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HjT, FAH1LV WORSHIP. We will not My the former day* Wore better tbait our own? That softer fell tho dews of hoaven, Or Uio nS more br??kt> shone? Hint the stars looked down with a sweeter light Through the depths of lh? azure sky? Or that wandering zephyrs touehed tho notes Of a richer harmony; Fir m know Jehovah's word is pledged, For the sunshine and tho dew? The flowers may fhdo, hut tliu breath of spring Shall their wasted life renew; And the nuthein of nature's praise is hyinned Through changing years the same. And to eouutless ages the stars of night Their story shall proclaim. Hut wo miss, oli! we nvss in the homes of men Tho holy song of praise? The sweet and solemn strain is Inn-lied, And we sigli for the former daysIs tilt* smile of heavenly love withdrawn? la the time of blessing o'er? Have we no more a God in Ileavcn? A Father to ndore? Not silent are our blessed dead. Though their work on earth is done, The struggle and the gloom is past, And the glory hns begun l lio tx-nuty ol the sinless land Shines radiant on each brow, And a song of joy and happiness Is the song they urc singing now. Awake, ye children of them who sleep In the b?sl ol peaceful rest, An?l let your voieco blend again With the anthems of the blessed! We know yc learn at your fathers' hearth The hymn ol love and praise, Let us hear your song with your children now? Tito songs of your early days! Oh! so sweet on the breath of the balmy air Shnll the sound of such music be, That passing angels may pause to hear. And rejoice ill the melody! And soil us evening dews that (all When no rudo wind is stirred, Sh II the pence of Heaven on that home descend, Where tho worship of God is heard. Catmakink I'm no uk Casio. LETTER FROM RUFUS CH0ATE7 I'lie Whigs of Maine held n grand mass met-liug in the town of Watervillo. Hon. Hufu* Choate was invited to l?o present, litit being tillable to attend, he scuta letter, in which he defined his own position on the Pre-ideulial question, and avowed his inleniutu to vote for Mr. Haclianan. Wo give it below. IIoston, Saturday, Aug. 0, 1850. Gesti.kuek: Upon toy return last evening. after a short absence frotu the city, 1 found your iotter of tho 30lh ult., inviting me to lake part iu the proceedings of the Whigs of Maine, assembled iu mass meeting I appreciate most highly the honor and kindness of this invitation, ami should have hail true pleasttte in accepting it. Tho Whigs of Maine composed at all times so important a division of the great national party, which under that name, with or without official power, as a responsible admin istration or as only an organized opinion, has done ?.o much for our country?our wuoie couutry?and your responsibilities at this moment aro 60 vast and peculiar, that 1 acknowledge an anxiety to see?not wait to hoar?with what noble bearing you meet the demands of the time. If the tried legions, to whom it is committed to guard the frontier of the Union, fuller now, who, any where, cau be trusted? My engagements however, and the necessity or expediency of abstaining from all speech requiring much cO'ort, will prevent my being with you. And yet, invited to share in your counsels, and grateful for such distinction, 1 cannot wholly decline my own opinions on one of the duties of the Whigs in what you well describo as "the present crisis in the political a Hairs of the country." 1 cannot now, and need not imiise to elaborate or defeud them. What think, and what I have decided to do, permit tne in the briefest and plainest expression to toil you. The first duty, then, of Whigs, not merely as patriots and as citizens?loving, with a large and equal love, our whole native land?but as Whigs, and because we are Whigs, is to unite w ith some organization of our countrymen, to defeat and dissolve the new geographical parly, calling itself Republican. This is our first duty. It would more exactly express my opinion to say, that at this moment it is our only dutv. veriituuy, ;u masi, u comprehends or suspend* nil oilier.-.; and in niy judgment, llie question for each and every one of us is, not whether this candidate or that candidate would l>e our first choice; not whether there is some good talk in the worst platform, mid some bad talk in the best jilatfoim; not whether this man's ambition, or that man's servility, or boldness, or fanaticism o. violence is responsible for putting the wild waters in this uproar?but just this, by what vole can I do moat to prevent the madness of the limes froin working its maddest act?the very ecstasy of its mad ne>s?the permanent formation and '.ho actual present triumph of a party which knows one half of America only to ha'.e and dread it; from whose unconaecraled and revolutionary banner fifteen stars a o erased or have fallen?in whose national anthem the old and endeared airs of the Eulaw Spiings, and the King's Mountain, and Vorktown, and those, later, of NewOrleans, and Buena Vista, and Chapultepec, breathe no more. To this duty, to this question, all others seem to me to stand for the present postponed and secondary. And why? Because, according to our creed.it is only the united Amen wl.mt. can peaceably, gradually, safely, improve, lift up and bless, with all social and personal auU civil bluings, rd! the races and nil the conditions which compose our vast and various fatuity ? it is such an America, only, whose arm can guard our tlag, develop our resources, extend our trado?and till the 1 measure of our glory?and because, accord dig to our convictions, the triumph of such a party puis that Union in danger. That is my reason. And for you, and for mo, and for aJI of us, in whose regards the Union possesses such a value, and to whose few* il seems menaced by such a danger, I 'i is idhmmi enough. Believing the noble 1 dup I Slate lo l>u within a half cable's | ugtli m the lee shore of rock, in a gale of wind, our first business i* to put her nhout, . lid crowd her oil' into tiio deep, open sea. l-'niti done, we can regulate the stowage of her lower tier of powder, and select her cruising ground, and biing her oHioer* to court martial at our leisure. Jf