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1. * m &<.' ;^.4. ** ] Til SilTHBl ElTEiPilSE. ,v .4 *' ' ' * -V'. , - ' : , ' * *' - * ' . r u . .V'-" i I ^ ?11 MMmgo-"aOTTA3b wmwMm T? &x?x?r \ VOL. 3. GREKNVILI.E. S C.: THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 1, 1857. NO. 34. _ <?jje &antjjmt Enterprise, A REFLEX OF POPULAR EVENTS. wniiiitiR/Aaa u\ IPIRHOIS, EDITOR ANO PROPRIETOR. $1 SO, parable ia advance.; |z if delayed. CLUBS of FIVB and upward# 11, the money ia erer? instance ta accompany the order. ADVr'.RTlSEMliNTM inserted conspicuously at Ik* ratee of 7ft cents per square of 13 lince, and II cents for each subsequent insertion. Con- 1 trseti for yearly advertising made reasonable. AOKNT8. R W. Cask. N. W. cor. of Walnut and Tbird-st, Philadelphia, is our authorised Agent. W. W. Walsis, Jr., Columbia, H. U. Paris Steadlst, Esq., Flat Rock, N. C. A. iL Pans*, Fairview P. O., Greenville Diet. Willi au C. Dailet, Pleasant Grove, Greenville Caw. R. Q. Audkeson, Cedar Falls, Greenville. iMerfci ^aetrtj. I a " 1 ' 1 1 1 ? jLobeSopg. , Sua who sleep* upon my heart, Was th* first to win it, 1 She who dreams upon my breast, < Ever reigns within it. ' She who kisses oft .ny lips ' Wakes their warmest blessing, j She who rests within my arms I Feels their closost pressing. i Other days than these shall come ; Days that may be dreary? I Other hours shall greet us yet, 1 Hours that may be weary; Still this heart shall be thy throne, Still this breaat thy pillow ; i Still these lips meet thine, as oft I Billow meetcth Billow. I Sleep, then, on my happy heart, Since thy love has won it? I Dreriu, then, on my loyal breast, None but thou hast done it; And when age our bloom shall change, \ With its wintry weather, i May we, in the self same grave, I Sleep and dream together. J t .. ' . 1 Sntrrrstiitg ^krlcljts. e 1 , , . 1 I he So rder I ocounf ei*. Jos Loostoj* was a powerful fellow, of i is foot three in his stockings, and propor- i tionately stout and muscular. Fear was a t word he knew not the meaning of, and to i fight was his pastime, particularly if his 1 , scalp was the prize he fought for. On one occasion he was mounted on his pony, which I was leisurely picking his way along the trail, i with hi* head down half asleep, while his 1 rider was enjoying a feast of some wild i grapes which he bad picked as he came I along?not dreaming of any danger until i he heard the crack of two rifiee on either aide of the path. One ball struck Logston, i grazing the akin above the breast bone, but t without doing any material damage. The i other passed through bis horse, just behind j the saddle, killing him ; in an instant of , time Logston found himself on his feet. * grasping his trusty rifle, and looking for his I foes. Tie might easily have escaped by < itiM>inv M th? cruna nf ilia liutim. ? ?.? - 5-"" Wi nvi V' ! empty, and they could not pretend to coin- I pete with him in speed. But Logston was ] net ono of that sort. lie boasted that he I never left a battle field without making Lis < mark. , One of the savages sprung into the path, i ?nd made at him ; but finding that bis op ! ponent was prepared for him, be treed again. i/>gaton knowing there were two !ndians,looked earnestly around, and discovered the otb< er between a couple of saplings, engaged in reloading his piece. The trees were scarcely . Urge enough to shield his person, and in -" hintr down the ball be exposed his hips; STl*** *-?* *r ?'? ??! 0tr*efc him in the exposed parv. i bis rifts wee empty, the big Indian, who had ftrst mad* hi* appearance, rushed forward, Reeling sure of his prey. Logston, however, atood calmly awaiting the savage, with his rifle elubbed aad bis feet braced for e powerful blow. Perceiving this, his foe halted J.s t . I _.%L .11 A l Wltnil) (in yew, una W5*n an iue veugeiui lord* of a vigorous arm, throw hit toinnhawk, but dUgston, equally quick in his movements, dodged it, suffering a slight cut oi) his /eft shoulder as it passed, and then rushed io. The Indian darted into the hushes and successfully dodged the blows made at bia bead by the now enmged hunter, who, becoming mad at the failure of his soo-1 i rendu efforts, gathered all hi* strength for tba foal blow, which tbo etfon',6g savage dodged ae before, and the rifle, which by this hma bad Wow ladaoed to the riropfe The Indian mag to Ms feet *nd ooafronted htm. ?