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> '-4-v*v; < * ' ii ,\.? -f? *. f*.. * ,VT> W^t m.*^fTe V . .C j 4. ; */> vr*\ '*'}\ \? * '- ;v'.- ^yvn _ ' mwmmtm-smmm~LA} @W3 " ?\X Os\>\ ' ? v/ '* * . * VOL. 2. . t . Clit iautljtrn dfttferprist, A REFLEX OF POPULAR EVENTS. . s?a ipaacgag EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. . VSQllllISb *1 SO. payable in advance ; 82 if delayed. CLUU& of FIVE and upwards tl, the money ia every instance to accompaiiy the order. ADVERTISEMENTS inserted conspicuously at <fc? rates of 75 cents per square of S lines, and TU cents for each subsequent insertion. Contracts for yearly advertising made reasonable. ^ ^ Lruaijsnicn bt t. j. prick.] ^tltrteb ^actcij. ? ?: /? Frm the Yorkvillc Enquirer. / * Til Swoet to Pray for those Wi Love ?T?s sweet to pray for those we Uve At Jesus' sliining thropc nbov/: For them to breathe with ardor tpcre. The ferveut spirit's earnest pAy?r. Do clouds obscuro some lovedAns's sky? Her bosom heave the deep ^rawn sigh ? * Tis sweet in Faith's fond ar** to bear, oat darling to the Saviour* enre. J .1 "Would we in place of dar^oss shed Bright radiance round t^at dear one's koadl The "Sun of Righteousiess" divine Can through the abides serenely shine. Within the sad, the troubled breast, Would we infuse n heavenly rest I Tis sweet to seek tlio ' Prince of Peace' For He can bid each straggle cease. Docs fond affection, true and deep It's watching o'er some sister keep I And would it to that darling's heart The richest, purestjoysiinpartt llow sweet to fool that there's a Friend Who waits our pleadings to attend ; A friend to bless, e'en more than sought, u: - i . """ w"" " w "? l'rweuw orauync. Tbe heart would bleaa thos? dear aa 1Mb, "Ttatwect to bow at court* above And pray for those we fondly love _ * K. 3n (Original |toq. Vom ?in BY LINTON FIE L D. Who does not lore to pausfe nmiJ the cares and business of life, and, on the wings of memory, go back through the dim vista of years to scenes of other days! As the traveller, weary with journeying over the andy desert, hails with delight the fair Oasis; so memory, as she travels over life's toilsome way, loves the green spots that here and there meet her gaxe. * ?? ??? Atiiltllnw' By green ipow, 1 nic.iu v?, days? days when the heart was free fron sorrow, and when all was joy and gladness As" the Ivy cling* to all that remains o former security aqd grandure; so memor clings to the scenes of our youth, and wii not let them go. They are the sunshine Ilia gladens her when clouds gather around he pathway, and when sorrow rolls in like flood. Often at the midnight hour, when thei iis nought to break the stillness, savo tl barking of the watch-d>g, or the hooting/ the owl, I love to sit here in my quiet clinc ber, where the moonlight looks in antly wTf tu rtitwr my mnwiuwt; fibiTfil ' ait thus, I love to recall the scenes of oth -*?jS?days, when in the language of Lot) fellow: u I sported in my tender mother's arms, I rode a horseback on my father's knee ; Alike were sorrows, passions and ft 1 arms. And gold, and Greek, and love, unknowi roe." Connected with those scenes there aomo who have long ago been numb< 1 ? *ee them with tlio dead, anu wo ....... mare until we meet them where partir unknown, and when all tears Are wipec' way, and as I ait here now with no conV ion save faithful Claaao, who ia quietly r ing on the rUg, I am thinking of one fa memory I ahall ever cherish?one vJ I the companion of my infanoy aiy9*' ? childhood, and who to save my )if/*ot I at any time hare sacrificed her or ^ I Mom 13inah, thou wert ever far1'* ' while memory holds her sway l/**" \ forget thee, and although many)Dg. ' I . veara hare passed since I receiy^T F L \ng Messing, ere thou wert to adieu U> the scenes of earth J J ;-tnag< ft as fresh en memory's tablet , (ait yesterday we parted. h^?55w3 ,LE, S. C.: FRIDAY 1 of absence and oome home at once; for Moo)' Binah was very ill, and wished to see roe before she died. Mom Binah dying! O, what a blow was that! Then the dark wingod angel was about to cloud the sunshine of iny expocta ^^Br' < * . ' ^ * i ? ~ ' .