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<WR ' nowo-**?iri!rjyu mmmrn ?o Jk%%> y VOL 3. . GREENVILLE, S C.: THURSDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 27, 1856. NO; 29 V __ ?? i <&jje iantjjcrii dMrrprisf, A REFLEX OF POPULAR EVENTS. mi jp. S&ic&is, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. - { Tf-WC*. J - *1 60, payable in advance; 'S2 If.iWfcyod. * CLUBS of FIVE nml upwards SI, Hie money w>*erv instance to nrninipiiny tlic oriler. ADVERTISEMENTS Inserted conspicuously nt tk*.rote* of 75 ci'iit* square of IU lines, and 7"li cento for each 8'.lb*bqq?oV-insertion. traete for yearly advertK-iitpiimde mtaofiablc. AGKNTR. X VT. Uarr, tn". W. cor,*?f Walnut And Tlilrjol, 1'hUa lelpkir., ie ?j?r authorised Agent. W. W. Wackko, Jr., Columbia, S. C. I'ltH Sra.ADt.rv, Esq., Flat Rock, N. C. A. St. Prors, Fairvlew I*. 0., Greenville DM. William C. Huticr, Pleasant Grove, Greenville. ? Carr. |L Q. Amdkimox, Cedar Falls, Greenville. > J?rlrrtrli partnj. ft \\b 0 r ft t; 0 t. j* ^ nv KnE.NEXF.il EU.IOTT. 1 I Iolrr, nrlty He down to die ! Hotter rub than ruxt, Il.irk ! the lark sings in llie sky? , i ? \ "Die when die tliou must! Day is waking, leaves are shaking, J Hotter rub than rust." ? In tho grave there's sleep enough? Hotter rub than rust. Death | erhaps is hunger proof, Die when die thou must; Men r?re mowing, breezes blowing, I Hotter rub than rust. ' I ', He who will not work shall want ; I \ f Naught for naught is just? Won't do, must do, when he can't, Hetter rub tlinu rust. Ikes arc flying, sloth is dying, j Hotter rub than rust. < iMfeMMMNWaMMMMMMM ' 51 ?rlrrtri> ftorij. ' Jhtficadfiiibe. < ' . A TOfSILLISO KVKXT. I Tun subjoined narrative, published origi- < nally in Chambers' Journal, is stated to 1 have been translated from a foreign newspa- I |?er. It is necessary to remind tlio reader (hat the Island of Mauritius, appertaining at < r this day to the English, was oiiginally colo- t ' nized by the French, and that the popttla- I lion yet consists, in a groat measure, of per- i eons of that nation, to whom, by a forma) i treaty between the powers concerned ; their \ f ancient laws and usages were preserved i without any material alterations. i 1 About twelve years ago, the Sieur Clodo- t inir Frenois, a rich merchant of the Island, was found dead and frightfully disfigured in j his own habitation. Ilis body was diacov- i ered lying on the floor, with the head and face mutilated by n pistol, and all doubt as ; to the cause of the catastrophe was dispelled | by the discovery of the fatal weapon by the b ?iiln nf tliA iintiMA ii? iilaA n( a nicco of nn per in the hand wtiting of tho decerned. I This paper contained the following word* :' | 'I aid ruined. A villain has robbed ine j ol twenty-five thousand livres, hterliug, dis-; t honor must be my portion, nud I cannot j I eurvivc it. I leave to my wife the task of distributing among iny creditor* tho meana which remain to us; and 1 pray God, my ( friend*, and my enemies, may pardon my , aelf destruction. Vet another minute, and I ( frhftU be in eternity I. (Signed) Ci.ouimiu Fkrnois.' Oreat consternation was caused by this 1 tragic event, which was tho more uiiexpecljjr od, as the loia alluded to in the above note r yT had never been made public. The deooased 'i fiad been held in great esteem over the col priv. *% a man of ?trict honor and probity, \ t ? ?: ii.. i ,?.| us. I I unci whi umverpiiiij inniniicu. *?? ??vm.v.. *d kKI w, after endeavoring faithfully to ftilflll hi* last wishes, found ber grief too overpowering to permit ber to mingle longer with tiio work, and took lha resolution to <5on*ecr>ite ber remaining day* to the aerator of religion. Two month* after tho aad I ? *' *n'' her lttndmnd, alio entered n convent, i b- iving to a nopbew of the late merchant, a phvsidnu, tbe charge of completing the I4 4 > distribution of tbe effecta of Freuo'u among * bit creditora. \ , | > A minute examination of the papers of Che defunct, led to the discovery or the pe7^ friod at which the unfortunate merchant had | beau robbed ; and this poiiod was found to ft Correspond with tbe date of tli? dlaappeariMce of a man. named John Moon, being in i >4*0 employment of FreooU Of ftta man, . < *?r*lK>?n arwpicion not unnaturally fall, ' ? MfeCUng could be leajrfttd oh iotjuify ; but | shortly after the division ^ the Utc^iner colony. When taken up nud examined respecting the cause of his (light, he stated that he had been sent by his master to France to recover certain sums due to the merchant \ there, in which mission he had been unsnc- , cessful. lie further averred, that if Clodo- , mir Frcnois ir. liis existing correspondence lind thrown any injurious susnicion* nnon him, (Moon) tiie whole was but h pretext to Hccouut for the defhionces of which the merchant himsclt was the cause and author.? This declaration, made by a man who seemed to fear no inquiry, and whose worldly circumstances remained to nppearnnce the same as they had ever been, had the effect of silencing, if it did not satisfy the examinators ; and the affair soon fell, in a great measure, out of the public recollection. Things remained for a short time in this condition, when one morning Mr. William Burnett, principal creditor of the latcClodouiir Fretiois, heard a knocking at his gate i\t a very early hour. Ho called up one of his servants, who went down and opened the door, and immediately returned with the intelligence that a stranger, who seemed desirous of keeping his person concealed, wished to speak with Mr. Burnett in private.? Mr. Burnett rose, tlnew on his dressing gown, and descended to the parlor. lie saw thero a stranger of tall person, seated in ?n easy and familiar attitude upon a sofa, with a number of the Morning Post in his liatid. The back of the visitor was turned to Mr. Burnett as lie entered. Hather surprised to see a stranger conduct himself so like an old friend of lite house, Mr. Burnett uiid aloud : Sir, may 1 beg to know your business ivitli me ?' The stranger turned round and advanced to salute his host warmly and courteously. Mr. Iturnclt started back, and utlorcUa loud | exclamation of surprise and alarm. Well ( lie might; for before his eyes stood his i friend and debtor, Clodomir Frenois, whom ' lie had beheld nearly a year before, a inuti- i lated corps-e, and whom he himself, had fob ( lowed to the grave ! < What passed at that interview, between i Mr. lUirtielt, and his stinuge visitor, remain- j ?d a secret. Mr. Ihirnelt was observed to i issue several times pale and agitated, from i his dwelling, and to visit the magistrate i charged with tbo criminal processes of the ( colony. In the course of that day, while i John Moon was regaling himself with tea < tinder the palm trees of his garden, along ~i with a Circassian female whom he had | [>ought sometime previously, he was arrested wd taken to prison by the oftiecrs ofjusticc. I On the following day he was brought before the criminal court, accused of robbing iho late Clodomir Frenois, the crime bo:ng conjoined with breach of trust and voileuce. Moon smiled at the charge with all the confidence of a ;uan who had nothing to fear, l'hc judgo having demanded of him if he confessed the crime, the accused replied that the charge was altogether absurd ; that clear testimony was necessary to fix Mich a delict upon him ; and that so fur from there being my such evidence produceablc, neither the widow of the deceased, nor any one person in hie service, had ever heard the pretended robbery even once mentioned by Frenois luring his life. 4])o you then affirm your innocenco}' repeated the judge, gravely, after hearing a!I I rvt 11 As* I. a. 1 ?a >* ? 'I will avouch my innocence,' replied I Moon. 4even before the Uxlv of my late master, if that be necessary.' i (Such a thin# often took place under the 1 Did colonial law.) 'John Moon,' said the judge, in a voice broken by some peculiar emotion, 'it is before your late viasler that you will have to 1 issert vouf innocence, and may God make 1 the truth to appear!' A signal fiem the judge accompanied these words, and immediately a door open cd, and Clodomir Frcnois, the supposed suicide, ctftored the court. Ifc advanced to the bar with a slow and deliberate step, having his eye cnlmiv, siemiy fixed on the prisoner, his servant. A great sensation was caused in court by his Appearance. Uttering shrieks of alarm and horror, the females present lied front the spot. Tho accused fell on his knees in abject terror, and slntd tiering confessed Ins guilt. For a time no voico was heard but his. However, us it became apparent that a living man stood before his court, the advocate of the prison* er gained couritge to speak, lie demanded that the identity of the merchant he established, ntid the mystery of bis existence be explained. He said that the court must not bo biased by what might prove to be a mere accidental likeness between a person living and one deceased ; and that such an avowal o? that of the prisoner, extracted in a moment of extraordinary terror, was not to be held of much weight. llefore being admitted here as an accuser or witness, continued the advocate, addressing the resuscited merchant, 'prove who and what you are, and disclose by what eliance the tomb, which so lately roceiyed your body, mangled with bullets, has given up its tenant, Mid restored you to the work! in life and healtl?.' jfe The firm appeal of the advocate, who con* tinned steadfast to his duty under circum* stances th(it would, have closed the lips of L ' ' ' most men, callud forth the followiug narrative from Clodomir Frcnois:? 