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* . I f " " .?< r. . ' . ** ? " ' . ; v i-. "J; ' D1V0T1D TO MTRR ATURR,THR??ARTS^^SCISNCI, AGRICULTURE, KHWS, MLmOsT^T &C 7 ' TEEMS?ONE DOLLAR PEE ANNUM,] "Lot it be Instilled into the Hearts of your Children that the Liberty of the Press is the Palladium of all your Rights."?Junius. [PAYABLE IN ADVANCE * Ok : " VOLUME 2?NO. 26. ABBEVILLE C. H;; SODTII CAROLINA, FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 3, 1854. WHOLE NUMBER 78. rUtiTRY. j's ' [rOKTUE WDEPKMDJCKT PRISS.] Boldotu of Speech Recommended. Messrs. Editors : The unmerited r' buke you have recently received for expressing your preference between two rival candidates has called forth the following article. Without seeking in the slightest degree to detract from the merits of others, Col. Brooks, I may say, is one of the risincr shitosmon nf "whom South Carolina may well bo proud. "Paul waxed bold."?Ada of the Apostle*. Bo bold, ye ministers of grace, Amongst an erring, sinful race, And shun not to declare to all Our sad declension by the fall I Let not your lips or tongue be tied, Before the haughty sons of pride: Unto the "filthy dreamers" show Their present guilt and future woe; And to the sordid misers tell Their brother Dives is in hell. Bo bold, ve Datriota of tho Innrl With cenaure and with shame to brand Tho wretch who'd s?ek again to light The torch of terror, awe and fright, That lately blazed throughout the State, Attended by the fiends of linte: Behold, ye patriots, our foe Await* to strike a deadly blow; Like brethren, therefore, we should be Prepared to meet tlie enertiy. Ye who conduct the public Press, Your'censure or your praise express, Regardless though you rouse the ire Of Tillage gent or country squire. Be bold the statesman to commend. Wlio shows himself the pnorLE's khienw; Bo bold, likewise, and blame bestow On him who shows himself their foe. Thus faithful seutinels you'll bo To guard our lives aud liberty. Ye Carolinians, one and all, The sainted dead upon you call, To trust not those who shall foment Disunion, strife, and discontent; If in your councils they should be, They'd stir up strife and enmity? In heaven itself, should thev cet there. The blade* would soon kick up a flnre, And have some censure? or complaints Agnii.st the seraphs or the saiotsl Hafiz. MISCELLANY. [foe the independent rciesb.] The Self-Murdered Wife. The history of the Liquor Traffick is the repletest page in the annals of retrospective crime, woe, and ruin. This society-corrupting and soul-bligliting curse has scattered, as upon the breath of a it j _i il. _ c?1?<. 1?i _ -1*1-11 iuuumuu aturuia, iue luuiwt iimmna 01 uen. Its ravages, as the foot-prints of " the angel of death," are graven, in glaring relief upon every feature, condition, and rank of human society. Urged forward by the inspiration of Mammon, and the love of "dishonest gain," it has fou, with insatiable thirat, upon human blood, and chanted its triumphs with the furious strains of the "song of death." The melancholy incident which we are now about to relate, occurred in the Fall season of 184?, in the county of C , in North Carolina. The unfortunate individu al who forms the subject of our mournful narrative, -waa the wife of William L , a religiont diatilUr / Slie had been for a number of years a highly respectabe and exemplary member of the samo denomination of which William L bimsel^waa a nominal member; and possessing in too small degree those amiable traits of character which ever adorn her sex, she was justly regarded a "model woman." The reaponsSbilities involved in the relations of a wire sod mother were acted oat by her with all the characteristic fidelity and affection of a noble and Virtuotw heart The happiness and interest of her family was the theme that occupied with intensest emotions her heart ladder life. But, she had a distiller for tier husband. Unfortunate woman! We tiaVd nftn (Km. nnr) nifo IViao aiill We haVe ilnadf remarked that bet hu?band, or rather the .*yrwitr monster whom, aite tu doomed I UmSgnw as ?u?bt wa* alao member of the ^ ^miog s . ^ _ . ??***" & ; ;>\ ' . */ '; - tsk?. -F:#!,.^V\v*:.. > .. ,. . 'v.;.J/*'-" /,;<v->'?&.."