COMMUMCATIONS.
I ing the Spanitjli authoi;itit*s, both cl\ll ftH.
ImiliUirv. It is stated that they intend to
I'ROM THK RICHMOND WinO.
CrPAN FACTS. I niiliuiry- . . i . . ,
I The National Intcllipcnccr, always in- ! issue eonmiis^sions for ihev coif-
tont on liirhti.ig bad things when on foot, , forthwith at thiouch-
and on briinriniT np their history when de- , stitute and CHtablish cn g
e their doniimons not to beneht their ban . cii|. a.> one ot t e ; ^ .anguine enough to think
„try. An.l.ition is ihe ruhng pnncrl« “raising the wind t.>r t . t.vo weeks’ Hine, there may be a
.i.ng..ner.lly. The world and the love despatehed to this govern-
of the worhUia. got the ehief seat in the jobbers rc,.ubbe epublaan..
now talkou tu be set in ilie ^sUkkj?.
For TFIK OnSKRVKK.
HHAI).
How unsettled the State of society
the present tiinel The politicians are go-
iiiy a hi'ad lor popularity. The objeet by
many of them is to till the potkct and en
large their dmuiiiions not to benelit their
eountry. ,
c'f iii;ui irenerall V. Tht* world aiul the love was to be a rc'publ
. . ^ ^ I 1 ♦ I K,.. ■ I 1 l««*l II N IIUII llll'flll. V -w. -y
...... * ... - mei^rVom the new republic. We give
hearts of men. I’olitios are now talked to be set in tlu .s , j this as it comes to us from a reliable
even \>V both men an.l women very freely. 7-/,,. Srn'p.—Justified by the oe- , having determiueil—as is our cus-
Neitlu r i. Sunday exvc pted. I can give ..,^io„al allusion- to the fact of the ' j,,,,, sinVilar cases, where j.uHic dis-
Vou a hundred }>eopIe by the hand or more (^’,,1,., gtoc'k or scrip, founded upon the ' rie^—to give both si.les of the
if you pl.'ase wiio can talk upon political „f tlw harvest of wealth expected to , j„ this exciting affair.”
tujucs sensihly and tiuentiy who could not reaped in tlie hitcly att>nipted comiuo.st ; ^ makes tiie winding-up of
t.'ll wherein consists the chief duty of mail, ' id'a, we have heretofore spoken ot runtinir anndoodv tragedv, so shall
Tlicv hivf thought that possesseth the minds as ,1 fact, b\it nM with all 1 ,1^. .,v,„aoiied Ned liuntline’s se(iuel to
of mankind now ’ ' ‘ “ ^- 1 • ‘ •
««at and what
wilhal sliall we ,
wishing and praying seriously lor thaiiges .,,titde; herause, though as.sortel, we had,
in the constitution, tluy are not lieh e- fYom the enormity of tlu* thing, a remain-
uou"h ui.ir honored as liighl\ a> they doultt of its being literally true. W e
should. Jcsliuraii waxed tat—Imt what ;,t length, however, ( rhlrtin 'wx the ^ . 01 nu- inin>i m
followed. He kicked. However the Lord subjoined article, which we find in a NVw !'vo,l Huntline” was freiiuentlv
gave her th.it n ward winch ,-lie montfd. (),K.ans journal received yesterday, d the , , , . *• r^ard. Wo were rei)eatedlv in
/uttliatpos.esseninie. as tact, Dut not witli all abandoned Ned liuntlines se.juel to
.w-a-days is what shall we ],y others as well as piHibu.>ter speculati«m (dose the scene
.hall we dnnk and where- -selves at the very idea of an Ameruan ,„vsent notice. Here is the ac-
,ve bo rlotlu\l. -’laiiN aie s]>eculating or trading 111 siicli an .
count ot it
A Mmi> i/-vt(ikinj Si/mjxithiZf r.—Pu-
ring the late excitement concerning the
“fitting out ot exj»etlit 1011s to ( uba, tlie
name of tlu* notorious individual who calls
creases in the same proportion will >iu and
wiekodncss envy and hatred spring up in
the bosi'iiis of uieny
t-n wish changes of governments at
present not considering for one uioment
the results of such a rash proceeding. Ami
fven men who have got the name of being
wise and iutelligeut are pressing forward
with the anxious multitude who are long
ing for hapj'ier days th.in what they enjoy
at present. In order tiierefore to obtain
this blessed situation nu>ral tom* is not tlu*
means merely insi^ti'il uj'nn by tlinse who
are de.-iring it l ut strong and invisible
phv>ieal I'one is tlireatfued and this evi'ii
from men fruin which other statements
wouhl bf mnro appropriate. Preaehers ot
the (i-'spj .'hi.uld not be amung the tirst
who would iTV, / fi> iiffus. e
Iiave fanatics in the North who are thiin-
deriiiff a;rainst slavery in the South, « ho>i*
tr 'atiuent of the ^anle rat e ot peopk* among
them^flves is uncharitable and I might
sav inhuni:Hi. Were tlu*y to pull the hi-am
out of their own eye then th*y wnuM see
better to pull the mote out uf their broth
ers eye. Sece.'ision nan of the Si uth are
big with ra;:e cryin>: as with the voice ^ t
iiianv waters .-iceession seiession. And
thus .'^atau who dceeiveth the natii>u> i
ai-ting in a most serpentine manner t'»
break that union which has been the glory
'f Amerii;;i yes ami a blesing t(» the
Avorld. Jf ourauinisters would preaeh the
rn>s}*el of ('hri>t mure faithfully than what
they do. and the hearer>i m>re attentive to
that (!o>peI than what they are, the Serip-
tures of l>ivine truth read nu>re carefully
in nur families than what they are, the
Jiilde the word «^f (J(xl real in our day
sehools so that like Timothy the children
might know the Scrijiture> from their
i hililhiMKl which art! ahle to make them
wi.>e unto .alvatinn more effurts put firth
for the salvation of souls in our own be
loved land, and more Mi.-.-ionaries .«^*ni out
to the heathen worhl tt> ri elaiui sinners
froTu spiritual darkness in this way the
arm "f Satan’s power which he exercises
over us wiiuld be weakened if not l»roken
then migiit we exjtect the blessiiiir of tnnl
to rest upon us ami our beloved land.—
Then wouM peace ami unanimity po^sess
every bosom and joy would beam upt>u
cverv countenance.
W.
roU TJIK OHSF.RVKK.
A .NonXH I'AllOLINA L()\ E I.KTTKH.
