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mm 111 THI ABBEVILLE PRESS HI liHEij II !H'I II I 'L - iV ' ' ? " ' ~L? ! LL-.-l I" 'I I I -'-J I'lllH Abbeville S. C, November lO, I860. - a I Pit t ni vam/\\T 11 a rvrTuf A RfiAfTT A TTOV ? I ?\t A uton/1 oni?An + Ann T^nn\.\ 1 4tf1tV\tTT/1lT?rr tlia fHHflO " t \Tn nnloAti otirl UnnlinfAwf I F rriAu T?*miv**?? ? ?lje f rm. 10. o. (Tridny, November 19,1660. i^SPr..0ur friend Maj. S. L, Jones, ,'hom wo had the pleasure of jreetig yesterdyr on his return from Co tmbia,. we learn, has been?turning hi* . isence togopd account in effecting 1)0 eaio of .the ^valuable estate of his tficle O. Hanlon, near Columbia, lltfch ho has eoWtfar .$36,000. j f#?- Judgo Carpenter has been lee.liring the Grand-Jury of Charleston, jbargitg.jChcjp with u-breach of duty il ignoring a bill a^uinut ? J. Maekey 4. wr ter iu the lie/mblirnjt UiL't-s him .W-task. for encroaching upon tbojjow?jh of an independent tribunal, and .dhows' very clearly that the Judge,has oseeedcd his powers lUSr QjW" friend Mr W. P McKcller <iiaa beqp ^fd^ingsome additions and iiDrrovement? W.hie beautiful County map, which was upon exhibition at , our Fair. It certainly reflects great .credit upon the pv/jfetaion.f!,! skill of ,onr friend. We hope one day to obliterate these new lines?"to change jjl th^t"?but until that time comc* jwe are coo tout to admire this map A copy may be ceen'in the t'oinniis..flioners* Office.at Abbeville C. II. 9ST Messrs. J .Chalmers & Co .arc offering.of. t^oir EurmijUiro Ware Jtoonifi, above Messrs. Mays, Barnwell A Co's store, a ehoico stock at low ratei. TLcir stock comprises full suits ,of walnut, ebesnut, oak and rose, ,with bedstead bureaus, .and chairs, of all varieties. They are able to sell ,JH chcap as .the .cheapest, and wo ad. iio qur/Wends to give Jiiejn a call. Mr,/. ?>. vCUMJ.lniers ja .{llso prepared to fill all orders for tombstones and iuuiiuiiivriiin nt me maruiu yai'U On reasonable terms. Call and select frotp ^ Hth^gra^pJue designs. *0U Wo regret to Joarn timt an ul tercation occurred on Tuesday last on .-a plantation below Greenwood, between one Shepherd and a freed.w^n in hid employ, when tho letter was wounded mortally 4)y a pistol shot ^r*i;hy Shepherd. Shepherd was arrested and tiij^eo before a neighboring JffcgiBtjjato -hi^t succeeded in making his eqci^pe. . There are conflicting ata,to.uent8 ad to the causes of the tquar^el and the ,cir<-iini8tauccn of the Escape.. " A Heavy Failure in New York Tbe failure of tho lioijse of A. Jjinin.ger & Co,, wholoftulo liquor dealers in Now York, established in 177C. was announced jo that .city aiid created jnuch excitowent in business circles This firm occupied (iie same position in the lino its special business as .that A. T. Stewart & Co. in diy goods It was tfro oj^cat house of the kind in this /country. it is stated that the asset? of jconcorn greatly exceed the liabilities, but that it will take tome time to reduce them to cash. . ' Lomdon, November 15 ?The Binhop fit London prcachcd Mr. Peabody't "liberal. sermon, at Westminster Abf; bey to-day. There was an immense attendance.* Tho Bishop naid no un AAI ? ? - I.?? ? * 1 uwcm vuitiiuuiiur 11 km over gamerea such a concourse of winccre mourners around hie grave. He labored to re Ifcvtf the wutfta of tho poor, and by *' tfcewhb waft beloved, an by all tliosi sympathize with poverty and .lienor bQApvojenco. Ip vyps hi? busi ne4tr to gatfaer *ntf his joy to give Two nations would ever reverence hit name, jvjbich ^rms another bond ?l . ^njoa between England and AmcrU# ? Aepolwn is: ?aid to to greatK - changed in .appearance. Ho look* haggard, care>yorn and auxiou*, and IV r^onsid^fabie difficulty , sjUJior the support Qf a esno and tb< Arm of one of hie suite hie movemenl would be exceedingly slow. The on ,couraging report# which are publish ed about bin health are all d^tateo 4 from offteial sources. During the last ten days of bis sojourn at Corapeigne Sr. Nelaton was in conatrnt attpn 4eaoe upon him, and the catheter had to be used repeatedly. '\< t \r. '' * - ' r ' ; GxjJiJ AMD tBB AUKHDUKXJ.?TJj< J&York f "If the fifteenth amendment be not harried up and proclaimed before tbc 1st of Ja9##ry, we pxay look for tbc frescindi?g^?ttaJ?ew York, ratification, aod'ffei for, a fiat