* /jfe':'^'/, unfeeling, heartless deliberation with which he demanded her name to be stricken from the Church of her preference, was enough not only to provoke tho reprobation of men but also to arouse tho indignation of devils. His friends remonstrated?his wife implored; but all, all, was utterly unavailing, for vengeance inhuman kept the bosom of the tiger-man ! "Take her name off the book," was his ouly response to the entreaties and tears of the minister, congregation, and, more than all, his poor wife. The name of William L lives in our memory but to be regarded as one of the , worst of men. Devoid of principle, pity or shame, and stained with the blood of her whom he had sworn at God's altar to protect, cherish, and love, his life has been a slander upon the society of men, and his acts a disgrace to the sympathy of friends. The fearful day of eternal retribution, however, awaits him, and we are content that it is so. From the moment that it wasannouueed h\7 tllP miniotnr Vt ??? ? T ?? ?j ...W bUUb libl/.A JLi III I consequencc of her husband's demand, no 1 longer a member of the church at Kadish, 1 a cloud of mental anguish was seen to gatli- , er upon lier once cheerful but now woe- ; smitten countenance. The minister wept, 1 and the congregation was bathed in tears. A I'oor Eliza wept too. Iler delicate frame 1 shook as the leaf of autumn is shaken by 9 the first breathing of wintry winds. With 1 feelings that mock description, she arose and c left her favorite seat, to be occupied by her no more forever. Her troubled heart throb- ? bed its last farewell, in silent grief, to her t much loved brethren, as she bent her way t e i ~e ? ' mjiu uic nuust: ui uieir communion 10 I lie * fatal spot of self-destruction. A few nights of more than Tautalian tor- ;| ture is endured by this miserable and un- 1j protected woman, and she desperately re- n solves to die ! In prosecution of her pur- s ???? ?1.? 4_ 1 ?ftl r 1 I pvmcf one is ewu iu stem buiuy up irom ucr ?. more than weary pillow, and by tlie dim j light that flickered upon the hearth, to pass c from the eldest of her children to the young- c est, imprinting as she goes a mother's last 8 kiss upon the unconscious lips of the innocent sleepers. She lingers for a moment s while she holds in her hand the little fingers of the quietly sleeping babe. But all is n over. Her frenzied soul seeks relief but in ? death. She passes out, gently closing the ? door behind her, and at the still and dreary c hour of midnight, she hastens her steps to e a creek r.ear her wretched dwelling; and, t after taking herttockings from her feet, and ? throwing them upon the bank of the 6(ream, v she encountered with reckless desperation 0 the enemy to whom she desired to yield her- & ?uu an vaxy i^ptivc. xx ivw luuiucuis, ana h a few struggles, and slie sleeps in death. j' Unfortunate woman ! thy blood, in unison with the blood of millions slaughtered v before thee, crieth from the ground for von- c geance against the confederate murderers, ? Avarice and Rum 1 When shall its voice | be heard f and when, oh ! when, shall their t hands be stayed f M. f Indian or Negro. ' At |ast term of the Court for Richland.lMBtriet a very interesting trial, involv- I Itojgjffiafan of this problem in regard to ' cfaTdaed as a slave, was heard. The ' following, taken from the Patriot, is by far | the most satisfactory history of the affair ] that w|hav eseen:? It - ^Some fourteen years ago, * Mr. Darby, of ' Cneiter District, purchased a girl called Lu- " oy, who was carried to that neighborhood by a man named Thompson, said to have ' nT-.M- -.1 TV r% I-1_ __ oeen seen in vvasinngion, u. as laie as 1801, practising law. The girl had the i looks of,an Indian, but was sold to him at a 1 negro. She ran away repeatedly, telling : her playmates she was an Indian. Some three or four years ago, she waa lodged in 1 jail fn Columbia as a runaway, and adver- . toed. Herownor came for her, and was required to Abowbis bill 4f <?a!e, which was not considered altogether satisfactory. St.eral citizens Were itopMiiifed bv the girl's appearance, and advised t^ iaflor not to cue ber up, as she. wm evioonUy an Indian. He MppHe&faNSto* Means for advice, and U&i, a* ^^n^^rfinportant rfghte to L. Y >. gyrate sister's daughter; that this girl is Lut-< and that she is as mueh like Tier mother i her mother's sister's children are like h< mother's sister. The chief's name is Inaluskie. The ol man removed eight years ago from Arkai sas, and now lives in North Carolina. 