: -f .kv- ::.v' .v . ; . v; r. lADVEKTIflNO RATES: ijTrtMaota will 1 lawrw-.l f flA) r qa&ra (om laci) for hf arM'an.I iff craU mc)k rahaaaMil mUicaiiia. , (j'oatrarta f VlmUiac (v nj iyc or tioM nw m Made at lh Sc or r -t ! i t v i B w l m . : . .as i . - m ma ar i w- . mi i. , . b ii bi . . m mm mm a a m a ma a a aa.li i a . cm. m I r . - L : Office .nF.yettwilleStrVftwpWilliaDn :i . " I , U- I V ' f 1 " i " J J ' tS. - A - iN 1 ' I Y . A V II ' !' ' MM f 7;, jt one VKM-.mailwi txmtmi'i. i W t; " . Bin.natl., " j" : ' 1 0 - '" "thfr- liiuudiH, " :i " 50 -Ko' name enu-red witliout iTment, anil no paper sent ijU-r expiration of tiaie paid for. . - . . . . - . . . . --- : . r ' - Iteautifal (Grandma. ,' From "poetry fitr C'liiMren,!!' a beautifully. llluitratt-ij ; eiitteetion of poeriis f rom many : amiMtTK, euitable furl a ( 'hriNtrrum gift tit any U.y- r irl, : puhlikltetl by K- V;' putun o., 71." lirwnlway New Yoric, wejelect. the fol- lowing an a'aaniple for the Iittl ttneu.l iranJiua in -her quaint arm yhair,. . . " Ne'er win a lady wore sweet amj fair ;' ; Her gray Iriekn ripple like Hilrer shells .-.And hjpr browlU own calmtry l-llt '. . Of a g iVitlc life anl-a jn-aeful nto, -A trust hi Ood anJ a hoie in Heaa'en. Little jfir May n'tU roekinif away ; ' . ." ; ". In her own low neat, like nome inome- fty ; Two doll fnbi(f her kisses ihare, " ,' !Aixl another mi e-lied by the Mile of, her chair j May in aH.frjmh an the morning di-w ' . . ; - i.'heeks of rofK'.H, riblii8.of blnw.'"t : i-:" --v " . : " ' ''. : t j 'ay'(irnmluia," ayV ibe pretty tif ri- ""fell me a ntry aloui your;lf ' ' . V "AVhen you wiTe little what did y'oiijplay ? ', Is IfiJH ,i Was it hu "iliVv, - A ml what . yon 1, . Were you jjooil or naughty, the whoki long day ? Wan it hundreds and hiiridrednfof years ago? hiaJce' your liair a white as snow? yon have a mamma to hug-arl kiss 7. -, 1 ;. ' And a doll like this.' and this, and this? - - - -Iid j-ou have a pnsfy like niy little Kut-? . lid vo ten 'Urfl whin the clock tjtmrk eisrht? ;Iid you'haVe long etirls and Komtj In-ails fike ." ; . tnina 1 ; " ' "j 'Ami a new silk apron with. riblxn Tine?" ; (irandiaa siuilnl at.the fittle iniiiiEf -.-J ' . " And laj'ii'g aide lier'knktiiig aid :" " -"" ' ''tto'to my desk, anil'a 1k.t you'Il.ef.; ( , "y Carefully lift and bring it -to me.'" 'i - .Sit Miiy pu her dollies awayVt( raii7 . ". ., -Saying "I'll lie as careful' as -ef I can.".' : Then tirjiiidiiia opened the. bx wid lo ! " ' ; Wautifal ehild with a tfiroat tjke snow,. Lijust tintel like pink shells jrarc .'. , Kyes.of hazel and ohh'ii hair; I " v -.11 audi all diiiipl.-.! arid teeth like in-arls, ;:FaiTet and Weetett'of.littlu"girtsl-. f : "Oh. who is it," erit-d winsome Slay, , ' . . ; ,llowrI wlidi she was here-to-day i j , Wouldn't'I love her like every tjiiig! ' " rve her.a doll and mv new irold rijur-. -'Say, dear firandma, who can slu-i bt-?" , 'lin-ling,"said (;ninfina,"tliat ehild wits me'.", - i ',' :" ' p . " - - - ' 1 'ay hvkeil -iTng'at4be diiiipleil frraee, . -'. JAiid tJieo jit the saint-like, fair ol.l face; "' tow funiiyV'xHhe crietl, -with a smile and kiss v To have such a dear little Grandma its this!. . j ;"8till," she added wfth smiling zest', i'I thiiilc, dear Grandma, I like Yif best". So Iay clinile(l on the silken knee, - . ' '-; "And -Grandma tld her her liistoVy';' ' Whaplavs fhe piaved, and wlmt tows she had, ' ifow at times she wa-s, nausf hty, or good, or sal "lut the liest thin you.did," said May, 'Mou't : you" m-e? - ' -- f . - ' ' . V. . AVast to grow to a1cautifiit tiramlina Tor me-" V LITERAHY "(J0SS1I. -MM. 'tl.tKY. nAYARn m.Anic' F-mm (Alt iMMareeetveil during the wee If .will le i mentioned by nanie in the next succeeding is-i ; sup) and, if. worthy of it, receive' a longii-'no-! j-1 fee after rare ful-reading. Theymay be senti Neither ly-tnail,.or in packages of a dozen by: rexpress, and should always he addressed to Mrs. MAKY J.YAKI t't-AKKK, Xew.bern, X..C.1 irif I. Tylor In ai intcri.stini' address iri u lu'tfiit Antlinptljryt"-j-U!t republished iti.tlte1 llecfinber number' of tTte ' 'J'ojmfa'r -Sct't t t MoutlJy, say's that .mm? reastin of the slow rrowth of tlic scf- I rfe. ' - rtuco8! aitronoiiiyj ' pjplojrj-,'nnd biolojry, 'J if it-1" "(till almost our own -daY-. wan 'because - o.f--j v the shaekle imposeil oh thcia by'tlielrt- I - ' einpt to jilaeetheiii in the "bonds of a short l ; . . .ehroii(lory, which alluw-s' no t'otflii fiirthe ,: -t'i":'r J.h-"o successive jK'riods jhroujjfh which it is! ; iMjw tk'ar that lhe j?artli inust liaye passed 4 "iLwith its plants and. animals before re;tjt liin i;l ist;y;X ; its present state; Tlie; uunleiu schemes of -1 teiH - ; astronoiiiiy getilojry ' and bitry are all . t '- ?s 'j . ifi-amed on the assumpti lof a pa.st, eorr.es-; 11 ; '"i ponding ta the 'endless timej -of the l'e'r-1 ! !S " :siah Tend Ayesta; under tlu-lrinsj)iration Jllf r ."-spaci? tia.s epauded to4 boumHess uniyerse, j il J. ;and the'ix days of creation jijUV as many f lsl'j- - vast M.rtods of time. - Kthnolry and phi-: f '..; Vllolojry have, as Mr.' Tylof-; shows us. in'i . N'-: like niaaner extended the bounds of hu X VM ; - man history so as to overt hro all systems 1 i H - !Af 'hroiolory basefl on. the idea that the ! s-g -" world, was, created six or cvvltf ei"ht thou- jssind years ngo, and all -the evidence acces- ible aA to j.aneient races of niair ooes.to prove' that the causes which brought about their jdifierenjees in types nf skull, hair, vMskin and constitution, did their chief work '- in "tlw re-historic . titucs.-'-' Tliat1 all the -rafts 'of man tire to be accounted for as "''. :V;iriett descendants f one original stock;; is : zoologically ffobable from the close re semblance of all ?men in body and .mind, ; and the freedom with which they inter L 'niarry. I. 'The evidence of the languages 6f i r'thb. world all point the same way. No one 1 jpareut language can be found from which all iotliers are vas plaihly descendcU a the ! '1 Italian is from the Latin ltowever.far back fwe. getj the"signs'lof developibent Jfrom an t A f earlier, t-tase are still . there, and tie whole1 . j struct ure is. such as only a long 'lost past lean accimht for- "From the nioiiuments'of fKirypt we-Sie that five thousand years ago -o jnan had advanced so far in4vi)ization asj ,:'to "havej an elaborate 8ystcm of ;g6vernment, ' : -n educated aud literary priesthood, and --4pr?at skill in agriculture, "architecture and ." liftetal" work ; anil the estimate of. Baron ' j' Bunsen-that man" musC have existed on. J. ;! earth -twenty thousand years at least, wasl "' niaihi ott historical grounds independent ofj ."geological ,f evidence, and Mr. jTylor main-! 