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" I ?. rJffe ??> L>>^gi r?< ah? Pbopbihtob. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF JHb&HAW COUNTY. TERMS :?82.00 teb axstm, nc adva.sc*. mM?* : CAMDEN, S. C., WEDNESD AMI APRIL 1, 1874. NO, 26. upon* tip* end eyes, the Wrsr'i sighs, so long ego ? i city etreets ego? i with feoee meek, i ego ? log tele friol, thet work'd I brother's hart; where are plots end sneers, } men's hopes, the rich men's fears Thet lived so long ego ? the gold cross. Vfu'J.ou nan hardly oonsider it a gift, and 1 8ha11 8plit ifc ^ two, half for myself." _ G*orge Wayland looked straight into Carroll's brown eyes as he ?poke, and saw the sndden glow of love on them, as they met for a second his th,en hid under their blue vexled, silken fringed lids. I shall prize it highly, George, and !5?mrthe ,Mt that yon wear ? half while I wear the other." But will yon wear it always, under all circumstances?" *' Always, under all circumstances " ??? repeated merrily. ?He neatly severed the narrow, thin ^ faat?ned one section to his watch chain and the other to the piece n"??iw velvet Maggie had brought, white-throat "" h" "?<md her **I like it better than a ring, George, " L ^7 J '* " b??anse every one ifthWt h^lT^ ^ \r" j1 wouldn't like every soul in Meadowside to know I had won you, my shy, brown-eved darling. I am on*7 too proud and too happy." Jf^gie interrupted him, playfully? ^Jl?, *ady, who considers me a bold q^"an'a foolish wadow passed over Mamie's {?J6' an<| instinctively she clung fo her iuver s arm. WOh George! I am actually afraid ? u? rJ 0nly ^ he m W Td be sorry yet that I refused 3 ? "? moro#e and sullen sinoe She blushed a little, and George mag nidmouslv helped her through. 'Since I asked and was not refused ?nose sweet lips. Never mind Ned ?rfe. Naturally he feels jealous. 1 " ?jaeif, Under reversed circum ?a. But all this has nothing to do our promise to wear the little gold Fhtle we are separated for these j months that are so dose at hand. Bttt, maggie. my little girl, if ever the TV*6. *h?nM oome?mind, I have no idea that it will?but if it should come, that you want to be released from me, all fou ve to do is to send your half of the cross lo me. It will be the mute token of my misery." Maggie smiled up in his faoe cheerfully. 44 If all the misery you ever antici pate <?me? by means of this little mes ae?fer, and she hid her hsnd lightly on *Ve glittering trinket, " rest assured youll have little of ifc. But, 8ir Knight, thPPr8 yOU WhAry ot mj oolors?what He folded her tightly in his arms and Kissed her. 7 As if I oould ever ohange ?" V two, in that blissful, painful I iUJAt- -eeetfted ages to them, re iheir vows. The old, old story _r new. cheerful rays of the astral lamp round, crimson -covered table d over Maggie Carroll's white ?, and flashed like a spark of Sliver on her tiny thimble and "4 needle, as her hands flew <m her work. ?ad cleared away the tea dishes, r parents had gone to a friend's. Bessie lay sleeping on the with the liffht shaded from her " Maggie, with a garment she one of her bridal out I happily, dosfly down _ ? thinking with ?tob she tstof George Way land, Ljjbs sway eut in Omaha, where i gain a good many hundred the machinery in a Uiat would start them rsverie was dissi dent rap on the sit followed, before she KSafctSai ana open lt^ by hob I've He drew his chair away from the fire, and near the table where Maggie g&fc. " Wei?, Ned, here I am for you to see." She was determined not to allow her annoyanoes to escape her, so she as sumed from the first a friendly, olieery tone. And it mollified Ned as she in tended it should. " I was a little rough on the old folks, Maggie; but the truth is, sinoe?sinoe? you and that Wayland fellow have boen srrch friends, I see precious little of you anyway." Maggie could have bitten her tongue to have prevented the blush she felt surging over her face. "I would naturally see more of my betrothed husband than merely a friend. Ned, please hand me the scis sors." She did not lift her eyes, but slipped her thread silently, and went on sew ing, while Ned toyed with the scissors moodily. Finally, almost abruptly, ho spoke: " I'll get out and leave you in peace, Maggie, if you'll give me one of your curls to remember you by." Maggie smiled indulgently, secretly thankful at such a cheap release. "Ton may have any curl you want, Ned, and weioome. Only, you must not take it as a pledge of banishment, Ned." And now Maggie laid down her sewing, and looked into his moody half scorned face. " I wish for your sake it had been as you so desire. But as it is not, as I am so content, let it all be forgotten. Which curl will you have ?" She leaned her head toward him