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'jjil jfesi^ff^ibbihhwp^wbwhipiihbbbwfe^apg^^^* ?limuaglgj*i-i-tiuuj-1?j^a^jiii'-j-ig.-i.---- ikiaijii' i mw?11 f it i jtootnl to f)roqrqstbilii]bightril^^hhi|^hii^hh^^^^^^b*?km,li? ,>- . p ' : : ..- '- _!___ " ^ w4%? -a21.v;?., lrsbel.1 ' - ^-^-^ ^';/v-^ v '*??/ i yjlume vii. grefin^b?obth cahlff^ ^|si^j|^}<ing. jwy^fpr %tjp. ^ .: number ik" it " l uj : 1:,'.. .,:o-., ? l-'1-il'a*i<fc?"*lww*^m ? j i" t)i f BUtjjtrn (gtiftrprisc .? ^ nsmos BVEBT tbubsdat MORNIWO, I ?v MCJUNKJN & BAILEY, L PROPRIETORS. - C. *, MeJUnkln. ... . J. O. Dailey. " W. P. PRIC'E, Editor. < T .HrJnnkiu, AsfciatuntTSHM8: ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, in Advance. Ono Dollar end a Half, if Delayed. ADVERTISEMENTS Inserted at 15 cents per P^nare of 12 lines (?t less) for tbo first insertion ; 50 for the second: 2S for the third to the thirteenth ; 20 for the fourteenth te the twenty-sixth; 15 for the ' twenty-seventh te the thirty-ninth ; 10 for the . fortieth te the fifty-second. Yearly or haif-yosrly contracts mode, and a liberal deduction from the above rate! given. Advertisements not subjectto centra oi should have the number of insertions marked upon thein. They wiirbe published and charged for till erdored oat. c > . - ?!!.l- -JL-1 jfliistcllinrams Untiring. _ ' i * Kon TUB SOUTH BRN KNTKBPtlUC. ' To the ittzen? of Greenville District. Felmtw Cm*ws?By * portion -of yotir own nnmlnir, w? have been requested to od\ drees you on a subject .of Vit*1 ' interest.? Soinc sf you have less means nMnfnrmatlon tiiMtn -others: we thercfoi-e us# grout plainiicm off speech. Years ago the Stat# of South OarnTitia entered into a eutnf act with other States for the accomplishment of certain purposes, equally important to them all. That compact is known a# tho Constitution of the United St.- tea The purposes of that compact were " to form a more perfect union; to establish jnstico; insuredomest-ic tranquility; promote tho general welfare; and seenra tho blessings of lihefly to ourselves mid our posterity.T* These ware wise and noble purpo sea, mkJ tha Union of States to accomplish them wis a wise and " glorious Union.1' But in the hands of wicked and even of foolish men. the wisest and best- thiags are liable to be abused. It has liven to here.? The Union s?f the Southern Slates with the Northern has been the occasion of serious evils to lhe Southern States?and is ahout to he made the occasion of trundles* disaster and ruin, unless tha Southern State* apply the remedy. We are not denying that the South has. in common with the North, derived advantages from this Union, particularly In the earlier years of onr history- ? But in tho case of the South these advents g. s are outweighed hy the disadvantages to which sho has been subject, and they are the mere dust of the balance in comparison with the mischiefs site mn?t yet experience, unless she take# the remedy in her own hand. The system of taxation under which wt- have been living, has given to the North annually the benefit of millions upon millions drawn off from the profits of Southern labor. By a high tariff they have shut off the fair competition, in our own market?, of those who buy our product#, andlhns they have m?de for themselves a market for their manufactures, where.they have been rceelving such prices ae have made them rich ? This is the secret of Northern wealth.? Their large cities, their immense mitnufaclnr ing establishments, their enriching commerce, never would have existed but fot their connection with the South. This hat drawn to them an Immense population fronr _ abroad?and so they have been swimming on npon a tide of wonderfbr prosperity.? Meanwhile, they have forgotten the handi h that fed tlirm.and after having rcfuecd t< listen to the complnirita of the South, the] have come to fee) for her a contempt wldcl tltey express through their press nod thei pulpits, Mid the men who apeak fef then on the floor of Congresa. In the halls o Congress?common council-chamber?a much curs ae theirs, a representative of 1 Jiorthern SWU nas uaroo 10 say oj iii Sooth, she " esn't be kicjted out of th t**-*---' Union.'