*h wnpty handed, they -i?n rmr^Mtha,M] utigmw m *':i stood for a moment, for the Hood whs flowing freely from the wound in Logston's breast, aud the Indian supposing hltn more seriously wounded thnn he really was, and thinking to take advantage of his weakness, closed with him, intending to throw him; in this, however, ho reckoned without his host, for he found himself at full length on his back, with Logs ton on top. Springing from under hiin. they were both on their feet again?and again closed. This time the savage was more wary, but the same re suit followed, and he was again beneath his opponent, but having the advantage of being naked to the breech clout and oiled from head to foot, he could slip out from under the hunter and resume an erect position. Six diflereut times was ho thrown with the name success ; but neither seemed to have ihe advantage. By this time they bad, in their struggles and contortions, returned to the open path, and Logston con:luded to change his tactics. Tie was hc:omin? scnsiblv weaker from lo** nf U V W" 'VX4' while on the other hand the savage seemed to loose none of his strength from the many falls he had. Closing again in a close hug, they fell as before, but this time, instead of endeavoring to keep his antagonist down, ho iprnng at once to his feet again, and as the Indian came up lie doalt hitn a blow between the eyes whtce felled hiin like an ox, at the mine falling with all his might upon the body, he grasped him by the throat with a grip like a vice intending to strangle him. fie found, however, that the savage was trying to disengage his knife which was in his belt. But he was too quick for him, for eizing it, with a powerful blow drove it iuto the hilt in the Indian's heart. Spring to his feet, Logston now bethought him of the other red skin, and looked around to discover hitn. He still lay whith his back brokon by the ball, where he had fallen ; and having his pieco loaded, he was trying to raise himself up to fire it. Concluding that he had enough of fighting for exercise, and knowing that the savage could not tnako his escape, the hunter took his way to the fort. lie presented truly an awful sight when he reached there?his clothes beiug torn nearly off from his person, and covered w ith blood and dirt from his hewd to his feet. A party started for the battle ground, where ihey discovered the body of the big Indian, and the orps of the second, with his own knife thrust into his heart, and his hand still grasping it to show that he came to Jii? jc.uh vy his own nana. Stqih in the Th* Sunday 7\mes nays: Those who have read of tbo wild wastes which California or Utah emigrants are obliged to pass, in order to reach their destination, will re:ognize the scene of the Following aftecting incident, which we copy from Mi*. Ward's * Female Life among the Mormons : M M lu a few days we entered a sandy and barren region, where, to our other ills and inconveniences, that most intolerable of all, the want of water was added. The streams were all dried up?the rivers disappeared from their channels?there was neither rain nor dew. But, though the air seemed intensely hot ind the sky exhibited aot a trace of clouds, there was a softness in the atmosphere at night, a resplendent glory in the stars, altogether incomprehensible and most delightful. And this region, otherwise so sterile, was filled with flowers of richest perfume and the brightest colors. In inany places, where it would seem from the gravelly, sar.dy nature nf the soil, that no plant whatever, could take root, cactuases, literally covered with a profusion of large critnson flowers, thrived luxuriantly, thus presenting a remarkable contrast to the surrounding desolation. For ?ne of the remarkable characteristics of this place was tho utter absence of animal life. Not a bird visited these resplendent blossoms s - a? ?in*i r uuiicruv or insect eiiiivtxi Ui? soiltude. Neither hares nor pheasants lurked beneath their coverts. Even the Indians seemed to avoid the country. Once, and >nce only, we caught the glimpse of a troop af wild horses, skirling the horizon. It was >nly a glimpse, and yet 1 shall ever reinem t>er the graceful agility of their motions, and ibe sleek sparkle of their glossy sides. But ^der b!?*hts than these awaited us. I had lescendeo ^ wagon to walk, in order hat I might ezamin* be.fiUfu| flowers. [ was particularly charmed by I*? or three luge plants of the cactus species, which isd grown so close together that they appeared compact. They were at least ninety Feet in circumference, and large scarlet bloslome depended from the branches. But while stooping to gather a bonnet my linger* inadvertently touched a relic, ilia sight which filled me with horror. It wae a human skeleton ; but the shin, instead of Tailing away, still eldltg to the bones, showing the veins, ths muscles and sinews, in a boirible stale of preservation, yet with * strict fidelity to nature. The long lank bony fingers yet Mid a paper clutched tightly between them. OnHosHy wae stronger than Hear, and I removed it. There were a few Itnee written with a pencil which 1 had much difficulty in pakiog not. Tbey ran huelaeef 11 \ n i i "We go no farther. My wife end five children?nil dying for want of water; 0 God I this death is horrible I" The poor fellow had evidently sought the shelter of the cactus to shield himself from the burning sun, and there died from burning, intolerable thirst. But the wife and children?