ooquet tishly; and he awkwardly, tremblingly, cut one off close to her neck; so close, the oold steel made her start. The moment he had severed it, he threw down the scissors, thrust the curl in his pocket in a wad, and arose from his chair. "I said I'd go. Good by, Maggie." Almost before Maggie oould reoover from her surprise at his wild, abrupt way. he was off, his footsteps ringing loud on the frozen ground. His eyes were brighter than usual, and his faoe fairly worked with exulta tion as he drew the tangled blaok curl from his pocket, and with It a band of blaok velvet, to whioh a tiny, plain gold cross was attached. Little did my lady know I out the velvet with the curl, and only begged the hair that I might secure the cro&s. Little did the lovers?curse 'em?know I overheard their sugar-oandy romance about the token of the cross B*t ff George Wayland don't get this baok be fore rm a week older, itH be strange. Trust either of them for an explana ! tion ; they're too plaguey proud. And Maggie went on with her eewing for another hour in blissful unconsci ousness of the loss of her treasure. Afterward she and Bessie had a gamo of romps befere Bessie finally went to bed ; and still later, at half-past nine, she and her brother Ben went down to the last mail to see if there was a letter from George. It was not until she bad retired to her own room, and stood before her dres sing bureau to arrange her hair for the night, that she missed it, and then she missed it at the very first glanoe in the glass. It was down stairs, oi oourse, on the floor, where it had fallen when she and Bessie had their game of fun ; or, O! suppose she had lost it on the street on the way to the post-offloo! It was very probable, very, and when she had orept softly down stairs, lamp in hand, and thoroughly searched the sitting-room in vain, sne knew it was really lost in the street. What would George say of her carelessness ? How oould the vel vet have oome untied? and with a little fit of crying over her loss, Maggie went to bed and dreamed of wading ankle deep through gold orosses. George Wayland, on his way home from a hard day's work, stopped in the post-offloe in the far off Western city for the long delayed letter from Maggie Carroll. It had been a fortnight now, sinoe he had reoeived the last, and a worried sort of feeling took possession of him at the delay. Was Maggie ill ? away from home? or?George hated himself for the ugly thought that more than onoe flitted un bidden across his mind?Morrison's heirship to a long disputed estate, that Mag gie oould have changed her mind T Yes, it was barely possible, and that was all, George decided : and when the mail was at last opened, and the rush at the boxes were leseened somewhat, and Georgo aotually saw there was one for him, he felt it was very impossible. But he shook with surprise and sick fear to see Ned Morrison's hand writing. What was the news in the sealed envelope ? He tore it rudely open, and, wrapped in a tissue paper, dropped in his tremb ling h?nd* Maggie's gold cross I Not a word ; only this mnfcr sign - the very token he had suggested ! How oontemptnons the blank piece of paper seemed to him,, and how unutterably osocking did hie name, In Ned Morri son's handwriting appear. Bo, not only poanible or probable that Kfegi" oould throw him over, but ac tually undeniably the fact, that she had done so. And be away out West, with but one friend?hie companion in lat>or. cousin Jim?and stinting to .2?J^Xfc.'nd OI was it any wonder he gnashed hia tee*? in ? rage ef grief t He crrmhed hie letter Into hie pocket and drew his oftp down over hia syes end strode on, rnimb from the blow, nevwr seeing. 1 * JIM Oarroll, who h*d got lad having rendu, to del** Messages to " What can ail this man ?" thought Jim, with wonder, and started after, and stepped on some little, hard object as he pnt his foot down. He stooped and picked np the little golden cross. 44 George has lost it off his watch ohaic. I suppose." He uut it in his pocket and went on^ intending to overtake Way land ana give him his lost trinket. But, bj dint of fast walking, may-be, George was out of sight. And on the morrow one of the hands gave him a pencil note from Way land : 44 I've a little business to attend to further down for a week or so. Keep things going on. Back soon as I can. G. W." Then, when Jim started off on his day's work, it suddenly ooourred to him that, as George would be away prob ably more than a week, he would send his cross home to Maggio for safe-keep ing. He knocked around so among the machinery, that it might get broken or lost, and he knew George prised it highly. So?the fates willed it that he had no time to write a note?he thrust it into an envelope