Newspaper Page Text
<sb ^"C.
jam toccm \tttx. mfi “
ea -n ,betsnumetn ci
J-1« •: .boSirtcct ~iz2i
■rxbat -Ixj azA^Cas^
rxir. no <7:ir Jim sjH
i X*
•OX g>i*|
I xtal ,.*D Mr: ! 0 «
,4n.i
•cr. eeirriai^t iucia Ittjrtnd rfii fi-jciseilii!
r*T vd jHdl ai io-'jnif vluo 01C. ccj)
-V uA>l to roiiMf i-onAA , a r
\sh ftO'Tj
'* V» yr:. iK fr. * Y
THE PATRIOT,
,• mtiMizu etebt webtosbay Horiram, .by .
NELSON TIFT & SETH N. BOUGHTON,
Editor* end Proprietors. 1
TERMS. :
VVV'O Dollar* per annum, ifpoid in advance, ok
nr* Dollare attbeeod ofthe yeiter • "
Vlvcrtiscment* nut exceeding twelve lines, will
i 'iu-erted «t One Dollar for tin fin* insertion, and
IW cents tar each continuance. Advertisement*
Slaving the number of insertions specified, will
! f j5jc* of Und and Negroes by Executors,'Adminisr
i-Lton< and Guardians, arc required by law to be
! Ivrrtiecd in a public gazette, sixty days previous to
•if day ofrtJo* * T>
‘ ^ sales of Pcrwinal Property mnrt be Wfcrtiled
i like manner forty days. i. .
Notice to Debtors and Creditors of onestate most
. ..nUi-hcd forty day*.
Notice tint application will be made to the Court
, f Odirary lor leave to sell Land and Negroes, must
ipublished weekly for four month*.
Monthly Advertisements, One Dollar per square
f;r each iwwtfci!# •" * f : -’ rt •
pyAll I setters on business must be post paid.
. . . . T i ' ! 'V : • ; -■ •••.■ • :.-:t •
communities as well as throughout entire nation.*, their fun being exhibited in shaving each others , ft
I say that I have reen nothing at au bring about horse’s tails, stripping a drunken fellow and rolling j sternness of
a great botdmb which ended far “a'fight all Toond,” j him in the mod, Rowing Hke roosters, braying lik* plans lor m&t
ond therefore I hade been forced to the conclusion asses, granting snfisqaesling like hogs, blating like with Billy Bohn and Sam Stirring that they com-
that Ifnot in natural philosophy at least in ethics, ft sheep, riding cnhocse.back into a tavern, or private tnenced to hrugh- kt precisely the sasae owwienr.
. 1 '■
I, so that the rigidity mid
juaBy ant'gaie
a. It was a.aimulUnoous thing
If the prim* cause of one half the difficulties which residence, and in a great many. other interesting
Uithma and societies have to contend ’against in ways'exhibitjpg themselves to the -westt as the
C£lBE(&nWiiHdo-
MOCHADO ABOUT NOTHING:
Or, Scene* ia the Old Country.
preserving pence and pfotnoiing faannony.
As I hare before informed the reader, there'was
a fight going on, and as a matter of consequence, ft
fcoestro nesecssaty that the whole town should wit.
We** the operation; because, forsooth, surgical cases
•re rare, find mankind am extremely fond of seeing
improvements upon file art by. which noses, eye*
and fingers are removed in the most r^mUfioon
manner possible. Man being emphatically a car.
nivorons animal, the sight of blood will invariably
develope his brutal propensities, and I suppose he
cannot be blamed if he gets into the “ ring" for his
vampire disposition can be controlled only by forte.
From this eohsidetatlon I could not trat excuse a
lawless multitude when I discovered them,‘pell mefl,
railing in the sand, shouting theirbravos, scratch*
iqg, gouging, kicking and cuffing,belching oaths, and
issnming various attitudes alikb disgraceful to their
species as dishonoring to their Creator. Bat at
length the tumhh was quelled. And yet, I think it
an exaggeration to say that the flame was extin
guished, for from what I could gather, I suppose ft
would be moire proper to say that the fire had burned
out; there being no more combustible matter. For
as the Sheriff with his aids came up and Cried out
in their stentorian voices, “I ’rnand de peace,I
’maud do peace,” the fuiy of the multitude knew no
bounds at this insalt to the majesty of Uie pcople
“What! interrupt ns in onr friendly disputes?—
Are you not the servants of the people? and ain't
we the People f Did’nt we elect yon, you ongrato-
ful scoundrels? Did’nt we. put you in office, yon
varmints!”
