Newspaper Page Text
th, 1810 ,-3T TlPflkl |». Oi'vti., I AT LAW, A., IOWA 1 ^Aulal services jufposiu- Uu* Ottum Tinjll be. found at 41 6n 'business of their r'Ssnonally to ,ill oe found at iiiwof printing office, unless 8 41' MB wofe^i#fc Courts of "Wapello J" Vie. Thiid ik& wl Pis* pngpm* Court. 1 fiompt tin- isftlli'utioii ot ^liiimsin |uil tV- sale of I'frid uat- trr ug. H, '4fc is Coyiigellor at pV.VBKLLO Co.. IoWV OU11 presei a n a o n e i I V urts of tn I OtN EEg^ MW'A, IOWA. .* !t ,= „1w tlH?' •theuawmc, «d at once divin tl-jrp lodrampt of un^ety ::l lyfoce was mini1: a voice in sleeping, 1*11 his hbpos forbid 'T 0 hs wakened weeping** 1 really think did? ^fcinWBaae'.r'" Dot'ciiee VJTB of Kentucky*! as the jeader aivince himself by referring to History of Kentucky."* The incrediblc feat (for a Woman of biting in two a musket .here vouched Tor. This nar written tor the Sunday Times. "Colli 8CClJ)il ^especi'. bullet rati rev :¥NOtf,DS, JUNIATA A ro i beautifuland quiet scone than .lie c|gp» .pj on the*ElkUo»o*. Mtkieh •nw4~ ^led in the light of a cloud ion the 27th of April 179*, Jfcvf* bem found between Kcn iver and thtekionutains. A rude '^Khuilt log cabiu —h-df dwell •1 the- foreground 1 Eikh**""*' ^scarcely broad aj^l ht during a freshet)Jp its eloping bank %'Cn of early spring ,E^nt within half-ri- The entire clear- jot about forty acres, girdled .*T*y*id« by the dense forest, except n the'east^ ^here a broad opening ap ired, and the ••blazed" outline of a jfas visible for a rod or two leading ifently to some adjacent settlement, nidation was only three or four miles Frankfo'fc *hen a small Tillage and •it two milefe from the nearest point the Kentupl^v' river, of wlheh the khorn ^ai ti&ut^y. Within the Iliad done murh. The 1 the sunlight into tho ^s, had been promp plow. The barns tilled tooverilowing, glistening with lie southern slope, ano^r abundaui «ha|- .Jill' fpas of' double the usual it eyitaiucd t\vo families. Its ffiayffccupants, were two brothers, Hosca and Jesse Cook, their wiv^s and children, and a youth seventeen, named John McAndre, who assisted the Cooks in their farm 'v|jtk. The twfe brothers were originally from Connecticut, but had em igrated to Kentucky eojpe years before the time at t|rhich»our narrafive opens.— Nearly louifYears had elaps|d since they had settled fill the Elkhorn, ^and during the whole ihat^s^they j|ad but one IndianJI Hosea's •household*%pnsisted of his wife, Miriatn, like himself a native of N. Jtngland—a woman of commanding future a{if| great personal strettgih—and tl^eir datwh'ter Aliee, a fair, gold eiihair ^eral eil beautwith a 1 I omakiug sale of personal Keal Estate, at auction reasonable compensation. Ottuiuwa, uuless abet'ut May 16th, 1849. i Printed, Blank Martiuge Jicense^^x iind Summons's, and fmfale Office. ,« superior article, just •ale cHE.vrat this office s!t* face that 111:111 brain. lie smiled all over, thci^in her sixteenth year. tliff wilift, of Jesse Cook, was rosy, younger than her sister-in-law, with two lioyftjof six and three years old, at her pnii^striug. Young McAndre w^s a tiu.' lifMrdy young huntsman, whose fath er li i!Sb»eu killed in a rencontre with a |).irty Wyandpts, near the Hlue I.icks jin that* memorable tth of the frontjer a i e w e s e y e a 1 7 8 2 the sun's red disc became viat .f the upper lme of the forest to |the door of the cabin opened tl i pothers passed (Hit. The mor had already lifted frorti' was sailing sjpwly upward, a breath stirrtd to shake the ipisture from the forest leave^f surface'of the swiftly gli- row- n split- ilinied and woold Ji'^en -carrying ihemselves against #, so eonfident had their long amnion from attack or molestation ren dered them. Hut their dream of securi ty was destined to be suddenly and uW fully broken. They had not struck 20 blotvs with their axes, when a dozen ri fle® ''Too Marly derf91 y ninie/l cracked from i clump of maples about forty yards in advance of the nearest point of woods, and Ilosca Cook, who was in the act of chopping, sprang Jike a ball into the air, and straightening as lie de scended fell with his fare tijpward quite dead. 