The southern enterprise. [volume] (Greenville, S.C.) 1854-1870, June 12, 1856, Image 4
?i it. gag-^??
SBlI/lOTlfilD ffOlETOT.
From Um Baltimore Clipper. -?
wax THOtf LOVX KB WHIM I'X
OUM
#Y PtVLKY JOHNSON.
You My you love me, dearest one,
With fond affection true ;
That in this dreary pilgrimage
I'm all the world to you ;
But wiil^you love mo when Pin old,
And time around shall fling
The cares of lifo upon our path
From off his heavy wing ?
When love's sweet dreaiu of youtlitul bliss,
Brings but a sourco of pain ;
When hopes are scaiter'd one by ouc, j
And life is on the wane !
You say my eyes like silvorv stars,
Shed forth a brilliant light;
And that my hnir is beautiful
And dark us hues of night;
But will yon love me when I'm <Jd,
When those bright eyes grow dim ;
When time has scattcr'd all my locks
And they are grey and thin ?
O, then will memory causo the past
To o'er your senses steal;
Ami raise within your heart a love
As angels only feel ?
Will you love me when I'm old, dearest ?
And stricken down in years;
Will your kind hand in safely guide
Me through this vale of tears?
And when the hand of time, dearest,
Is prees'd upon my brow ;
Can you then say in truthfulness
%'y love is stronger now ?
And when beneath life's chilling stonns
Ail things grow stern and cold ;
Vhen joys all fado?may I then feel
You will love me when I'm old ?
Tiie Gam of the Season*
wlt would appear, that tunoug the
Pro-Slavery warriors, who besieged
the far-famed fortifications in Lawrence,
there was a certain good man,
and true?one Mr. Magee, from Clay j
County, Missouri, or thereabouts (eve ,
rvbody comes from counties at the
West.) Now,Mister Magee owned a nig- j
ger, who had worked in the yoke ot
Slavery,until it nught to have sacrificed |
bis shoulders' but had not. Of the precise
baptismal designation of Mr. Magee's
nigger we are unaware, but, for
convenience sake, we will presume:
11is cognomen to havo been Caesar, if 1
you please?or, if yon prefer it?Au-|
gustus. And our uawar was evident- |
ly in? coward, but rather a valiant!
man-of-war, who like Mr. Nerval,
"JIail heard of l a'.tles
in short, lie was a "fighting tlarkev,"
and accompanied his master to prove,
by doughty deeds, that a "colored pusson"
has his rights and won't be freed
without his consent being previously
obtained, "anyhow you can fix it."?
Now, it so happened that Caesar, while
serving in the Wakarusa camp, was
charged with the preformance ot some
scauting duty, in the execution of
which lie discovered an abolitionist
lurking about his post. Ctesar hailed
him, nnd inquired into his business
there. The Abolitionist gave replies
which Ca?ar regarded as being highly
unsatisfactory. The Pro-Slavery dar !
key forthwith advanced upon this philanthropic
upholder of human rights
with an energy which, while it spoke
volumnes for his jiarty zeal, said very
little for his paciftic intentions. The
pale /ice turned and fled?it is not
even on record that he lingered to say I
--"Jit tit JJruie"?or as it is matrimonially
translated?"and you too,brute."
Cmsar was swift on foot, as well as va1
?11 c? 1 I.. I
loruiio ui uw: i 9 iic unriuu uu wziru in
pursuit. The white man quickened
Iiis pace, but Ciesar put his long heels
down as if he were utter a runaway locomotive,
and are long overhaul ted
the panting fugative, who "surrendered
at discretion," at the same time begging
for his life, and delivering up as
an evidence of bis submission (in compliance
with Ciesar's particular ro<|uest,)
a Sharp's rifle, a brace of Colt's
revolvers, and au improved bowickuife.
with which he had encumbered
himself. Our narrator goes on to state
that Ciesar "toted" the fellow into the
Wakarusa camp, and then and there
delivered up his prisoner and the
spoils, to the manifest amusement of I
1 lie Pro-Slavery men, and the nol
slight increase of the military reputation
of Fighting Cceaar. It is now
generally suppose I in Clay County
(adds fair informant.) that a "white
man trial/ !im tia f/iuwl iu a lmm-o w mi
....... ...?J ?? p. "? ? "VJJ.V, MH-I
der favorable circumstances.
