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^ uV^v,, ^ W .V-.1.v..>.. ...,.. . m '" : aw^-.-..- - ni IJ " Mill I u Iftl I lfl* !S|l* 3l)c Camften Journal. VOLUME 11. CAMDEN7SOU^ 26,1850. NUMBER 10. Poetical department. , For the Camden Journal. ELLA. I would love thee, Ella, , And at thy shrine how; But thy love is another's Oh! 'tis not mine now. Another thy favor Has happily won, Who will claim thee as his Forever his own. Tho' pain lie the portion The blind God has given; Tho' hopes be all crushed My fond heart be riven, I will not upbraid thee: 'T were impious to blame: ; I'll love thee still, Ella; . ! j. Yes, love thee the same! HI love thee on earth, } In my dreams of delight; * I'll love thee by day T'li invo tJmo hv iiiedit! I'll lore thee in Heaven, j *' With angels above, Where the "burthen of song, j, Will be love, ever loveA j! Camden, S. C. , ERNEST. e h From the Philadelphia Saturday Courier. ,1 A SINGLE STAR WAS SHEDDING. I> BY M. ELIZABETH WENTWOKTH. H' A single star was shedding its azure light on high, ^ In silent beauty reigning, sole monarch of the sky: w I thought of thee, my absent, thine eye ofkindling light Seemed to my soul reflected in that lone star of h. ' tl . night. >1 For in my thoughts thou reignest, thou teacher'of my youtli, And still my heart is keeping the lesson of its truth; j I think of thee, my absent, I bow in love to thee, <1 Star of my early worship, art thou thus true to me? c i Long thou hast been a wanderer where softer voices ' " breathed, . And rosier lips beguiling, with brighter smiles were wreathed; tj And chide me not, my absent, if that sad star above Hath less a glory for me, since I distrust thy love. ] t'i If wandering from the compass, or false to ftie thou art, Unlearn what thou hast taught me, this lesson of M ihe heart If faithless to the covenant we plight^! when we met, Who taught me first to love tlice, shall teach mo to forget ' Tim iftiilo T ilimurlit on memories, in loue oblivion o hid u A gentle voice beside me mv sad reproaches chid; ai And thou, my oxrn, my absent, wert kneeling at s< my side, " o: Our hearts again united, in love by absence tried. 11 Westerly, R I. j' <Eljc Olio. i' D. RuT-ronrvfl 1114 1NSTIH'(.T1 SS. A ladv !l and gentlemen, recently married, in the neigh- tl horhnod of Notingbaiu, left home in their car- it riage for a bridal tour among the Cumberland si lakes. In order to avoid the notice generally ei attracted by persons in the honey moon, the ti gentleman gave his Irish footman the strictest a charge not to tell any one on the road that they ft were newly married, and thrcatning to dismiss si .. .... ... . ______ j. I luuuMie did. rai promiseu uiijuivit UUUUICIIVC ) I <* but on leaving the first inn on the road, next a morning, the happy couple were much astonish- ii edand annoyed to lind the servants all assembled, a and, pointing to the gentleman, mysteriously n exclaiming," That's him, that's the man." On p reaching the next stage, the indignant master h told Murphy he must immediately discharge him, u ts lie nadtnvuigeu wiai m iwuiuipiMi.,. liiin, as a secret " Plase yer honor," says Pat, w " what is it you complain of ?" '" \ ou rascal," h exclaimed the angry master, "you told the ser- ti vants at the inn last night that we were a newly n married couple." " l)ch, then, be this and be v that," said Pat, brightening up in anticipated a triumpl)," there's not a word of truth it it, yer si honor, sure I tould the whole kit of them, servants a and all, that you wouldn't be married for a fort- t< night, yet ?" d e Tiif. Nf.w m altz. The Parisian eorres- ^ pondent of the Courier des Etats Unis, dc- a scribes a new dance, called the Scottisch 11 Waltz, which he says is all the rage in Paris. His words are: j( " This step, which is the favorite one of the j1 TWlUli Oneen. is a union of the waltz, polka, | "* ' - ^ t imd red own, a gentle balancing-with alternate j movements and repose, with pironetts and slides. It is less fatiguing than the waltz, more nniinn- " ted than the polka, and more graceful than the j redowa. It is, in a word, si :j b and charm- ! ( ing, a movement of exqnisiti erace and agiltv,1 and one which parents may w their children ' to narticinate in without sen , i I I IJ The London Literary Gazette says of the i fashionable songs of the day "these realms < . were never so stulified and besotted as at this ^ hour, when we are inundated with a class of compositions so infinitely beneath contempt, < that to waste a word upon their inanity would..' !>e a v.a.