'N Jesse, aUliough heir Home. .. i$ory of the Frontier Wart. Tiirfc is no exaggeration in tin fol •vi Sketch, the instances narrated ha "lu illv occurrcd ^luring die bor- struck with three bal lets and mortally wounded, started in o fleering run for the cabin, and fell a few feet from the door, a* the very mo ment that thirteen Wyandofs, painted and plumed for war, leaped from the co ver with a hoop of demoniac exultation. For one moment ihe inmates of the cab in were panic stricken but in the next, the youth McAndre, had rushed out for the purpose of bringing in the wouuded man. He seized him by the shoulders and was in the act of dragging him to ward the threshold, when an old Indian, who had reserved Ms charge wlren the V« U y JMMM i N o k 4 i w a a i a the young and shot him thro'ugK tlte Yle trigger. fell dead across *alice—was the jCOuntered no resistance. Tae door to° large to be the body of Jcsae Cook- ». Had the anvnires rushed upon the caV in at that moment they would have crh was open anu tin: vvTTu.eji completely unnerv ed by the horror of the scene. B«.t the savag«»"»ioiped when they reached the"1 body of Ilc^ea Cook to scalp their vic tim. "Wicy fcnfcw that all the males of the houschoH^ad fallen, and that it was utterly impotisiblbyfor the womqpaid children to escape.1 As to a»j* a,ttonpt at a defence, they"did "nof dream of that. The three females, who with arms outstretched towards the bleeding bodies of their fallen protectors, and eyes dilia ted with horror, stood huddled together oa the threshold, felt rather than saw that their only chance of avoiding immediate massacre was in availing themselves of H.: brief respite which the blood-thirsty mjlignity of the savages Allowed them. Rushing from 4he cabin Miriam Cook grasped the corpse of her brother-in-law in her powerful arms, while at the same instant Hope and Alice seized cach an arm of the unfortunate youth McAndre, and in the next instant they had darted back again with their burdens, and closttd and barred the door. The cabin was a solid structure, built of immense logs of chesnut and oak, completely impervious to rifle or niusket shot, except at three or four points, where narrow loopholes had been left for the convenience ol'reconnai teririg or firing upon an enemy. These holes were about three feet from the gryiwulj.^and barely large enqugh to ad mit the play of a rifle barrel# so as to coiniAand the whole frout al the build ing. The door was formed of two thick nesses of hea^y whiteoak plank, equally impcmetrfcblo by bullets, aud, when se cured by tho solid bar inricfe, was almost as im pregnable tuc vall^of the cabin itself. Having deposited their (lead upon the cabin floor, Miriam, Hope ?.id Alice be gan to prepare for a vigorous defence.— Their faces no longor wore an expresk Noii of terror. The brows of the two '^njjtrons were knitted v/ith l|brce deter 1uhiationLami.their eyes Bp^kled with the instinct of revenge. Alice was no uely ^daughter of Virginia, much""longer the tipyd and genilu. maiden of yesterday. Ilerlovcr (for slifchad given her whole heart aud wat» soj^n to have given her haudt to youug .\l/^iidre) and her beloved father lay dead/before hs.r, side by. aide and the red spinous were in the very act bcalping 4id mutila ting the body of the'unelo oniside and But the Cobks were not upoa the l|nd'ic«£tt with "X *+3S:. nd something of the tig res-s fipsrfied cv^ ia^'uf her powerful ar%i, and struck him dl cctly in the forehead with the sharp edge of the staves. She heard the bones crash aud. the victim groan, A moment aftcrwardia, he was drawn away by his companions, three of whom then desceu ".-oui the roof, bearing hhn in their 1 afj jiey iffiio by ^Jfliaexltibiteil perceptible jur^nnii limbs.— iwift e^ es, df |luule tears. t'vochild signs ol fear bu?it shrieked nc^ wept, but sat a corner if the-cabin, idi their arms locked togcthVr, watching pc movements W the females, a* they pled chests, and benches and (irewpod ag iist the door to strengthen the weake^ pint of defence. Miriam Cook ^las i.' 0e speak. After assisting to secure the door she had knelt down at one df the loopholes to reconnoitre. At the very instant when she applied her eye to the aperture, the group of savage** who **ad been engaged in stripping the body ofher husband and hacking it with knives aud tomahawks, opened on the right and left, and a braw nyYfiiuw in the war trappings of a chief advanced two ftr tlirce steps and shook the bloody scalp derisively., above his head, while the whole party joined in^at) infernal yell of scorn and exultation. "My htifbatid's rifle!1' phe shouted, springing to her feel a lid rushing across the cabfn, she tore-, the Weapon and ac coutrements from the wall. Rut on try ing the piece with the ramrod, Jt proved to be unloided. She thrust