- < 1 ' iim GKEENVII Mom Binah. You did not know her reader, would Uiat you bad! for truly she was a pattern of excellence, and I fear that I seldom if ever, shall see her liko again. She was a native of Africa, and came into ray grandfather's possession when my father was but a child. As a faithful servant, she soon won the confidence of hor owners, fgnd the esteem of alhwho knew her. To h& 'old missus,' ray grand tfiother, she was most de votedlv attached, ant^ after hor death she always dressed in black. But her turban was white, and I used tc think that if Mom Binah had just the least bit of prido, as far as dress was concerned, it lay in the folds of her turban. Most of the servants admired fancy head dresses, and in their estimation a bright plaid was the neplua ultra, but Mora Binah was refined in her tastes, nnd therefore her turban was a white one. An old woman, then, of medium height, jetty black complexion, and a pleasant couuteuance, with just enough melancholy in it to make its possessor look veuorable, dressed in black, with a white handkerchief around her neck, and another very neatly 1 fixed' upon her head, and some times a white apron 'jistto preserve tho dress'?then, reader, you have my old nurse as I knew her in yearsgone by. Mom Binah was a christian, too. but her's wm not merely a profession in name; for while she bad the form of godliness, she possessed the power also, and she obeyed the injunction and let her light's/tine. I well remember, although. I was but a mere child, how I used to take a seat beside her on the beach when we were at our Island home, or at the foot of the lofty pine when wo were at our summer residence, and listen to her as she read from the sacred volfflwl IHVipWJupofftM book, nnd in her owil tpoculia* and forcible manner, she would endenrour to impress its important truths upon my youthful mind. I have heard men of gigantic mind expound the i scripture since that time, but her expositions, for clearness and simplicity, could not be excelled. Surely the spirit was lier teach er. / No prayer meeting upon our own, or another's plantation was oomplete in respect I . M T?- 1- . .1 to numDers u mom Dinau was not mere*, ami when th* missionary ascended the sacred desk, he pi ways expected to see her in her accustomed seat. Aad when he broke the broad of Ife, Mom Binah would feed upon his wordi and then go forth to gladden \ the hearts of ithers. i If there weVj any disputes among the servants, none cijild settle them sooner or I better than Moui Binah, and the servant ) who did not trencher with respect was look ed upon as one wy> had " no manners f' f When my prepfatory studies were corner pleted, and I washout to leave the patcrII nal roof to enter lion my college course, it then it was a scas<\ of sorrow for Mom tr Binah, and when sh packed up my trunks, ft some of the things tilt I first needed were placed in the very tytom ; while those I re had least use for enm^first to hand, never le I was Mora Binah, aa aft herself said 1 ho out I of of sorts.' But when |e carriage was in iv waiting?raiK?ads werjp faalnouable *1 otan'JJ, "^r^nd parents had given their er last '"hra/e?^ien waa Mora Binah's g- herfwiw Rn(* any one ?hed niore ieJ than ray mother, that ono was my fjht\ old nurse. A'ith * heavy heart I bid adieu to the 1/nca of ray childhood and youth, while 1 ^je tlrougit of return alone occupied iny . / Arriving ai me ena or my journov, ?now sccnosfcd new faces soon helped to drive J iny gloom Iway, and I commenced my a\ course of siies with pleasing anticipations f I and a detonation to exoel. Time flew p. I by on jd wing". end college life was ie I then as rer ? ? life of hard study and asI monotcy Each week brought a letter' rly I from 1q one*' an^ cao^ fetter oontained a ildI word <^v'ce and a blessing from Mom , feslWnaW I indl Ttf6 year wa* drawing to a close, * not! and f? was the theme of half of the \ ongi ^^pmpositioDS, for vacation was fast | art-1 Sp^ng.*nd hearts were light, and head" bid | w Jming holiday pleasures, when an & is 1 q#1 fetter from home came to hand, c was I more and vacation wonkl oom- t | Jut the fetter bade m<i to obtain leave f tioiis, and the1 freo destroyer' was to scatter1 the flowers of pleasure ere they began to bloom. I closed my text-books and hastened roy departure. True, some of my classmates laughed at mo for being in such a hurry to go hope to see my old nurse die, but they knew her not, or thoy would have thought differently. t * On, on I went towards my home one* more. In gloom I left it, and in sorrow I was now returning. With pleasing emotions I had long looked for this return but now I dreaded it. ' Oh! that a dream, so sweet, so long enjoyed. Should be so so rudely, cruelly dostroyed.' Oh ! how the horses lagged upon the way, at least it seemed so to me. But home to<u reached at last, having received and returned tho fond embraces of roy parents, I enquired for Mom Bioah. She still lived, but her journey was nearly completed and she was slowly, but surely passing away. I hastened to her cabin and as her glance rested upon me she seemed to revive again : and thanked God that th.