N. Is.'.O.
With a sad and reluctant heart I take
the opportunity to aihlress you. Since I
last saw you, my tnind has underwent va
rious revolutions in the wav of trouMe-
some thoughts. The treatment that I
lape
OIK* of thest* “bomls, or certiticati*s, stat
ing ]iarticularly, if it be not so stated on
tilt* fac(* >f tlu* bi>nds, out ot what tunds
those l)>mls were to he jiaid.
That such bonds were in market, we
*2-i‘peat, we have the proof subjoined.—
Should they turn out to be ot a ditfen nt
charact *r froiu that which we have sup-
post*.l for them, there are no journalists in
the country to whom it will give more
pleasure th:*.n to us to pronounce upon the
iniuH-igice ot the transaction.
In fhr i'lififii.—At a regular meeting
prevented him.” Still he has not lost by hi?
syinpathv, and he is now engaged in ilis-
plaviuii it betVire the people ot (.'leveland
—admission twenty-live cents. In onler
to add intt*rest to the oxliilotio\». h«* adver
tises that he will apjiear in “full J\itrn>f
unifu'm: " .also that “a lull band of music
will perform se veral popular pieces, ami
tin* (’uban flag will be cxhibili-d. ’ Iho
editor of the I'laindt aler, who Ix longs to
the excei'dingly s\ in]tatiu'lie class of ]>hi-
laiithropists, a^sure.> his readers that the
tiair is th* real (’uban flag. With such en-
(h-rscim nt as this, we have no doubt that
of the ('uban ('emmittee. lu ld thi> day, if d,,. svnipathizer, with his uniform, and hi>i
w:'*; ri.-.'olved that ('ol. . ^akey, I. X. tlair, and his aiiceilotes, will be very su'-
Marks and (leorge W. (’hristy be appoint
ed a coiniuittet* to .‘solicit funds fVir the pur-
po.^e of M iiding home those volunteers who
are now in this cifv and without means.
hcreas mauv exaggerated accounts
have been circulated in relation to the a-
Mi!>unt of moiu*y colleited by t/ir Cuhnu
(iff' >\ for the purp>»se of correcting
filse rumors, they beix re.'-pecttully to make
tlie following >tatemeiit:
•‘III eiiteiiii;^ Upon the discharge of their
iluties thev found a large body of iiieii in
this citv fri'iiLabroad who had enlisted in
the c.-mse of TubMn intlependeiiee, waiting
an opportunity t'or traiirportati(>u to the
i'.lan l. They had exh iu>t»-d all tluir in
dividual resources ami it bei-ame necessa
ry for this Cl iiiniittee to niainfain and feed
them until tin* i onti uiplated expedition
should start. In loing this the «-onimit-
tee hnvc cxliaii.'tcd all the moneys receiv
ed. as will be seen by the following state
ment:
Aiinmnt recfivc'l from •'tty 74
l>tj do till* iMiiiitry 'J.’JT’J 'lO
Siilf CuK^nt hi.itds 700 00
Anii'iuit esjpciidi-ii
have received from you, afti'r promising
me your heart and hand, with all the pledg
es that two Jjovers can make as a band
with which to bind themselves fogether,
you have severed. You need not raise the
cr\ ot \ictoiy over a .sad, a disappointed, turn to civil lite again when the war is
and broken iik.\kt. KcmeiuV;er the odd concluded.”
r.alnnoe n lininl 17-
‘‘The small balance on hand will more
than be conumed by outstanding lial ili-
tit's. As it will re»[uin* but a small sum
to .send the men home, the committee tru>t
that their agents will be generou>ly as.-i.-t-
ed by the public at large.
“1>. MiTciiKi.i,, rresidcnt.
‘•lb I. Rkahdo, Sec’y.”
We can collect and even givt> to th- In-
telliL'eiiecr not a little further information.
Here is soiuethiiijf from the l/mdon Time.':
'‘T/ir Tt/iiis.—An Kngli.'hman, when
about to embark in the Lojtoz Kxpeditiou,
wrote thus to the I^ondon Time.-: ‘As to
the pay. the terms are good enough if we
win; and, if we lose, it won't matt r what
they are. ?JH) per month, and a bovmty
ot SI0,00(1 to b»* )>aid at the t'ml of the
war, is what T shall receive, if we are ever
j»ail—a fact which 1 deem somewhat j>ro-
blematical; but s loni: as the i-laiid i
made tree, and the soldiers are decently
lel and clothed, I .'hall be s.itisfieil, .-md
will readily resiirn mv commission and re-
cC'stul in ac)uiiing »|narter-«lollar- It Ir
could but add to his >how the man that
wrote flu* “(ilorious News l>y tlie .M-hooner
Mercluuit,” and other interesting roman
ces of the same character, flit* ru>h tor
seat" wouhi ret all the triumphs of Harnum
and dcunv land.— ./ iir.
Th^ —TIi'ir Ifii/iifs.—A geii-
tlt inan ju>t arrivetl fn iii ('ub.i, and who
has been engaged in 1 UMiie.-s there, which
ha iriven him ojiptirfuiiitics to ob.'crve the
country fieople, in a di.'trict near tin* ^ea
co'i>t. gives the t’ollowing picture of their
maniur of lite.
They havt* ///» Innulrnl nml • i-/Jifi/-srrf ii
r'ixfir.if {hu/s in the year bt >ide' ,''unlays,
in :tll of which they an t’orbiddeii to woik,
iml wlii're they show no di>]i' sition for
any thintr but I'lay. They tin ii a'-scmi'le
in erowils at each other's hou.-e.', tlieg.atl;-
eriiii: ]:!ace for each day I t .nix arranged
before hand; and .'pend the rthoK* time in
tlaiaing the t.iiidi.ngo, drinling, \‘e., iVc.
They wear their >wi>rtl,' en all occa'ioiis.
and ritlc on htM'.'t back wberevi-r t!'.« y go.
I'.ven tiio>e who go to .'cck a day’s work—
mere l.iborers—attire tin m-t Ives and rl'le
up with an a]ij*earance ot' iMijiortaiice and
display, so that they might be mistaken
for olTuer> of the army.
Tiiis tle.'t-ription w;;.- givn in rej’ly tti a
([ucstio;'. about the ili-posiiiou of the peo
ple of Cuba for a change f gtivernment,
and the traveller coiivt y. d the impression
that he saw not a symptom of any lie.'ire
of even any improvenient, civil, .'K-ial, or
r» ligiou>j. All the liberty they tle.'ire is
that tif living just so. with their priest.'tor
tla r masters.—A. }'.
moments that havt; passed, and how often
you have toM uie of your pui.s.sant Lf»VK;
anti as the lilly of the valley, so your .'len
der form pro.-^ented it.self to me. Vmi told
lue your hand and iikakt were mine.—
And believing your words t> l»e true, 1
gave yon a faithful proiui.se fr»m mv
heart—which nece.ssit\- cau.'^ed me to break
—wliit h I iiitdiflcd to make gotKl. Hut
ere I arrived, you had gave your.>;elf away;
untl as a forest nipped with frost, so my
ht>pes are blighted. My name is truth.
