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SHERIDAN & SIMS, Proprietors. SUBSCRIPTION. Ono Year.K........V..81.50 Six Months.i.....1.00 MinhtersiOf tho Gospel.1.00 Advertisements. u First Instortlon.v..$1.00 Enoh Subsequent Insertion.50 Liberal contracts madu for 3 month ami over. JOB P4?Fip^ 18 PREPARED TO DO ALL ?{KD8 OV ejp]3 printing' HODRKipi ?o? -HOW IT IS OUSERVED IN DIFFERENT \ ' COUNTRIES. ?'. As we look, back upon the struggles of map, up'"1 to the present stage of civilization, we find t'pat many and rancd have been' the moans devised by hiili for showing forth to the pub lic the grief ensuing upon a death. The HcbreWo of b*fdf fpupd vent for their feelings upon the death of rela tives and friends in frantically smit ing themselves and tearing their gar ments and hair. They neither bathed nor shaved, nor did they cut their nails, nor dress themselves. Their beds were not made up. They shut themselves ' up in their hoiises? and saluted' nobody. Fortunately the pe riod for the?? exhausting manifesta tions was short,"being mostly seven, and never over thirty days. The mourning customs of the Egyptians woro similar to thoso of the Hebrews, ?with Slight variation. Their women ran crying through the streets. 1 Among the Greeks and Romans also, mourning for the departed was conducted in much the same style, but carried to a greater extreme. They wore a coarse black stuff for apparel, and rolled themselves in the mire pr dust. They put ashes on their heads, tore their hair, shaved their beads, and scarred their faces. They cried aloud with often-repeated drawling topes of lamentation. They excluded tbemselyes from all enter tainments and public solemnities, as well a3 denied themselves the pleas ure of music, and drank no wine. When a popular general died the whole of my cut off their hair and the manes of their horses. Among the Syrians exhibition of grief was deemed so unmanly that any man wearing mourning was com pelled to put on female attire. There are many curious ways of manifesting sorrow for the departed still exiBtipg jn Arabia. While the men show no evidence of grief, the women stain their hands and fect _with }PdiS?J whifI1 Lbpy wear for eight days." During this period they will drink no milk, its white color not according with the gloom of their minds. In Syria they have very affective scenes at funerals, by means of hired mourning women, who arc adepts in the art of weeping. A death there is often a ruinous event for the finances of a family, the com memorative feasts being so costly and so indefinitely prolonged. White is the color'of mourning in fJhina. All their apparel, even the cord which ties the gowns, and the yery shoes, must be of that color. The wearing is enforced by law under }ieavy pen alties. They employ mourning wo men at their funerals, who appear to have immense fountains of tears at command, ^he Japanese also mourn in white. ' They shut themselves up in thpjr houses for fifty days, during which time they neither shave their heads nor cut their nails. Among savages are found many curious customs for mourning the dcficj. yf iih the Africans in Nuhier, the business of loud lamentation ?> > v, - t> - t is undestood to perfection, and if a map die leaving a little property, it 1b most likely wholly exhausted by the feasts which are held in honor of his memory. If a woman die, her friendy of her own sex continue for mapy successive evenings after her funeral to make pilgrimages to her grave. Man must not look upon the face of woman while engaged in these mourning duties. Arrived at the grave the whole neighborhood is made to resound with their lamentations and waitings. Among some yet more savage people, the Feejee Is l?nders, we find that some fifty to a hundred, fingers are amputated and placccl over the tomb of'a chief, and njtjiough they fast until the evening during1 the first ten days after his ; deatnJ the period is enlivened by comip games held in honor of his memory. A.mong the Sandwich Is land nhtiven, they blacken the lower part' of the face, in mourning, and give a permanent expression to their flense ' of bereavement by knooking out their front tectb. It seems cniitc evident that as man is elevated ho shakes off the coarse jdea of turning the' sacjfbd period, when a soul, Jjas just passed from among us, into a time of any sort of riotous excitement. Even much vio lent 'weeping afe'wp bear of, noi, very long back, wiopld not he approved now. ' phateaubriand tells of the groat credit that was given to him -;-r~-, * '? for the manner in which ho wept at his daughter's grave. 