. W he or that shall be thing to do with wild is to put them carefully into I he hottest part of tho get them burned to every seed of If you sow no matter in what they will come up with tough like the and luxuriant stalks and as sure nn is a sun ill crop which turns one's heart cold to of. The whose special crop they will see that they and and will have to reap them and no common will get them out of the which must bo dug down deep again and Well for you with all your you can make the ground sweet again by your dying saloon keener at Paris recently wout to Madison and purchased some pictures to hang in his Among other pictures he ' purchased the of not knowing what it lie had never heard uf such a thing and considered It an appropriate screws in a watch number or more than quarter of all its The Screw and Steel Department is one of the largest iu tho Its magical little run by nimble-fingered convert shining steel wire into infinitesimal pare down their and cut slots in them for microscopic They are polished to perfect and like every other part of tho brought to temper of the leaves them ot a deep The illustration shows tho screws of their actual and also one 100 times or 10,000 times the actual are machines which will cut with five hundred threads the tho finest used in tho watch have two hundred and fifty Even these threads are invisible to the naked and it takes one hundred and forty-four thousand of tho screws to weigh a A pound of them is worth six pounds of pure Lay ono upon a piece of white and it looks like tho tiniest Only bv placing it under a strong magnifier can we detect its threads and see that it is shining as n and as true and perfect as the of a of the best compensation balance are of A ten-dollar will material for six and fifty of The comes from tho Punching Room a solid piece of steel as large and heavy as a new and inclosed in a rim of It is ground worked and polished till it becomes a slender outer rim brass the inner rim and lighter and thinner than a Through the double rim twenty-two holes are drilled for the A chuck whirls the wheel one spin a penny upon a thousand eight hundred times a while u lad makes each hole by applying three tiny drills one after the lie will bore one hundred wheels per or apply a drill once in 6 seconds from morning till to say nothing of time consumed in fastening on and taking the wheels and sharpening his Screws of gold or brass are then put in and the balance is On this little part alone eighty operations have been D. in Harper's Magazine for men named Lewis Mayer and Arnold Lewis were arrested in New on a charge of boring holes In the bellows of gas Each hole saved 10 per upon the consumer's the sustained 10 per This fraud bos been largely practiced both in New York and Henry J. of the Kew York June 18__^The the facts of Mr. Raymond's from best as accompanied by bis went to Greenwood Cemetery for the purpose of selecting a family He intended to have the body of one of his children who died removed from the vanlt and returned to the Times office about 5 and remarked to the associate editors that be never felt better in his except a sad feeling of fatigue consequent upon his long walk through the Ho left the office at o'clock and proceeded to his residence in West Ninety-eighth street where he remained until about 9 to recover from the fatigue of the Mr. Raymond left his house about 9 remarking to the members of his family that he had an appointment to attend a political He was shortly after walking up and one or two friends who stood in front of Wallack's noticed his elastic step and general appearance of robust After attending the meeting ho returned to his residence at 11 and as soon as he had closed the door after him he fell heavily upon the None of the inmates of the house heard the having retired for the At about 3 o'clock this morning one of his children became upon fully remarked that he heard some one breathing The persons in the house were and oti descending to the Mr. R. was found extended on the floor entirely breathing and apparently with great He was carried to his room and placed on a and physicians sent for four of whom arrived soon They examined him and pronounced him beyond all medical They also declared the case to be Mr. R. lingered in an state 6 o'clock in the when he surrounded by his He passed away apparently with bat little The news of his death caused much and very general regret throughout the All down town hotel and newspaper offices displayed their flags at half-mast as a mark of The associated Press to-day adopted resolutions expressive of profound sorrow at the death of Mr. England's is true that parts of New England are Thousands of acres which under cultivation are now covered with Whole districts which were once occupied by thrifty American families are now quite deserted or inhabited by on the other the cities hare more than doubled in population within twenty-five New villages have sprang and almost all the old towns are more prosperous and beautiful tban they wore a generation The agricultural interest has bat other interests have sprang ap and grown Into overshadowing The property of the six States has steadily increased in spite of the draft and the greater drain of New has declined relatively only because the rest of the Union has grown with such and she lias contributed to that growth of enterprise and ideas than any other section of Every rail road has tapped that and drawn oat more or less of its Every new city west of the Hudson has been built up at her and Cleveland are New England Minnesota is Massachusetts There is not a village inali the West bat traces its best back to the veins of the old Puritans of and Plymouth and Massachusetts New England has declined only because she has We go back and look in the old nest and find nothing there but shells on tbe all through the are the winged ones that rose from the house of straw to fill tho whole land with beauty and New England has Rock is only the of a house that reaches to tbe Golden tilings happen In the horse cars A young lady stepped into a car and her handkerchief upon a vacant as much as to say While she advanced to the opposite end of the car to speak to a lady Meanwhile a with a college air about jumped in and sat down on the without observing it. The young after up her turned discovered to her chagrin her seat was occupied and sat down a gentleman making room for But she did not desire to lose her and so she looked intently toward the place where she had left hesitating to ask for it or Discovering the direction of her all eyes on the opposite side of the car were bent on tbe young Finding himself the object of so much he himself and discovered to his white on which hu the end peeping He mistook its To cover it with his hand and to tuck it nicely away was the work of a few None in the car but tho young lady that the was a hesitating still more to she lost having had occasion to leave the car before the young man native Boston youth accosted a boy of decided African lineage a a few days and inquired of the sable lad why her had so short a The reply so it won't poke itself into other people's New View of newspaper tells the following story of a recent Irishman was sitting on the line whan the engine tossed him down an embankment The driver backed his train to pick up the dead The victim was found only somewhat and taken to Here the driver kindly offered to send the man to his a few miles in a but he insisted on his ability to and to be sent The driver the when the had stood the so away with your go home by and if I've done any damage to yer old I'll pay H on the  

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Your full introductory membership payment will be credited toward the cost of full membership any time you choose to upgrade!

Your Membership Includes:
  • 100 page views for 2 months
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a Monthly Membership only for $29.95
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!
Subscribe for a 6 Month Membership only for $99.95
Best Value! Save -45%
Your Membership Includes:
  • Unlimited Page Views
  • Access to Over 130 million Newspaper Pages
  • Ability to View, Save, and Print
  • Articles featuring over 100 million people
  • Full Access To All Content including 10 Foreign Countries
  • Weekly Search Alerts - We search for you!
  • & Many More Features!