University of South Carolina Libraries
% u > > [ !_ ..JJLX^l'l - UIPKA IS A SHADOW VOL. 1. %r. L. Y. PftlMC*. J. H. MALdiOY. | PttntE Sl HALLOV, i EDITORS AND r ROP RI BT O RS. i TEA 51 * J I Tit Ptl Dm Usual* iapuUMred mrj Tvmpat, *112 i par ymr, *TWcn.r i* ac?a?c*. i A?VKRTIf?;?IK1TE t>t in?n Uml or Iw. "hub U aquara, will b* InarrUi at on* dollar, Air idngta i&Mvtion; one ?|uut rooUnuoi, aaaantr-flr* eant* Air tha ftrat, sod fifljr o?nta for *?cb InwatUoa. R*n*w-*1 or citaig* cwti par aqua**. Ad iltfoinarnt* lomrtad ninthly or qnaruriy, on* dollar taraqaara; aastl monthly, arrauty-Ora cent* prr aquara. Till following deduction* "Ml ba mad* lu for or of iWodiof Sliiilliwu'iib: On* aquara, Co.- ihraa month*. Ad SO da ftn rlr month a, 7 .*<) do for i v# a faar. lOOO Two tquaaa*. fr thro* aaoatba, 7 SO da tor i-U do IS OO da for om year, 11 OO Tbre* aqnaraa, foe thraa moot'-.*, 11 OO I do for tlx do IS OO da for on* year. tA OO ! ?i NUMW PIT 1MH ?nnU>s 1 4 OO for Ux da 22 OO ' 4v for ?t? y?*r. 30 OO Fir* aquMW. fbr oar jrnar, 40 OO Pr*CMok>M> **4 On ilim* C*nta, OO r?r um*. All *dTtrti**?a?ot* fi-r io*i than tmu mmtiu CASH. *th?r* nvrr li* mi p?a worn bit It ni nnn of lowrOoo* la ml ?p?ctn*i, in wtmio, 1 *dr?rUM?k*uU will U coatu>ckJ? till jrvirrwd oat, and Milaie acniMWtr. No adrerWeweoU, iwwrvw nui, will k* ooadJoral Lap* nit * ajuu*. jfs^l/LApOUa FANCY TALES FOR MONEY AND AMUSEMENT. The world hi* come to a singular pass in regard to its reading. The chango in this respect, in the reading provided for the people, wilhin the last twenty years, has Keen marked, as can well be iinngined The Christian family, then, would have no more permitted the kind of reading which is now popular among almost all ' clauses, than they would have allowed a person infeoted with some dreadful disease an association with fbfeir household. Novels, fancy tales, disuniting recitals, polluting reminiscences, the merest bsi derdaah, written, too, many times by persona professing morality and rcspcctible position, are now rend and relished by our children, even with the consent of pious and church-going parents. We huve j Dot been surprised, when wo hare oon aid>r?d the amount and character of the sthflf thrown off trout a prolific press, and ; seized with aridity by the public, that the , general taste and sentiment slvmld have | become so vitiated and oorrupt. The result of thin innovating and demoralising tendency ia already too apparent. The more substantial and improving kind of reeding, thai which rnlau-* to ths pructi.! cat duties and high responsibilities of life, with that, also, which directs thought j and feeling to their oterual destiny, has passed into an almost secondary oonaide-1 ration in the formation of character, and io the estimate of life's true position This is particularly true in regard to! the youth of the country. Other publicstions and books may bo read, and the tratbs which they contain may be considered with something like aobcrnoss of purpose; bat still the novel, whether it be one of the oomuton sbain moral tslee, tho improving every day life delineations, or some other form of disguise sought to doeeivo the public, is, sftersll, the passion of vast multitudes of the reading class of oar people. We need not seek eveo to present etiicnco for this opinion, j There is sesreelv a family bWaIi ? ?.?