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the French Deputy Manuel.—It is the
ractcristic of generous enmity to stop
lie grave and ro let the dead rest in
ce. It is useless and brutal cowar-
? to trample on a corse. It were well
in French Government could compre-
>d this truth. At the funeral of the
puty M. Manuel, the authorities inter-
td to prevent the people from expres-
Z their respect to the departed p atriot,
teen hundred infantry and cavalry were
!er arms to intimidate the crowd—but
'ain. Lafitte, Lafayette, .uid Schoner
ivered orations over the grave, and
surrounding multitude shouted “ Glo-
to inanuel! Long live Liberty 1”—
ion the coffin reposed the golden crown
merly decreed tr» Manuel, and crowns
oak-ieaves were poured into the grave.
[Chas. Courier.
M. de Schonen, Counsellor of the
mi t of Paris, followed, and expressed,
a forcible and solemen manner, his
>st deep regret. [M. de Schonen not
ving communicated to us his discourse
writing, we could report with accuracy
!y the following passages :]
“ M anncl !—Too early xve have been
larated ! You have been snatched from
at that moment when we reckoned
ist upon you. We resign ourselves to
ixplicable destiny ; &, may thy death he
thy life hath been, au example for us!
ly existence may h ive been short, vet
lias been complete. Your youthful years
■re given to your country, as your riper
ars have been. You were a soldier of
e France, and a senator, when the tri
ne was as glorious and dangerous as
2 field of battle. Your enemies, the e-
nal enemies of France, could not enn-
er you ! Not being able to answer you,
ay proscribed you. From thy expul-
n, Manuel, the present Admiuis'ration
s taken its date ! . . Cut here I pause;
2 respect which I owe to the tranquility
the tomb checks my just indignation.—
it us proclaim it over thy t"inb ! AH
ance had protested against 'ha outrage
unanimous re-election. Nations, like
lividuals, have, unfortunately, their mo
ults of weakness* and follv, but they
cover themselves. This will never or-
r again. [Mere M. de Schonen was
errupted by unanimous cries of * No,
.’] I adjure this immense multitude,
te tears which How from ..11 eves sneak
ficientlv. May they not be shed in
in ! The excess of our evils gives se-
rity for our safety, and our power and
witness will arise out of our humiliation.
wo shall yet regenera > ourselves.—
tis we swear to thv generous manes
ries of ‘ Yes; yes’] Thou werf the
•rthy choice of the country, and wo
11 not show ourselves unworthy of being
sons. Adieu, Manuel / adieu, great
izen, man of worth, humanity, and talent
exann le of the admirable harmony of
2 most noble qualities ! Adieu! sincere
d faithful friend ! for ever adieu !”
-<3©©—
Resident Adams.—In A. D. 1734,
esidenl Washington, on the recommen-
tion of Mr. Jefferson, appointed John
lincv Adams Minister Resident to the
'therlands. The conduct of Mr. Ad
is, at the Netherlands, was so satisfacto-
to Washington, that one of the last acts
his administration was, the appointment
Mr Adams Minister Plenipotentiary
Portugal.—From this place hisdestina-
n was charged to Berlin, by President
lams, senior. It seems, however, that
s change was not made without con-
ting General Washington, who had then
ired from office. In a letter in reply
the inquiry of President Adams, Gen
ii Washington gives the following ho-
'ble testimony to the character of John
‘Micy Adams.
President Washington's Letter
Monday, February 20th, 1797,
Dca- Sir—I thank you for giving me
; perusal of the enclosed. The senti-
nts do honor to the head and heart of
i writer ; and if my wishes would be of
r avail, they should go to you in astroug
ie that you will not withhold merited
•motion from John Quincv Adams, be-
ise he is your son : for without intend-
to compliment the father or mother, or
censure any others, I give it as my de
ed opinion, that Mr Adams is the most
’uable public character ice have abroad
1 that there remains no doubt on my
:d that he will prove himself, to be the
U of all out diplomatic corps. If he
■> v to be brought into that line, or
■ ny other public walk, I could not,
the principles which have regulated
> own conduct, disapprove of the cau-
n wh'cii is hill ted at in the letter. But
is already entered ; the public, more
1 more as ho is known, are appreciating
talents and worth, and his country
old sustain a loss if these were to he
’eked by an over delicacy on your
■•t.
