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I VOL 3. GKKKNVII.I.I-; S. TUl'ttSMY M01{\iNO, OlTliBKi; !l. " SO. 2# ' JL M, , tm ,1,1,11, ..? 1 ^c?t|ient nbrprist, K HE FLEX OF POPULAE EVENTS i&.awtuiijxim s>> fc&aonii ?T * ;' E0ITWIAW PMrtHETOfft I Wvi?l ?? ?*. * -V ?v# i * nrsQKtiMnw* v} <' 4 ?J tfd, pAyji&la iu advance ; 84 if delAyed. I. OlW oi FIVE and upward# 81, the money 9 iimafy lostance to accompany the ?Wlcr. IfS; Attf ElfTifiEMENT3 inserted contpitfptfttsly at jfit.h'fc rates of tA cents j??:ic squrfr* of 13 fines, and JK 4.1 jerita for each subsequent insertion. Owy tracts foV yearly advertising made reason alio. ACT K NTS. E. \V[. C. ua, N.' XV. cor. of Walnut and Third**}, Philadelphia,-Is oarnutliorlr.cd Agvul. 9 Walk**, dr.,,polunibiW, 8. C. 9 I'ktmi Stsat>lkv,. Esq.. Rut Hock. N. C. I A. AL Ptosx, Fuirvibw P, O., Greenville Diet. Wuuak C. 1UU.CY, Pleasant Grove, Greenville. CjWW Bi<l. Amutiwu*. Coder Falls, Greenville t f i inn M nil M i i I ^ irltrtrh ^nrtrq. I MiiA* i%' pFrotn the Knickerbocker.] I Spiidg. S. ,. ? nitj). . "lie tinth made everything beautiful in ^ hi* time." Eetlesiw>ticus 3 : 11. Tl^re are two things L dearly love, *" -fn1l>aturo,? circling year, VTUicU lift my spirit far above "The weight of earthly care": Jllfy l?rn?g before my eager view ,?i The "brightness of a home, 'iVKere all their loveliness is tiue, Nor chaise chu ever conic. The early times of Spring's first hums, .'|V0rf?gs freshness to the heart; They rouse the wearied spirit's powers. And sweeter life impart; Her dancing breezes gently woo The blossom* of the rose, Wtwdfwntlf Kpmkling moaning'dew," ..Their .petal* u> -inclose.' < Thes weary sufferer of pain, The boweti with caro Or grief, llail Iter reluming once again, With la>pes of 6wcet relief: Spring hours cannot fail to bring ":;*C*l.ui nfitl consoling thought, Her many voices ever sing Of joy to mortals brought. But, how, O Autumn ! shall I dare K To paint thy gorgeous hues; The softness of thy morning air, Thine evening's jtearly dews ; The Solemn grandeur of thy night, Whose starry crown is set _ With gems more radiantly bright, Than earthly corouet I The glory of thy 6unsefc hour. When all is calm and slid. Bring* full conviction of the Power A J iv That heaven and earth doth fill; Oh I who can giue upon thy skies. As twilight shades thein o'er, ' And not from earthly dreaming* lise, "Their Maker to adore} i>. ni A The wreath of failing Summer (lowers Is yet ii|>on ihj* brow, *Bul all the mirth of Summer hours 1$ changed to sadness now, And yet upon thy dying head, ft A noleron beauty lies, "flore glorious than the riches spread T^ealh Summer's glowing skies. Ew,0 Autumn ! aim It thou be .^PQq US HQ emblem meet Of spirits sinking peacefully To ehuuber calm and sweet: Though tby delights not long may last, V Yet ourn shall still increase : Thy reign be soon for ever past, Hut Ours shall never cease. mm net like thee shall pass away, ^ The Chisiian's hone and lov : JVf * look for an eternal day, :1 And bli*a without alloy? fFor gloriw hid from mortal tight, jjg^rfwjad in realm* above? F6r fadeless crowiia of heavenly light, AHd perfwrtnqM of love. Charleston. 8. O., May, 1850. "% T^K*Wa!rt?ingt?? dratni ?aya;*"The work 60 the Capitol extension ia progressing o ranWly thai there is a prospect, should ^^jjjjj^^ervene, Meip will aiiatrtikforo JUiiiitijg. J^BY [ RQt KST ] * $ ?aird. Tnbi,*<ippearo!rl fit the Souther* ?titer- j priee of (lie 4lli of August Inst, a coiniijunica- , lion from the pen uf one Rnfus W. Folger, , addressed to Judge O'NeiJI (to whicU.we . think his hcaior Ii.ih indiscreetly giveji pub ; licity) setting the pfcopic of FukensvtfU and ! its VK-initv in an odious and fnNe light.? Wi tlio undersigned citizens prompted by ] no vindictive motive, hut discharging what ] wo- falifevo to be our duty have taken Ibis < medium of correcting an erroneous im- , pressiou which may go abroad front tho , statement* contained in this indiscriminate ' pliilipic. Ilad (tic communication been J confined to llio circle of his acquaintance or * to the limits of this district it would have needed no refutation, but it (tap travelled the circuit of tho Enterprise and will h-ad the , stranger to suppose (if it does not meet with correction) that we live in. worse than heathenish darkness, and that the light of civilization has never reached our door*? lie prefaces this notable -epistle by asking f the author for a copy ot his "digest of the I License Law" nud afterward (a* if to com- j pensato him, by catering to Ids sober taste) t bounds like a hungry tiger "seeking whom i he may devour." Why this enmity ; and J w hy it is, he so unwarrantably indulges in this wholesale abuse of tlioee who have i never injured him, we are at a loss to itnag- i ine. He charges us in the first instance a< I i being a sot of lawless and depraved oitixens. | i So foul an .imputation scaice deserve* reply. 