•ure tliy lu art of tliut is iiiii(k*,
Or Timers iiurKc.l tht-v* ii» the clescrt ^^lla•lt■.
Farewell: eternully At tlii.s la^t vliat
j*j;onics 1 feel! AIm.s, I feint. I .He. Ik-iia'iJilicr
1 Wii8 true; it it> m11 1 utk. Jord Lave mercv
uj»t>u inc.
V*'ur slender form nrnl pracefiil air;
\our lilly liiuiiis mi'J jroliJeii hair,—
iiiiK'h eiihuiice your eluiriiis,
i t> kih.s your lo^y uiut ]>re(s you in iiiy
«rni»,—
Yes
all my liemt.
do ^rentlc ariJ )»f.‘ir iiiy si;Iis along.
1 lie bii’tlK isluill oe».sc ti time tlit’ir eveiiiiifj
8on«t:
Tilt* ■wimJ.s to breathe, tla* wuvinj' wtiodn to
Next, the Intelligencer will jdca.se ri'-
member that Lieut, ^'an \'echten, in his
personal history of the exjtt*tlition, avows
that he had snliscribed 81 Odd in money to
the uiitlerraking; ft>r liich he was tu havt*
?10,0()0, if it succeeded. That is to say.
no tloubf, that he received S1(),0)0 in
scrip tor his -SlOOd in cash.
Now, ob.erve the iiuxle t>f tiperating: A
Ciibau junta in this ctiuntry, self-aj>point-
dl, issues a scrip ot the iimiginarv rt'pub-
lic at Havana. They offer it at* -SlU in
the hundred. To give it sale, they not
only bestow a haiidstinie amount of it, cost
ing them nothing, on the New York Sun
and the New ()rleans Helta, (pajiers evi-
tleiifly (ffep in the speculation ) but proba
bly tco others, get fictitious h*tters about
th e wrongs anti the inteiuleil revolt of (’u-
ba published, and thu.s begin to be able to
palm of! their scrip upon thecretluloiisami
;s, to press you in niy tinns woultj cajiture more ,M»ber calculatt»rs wlu) thought Id
■ cents in the dollar no jrreat risk tt> run t>n
the American sjtirif of rapine, of freedom,
of mere tlespcnidoism, the example of
Texas, anti the facility of making a new
victim t>f ('uba. Kveiy man whom they
enlistetl as a private received ?lddO in
St rijt; every officer, ten timi's as much: if
he had (like Van Vechten) money, he in
Aiiil ritreaiii.s to nmriniir, ere I cease t«> i.ovf..
Ivcmembcr, truth is my motto, and i ite
r> I SO ii^ yours.
1 tender mv thanks to Miss —
FKOM HAVANA.
Account' t’rom H iv.ma to the 17th in-
-tant furni.'h the following items t.if inttd-
ligeiice:
Forty-five of tht* Cuban prisoners still
remain in continemeiit at Havana. The
Am*ri-ans at that place had matlt* up sub
scriptions to jiurt hase clothing' and other
iii*( (■•;«aries for the mfort of the captives,
who.'C chains hail been take” off them, and
they appear to be kindly treated in every
respect.
The prisoners had published a card of
thank'- to tla* ofVirers t>f the I'nited .'^tates
sloop of war Albany, and the othccrs of
the jirison at Havana, anti to tin* British
Ci>nsul, ami resilient Americans, thanking
them in warm terms for the kindness ami
sympathy expres.-ied in their behalf, and
the measure.-, they had taken ftir their re
lief.
The inhabitants of Havana hatl sub-
.scribed ?(d,d(ld lor the nlief of the wid
ows and orplian> ef the Spanianls w ho fell
in the late I'ngagements with tin* forces
under r.,o]'ez. 'I'lio funeral obsi[uit‘s of
till* slain were celcluated at the Catlietlral
at Havana on the *.Uh ii stant with great
pomp. Crossc^^were distributed to tin*
stiMiers by flu* Captain (Jcneral, who af-
t'rwards went to Hahia Honda for tlie jmr-
jio.se of insjiecting ojierations, and to tlis-
tribute rewartls among the people.
The. rejtiicings at Havana were very
great at the annihilation of the expedition,
.iri GK OF TIIK St l'ili;.MK (’Ol T.T.
We are grafilietl to be enabletl to en-
nouncc that the IVesiileiit has appointetl
Henjamin llaml Curtis, Ksj., of the Suf
folk bar, to till the vacancy in t’ne Su-
jireme (!ourt of the I'nitetl States that
has been created by the tU*ci!a.se of Mr.
•Justice oodbury. 'I’liis aj'poinfment
' will give very general satisfaction. Mr.
lor the manner in which she defendeil my
cau.se. Nothing more at pre.sent. ■
I remain your humble thinking friend,
TUL'TH.
Prophecy.—A ctirresptiudent of the 15os-
Curti.s i.H a young man, but little more
than forty yeaib of age; and the desire to
vested it at a tlet uplo rate. Thus.Nir. Van ' appoint a man w ho might have the rea.stm-
V. probably had ?:i0,000 staked on the ; prospect of a long judicial term, has
adventure. ' induced the JVesident to pass over the
Well: each speculator'and each adven-' ^'hdnis of many disfinguishctl gentlemen,
wlu»m he would otherwise
ica.sed with the opptutunily of
■ fnrer was thus stimulafetl, by the hope j !unorig wli
! of extravagant /iains, to great exertions of , been pica.se
ton I’ost, more than a jTar agt^\7nturcd prt>.elyting, and of lighting. Is s^decting the occujiant of .so eminent a"po-
the ftdhiwing ]»n*f|iction, basctl uptm the | '^'^‘h'grapli sition. J ho jmitessional affainmenfs and
fa.^hions of lh.it periotl. He saw it liter- " ‘*h the most enormous fal.sohootls'i' : high per.sonal tpialifieations of Mr.