1 Wo see that the most excessive demonstrations for sorrow have at tended nu era in this worldls history which we have left behipd,. Jt is a sad thing, however, that we have such a gloomy relic' of former days among us as tl)o black garb, by which tho biightucss of many a life is blighted. It is a mere matter of fashion?worn by the majority of the world for no other cause. I have known a widow driven to wear black, for which she had an abhorrence, and which her husband had never allowed her to wear, by the fact that '^people would think she 'did pot treat his memory with respect."' She could not face Mrs. Grundy. It is through the dread of this same personage that many spend the lost cent they have in order to procure black clothing. The poor copy the rich. A man dies and perhaps, after a handsome funer al is paid for, and tho family attired in black, there is not as much money left as will buy a loaf of bread. This fashion of I'going in black" is a most tyrannical custom. It is like a con tagious disease. Minds which we would suppose incapable of the infec tion take it, aud so on the first be reavement, a whole family, even to the little ones, are in black. One can see that there may be states of mind to which black clothing is ac ceptable, but inasmuch as these are unhealthy states, it is not well to fos ter them. There is bqt cue event o! which we all are sure?that called Death. Our friends may look for, and long for, and expect our birth, but until we arc really arrived hither from the invisible world, all is uncer tainty. Not so with the great mes senger through which the way is opened to the great Beyond. "We cannot be happy while we live in dread of this great translation, nor can we be happy if we fix ourselves in a state of rebellion against God's laws, when it bears out of our sight for a time opr dearly loved ones. Every moment that we live some of our great human family are passing away, but the sun shines, the flowers bloom, all nature is as beautiful as before. The great march of life goes on. It is well for us if we keep our souls attended to tho harmony of God's law, so that we can keep step when the music changes. I have said we can never bo happy in ? ctate of rebellion to the manifest will of our Heavenly Father. This we certainly are when we go about enveloped in mourning. There is no good side from which to contemplate the custom. Jt is often too a mere mockery. l*erhaps, in additiou to tup wearing of black, it may l^e the fashion of a city to ?'bow the windows" for a year, or longer, after a bereavement. Where the custom of tho place sanctions heavy outside window shutters, the opportunity is very favorable for this mode of expressing grief. It is not unusual to cec houses, for years to gether, with the shutters tied by black ribbons, the ends of which are carefully pushed out for the contem plation of passers by. It is quite im possible that God will leave i}8 so comfortless in our loss, but tb.at a good measure of cheerfulness will in a little while be our portion, and so it happens that the front of a house may be decked in the ^habiliments of woe," and its occupants, in their black garbs, have quite a lively ?imc within. That they should have a lively time is a grand and natural thing. We need not try to contend with the inevitable. Tho cheerful ness is all right; it is this "mocking of woe" that is wrong. Then too, mourning is unhealthy. No one can get a healthy breath of pure air be hind a black crape veil. Much inno cent life is crushed out by it, materi ally, as well as spiritually. There is a world of vanity in this snmo garb. People are exceedingly careful to have the exact right fashion for their especial phase of grief. Flounces may be worn in one way? plaited, we think it is?but in no wise may they be worn gathered; things must all be very nice and har monize well in tho early stages of grief, for "people look at us so when we first go out." pining the sacred period, when the loved form from which the spirit has just dep'.rtcd, remains with us, what n desecration it seems to have the mind distracted by thoughts of our clothing, lloft paltry and uttorly insignificant an occupation.?Prog ress. ? ?? > "The Butlers and the Camerons." In the Philadelphia Times of the 17lh insb., appears an article signed ?lJustice," in which the writer seeks to prove that Simon Cameron did cot tell tho truth when he allodged that his son Don1* voted, recently, in the Senate, for Butler rather than Corbin, because in 1857 Senator A. P, Butler, uncle (not father) of the present Sen ator, did Comeron a service in do fending him against the assaults of Bigler. "Justice" searches the Con grcssiohnl Kecorc] and Globe of 18f)7 to sustain him. It "ig a matter of little importance to us why Don Cameron sustained Butler. Perhaps "Justice" is correct in that part of his article. We take issuo with hjm because ho closes by saying that the true grounds for Don Cameron's vote were services rendered by Patterson to SJmon Cameron in a more recent Senatorial contest, and adds, "for since th,at vote wo already see immu nity guaranteed by South Carolina to John J. Patterson." If this asser tion were true, why should Don Cam eron be under obligations to vote for Butler because John J. Patterson ren dered services to Simon Cameron in a recent Senatorial contest? If "Justice" would leave the ltccord arid Globe of 1857 and read the pa pers of to-day, he would find in every one of them, of auy prominence, Pat terson's denial of the charge that he had circulated that report?