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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 21

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

ITIE BOSTON SUNDAY GLOBE SUNDAY JANUARY .6, 1889 --TWENTY-F0 PAGES. 21 tir .6. 1889 --TWENTY-F0 Mt PAGES. FIRE AND Eon FIRE FIRE FIRE AND SMOKE cholowl en oleo that I eonlan't leetnee. and rr'r uki veer I was with the Ant0-htvery ofnt In New Noel.

editing anytlerg 'WA hooks. Pam ptlets. I lttd a beint of opem ging extetnve and am my trotefle kept ogi until war came n. I felt oath so 1 o'f and went same. That evening I I43- turett at 104 or ten znbes whPre the tnoPi followed and.

by the Loral t. repeated I beir ix. but eel was in the church and 1 Oecuploci 0)0 I el got the ta-st of therm, at night atoo on Ipeseon occupied the I al pit I got the tost of them-That night I stovped at bearott l'eppont's, NEE AND SMOKE SMALL WARES. I IJAVEllY DAYS. Pilch of Theodore Dwight Welds Almost the Last of the Abolitionists.

1.11E3 11! it3 CES3 Ind Earned the Respect of Garrison and rhillips. A Tr3 t3 I' Vie'l It3 ru iir soovne Viand Cie thn ty.salis of foinauco crN Clot Out a fePir pars frog ntol Stazoo Was A for lAttoto thet cowmen roc rata.nia to olio to tell thol -1" trethers antt their st4te-s. and that the rooi over It to a suarle. 0 4.ac lnab st .4 hes, poser Of pramsh tho Amerman oacat.t.:ary. when 4at ea Je.lyrson tr 4 under the Itallit at 11263,1 aucilon at a AV', It bad the of r.

a Ler face. rider et? eft" Sill one wcipler Ca: a taa! men ke.lo!an lin. 1 en. Ib rk Arno; umber. 'Theodor ata Lloyd 0 iazr son and others oviay welt known hato gone down to Luta 14 the 44 4 tott.

men quAb brit, I niM. vilonce LA, it terror to many other Ira LI sa not ttniwed the great idea and the to of a be and whqwe Durpootes wouid have icot tforiP. thy, creat riihIe atetiment t' 1:" 1134 they been po.t4o.46ed of yni lit hirb eacht roves to La azattirt the 1 tiro ortarajr. I. i c's I 61 4,.

k. '4 tr-- I 4 1 NIA S. -4, 0 1 1 .1... A. A i 1,,, re, 1 N.

3, ''s 'A. ty ce A' i 1 I THt0DOE D. WELT e) anti they gathered siout the house and made the glit htileene." I asked Mr. aid if be was personally isen 'tainted wah John Brown. He said: "I met Len iniv-e frfPallit UV the in Boston.

I not at li st know him. but I was so 1 morn impreseed by setearance that 1 watchea and follwed him around several corners. asking several who that man wan, anti was told that it was John Brewn. and In'tkl'4. le I tilt of an aneeilote c.iirrir tt me one filiS Eltrur cht went to school with Jilin Brown.

sn i knew tien well. One day in school Jelin Hrriwn eared all the bey, in schnol to gime ball Line TrieY accepted the challenge. but Job litroyeas' 'Flattery Was Ito Trw snetadone nal be drove them all off." Mr. Wehl. with a merry twinkle in bie eye.

said that during the war somebode got out an biography of his life. In pamphlet form. professing to give bit WStorY. In thie painplilet It said I was a Pirate and sailed about the 'Vet India Iiitanen and lay in wait. and with bluneerbuses anti tut vee uouidsielsvesaels.

seutti them ABA paNiteozo.rri and vessel he bottom. awl after Lsilinz aileut aoine time tome into New Vorit and got na a mob and reeled a roue store. eterwarde bringing I li Li areie into the streets. knocking the heads In. when the flour wag taken by trent amen.

who canos with patis and vane to Carry ot Iles waa during the bread red when tionr weit 0 itt per The tin.jr foendation for the story was that il wait in New York at the time. and 1 A bolitioutste wore wicked peonle at that time. awl people would stradow anything. It was on a par with the stories told at that I Ine abreit it and our einem. and Ls I was a ministf-t's son.and minister, inns were generally accorded scapegraces.

all sorts of inti ientees wore heaved upon me and my defenceeas followers. 7 I I i ire 04 7: ri ,,,,,,9 4 1Nr- 1 11 i -ie. 4.ts iii I al ::4 ti ,40,4...1.,,,, :7:: '-ij i 0 I 1 IRICV A. C. instrat TISIT TO THIC JAIL.

Durinr my lecturing tour I had a continuous tight to prevent the titles "Judea" and others being athxed to my name, many titnes they announcing me as mb I li. Mr. tt eld of New Jersey. and the first tiling I elways did upun openunt my lecture was to tell them that a true sailor never I sailed false colors. and that I had neiler held nice except as roadmaster in New Jersey and Purenntendent of schools.

This seemed to make no ditferencte as In the next paper the same expression creep in and it was only a week ago that I I was addressed -Reet Mr. W. has written Many pamvhleta 1 serainet siavert and event, voiumieearnouff which were: The Bible Against Slavery. "Slavery as It le." and "I he Power of Con- I greSS )ver the Dilated of Columbia." tin alay 14. 143s.

Mr. Veld was married 1 to Angeiltia Emily tinmite. In Philadel- ve'a. atise Griteke came of an aristocratic I southern family. and her name was well known WHOM the anti-slavery people of tins conntry.

Ness Grimke beeame a rest- i 4itnt ot I bilaile plies. when. with her sister 4 Sarah. she joined the Society of Friends in 1 becolnin4 well known in connection I Oh the emancipation of a number of itlaves in le.se, whom she inherited front 4 her parents. She was aleo joint authorees with of several boole.

To this wed- ding many anolitiontsts were invited and 4 all colors represented. from black to brown 4 a nit tiaitolon to octoroon. the colored 4 teing mostly the desceudants of slaves in I Judge Griner', family. I This marriage was 801eMni7ed at the house of Anna R. Frost.

by the lima of 1 remptrivania neither clergyman nor mag- I istiate W4 rentnred to be present, a mar- I riaze being legal if witnessed by twelve 4 persons. Miss Grimke would not consent 4 be married by a clergyman. and Mr. I Weld consented to a marriage in coutormity to her Wwiee4. hea the time came." he said.

"we and took each other's right hands. I lien repeated these words: 'Angelina. I take 4 you to be my lawful. weditel 'wife. and I promise to love.

honor and cherish and in I ill things to recognize your equality with I I then went on to against the 4 present laws. She said what occurred to 1 her at the time. and we both knelt and prayed. There were present at this wed- ding tt 'leant Lloyd Garrison. Abby Kelly Rnd others.