* Only within a few days, n leadin Boston paper recommends a certain treai mcnt of Roolh Carolina, in aader that ah may know "nrbom *h? belong* to" and leading Pennsylvania rnper proposes "I buy South Carolina." This is the natnn 4 insolence of ill-gotten gain. It. is like th effrontery of the highwayman who rifles It victim, and when ho complains, smites hii ^ in the faoe. *Tt? true these things has L b*en done undpr the forms of law, but the A did not " establish justice." they did m M promote the general welfare,'* unless ju / . tico consists in taking away the profits p one party in a firm to give it t? the oth Mrtrxiinliiu the general welfare meaaetl y $??* of the greater cumber at tho coat r '} tb? entailer. Facta tike the**, Fellow OUiaena, led fn ' aceioff roou long ago to aak " what la t] value of the Union." Rut up to thla tini r tho pOople of the South have chown . abide by the oompaet rntber than break P*' i- up. A veneration for our honored anoi ton. and tho hope that certain falaa opl i loaa at the North would, like a aweepi i prairie lire, burn out, have kept onr peof s> true tothe Union. Conreiott* that they de* " ,'i |?w upeqnal advantage (and heft rememb , #d that Jul North h?a never pretended tl 'P ' t^o^onth ??er aaked an unfair adrantaf they have IqAulgcd the re??op*hU cxpeo Clip* that the North wenM at length dn a treapaaa on Sputhcrn rlghte. T gaportlrtton baa been bitterly disappoint* < *}'%)&> yovo he moat bo Mind who doea i **"* aoc that tboaa righto ara now laid ia i fend them, if pet-d be, aven to the death. . A false opinion, -which contradict* cothrnoii mhic, contradict* nil history i cunt rndiots the Bible, has rooted iUelf into the Northern mind. It U teuglitin their schoolti and eollogea; if la eirfbroed in their pidpUa; it ia the Qospel of Northern fanaticism.?> That false opinion la, that every man la born free and equ?l. The* Abettors of this dootrino differ somewhat in the extent of the inforeuce they draw from it. Some of them, (the linoat honest and- consistent of the olaaa,) seeing it is virtually contradict ed by the Constitution of the United States, (for that does not treat slaves as free, and equal to wltat men,) denounce the Coostitotlon as a " convenant with dcatli and an agreement with helland, therefore, they arc for dissolving the Union because it Is founded, in their judgment, on a rotten Compact. The larger claes, however, arc for holding on to the Constitution, bceausc, by the use of their power under it they can filially abolish sin very. Give thorn the Presidency and ita. patronage; the millions of money it has to dispense; th* control of the Post-Office, die.; asd in a few bricl years the slave States bordering on tho North will have to abandon slavery as tbe source to thcni of endless vexation and loss, through the interferenee of Abolition emissaries, v.lrile no new States will he admitted but suoh ae are free?fcnd then, by a rote of Congress, thdir great iden will be carried out? universal emancipation will be. declared.? Then every negro in South Carolina; and in every other S<*? them State, will be his own master; nay, more thani that, will l>e the equal of every one of yoit If you are tame enough to submit. Abolition preachers will be at hand to consummate the marriage of your duughters to black husbands! Nay, nayl we beg pardon of South Carolina women for such a suggestion. If their fathers and their brothers have not the spirit to break loose from a government whose elected Chief-Magistrate aims to establish such a' stntc of things, the daughter* of South Carolina would die Tor shame at the duhouor of tire men. Fellow citizens, this is no picture of fan* ey. It is a stern reality, which must arise in tho future, unless the infatuation of the Northern