lving on George's desk, already directed to Maggie, and sent it on its ill-omened message, all unoonscious of the mischief he was brewing by the act. The long winter has passed away? somehow or other, but Maggie Carroll nardly knew how. It was enough for her that she had been very wretched and unutterably miserable sinoe a day months past, when, without a word of warning, she had reoeived from George Wayland the cross he had solemnly sworn to always wear for her sake. Ned Morrison, too, had seemed so delighted when he learned?how such pitiful faets do leak out?that it waa all over with Maggie and George, and full of pomposity and self-importance over his inheritance, had tormented Maggie half crazy to aooept him. And now, when even his dull head had been made to know it was impos sible, and he had transferred his atten tions and affections to Amy Harrow, he was to be married, and George Wayland and Jim Carroll were ooming home on the same night. Now it was sundown, and in an hour they would meet, for George was obliged to see Maggie's father on busi ness at the earliest moment. And so she dressed in the self-same suit she had worn that night George had. TpalnfuF mem' ory of that dear past, fastened the cross in it* old plaoe. George Way land should see sne had kept ner word if he had not. She would let him know that though carelessness lost her hers, still she would be true to him no mat ter how false he was to her. 4.nd so, when her ffcther called her down from her room, she went with slow, listless footsteps, and wildly throbbing heart that would not be still, to meet the man she loved so dearly, the man who had ceased to regard her almost as soon as he was out of her presence. She had heard her voioe so round and full,and sejsweetto her hungry ears, before the door that stood aiar. "Ned Morrison to be married to-night to lit tle Amy Harrows 1 Why, I thought?" and that very moment Maggie walked quietly in, her faoe pale as death, her blue eyes burning like stars. " George, I am glad to see you. How do you do ?" She extended his hand and looked him frankly in the face. And why should she not ? Ma?gie had naturally supposed that he would have been per fectly careless, utterly indifferent, and here he was actually trembling like a man with an ague. Had he been opnscious smitten at sight of her loyaltxflaunted so openly in the very face ef Mb treaohery ? ?? Yes," Maggie was deciding, " it was the cross that made?" and then Georgie's voioe, thiB time low, intense, addressed her : "Maggie, can you explain away this siokening mystery ? I find to my utter demonstration, that Ned is to be mar ried, and not to you. And yet theoross name to me in his hand-writing." All over Maggie's faoe flamed the red Burses. Her lost treasure found by Ned Morrison, and sent?oh, so mali ciously 1?to George Wayland. And then a giddy, blinding rush of happi ness almost ohoked her. "O, Qeorge I I lost it somehow,some where. I never knew. Do you think, really, I oould kave been so?so?" Her tears welling thick and fast, al most ohoked her. " But this cross, Maggie, that you have on }" " It oanie in a blank letter one day, two or three weeks after I lost mine and I supposed you wanted to get rid of me. xou know what you said." Wayland looked utterly thunder stricken. " I have mine at this moment. I have been an true as steel. See I" He threw back his overeoat ; there was the tiny cross attaoh'ed to his watoh chain. " Oh, George I" " Maggie, my own darling I" I' WM utterly incomprehensible to them, but they loved each other, and what did they ear* f That evening, when all the family, with the two gnosis, were sitting .round the fife, Jim Carroll aaked M^gie if ahe ever reoeived the Utile cross he sent her, and then it wee as plain aa sunshine, although none of them ever knew of Ned Morrieon's theft, nor in their new bHeefnl happiness did they eere. . Show me the mantelpiece of a house, ?*ja * ?*e. eod I will tell yon what manner of persona reside therein. ~Atoaa Sacrifice. HomAB -Acrifioe vu instituted bj the peof^^Hfcexioo daring the fonr tee nth odv, and from being quite a rare rite, ?the growth of their civi lisation iaaftaaed until the activity reached to Mfearfnl height. Their cus tom was Wye some fine young man? generally fl^BMmy taken in battle; and then, for (^Binaoe of a whole year, he was treate^Mth every respect and dig nity; rioh ttd, flowers, and dress were lavished awn him; four beautiful maidens wt&t selected to be the com panions of Iris captivity; music, feast ing, and viiping at the abodes of the principal Aye nobles passed his time away. Attended by a oourtly train upon passiiw through the streets, de ferred to aal regaled with inoense, he was creatotialmost with the