11 ?l.l -1-1? e * * v>iu ?n? sioiuii iroin nis party; tbat grei distress was caused to her parents; that sli was the child of his sister's daughter, an that her name was Lut-se; that he came t Columbia with the hope of seeing Lut-se and that as soon as ho laid eyes on her, hi heart was rejoiced to see the face of hi was a Captain under Gen. Jackson at th battle of the Horse Shoe Bend, where h commanded one hundred and thirty warr ors, and fought with much distinction.? Commissions were read from several chiel of tribes now in North Carolina, stating tlis a girl named Lut-se was stolen from one c Lheir nartv nhnnt. fnnrtof.n k : > vr*7 J*-?a "&" 1 commission was read of the examination c Mrs. Carter, the wife of a inan who pui ihaaed the girl from Thompson and sold lie :o Darby. In this she stated that, loarninj 'rom her children that the girl said she wa Indian, she called her up and questioned he ibout it, when she said "No, she was no [ndian, but her mother was negro." Thi yas offered as evidence, and, strange to say ulmitted. But it had the opposite effect a vhat was intended. As it was clear tha imong her playmates the girl told the truth ind to her master or mistress she evidently lad been taught to say otherwise. Evidence vas brought forward that she had for four eon years, been in Chester, in posscssioi >f Darby, working as a negro, and so con idered, although called "Darby's Indian.1 L'he most striking testimony adduced in th< ;ase was that by our distinguished, talentec ind scientific townsman, Dr. R. D. Gibbes ['his is not only mine, but the opiniou o there. He understands the anatomy o >ur races as well as I know my multiplier ion table. As proof of iny declaration, h< vns put upon the stand, and called upon tc explain the ethnological distinction of ra :es. He was asked to point out the char fteristics of the Indian and Negro, whicl ledid very minutely and fully, and in : nanner to bring conviction to the whole as emblcd crowd. He exhibited a cast of ar lldian skull of nil alvirinrmnl ooi/1 is* rom one in the Academy of Science ir Philadelphia, from a mound in Ohio. II< xplained all its characteristics, and ther ailed up the old chief and interpreter, ant howed the identity with their heads. II< lien compare 1 it and their heads with thai f Lucy, and established them all as of th< aine type. He then handled a negro skull, and denonstrated clearly the peculiarities, and howed by comparison the marked difference Hiiween mem, lie explained tlie proini lent differences in the anatomical structure ?f different parts of the body, and gave ar xceedingly interesting account of the dia inction in the bair of the Caucasian, Itidiar nd Negro race. He stated a very curious act, as resulting from microscopical obser ation : that in the mulatto cross the hail if one or the other narcnt was on. ometimes hairs of both, but never a mon ;rel hair ; tbat no amalgamated bair exist d; tbat as often the-mulatto bad straight lair as kinky. He stated the microscop< evealed tbat the hair of the white rac< rag, when transversely divided, oval, thai if the Indian circular, and that of the Ne pro eccentrically elliptical, with flattened dgea; that the hair of the Negro was noi lair, but wool, and capable of being felted, hat the coioring matter of true hair was it in internal tube, while in the Negro it wai n the epidermis or icales covering the shaf >f the hair. In corroboration of his statement tha x>th white and necrro hair were sometime bund in the same head, a singular case wa mentioned in my hearing, by Dr. W He stated that he once attended a half breed Indian and Negro, who had straigh Indian hair. He was ill, and bad bis ImA shaved and blistered. On bis reco^^ when his hair grew out, it was Negro hai ?crisped and wiry. These are very curious facts, and of mucl importance in toe distinction of races. The counsel of tiie plaintiff proposed an insisted on Dr. Gibbes to give the facts a to the hair of grades of Mead) but he sai be had not examined by the microscope a? but the half-breeds. "It is to be hoped tba full investigation will made of this sol On the vfhole^ti^KevideDee wt forth ^ Dr. Gibbes was extremely interesting, an fjfeloped some facts I nerer heard of befor There has been but one opinion oxprewe in rfllutinn (n it . Ia* _ es such. Is there any free State that annually as makes provision for a remnant of the Aboer rigines remaining there, as ours does ?? South Carolina regularly appropriates a Id Bum of money for the support of tin Catawbas, in York District, where