* I -r- r-> * "^ WM firilfd by what ia tanned the light reading of tbo day f/It is sold and booght arery wk&ra, **d i* praeoated in every . imaginable atyU and 4%oonUon to eatoh the attention. Dot while tbia fa ao, aud while luauMOM miechief m*H grow oat f what U termed the oomnon literature of the ooentry, ila fancy tale*, published for Money and amuaemont, we are (l*#io reeogniae a eoonteracting element at can in tA taultiuuhnoiu iaeac of merai and re Ugiooa hooka and other pabiicatieaa, by the various deuiominal'iooe, designed (to Mine oo tho young mind before it beeoiace an tire ly alienated from good and WfcelaeoaM rending. Tbia #a aatoena aa a . dkdwood to the age, and tba bright ator of promiae to tba rising gencmilon! Wt appeal to the Chriatian pnblia, to plena families to ?ot*i and lotollifent men and wpnoa. to Infaae thfa anintafy and life. isfrtoiss into the mieda of their ?id-.-. ? I |1'. _ , t - r?i rii ad . Wtp Mtor% VMMII dM MtftpKM, and tWr young MaaHa potaottcd, and ibsir 5 oieral habit* benumb gbtmnpmd from all which (a aulstostUi and bsrwuring in human pwgwi?thtfalo UkrtttOtn Mvo. .c?*, r-?.v / T; a ' M It ? sifrl ' \ -' i /a! ? f*' I##***? V r 'tie 1 THAT DEPARTETU, SPEECH IS CHEB THE BOTTOM OK THK SEA. Besides the countless varieties of the fuc| is, tho bottoia of tho sea is overgrown with a the curled, deep purple leaves of the jm a i lettuce, with a large porous lichens, and i many-branched, hollow algae, full of life ? and uiotiun in their roay little bladders, thickly set with ever-moving tiny arms. j These plants ff'?riu submarine furcata. growing one into another, in apparently 1 lawless order: bere interlacing their bran- t ch^s, there forming bowers and long avon- 8 ues; nt one time thriving abundantly, till t ho thiokvt seems impenetrable; then again leaving large openings between wold and c wold, where smaller plants form a beauti- ' ful pink turf. There a thousand hues and t tinges shine and glitter iu each changing i light. In tho indulgence of their luxuri- ^ l ous growth, the fuci especially seem to ! irratifv e*erv whim an A # *? l. : ? , - -v ? ?? UtCfpUI|J close to the ground, or sending long 1 stretching anus, crowned with waving t plumes, up to the blessed lie fit of heaven, they foriu pale green sea pro\ es,, when j there is riejthcr moon or star; or rise up near or to the surface, to be transooudently rich and gorgeous in brightest green, gold, 11 and purple. And through this dreamlike T scene, playing in all the colore of the fc rainbow, ami deep under the hollow, britiv 0 ocean, there sad nod chase each other! merrily gaily.pointed moliu-ccs, and bright I shining fishes. Snails of every shape j c creep slowly along the steins, while huge, t grey haired seals In.ng with their enormous : a tusks on large, tall trees. There is the : p gigantic Dugong, the siren of the ancients, . the side bng shark with bis leaden eyes, ! the thick haired sea Jeopard, and tho j sluggish turtle. : u Look how these strange, ill-simper forms r which ever keep thoir dreamless afe-tp far f down in the gloomy deep, stir iheiuaelvea n from tin) j to time I Set how they drive enoh other from their rich pastures, how ! they eeciu to awaken in storms, rising like P islan's from beneath, and snorting through t< the nngry spray ! Perhaps they gaze r peacefully in the unbroken cool of the ocenn'x Je?n liail !?"? 1 * 1 -r ? wwm iv * b nun pry shark comes alyly, silently around that * grove; it* glassy eyes shine ghostlike with n a yellow sheen, and seek their prey. The . ii aoa dog iirst becomes aware of hie dreaded cnoniy, end seeks refuge in the hieVeet n recesses of the fucus forest. In aq ioatiint the whole scene changes. The oyster closes its shell with a clap, and throws it- f> self into the deep below; the turtle conceals b head and feet under her impenetrable ar niouor, and ainks slowly downward; the a playful little (iah disappear in the branches of the inaroeystis; lobsters hide under the * thick, clumsily ahapen roots, and the ^ Vnunir Wulrtia klnn* liirn* L.Ulu Riuinil C > n ?