worship that would jfave been accorded to that of one of tfattr gods whom for the time being he wii supposed to personate. But the fbar. of pleasure drew to a close; and ^ctobtless, not being igno rant of the-.fate in store for him, this knowledge 4tiat often have embittered the gayest festivals?the richest ban quets. Devoted to the sacrifice, there was no escape for the captive; and on the expiration of the time he was de nuded of alldris gay trappings, seized upon ty the priests, and conveyed across the^ike to an island, where, about a league from the city, rose tow ering up oner of those huge pyramids, standing to &ia day as monuments of the industry and civilization of these people. TheK asoent to the flat top of the pyramidal temple was by a slowly " t of steps, oontrived so ion during one of the feasts might be seen ! -the city, winding up to >riests were standing altar?these fearfm performed in the open made imposing, and the assembled thou >us city, who watched ritement and a feel the Moent of the vio was received by six I strange-looking, with red robes, and long, halt. By them block of iaeper, slightly rounded at the ton ; and upon tULMM uppermost, the upon victim _____ ith a knife of obsidian?a volcanio glass? the ohief priest out open the sacrifice, tore out his heart, held it up towards the sun. and then threw it at the feet of the idol to whom the temple was de voted. This soene was awful and im pressive, and viewed in silenoe by the ' assembled multitude, ready to throw themselves down in adoration of their savage deity, as this last act of horror was performed by the priest of the bloody rite. But not only were men offered up, for there were instanoes of the other sex being sometimes selected for the abominal offerings; and at times, when rain refused to visit the earth, the great god Tlaloe had to be appeased or supplioated by the offering up of beautiful infants, whioh were borne in festal robes in priestly proces sions, their pitiful wailings being drowned by the chants of those who formed the train. The saori floes were at times appalling in their number, at great feasts or <|edioations of temples. For such occasions #ie prisoners of many petty wars would be reserved, perhaps for years, and then broaght from all parts to the oapital, and led in long prooessions to the great temple. At the dedication of the templo of one deity, the ceremony lasted for six days, and seventy thousand victims are said to have perished ; and this aston ishing computation is attested by the most trustworthy writers. Hydrophobia In Pennajlrania. The Allentown (Penn.) Chronicle nays: "A few weeks ago we notioed the faot that Andreas Wert man's dog had been attacked with hydrophobia and had been killed. Two weeks sub sequent to that occurrence, a dog be longing to a nephew of Andreas showed unmistakable evidenoe of hrprophobia, and was also killed. A heifer belong ing to Reuben Bittler showed symptoms of hydrophobia, and soon the effeote of the malady were so riolent that the sufferings of the animal were pitiful to behold. She frothed at the mouth, and butted her head against every obstacle within her reaoh within the enclosure in whioh she was oonflned, and when the paroxysms became most intense she was thrown heels over head oomple*ely upon her back. Her owner had her -killed upon the same day. A cow be longing to Mr. Donaft, rewirlina newr Btinesrille, was attacked with hydro phobia on Hunday, and when the fact was settled she was promptly killed. A cow belonging to Jeremiah Clingaman, near the same Tillage, was bitten by a rabid dog, and the dog was killed. A large number of dogs hare also been bitten and they are being killed. A Ooot> Twiko.?Mr. Patera pro poses to render worm fabrics non-in flammable by using, instead of sodio tungstate, a mixture of foar parts borax with three parts msgaeais sulphate. One hundred grammes of the mixture are to be dieaolred in throe hundred to four hundred oubio oentimetres of water, and la this solution the fabrics era placed until soaked, then wrong out, dried, and ironed. Aftother mix ture proposed for the psrpose is that of ammonio sulphate i Shipping Seamen. When a sailor wants a ship, sayB a sailor writing of snoh matters, he ap plies not to the owner or the captain, but to a shipping master, an agent who undertakes to secure a crew for the ship without trouble to the owner or captain. It is the shipping master who engages the seamen, selects them, pays them their "advanoe," and holds them in hand until the ship is ready to sail. It is the sailor boarding-house keeper oftenest who deals witn the shipping master, supplies him with men, ana re ceives the greater part of the advanoe money. Oftenest the owner never sees the crew on whom depends in a large measure the safety of his ship ; and the captain does not see them until he ocfmes on board as the lines are caat off. Sup pose they oome aboard drunk ; suppose a large part of them are inoompetent, and others of them diseased ? It is too late then to remedy the matter; the ship puts off to sea, and the captain, enraged perhaps at the cheat for which his neglect is chieflv to blame, falls to abusing his men. 