' l)Ut here is another samjile of the frit ks ^ ^ ‘d(is are ftit> well known to the bar, not
sell to get up tjie credit of tin* Stockjob- i 1‘higlaiid but of the nation, to
ally fullillcd at a very early period:
“Wlien cont.s, hiit.s, nntl jackets lire taken
liy our ]>reciouB iietjuifcitiMr hptamib,
1-Mii- cuiifiileiice well iiiJiy he slmken
ill rc;.(Kcl to leluiiiiii); t>ur lioin-rr.i.’"
A Lu-eJy Propfc.—Lamartine, in liis j
pretaci; to hi.s new woik on the “llcstora-t ■ ^ (^rovevmntut m ('iiIhk—
tion of Monar. liy in France,” has the ftiU ! Herald of the 24th ult.,
lowing remarkable sentence: “I i,earcely i
exceed the middle age of man, yet between | intimated in certain circles,
lity I have been l a rei~ Ci^an revolutionists, ere this, if
infancy ontl maturity
olutions.”
A westeni editor has marri. tl a girl • publican constitution for the new republic
named ( hurt h-and he says he has felt j of Cuba, and have organized anex. cutive
h.ijtpier tim e Ilf joined the (. hurcL than j and military admini.stration, and have a-
e ever » e ore. ^ dopted, also, laws and ordinances abrogat-
useii to get Up tji* crcitit of tin* .Stockjob- i ”"*> r.ngiaiid but ot the nation, to
ber’s Jintl Fillibu-stcr’s Kepublic. It is ; it necessjiry more than to alluile to
from that worthy paper which .seldom sees . ^heni. Ihe early and decidetl btaiitl taken
an initjuily into which it do^s not thrust a | 'O' ^'wi tis in support of the constitu
tion and laws, on a recent important occa
sion, and the national and c.)nservative
disposition that he has manifested when-
3ver and wherever he has been prevailed
upon to mingle in public affairs, has also
constituted a claim for this distinguished
honor that could not be overlooked by the
Administration.—Holton Truusi'rij>(.
hxccUcAit.—l*unch says, an astronomer
being asked what the u.sc of un eclipse was,
replied—“C>, I don’t know. It gives the
sun time for reflection.”
successful, in all probability have formed
a provisional governnient—adopted a re-
Extract of a letter to the Editors of tbe
National Intclligencer:
Aijkrdken, Missisf^ippi, 1
September 7, 1851. j
“T congraiulate you upon the successful
ami glorious torniination f»f our contest
here. The L’nion i>arty have triumphed
most gloriously every where. Our popu
lar majority in the State will be not less
than twenty thousand, and 1 do not V»e-
lieve the falsely-styled Democratic State-
Kights i>arty will get beyoml seven coun
ties in the whole State. I a.s.«ure you Oen.
Foote has tloiie wonders. 1o him 1 give
most of the credit ft>r this gratifying re
sult. He has laborctl night and day,
through rain anl st(»rni anti sunlight, for
the caii.se, and now has the pleasure to
witness his triumjdi over his countless po-
; lifical and jiersonal foes. Naptdeon or
Washington never ac hieved a more ^dori-
' ous victory, with such fearful othls ag;iinst
him. Old Munroe has given 447 majori
ty for Hutler anti Adams, Tishomingo 1,-
7(1(), Tipjiah 7'J'J, IVuitotoc 850, Itawamba
. ^>SH, .Marshall 1?0(), Chickas;iw L>(,1. Noxu-
i bee-li 1, Lowndes IHO, Choctaw 1^;>0, I^a-
, fayt;tte IS.S, I'iic. Roger Harti>ii, Jit. .^Llt-
: thews, Jakt^ Thoni]»son, Sam. Cihols(ui and
all the other H'J Ji'i/, :ire laid on the shell
forever. 1 assure you a more bitter caii-
v:iss never was ln*ard of in Mississijtpi.—
The I nion mt ti never will vote for a fire-
eatt*r for any thing; anti in tuir county,
district, anti State oiliccrs. tlu'y swe:ir they
will not \t>tt* for out* of them. Hy Nov.
the l uit>n jiarty will bt* uniteil by sut h
fraternal trials anti babor-^, that they will
he cemented nearly as well as either ot the
tdd jiarties ever were.”
/’row the IticJnnim'i H A/y.
Till-: IIKTUKAT.
As long as the Heinocnitic dtdeg:ifii>n in
(’ongress fnuu this State were able, they
tonirht in Congress against the Compro-
mist*. Such was conspit iioiisly flit* tact in
the I'liifed States Senate, where Messrs.
Hunter ainl Mason tlitl all thi*y could, by
the most deft rniinetl opposition, fti defeat
the w Inde ailjustnieiit by that gn'at botly
of measures. In the other House, the
^ irginia nioerats ftdlowi-d that h ad,
nearly without exciption. ('leiieral Hayly
stooti almost alone :imong them, in the op-
sitt* course. .^lcssrs. Scthion, lieilinger,
Mill.son, A\ert*ft, Ibicock. i’l-wtdl, wtre
particularly \itdeiit in lighting against it,
a' a sacrilice of not only the claims, but
the ri>;ht'. the iirter> sts. the lilu rty aiil
the vei V honor and e.xistciit e td’the South.
In 'liort. they all hehl. but with a still tli-
ittter ami jdainer avow.il, tin* tloctrines
M t forth against it by 31 r. Sethlon. in his
late Adihcs.' of withlrawal from the can
vas'.
In taking these grounds, they went the
entire leiiith With the South Caitdina 1 >is-
nnionists. and the Calhoun men e\erv-
where cl.'t—the Calhounites of (leorgia,
Alabama, Mississippi, Ark.nis.«s, 'rennc:'-
s. I ami Louisiana: that regular ami banded
tonf w hit h stoi .l undt r 'I'roU'dale in Tt li
nt sst*-. under (.Juilmaii in .^lissis'ippi. un-
di r Yaiicev in .\!:ibama. untlt r .^lat Honald
in (i"orLiia; and has ittu beatiii. and will
be beati'U. f\cr_\ w here but in Arkansas.
In all this oj position, they etjually acti d
with tin* Northern I >i.'unionists. .Sewartl.
Halt , Ciitldings and Itaiitoiil, though avow
ing for their conduct ojiposite rea.sons.
riit y w t n* b ateii in (’oiigress. The
great measures id salt tv, td peace, ami of
l iiion, W( re carricti in .'}>ite of both the
Calhoun nan and tin* Sewartl nan. the
lhsuTiioni«ts proper ami flit* Abi>litioiiists.