mind is checked by a miracle, or Viitess you yourselves apply the ternary. Truth hat its natural limitations; error has none, A conscientious errorist is the most hbpeless subject with which you can treat. A conceited errorist, especially if prosperity feed his conceit, is the next bn<l case. John Crown and Henry Ward Ileechef, the one nn infidel and the other a Christian preacher,-belong to the first rliu. No de feat, not even d>nth itself, would chung* the opinion of such men as these, and many, many such, are in the ranks of Northern J Abolitionism. The other class is the more numerous. They glory in being wise.? They claim to he political philosophers, or pride themselves on following In the wake of such.- They utter and echo the veriest , inanities-in a style befitting discoverers or ' truth. Calmly ensconced in the sense of ' their own security,' they give curreucy to theoretical opinions which tliey cannot but see must damage others at a distance, without sufficient foresight to perceive the reaction of their own mischief on themselves, > like a silly boy who sets fire to a neighbor's haystack, and fljirg to his father's house, > feels that he is safe. when the door closes, until the lurid flame licks its hot tongue I against hit own bed curtain. The North is i full of these shallow philosophers, a famous I New Yorker at their head. Of these men - there seems to be no hope except from the i actual experiment of their sc-hemea If the > first clnsa labor under nn incurable malady, f like disease of the heart, wherein Uie pnI tlent can't be cured, the other labor under r brain fever, which nothing can cure but tha II lancet and the blister. If the Union is dis f j solved, wo answer for it, Mr. Seward will s | in o abort time bo a much wif-er man, with A t very changed opinions. Let tho Union ? continus, and he, with oil his disciples, will 0 remain as madly bent as they now are, on g universal emancipation. t- But let 11# look more directly into the e face of the danger before us. a A citizen of the North has been brought !o forward by a party at the North as Candi il date for the Presidency, on tho undisguised >e nay, the avowed ground, of Id# opposition is to slavery, A great political organization ru known as the Black llcpublicau party, has re ed upon the theory that'the negro is tlx y equal of lha white man, had chosen Abra i>t ham 1 incoln as their candidate for the Ire a- eidenoy. The election hat just been decid of. ed. A majority of votes has been given foi er this men, 1 "VT V-i J ir.. Tf 1 . % if* xiuw, wtin* nr, i.mcoui into nil of Hear his own language: MI believe," hi says, "this government unniiot endure per ir.- maiiently half slave and half free. I d, fie not cxpeet Uie Union to. be dissolved ; I d< is, notexpeot the house to fall, but I do ax to pect that it will cense- to be divided. 1 it will become all one thing or all the othei m- Either the opponents of slavery will arret In- the' further spread of it, and place it wher ng the public mind shall rest in the belief tin ?le (t is In the eonrso of ultimate extinction, r ire its advoeatee shall pnah it forward until er- ah all beoome alike lawfol in all the State iat ' old ae welt ae new, North ae well aa South 1(e) This extract proves two things in regar tS; to this man. H shows, first, that in appen 4?t log to popular prejudices he is not looepi Ma Ida of disingenuous and greae misrepreeen id , ationa of others. Nvhen, in three quortei sot of a century, hava the Southern States, < the any single Southern State, or aoy eitL-su & I tJVIIVUCIU ^ W1TV| Ts??4r /.f ' kind to engraft slavery j.5 n faetious dams, their own impertinent inter the hnsinesa of Other people 'ThPWjei- ? pojnt which this extract reveals (s Mrey|fc? 1 c coin's abandonment to that folic opV*lon*VM|| wliitfh the whoU Abolition agitation" founded. lie telle us egnin, " that he Aatre. I Uv?r? u miiKk aa anr AliftlUMnltl f I We out not to prove that Mr. tlieofa I tvAtikl