A love tick swain, desirous to indicate
the extent and character of his
iovo lor the empress of his heart, exclaimed,
"Ah, Miss Brown, my affection for
you is as strong as?as?as the butter
tlicv gave us tbr dinner!"
&he was satisfied, as they boarded at
tbe samo house. The bargain was
struck, nnd tlicv were married.
' *
a. a
Rich and Poor.
It is undoubtedly true, after all, that
very little of the happiness of life
comes from what most persons covet
so eagerly, viz: wealth and worldly
consequence. The following thought
is just:
Kothschild is forced to content himI
self with the same sky as the poor
newspaper writer, and the great banker
cannot. nrt\&v a ni'ii'oto anneaf on
? ? v. |'i I f CHV OUIIO^I'j l/l
add one ray to the magnificence of
niglit.n The same ail* swells all lungs.
fcaeh one possesses really liis own senses,
soul and body?these are the
property which a man owns. All that
is valuable is to be had for nothing in
this world. Genius, beauty and love,
l are not bought and sold. You may
buy a rich bracelet, but not a well
turned arm to wear it?a pearl necklace,
but not a pretty throat with which
it shall vie. The richest banker on
earth would vainly offer a fortune to
be able to write a verse like Byron?
One conies into the world naked and
gjoee out naked; the difference in the
fitness of the bit of linen for a shroud
is not much. Man is handled of clay,
which turns quickly back again into
dust.
"Wretched is the man who has no
employment but watch his own digestion
; and who, on waking in the
morning has no useful occupation, of
the day presented to his mind. To
such an one, respiration is a toil and
! existence a continual disease. Self-oblivion
is his resource, indulgence in
alcohol in various disguises, his remedy,
and death or superstition his only
| comfort and hope. For what was he
born, and why does he live? are questions
which he constantly asks himself;
and his great enigmas are in the
smiling faces of habitual industry, stimulated
by wants of the day, or fears of
the future If he is excited to exertion,
it is commonly to indulge some vicious!
propensity, or display his scorn of
those pursuits which render others hap- i
pier than hiui-clf If he seeks to relive!
liis insanity in hooks, his literature
re ascende no higher then romances or
scandals of the Jay ; and all the nobler
pursuits of mind, as well as laxly, are
utterly lost in regard to him. His passage
through life is like that of a bird
through the air, and his final cause appears
merely to be that of sustains the I
worms in his costly toinb.'V?Hii' Ilichard
l*/n'h'j>s.
?? ?
For the De^il.
Several years ago, a celebrated
Methodist minister and revTalist, well
known for his eloquence and zeal in
converting souls, was preaching in
Louisville. The tooling luul got pretty 1
well ii]?, undone nigh., after a very i
"powerful" sermon, he came down1
from the prtlpit for the purpose of receiving
the "mourners," while the good I
old hymn ot
"Canaan, oh, Canaan, I'm bound for die
land of Caiman."
was struck up and chimed in by hundreds
of voices. The hymn was concluded,
but there were tew penitents
at the alter. In vain he exhorted?
his words and appeals fell upon the
ears of his congregation without exciting
an emotion. At length he concluded
to make a bold stroke and follow it
up with a test, and resuming the pulpit,
after a tow words of exhortation, he j
so'emnly announced that he would put;
a question, upon which, he expected I
all to vote in view of the estimation;
they placed upon their souls. With I
finger raised most significantly, and in;
a most solemn manner, he announced:
All those in favor of Christ will please
rise to their feet.
Only some eight or ten responded'
to the announcement; ami while the1
minister was watching intensely for
others to signify their position l>y "rising,"
a worthy member who was on
his feet intertereu, and suggested that
"the reason night he that the true disciples
were too modest to vote."
