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i THE CAMDEN JOURNAL \ E VOLUME 3. CAMDEN, SOUTH-CAROLINA, SEPTEMBER 17, 1852. NUMBER 75. ^ IH THE CAMDEN JOURNAL. PUBLISHED SEMI-WEEKLY AND WEEKLY BY THOMAS J. WARREN. TERMS. i The Semi-Weekly Journal is published at Three ' Dollars and Fifty Cents, if paid in advance, or Four Dollars if payment is delayed three months. i: V: The "Weekly Journal is published at Two Dollars if paid in advance; Two Dollars and Fifty Cents if payy,: - ment be delayed three months, and Three Dollars if not * oaid till the expiration of tho year. f ADVERTISEMENTS will be inserted at the followL-v; ' ;ng terms: For one Square (fourteen lines or less) in the semi-weekly, one dollar for the first, and twenty-five \ ( cents for each subsequent insertion. In the weekly, ru'.J- seventy-five cents per square for the first, and thirty-se: .V ven and a half cents for each subsequent insertion. Sin; gle insertions one dollar. Semi-monthly, monthly and Ccf- --'quarterly advertisements charged the same as for a sin ;. -;giu iii^LTtiuu. 5pS>v:',i; gythe number of insertions desired, and the edi"tion to be published in must be noted on the margin of gjpg: all advertisements, or they will bo published semi-weekiSp'S' "-ly until ordered discontinued and charged accordingly $? " ?, From the Ohio Cultivator. ; AUTUMN AND WINTER. The Autumn is going with its beauty so glowing, And Winter o'er all things is casting its pail; The rose tree is fading, 110 longer 'tis shading, ^ . The arbor of love or the bright water-fall. The dahliahs are lopping, the ripe fruit is dropping, flfi"-- The corn-leaves are withered and dry on the stalk; '*' The ring-dove is sighing; the grasshopper dying, ??r-v The fire-fly no longer enlivens the walk. ii ?. . The forests are changing, the wild birds are ranging i To hunt out a home where the skies are more clear, t The streams deeply flowing, the chilling winds " blowing, v All tell us that Winter, cold Winter is near. 5-V -s Summer's sweets we're tasting, away are all has' . . The days of the pe^ch and the melon are o'er; V. . Then let us be trying while Autumn is dying, W To lay up for Winter a plentiful store, Sggp V s? Work freer and harder to fill up the larder, Jv":7 " Then give to old Winter whene'r he shall come, A welcome most willing; we'li heed not his chilling If there is warmth round the hearth-stone and wis plenty at home. ^ But while we are careful?no cause to be tearful, rfr " Let us think of the children of sorrow and wrong, :"> Asd give from our treasure, with no stinted meakV sure, I; The good gifts of Heaven to help them along. FRIENDS. BY JAMES MONTGOMERY. / ; ' * Friend after friend departs ; ^ 7*V. Who hath not lost a friend ?j N rj-.'i, miere is no union here of hearts, \That finds not here an end; Were this frail world our only rest, Living, or dying, none were blest. Beyond the flight of Tijjie, Beyond this vale of death, There 6urely is some blessed clime, Where life is not a breath, ' Nor life's affections transient fire, S Whose 6parks fly upward and expire. V:,' There is a world'above, Where parting is unknown? |j^~- 1. A whole eternity of love, EnB Form'd for the good alone; And faith beholds the dying here Translated to that happier sphere. mi J.. J.OUS eiar uy oimi ucuuuco, Till all are passed away' ;v,' As morning high and brighter shines To pure and perfect day, Nor sink these stars in empty night, k . They hide themselves in Heaven's own light. The Atmosphere. The atmosphere is that great ocean of air which MR surrounds the earth on all sides, and in which we 9L live, move and breathe, as fishes do in water. It revolves with the earth od its axis, and, like all ? other forms of matter, is preserved at the earth's surface by the attraction of gravitation. This tA jcean of air penetrates into all unoccupied places, \ Is water flows into all crevices and holes beneath B \r^ie 'eve* sur^icc' an(l enters into the pores Br Jof bodies; hardly anything in nature being free |B ..Strom air unless force has beer employed to ex^^fcV_Jhe following truths have been ascertained nHfcWpecting the atmosphere: HHBnAiris a Material Substance.?The minds our readers, unaccustomed to philosophical ^^B^Lculations, may at flrst feel a difficulty in be^WP^Ing that a thing so light, impalpable, and A1? niH cKauM KA riAConccfirl i7 jBpareuuj spiritual os an, ouvuiu w iwovaiw J the same properties as solid matter. Yet that lis is really the case is capable of being proved ieyond the possibility of doubt. I Matter may exist in the solid, liquid, or acri)rm or gaseous state, and may be made to pass rom the solid to the gaseous condition by the pplication of heat. With this