Tli^st* Went North anti tho.se ,s,,uth,
home to their peoph*, with unabatcl ani
mosity; aiitl at getting among their cou-
stitut nts, continueil tt» tleiiounce the Com
promise, as a sacrilice of the Nortli ^.';^itl
oiii* brant h id them ) ami t>f the .'•'outh
{'.lid the otlnr'. They bt'gaii, in short, a
re-agitation of Sla\ery, a rc-t>pcniiig of all
that the Compronii.'t* had clo.'ctl.
'I'liis is the conduct w hit h these gentle
men here in ^'irginia call A' ijnii sn n, i,
ami t laim as n merit; averring that siit li
action towanls what they couhl m> longer
rt sist—the measures that had saved the
I nion—constituted t/i> t)i better I nionists
than the very frii nds id’ tlioM* measures!
Strange ami monstrous as the claim might
seem, they say, in reality, that tht>se who
stood by llany Chiy in the Compromise
which saved the Cnion an* not as ;oxl
I’nioiiists as they who (,tood by Lhett,
.Sewanl i: Co., who diil their best to defeat
that whit li saved the Cnion. This is the
.•ame thing as saying that Ilhett is a better
' Cnioni.vt than Mr. Cla\I
I’rejiosterou' as this is, it is what the
I'nijnirrr ami their other presses aver;
what Mr. Seddon ailinns in his farewi 11
Atldress; what .Mr. Caskie a.sserts in the
j canva'S.
; Now, in the danger to the Cnion through
whit h wt! have ju.'t pa.'sed, what was the
I ill Ip they rendered';:' w hat the loyalty they
di-'playetl'/ 'I'heir helji was the utjuost aid
to flit* 1 >isunioiii.sfs; their loyalty was tle-
I nunciation of the rnion.
1 Ftir what is the I’uion? We all agree
j that it is (he jirescnt .settlement by the
! Compronii.se and its faithful and friendly
I ob.servaiice. Ihere is no other hopt*, no
itither chance for the Cnioii. They, tlien,
I who dentiunce the Compromise as fatal,
I tlishoiioring, oppre.ssive anti enslaving, to
i the South, if' iiututct the rnion ami are its
' onemit*s.
if they are not, who are? “The Stmth
Carolinians,” they may atfemjif to reply;
and, imleetl, they are coiii|ielletl eitht*r to
atlmif that the South ('arolinians (Uhctt
and the other Calht>iin men) are so; or
idse to deny that any body is a Disunion-
ist.
It Rheft or Sewartl, or any bi>tly i.s a
Disunioiiist, then are the.se men .so. For
they did every thing that Rhett I't Co. did;
tht'y strove their utnmst against the salva
tion of the Cnion, «. Inn;/ as it tvas in
and they ceased when it was .safe
beyond their and Rhett’s jKiwer to hurt it.
AVhat, then, is the difference between
them and Mr. Rhett'/’
It is that they—not being able to help
it—have* actjuiesced; ami that he—being
as yet able to help it—has not.
Who doe.s not know that Mr, Rhett, too,
will acijuie.sce, ae soon as he tlare not do
otherwise for fear of being overwhelmed
by the feeling of his people?
Mr. Seddon, as all the world know.s,
meant to had he continueil a
caiulidate. But as sotm as he determined
to withdraw, he tuquit'Aced no longer: he
denounced the Compromise as slavish, fu-
t-al, disgraceful. And why!* liet^use he
had no longer to sacrifice his opinions, his
real opinions, to hi.s ambition.
What, then, is tho a^quknccnre of tlkoftc
politicians?
It is regard to their own ambition; not
fidelity to the Union. Could they to-mor
row destroy the Compromise, ’fis plain
they would do it. W'ere South Carolina
in November, by her Convention, to se
cede, what ct'urse would Mr. Caskic—!i
Secessionist—take towards her, were he in
Congress? Let the people of this Union
ALABAMA.
"U'e take the following humorous '‘ad
vice” from the Chambers (Ala.) Tribune,
published by J. J. Hooper, ftjrmerly of
North Carolina'. Some of it, perhaps, may
not be inapplicable to his nntive SUite:
ADVICE—GRATIS.
II will V,c seen bv tl,c raptiui. th.t wc 1 ’""I""' .
1 L • Tl* j w. ' the sash tncr the ut)or w ith a ni..,
diargc noth.ng for th.. |.dv,cc, 1 lie rca-. f. ....
son why, is that it pertains to subjects ag- j .' In.::.
Stare kriUM.—On Tluirstluv .
the store of Jones & Nichol.sf.n^ on i'*"
pie street, was entered by
thieves, and a considerahlti tiua,'*
goods and ?25 in silver stoh.*n. 'pj*-
trance was eflecfetl through the h-.
dow in the secoinl story of tl,„
loving District, Whigs and Democrats, ask i ricuUural, whereof it is presumed that we
themselves that one plain, unavoidable
question.
AX ANA.MALOl'S 1‘OSITKJX.
The position of the Washington Union
in regard to the con tost for the next Pre-
sideucv is .so very ananiahms that we think
it will require more than ordinary tact on
the part of its editor to keep him in .1 con
dition of even tolerable comfort and ease.
On one day his bugle .‘soumls out ringing
notes to rally the “National ])t mt>cracy”
The Chrl.'itiiniu Mnnh r.— \
are profoundly ignorant. Aryal, our ad-, - - —
vice may be worthless—and so we price it. | has been committed, atnl the iiiur,j(.j.,,
But let UH see. W'e think we can say | been arrested and will he trii-^i '
some things that will bear a striking re-1 if'hctl; while the ministers of tlif.
semblance, at least, to the truth; and if i the pco]dc have been ].rompt f .
we do, our farming friends may make a j to act. \\ hat more is requireiii' ]*,
clear profit out of this number of the Tri- . ^ lul i> i.-
bune. Anti if .'io, that will be uutre than |
the most of them will do ovt 0/ their crops i
the jirescnt year. Capital I The very \
thought that one agricultural friend may
make more out of one number of t>ur little !
