The southern enterprise. [volume] (Greenville, S.C.) 1854-1870, November 06, 1856, Image 1
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VOL. 3. GREENVILLE, S .: THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 6, 1S5C. NO. 26
_|^M|M|,-T r- ?A r
&ljc lontjitrn Enterprise,
A REFLEX OF POrULAR EVEKTi
\W5irCiM s>B &>iRS<&a,
~ EDITOR AND FROPRIETQR. 7.
nrmtAKiB*
f #1 50, pMtble ia advance ; $3 if delayed.
CLCfvi of FIVE and upward# $1, the nione;
v everv instance U accompany the order.
ADVERTISEMENTS inserted conspicuously n
the rates of 73 cents per square of 16 lines, su<
S3 cents for each subsequent insertion. Con
tracts for yearly advertising made rcusouable.
AOKNT6.
H. W. Cass, N. W. cor. of Walnut and Third-st
Philadelphia, is our authorized Agent.
, "W. W. \V abaca, Jr., Columbia, S. C.
Par** Stiaolkv, Esq., Flat Rock, N. C.
A. M. Proax, Fnirview P. 0., Greenville Dist
"William C. Dailkt, Pleasant Grove, Greenville
Cait. R. Q. Andiuox, Cedar Falls, Greenville
leltrtrb ^nrtrtj.
L-i?
Jll - t - U OVT ~ < U . k
>IXJ 2) i t 1/ , iy V i 1/ H .
We do not know when we have met witl
a more touching and beautiful poetical mor
ceau than the following. It breathes a sen
tlment ot holy inspiration which touches er
ery chord of the heart Head it:
Mother, watch the little feet,
Climbing o'er the garden wall,
Bounding through the busy street,
Hanging cellar, sited and hall;
Never count the moments lost.
Never count the time it costs,
CuiJc them, mother, while 5-0u may,
' JLest their infant footsteps stray.
T ' * * *
Motlter, watcli tlio little hand
lacking berries by the way,
Making houses in the sand,
Tossing up the fragrant hay ;
Never dare the question ask :
"Why to me the weary task P
The same little hands may prove
Messcngtrs of Kght nud love.
Moflter, watch the little tongue.
Prattling eloquent nml wild ;
What u said and what is sung.
Hy lh? joyous, happy child.
Catch the word while yet unspoken,
Stop the vow before 'tis broken;
ITtris mum tongue may yet proclaim
f?les*ings in a Savior'* name.
Mother, the lillJo heart,
SieatABg soft and cwna for you ;
Wholesome lessons now impart,
Keep, O ! keep that young heart tra<
Extricnting every weed,
Bowing good and precious seed,
Harvest rich yeu then uiay see
Bipen for eternity.
Ilrtie Flriend3 i)ip.
On ! what happine*s, what brightness,
In life's ohanging scenes appear,
"When we meet kind words and actions,
And we feel they are sincere ;
When the smiles of friendship greet us,
And we know that they ere true
What greater cbartn hath this fair worl
To offer me or you f
V ^ *
'With the beaming sky nimve us,
And the lovely earth beneath,
With the music of the ocean
And the flow'r-enamel'd death;
* With the beauteous scenes of Nature,
What more cheering would you ask,
. Than the glance that speaks affection,
, From the heart without a mask.
. ' for pure truth is such a jewel,
so precious and so rare,
That it aeems a spark from heaven
" 8eldom lent to moral care;
When we meet it in earth's friendship,
i Let us prise its holy might,
For b comes onto our spirits,
Like an angol winged with light.
fgpugj JL-LL . g?
yfywy woman promised 'to slrow U
young women their husbands' face* in
mN of water. They looked and exclnnwec
rWbv, we only tee our face*." "Well
aid tlfagypeey, those faces wtf/ 6c your hu
bands' wnon yon are married."
"This Awr*al," **id an iternsnt shoi
men, St the royal African hyena, meaturir
fourteen feet from the tip of his nose to tl
tnd of bjs tail, and the same length bat
again/ftfcfthg |n all twenty eight fmt, I
cmeiw lbe wOodt in ibe night aneaoa 1U
ft lUftuMltaeing in dfetreas, and that) derou
that eome to his amjrianaa- i aad ii
iHsfli of the depravity of bnman nature,"
W ^ M ? V 'X ? ?? -r? w ? *
JllistellantDWi tUnbing.