her band in die pouch, but it contained _nothing ex cept musket balls, which her husband had purchased at Frankfort a few days before, intending to run them into balls suitable for his rifle. The powder horn w^s full but whit, use was powder without ball? propping the weapon, «l»e wrung her ha^b in despair. Sud denly a tlioOgkt stftick her, she »ciyed one of the bullets, placed it between her teetTi,and by a tremendous exertion, bit it clean in twp! Dashing a charge of powder into the barrel, she rammed down one of the fragments, primed and cocked the piece, and the next moment its muzzle, protruding through the aper ture, covered flic body,of the chicf now advancing at the'head of his party, to ward the hou*e. The quick eye of th»x, savage caught the glimmer of the rifle sight as the sunshine fell upon it, and he rush finger pressed When the pufl' of smoke from the discharge cleared away, she saw him reeling backward and clutching at the air in the. vain eflfort to recover himself. Before the other Indians, who seemed paralyzed by the unexpected ca- afVc, he threw liis hands wildly above his jicad, aud whirling quickly round, fell liis face. A shout of triumph burst yom the lips of Miriam as she saw the efle^|vof the avenging shot, and then withdrawing from the loophole she cow mcnced re-charging They savages remained. motrrifiteM,. for a few •feeegnds, transfixed with aston ishment, and ihen, lifting the body of the chief, withdrew hastily to a more respect ful distance from the cabin, and its in mates half beliered that their peril was over. They wern soon undeceived* After getting ou\of gunshot, the «fr» ges clustered together and appeared for several minutes to be in close conversa tion. Al the expiration of their pow wow, having apparently agreed upon their plan of action, the whole gang took open order and dashed with wild yells, at full speed, toward the dwelling. As the foremost came up, Miriatn Cook, who was now stationed at another loop hole, again discharged her rifle, and the unlucky WyaudQte, shot through both legs, drorppud in his tracks with an in voluntary shriek of agony. Tho other eleven kept on, and on reaching the cab in six of them clambered on the roof, while ,the other five commenced firing at thfrdoore aud openings iu the logs.— Those on the roof, quickly kindled a fire on the shingles, which were soon in a bright blaze. The destruction of the cabin and inmates now seemed inevita ble. Hut the brave garrison did nol des-' pair. There was a hogshead half filled with wuter in the house, aud Mi rain, buck et iu hand, moupied to the loft. Hope and Alice supplied her with water from bidow, aud as long as it lasted she con trived to extinguish the flames as fast as they broke out, while she hertlf, envel oped and almost suffocated by steam and smoke, was invisible to the assailants. At length the water was- exhausted, and one of the Indians, observing that the et flirts of the beseiged were slackening, ventured tb poke his head through one of tfie holes that had burned in the roof to see how the land lay. The, undaunted Miriam was standing' -file moment a few feel fi'om the opening, and the in stant she saw the facc of the Indian she whirled the empty bucket round her heac\ an'd hurliug Jt with tho full swing *Mirinm notr thought sbe licarfl'the two who remained upon the roof tearing down the upper legs of the chimney, and presuming that thogr intended to at- *s, Literature, AgriciiltuiV.Mechanics, Education, Markets, &(•.• A, IOWA, FRIDAY, NOVEMRBfi 2, ft49. stopped hut Insfore he had li'»»•«« wi*W» «»f. hoc btMbaud'a riAt, tho only tfstrophe, could afford him any assist^ ftablishment and thus armed the three feathers overcame h.m, and he fell heavi- Four of the thirieea Indians wore now killed or disabled, but these casualties ouly added to the fury of the remainder. They were all well aware that the cabin was occupied with women only, and nothing could be more degrading in the eyes of these swarthy savages than to be baffled by a parcel of squaws. They now furiously assailed the door with their tomahawks. To this proceeding the inmates could offer no resistance. In striking the savage who had fallen down the chimney, Miriam Cook had broken gun they had and now, handing the weapon toiler sister-in-law, she armed hers-ilf with the axe of McAndre, which stood in one corner of the cabin, and prepared for the last extremity. Alice betook herself to a very formidable wea pon, the