- U J ? , an:! fares ?hn |gfrs: !ar shsrp-pttist-ed j leelli, The shark seeks to craiu his an- _ protected side. The Lattlc commences ; . b?.?th seek the fores*.; their (Ins become en- ( " tangled in the eloeely interwoven branches, at last the more agile shark suocetd* in o wounding his adversary's side. Despairing u of life, the bleeding walrus tries to oon ceai his agony iu the woods, but blinded by | pain and blood, he fastens himaelf am mg . the branches, and soon falla an easy prey to the shark, who greedily devours him. o ANCIENT WHEAT. J Two years ago, a acieutifio gentleman, n in making aruheological researches, in some of the ancient t,?nh? ! ,l? v?,L ?... bug OVUHt I Jj of France, found imbedded with some ^ preserved bodies a species of wheat not q now in existence. It was a Labit io the : _ 1 days of the first Oailio kings to plaee in p the coffin of emhalmed person* a certain c quantify of wheat. Some of tliia wiieat g was sown, and the gentleman was as- j j touished to see sprout fhrtj. fruta sixteen t| to twenty stalks from a grain. As they j q grow, the stalks became angular end ranch q stronger and umre vigorous then the p nonjmoa wheat. When the grain formed, it was found that I here were oo in average 1 twenty more grains in a bead then in the j ordinary wheat A eooaiderable quantity ti of this a anient Gallic or Woman wheat j H wan. sown last Fall on tbo Gtfyrnraent} ti l?nn si iUrabmiilUi, sod grsst reports ere, ti arriving of its pgvduoiivAwsa. The or. q dlonrj whmt of Fr?uos Is f suspsot, mly tho degeneration of this msisafc nhsat. diminished in vigor snd productiveness d by the centuries of reproduction through n which ithea fluid ,Tfcto discovery trill o tsko as beek through fourteen eeeturiae, ? fcr ?r sesd wbs*?, snd trfh pot Phtuee n mddfttlj in ptmissiae flf tnv eighth menu tgHMlhtrtl ncsltb Ihstl she wwnd n before tW <Wflpo*sey! At lea* Arse ere a tfcs .iltrrl Ssj*4 '** r>* ** ^ hoped iketlfcey tffl be rsctUsed -M >' { i PW* y$v 4'. fy'lfrvf ' ? 'J FLEETING A3 THE WIND? l AW, S. C., O 11 11 11. .i". INDIRECT SUICIDE. "1. Wearing thin shoe* and cottor locking* on damp nights, and in coo) ?iny weather. Wearing insuibcient cloth ng, and especially upon the limba and ixtremities. "2. Leading a life of anfoebiiog, atupid ziness, and keeping the mind in an an mtaral Mate of excitement by reading ashy novels. Going to theatres, partial md bulls in all sorts of weather, in th? binneet possible dress. Dancing till in a icmpieto perspiration, and then going lonte without sufficient over garments, hrough the cool, damp air. " 3. Sleeping on feather beds in seventy.nine bedrooms, without ventillation a( he top of the windows, and especially Vital ur (Hurt poraons KU Ulf 8IIUI StDtil, invent'il'sted bedroom. 