For this gracious offence to the majesty of the
people—the sovereign people,—an Insult given by
their own servants could not foil to arouse the in*
dignation of the Peons, who could not refrain from
giving the officers of the court “a real genutcine,
out and out flogging,” or in other words, “ a small
touch of thunder and lightning.” This last out
break of popular feeling now subsiding, tho boys
were ready for “ all sorts of the most killingest fun’
that human ingenuity could devise.
But before proceeding to relato anything relative
to this part of my story, it becomes necessary to
refer back to the commencement of tho chapter; or
in other words, to begin where the fight began, as
in the excited state of my feelings I have been borne
along by a current of thoughts u little foreign from
the characters I had intended to depict—not to mince
matters it is evident that I have travelled ahead of
my tale, and it becomes necessary that we should
retrace onr steps a little to toko a glance at the lead
ers of the melee.
These, as I was then informed, wore two intimate
friends, who had got into a fight for reasons which
they knew nothing about; probably some imaginary
insalt, for as they could not remember why tbejr
had fought, or who they were contending against, it
was deemed advisable that as they had got a great
many fellows into a scrape on their individual ac
counts, that all hands should be treatqd at their ex
pense. To this of course the two friends readily
agreed, and the gallon jug was handed from mouth
to mouth, until the whole crowd bad taken' enough
to put them all in a good humor again. Sam Stir*
ring was the very opposite of hie friend Billy Bolan
in figure, yet they were very much alike in disposi
tion, especially in a amt of inmate propensity for
getting drunk whenever occasion 'required; and of
course they had no scruples about getting into a
fight about nothing. And yet it could not be said
of these two worthies that they were really quarrel-
tome, for upon ordinary occasions, there were no
bettor, or more peaceable follows flan'Sam Stirring
and Billy Bohn. The greatest difficulty they had
to contend against was their excitable, “thunder
and lightning,” “powder blowing up” natures.—
For, as upon the present occasion, they frequently
engaged in broils from the conviction' flat they had
boys, of creation”-—the very identical boys that
could “out run, outjompv out sing, out whistle, out
ent,oatdo anything npoa the whole- face of tbs
youth.” ' In this “ ring" Billy Bolan and Sam Stir
ring acted but a very feeble part, inasmuch as they
bad been completely?* used op” by .repeated draughts
of liquor, qoafibd to each other by. way of making up
the dispute, “ as it wouM’nt do for friends ever to
reams srit
S-r»
,CMerits. wish'to ball, the attention of (ho
Board to thb f n *
so thin that so. . JI
way to all the working.
sassasssaaK
have to drag thoT • * - - J
slack, CO times a „
rows lack, without onco
unless they choose to stal
file risk of having their
coal.” Rep. on Mints, 1842, p. 71
Destitution.—It is stated by your
• Give it to him! pour it in, my boys! that’s the
vsy to use the rapscalion up! hurrah!”
“Do! rot your ugly hide! mash off my heel, will
van! Can’t a man see decent people fight without
jetting broke all to mash by sich varments as you ?”
“Well, who tolled you to git in my way, yon
rartutin’ ugly lump of clay! If you can’t oxpli-
(IN' yourself when you’re in a crowd, it’s non* of
?-,y liusineM.” I ’ - * *
■ Hold me, undo Billy,” said Dick Jarrel, “or I’ll
villi jnto this fellow’s countenance in jist aleetlc
k*s than no time, whaUumcvcr.”
- Come on, you evcrlastin’ tad-po!c, and I reckon
N' l.oiv I'll mash your tail so badly that yon wont
wiggle wagglo any more when you go into peacea
ble company. Let him alone, uncle Billy, I can
whip a cow-pen full of sich windy, wishy, washy,
cMogated l'ellers as that ’ar.”
This was the substance of a conversation that
jossed between two fellows who had rushed along
w ith a crowd to sec a fight that had occurred just
outride of the court house. As a muter of course,
such interesting conversation os that we liavo des-
fcrilied above could not fail to produce some sort of
an effect. It was no matter of surprise, therefore,
to me, when in a moment after the parlies were
rolled into a heap upon the ground, tearing each
others clothes, gouging eyes, and in many other
ways disfiguring each other, and if possible, disgrac
ing themselves to the level of the brute.