The certificate was then read ly tVilitain Lloyd Garrisou aud signed by I those Present." i II la' el ti. ,4, Otitt ei se a a .42 4,15,74 e.s.--4cr-',.,:::..,Lit- 11 1 ty 1:1, re 'I Y'''' ..7::1: 'I "tit' 0 rev -No, 'T a rk ei-'3 4444 jri) Ld ii 4 li'''''' 1' 1i I ot i 't -i' --eg I 1 i 7 a t1 li ZnaecteaTtom, SECOND WEEK -or Ora-. CHEAT FIRE SALE Haring gone through our immense stock once more, we offer for sale next week, commencing Mcnday, Jan. 7, at 8 a. mil BARGAINS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT.

Tbe prices Ire advertlite La the followlet tektites seta almost Incredible, but lbw Iadie who attended our Immense sale afloat week can testify that we sell Just shot we advertise. Ladies wishing to secure these BIRGA1N3 inust come early, as there Is a limited supply of these which, If not slightly damaged by smoke, would be worth 30 per cent. to 73 per cent. more than we charge. FUR DEPARTMENT.

BARGAINS! BARGAINS Entire stock et Seal Loops for Plush Gar. at 25c. each, former price, 75e. 100 yds. Black Russian Bare Trimming E'er.

In. wide. per former price. 50c. ZOO Ids.

Mack Russian Bare Trimming Fur, 4 In. wide, at 50c. per former price. $1.00. 11 yds.

Nat. Lynx Trimming Fur, $1.00 Per former price, $2.50. NIL Lynx Sets, Boa and Muff, best VialHY. $ILO marked from 523.00. I Black Lyng Sets, Boa and Zuff, former price, $20.00.

Beal Russian Bare Mufti, $1.50, former price, $2.30. lest "flush Cone7 Muffs, $2.00, former price, $3.50. Martin EON, best quality, $5.00, former price, 59.00. )1iTMED'iS 35 Winter St. sins and bowling mobs who at times almost lore the clothing from MT his body: lie stood unflinchingly before the frowns.

the scoff and sneerer is fellow-men. always steadfast in bison purpose of freeing the slaves, which act of justice he lived to see consummated. and for which countless thousands of those within whose veins how the blood of the negro race rise up and call lipel blessed above men. Mr. Weld's wife diea on Oct.

fl. 1879. the funeral taking place three days later. at which service Elizur Wright. Lucy Stone.

Wendell Phillips and others equally well known took part. Mr. Weld has been in Dxcellent health until within a couple of weeks. when he was treated to the novelty a slight nervous prostration. from which, however.

he is 10owly recovering. the last public occasion in which Mr. Weld Look part was the reception which was tentered to him at the residenee of Mrs. Pay-ion. LW.

7. when a brilliant literary company was present to honor irs eighty-sixth birthday. which had just passed. Mrs. Weld was the first woman in this to cast a rote at a public polling place.

It was on March amidst the rn ngled yells of derision and laughtiT and melees3 of the anti-female suffrage mascnmes gathered. that this intrepid woman. aszether with her sister. Sarah Grimke. and Lucy Stone.

with a following of their elders ind a string ot maidens. some bewitchingly irettv. with cheeks aflame at their novel )osition. marched up to the polls at Bragg's in Hyde Park. each with a bouquet in land.

and declared their political preferince. 1 he votes were kept separate. howiver. and not counted. but the result howed that there were tiO women In that own who believed in female suffrage.

At this reception William Lloyd Garrison. of the elder Garrison of that name, GerLid Massey. the English lyric poet: John utchinsou. of the famous Hutchinson 'amily. and many Others.

well known to anus were present. Letters were also read rem John Greenleaf hither. Henry Rey. Joseph F. Tuttle.

president of IVabash College; Parker l'ilisbury, Lucy tone and others who were prevented from her present. It was a notable tratherinir. Ind Mr. NVeld. who was the last speaker, was particularly imeressive as he wandered 1 ntek through the labyrinth of his 813 years pf almost continuous labor.

In conclusion. many of Mr. Weld'a friends hroughout the country will be glad to tnow that he is fast recovering from the light prostration with hich he has been ittileted during the past two weeks. and exiggerated reports of which have been Tinted in some of the Boston papers. MAitB12i W.

Baowsr. WHITTIER'S TRIBUTE 0 the Mani of Hue Youth, the Champ Ititt of the Slave. A day or two ago the writer visited Mr. rhittier at his country home at Oak Knoll. nd wai very pleasantly received by the He was NUffering from a severe cold that moment.

but said he would write ut the little poem and mail it. The nett tlav it arrived. tozether with the following letter. a tribute to Mr. NV eid Aback and alas! that a brother of mine.

A bachelor vro; 011 Coi Wiry 's Altar Should leave me alone thl desolate shrine, And stoop Ws own to the enemy's halteri flow sad Is Ms lape! it reminds me. in sooth, of p.L. Atithuy fall, witeu like Spirit ot it ttirtrt the sanit's eyes from the pace of truth, the cell of with impAragon and devil nut rLe Snt nover 'Ted his eves from the Book -I 111 tie 'clinger app4Kired Lit the shape ot a woman, Theo he turned his grave and ventured one Lx-t. And iLe Atoll Find rejtdeed, for the Saint bad proen No doubt onr friend thinks he may laugh who eta will. That each tricks aro ceetnited by the powers above, That in place.

of tlie bad a Kraal angel 5 lips in And Satan bitneIf Is unheated by ILAve! This I think is the substance of the little verse 1 seat to dear Weld when he did the best thing a man could do. and mar; ried Angeline taillike-a woman of great beauty of mind and person, and an eloquent pleader for the slave. You will of course speak of his marvellous escape from death in the Western fever. of his being one of the tint lecturers for temperanoe. of his wonderful career at I sue which turned alkentire College into anti-slavery Propagandists of ids immeshing eloquence his voice failed.

when he went over the country. like with his lantern. searchinz out ecor.ls of the and bravest young men. inspired them with his own fervent real and sent them forth to preach deliverance to the hieve, and au sten the dead conscience of the nation. 1 ant tko iii and ohl to do more than make these suggestions.

1 hove our beloved friend is better in health. tiod Thy frtund. Jolts Danvets. Jan. 2.

BOX BROWN AND ELLEN cuArrs. Story of the Heroic Acts of These Two Persons. The escaps of Henry Brown. or Henry Box Brown. as be was known.

is familiar to everybody. The terrible ride in his narr(w prison cell marked "This aide up with care." was filled with horrors. Tile writer reinembcris hearing Brown once reate experookies of that memorable ride. Said iikt: "be box I was in W3S packed away with several ca-Aes. anki I bored two or three boies in the cover to get air.

Well, what do you supotact but one of the bands came once wh.le we were on the trip and thkt down right over my air holes. In a few I beiran to4111e. and latowinir that it would be ali up with me in a le minutes I rewired to do something. desperate. I seized the citulet I had tis1 in boring and drove it wita a thrust no through the aperture.