'tains . trat the antiquity of jnan qan be; " '4roVed by evidence derived fnou race, lan-" ; guage-aiid culture alone. The problem of S primitive man must remain obscure; but! he links, connecting the civilized races) ; fciay be! traced by the scholar and, accord-' jjhg .to kiTj jiyior, -comparative .myinoiogy is a most ; iterestmg part ot -the study 01 "anthropolo I MaxMuiler has" shown in Iris famous' ' .essay bow5 the 'myths and fairy stories -ofl j - various .nations have one origin; and Joboj Thackeray Bunce in a late number of Ap-I ; fpleton's I Ian dy Volume Series,' entitled ' Itiri Tak: Their Origin find MeWningf i has traced the connection of four of our; best known fairy tales, "Cinderella, ' ''Lit-: tie Be4 lliding-llood," "Jack the Giant v filler,'! and "Jack and theJLBean-S.talk '" with 'the old Aryan .myths Mr. Tylor shows that the principle of myth-making be learned i trom the peasants 01 and drives an account of a terrible - ranic among' the- peasants' of Germany ansluST jiroilJ a.rvjKiri, rjueau i.u uma n me.: 1 v. --- . .. ' ! "r-; r : ; '. " i ', j1: :", " 1 xs ' " ' " ' , '.i ,. , ..' . - . i ......... : 1.'-1 1 1 : .; VOL. 1. tliitt all the Catholic chiTdren with' black. hair and blue eyes, were to.be sent out. of the country, some said to liussia,j others ta Turkey; the King of Prussia having, while playing cards with the Sultan of ' Turkey,-staked arid lost forty thousiind fair-: haired' and blue-eyed , children, and. that there jwere "Moors' i raveling through the country with eovereLtarts to collect these children, assisted by the schoolmasters, who were to receive five dollars a-piece for every child they delivered. For a time the popular excitement was so great that parents kept their children froa .school and when they appeared in the,, streets their children clung to them in terror. I)r. Sehwartae, the well-knowninythoLnrist-. -tMk -'r" "J-trauC""liuruulor tJ its' source ana iounu tnat that grave apd learned body, the A frthropologieal Society of Berlin, without a thought of the fer ment they were about to create, had, in order to class the .populatioii"as';to race, in-.-, dnfeed 1 tlie authorities to have a census iiuide, throughout the local schools, to as- , certain the color- of the children's, skin, hair and eyes, I HadJt been only the boys, . to the government inspectioti of . whom for militafy conscription the peasants were ac- 1 customednothing would have.been thought of it, but why should the officials wish to KmoV about the color of the hair and eyes ,'of the girls? -i The stories that suddenly' sprang hp were m ths to answer this ques tion The. memory : of German ppnees stdling regiments- ol their .people to pay their '.debts, revived and took substance from, the jRilit ical negotiations '.''pending be tween llussia;;and Germany. The fact that'' a caravan of Moors had been travel-, ing with a show, accounted for the covered carts'which vvere' -to carry off the children, anil tlie schoolmasters were naturally im- r jilicatt'd as having drawn the censtis. One sihoolniiLstcr," who evidently knew his peo p.Ii;, assured the' parents it was only the 'children with Um- hair and green eyes who were .wanted an . explanation that sent .them ho'ine com iiirtcd. r The article entitled ' Goldwin Sjiiith on Morals,'-' wliich ;ipears in the -vr"ditor's Tald. of tliis. iiuiiiljer will hardly ; relieve' the niitids of any per ins who were serious ly alarmed. at '"The I'rospeet of a Moral lutern.'gnum"" shown by Professor Smith in the November Atlantic 'MonJJg, in Lwhich he takes the ground that morality is based "upon religion, and 'that in the past the. collapse, of religious systems 'has - always been fol lowed by periods of uioral debasement. ' In tlie' "present age he shows there is an-extensive decline of religious . belief," which e promises, and is already bringing fo'rth, another period of moral debasemeht. The editor very pertinently remarks that if we .assume Prof. Smith's historical representations to be true and he does not deny that they are the c proved an .insecure foundation for mor; that whether there is, or is not, an indes tructible core of truth in all religions, mor ality, . according to Professor Smith, has been planted Upon their perishable, and mutable parts and has lost its.jfolc on men as these have passed away. ,. j ':A fouudation which crumbles and' per-, niits . its supei'strueture . to . fall is . a bad foundation ; and the real question forced upon lis by Professor Smith's historical lessons isf shall we continue to build the edifice of morals "upon this, unstable basis, or shall we seek a better and more eudur- r'ba IMS : Are the rules uf conduct to be derived from vyliat men know of this " world or-from what they conjecture con cerning another ?"' Professor Smith main tains' that fur the fourth time morals have oh a great scale rotted away, First at the fall of Greek mythology, second in Home, third at the llenaislstuice,; hen Catholir clsnr felt, through" the superstitions aud im jxistures which had gathered around.lt,' and which . awakened -intellect .spurned away. 1 he iouruyialt is to be through the skepticism engendered; by science. , Here the editor taks him up, and shows -that he overlooks the altered condition of the questiott, and forgets that the circum stances in this age are profoundly different from what they were I in the former great periods of leligious decadence. In those times when religion became superstition by growing incongruous with intelligence, the state" of knowledge was not sufficient 'to prevent that superstition from re-entering into the 'new forms of religion. BuJ scien tific doubt does. not lead to. negation and a blind sweeping away of all things; but to proving all things and hojding fast only to what is true. : 'The Search ipr principles; and trust in them when established, "are becoming through the influence of science, intellectual characteristics of the tiuie. Morality has its! principles and right arid wrong are grounded in the nature", of things." l'rolesspr Smith never refers-te aiiy element of truth in his rreligious ' foun dation" of- mor;ds;'nnd the-" editor mam tains' that it is a vicious system which jilants morals upon a biisis that Can be car ried away 'by '.the, necessary progress of knowledge;- that morality is not based uxn. religion as a statue on a pedestal but morality and religion have grown up to gether, supernatural beliefs being mixed with ethical ideas as with everything else. ( Astronomy was mixed with religion,, s'o Was chemistry, but 'who could -say they were based upon it? In the progressive' differentiations; of knowledge they have be come freed from; superstition, and arc how independent branches of science'. Morals, is later in separating, but must follow the same. law. The Professor makes lout: a frightful list of crimes which he lays at the door -of tlie spread in the belief of the d(Ktrine of evolution, which ' he definesas. the "exetrable doctrines of brute force, outrage' and violence, and- considers "the , adoration of-a characlfif such as that of j Napoleon to be the morality of evolution' supplanting that of Christianity." To .which' the editor- replies, ' "'that the most . signal and representative example of this adoration that; we knew was that of, a Christian clergyman, the llev. John S. C. . . Abbott, whchwrote the ' life, of Bonaparte '. in a strain jof extravagant eulogy-t-and found hundfedsi of thousiinds of Christian readers who shared the admiration of the - reverend author for his hero." . Jle might have added that the doctrine of evolution so far from being the "execrable doctrine of brute force, Outrage and violence,'-' is just the reverse. Scientific men T7AT 1 -. I . . .. VI - - I 'I do; not' hold the doctrine of tlie survival of til Iffv.l4e Tti& P ti-A.- j. u( , MJO juien y , every power or irau wnien ueuer aaapts an ani mal o live amid ' its eurrountfinsrs enable that nimal to survive another which Las' not.tjie eanie pjver or trait; mere strength is not fitness, ior man is the .weakest of all animals, at his; birth, yet because of hia ntness ne is me nrst among them. Kvo- iution does not make him the -descendant ox an ape but the oHspnng of the anima ted universe, "a figure of which all pre ceedhig forms were but, sketches and stu- dies.1 ; ; ; T ' ' . .... ; . " ' Do-aii Stanley says it mattes not whether man Is descended irom the animal wi juai-v--'Ii,w say rroin the m- auiruate ddst of the earth ; jt iight would still Ie rigljl and wr(jng, . yrong. But, nevertheless, j religion cannot, istamt still wheni every other science Nis progressing. " Th giving upbf the sun's! iholioii is giv ing tip. the foundation of relisrionA. said the priests who burnt the bookl orCof)er- nicusa is) "The giving up of witchcraft is- the giving up the Bible," said Sir Matthew Ilale- , Yet religion did not fall, nenher was. tjie! Bible given up any inore than God, fas some,pjereons maintain, 'is expelled from he Univbrse by the adoption of the hypohd8is of evolution, i Nor does it de tract from the dignity of humanity to feel that, jtbr millions of ages the1 forms and iorces oi nature were employed in working out the marvel of the human brain, and -the form of man ; rather does it add to it. lor the lorce which.rhas built him from a brain ess zoophyte, is working still towards the jultiiuate perfection of humanity, wheuM'.tlie meek shall inllerit, the earth.'.' f ags And Trices of .Anuals:' - Sent by E; P.; Button, the agent for the publi catioris of Grimth & Farran, liondon, is a eouequon oi snprt, stories written in simple style arid printed' in large type for the amusement of young children and with a view io interesting them- in the nature and habit! of animals - ! ' V 'recked, Lost, ' from the same houst, is a story for boys being an account' of 'the. adventures of two lads, who, with the p'lot of the: ship, were wrecked on the coast" of Spitzbergeu . and lived nearly a ycar pn that inhospitable coast. : . j' . Jfi-Mcenturc. . ' Australia " P., Dnttdn & Co.,'eontains an accurate, descrip tion,' If .the habits of the natives and the' natural productions and features of -the" comitfry interwoven" with an .account of the hunting adventures .of Captain Spencer, who, &r his health, goes on a tramp through! the B;ush. The interest is well kept up arid tie story a good one for boys. ..; fcfyricaii,Pet8;'E. V. Dutton & Co., is" a eollection of true stories about the pet animals of i lady residing in .Natal.'-, Dogs, cats, pionkeys, birds and ponies are not ujn- comnlou pets, but to hfar of such pets as; a s f ! - f .i - . i i t is sonjethinir out ot the common run All the books from this hotise are hand somcly gotten" up in attractive bindings arid with" jood illustrations and are most appro- priat ior nonuay girts or scnooi prizes. Bigamy or No Bigamy J Saniiicl Warren's Confessions of an. Attorney. Thp firm of Flint and Sharp enjoyed, whetlier dest;rvedly or not, when I was connel'tcd with it, as it still does, a .high reputltion for' keen practice, arid. shrewd businss-inanageiiient. ; This (kind of pro-, "fessiofial fame is far 'more, profitable than he druni-and-trumpet variety of the sauie article; -or at least ?ce found it so; and o ten, from blush of morn to far later than ewy eve -which natural phenomena, by the way, were only emblematically -ob--sjryet by me during thirty busy years in the e ttinguWiuient of the street " lamps at dawn, and thcir're-illuminatibn atdusk- did I and. my partner incessantly pursue our gplden avocations;; deferring -what are usually esteemed the pleasures or life its banquets, music, flowers till the toil, and heat day wrre past, and a calm-' luminous even ing, u i clouded by" care or anxiety, had ar rived. This conduct may or" may not .have Been wise; but at all. events it daily increased the connection and transactions of the firm, and '; ultimately anchored us both ery comfortably in the three per ' cents ; and this too, I am bold to say, not , withoi t 'hating effected some- good iri our i , generation. . Tliis boast of mine'.. the folr lowinii passage in the 'life of a distinguished : client-l-known, 1 ; am quite sure, byrrepu-, tation J to- most of the readers of these pa pers, Ajiiom our character for practical sa gacity and professional shrewdness brought us -will, I think, be admitted in some de gvee t substantiate. Oan connection was a mercantile rather than In aristocratic one, and iniy surprise was tlirefore considerable, when, on look-r ing tlfrough theT office-blinds to ascertain wliat a ehicle it was : that had driven so rapidlj up to the door, I observed a handsomely-appointed carriage with a coronet emblazoned on the " panels, out of which a tall Jodtman was handing