rdtfiKal from Tennessee* 4jte0f?ia- and ^ Alabama, rsawasua o^tbp^aedtion 41 over tf><j . . ;i . i .C . I vuanur.oiuii i/ni i i>j? This body commenced its annual meet- < ingin Sumter, on Friday.evening last, i Rev. Dr. Wilder, Moderator. Tbesor- I vice lwUl in ,tbeChurch, haw been in-' teresting, and well attended. Wo s were much pleased to see Rov. Dr. I Richard Furmnn, in attendance, res- i torod to his usual health, as wel! as i his venorable father, Rev. Br. Samuel Furman.?S.um.ter News. i Washington, November 15. ? Presi-I i ! dent .Grant, in a conversation to-day ; with two gentlemen, one of them a , ! senator, informed them that in his i message ho would recommend that ! Congress authorize a consolidutcd four . j and a half per cent, loan, in which i ! should ho funded the outstanding i bond debt. The President said lie ! would advise against any reduction of i ' taxation for one year. - J By agreement of counsel tho pcti- < j tion for a writ of habeas corpu* in tho < , j Yergcr caso will not to ar- gued farther, but will held in aboyaoeo until Mississippi is reconstructed, ] . when tho prisoner will bo turned over < f to me civil coutJ. lt?m understood to | be the intention of the President to i , pursue the course with similar cases i in Texas. i It has been officially ascertained i that no new ateps have been taken in ( tho negotiation for settling the Alabama claims. t Ex-Miuinter Webb testified again ] before the House Committee of For- , eign Affairs to-duy in regard to the l uio Jt araguayau uiniciillics, and i thought that tlm Allied Powers and r Lopez had both committed outraged. < < The Soi:tii Carolina Clvb.?A 1 meeting of" young men, in attendance 1 upon the Fair front different portions 1 of the State, was held, on Friday evening last, with a view to the or- , ganization of a society for the pur- j pose of promoting social intercourse , ?1... I C! A 1. /"1 ?uivu^oi guiiiiuiiicu ui kjuuui V-/UI- | oliiui. Tlui society under tijo uame of the "South Carolina. Club," was dulj* organized by tho election of the fol- ^ lowing officers: William T. Gary, . Edgefield, President; Wade IIamp- J ton, itichland, J. S. Heyward, Colle * ton. Paul lla*kell, Abbeville, William ' D. Aiken, Fairfield, David Hemphill, ? Cheater, Vice-Presiduots; Wade Man- t nino- lii^lihinil Tr^miifiiv I? P T?'lli o, , I '* a.ui, Fairfield, (Secretary. An Exccu ( live Committee, composed of the oi'- .c ficRW, was churned with the duty of ( drafting a suitable constitution, aud of ^ perfecting arrangements for an anni versary ball, to be given by the club on the occasion of, aud in comjcction ' ( with the next Fair of the South Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical So- * eicty. Gentlemen desiring to beeomo : members will forward applications to Mr. Wade Manning, at Columbia, ' E. ELLISON, Secretary. 1 Gcorqb Peabody?-Two contU 1 ncuts unite in paying tribute to tho 1 great philanthropist. England's Queen does honor to liis obsequies, J in that noble Abbey, where her il- ] lustrious dead sleep together, and 1 England's minister invokes his 1 name, as a pledge, that the tics 1 , which bind tho two countries are i indissoluble. America wilt hold * his dust, and it is proposed to build 1 here a monument whiuh shall be - worthy of hts fame. The Lat* Elections and their Teachings. The elections jri Texas and Missis? sippi are not j-et held: In these all I thn inHi/toiiinnf* j?ih> nf ?ho uiwxnaa nf the Conservative parties in' these States. Radicalism overywhgre, and > especially in those Commonwealths I r of the Sooth, has been the symbol of mgrille and oppression. The result is the fdpihinutifin of all true men who > a*e In lifvor"* of good g?,?vcrnipiMit on i ehalf of some decree' of protection [ for life, liberty* and property. . $J?o betfe* class ol" the Republicans ? in the South cannot f<4fget the fact t 'that thsv are pitiaenu, und hav'o'inter, ests at stake, and hent'o the develop. ments for a rule under which there I qiu bo safety And,p/osp^rity. V The feac||pn ifc? tbt South has, of , necessity, been great. It could not bo 1 - otherwise. Wo do not doubt, thore. 1 fore, that both Texas and Mississippi will follow the lead of Tennessee $nd ,' Virgipia, and place themselves aide by j side in support of anti-Radioalism. Arid this'teems to bo not only tlip ; , growing sentiment, but conviction of ' the whole country. Tis is illustrated by the recent eleot&p at tbo North. 