At this juncture, a loud voice was
heard in the gallery: "I say, brother
?,it's no use a talking or trying to
force this vote?this congregation is for
the Devil by at least twenty-five hundred
majority!"
Queer Tom.
Tom Flossfer was the queerest boy
I ever knew. I can't think bo ever
j cried?I never saw him. If Fleda
! found her tulips all rooted up hv her
pfct puppy, aiid cried, as little girls will,
Tom was sure to come around the
corner, whistling, and ^ay :
utiri. .1. i *
i - ?* nut niHKtis you cry, iny infant I
I can you cry tulips? do you think every
l sob makes a root or blossom ? Here!
i let's try and right them I"
Bo he would pluck up the poor flowers,
put their rooto into the ground aSin,
whistling all tho time, inako the
<1 look smooth and fresh, and tako
Floda off to look at n pretty snake, or
to hunt hens' nests in tho barn. Neither
did ho do any differently in his own
troubles. One day his great kite snappod
the string, ami flow away far out
of sight. Tom stood still one moment,
and then turned aronnd to come home,
whistling all the time.
44Why, Tom,1* said X, "ain't yon sor'
ry to lose that kitcf
j. ^Yosl but wbat'? the can't
???d miwiv wwi n viiiiuw w reel usu;
'som*' will not bring the kits buck,
and 1 want U # lake another."
Just eo wK \ he broka his leg,
"Poor Tom," cried Fleda, "you can'i
play any mo-o-o-re!"
"I'm not poor either. You cry foi
me; I don't cry for myself, and 1 have
a splendid time to whittle. Besides,
when I get v. eil, I shall beat every
boy in school on the multiplication table,
for I say it over till it makes m?
sleepy every time my leg aches ?"
Tom Flossfcr was queer, certainly
but I wish a great many nioro people
were queer that way.?80Kool-Jrellaw
Anecdote.
Old Parson B , who presided
over a little Hock in one oi the back
towns in the State of M , was,
without any exception, the most eccentric
divine we ever knew. Ilis eccentricities
were carried as far in the
pulpit as out of it. An instance we
will relate.
Among his church members was
one who invariably made a practice of
leaving the church ore the parsou was
two-thirds through his sermon. This
was practiced so long, that after awhile
it became a matter of course, and no
one, save the divine, seemed to take
notice of it. And heat length notified
brother P. that such a thing must,
he felt assured, be needless, but P.
said at that hour his family needed his
services at home, and he must do it ;
i._1 i ! 1 1. 1 - _1
UC\ei llieiets^, Oil leUVlllg CIIUICI! lie illways
took ft roundabout course, which
hv some mysterious means always
brought him in close proximity with
the village tavern, which he would enter,
"and thereby hangs a tale."
Parson 13. ascertained from 6ome
source that P's object in leaving
| church has to obtain a **dram," and he
determined to stop his leaviug and
'disturbing the congregation in future,
if such a thing was possible.
The next Sabbath, brother P. lefr
his seat at the usual time, and started
for the door, when parson 13. exclaimed
:
"Brother P.!"
P., on being thus addressed, stopped
short, and ga/.ed towards the pnlpit.
"Brother P.," continued the parson,
"there is no need of your leavit g
church at this lime; as I passed the
tavern this morning, 1 made arrangements
with the landlord to keep your
toddy hot till church was out."
The surprise and mortification of
the brother can hardly be imagined.
Tiik Fikksidk.?The fireside is a
seminary of infinite importance. It is
important because it is universal, and
because the education it bestows,
woven with the woof of childhood,
gives form and color to the whole texture
of life. There are few who can
receive the honors of a college, hut all
are graduates of the hearth. The
learning ?>r me university may iaue
from the recollection, its classic lore
may moulder in the halls of the memory,
hut the simple lessons of home
enamelled upon the heart in childhood,
defy the rust of years, and outlive the
maturer but less vivid pictures of after
days.