--and tho fastening ot the miserable inuendo on the very fellow?Corbin?who "Jus tice" doubtless thinks is entitled to Senator Butler's seat. Moveover, Gov. Simpson and Attorney-General Yuumans have positively denied tjpat any pardon or' immunity had been extended Patterson, and this denial has been heralded all over the coun try. If wc supposo "Justice" igno rant of these facts, it argues him de cidedly behind the Times. If he was not ignorant, and wrote his mticlc with a full kuowl.dge of these facts, he was bitter and disingenious?lo draw the case mildly. "Justice," we of the South have little enough, God knows, for which to thank either Simon or Don Came ron. But if you knew Butler and Corbin as well as we of South Caroli na do, you would think Don had done the noblest act ot his life when he voted to retain Butler, the chevalier, in, and eject Corbin, the thief, from, a scat in the Senate of the United States.?Neicherry News. Southern Baptist Convention. The Southern Baptist Convention, numbering 437 delegates, will assem ble in Atlanta, Ga., on the 8th of May next. In tho South, according to church statistics, there arc 17,411 Baptist Churches, 9,347 ordained Baptist ministers, 1,436,709, members of Baptist Churches, 5,575 Baptist Sunday Schools, 38,079 oQlccrs and teachers, and 806,064 pupils iu Bap tist Sunday Schools. Georgia leads the van in churches, ordained minis ters, and members ; Missouri in Sun day Schools, officers, teachers and pupils ; Maryland has a membership of 7,607, while she has in her Sunday Sch'ools* a total of 10,191. The States at the last Convention wore entitled to the following representatives : Maryland 33, Virginia 63, North Carolina 41, South Carolina 46, Geor gia 72, Florida 4, Alabama 22, Mis sissippi 23, Texas 9, Missouri 20, Arkansas 7, Tennessee 17, Kentucky 80, West Virginia and the District of Columbia will be represented in the approaching convention. Albinos. Albinos are individuals in whom, by some defect in their organization, the substance or pigment which givos color to the skin, hair, and eyes, is absent or deficient. These persons, whether Indian, negro, or white, are of a uniformly dead, milky hue, with hair of the same shade, and from the eyes being deficient in the black, pr blue, or hazel pigment, the iris is of a deep "red, and the circle around the pupil is of a pink color; hence they are commonly spoken of as having pinjc .eyes. The name Albino was originally applied by the Portuguese to the white negro on the const of Africa. The Albinos generally lack tlie strength of other men, and are also deficient in mental capacity. The phenomenon is supposed to result from a cjiseascd organization, but its ultimate cause Is not knowp. White cows and white blackbirds arc speci mens of Albinos, as nro also white mice. %- ' ? *? 4? " I1IVEN UP FOR LOST. ?o? STKAMSHIf'S WHICH HAVE NEVEtt BEEN " * HEARD FROM. )!' ?'' Tho oyiijpnt Joss of tho steamer Zanzibar, with thirty-three men, re calls memories of other steamships whoso fate remains sealed, and which have ncvpr been heard from r not a singlo survivor having remained to tell tho story of the wreck. Wbptber they went down by fire, stprm pr col lision with an ice-berg will forever remain a mystery. The following are the principal cases of loss steamers arranged chronologically : The loss of the steamship President, which sail ed from New York for Liverpool on March 11, 1840, cast a gloom over the whole land. It was in tho early days of steam navigation, 'and the new power had nQt yet gained the confidence of the people. Among her passengers was the celebrated' Irish comedian Tyrone Power, who was re turning homo from a highly:success ful professional tour in this country. Days, weeks and inontbs passed without any tidings, and then she was given up for lost. The loss off this steamer was a serious blowtp: pomr mercc, ns pcoplo distrusted the new motive power as applied to seagoing vessels, and refused to intrust their lives or their property to ships pro pelled by it. ' Public confidence, however, was soon' restored as years passed Und many voyages wcro made without any serious disaster, but suddenly the community was shocked by the tidings that the Pacific, of the Collins line, a uiapificcnt ocean steamer, which left Liverpool on January 23, 185G, with over 200 passengers, yjjp overdue. From the day she left the dock she was never heard