there aro any in Maine?and among the Whig* of Maine 1 hope thoie is not one?tiut if there are any, in whose hearts strong passions, vaulting ambition, jealousy of men-or sections, unreasoning and impatient philanthropy, or whatever else have turned lo hate or coldness the fraternal hlood, and quenched tko spirit of national life at its source; with whom the union of Slave States and Frco Statu* under the nc lual Constitution is a curse, a hindrance, a reproach; with those of course our view of our duty, and the reason of il, nrea sititnb wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnmmmmmmmmmmmmmm ling block and foolishness. To such you can havo uolhing lo say, anil from such you can hare nothing lo hope. Hut if there are thosa again.who low ihe Union as wo iovo it, and Bri? ! ; who regard ?t as w? do, not merely as a vast instrumentality for the prolocliott of our commerce and navigation, and for achieving power, eminence and name among the sovereigns of the earth? but us n means of improving the material lot, and elevating tho moral and mental nature, and insuring the personal happiness of the millions of many distnnt generations; if thoro are thoso who think thus justly of it?and yet hug the fatal delusion that, because it is good, it is necessarily immortal; that it will thrive without care; that anything created by man's will is abovo or stronger than His will; that because the rea son and virtues of our age of reason and virtue could build it, the passions and stimulations of a day of fronxy cannot pull it down; if such there are among you, to them address yourselves, with all tho earnestness and all tho eloquence of men who feel that some gieater interest is at stake, and somo mightier causo in hearing, than ever yet tongue has pleaded or tiumpcl proclaimed. If such winds and hearts are reached, all is safe. Bui how specious and how mani fold are the sophisms by which they are courted! They hear and they read much ridicule of those who fear that a geographical party does endanger tho Union. I>ut can they foiget that our greatest, wisest, and most hopeful statesmen havo always felt, and have all, in olio form or another, left on record, their own four of such a party! The judgments of Washington, Madison, Clay, Wkiistku, on tho dangers of tho American Union?are they worth nothing to a conscientious love of it? What they dreadrd as a remote and improbable contingency?that against which they cautioned, as they thought, distant generations? that which they were so happy as to die without seeing?is upon us. And yet some men would have us go on laughing and singing, liko tho traveller in tho satire, with his pockets empty, at a present peril, the incio apprehension of which, us a distant and hare possibility, could sadden the heart of tho Father of his Country, and dictate the grave and grand warning of the Farewell Address. They hear men say that such a party ought not to endanger the Union: that, although it happened to be formed within one geograpiiicnl section, and confined exclusively toil; although its end and aim is to I rally that section against the oilier 011 a | question of morals, policy and feeling, on | which (lie Iwo differ eternally and unap , peasnbly; although, from the natme of its origin and objects, no man in the section oulaide can possibly join it, or accept ollice under it without inlatny at home; although, therefore, it is a stuj endous oiguuizalimi, practically to take power and honor, and a full share of the Government, from our whole family of State?, and bestow them, substantially, all upon the antagonist family; although the doctrines of human rights, which it gathers out of the Declaration of Independence?that passionate and eloquent manifesto of a revolutionary war?and adopts as its fundamental idea?, announce to any Southern apprehension a crusade of Government against slavery, far without any beyond Kansas; although the spirit and tendency of its eleclioneeiing appeals, as a whole, in prose and verse, the loading articles of it papers, and the speeches of its orators, are to excite contempt and hate, or fear of our entire geographical section, and hate or dread or contempt 19 the natural i impression it all leaves on the Northern mind nud heart; yet, that nobody anywhere ought to be angry, or ought to be frightened; that the majority must govern, and that the North is a majority; that it is ten to one nothing will happen; that, if worst comes to worst, tho South knows it is wholly to blame, an I needs the Union more t'.an we do, nnd will bo quiol accordingly. lint do they who hold this language forI get that tlio question is not what ought to cn lunger the Unioir, but what will do it! J Is it man as he ought to be, or man as lie is, that wo must live with or live alone?. In nppiociating the influence which may distui h a political system, and especial I) one like ours, do you make no allowance 1 for passions, for piide, for infirmity, for the burning sense of even imaginary wrong! o o o 1>.> you assume that all men, or all masses I ' of men in all sections, uniformly uhcy rea i son, and uniformly wisely see and calmly I seek their true interests? Where on earth ; is such a fool's Paradise as that to he ' I found? Conceding to the people of tlie I ; fifteen States the ordinary and average hu I ' man natuie, its go ?d and its evil, its weak; ness and its strength, I, for one, dare not say j that the triumph of such a party ought not I to bo expected naturally and probably to disunite the States. With my undouhting convictions, I know that it would be folly and immorality i in ineti to wish it. Certainly there are in all sections and in all Stales those who love i the Union, under tho actual Constitution, as i Washington did, as Jay, Hamilton and Madison did?as Jackson, as Clay, as Webster loved it. Such even is the hercditaiy and tho habitual sentiment of the general American heart. But lie has read life and books to little purpose who lias not learned ; that ''lxisom fi i.-ui.Ul.i I.~" ! " a ( V \J\Z KXJ IP.U*lll* iiient soured," and that no liuli 2d is so keen, dcoi>, uud precious ns that. "And lobe wroth with miu we l<>vo A\"i!l work lik?