'My storv may soon be tolj. awl will suffice to establish my ideotitv. When I discovored the robbery committed by tho accused, he had then fled from the iidnud, and I speedily saw that attempts to retake him would prove fruit lex. 1 saw ruin and disgrace lmfore me, and catno to the resolution ef terminating my life before the evil day came. On the night in which this determination was formed, 1 was seated alone in u?j private chamber. 1 had written the letter which was found on my table, and had hauled iny pistol. This done, I prayed for forgiveness from my Maker for iho act I was sboui to commit. The end of the pistol was at my head, and my finger on tho lock, when a knock nt the outer door of the house itartlcd ntc, I concoalcd my weapon, and went to tho door. A man entered whom 1 recognized to la; the sexton of the parish in which 1 lived. He boro a sack on his shoulders and in it the body of a man newly buried, which was destined for iny nephew, the physician, then living with inc.? The scarcity of 1 todies for dissection, as the couit is aware, compels those who are anxious to acquire skill in the medical-profession to procure them by any possible secret j means. The sexton was at first alarmed j when he met me. 'Did my nephew request 1 you to bring this laxly ?' Said I. *No,'replied j ihe tnan ; 'but I know liis anxiety to obtain i one for dissection and took it upon mo to I offer him this body/ 'For mercy's sake,' J continued the sexton, Mo not betray n>e, sir,1 or 1 shall lose my situation uud my family's brawl' 'While this tnan was thus speaking, a strange idea entered my mind, and brought to my despairing bosom hopes of continued j life and honor. I stood for n few moments rtbsorbed in thought, and gave to the resurrectionist, the sum which he had expected, felling hitn to keep his own counsel, and that all would be well, i sent him away, and | carried the body to my cabinet- Tho whole of tho household had been sent out of the awav. on numose. and 1 l?n?l into execution (lie plan which had struck inc. The body was fortunately of tho same ttature n$ myself, and like rue in complexion. 1 know the man ; he had been a |>oor iifiender, abandoned by lii? family, iioor relio of mortality !' said I, with tears in my pyes, 'nothing which man may do can now injure thee; yet pardon ine if 1 rudely dis-J figure thy lifeless substance. It is to prerent the ruin of not one but twenty families ! Aud should success attend my attempt, T swear thai thy children shall be my cliil- i iron ; and, when my hour cornea, we shell j rest together in the tomb to which thou ; dialt ho ho* uc before me ! At this portion of the merchant's narra live, the most lively interest was excited in lire court, and testified even by tears from many of the audience. Freuoi* thus pro- i coeded: '1 then stripped off my clothes, and dressed tho body in them. This accomplished, 1 then took up the pistol, and with a hand more reluctant than when I applied it to my own person, 1 fired it close to the head of the deceased, and at onco caused such a disfigurement us rendered it impossible for the keenest eye to detect tho substitution which | had been made. Choosing the plainest habit I could get, I then dressed myself anew, shaved off the ...i.i .i ...1 : -i t ?- - ? - miiBKur* n iliill 1 WHS IICCIIKIOIIICU to wcnr, and tool: other mean* to alter and disguiso my appearance, in case of being (subjected by any accident to the risk of net ray at? Next morning isaw mo on board a French vessel, on my way to a distant land?the native country of my ancestor*. The expectations which had led me to the execution of this scheme were not disappointed. 1 knew John Moor, was the man who robbed me, And who now stands at the bar of this court, and that ho had formed connections in this island, which would, in all probability, bring him buck to it as soon us tho in ellicreneo ?>f my death gave him the promise of sccuiity. In litis 1 have not been disappointed. 