1 1 We appeal to those who know us and call j 1 upon thein to brand him who uttered it as a 1 slanderer. A panegyric upon our virtues t would come from us with bad grace, yef. u? i will assert that thore are aa good, hottest, I virtuous, and law-abiding citizens ill Pick-'* ensville and its vicinity as breathe* in South ' | Carolina. And never have we before heard , I or seen the declaration made that wo were | "a lawless aud depraved jwople." In the i next place he afilrms * that diinking, tight- i iug,. profanity, vulgarity and gambling- ftte ' carried oil frotn the dawn of tiny inftif tli<e midnight hour." ' This we pronounce une- "I 3uivocally false. On public occasion*, on i ays of popular elections, as is usual at most places, a few are seeji reeling under the in tluence of strong driiilc anil'occasionally 'a ' tight, ensues, but that this is their constant i and daily habit is frr*fnom being true. As f to tbo other vices named, we believe tbcin j 1 carried to no greater excess tban hi most | \ communities. And a* fur the liar Hooiii at! i tills place being a peifcct gambling saloon.,! ( where this vice is practised from ' dawn of , i day until midnight," it is a base fabrication < and he knew h at the time he penned it.? Now this valorous innn has plucked up the i spirit of a Caesar, and as if against all oppo- 1 sition Iw e dared to scud u vagrant, a woman I to jail, (noble achievement I) - He ba? the valor but not the grne'roue impulses of a Spanish knight. And becnuso of this, he j lie says he has called down the "wrath of I those .yrjfched- tpwnf who bay* *n the shades of uignt applied tJio torch a dwel- j ling on his farm. Thi.^.we believe to have been purely acclderfbif", as n family bad moved out of it the same evening it was bfe?i< ' ed, having no doubt left, tire on tbo hearth.^ If not, it b a grave charge to say that ttt \ (making no distinction) did it. If ho Intend* us, wo pronounce it nn infamous falsehood which could have originated only in the blackest heart. But why did he not ' designate his boundaries and name those individuals! In this he has displayed considerable legal <r<ttmcn. A grog-shop was established here laat winter, permission having boon obtained froiu the Commissioners of Koad* and Bridges, and if they granted I license, it was their light and privilege, and i the citizeus of Piokensville are not responsi- < ble for the evils that <uay flow therefrom,?- H We would he e add a* an evidenco of the moral and christian character of our people, that theie are six churches within five miles . of Picken'sville, some of them a much Ism distanco, and that constant accessions are i being iiiiuO to ihws cliUrcllCt rh'ch Rr* *1 ready large. We nro sorry the nature of hie communication demand of such emphatic language. Vet he wlto shows Mich a brutal disregard for the feelings of others, deserves no <juarlcr?. Wo think tl|6 aenti-1 menu of an eastern sago anpropos, 'That i has not n Nttlo of die I)evil in liim who prays to Ood and hi tea It in neighbois.' We now dismiss Sir Ruftu, whose slanderous end viperous tongue lias been profuse in Its malediction* agamet us and would advise iiini that having had "one eve upon our follies, lie rurn another into the register of his own." Wo would here say to Hk Honor Judge O'Neall that in what w? have said, wo intend no disrespect to him. Sir ! your philatvtHrophic effort* V thj moral amelioration of our people command the bighj est admirationand po-terity will reward your disinterested seal for the suppression of that viee which has been' a blighting and withering curse to our land. But bew?re that ll?e man wlio addressed you in each "mournful numbers" prov# not a traiu>r <*rap. And. dr. U warn) whenover we Uomm so bleeped, lawlessness. ? - -1 i -l debauchery and crime, n? to have foit si K^t! of nil sense