> madiu-o in the brain." lie has read the hook of our history to still lc>s purpose, who h is not learned that the friendships of the-e States?sister*, lull iivali?sovereigns each, with a public life, and a body of interests, and source* of honor and tdriinc of its own and within itself, distributed into two great opposing groups, are of till human ties most exposed to such rupture and such transformation. I I Iiiivh not time in these hasty lines, and there is no need, lo speculate on tlio details of the modes in which the triumphs of this parly would do its work of evil. Its mere struggle to obtain the government, as that stniggle is conducted, is mischievous to an extent incalculable. That thousands of the good men who have joined it deplore this is certain, hut that duos not mend the matter. 1 appeal to the conscience and honor ef my Country, that if it were the aim of a great parly, by every species of access to the popular mind; by eloquence, by argu- 1 inent, by taunt, by sarcasm, by rocriininalion, by appeals to pride, shame and natu- 1 ral right, to prepare the nation for a strug- 1 glo with Spain or England, or Austria, it could not do its business more thoroughly. Many persons, many speakers ? many, very ' many, set a higher and wiser example, but the work is doing. If it accomplishes its object, and gives 1 the Government to tho North, 1 turn my ' eyes from tbo con sequences. To the fifteen loo States of the South, that Government will tiei appear an alien Government. It will np- tlx pear n hostile Government. It will rcpre- qu sent to their eyes a vast region of Stalos, art oiganized upon anti-slavery, flushed hy iri- ail umph, cheered onward by the voice of the ovi pulpit, tribuno and press; its mission to in- inc augurato freedom and put dowu the oligar- of chy; its constitution, the glittering and no sounding generalities of natural right which pa make up the Declaration of Independence, tlx And then and thus is the beginning of the ed end. git If a necessity could be mnde out for such do a party, wo might submit to it as to other i wi unavoidable evil, and other certain danger. Iii Liut where do they find that? Where do coi they pretend to find it? Is it to keep 81a cm very out of the Territoiie*? There is not pe one but Kansas in which Slavery is possi- lo< bio. No man fears, no man hopes for slave- tin ry in Utah, Now Mexico, Washington or ov Minnesota. A national party to give them wi to Freedom is about as needful and nbout roi as feasible as a national party to keep m< Maine for Freedom. And Kansas! Lot a that abused and profaned soil havo calm ch within its borders; deliver it over to the pu natural law of peaceful and spontaneous en itnmigiation; take olf the ruffian hands; of siriko down tho ritlo and the bowie knife; W guard its strenuous infancy and youth till it Sli comes of age to choose for itself?and it will fin choose Freedom for itself, and it will have in; r ?t is i lurvver wiiju 11 ciiooses. co When this policy, so easy, simple and li^ just, is tried and fails, it will be lime enough gi to resort to revolution. It is in part bocnuse cli the duty of protection to tho local settler th was not performed, that tho Democratic Ct party has already, by tho action of its great i iai representative Convention, rosolvcd to put an out of odico its own administration. That all lesson will not nnd must not be lest on th anybody. The country demands that Con- ca gross, before it adjourns, givo that Territory th peace. If it do, tinio will inevitably give di it Freedom. wi I have hastily nnd imperfectly expressed re my opinion through tho unsatisfactory forms oli of a letter, as to the immediate duty of ru Whigs. Wo aro to do what we can to de- In feat and disband this geographical party. lv I tut by what specific action wo can most ro effectually contribute to such a result is a ]? question <?f more difficulty. It seems now da to be settled that wo present no candidate &p of our own. If we vote at all, then, we vote fui for the nominee of the American or the of Democratic Parly. As between them 1 f,?i shall not venture to counsel the Whigs of do Maine, but I deem it due to frankness and |i|, honor to say, that while I entertain a high . th appreciation of the character and ability of ' of Nil. Fillmore, 1 do n?>t sympathize in any 1 ba degree with the objects and creed of tbe ; id particular party that nominated him, ami wi do no approve of their organization and their tactics. ar Practicn'ly, too, the contest, in tny judg- to merit, is between Mr. Duchanan and Col. h;i Fremont. In these circumstances I vote so for Mr. Buchanan, lie has huge experience hi in public ati'aii6, his commanding capacity wi 13 universally acknowledged; his lite is willi- do out a stain. I am constrained to add that cos he seems at this moment, by the concur- tin renco of circumstances, more completely St than any other to represent that sentiment ' cr: of nationality?tolerant, warm and compre- si hensive?without which, without increase \ ii of which, America is no longer America, Nand to possess the power, and, 1 tuist, the disposition, to restore and keep that peace, j,'^ within our borders and without, for which I ,\1 our hearts all yearn; which uii our interests ! Mi demand, through which and by which alone j we may hope to grow to the Hue greatness of nalion.s all Very respectfully, your fellow citizen, an KUKVJS C110 ATE. eU To E. \V. F aulkv nnd other gentlemen of ce: Maine Whig State Central Committee. St: l'Veni the Nov Yurk Journal of Commerce. THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION. The election for President and Vice President of the United States, which t ikes place on Tuesday, the 4th of November next, is the 18th in the series, since the adoption wi of the Federal Constitution. The choice is ill made by Electoral Colleges,?each College ha icpieseuting a Stale, and compiling as go many members as the number of Senatois d<> and Representatives which such State is ici entitled to send to Congress. The whole number of Electors at the first Presidential ch election, in 1789, was 09; all of whom \o bu ted f>r Ceorgo Washington. The present re; number is 1290, viz: G2 Electors at large, ?