1 > Id New York, at tho last election, the Republicans had a majority of two t Mnfhe Senate aod of'twenty-four in p { tit* Hotisd, thus having the control of;. 1 the Legislature on a joiut ballot by . r iw4?ntydE votes. I The Tribune concedes that the posi- 1 tioa of things Is reverted, and that the j t. I;- 'S2 i ' o t 6 irats to fifteen Republicans, and thero 8 a Democratic majority in both Dranchos of the liCgiblature. If so, for the firat time in nearly lixteon years the Democratic party lias had tho control of, and a working majority in tho New York Legistlure. It has, it is truo, carried thi> Stuto on a general vote, and elected n that period two of its Governors. Horatio Seymour in 1SG2, aud lloflman in 1SG8, but tho Republicans have hud the real power in the intcrufFairs of the Stale., because they have had the majority in the St^te legislature. This is certainly one of tho signs of the times. In Ohio, at the election in lftfiS for President, Grant received the vote of the State by a majority of 40,G17 votes. At the recent election for Governor, Mr. Hayes, Republican, was elected by a majority of only 7,500 votes. This of itself attests the change in public opinion. And so we might eite from the other States. The country is fast drifting away from the old ssues. The cry of disqualification ind of evasion of the Constitution, under the plea of party necessity, and under the cloak of patriotism, is ascertained to be false and hollow. The people are rising to a true, and | therefore to a higher conception of'< right, justice and the common weal. And thus they huve discovered that there can he no true unity or welfare is long as Radicalism has tlie sway. This is tlie source of al the woes and lissensions which this lanvl lias been ailed upon to undergo since the tvar. All its promises of peace Have been like the Dead Sea fruits, ! lull of bitterness and ashes. ! And now everywhere there is n leinand for peace, and a demand for decent and honest government, ivhich 110 arts enn nlhiv nrwl nn onli. terluge prevent. Mr. Parker Pillsbury, certainly not pi'edisposed to the South, has l)orne hid testimony that wherever 'Radicalism bears the sway, there he rule has been "against all the lietates of a genuine statesmanship, is well as the requirements of jusice and humanity." What the country needs, is tlic )bliteration of all distinctions on iccount of tlic past, the withdrawal ?f all political manacles on the >art of Congress, or of the Adminstratiou, the restoration of the people to the free and unbiassed lontrol of their own States and iu:ernal governments, and the full ind real voice of their people. This attained, nrosneritir will nnnn ? - t- J ? more ensue, and the whole land ft'ill be one in fact, as it is now one it) name. The recent elections proclaim the coming morn. For the full Jay we must liuve union of all men who thus aspire. Hadicaliam needs no comment. Its history is written in the servitude of she past and the misrule of the present, : With its overthrow will come peace and imlty. As the Washington lnlclligenccr 2nd Express well says : "If without any sacrifice of principle upon the living is3suc8 of the day, the path I can he smoothed for a union of all good men, to reform the Government, restore the Constitution, aud cleans the augean stable, then what is ii?nf?SRnrv nlir?ii!<l l?r? <>/??/ */ ? ntt'w.t J ?V fcUWVl it. Party names are uothing, men arc nothing in comparison with so great an end."? Charleston Courier, "Jim," said a little boy, who was boasting of his father's new house, "we have got such a fine portieo, and mahogany doors, and plateglass windows, and on the top is a cupola, and it's going to have some* thing olso." "Whasisit?" asked his interested companion. "Why, I heard fa.her tell mother, this morning, that it's to have a mortgage on it." ST. ^HTJJR&bueq, November 1G. ?The prospect of a treaty alliance, defensive and offensive, between France, Austria and Hussia, is pending; to continue three . years. Each party to maintain certain standing armies. i Fanny Fern says: "If one-half the girls knew the previous >Uv?8 of j the men they n>arry. the list of old J maids