So deep, so lasting indeed, are the
impressions of early fife, that yon often
see a man in the imbecility of age
holding fresh in his recollection the
events of his childhood, while all the
wide space between that and the present
hour, is a blasted and forgotten
waste. You IfUve. perhaps, seen an
old and halt obliterated portrait, and
in the attempt to have it cleaned and
restored you have seen it fade away,
while a brighter and still more perfect
! picture, iiamted beneath, is revealed to
view. 1 ho portrait, first drawn upon
the canvas, is an apt illustration of
| youth, and thought it may be concealed
by some after design, still the original
traits will shine through the out
; ward picture, giving it tone, while
fresh, and surviving it in decay.?
Such is the fireside?:the groat institution
furnished for our education.
Why Not Suookshful.?The young
111 v. v. 11?I 11 *' t'i Clvl K Illitl I < % 11V | U
house, which ho proceeds to furnish
twice as expensively as he can afford,
and then his wife, instead of taking
i hold to help him to earn a livelihood,
by doing her own work, must hn?c a
bird servant to help her spend hi* limited
earnings. Ten years afterwards,
you will find him struggling on under
a double load of debts and children,
wondering why the luck was always
against him, while his friends regret
his unhappy destitution of linanciai ability.
Had they from fir6t been frank
and honest, ho need not have been so
unlucky. The world is full of people
who can't imagine why they don'l
prosper like their neighbors, when the
veal obstacle is not 111 banks or tariffs,
in bad public polloy nor hard times,
but in their own extravagance ana
heedlesss ostentation.
The liest idoa of weight was given
by an Indian, who, when asked how
much he weighed, replied,14As 1 am,
I weigh one hundred and fifty pounds,
but when T'm mad, T weigh a ton.
___________
i An AomowhcoesMBitr.?If, indeed, we
; go on quietly to submit to sueh outrage#,
? we deserve to have our nosos flattened, our
skim blaeked, and to be placed at work un*
der task masters; for we have lost the noblest
attributes of freemen, aud nre virtually
, slaves.? Tribune.
) When a man's "nose it flattened and his
, skin blacked," does he u!oee the noblest at
tribute* of a freeman!" If eo, it seems to
- us that it in the Almighty and not the slave'
holder that has taken away, or made the ne
gro minus "the noblest attributes of a freeman
!" The truth will slip out once in a
while, iu spile of all Greely can do. .
[ATese York Day Book.
to iif m MIBook
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HAVING A FINE SELECTION OF
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CIRCULARS, C ATA LRU$7 HAND-BILLS, WAYBILLS,
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Southern Literary Messenger, <
FOR THE YKAR 1850.
IN issuing the Prospectus of tlie twentysecond
volume of the SOUTHERN LITEKAliY
MESSENGER, the Proprietors re*
lv solely on the encouraging letters and
promises of the friends of the Messenger, to
aid them iu extending its circulation, und '
they beg to nssure the public, that no exertions
will be remitted on their pari to main- ]
tain the high character of the work, and to J
chalengo the patriotism of all who value ster- ,
ling literary merit. For Twenty one years {
the Messenger has endeavored to reflect i
faithfully the Soutiierii mind, while disdain v
j mg all narrow and sectional views, and has
been alone among the monthly periodicals ,
I <>f America in defence of the jrecnlinr Insti
tutions of lire Southern States. To this of- '
lice it will still be devoted, and will lie >
prompt to repel assaults upon the South,
J whether they come under the specious garb
of Action, or iu the direct form of anti slavery J
! pamphlet*. At this critical juncture, while ,
our enemies are employing literature as their j
most potent weapons of attack, the Southern
people will surely not witliliold their en- (
couragement from a work whose aim it shall
be to strike blows in their defence.
e
The Messenger will, as herctofire, pre- ^
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land I'.iographical Sketches, Novels, Travels.
