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HF^ u O ':- The we J wee long, intense the heatThere ceroe unto my door A wandering child with weary feet, m Duet stained and Uavcl sore. Bis eye was end, his cheek was pale, And (oil and hunger there, And summer heat and wintry gale Had seamed it deep with care. His mother long had passed away Into her dark, cold tomb ; Bis father, in the bloody fray, Had met a soldier's doom. Be was on earth alone, alone: On him no parents smiled. The joy and light of home had flown? Oh, Ood 1 and he a child 1 Oh,.east that shadow from thy brow ! ' Here let thy sorrows end Thy time of grief hath passed, and now Poor ohild, thon hast a friend 1 My God, I thank thee from my heart, That thou hast sent him here; That 1 may bid bis grief depart, And bis young,bosom cliecr. Dear eliild, thou dost not here intrude; Ob, welcome may'st thou stay, I dare not turn thee, if I would, In emptiness nwuy. I My little store ol daily bread I'll frSely share with thee ; I well remember who hath said, Ta'ee done it unto me.* I'll shelter thee, poor stricken dove, And bind thy broken wing ; And God, who is God of love. Will health and healing bring. ^Inasmuch as ye have done it unto (he least of these little ones, ye have done it unto one. The Charleston Board of Trade i'Ae Qreat Banquet of the Season? Speech of Governor Orr?Burial of the Democratic Party. At 6 o'clock yesterday evening the members of the Hoard and their invited guests entered the spacious and elegant banquet ball of tbe Charleston lintel, to the inspiriting music of the U. S. Oth Infantry band, which was stationed un* dor tbe verandah in the quadrangle. Mr. Ilatiie announced the first regu lar toast: 14 Tbe State of South Carolina," upon which the band struck up " Dixie" amid tbe deafening cheers of the enthusiastic assemblage. Governor Orr arose, and was loudly cheered. After the applau&e subsided, ' be spoke as follows : Mr. President and Gentleman of the 1 Board of Trade : I thank you for the very flattering reception which you have been pleased to give me personally, and for the pa- 1 triolic manner with which you have re 1 ceived the sentiment to the Stale of ' South Carolina. % ft ? ? ? ? i I propose upon the present occasion, < Mr. President, and Gentlemen of the { Board, to indicate to you my opinions 1 as to the course to be pursued by South Carolina. If the counsels I give are not acceptable, and I do not substantia ate them by sufficient reasons, reject 1 them, as it is your duty and your pro 1 . vince to do, but, if on the other hand, 1 they are reasonable and have weight, 1 ask for them your respectful considera tion. (Applause.) 1 desire to state to you that your commerce, manufactures i '.and agricultural interests will all remain paralized until our political relations are re-established and re instated with the Governmental Washington, and until YOU secure renresentation in the Con- i gre?8 of the tinned States. While the l Constitutional Amendment whs propos i ed to South Carolina as a State, and our own volition in that capacity could i be exercised, as is well.known to every i fentlenoan here, I opposed itradoption, i ut the act of Congress reoenlly pa?secT, 1 has assumed that thie country is a con- i quered territory, a conquered people, I and consequently that that body has a i right to dictate terras. The power ex i ists in that body to dictate*those terms, i it is secure for ibe next two years, and i when tbey plsco themselves squarely l and broadly upon that platform, I for I one, do ml propose to go to the Su- i preme Court or any where else, for the I purpose of disolating that power ; but i in good faith 1 will accept the terms, i humiliating as tbey may be, and open* I If, fairly and squarely urge their adop- < tionv before our people. (Qreat ap* pis use.) i As 1 hare said to you these terms < are humiliating, and, in many respects, i ungenerous uud unjust, bat wbcu Con- I ' I 1 1,4 i I n .. .... -- - IRil PLE i tenm exercise their power In spite of the President of the United States, and without regard to the Constitution which has in vain been held up to them for the last eighteen months,. I see no other course for us to adopt as a matter of Interest than to yield. I happen to be one or that class or perrons tlial are die- i fraticbised now, henceforth, and for ever. I have neither the privilege of enrolling myself as a voter, of casting 1 ray vole at the ballot box, nor of be- < noming a candidate for the humblest 1 office under this organization, and, > therefore, the counsel which I may otter upon the present occasion tnay be re I garded as accepted by even those who are in the habit of distrusting me as l the expressions of an individual entirely disinterested, and anxious only for the 1 welfare of his people; [Applause J 1 With reference to the disfranchising ,1 clause, I think it was an uufortunale | one. According to au 'estimate made I in the region of country in which I re? I tide, it appears that within the limits of < Anderson District alone, about eighteen hundred persons would be excluded from I the privilege