-'te indeed." I ) Death nr Lightninc. A correspondent "roin Ware county, (Ga.) writes, us: On the 21st inst., the liouse of James Aspin ii . /MI' i i. i. Ailll 9i > HIV ClIUIllV, AV t& ?511 11 v i\ u> liymuiuy. j \t tlie time of the melancholy occurronco, there ; .vere present in the house, besides Mr. Aspiu- | rail and his wife two other men. Mr. Aspin- j .vail was instantly killed his wife badly woun- ; led, and the two others present were stunned j "or some time. Upon their recovery, the lat- j :cr found themselves lying upon the grass, out- j fide the door and on entering the house, discov- | red A pin wall dead and his wife apparently so: | )ut upon the application of cold water to her j ace, she recovered and expressed unconcious- ; sess of what had happened bv asking, who and ' vliat had wired her in that manner? The fluid seems to have inn the whole course , if their bodies, (roin the head downwards, as he shoes of all the persons in the party, were : hrowa otf their feet and torn to atoms. Mr. t spin wall was a young man of great rcspoeta- i lility, and his death is universally lamented. _- I First Totcns in America. The National In- i dligcncer relates the following curious facts, j t'hicli will be news to many of our readers. " ft will seem curious to those who are not ware of the fact, that the first towns built by le Europeans upon the American Continent rere St. Augustine in East Florida, and Santa e, the capital of New Mexico. The river Gii was explored before the Mississippi was nown, and gold was sought in California long re the first white man endeavored to find a oine on the shores of New England. There i_ J: til.:.. il._ c. I1_.. IL-, uuuinii'w trtfrs buinuing wiuilli uitf luuuii uildings of ancient Panama that had comicnced to grow when the sites of Boston and ! lew York were coverved -with the primeval ; ilderness." Fi.orid.v Indians. From rations sources 'e learn the gratifying news thai Indian hoslities are probably at an end in Florida, Gen- j \viggs having induced t!ie Scniinoles to Emi- \ rate. A 'Dtmpa correspondent of t!ie N. O. i icayune writes as Follows: " Unless some unforeseen accident intervenes, | feel confident this perplexing question is now | t ro.-t forever. It will take them some time to j ollert no their plunder. The irencral is in opes to start them all within four months, but it uring this year he emigrates them all, lie wilj o well; Indians are slow in their movements, xcept when on the war trail of the whites, and ten he move himself suiurtly. But no man can et them oil'sooner by a single day than (Jen. 'wiggs, to whom much honor and credit are ue lor tints amicably terminating this dangerous i uestibn which has alflicted Florida for so many ! ears." iilisrcllancous Department. From t'u* New V<>ik Evening S:ar. THE PIH.NTEii 'Hiore lie stands at Lis rase; his eves are fixed ti his cojiv while his fingers, obedient to his ill, collect the letters from their various boxes, , ltd place them together so as to form words, .'nteitc.es, complete articles of news, politics, r literature. The musician of the piano can arulv compete with the printer in the rapidity, j nd precision of his digital motions. Like the lanisi who jii.iys won his music hook and 111tnunent before him, the printer sees and comrchcuds at a glance the ever varying results is lingers must produce, and does not hesitate moment to perform tiie necessary action with ic rapidity of lightning. Like notes from the istrument; every letter, every pause, every top, is called forth in proper place, til! complete nsemble is formed, which the memory can ensure up, and which liie mind can conceive nd digest. But how different are the final efjct produced in these two instances! The nmiciau creates, a series of melodious ami harmo f . 1 i ! . i f ious sounus, wuicii pieasc uie car ior a momem nd die awa y; I lie feelings gay or sad, dispond>g or enthusiastic, mild or violent, arc excited t the moment, hut the charm soon ceases, and ought hut the recollection of past pleasures or ain remains upon the mind. Hut the printer's thor hears everlasting fruit; he spreads before luukind the arcana of knowledge, and works , itli the sages in the laboratory of reason ; be ends messengers to every one of the human unilv ; he invokes all men to behold the beau ius of truth, and socks to make t!ic mass of latikiiid conscious of tliosc immutable rights l itii wiiicli nuui is invested at birth l v nature lid l v nature's (Jod. The printer has been, inco the fifteenth century, the faithful and most etivo auxiliary of learning. That day the prinL-r struck oil' a rough I dock of types from that ay we may date the universal spread of knowldge, and the gradual disfranchisement of man intl irom 1 lie bonds of ignorance, superstition nd oppression. From that (la v Ins man gradallv advanced to the general enjoyment of free, alighted, and rejnihlican institutions; from that ay royalty and its concomitants began to deay, and fair liberty to grow in their place. 