5 predictions for tl)i$ {Jeoir.
Tits following sagacious predictions were
made, though marie for another year, will
doubtless bo fultilled in 1357 :
Through the whole course of tho coming
year, whenever the moon wanes the night
f will grow dark.
Ou several occasions, duting the year, the
j aun will rise before certain people discover
it, and set before they have finished their
day's work.
It is quite likely, that when there is no
business doing, many will be heard to complain
of bard times, but it is equally certain
that all who hnng themselves will escape
tAt-vnf ton
If bustles and boons go out of fashion, a
church pew will hold more than three ladies.
If dandies wear their beards there will be
! leas work for the barbers, and ho who wears
mustachios, will have something to t-ncezo
at.
Thero will be many eclipses of virtue,
some visible, others invisible.
Whosoever is in love, will think his mis
tress a perfect angel, and will only find out
' the truth of his suspicion by getting mar
ricd.
Many delicnto ladies, whom no one would
suspect, will be kissed without toiling their
Mas.
Thero will be more books published than
will fiud purchaser, moio bills made than
will find payers.
If the incumbent of a fat office should die,
there will be a dozen feet ready to step into
one pair of shoes.
If a young lady should happen to blush,
she will be apt to look red in the face, without
the use of paint; if she dreams of a young
mail three nights in succession, it will be a
.sign of something; if she dreams of him four
timea, or Jiave the tooth ache, it is ton to
one she will be a long time in getting either
of them out ofWr head.
Many people will xlrink more strong ii
<i :n -??? .~ i i
uinu v?m uc uirco^.u > iu hcvjf iiiviii
sober, and Uke (tnoiC naedicme liiau will be
reoui.-ite to iLe enjoyment of good health.
DinDetw itud entertainments will be given
to those who have enough at home, Hiid the
poor will receive much advice gratis, legal
and utodical excepted.
The (wblie debts of the repudiating States
will haidly be adjusted, and the tonne fate
will .very probably attend many private contracts
an this latitude.
lie who marries this year will run a great
risk, especially if he does it in a great hur
w*
He alio steals a match gives tattlers oc cntftun
to gossip, and will be apt to involve
himself and pride in disagreeable relations.
There will be a great noise ail over the
. -country when it thunders, and a tremendous
?. dust will he kicked up occasionally, by conch
horses.
Many young ladies, who hope for it, but
little ex|fcct it, will be married; and many
who confidently anticipate that glorious consum
mation, will be doomed to wait another
year.
Finally, there exists little doubt, this will
be a "most wonderful" year, surpassing in
interest ail that have preceded it. Politicians
will make fools of others ; any many
women with pretty facet will make fools of
both.
The world will go round ns usual and
come back to the place whenco it set out, as
will many a innn who engages in business.
There will be great cry and litllo wool,
" both at the shearing of pigs and the meeting
of Congress.
?- >?sm ???
Iblree Iliiogg. ,
Three things that never become rusty.?
The money of tlie benevolent; the shoes of
the butcher's horse, and a woman's tongue.
Three things that are as good as the best.
?Brown bread in famine ; well water in
thirst, and a great coat in cold weather.
Three things as good as their better.?
Dirty water to extinguish a lire; an ugly
wifb to a blind man, und a wooden swora to
A w/WSfj.
Three things of short continuance.?A
lady'* love ; r chip fire, and a brook's flood.
Three things that never ought to be from
home.?'The cat; the chimney, and the wife.
Three essentials to a false storg teller.?
A good memory , a bold lace, and fools for
hia audit nee.
? Three things seen in a peacock.?The garb
of an angel; the walk of a thief, and the
ro voice of the devil.
Three thipgs it is vnteiee to boast of.?
Tig) flavor oif thy aft; the beauty of tby
? wife, and the contents of thy purse. ( t
lv Three miseries of a man's house.?A smoky
chimney ; a dripping roof, and a scold^
ing wife.
'Mistkr, where are yot? going with
,'j. that horse t' cried rt gentleman to a
[4 suspicious looking loafer, whom ho
met on horseback. 4 Wei I, I .hain't,*
rs going nowhere with him/ said the owls'
of, hat It? is a going soipowh?rc with
v*.?*' ' 4- I- , ' ' 1- > "
> -<>?> . ?t ? :* t h K
Sleep.
