Warren Ledger (Newspaper) - August 5, 1875, Warren, Pennsylvania WAKREN F. H. JR. ARREN PA. Two in OF Six and U 75 112.00 8.00 8.00 15.00 26.00 12.00 30.00 6.00 30.00 85.00 8.'oO 15.00 35.00 80.00 100.00 Notices 1 100 8.00 Business of OE over nvo lines Mu will cue square and Purged as Notices In the Local Column per Obituary Notices Marriages and Deaths mil be in- freo of BUSINESS Attorney ut O. on opposite July 1 Attorneys at Of- VV flee over Jewelry W. W. M. M. Physician Office and Witter third Episcopal I. Attorney Law in over east ot tbe Carver U and First National Office Lours Irom 7 A. until r. M. Sept. M. Physician und burgeon Kesi Liberty next door to Hooker's Attorney at Law and Justice of the Water over A to him carefully attended done and promptly and selors at No. Johnson's W. M. Attorneys lit Office on Water F. HOWN A Attorneys at over B First R. o. w. ft Attorneys and 0 All business en- 1 rusted to thorn will nmi ly attended on Liberty ar- V. 1IOOKI3U. fl LARK Attorneys at O on Second below son's j. H. 15YLES, Attorneys lit Of- flee on Spring opposite the Legal business in and forest fully and promptly attended and xV selors at entrusted to care will prompt in. Central O. W. C. 0. BROWN Attorneys at w. 8CIINU15. Manufacturer of and Dealer in Hoots and Sales work of tho best In and on his new Brick Third ALLEGHENY TIME Takes Effect Nov. 15, 1874. PASSENGER MOUTH WARD 0 40 r 01 20 o 47 S 87 n 35 0 35 1 41 p. in I 10 F 12 as iz 12 12 11 48 U 41 112K II 00 4 i 4 18 4 16 44 9 38 9 o o 8 lit 4M 44 8 50. SK 8 40 Tit G. k i rri v o a. in 7 80 v pin v 02 t S 85 h W 4 M 8 87'.i 01 8 18 8 fit 19 12 5 9 n 13 U 10 It 111) 41 5S 110 I 7 111 111 4iS 01 U Ot 1-2 lh REN 5, 1875. 49. SHEET SINGER SEWING Anj other AND of Sewing Machines If Next door to Orr Pa. SAVINGS Is tho only chartered Barings Bank in Warren County or Interest Allowed on MADE BY How is This lor Largest and Best Stock of SPRING i SUMMER Ever brought into I propose to make them up IB rwy BEST STYLES at LO WSST PRICES AND Guarantee Pits Every I also have everything for in tho lino of that can bo asked WOMEN or MINORS F MIT VICE CASHIER L. F. A. 0. P. M. B. DUNHAM G. A. J. 1874 1874 Tobacco UNION BLOCK WATER Atlantic 1> m East p m m in p in p m Albany p m a m am Atlantic Express runs St. Louis p m p m p in 2: a m a m a m p m p m Louis and Retail Dealer in and rer of C Also Dealer in all kinds ot Tlie undersigned keeps band the best brands of Cigars and and being Ins facilities for buying stock cheap greater than and ly ho can soil than any incut in tho Hotel and keepers and all this and adjoining counties who want a good will do well to purchase their cigars of us we sell cheaper than thoy can bo bought lie also keeps on hand all and styles of and all other articles in this FETTK MEN'S PUBLISHING GOODS From tho to the best that can DO 4june74tf C. No. 5, Keystone IN MEDICINES A FANCY GOODS A Large ami Complete Stock of anb For MEDICINAL PURPOSES Futty and Oils And other articles to Special attention be to Prescriptions and Hoffman Clark's Water St. S. ABE WE SLUMBERING night it far tht it at I ft therefore cast off the of put on the armor of 13-U. Are wo mow when ft Lat ug banish the spell and from our On the watch tower of Truth the the to for It the night far spent wad the day is at Free from terror and gloom in tlie brightness The gray mist away from pathway has And the beams of the morning around we Let us leave the soft couch at tbo earliest While the dew Is yet fresh on leaflet and Lot us put off the garments of wrong from our And go forth to the day clothed In armor of The la removed baa darkened our That truth like the sun on our may Anil the chains from the arc last falling As the mist is dispersed by the dawning of In the sunlight ol hope unmolested we With plenty and health smiling over our No tyrant can take what was given us by And no priest holds a key to Interpret ottr Ihy are given to how sweet from the lips of the loving they And no craft or device can the record For man may not measure or limit Thy On our sunny the white Is And the spire rises up in the From the church in the prayer and praises are And the singa of the goodness of From the fair science is hidden no For the hard hands of labor are opening her And the poor with the wealthy and great may unfold The treasures of Knowledge more precious than In the streets of the city fair virtue How her robes and how heavenly her m ion 1 With her ranks filling last she moves on in the Whilo vice shrouds her form in the darkness of glad should our hearts while thus going All around us we see the great work of We may surely rejoice when tho of To the kingdom of virtue and peace enter in. To the Father should praise and thanksgiving When a morning so glorious our May he grant that the sunlight so bright in its Go not out in the noonday In darkness and Lot us watch and be sober as onward wo