fact every chemt is familiar. Now, matter when it passes from solid to a gaseous condition, still retains all its i&ential properties as solid matter unimpaired, id that this is in reality the case with air we iiall now proceed to show. IAir is Impenetrable.?Impenetrability is KTproperty which matter possesses, of exclufog all other bodies from that portion of space feich it occupies. No two pieces of matter can Bust in the same portion of space at the same lime. Every material body necessarily fills a fertain portion of space to the exclusion of all Klier bodies from that space. This property of matter philosophers have agreed to call impene- | trability, and that the ocean of air which sur- j w; rounds the earth, possesses it equally with the . of solid rocks which form the crust of the earth ; va may be shown by the following simple experi-1 an ment. j ist Place a piece of cork on the surface of water ! Sc contained in any convenient vessel, and take a th glass tumbler and invert it over the cork so as wi to bring its edge in contact with the water. A 1 pi portion of air is now detatched from the surroun- j ding atmosphere. If now the jar be pressed . 01 down so as to be entirely immersed, the prcs- j lit ence of the confined air in the tumbler will be | tei found to exclude the water from its inside and j cr the cork will be seen floating at the mouth of, th the tumbler, thus proving that the water has to not entered its inside. J a1 The experiment may be varied in the follow- 'o ing manner. wl Instead of a tumbler, take a glass jar, put a handkerchief into the inside, which must be so v>! secured that it will not fall out when the jar is : he inverted. Now invert and press the jar below j to; the water as before, on removing the jar from , an the water and taking out the handkerchief it ; be will be found to be perfectly dry. ' ar Float a candle 011 a piece of wood or cork. In- j ha vert a jar over it and press the jar down into the | kc water. The light will be seen burning below ?>j the surface of the water, and will gradually be-! come extinguished. mis proves tnat tne water \ "a does not enter the jar, otherwise the extinction | had been instantaneous. | One of the distinctions of modern times, is that science has passed from speculation into life. It is not only pursued as a source of intellectual pj gratification, but it is made use of as a mighty In power bv which nature herself is subdued, and sh the comforts and convenience of life increased. wi We are indebted to the discovery of the in- dc penetrability of air for gasometers, or reservoirs sh of gas. They are formed on this principle. A he large iron vessel is iuverted in water and sup- sh plied with gas by means of pipes from an ad- nc joining manufactory. All day long the metre or 1m vessel may lie observed filling, and its top may fe< be seen to rise. Towards night, a weight is js made to descend on the top of the risen vessel, th and its pressure forces the gas into the pipes by fitl which it is conveyed to all parts of a town or sh city. By this contrivance the darkness of night Lc is dispersed, morality is improved and crime js lessened, for every passer by is now a detective policeman, and* we walk securely from our places of business to our homes, through brilliantly illuminated streets. The Diving Bell is constructed on the princi- ]tj; pie of the impenetrability of air. A vessel in Sp the form of a bell is inverted in water, and the f0) impenetrability of the a?r not allowing the water tu to enter, workmen may go underneath and de- mi scend uninjured to the sea. But it must be jni obvious, that the air in the bell must soon be- ni come unfit for respiration, to remedy which de- Jj feet a continual supply of fresh air is by means th of an aii pump, conveyed by pipes into the bell, p0 which is thus kept constantly overflowing with |jj. air, the superabundant air escaping under the bell and rising in bubbles to the surface of the ti< water. sc The diving bell is used extensively in most of sp the royal dock yards in England, for the repair- p?i ing of Ihe bottom of vessels. It is also used in wi the pearl fisheries in Ceylon and South America, gr and for the recovery of property lost in wrecked ]ji and sunken ships.?Arthur's Home Gazette. nj( to Action of Lead ci'on Water.?Wc have ci< lately seen a number of articles discussivo of the to question, whether or not the action of lead fri pipe upon water rendered the water deleteri- co ous to health when cousumed; an dalthough the arguments in the negative were ably ingenious, yc they were not sufficient to overturn the many is well established facts offered by the other side.? is It has indeed become so