Footprints of the Red Men: Indian Geographical Names
The house has disappeared, but the cellar walls stand almost intact. About forty rods south of the corners and on the east side of the road is the site of the school-house in which the Moreau society held its meetings. A dwelling house, the home of Mr. George Haviland, now occupies that plot of ground. The sites of the Union Meeting House, parsonage, Mawney house. Dr. Clark's house, and the school house, should be appropriately marked.
THE DEMOCRATIC IDEAL.
By Hon. Milton Reed.
The shrewd saying of the Swedish 'Ohtancellor Oxenstiern, 'An nescis, mi Uli, quantilla pnidentia regitur orhis?" -- "Dost thou not know, my son, with how Httle wisdom the world is governed "? (has been substantially true in every epoch in the world's history. Everything human must needs be imperfect, and in nothing is imperfection more plainly exhibited than in the successive schemes of government which men have attempted. Some have been broad-based and have lasted for what we, in our ordinary reckoning, call a long period of time. But most of them have been built on the sand ; a few storms, shocks, convulsions, and they have fallen. Men have generally made but sorry work in trying to govern each other. The individual may govern himself after a fashion ; but to govern wisely another man, or, still harder, great masses of men, even where there has been community of public interests, of language, religion and custom -- aye, there has been the rub! Human history has often been called a great tragedy; but no tragic element is more ghastly or more overwhelming than the catastrophes in which most governments have collapsed. Ambitious attempts at world-power, the most splendid combinations 1o group nations into a civic unity, have tottered to their fall, as i.urely as the little systems which have had their day and ceased to be, -- shifting, fleeting, impotent.