Eveiy spirit, it is said, begets its own likeness.
If this be true, and I have no doubt pf it, as my own
observation made upon a hundred or more cases has
fully satisfied me that it is ah axiom, then we need
rat ft el surprised or disappointed when we discover
a pugnacious spirit suddenly aroused in an appa
rently peaceful, inofiensiyc man; for even the pol
troon, it is raid, will fight like a Trojan when hem-
id into a corner by his adversaries. But when a
parcel of men laboring under any excitement, wheth
er artificial from the effects of stimulating drink, or
'■row those hateful passions which tend to lower the
rtandard of humanity, it needs scarcely an.cllbrt to
bring about a simultaneous explosion of the whole
ma-i*. And terrible is the havoc done to whole
shirts, bright eyes and suspender buttons when *6
rad a catastrophe occurs! A fight among a crowd
of “war horses, snapping turtles," and “alligators,”
turn the sumo effect upon the mass as the electric
spark upon each link of the chain that has served as
its conductor. Every atom feels the influence of
the excitement almost *t the identical moment:—
Every man becomes a conductor to convoy the im
pression to hi* next neighbor, and a general “ blow
out” is the consequence. Now, the chain can no
more tcli.whiroeo or how it has been made a medium
of eommunieatiea for tho all pervading fluid than
tho fighting croud can give a reason for their ehul-
lition of temper. 'They go into a fight without pro
vocation, kick up a row and crack each others I received some insult to their dignity which would
skulls without an evidence of any assignable cause,
other flam an inherent love for a rumpus, or Os Pat
would express it, “a daccnt relish' of the shillalch
before breakfast.” •
This is only human niture, however. A look is
often sufficient, even ia onr calmer moments, to
bring about hostilities; or at least to engender a
spirit of hatred, inimical to our pice, subversive of
all rational ciyoymcnt, and detrimental tothooe fioer
while each pointed significantly at-the same-mo-
to tho other's muhtehance. I said that Billy
Bohn. and Sam Stirring toughed at each other, but
to cotiwy fire exact stole of tiling*; I should have
said, they toond* or shrickod •, at oil events, they
■sdr a thundering notea, for entry boarder in Am
house was called to the spot to see what was going
on in Room No. 4. ' Tho more they laughed at each I
other, the more folly did each become convinced I chester' iivo
. ... . that it was a threat of defiance;and -Billy Bohnipuss the idg r _
fell oot and fight,’! although they had done the name I could no more bear to beridtenlod, as be began to l u There have been found such a
dung fifty.times before. "'-£-• conceive himself, than Shm^^8tfrrtag conkf endure H 10 coM *«®» 11 - „
and Billy Bolan were so completely overcoase byl “Look hcrc Sun.” said Billv TVJ>n ikn I - * j • .. , N -. .
tho deep potations which they had been taking
throughout the day, tkat exhausted natoregave way,
and they both rolled down upon the fox>r together, tell yon what it is, I han’t afeeid of any man that cv-1 After thus forcibly stating the tru# position of tho
locked in each others arms, and resolved never to cr tolled slog or sptit a rail in all Georgy. I’m a I case > Governor llaiumoodaaks by Srbst■ coarse it
bo separated eien in drunknmess. IIow loving^and whole teaai, by golly, and no mistake.” I is that they propose U effbet their object Arc the^
afiectiooete wore Sam Stirring and Billy Boian! I “And who’s afeerd of yon, Bill Bolan, yon ever-1 prepared to raise in Europe a thousand millions Cf
It really socmcd that it was a matter of impossibility I lastin’ imp of Satan 1” said Sam Stirring; “ thar I Dollars, the price of our pr^icrty in slaves, and a
for snch warm friends ever to todto umbrage at any-1 ohTt a man that ever snufied the breeze that can | thonaand nullion* mqre foe the mahuria lands-upon
thing that the one coaid do to the other. Why in I lick mo! I'm a perfect rail road and* tech of the | which they can alone work? and thus to' effect a
of reason did’nt tho fellowa leant to un-1 cteam boat; and I’ll toll you what 1 know Billy Bo-1 purchase of us. Or will the Northern States , pro-
dcratand each other—to know each others iutentioni>| lan, that yoa han*thad time to tarn yet why man, I vide the fanda and divide the glwy? He also ridP;
and appreciate cseh others motives? If they had I never did fight you in all my life. Why Iean| eule ® thosebeme of bringing emancipatioaaboutly
only takcu a little pains to ascertain tho real from jest take you by the nap o’the breeches and shake ] reducing the price of white labor.