well substantiated that wi water corrodes metallic lead, and forms a poison al which is always injurious and in many cases fatal, ai when taken into the stomach, that no one ought tli at this day to dispute it The immediate question, however, is?and it is a very important one?whether or not the wa- Ti ter which is used from public works in towns ^ and cities, acts sufficiently upon the lead in its di passage from the iron main to the dwelling, as to endanger health. We should say, unhesitating vc Iv, that it depended altogether upon the state of ^ the water drawn off. If that be fresh from the 13 iron pipe into the street it would ceitainly be be pure and harmless; but if it had been remaining ^ for some time?and the longer the less pure?it tn 11 1 11. -II? L - J?. iV_ H !1 tin wouia unaouuteuiy oe uuiii 101 iumuy consuiup- "" tion. An incident occurring upon our own premises will confirm what we say. Wc have a leaden reservoir for rain water,holding some fourteen thousand gallons, which contains water some eight and a half to nine months in the year. At the Kr beginning of December hist, fearing the etfect of b* tin. frost upon the pipes, the water was let out P' as usual, to the amount of five or six hundred P* gallons, which ran into a fish pond, containing m at the time a couple of thousand gallons of other a water and the effect was instantaneous upon the fish. In less than twenty-four hours, the whole of them?some ten dozen, with the exception of half dozen?died. Some of them were catfish of large size, which are regarded as among the hardiest species. The half were saved only by df removing thein from the pond. On one oc- at casion a gold fish was put into a tub of this wa- tli ter, and it no sooner entered it, than it sprang w over the sides of the vessel; and when replaced, in soon after died. to Though these are simple occurrences, they di bear very strongly against the use of leaden pipes for the conveyance of water for cooking and drinking purposes.?Germantown Telegraph. in If you make love to a widow who has a daughter twenty yoars younger than herself, begin by declaring that you thought they were sisters. $ V . ' - Description of Jesus.?The following epistl is taken by Napoleon from the public record Koine, when lie deprived that city of so man iluabic manuscripts. It was written at the tim id on the spot where Jesus commenced his Mir ,ry, by I'ublius, the Governor of Judea, to th mate of Rome, Ciesar being Emperor. It wa e custom in those days for the Governor t rite home any event of importance which trans red while he held office: "Conscript Fathers: There appeared in thes< ir days, a man named Jesus Christ, who is ye ring among 11s, and of the Gentiles he is accef d as a prophet of great truth; but his own dis i-Uac mil liim tlii? son of God. II& had raisei e dead, cured all manner of disease. lie is an of stature somewhat tall and comely, wit! rery ruddy countenance, such as one may hot! re and fear. His hair is the color of a filbert lien fully ripe; plain to the cars, whence down ird, it is more orient of color, curling and wa ng about his shoulders. In the middle of hi ad is a seam or portion of long hair, after th anner of the Nazarites. His forehead is plai d delicate; his face without spot or'wrinkh autified with a comely red; his nose and moutl g exactly formed; his beard is the color of hi iir, and thick, not of any great height but for d. In reproving, he is terrible, in admonish g, courteous; in speaking, he is very modest ani se; in proportion of body, well shaped. Non ive seen him laugh, but many have seen hin ?ep. A man, for his surpassing beauty, excel ig the children of men. Beautiful is old age, beautiful as the slow-drop ng mellow autumn of a rich, glorious sutnmei the old man, nature has fulfilled her work e loads him with her blessings; she tills hiii th the fruits of a well spent life and surrouo d by his children and his children's children e rocks him softly away to a grave, to whicl i is followed with blessing. God forbid w ould not call it beautiful. It is beautiful; bu it the most beautiful. There is another life ird, rough and thorny, trodden with blcedinj 3t aud aching brow, the life of which the cros the symbol; a battle which no peace follow is side of the grave; which the grave grapes t< lish before the victory is won; and?strange ii ould be so?this is the highest life of man.? >ok back along the great names ofhistory; ther none whose life had been other than this. Westminister Reviewfor July. Learning to Spell.?Bad spelling is discrcd ible. Every young man should be master o s native tongue. lie that will not learn ti eh the language that is on his tongue and be re his