<. corresponding with the immher of Senators no in Congress, and 234 District Electors, cor- mi responding with the number of Kepresen- tin tatives. I he Distiicl Electors are not clios- to en by Districts as in the case of Kepresen tic lathe- to Congress, but each Slate votes by no general ticket for its District Electois, as lie well as for its Electors at I ?rgo. The billow be ing schedule shows the uiimher of 1 'residoiitial Klcctois to which each Slate is entitled: Dv 8ixtbkn crkk aratks. i rilTKKN il?vk ktatk?. ai Maine 8 lleliiwure 3 tin New 1 luni|Hiliirc f*, Maryland ,s hl;( Vermont 6| Virginal |f? Ma%K.'iolitisi'Ua 13, Nurlh Carolina 10 ' Ithxlc 1 -I.iikI i South Carolina n Connecticut 6|(?e<>rjgia 10 wi New York 3N, Florida 3 ,,f New Jersey 7, Alabama . 0 j],. Pennsylvania 97 MiMiateppi 7 Ohio 93 Diuiaiann. r. 011 Indiana l.TIYxas 4 vvl Illinois II iTcnnrMcc 1 ~ a Mlohlpan fi Kentucky I ?' .sex Wisconsin .r>'Missouri ! ... [iwi. 4 Arkansas 4 | California 4 Total 14_?o |?e Total 1 Tit < >i and total. . , .'JillJ jji; Necessary to a clioiee 149 f((] Of course (here are various opinions as (>f to t!io result of (ho approaching election ? hk the general result, ami the results in par- wi tied 1 'tr States. Some of these opinions are an doubtless put forth for political etlcct, while isn others, we may presume, express the real *c< sentiments, modified hy the wishes, of those (0 who utter them. Wo too have our wishes, nn< which arc liable to bias our judgment. Hut sto at least there shall he no humbug about ph our calculations; they shall he honestly vat made, and fearlessly uttered, leaving the of event to decide. It must l>c confessed that pu in many of llio Stales there is much greater jm* (1 ifDciilty than usual in prognosticating re- thv suits, hy reason of tlio disjointed condition bri of the old parlies, and tlio disturbing elo- eal mollis which havo been introduced, in the the shape of Americanism, and Republicanism wh so-called. It is however to be noted that nm Republicanism has no existence in the (If we lo? n slavcholding States, or numbers loo de< few adherents to justify the formation of an if i Klectoial ticket, except possibly in Missouri, ? where il is thought a few thousand votes for such a ticket might he obtained. In ^ 1 lltose fifteen States, then, wo have only to I vJr k at the Democratic and American \sr T i, with such a reference to tlio remains of > old Whig party as the case may re- 7 ire. True, a Urge portion of the Whigs i merged in the American parly; but not There are ftUiocrous indirrhrnK si! 1 er the country, comprising many of the 1 >fit respectable and intlueutial members 1,1 the old Whig party, who never did, and w ver will, consent to be merged in the w .ty which supplanted them. Hitherto vt jse inen, for the most part, havo remaininactive, not caring to waste their cnor- "J ,*s in a fruitless contest with their iuva- j rs, nor yet boiug prepared to co operato iit th their hereditary foes, the Democrats, w it tho now phase of politics which has me up, in the shape of Black Ib-publi- nism, like a dragon from the sea, will not T rtnit these patriotic citizens to bo mere >kors on, while their country demands uir help, ^specially at tho South, whener they become convinced, as they soon y II be, if ibcy are not already, tliat the il contest is not between two national 3ii, Buchanan and Fillmoro, but between national man and n sectional man, Bu- t'r annn and Fremont?between Democracy n rifled of its most mischievous ingrcdi- u| ts, and Black Republicanism, composed ? those ingredients, and a decoction of ft liiggery and Abolitionism, spiced with w larpe's rifle theology?we say, when old p io Whigs at the South (and the same m ny be said of many of tho Ainericaus,) n me to understand ihe question in this _ ;ht, they will not hesitate a moment to 1 vo their intluence and their votes for Bunnan mid Breckinridge. At least five of ?' o W'?ig United Slates Senators now in j ingress, viz., Messrs. Benjamin "f Louis ,| ua, Jones of Tennessee, (Jeycr of Missouri. 1 id Pratt and Pearco of Maryland, have ready, in tho most public manner,avowed eir intention to suppoit tlio Democratic |( ndidales; and these are but specimens of u ouaauds like minded, if though not all so ?? stinguished. This will explain the other ^ iso unaccountable phenomena of the rent elections in Kentucky and North Car ? niii?iwo 01 isic rstaies wliicli were most ti lied on by the friends of Mr. Fillmore. a stead of any indications of such a result, | entncky lias given a majority of 8.000 in 1 | mid numbers, and North Carolina of f,000, in favor of the l>oinocratie caiidi ; ites ! Missouri too, which, owing to a j j lit in the Democratic ranks, was claimed r Fillmore, gives a Democratic majority I ,k< 8,000 or so, after sparing L'5,000 voler Col. Hellion.* If the>0 tilings are ' } me in States w hich were among lliomo-: I ^ tely of all the Southein Stale- to give j |(. eir votes for Fillmore, what shall be said Virginia, South Carolina, Ccorgia, Ala- u| ma, etc., ?tc. Our inforinantion fiour iv>u- v ana and Tennessee assures us that they " II follow in the wake of Kentucky and ' u mill Carolina. Maryland and Delaware | h e most likely of all the Southern State- I" giro '.heir vote# for Fillmore; but we : ;irdly exjiecl that either of them will do i Dalaware is more likely to vote f >r ' 1 in than Maryland. For the present we 1 II place these two States among the j ublful, as it is easy to make up the ne 1 ' -sarv complement for Buchanan without Pill. All the ic-t of tlio sl:iv? holding ates we distinctly claim for the Demo- \ ilic candidates, as follows : nlr$. III. Yvtf*.' Statr*. III. t 'otm ... w rgima I .> ! .ou .-aiii.i n 1 irtli Carolina in]!Yxa* t " mli t^iirn'iii.i 8iT>iiiumwc lg I orgia Jo Kentucky t'J i irida it.Mi-noun y I j'' ib.ima II AI kalis. t ... ? hi a#IMI| Jl < | , This leaves 10 vote- to bo ?1 from i It the other State-, including Mai viand J il Delaware. We might look for iheiu [ ewhere with n very good cliaiiee of stic?s, htil will take liieiu turn the id .wing ntcs viz.: 1 I! IViiustlvnnai 2? Ill'liow 11 |S < '.thiol nia i ' 4-' Atld ihc above lu'J I ti And wv have ther<<iti ie.l in ijoritv, lot i .?