- ? mitted to see me before she died. And when I sat beside her bed and read to her from the Book of Life, its tin earnings alarmed her not, O 1 surely angels waited for her there, and longed to bear her to their happy home. When the fierce hour arrived, and Mom Binah 4 st odH trembling on the brink of time,' j sl?. i,c,- timo Wo,? gnjgjj and then ihe gave me her MOg. 1 And then when night had thrown her i mantle o'er the world, and heavon's lamps ^ were burning brightly, as if to light Mom Binah's spirit there, she passed from the scenes cf earth ; crossed the narrow stream of death, and entered the celestial city. The morrow was a day of gloom on the plantatibn, and at night the servants assembled for the purpose of hearing the lifeless remains to their last resting place. Lighted torches gloamod in every direction; for many came from far ^nd near to attend the funeral, a thousand voices helped to swell the funeral dirge, and filled the air with melody. The missionary then arose to preach the sermon. He spake in solemn and impressive language, nor eulogised the dead a whit too mucin The services over, the procession took ?p its line of march for the grave-yard. On, on thov came row after row, torch after torch ; truly it was a long procession. Arrived at the place of burial, they lowered the coffin in the yawning grave, while again the requiem for the dead was sung in solemn strains, and then they left her where soon we all shall be ; within the cold, dark, silent grave. Mom 13innh thou art sleeping now. Beneath the lofty pine. And n quiet grave in the old church-yard Mom ISinol>, now is thine. ?.?. ?ptrffc awMis in the better land, Where parting is unknown, And thy dwelling place, Mom Binah, now, Is around thy Father's throne. And though parted now, we shall meet again ^ hen life's brief raoe is run, And our Father s voice <u accents fetud, Will say to us-?" Well done." Death of a Daughter or Lafayette. Mad. Mauborg, the eldest daughter and last surviving child of the Marquis Lafayette, is dead. The correspondent of the Newark Advertiser, writing front Genoa, says : | oueaiea a tew days ago, aged about 75, at her princely residence in Turin, whero she has lived many years, and since the death of her husband, at one time French Ambas- ' sador to the Holy See, with her daughter, j the Barroness Perrone, widow of the l*ied- . montese General killed at the fatal battle of . Novate in 1840. The Baroness inherits the . rare virtures of her mother and her race, and they are likely to be transmitted through 1 tier carefully trained children. Madame M., >ften spoke gratefully of her family relations * with the United States, and delighted in ev~ iry opportunity of bestowing her graceful 8 lospitali ties upon the citizens of the country." ? The corn crop is superabundant in Scott ounty, Kentucky, the present year, and con- it raets, it is said, are making at Jrfk+n cent* ft er bushel. J A K;' S \ ytK'- *. ?v ?. V . v. - "? '< ?> H I G H1 jfo" pRSISG, SEPTEMBE Siiacfllnntaus lOnbiiig. rJiTJ1*8 IhPJMj I9P0. "\frfceerfu! temper is a. natural gift, the dgSSkgr ot^ebMi aiftfiuirt?^ questioned, D^toddftfdo we nteet with a spirit so ? tbrKply saturated *vith good uatwA; that u^Vppointnser.^ no poverty, deprivation oMmbination of adverse circumstance^ caweak k down or overcome its geniality. 0Mpsterday morning a man made bis appenfece before Justice Breanaa who seemed to tat a perfect fountain of undiluted contemant somewhere in his composition mm t no depressing influences of care or aacifQt had been able to exhaust or adultdtal a typo, a modem edition of Mark 'llpty?a ha man barrel of jolliness without | ntPKjOp. lie was arreted for being mtoxicttttV lie give his name as Gettyphnt Tlca&nd said he was a printer, and hailed fr?i *STho Gein of Science' office. He is a shjfttaan, of a beer-cask figure, and a face asruhcund as if he slept in a room with reJ attains. His answers to the questions of?L<yauthorities showed his contentment unwf||dL shades of fortune. The Justice, beilr |Uo in a genial humor, was inclined to Milertbe disciple of Ben. Franklin, and acofs&ygly addressed him as follows: ?