of voting. I presume that ] this rule will apply to the entire State 1 of South Carolina. Very many of these < persons excluded, enjoy the esteem, re- f ipect and confidence of their fellow-oil < zens. Many of them, indeed, are, in f ray humble judgment, required in the 1 formation of our State Government.? I And the absence of these gentlemen in ( rour Convention, when it assembles for he purpose of preparing a Couslitu t lion, will be a source not ouly of regret f lo the people, but a tnisfonuue to the slate, because their wisdom would, en- t able them lo give such a directions to I public attiiir* as would nrnke them mo<e I tcceptablo lo the community at largo < ikaD those thick we are likely to | hope for with the present prospect. It 1 is better, however, tbat wo should be t excluded than that we should refuse to 1 rccepl (be terms proposed, v ben ibere 8 a reasonable certainty that if we do lot Accept those terme, other and harsh sr terms will be proposed than those which are contained in the bill. Look ng,- therefore, to the interests of the great mass of (he people of South Car? >lina, and believing that the threat of :oufi*cation will not be carried iuto effect if we accept the terms of this bill ; tiid behoving that confiscation will folow if we do uot; knowing, also, that we shall be benefitted d>y its acceptance, t say that, as my humble judgment, in terest, and wisdom dictate, that we shall :oncur iu the measure proposed by Congress. [Applause] I would, therefore, say to every man n South Carolina, who has uot been Jisfranchised, that a* soon as the prop sr order has been issued, he should piojeed to register bis name, and picpare lo go to the polls to vote for the best man that can be selected lo form a con-> ililulion under *hicb we and our posterity can live. 1 believe that Congres made a n;is.? lake, and they will realize it, when they extended suffrage to the colored man. I was in favor of giving to the colored race, before that law passed, whenever its individuals could lead and write, or possessed property to the amount of fc250, the elective franchise. In the first place, if you open the door Tor all to vote, von give an opportunity for bad men to exercise their influence; but il you had restricted the privilege in the manner in which I had suggested, you would have had a guarantee that when their arguments are ad dress-d to colored men, they would have had the good sense to reject them. In the next place, if Congress had created this limitation to the right of suffrage, irrespective of color, I undertake to saythat every man in the limiis of South Carolina would, in Ave years, have qualified himself to exercise the privilege. _ . Under the present circumstances, however, you hold out no such inducement, You have an opportunity to educate this race. If you educate them you will make them citizens who will understand the relations of society much better than if they remain in a state of ignorance. It js, therefore, to our interest to give them an intellectual character ; and it 1s your interest further, that Ihe black man shall vote with you in the common election. 1 have heard a good deal said of controlling the rote of the black man. It has been sup posed that his vote will be controlled by personal influences,and notwithstanding bis convictions of interest, but you Are I mistaken. That vote is destined to be t controlled not by personal considers I lions, but bv going to the black man i snd talking to him in private eonversa- ! lion, Hnd proving to b>m that his in- ? terest in South Carolina is your ioterest; < that the white man's-interest is the bla'ck man's interest. J think it can be i ihcwn to any rational black man thai l it is to his interest to. make bis friends l here rather Uibn io the State of Massa chusetts. ^ ' , It is supjftewlMhat because the lIcV I man has been held here in a ooodilion I [>f servitude for ages past, so.?oon as re < itraints bavefbeen removed from him I he will at ooc<fcjiLc#ta<r;the aiihinr el ; *; /. L * * GREENVILLE, SOUTH C llie white man. It will be delared that a the Northern man set him free. Dul t it may be remembered that it was not r the first, nor the second, nor the third l! year, nor till they were called upon to p fight in the armies of the Uoited States, tl that they were set free. Suppose, how tl ever, that they were set free by the d Northern people, the question arises g with them: this relation having been n destroyed, we occupy a totally new position. What, therefore, is our material, u our social, our personal interest! I p >u|/|n/?v uinv iimujr \JI IIJU I'UIUIfd C1II- H zeus of this Slate, both before and after n the w?r, Rre able to cite the nnmea of Si Mr. A., H. and C., who have extended g Lo them pecuniary assistance. t< If agriculture flourishes in the State, a whose interest is promoted by it ! J?it' not that man's who occupies the posi- w lion of landholder ? Yet you find Con h gress imposing a tax of three cents a b pound upon cotton up to September tl last, aud two and u half cents since that it Jale. s< Looking at the last year's crop when S