join hands with Mch ft fnan asj^obn I Ilrown to harry fire and bloodshed Into ft -* slaveholding State?it is ehongh for us to { know that he is in full coneert with what the It 1 fttitr Repnblieans themselves would c consider as the respectable and conservative \ part of their own party. Hear, then, what a two of the highest authorities among lliuhi r haVe proclaimed. One of them is a Sena- r tor from New York. Senator Sewsrd aaj ?: g "Free labor has at last apprehended its i fights and its destiny, and is organising it- j Self to assume the government of the jlepub- r lie. It will hereafter meet you luridly and * resolutely here. [Washington.] *. It lias driven you back in California and t Kansas; it will invade you soon In Delft c ware, Mflrylhnd, Virginia, MissohH nhd g Texas." " The interests of tlio whole race t demand universal emancipation. Whether s the consummation shall ho allowed to take j effect with needful and wise precautions t against sudden change, or be hurried on by t violence, is all (hat remains for yooe to de- c eidc." The other representative of this i party is a Senator from Massachusetts. In < speaking of what lie calls (he elilve oiigar c cAy, he says: " Surely-, then, In its retreat, I (matting under the indigntttioh of fth arous- t od people, and the concurring judgment of < tho civilized world, Unmet die > it may be ^ as a poisoned rat dies, of rage, in its hole. ( Meanwhile, all good omens are otirs. The t woik cannot etop. Quickened by the frt- i limph note at hand, (the Presidential election,) t with a Republican President in j>ower * State after State, quitting the condition of | a territory and spurning slavery, will be t Wehrotrved into -our plural unit, and joining bands together will becoms a belt of fre , about the slave Male*, in ichich slavery must J die." > Ilepc, (heYv, MloW-citicens, arc the purposes of Ihis party so plainly ??*6wed that < none may doubt lhe>?. lterc is a I'resl- I dent elected to enrrv out these purposes. < As a wary man, intent on their acvotvipllsb. , ( ueiit, and with a stubbornness which the i madness of hie own party1" cannot bend so ] as to hurry hie Administration into any " overt acts" whoso flagvaney woutd arouse i even the most torpid nt the South) he will i move on with a cold steadiness of purpose i towards wthe projected end. lie nnd St- I ward and other leaders of the party are < too wise to be betrayed into any action i which would offend those who are tame or blind enough to submit nt nil. Tiio tiger hne no " overt acts " before the final spring, i Only let him get his springing place, nnd he crouches still nnd quiet as innocence itself. The nnncondti, once wrapped about its victim, does not arouse the tated beast by unnecessar}- constriction, until its wnsted breath makes its destruction us convenient as it is sure. Such is the fate, fellowcitizens, which our Abolition enemies, (longer to call them brtthren would be a bitter irony,) design for us. And yet we, poor simple souls, are to wait for "overt acta!" As slmrcrs with you, in the obligations and the destinies of South Carolina, we sny to ypu, stand up for your rights, nnd through you, through your votes, let our beloved commonwealth declare herself dissevered from all political connection with men who have "broken the covenant." The Constitution yon have striven to keep sacred, but the States of the North have trampled it in the dust. It was established "to promote jn?tice.n Abolitionism has under its protection rubbed the South annually of hundreds of thousands, and would use it to rob the South of property worth four hundred millions of dollars. It was established "to secure domestic i tranquility/* What is the domestic trnn quility which Abolitionism securesf Look . at the secret emissaries prowling about Southern homes aud plantations. Look at , lh^arms placed in the hands of slaves to i destroy their masters, and their masters' , families. Look at tlis poison (with a