slaughtering-knife of the es- women ranged themselves on either side of the door, determined to sell their lives as deady ae possiblg. In about an hour the Indians haj] near ly cut out two planks of the door bctienth the bar—a space just sufficient for a man to force his body through in a sUo posture. They now brought a hea vy piece of timber from the adjacent pile, and using it as a batteringram, soon beat in a portion of the door, at the same trme driving the articles that had been piled against it into the middle of the cabin. Taught caution by the losses ihey had already sustained, they did not immediately attempt to enter through the breach, but thrusting in and crossing the muzzles of their rifles discharged them into the house. In this they had a dou ble design—that of killing or maiming soine.of the occupants, and ^euiug 4a under cover of the smoke. Before the sound of tfte d^hfWng broaikide had died away, the feather crested head of a Wyandot warrior par ted the smoke rload which obscured the interior but as he rose from u stooping posture in entering, Miriam's axe des cended with tremendous force, cutting through shoulder and collar-bone clear into his chest. He dropped with a wild cry, half of defiauce, and half of ag ony. Another 'Savage followed, and another, each te sink in turn nnder the axe of the« courageous matron. The Jifttl she missed, but instantly grappling with him, she held him powerless in her A his body. Ot the next two who entered, one was disabled by a blow on the head from the butt of Hope's rifle, and the other very uearly decapitatedhy ft sweep of Miriam's axe, Of the thirtoen warriors who had left their tribe for the war-path, a few days before, only two were uuwtfunded and cupablo for service, and they, seized wjth a panic at Uie havoc made among their companions by tha„ "leug-kuife sqiviws," abandoned the siege aud fled back to the village. To the wonided they left belli 11 work of thftn, and thjs duty per tho family lost 110 iiuio iu prou Fninkfort. The ne*t day mounted Irpntier's men al\or bringing in tho boJi audf MeAndrp, started Wyat^ot tifyage to taj-"*4',,y vctige, GOV. AN LEI ha«* fsstrcd a Thursday, a day of praj out tliat y 11 tempt an ent%jee that* ,wnv, slHl ran down stairs to prfc^re for thqan. "The feather bedf^e foa'W bed!" "he shouted, as she reatH^l the Jower room and this much prize#article of frontierman's inventory of h5%^hoM-, chattels was quickly dragged forth*«d "V eight hundred are pun water. thrust snns ceremonit into the huge firfri distribution of organized beings all over me world is to a great extent regulated place. By this time one of the Indians was fairly in the chimney and the other about to follour. "Thrust the lighted brands into it qui£k!" said Alice, and the-next moment clouds of slitting smoke from Ihe burning feathers were ascending the chimrtey.— The savage made an effort to scramble I up again, but the pungent effluvia of the er ariua while Alice plunged the knife into ^.'u» "c^s' *v YP^ V* -»JW^"", ^s .• -JS?*'. ^••"V i ,,, 1 acidity of vinegar. Distilled with ly on the hearthstone. In the meantime jt contracts- from them their fragrance, Miriam had again grasped the ri'ie and and with equal facility becomes the vchi held it club ready for his recep'ion Scarcely had he touched the floor, when the iron bound point of the breech crash ed through his skull. The otl^r Indian, who had caught a wfcitT of the vapor in time to avoid a like fale precipitately des cended from the ra|f. j£". v jjjr 2S',aftL.-„« -5 "lf'lS* WHOLE NO. 58. The Nature aut' Wafer. No living thing can exist exrdp%,|x flower% oV thfi #romatic parts of pWj __ I cle of odors the most offensive to our sen- ses. y We talk about the use of water, and imagine that nature furnishes its a peren nial supply. The common phylosophy of the people is doubtless advanced so far as to admit that, in an unknown manner, this substance is created in the clouds, de scends as rain for the use of animals and plants but whence it came or where it goes never enters into their consideration. Men constantly forget that in this world nothing is ever annihilated an atom oncc created can by no process be destroyed! The liquid that we drink to-day, ha9 been drunk? thousand times before the clouds that obscure the sky have obscured it a gain and again and if the sorrows of -mankind are as many as the philanthro pist may well fear, he might suspect a great part of the ocean is, perhaps, made