of honor, Of our duty ** i and oar bbiijgftiious to God aud our country. > w? will tu>U a worthier son. a truer patriot, and more devout christian than your piiar i?aical corre*|K>ndcnt to preach to us upon those subject*. Stephen Watson, J. W. BatVley, I, H. Ariuil, Jr., E. A. Alexander, Joshua Jamison, Berry Forrester, Joel Bradley, J. T. Watson, Milton NJauUlin, \V. A. Alexander, A. MeCraeltin, Jas. Adam*, W. M. Keith, Alex. Miller, Moses Konnetmre, N. Freeman, hot Kenneinore, J. 11. Man?ell. [Jeo. Kennetnore, Jr., J. A. Mnhrey, A. II. Moon, D. Woolen, Fno. McWhorter, Jr., John Day, SV. W. Slatton, J. Freeman, I. M. Phillips, G. M. Thomas, r. M. Alexander. Pickensville, Sept. 23, 1838. 0 Good "XrlU-Off" on I. S.?Ujj. Early yesterday forenoon, "?ys tho Laavette Journal, a small crowd at the lJiain )le House corner wore gathered around a >luin looking countryman, wlio was reading roin a small handbill or circular, containing n substance the letter of "J. l>. I J.," a? published in the Journal a few fdnya sinrc. The letter, as our renders will remember, is addressed to Jnrncs It. Clay, tho "degenerate son of a noble hire," who now fatter- j lizes with tho "bounds" who pursued his llusliions father to the very threshold of the rravc. As the countryman was reading. ?lr. Clav, who is stopping at the Bramble [louse, bearing his name spoken, approach-d the crowd, and interrupting the reader, uqitired wliKVit was. "Why," replied the countryman, (who, jf course, had uo idea that he was in the presence of the distinguished gentleinan limself.) "it's a mighty g*>od thing on thai [ prodigal, Jim Cjay, whoa been brought up by the old liners to come over and help car ty Indiana. It's d d good," said he, aarming up with the subject. " Clay straightened himself up polupuous!y, anil with an annihilating emphasis and | imperious gesture replied, "/ am James B. Clay, sir / The countryman, nothing abashed, by the 'plantation manner" of the August individual in whose presence he thus unexpectedly found himself, coolly surveyed him from iiead to foot, and placing his thumbs in his rest, threw himself back a la Clay, and u-suming aa much as po&sihle his tone and gesture, responded, "The h you are /" ind quietly added, "1 had no idea that the dd stock Was quite so near run out 1" The iiutuner of the countryman was inimitable and the joke so broad that tins'hole crowd, old liners and all, joined in a i < s. i r>i-- I --. inujfii, jiiiu vuwy veil n icircu!. hriMljOT AND CilKISUAMTT. !|t h[ graveyard in England may be found ?!iq following on a tombstone over four infants : Bold Infidelity, tarn pnle aiiJ die ; Beneath this atone four sleeping infants lie ;, Say, are they lost or saved I ] If death 'a by sin, they sinned, for they are bore? ... - i [f heaven 'a by work, in. heaven they can't j appear. / Ah, reason, how depraved 1 1 Revere the sacred page, the knot's untied? rhey didfl, for Adam sinned ; they live, for" Jesus died." i' ? i i?s^ - *? 0 . ? Home Knots on a Naw Principle.?A Philadelphia mechanic has constructed a bor.se shoe in such a manner that it requires no nails and can be put on by any one with-1 out the aid of a blacksmith. Attached to the shoe is a flange extending around tin* hoof, and at the back of the shoe, which lies overthe frog of tbo hor?es's foot, is a ioinL held in its olaee hv n wr^w u. tii. li nl iuw? the shoe to op?n and close ho at to acroniuuxfota itself u> the si?o ihc.hovt? j Hefwaen tho hoof And the plwte it placed a; layer of gotta percha, fur the purpose of preventing injury to the hoof or leg of the i Itorto l?y concussion, while running over very bard road* or street*. Tlie uieelianfm i* very simple, and the cost much below that of ordinary shoes. As Use ret, Wolf.?ThO millennium ' teem* to be approaching out Weat. Tho Htrald My* a gentleman residing ton?e' tiiirty miles west of San Antonio, has a , "live" wolf, tome eight months ohl, which | attend hit ttoek of sheep in tlie tame manner at a ahepberd'e dog, going out with thein ia the morning, and returning with tbacn at night, llit wolfchip was captured I whan young, and hat been unified with the sheep. [ v Lutmmo Bttauxv-r-W e have lately ob *ji: vud that several of our young friend* limping while walking, ami upon in quiring find that their legs arc terribly iatiargftd >y the contact with hooped skirt* dtl^U with whom they haTe hewn