ihere was oo eomplaint of the colored S people in any section of the Stale, w rod when we produced 100.000 bales b jf cotton, what proportion of that has p gone in the shape of taxation ? $1,00,- C J0U, which has been literally wrung F rom these people in the shape of tax ipon cotton, while not a dollar has a; >een levied upon the wheat or graiu in w Dhio, or corn in Illinois. . it l)o not, then, tell tnc, gentlemen, that et he colored people have not the intelli hi gence to he interested in these affairs. e? I'hcy need representation in Congress a is much as we do. They requite that pi he tiix shall bo taken off their labor. c< It is not ouly the cotton of South Car L jlina, however, but the tobacco of Virginia and North Carolina, which is as C inequally taxed. It is not. then, bv in* N imulation and brow beating, or by I wTOBging tliese people, that you are to tl :ontrol their votes; but you must show * uai u is 10 iireir interest lo vote wilt) A rou, and I undertake to say, that when tl heae facts aie presented to those who fi ihvo intelligence, they will be found T landing shoulder to shoulder with the c< while man. and catrySng out the prin? tc :ip!es which I desire to urge upon you w rri this occasion. tl It is to he expected that attempts N will he made to alienate the sympathies o >f those people f?oin us. I'eople will p :ome here and see that the negroes have tl treen persecuted. We concede the f.?cl li hat theirs was a condition of servitude, n I'hey were so under the law. It was o .relieved to he light, hut the relation is tl shanged, and now, every dollar which ii the black man earns by his labor goes a o his pocket in precisely the same way o is every dollar which the white man w earns goes into his pocket. Now, theie a fore, our iulerest is identical. o As some of these remaika are likely " to go in print, 1 would here take ocea- 11 sioti to say one or two things which 1 c Jed re 6o go upon record. When an li pmUsary comes here from the State of c New Yoik, Massachusetts or Ohio, and ^ <ays lo the black man, we are your 11 friends?we are going to take care of l< ?ou ; vote with us ; these white people * :annot be trusted : I want our colored 8 men to say to these emissaries, to the P Massachusetts man, that in South Car v jlina, under this law, it matters not by w whom it was passed, every colored man, P iwe.ity-one years of age, is entitled lo his ballot, and that he would riot be l' allowed to vote in Massachusetts, unless >' lie could read and write. Say to the sl rmissary from Ohio w ho comes here for ^ die purpose of giving advice as to how 81 you shall vote, go back to Ohio, and f' enlighten the heathen there, befoie you 11 EOtue here, because no black man there 81 is entitled to vote. Within the last l< ihree weeks, New Jersey, Ohio and Michigan have resolved that the black ' >uan shall not vote under any circums 11 dances whatever. . f Tlierefore I say to those colored inen, ^ when these emissaries come among you . .ell them to go back and remove the - J ieam from the eyes of their fellow citi- .* tens before they come here to lake the 11 mote from the eyes of our own people. ? I have seen indications in various lo ;aliiiea in South Carolina to organize a colored and white party, lo be called a National Union Republican Party. 1 a. lltiuk that is the name. I do not |t.ink t? this is wise ; because I believe that (be u white and colored people of these time jonstructed States will further their ends li more thoroughly by turning their at- fc lentions to their owu Slate policies ; and -a< when we get the right of rtpr/jnsenta h ;ion in Congress, 1 would send men t< here, not pledged to a Republican tl Union Party ; not pledged to the Dem y jcratic party, but would send tnen who b would say to all parties : We stand by tl :he; parly which will give us equal I rights, equal legislation, and equal jus lice, under the laws aud constitution of ;bia country* ' . . p I know there is au apprehension wide e< ipread in the North and West that, af- E er the reconstruction of the Southern p dates, we shall fall into the artns of p >11 r old allies aud associates, the old n Democratic pat IV. I say to you, gen cl leuien, however, that 1 would give no a Bfcpp!* yw I I ^ ^ W^W LPTTr^LR. AROLINA. APRIL 11. 186 uch pledges. I was identified during be teti year* of my public career as a epresentative in Congress from one of be Districts of South Carolina with that arty ; and as mv distinguished friend, he Commander of ibis Military Durict, knows that 1 enjoyed their confience, and the highest office within the ift of that party of which I was A leinber. (Applause.) I have, therefore,'every reason to entrtain the respect and regard for that aity. Mid I have entertained the hope >r many years to see it reinstated in ower; but the dream baa passed. We a??