4. Surfeiting on hot and very atimu ting dinners. Eating io a hurry, without h*lf masticating the food, and eating learltly before going to bed every night, rhon the mind and body are exhausted >y the toils of the day and tha excitement f the evening. *'5. Beginning in childhood on tea and offec, and going from one atep to another h rough ohowing and amoking tobacf, ml drinking intoxicating liquors By i^rsonal abuse, and physical and mental loesses of every description. '0. Marrying in haste and getting an neongenisl companion, and living the omainder of life in mental dissatisfaction, hiltivating jealosies and domestic broils, nd being always in a mental ferment. '7. Kseping children quiet by giving aregorie and oorOials, by teaching them ) suck ca dy, and by supplying them with eisins, nots, and rich cake. When they re sick, by giviug them mercury, tartar nietio, and arsenic, ander the mistaken : ,l.. ,i VIVIUII VIIM MICJ irf IDMiCin#? iikl dot riitact poisons. < 8. Allowing lh? Ioto of gain to absorb ur minds, wuw leave no tinto to attend 3 our health. Following sn unhealthy ccupation because iuodcj osn be uiade y it. 9 Tempting lbs appetite with bitters oa niceties when the stomach ujfi No, nd by forcing food into it when nature oes not demand sad even rejects it ? '.orir.andixtntf between meals. * ' ? ? - ?. ? i_ _ _ . _ ?l j iV. U9QI;;T;SK ? ??f = s~rs?sw? rorry about something or nothing.?Giv. ug way to fits of eager. < 11, Being irregular in all cur hibiu fbleeping sod eating. Going to bed a( nidnight and getting up at -,ooo. Eating oo much, too many kind# of food, and hat wbich la too highly seasoned. It. Neglecting to take proper care o( nrselrea, and not apply for medical advice rhen disease first appears. Taking tela rated quack medicine# to a degree ol aaking a drug ahop of the body. The above causae produce moro sick oss, suffering and death than all tpldem. m, malaria and ooatagioe, eombinad with rar, pestilence, and famine. Nearly all rho have attained to old ago have been aoiarkabte for equanimity of temper, orrect habits of diet, drink and rest? or temperance, cheerfultwea, mid Morality. tTjatael punuhmeat ia im la Tint the rena^r?or of n? tare's law*. AU Mnmii oieide, and cot off many yeare of their mini life who do wot oheerre the m?u o1 rerantiesdioeaae and ?fpreaerriag With. WHAT IN TffK ARCTIC MG10NS. The dm of mow wh?a pmoM m liiiwtj doee not by any roeeae alley the luetiabla deeira for water; tm the eonrmry, it appear* to be iuereeeed in ptopor. Ion to the quantity weed sad (he itf ueoey with which it i? pel into the loutfc. For example. a potato Ffikln| long ftebs iateoehly tbitotyv w?d be fooki owe with aerating eyee; bat Me pood MM and fin* iweeluttoe tie aok to be _ 1 U^i. ~ - --^ vtrtorat m mmlj,\WP* \* wilM**wt tkt pcA haail tfa* ? to ipntp Ai UiliMO tmmf It lino fait ptjMa* w?ti>. It? fato TftTtl MklM of ? Joor <J to tcoaiiyiMt, tu4 kit tkmi U etwj itettn; inor *? ?*... K k jHtf*f*Tw?g jrc#v sr4 . ** &m, ** ?h trr4aW?gtk kit pxxl M| fc? of *Vt T^rtiok, \it. I READING IS AN UNREMEMBK! CTOBER 1 4, I which produces a most exhilarating effect; i in loss than ten minute* he tastcfl again , and again, always increasing the quantity; ? and in half an hour ho baa a gum-stick 1 of condinsed snow, which ho masticates with aridity, ond replacea with assiduity 1 the moment that it ia melted away. But . hi* thirst is not allayed in the slightest ; degree; he is as hot as ever and still peri spires; his mouth ia in (lames, and he is ? driven to the necessity of quot-cling them \ with snow, which adds fuel to the fire. ; The melting snow ceases to please the , palf'e, and feels liko red hot coals, which, like a fire-eater, he shifts about with his - tongue, and swallows without the addition ; of ealiva. Ho is in despair; bat habit has r taken the place of hie lessoning faculties, , and he moves on with languid steps, la meriting the severe fate which forces him . to persist in a practice which in an un guarded moment he allowed to begin. 