a lady attired in deep ut elegant mourning, and closely veiled; I instantly withdrew to my pri vate rt om, and desired that the lady should be inii lediately admitted. Greatly was my surpri- e increased when the graceful and still: youth flub visitor withdrew her veil, and dis closed the features of the Countess of Sey ton j upon whose mild, luminous; beauty, as rendered by the engraving from Sir Thomas ' Lawrence's . picture, I had so frequently I gaied with -admiration. "That rare and ; touchihg beauty was clouded now ; and an intens expression of anxiety, fear almost temir gleamed ; from out the troubled depths of her fine dark ces. Tre,Couness of Seyton !" I, half-invol-untariy exclaimed, as with my very best bow Ij handed her ladyship a cliair. ;; ; 'ys"; . and you are a partner of this cel ebrated firm, are you not?" .. , 1 f bwed again still more 'profoundly to tliiis Compliments and modestly admitted that l3 was the Sharp of th4 firm her lady ship was pleased to entitle "celebrated." i "Tleii, Mr. Sharp, I have to consult you professionally upon a matter of the'ut--. most-4-the most vital importance to me and mine, Her ladyship theny with some confusion of manner, as if she ,did not knowtwhether what she- was doing was in accordance with strict etiquette or not, placed a Bank of England note, by way of retainjpr, before me. I iput it backf ex- RALEIGH, X. G., iTJDAY, DECEMBER plaining what the Mag ' really w-and the countess replaced 'it in her purse 'We shall be proud to render jouipady "iship any assistance in oar power,", Iffflud; "but I understood the -Messrs. Jmlkrson enjoyed the confidence of ; the Koifje of 4 1 . - 'Precisely.; Thev are, m to srtesti the hereditary "solicitors of the 4familjtAnore than of any individual member off and therefore, though 1 highly respectabjj per sons, unfit to advise me in thw-rarular matter. .BetadeH,? Bhe'-Added. witl eav.i .ad'" private ;..intetview, en, he. ing tremor.an4 htsitatm,'& detdth,f, IjnAf' and if possible. f2ii tlie individual biSihcw t tvItWr t' ji- A, an-,; Perfectly,; madam; aod allow suggest that it is pjpbabie..'' ourjitriiew may be a sonxewliajt .prolonged ou'sgour ladyship's. carriagewhich may attrt, at tention, should be t once dismissed AThe office of the famiA solicitors is, -'yare ; aware, not far of; and as we coul'iinbt explain to theni li reason which intces your ladyship to honor us with youtyjon fidenee, it will be as well to avoidany chance of inquiry"! ' ;; . ; - Jiady Sey tort; acquiesced in my svjfees tion" : the carrid was ordered homf jand Mr. , Flint entering' just at the 'tin? we both listened with earnestness and afcflety to her commuhieatliori. It is needbs to repeat verbatim tie .somewhat proljg ex clamative narratioiil of the countes the. essential facts weieias follows:-- ; M -'.' The Countess f'Seytori, previouS: her ; first 4- marriage, van Miss Clara 1 Lvley, second daughtei uf the lleverend ohn Ilayley, the re'efor jof a parish 'n'tron-.; shire. She married, when only hineen years ot ,asre, a . uiptain. uosioru. ; -iier husband was, tea yiars older than "lii;eiiy t ' ' .i i-. .... J i ;s. .; auu, as, sue uisctveneu aiie-r iuariiit;flvaa, cursed with, a; morose and churlish tiper and disposition.! ljrcyious to her acojpunt-. anee with Gosfgrd, tehe had been inflate with, almost! betrothed to, Mr. ;',ur Kingston, a young, gentleman" conjcted with the peerage, and at that timoiAeh . apparent to the great expectancies a ac tual poverty! o' his father, Sir Ahur Kingston. The haughty baronet, tlie in stant he was made aware of the naia!.e of his son's intimacy wijth the rector's daufter, packed the young iiian dff to.the corw&ient on his i travels. - jine iteverena ry onn Ilayley and his .beautiful Clara .- wSe as proud as the baronet, and exttem in dignant that it shoiild be thought, eifr of them wished to entrap or delude . Shur Kingston into an uilequal or ineligibljar riage. This feeling of pride and iytenU ment aided the suiccess of Mr. Gosi rd's suit, and Clara Hyley,.Uke''many0.eraB, . - . i -- -- .;'.;M. i r - seir to misery, in oraer to snow ine na, and Mr.' Arthur Kingston and his ; oud. father especially, tlijat she had a spintFhe union was a most uhhappy oYie. One Jliild ; only, which died in; its infancy, vvasiiorn Jo them ; and after )eihg united' somifltfiiat i more than two years, a : two ? years, a separatiou.tierhe mently insisted on by the wife's 3ier, took place, and the . unhappily-wded ; daughter returned j tq her parents" joof. ' Mr. Gosford he had some time Jybre sold outi of the ". arniy traveled abothe' country in search o amusement,; antllat terly -of health, (forjhis unhappy eanVous temper at last affected arid, broe 'dovsg his. never very robust Jphysical coristitupn), accompanied for the twelvemonth . pf "feed ing his death by a jj oung man belufeirig to the medical profession of the rnjle of Chiltoiii. Mr. and Mrs., Gosford Ha6een, separated a few dftys less than- threeears when the husband Hied, at the village of Swords in-Ireland, and not far distant rom Dublin.! The intelligence was firstl-on- veyed to the AvidoWjby a paragraph ithe 'Freeuijan's Journal," .a Dublin nevsspc- iandiettered-eftse. per ; and by the following post a Iet ar , and. hunt of the "-rised-' from Mr. Chilton, inclosing l.yihg whicTTlrhe-jieceased i had requested stwuld be sent to his wife, and a note, dK3&ted jifst previous o the death-hour, - in jieh he expressedregret for tfiepaist, a. ad mitted that he alone had heeatpiblafbr the unhappy sepajation. .'A CQpylhis will,made nearly a twelvemonth prevsly, was also forwarded, by which, heb&juiied his property, amounting to - abouti;gferee . hundred pounds per annum, id: a 4;tant relative then residing in 2s'ew Ho f ind. By a memorandum I of a subsequentate, : Mr. Chilton was to hive all the nbn;and other personals lie might die in icpos sessioni of, after, defraying the 'neesaiy' funeral expenses.. This wiD, Mr Clinton stated,' the de&asetl gentleman -hatg? ex pressed a wish in life last moments tolter, but death had been too suddcri for hMl to be able to give effect to that good, 'n twi long-delayed intention. li i -i- IM 'v .It cannot be! supposed that t thecing before ' practically widowed wife gybyed much' at theifinal" breaking; of the jiain which bound her to so ungenial a fjate ; but as 1 Lady Soy tonjwas entirely silent fepon the subject, our suptposition can onfefrest upon the fact, that Arthur Kingstvnwho. had -some time previously, in consefjignce of the death of the' Earl of Seyfbn aSl his ' only son, an alwayswspakly child, prttjded a few months by tHat of his own iierf the baronet, $uccee4ed to the earlddSitnd estates hastened loipe, .on, -seeing tl aiir. nouncement of Gbsford's death tl'ie Dublin paper, from! the' continent, ?giere . he had continued to reside since hi3om- 1 "pelled-departuresixi years before;, andoon afterwards found his way into Devonirey and so I successfully pressed the renewed; offer of his handj that the wedding ook place: slightly within six months aftrf the; decease of Mr. Gosford. Life passqpwlf liantly and happily1 with the ,ear"arid countess to; wborii three children ;&boy and two girls) were born till jabgupS five . monttis previous tos ine present jtimewiien the earl, from being , Caught, wheS out riding in a dreriching shower of raiwas attacked by fever, and after an acute fness of only two or ,three..aay8,.'