fiend isli and cowardly malignity) put Into the i hands of the rnrue deluded creatures, for - the same nefariouspurposc. Fellow-citizens, what mean the patrol and vigilance com mittees, tho gallows,-and the halters, which r at this strange crisis have of late so often figured in Southern scenes ? These arc ? parts of the " domestic tranqnilwy " you a ava ft/a (lift Viiflli \VI?u (a if nAw l1>al u 1 most every man, young find old, is daily i? handling arms? Why are the minuter* of a the Gospel, a clnss of men at the StnUh, who ; keep aloof from party politics, registered t on the rolls of Annuls Men, and nddreaaing r. their fellowcitixens ? Is it not the simple it truth ibat under the Constitution our " do e niestio triys^nility " has been invaded, and it that a tyrmnical, proscrlptlve party, full of >r pride, folly and insolence, have, as thay it predicted, " assumed the Government," with a, the fell purpose tot lay that tranqnlllty at last in absolute ruios t d Wo despite Abolitionism?for it ia most 1- flagrant iniustlec. It proposes to oireiim* s- vent us, and then by the power of numbers t- to deprive us of our lawful property?potra sessions many, of them derived from the >r very men who established the independence of of the ITuitod States. so e J rig 11 ^ ' ri 1^ 1 ^ ^ ^ \ iciglibor'a * tnan xerr*ntk nor hi) noidtervanL'' It nssuiftu* to underatanll fell loot duty betU-r tlinn nn wis{flrcd A|>v*Lle. le sent? ttinftwnj slara busk U? hUmaste*. rta Abolil(oni*(*ancotinvfce bim to mri way. "To this boffiRation it must conrco it Inst." Tho tirndss against slavi-holdee# ?not for abuse of their relatlnnhipsae maaers, but for the relationship itscif-^-is nn mtfags an the authority of Goo'? word, kftdhsrtt Christians hare honored th? nu hority of tho Bible, in withdrawing from ,uoh bodies ns lifU.i becotne infected with Vholitioninn. Hero is the IJtyflio injuncion?" Lot as wuny Ttftrvnnts as arc aoduv ho yoke count tbdr own masters worthy >f nil honor. And they that lmve Lctievng musters, lot thrra not dc?piso them, bontise th^y arftbiethreu. huUmlltcr lot Ihcin lo them wt-vlcev beemisc Ihey at** holj.arirt jeloved, )>ftHnkors of the benefits Those hinga tench and exhort. If itny mhn tench >therwlse, and consent not to wholesome vords, even the vcWls of our Lord Jrstts Whilst, ho i,* prvtid, knowing nothing, hut Ip'ing about questions and strifes of words, Thereof comclli envy, strife, railing, ovil urmlaing. perverse disputing* of men of lOrtupt init:ds,.And destitute t?f Irttfl,, snp' losing that gain is godliness: /tont tweA pilfiiiraU) Bee 1 Tim. 0 : 1?u.. When Southern States separate from Northern ones, on the gVouti'l of their Abolition sin, they \rill he doing it under th? highest (auction that can warw?nt hummv aoli To you, cllizens of Greenville In common with the citizens of tho State, Will the quesion soon be presented t What shall the Stats Jo 1 Shall sit* remain in a Union thus atended with danger and dishonor, "to be girt tbout by n belt of fire," or driven 6 to dio ike a |K>isoned mt in its hole ?" . Or shall <;he jsumo her untqnecthmKlile independence, :endy to enter) wliw other Southern State* dmll be prepared for it, Into a new Icrncy willi them t Such a Government tnnst |>c formed, for it cannot ha that tho South' em portion of the present Utitted States? tl?o finest country ill the world?is destined to be sn?riticed to tho tTtopian schctncs of lli.' shallow prcfemVus^nnd schemers who arc forming new plane for Pfuvidgiieo, anil uttering their follies as prediellnh*. Men of Greenville, show youl'eelves nlcti. Many of yuu nre Baptists. They know the relation which the churches anil association* sustain to eaeh other. The vhttreliM nre the smaller bodies, and the associations are the larger ; yet the chttrches make the assocln tion, and it* atony timoaiiMSOcintlon should Interfere with fit* rights of a church, thai inonient that church w ould secede. Justsi here; the States hneoformed the