1 liavo been equally fortunate in other respect*. While my unworthy servant remained hero in imaginary safety, I liavo been successful in discovering the quarter in which, not dating at first to betray the ap|?earance of wealth, ho hail lod Sed the whole of the stolen money. 1 have rought it with me, and alno suflk-ienl proofs, supposing hie confession of this day to be set aside altogether, to convict him of the crime with which he standi charged.? 'liy the same means,' continued Clbdomir Frcuois with a degree of honotalde pride, in which nil who heard him sympathised,' will I be enabled to restore my family to tbeir place in society, and to redeem the credit of u name on whieh no blot was left by those who bora it before me and which, please God* I shall transmit unstained to my children, and my children's children.' John Moon, whose guilt was thus suddenly and strangely laid bare to the world, did not retract the confession which he bad made in the extremity of his terror; and without separating, the court sentenced him to oenftaqprcnt for life in the prison of the The news of Clodomir Frenois' re-appearanee spread rapidly, and the high esteem in ^ - ' "'jvr - I tl, -ifream fltor V1I a a.-? ... ' ?hicli hi* diameter wns held led to h uni I vernal rejoicing on tho oewuion. He wan \ accompanied from the court to hi* home Uy i a dense multitude, who welcomed him with prolonged shouts. Tt would he vain to ul1 tempi any description of the feelings of the j | wife who was tbtn restored to the beloved being for whose sake she had quitted the 1 [World. She was released from ecclesiastical vows and rejoined her husband, no more to i part till the grtvc roally claimed one or the ' other of them as its due. I Jliisrrlinnruus Jlrnlihtg. J)xc qo0 SqOOle-Snys. 11KNKY U. JJASCOM. | ? I Anions: tho mativ irraohic sketches to he met with in tlie work above inentioned, wo extract for rbo entertainment of our renders the following.? The Author assume* that three ''tools'' for the civilization of the great West were the Rifle, Axe and Saddle Rags, and having shown how the hunter made his looting good against boast and buy ago with his rifle?how the |?io- J jneer made erection for comfort with j his axe?he next goes on to show the ! harmony and culture borne over all its remoter sections in the saddle bags , of the Methodist clergy, and takes as i an illustration and a type the character and history of llishop lias con.? \Yc drop some of the features of the sketch, but preserve enough to give a ; conception of the subject. And now let mo give you some facts from the history of one of my own friciuls, whom I loved well-nigh as a father, one ot the noblest men that| ever trod this globe, lie left us near- j ly six years ago. Although not one of; the earliest, he was in the field at a ; j sufficiently early date to entitle him to | I the name of a pioneer preacher. lie too was a specimen of young America, for he began to preach at, the age of sixteen years. As I remcm- j tier, he had never received three' months' schooling in his life. He was remarkably handsome. For five and ! twenty years he was called the Appollo of the AVest?albeit for a good portion of tlie time Appollo in ho.nespun. 1 f T /H -~1. -1 1 1 1 - ncnry way, who isiiohki nave uoen a good Judge in such matters, prononnced him the most eloquent mail he ever lieard open his lips. I have said ho was very handsome, j and that, in t lie esteem of many of his j I brethren was equivalent to heresy. I ! have known many well-meaning sinv , | pletons, couldn't abide him because lie ' looked so like a "dandy." Many of the old brethren of the laity and cler-j gy thought it "wasn't in him to be aj preacher. When they saw him com- i ing towards them with his ingenuous face and kindly carriage, their countenances would lengthen to a preternatural longitude, and uttering what they : meant to be a pious groan, the}' would : murmur among thomsolvcs, "ho'll ncv or do." 1'here was one old brother, who, i while ho shared this prejudice, nevertheless felt some interest, in the strip- j ipling; blunted, indeed, must have' been that nature which refused res- j ponsc to the generous spirit of 1113' friend. The old gentleman Ux>k it upon himself to deliver admonitory lectures 011 the subject of apparel and do; meaner," to the candidate for holy or1.1 , uii. ? ! | UCI 0? AIVtMj J Hl> DUII) JIU DtllUf 111 tl gruff, rebuking tone, "why don't yon fry to l>e like a preacher, and look j like a preacher ? You'll never bo worth shucks as long as you live." "I don't mean anything by it," modestly responded the young man?never i have I known a woman more diffident i tliun he was, except in presence of peril, where lion was never bolder? can't help tho way I took; I am just the way God made me." ".No you ain't,"responded the senior, "you can help it Dross hotter, and | i* u t i .l i ?