up of tears that have fallen from the hu man family. In the air their sighs die away, and in the ocean their tears are all jost. This using over and over again is a striking characteristic of the ways of" nature the beautiful aud the vile—the great and the small—are all mingled to gether, the tears that you shed in the depths of grief to-day, may be squirted to-morrow through a hose-pipe to clean the dirt of the streets, or whistled away through the squeak of a locomotive, to scare some dilatory cow off the track. So much for the sorrows of man. What then becomes of the immense quantities of water, which thus entering as a constituent of the bodies of animals, gives to their various parts that flexibility which enables them to execute move ments, or combining with vegetable struc ture, tits them for carrying on their vital proccss? After the course of a few years, all existing animals and vegetables en tirely pae» away, their solid constituents disintegrate and Uike on other condition?, and the waters, lost perhaps for a time in the ground, at last esuape in the form of a vapor into the air. In that great and invisible receptacle, all traces of its ancient relations disappear it mingles with other vapors that are raised from the sea by the sun. "From the bodies of living animals and plauis immense quan tities are hourly finding their way into the reservoir. In a Crowded city, from the skin and by the breath ol its numerous inhabit ants, clouds of vapor are continually es caping we sec this visibly coing on in the cold weather of winter, and, though in visible, the process is equally active in summer—the escape arising from the ink we take, or from all those various portions ot the system that are dying each moment, for the life of individual being is made up of the successive death of all its constituent particles. In the same manner, from the forests and mead ows, and wherever vegetables arc fouud, water is continually evaporating, and that to an extent far surpassing what we might at first be led to suppose. In a single day, a sunflower of moderate size throws from its leaves and other parts nearly 20 ounces weight. How enormous, then, must be the quan tity which escapes from the surface of a great continent! Yet all this is thrown into the air, and there it mingles with oth- portions, some ot which are coming ean* thein no quarter was giveiii To have spared tneir livesjjjfsion these relics of every )art of would have been treason to the Miriam's axe ^ud the kjtife made si.^ man of average sure requires a halt Ti OSS*. Nortl^ Carolina, setting apart day uf.Ndtvmix'r, as v am* 80'1e th® derived front e s u a e o e o u n a n s o n i i the re310te thc sca as if nature fiad taken surpr means that """"""'"S here all identity should ^e los^ The' »W •-"*&$. '*YV Pfllkl BI'akDeeas, l*l0rt|raf(c*, BALL TIE DONE ON ThE AT THIS e,m: tains water as one of the leading roTK*ii- To so great an extent does this go, th.it tin a thousand parts of hum 111 blood, near The by Tto-aVinilanee or scarcity. It seems as if the p^^erties of this substance mark out the plan t^uniimted nature.: From man at the he?hl of all, to the meanest vegetable that oan^row on a bare rork, through all the varidtta orders and tribes, this ingredient is ever nyjuired. Insipid and iuodorous in itself, it {partakes of the peculiarities of all other bodt&j assumes with readiness the sweetness ofsngar, and the uents of the various parts of the system'. M^0119 question what provision nattfW^has m*6c to meet the demand, and how long the #Wers of the sea, supposing none returned ffet^hem, could furnish a sure supply? V winds, proverbially inaftostanVblof** Question was presented /or thc one-time fruip Africa* at another from 1 ,e is a stern equa^. The breath of the king intermtoflK with fhe breath c.r the 1° beggar at^dXJFaame quiet atmosphere receives tlW^w^ifnuDns of ihe American, «he UiJp|fean,_the*Asiatic and the Af'rU Jra Parlicie«s that have risen from the infe'mmirtj! with those from the livijl/and il this times as much water as we 3b, vegetable world two hundred til much as all the animat' yacea, such an immense drain it becomes 4 oa- The question iuiHjjes the Stability pf existence of animateu *%ture, and Ui® world of organization and fto man satfe one whose mind is thoroughly tenbudd with an appreciation npon which the acts of the Cjogftaf founded, would, I am sure, justly at the result. There exists in the' supply which would meet t,his en demand for more* than a ((natter millions of years. Such is the plan of nature, and such are the resources on which she depends for carrying out her measures. For the well being of her organized creations, hhe can fall back on a gigantic sdpply.