With sincere esteem and affectionate
yard I am ever yours.
gaping awfully at the knees as if they
would have swallowed his feet, who, ever,
and anon, from a large tub swabbed the
axletree of our sphere. I found he was
cousin german to the man in the moon.
The ship on her return, struck on a
Kraken, a fish to which a whale is a
shrimp, and bilged. All were lost except
mvself, who was taken from a planly by a
wh der.”
Thus far Linkum’s testimony goes.—
He meant to
scripts, but dea
them until now.—Portsmouth Jour
selves with the idea, that we perceive all
the force, and the beauty and the propri
ety of the allusions of Pindar to the games
of Greece, and that, by the discovery ot
the circumstance that these were a favo
rite theme, we transport ourselves to Hel
LATEST FROM BUENOS AYRES. | Litter from Ex-President Madison to the Edit...
CHARLESTON, OCT. 27. 1 o/th-, LynAhurg Virginian-dated
The Editor of the Delaware Weekly
Advertiser, has received from his corres
pondents at Buenos Ayres, files of the
“ American” and “Argentine News” of
las and read with the eves, and hear with the 3d and 4’.h Aug. from which are ex-
the ears of a Greek. But the tone and | traded the billowing tunes ofI Intelligence,
spirit of that age are gone, never to re- , By a decree o ^ongr
turn, the allusions which were then faith- of the Republic lsaut ho „
inkum s testimony goes.— full, cannot be understood ; and in spite ; a loan of 5,000,000 dollars, tor the use of
have published his manu- i of ourselves, our reverence for the Greeks the ^ovenimen .
•alh robbed the world of and for the genius of the poet, we cannot | General Ail mi a
Mr. Calhoun, the Journal asserts, will
; not be supported by Georgia for the Vice
Presidency of the United States, at the
approaching election ; because he oppo- i
sod the election of Mr. Crawford in the,
Presieencv. If this be sufficient cause ;
for opposition* then General Jackson will |
not he supported by Geoigia for the Pres- |
i idential chair; for he was ilie rival of Mr.
; Crawford, and all his friends opposed Mr.
I Crawford. IIow has the Journal obtain-
| ed its information 1 Has it taken the
! sense of the Slate, or merely depended on
I the sav so of some gentlemen who have
I the sufferago of the people in fee simple ?
Macon Telegraph.
! THE LATE MR. LOWNDES....
Mr. Roseoc, the elegant historian of the
arrived at the city
of Buenos Ayres on. the 30;h July. He
left the army on the l»4th, and met on his
wav thither Gen. Livalleja, appointed
Commander-in-Chief.
„ „ The provisional Legislature of Buenos
cloud of obscurity which no ray of learn- ' Avres was installed on the od Aug.
; n or can dispel, and which is daily gather- j 'The Clergy have made a voluntary
ing around them, and shrouding them in I contribution to assist in carrying on the
thicker darkness. ! war with Brazil.
j There appears to be but little doubt en-
Obscrvation.—It is contemplating men j tertained of the re-union of the dissident
read the digressions of Pindar without a
feeling of constraint. We may admire,
we may venerate the Odes oi ancient
times, but we cannot truly appreciate
their merits. Over them there liaugs a
! a t 3 distance that wo become benevolent, provinces in the common cause and inter-
Wiien we mix with them we suffer by the ests of the nation, arrd that a more effec-
contact, and grow
if not malicious from
, the injury, at least selfish from the circum
spection which our safety imposes.
wse of the Aurora Borealis at last cx-
ined.-The AuroraBorealis is one of ua-
e’s most beautiful d splays, and for ages
nuzzle 1 the most scientific observers to
1 i s causp.
By a fortuitous circumstance I have
i discovered a manuscript never pub-
ied, owing to ihe sudden death of its
bor, “ which is fairly described bv Ir-
g in one of tlie numbers of the Salma-
idi,” that fully unfolds its mvs’terv.—
ie manuscript is in black letter, and ve-
qoaint. In plain language it runs thus.