-where were they f A little further on, in the state of horrible attenuation without decay, the mother yet clasped her infant in her bony arms, and the thin, tightly drawn lips of the infant were pressed to her cadaverous breast. Two of the children ?a boy and a girl?had their fingers interlaced ; while the other two were twined in each other's arms, as if they sought to solace the agonies of that horrible death bv the sweets of congenial affection. And who shall say that they were not happier, dying thus, than multitudes have been who de-; parted this life, surrounded by all the comforti of wealth and luxury, but with hatred gnawing, 1'romctheus-liko, their hearts f i'u> uiu ucoi. ui us were id no condition to speculate or philosophize. Thirst, intolora ble thirst, was burning our tongues and i scorching our braius. Our poor animals sufferod as much, or even more than ourselves ; and I half forgot my own miseries in witnessing theirs. Solictor? ?it in TjffatoMb Cube. The bottomless pit in the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky is suspected by many to run through the whole diameter of the earth. The branch terminates in it,and the explorer suddenly finds himself brought ut>on its brink, standing upon a projecting platform, surrounded on three sides by darkness and torror, a gulf on the right and a gulf on the left, and before him what seems an interminable void. He looks aloft; but no eye has yet reached the top of the great overarching dome ; nothing is there seen but the dashing of the water dropping from above, smiling as it shoots by in the ir.wonted gleam of the lamp, ne looks below, and nothing there meets his glance save darkness as thick as lampblack, but he hears a wild, mournful melody of water, and the wailing of the brook for the green and the sunny channel left in the upper world never more to bo revisited. Down goes a rock, tumbled over the cliff by the guide, who is of the opinion that folks come here to see and hear, not to uiuse and be melancholy* There it goes? crash! it lias reached the bottom. No? hark, it strikes again; once more and again, still falling. Will it never stop ? One's hair begins to bristle as lie hears the sound repeated, growing less and less until the ear can follow it no longer. Certainly if the pit of Frederick shall bo eleven thousand feet deen. the bottomless nit of tl?/? \f Cave must be its equal. Gold flegioi)3 ?xfei)ding? It it well known as a matter of history, that when Greenland was discovered it poa sesscd a much warmer climate than it does at present. The ice packs have been extending South from tho polar regions foi some centuries, and the Northeast coasts of our continent are now much colder than they were three centuries ago. The cause of this is not well understood ; the fact only is known. It is believed by some persons that there is a great eddy in some part of the polar ocean which sometimes changes its direction, and drifting large icebergs from one place to another, changes the climate of those places whence they are drifted, by the presence of such masses of ice diffusing their temperature to great distances. In the month of July last, the White Sea was blocked up with huge mountains of ice, and the oommerce of Archangel stopped ? something which never happened before. In the Faroe Islands snow fell in the valleys in the middle of July, the like of which also never happened before. If this drift of ice continues regularly for a few seasons, the coasts of the Wnite Bea will become as inhospital as those of Greenland now are. [Scitntijlc American. A Naoao No.vplusskd.?An amusing circumstance, as related in our streets, is worth a nassinir notice. A n^in.1. ~r -? , 0 -- M%?gnwui VI UUIB has a negro man named Henry, that is very fond of Poseum hunting?a perfect Nimrod in that (ine. Having, as usual, gone out for that purpose, it was not long before his dogs struck a track and soon treed. The hunter having arrived at the tree, deliberately laid do^Q his torch, and drawing his axe from ni? shoulder, eager for the game, began laying on to fcJI it. He had not given more than one or