Let us put on the breastplate of faith and of From tho sword of the Spirit tho erring will And the hope of true freedom our helmet shall With our hearts firm and true we will walk in the For the night and the darkness are passing And strong in our love and tho power of our We may go forth in our own armor of STEAM SAW MILL FOB Large Mills Largo and all other fixtures in use in a saw Will exchange for Pail and Tub Address CORRY MANUFACTURING AND tf take curs on through from to and a change at No change of ears Buffalo and Trains No. 2 and 3 run Passengers for Jamestown by stage from J. 1 Vi General C. A. Assistant made w itli trains on Luke Shore road at Dunkirk fur both Through tickets can bo and baggage NEW STOllET Tho undersigned has removed hid Cigar into Hall's new brick below Keystone Water where lie keeps on hand and and for sale at wholesale and retaM tho boat brunda ot IN- Family Groceries CIG A ILLS Including his favorite brands S IEON PA. 1851 MANUFACTURERS OF Stationary Steam Ten to Three Hundred Horse from Jiew aud improved Wo on and make to PRO S Wood and low Canned And in fact everything that la needed for ly use in the Grocery SECOND One Door West of First National PAa WOOD AND LATH Royal He has received a superior anality of Chewing and Smoking OIS The best in the Also CIGAR POUCHES Tobacco Give him a JOHN Jan. 30, To perform any duty We also koep ou hand and make to a Full Lino of Having determined to make Warrun my placu of abode for wmo 1 would state to tho of and adjoining counties that 1 will attend to all calls I or MI or ol every with promptness and having had many Would be pleased lo re- your and plats made w ilh Among may DO found and SNYDER Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Coal of ail Bituminous and Blacksmith's Office on Third near Methodist Church PA. Mill in Civil Engineer and Champion This is the most perfect invention ever got up i or trimming or pruning trees or H has a large sale in ami Us ex- are just LOG TURNERS AND MILLS Together with a great A LIOS IS THE THE MODEL There lived a model man of always did exactly lie never nor nor And never staid out late at Ho made no he played no lam all women were the lie never knew what horses In truth he was a model manl with this model man of yore wicked world did not His neighbors voted him a His friends a man of He found himself accused of crimes Not to be mentioned iu these Until blind justice laid her ban And rope upon this model in this model man of A moral and a warning A little something Than must wo mortals Live while you Smoke good Drink dry Twang gay And be as virtuous as you But do not be a model little that such long years wander 011 through hopes and Must ache and bleed beneath your 1 nearer to the Where toil shall cease anil reel Am thinking of your 0, little that weak or Have still to serve or rule so Have atill so long to give or 1, who so much with book and pen Have toiled among my Am thinking of your little that throb and beat With much feverish Such limitless and strong thut so long has glowed and With passions into ashes Now covers and conceals its as pure and As crystalline as rays of light Direct from their source Refracted through the ilow red my setting mm How lurid looks this aim of W. WE to bo GEORGE now the entire interest in their sale in Warren and thoy can be ol sio other Thoy are anil will out a limb easily from 1 1.2 to 2 Inches in They are the handiest things ior minimus ever Forties iv Trimmer can call ut tno fitore of H. A. where they arc tor sale of Champion Trimmer TO LIVE MEN Entire Outfits in Machinery to VV travel and appoint Agents for CATARRH Warranted to euro Ca rh or pay 43-3 J. C. Pa for DONE PROMPTLY And at Greatly Rates Undersigned now weaves very I and on short For large one shilling per square For small carpets 1 charge u little The materials may bo left at tho store of or be taken to my residence in C. 10, tf And all those who contemplate putting new mills or repairing their old I am now prepared to furnish the following described null of the best and on the most reasonable C. D. Olmstead's Patent Mulay Saw Hangings And Mill for upright mills ex- which aie an improvement on tho Hill Lyon's formerly known as the and are far superior in simplicity and and does away with the many objections on the A L. of too much on the too much ble to keep keys under back of ball block to vent logs Irom rocking and moving and ing of spring etc. Stationary Portable Circle Saio Mills Side Different Planing Mills of Various Halo's Patent Gang Lath with hollow HAIR'S PATENT LATH with bolter and stripping saws on one Stave Machinery of Different PI PA TENT SA W SWAGE For dressing the on me and makes a perfect Agent for PRESS SAW GUMMERS ENGINES AKD BOILERS Of the best material and PATENT AMERICAN DOUBLE TV RHINE WATER best in Power pledged to an ranted to give satisfaction or no All orders promptly