__ - r ? UOll t IOOK SO HUH II liKG H IOJ>. "I have to wear the clothes that arc given me; you know I have 110 money to huy new onos." "It that is all," said the ohl man, "it can soon bo fixed. "NVill you wear a suit of clothes I'll have ina?lo for ^*ou t" "Anything in the world," rejoined the other. "Very well, trust me. I'll make you look like a preacher." "I wish vou would, with all my hoart;-nothing would please mo better" said the future orator. They parted, the young man going to his work, the old man to see to the * tttiloriftg*. A,1 *1*3 ?nd of six weeks, the ap]>ointed time, tho -> young man made ins appearance. The aged saint, standing in the midst of a number of friends whom he had summoned to witness the transformation of his deformed protege, rubbing his hands in idee, pleased with his anticipation of success, pointed to a thicket of bushes behind whieh the new suit waa deposited?for houses were small, and the only dressing-room was the "timber." The remmearanco of the vounir cler gy man in his canonicals was impatinctlv awaited. At length, attired in his new habiliments, with manly stride and noble person he approaches. The old gentleman looks, then stares, unable to believe the evidence of his senses. He hastens to meet the person, then withdraws a pace or two, and performs a circuit round him. Some trick has been played upon him ; these are not the clothes ho caused to be manufactured. Hushing up, he turns the young man round and round.? ''Yes, it is the very suit?copperas homespun, shad belly coat, a vest to match, breeches as nearly alike as possible. Whirling on his heel, his countenance expressive of disgust, mortification, and contempt, he exclaims, as ho marches off, "tut, tut, boy ! there's no use in the world trying to lo anyi ing with you. You look more like a dandy now than ever, you did in vour life." ****** One other incident of his eventful career, let nie relate as he told it to me himself. Jle was preaching in a large country church on a brignt Sabbath morning. The house was crowded to its utmost capacity ; the windows were all open, one of which was immediately behind the pulpit, overlooking the rural graveyard. The preacher was indulging in a description of the various typical forms and manifestations of the llolv Soirt. Wlm tlint ev??r IhmimI him in one of his happy moods, docs not remember the cnchnuting power of his oratory ? Spell bound, breathless, the audience hung upon his lips. It was the baptism of Jordan. With John they saw the opening heaven, the Spirit ot' God, in the form ot a dove nestling upon the Savior, when silently suddenly as an apparition, a milk-white dove rfew th rough the open window at the rear of the pulpit, and nestled on the preacher's shoulder. Astonished, ho paused ; an instant it sat, then rose, and describing a circle round his head away liew the snowy bird to the vernal pastures and summer \vood3. The effect of this startling coincidence upon tho audience I leave to imagine. 1 have said he persevered. Ho became a Doctor of Divinity, and deserved bis degree, which is no faint praise in tho United State. He became the President of a University, and graced the chair ho filled ; he be came a Bishop in tho Church ot God ; and truer, nobler man never trod this Continent than was IlenryB idloman Hnseum*?Milbum 2 $ e 0 if f i f t; 1 8 c 0 \ I ho c 0 f. On a beautiful summer's day, a clergyman was cnlled to preach in a town in Indiana, to a young Episcopal con grcgauon. i\c rue close ot ins uiscotirse, ho addressed hid young hoarold in such words as these:? "Learn that the nrescnt life is a preparation for and has a tendency to eternity. The present is linked with the luture throughout creation, in the vegetable, in the animal, and in the moral world. As is tlio seed, so is the frnit; as is the egg, so is the loivl; as is the boy, so is the man; and as is the rational boing in this world, 60 it will bo in the next; JVivcs estranged from God here, is Dives estranged from God in the next; and Enoch walk ing with God here, is Enoch walking in a cnlin and hotter world. I beseech von to live then for a blessed otomitv. (i:> to the worm you tread upon, arid learn a lesson of wisdom. The very caterpillar socks the food that fosters it fur another, and dissimilar state, and more wisely than man, builds its own sepulchre, trem whence in time, by a kind of resurrection, it comes forth a new creature in almost angelic form. And now that which crawled flies, and that which fed on comparatively ^ u.ss food, sips the dew that re veil m the rich postures?an emblem of that f>anuliso whero flow the river of Ife, and grows the troeof life. Could the caterpillar have l>ccn diverted from its proper aliment and model of it had, nqver attained the butteri V'JSi.