would be wondcrfiHly inDreased." Whereupon t.ho Boston ' Post asks: "If the men knew what! their future Uvea were to be, wouldn't; it increase the list of old xu^ds still j further?' . ' vivnuujg w lOiu VIMVOI The New York Time* contains some judicious reflections upon this subject. Alluding to tho fact that there is a < growing disposition on the part of the ( young to leave the "paternal acres" in tho hope of bettering their fortune in eitios, and to the fact that the proportio 1 of agriculturalist to the whole body of the population is not as large as it should, the Times says : ''Now, there can bo no more fixed axiom in political economy than that agriculture must form the basis of tlio prosperity ami power of tlie American people. It is tho great foundation of our national wealth and con1 sequence?the primary source of all our prosperity. It feeds us. To a degree it clothes us. Without it wc ! could not have manufactures, and | should not have commerce. It fur msnes our lactone# wmi mcir ra\r material and it fills our ships with their cargoes. Social industry depends upon it ; individual life depends upon it. There i.? no man in the country who is so wealthy at* to ho independent of the success of this ??r? at ; interest, nor any so poor as not to be affected by its prosperity or its decline. This country has peculiar facilities for advantageously prosecuting this great department of human labor. The variety of its climate, the abundanco and cheapness of its fertile soil, are such as no other nation on the surface of the globe can boast, It, is no credit to our vaunted enterprise that we have never yet made adequate use of these signal advantages?thai the time has never yet been when the proportion of our farmers to the whole population was as l.-ir^o as it should h;ivi? Iti'l'ti _ ?. ln?n t ln? niimlun. i.l' engaged in profession* and trades were not, at the very least, twice as great as the actual necessities of society required. There is reason to apprehend that this disproportion will increase. This rostless, advunturoi 8 spirit is ever tending to take more complete possession of our people. Everybody is getting more infected with the eagerness to get rich in haste. There is a growing impatience of the I v.. ... uiii|ivuui i; by steady, persevering labor and frugal living. The young incn of the [ day have tired of the isolation and monotony of agricultural life, and pant for something more stirring and exciting, and something that seems to promise quickor and more splendid returns. They have seized upon the first opportunity to launch away into j the tide of trade and speculation. And that tido once embarked upon, [ it is very seldom that they find their . way back to the plowed fields. A largo proportion of them have not succeeded in their new pursuits , tens of thousands of theru Lave miserably failed, and became bankrupts and drones, and yet they have, frointhe pure force of acquired habit, clung to town-life with all the greater tenacity. ' It cannot be too well understood by these young malcontents in the country that failure there almost infallibly foretokens failure here. The same qualities and habits which stand | in their waj' in the country will cause them to stumble in tho city. It is everywhere the tame all over tho world; to fill any Bituution successfully, one must Gil it as belonging to it. Tho man who feels above his business, let that business bo what it may, is actually below any business, llo is without anything lo hold him up anywhere, and is bound to gink anyhow. The great work of life, whelherin either country, cannot be maintained by uuy suoh weaklings. Least of all is this teari- g, grinding, crushing mart the place for them. Wo already have an over-pro-tuction of incapables of and drone*. There is no room hero for iho drift of rural weakness and. cowardice. Let tho farmers' sons heed the c unsels of their govenois and stay ut home?holding fust to the oldoHt, happiest, most independent and moat honorable of human occupation." A Prophet.?A privato lotter received in Washington from a prominent Government oliiciai in New Yorlc, contains a prediction that before the holidays u crush i will] occur in Wall 6treot, which will equal in its disastrous oonsci quences the ejects of thd reoCut Fish-Gould gold conspiracy. The 1 writer further says, values generally have a downward tendency, arid thinks that specie payments may he reached without difficulty before the 1st of July next. i f Sa? Accident.?W? regret to loarn 1 that a little boy naiood Joe $dow, was killed one da^y last week, by being ' caught in the machinery of a cotton 1 press^on Dr. McKollcr's plantation,? ? Jfntbtrry Henht. 