With a yell the nian leaped from his seau but to my surprise be did not in veat gate. Und I was IIGL oisturbed." Our shows brown In the act of leapint from the box. The portrait of Ellen Crafts wag DUI). 16hed in 152. and P.

a correct likeness of this uktrepid woman. who. dressed is a 3 clang plaiiter. travelled unmolested from orgia i)y a putAic route. in steamboats and cArl.

reaebnt this city in her ace mpanving her in the of an old lankily servant- here thry lived in teace in Crafts own ikonse until the passage 4) Lhe fugitive slave bill. when his former master sent to BoAton to reclaim him. Craft s. however. locked hintsel up in his a dombile, having obtained a legal oninion that it be felony for say one.

o.hkx.r or ptherwtsa to break into his dwellitig 1-bus be put the mercenaries his water" had employed at defiance. until a Et opoortuoity linen he left the of the old bay State for England. where for mAn TP32'11 botti be and his wile the lio--DitaLtaes of freedom. it rani Bak. 144 rellitSt Basle Cotton, regalar price, Odd Iota of (Woe la differeat brands, spools for Se.1 regular price, St.

a spool. Telt. 2e. a rolls regular price. Dress Braid, regular Price aG Waist Steels.

SG; regular price. Skirl Extenders, SG; regular price.120. Lilies Selling. Sci regular price, SG Silk Belling, Oct regular price, 1e, Books and Eyes, I cards for 1G1 0011110, prite. Se.

Silk Elastic. 9e. per regular primp, 230. Entire stoek of Fancy Shell Hairpins, 13c4 regular price, SOG SO doz. Tort Imo Shell Hairpins, Senn regular price, SSG, 50c.

Fancy Elastics, Se. regular Wee, tooth Brushes, regular price, To. Tooth Brushes, regular prim 1. Tooth Brushes. regular price, 11110.

Bair Brushes. regular price, Ile. Bair Brushes, 23G1 regular price, Metallic Brushes, regular price. ITO. Combs, 4c.1 regular price, Te.

Combs, regular price, 100. Combs. regular price, 130. Shell Hairpins. 2c4 regular price, Be.

Dress Shields, regular price, Stockinet Shields, regular price, 2315. Toilet Pins, regular price, Sc. Mourning Pins, regular price, Se. Elastic Corset Laces. regular price, So.

Initial letters.12e.; regular price, 110. Darning Colton, all colors, le. per card: repo ulor price, 1c. Entire stork of Canvas tells, 2504 ilegalat price, ISc, rot retorts, C. per boz: regular pries, Ilice Soap, 2e.

per cake; regular price, 10c. M. H. We have la stork pairs of corsets. coexisting principally of P.

R. 11., Good Sense, in ladles and slimes' which we will sell for liSe. a pair brewers' O'clock sad 10 o'clock a. in. only.

The ladles' corsets are mostly large sizes. MAD'S 35 Winter St. affairs. Again. there Is lie brilliant ligki mortified by passing through media of vie rious the ravishitig music, sensual.

lied with all the art which those Who own. DOSO The Harmonious Strains for Waltzes and other dances know so well bow to eno ploy; the supper table loaded with the most appetizing ptoductions of the cook's and the confectioner's bkill; the wham which, when taken with due znotieratiou. Cause just such degree of increased cardiae action as to tienti the blood a little more rap. idly than usual through the brain and thu to etooken ita action. to heighten its sense enjoyment RIO to retard the running, of the wearinese which 11001)tir or later follows sti excitement to excess of that which to itabitued.

A very might tumours tn tbe amount of blood eireulating through the cerebra! vessels suffices to augment the acuteness of all tho perceptions, and nOtli times even to give brilliancy to minds that are ordinarily stupid. it 3s by no Meant hecessary uso alcoholle liquors for thil Purpose. for te cup Of coffee or tea, a tett grains tit quinine or the presence of a fevet wilt produce a like result. Even the a of the reounthent posture will In many persons so increase the activity of the brain a4 to enable Intellectual tasks to be accomplished which would otherwise lie impostoble. Many celebrated mathetnaticiarim anti literary men have been oblige i to le (men in order to work out their problems or to write their most effete.

tive poetry or 'I be inanatrers of belle know very well what they are about Whoa they provide chatimaglie for those wife have collie to deuce. They should take chre, however, that there is not too great a I profusion of this most ex of bey. erages. It is a good friend when used with discretion, but a tnost malionatit etierny when abused. A single olass too mach ill so deaden the sensilitlities and blunt the perceptions es to reinter any kind of Plea ure impossible.

Now. as to the dancino itself. I Lave he hesitation in sayitig that In It we have at powerful a means of both the mind and the body at the same time its it it possible to obtain. The notirculer thews extend the greater portion of the body, They are not merely antontatio but it lit necessary that the attentiou dirocted to their propor performance. tot otherwise catastrophes of various kind' would be likely to result.

but there is one feature that I cannot to strenueueiy insult upon. and It is this: Tbe dancert who desire to obtain the uttnost aumunt of pleasure from the healthful and beautiful exercise in which they iudulog should take peelsl care to change then partnere frequently. I have already called attention to the fact that the system becomes habituated to any particular kind of excitation. Variety is. in dencitor as le all other things, the spice of life.

Titers it only one exception to this precept. so far Ike dancinic is concerned. and that is that some people dance with other objects in view thao mere dancing. A couple who are 31 love with each other will dance tottethei al! night. but even they would have to eon fess that if they told the truth that the last dance was not no pleasant as the first.

'I he man who Invented the "germ an knew whet he was about when he devIsed a dance in which frequent chanixes of pare ners are neeesary. The old-fashioned squere dances were not without their ad. vantager In this respect, arid are too much neglected at the present day. The "Vie ginia reel" was wondertul in Its rapacity te give pleasnre but it is now eareely eves seen, except in Homo out-of-the-way cows try teens of the Smith. Let the world.

therefore. continne te dance! but In this. as In all other thing let it be guided by wisdom and moderationt WILLIAM A. Ilteiat000 I Absolutely Pure. This powler never A insrvot or rarity.

strength mut wholosontenneo. hog the oidinory Stade, and lee sold in sompetit two watt' tne Inulthitmle ot low 1.o4, snort weigbi Loos or tintS onto so JoTLL 1iAA4a0 kOWSHIS ke ail et. 136 'tabJulio sett SPECIAL DOWN. Eld Boor Mills and Bon We shall sell ISO sots of the EEO, QUALITY at 030 to 834, forms price 830 to 840 We also have Bear Leta I'LOY $17 upward. Etillakas 404 Strut.

v. i 1 4-' '(thi I ,,,,1 it VIBE a Entire stock of Wool trimming bee, to close, at per former price, 1 1000 yds. Black All-Silk Marquise Trimmiag Lice, l'Oe Per 1d-; former price, 11.00. SOO yds. Black L1I.Sflk (rutiie Trimmiag Lace, 50c.

per yard; former price, $1.23. 100 yds. Black All.Silk Chemin; twee Flossie. hag. 42.1n.

wide, 11.00 per former price, 61.23 and $2.00. 100 yds. Cream Silk Chantilly Floanclag, $1.110 former peke, $3.00. 300 yds. Real Medici Lace.

vide, $3a. Pt, former price. 50c. 2090 yds. Torchon Media Laces at Mc.

per former price. 13ce. 1S. 20 63.00 Mack Beaded Fronts, $3.00 each. $4.00 Black Beaded Fronts, 112.00 emit.