promenading. ; v .?? ~>. THE FIGHT BETWEEN THE j < Sfyesq pcqife gqO 1 i;e ?l)qi)f>oq. 1 c A coiiet^u clent of the Boston Trau-j J script gives the following interesting c account of this memorable sea lightA which occurred forty three years ago: !c There are doubtless, some survivors; 1 who could give thrilling recollections f or that memorable battle, in which tlio! ^ portion killed and wounded to the sur- * vivohi, wan said to be greater, for the short time the battle lasted, than any c other light between single frigates on record. The battle lasted hut lilteen c tniuu'eymdinlhat time the Chesapeake J had nearly two hundred killed and 1 wounded mid the Shannon one huud-111 red ; being about three hundred in all,; n or twenty for every minute the action I lasted 1 j \ Aixnougn young ut the time, living '1 near the scene of action* I well recollect 11 the exciting events of the day, and I * heard the distant ronr of the cannonade j 6 on the Still beautiful summer afternoon; i [ thousands crowded the wharves and 1 housetops of Boston ; and the battle it- ? self 1 think was visible (with glasses) ^ from the top of the old Exchange Cot- * fee House. All the pleasure boats and 0 floating crafts were m requisition, and k filled theharlior and bay down to with- s in a few uiiles of the hostile frigates. 1A 'Captain Lawrence had taken com-11 tumid of the Chesapeake but a few days ! * previous, and was a stranger to his 1 officers and crew. A large part of the 6 latter were a drunken, riotous set, and 1 in a state of g:eat insubordination 1 from not having had some prize money paid which was due for the previous captures. His officers were young, j his first lieutenant (Ludlowj hardly 21 j years of ago but such was his confi- j t deuce in the skill and confidence of j Lawrence, that public opinion pressed, | ami would not allow him to remain at c anchor while a# British irigate ofequal ' j size lay insultingly, off and on the bar- j j bor. , i 1 'Captain Broke of the Shannon, was 1 a noble officer, ami a great disciplina if ?* -1 ? - i uiu. lit- jhiiu purircuiur attention to ' <; exerc sing liis men at the gunsjtill the i t rapidity and accuracy of their lire was I celebrated amongsttlie British pruisers. < As soon as he saw the Chesapeake loos- | en Iter sails lie exercised his men at the ^ cannon (without tiring) for two or three a hours, it was stated by the Shannon of- r tioera some years alter, lie also ad- j| vised tlrp numerous fishermen about c the bay to haul oil'a few utiles, as there j would he bloody work before night, I < and they might be injured by the can j t non balls of both friend and foe. This J fact 1 learnt from a llingman fisherman i who was out on the lower harbor that s day. <"/ c 'The Chesapeake lifted her anchor t about noon, the Shannon being then in t sight. Tito former ship was waited g gently down the harbor, the Shannon * slowly drawing off, so as to get plenty ] of sea room for maneuvering. At a v little before five, the Chesapeake fired c her first gun of defiance, and to inti- i mate that she would not be drawn off t any fartlior. The Shannon instantly \ and promptly hauled up, the crew oi' the Chesapeake gave three cheer* t while the fortner poured in tho broad- j sides, at scarcely pistol shot distance a with such fatal precision and rapidity, that tho quarter deck of the Ohesa- a peake was nearly swept of its officers f and men. I 4Tho fire was promptly returned I with as much efficiency as possible; and the weather being calin and sea t smooth, the slii|? hung foul ot each I other, and in fifteen minutes were i both jiorfect charnel houses, ^nearly c one-half of the crew of the Chesa- f peake being killed or wounded; < Captain Lawrence, three lieutenants, < three midshipmen, the sailing master ? and boatswain were all killetl or nior- j tally wounded by the first two broad- ? sides of the Shannon; and eventually \ every officer on whom tho command | of the ship conld devolve was cither j killed or wounded. ' Capt. Lawrence was wounded in the < leg by the first broadside, soon after he I received a grape shot through the body. On being carried below, and for a day or two after, while Itfj mind was wandering and he in excruciating agony, his constant cry?aince become menimoi able. was vdon't yiv* uv tka thip? 