1 ; believe the true cause of such intense i mini 14 the extreme dryness of the air, I when the temperature is low. THE MORNING STARS. I lied occasion, a few week*) since, to ? take the early train from Providence to Boston; and for this purpose rose at two o' clock in the morning. Every 1 thing around was wrapped in darkness and hushed in silence, broken only by what seemed at that hour the uuearthly i clank and rush of the train. It was a mild, serene, midsummer's night, the sky was without a cloud, the winds were whist. The moon, then in the last quarter, had just risen, and the stars shone with a spectral lustre but little affocted by her presence. Jupiter, two I W ? ? LJ-t. .i t ? - I nuum mo ncraia 01 the day; 4 the Pleiadca, just above the horizon, shed their awect influence in the East; j Lyra sparkled near tho Zenith; Androj tneda veiled her newly-discovered glories from the naked eye in the South; the steady pointers, far beneath the pole, looked tneckly up from the depths of the North to their Sovereign. kl..A aL. I - I sj'ivii ?ns tnv glorious spectacle a* 1 1 enter ml tho train. As we proceeded, 'the timid approach of twilight became > more perceptible; the intense blue of the sky began to soften; the smaller i stars, like little children, went first to i * rest* ~j... ?r tl?o ? 1.1.4.. - soon melted together; but the bright constellations of the West and North 1 remained unchanged. Steadily the 1 wondrous transfiguration went on. ; Hands of angels hidden from mortal 1 eyes shifted the scenery of the heaven*, the glories of night dissolved into the f glories of the dawn. The blue sky now ? turned more softly gray; the grcal watch-* ur 3 shut up their holy eye*' t' the East began to kindle. Faint streslct of purple soon blushed along tho ky; the whole celestial concave was filled with the inflowing tides of the morning 1 light, which came pouring down from above in ono great ocean of radionco, 1 till at length we reached the Blue Hills; 1 a flash of purple fir* biased out from above tho horiscn. and turned tli* i!?w? tear-drops of dowers and loaf into rubi ies and diamonds. In a few second*, - the everlasting galea of the morning were thrown wide open, and the lord of r dcy, arrayed in glories too severe for the gate of man, began his course. I do not wonder at the saperstttion oftbe ancient MaginHs, who, in the ' morning of the world, went ?p to the ; hiii topa of Central Asia, and, ignorant of the trna God, ad ored the most . rions work of his hand. But % am filled with ami cement, when I am told ! . thai in this enlightened age, and in the 1 h??rt of the fftiristian world, tbero ar? [ persona who can witness this daife i manffoatatfnn of the new#r tm) wii/tn* I of th? Ofwttr, tod 'yat toy n? thiit btartt, "Tbero it no 0?d."?Ihn ,w | t?.At Irishman vrtt in tbn myjnttl. f Wnsl o<?cap*ticm of stoking row tgjP *cd Msdiwg a n?jw*papcr By some atahsfeM Utoutmod to boie tlli-e ekioken. VL< poor>t# +b?*i *? U ??o* down M? lerali iV.V) PASTIME; BUT A WRITING I 8 5 6. I NXVEQ GOSSIP. Oh no, I ncvef gJsuip ! T have enough to do to tako cure of of tuv business wilh. , ont talking about the affaire of other*, i Mrs. Smith. Whj, there's Mrs. Orooker, ( she deals in scandal by the wholesale ; it docs roem to nie ns thou gh that woman 'a tongue must be almost worn out; but no j danger of that. If everybody wna tike me i there wouldn't bo much trouble in the world. Oh no, I never gossip. J?ut did you know that Mian Elliot had got a now nilk dress i Mrs. Smith? You didn't ! I do euy it's a real brocade ; I aay it myself 1 do say ' it'b shameful for ber to be so extravagant; I incan to eivc hor * ?r , W. ...J | i Mrs. Smith? You believe her undo gave it to her? Well, 1 don't care if he did; why, it'# only two months since bcr father i i foiled, and now, to see her da-th out in ihis style its a burning shame. 