1 * - ^ . .J ' % liajA/l^UU OUU 1WUVOC1VIX l/? M. Henri Kochotort, editor ot a ^ Paris journal named iMVlerne?an t an excellent specimen of tlie lurus j n twh luccth/o in trans-atlantic journalism?lias completely failed in f his endeavors to rank as a French j political martyr. Napoleon Las ex- ^ tinguished him, in Ida own peculiar j style and in a manner just suited x to the case of Rochefort. The pen and ink parodist of revolution, who has been for some time past in exile t in Belgium, set out from Brussels the other day for France. On reach- t in<^ the frontier lie was ams'ed by | the police. This wns a perfect ^ "Godsend" to U??chefort, who immediately commenced to sting in ; anticipation, like a Quartier I.aim j flna, when, behold, the Emperor comes out 011 him with a coup (I'tat in the shape of a telegram directing his release and accompanied by a "safe conduct" paper, etidors by the imperial sign manual, under which lie journeyed to Paris, where he had heeti nominated for the Legislature and serenaded by his friends without any interference on ' the part of the police. People have been accustomed to read and speak a good deul of the : Malakoff ami Magenta and Solferitio, tlio assault on the tower of the Russian stronghold demonstrating O < that no impediment is too high or , difficult for the military genius of France when inspired by a Ronnaparte, while the attack?for it is an attack when applied to such a man ?on Ri?eli"fort proves that no event can be so trilling or insignificant as to escape the careful attention of Napoleon the Third in the pursuntw<n nF Inu i*aof o?ul l'^u"u' "J^ ( torn of rule. During tlic legal arrangements for the "State trials" and prosecution of the late great . Irish agitator and his associates in . Oublin, some years ninco a very \ fussy "conspirator" (Mr. Torn Steele) 1 bored the law officers of the Crown vastly and almost daily with quts tions relative to his case. The At- , torney General (Mr. Cusac Smith), becoming impatient, one day said , to him "Mr. Steele, I cannot re- < ply to 3'our questions, and if you , asK another one I will omit your | name from the indictment and you 1 won't be tried at all. either ad con- j spirator or rebel." This threat si- ' lunced Tom, just as Napoleon now silences Ilenri. Such a modo of < action results from the universal 1 communism of great minds in contempt for professional politicians.? : llcrald. Anoher Atlantic Cable. The more electric cables across , the Atlantic the better. The quicker and more reliable the communication between Europe and America the greater will be the advance ii: the civilization of both hemispheres. Therefore we arc glad to see that the 13eJgian government gives its adhesion to the scheme of laying a new Atlantic cable from ' Belgium to some point, yet to be 1 selected, upoii the American coast, from Muinc to Georgia. We need a telegraph line having u terminus up tn our own soil. We need it in order that wc may be in some e.\- : toilt llsd<?ti??l?il<?n* /if npuiifii oaiiii. I ??ft" tries in the receipt of' important news. Tlic increase of telegraphic 1 communication with Europo will ' increase the business, just as greater facilities in the postal service ' and the railroads havo multiplied < the transport of lettora aud the ' proportion.of travel. Tho French 1 cable has not interfered to any sen* ! Hole degree with tho busines of ' ilie British lines from Ireland. All. the new lines will make trade for 1 themselves. ' Now that we have secured a fair 1 telegraphic intercourse across th$ 1 Atlantic, the next thing'to bo done is to get a submarine gablo under < the Pacific, to put us in imnwdiate ( communication with-Asia and the J great empires ot CUina aud,, Japan.. 