Thkrr U no fact more clearly established
ill the physiology of man than this, that the
brain expands ita energies and itself during
the hours of wakefulness, and that these are
recuperated during sleep ; if the recuperation
does not equal the expenditures, the brain
withers ; this it instantly. Thus it is, that
in enrly Knglish history, persons who were
couucmucu 10 ueutn, by being prevented
from sleeping, always died raving maniacs:
thus it is also that those who are starved to
death become insane; tho brain is not nourished
and they cannot sleep. The practical
inferences aro three.
1. Those who think most, who do most
brain wotk, require most sleep.
2. That time "saved" from neeessary sleep
is infallibly destructive to mind, body and
estate.
(iivo yourself, your children, your servant,
give ail who are under you the fullest amount
of sleep they will take, by compelling
them to go to bed at some regular early
hour, nnd to lisc in the morning the moment
they nwako of themselves, and within
a fortnight nature, with almost tho regularity
of the lising sun. will unloose the bonds
of sleep, the moment euough repose has been
secured for the wants of the system. This
is the only safe and suflicicnt rule; and as
to the question, how much sleep anyone requires,
each must bo a rule for himself;
great nature will never fail to writo it 10 the
observer under tho regulation just given.
\Journal of Health.
Jl)c Ioh)6 of ?izz*lro.
In the crvpt under the high nltsr aro deposited
tho remains of the celebrated Piz
taro, who wmk assassinated in the Palace
hard by. A small piece of silxer, which I
dropped into the hand of the Attending sac
rislan, procured me Admission into the
crypt. Descending n few steps I entered a
small place, Rome twenty feet long, quite
light nnd whitewashed, and which smelt
and looked so much like a comfortable wine
cellar, that I caught myself more than once
looking round for tho bins aud bottles. The
flr>t object I saw was a large square tomb,
surmounted by the erect figure of an nhkott,
and c'ose by, in a narrow oj>cning in the
wall. 1 nolieed what appeared to me to he
a collection of Uiuty rags, but a closer inspection
proved that this was all that remained
of the renowned conqueror of Peru,
lie has still on him the clothes nnd shots
which lie wore at the time of his assassination.
Of course his bodv is nothing hut a
skeleton covered with the remains of what
was white linon, swathed round him, hut
the dust of centuries has collected on it, and
turned it to a light brow n color, nnd it all
most pulverizes when touched. The body
is placed on a narrow piece of plank, in a
sloping position, and has been placed in this
hole merely to put it out of the way.?
The folks in Lima do not think anything
of the remains of poor Pizzaro, and I dart
say that n little nfoney, judiciously invested,
would procure for any curiosity-hunter, the
whole of his remains.?A Jiambh from
Sidney to Southampton.
The Boy of the Timks.?AVelike an nc
tivo boy?one who lias the impulse of tin
ago?of the steamboat in him.
A lazy, plodding, snail paced chap, might
have got along In tho world fifty years ago
but he won't do for these limes. We Iiv<
in an ago of quick ideas. Men think quick
eat, sleep, couit nnd die quick?and slow
coaches aro not tolerated. "Go ahead i
you burs'* your boiler!" is the motto of eve
y one?nnd he succeods the best who ha;
most or "do or die" in him.
Strfv*, boys, to cAlch the spirit of tin
times, be up nnd dressed always, not gape
ing and rubbing your eyes as if you \ver<
half asleep?but bo wide awnko for whatev
er may turn up, and you will be somebodt
before you die.
Think, plan, recollect as much as yot
please before you act, but think quickly
closolv, and when you have fixed your cyi
upon an object spring for the mark at once
But abovo all thiugs be honest. If yot
inland to be an art!*t, carve it in the wood
chisel it in the marble?if a merchant, writ*
it in your ledger. Let honesty be your gui
ding star.
I Hit Jews.? J lie New York J'oat, o
Friday. says:? Some important mictioi
ales of dry pood# wore jrostponed from ye*
terdav to to-day, in consequence of ye?ter
day being a holy day, kepi so by our Jewish
brethren. Auctioneers value groatly lb
attendance of Jewish buyers at tKcir Bales
they giving oonsiderablc tone to the market
forming not only a considerable class but ai
influential one.