1 suppose she ; thinks she'# going to catch young Lawyer ; i Stanhope, but I guess she'll find herself I mistaken; he's gjt tuoro sense than to be ! | caught by her, if she has got a brocade silk j dress. % And there's the upstart dressmaker,Kate < 1 Manley, setting her cap for the doctoi's son , 1' the impcrtioenc of some people is perfect* ly astonishing. I don't tbiuk she's any I better than the ought to be. for uiy own part; I never did like her, with her ratld | soft look, when anyone's around; tny word I j for it, she can look cross enough when then: ! ain't, then eke any* she's only seventeen ! i Goodness knows she's as old as uiy Arabella , Lucretia, and she's?Well, I wou't say how t old, but she's uiore'n seventeen, and I ain't 1 ashamed to say so either; but I guess Dr May's son will have more discretion than to think of marrying her. Some folks call her handsotno ? well I don't; she ain't half so good looking as; my daughter June; then the way eh? does j up her hair in such flyaway curls; and, it you believe it, Mrs. Smith, ahe actually had the impudence to toll me thatsho coulden't make thorn straight as iut Maria Jaue's. Impertinence ! if she'd let currling papers and curling irons alone, I'd risk hut what her hair would bo an straight as anybody's. But what dry you think of the miuister'a 1 wife, Mrs. Smith ? Yon like her! well, all I can say. isyoa're got a very peculiar ' i taste, why she's proud as Lucifer, been 1 i married a whole waek. and hasn't been to i\ V.~. j. -1.^ Iv.i'S hid I n\v WK. |\Vf I * V?a pr a ? ? ; timo? I don't see what the minister want1 cd to go out of town to got him ? wife for, 1 any way; and then above all things to get J that little girlish looking thing; wbydid\'t ' he take ooe of his parishoners T There's > my Arabella Lucretin would have made 1 him a better wife than he's get now; then ' she's she's just about the right age for hiw ' She is two yearn older than ths minuter} ? ( should think it was a pity if I didn't > know cuy own daughter'a age, Mrs. Smith ! ? if aorae folks would mind their own business j as I do, I'd thauk them 1 I Y Wactrlji Magazine. i A GEORGIA STORY. | Twenty yeats ?*go it was tbe cuttrm in j i north western Georgia, as indeed it mo j 1 throughout the southwest, fur dry goods dealers to k?wp a barrel of 'tpirtt* to the beek room, and to treat liberal caatooitra 1 , too gloat whenever doaired. Plliena and Dewberry were auch dealer* j , in one of the susll to wot indionted, and j they had he a customer a clever, ruilokieg j old fellow, who drank wbiakey in prefer- , even to water always r.^4 wboee wife war 1 -fleah of hU fleali' in that pellicular. The , old ample would eoinoto towu, trade quite 1 j freely; and freely imbibe the tpiriit in the J bae? rooms of tbe dealers we have a*ta*d * | Oe one eaonsion both the old oeu and [ old woman continued their potations leer. diantelyi and at KilJerie observed that hit r goods went better the dranW* tbe oty 1 ?osm?? hoootae, he piwhmd her to drink* At hist she refused note* he -would OF(?M*it with a KoU atiudi * 1 wt j-?r? *"* : Hurt indwjjrl b?, ?<? ?* - tke-jMpwl (fcrnw* :?SWpU? to ip* L. . - . ?L J L -IM IS ETERNAL."