1 might continue to show, in detail, the corectness of the general outline 1 have drawn ; mt the immense beneiits which the art of prilling conferred upon mankind, have been descrih(1 bv abler and more eloquent pens than ininp. jot mu present :i single hypothesis; suppose hat the great prutectivoness, and teacher of all n ts and sciences suppose that the art ol printng had never been discovered, at what a stage >f progress would we now lind natural philoso. )Iiy, astronomy, mechanics, navigation, and nniiy arts which conduce so effectually to the ' ' 1 - < i :...! / ' in minion ami preservation m iii.nimuu . . uuuvould now be those liberties we hold so dear ( I'd iu the womb of futurity. The discoveries tf ;i Newton would have been tiie treasure of i;. exclusive few. W ri-1 c.ml I' niton would, .crimp-, never b.ive ie.;nud tie- lir.st principles ; of mechanics; and Franklin, might never have ! read a hook, nor published a single principle tending to the independence of his country. The ancients of Greece and Rome, certainly number some great and wise men; but, beyond the circle in which these learned men moved, how few received a glimpse of science, how few ever learned to read ; and how difficult it was to obtain instruction books. Now, through the agency of printing, our means of acquiring knowledge are unlimited, and its dissemination ^Universal. The consequence is, that a greater nuinher labor to unravel and make useful the secrets of natufc and the progress of mankind towards perfection is a thousand tii :cs more rapid. The printer, as an individual, conies directly under the constant influence of the instructive and liberal art lie professes. The printer reads more varied and general information, than the theologian, lawyer, or avowed philosopheP. It is the printer's trade to read constanth*, day after day, during his whole life; lie earns his dail.. I,,, ,. .wU .r o a y - - *V> rt,,u .and carefully, for he must follow and put the works we read into type letter by letter; he must dwell awhile upon every sentence. Does the merchant know the prices of cotton and other goods in distant countries the intelligence is'perused by a printer before a merchant touches it. Does the politician discuss the affairs of nations he owes his knowledge to the printer who is always ahead of him in points of infornmtinn I Iniifi tlif> nil vcipi'in cfixlv tlio -A-nrlf ftf soiuo profound Aesculapius let him look at the title page, and he will see that he owes the work to a printer, who has read it over and over to see that not a letter isVanted, not a comma out of place. The same may be said of the lawyer, the minister, and the scientific mechanic. The printer stands at the door of all their learning, and holds the keys which open it. The printer is a great traveller. There are few printers in the United States who have not visited every State in the Union. They are sure of finding a printing oilice in every village, and consequently do not hesitate to travel wherever their fancy may lead them, sure of finding lit tliikie lifntlwtr ti*rk<i/rrniilwiM< 6*. Ill UIVIl I'lWUIVI O, llll'llUa IVclllJ IU assist them, give them work, or obtain a situation for tiioin. The printers are consequently thoroughly acquainted with their country, in general and in detail; none can know better or speak of it more correctly. Sometimes he crosses the Atlantic, and, while he prints geog raphics and books of travels, he takes occasion to view with his own eyes every part of the old and new world. The printer is always a good grammarian and it frequently luippens that men whose produclions are esteemed hy the public, owe it to the printer* that they are not written down asses. 1 Often, very often, docs it happen that manuscript is put into the hands of the type-setter full of gross grammatical errors, sentences devoid of sense, and without a single point or capital letter. When this has passed throntrh his hands. tin* errors are corrected, the punctuation and ( capitals are all set in their proper places. Tile , conceited author finds himself all at once a , grammatical and logical writer, and basks in the sun of popularity, w hich he owes to sonic unobtrusive son ol'luitteniburg. He takes care not to give credit to the proper person; but 011 1 the contrary, should some of his blunders re- ( main uncorrected, lie is sure to la)* them all to , the charge of the " ignorant printer;" such is the false and unjust phrase iguonuit writers Ire quomly use. No trade, class or profession, except those of law and physic, has furnished a greater proportion of Kanied and distingtiishcil person's tuan the pi inter's craft f rom the day of Franklin to the present time, our legislative halls, our places of honor, have been ornamented by talented ami eloquent printers. The bar is often indebted to the printing otliee for some of its ablest members; in this city we have living and prominent examples of the fact. _ J t ii :l . f i Hi' primers, wnerever mey can unite a suificient force, gonerallv Itirni themselves into a society for the mutual protection, and for the purpose of assisting each other in cases of need. These societies fix the rates of wages, the hours of work, ami provide for the sick and unfortunate. 