.diirati(.ez-! pired. r The preseht-earl was at the tinjif jiist turned of five yeari of age: i-!;. '' ;';... This blow, we comprehended frojii the sudden tears which filled the lwauliEuficyes of the countess as she spoke of 'thetlarl s decease, was a severe ojie. Still, thjrief of widowhood must have been' grea J as suaged by love f(jr her children, not inmsidely, after whOei, we may be - sure, .by L brilliant positioB in which she wa leiiH,' ia idditio Jto iheing fplen 'didly'atured she was appointed by her husliiva will sole; guardian of the youug !ordyT eon. , , - : . -' - : Ak Trible reverse awaited ; her. She washing with her Father the lector, nd her illunmarried sister, Jane JIayley, in the diwing-room of Seytoa House,1 when a nol'.'as broughtjtd her, signed I'M ward Chilt'-nlfee trnter of which deoiaiTcSea an UUIUUIKW Ml B IU liaijai. lUaulvU iuui cope from which he had unexpectedly rej covered, ana Baa uvea six monius longer; "The truth is," . added Chilton, ' that-, chancing the other ihty to be looking ove a 'peerage,' Inotieed tor the first- time the date.of 3"our marriage with the late Earl of Seyton, and I have now to inform you that it took place precisely eight days previous to Mr. Gosford's death; that it was conse- q'uently no. marriage at jall ; and that your son is no more Earl of Seyton than I am.'! ,' lhis ' dreadful announcement, as one might expect; completely overcame the -.countess. She fainted, but not till she had heard and comprehended Chilton's hurried injunctions to secrecy and ' silence. He -rang the bell for '''assistance,' and then left ;the house. The mental agony of Lady Seyton on. recovering. .j consciousness was 'terrible, arid she with great difficulty sue, ceeded in concealing itH cause from her anxious and wonderhig relatives. Another interview "with Chilton appeared to confin 'the ttuth of, his story j beyond doubt or question, lie produced a I'ormally-drawiiT .up document," sighed by; tne lHcrce Cuii- ningham,' grave-digger jof Swords, which set ibrth tliat Charles Gosford was buried , on the 2Gth. pf June, 1832, and that the inscription on his. tombstone set-forth that he had died June $od of that year. Also a written. averment of jj'atrick . 3Iullins of,; Dublin, that he had lettered the stone at the head of the grave jof Charles Gosford in Swords burying-groiiijid in 1S32, and that its date was, as stated by Pierce C.unninj- J lKim, June 23, I ; - 1. -f: "Have you copies of.thosc ducuments ?,' . tisked Mr. Flint,. ; .Y ' ; . ' i '; "Yes. "I have brought theni with Hie," the" coiintess rephedj and handed tliem t5 Mr. Flint. ,"In iny terror and extremity," continued her ladyship, !"antrr ungraded by coUnsel--for, till now Ij have cot dared to speak upon the subject ! to any person 1 have given this Chilton, at various times, large sums of money- but he is insatiable 'f a$A ynly , yesterday ;: I '; I cannot repeat I'll i.rr . "Marriage F' exclaimed- Mr. Flint with a burst. 'Tie ,had read the note over my shoulder. ''The scoundrel !" . '1 - My worthy partner was rather excited The truth Was, he had iv Clara of his own atholne a dead sister's child very pretty, just about marriageable, and a dood ', deal resembling, as he told nie afterwards, our 'new and' interesting client. ; ;V: , "I would dio.aOthoushnd deaths rather', resumed Lady Seyton, In a low, tremulous voice, as she let fall herveil. "Can there," she added in r.' still ..fainter; voice, "be any thing done-anything"-- ' ; I "That depends entirely," interruptei Mr. Flint, f nipon. whether. thisfina story is or is not a fabrication, oi up for thpur :pose of extorting money. It seems to m, . 'I must say, amazingly like' one ' j . "Do you Jeally think." so?' exclaimed the lady with joyful vehemence.. The no- 'tion that Chilton was pierhaps imposing on her credulity and fears peemed not to have struck her before. . ! ' -"What do you think, Sharp ?" said my tUM . Km partner. N -;;:' if. r- ;"-" j '--; , ,1 hesitated to give an opinion, as T did not share in the. hope' entertained by FJint. I)etection was so, eertiiin, that I tloubted - if so cunning a person as Chilton appeared , to be would have ventured . on a fraud so severely punishable. H;Suppose," I -said;'! avoiding an answer, "as tliis note appoints an interview - at'three 'o clock to-day at ; Seyton lipase, we met:t. hiinXhere instead of your ladyship ? - A little taik( with the fellow, might be serviceable." . , ; ; ; Lady Seyton eagerly agreed to this pro-; posal ; and it Was' arranged that we should -be at Seyton' House half an hour before 'the appointed time, in j readiness for the .gentleman.'?. . Lady Seyton left, iri : a" hack "ney-coach, somewhat relieved, I thought, by having cotifided thej oppressive secret . ; to us; and; with a -nascent hope sligMly flushing her pale, dejected countenance. I ; The finh of Flint aiad Sharp had then a lohg-tHiference 'together, during which the lady's statement and Mr. Chilton's ' documents were,- the "'reader, may he sure very minutely conned lover, analyzed- and commented upon. Finally, it was resolved that, if- the; approachimg inidrview, ' the mariner of which we agreed upon, did1-not prove satisfactory, Mr. Flint should imme diately proceed .to Ireland, andf personally ascertain the truth or falsehood of the facts alleged by Chilton. ; : ; i V( "Mr. Chilton is anmmnced.," said Lady Se3'ton, hurriedly eiiterinir the library in Grosvenor Square, jwhere Mr. Flint arid myself were.' seated, sent, I think you great tremor. 1 "r need not be pre paid ?" she added, in "Certainly not, madam, I replied. 