from, and hundreds of families through the land were in mourning, Among her pas sengers wprp several prominent New York citizens, including Edward Sandford, one of the first lawyers of the New York bar, whose loss W03 deplored by all his associated^ A long time now elapsed, during ^ich there was little cause to complain of the treachery of the ocean. It is true disasters occurred nod lives were lost, but the fate of wrecked vessels was not a mystery. The steamship traffic between the new and old worlds was continually' on the in ciea8e.. P.eople becanje so accustom ed to the rapid transit of the Atlantic that it was contemptuously spoken of as "the pond;" and a voyage to Eu rope, once a "matter of grave delibe ration, became a feat too common to mention. In the spring of 1864 the traveling community was rudely awakene~d to a sense of its insecurity by the loss of the City of Glasgow, of the Iumau line, which disappeared from human sight and knowledge with 450 precious lives. This disas ter was followed by the ewallowing up the City of Boston, which sailed from Halifax on Tuesday! January 25, 1870, with 1Q0 passengers, au^qng whom were many'-prominent men. It would naturally bo suppos ed that these appalling occurrences would have the effect of lessening European travel. On the contrary, it appears that it has in no way seri ously affected it, and people are still willing to commit themselves to the mercy of tbo treacherous sea. The latest recorded case of a trans atlantic steamship which has never been beard from?except the Zanzi bar?is that of tho Colombo, of the Wilson line, which sailed from Hull, England, for New York in December^ 1877*. She had but one passenger, and was laden with an assorted car go. Her crew numbered sixty per sons. Of these yessels and their precious human freight nothing in this world will ever bo known, mid until the sea gives up its dead the cause of their disaster and the way they ncet their death must remain a matter of conjecture. Judgment of Men. Don't judge a rnan by tho clothes ho wears. God made one and tho tailor the other. Don't judge him by his family con nections, for Cain bclongpd lb a very good family. Don't judge a man by his failure in life, for many a man fails becaus'o he is too hopest to succeed. Don't judge a a^an by his speech, for the parrot talks, and the tongue is but an instrument of sqund. Don't judge a man by tho house he lives in, for tho lizzard nnd the vat often inhabit the grandest structures. ?-'-M . 7 Tribulations ot a Local Editor;. Once upon a time a local editor dreamed that he was dead and in an other world. Ho approached the gate of a pity before him and knocked for admittance, but no one answered his summons. The gate remained closed against him. Then he cried aloud for an entrance, but the only response was a score of hcotjs appear ing above the wall on each side of the gatp. At flight of him the owners of the heads set up a dismal howl, and one of them cried : "Why didn't you notice the big egg I gave you ?" At this horrid and most unexpected interrogation the local turned in tue direction of the voice to learn its owner, when another yoicp shrieked : '.'Wherelg tbp piece you were going to write about my soda fountain?" and close upon this was the awful de mand : "Why did you write a piece about old Toddle's fence and never say a word about my new gate?" Whatever answer he was going to frame to this appeal was cut ubruptly off by the astonishing query : '/What did you spell my name wrong in the programme for?" The miserable man turned to llee, when he was root ed to the spot by this terrible de mand : "Why did you put my mur riage among the deaths?" He was on the point of saying that the fore man did it, when a shrill voice loudly cried: "What'made'you put in my runaway, und spoil the sale of ray horse?" And this was followed by the voice 'of* a female hysterically proclaiming: "This is the brute that botched my poetry, and roude me ri diculous.'' Whereupon hundreds of voices screamed ; "Where's my arti cle? Give me back my article." And in the midst of the horrid din the poor wretch awoke, perspiring at every pore and screaming for help. A Touching Incident. A lady in the street met a little girl between two and three years cl'd, evidently lost, and crying bitter ly. The lady took the baby's hand and asked where she was going. "Down town to And my papa," was the sobbing reply. "What is your papa's name?" ask od the }ady. "His name is papa." "But what is his other name? What does your mamma call him ?" "She calls him papa," persisted the little creature. r The lady then tried to lead her along: "You bar. better come with me. I guess you came from this way." "Yes ; but I don'.t want to go bach. I want t? lind my papa," replied the little girl, crying afresb us if her heart would break. 