part of the ] [e tribe is still loft. 1 n T *? -w-w V* V/? V AflHAX* ie The Slave Trade. d Some ultra-benevolent souls in our country o both North and South are beginning to ad:; vocate the re-opening of the slave trade, not is on the score of gain to America, but of is kindness to the poor benighted Africau ! e These poor deluded creatures would be so e much benefitted if removed from their own i- land of darkness and cruelty to this land of - light and love. I'ts a pity to let them refs main where they are another day ! So then n icl Miijns anu raiis ana Doats ot all sorts be ,f prepared and let the eighty or three hundred V millions of these ignorant and vicious sons >f of Ham be transported to our shores where -- they can make cotton and rice, hear the r Gospel preached and learn to read the Jii% ble, for if we bring them over to the states s to enlighten them it will never do to shut r them out from the light and close the Word t of God Against them. Let them come then, s one and all, for if one, or a dozen should be transported to enjoy the blessing of the Gosf pel and the sweets of civilization, so should t tho millions. Let them all come and givo i, them a free passage too. "Where is the use j of acting niggardly in this, the greatest beb nevolent enterprise of the age? But why - confine a work of so much benevolence to 1 benighted Africa ? Why not bring the mill ions of India and of China, the Sons of Ja' pan, the Cannibals of the Isles, the Lapland2 er and the Turk ? 1 From Greenland's icy mountains, - From India's coral strand, f From Afrie's sunny fountains, f Bring all to this good land. TllPV all nepil fifllvnt.inn onrl if tun ?! ? ^ ing to re-open the slave trade to Africa, that her poor, sable sous may enjoy the light of the Gospel, why not send round our benevolent ships to nil other Jonds and bring the benighted of all lauds to slavery and salva\ tion ? ( If the slave trade is opened again and any more Africans brought to South Carolina it | should be purely for the sake of doing good i to them and not because they are needed lo J tear up and destroy the soil, or for the safeI ty of the Commonwealth. According to the last Census, there are ' in Abbeville District, 6920 blacks, (slaves 5 and free) more than whites. If we nttend < well to these in temporal and spiritual thincrs 1 we will do well. In the whole state of South j I Carolina there are 110,381 blacks (slaves j , and free) more than whites 1 No doubt j ^ hundreds of these are unable to answer the I , question " who made you ?" They are liter- 1 j ally M without God and without hope iti the ( world." Here is a wide field for missionary k woik, and wo would do welLto cultivate it. i . It is already white to the harvest There is i ' no use of importing cargoes frOm Africa ] and adding to the mass of moral putrefac- 1 I tion. If any are imported let them be ; transported to the free States and Nebraska. There is room for them there, and as the free i t States are so fond of negroes, let Africa bo ; Bent to them, thoy will have their hands full i j for once, and a door will be opened for them, ^ wide and effectual, to do good to the cokx1ed race. We have as many slaves in South I Carolina as we can well attend to in the way t of religious training and the numbers are , . multiplying; botJcf the slave trade must be , j opened by way dH&saing the Africans ,wit^? the Gospel, let the sh*p-loaife 'be landed at I Kaut VAflr on/1 ILttlnWikil lnf AMi* AlwilUtrfiti friends lmve a glorious time of runnibgitfeeS-" t round on the underground railroad apd do8 ing them all the good they. can. 3 However, we are not dispoti ?4o~back out in a good cause. If the inafe trade must * be opened again to blest the Africans .vith t the Gospel, Buppose we Would it a not be. fair to land one ship load of enlight \ ened, religious slaves on the shores of Afn* ca and bring back do*U? tbo amount to supply their "frtace, of podf^MHghted idolators ? [j Those W&^srould. be sent to Africa would spread' Ur'Gospel around: and those, who j would bo brought back in exchange would M enjojr its eenial influence here, and thus the j whole colored race would soOnbe tyftdrtted and become men and christians, dapable of ? self government. <*J .j surely not in easiest in advocating the re-opening of the uhorrid slave _ trade," we. thing, wan absurdity, a mon . .. .