- i\ . v 9> > ^JJVtWS f fly's splendid form and hue, it had j>eritilled as a worthless worm. Consider her ways and be wise. Let it not be said ye are inore negligent than worms; and that your reason is less available than their instinct. As often as the butterfly flits across your path, re* member it whispers iu its flight, 'Live for the future." "With this the preacher closed his discourse; but to deepen the impree* ? ' sion, a butterfly, directed bv the lland which guides alike the sun and an atotn in its course, fluttered through tlio Church, as if com missioned by Heaven to repeat the exhortortion. There was neither speech nor language, but its voice was heard saying to the gazing audience, "Live for the future." $necOolc of Vnpoieon 5. Napoleon was accustomed to wear n coat of mail under bis clothes, and which lie rarely went without. On his departure for Belgium, he thought it best to guard against these dangers with which ho was threatened, by every means in his power. He accord* ', ingly sent for a clever workman and asked if ho thought himself competent; to make a coat of mail of such texture that no weapon whatever could penetrate. On the artificer answering in the affirmative, Napoleon agreed to give him 18,000 francs, the sum asked. On the day fixed, the man brought his work to the palace. Napoleon quickly examined it, and ordered the workman to put it on himself. The man obeyed. Napoleon took two pistols, saying, 'We shall now sco whether this coat of mail is of the texture you promised me.' lie fired at his breast, the cuirass resisted. ! Turn around ! tho man obeyed. The i second ball struck his hack with thei same result. The poor artificer half dead with fright, thought these trials would l>e sufficient, but ho was mistaken in his calculation. Bonaparte next armed himself with a long fowling piece, and made the same experiment on the shoulders, back and breast of tho trembling patient. Happily the cuirass resisted, and saved the inventor from so cruel a trial. How muck am I to uav von ? sniil Nnimltaon this noble exploit. Eighteen thousand ! francs, stammered the affrighted! art?" j ticcr. No sacli thing, sir,, sanff NapoI Icon, T shall give yon thirty-six tlious' and francs,' and accordingly gave am j order on his treasurer for that amount. ;,<ri licbci* Sirlpl; .Enough ia DuHjiJc!" We find the following direct nppcaf in one of our exchanges, without any indication as to where it originated : You never do? Then why that peculiar tinge to your cheek ? Why that increase of irritability? "Why that growing recklessness of character t Don't deceive yourself, dear friend.?? You arc in danger; and it is a kindness to tell yon so. Thirty thousand persons die every year in our country* simply because they do not drink V nough to hurt thorn. Half a million are ever pressing hard alter them, upon tho crumbling verge of a drunkard's grave. Several millions more are bending their steps more or less rapidly in tho sumo direction. You 1 are one of this great crowd. You ore ! tv candidate tor a nlnce among the l?al? ' million of actual drunkards*. Think vou that any one of the throng of moderate drinkers with whom you traiu, will admit that ho drinks enough to hurt liitu { Andyefc? from all this clues, do death and the devil take their pick. They aro after4 you. Depend upon it, they aro after yon. And you are welcoming their insidious approaoh. Beware'* young man, beware t: A bank in Boston held a note for collection against a man in Rockland*. Mo. The usual notice was sent, but by some means it went to Jtoc&lafid* *i.i -_.i -? ?- - * * ?? *uu., wuure Kiriiugo iu say, ?t jyuncr m man with the same name, who replied as follows: "I rood A noto from }on stntfagthat you held my noto of 83 dollars j i should like to know from whom that i noto is, for i have no rceoHvctftm of* signing u noto ot that amount; i should Mike to know, who that note is from ; If u jist one i .wiU i?ny it, if not von moat as well look to the dev il as to look to, ?ne. Hurra for Fillmore. Yours rU,pict/ully.