44 What dp you want of your papa ?" asked the lad)'." "I want to kiss him.". Just at this time a sister of the child, who had been searching for her, came along um} took possession of the littlo runaway. From inquiry it appeared that the little one's papa, whem she was so earnestly scekiiig, had recently died, and 8Ue tired of waiting for him to come home, had gone out to find him.? Cleveland Her ald. Too Late. The following incident took place in Washington County, Texas. The jury of a circuit court, before whom a miserable wretch had been tried, re turned a verdict of "guilty," and sug gested the "whipping post.'/ The court adjourned for dj riper. Immedi ately after dinner tho defendant's counsel, without consulting his unfor tunate client, moved for a new trial, and commouced reading the motion.' "Hold on!" whispered thp client, pulling at the counsel's coat-tails. "Don't road that!" "Let me aione,"" muttered the law yer, irritably; "I'll attend to you when I've read tho motion." "But I don't wont you to read the motion," whined the agitated culprit. "Don't want mo to read it? Why not? \Viints tho matter? I'm going to get 1 you a new trial!" "But I don't want a new trial," ex claimed the wretch. "Don't want one 1 Why not?" re turned tho other heatedly, frowning from under his eyeglasses. ' ?''Cause it!s too late," urged the client. "While you wcro all out to dinner the sheriff took me out, and ho's whipped the very hide off me." The motion was summarily with* drawn. ? tv*?? ; ? - ' ? ~ Beautiful Incident. A beautiful illustration of tbe pweetness and power of a child's sim ple faith is given in an Incident relat ed of* a recent wreck of the new Bteamcr "Maasaphusptts" on Long Island Sound. Among the many passengers were two mothers, each with a child, who were noticeable for their calmness during the iiour of greatest peril and anxiety, when it Seemed'that the vessel must shortly go to pieces. A passenger from tho city of Philadelphia says his atten tion was Qrst called to them by their voices in singing. Going toward them he "found a little boy standing there wjtji his life preserver on, and tho littjp fellow was just joining with his mother in singing one of Moody and Sankey's hymns?a hymn of trust and confidence." As the hours pass ed on, mothers and children sat there together singing or conversing calmly, ready for whatever God had in storp for them. They were fully aware of their danger, but their faith was unshaken in Him who said, "When thou passest through the wa ters, I will be' with thee ; and through the rivers (hoy shall not overflow thee. Fear not for I am with thee." And when rescue came, and the passengers were safe on another vessel, those same sweet voices were again heard singing, this time in a ringing strain of praise for their deliverance ; and so powerful was this example over their fellow-passengers, that there was quickly a gathering about them of those who were saved from impend ing death ; and prayer, and the songs of joy, and glad words of gratitude went up from one and anothpr, until, as one says, **It was the best prayer meeting I ever attended." Tbefe, surely, was praise perfected out of the months of the little one. And it is such trust as \\\fxr vyhicji we paay look for in the children of our Sanday Schools, who are brought and trained to a confidence in the Lord Jesus as their all-sufficient and their ever-pres ent Saviour. Courts Martial. Things are beginning to look squal ly says the Winnsboro News and Her ald,. Those adjutants who foolishly accepted office in the State militia, looking only to the gold lace, brass bu' tons and the glory of the dress parade, will now tremble in their boots at the imminent danger they arc now threatened with, of death sentence by a drum-head court-mar tial. And as all tho worthless weap ons will have been changed by De cember for others of a deadly nature, the condemned can indulge in no pleasing hope of a cap snapping or a gun bursting and hoisting the execu tioner with hi3 owp petard. By a singular omission no provision is made for killing off several hundred governor's aides at the same limo. This is discrimination of tho most flagrant nature. A court-martial should be organized to see that every colonel iu the service, whether of stall' or line, have a pair of spurs at least six inches in diameter, and not les3 than forty-eight brass buttons on iho breast and sixteen on the coat tail. "The adjutants must not suffer alone. ' If thtfy do they will ever bo monrncd"a8 martyrs to the cause, and their death will be avenged. "Is This Sent Opcupied?" An old but vigorous-looking gen tleman, seemingly from the rural-dis tricts, got into" a par and walked its full lengtjjj without receiving an invi tation to sit down. Approaching one gentleman who had a whoje bench to himself, he asked: "Is this seat oc cupied?" "Yes, si", it