sensibilities of onr
are encouraged and aggravated, the toon merge*
ihto the fiend; passions once hallowed by affection
the false, the intentional from the accidental, why I yon into a lump of nothin’ before you ooukl tell whar I I not think you will atttmtptto pinch your op*
.. . „ . . ir. - . „ eratives closer in Gnu Britain. Tout
then, in all probability, there would have been no you was.”
hard blows given, and their feelings considerably
relieved or never subjected to treatment. But alas! I Stirring,” replied Billy, “I tell you what it is, and j barely, and not always, keeps those who hava
it was too oiton the case that Sam and Billy had to uod you oughtor a Itnowed it long ago—Bitty Bolan employment from perishing of famine. When yotl
mourn each others wounds, inflicted in those periods I n’nt the mantogit shard; and if you is a steam eandothis, wewiil consider whether our stores may
of madness to which men and communities are Crc- bo * t V a *5“! Jbud, you’ll git your biler busted, or Ife^garmoots*annuaHy t *Toor^B,^howtorer'
qncutly subjoct—«uch uiiodsooly, however, as arc I you’ll gitsboved off the track, if you come larfin’ at j j,. to cheapen labor in thottopies. The ilea ofd(4
unenlightened by education or unprotected by the I “»•" I ing this by exporting your “bold yeomanry,”is I
influence of morality. I “J’lllangh at yon, sir, wheasomever I please, you presume given up. Cromwell tried it when Bo soil
The fun-loving boys could not let such an oppor-1 miscralile, stinkln’ raw hide! and I’ll tell you what the Ca|*urod followers of Charles into West Indian
tuuity as waa presented to them in the present spec. & W Sammy Stirring,ef yon ever bmghat mo agin found graw*- N°rltore
toclo pass by unembraced. Billy Bolan and Sam- ™ g»'l»p 1!v " *«^ ''Sbta out’n you like a flash racoee ded better. U Hsvc yoa «t91 foith
my Stirring were in too liappy a condition for their °’ .Ugbtoiu’! whoop! whew !” ; n carrying hither your Coolies from Hindustan ?—
purposes to allow them so easily to escape. A suffi- There was no “sheer?’ in' Billy Bolan or Sam Stir- Doubtless that once wild robber race, whose higfc-
cient quantity of soot and grease were soon obtained, <bt»hed into each other sure enough, cst culogium was that they did hot murder merely
mixed into a paste, and carefully spread over their «*» <*? war stoamera, whooping^Warningand
faces, so tint no partiqle of the white surface could tomng ether “all to mash.” But fortunateiy ^ reached it, plurttler has grown scarce
be seen. As an exruto for this very wicked cori- t fof tbe two bcllgeionts, the boys who had played the I j n Guzerat. But what is the result of tho experi-
duct, tito hoys satis tied their consciences by forcing Dick upon thorn of blacking tholr faces the dhy pre- ment thus far 1 Hate the Coolies,' ceasing to Itan-
thcmsclvcs to tiie belief that it was necessary for the vlous, now Interfered and explained the difficulty by die arms, learned to bandfe spades, and proved htr-
poor fellows, as Sam and Billy were very muchdis- bringing a mlrrpr, which exhibited to each his own ^rij^ lufelTen wife dirorao’tt^e.'tite
figured by tho bruises they had received from each “charcoal sketch.” Peace waa restored, and all ^r^tchcd victims whom you have hitherto kidoap-
othcr in the late severe contest. Tho next business hands treated as before; for Billy and Sam had cred- ped for a bonnty, confined in depots, put underhatch-
was to place them comfortably together in the samo il f °r a quart or more. I think tho friends live at es and carried across tho ocean forced into " volun-
room, where they might, unmolested, enjoy that, re- t** ®unc friendly rate—hugging and fighting, ca- toj immigration,’’ have donoUltle but lie downand
paw necessary for their wearied frames. rowing and scratching, and will continue in tiie same fa ^ a Urg^ prop^!