eyes every hour, shows no great apti ue tor the duties at ail lntolhgonfr-obscrvinj an. Had spelling therefore is an unavoidabl dication. It indicates a blundering man?; an that cannot see with his eyes open. Accoi ngly we have known the application of mor an one young man, made with great display c nraanship and parade of references, rejected fo 3 bad spelling. Bad spelling is a very conspicuous bad indica >n. lie who runs mad read it. A brigh hool-boy, utterly incaj?able of appreciatingyou ares of science, art and literature, can see you id spelling at a glance and crow over it. Yo 11 find it hard to inspire that boy with an eat respect for your attainments. Bad spcl ig is therefore a very mortifying and income ent defect. We have known men, thrown in prominent positions, so ashamed of their deli ;ncy in this respect, that they never venture) send a letter till it had been reviled by i end. This was, to say no more, sufficiently in nvenicnt. I say again learn to spell voung man. Kec iiir ryes open wluti y u read, and if any wor spelt different from your mod" a>eertain whic ri"ht. Keen voiir dictiuiiarv hv vou: and ii riling, whenever y<,u have the loa^t misgivim (out the spelling ot'a wi.nl look it out at onc< ul remember it. l>o not let your laziness ge e bettor of yon. TonAcro Cuoi* ok Yiuuixia.?ThcRichmon imcs publishes a comparative statement of th bacco crop of Virginia for this and the precc ng year, from which it appears that the tot? eld of 1851 was 30,454 hhds, whilst for the sc n months of the present year the inspection ready amount to 47,421 hhds. By October i thought the quantity will reach 50,000 hhds ing an increase of more than fifty per cootie ruling prices, though not so high as duritij e two proceeding years have been sufficient! indsomc to remunerate the planter. A Good Cement.?Take Plaster of Paris, am ak it in a saturated solution of alum, then bak e two in an oven, the same as gypsum is baked make it Plaster of Paris, after which they ar ound to powder. It is then used as wantec ing mixed up with water, like plaster, and aj ied. It sets into a very hard composition, e.i iblc of taking a very high polish. It may b ixed with various coloring minerals to produc cement of any color, capable of imitating mai c. This is a very rare receipe, and is wortl .'cnty dollars to many of our subscribers, air wiiuin can prepare it ior inemseivus. Singular Shipment dy Express.?On Thurc ly last the editor of the Cincinnati Gazette sav the office of tlie American Express Compny i lat city, a little girl, about ton yearn ofag< ho had been shipped by express from Wash gton City to her father Mr. Perryman, at Day in, Ohio. The cost of transportation?inclu ng boarding and extra faro was only $18. We are indebted to Mrs Cudle, for the follow g lines: Men brandy drink, and never think That girls at all can tell it; They don't suppose a woman's nose. Was ever made to smell it. e How to IHafcc Manure. Is The following statement is given by a Hampy shire County, Massachusetts, farmer, in the ree 1 port of the Agricultural Society of that County i- on the best method of making a highly fertilie j zing and cheap compost manure: s i 'Tinmediately after planting in the spring and 0 after I have used the manure I want, I commonce my compost heap for the next, season.? Into a convenient place, which is a hollow in the i, angle of the bank wall, on the South end of my t buildings, I deposite first a load of horse manure, i- Over this I usually spread the scrapings of my i- wood and cellar, especially in May, and all other 1 substances that will make manure, I find about a mv buildings. such as the rakincrs of the yard. h old leaves, <fcc., making in all another small load, li then over the whole spread about a bushel ofashes. ' For the next three or four weeks this heap i- receives from the washroom, all the soap suds i- and washing water, and from the house, all- the Is useless slops and washing of the kitchen, sweepe ings, &c., being kept continually moist. In about n four weeks after the first deposite, I add another ;, load of horse mnnure; more loam and sand from h the washing of road drains spread over the horse s manure, and over all a layer of wood ashes occa sionally adding more dming the next four weeks. This heap, for the succeeding four weeks, receives j ! as before, all the fertilizing substances that aec cumulate in the washroom and kitchen. This u process is continued during the Summer and i- Fall, until snow covers the ground, and then I call my heap finished, only it continues to receive during the Winter, washing slops, <fcc. h I claim for this manure the following advan. tnges: First, it is cheap. Horse manure alone