%^K~Well, Mr. Take, it seeins you havawfeewn aside the ' composing-stick,' and go* to getting drunk for a firing. I'm afrall.jl pi're a *-bad case,' and stand in netd of; correcting.' I think I shnli send i yotttor'guwl.' I TbpWechnicalities, which were uttered in aso*t& you-see I know-your trade as well-asyou-do air, seemed to giro Mr. Take that assuranW which printers seldom lack, but of which t?e solemnities of a Police Court mighivimnporarily have deprived him, apd he ans*o\p: Pr^aowAc-Well, at any rate, I'm glad we're net "gijlleye' iu this eountry, or I supM*o yjfltjTput _me there, and well 'leaded' Co, besides in voting three rtew steps for a fancy hornpipe?it's a good deal better than setting solid minion/ more than three-quarters ' figure work, and getting only a ' priceand a half for it. Lord blest you, Squire, I'd a great deal rather go to jail ten days than not. I've crot sick of work iust now. and I'll have a chance to get the bile off ray tomach. Judge?You seem to take it easy ; how do you propose to err ploy your time this trip ? Prisoner?Well, Corporal,I'm undcrcided whether I'll learn to whistle the opera of the ' Bohemian Girl,' practice standing on rayhead, or undertake to acquire the elegant accomplishment of balanching straws on ray nose; II could get a cat I'd teach her to play the Ar?le,if I thought the strings wouldn't remind ter mtplcasantly of intestinal discords, after ior feline body had been nine times slain. J June?Mr. Take, you seem particularly happ; under the circumstances ; have you (?bt t irife ? Pi toner?Not now, Lieutenant, I had one, it she run off with a bow-legged cobbler ; I was so glad about it that I sent her her d ssses and quit-claiiu deed of her person, whie I signed in capital letters; she left me c ? boy?but ho was a 1 foul copy;' not a bit ke mo, I bound him ' prentice to the type icking trado, but tho first day ho quarreled rith the regular 'devil,' knocked over ithe ' ink,* pulled a 1 form off the imposing stoni and 'pied,' five ' columns he drop pedle ' shooting-stick'into the ' alligator Eres and in the evening he and another op j1 boy was caught rehearsing a broad awo i combat with a couple of * column ruler, the foreman ' batttered' him with a 1 nilet,' and when he got homo to me he hadk 'fancy head,' if there ever was one. (trk?Where is he now ? risonrr?He ranawav with a circus, an<! he lost I saw of liiin he was in the rait le of a saw-dust ring, trying to tie his leg in a bow-knot round his neck, I've bee jollier since then than ever before. ? idgt?You seem to be always jolly. j ritoner?So I am ; I laughed when'my fatl r turned roe. out of doors at eleven years old laughed when I broke my arm, and ma > funny faces at the doctor while he was set ig it ;* the happiest day I ever spont wa one time when I hadn't but one shirt an< a pair of pants to put on, had spent all ly money, and gone hungry forty hours, r r ver was really unhappy But once in my [jfe rod that was when I fell down stairs, rra ured my collar-bone, and skinDed my eg so badly, I ooulden't get down on my in m to thank God I hadn't broko my >e Toe JuJge relented and let Mr, Take go, lqJ that round individual fefl the room tryni to whistle and sing at the same time, r.d also dance an independent jig with ?4\ leg to a different tone.?New Yorkj fnfcaa*. Am exchange thinks jt rather embarrassig to HA your hat to a lady in the street, w the sake of politeness, and let a couple of irty collars roll out upou the sidewalk. ' " * A3 R 7, 1855. ' ' i t-!!__i ' So lt)e S??f you Gat). It is a vory usual and vety natural tiling for men?anu wunion too?tosiukdown du^ cou raged when obstacles present then?eel*?* in the xyay of easy pmgr^ jjWwogfc- It^? The apprentice, the ineoh$?^MKSujga?