83.00 Black Beaded Fronts, $1.00 deb. CLOVES. Odd iota of Eli Gloves. In all alses sad rotors, 30c4 regular price, S1.00. $1.30.

$1.13. THook Embroidered Beck kid Glow, 9064 regular price, SIAS. SILK MITTENS. 2S doz. in Black and Colors, regular price, S1.23.

WOIISTED MITTENS. 50 doz. Ladles' Cashmere Mittens, reg. ular price, 62e. :0 doz.

Ladles' Mittens, 2Sc3 regular price 5Sc. VELVETZ1111313ONS 600 pieces, in all colors, 5c. a piece, 10 Ids. la a piece regular price, 311c. r.

100 pieces, In all colors, 23e. a piece regular print 61.00, $1.50, A2.00. All our Black Velvet Ribbons to be sold at GO per cent. off the cost. BUTTONS.

500 doz. Fancy Dress Buttons, 5c. mut lar price averaging from 2e. to De. PERSIAN BANDS.

Fenian Bands to close at cost. Mt A D'S 35 Winter St. THE VIRGINIA REEL Dr. Hammond on the Effects of Dancing. He Favors the Amusement Because It Exercises Mind and Body.

A Physician's Advice as How Best to Enjoy Dancing. teepright, 1888, by Charles R. Brown.) I smino8e there Is more danning done throughout the United during January than in any other month of the year. and it may not therefore be deemed inappropriate if I restrict my remarks upon this occasion to the consideration of the effects of this amusement and exercise upon the systems of those who indulge in it. Nothing is more wearisome to the average man or woman than exercise for the mere sake of the exercise.

A walk in a familiar country with nothing but trees and cows and a dusty road to look at. while it may give exercise to the muscles. does this in a not much less mechanical way than if the limbs were put on a board and shaken by the vibrations of a steam-engine. While a like amount of physical exertion in the streets of a large city. which are crowded with people and lined with shops resplendent with the most beautiful products of art, not only brings the muscles into play.

but at the same time stimulates the mind. the walk through Farmer Smith's lane is pretty tinich the same day after day. and eventually the mind becomes fatiguel with its unvarying features. But Broadway or Fifth avenue or Chestnut street are always changing and the mind is kept alert and amused. for.

after all, the one factor that never palls is variety. This susceptibility of the system to become wearied, and. as it were, callous from a repetition of the same impressions. L3 exhibited not only in the way I have mentioned but in many other interesting modes. The body.

for instance, soon becomes habituated to the repeated dose of the same medicine. and it is necessary to increase tne quantity from day to day in order to obtain the desired results. A. iirst dose of an eighth of a grain of morphia will Probably put most persons to sleep a second dose of the same quantity acts less energetically. a thdd dose still more feenly.

while a fourth has no appreciable effect whatever. In order to obtain sleep the dose now must be increased and a like process must be gone through with from day to dav so as to subiect the bedy to a continually increasing influence. A like condition exists in regard to pains. the hotly soon becoming accustomed to very agonizing sensations unless they are rendered more intense or altered in quality. Even the mast acute tortures fail to be experiented by the nerves, unless they are changed in some way or other.

There seems to he a natural tendency in all animals, including man. to skip or jump or dance when they desire to show pleasure. Our domestic animals. for instance. exhibit this inclination in a marked degree.

and children even when only a few weeks old exhibit tneir delight by kicking out their limbs while still too young to manifest pleasure in any other way. Li-en the most savage nations of the present day Make Dancinir One of the Chief Features of Their Itejoit loft, Our ancestors' at the very dawn of the historic period. and doubtless for mass' thousand years before. danced at their victories over their enemies, during their acts of worship (if their deities and when they met to feast over any event that gave theta partieular. pleasure.

No custom is more extensively and ineradicably shown by the monuments that have come down to am from antiquity than dancing. The walls of Amy. ran and Egyptian temples and dwellings abound with representations of dancing men and women. The Bible contains many allusions pi dancing. as one of the chief means of showing pleasure.

But between the aancing of adults of the civilized portion of the modern world and that of odier nations and of the people of our own times there is considerable difference. Our remote ancestors daueed to iltiOW their joy over some notable event. and the savagi-4 of the present period are actuated by like motives. It is tie that ancieuts took pleasure in witnessing the natatorial exercises of Professional dancers. and several semi-barbarous nations of the vreseut day look with great delight on the gYrati0118 and contortions of their dancing girls.

But there is nothing to show that any of these people danced for their own amusement. A sultan of Mozambique or zanzibar or some other such country was astounded (et being introduced into a European ballroom to see a king and other mighty personage. mes and whirling round the room to the strains ef a magnificent band of music. "When I want dancing." he said. "I am too august a weer-sign to do it myself.

I would feel degraded by such an at. I hire peoble to do it for me and I take pleasure in looking at them." Any one who hao seen the danc.ng girls of India or Turkev will at once admit that so far from being a pleasurable exercise to them it is a painful labor. which has no compensation except the money they receive trona those before whom they exhibit themselves. but our men and women dance for the pleasure they derive from the set- Now let us see in what that plemure consists. In the first Place.

there is the with others who bave come to dance. which of itself affords a degree of ex hilaration not to be despised. The sight of handsome men and beautiful and well-dressied women. bedecked with we a and other affords It no smell measure of delight as well to the inexperienced in such niattere as to thcsie who have becotne accustomed. in a measure.

to the excitement. Hero vsriety plays its part. for it may safely he said no two are attended ey the same Deopie. dressed in the same way. and thus ea tiety is not predusged.

A corta'n degree of freshness is therefore inseparable from such SMOKE. 1,11 Dior guilloills liezugloss et Cost. ENGLISH WALKING JACKETS, Regular price $5.00. SEAL PLUSH SHOES, $14.90. Made of real MOHAIR PLUSH, that will OUTWEAR TWO ORDINARY PLUSH SACQUES.

Regular price $25.00. During this GREAT SALE we shall MARK DOWN OUR ENTIRE DUPLICATE STOCK of GARMENTS, TEA GOWNS, JERSEY WAISTS, GOSSAMER WATERPROOFS, the bulk of which were in our basement and are slightly damaged by SMOKE ONLY. NBA, 'S 35 Winter St. Nobody has ever aaid that Cleveland or Arthur was dishonorable, but both have been repeatedly convicted among politicians of ingratitude. History is already re, sponsible for the verdict that Garfield and Illfaye were guilty of both dishonor and legratiIt takes an abnormaldevelopment of the backbone to achi0e a reputation for ingratitude without adding to it a distionest or an uncandid character.

A presidential ingrate, without extraordinary spinal works, is Pretty sure to be a liar and a The signs that Harrison has given the public since his election. however do not seem to have come from a shiftless and panicky prson. The popular mind is fast giving him a grim and stern nature. He is growing away from the Hayes and approaching the Cleveland parallel. He is as calm as a pond under two feet of ice.