'We shall do better alone." She retired instantly j Flint rose and sta tioned himself close by the door. Presently a sounding, confident, step was heard along the. passage, the library door swung back on its noiseless hinges, and in stalked a man apparently about thirty-five years of age, tall, genteel, and soldier-looking., 'He' started back on seeing me," recognizing,, I perceived, ipy vocation '.at a glance. "How is this ?" lie exclaimed. 'I ex- pected" ': "j, v:- 'y. 'i -:' " ; '-..' - "'The countess of Seyton." True ; but 'her ladyship has deputed me to confer with: you on the business mentioned in ; your note." . -. .. " ;- "I shall have nothing to say to you," he replied abruptly, and turned to leave the ; room. Mr. Flint had shut, and was stand ing with his back to the door. ! " "You can'fr go," he said,, in his coolest . -v '" 'f":..;-i!' -. ;. ;.;;; . : '"'" ".' 4 Q, 1879. manner.. "The police are within call."; '"The police ! What the deTil do jjroo'V mean?" eried Chilton, angrily ; but, t of his awuranee, visibly trembling benth Flint's searching, half-sneering luok. J 'iNojthing. very "remarkable, ! replied that gentleman, "or unusual io pur profeiwon. Come, sit down ; we are lawyer yow aire a man of busine8s,.we ktiow. I due mj we shall scon understand each iother." . I : Mr. Chilton sat down, ftnd Mwdir awaited what was. next to come. ! I "You are aware," said Mr. Flint, nhat l V 1 1 ; I r 'To.' transportation, " continued 'mr im perturbable ipartner, "for seveuj ten, four teen lyears, or for life, .at the discretion of the judge; but, considering thej frequency of the crime. o late, I shoiild say there is a stnng probability that jrow will be life, 'What, devil's gibberish is this?'' i ex claimed Chilton frightened, but still fierce.. "I can prove.everything I have bid. Mr. Uosiord, l tell you 4 ell, well, ' interrupted Mr". Flint; "put it in that light, how you r ease;! turn it which way you will; it's like! the key m Blue Beard.i which, I dare ; sav, you i have read of; rub it out on one slide,) and up it comes on the other: Say, by way of Jargu-. ment,. that you have not obtained money by unfounded threat a crime which tlie jaw holds tantamount . to highway robbc'iy. You have iu tliat case obtained; money jlbr compromising a felony that of, polygamy. An awfulposition, my gopd isir, chaise which ybu wilL" ; ! 1 Utterly chop-fallen was the lately trit m-. phant man; but he speedily rallied. J I "fI care not," he at length said. "Punish .mevou may '; but the pridti of! this slum count eks and the sham earl will! be brought low. And I tell you once for all," he added, rising at tlie same" tiriie,j and speaking- in ringing, wrathful tones, j'that I defy you, and will either be handsomely remun erated for silence, or I will at Jonce infejrm the Honorable James Kingston that he is the True Karl; of Seyton." I ' , f And I tell yon" retorted Flint; "t lat if you attemjit to leave this, room, I will give you into custody at nice, and tr in sport you" whatever may be t' lelconsequeiice to others. .Come, come, let us have no mure nonsense or bluster.: - Wi have strong '.'.reason:'', for. believing that the story ;.by ; which yuu have Ijeen extorting money, is a fabrication.'. 'If it be so, rilyupon it jwe shalli detect and punish yo.i. " Your only I safe course is U make a cleiin j breast of it whilst there' vet time. 1 put with it, man, at once', aui you shall "o Scot-free ; nay, have a few sn re poutids more; nay ,a hundred.. Be wue in time, I. cour sel ytt.ii' -4j-.-i.i.i "j't '' """" ! ;, Chilton hesitated ; his white lips quiver ihI. There ; something to reveal. "I cannot," he muttered, after a consid erable pause; "There is nothing to (lis- closevV . . ; j.- '.:; ;jA "lou will not! Then your fate be6n your1 own head. I have donq-with you." : It was now my turn. 'Come, come,.' I said,; "it is useless urging this inari further. Howj much do you expec?? The insolent ; proposal contained in your jnote is, you well ! know, out of the ouestion. IlloW much inowg do" you expect lor keeping 'this j -wretched 'affair secret!? State yiur terms at once." .. ! ' ; ' " A thousand per annum," was the reply, "and the first year down." - . "Modest,.Tpon my word I But I sup pose we must comply.'" I j wrote out an agreement. "Will you sign! this?" 1 He ran it : over. 1 " Yes ; j Lady Seyton, as she'. calLs. herself, will take sees, the light." icare it never I withdrew, and in two or three minutes returned with a check. "Her ladyship "has no present cash at the bariker," I said,"a!nd. is obliged; to post-date this days' ' . ' ' - ...r; . fcheck twelve Thd rascal grumbled a rood deal; but Las there, was ho help for it, life took the securi- : t signed the- agreement and walked ' !ff ; ' lA sweet nut that for the dbvil to cract," 'observed Mr. Hint, looking Savagely afjfer him. ;' "I am in hopes we shal 1 trounce him The-ch!ck order or ! to yet, bravely as he carries iL; of course is, not pav'able td b.:arer?'' : ,,(' 'Certainlynpt ; arid before twelve diys are past, you will have returried from Ire land., The agreement may be, I thought, of rise with Cunningham or j Mullins. j If they have been conspiring (together, they wilt scarcely admire the light in which you can place the; arrangement as affording proof that he means to keep the lion's share of the. reward to himself." . J "Kxa'ctly.- At all events we shall get'at the truth, whatever it be." - ; ' , i The same evening Mr. Flint started For Dublin via Holyhead. ! j rVeceived in due course letter from him dated the (lay after his arrival there. It was anything but a satisfactory one. The date, on the grave-stone had been truly. rep resented, and Mullins who erected it was a highly respectable man.' Flint had also seen ,the grave-digger, llut could -make nothing out of him. There was no regu lar register of deaths kept m Sword x cepti hat belonging to; CAininingham ; . and the iminister who buried Gosford, and wiho lived at that time in Dublinj had been dead sonic time. This was disheartening ajnd melancholy enough ; and, asj'if to give our unfortunate client the cfjupnle-g race, Mr. Jackson, juriior, marched into the office iusf aftc;r 1 had read it, to say tliat, having been referred by Lady Seyton to us for fex- planitionsf, with respect to a statement made by a Mr. Edward Chilton to the Honorable James - Kingston, for whpm they, the Messrs. Jackson Vere now act ing, by .which it appeared that the said Honorable James