‘ 1 Linkom Fedelius, sailed in the year
97, on board the good ship Von Vrow,
ip*. Slapping Slawson, as botanist, on a
ling voyage to the artic seas. By a
tarkable providence I was driven to
North pole, and to my great astonish-
nt found the earth rolling on a vast
etree, which from the immense weight
upported and the consequent frict>on
s liable to catch fire and blaze. The
nr of this blaze I found produced the
■rthern lights. The hissing souud so
mi heard by many, arises from its ex-
ruishinent by an old fellow dressed in
Dutch style with a score of breeches,
Medici family, one morning entered the j
Liverpool library, when a friend said to 1
him, 4 I have just now seen the tallest, the j
best bred and the most sensible man that J :
have seen for twenty years. I wonder i
who it could be!” ‘That must be Mr. j
Lowndes of South Carolina,’ answered j
Mr. Roscoe, ‘for I know of no other man
that can answer your description.”
Advantage of Advertising.—In No
vember last. Mr. Caleb Ruffe lost a very
valuable diamond, (such as is used by gla
ziers for cutting glass,) and advertised the
same in the Journal offering a reward to
the person who should return t. Several
months had elapsed, and he had given it
up for lost, but a short time since a man
from tiie country called on him to know
f he had lost a diamond, and preseming
the same,to him, related the circumstance
of his finding it, and the manner he disco
vered the ii uaie of die owner, several
months after he had found it, by pur
chasing an article at a store in this town
done up in a part of a Jounlal containing
Mr. Roffe’s advertisement, which was
discovered by his children in pernsing it,
after it was takan from the article pur
chased—[Providence Journal.
A singular equipage, consisting of a
carriage drawn by two enormous wolves,)
says an English paper) has been seen in
the streets of Munich, for these six months
past. The animals were found by an old
merchant of St Petersburg!], when verv
young, in a wood near YY ilne, and have
been so well tamed, that they are as do
cile as horses, and harnessed in all re
spects like them. All that the Police has
required is, that they should he kept muz
zled.
A Professor, lecturing upon litat, ob
served that one of its most conspicuous
properties was the power of expanding
all bodies. A humorous student arose
from his seat and asked, “Is that the rea
son why the days in warm weather are
longer than those in cold ?”
The persecuting Archbishop Laud, was
a man of short stature. Charles the First
and the Archbish ip were one day about
to sit down together, when it was agreed
that Archee, the king’s jester, should Say
grace for them, which he did in the fol
lowing words : “ Great Praise be given
to God, but little Laud to the devil j”
The Montreal Herald states that Mr.
Maywood when in Edinburg procured two
manuscript plays which he intends to pro
duce this winter. The one is entitled
“ Cramcmd Brig or the Laird of Balna-
geich,” and the other has reference to the
escape of Queen Mary from Lochlevin
Castle. They are understood to be from
the pen ofj. G. Lockhart, Esq. Sir W.
Scott’s talented son-in law.
The Missionary Society of the Metho
dist Episcopal Church lias an income df
about $5000 a year, and employs its mis
sionaries chiefly among the different tribes
of Indians.
The two gold medals of the royal Soci
ety of Literature for die present year were
adjudged to Si: W her Scott, for the Illus
trations of the Manners, Antiquities,
and History of Scotland, in many works
of preeminent genius, both in prose and
verse, particularly the Lady of the Lake
and Waverley;” and to Dr. Southey,
“ Author of the History of Brazil, and of
several other distinguished works in En
glish liteiature.”
Most people read books, as children
visit a flower garden ; they amuse them
selves with this or t’other gaudy knot ; the
colour calls their eye from one border to
another, the sight of the present banishes
the last. It is the man of real taste who
takes in the flower and other gardens at
one view, who considers the cast of the
grounds, the crossing lines, the disposition
tual war will be waged against Brazil,
than that heretofore made.
Admiral Brown was in command of the
I National Squadron at the date of the a-
j James Robert Reid, an American, was hove papers, and nothing was said ot his
j on Monday la^t, committed to gaol, accu- j intention to resign, as lately reported.
! seil of attempting to bribe three private! I)r. Francisco Bustos, nephew ol the
i soldiers of the 71st regt, to desert to the j Governor of Cordova, who it was under
stood was bearer of an important mission
connected with the re-establishment of
United States.—Quebec Gazette
-***•©•<*—
The General Assembly of the Presby
terian church in the U. S. have set apart
the second Tuesday in November next as
a day of Thanksgiving, Humiliation and
Prayer, to he observed in all the church
es under their care—and they earnestly
request the churches to sanctify said day
unto the Lord.