A great hullabaloo has been kept up around him, but he has not yet stampeded. He is taking his own time by the yard, and an parently confiding in no one. Nobody has been slapped on the back or felt the presidential arm tenderly encircling his neck. "The original kiarrison man" has not been taken to bed with the president-elect. The men who think their brains or their boodle carried the country have not been asked to sit down and take a bite.

Not a dozen men all told have been bidden to Indianapolis. Scores have gone. and all that have gone and all that have come this way were as empty as gourds. There is something drearily vacant about the statesmen who -just dropped off to call" at Harrison's home. These gentlemen commonly like to be mysterious.

but from some cause or other they are not concealing now their entire ignorance of what is going to happen. Borne of them first confessed and then complained that Harrison was moving on the assumption that he was the only man concerned in the policy of the next administration. One of them has said boldly In a Select Crowd that Harrison thinks that nobody else was elected in November, while a senatorial associate of the president-elect has leaked his disrelish for being treated, when calling on Harrison. as if he were a persistent newspaper interviewer, to be fenced with and watched. AB this is mostly a revetItion of the reports made by the pilgrims to Albany, the Mecca of the winter of isea-ri.

but Harrison's situation is essentially different from Cleveland's. as president elect. Cleveland had to make his own situation. His nomination, won after a hard battle with the old leaders. was an out and out revolution.

It was much easier for him to turn his eleaion into a personal victory than 1 it will he for Harrison to do such a thing. Harrison surely was not nominated for himself, and his only strength as a candidate was supposed, at the time of his nomination. to be his ability to carry Indiana. He was not nominated in rivalry with the old leaders, but rather as a trustee, when they themselves were tired of fighting one another. In the campaign his personality was the slightest element of all, and in the result it was seen that any Republican candidate, not having a political or personal character that woald have diverted the tight from the public to privote issues.

would have been elected. The president-elect will therefore have a very nerd time if the party leaders should take a notion that he is, trying to convert the general Republican victory into something of a personal affair. They wouldn't stand it. This is the very thing they are fearing now, and a resolution is developing to make him walk the chalk line. It must be sat.

however. that General Harrison comes from a btato of Robust PertIsaublu, and since Oliver Perry Motton's death. the president-elect has been more of a leader there than any other Republican. Bevond question he has more hatred of his political opponents than Hayes. Garfield.

Arthur or Cleveland ever manifested. But his new elevation may lift him above that, and he may become a more generous philosopher on the dittering views of public matters. But if that elevation should also lift him above the expectations and purposes of the politicians in his party we shall have lots of fun. Already he hears a murmur of applause from persons and papers who like to see the cold shoulder turned upon the men who manipulate elections. and.

as Cleveland once said. "Stand between the people and their government." This applause has alltued many a public man before Harrison. but their records all ended in disaster. Surely it is a lino sight to see a man stand up before a whole uation and light everybody that comes along. It makes the People howl with delight.

but somehow or other when the ballot-box is passed around to obtain sup. port for the entertainment, to many "buttons" are dropped in it No oloubt the country would fare better if Senator Luny, Colonel Mr. Wansmaker. and the men who mine iron and import Huns and Italians. and the lobby in general.

should be snubbed by the InCOMiDit President Yet it would be a very poor example. It would be ungrateful and The election was carried by these people. If they are not good enough to associate with they should have been virtuously spurned at the outset of the campaign. Having taken the loot. it would he unmanly for the receiver to shut the door on the looters.

Theme are the Wings 'Washington is saying now. Moacee.u. An Awful Warning. iporil And Press.) The largest circulation of any daily in Maine-4Easteru Largest circulation in Maine of any newspavanI-Lewiston JournaL Largest circulated dMly paper published In the Express. And Ananias fell down and gate up the And the YOunic men arose.

wound h.m up and carried Lim out and buried him. Acta 6. 13. Struck a Bonanza. Woman (to tramp)So you want a drink soma kind? get you up aornathbag brings it to him.

"There. drink that?" Tramp it it? WomanIt's a miktare of hydrogen and oxygen. Tramp (gratetal1y)-0b! I gensrly drinks plan Oil Tom. but I s'posa tusm ft.tney braads is en so as they're gin. -g, ,0 ,,,..4 A 1, SMOKE.

11111110P gE11101113 TO BE SOLD. FRIEZE CLOTH WRAPS, Trimmed with Fur, $7.90. Regular price $15.00. Stripod Cloth Hemarketst $5.00. Regular price $12.50.

Fancy Cloth Newmarket With Angel Sleeves, I 0.00. Regular priee $18.00. FUR-LINED CIRCULARS, Sic Menne Silk Covers, and trimmed with Fur, S14.00, reduced from $18.00. 524.00, reduced from $32.00. S3500, reduced from $50.00.

reduced from $65.00. 500.03, reduced from $80.00. 35 Winter St. WASHINGTON FEARS. Harrison an Unknown Quantity at the Capital Politicians Puzzled and Vied by Ills Austerity.

Kicking and Howling Ahead and the End is Doubtful. WASIIINOTM Jan. 2.There le no one that Washington cares to know about that she knows so little about as the nresidentelect. Yet it is only two months until he will be inaugurated. It is not unusdal for men strange to the capital to be swept into the White House by circumstances unforeseen and conditions unexpected.

Cleveland, unaided. could not have found his way from the railroad to the seat of the president when he came to be inaugurated. Arthur was still an unfaminar figure in Washington when Garfield died. Hayes came and went in the swarm of undiatinguished congressmen. and when his luck brought him back as president it took a mighty long stretch of flattery's Imagination to identify him.

Lincoln4 only appearance in Washington. except as president-elect, was as a raw, awkward and inconspicuous single-termer la Congress, a dozen or 15 years before. But Harrison is a stranger to this town in quite a different way. When Chief Justice Fuller shall administer the presidential oath to the first Hoosier president its will have been only two years Mace Haul-Son closed his term in the Senate and left Washington in defeat. He had lived here six years.

His voice has often been heard here, and his figure was a common sight at the Capitol. on the avenue and in the hotel lobbies. but he was only the average of 76 senators. He came and went without big any more impression than is left on the ocean'a surface by the fisherman's bob. His path through Washington.

both politically and socially. is now trackless. It is the fashion for people hereto say that they remember him, but They Are Up the Stump when asked the simplest question concerning his services, his manners. or his habits. One recalls that he lived with extreme Iragality another that he didn't seem generally to like his fellow-senators, and held.

regarding the world in general, fewer likes than dislikes; another that he despised Washingtou society another that he was without a spark of conviviality that his chief enjoyment of with others was to argue, never haviug heard him leave a conversation without disputing some point. if not everything: and still another, oi the sex opposite to those whom I have quoted. remembers that she could never fully understand whether Mrs. Harrison was shrewd and sarcastic or simple and frank; while another woman recalls that Miss Saunders' acquaintances all wondered at her marriage with Russell Harrison, whom they regarded indifferently. I have now enumerated every imnression that I am able to tind lingering in 1Vashington concerning the new group of the White House.