attend MILL GEARINGS OF DIFFERENT OSCAR B. Tanner Pa. A headstrong a headstrong every old woman m the neighborhood called Bessie and when she and Georgia her mate in most of her frolics and were the same authorities might be all the neighborhood were Bessie Allan's They all loved the little bright the dimpled chief of the rosy the glistening of the with their lashes that knew so well the demure trick of veiling the lustre under- neath them at the auspicious and making the face too tempting for anything but forgiveness and She was and though all the neighborhood might in some way be ed her yet she had never had that single and individual lover who belongs to young girl's for with all her gay spirit there was a certain most like that of the little an- imals which allures you and then escapes and no admirer had ever approached the thing near enough to become a That is to until this present epoch of which we are about to and then one day the new the new and be- by some of the old of mention has been and some of the young ones to be nothing less than an angel in if such things had happened they reasoned then they might happen as he rose in the saw Mistress Bessie come walking into and it was all over with Pray don't think ill of the young it was no earthly love of which he was conscious the brief hour of the Only to that early mer the sky was the rose was the sunshine seemed more ever to be flowing out of heaven like the shimmer of the river of lie was Dot exactly aware that lie had ever seen Bessie all that he was ly conscious of was that as if he were in an the whole world had brightened and lifted he and and preached after a manner that made the congregation during all the of Tobit and the and then he went home to dine with Mr. As for she sat very still between her father and mother in and for- got all about her roguish glances hither and all about this body's ribbons and that body's and heard the preaching and the praying with a new light in her eyes and a new sion in her the singing of the hymn with her whole soul and a voice like a and perfectly agreed for the time being with the old women and the young women that this was no common but more likely to be a spirit in mortal guise than any mere graduate of Beckwith was not of such im- material form as might lead to such Ho was a with brown curia clustering in thick rings upon a head of antique with a steely glance iu a pair of great blue and was by no means any more ethereal in than a man of proper tions and natural emotions should except in such moments as those when his excited aspiration lent a singularly pure and holy expression to tlie face that was usually rather severe than But if this young gentleman had not been self-conscious ot Bessie's presence in he became very conscious of it in her father's Not to be for the awe in which she had been bound did not wear off at But when stee found that the ister liked plenty of when she had helped him twice to when she had discovered he had a good hearty heathen then the chief in her began to get the upper and almost before she knew what she was about the eyelashes were doing their wonted Mr. Beckwith saw the rosy face before him on the darkness as he walked home that it made a picture in the sunrise clouds he woke iu the and after he had known her a fortnight there was not a day or an hour in which that foce did not seem to be lurking somewhere about his sermon between the leaves of his in the very sunshine that fell across Mr. with was not the man to consider this a mawkish or a thing to be checked by and tions of flesh and He knew in fact that his hour hud lie sat down and reasoned tho matter out with A child indeed she he con- but then an utterly lovely Not precisely the material for a minister's according to old-fashioned but then he hud abandoned old-fashioned theories in that His wife was to belong to not to the and in time she would be everything the fondest parish could Aud as for anything more that could be there was but one loved A month ago he had never seen life would be a hard struggle to the grave without A month ago he had never seen yet he was sure he had only been journeying toward and he was MS determined to his and as confident that he should do as if he had seen ic ten in the book of When Mr. with determined on a thing he was in the habit of accomplishing it. But still Mr. Beckwith had perhaps had different subjects to deal with as well calculate on lie presently as ou Bessie day she was all melting smiles and to-morrow she was remote as a to-day she was like a bird on which he was just about to put his morrow she was singing and soaring far beyond his After he had met her in some of his and had spent an hour sometimes sometimes sitting on mossy aud had been amazed at her acquaintance with the things of at the insight into spiritual things which her young at this quiet moment its sympathy with all