twocuia, when, to his consternation, he heard a voice from above, spying, 44 If you won't let the dogs bite me I'll come down and help you cut the tree down." Thunderstruck and amased, otir huntsman dropped his axe, and made double quick time for home. It tUrned out. In the sequel, that another negro, a runaway, hearing the dogs, toofeu trM, and the Possum was treed hi another, about tan fe?t Off; the runaway, seeing no other person but the hunter come S?i volunteered his services to help him. nt Nimiyri thought the M varmint" wae entirely too obliging, or M thar was a ghost some wbsr about" | [MiUtdftvUl* Ataw&r, Widows is Kansas.?The following interesting sketch is from s private letter of a Georgia emigrant to the Savannah Republi- can : " But there is another interesting subject out here, and that is woman. 1 would not, for the world, say anything against the dear c creatures that is not strictly true ; and when 1 sny that one fourth of the women are 4 grass widows,' it is so?is so* Here is a bit * of romance in real life : " A young gentleman (call him A.) from . South Carolina, got acquainted with ' Miss' B.t (a grass widow, with two husbands living.) fell in love, and they were engaged to e be married. Business calls him away, and , in the meantime C. gets acquainted, falls in "j love, and is engaged to A.'s betrothed, and t shortly afterwards they are married. On /lot* a ft Ar ?1%A ? A * 1 4 . ?*u?i mo iiiannigv n. r^iuriis, OUl | | takes things very coolly. A.t tho end of j I throe weeks, C.'s bride eiopes with A., leav; ing C. in the lurch. A letter informs me j i that she is again married, and enjoying tier { ; fifth honey moon, and all five husbands liv'ng" ' 1 Tn* Vision or a Mombnt.?Could the ! life scenes that take place upon this world, nor.h and south, east and west, in one mo- 1 ment of time, be pictured in a space small . enough to enable tho human eye to comprehend them at a single glance, what a ' mighty shock would the miud of the gazer ! teceive. Even as we write, while the pen is round ing the letters, tho angels of joy and grief ' have visited many a fire side?cloud or sun- j shine have darkened or illumined many a . home. The breath of the new-born infant has kissed the cheek of its mother, with a perfume sweeter than that of tie violet ou j the gale?the last groan of the weary pil- j grirn of life has fallen upon the hearts of weeping friends with a weight unutterable. ' The bride has stood beside the altar in her pale purity, heedless of a dull sound that at | the same moment arose from the yard beside the church. There wero two voices ! then, the one the binding of two hearts, the other " earth to earth and dust to dust.'' All tiic Sams.?A gentleman, in a Scotch town, lately told his servant to clean the windows. The servant applied to the governor to have a small quantity of spirits to assist in the operation, as wbiskev was ... i ? w ^ ouiiittiuin uscu iur bucu purposes. Ho re- i ceived a gill or two. His master, after ( watching for sometime, was surprised that , " Arcbio " never dipped the cloth in the vessel containing the whiskey. He went forward and found it empty. Accosting the delinquent sharply as to what had become of the spirits, the following reply was made : "Ye see, yer honor, I drank it, but (suiting the action to the word) I blow my breath on the glass, an' it's a' the same 1" Im reply to the question," What is a kiss?" somebody replies: " A kiss is, as it were, a seal, expressing our sincere attachment?a pledge of future union?a present which, at the same time it is given, is taking from us the impression of an ivory coral press? ( crimson balsatn for a love-wounded heart? a sweet bite of the lip?an affectionate i pinching of the heart?a delicious dish which is eaten with scarlet spoons?a sweetmeat which does not satisfy our hunger?a t fruit which we plant and gather at the same t time?the quickest exchange of questions , and answers between two lovers?the fourth t degree of love." | Not Bad.?The Minnesota Times says : < "The most accommodating proof-reader we < over met, was one to whom, at her request, < we sent a revise of an article she had writ* i ten for us. There was about a hundred su | perfluous commas in it, according to her t count, so she " set up all night, and scratch- a ed them out with her pen-knife so neatly that no one could percme them." Tnic Nkwspatkrs or VjnorxiA.?At present, says the South Side (Va.,) Demo- s crat, there are one hundred and fifty news ( papers published in the 8tate of Virginia, the working expenses of which amount to $400,000 per annum. J Rkprirvcij.?We learn from the Newber ry Sun that Thomas Wells, condemned to , be hung, has been reprieved by the Gover- \ nor, and discharged from jail. The jail of Newberry District is now unoccupied, except by .he Sheriff and his family. I -* *1 c NoTmno morr or tji? Doku?We see r nothing further from the Tombs and Fre- c mont duel in the papers, and therefore con- . elude that Fremont decliues going to the Tombi until after the Presidential election of 1880. 