* " th two votes to spare. 'Kir opinion i-, M at in half a dozen other Stales, and pro i I. bly more, the Democratic ticket has a- " tnj a chance as the Republican, hut we " n't care to go into particular, for the isoii above stated. ! We eonld give good lea-ons why we liin 1 'enlist Ivania, l linoi-and ' al.l jinia, t it would occupy too much space. In ?ard to 1 Vutisv Ivauia w e may - tv in a ' id, that all American ticket I.as been initiated there, and will receive a handsome l pp<>rt. I'.v the strong v?>tu ? l" 7if to lb. I e Convention which nominated it refused " unite with the Republican- in a Fusion ket. If the AmeiicaiiH adhere to theii ,, initiations, as there i- overv rea-on to be- u ve thev will, the Demon alio ticket will ? elected by a large majority. We have -a d enough to cnheartcii all luoci.ilrt, ami all conservative \\ lii^> ami ?. ilericans who are disposed to unite with < ciu in placing in the Presidential chair a ilesinan of long experience, Hied integii uniiupe tellable molality, sound wisdom, inne->s without laslniess, conservatism tlioul old fog) isin, in shot t, a man worthy the he-t davs of the Republic?rather tit elevate to that exalted station a joung ( m without experience in public affairs, tlioul eminent qualifications of any kind, representative of all the timi, and of a lion, against Hie piiucipie ut national ity on which the Republic was founded, r, il on which alone il can stand and pros- ? i in liino to come. Ihil theie i-> a dan 11 r in the opposite direction. It I leinocrals d their liands and say ''all's well," instead Itiiok 1 inoil tlio harness and working ci e heroes for a glorious tiiiiniph, tln-v ' II lose the piir.o which is set helorc tliein, I in so doing establish the toign of ultra i, sectionalism, and proscription, the eonpiences of which will bo most disastrous themselves, their posterity, their countiv, I iii.niViud. Theii opponents will leave no no unturned, no etlorl untried, to nccom sh their purposes; und they have the ad itngo of a numerous and powerful pre>s, a vast many idle prcacluos, and ol the I! -valeiit bitterness which for vears they iu been fomenting against a pojiioii of ir fell >w citizen> as o.. , i as tlieiii-.dve-, as | ive, as self saciificing when the country Is, and who only ask equal privileges in i common territory, for the acquisition of la ioli they paid their full sliaro of blood ,-f 1 treasure. Thoro nro now but eleven eks before the eventful day which it to ido our destinies for the next four years, It u?t for all limo. I to Since tli ? was written, we have receives) a tele|ilnc ilce|mtcli from St l^iiiis, tinting that the Hon ch-ctorul ticket It as been withdrawn in fa- ! '1 of the regular Dcnioerntic ticket. ' HE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. In th? Common Tleat*. he President and Director* of the Dunk of State of South Carolina, Endorsees, rs. E. C. Leilner, Endorser, Declaration by Attachment. \rilF.RKAS the Plaintiffdi.l,ou the 13th day of December, file bis l>eviaration against e Defendant, who, (an it is said,) is absent from id without tlio limits of this State,and has neither ife nor attorney known within the sainc u|hiii horn a oopy of the said deelnrntion might bo serai : It is therefore ordered that the said defendant >penr uud plead to the said declaration, on or hero the 14th day of December, which will he in thu ur of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ty-aeven, otherwise filial and absolute Judgment ill then be given and awarded against him. J. B. TOLLKSON, Clerk. Doc 13 43_ 4<| IE STATE OF S< >UTH CAROLINA. Spartanburg District. In the Com moil Pleas. ;. & G. W. MAUTIN, "I vs. > Attachment. PEN C KB KOKI1UCK. ) HOIiO & KlfWAKDS, Plaintiff's Attorney. ITITIIKIMIAS the Plaintiff did 011 the c.gliv v teen ill day of March, file his declaration gainst the defendant who, (as it is said,) is absent 111 and without the limits of this State, and has either wife nor attorney known within the same l?>n whom a copy of the said declaration might he rved: It is therefore ordered, that the said dendant do appear and plead to the said declaration, 11 or before the nineteenth day ol March, which ill be in tbe year id otir l.ord Olio Thousand light Hundred and Kilty-Seven, otherwise filial ml absolute Judgment will then be given and warded against him. J. 15. TOLLKSON, March 1^. 1 Sob C. C. c. r. 11E STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA. In the Court of Common Pleas. Ol IN 8. CiKNTKY, Adin. "J AMES DKHAY & | Attachment. OSKI'II Ill'TLKIl. t\7 11 K.K 1*. AS the Plaintlfls did on thelOthdav v ?.f November, tile their deelarntiuli against le defendants who (who as it is said) are absent in and without the lim ts of this State, and have either wife nor Attorney known ivithiu the same pon whom a eupy of the said declaration might he rved. It is therefore ordered that die said de iiilatiU do appe.11 and plead to the said declarant) 011 or before the |0|h day of November next, hieh will be in the year of <mr I.ord, one thuu1 nd eight hundred and fifty-seven, otherwise 11a and absolute judgment will then he given und warded agan-t them. N-.v to h| J IL TOLLKSON, Clerk. HE ST.Vl E < )F S( )UTH CAR< >1.1 N A Si* AltT AN IIP ltd District. Iii tli Coui*t of Cumiin 111 Pleas. \mks l.m'kknci:, ) vs. > Attachment. ol insiiop. ^ It' >IH > A* LI >W.Mil>S, Plaintiff's Attorney. I % * 11 Kit f. AS, tile plailltitis dill oti the gljtli day ? v o| Much, file tln ir deelaratioiis against ie ilef a hints who (as it is is oaid) are nhsent otn ami without the li nit - of tli*s State, and have itluT wife nor Attorney known within the same poll whom a copy of the said dcelaration might he rved. It is therefore ordered that the said defenditsdoappiar and plead to the said deelaiatioiinn r before the 'JTth day of March next, which ill he ia the year ofour Lord, one thousand eight iitn I l ed and tit v-seven, otherwise final and ahso judgtio ntwill then be given and awarded rainst tliein. J It. TOLLKSON, Clerk. March i!7 .r> 4n II ESTATE OK SOUTH UAIOMXA Si'\kt.vn ucihj 1 sillier. In the Common l'leas. 