^ incrch??K <*~J * otesstohafma WJJIffif over what (hey nnu to he eitlier dTKWivl|;imddisagreeable fn their rounds of duties, Without once thinking the wrong they do themselves and others, and the ever-accruing evil which such a habit engenders. A constant self-watching is needed by all who would j Mdo well" in the world, atul they cannot get along without it The apprentice lnd tlie clerk iniure themselves more than their em. ployere when they give way to slothful feelings and become mere eye servante ; white,' on the other hand, by constantly keeping" in mind and practising upon the motto "Do the best you can," they earn the good will of all around them and the satisfaction afforded only by an approving conscience. Theft, when time and opportunity aVrive for /tdvancement, they rarely want a hrelpipg Idi* *. To "Do the best you can," young wan, jjs not to plod on, day by day, performing tlrtj allotted round of duty upcomplniniqgiy, without once thinkiug of btitfer things or df independence for yourself and for three in whose fexistence yoursf 19 bound up. Neitlr* er is it,on the other hand, to let.tUe thought of your own superior worth, and the-watchfulness for "chances" predominate in all you say and do, so that it can only be said you j "do" your duty?nothing more. Nor yet is it to think of your work as so much task to be rid of as quickly as possible, so that you may spend every other moment iu idleness bi mere amusement without aim or object be yond passing pleasure.To "Do the best you can," is, so fur as pos sible, to lay down a course of life in you own mind to which you will obtain if poesi bio, and their keep your eye upon it, w here ever you are, and in whatsoever you do. 1 you are determined to be a master mediae t matter how ink*or trifling tbo thing ma t be. Strive to make tho work which got through your hands just as yon would t proud of if you had turned it out as emplo) or. Connect yourself with somo library, c .! wmoi w?^8 uuuun DOOKsoescnptive ofth art of trade in which you are engaged.? Lose no opportunity to obtain information upon every branch and minute detail of il Relaxation you must have, of course, bu while you seek and enjoy it, sec if you cau not adapt even that to the aim you havi chosen. Your first steps in such a course will bi hard ones; you may feel terribly discoura ged, but persevere, and when you cannot d< all you would, then^lo all you can, and b< content therewith. But do not give up th< contest. Renew it day by day, and year b) year. When you once get fairly started, tin progress you make will encourage you on and difficulties will vanish like inist, Soot you will gain confidence in your position.? A superior intelligence will show itself it your work, and as you compare yourself witl: your fellow workmen?those who work with out thought or study?you will discover little by little, that the secret of real success in lifo is pcrseverenco aud close application. [.V. r. Sun. From the Olive Branch. That is the word?give us energy, the nerve of business, the soul of success.? ci.?_ .1 - uiiiuuc uu him craven spirit wiuen on a first repulse sinks into inertion! Pity and contempt be his portion. But thrice three cheers for him who when misfortune throws him, is up mid on his feet again before the blow can be repeated. Such a one give*, the world assurance of a roan. He may droop for a moment, but instantly the tear is dashed away, tho brow is uplifted. Determination unfurls her (lag in his dauntless spirit; ho sets his soul against his courago and wrestles with his iuck. Dashed among rocks, and with a wreck in prospect, he yet steers safely out, sets every sail, and to the astonishment of those who thought his bark a U5uif wreck, steers into port with flying colors. lie is up and on his feet again ; up to' galvauiac dead friendship into lilV; up to attonish tho^e who gloried in his ieikat; up to prove to them "thftre'a no such word as fal." To such a man thero are no stumbling blocks; to such a man thero are even no4sappoiutmeaU. Stumbling blocks bootoe weapons in his hands; disappoiuimmts change to bloasings. Take away every sip* port but a good conscience, and still he vill battle on. Burn his house down, he Wtl build it again. Sink his ships he will aril others over their wrecks ; take from him til good name, even, and God helping him, M will be up and on his feet again. The man of energy bears the stamp of hi*j creator in the moAl unmistakeablo charat j ters. Changes Occur on every hand but b| changes not. "It shall be Hone," is the Ian I guage of his determination?and truly t<| him nothing seems impossible. He creates! he endows, he sustains. New worlds spring into Wing at bis feet* and. new riven? bear hiti IS^ S ) n i i i ?r NO. It t _ 0 name; lie is a healthy joint in thobackbone of commerce, aivd, all Land* bow down to him and * 11 waters bear spices to his feet. M- A.