TheNew-York Commercial Adverti
ser states that at a recent meeting of that
ciiv, one hundred and three thousand dol
lars were subscribed in aid of the funds of
the American Board of Foreign Missions.
The subscription is to he paid in five an
nual instalments. One gentleman sub
scribed 25,000 dollars.
Capf. Dacres, who commanded the
British frigate Guerriere, when taken by
the Constitution, has been promoted to
the rank of Rear Admiral.
The Committee on Manufactures at the
exhibition in Milford, N. H. say, Linen
Fabrics offered shewed that this useful
manufacture is in the las? stage of decline.
Cotton has superseded it !
One of the committees at Paw?uxet say,
“ Mr. William Hamlin, of Providence,
presented a Telescope, manufactured by
him, of great magnifying powers, and pre
sumed to be the most perfect and valuable
Telescope ever manufactured in the U.
States, for which they have awarded a
premium of $20.
Lord Wm. Bentinck intends to make
his appearance in India as Governor Ge
neral in great splendour. He takes with
him 3 or 4 elegant State Carriages, built
on purpose.
From the TX T ew York Statesman.
Mr. General Duf Green, of the Wash
ington Telegraph, expresses very sincere
regret in his paper of Saturday last, that
the Editors of the Statesman have not sn
far accorded with his high behest as to
have “met the machinations of the coali
tion prints with a prompt and indignant
denial,” and thus saved “we” [Mr. Gen.
Duff Green] the pain, and Gov. Clinion
the mortification of perusing the respective
paragraphs which appeared in that paper
of the 8th and 9th instant.” As we are
sorry for the “ pain” of Gen. Duff Green,
we send him, by Telegraphic despatch,
this note of deep condolence, wishing that
he may live a thousand years, that he may
become as great in politics as renowned
in arms, and eventually receive the rich
reward of his patriotic, most disinterested
and invaluable services as keeper of the
“United States Telegraph ” But for him,
darkness would envelope the land, and
gross darkness the people.
friendly relations with the pr ivince of
Buenos Ayres, and the renewal of the as
sociations of the povinces, had arrived at
the seat of Government. The authori
ties of Cordova declared that they are
desirous of effecting a general reconcilia
tion, but they required as a conditional sine
qua non that things* he restored to their
former states; that is, that the province of
Buenos Avres re-enter into the enjoyment
of its rights. When the Legislature is
installed, and the Provincial Executive is
elected, they say, the province of Cordo
va will concur in tiie measures that the
rest may adopt, for their social organisa
tion, «fc carry on the war against the Em
peror of Brazil.
Circulars have been addressed bv the
Executive, to the Governors of the pro
vinces, desiring to know what force each
can contribute to increase the army of
operation, stationed on the Oriental fron
tier
Extraordinary Invention—Much has
boon said and thought and dreamt, about
a perpetual motion ; and much laborious
invention has been exercised, and many
complicated machines have been built to j
attain the long desired object. But the \
very complexion of these machines is suf
ficient to defeat their purpose, by incrcas- ! that f regretted rh*
ing the friction. N^w an acquaintance of | General Assembly, ns Ieml'ing t.» impair
very ingenious fellow, has produced (foe confidence and cordiality of other parti
ynchburg Virginian—dated
MONTPELIER, OCT. 10, 1827.
Sirs—I have just seen in another Ga-
zette the following paragraph, noted as
extract from the “ Lynchburg \ iiginiarr”
viz:
[“ We state, as a fact within our know,
ledge, that, very recently, the sage &, patri
ot of Montpelier expressed his deep regret
at the course now pursuing by some of the
most eminent politicians of Virginia-That
he reprobated it, as sapping the founda
tions of her power and influence in the
confederacy, whilst, by a course of mod*,
raion and prudence, she might have woo
over a majority of her sister States to em
brace her principles. Tiiat he defended
the right of the National Government, u n _
der the Constitution, to impose a TarilT
of duties on imports, with reference to
other objects than revenue—he averred
that such had been ihe course pursue.! bv
every administration in the country, his
own and Mr. Jefferson’s included ; that to
call all the latent resources of the country
into action, and to give them such prt>te<v
tion as circumstances might suggest was
one of the principal reasons for the abo
lishment of the confederation system
which was found inadequate for th.it pur*
pose, and the adoption of ;he Federal
Constitution—and that the resolution pas-
sed by the last Legislature in relation to
this subject, was extremely unwise and
impolitic. Here, then, is a man everlast
ingly quoted by the martexts of the Con
stitution in this State, who assisted to
frame this instrument, and who was one
of its earliest and ablest cotemporaneous
expounders, and who in the exercise of his
Executive duties at a later day, was called
onjto construe its provisions, who says, tha:
he is erroneously thus quoted—and that
VY illiam B. Giles, that dog in the manger,
is fast hurrying his beloved Virginia to
ruin and contempt. We again repeat,
that what we have here stated is of our
owu knowledge, and cannot be contra
dicted.”]