Tlte next morning Billy Bolan and Sam Stirring I uninterrupted harmony uotiMlmcndjifjLimc. I tion, are no more t Humane and ptons contrivance!
woke at any early hoar, refreshed by the deep sleep I nr-GovOmor Hammond’s Letters ©n I To alleviate the fancied sufferings of the see titled
into which they lad fallen, and relieved from the in-1 Slavery* posterity of H*ea, you neriflee by * cruel death ts-o-
. • *• - ■ . . .1 * .. * I thirds of the children of the Meewd Shem—end fe
toxicoting effect of the ardent spirals which they had I Contmtud from our last. I, Umj . of Christians—the bicMiue of
taken the previous day. The movement of the one! Haying thus sarcastically treated this less impor-jjj^^, If this “experiment” is to go oo, in God’s
arroused tho other, so that they awoke simultane-1 tant point, bo takes up the great hobby of fanaticism, I namo try your hand upon the Thugs. The other
ously, and tho first thing that attracted Billy’s eye the “ irresponsible power” of the slave holder: of I species of Immigration to which you are resorting I
t:.... RiimntVa tj-i.v t'n.n. anJ Ram mt equally I one man over another. IltTC we tsust also, to do I will consider presently.
■m—nt hg bchrid the sirany-ty altcscd complex- justice to the author, extract from him. I He next takes up the picture of effected etnanc:-
ioo of his friend Billy Bolan. And there they sat in I “The question of the responsibility of power is a Potion.
perfect bewadennent, both inexactly the same poai- vast one.. It is tho great politicai question of mol- - 1 " Vou are greatly mirtaken.hMrevcr.ifyau tiank
tiL-yet emd. ignorant of his ow-n situation; fori Whole nation, divide off upon Hander Uhrt the conjequence. of oumneq-^n here, would
uon-yet cwn ignoranv o. .us o n ivuauon, ror i diffi;rcnt r un <Umcntal systems of government: •» and no more inyunous than those which
certam there would have been no misunderstand- ^ . |ulit „ wUich l ^ JTof millions flowed from it in your little wagirt Wrat India b-
ing between them, had they been folly apprised of rofflcieat to check the government to ^ whe f° newI J •“ we ™ b ^ M - Thn system
ti*^ °f ^i 08 *'.. j the su^^^tf whidi they devote their^^* and *° r "|^ftJi ^d^JJj^vigo^Ourcooraiyfebi»niSl!^
neither of out heroes could well stand; for they tones, appears to another setofmmions a mere mock- Dotted heroand there with vfllsges and
were ever ready to flare np at so great an insult as eiyofrestraint And accordingly as the opinions or gelds, it U for the most port covered with immense
tin attempt to “stare out of countenance.” these millions differ, they honor each other with the forests and swamps of almost unknown size. In
“What in the devil arc you lookin’ at, Billy?-— epithets of “Serfs” or “Anarchists.” . It. is ridicu- such a country, with a people so restless as ourr,
Do you take toe for awitch, you ugliest of all mor- tou » to introduce such an idea a* this into the discus- communicating pf couno some of that spirit to their
I sion of a mere Domestic Institution. But since you I domestics, can you concicve that any thing short of
-And what are you lookin’ at, you black rascal, 1introduced if, I deny that the power of tiu-| the power of the master over thn stove, eould^ con-
usher wav mbuWnm™ slaveholder in America is “irresponsible” Ho in 6 ”® Dm African race, notoriously Idle and im-
If y°« dfln ’ t ^ bo down ^xm | rt-poo ,i Urto ^ ife j, responrabl. to the world ^
toilky which AbolitionisU do not intenl b«dbtrtfor aday.and thessplantaUoaswUl be
-
mbm, although they were bath-invariably whipped inuler which he enjoy* his civil rights.” __ l—tv^, hi. ebligitfom hw fiM impdtff
they “fit,” so that they had never yeti Ontho samo subject, too, his comparison of the would be, to go somewhere* And hero nit natural
docidod fully which was the greatest horse, although treatment of the alavo for crime, compared with the boundaries wopld restrain him. At first they would
they-had long strived at the conclusion, especially Courts of Semima in the fieo States of Europe. sllsoek tho tosm^ shd rapidlysccuranlato In squalid
after a “gtnuwine bust up,” that they were tho best | “ If *■ mmtrteto. a pig in Bn^and he is^pSrt. I
you Uke *a thousand o’ brick,’ yon evcifastin’ lump
of blackin’?”