'They hind themselves by the strictest and most honorable rules to preserve the dignity of their art, and to defend each other against tm1 injustice of grasping employers. II a printer should dishonor his trade or work under wages, he is immediately stigmatised and disowned. It is very rare that a printer ran he induced to dishonor the pledges he has given to his fellow-workmen. The printer is essentially a democrat that is to say, opposed to the aristocracy of riches, and though so far above the generality of artizuns in | knowledge and talent, yet he is proud of being culled a mechanic, and lie frequently boasts tiiat his subsistence is earned by the stccnf of his brow. Yes, ye proud nabobs, who loll in your carriages, ami who would disdain to touch the hard hand of a mechanic, learn that there are mechanics who are by far yyur superiors in every tiling which elevates mankind above the brute. I know of mapy graduates of college who might be made to blush for their ignorance by the mechanic they despise. Hut the boast of these proud aristocrats must gradually fall beneath the power of the press; and it is proba ble that, when the laboring class of Europe and a. .;ii u.,,:.. <...... i-nilf in Kimictv. I ;iinl will en II lor the enjoyment of more equal rights, their spokesman will hen printer. Chant rev, the seulptor, says his reccut biogrnplier (ieorge Jones, " whenever he saw a ....... ..(* .... ....lti.-.itin.r m eniuo'lliloiw rrrowtll II.Ill IW.IM III, ~ p, of hair, or imitating a Knphnlosque nppoarnnco, ii'.i would pivsiait such a poison with a shilling, :iinl, hi'ir that, lie would ononura^o somo haird:v>-vr 1 v his oii.-'niM.'" HIGHLY CONCENTRATED SERMON. BY OLD nCN'DBED. My dear dandies and belles, fops, and flirts, and other stragglers down the hill of life, my text to-day is that much used and abused saying, " Does your Mother know you''re cut ?" Poor silly inflated grub-worms, I would say from your slyness and capers that she can't know you're out. You young lady, with a parasol like n wilted cabbage leaf on a ram-rod, and chains ol liair down cacti cheek, like a battle-tailed spider dipped in blacking, lmd been making his everlasting elopement, over jour rouge-covered face, leaving a broad trace behind him, and on jour back a peck of. bran and jour mincing gait like jou were picking jour waj among rotten eggs, or was barefooted in a brier patch, and jour arm lined to a brainless dandj, (but Til come at him as soon as I am done with jou,) wriggling along the street, and for what ? to hunt up indigent virtue, or suffering innocence, to pour balm on the wounded spirit of poverty, or only to smear jour own giddy heart with the corroding grease of vanity, to hear fools whisper as you pass, " what a fair girl ?" Remember, vain one, beauty is but skin deep, and the storms of matrimony and bleak winds of affliction, rubs it all out and leaves the countenance bare and unbecoming as a weather-beaten barn door, unless you put on a coat of the lasting paint of meekness, worth and lov?, lin/lor tlm vnrilioli Unnntf If ../Mi Ann lon/rl. HIV * <11 AUOIl VI MV IUV>. XI JUU tail IrtU^li like him who wins, and know that yon are still loved and lovely, and that you are still beautiful, now that the gloss that hid your worth and goodness its dazzling glare is gone, you shed a happy influence on all near you, make us poor erring mortals feel just like a man almost frozen, feels when he sets down by a cheerful fire at his own home. He hears the storm but heeds it not; he is happy once more. But have you done ibis? I am al'raid that you arc but a butterfly, borii a woiTO, to die an insect. Ah, i don't half like that laugh it was fore ed; 3-ou protend to be pleased with that tool's wit, when you knew it was stolen! Oh, winsuch deceit, giddy lluttering worm of the cabbage patch ; you are sold, soul and bod}', for a little empty, windy, useless adulation; yes, sold to that old snake with the fish hook 011 his tail the same snake that fooled your mammy in Adam's truck patch and 0I1 scissors! how he will strip that finery and raise a dust for a mile around, with