'He lived five days, ana was then laid out on the quarter deck and galley of his shin, and shrouded with the American flag. ItU first lieutenant Ludlow, was mortally wounded in attempting to repel the hrdtnf biff hoard ;rs of the Shannon, his head and feef lelng almost hewed to pieces by their shtlasaea. They were both buried ut Jalifax with the honors of war. Soon ifler Captain Crowhinshioid of Salem olunteered to bring them Lome at liis iwu m pease ; they were buried at Saeiu with great pomp, an eulogy being lelivered on the occasion by Judge Jtory. They were afterwards removed o Isew York, wlierc a monument was rected to their memory in Trinity :hurchyard. 'During the afternoon and evening f the battle, the public excitement in Boston and neighboring towns was in ense. The streets were full of people ill night, aud it was ten days before my particulars could be ascertained, t was only known that a desperate ight had taken place, and that both rigates had afterwards sailed out of he harbor instead of coming in. Probibly no battle during tiiat war uceaioncd greator mortification on the part f the Americans, or more exultation n England. Capt. Broke was welcorn:d there with great distinction, and mi^hted. Toe Chesapeake was an un uckv, ciumsy oia mguie, ana a source f trouble and expense to the country, die was taken to England but I think he was never refitted tor service. She vas moored in the river Medway for a ong time, ami finally broke up about en years since and some ot her timbers ised in the construction of a mill on a mall stream running into that river he best use to which they were ever nit.' J.qDij^sgbel. Tl le Lady Isabel was a Scottish Ba on's daughter, and far was she famed ?being both rich and fair. She was J lis only child of his old age, the idol j >f his heart. But still he was a cruel | at her; for, in return tor her duteous l tflections, lie had determined to wed lcr to a mau she had never seen, while le'knew that her heart was another's. The Lord ot Ormisdale wnst the.son >f his ancient friend, and the possessor >f broad lands in a distant part of Scot and. The two old men had sworn to sacli other that their children should I >e united, but crc this paction, the; outh had been sent abroad to be iiiiti- j ited in the art of war?an art but too iruck practiced in his native country, n the fifteenth century, when the feuds if the Scottish nobility were frequent ind deadly. "Much was bruited abroad if the goodly person and brave quail- > ;ies of the young Earl, but of this Lady Isabel had no opportunity of judging, ?m never, una uefii roiu, IIHU 8110I icpti him. She had howevor, but- toe dten seen his cousin lioberick, and :o him was her heart devoted. It w as rue he had neither title, lands, nor vaslals; but he was a handsome, a noble, mil gallant youth, and he had knelt at icr foot, confessed his love ; and though, vhen she thought of her father, she ioldlj turned aw ay, it was but to treasirc his image in her heart, ami to weep nost bitter tears of the hapless fate vliiclt doomed Icr to wed another. Roderick by-and by went away to a breign land, distraught by his passion or the Lady Isabel; the time was long aid he returned not.. And so life pass-' <1 oil, and many were the suitors that ought the hand ot the Lady Isabel. Unite loved her for herself, some for icr great possessions, arid some for >oth but; but all were sent away. And now the time was at liana when he sun was toshine upon theuineteeth >irth-day of the baron's daughter, and Multitudes were invited to his castle to :elebrate the festival with mirth and cvelrv. Many were Hie "voasion* 1 )ii which he had thrown wide his astlc gates and welcomed numerous quests, and ample the hospital provilion he made for them ; the birtn day >f the Lady Isabel had always during ;he lifetime of her father been celebrated, but never had there been imagined such a preparation a this.? i n ere were several whose eager curiosity caused them to ask an ex planalion of the old baron himself. They ; wt'TH all. luiw?vi>r. foiled in the attempt to }HM>ctrato the mystery. Nor did the young lady, on whose account was all the turmoil, feel less surprised than other people at her father e unbounded extravagance. . The day at length arrived for which all tiiia extraordinary preparation hud been made v and now, utter haying arranged all things and been promised imjdicit obedience by his daughter, the mystery of all hb> m^pniflemtt