There may be many other impressions in town. If there are they have eluded my diligent and persistent inquiry. Not an anecdote or a Joke has come out of these six years of senatorial life. There is small material indeed with which to build a character. and aside from the quantity the quality is not reassuring.

Cleveland did not have many surprises in store for Washington. His force and bent as an executive mil leader had already betn tested and displayed at Albany. and his declarations both before snd after his election prepared Washinitton and the country generally for the course lie has followed since coming here. But who can foresee the course that will bee taken up the fourth of next March? Harrison is untried in the son, of magistrate. never having held an ailministrauve paice.

and his capacity for leadership is yet to be shown. Fear and speculation. are all there is to The Existing Situation. It is already known that the President-elect is secretive and SOCIUSiVe cold and obstinate, self-esteeming and opinionated. and not without his share of jealousy and envy.

What do these things bode? Is he to he firm or cranky, heroic or mawkish. Cievelandish or Hayesy? That's the queetion. On the asstimpoon that history is only a repetition. the orst refuge from a doubt concerning tbe future is to the records of the past No one expects P3 see the broad poll-tea open COUnCi1 3 and gentle firmness of Lineolu; the popular strength and the royal favoritism of t4rant, or the brilliant social parades of Arthur duplicated. with Harrison in the White House.

find the most oiservant people here are wavering between Haves and Cieveland in their search for something like what they ex pect to see during the next four years. Keen eyes are not lookin; tor anrthing solewiid or generous. There is a general expectation that the oresnlent will be the president if he has to smash Maine and fight for the seat at the head of the table. It has been a good many years since he got it into his bead that be ought to be oresident He wu looking for the nomination to I and ran away from Chicago when he fancied he saw the prealdeutial lightning start towards him from i the heavens. NS hen hardly a corporal's guard his haulier outside of Indiana be was reiterating earnestly that be would not take any second place in the honors of the convention of Issa.

with memory and juclguient. therefore. see st-f? times ahead and lots ot kicking an1 bowling. It is a strange fact that ever gine the capital political erime of is 7.3 the Presidential polities of this country has been devoid alLernately 01 either honor or gratitude. of Atka le Hy wantr-4 to do sometIt'ing to help ttio na Con.

I kuaw I traI and write with. out brin.cg on my old ailment. hub was oeraggleono.d by talkinz eicionely and ternetoottaIy. which Homy young teen cid. Vbert the ear broke out I p.

epAred a hum-be- of on it state of the conntry. taktng for ma tub trt IrPjo aro oval toe0- 14P. MIEh.h Catrieun and phil.u.a. knowing hat I was oi tor wrote Ina that 1 heo.tore Parker. who had been Ling In Hail.

had gone to and they me to peak in blot Wat. htell I I ler, nr, a good ties and Vie old rreation Of tlirot recurring. I ad to too Ikleantanto 1 w-tit. New liatop4tra in 1.4 doring the dark. et pence of the wir.

and lectured to the C-km oa 4ra at Cote-ord. as I ortantr, It ar.ri many other After that I couldta I errata to go bark to lay old baLiza. ELLEN CRAFTS. 1R41 I got letter from Mr. Giddings.

anti-slavery man from ()hos. and etotveraor zstatio iron sarinit they wens going to get up a ser.tei oz and wanted we to come on. I went over said ett several In, MIA- one discupaing eerie legal questions was pubitsited in the Macon Piet. which if had heen aro as coming from an abolitionist would reser have POn published MY friend. Mr Calhoun.

said to we. let me have a coPT of that and I wit send tt to 1 thinkof the Post. and he wnl put it in. anti Mr. Calhonn sent it to Ireton under his frank.

anti it was eigned l'entlieton i hey 'nought st was quite important. Well. then I went home. tool thee rote for me again after several months. anti returned.

coing varit us thingelu conneetion watts thefts. At this time there a a retantit received from People in liaerhiii. NI ass sent to John witcy Adams then a member of the lionse alter he hail rehni.nothed the presideney.praying "Iliat as they Isere reiuireti to hear the epprobrium of si V. thev begged that the North and the be divideal. and Llama the' 'south go its war anti the North its way." This petition Mr.

ataMS brought belche the 'louse, rind it timed ately brought down upon his mute cent head a torrent of abuse. lion. J. roPresviitative from Kentucky. who had irtdt a great reputation.

I moved that Mr. Adams be censured. because Le had entered the otoectionable Petitaiti. Nit Adams didn't beiieve in the petaion and w.u4 have voted it. but he be.ieved lie watt ender sacred obligation-I.

maul he presented it- ereatintr a Profound iwa.sillort ACtiQ111. however. was put rat untti the nett All the anti slavery leasnied at the same gLai. a along with the rest. and that evening called a tawellait.

unatt which we voted to oiler our awbflroffS lotion in anything we could as he ass feeble. and we it cruel to tat him tat much. Mr. Githlitiga. another whom I forget anti ins-tell were, appointed a cotamstroe to uloot him.

but when the time came both these men were unable to go. so I wolai aleae. I went to Mr. Adamsbe bY the war. was in Cambridge Coi ages wills 114v fro her.

anti had toitt me previously that mv grandt'ather had traptitd hint in the half way covenant whea a babe. so when I met him he receigritteil me as a son of his college DIVA. and glad to AI elCOMO me. I told him two and nivsnip had been appointed aro timttee to oiler him our aervite in has sutaion emergence. and wi tears in his 'Yrs.

hit atiswereti. I sin nnder deep obligations for this great lhere aro a niimher of hirers I should like. eve se a French book vi hich contains a decision on a similar case to this. 'I iters is but one coPY in the country. anil that is In the possession of Mr.

King. editor of the New ork American. and at he said the trial wculd last several days there was plenty of time to send by mad for it. at there wit no telegraph then. lie then said: -Chtli librarian is sick.

and as it in necessary to expedite matters. I will t.Il)ou where several books are involving the Paula principle. Get and Put theao books under rny seat. before the time of peeing ITENRT "Rol" Enowg. Now I want to show you what a niarete is loafs memory ill great man had." lie then oresteed.st to tell W.

'1 want such a book: sou will tind it in alcove No. on let: as you enter. fourth neer et.d. I want another -and ao on he gave me the names nd olaces et the Oast ed hooks. I tound ra be bat I.

and saw thew 44.11 under ha erak. reedy his reference. Lori Morpeth. sk-at Of the Puke of Carlyl(s. was tbere and at best me with ears turned up to Mr Mato, and low w-lw ttusl ILe 11r.

Adams urnee and soot Mr. Speak. I base Less. in the lion of lora' and 11ariaareent tho best, donators in I lid sz' and. I have heard lturse anti that Martel.