Without being aware of the ground on
which tlie statement is alleged to he with
in the personal knowledge of the Editors,
I think it proper to observe that, as often
happens in the report of conversations,
there most have been some degree of mis
apprehension or misrecoliectioBV
It is tree that I have not apcraved the
proceedings of the General Assembly of
the Stale, which would limit tiie power of
Congress over trade, to regulations having
revenue alone for their object ; that l
have, in occasional conversation, been
led to observe that a contrary doctrine
had been entertained and acted on, finwi
the commencmfint of the Constitution of
tiie United States, bv the several branch
es of every administration under it ; and
tirsued by tho
A new town is to he built on the river
St. Marks, in Florida, to he called Mag
nolia. The site chosen is about 5 miles
distant from the fort of St. Marks, and is
said to be secure, healthy and very ad
vantageous for trade. St. Marks itself, is
low, unwholsome, and frequently flooded.
ours, a
an invention which is perfectly free from
rhe above difficulty, is as simple as heart
can wish, and bids fair to supersede all
ollmr modes of speedy conveyance. I* is
just this. He takes himself up hv the
waistband of his inexpressibles, and in
the twinkling of an eye transports himself
wherever he pleases. That is all.
Berkshire American.
Real Friends. When Socrates was
building a house at Athens, being asked
by one who observed the design, why a
man so eminent should not have an abode
more suitable to his dignity I ho replied,
that he should think himself sufficiently
of the Union,
agreeing with Virginia i:1
her exposition of ihe constitution, on o-
llmr points. In expressing these ideas,
however, more respect has been felt for
the patriotic sensibilities of the Legisla-
tivo body, and for the talents and good in
tentions of members, personally or oilier-
wise known to me to be particularly en
titled to it, than might be inferred from I lie
tone of th n publication. I must observe,
also that though it >s true, that T have spo
ken of the power of Congress in its en
larged sense, over commerce, as a primary
and known object in forming tiie constitu
tion, the language of the statement is in
accurate, at leas' as being susceptible of a
accommodated if he could see th it narrow j construction embracing the indefinite pmv-
habitation filled with real friends. Such j e rs over the entire resources ofihe coun-
was the opinion of this great master of hu- j i rv#
man nature, concerning the unfreqtiency j I presume that the expressions whici
of such an union of minds as might de- j re f er , hv the name, to the Governor of the
serve the name of friendship, tint among
the multitude whom vanity or curiosity,
civility or veneration, crowded about him,
he did not expect, that very spacious a-
partments, would be necessary to contain
State were not mean to be ascribed to me
being very sure that I couid never have so
forgotten what f owed to myself, or thr
respect due to him.
ft is with murh reluctance, Sirs, that I
all, who should regard him with sincere j have had recourse to these explanatory
Among the premiums offered by the
Agiiculcural Society of Salem, New Jer
sey, is one of $5 to that laboring man who
can give satisfactoiy evidence that he-has
been strictly honest, faithful and sober,
during t,hree years which he has lived
with any family or farmer ; and another
of one dozen silver spoons or $5 to that
woman, of the same character.
Anecdote.—A man was dining at a
tavern not a hundred miles from this place
where the luxury of tumblers is unknown.
A number of persons were at the table,
and the only drinkable was cider, con
tained in a pewter mug, and this was nice
ly coated over with flies. The man skim
med off the flies with great care, placed
them on the table, and after drinking, re-
ofthe walks, the arrangement ofihe trees, ; turned them safely to the mug.
and convetiiency of the shades and arbors, ! « Why do you put them back said
the propriety of the statues, and perceives the landlady, who had observed his opera
te symmetry resulting from the whole. tions w j t h astonishment.