'r":\
. The Editor of the Chalotfimliip ,
eh;ctnlies us, with delight. J.et us try. |
Our appeal is to the farmers ot (.’ham- | that evcrv i,,,!
bers. We are mad enough with the whole 1 '
brood, almost to wi.sh that fho .Jiripos t^f ^ ,-oek, and that the pro-r s, '
hunger may get hold of and int(*i-twist : v more than a foot iu
their small bowels, to a degree. Anti we |
are not :.’.ngry without rea.son. It i.s true, . —
we have not many rt*asoiis; but the one or ' ^ho Lomlon l inn-s is led, I v tL. j..
two we have are invincibly potent. First- , cation ot a Parliamentary return .
ly, WE can’t get any thing to eat. Sec- ^ n‘f'‘>i'Jned postal system, to tin* ,
ondly, NOIiODY ki.sk, about this town, can 1 ^ curious circumstance: “A travoli r.
get any thing ft» eat. There are two good ' Bering through the Lakt? Oi'tricr,..
anti sufficient reasons why we shouhl be at \ years ago arrived at a small puhli^- ;
“drawn daggi;rs” with the farmers.— ' j'^^t as the postman stopjx'tl to
Who.«e business is it to see that peojile letter. A young girl came imr ti r
(w ho have thtj money to pay for j»rovision*
to the support of the ( onipromise mo;i-, .. r i • 11 ..1 u 1
, ' .1 . J • 1 11 iiai'cr than out ot nis wlrole crop fhriMs, 1
sures, and, on the next, sword in hand, he .,..,;..i.. i , ♦ :
attacks tho very man that gave vitality tti
tlie.se measures, and who stanils pletlgcd
most .solemnly to use all {powers vesfetl in
Inm by the Constitution to prt'vont any
disturbance of this .sc'ttlcment i»f a vexed
and most ilangert»us t|uestion. If the Etl-
itor id’the Union regards the maintenance
id’this Union as established by the ('011-
stitution as an object far, far, abt)ve any
mere jiarty triumphs, we cannot but think
he adopts a strange mode to manife.st his
views and wishes. He knows full well
that, with ."'Ir. Fillmore in the Presitlen-
tial chair, no bill repealing the Fugitive
.'■'lave I^aw—now the only part t>f the
Compmniitt* which can be reached by le
gislation—or nnnlifying it so a^' to inqiair
its value to the South, ctiuld, even if pa.ss-
ed by Congress, become a law; for he is
well aware that Mr. Fillmore would, with
the utmost promptness, place his veto up
on any such bill. Why, then, we a.-k,
with all this attachment to the Union—
with all this atlmiratioii of the (’ompro-
mise w hit li savetl it, and w hit h alon.* can
nuiintain it—does the eilitor id' flu* Union
speml so nun h time ;iml breath in rallying
a part_\ in opposition to the p.-esent Atl-
mini.'tration. We doubt if, since the davs
of Washingttm, there has exi.'tetl any Ad
ministration which has jirt*seiitetl as few
points id'attaidi as that id’ Presiilent Fill-
mtire.
'fcrou
meetings in Philatlelpliia, Raltim.r^
elsewhere V.ill do no good, hm
harm. It would be better if b')th Ji
would dispen.se with the capital tij.y
to make out of this matter,
iishiiujton T' I
it. She took it in her liaml and :u
which by thi' way we have not, but we’ll ‘^'vor and over, and askt*d the charL’’
make a good note at short time, for meal,
meat, chickens. potatt>es, butter, and so
forth.) get jirovisions a plenty? The far-
na-r’s, indulutably. And whose fault is it,
then, that butter lias become “novel and
tlifticulf,” ami chicken-pie an “t>bsolefe
idea?” The farmers can’t tlodge the re-
spffusibilitv. How comes it, that this
bles.^etl tlav. we. our editorial .'clf, a*'e uj»-
011 a short allowance of .^Ionfgomery-
ground meal? Let the farmers take sliaiiie
W'as a large sum—no le.ss th;;n a
Sighing heavily, she ob.srved that::
frt^m ht r brother, but that .-iho w..
poor to take it in, ami she return [ •
the ]iostman accordingly. Th.- m.'.
was a man of kindness as well
vation; he offered to p;iy the )»tstutr.
self, anti, in spite of more reliji T:,!, t
the girl’s j>art than he could well
stantl. he did [>ay it and gave lu r ;h
tl r. No scoiier, however, w is tlj- ■
the proceetliiig had been conccrteu !■
her brother and herself, that the Ktt'
It has bail some of the nio.st tlan-
and ilelicate tjuestions to meet
i for it. Who is responsible for the fact, ^nan’s back fiiriietl than she c.nt. "
i that Montgomery Grticers are selling “mid
dling” bacon, to farmers in this county, at
I lo cents? Whv these same identical, lea- j tni[>ty, that certain signs on the liir^
I ther-heailed, low-fenced, poor-hor.'cd, half- i conveyed all that she waiiteil to kii.\
; niggered, improvident farmers themselves’, i that as neither of them could afford
I - 1 I] 1 - 1 , We record it against them, tint here in postage, they had devised (his met!
which could peridex and embarrass any :
ired.
and.
. , • • • I I . .1 -.1 ' ( h.inibers, one t>f the best iirai^ counties flanking the intelligence d:
Aiimiiiistralit^ii, anti it has met tiieni with : . , 1 • i ,• . 11 1 1 • •
I , 1 • 1 1 1 in b.ast Alabama, meal is worth from .^d ; tra\ei!er pursued ills jo\iriie\.
.1 I I ouii lit.. aiii manna.. " ^ ] (kj ] ;j ph^JJed over the (,'umberlaml f.i;.
U„P-.I . ,.t ,l„. |,a.,k U..J : ,1 ; ■
manly id all parties. And vet, in spite td 1 \ ' 1 1 . u . v\.
. .• i , ■ i U> cents; anti eggs about cents, if vou drove people to .'Uch straits f ir mea:
Its tirm anti i.atriotic piK-itioii tui a tiues-! . ^ 1, ..,,^1 it
• 1 1 1 ,1 • . • .1 ; count oiu the rotten ones. • coriespondtiac, and rkftatt.il its 1 w„
tion which invoives the exi.steiice of the! . , >-t all the time. With most im-n •
sings would have ended before tli-
r- i t)f the hour, l.nt this man's iiau;-
Rowland Hill, and it was from thi-
Union it.'clf'. it is to be overthrown—that
is. in the event that the high uchests t>f
the etlitor td the Union shall be lieetlt*d
ami yi( Idetl to. But of this we flatter our
selves tla re is 110 d:mger. The American
pti'ple cannot be bliml to the fact, that
while the editor of tin* I niou is rallying
his party on the great iiatiiiiial issue id'the
suppori of tin* (’oinproniise, Millartl Fill-
more, with all the powers of his great td-
lice, stamls pletlgetl never to permit, while
he is in power, any tlisturbance td’ that
.ettlenient which, but for him, would nev
er have been t ffccted. ^
P>fi r^hiirij Int lliijriicrr.
Is it ti^ be expt cted that we as an nnpar
tial journalist are to allow sut h things to
Vie, without wo.'ds of pl.iinest i\prehension?
We trow 111 t.