1 Burniko or JarrsnaoNCoLLSOB.?A dee- J Iatch from Cannonsburg, Pa., states that the f efferson College of that place was burut on | Friday evening together with the library, contamg 10,000 Toluoies. The toullois is about $60,000. ' c Horn, ALL wao HAVE ATTAINED THEIR < EAW OF DwoRETwar.?It i$ * long poll- i tiowMifo tb*t Vnowi no taming. 1 IButnormts Urnbing. =? I #oto he Spelt Soots. n v Rkckntlt, a Wall-street broker of consid- 8' irnble wealth, and who lives in great style o n thy west end of Gotham, purchased a fire- d >roof safe in which to secure his valuables I igainst the fiery element*, to which lie affix. <] d one of those beautiful pieces of median* t, sm, a combination lock. They are so fj trangely complicated that you may lock 8 hem, hand the ,key to the manufacturer, :vcn, and the chances are once to ten thousind that he will not be ablo to open them. Hie wards and interior arrangements of heso locks are nlnhnhotioallv ??../t ?J ?J - f,-~. 'ou select a word in the language, tnke the otters nml lock the words answering to these etters, one by one. Thus the word "chair" w ?you lock C, then II, then A, then I, It. ? N'ow, it must be unlocked in the same way, w tnd unless you hit upon the same word you n vill never be nble to unlock it. Well, the jroker in question locked his new safe to he word " boots," but after trying for an lour or more tbo next morning, he could lot unlock it, and gave it up in dispair. c And his funds were all locked up, and he bad no monjy to carry on his business that # day, but as bis credit was good, he raised jufficient for the purpose by banks. The next day the manufacturer of the lock, nc- <J sordiog to request, called to ascertain the h Jifficulty. lie said ho bad no doubt he f| :ould unlock the safe, if the gentleman would * :cll him the word to which he locked it. " Boots" was the word, and to work he act h .0 unlock it to " boots." Well, he tried, t ianguino of success, tried again and again, jut was no more successful. He tried an * hour, two hours, three hours, with no sue r :ess. Finally a thought struck him. He wiped the perspiration from his face, took a drink of water, examined the key again, and i looked at the broker straight in the eye and r said: f, " Sir, allow roe to ask you how you spell 1 boots." i " How do I spell Loots !" said the other; c " why I spell it right?how doyou spell it t" ? " Oh, never minu," said the man of com- ? bination lock, " how I spell it." < "Well then," said the broker, " b u-t s, to be sure." " The deuce you do," said the lockman, | " and if you spell boots, b-u-t-s, I will unlock t the safe buts," and be did unlock it in the , twinkling of an eye. , VocTn and Ao*.?A story is told of i Berkely Craven and Lord Alvanlev. when i nn accident happened their carriage. The t former, getting out to thrash the footman. i saw he was an old fellew, and said : " Your ago protects you;" while Alvanley, who had advanced towards the postillion with ; the same intention, seeing he was an athlet i ic young fellow, turned froin him. saying iu hix waggish way, " Youth youth protects you." A Paddy hearing of a man having a stone coffin made for himself, exclaimed : " By me soul, that's a good idea. Sure a itone coffin would last a inan his life time." Nova Illustration or Scicxcs.?Du- ' ring a learned lecture by a German adventurer, he illustrated the glory of mechanics t ?s a science thus : " I)o ting that is made is 1 more superior dan the maker. I show you bow in some tings. Supposo I make the round wheel of de coach. Ver well; dat J wheel roll round five hundred mile?and I j ran not roll one myself! Suppose I am a [ rooper, what you call, and I make de big ^ ,ub to hold wine. He holds tuns and gab * ons, and I cannot hold more than five hot \lt! So you see dat what is nude is more mperior dan de maker." A CITT Mias, newly installed as the wife % >f a farmer, was one day called upon by a r iciglibor of tho profession, who, io the ab- * tfnee of her husband, asked her for tho loan r >f hie plough for a short time. 44i*am sure fou would be accommodated," was the roily " if Mr. Stark was only at home?I do tot know though where he keeps his plough; < 4 but," she added, evidently zealous to serve, ^ 4 there is the cart in the yard?couldn't 