sweet aud innocent in- its ready acceptance of the great truths to the statement of which his words were apt to all this he would be just as likely as not to catch his next glimpse of her down in the in company with Georgie Knight making cheeses with her as if she were ten years or racing like a cap through the straight lines of the only for whirls and twirls and swift waltz steps as she went like one of the old pictures of the or else calling the filly to the bars and catching her by the and loping away down the pasture without saddle or hair blowing in the as wild as Madge Wildfire Mr. Beckwith was not sure that there was not something unregenerate in his heart if he acknowledged the truth to he loved the little baggage at such times more than It actually seemed to all the at about that as though sie Allan were beside herself with berance and the mere delight of and and The sowing circles and the prayer meetings were on- ly so many places for her wiles aud with glee at the a coquettish little Puritan at the other un- der lla her contriving to go home with some other gallant than the The Bible class was the only place that tamed her and there she grew more aud more her veil gradually lowered till it shielded her aud as long as her unaccountable tears could and only blister the leaves of her Testament she and a hysterical burst became without a word of warning she would rush as if in danger of her Nobody else dreamed what it Mr. Beckwith thought he Poor little If ever a young falcon out of the forest objected to the clipping of her wings not one chance after the abrupt end of the single opportunity he had contrived to seize aud He had been called that almost three months since he first saw Bessie to visit a dying person across the for many of those who did not exactly belong to Mr. Beckwith's parish used to beg for his and in the little time of his residence among them more than one soul had seemed to wing away the easier on their eternal path for the rapt prayers with which his presence had their The roads being and the he had borrowed a a valuable as it and was returning now in the lost in and coming his horse's feet falling so softly ou the turfy way that one could hardly hear when a scared as he turned a curve of the winding with her light garments fluttering in the at sight of which his horse had reared and swerved and he cast himself from the saddle and caught sie Allan's begging her not to be I have cried was said Mr. I had forgotten And when I saw your white dress it seemed like a continuation of my you thinking of my white asked of a whiter said Mr. a white dress that I saw a soul put on winging its heavenly A little Bessie was have just come from a Mr. taking ad- vantage of the peaceful and beautiful it was that it makes things of life seem too poor and small thought beside that everlasting Miss Barton then she though no one knows how she had learned where the minister had she was a I wouldn't like to bo so he knew well enough hidden springs of which reacted 80 upon the young of which aim mean it would be so at the ho I don't like to hear about said with a half of us do when we are said the Yet we are all drifting ou the tide that takes us she I have felt it said the is so full of vitality that it is to There are only two things that quite reconcile us with the inevitable ness of and the that exceeding which makes the hours seem long. hope the first will never come to my cried could I be weary of how could any one such an hour as this were said the taking off his better to enjoy the perfumed breeze upon his brow and in his purple with the scent of the hay fields ing through this tender that and the strong health and Oh if such an hour were i said comes day after summer after It ways will come to mo as long as I I never shall be willing to die and leave never shall be willing to lie in my and know other girls are ing in the lane these summer with the sweet wind blowing over and Bessie stopped in What was it she had been about to Perhaps the young minister was not aware that he still held Bessie's Bessie She essayed to withdraw and then the grasp She blushed red and she felt an arm stealing round and looking defiantly there was the minister's face bending before She knew what he was about to She didn't want to hear not at any did she want to hear it. But she did hear it. That arm held her close to a plunging that voice was murmuring in those they sought her tress half half were answering were answering And almost as if she did not know what she she had lifted her with the willow switch in it with which she had been and hail dealt the horse beside them a swift little blow that startled him into a rear and a tore the bridle from Mr. wheeled Mr. Beckwith shortly aud set the horse off at a There was nothing for Mr. with to do but to hasten after the so valuable a and not his and then there was nothing for the