Letters concerning Mythology. u Because, madam,” replied he, “tho’
I am not partial to flies myself, I thought
that some of your boarders might probably
be fond of them.”
[Middlesex Gazette.]
Love.—What is so unearthly, so beauti
ful, as the first birth of woman’s love !—
The air of heaven not purer in its wan
derings—its sunshine not more holy in its
warmth. Oh! why should it deteriorate
in its nature, even while it increases in its
degree 1 Why should the step which
prints, sully also the snow ?
How is the face of nature changed since
Pindar wrote, and Anacreon sung 1 Sincc-
then, how many generations have been
swept away—how many nations have ri
sen into glory, and shrunk into insignifi
cance—hovY many waves have rolled
down the stream of time, each suc
ceeding one rendering still more dim the
faint traces of things that were ! Their
monuments of immortality still remain,
hot manners and customs have undergon
an utter revolution. We may flatter our-
kindness, or adhere to him with fidelity.
Henrietta Maria, the relict of Charles
I. and daughter of the illustrious Charles
IV. King of France, was reduced to such
a state of poverty, that she and her daugh
ter, who was afierwards married to the
brother of Louis XIV. lav in bed several
days, at Paris, for want of fire to warm
them, in the month of January, 1819.
The celebrated Dr. Cheyne said of
punch : “ It is like opiam, both in (he na
ture and manner of its operation, and
nearest arsenic in its deleterious and poi
sonous qualities ; and so I leave it to them
who, knowing this, will vet drink and
die.”
In the Island of Madeira a very singu
lar contrivance was obtained for increas
ing the depth of the soil on the side of the
hills. The inhabitants, in conspqucnce*
of its shallowness, break such pieces of
the scattered rock, as contain vegetable
matter, into small parts, over which the
rills from the heights being made to flow,
the fragments soon are found to crumble
and become a fertile mould.
From the 7th of September until the 9th
of October, we had not a drop of rain,
and vegetation was almost entirely sus
pended—we then had a fine shower, the,
weather turned cool, and on Wednesday
night there was a slight frost.—Mobile
Com.Adv. Oct. 13
We learn bv a gentleman who passed
through Claiborne on Wednesday, that
on Tuesday night last, the Court House
of that place was destroyed by fire, sup
posed by an incendiary.—Lb
An extensive bed of Manganese of the
purest kind lias been discovered in Chit
tenden County, Vt. About 50 tons have
already been dug. It is said to be worth’
$50 per ton.
From the minutes of the Methodist E-
piscopal Church for 1827, it appears that
the total increase of members throughout
the United States, is21,187
remarks, withdrawn as I am from scenes
of political agitation, by my age, and
pursuits more congenial with it. It is the
single instance of a communication from
me to the press, on any subject connected
with the existing state of parties. With
respect,
JAMES MADISON.
Cation in Spain.— In order to incour
age the growth of Cotton in tfie kingdom
of Grenada, the King of Spain has issued
a decree imposing a duty of ten niaravo-
dis on long Georgia and Pernambuco
Cotton when it is entered undet the
Spanish flag, and of 15 maravodis when
under a foreign flag, or coming by land.
Other Cottons are to pay 20 and 30 mara-
vodis, accoi ding to tiie flag. Manufactures
of pure Cotton those silks imitating vel
vets into which Cotton enters as a com
ponent part, are prohibited
A passenger in the Six Brothers to
Greece, writing from Napoli to his father
in New London, mentioning the dissec
tions of the Greek Government, says—
“ While these intestine divisions are
weakening their physical strength, th©
aged, infirm men, women, and children,
are literally starving, and suffering every
privation which nature can endure. YVete
it not for grass and snails, and such mud
cabins as would give horror to the mean
est object to shelter himself in, death
would interpose a general relief. Thou
sands have not the semblance of a domi
cil, but live under trees, with barely
clothing enough to cover their nakedness.
It is computed that about 10,000 souls
live in this way at Napoli, 5,000 at Poros,
and as many more at oEgiua, beside those
who live in cities once the most splendid
of the civilized world.”
The very essence of Etiquette.—YY hen
the Emperor Charles made his entry into
Douai, in great state, under festoons ot
flowers and triumphal arches, tiie magis
trate, to do honor to the occasion, put a
clean shirt upon the*body of a maletaclor
that was hanging in chains at the city gate
Monthly Magazine..