Judge Tanbt.?The Wnrrenton Whii
states that the venerable Chief Justice Tane;
still remains at the Fauquier Spring*, bu
expeota to leave soon for Washington. It wil
be a source of gratilication to his manj
friends to know that his health still eon
tinnea to improve, and that by proper can
he will ioon be entirely restored,
/ If*' 'T l
Jtoe ?c3t of ?bciry-'
f to i n g.
"We once knew a man wliotn neither
enren or t or row seemed to affect;
who at sixty had the digestion and j
flow of spirits of twenty-one ; who had
acquired a large fortune apparently j
without un effort; who in short, was
the happica of men, and the envy of;
nil who anew b:rr?. "Ilow is it," we said j
to him, "that you ??*? so fortunate ?
What talisman secures to you all these j
advantages?" lie smiled as he answered,
"I have no talisman, unless i*'
is to make the best of everything." i
mnL*n flin l\ncf liiti/* t
JLV I I J < IIV vs ?ll\> UVOU VI V* V/l tiling .
Liken key to a problem, tlie answer!
unlocker of us, at once, the whole of
the great mystery. Life is too short,
and happiness too precious to consume1
the one or throw away the other, in '
idle, unavailing regrets. Even if ill-)
fortune swells into a flood, threaten I
ing to undermine the very ground on
which wo stand, is it not wiser
to strive to bridge the torrent than to
wait, bewailing our fate, till the wa
ters swallows us ? The week and un
stable suceumb to ilstiny, and are I
washed into oblivion. The wise and!
; brave, accepting circumstances as they
present themselves, plunge boldly, j
like lloratius of old, into the stream,
win the further shore in safoty, and (
earn immortal guerdon and renown, j
Few men, if any, ever succeeded in
life whom have not learned to make
the best of everything; and generally,
their success is an exact proportion to
their adherence to the rule. Does a
debtor fail ? Every merchant knows
that it is the best course, it the debtor
is honest, to accept his flrst offer of
compromotion, and not sriuander money
in useless litigation, llave you become
insolvent yourseift The worst
thing you can do is to give up to des-:
pair, and sav that it is folly to trying
to redeem yourself, lias a friend I
misjudged you, or an enemy done yon j
secret harm i Don't lose precious moments
in sentimental griet over ingratitude,
or passionate threats at your'
wrong doer : but go to work on the in
instant, to shame your friends, or dis-l
arm your foe. Had Astor, when he
was a poor German emigrant, made up
his mind that the attempt to be a millionaire
was absurd, he might have
died a begger in the almshous. Had
Washington, when Cormvallis pursu <
ed him aoorss New Jersey with thirty j
i thousand troops, said that it was hope- j
{less to save America with his frag-1
I meat of an army, his three thousand I
: Uttered continentals, we might all thisj
1 day have been in slavery to Great,
| Britain; but he said, "If the British
' j cross the Delaware 1 will cross tho Al j
J leghanies. and if they are victorious
there I will fly to the wilderness be-,
' yond and this ressolution never to
j! give up, but always to mako the be?t|
of everything, led to tho victory of*j
L Trenton and the freemdom of the Republic.
> We are familer with people who;
. whine continually at fate. To believe'
' them never was lote so hard as theirs,
l yet those who knew their history will j
* generally tell you that their lite has<
} been but one long tail of opportunities
disregarded, or ?a:sfo:U?uee otherwiseI
uuserveU. Perhaps they were born
* poor. In this case they hate the rich, j
and have always hated them, but f
. without ever having emulated their i
prudence or energy. Perhaps they1
, have seen their rivals more favored by j
accident In this event they forgot '
a how many have been less luck than
. themselves; so they squandered their
? little, because, as they say, they cannot |
f *ftva as much as thcrs. Irritated at
s life, they grow old prematurely. Dis
* satisfied with everything, they never
permit then is Ives to bo happy. Jleeause
theyaro not born at the top of;
^ the wheel" of fortune, thev refuse to j
1 I t.?lJ ?!.? a!..
ulitu mutt ui uiu nn 11itiuri
!. comes around, but lie stubborn in the j
. dirt, crying like spoiled children, ,
P or doing anything themselves, nor peri,
initing others to ao it for them.
, Make the best ot everything t At (
11 homo if wife or husband is cross, if I
servants are careless, if children are
irritating, don't fly into a passion, for
v that will do no good, bnt make the'
y best of the circumstances, fulfill your ;
t duty, and wait for happier tiinc3.?!