'At l'i fulfill awl Directors ??/ the It ink of tht State oj South Carolina, Ihidorsem, r*. /.'. r. I.eitner. I > -ehiiation l?v Attachment, i \ ' 11 F.U K \S ll?-- I'ii nil! i. I "ii ;!n 13thd.iv ? T ..: 11 nil) r file b - I liUtltinn .._:..11-ili.wrtfodant, whu (Mit iiaakl) is absent fmin md tli'.ui tin- Ii in t*> i'f 11 - if State, a in! Las lu-i'Jii r u ifo r attorney known w tliiii tin same upon whom a >p\ <?f tlu- siiil ili-i-laialii'ii in fill Ik- n rviil: Ii is ;h i-.-fnpi- order* il that the said defendant do |i ar an I |ih-ail t?? tin- Ni'd declaration, nil nr lor. tin 1 l:!i day of I >. oetnb.-r, w hieh will bo i ill.- \.-ir of our l.or.1, one tli >u?aiid e.ght Imurrit ami lil'iv-s \, n'.li r?.?i- final and nlmolutc iidgin lit will th nl" u'ivi n aii-l or.h r? d against iin. .1. Ii. T'lLl.l-SON, Cicik. I?.? 1.1 4$ 4q HE SPATE ( ! S<?!' I ll CAIN>MNA. Siwui % Mil'itu lh-riucT. In tli t '1.111111011 I'ii as. : A- C. V. M AUI IN, I vs. ? Attachment. ri:\('i:u u< >K.i:r? k ) Id >1'.' > A' KI*M A1!I tS, 1'taint ll's'Attorney | I \ ' IIUUI'.AS :!., 1' .1 1. ;1 did ..11 the , ght t t.?iit!i .lav ot M itch, file Ii * declaration, yf linst the ih-fi-iiilunt. wIt-. i.isiti* said 1 is absent r..ni and with, u: tin- litn f* of tliia Stat , an I has . i.h'i-wiv nor attorney known within the same Ix>n whom a i'ojiv ot tin- 1*1 d declaration might t, erred- It ia thi-n tore ?>r%i r*-d, that tin- s.i I dcndant doa|>|K-nr .1111 pini I to tin- said declaration, ti or before the nineteenth day of March, which oil l?, iii ilie year of our I.*-id One Thousand hi?ht 1111 u lr.d and Fifty Seven, otherwise final ll.l :i solute judgment Will thctl he g ll'l) atld warded aga list him. .1, It rOLI.EjiON, Mai eh IS, ISoG C. C. 0. P. IN K((l ITV Spartanburg. 'obi rt Watson and others, \s. .Tames Khod.-s. Wilhatn lllio.les and otln rs. 1> 11 lot nee.'tint, pill tilioii ali.l relief. I) V i rtuc of a titer, tal ord. r made in this ctse J at dune sittings, IN'.G, I will sell on Sales day 1 t i toiler 11. xt, at Sprit tanburg Court House, neurdilig lo idat.s eXeeut. d and oi. le.. i>. ic lleiucstc.il, composed ot several tract* wl lanJ, |m>ii ilit bdlowinz cnndtioiis. The I'mnipu* tract, il l tlif 11.i \\ 1M1 ip tract, two of ill,- constituent* the Hem ~tf.i l, will Ik- sold separately from the ill r tract*,.niil Iroin each other. The remainder I tin- ho:iH'i?ti-a 1 vt 11 lie k.i'd hi t.vp irate division*, s represented hy the plain aforesaid. The nbove in 1- n II b Sold tm a credit of one mid two years. 11ii i! instalments, w itli inteiest tiotii the day < ) tie. Purchasi r? will he rctju rod to secure their 1* by ifiviiirf bonds with at least two go*l sure > to ia In An 1 also to pay lor papers. T. <> I'. VKIlNOX.c it s o. t' iii'>. < Mliee, August ti, 18."?6. -a 7t. In VAlllTX ?Spartanburg. dough II Mayhry ct. al \?. Mary Mnbry, et. al. liiil (or I'art it oil ol Ileal Kstate. I N Pursuance nf an ord. r of the Court of Equity I in tins eaac, m ids llta Sth of duly, ibo6, 1 will xpose to puhlic rale, at S|iartatihurg Court louse, oil Isales day in < Moist next, the lands ,-lom-d to in the return of the Commissionrs to the writ of partition, and represented n rein by plats nuiiibi-rid I, V, it, and I, on a red t ot one and two years, with intero*t "from ie day ol stile. The lands thus desei.bed will be ild in sc|tarute tract* as numbered, and a sulli ency ot tlio purchase money to pay the costs of leSo proceedings Will he rc<|'.lilcd tube paid ill i?b on the day of wile. The purchaser* to give >nd with approved surct . > for thepayment of tlio ui chase iiioim v, and also a mortgage of the preiuVS. Cost of pap( rs to be paid down. . .\ f. it ? ? > , C. K. H. I>. .Coin'*. Oflioc, Aug. G. Aug 14 -5 if The Slate of Soiilli Carolina. Sl'AtlT A N III' HO 1 MSTRICT. IN Til K t'ol KT UK OUIMNAUY. iiij.nii.il llnniinctt, A|ipl. vs. Benjamin I'age, Atlm'r., mill others, defendants. Citation l'i Si'lllrmi'Dl. I T li iviog Imtii shown to nij satisfaction tli.it Ilha L lli'?lit'.ir?, ami tin' Iivmb at law nriil legal r? |>roillative* of I 'l./.'ili. tli l!ijlii;ir?, diwiMd, dvlrn* nits in tliii above case, reside from ami without the nits uf t!ii* State: It is therefore orih rc?l and deee?l, that they be an 1 appear at tho Court of Ornary lor said I>.strict, to be hell at Spartanburg ourt House, on the Hist ilay of October next, to low catt'O, if any ? vst, why the I'Ntntc of James urehtielJ, dee'd., should not bo settled ntiil tho iio-ts of the same ordered to be paid out according law, or their consent to tho s.auo wiil be taken a ronfeaxn. t J.veii under my hand and seal of office, the J 1st jly, I8&6. It. HOWDKN,0. s n. August 7 Si lit CHEROKEE SPEDTG8. I'. C.WTRELL, Proprietor, TIIIS pleaaaut Snmmcr report is now [imTPI iu complete repoir, aud ready tor tier liiilfifM entertainment of u large company of A jUssMmk Visitors. It M located 8 miles, noiiotsui of Stay UtAittg 0. II., on the mail route loading to Rutherf?rdtou, N. C., on nn elevated spot, aud surrounded t?y pleasnut walks und drives. Cow pens little-field id but 8 miles distant. Tbe HOUSE is new, healthy, and comfortably furnished, with sweet and airy bed rooms, and piazzas to both BtorieS the entire length of the building. The TABLES are supplied with every reasonable article within reach, and the Servants are attentive to the comfort ol guests. The WATERS of the Spring are known all over the State for their valuable medicalproperties, and particularly for rapid action on the liver and kidneys, and are eminently beneficial ill ceUai'offl diseases. A Shower and Pluugo Math* are also l" attached to the Spring. The Spring itself now lMI rises inn Il-s-k I'.isin, aud this improvement has reduced the temperature of the water much below what it formerly was. ^ 1'rof. J In Pre, of WofTord College, is engaged upon an analysis of the properties of the Spring, and as soon as completed, it will be added to this "* notice. *' TZRMS OP BOARDING : "I1 One Person, $'.10 per month ; rc u ti .. Q o wcv|i . o n n | n day. bt Children and Servants liaif-prico. Horses 62$ per *> day. Ol A lew Cabins still uulet. Terms, $25 per season, tit July 10 _ 20 tf cl S. W GILLILAND. ? GENERAL C'OMMSSION AGENT. ,.i NEWJIEURY.S. C. rt I> HSPECTKUhLY oilers his services to all in k. those who trade at Newberry, as their Ueneral el Commission Agent, lor the di*|>osul of their Cotton ni and other produce. Will give his pcrronal atten- hi tiou to Receiving, Selling,< Storing or Shipping of s< Cotton and all kinds of produce intrusted to his care. rt Having made arrangements with different IIou- $ ses, he is Dow prepared to make liberal advances hi on Cotton shipped to Charleston. 