proceed jugs were partly unravelled by big telling that tliev were that night to-expect) tbo Karl ot Ormisdalo ; ho moreover presented her with a mask, and in tor riled her that lie had g ven orders that each of hit* guests should put on a visor before they entered the ball rtiom, after tlioy left the banqueting hall, and that he had done this for her sake, that the eye of curiosity should not read in her features what was passing in her tniud when she first mot her belli rothed. It was in vain that the afflicted Lady Isabel plead most movingly for u more private meeting, for her father was deaf to her entreaties, while lie affirmed that his precaution of the visor would do away all objections, and was so peremptory in the matter, tlmt? as usual, she acquiesced. How t?or? averse was she however t<> meetthe muii' she was sure that she could never love and many wero the tears she shed, and many the resolves she made to retract' all her promises and live and dio in solitude. Hut then she bethought hei? poor old father?of his tender though mistaken love?of the few remaining years of his life embittered by disappointment?ami his death probably (lurried on through her means. All this was too much when laid on the balance with her own happiness, and she still sustained the character of a duti ful daughter, by heroically determining to sacrifice all selfishness at the ah tar of filial dnt? and affection. Bat though this was her ultimate ye"~' solve, we need not be surprised UnfiT1 when decked in her splendid attire, and presiding in the gorgeous banqueting ball of her father, she looked1 and felt as if assisting at a funeral least,.and that she even then would have been the better of the visor to prevent luany-.tronj eel u res on what her saddened looks* might mean. But the time for assuming the mask arrived, ami the nobles of tho land, with their haughty (fames, and many a knight, and many a damsel fair, bedighf in .silk and cloth "of gold, and blazing in jewels, graced ^?o tapestried ball room, on which a lldod of brilliant light was poured from lamp and torch. And eac h in joyous uioo<\,. cheered by the uteri v minstrels, and by, the sound of harp and viol, impatieot!v awaited the commencement of the dance, when they were informed that it was staved for ?m expected and honorable guest. And now again cariosity was at its height. But present- _ lj* there was a flourish of the music, and a cry of the ushers to make way for the noble Karl of Oiuusdaiu; atjd the large doors at the foot bt the hivll,. were flung wide open, and the gallant* young carl, masked, and attended by a train of chosen triends, advanced amid murmurs of admiration to the middle of the hall. Here they were met and welcomed by the baron, who led the earl to his daughter, and having presented him to her. the guests were presently gratitied by seeing the gallant young nobleman "rake the hand of Lad v Isabel, and leaf! her out to dance. When the dance wag finished her father told her thntshc must presently prepare to keep her word, orf this must be her bridal ldght; for that purpose a'one was that high wassail kept. ller lover,| too, no way daunted by his knowledge of I tv lieart, preyed on his suit to have it so. And so now was the despairing damsel almost be&ule herself, when her father, r.nnonne'ng aloud his purpose to the astonished gueSta, called lor the priest, and caused all to unmask. But in what words shall we paint the surprise, the delight, of the Lady Isabel, when the earl's mask was removed, and she beheld in hiin her much loved Roderick, who, his cousin being dead, was now the Karl of Or* in jMiiu*:. The statjly cr.slle and it* revels, the [proud baron and hi* pAuip, the beauteous bride and her children's children have now till passed away into obi 1von, save this slight record, which has only been preserved in remembrance oftho daughter's virtue, who preferred hoi* father's happiness to her own. A chaplain was onee j re ac hing- to a class of collegians ivliout the loruiatlou of linhits. 4iGent Ioniansaid he, "close vour cr.ru against b:'.d discourses." The scholars immediately cl;ipDed their hands to their cars. & Soktxmxq Tin: KxruibSiox.?4>'IrolY* a thundering big lie!" Kiid Toin.*^t4N<>,ri replied Dick; "Il'b oeljr a l'ulminuting enlargement. el' elongate! voracity !" Harry took ?>H his J.u elevated hi* **><>, nitd held bis . 1*5