?'Tikm-IT*. NO. 18. . . . to him instinctively, ihry passed out of tha villago softly. Before reaching their hrorrc, however, t thry had to cross a small creek, end vrhon | the horse stepped in to drink, tho old lady 1 having reached unconciousness released her her hold and slid quietly into the stream | below. Arriving home, the children iu. quired for oianuuy.' but the old man could only nay tint she had beeu on tho critter | and tho crittor In dn't kiohtd oary time, ! w> he couldn't say whore she must be, and * ' '' turew lmnsel . stupid on the bed. | The g'nlaund bovj flew along the road the old man had come, yelling 'noamiuy !' mammy" but of course, no niauimy responded. - : When they arrived at the creek, tho " r ' t 1 oldest girl jelled Lhero she issittiag down in the creek?' And there she was abated comfortable in the water which came nearly up to her mouth. As she swayed beck and forth, ? . now yieding to the impeiuouaitj of tho stream, an ] now restating it with aomo success the nuudd.v fluid would occasionally wot her lips, and each time it did so she would faintly ex claim, with a prim qffurt to -. < * '& sinile : - -. % * Net a drop more, Mr. Fillena, 'jhcmt , 4 * it a sweetened. . i 9 i ? m K # A COt.K'J' bCHNE. "?v?. Here is another of these Western court sccr.es wnich ? we read about/' aa related. 1 -y by Jenny Nobs. It will do: > ^ JudgeB ,of Missouri was, in many > ' V I -' respects, a remarkable roan. He stood ei* ** \v r feet two inches in I ii boots, and wan U | food of w frolio as tha most rultleing lad in. *.y? ttlf. Miinlra Uj ... ..I."i " * ^ . it( vuuiw urmn I1IOIV I njuor, | "lirt" a heavier "bag'o'tneal, ' and play a ,< belter game of ?pokcr" thau any man in ' bin circuit. These admirable quatifiof'iona f of coarse rendered bin> the moat popular ,. i judgo of the bench of ilia district. Vet bo never lost his dignity while oo hia bench. ' There, ho vena stern haughty and dignified. j Tbo least approach to familiarity, whilo i ho vtha, ai'*jng iu courtj-wis alvrayw resoc'.' ed by a fine, and sometiuiee by imprison| meot. Well, it happened ^on* day, while i ho **as holding dour*. that Mr. Dewxcnbo; ry, a rough looking but iodepewdact customer, eaiue iota toe court room with hia I hat on bis head. Tbie the judge consider > . I a __ -i:? :a-. a jtWJktiu. i " v * I CU ? UUCI CU VU tuu WU??f aau? t|r; j # f .. % ^ ! lortftwtm . Mr. D. to sake as hi*, > . To thi*, Mr. Dawacnbyry paid no AiUir- , "\-F7$l< 1 | tion, which being obeorrcd by bie honor, ' he ordered the sheriff to "take the man's I S t! w , T jtottf* ' ; < I "Take your hat off." eric J the sheriff. | Mr. Dewaenbtiry remained motiotoleee, ' , while theju Ige proceeded to huaincts. At /. i'^6' list'raising his eyes, Kia'hooor agaiu dim. covered tho incorrigible standing with his' hat upon his heed. > , <t. , , "Sheriff 1" cried the Court,- "talc* tbet ' ^ ' ^ . man's hut off " Tho 8boriff approached aod repeated the commend of the Court. ' Fa bald," laid Mr. D., "and oan't ^comply," ??'You oan't ezelalmod the judge, wax- > x ^ rag angry, <<thee Ifine you fivo dollars for I contempt of Conrt." a;. 4i.? ?isL'_ ? ? " - . .?.u???. JUO ?Jh JOttg*? v V V \ Mr, D., eehewelkeddoliWetelyop *? "1 jo-jCto lullere, eir for eoTilemp* ;'' '''' .'Jk ofcu?."' . 'Vwtj %*H," wild Mr. D , m hec&refal\% bvt his hand into Ui? poa^et, a?d palled oat a Ufty o?W pfcce. 5 -'Vtrj welt* W? $1 <$?$& q the o?oiwy>M handing tho judge the half | duller, \?* jodge. To* <>*?*'*Jtp I tte four dolUw and a half when we I pfcytag ** ?l*** ?d :. Aid half I W9km ? $?* : 4 I. *h? her K>r<sd, th# etowd tmM, end t&R'Sr?" ""* ***