that peck of bran. Say, flowersucking butterfly,does your mother know you're out ? If she does, she is unfaithful to her trust; and ought not to be trusted any more than the man who stole a handful of acorns from the blind sow; go home, gossamer, and try to pre pare yourself fo he a woman, and then when you are abroad, any body will know that your mother knows ydu're out Now you that was cut out for a man, but was so villainously spoiled in making up, I'll at- J tend to your case. For what end did you burst upon the world's door and rush in uncalled, like a man chased by a mad bull, what good do you expect to bestow on your fellow man some useful invention, some heroic act, some great lllbCUMTY, (1. CVl'U UIIU SUIIUITY lY'IlKUK i><>, those that look lor anything useful or good from you, will he just as badly fooled as the man who caught a skunk and thought it was a kitten; or the old woman when she made greens out of gunpowder tea. You know where the neatest, tightest pants, with the strongest straps, can lie got on tick, hut yon don't know where the next useful lecture will he delivered, you know the fashionable collar of a vest, hut you never studied the gorgeous hues of a rainbow, unless it was to wish for a piece to make n era- j vat of; you know how a fool feels in full dress, hut you don't know how a man feels when he eats the hroad earned honestly by the sweat of his brow; you know how a monkey looks, for you see one every day, twenty times, in your landlady's looking glass, but you don't know how a man feels after doing a good action, you don't go where that sight is to he seen. Oh! you wasp-waisted, catlish-mouthed, hahhoonsliouldored, ealliper-legged, goose.-eyed, sheep faced, he-whiskered drone in the world's bee hive! what are you good fori Nothing hut to cheat your tailor, neatly lisp by note a line from some milk and cider poet sentimentally, eat oysters gravely, smoke cigars lazily, make si'lly girls act the fool shamefully. 1 say, does your I iiimfHT itmnv umi ir uui, jmmji iiM'iu^a iu.iu . i am afraid you have no niotiier nor never hail. You are no more use in this world than a time piece ill a heaver dam, or a hair mattrass in a hog pen. You till no larger space in the world's eye than the toe nail of a musquito would in a market house, or a stump-tailed dug iu all out doors ; you are as little thought of as the fellow who knocked his grandmother's last tooth down her throat, and as for your brains, ten thousand such could he preserved in a drop of brandy and have as much sea room as a tadpole in Lake Superior! and as for ideas, you have hut one, and that is stamped on your leaden skull in letters an inch deep, that tailors and females were made to be gulled by you, that all may envy you your appearance. Poor useless tobacco worm, you tire a case. Does your mother know you're out? It is lunch time; so start, buv a brandy toddy on tick from some good nutiired landlord, and eat lunch until you aiv as light as a drum, sneak to bed and think of nothing untill you fall asleep, to dream of apes, pant straps, and tailor's bills, not to awake until the dinner bells call you to cat again. How many harmless shallow mortals of another order scudding about on the surface of the world's great waters, without an aim without a motive; guided only by chance, whim or impulse, like a mellow hug in a big eddy under a shady willow, until they are swallowed up by the greedy bass of death, and the lirst thing that they know, they know nothing: when I see one of these, 1 always think poor bug your mother don't know you're out. How many silly ones neglect their business and get after some foolish pleasure and chase it, and keep chasing it like a boy after a butterfly, until they wear out the hat of constitution, beating the ground w;ith the vain hope of catching the swift plantation, and finally fall into some hidden pit covered with flowers to rise no more! I then think poor fool, your mother dont know you're out; nor \<m won't be **' out soon again. . . hen i see a young man step in 4h<r*1slciff of dissipation and fetart down the stream of pleasure, using the onrs of iinf)rudence, while folly holds the helm, passing theshores of propriety faster than astrrli of lightning can pass a sick crow and at last drawfi over the falls of total destruction and dashed into as many atoms as a drop of water from a four story roof, I then ask of myself, for I can't ask of him, did his mother know he was out.