But tht* answer t(> all these greivanccs,
is ;i groaning about tho lutiH TH of the
past .se;ison. We t;ike it, that this is no
answer at all. The last was a line wheat
season. Thoj*e who sowed that grain in
this, and all (he surrounding country, re
ceived a most alnimlant return. W hat Js
the roa.son, then, that flour is not, at ouce,
plentiful and cheap, hereabouts? Simply
because our unthrifty farmers will insist
which all the advantages of raising abuu- | .«abbath, within .-ouii-i
■If (leu. (’a.' h.itl been tdt‘cted. we have converting good grain lands into pt>or
Mr. Wt b.'ter's authority for saving that ^'Otttm lands.. Tht*y pitch their gram crop
the Mi,....ouri line would* have bJt*n estab- ; sirj.ply, if the .season should
lishetl; and that, with t»ther nieasurt's i ^ gotnl one; anti e>et} drouth put> the
ei|ally fair, would have given .'atisfactiou ' ^‘"'H'try on short allowance. This is mis-
to the most “ultra” Si»utia*rn .''fate.” | erable ptdicy; and in the long itln the far-
,Stuinhird injured by it. The little cotton for
It is wt*]l known fh.it the proj>osition to
extend the Missouri line to the i'acifie,
thertby tlividing the State td (’:ilif'ornia,
was rc’ected by a large ni.ijority both in
the .'^eiiate ami the House. Had (leii.
Cass been electetl, coultl he have alteretl
this state of things? j
This h.ibit of the “Sfantlard’';" of boast-
ing id' what (leii. (’ass would have done ■
—how much more favorable his Adminis-
tnitioii would have been to the South, and 1
then whirling immetliafely arouml anti /c-
iifiuitriiii/ tlaw measures w hit h he ditl atl- !
viH-ate and assist to p;iss, jiro\es what
contideuce is to be placet! in any id' the
lOilitor s professions of ulmn-imrfi/-{sni in
connection with this f|ut*stion td’slaveryl
Ruli>jh Jix/isttr.
MCMIK bV.N('ll LAW.
The El Doratlo ((’alifornia) News, extra,
of the iMh of August, contains the follow
ing:
Ye.'terd.iy, at about 2 o'clock, P. 3L, as
twii miners, dim (iraham anti Alexander
Leslie, wen* returning to (ireenwt>iKl A'al-
ley, and when within a mile of that place,
wliile stopping to rest, (Iraham asketl Les
lie to h ntl him a ncetlle ami thread to
mend his pantaloons. After he had got
through with it he refurnetl it to l^t'slie,
anti whilt* la
shot him
dent, and these reflections, that th
scheme of penny jiostage was deri\' i
I^iiiut./s (it Chiinh.—A ^ Miiki f.
writes from Wilmot (N. S.) to t!;. '
I IU*gister, says of the Church sr\;,
, observed a deep, quiet, solemn ci u.i .
all over the congregation at the clen :
service, when the benediction was i;:'
It lasts for half a minute. Not at
raised, not a foot stirs, and th-re i-
1 reverence appttrent. There was a
given from the pulpit ^s hich m uiidnir
cnldly. The bell did not ring a> u.'ui
the morning, and the llccti r very gnr
stated to the congn gation fp ni the ■
that, vwiiKj to tht tin iii/n/ coiiiliti"n
I /W/ roj)e, the bell could not be ruii^'.
something was dtnie about it. Mr..
thin;:s creep into pulpits stmietiiiits
dant supplies an* sacrificetl, dx*s nt>t com-
pens:ite in a .■series of years. Ami strange
as it may appear, although every farmer
you talk to willfbTliit as much, ntit one in
fifty but ft'llt'ws the starvation ptdicy.—
This ct>unfy will buy, the coming winter, I
nearly all tht* pork for next year's con- |
sumption, at enornious prices fn>m Ten ;
iiesst'e ilrovers—if iutlecd any hogs fortu-
ii;!t«*ly should be tlriven here for sale.—
What a shame! We ho]>e that every man
that j)lanted a sm.ill crt»p td’ corn and a big
t>ne of cotton, this year, may suffer in the
pork market. All such richly de.-icive it.
-Vgaiu—evt*ry other man in this neigh-
borh'fl*tl is fixing to move to 'I’exas or Lou
isiana (his winter. They are going to set
tle fresh lands and wear^/i Hi out—and
then move again. That is the policy of
our pc*ople. They scorn the itlea of irn-
prnvimj land; the great agricultural idea of
our people is to reduce to hojieless sterility i
as much of the earth's surface as possible, ;
in one’s life time. They care no more for I
plea.«ant homes, fine orchartls, fat herds,
anti the pleasure (d' priHlucing at home '
what is neetleil at home, than the Cubsin
Creoles tlo ft»r the ble.ssiiiii of liberty. It
IS cotton, cotton, cottoni Every man who
works a half dt>zen hands, imagines him- :
St If a gi(*at cotton planter, and would be
church bells of Boston, a Yankei
disclosed to us a scene bordering -
on tho ridiculous. The day hap]K:
be unusually warm and oj'pressr. . a.
the time, after dinner—a conibii,;.'. n
circumstances (to say nothing iif ai;>
hercut dullness of the preacher) wc..
culated to induce a i»owerful tJt;;:r
drowsiness. There were two ckr.'}
officiating; and the one w ho matle tlu ;: ’
before the .sermon, cither distrustii
potency of his brother who was to jr
or knowing the effect of a gootl dinii'
a hot day, made a very fervent aiul >;
appeal to the i^ord to kerp the ooi.fr,.,
aua/ce th;it aftornooni The wurst '
joke was that the reverentl
trusted too much to liis prayer, aiiu'•
one (d‘ the first to fall asleei'. 11
vigorously in the face of tho whole p'.
TllK UTILITY OF A TASTE FuH T
BKAUTIFUL.
In the r^'port of an eulogy on t!'
Mayor of iloxbury, jironouiiccd t;!'
Putnam, we find these passjiges, wli;
(juQte as describing a tine exanipif •
kintl of benevolence which dcscrvi^
that is said in its praise:
“His thought stands exprcsseil -
beauty, and abundance, autl tastt*fuli.
he was luitting it up Graham i ,.1', ^ •+• •* i ti » i • 1 bmumerable fields, and n-oves. uiw-
^ ^ : insulteil it it was supnoseti that he vai.-icti , .