Kingston was, in fct the true Earl of Seyton, he, Mr, Jackson,' junior, would be happy to hear what I had to say upon the subject! It needed buV this; Chilton had, as I feared he wold, after finding we had "been 'consulted, sold his secret, doubtless advantageously, to the heiT-at-law:; There was still, however, a chance that something favorable niijght turpi up, and, as I. had no ntkion of throw--iiig tliat chance away, I carelessly replied that we had reason to believe Chilton's 8ttry was a-malicious fabrication, and that we should ot course throw ! on them the onus of jadk-ial proof that Oofird u rtill alive when the late earl marring wu ok-tunisrd. Finally, however, Ui pUive Mr. Jackson, who pitifitwed to be very anxum, foyhe lady s ak to avoi.1 un-nm-mary edat, and to arrancv t he'affair w quietly as ponwble, I agreed to meet him at Lady Seyton'i io fior days from that time, and hear the tvidenee upon which he relied. This could not at ail eVenU rcndtT our position worse; and it was, meanwhile, agreed that the matter hould be kept a far m poiwible profoundly ecret. Three days passed without any lurtner lint, and 1 vehemently jowrncy had prfVed a fruit . ouliJ evmiiie tu u th- day1 JprKHntcd for the eemference -'at Seyton House, a hackney-coach drove rapidly up to the oiSoe door, and out pop ped Mr. rlint, followed by Jwp strangeniV whom he very Watchfully racorted into, the house. , j I " "Mr. Patrick Mullini; and Mr. Pierce Cunningham," mid Flint as' he idiook hands with me in a way which, in oi injunc tion with the merry sparkle of his. cycH, and the boisterous tone of. his vohv, aivur ed me all was right, f Mr. llercc Cun ningham will shx-p Ihtc'j thight," he addinl ;' "so Collins had better engage aU-d out." ;. : 1 j ; .." ; ..'"-; Cunningham, ani ill-lmiking lout of a fellow, muttered that he ihe "to hh-p at a tavern." ' '- j ' j .'.''.'' f . "Nof if I know it, my fiiK fellow," ire. joined Mr. Flint. Youj mean well, I dare say; but I cannot he sight of you fr ulj that. You cither sjirp here or at a station-house."-' ' ' I I - - ' . Tlie man stared with surprise and alurm ; but knowing refusal ujr reistanv to be hoi'ieletiH, sullenly uMMlitM to the .arranger ment, and withdrew to the roiu-apjioiiited fr him, , vig'tlantlyl gusirde!.. rr Mr. Mu-llins we engaged a bed at a neighbor ing tavern. ' h. J Mr. Flint's niis.vion iad been hlilfully and -Muccessfully aoconiplishetl. .' He was convinced, by the sullen confusion of man ner manifested by (unninghain, that Home villainous agency had Thhti at work, and he agliin waited on lullins, the stone- , cutter. ?'Who gave you the, order fr the grave-stone?" he oski-l Mr. Mulliim re ferred ' to his book jandj answered that he received; it by letter. 'Had he: got that letter?" "Very likly,j he replied, "as he seldom destroyed bliiness pajx-rs of any kindv" "A search was iiistituUMl, and finally thU letter," said jMr.J-'lint, "wrth an carl's coronet, torn and dirty us it is, turned up." This invaluable-. lKuinent, which bore the .IindonJ jMft-date of June 1A,-K.Vi ran ns followii: ' "AxtlLKSEA H(-Kli, HaYMAUKF.T, ) "Uindon, June 2.1, 18.12. J ..... "Sir Phiase to ereci a plain tomb-stone f- at the-hewd tA Olntrh ltford," Kwpiire'a grave, who died.'aj lw .Months since at Swords, agel thirty-jtwo years. This is all that need be inscribed upon it. You are 1 referred to . Mr. Guinness of Sackville Street, Dublin, for jiayment. ,Yur obedi ent servant, . EjiiwARn Chilton," "You see," continiued Flint, "the fellow ; had inadvertently left oat the date of Gos ford V death, merely Bating it occurred a few months previously; and Mullins con-' eluded .that, in entering his order in his day-book, he must have somehow, or other confounded the date'of the letter with hat of Gosford's decease, f Armed with this precious discovery, 1 -again sought Cun ningham, and by dint .of promises and ; threats, at last got thd truth , out of the rascal It was this: j Chilton, who returned to this country fronl' the Cape,-where he had resided ' ftr three1 years previously? about two months" ago, having some busi ness to settle in Dublin, went over there,, and one day visited Swords, read the in scription on Charles j Gosford's grave-stone, and immediately sought- out the grave digger, and asked him if he had any record of that gentleman's jburial. i Cunningham said he had, and produced ,his book, by which it appeared that it took place De cember, 2 v 1831. 1'That cannot be," re marked .Chilton, and he referred to the head-stone. ' Cunningham said he had noticed 'the mistake a few days after it was erected; but thinking it of no consequence, and never having, that he knew" uf, ecn Mr. "Mullins since, hie had said, and indeed: thought nothyig about it. To conclude' the story Chilton-ultimately, by payment often pounds dowfl, and liberal promises for the future, prevailed upon the grave digger to lend himself fo the infamous de vice the sight of thd grave-stone had sug gested to his fertile, unscrupulous brain." 'This was indeed a .glorious success,' and the firm . of ; Flint and Sharp drank the Countess of Seyton'jj health that evening with great enthusiasm, and gleefully "thought pf the morrow." We found the' drjiwing-room of Heytoti House occupied by thc Honorable James Kingston, his solicitors' the Messrs. Jack son, Lady Seyton an4 her father and sister, to whom she had at Icnirth disclosed the source of her disquietude. The children were leaving the apartment as wo entered it, and the prief-dimhied eyes of the coun tess rested; sadly upon her bright-eyed boy as he slowly withdrew with his sisters. That look changed ! io one of wild surprise as it encountered Mil Flint's shining, good humored countenancc.i I was more coin 'poscd and reserved tlilan my partner, though feeling as vividly as he did the satisfaction of being able not only "to dispel Lady Scy ton's anguish, but U extinguish the exul tation and trample 'on the hopes of the Honorable James Kingston, a stiff, grave) middle-aged piece of hypocritical propriety, whclwas surveying from the corners of his affectedly unobservant; eyes the furniture and decorations of the splendid apartment, and hugging himself with the thought that all that was his! Business was immedi ately proceeded with. I Chilton was called in. He repeated his former story vrrbatim, and with much fluency and, confidence. He then placed in'the hands of Jackson,' senior, the vouchers signed by Cunningham and Mullins. Thej transient light faded irom