*+; f if '"I' Drunkenness, Somnambulism, 01 Foul Flay. To eitlier ono or tho other of these cause; is to ho attributed the fall of Simpson Berrj from tho trestle at Newberry, on Thursday night last. Simpson Berry was ono of the prisoner^ mol important witnesses in the case oftheStntfl JKviiino* .. I for the murder of Jesse Scurry. He testified to the fact that Scurry threw two pistols into his buggy, before starting to Cross Roads Church, in Newberry, on the day of the occurrence of one of the difficulties between the deceased and the prisoner, and his testimony, doubtlessly, went far to strengthen the jury in tlio conviction that Scuriy whs contemplating an attack on Gunter. lie had also been in the employ of Jesse Scurry, as an overseer, during tho last year of his life, which relation was dissolved by the death of Scurry, and Simpson had engaged his services for tho coming year to another gentleman. So much in relation to t|ie character and occupation of Simpson Berry. On tho night of the eventful Thursday, Simpson's room-mates report that ho was perfectly sober when he retired to bed, at about 11 o'clock at night, and strange to say, ho was found under the trestle in a mangled condition at an early hour on the iics.1, muming, Having tallon a distance of about thirty feet. Now tho question that puzzles usis?how did Simpson Berry get to tho trestle that night, and who or what is to blame for his fall ? Four or five persons lodged in the same room witlihim, but they can give no account of the time or manner of Simpson's exit from that room. Can any body do it ? We must come to one of three conclusions in tho premises, and first, that. Simpson was either druuk and slipped out of the room late at night, and as he "pnced along upon the giddy footing" of the trestle, stumbled and fell into the vortex below, or secondly, tlmt ho was seized with a fit of somnambulism, and was led by his evil spirit, or some other spirit, to this dangerous precipice, or thirdly, that some one who was not pleased with Sijrnpson's testimony in the Gv.nter case, having either gagged, or, by some "foul potion," deprived him of reason, bore him uvi tit armis" to tho trestle, and pitched him from that lofty emiuence, thus reeking their vengeance on him. This last supposition, we learned, whilst in Newberry, is agreeable to the account which Mr. Berry himself gives of his fall. lie states, we learn from good authority, that ho was i forcibly seized and thrown from the trestle ?that he recognized tho man who 4id the | deed, and if he should recover, -./ill dtsc'osc | ma name, mit thinking <Ij.it his cJianoos for] recovery are doubtful at present, lie persists in refusing to Jo so. Strange idea!?that Newberry is a a hard old District! It may bo that the Ncwberriau or Newberry Sentinel can throw some light upon the transaction.?We shall see. " ... Mr. Berry's physiefefot -jegorts him to be in afgpry precarious condition. One of his irmB was broken by th?ftkll, and one of his legs so badly itojured as to make it necessary to amputate it,* besides injuries upon other parte of his body. We nope if it bo true that Simpson was thrown from tha thaithe scoundrel who did it, may be detected?tried for his life?and that the setdiet of the. Jury may not read Uf*ror Gentry."?Southern Rights Advocate? m ?? IV Sootlt ud the North. Various sugge3lion& hare been made as to the comatf parties should pursue in the llpveholding States. Many Southern newspapers have inqi$bed>that the South should unite in hostiH$r'to all parties jn tho Nortbr; In orir judgement this would be unwise, an<J.in bad faitn towards the sounder portion of the Northen democracy. There is aip! always haq&een, a portion of that party "who have -ifcUsd with the^South in-. the many agitatinjpjgueetiona Mrolving ow.rights and interests, connected with the institution of slavery. In doing so, thay have placed themselves oft constitutional*-. grountjs; true they do not^iqr 'yet', take a perfectly souifd view if ? the question of slavery, in a moral and reli|fteff* point of view those respects tfioy against ub, more or loss. Bnt dwylraf-vand do vote with us on the constitutional questions, they have voted with us ifr aeqtitriugtho Vast domain of Texas, in preventing the circulation of incendiary L:,ii . ?? - i- It luttiwr tun^ugu wie uuico*~in repeal iw. irie Missouri Compromise liue? in opening Nebraska and Kabbah to be settled equally by slaveholders, and non-slnvebolders, as cirby ?Br" immediate