wicked Bessie to do but to sit down on a stone and and go home at last all and dash past the family room like a up the stairs to her own bolting the door with a resounding echo that might have ed any fear of the She sat down in her dark room then dazed but She loved she loved she was but he was a- and she didn't want to love a She was half promised but iu her there in the dark she defied him to exact the in the world is the matter with the said her But the father only nodded hid wise and bade the mother learn her He looked at the absurd little portrait of his aunt of whom Bessie was the image and she was for she felt the band tightening around Evidently she was in the mood of those who mean to have their fling out because they know an end is And yet if you could have seen Bessie's sometimes as she sat in the there was such a serene content in its you would have said to yourself that if was there supreme But the child did not know closa upon any such brief experience of there would follow such a restive rebellion against all chains that even Mr. Beckwith wlis if he happened to be in the house on some parochial and saw her dancing down the stairs and through the vouchsafing him neither word nor answering neither father nor flinging down her hat if anybody called to her to put it whistling to and making off for a tramp that was to tire out with its fatigue some of the refractory Most men would have hesitated awhile after one or two such would have forseen the plucking of a little termagant from this would have anticipated trouble in the llesh after the fight was Not so Mr. If so good a man could be he was perhaps piqued into the resolve for he was determined to teach the tantalizing thing that it was happiness she was flying and not as she seemed to he was all the in his intention to win win her and to tame But not one chance for his ning and taming did he that is to and remembered the story of her courtship as he had beard her tell it. will all come he 41 all wrong said the these tantrums will be the death of me if they don't come to an end Perhaps Mr. Beckwith thought they would be the If he he could devise no way to overcome Half promised as she was by those ing lips of he could not arrive in sufficient distance again of the lious little maiden to exact the rest ot the That his power wan and not only felt now but was evident or she would never have tried to escape him so. In the mask or in the mask of whichever way it she was equally in- If there was to be a picnic now in the occasion where all were on a young woman announced her intention of before Mr. Beckwith had chance to invite in tho company of another and in that house had ever in the habit of Bessie When evening meeting was she was not the one to wait for the she caught her and don't let anybody take And after that mark of confidence the proud and loyal happy slave of a spoiled would not have her to the minister who it was very plodding on behind with her mother and When the sewing circle closed its sessions Bessie said to the first spruce young that stepped for- And when three weeks had passed after that twilight in the Mr. with had not spoken one with for all a change in Nobody ever heard her voice carolling out of the window no- body heard her sweet laugh like the music of a there was a curious little frown between her eyes on her maddest Mr. looking at her with his longing felt that if he did not conquer soon it would be the worse for He knew well enough after the innocent whose brance so was and whose first stirring so disturbed he knew well enough he could make her so blissful that she would one day wonder at and despise this time of doubt and and this desire for longer liberty from the great thrall of But not one chance was tie finding to make her learn these It was just at this as it toward the close of the bright September that posted up at every aud on every empty proclaiming the approach of Great Show and Gymnastic which the villagers were deluded into supposing anything other than a Miss of read tlie bills in common with and way announced to her astounded family that she was to bo a patroness of the great Scriptural show to the extent of a single to the came tho astounded chorna of isn't a said a Scriptural There are texts from the Bible on every take the livery of God to servo the devil exclaimed her don't see any such she an opportunity for ing natural history such as seldom occurs the bills natural history in those ing women and riding as for that 1 shouldn't think there could be anything more in- than the sight of those people springing through the air from their said the well-informed young showing what lino bodies they can make for Like pictures of the heathen said Mrs. non- Your head's a deacon's my said her agree with your mother I've never denied you but I feel that I must You can't go to the said her the minister has paid attention That