*"accounla to settle with that party, entlemen, before I at least will consent > affiliate with it. (Good, gOod, and pplause.) Many of you well remember that hen the war first commenced, great opes and expectations were held out v our friends in the North and West, iat there would be no war, and that if I commenced it Would be north of Ma? in's and Dixon's line, and not in the 1 outh. You know, sir, (turning to Gen. 1 ickles.) that faith wns .pledged, apd 1 1 ill now state that if that faith had eeu property carrieu out, mere is no reliability lhat any State bill South arolina would have seceded fioiu the edeial Union. * 1 Another account which I have tc bring j gainst the Demociatic party, ia thai lien the Philadelphia Convention met, 1 adopted a platform broad enough to 1 nbrace every conservative man North nd South, yet no sooner had it adjourn ' 1 than an attempt was made to give it 1 Demociatic character, and make it ap ear that every man who atluuiDd that invention wife an accession to the I tcmocralic party. Again, duiing the pendancy of the 'onMitutional Amendment, every forthem newspaper, and almost every lemocral in the countiv, urged upon to South to nject ita.provisions. Ii a* rejected. A lew weeks only elapsed, nd yet we find lhat on the passage of lis Sherman Kill, our Democratic iends acting in conjunction with old had Stevens, were instrumental in in- , operating on that bill its most odious aiures. It went back to tbe Senate, as tina'ly adopted, and every one of in Democratic newspapers all over the lot lb, so far as 1 am informed, have nine out and urged the Southern poo!e to accept the Dill. I say to you, lierefore, thai in tny judgment it is me for us to seek new friends and a ew alliance. Hence 1 am opposed to rganiziug any party in South Carolina, iial wi I cement -itself to the Democrat: or any other party. 1 would uot afiili te with any party that would put a tax f two and a half cents a pound on cotton, hen not one cent is put on the corn nd giain raised in Ouio, Indiana and .1. ? - O. t Ml r iu?r n u^itru oi.iies. 1 will vote lor o parly that will perpetrate such an trdignity. Therefore, when we are le ouslructed, I hope that our Bepre.-enatives will go to Washington and delare all giance to that party which will o us justice, and that, in my judg lent, is the policy for South Carolina ) pursue in this emergency. 1 will uot ?ay that the attempted oranization of a Republican party is unatriolic, because there may be 6ome ery patiiotic tnen engaged in that rotk, hut it certainly isu short sighted olicy for our people to pursue. Lint, Mr. President, and gentlemen of lie Board of Trade, 1 will not detain on longer. This being the first occaion presented since the passage of the herman bill. I felt that it wa? due my alf and to you to give expression to neso sentiments. 1 think they are disiterested, for the reason that I am my alf deprived of the privilege of going a the ballot box, and of holding office. In conclusion, I would say again that believe it is wise to give to the black ian the rights which has been conferad upon him, and to permit him to eniy those privileges in good faith.-? hrough their efforts we rhall tuidot.btf be reconstructed, mid thus secure -presentation, and our rights as equals ? the federal Union. I thank you, entleinen, for jour attention. [ CJuirlexlvn News. A Prophecy.?Over thirty yearn go Fanny Cetuble wrote the following mtence in her Journal while on a visit > this country : " 1 believe in oy heart that a repub c is the nobl.At, highest, and purest trin of government; but 1 believe that ccording to the present disposition of utuan creatures, 'tis a mere beau ideal, >inlly incapable of realization. What re world may be lit for six hundred ears hence, I control exactly perceive ; ut in the meantime,'lis my conviction [rat America will be a monarchy before am a skeleton." The Haiti more conference has recentr acted on the question of the propoa J change of name of the " Methodist Ipiscopal Church South," to " Episcoal Methodist Church." Uy its ap roval, the chango, we understand, is tade certain. Lay repreHentatiou in hurch councils of that denomiuation is l?o adopted. / v % EVENTS 7. You a LIumk 1'apku.?The Cleveland ileralr# very justly says : It matters not how many newspapers a man lakes, his list is incomplete without his home pAper Every citizen who wishes well for his locality should give a generous support to his home paper. If that paper is not just such as he would wish he should feel that bira self atid neighbors are responsible, jn a measure, for its short comings. Give a paper a liberal support, an active sym? pat by and it will instantly respond to such manifestations. Let art editor feel that his tflbrts are appreciated and he is the most tosponsive being on earth ; his paper a part of himself he is as sensitive to praise or con.