I Kvsays, Poem*. Critiquus, and Papers or
i the Army, Navy, and other National Sub-j |
ie.-tx.
r~~ \ . "
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Clibs?Remitting us Fifteen Dollars in <
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The E litorial and Critical department of ]
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The Editor's opinions will always be hones
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A GEORGIA BOOK.
The Three Ciolden Links,
ok
Tab* of Odd Fellowship.
iiv miss c. w. uAURP.it.
Link tiib Kikst.?Friendship, or the Mysterious
Governess.
Link tub Second.?Love, or the Adventures
of an American Student.
Link tub Third.? Truth, or Crazy Madge <
and her Child.
IN the present work Mis* Barber has
succee ded, most happily, in illustrating\
f liA titi'iiu nowlinal ?vaii?i?i?vlAo A.LI
vv V vttiMU'f*!, piMivi|/icn Ul vmiu rciiuw*
ftliip?Friendship, Love And Truth. The i
tores nre well written and, while they will
particularly interest the Odd Fellow, ere of
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^"I^llE first number of this periodical was isJL
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k,every good word and work." The spirit
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January 17i Richmond, Virginia.
pi -, S&vkaryfthe'surftdScstruciicn c/ human
life and health, canned by Sexual disease*, aad
the deception* which are practised upon the un
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have directed their Consulting Surrreon: as m.
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Medical Advice Gratis, to all persons thus afflict
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aug 24. 16 tf
The Home Journal for I &36?
NEW AND BRILLIANT SKKIhS.
WEttast w eek issued the first number of
the New Scries of tho Homo Journal
for I860, in a new dress, and with new at'
tractions. It contained Chapters I. and II.
of PAUL FANE, OH PARTS OF A LIFE
ELSE UNTOLD. A Novel in Serial Numbers,
Ry N. P. Wii.i.i.s.
That nutober also contained the cam
nienceinent of a series of original novelette
in verso, founded upon fact, called, "Tint
Story of a Star," by j. M. Field.
noKRies lue contributions and labor of thor
Editors?the Home Journal contains the
Foreign and Domestic Correspondence ef
large list of contributors?the spice the of
European Magazines?tho selections of the
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the brief notels-r-tlie piquant stories?the
sparkling wit and amusing anecdote?the1
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ttirring scenes of the world we live in?the
chionido of the news for ladies?the fashions
?the facts and outlines of news?the pick
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of careful choosing* from the wildeiiivss
jf English periodical lionature, criticism a
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that we have also one or two uiism passed
correspondents in the fashionable society
if New lark, who give us early news of
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ihe leaders of the gay world.
Teiims.?For one copy.&2;for three copies,
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MORRIS 4c WILLIS, Ediloisnnd
Proprietors, 107 Fulton-st. N.Y.
The True Carolinian.
HTMIE undersigned will issue at Anderson
JL C. H., on ??r befoie the first of February,
a LITERARY and NEWS JOURNAL,
bearing the above title. It will be
an independent paper in evciy sense of the
term. It will be the size of tho late Greenville
Mountaineer, and about as large as the
Gazette and Advocate. It will be published
at the ur.precedentedly low rale of One Dollar
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would do well to send in their name*
as soon as possible, together with the subscription
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JOHN V. MOORE,
Feb 14-tf. Ed. and Proprietor.
THE EXAMINER.
TO SOUTH BRN WRITER*.
TIIF editor of the Tiie Examinem, desirous
of enlisting the aid of 80UTHREN
LITERARY TALENT in his enterprise, offers
to those who may be disposed to reuder
that aid, a prize of FIFTY f)OL*LAR8 for
the BEST ORIGINAL TALE, not to occupy
ItsM than twenty columns of the Examiner
(about fifty pages of foolscap in ordinary
writing.) The manuscripts will be submitted
lO a COmnctPnf *?44
, ? mm ineir at*
cision published. Should any other of ih?
tale*, in the editor'* opinion, be deemed
worthy of publication in Thk Examiner, the
writer will be furni-hed with the paper for
five year* free of expenac.
This proposition will remain open until
the first of Slay, 1856.