is," imperti nently replied the other. "Well," replied the broad-shouldered agricul turalist, "I will keep this scat until the gentleman comes." The original proprietor withdrew himself haughti ly to ope end and looked insulted. After hwhile the tram got in motion, and still nobody came to claim the seat, whereupon the deep-chested ag riculturalist turned and said : "Sir, ff USD you lohl me this seat was occu pied you told mo a lie"?such was his plain language?"I never sit near a liar if I can avoid it; I would rath er stand up." Then appealing to an other party, he said: ^'Sir, may I sit next to you? You don't took like a liar." We need hardly say that he got his scat, and the original proprie tor thought that there was something wrong about our social ayatem.?Bal timore Gazette. A SXBA^GK CA8ICOF ^ltAJ{C^ REPOBTK? FitKKLANpviLi-E, March 15.?Wha? is considered a remarkable case of trance has happened here lately. The victim is Mied Flora Feiblemann, the daughter of a well-to-do farmer, residing near this place. The facts, briefly as possible, are these: Miss Feihlemauo, whose family are Catho lics, returned from the school of Noire Dame, Indiana, last December. Since her return she lias been in very ..... u 1 . R >? ?\V? ill health, seeming to bp generally affected, moaning and tossing in fever at night. Immediately after the late cold spell she was attacked v/lth pneumonia, now so fatally prevalent in this region. Notwithstanding she, i had the best medical attendance to I be procured in this vicinity, she died on Monday, March 3rd, or at leas), apparently des,d, for the village phys ician in charge so pronounced her. It was decided to hold the corpse un til relatives from Ohio, who had been sent for, could arrive. This delayer} the burial until March 8th. The fun eral was to take place at 2 o'clock. At that time, as the friends and rela tives were taking a last look, tho corpse not yet having been taken from the house, the mother being last to view the remains, suddenly bent over the body, and uttering a cry^ declared that the eyelids moved as in life. "lbe father, with other friends, commenced immediately to try, by gentle movements, to with draw her from the room. They had nearly accomplised this, when the corpse, to the surprise of all, sudden ly arose and assume^ a sitting pos ture in the c?fSfn. J Miss Feihlemnnn is said by those who witnessed the scene to have gazed around with a vacant stare, and then, unlike cases of trance usually, to have sunk back apparently exhausted. She was im"" mediately removed and placed in a bed, but it was perhaps three hours before she was conscious enough tq give any account of herself. The last she remembers was before her apparent death, when lying in bed, and the inteivening space is to her] like a dreamless Bleep. The case ex cites much 'comment in the neighbor hood. Fair for Marriageable Daughters. Baby shows have become a matter of common occurrence ; but what shal^ we say to an annual fair for mairi ageble youug girls? Such a shov/ took place a short time since, and is. of immemorial custom among , tho Roumanians. As the time for tho fair approaouer, the father whoso children are marriageble collect what they can afford as a dowry. What ever this consists of ft is packed, if possible, into a cart or carriage, and On the appointed ifay they all?fath ers, children, mid qlmtte]r>?-str.rt' for some try sting place, generally chosen among the western mountains of Transylvania. When the fair is op ened, tho fathers climb to the top of their cariiages, and shout with the whole power of their lungs, "1^ havo c, daughter to marry. Who wants a* wife?" The call is answered by some1 other parent who haa a son he is anxious to pair off. The two parents' compare notes, and, if the marriage portion is satisfactory, the treaty iij then and there concluded. The'young man takes possession of his wife and ail her goods and chattels, and drives oil merrily. If, on the cither hand, the match is not equal, or for some reason or other unsatisfactory, then tW'parcnts begin to cry their five merchandise once more. If, How n Lady Avoids Crowding. Speaking of that woman who com plained of ill usage at the Evangeli cal Alliance, a lady writes to the Ob-' > ? * v server: "A womanly woman never gets jammed, or crowded, or pushed* I am neither young nor pretty, but t never stand nor am shut out. Do yon know why? Simply because I never I push. If I do get into a crowd, and am pushed before a man, I beg parr don, and simply step back* and give him his place. Do you shppose-'hj} lets me? Never. On the contrary ho will help mo forward, and I thank him, and then he helps mo more. No man but will help a quiet lady; but don't they like to be rude to a mas culine woman? I firmly beliove they all do, and for it wo have only to thank the woman's4 fights move ment." *