Chitties Jiatues roa. the irreales' ati-stier in the raciament. hut I am eompetted to way 1 never heard eaukaUttsc a trees Abe ot them oateekar auspectur Ise she Gentleman trews araintt Ins," and left his desk with eyes 114)4a G. Mr. Alams bed aolected from the books Ian of Ns ashington a farewell address.

and other sub which lithsi rteht Into me mei, ot arnient, and as aid call noon hen be eart rell4 a thing. got to he to.nt where the sentence ad- 1.11'ra41.y ttt.d his La wool a eLAV I-tea of thunaler; Stop therel ad that ag out ntsgs there: reod that mon there: real that again reoeattrist 'bred Vasa, then went on. 1 he cdect on tho li -Lae and a a.aveliolder los As not to aid the vat.tiou snouiti trtuPL 11.0, oh. was taken the Vete SOC CieLbtire lugs nughty acnnty. no.

or attenirtc.1 Presk once 13 esenity in tibia fn. deputy tad charge of the niatiellOUs0 and ss at al nod to atsolli.on, Al any is C. gra aessied to gettuig to go nit) tho cestrt room and hold taut eacetgar. I hal Leen on the ogee b. heti tor a teV, mtuatew when 1 1.e.ird the trm tramp coming UP Irons the loster 11, 1 rout cowl, nearer.

aud soon Nur attresat. toe ou Ing0 ttio EtAtIll 16,.:14 up U-1 tia) ts.at forr3. crowd uit mecarefulty rozat lour until tame to sortie siep s. hen I was totew-ta deswa it tants They then cross-dell in auloogat the a o4itionk.ta gradate traw4c.i the -a 4-nt. a easie the stales.

1 cues an earnest. man woo sad his alicolt.oinse wa4 open. soot it went right over there 1 conl.4 La it witla ir ends sod the o.tid not get tn. V. soo.1 got hvatter ta ths tioolionee and t.e.1 tiontst s.

lb ten nosh gat wino ot and come over in a isody. pain rig' theinleelves heingtig 'situ theta sleigh iss. tin Pens. t. sold aissitt.

one young trin.0 ii Wm a col Irnu51 a tret crow dlug r.ght uts MO- I began to when the 'Nola Csvrtanteneed $1 USA. titli PAU, 1.1 'Attie and the toe to rtne. arid the Meta at the CAM bats they and t-, dogs commenced to Ad 1 con.4 do was to an. until they trot I tvkt. sta1 then a ELLor.4 Al to get Ut some Crds.

Coe din licauld ClrtUMent't told therm ta.ey were using Italia' la-st eao no n. la they had any. cause tris- would atarad so sliscows it. an I that zsa hie length of toy se-ritencee. as toev won) a1 rupeat thezr U.

se at ever! es voriunity. and 1 was sy)1 gsst ts wait until ttbe. I 40111 tecolect, LAE I ad. but th eirettnicaneee atioulted Caine. soo turA.4 it at them.

and the mon as asesheine.i. atd ene mars utidertoow to Isetass it. bet whett toey foun their clisto won a ss nz tie worn et tit canl- mooted ar over egA rt. and aos 1 had the tact. re.

glen. of LD evendenee tat bats of right at toy tetrenoa end. 1 overwhelto Veto. and tosty kept on 1011004" rear Cal. whom they II At 1 4 1.

1 .,7. 1 te 1, le'lt 4 Or :0:7, 1r kJ 2 1" i 1 1 El1 1 1 I 11-11J4- Llh'.) -Tr ii i.t', Le tL alloll I If a se it In et 1 'A rase of man. mad 1,01331919 irww9 tLete ten their memoriam pra shoA by a grateful peeiolo. whose tsx I s. a the tread unlettered on Upward trtter to a Wither on an nally with a rtaiw dam' I airk otieiii-I, Lug the work of thlt le oa ceur rit Loa of the here of Ast II hart Ir.

SOUSIS a theme a It Ittsa beets toy griTtleit Is Artnowa. 'It Ith what pveasare do I S' 14 IS tth Vim ell bIlltok. stini il Itt ahand evil be hal toi4 ot th Putt's, twi el thovareastio of late evlors4 b. LAirs. ow 44to Ira richt eh.

the 1 It, s'seto h. Itat grAmt oldi wan. vutu gu trios i Li Love. whJ tali hoed L. of Sin 11111911.9e at a itt.ta who has dvoteil ir sitTh'4 atiI risked reontatioril In 9.4 sot, rot141 Its his it ter sow anI tatiad about a treat moral 04 fro aost woo too wth lioa rounded rs- la a tha ot Lio Les or.

ft r.41 rt. tame ii turtr.isr to 0 eer terooLto Shetts.stLotag the country. I oval, siostcy Knit piliotti diewewtou 10 et' La9 pre4.ite4est this enerar.ou 't tra an Intimate acsittatntazea w.tti be brti.4; no it" Lthed ihmi I. ti ST tog roan th lit forme40 a ke lato.1 Che at vr at art L.SITS ka. Lis 1 tu hs 114rre ty ha tee.tta rti Its I.

be trivi.e4 tact In ke move ceer the taaav tartletta ot bao U. tot oleo, wort VT I Ii era torn at It itt.ption Conn. Noir. I sot ahl trotu tl.i. I 1.140 nu rti Bios 1 LI.

ha beo, a livittar ri, a to Til icl Cot hot tear 1 t.t.ou..h his 4 arPor kr. tt egil has I is- a two ADA IA gams the L'. tt, And stt W.litZ IV'S bo I rarest a iia '42 tilt-t aa I my. wh-eb a kt-te4 9 tt-iimsts att it I and men al tileJ 4 li olaa.roir speecti op i a 1s3Aat eir rutille an I LI V.11,te of tor t.r.- i-i- ct t' growls, to hcIt to wall ales. toi I to adtrocatek 'It 1'4 as aa lb 1 14.0 IV, riLtil butt he ea Lit gots car when atten.ttrir -or: tn Cohr.ri tent A a Ivo liA.iirli.tost as a It wet mit LI-ti, s'itsrartp-, T.

awl I st. was ten ent with a 11.4' or VI .4 1.4 lar it? lik Oil a L11111.11 situ. an.t the In4 'a, 4,4 Iv, bit be vi Ill osititiI T'a ii 111111 Li ST ix p.a Let Ltst di. A-1: LA4 A vt: s's P1041 ho a .4,...,2 az. 2,4 to 4o.a.