^ v I'&foXi*rr4&;7$i ?3 3 Leg, 1 Before rod' l>ow to a lady in tha tfcet, permit her to deckle whether ye* do so or not, by at least A Ux>|: ot recognition. 2. When your companion, bows to a lady yon should do the una I V\ hen a gentleman bows to a lady in yosrr icompany, always bow to him in return.**^ jNothing is so ill understood in Amancn ka iuvsc couveiuionni laws 01, society, ?o understood and practised in Europe. Ladtea complain that gentlemen paw then* by m tbe streets, unnoticed, whent in fact, the fan) arises from tbcir own breach of politeness.*'. It is their duty tp be amiable first, tor it la a privilege which ladies enjoy of choosing Ihci* own associates or acquaintances. No gentleman likes to risk the being cut in the streets by a lady through a prematura salute. .< too many ladies, it would aeom,- ' don.'t ; pt their trade" of politeness.. Setting Indies in the street, whom ono has oaiually met in company, thoy seldom bow unless ho s drsl: and good breeding, cxaept 00_ oasionally by way of experiment, bis aojqusihuanccs do not multiply, but a> gentfetftnn, is not upon tbis to presume upon, acquaintanceship the first time he afterwards meets her in the street. If it be her. will, jfhc gives some token of recognition) when th gentleman*may bow; otherwise he must pass o?h and consider himself-a. stranger. N n lady n^ed hesitate to bow U>. a> gent la . tor be will promptly and politely ns> von if he has forgotten his fair saluter. None but a bruto can do ether vviso should ojraudely, his character is declared, - and there U a cheap riddance. Politeness, or r goo<l breeding; is like law? ' the- raaaon of J <mo at the cqpunrucementbf thosiege * out a world-wide reputation for skill and 16 valor. AchiUo Foulu, late Minister of fin' ance of Louis Napoleon, nud ye* one of kia r n ^nvmoullnro l'c n Taur t si wuuvxwio, < oxen, auu UIIU Ol Ul? f house of Fould, Oppenheim *is Co., banker* - of Paris. It was through M. Fo?L4 ?n11 gacious suggestions that the reduction in ~ tlMj French 5 per cents was so sucuessftilljr < effected, and it is more than probable be - has advised the submission of tho late vari3 ous war loans to the people, instead, of ape pealing to tho Stock Exchange for su^3 port. Mr. B. D'Israeli as an author and a poh>. tician is well known onhoth sides of the AtJ iantic. As leader id the IIouso of Com! nfens and Chancellor of the Exchequer, be ' has occupied ]>osition only granted, to the 3 first minds in tho British empire* v lie is also a Jew. and of puro blood. la 1 the United Stales, the Senate has two of the " childron of Jacob, via t Senators Yulee and 1 Benjamin. The latter, though but a short 1 tinio in the Senate, has already much infln" once in that august body. Senator Yulee's father was a.lew from tlie coast of Barbary, 1 and we believe from Morocco.-N. Y. Ka~ press. A Sf'scmex op Youno A'mhuica.?"Wn learn, says tho Warrenton (North Carolina) News, that atone of our fashionable watering places, not u thousand, miles distant from win auucitiui, a young- gentleman, between 1 tbo age of eight or ten year*, upon hit arrival a few Jays ago registered his own name, two ladies, servant ami two horses. We take it that no youth of like ago ever before had such a train of responsibilities in charge. We have not yet learned whether or not hie mother knew he was out, but think thht he it fast enough to bear watching. We mention the ease as an offset to the story, told by the Picayune, of a youthful boarder of ten yean, old at the St. diaries Hotel in New Orleans., lasi winter, who, after dining sumptuously at the,first table, oaJled (or a Dottle of Chami pagto ami challenged his frianue on either I side to a bumper. Hurra for Yoaag America. SitTI.I.APKK, of llie Carpet Hag, tells the following outrageous gun story : "Spanking to day with a. sua of a giua, re? garding some hunting exploits, he told me of a singular instance of a gun hanging fire, which, nero it not for his well-known verac* ity, 1 should foci disposed to doubt. He hid snapped his gun at a grey squirrel, and the cap had exploded, but the piece not going off, he tqok it from his shoulder, hooked down in the barrel and saw tW charge just starting, when, bringing it to his ?boulder again, it went off and killed the squi:rel !n Thr following notice was affixed to U shop in Leeds: "This Ouse 2 Lett. 8fo? quir Necks Doar." 'Moving for a new trial.*?hoc iting 4.second wife. A bachelor is a target which fSfrnuetts shoot at*