I Abroad, if things look unpromising, J
y preserve a stout heart, keep cool, and
- play your hand to the best of your ab
bility. Even if fate has the first move,
which i* not always- the c?m?. von have ,
. * -^7.
the second ; mid the "aiiie may still lie
vdurs; it von play skilfully and hopefully.?Jfaltimore
Sun.
Tiik Most Bkautifvl Hand.?Two
charming women wero discussing one
day what it is which constitutes beauty
in the hand. '11 icy ditiered in opinion
as much as in the 6liape of the j
beautiful member whose merits they
were discussing. A young gentleman
friend presented himself, and by common
consent the question was referred
to him. It was a delicate matter.
ii.. o. ~...i .1-- .1
iiv iuv;ii^iit ui i. ai la *.11 ivi iu\j imtX.
goddesses. Glancing from one to the
Otoe cf the bcantifnl white lmnds presented
10 Innl, which, by the way, he
had the cunning tc hold for sometime
in his-own for the ptirpoffc of examination,
ho replied at last: "I glvC it up,1
the question is too hard for liie, L.lr-1
ask the poor, and they will tell 3'ou I
that the most beautiful hand in the
world is the hand that gives,"
A Pomkstic Imi'ROvkmkxt.?Putting
down carpets with tacks has always
been a trial and tribulation to housekeepers,
which ought to have been obviated
by some better invention before
this. An improvement which will]
answer the purpose has been announced.
It consists of a series of cast iron
buttons, with the lower end formed in
the shapo of a cam. This is secured
to the hase board of the room, and
when the carpet is properly stretched,
the cams are turned down upon it,
and retain it firmly in place. This
saves the carpet from the tear and
wear of the tacks, and Lho floors from
the injury of nails being driven into
them, besides making the putting down
and removing of carpets but a few
mittnrnc^ wnrl'
"Lornf.i*?A man lately went to
the Postotfiee, and putting his month
up to tho delivery box cried out
Louder 1" The clerk supposing the
man to be deaf, and that he was making
a request ? f him to speak louder
so that he could hear, asked him in a
very loud tone tho name of the person
of whom he wanted the letter.
"Louder !" cried the man.
"What name!" yelled the clerk.
"Louder !*' again bawled the man,
who now supposed tho clerk to be
deaf.
The clerk took a long breath, and
with all his might again bawled out in
tho man's face the same question,
"What name?" This was done in so
loud a tone that the .echo seemed to
return from the far off hills.
Tho man started hack in alarm,
shouting to the very top of his big
lungs:
"Louder, sir, Louder! I told von
Louder! my name is nothing else !"
"Oh, ah ! oil, hon* said tho clerk;
''your name is Louder, ch! Lidn't
think of that; here's your letter; Mr.
Louder, here's your letter,"
1 Vashi'vyton Star.
A Dodok.?When Dcncon 13??
got into a had position, he was venexpert
in crawling out of it, Though
too quick temnor^ no wa9 0ne of the
ucacons in the world, ho would
not in a sober moment, utter an oath
or anything like one, lor his weight in
cider.
At.the close of a rainy day, he was
milking upon a knoll in his burn yard,
on one side of which was a dirty
6lough, and on the other was an old
buck, that in consideration of his usually
quiet disposition, was allowed to
run with the cows. The deacon was
piously humming 'Old Hundred,' and
had just finished the line ending with
'exalted high,' when the rata obeying
a 6uddcn impulse to be aggressive,
gave him a blow from behind that
sent him up a short distance, only to
fall directly into the slough, where the
dirty water was deep enough to give
him a thorough immersing.
As he cralled out tUid before ho rose
from iiis- hands and klioes, bo looked
over his shoulder at the rum and then
vociferated:
Yon d?d old enss !' but on looking
around and seeing one of the neighbors
at the bars, looking at him, be
added in tho samo breath, i!f I may
be allowed the expression /'
, H?l
Tub girls of Northampton, bnvc
been sending a bachelor editor a boquct
of tansy and wormwood.' lie
says be didn't care a darn i had rath,
or smell it than matripeony.