0 ''''t rt 4.4r, ar gi. Is C.S.Ii: 14.4 I stn, gat et.At him in ssitItAry camts. a bo mg ail Cli.iii-.000 i 7-rted At L' 4,4. IT'IT II ho a i to st ha 're Witat a NMI th1 (- th ttr Lte 4 hai teen an bola ow -c. sit at c-tr t-overtukt on 'aid to never Lig ias rr Iirs I owe 4 t.tzl 1 ill k.

tr caw sti it leo -Ims blotter I STA, a c.1 ate ni Ala to- IT tine the hoer lb viz I Lvelve 4 iAvta. the glory ot tier ter-: Las-A it a-ss sus v. eol wiii. r.1 twatott at 1.1AmEtott CO .3 thiiss.iislr Ilt I-Ano asty a tit ilia siLi s'I st cl the co taAt litS SO ti 443 acvi'uot it the ill Po v-t ast aShti-9, At eft' LT thii It tocarna kt, act s.it to octt.ter. $4 sLattat I.

at ty at i co! 1111 PI tt w.att that a aunt- 1 i.c.;- ot ..111 sere iiii. iit locale I '''s a et, sot. 1.4 y. 1 Le tea, ittg set-. Ms te-r-(rs- the country.

crww" ilitateettr and row ivo to c. Mal taerarorwa eis ustatate acilwaintazete lath ire tere hetug hiogrei hi huh 'shed I. having retie-est Ittarte CI inform. he "stay harmatoel Ca la flt." as. et et- sus lavoy to-airs in- Lis p.

as wirrouudest in lt liurary I he tt bock In kettle-es Cr, the mans incoleute ot U. at wort Vir a e.1 was torn at ot.ploo (ono. Nov. 1 sikt. from now Lt.

has taklm a living sueh a to taa lat at het test kittts, his 41 bail as- a a st sea IA moot Ste. And t4 PAIZIV'S Who I rawest tate ths.s an saaverv I mos. wh-eb t. '41'41w! Ittamfoo eoll ended st opnlell 111" ils3Aat at ruktolle covialaa for I Vlitts of indigh.lies. 'I-e re ow-tot to was al.

es. a a re 1 nese to advocate. try' lb Lae as-earred sten he as 41 s1 Ye'4" attelltla ut 1,11 tent A ltt sto.onet bos ghs was it. sr liesat.e.aens wet L'; and le so gtveis a was ern with a .1 'id Era'? to. en a loon 'et'' '1" to'.

e. atm soot the tn. be i illOttlth4t itS3- his as in h.a Let a Lin ti.e..erry Lad A eh atnotoss ho IC OA 01.1, tt far 114 toy 14.4 im bLIII In ss 'try 1 7-rted es4 IS LO to st bigger' root that 4 has oven an winos. loot al a-4r et-overeat on to never L44 t's re 'or I 4 es'l 1 utut- ib 4 b. 171 mother "'I -ter Iltd St Ala to- 4 i he Lon.

tb 14 LIwIthr siavta. the eu.es of her ka.aar ei--g oart.gaarly Law 5. a a-to sa e4 Ito at Coy- Itt 4J theINA.14 at Ian s2 a lie healed ti. so ss the Haat nu to seveaut cf the ea erf LT the --re azierwa eds Lectern stss Is eti.tor. aol d.ritigt I.

at (S. Co! hi, at on. tt r-s st It was that a nuns- AI. O. DIVIIP at wavehoolers.

locate 1 "it 't7 tor trucesie got 4 tuct.tn&A ie.re u.a '14 Itto trtt.oe sing at I si- sitosit-tioiss eta. aers, 11' 11: 1.s-tsistuot An 1 we re-ten-Al ter sat "rt.t or gh ate Ws its at. la pecto th tn. et et- ris at and at 4 I C41 ral-i 4.4,4 stt tu a anon ing fro is 'tele sus-trier asatonuens.y. 1 torget kl.

itsoiat-to were a ts- 7- 1.4- are coset Doe huts or get or kansh le-t3r. so Itasca I. re It cOeVe 'Olt, so ereoka4 an4 wArZeus. It 10- 1-ott "l'er wows, At ti.sose rseetirge 4,, v441 Is, wl I as 3.1 throw -kr- Ilts I.e I tissd any tre.5 ones as ea 1.1'salt ,4 4..111..4.. in the or a r.

ire4 a tax '1 OM a the 1 bo tolS Lae I trio T41, Jotin Creenleat who wns a stai.ch friend of Mr. Veld's. belonged to the I ee ho-lon braneh of Friends. that lie was forbidden to tam with Angelina. who beloreael to Cie lii termite: Mamie prevented his attntlinz the Wedding of his friend.

In messing eut the Mr. Veil knew that he couldul at. tend. as he would then be evealleth AbLy was also inCitttl, and Whittier came as fitr as the door with tier and then went away. The morning the bell was milled.

and some one brought a line from Viettier and I bal Feen together two years in the Anti-Slavery nice. and be itlwaYs ielold he was never voing to be mart' I without me. or I without him. 'I his poem contained several stauras. and has cover leen I enly remember the rst verse: Aindt sold' alas! that a brother of A I a -ast-t poorn i.0 att.r St ttm- tc.o.o ta Uwe trate shrink Alta Coot) hut owtt neCii it) the ettomy's halter! Pefore hie marriage MeWeld 141rettunon pratc pie.

with a colored family in New lurk. The colored in in I Dotraed With in New was hey. Mr. Connote a college ere.luate. akin was sa light that be teller eearce'y Iss seen.

who while a menilwr of the Bele tile Chnreh was refused a W. A jib my wife aud her sister went the tirst Sunday to a Nletliodist rime. h. and I 'wele it rue it a velar hail a seat I woulti flint it out and sit with bine i.i. I found a seat and sat down.

when an mover to the churvh rushed to me and said I wetdd ste? I award he would snow me resipetahle seat- I ItOtI the man I I al sat isneti. het that was why I bad sat there. Len I went to Yorie we a room of him awl as ler bk ard I don't remember. Cernish wae soon gien to uhderstend that he was not to tolerate an incendiary av it list in haute. hut he had more Plitek than they grave hint cretlit for.

and he satuld not refute togive me shelter. In 4 he establisbed a echool of a high tease at Faelewrett N.J.. ititeated ele ntroan bay'. milts from New York. iiiient let, aut.

Ilorsee Greeley. NIoictire Ik reeman Clarke and others event nitor.v Sundays here. trio Parlors of Fa glewood becoming famous for teeir gatherin.is and discusteous. A. Drensen Ateett gave here a seegs of lectures.

and Thoreau spent nialie happy CST'S in the congenial etincephere of the Vette. Wbio at IleFeville Mrs. Well and her sister toieeteti the bloomer co-tutne. as tlitt also Mrs. Stanton nid Mrs.

Miller. a of Gem! entitle It trisde a great hue ant er-re in the s.nool. hut she cont.nued to weir it until her son was old to Ohserv the effect it Mei. when she hazarded ahozetlier at vo vieadings. in 18 4 the Welds novel to Ityde Park.

butna.t a house t-n lairmouet, where they were surroturied by eougenial neigh-ley, 1 nes horse tlorv only wonted SUFIcav, and Ales. Veld pos'tions leo IUs famous school at Lexinsmon during tie week. In a ci.otel of the deepeet anzufch settled ooer Las family eirete when it Was Warne on the death of Mrs. eld's Youugeel erether that he bad lett as a ti.ree chi dren born ot a cotored mother. The tree nobilzty of bor nature elttit kly, asserted iLself and fortnnisel bee decision.

and Cos at on se aeknowledged the of Wen dee sun was aceePted the tots 'and and melee Se an, after-ware, met theses and gentle. menle younz men I ti.ing Ste el rs fzht for the equality the coionol race he Awed, ateaithy assas.

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About The Boston Globe Archive

Pages Available:
4,496,054
Years Available:
1872-2024