is a miserable fertilizer, and this except the wood u' ashes, is the only substance of any value that enters the composition. Combined in the way stated, it helps to from a valuable manure. Again; J as a matter of cleanliness and convenience, this Q compost heap is of great advantage. How often t do we see about farm yards, accumulation of sub, stances rendering the premises filthy and unsightl ly. The compost heap receives all these other^ wise useless accumulations." ? ^ The Curculio?A Discovery.?Much has t been written on the Curculio?many inquiries _ have been made as to its habits, destruction, <fcc. e We have carefully read every article seen for years back in our agricultural papeis, and in a large number of exchanges recently, for the remedy but have found nothing that could be re_ lied upon. f Having some fine plum trees, the fruit a very large reddish purple variety, that have been bearing some eight or ten years, and never maturing a dozen plums a year, we have felt much solicitude and anxiety to discover a remedy. We ^ have tried many that have been recommended, ^ without success. Knowing that trees standing in a hard trodden yard were more apt to mature fruit than others differently situated, we resolved j last spring to make an experiment. We there-. r fore, before the trees were in bloom removed the soil, which was thickly set in Bermuda grass, ^ from around e'ach tree to to the distance of t five or six feet, and depth of two to three inches ' ?then built a chicken coop around each tree, and requested our better half to have herchicku ens, tfce. fed no where else but in the coops which had been done; consequently, of chickens, ducks, l_ turkeys, &c. one brood or another will be found under the trees, waiting for their oft repeated ' meals, throughout the day, and ready to pick up every curcuiio that tlare show Ins head above ,j ground. Now mark the result; our trees are ^ breaking with the finest fruit, just maturing, we h have ever seen. Comment i? unnecessary?each reader can make his own deductions. If, on furthor trial the course pursued this year shall prove [j an effectual preventative, even when applied to ^ a few trees, we shall feel gratified at having made n the discovery.?Farmer and Planter. f Fatten all your Hogs.?Our caption is a t' piece of advice we give to our readers, with the understanding of course, that "hogs" don't mean little 'pigs' or even 'land pikes.' We intend to (j designate any swine that will weigh eighty pounds poor. And wc repeat, lot all such be fattened before hog-killing time rolls around. Because j every farmer, nearly has an abundance of corn, and we feel assured it will pay him better by being put into hog meat than any other possible I way. To convince our agricultural friends of the soundness of our advice, we will tell them what we know to be the truth, l'ork is now selling in Kentucky at five cents gross, and it is ' altogether improbable that it will be ottered in ^ this latitude at any thing under 6 1-4 cents, during the coining season. Therefore, the more of your own meat you fatten, the less heavy will be the draw upon your cotton money; and nu0 other season pork may be cheaper. A word to ' the wise ought to suffice.?Edgefield Advertiser '' Crops.?The Aberdeen (Miss.) Democrat of '* the 1st inst., says the rust and boll-worm are proving very disastrous to the cotton crop in that region. Planters estimate that the crops will be e one half less than was anticipated a short tirao I since. 1 We learn from the Eutaw Ala. Democrat of ^ the 3d instant, that the corn crop in Greene county is generally an abundant one. The worm was doing great damage to the cotton crop. The accounts of the cotton crop in the adjoiningcounv tics were also unfavorable. n The Red River (Alexandria) Republican of !> tho 4th instant says: "The Sugar crop of the Parish has turned out much better than was anticipatcd in the early part of tho season. The l" cotton crop is, or rather was, very promising, until tho appearance of the caterpillar, which is now becoming general. The late rains, too, r- havo put a stop to picking, and injured the prospect also. Tho corn crops havo turned out well." The Lexington (Miss.) Advertiser of the 3d inst., says accounts from every portion oLthe State speak in the most oxtravagant terms of the abundant yield of the grain crop. Some ' *.' . ' . fears are expressed though that iJotton will not do so well as was thought a few weeks since. The accounts of the crops of all kinds, in Arkansns continued to be good.?N. 0. True . r'r? Delta. , M , Duelling.?A duel was fought, theiSun re- ..