Writers may enclose their names in a separate
envelope, which will not be opened until
the decision of the committee shall be
made known.
Address ,W. D. Johnston, Columbia.
WILLIAns A, PCABTBB,
Wholesale & Retail Orocer*
AND BUYERS OF COUNTRY PRODUCE,
Clreeuvllle, I. C.,
HAVE just received, and will continue te
keep on hand s good supply of &*&
Coffee, Sugar. Molasses, Rioe. Sah, Bacon,
Lard, Flour, 1M, Mails, and
Many other Article* pertaining te n Grocery Mm
tablishruent, to which w* Invite putdlo attentian,
W? are trading in Article* that require large
Cash Investment *ud admit of hut short profits,
and wc find, by experieuce, that it i? impossible
to do business on a' limited credit We shed,
therefore, discard hooks, end in future, without
distinction or exception* require the CASH on
delivery of Goods. V ?T
We are also BUYING PRODUCE of etery description,
and will pay the highest market pincea,
either iu Cash or Goods, at the pleaeor^ o# thf
140oa jr. nusTca. lioshd uausiM.
Nov. 2. U U.
BOOK AfflD JOB fRISTlUG, neatly 4pnp *S
the "Enterprise Office "
? rpUEHFTlriu ^natOJ?, with One
M Jl Hundred; showing DisUna
tjf the Human
^71 System in every sfopc and form. To
which is added a Treatise an %he Disease*
fits of Females, being of the Highest importance
to married people, or those contemplating
marriage. By William Yousn, M. D.
Let no father be ashamed to present a copy of
the A?8CUZAP1U8 to his child. It may save
him from an early grave. Let no young man or
troman enter into the secret obligations of mar
riage without roading the POCKET AS8CU LAP1TJS.
Let no one suffering from a hack idled
oough, Pain in the side, restless nights, nervous
feelings, and the whole train of Dyspeptic sensations,
and given up their physician, be another
moment without consulting the AESCULAPIUS
Have those married, or those about to 1?e married
any impediment, read this truly useful book,
as it has deen the means of eaviog thousands of
unfortunate creatures from the vcrv jaws of death.
, tsrynj person tending 7Wnty-Pive Cent* en |
closed in a fettor, will receive one copy of this
work by mail, or five copies sent for one Dollar;
Address, (post-paid) Du. WM. YOUNG,
132 Spruce-dree*. Philadelphia.
July 0, 1836. ly
Farmer & Planter.
Is issued Monthly at 1* end It ton, S. C.
TERMS.
1 copy 1 year (tn advance) 8 1 00
5 copies 1 year 44 6 00
23 copies 1 year 44 20 00
100 copies 1 year V 75 00
itST A dvertiseinents will he inserted at the I
rates of 75 cents a square (20 lines or less)
for the first insertion, and 60 centa for each
<ubsequeiit one. Liberal deductions will l>e
made to liberal advertisers.
JC3?~Thc postage on the Farmer & Planter
any where within the State three fourths
r _ ~. i ... r .i o? .a. a .1
ji auu uui ui ino oiaiu one cem nnu
i half per quarter,
GEOHOE SEABORN,
Editor nutl Proprietor.
S. W. Lkwis, Publisher.
Now ishe Time ! Subsoribe for 1853!
PETEKSCN'S MAGAZINE,
d Monthly Periodical of Literature, Art
and Fashion,
i)ktkrson's Ladth* National Mauazivk
L for 1855, will contain nine hundred pares
of original douhlc-coltinie Reading Man
er, about thirty Steel Plates, and nearly I
hree hundred Illustrations engraved on 1
rood. '
Its Thrilliny Oriyinal Stories
Ire fiom the best authors, and written ex- *
ressly for it. Every volume contains one '
r more of Mrs. Ann S. Stephens' copyright '
toveU, the celebrated author of "cushion 1
ml Famine." The Press and the Public!*
iriinolll)<<i<>. it 11 ittiutl nf f I <> \1 n?. ! I