'The greatest atroci ties have been oommitted, and, indeed, are sometimes still perpetrated, in the shipping of men. It is but a few months sinoe a mechanic in Baltimore, an in dustrious man, with a family depending upon him, was kidnapped, put on board a vessel which instantly sailed, and only returned, after serious suffering and long detention, to find his family in want and himself mourned as dead. Our author mentions another case of the same kind which came under his own observation. When freights are high, and seamen scaroe, extraordinary and oriminal means are fiequently used to procure crews for ships. In New Orleans some years before the war it was no uncommon thing for a ship to be towed to the Pass witn a whole crew kidnaped and lying in the forecastle stupefied by opium, with whioh they had been drugged. There was a Btory there of an unscrupulous sailor board ing-house keeper to whom had come the day before an uncle from Ireland, a venerable person in knee-breeches. Him his nephew drugged?being com pelled to make ud the tale of a ship's crew?and stuffed him into the forecas tle as an able seaman, pocketing in his name the hundred and fifty dollars ad vanoe money whioh was just then paid for the "run" to Liverpool; and thus the poor old oreature spent but a single day in the pountry. before he was 4>orne back to 1 A Remarkable Trio. A St. Petersburg correspondent of the Hartford Pout thus speaks of one of the remarkable features of the late royal marriage in Russia: ' The most striking trio of all were the three princesses?one the future queen of England, another her sister, the future empress of Russia, and the third, the sister-in-law of the first?tne future empress of Germany, The faces of all three expressed gentleness, intel ligence and refinement. The Grand Duohess Maria wore a dress of silver heavily embroidered, and from her shoulders bung a train of claret oolored velvet, lined and edged with ermine. On her head was a tiara and a small crown of diamonds, from whiob herns' ? point lace veil; on her necV tue largest diamond necklaoe in Russia, oomposed of lar&e, perfect diamonds, each with a large drop attached, the whole valued at twenty millions of dollars. The front of her waist was oovered with dia monds, and down the front of her dress were rows of pearls. The bridegroom wore the uniform of a Russian offlc" The dress and train of the Empreus were of gold oloth, her tiara and jewels, sapphires and diamonds. The crown pnnoesses wore velvet trains embroid ered in gold, and their jowels were only surpassed by those of the bride." Ronnd Hats. The quaint piotnresqne shapes of last year are retained for the round hats that will be worn in the morning in town, and all the day out of town. Orowns are higher and more sloping while brims are wider and, if possible, more oapriciouslv shaped. One is of black chip, with high round crown, and brim rolled npward on the sides. This brim is faced and widely bound with black gros grain ; folds of the same are around and over the orown, while on the right side are three demi-loug ostrich.flumes, and on the left only a bit of a phesant's breast for a touch of oelor. A country hat of marvely fine ohip, with soft brim, not lined or faoed, but with a wreath of white violets be neath ; outside is a twist of blue rib bon, and a long veil of blue tulle. An other has brown velvet facing on the brim, with a rose wreath under one side of the brim, and olimbing up tho front to the right side of the orown. Leghorn flats are in the Charles IT. style, with wide brims caught up with dusters of long-stemmed violets and English hedge roses. Bometimes full wreaths of roses paes under the front of the brim, turning it np in most gro tesque fashion. Not Wobthv of th* Plac*.?The Dan bury New* man says : " Mr. Hen derson, of Danbnry, was appointed con stable the other afternoon. 