^Y ,: ports, on Wednesday, in New Jersey, by Capt. Stone of Santa Fe, and Mr. Townly of New Bedford. The insult, it is alleged, was offered by -P,~ ^ Mr. Townly, to a cousin'of Capt. Stone's. The latter having demanded reparation, and being , ~' refused, the laws of honor were appealed to; and % both gentlemen, with their ;tfriends" were on the ground at an early hour, two shots, were ex, changed. The Captain received a flesh wound J on the arm by the first shot, and the second | bored his hat. Townly was hit by both shots. \ in the shoulder and hip, and was carried feeble condition, '^b^, /' What Barnum and Jenny LindMade.?The following note to the New York Musical World, said to be from a reliable source, gives the sum ;3 total in round numbers, that the two personages whoso names head this article cleared over i all expenses during their connection. It seems \~ that they averaged a trifle over $3,000 a piece on each concert: Not long since, Mr. Barnum exhibited to me .x. -?' . - " ' mc utcuuui current oeiween Himself anct asnny i"ij? Lind, and a truly marvellous document it is.? He ought to publish it entire (or the astonishment and edification of the world generally and , singers particularly. According to the rooting * - ''-a up and balances, the parties received the follow- - frA ing handsome dividends, after all expenses were paid:?Jenny Lind, ?302,000; P. T. Barnum, ?308,000 total,610,000. Natural Religion.?1. Look out fornura- ^ berone. 2. Use others all you can, and let them use you as little as possible. 3. Get money honestly if you can?get mon- . _ 4. Every one for himself and the take the hindmost Ilerc you have the thing in a nutshell. There : ! is no need of inking whole reams of paper with an explanation of the subject, for here you have the exact doctrines in which the world believes and which are practiced by a vast majority of the .<?\ v? people in every nation of the globe. I shall soon die, Cuffy, I must go on a long i journey.' 'Verry well,' replied Cuffy, 'I guess you hah good going because it's all the way down hill." . CA A rich joke was recently played off upon a sharp-nosed constable iu Western Massachusetts, lie started out to arrest a person who had often escaped pursuits, but who, he was informed, was at that time engaged in a neighboring corn fiield. . . The constable, wishing to take him by surprise, . took a round about direction, scalimr the sheds and fences opposite, when squatting, he crawled ; . stealthyily along, and at length pounced upon his victim, clenching him firmly around the waist excliming: "You are my prisoner?" He had nabbed a scarecrow. "Hello, Mr. Snouticle, can you tell me the right road to Mr. Belfzooset's mill?"said a travellor to a Dutchman, lately. "Yaw," said the Dutchman, "I kin dell you pesser as any body. You musht shoost make do riffer up stream, und the first house you come do, will be mine proter Ilan's parn?it is shingled mit shtraw: und ven you ax him, he kin clell you pesser as me." g A worthy divine having wearid the patience of a portion of his congregation by a somewhat lengthy sermon, and noticing persons stepping out of the church very quietly, sat down in the pulpit, saying, "I will wait till the chaff is blown off." This made the people quiet. A Colloquy.?"llow do you do?" "Do what?" "How do you find yoursel ?" "I never lose myself." "How do you fe? 1 ?" Pretty smooth, I suppose, but you can feel me and see." "Good morning, Mr. Smith." "I think it's rather a bad one?very wet and nasty;" "Wood is the thing after all," as the man said with thfc oak leg said, when the mad dog bit it *5 \ r The Albany Knickerbocker tells of a young man who died in that city of disappointment ambition, as he "wanted to wear high shirt collars, and his mother wouldn't let him ! Two signs were one opposite to each other in * Philadelphia thus inscribed 'J as. Shot If and Jonathan Fell? An old man who had fallen into a ditch on his way home, and being unable to get out bawled lustily till morning when helped up by a neighbor he hastened home, and began to scold his wife for not hearing him, and coming to his assistance, 'Lor!' said the old Lady, 'I heard your J T 1 .1 !i 1--.. T il. l.i il ? - ? voice, auu i suowea it out x tuougiit it was an owl!' Hard.?A cotcmporary says, "A fool and his money are soon parted," and a brother kindly asks of him what he has been buying!" i "I wonder what makes my eyes so weak?" said a fop to a gentleman. "Why they are in a^sveak place," replied the latter. A village pedagogue, in despair with & stupid boy, pointed to the letter A, and asked him if knew it. " Yes, sir." " Well, what is it?" " I know her very well by sight, but swallow uie it 1 can recollect her name. *. ^ ' 4V; >. ' "* ' "r . r'vj " .> . . % - . ,1 ' i.