1' Will nl.io pay thu highest market cash prices on tl delivery for all tha Wheat, Flour, Corn aud other ^ produce that can he brought to this market for V sale. An experience of several years business at this tl place, in all its various forms, induces him to believe ^ that he can promote the interest of plauters, and * hopes by prompt attention to merit a liberal share T of patronage. Charges for selling or shipping h | Cotton '2~> cents per bale, all other transactions in accordance with custom. The best of references SI**"". Until llie first of January next he may bo found alioiit the Store I loom formerly occupied by Messrs. \V. O. A J. F. Glen. " N.v 15 39 tf B1 S. T. &GWEW, .Wiufteri'i/ Court House, Importer and Dealer IS HAHUUARE, PAIS'TS, OJI.S, WINDOW GLASS. GROCERIES GENERALLY. DRY (iOODS, HATS, SHOES, ASP CLOTIIISC, ?J-G\, AC., ANl) r BUYER OF COTTON AST) OTHER COUNTRY PRODUCE, "J lias now in store one of the largest, and most varied Stock of Goods in South Carolina, and is prepared to offer to his numerous Iriends una customers, ?' liberal inducements w hicli eanuot fail to prove to JV their interest. I am nlwuva in the market tor the , purchase of COTTON and COUNTRY l'UUiJh'CK generally, and planters will tind it generally to their interest, by culling on mo before making ' { their urraucemctits ciscu here. ' j S. T. AC NEW, v importer <>l English Hardware. r. ! <M. 18 3.*? tf I j Fisk's Patent Burial CaBes! j n xn.iu.r i" -til, Li-U-MC." i 51 rlMI E siihscribt r is agent lor the sale of DISK'S tr 1 PATENT IIURIAI. CASES?Clotli-co- j a vered ??r Utilized? in whit ha body can be kept or j transported any distance, without danger from de- ? eoiiipuaitioti or vermin. | > Cabinet Making. IlE is also u CAIilXKT MAhKH, and pri- ( puted to furnish New Cabinet Ware at short notice, ami also to repair old furniture ou reasonable j terms,and solicits a will at hi* room* <>ti Maiti-st., 1 Spartanburg, below the Court llouse. 1 A!- * 1 lino tu.-nt tm.ut of 1'AllUOll CIIAIRS. | constantly on hand. | . Sept 20 :il tf S.V. GENTRY. . Ml SIC ! % 4 V Eli Y la*ge soh etioli of the ~ n V beat and latest improved 1*1- j ANUS of till hi til* call lie hud lit " " * J * a K A M SAY'S P I PIANO FoKTE AM) MUSIC STORE i!11 COLUMBIA, S. C ! * j lb- iiv! iv* a *p eial exaiinnution of the late pa- ! nj I tented iinproveiiiuntsin ilullit lis via.I- ...a? I i> I bntv.l Pianos. Every pianois guarantied. ta j Jan* 9S 18 ly The State of South CiraHia* HI* AHTANIU'KG DISTRICT. IN THE COURT OF ORDINARY. Jno. S. N ice, Adm'r , Appt., vs. J. Kber Vice, V niul others, defendants ' ' Citation to have I'lststo Settled. Mi "^"M7TIKRK.\S it has heen shown to my sntislne- w v tioti th it the heirs at liw and legal representative* of Williunr Vice, deceased, Defendants _ in tin* :ib wee .so, reside from and without the limits of this State- It is therefore ordered and d elared, that they l?e and up|?ear at the Court <?f Ordinary for mid I).strict, to bo held at Spartanburg Court llouse, on the lOtli day of November next, ? t > show cause, if any exist, why the Estate of Mrs. lane \ iee, deceased, i-houid not be settled and he bi assets of the same ordered to bo paid out according to law. or their consent to the same wnl be entered | of record. ? tiiven under my hand Mid seal of office, I lib \ UgUst, Itiati. li. liOWDEN, O. #. D. August Id 25 I2l. IN IjQI'ITV?Spartanburg. 1 Wade Woflbrd, and others, vs. Alexander Thomas, and others. Hill for Partition, Account and Relief. EN Obedience to an order of the Court of Equity J ma le in this case, 1 will r -II on the premises, , the former re*.donee of the widow MARY WOF1 (Mil >, deceased, on the thirteenth day of November next, the lauds described in the pleadings in this ease, and represented by plats ex cent id by Win. C Cump, on the 1-tih nnd 15th days of May, IS.'.f. One of the plats represents a tract ?f ri land owned hv Mary \Y afford, deceased, contain ing four hundred and ninety-five acres, more or t>( hss The other two plat* represent real ?state \| owned by .1 esse \Voff>rd, deceased, lying on lino- fa ....v.. viir ii.i -i containing ivvo liuitiir..] and ' t|1 twenty-eight and the other twenty-two nud a hull , ? acres, mure or K-m. Kur a more partii'uliir dttcip- I tion reference is inrilcil t>> the aforumhl plats on file ' _ iu my utliec. Terms of Sale. Credit of one nn?l two years. ( with interest from the day of sale, will l>o given Iw ! the purchase money, except the owls ol lhos-' pr<> , cceding*, which mast U pa.il in cash oti the day ? ' I sah Purchasers will In i piirc 1 to give t>i.d and approvid security to NttM their purch.iic^, I ! and pay lor papers. j -I TII<?S. O. P. YKRNON, e. r s n. *1 CoinV l>ffieo, Aug ft. Aug. 14 Vf? tf u< -? _ ? c IN KQl ITY Spartanburg. Thus. It \VoflP?rd vs. .1. K. Woffotd, el <d. di Petition for Aeeount and Relict. IN pursuai.ee of an order of the Couit of Kquity J"' . in this case, notice is hereby given to IIm crvd* 8' ; it<ns of th? absent debtor, J fc. W'OFKOPI), |o corns in, present nn ' verify the.i demands, withiu i three months front the date of this rule ' YIIOS. O. P. VKHNON, c c s i>. | C- niY Office, August 13 lbcf?. *.'5 IJt i.i.hh --- i . {* 9 C\ I ' &-% iJ ic O m ? L I ^nu^tKAT^jim i The Best Alte)*ative Kqowb I ?* HOT A PARTICL* OH KIROVBT |i.