This was sufficient for a
warrant “a bust up.” Now this unhappy lack of
proper discrimination betwoentbe real and the false,
often led them into disputes of which they afterwards
repented and felt heartily ashamed. If it 60 happen
ed that they heard a repetition of any Expression, or
the narration of any elrcinnstande.or anecdote, that gto gift.” Blow followed Mow; and kick
in any degree suited'themselves, or here any rein- kick, an Billy
tion to their friends, although di s^ ficto were around the room,
nppScMtt to . thflutohd «beto to the worid-^yeO other, brains otrt,-«d SUfoemiother p&toe thrnrI Woowrt. Fbw, v^y fow <7the^wShT^n-
forsooth, Sam Stirring and Billy Bohn felt bound that of cnjbying the best of all privilege*, to which I ^ bantor. If aa|tve does the fame I vailal on to do a fitrolc of work; nono to labor con-
man is entitled. Bnt Win«»nd nia ***”11 hrirc. n fnrtrihmriirrl—jTTfl-r' — -x. i-1 thumulr. whUe ahead of cattle, sheep orstspn
of such spik as thrtt, and. they naturally agreed to Lattfes the mutter. Are: onr court* or yoore the
bike a resting ^en before fiiey proceeded furfheT.l morthnsmnellfstorerywnrenethtqaastkm, ynaj ^rTTsrikhsnWTT* storehoasoo
A cessation of hostilittos produced * corresponding I wonld dtwMIsm say outs istohlUkWv lenky. , Pixssllj, our somtorod
fsUems iaodsadu^ thst ever made a stopon Ge*t-| Antipodes; infamous and iti duteaxt forever, though ! bodies of them might wander towards the
followed blow, and kick IbUowed I perhaps he iddr feom tito snjtorabtfadancc of -fre^? Slate*,exto titowe*>eni-a[tl.i»irawkiB|kjn«
Bolan and Sam Stirring wheeled I nfighbor to save tire Hvra of Ilia famishing little one?. I thcir tncka by their depredations and their corpses,
m, doing their utmost to beat ^ 'veil fed negroes, merdy for the sake of Many would roam wild in our “Big woods. ’ Many
mt. ami all for im ofhor ofltihcc than fresh meat, «ted» a pig, nopts perhaps forty rtripcs.1 more would seek tbe rocmM of e^pwampafec ss-
to take it up”—to defend thdlr Injured reputatidUs;
and then upcn such occasions no persuasion could
now swallowed up in revenge, and murder and | induce them to nhendfto the absurdity ti “ fiting a
ssspmhtfan mark tho ravages—tiro fearful Might: foot.” To took at them arms* stare fit defiance,
condition in their excited feelings, and they gradual-1 Again, contrasting tho labor of the two popula-
| _ I lyioofed down, just as the mercury fells in die tber-1 tiohs: I ;". t 4 Wi ^jjj|
to iiWn»ltatIrtgitid• How■soch'frtendsgot along to fito world,!shall;mometor as tho atmosptone.beeouies coder the “< *61™* ^ ,
of each
which a blind submission to that worst of tyrants to look away from them, was equivalent to an in
flings upon tho world. But it is not my intention j tcntional slight/and called for their
v_ -te utr Ji!.-.-x siowsnclrfriends got alo
Tocoed to relate* ■ — — - —y— — yf-—yrrx,”? v.i
«*%•«»»•* to to Shtto &Iriy ^ BUan ini Sammy Stirring, jure opposite each 1
sng cannot pmrasaan«v, ■ - - ■ . ■,^ ^ Juki ^
—CO rasa - I - -XM-. fc-t that oot'rffeffi^ stiwnshoirjolfty.toqor two heroes' other, taking a mibuto
resfci-g S -ronnoedian in. had treated just enough to make to^^ho/k ftumy ;}mns; and the longer t
“rrr* r"/* 1 * wsrsr
dwellings wonld bepludered, perhaps fired and tho
inmates murdered. I low long do you Buppopc that
veoouldbnf IIow long
befqre wnwouldaleep-with rifles at our hpdnflss,
' There is
But the earn* increffiUe amount work once begun, let the story of our Briush ance;-
. tors and the aborigines of this country tell fiipeeqneLi'
th. hmrir theiri |^more krere,wreldb. the catartrophe.
tioUu