Genera' Government, and tho moment that Govern ment invades, directly or indirectly, tin rights of a State,"that moment such a Slab owes it to herself to throw off tho odiou tyranny. Such, fellow-ciMrehs, is the position o South Carolina. Self-respect, honor, tlv safety of our wires, our children, and ou slaves themselves, tf hose well being is iusep aralily connected with the welfare of the! masters, all conspire to titgo you to siistnii the State in the high position which, if eh is true to herself, she must assume. As you miiow ciii/.ens, we enut.i oe grievously ohaj pointed if you do not make common cans with us. Tlio negro is not jour equal, ur less the Bible'be. nut rue, or you proveyoui Belves unworthy of-tho name of free mei Tho Abolitionisti nre hot Our masters, an though they hnv? ,sa**uinrJ the Ooverr ment," yvt they ennnot exercise it over yo without your fubmiitiieit. Men of Urcti ville, will yon nibrnil t J AM Fit C. FlHlMAtt, <1 THOU. R ARTBUK. ? MM. 11. CAMI'WCLL, WM. hi. THOMAS. ^ ~ -- -* ?* ? - A (ittxwtt; Bhaprn It wne gorrc te i or fifteen venrs ncrifi I hut ft r.oiintrv mil inter by the-nnme of Green?not gree except in name^bnl full of dry lion?< ? came to town on exchange with or of the Salem pastors. In the venerab church where Lfo wa* to officiate, tl Bible and hvmn-book in the pulpitis been in line for years beyond v* Inol* tl memory of the people did not extern The Pahlor wm not of the roaring ord tike the great preacher in SeotUnd, wl in three years kfckcd out two' JMifpit and Utt^nt Hi "I ofsixteen J3ibl? detected, tie'gave out a hymn for tl choir to eingt ijfcd three veree* of it at then looking up toward the t-ingera the gallery, aal4?" That> all there i? ; this book ; if there1# any wore in yow yon wnyt ting tef In the afternoon * beautiful jvaeli book was in the jkdpU, and on the ne ; Sabbath a BtUU to match, %r Ub :' .v h > mmm ^ 4>r-' ^ "" cr. lie never left home but to vi>i>. the ! neighbming fairs and markets, and to attend the parish church where h'u pros ence was regular and liis conduct de ?0H1. In short, tiiongh highly circuit! *f*et in hi* behavior on nil occasion*J lie was ? melancholy, reserved man $f.ni| even the clergyman of the parish to whom he >vas always most respectful in his demeanor, ofiUrely failed in his en f dearora to cultivate an acquaintance h wiih him. 'fho farm, under his man ' ngenienf, had improved nnd become profitable; and tho circumstance* of Mortis were, by hi* assiduity and skill, both prosperous and '(|cnrh@itg: in this manner more than two ycats I had pawed, and the widow began to reglud him more as a friend and beno factor than a servant, and vrtf* not, sor rv to observe her daughter's growing affection, which appeared to In* r-cipro cnted. One evening m November. 18l?, being, detained longer than usual by business al Walespool, ftewtop set out about six o'clock to walk Immo to Oaklield. It was an exceedingfy-dark L mght, and lie never rqrtched homeagaihj B'fho family became very anxious, am! upon inquiring <?aily the next morning it* West pool, learned that jfj| had bytm brought bnck to town not loeg yfh'r hi: deptuturo from it, by two fhep named Pifker and P*atr<*. who charged birn with highway robbery, accompanied by vtoienfio, an ottence then ppni -liable witli deittli. At the 'Mill ftt the, assises he ?hr pronounced gnlity, on the testP mony of there two persons, winch was clear, positive and consistent throughbut, sentenced to be hanged, and left for execution, lie employed no counsel, , and called no witness in his defence, but upon Wing risked by tho judge in the usual form if he hail anything to shy why sentence of-death should not* r ,missed upon him ? ho made in snbstaw^ following extraordinary ( speech 1 t"'- * ?? **My lord, it is evident idri~-*VutM say in opposition to such testimony would be vain nnd hopeless. Tho wit I nesaea are men of respectability, and t their evidence has appeared plain and conclusive, and my tnosi suUino proles ! tfttirtttS of 1t1nbeeucfl could iiVwil t>to nothing. 