* |T t \,f n Infallible remedy for Scrotals, ?jJL Rheumatism, Otwtiniic Cmiomm Krvpttu. Pimples or I'lMtuId on ike Furc es', Roils, Ague ond Fever, Cbroui* f Sore Kyes, Ringworm, or Tetter, Sc.ild-heod, Kalargument aud pain ot ihe Rone* and Joints, < Salt Kbeum, L Stubborn Ulcers, Syphilitic Dwordei?, and oil diseases seising froui on injudicious use of Mercury, Imprudence in Life, or Impurity of This great altera tiro Medicine and Purifier ?f e Wood is now used by thouasnds of grateful itients from ull ports of the United Staler, who rtily daily to the remnrkable cures performed by I e greatest of all medicines,"CARTER'S SPANill MIXTURE." Neuralgia, Rhesuisti?, rrofula, Kruptiona on the Skin, Lircr Diseoae, L-vcrs, Ulcers, Old Sores, Affection of the Kid j \?, l>i*<- iwi of the Tlirout, Female Complaints, tins and Aching of the Dome and Joints, aru ccdily put to flight by uaiug this inestimaKs medy. For all diseases of the Jtlood, nothing baa ye 1 :eu found to compare with it. It cleanses lbs 1 stem of hII imparities, acts gently and efficiently I i the Liver and Kidneys, strengthens the Discs>n, gives tons to the Momuch, makes the Skim ear and healthy, and restates the Constitntion* ifccbled by disease or bioken down by the CSset of youth, to its pristine vigor and strength. For the diseases or rcMAi.es it is peculiarly apicable. and wherever it has become known id gularly prescribed with the happiest effccta. Il ivigorates the weak and debilitated, and imparts asticity to the worn-out frame, clears the skin* id leaves the patient fresh and healthy; a single uttle of this inestimable remedy is worth all th? i-callcd Sarsnjierillus in existence. The large number of certificatrs which we liaee ,-ceived from persons from nil ports of the United tatcs is the best evidence tliat there is no humug about it. The Press, hotel keepers, mngisat.s, physicians, and public men, well known to io community, all add their testimony to the wonrrlul effects of this GREAT RLOOD PUKIBiro. *1 Call on the agent ami get on Almanac, and read ic details of astonishing cores performed by CARER'S SPANISH MIXTURE, (in now ?a?w 'HERE EVERT TUINO CUE HAD BIOHALLT fllUa) he limits of nn advertisement will not admit their ill insertion. : \YM. S BEERS & CO., Proprietor*, No. 304, liroadvcay, JVeie York. To whom all orders must he addressed. For sale by Druggists and Country Merchants i nil |>urts of the United States and the Can ad as, [id by 2 id by F1SI1 Kit & I1EINITSH, Spartanburg. JOllX L. YOUNG, Unionville. May 8 11 ly booms! hooks: ! t"MIK subscriber takes'.bis method toinform the . citizens of the Village and surrounding cosny, that he is now receiving a good stock ol N JtW OOKS, at his Hook Store, No. 6, Main-smrt, .posit e the Court House, snch as are genei ally ied in Colleges, Academies and common English I'hooU. A large variety of MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS, ..bracing HISTORICAL, BIOGRAPHICAL KOLOGICAL, MECHANICAL. Poetical and lusieal works, of various sizes and prices. ^ Some light reading (in the way of Novels.)? ,UT1I HALL, Funny Fern's writings : TOM ONES' COURTSHIP, Ac. A*. BLANK Bt.K'KS. A number of H Y M X UllKS, used by the different denominations < f liristians, together with a large assortment el FAMILY. BIBLES, rices from $3.00 to $10 00; small HIBLKS, from D cents to $1.50 and $3.06: TESTAMENTS ?nn fifteen cents to $1.00. PRAYER BOOKS, l various prices. Also a variety of small religious books,toy books lid Primers. A good lot of Foolscap, Letter, Commercial and .<>te Paper. Envelope* from common to the finest Ivies. Black, Bine and Red Ink. NEW MUSIC FOR THE PIANO. Between 500 and 1,000 new pieces for the Pi rm, from the best composers, the greatest nn.iv rer ottered in the up-country, (We hope the laics will call anil supply themselves.) I have made p< rmnucnt arrangements with sevral large Book Houm-i in Philadelphia and New 'ork, to exchange my Music Work?th? SOITHERN HARMONY, t CASH I'llICE, lor tlu-ir Hooks, Ac,, at each rices, nctt. 1 w ill, therefore, be able to sell Book'' ad Stationery lower than they bare ever bean sold j i Spartanburg: and ns I des re to do an entire ^ tsh I usiness, if the people will call with their mory, I think they whlbc satisfied that they ean buy J <> iks, &C., frniu me, as cheap as they can (at ri- 1 [ 1) in Columbia or Charleston. I JUT CALL AND SEE.Jtt WILLIAM WALKER, A. S. II. jySchool teachers supplied on liberal terms 1'. S. If any jH-r?on should call for a Book or ooks, that I have not got, 1 will immediately or-r them if they desire it. N. 11. The New Edition of the Soutiicrn Hanoer, kept constantly on hand, wholesale and reil. at the CASH BOOK STORE. \ May 17 12 tf Notice. ] VI.L persons indebted to tlic firm ol KIRBY & WlliJON arc hereby earnestly reqnesv~ i to come forward and make immediate payment. 1 Money we want and money we must have?our rainess requires it. We had rather trot sae. 41 Ai ; ord t>> tin- wi.-c is -utVu-ii r?t." Sept 20 31 tf KIRBY & WILSON* R. D. OWE N, TAILOR, HAS RETURNED TO START AN BURG, WHERE IIK INTIRUI TO LOCATK PERM A N EN TLY. To may ho found at No. ? llriek Range, i 71 on Church street, where he will be vers M'py to ace hla oltl Iricnds, and ready gJ TO BKKVK rnSM CIlEAr FOR CASH* Xuy 1 37 ?r Store House to Sell or lleoi. 1^11 K ?uWi t>i 1 pr.y<*ea to Si ll or l*cnt ono of - the must eligible mercantile t'auda iii the town Spartanburg. The 11.use it (routing both or Iain and Church street*, the m.*t public thoroughre* in the towu. For Icrint application may be ado to either the subscriber or (Sen. O. K. Kdarda A. K. GOLDISO. A pril 3 - 9 if IN EQUITY?Spartanburg. David 11. Smith, Adrn'r. and other*, v?. Till 1 ilia Smith. II for Partition, and for Funds to pay Debt, Ac. 'N Obedience to an ordet of the Court of Kqiiity, made in litis cut, at the last term, I will cell at parlnnburg Court Ilouae, 011 Sahe-dsj la October jdcadiags in th'u fl iae, in two separate ti .u u, aa rcprcecntcd by plats W imbcred one and two, on file in my ofticc, and S itedby II. Whfts, surveyor, 00 25th of May, I85C. Terms of Sale, t redit of one, two and three gk ars, with interest from ihe day td sale will be fl Ten, except tho cost* of these proceedings, w hich c to be pmd down. Purchasers wiil he required give bond ami two npptoved sureties to eccere e purchase money, so.I ;?sv for papers. T Tilos (vr VV;nNON,c.t th Corn's. Otlic , August C, Aug 14 05 tf