in CongW*, Ka CUibn acqoirhig' Administration/ lai addition to all this, the supporters o n^w poiit* r confessedly and universally associated in the lato issues with Northern Freesoilersand Abo} litionists, it is impossible thatche mass of r the Southern Whigs, ahd the pfctriotic por, tion of the politicians ateonff thtm, can longer sustain that par$y. There woud bo ' nothing inconsistent or dishonorable in th^n to mako common cause with Southern Democrats in supporting the party of the constitution, and therefore of tne South.? Tl. - -11 * xiiu oiu party issues of Hank, etc., af? extinct, no reason exists for a longer continuation of a Southern Whig party. It is only possible that a few calculating leadars 'of that party could bo benefitted personally by the success of Northern Whigs in a future Presidential election, which would be ouly disastrous to the South, and a triumph of all the anti-slavery and unconstitutional principles of the combined hosts of Freesoilers. v We are therefor? oppossed to the South taking a position which will ins<ftfeite hero ? from all political co-operation with the true DemOP.ratif. norlw ' ' r""v vi vi"5 -worui, * <! leave her without sympathy or support from any party there. " They wbo^ouM-h?veTrionda> should show themselves friendly. And if "4 the Southern States mean to etAJ^ in the , _ Union, expect to enjoy theiirequalpivilegea in any measure,^tuey' must co-operate in-, mirty-political associatiotf with\itik?e ip>the " < V North who vote with hqrgon qjjgptions invdfcr-jg:r ing her rights arid honor?' K' v ^ Greenville Mounfainedtg^^ The Farmer.?To cultivate thee&rth'^is the noblest vocation of life. Upon die products of the farm, the very' existence of bo^ ciciy depends. lu the fabalAiu days of Eden, when the human family was emails our great ancestor Adam, like the lazy and luxurions " Poet of the Seasons," could place. his hands where his pocket&?rer? to be, open; his mouth, and feast his fill upon the spon- * t:ineous fruits of Paradjse. It is not go now. Men must work, or beg, or steal, cfrstarve; and as no occupation is so honest, so healthful, "and so entirely in accordance with the Divine behest, as farming, wo take the liberty of suggesting to tho corresnondont s(Tpleadingly to us for a " situation,".that lie turn liis attention to mother earth whose breast is every ready to yield susteuance to her children, multiplying a thousand fold the good seed cast into her bosom. ^ ^ A True Lawyer.?Alexander Hamilton' was once applied to as counsel by a man Having the guardianship of several orphans, who would, on coming of ago, Buceoed to a largtf and valuable estate of which there -,vas material defect in the title-deeds, known onijt to tlieir guardian, who wanted- to gfet the title vested in himself. Hamilton noted : down the faithless executor's statement,, ancl then said to him, "Settle with thesejmhappy infants honorable to the last cant, Or I will hunt vou from your skin lilte a hare. The advic? was strictly followed, and theman who gave it whs 'an ornament te> Uifr 1 bar and to the age he lived in. *"'' A young planter from Virginia, who bad formerly been a student in Philadelphia, arrived there last week and put up at James* Hotel,Chestnut street. On Tugylayhe was waited upon by a genteel looting man, who ?. ingratiated himself into his, the planter's, good graces by inviting him fo visit th? Gimrd College. In the afternoon the twainwent lo the College, and after witnessing withiu and without that benevolent (mtjtution, the gentle young man swindled. tb'e planter out of Aft"ss Kr 'iim -----.vr- >,-x rr.flgpy.-. Some young ladies, f^ina aggravated' J^y the severity with whioKvflfcfr ' _c speculated on their gay plunges, neciliK^ rings, etc^ went to their pastor to' leanrhis- * pinion. ' &-&&&' 4$. u Do you think," said tbey, 4 imnrnnrifitv in tuMMt.- ,fw I J1 By no'' means," was the 1 Variona robb^^^^mve Fair tliere.^fhe Covin er g?aJt Smith, of Lexington, was TobbM ot^6?t ?, ? $150 in easb, and-notes to_tbo atwMW;$v ;' ^'T ?buuu. a gentiet?atvof 15ar<mtow&gj?j?. * robbed of a watch Which was valued?? ' JL 40. An unwary printer, while on to the races, was also relieved c^ tfcwaBfcjfr gold watch. ^ ^ . '* , Hero ia a v^ry tender atanja, by some soft hearty lover; * , My dearest ArabeU?r, . - ^ V i You've beeu in piy tieart a dwelle^ . ^ \fy.~ *, ; inu II 1 cawsn yon taiu^g to . | An i\]i i t^him on- the wnel^