Lady Seytonls countenance as she turned despairinglyj almost accusingly, to wards us. ; . "What answer -have you to make to this gentleman's statement thus corroborated ?" demanded Jackson,' senior. "Quite a remarkable one," replied Mr, Flint, as he rang khe bell. "Desire the HALE S W E r K L FrrrtlTn 8irrt, orrr W'UIlaman 4 t cfcarra, Ofp-il Marlbr H.marr, - PiMWl F.Ov wj.Wr- nailJianyi, X. C j groth-nH-n in the. Itbrmrr U tep op," he added to the f i nun who answered the utnmona. In altout thne tninnte in mirthrd Cunningham and Mull i on, f. 4- kiwwl iy two pwu oitprn. An irrrpnw ilil exclamation of Irrror eorapml Chilton, wlich waa 'SinnxJuteJj rrhoel j Mr. Fliata direction to tlie p4iee, m he pointed towarda the trembling caitiff; "That la yiinr man ftrur him." ;A Btorm of exclamation, oooMi.mj, re monxtniDotw inatantrr broke forth, aixl it wm aevrraJ mi naU before attention coulJ he obtained for the'; Matentmu of our twa TriaK aiilluv n,l tdt- n&.lin.r. T tl. bppi)j-fLud letter. 1 Tlfo i-ffect of tho etuleny Uneixl wm dVunMrvckirioa) . Lady Seyton, ai iU full nignifieam CmimJ uon her, crtaUMd with ronvulaire joy, . attd I thought tnu.&are fainlrl fnuu . c of enition. The lie v. John Ilyh-y ; returned audible thankn to G1 in a voice iTering wich-. ra4urs. and Mia lik-y nurtout of.th artnu iit, and pr.-miily nturnol .i(hhe i hikln n. who wi re im-. mi-diately halfiiiiihcnil with their, ui.h. ens ccstat k i-wc. All--wan f.r, a f w minute U-wildi uncut, .y, hijKim-t Flint p;iiMt to hia 'lying day that ady Sy,. ton "threw her arum around bin tuVk and kilsK-d Ida bald M pirclwud. Tbix, how ever, I cannot fiiidly vouch f ir, as niy aiU-ntioii was t-ugngel at the iiioiiicnt by tliL adverse rlaiuiuiit.llie; I loiiorubln JiuiMfi KingMon, who ctliihiti-d oiH of the nioMt irretiMibly, dnii wo U gono, lackadaisical aicvt it in Hw.ible to mini ic. lie inali a w hurrieil and ui'wt uudii:uitiil exit, aiul as itnniciliat.lv li.ll. 'Wed by 'the di4ii. fitl'd 'family ' Hlieiton. ('billon waroi. KihI to a at;tli"ii hotio', and the Ant d iV a iiiny ctniiiiiiuiii inr .iri.il. . lie 4 tnvict-l at the next Mi-nnioiiM mid if iitceniil L . P.M.. ... !i. . ' I . r tJm'Vcn yenr?' iTiiiitatiin , and' tlic 'Vi I' el rat4-l'' linn of I li tit and Slinrh derive! jusiilerable hnn-, and More profit, from ih suectlul, htri.kc oF pr.ihivi.iii.il ,d .ty. ' . ' Here and There In North ( arullna. ' iti.Ms ntuvi I :iTus fi tiik' Ki'iroit. CltAVKN 1 M M Mill ATloN j .T:. jit ubrrn, Ihttwln-r 'Id, IHTII.- .i (il:rritt. Yviie amd'Mr. J. DintrMia. Ilollaiidcrs .who imve ln-n for veara w . ..... . . . . .11.....!... ...I... I..;;.. I r . . .. Michigan, )iuvc' lut1y Ihyii uhjr cting tour to 1 ho Mclicaii Mkn-t (ng lavelHk, between NcwIktb an hfad .City, where a year ago JlM McJjcim acttli'il a do-n or more countrymen. Theo p'titletncn,'' J iiien in suimiancc ana ciain; tl emselvoH mm h pleased with all' seen, and say 'the account given i I Mr. Mclean fell far short of TJIicy rcmaimHl mime da- at I! and liaatiad through Ncwbem on Ui back to Miehtiran to make arran(menta fi r a ixTiiianont settlement in the colony, ' which will this winter he largely inercamu! ;, b risettlcrs from the Holland villngW. of,. y ichigan arnl I II in mi. r- They had heard .much of the unwttl.il Ute of sotiely here and were warned Ix-fore they led' home tl at they could not, Ving Hepublirau(, ex Ji 'ess their jxilitical AcntiuictiU in thixStiito without !ang-f of troublr.. Tliey 'w ro much Kiirjirtrteil, nn well ax plcaMcd, Io find tl at the warning wan entirely iKy-dlca, and tl at llepublieans are iw free of hjHH-i h and ation in Curoliiia as Ii.iikk rutn. Tho -pi otirtectii of the colony ; are nteadily im proving, as all who are already locnU-d there arc lAore than plciw.1 with the t-hangr from tie s;vcrc winter of 'Michigan to our gcniid climate. . M. II. ', The Lale lr , Slrnilwltir. .v From thr Ihirhaui IlcorI-r. ' , ' I No death, o much in the firm of a pub calamity, ham-ver fallen urton the riti- zns of HillsWo. Identic. -.1 with that -cijmmunify for morq than half a century, he had won, and through Ids long lit) re- ' tinel in an unusual degree, the affection, tlie rcHpcct, ihe .ooiifidenu) of all iliuica. Tlic giHd phyNician, the nafe counsellor, ti c genTous friend, the hospitable' gentle "' man, the enlightened citiwn,'in all the varied relations in which he tooI to the wurld lie won every heart and eoinmanhl j vay judgment. I;nther, Irieml, gunl).'. hs heart, bis purw and 'hi profiwiinI fl.ill were at the coniuiniid of all and with o it question, his warm affe'tior afid his nerous Ixiunty were uiiMtiriUlly lavuhol. ; o man has ever gone down to the jrrave ; Ilowtrd by Mre wnecre ontiNiuring" of; anieii Horrow. ! ' . i His was a beautiful ihrUtian life, cxetn- ifying its highft and untt i haractcris- tic by consistent and, uniform olmcrvanoo of its teaching. - Nothing but its pure1 and elevating IchmoihI could have animated a pieart so warm and o guilelettM, - ufTec tionato, m gchfroiui awl so truntful. A J.Jng life of aitive i IeVotion to duty glori fnhl with the brightest attributin of the i .liristian charaeUT M nudl. tily c loed, but ! cl mt without the iifu.d terror of the death lx-d, f.r liin 1.m- uiw.n this tiiortal exist-ne4 without the coii ioiuineu) ; of suffering, and tW dawn of a glorioua eternity broke up Ids vision widi the blwtv f 1 1 transion of a bodily trjialation. Dr. Strudwick was Ixirn in Orango a unty in March, 1 and waa in his ?8th year". His remain were intcrre! on Ioti diy. ; ' j' " : i ' ' - - ' -ft a -- ' t A'aifs: f . ; The inot common dish at ' the country hotel ''all out." . "What wrc theworA. results of the cilil war?" cried an orator. "Wid6w,M shotted Jon.s, who had married one. , Avcry rich old man had married a young wife, and dwl suddenly, on which tie widow raved like a maniac, and ex claimed to the doctor, who stood by the bedside of the deceased, 'f Oh, I'll not be lieve that my dear jwrtrnT is-dead; he could not die, and leave mc I o, no! lie a alive I'm sure hc'n alive! T:ll me, doc-i t-ir, don't you think so?" " tadam," ro-j plied the medical man, with much gravity, : "I cbnfeM that it U jxinsible that' he may be revived. I will apjIy tho galvanic hat-: tjry." 40h, no, .4i!', cried, the grief-; stricken widow. 'Hard a it U to bear I my fate, I will' have no experiment ! against the law of nature ; let hint rest in : peace." '-'' ' ) ., ' .'.' . ; ? v - ' i : ' ...mi i - I l -Vi .: ' !' Mi. l . !- f,