1 This can be done to a great, eictept ? without going out ot our own ter- c ritory, by mting the chain of' jibe c Aleutaiti Islands for tho overland ? portion of tho line, and taking our .v submarino points of connection U there. A Pacitfc cable id there c juite practicable. We need' not . urge it& advantages, but cOn only tope that it w!U not bo long before liich an enterprise will be underta- J ten?Herald\ a. 1 tl ivLiiLU nvu.u x'Aintn iiiavi^iqE, ?The following is the substance of he letter written by Father Ilyalinthe to the "Evangelical Alliance" icld In New York, on Thur??luy : Father Ilyucinthc said that he elt gratified at the honor ahotvu lis discourses in Turin by their republication in English. He would lave been giaU to Uave baa tbem wore worthy; but such tu? they vere, lie committed them to tho vorld. lie added, that ho pretenod them to America and those rotestant -churches of which his alentcd translator was on? of th? loads. IIo waa proud of beiug a frenchman, and hoped France Youlu souu iiuiviiu me country vhieh ahe hud done so much to i be rate during the revolution, lie aid lie continued faithful to the Jut ho lie Church. It' ho had eacred u protest against her utsurp*ions, one could judge of his lov? >y the bitterness of his lamcuta.10113. Howevpr he was none the ess sensible to the sympathies of he ? hurches of other faiths in the rtand he had taken, lie did not hiuk that churches separated from he Catholic communion, are b? f?uu Uiv jiuic ui me ciuiy VJlCOSt, Whatever may divide us uow, we ivill be united in the space oftltne, uul all live in hopes of tho same sterility and love of the same God. Weave all living in common for 'he grcjt Church in the future. Men Intd laughed his ideas to acQrn, t>ut that he had expected. After expressing himself further, he concluded by saying that he looked forward to one <3od, one faitb, one baptism, and one shepherd, and signed himself "Brother llyai*ii)tht* " Horace Greclet at a Wsbmxo. ?There was a wedding in the Fifth Avenue Dutch Keformed Ohurch, the bride bcir.g Mrs. (Juilderslieve, the well known authoress, and the groom Mr. Smith Longstreet, * relative of the rebel General of the same name. A great number of literary people were present among others lion. Horace Greeley, who cAino out strong iu the matter of clothes; he was dueased iu the height of fashion, with tall cobtf kids?, white cravat, dauciug pumpe, n rose in his butt i i-hole, a bouquet iu his haiul, and fairly drenched with patchouli. Of . course ho fronted an immense seiisuuoa when lie kissed the bride. Tlu- m .rriuge id a romantic one, iuasmuch us the gentleman, upon reading a poem by Mrs. Gilderelieve, before he !:new her, declared bis intention of wedding the woman who wrote it. lie traced her up, but bef- first husband was still alive, lie waited until that impediment was removed unci thft rippi??rl ?- - v? u?/i4iiii |i^ n MB passed, but the lady .was coy and would not marry, becauao il*c name * was Longstreet SjnitJj,,* ,1'h^ Ltg* iglaturc changed the i#ame to^mith Longstreet, and hence the feappy event, which has created an axtraurdinary interest in fashionable and literary circles. v -.c . ? ^ .. . f Do Womek KeallY Lov* Ba? Men tiie Most.?It is: a singular fact that eight-tenths of the reading women of this country are devotees at Lord Byron's shrine*, Of sonic twelve or fifteen communications offered us, in relation to the Mi's. Stowo "scaudah" all bat on* were from tho hands of women, and overy one, without- exemption, were eouehed in terma 'Of tenderness for the hwcivfoiia hard.1 W? wo toTd by tl^mahaging* editor of Dtte'of ow lbudlil^ U^Ulba that ha lias been aitnply astounded at the multitude of worhchpf excellent .ustft and good' scino, *'bo har* talk* d to WUHand written to him Q^eiiBie of Byron. ?'? r.L Wor^ivnfK*d ifrort tlifMfeince, ipOtt ?H?1 thtofoaity- >WfUitM#d, in jtory eonftrttmity Wtotltt/ lEtiown test nien: were 'tUfa' Tavortt* ft' '"'A 9Wfotfift win. ier sisters"''stitirn'f ft 'fas^^iin ?. > ! I!y> ; >V UJ ;ures hersmijos. Tuia fa a fact so '-ti'-A i vVmii? loiniuon A3 tf.ut t& bo discredited; nd to' cry rrjuco <4 Troftattfe#, \3 but notfie'r exnrtif&iop of mo tact? who \vnlc'tf oddtin^Jtfr iff-i-JSt hangc. ' Coininunigm htw foqnd' a haipe ia owa Near MarCngo t^ere is a ooloy ol 1800 inhabitant*, ownitiicf otrar 0.060 ac**a *f landy wd ' bmtg eU lipg* i? OOttmOCv >? !-v .' :ow o* 1. M-i /.!:> .- ' I > 'il'tj" '!? ; ,i: <-:,i i 'to ' - /':< c} .q - .ij. ^ *?'