- When I see a boy leaving the prison door after a long and dreary confine mem, witu a pale lace and withered hands, his step weak and tottering and skulking along, dod* gingaall lie meets like a guilty thing, shutting his eyes from the usual glare of daylight; cut from the society of his fellow beings, for some trival offence committed in the thoughtlessness of erring boyohod, (when if mild treatment had been resorted to and the crime buried in silence, and inducements held out for him to think well of himself, perhaps that boy might have been saved from treadinc the slimv road of villanvl w w / I say when I see this, I think of the grey haired mother at home, if a hovel can be a home, the scalding tears of misery chasing each other off her high cheekbones; and her boney hand sha'* king with age and sorrow for her only hope her son, ,while her old looking eye rests on nothing; I say to myself, poor suffering woman, you don't know he is out yes he is out 1 out ol/ail; out of friends; out of credit; and out upon the world, a scoundrel, for the rest of his days, all for the commission and punishment of a bovish crime. So the world nroos and so it will go, till it is run down, and 1 begin to think, that but few of our mothers know we are out The Farmer's Life, Wm. Gilrnore Simms, in his " Father Abbot; or the Home Tourist,'' thus beautifully represents the life of the farmer: 44 The principles of agriculture were simple exceedingly. That they might be made sov God himself was the great first planter. He ivrntp its laws vieihlv in tk ln*irrl f .rf >A 7 ;*< unjjimiji, in in iui' liest, and most intelligible characters, every where, upon the broad bosom of the liberal earth; in greenest leaves, in delicate fruits, in beguiling and bnhny flowers! But he does, not content himself with this alone. He bestows j the heritage along with the example. lie prepares the garden and the home, before he ereates the being who is to possess them. He fills ' them with all those objects of sense and sentiment which are to supply his moral and physical necessities. Birds sing in the boughs above him,-odors blossom in the air, and lruits and flowers cover the earth with a glory to which that of Solomon in all his magnificence was vain and valueless To His haild we owe these tall ranks of majestic trees, these deep forests, those hrond plains covered with verdure, and' these mighty arteries of flood and river, which wind among them, beautifying them with the lovliest inequalities, and irrigating them with seasonable fertilization. Thus did the Almighty Planter dedicate the great plantation to the uses of that various and wondrous family which was to follow, iiis home prepared supplied with ;dl resources, adorned with every variety of fruit and llowcr, and checkered with abundance man is conducted within its pleasant liiiiits, .and ordained its cultivator under the very eye and sanction of Heaven. The angels of 1 leaven doscend upon its hills; (iod himself appears within its valleys at uoondav its groves are instinct with life ami purity, ami the blessed stars rise at night above the celestial mountains, to keep watch over its consecrated interests. Its gorgeous forests, its broad savannas, its levels of hood aiul prairie, are surrendered into the .1....,.!^ , ' !.. ci.- ....... wiliiUC vn II V n I/IIUIVUCI j iUM/lVtl, UK' JIV I IVil' ted lieir of Heaven! The bird and beast are made his tributaries, and taught to obey him. The fowl summons him at morning to his labors,and the evening chant of the night bird warns him to repose. The ox submits his neck to the yoke; the toils of all are rendered sacred and successful by the gonial sunshine which descends from I'eaven, to ripen the grain in its season, and to make earth pleasant with its fruits." Missi*sirpr. following is an extract from a letter dated " Jackson (Miss.) Jan, 2(5, 1830. " Tiie report of the Committee on State ami Federal Relations is now before the Senate, in which it is recommended to place Two hundred and Jt fly thousand dollars, at the disposal of the Coventor to he used in case Mississippi is thrown upon hcf reserved rights in the great contest between the North and the South on the great slavery question. A very animated diseussbn is now going on in the Senate on tho adoption c t* the report, and I am pleased to see that it does not assume a party east. Judge ( iiiion, one of the most prominent Whigs in the State, is the author of the report. Mjssisstppi was the first to move en mns.se on this great question, anil although I sincerely hope, as a lover of our glorious Union, it. may not be necessary for the Governor to use the amount proposed to he placed at his disposal, yet I am of opinion that we should, as an earnest of what . * ti 1111 i wo liavo norotoioro uociarou, now ourselves ta readiness to meet "any emergency." Mrs. Pariimjlon savs that a man fell down .1.,*. in .m iimliiionlr l?f nml llmt 111* | 111* " I !' I " '/l "" t * . ... , life v.a extcrnatiul,