... ,e l,:u k .1,0 .,..J , 1,,,^.^ ,„.rk. A« for ..r.xludnj. ^ I*
neck, (iiaham then rotibed him of seven i i:..„ 4.-^ roadsides ot the country; ami tiif'i
huinlrcd dollars in gidd tlusf, ami starteil
for .'^acrainento. In abtiut half an hour
Leslie recovcrctl suffifiont to crawd to a
’11 • • 1- ^ roadsides ot the country; aiul tlif'^’
smaller matters in the provision line, tor
■s;.!.., 1..-M k....tk vou .low.., if vou l.i..te,l I "'“""“"J’. '-I'" “I'ly ..ever In
al suel. a 'All o..r ..ci.lo are “iH-t- I J'",’ tollmv I,., >•
I , 1 . . I ter ll.ni. H.;.t CO...W to, a.,,1 IV'''*;'''*"
in, , ti n,;' "“'V “ •J^Mhave horeo.. the red l.ills of Chal.iber,- ‘'l'-' e"f»ge 1 .e.r U«r ■
eai.tur.l.g hi... about tl.reo i...\e» below tl.c n- , ...Tuhrv. bon.-r L.J hl-l. ' V"''"'' fragra.it flo«crs that ll»‘
place, and rectivering the gold
He was taken back to (Ireenwootl A’^al-
ley, when a Court of the jieople was call-
etl, a jury of twt Ivo men chosen, and the
trial commencetl. Every thing was con-
tlucted in a cotd and dtdiberafe manner.
After a patient hearing, wdiich lasted from
10 o’clock at night till 12 next day, the
jury retired and soon roturnetl a verdict of
guilty, and sentenced the jirisoner to be
hung. He was allowed a few hours to
prepare for tleath, and at 7 o’clock this
evening, was taken to a tree in the roar of
tho American Hotel, where he was hung.
(Sraham was a sailor from Baltimt)re,
Md. Leslie is yet alive, but very little
hopes of his recovery are entertained. He
has a father and mother residing in liou-
dleville, N. C.
Brevet Brigadier General Henry W'hi-
ting, Assistant Quartermaster General in
the Uniu;tl States Arn:y, died at St, Louis
on the 1 (1th instant. Ilis death was nudden,
and supposed to have been caused by an
affection of the heart. He entered the
ttriny in 1808. His remains are to be
taken to Detroit for int^jrment. The Dc.
tndt papers speak of him an a gallant
soldier anti true Christian gentleman,
who.se death is deeply regretted in that
community, where he wa.s universally
hont^rtnl aud beloved.—A/^. Intelliijenccr.
.sellingbeef,ptmltry, butter and the like, 7"^" ,
as they are in Ltnvmles, Dalla.s, \^oveor
.and Marengo. We are entirely re.spccta-1 tbe xHl..ido ot tlic
ble in our ways. We are cotton-planters, i ^ ^ iii\i*lid, or on thi _
Wo have an agricultural friend in tluJ ^
lower part of this county who knows all 1 ^ ^
about thosi* things; and he has proniist*d | bridal wrcat i. r_
us to give his brethren a rasping on the I t** gleammg the brow of beauty
matters we have hinted at, and we hope i
ho will go to work immediately. Pitch it I . basket ot summer tnn
into them without mercy, aud be sure not ' festive board m
to do it in an agricultural poritxiical, for
our “Planters” are too respoctiible to pat-
rtmize publications which might possibly
enlighten them on the cconomy of farm-
ing.
OVtTV
that W’reaths a ganlen bower m ^
green plant that adorns the ^
dow. He, as much as any niini. l'‘’’|-
more than any one man, has put m
those agencies which have iiitr'*tlu"^^
... , - the knowledge and love of all '
. . ^Jocinnati Commercial s;iys, that^,our people this greatly cxtendcil
an irritable individual from the country
pilletl tor his diutier at the Bank Exchange,
iu Cintinuati, ou Saturday, and was st^ated
at a table to await the approach of the
viands. The provender at length appear-
ed, and with it a clean white napkin, The
mau looked at the napkin with an eye that
eviucoti a full concentration of thoaght up
on tho Siiuio, and laid; “What do you
moan, sir?” ‘A napkin, air,"' “A nap
devil! Do you want to inainuate by throw
ing down that thing that X can’fafford a
clean handkerchief of my own!” So siiy-
ing, he jerked himself up from the table,
with rumbling nmttoring.s of wrathful
dudgeon, anl left tlie houjjo.
both of the useful and* the ornaiiifutuM-
ducts of the ground, to proiuott’ a t-
for them, and to teach (ho iiit'du''
their culture. Herein he has bt'fii]
lie benafactor. It may bo trul} S'' ■
him that he has contribufod, amlt>‘ _,
the whole, more largely and ^
ciently than any other man of
tion in this country, to diffuse abri'^' •
love of the beautiful in nature,
refined sentiments, the purifying
the pleasjuit resources, and tlio gt iitl' -
ness that spring from, and act‘t>»'p‘'’‘' j|
wholesome ami hallowing affoctu’*'-,
who has done this, has done wfH
day and generation.”
O
I ^
TL’
Thk
To roct'i
(lays, 4
—-the ol
H single
‘2i days,
any poll
To recei
niond p*
‘2Gth.
day, Chi
2()th
morning
llichmoi
rived in
Whil
wrote a
very old
^^ono a
a nunibi
of older
ter tlit>'
The
hours *
, The St
comes a
leaves,
evening
which 1
hours,
leavt s
mail fr
that wc
when w
times,
and arn
Thiii!|'
rt*ntleriii
hance.
Wo
to see til
Assistaii
ities, nn|
.tago 11 si
asked tl|
officially
FUggOStj
■ a rt'uici]
the Dt*u
And wtj
ters aiaj
SU!'gt*st]
t>» US Oil
FmiI
b:i\0 o«j
niaiuifa
city of j
j)t*r ct*n|
even 1'
creilit. I
Tho
attribuj
ny good
it sclisj
/ i
j»ay th;j
Europt]
As coin
to cont
od on «
astrousi
that tl|
' gt»0;ls,
cheap**
pt*rsedd
anti tin
manuf.s
some ti
The 11
WDollelj
tluced 1
l.ist yc;|
not cht
In s
marks
A few
credito
abuntl;
wli at tl
dor fhtj
Selling
month)
has bi'
very b
CtlUlptil
NtdeS
If s(
a yearl
what I
ft*rent
write
A litJ
nml fJ
tjut^nc^
Tin
that I
batch
in whi
titnictl
North
York
^ insteai
• Fear
North j
AVe
correC
by a
the Is
origin!
Grapt
of No
as bei
Virgil
North
J.retci
t)f ha\
rieties-
^Ve 1
niusc.'^
()r^
ufacti