1 n the , ev? ning he officially interfered in a fight in the sad die-factory tenement, and within the spaoe of three mianfcta waa knocked down, dragged over a rough floor on the back of his Mad,' kicked down two flighteof stairs, bitten on the btekpt Ilia naok, lost two teeth, and waa shoved through a fence b Ma shirt sleeves. Ha resigned the4 not ifcbrhing. Ha (aid h? waa afraid be wae too nnobtnMve in hie na*nr? for ? he office." Items of Interest. Johnny assures na that a railroad conductor pnnohea a hoi? in your ticket to let you pass through. It is stated that in- New York there are fifteen preachers whose salaries average 815,CKX) per annum. Lately not a death occurred in the city of Bath, Mo., for eleven days?an unprecedented lack of mortality. Summer-resort hotel keepers have commenced preparations for the com ing season by intimating a reduction in prices. A suspicious wife, on being asked where her husband was. replied that she was very much afraid that he was Miss-ing. '? A young lady'H excuse for not taking supper at a recent donation was, that she didn't want to run the risk of injur ing her corset. It is written on the sky, on the pages of the air, say the Orientals, that good deeds shall be done to him who does good deeds to others. They who are most weary of life, and yet are most unwilling to die, are such as have lived to no purpose, who have rather breathed to no purpose. Mrs. Putnam, the wife of the man who was killed by a New York street car conductor with a car-hook, is sew ing for the stores to support herself. Nov comes Altoona, Pennsylvania, with a case wherein a son marries his mother. The son was a clergyman, however, and married his mother to a farmer. It has been ascertained that 252 per sons were rendered insane by the Chi cago fire, and every one was poor at the time and only lost sense where 9thers lost dollars. " Experimental philosophy?asking a young lady to marry you. Natural philosophy ? looking indifferent and saying you were only in fun when she refuses you." The largest tree in Brookline, N. H., has just been cut and sawed. It was a pine, 130 years old. The first log, 12 feet long, made 800 feet of inch board ing, the whole tree, 3,317. Ooleridge, when lecturing, as a young man, was onoe violently hissed. He immediately retorted: " When a oold stream of truth is poured on red-hot prejudices, no wonder they hiss." " I think it is the most beautiful and humane thing in the world," says Pliny, " so to mingle gravity with pleasure that the one may not sink into melan choly and the other rise up in wanton ness." If you have talents, industry will im prove them; if moderate abilities, in dustry will stipply the deficiencies. Nothing is denied to well-directed la bor; nothing is ever to be obtained without it ? No man's life is free from struggles and mortifloations, not even the hap piest, but every one may build up his own happiness by seeking mental plea sure, and. thus making himself inde pendent q/ outward fortune. A Nevada paper says: "There was no regular trial in the case of Johu Flanders yesterday. He had an inter view in the woods with a few friends, howe/er, and it is perfectly certain that John won't burgle any more." " Does the razor go easy ?" asked the barber of a victim who was writhing under a clumsy instrument, whose ohief recommendation was a strong handle. "Well," replied the poor fel low, " that depends upon what you are "doing. If you are skinning me, it goes tolerably easy ; but if you are shaving me, it goes rather hard." Thirty-seven of the seventy-tw? Sena tors in Washington are accompanied by their wives, and nineteen havo their daughters "with them. Of the two hundred and ninety-eight representa tives and delegates, one hundred and twenty nine have their wives with them, and many of the others are acoompani ned by daughters and lady friends. It may be of interest to the pork packers of Louisville to know that Bergh denounces the usual method of hog-killing an oruel and inhuman. He has brought the matter into the courts of New York, and reoommends that a cap be made having a nail in the centre, so that, when placed on the hesd of a hog, one blow from an ax will termi nate its earthly career, without letting the animal know what struck it. Statistics, Among the oanses of death la*fc year in Massachusetts, we find that one man between sixty and seventy war killed by the bit* of a horse. Consumption oarried off 2,544 males and 8,012 fe males, of all ages from nnder fire to orer eighty. Deliriam ttemons wm the death of forty two males and three fe male*. Of fleaths by drowning, there were one hundred and eightr-tbre? male^and thirty-three females. Sixteen males and twe females Were ri&ima of hominido IJine persona ?wa*e struck by lightning Of mAlee aeren, ^pd of femaXia five, died "suddenly," whfcfrrrai that may be. Kighty-#e>en m^n ?Qd tfiirtjf women oommiated snioide* By ^?eiaent or negligaa? sermi hundred lad thirty-two peraona Igfct t%air Urea. ~J~ t, * - rJiiifct. Stwarrswa.?In making Si pllater. nae no water wfc ttfai thf mtiatard with " SB *nd the r*snlt wvJl ?>o will draw an infant, I lowed to remain