' ,,
Tk ANtjl'LANTlNO TKKi?.~~Thu? IB Mtt
I excellent season of tlio year for transI
planting trees. In choosing garden
j trees you should be careful to telect
those having strong and vigorous
stocks; and the larger they are the
better. As a general thing it i* much
better to pay a high price, and tints
purchnnse a tree which will commence,
bearing a year or two earlier, then Co
give a low price, and have to wait a
long time for the fruit. In setting ont
the tree, a hole should ho dag of sufficient
del)th fo allow of the tree being'
placed a little lower in tho ground
than before, and if the soil is of a hard,,
clayey nature, tho bottom should bo
covered with a layer of limn. Then,after
spreading out the fibres carefully,,
fill in, accasionally &haking the tree sons
to allow the earth to settle wclK
about the roots. The soil about flit#
loots should he well watered, and the
e*?:th, nftor the hole is filled, it should,
bo staiYij;vd down hard.
Once Colored, Always Colored.?*Xnegto
woman una relating lior experience to"
r guping congregation of color, uud among
oilier thing*, t>!ic said alio had beert* ill heaa*-"
on. ' , .
"Sister, did you see any black folks in'
hoiiven ?"
"OIi, got out! you Vpose I go in db kit*clion
when I was dar ?"
'litis reminds us of an anecdote of anoth-er
colored man who was so convinced of the
iowiiuess of his position, and that labor war
bis natural lot, t.iat ho was even indifferent
us to ft future state, believing tbat "devil
mako nigger work eben e/he go to lichen."
| A clergyman tried to argue him out of ibis1
opinion by representing tliut this could not
i be the case, inasmuch as there was absolutely
no work for liiui to do in Heaven. Ilia
1 answer was:
I "Oh ! you gVnv Msssa. I knows better.I
If tlieie's no work for culhid folks up dar,.
dev'll make some fur 'em, and if ders's nuf
finliclter to do doy'll mnko 'em shub de
clouds along. \ ou can't fool dis chile*alassH."
Drkss Waum?Hkcmn Now.'?Our climate
is changeable. Pleasant and charming
weather soon passes into raw and cold
taking days, which, unless provided against,
are most disastrous to the health of the peo*
pic. lhit the women?the young ladiesare
the most exposed. Pride makes them1
the most insensible and I...;.? ?i?1.
... .. wvi(i|^a ft liltll
I claim anything of reason and prudence?*
i They dress to be sick, and half of tlient' moy
i because thoy despise thick and warm clo1
tiling. Away with snob nonsense, men and
women, and prepare for the change of the
I season. Better l>e bealtby, beautiful and 10bust,
ilinn fashionable, thin sliced and llounced
dress gentry, with a gvtlleol cough and
consumptive look. Then, dtess warm ?
Begin now! But awnv your wafer untie*standings
and summer trapping*, aitd H?*
take yourselves to thick, tratm. sensible, and
protecting clothing, sncli as sound-minded
men ami women ought to choose,
"WiiKnii to takk ] 1 rsi.?The following
specimen of "Young Americanism,"
wo think is too good to be lost.
One night Freddy l,nd been put to
bed, am', mother mul Johnny were iu
I an adjoining room. Presently John-,
ny cnt up some caper, on which moth*
i or threatened to take him into the.
other room and whip him.
'"Mother," said Freddy's voice urK
der the bed-clothes, "I know where I'd
take him."
"Where?" said mother, whose curiosity
was excited.
"I'd take him under the left ear /"
i An Ingenious Apoloqv.?'Why,'
I said a country clergyman to one of his
flock, 'do you always sleep in your
! pew when t am in the pulpit, whilo
von are all attention to every stranger
jl invite?"
'Because, sir, when you preach, Fin'
sure all's right; hut I can't trust a
! stranger without keeping a good look'
| out.'
j A Youthful Frenchman received
from his love the following letter:?
"Isadore, yon have abandoned mc;
I that is the recompense for my virtue.
My landlord will no longer ;come
I to-night, or I 6hnll sleep in the room
! with iv charcoal furnace?Naniche."?
' iSAdore was in no hurry. He went
the next day to see hw eor]>s! The
furnaco was burning, and his own^
Nftiiiche WH9?frying sausages.*
? - ?
M?tj. TvRxanii is ralhing reeiuita in Grrnv.
ads, Miss., to go to Nicaragua,. We predict,
be will get into- a mow with T'm lg Satp^
w?1e?R he is careful.,
- i * iw? ?*