settled Nothing bat irons could have kept Bessie from that circus after those fatal She confided to Georgie Knight at once her intention ol going to the And when the mighty show came into she ed her and harnessed the filly herself into the little open and set off with Georgie unseen and un- missed for a to visit tlie beasts and the gymnasts of the forbidden the minister can see in that said old Miss looking through the window as the wagon ed can't She's an engaging that's but I shouldn't want to marry But as nobody wanted Miss Sparks to marry it didn't so much Bessie was in great She was in itself always kindled her Then she felt sure that Mr. Beckwith would and that was another She had a fore- boding that the time was coming ly when her free agency till it did she was And well pleased with her success so she and Georgie sung and laughed till the road rang with their overflowing as they drove along and put the lly through her It was only a couple of miles before tho road grew dusty and People were and people were All sorts of vehicles jostled Far off thoy could hear the strains of a ri- sing aud falling on the till they were in an ecstacy of as they grew silent and Booths began to line the lemonade and eral and and presently the tent rose on their sight like white the flag waving its long folds over And now they were in the great space be- fore the crowded with witli with men leading bald horses and Shetland with boys crying their with the voice of the who pressed the claims of the fat woman and the learned pig on the And through it all came the burst of the band again in some tripping dance the roaring of the and screaming of monkeys and and then the great canvass seemed to swell and and a all and was running up the air on a rope stretched from pole to far dancing from sunbeam to as it seemed to the rapt What trans- she and she sat with her head thrown regardless of thing but this flying wonder in the till suddenly a shriek rose from the great shriek that was repeated iu the crowded shriek of a thousand awful cry of fear and agony from all the echoed again bjr all the beasts lion bad broken What a scene it wasl what yelling as they children were women were were rearing and was surging and plunging this way and that in a Iran tic effort at suddenly called from her rapt reveling with that spirit in the gave one look of to pull the weak as a fell back upon the The filly turned her and with starting and ing stood upright one and the next bolted away from the the not felt it Decenary to be much It was Georgia Knight's seat that Mr. Beckwith Occupied that evening M they drove after tho of the filly aud the mending of the Mr. Beckwith having mado tho most of the three hours in which be had had Bessie ou his aud Bessie tired and lying if you will believe within tho arm that infolded ho la only the second lion in tlie What was the one that always drove you from me was of then you took it so for said tho ing her closer what it 1 took it for granted that were going to the parsonage with me next I'm not cried with a you make said her shall stop at Justice on our and lake you homo with mo And with that tender arm about that face beside her all in the September ami under the lump ot tlie evening what could Bessie do but don't know what father and mother will she as at ing left the they clung together one moment in the and saw father and mother hastening toward them down the long said the walking boldly with his arm around their naughty is a that i have and that I intrust for just three weeks longer to your It has come the and it is bound for the and said Mr. in going to turn into the light of tho the spirit of the tho sunshine of ken traces and left all Georgia with a Hung herself from the and was swallowed in the but Bessie sat stone her heart beating with great as unable to move as one What swift thoughts swept through her mindl This was tho end of all her This was what she deserved for all the pain she had given father and their only their who should have their joyl This was what she it flashed across for making bleed the heart of the man that loved Deserved no one could quite deserve to be torn to pieces by the teeth of a wild If she had but been true to to liked less to see her feared less for her what peace and pleasure might have been hers this And She remembered tho Christian gids in the she was not even a She had wanted to study natural she had a line She could not In another moment the brute would be done his oc and come leaping through the Another a great ing wave of there he tail in the tawny mane eyes ui great bounds through the already coming straight for She cowered an then sprang to her and glared full at the advancing It was too With a wild cry she only to hide her face in Mr. Beckwith's aa he climbed in- to the wagon behind Thought is instantaneous was the rapture mingling with tho the motion with which she