1 have called no witnesses to character, and upon such evidence, ' jre s Jury could'pronounce no other verdict. Bal hlaine them not. Ftom my soul, too, # I forgive tlioso men upon whose &ils? j testimony I have been convicted. 1 tut, my lord, I protest myst solemnly before 4 this court, before your lordship, and r above all, before that God in whose presence L must shortly appear, I am r guiltless of the crime for whioh I am " about to suffer. I. have produced no ^ one to speak in my behalf. l'wo year* p have scarcely passed ftn^e I came into ' this country aii entire stranger. I hnv? e made no acquaintance here, beyond the l* household in which I have %ndenvor?(! " to discharge my duties faithfully, lion ' estly and well. Al hough I dare not d }>op?, nnd do not wish that my Hfi >- should be spared, yet it is my dovoni " and earnest desiro th it tho stain of tljL i; ciinto may not rest upon my hnrne. ] devoutly hope thtp my good jnistruM an. her kind and excellent daughter, ma} yet he convine?|ll?nt they fiavo n<> nourished'and befiieuded a highwat lubber. 1 have, therefore, in hpmbh n dwoiion, offered a prayer to heaven. i- believe inline been heard and accepted in fvenlurfeto nsseit tlijft if t ant iunocCn it tflfl he crime for tvlikh I suffer, thegratf io foKono generation at least, will n<? ie f?ver mv grave. My lord, [ awaji ypn te aenitmce without r mWffittr, and [,de id vouily pray that all who hear me now \ U mkt.' KAM/iri isf Jna ^twi ill/mt -i.b it ???f?jr iTjryu VI IIIVH 9IUO OIW ^?rs.??.tw?r .? d. heaven. ' er The'OnfortunHto m*n was condemn lo ed and ?*ocntcd, and buried m ^uDt *< gotrtvey churchyard. ^skf} *{ rl1)iriy years b?d passed atvsy *h* ? I sa* i'., and (ha grass had afr |gft cc v*rwl hi* ayiH. r It is sUWtfWWTt^ V molo cofW? ?f the chuich /fthl^ar r< ? moT^,#>m all #iher gr?m Hfanc . 4 nAf*& mound of earth* but is eve jn wftb the surrounding ground, which 1 ,n for some distance especially iuxtirian 9f the hettasge being rich and Abundant. n. Numerous attempts bavs, frtnn, lim xt to tim?|Wn made by some persons w1 are still attvo. and otberk who have oas ,, , V V 2 ?- - ' W7.? ' : * sm * ' ' hi.&j * * ' * * cra* ojmvw <m?h! htm^b$2bisk$' *rx\h'h+<} \vul? ^l- f * ^ ^ ^' ' (i H ' veluit if*' hi?s rfAil it? iNM (if ill. i:mn "v\!)ii ikv-ais n.aay. | 'lt?-' Ji t, II h\ Ml |im Ik-'i i'o : I. ! l !:!?<>.. | require a mulcr ; lie can i?o 1 i? -tf. roller. It isJtn pa*ier, a though megjj Connal, pru^e.-*.- of digestion, than laJj$w|p It i>i in cr\>rvlj<>ilY,> power.; aitil everybody who read# much, makes T>r J Ic?a UMf4df it, l?ecaii#e, hh bucoti s*j>, ifhe (loeh not write, then lie ouyht to Jtat&vi fXtrnouliiiHi v faculties ;o cothpensMtrlH 'such,neglect. It in in this view that wfiv His to umfeistuml :lie complaint of ? Well known author, that lie wis ign?>*< rant of a certain suhjtct. and tliu rndfcm by which he was to dispel his ignoinin'o^ namely : by writing on it. It'is in thi^, view ihal the nmniloiiu) system of ?t? j its great value?ihVj monitorH.it is tw^e^ort of tWchi^ It. is from the same tyjew thftv! ^ir \Vilhani II.;., om us . to . no. Mate should.give lo iiloiicc o :i over iu IUU bUCiJif iiim??c*? ' ^ " k'?'3fc vim-t, wanted some' whisky ; }j>y n ,? > - :<-iaii, wrote himself an order, | | ^ ! j ^ ^ & ,0^ ' J 'i:.- g tndftvftther; ^S$*iirig 11is temciitv, mi<ut!y reproved li.iro, an.I gia?i?iug ilio old ?ot*(in?iitHl, discharged it. TUo' recoil was uvmcndtms?throw jfg. tfrfl old lady <M) her l?aclc. Sho Sri'V tr-urirlac^ to regaiu her feet shiW*cr:utnv?thero aro Gve ' ">:.r,vh ?> go off !" ^Kv^SwlMe?Sr'a'? ' W'KU.vrts;?;A M bumpU . : Bfr^'''tE<&ftl<rT overtaking !^n old 1'ioa, l.yuiiiiJi Tt??. . wl.ote.nng was much gentleman : ?--<e hbi*e, l^^raH^HHn^alp^liiin Wag his tail ^ ; > : ? ?" 'haveaalt^tl KiflHynmi:. fw *h? sumo i**#"*wag* ao-?a .M. - i ; ^'^WPWEp^iv i l^' 'r i^. gTjfflMWMBKgMMBM^^WWKi 39mw **.* *9> v ' Tir^iry -