— Prdfts8or Draper. SIMPLICITY OF DISCOVERT.—fV5nr%e complex, yet simple and wonderful na ture of the human mind, man is fond of the mysterious, the complicated, and wTonderful and he is more ready to pnf» sue new projects through mazy laby* rinths of study, than along the straight road of simplicity. The famous Philip tine general who came down to the H#« brew prophet to be cured of a fatal di» ease, treated at lirst the simple command of the prophet, "go wash in the Jordan and thou shalt be healed." He thought that some grand ceremony, or some wild incantation, would have to he pel formed to remove far from lii&l malady. How complex are false the®? ries in comparison with true. How complicated were the theories of Plato in comparison wite those of Newton and who would have thought, that from the falling of an, apple, the greot philosopher wonld have made hi* greatest discovery? By simple conden sing the steam in a separate chamber from the cylinder, the immortal Wa% changed the whole nature of tho stewa* engine and gave it new powers. We Jmay well admire the powers ff that machine which can propdl the gi gantic steam-boat over the stormy orem, or whirl the thundering train of c, along their iron ribbed footway, 6U ing the flight of the eagle fn swi but seldom very seldom do W who, in beholding such woWSe impressed with that diving has chosen the weak tniqga 01 world to confound the mighty/' are the elements that propel the boat or the iron car, and how Only two—fuel and water. The the most complex part of the whole, ur but the means to convey and apply the power. With the tree from the forrest, or coal from the mine, and his boiler of water from the neighbouring fountain, the engineer mounts his iron steed, and when all is ready he touches his valve rod, his iron steed feels the breath of hi* life, and well may we apply the words Scott: "He is off, he is off, o'er btah, brake Jc scaur, They 'llve fleet steeds that follow, ^giath Coffcl Loehinvar" How cSlhplex was the electric graph of homering, with his thlf golden points, in comparison wit fectuai and simple Electro Telegraph of Morse, who, with wire, sends the whispers of from lake to sea, on swifler w those of love. All the great discoveries that been made are remarkable for th plicity because they arc based truths of science and this ioi many errors may yet be woof and warp. In saying thi§, cicity of discj we might a after col' who ha* caoe, or remeaaber first, 01 court' Asia. °.a ^e wrong side, and whe 'opufihojf th* universe there 8,te n |he aiul the tempests o**^ cvery action, aud dash in one eomn*^ ton u eight ot water a year when he has reached the meridian-of life, he has con sumed nearly three hundred times hi i6wn weight of this liquid. These are suterauuw winch may seem to those s!i0iV the court what a hear them for the first time, very wmPvtoUpUgtonp derful, and as they arc easily verUi^f such a shout of laufhfcr-i* might lead you to,A)ubt whether \Mi $x" ieting order of Ji^ture, as depeuift'if~on the waters of iihe sea, couhJ l»r any length of timi be kept uii^l such a heavy consentption. The huxian family pontfists probably of a thousand milliops individuals it woiild. ne a very n^orate estimete }o though- L8upf*»se, that th^ various a^iimiils, great Ijapv enufl, takei^bgether, consume* Ave on the »imp\i «pou which up column exort all thoeto the pursuits of sci- ,*®iicement of the arts—t^' simplicity should be th •nd last consideration •S&tentijic American. 1 04A ANECDOTE.—Recentlyil a ^-ouri aeiu in attending a court held in J- ier? udge S. presided, a was argtlsi atl°r«»«y elat (a real Paddy waJeU through Blackstom as to oI)ta*n.a license,) i he was stopped by his mi formed him that hie up against him that h« further argument. Pq slowly upon a volut and opeued where turned' down, enr law in conflict vuEpte opiuioi^ i o u tut and .11 y muul IS^v. loa- ger (TpeW. conviction, nor w^W have auy ^uinenri^-iijLOucase.'' said "IdHll iGffiP argue the point, convince your honoi-—Ij from every part of was beyond the means court to coutrol for when Paddy \va|f. fined 4 slander of Blac&stone* A youijg fyp nb ^ut' starti York proposed a life preeer ^Or yop' will not we the Jlerk, 'bags of wind .1