4 JAM I\!AI1 nti wt?1. tUmt ?:il M. I VIII mi, uvni sa m; m ^ >ack I" A I'LATKR performing the ghost in Hamet very badly ?m hissed ; after bearing it a c food while, he put the audience in good hu- \ nor by stepping forward and saying?"La- ? lies and gentlemen, I must give up the ] fhoet. Mrs. Smttbirs has got a great ides of let husband's military prowess. " For two I rears," she says, " he was a lieutenant in the i torse marines, after which be was promoted t o a captaincy in a regular company of sap ( leads and minora." Tub old adage?H You should not count i chickens before tbey ere batched I"?has ob- > ained a new reading thus?"Ths producers < >f poultry should postpone the census of the 1 uvenilo fowls till the period of ineubstion is ' fly ar-oompltshod. 1 ^>rwn na i - ? : ?y f. > Vert Laughable.?At a church of color," about twenty miles from Ah any, the other evening, the minister lOticing a number of persons, both rhite and colored, standing upon the eats during singing service, called nt in a loud voice: " Git down off ,em seats, both white men and color, care no more for one man dan I does !e odder." Imagine the pious miniser'a surprise on hearing the congregaion suddenly commence singing,"in hort metro: Get down off dem *eata Hoff white rnnn and color; I cares no more for one man Dau I does for de odder I Gone.?In one of our courts lately, ft man ho wfti called on to appear as a witness o.ild n >t to found. On the Judge asking rhere he was, a grave, elderly gentleman ose up, and with much emphasis said : " Your honor, he's gone." "Gone! gone!" said the Judge " wbers . ? i iiu ^ullu x ** That 1 esrnol inform you," repliod the ommuiiicative gentleman ; " but he's dead." This is considered tl)? most guarded mower on record. Hitmok ih Haos.?Wc observed yesterlay n little tiiin old mail, with a rag-bag in ia hand?, picking up a large number of mall pieces of whalebone, which lay iu the treet. The deposit was of such a singular aturo, that wc presumed to ask the quaintjoking gatherer how he supposed they cams here. *' Don't know," he replied, in a squeaking 'oice, " but I 'apect some unfortunate fenale was wrecked hereabout somewhere.** Verdict or a Nkoro Tscjcmt.?We la undescribed darkies, bein' a Erunors Juay ob di?gust, to sit on de body ob de nigjer Sambo, now dead aid gone before us, tab beer sittin' on de said nigger aforesaid, lid cn de night ob de fusteentb ob Juvember, atne to his tlenf by fallin,' from de said ribtr, what we find lis was suloecomeiy drown>d, and sfisr wards was washed on de riber lido, wher we epose be froze to def." JtMtcKs says that when be was in lore, je felt as if he wore being hung, and had i cat in his hat and n peck of bumble bees jnder Lis waistcoat. Jimicks knows the tymtoma. Juliana says that sho felt?oh, ray I?as t she were in a bower of moonbeams, rinkng in a bath of effulgent honey beneath a >luzu of balmy stars, to the tune of slow nusic. Falliko Leaves.?The following hori* Eontal musing of a leaning tippler deserve to bo perpetuated. Hear him wnil: "Leaves have their time to fall, And ao likewise have I; The reason tho's the same?it Comes of getting dry. But here's the difference 'twixtleaves and met I falls 'more harder' and more frequencies." Thk following notice appeared on :he west end of a country meeting 1ou80 : " Any person sticking bills against his church, will be prosecuted accord* ng to law or any other nuisanct" A Frenchman in Canada advertises tie better half as follows: "Notes.? ily wife thats Catrine?she left my touee?shant ax me?any man truss tim on any account that's loss for you. L.ouis La. Flamme." A skillful musician,'who had ac* [uired a large fortune by marriage, vas asked to sing in company. Allow ne, said he, to imitate the nightingale. eh.. a?r?r. nft?? "* 1 *?W MVVAI IIW Olli^ 11 1II&U9 11-3 test. A recent traveler in America re:orda the following anecdote :? 1 Jack," said a man to a lad just enering his teens, " Yonr father's dead.'* 1 Darn it!" replied the young hopeful. ' and he's got my knife "in his pocket," Tkddt, my hoy, jist guess how many tbeese there is in this bag, an* faith, I rill give ye tho whole .Ave. Fire, aid Teddy. Arrah, hy my soul, bad uck to tho man that tould yb, - ? Aw obituary notice in a Vermont ">nper announces the death of a young nan, stating that 4,he lived and dien o tho entire satisfaction of his bereav>d parents and friends." To PaiVBHT Cows FROM HoLDIFO OF nam Mils.?Feed them at the time of nilking. If this is dona they will give lown their milk freely. But if yon negieet o feed them, they will bold it up, So that it slmost impossible to get any from thctn. Pry the ?>*p-Hmeut.