ed him from she can't have my folly kill tool as he did not you love me is because I love you that I shall murmured Mr. in her I shall never go until I hear you say as you know she and ted on his just us the keepers sprang with their ropes upon the poor old toothless who loved frolic and enjoyed the and of whom Mr. Mr. lloyt Is Heard the We give place in this paper to the ad- dress the Republican State although it is possible wo might have a column with more valuable The organs will probably wait tho copy conies in over the but so wonderful a political manifesto ad this and shall tlie of circulation through THK out money and without The of Mr. Henry M. which is affixed Lo is not quite as familiar to the ple of Pennsylvania as some bub we have no hesitation in for him a widespread and lusting In- this proclamation alono is Lo assure Mr. lloyt has done what more celebrated men than have lately essayed to do and he has tho difference between the publican and the Democratic parties now aud has laid down au immutable platform of Republican ciples which differs from all tho other we have hud this and they have been many and All this shows Mr. Hoyt to be a man oL while his astonishing quence will bo at onco apparent to all who read his Ho as they always by ing with Wo never knew a politician who did not point with And should ho not? Look at the Stato Look at the Sinking Is not that something to bo proud and Lo pointed And then and tho public and and Die and a lot he points to all of no previous is tlie remarkable statement of this able this State baen so ly prosperous and well and the slight experience which people had last winter ol one branch of the Legislature under Democratic control may well lead to tho conviction that thoy have ery tiling to lose and nothing to gain by a change in the administration of public We do the ing of this but we suppose it is that the slight indications we had last winter that the State was not altogether cared the long for mines and forges and empty tho and and all came from the Democrats in tlie and that it they hud had the Senate too there would have been the mischief to Only a great statesman would have thought of putting it in that wo say Mr. lloyt is one that Having got oil this stupendous ho resumes his pointing with especially al his Mackey is but Rawle comes in for a an in whom In combined all the qualifications of good public anti if such a man as that cannot be pointed at with what is the use of pointing at But the roally stupendous part of Mr. Hoyt's address is that which It has puzzled some of us to tell on just what sues tlie parties were but Mr. lloyt lias no hesitation on this Democratic it believes that tho Federal Government has no power to protect existence or pre- vent any State from asserting its and we were to let the Democrats the States would doubtless begin to secede and then where should wo This is another statesmanlike Ifc has boon ly supposed that a live war hud settled all but Mr. shows us the war settled although we that he still points pride to it. After this comes a new and revised version of the Lancaster a good enough but not re- sembling tho original much closely it resembled the various can platforms in other and finally an outburst of buncombe such as we have not heard since the glorious days of tho We received Mr. Hoyt's ing pronunciamento late last and our comments upon it havo necessarily been but wo may say in sion that to such as kind bish it is just the kind of rubbish that such persons i Talk to Young Judge of said to young lawyers who had just passed an examination in Jiin I want to a thing or two to You have passed as good an ex- amination as but you don't know Like these young follows just back from their you think you know a great It's a If you ever to be of any you will he surprised at your present Don't bo too big for your Go round to tha justice's court and try to learn Don't be let off upon a high You no speak a good deal ojC You will have one consolation will know it. The great mass of mankind take sound for Never mind about your pitch about as apl to as Don't be ashamed ut the lie don't know a He's a deadbeat on Stand to your lodder or no and you will see daylight a Tho community generally Jl n oi aimt you will bo H no absolute necessity that you You may smart without being Lawyers ought to bo bomo of them don't come up to the and are a disgrace to the They know more than any other race i and not much in don't know anything about carboniferous aud ancient lanu animals known as Men that make out they know a great doal ou these sub- know They They are i land animals and will be You arc with the sincere hope of the court that you not make asses of two sides of any human face are S It is the same with every of limbs are fashioned alike One hand ia almost always larger so with the the and the But the of all is flits never were two human faces