->uro as a dealing father. Nothing can supply the place of the home paper. It is tho mirror in which the Itwn Ami neighborhood news is re> fleeted ; in the social, political and religious circle where printed it Ill's a place where no other paper can. When a need for economy compels tho curtailment of your newspaper list, strike off uvery other one, before you any to tho publisher of your Louie journal, " stop hi/ paper." The man who does not rend the advertisements in his home paper, can never be said to bo well posted. The sdveitisemuntj indicate not onlv tbe business ertterptise of the place in which they are published, but the enterprise o the advertiser. When you see a manj who udvQrti?es libeially, you may bo certain of finding a good slock of goods in bis store, that he keeps up with the maikct, and sells cheaper than those who uo not advertise. If you want good baigains always patroiiiza those who avail thciUSelves of ihn urtvnnOi.ro afforded through the ad\ ertising column* of the home paper, Tiik Doctoi:.?EveiyLody knows the doctor; a very important person lie is to us all. What could we do without him? Ho tilings us into this world, and tries to keep us as iotig in it as he can, and as long as our bodies can held together ; and he is with us at that rltange and last'hour, which w ill come to us ail, when we must leave this world and go to the next. When we are well we pel haps think little about the doctor, or we have our small jokes at him and his drugs, but let anything go wrong with onr bodies, that wonderful tabernacle in which our souls dwells?lot any of its wheels go wrong?then off we fly to them. It' the mother thinks her husband or child dying, how she runs tc him and urges him with her tears ! how she watches his face, and follows his searching eye as he examines the dear sufferer; how she wonders what he thinks I what would she give to know what he knows ? how she wearies for his visit ! how a cheerful word from him makes her heai t leap with joy, and gives her spirit and strength to watch over the bed of distress! Her whole soul goes to him in unspeakable gratitude when biings back to ber from the power of the grave ber busbaud cr dailing ,1.11.1 .1?-.. 1 ' v.uiiu. x lie uutiui nilu?s many 01 our secrets, of our sorrow#, which no one el#e knows; some of our sins, peihnps, which the great fJod alono knows.? liow many lives and hearts he carries iu his heart and hands ! So you see he is a very important person. the doctor, aud \va should do our best to make the most of him, aud do our duty to him aud to ourselves. Varnish for tfiioics.?It is a bad plan to grease the upper leather of shoe* for the purpose of keeping them soft; it tots the leather, and admits the dampness more readily, it is belter to make a varnish thus : Put a half pound of gum shellac, broken np in small pieces, in a quart bottle or jug, cover it with alchohol. coik it light and put it or. a shelf in a warm place ; shake_ it well several tiroes a day, then add a piece of gum camphor, as large as a hen's egg ; shake it well, and iu a few hours shake it again, add one ounce of lamp black ; if the alcohol is good, it will all be dissolveJ in three days, then shake and u-o. If it gets too thick, add alcohol?pour out two or three spoonfuls in a saucer, and apply with a small paint-brush. If the mate rials were all good, it will dry in about live iniouts, and it wiil be icmoved only by wearing, it oil, giving it a gloss almost equal it* patent leather. The advantage of this prepaiation above others is, it doe# not Mi ike in o (lie leather and make it hard, hut icmains on the auiface, and yet exoi.^t lLo water almost perfectly, 'litis same preparation is adioiiahle for harness, and does not soil when touched, hs lamphlack preparations do. [J/alL't Journal of Health. Tjikkx is no man more independent than the owner of a well cultivated farm. lie is less beholden to popular sentiment than any other calling. lie has always a suie support before him without consulting the opinions or relying upon the custom of any one. There is a constant nraiket for all the surplus he cau produce, and lie obtains for it the current prices without Any one de*< manding of liirn to know of hku his religious or political faith. ** ' .^%|8WpiMW i ? Acquisition of Rutsian America. .' It ban been announced by lelegiaph ' .*. that the President communicated to the Senate, on Saturday, a treaty with Rus- " sia, bv which the latter power cedes to the United States all her territories in North America for seven million dollars. The N. Y. IleralJ, of Sunday making _ #1.^ .... ? - - Although a price is set upon the tern ritory thus surrendered, it is in fact merely nominal, the value of the fish* eries and the fur trade alone to our enlerprising people being vastly iu excess of the sum agreed upon as the purchase money. The treaty is an evidence of the close and friendly relations existing between the two great powers, ana evinces the concurrence of the Russian Government in the policy which denies to European monarchies the right to build up kingdoms and dominions on the American continent. With Russian America in our possession, it will need but tho annexation or absorption of British Columbia and i Vancouver's Island to give us the whole of the Pacilio coast North of Mexico as our own ; and in one way or other this result is certuin to bo acouiplished. We cannot consent that our territory on the Pacific shall be broken between Washington Toriilory and Russian America, when the latter is fairly in our possession. It will bo well for England if she is dUcieel enough to profit by the exj ample of Russia, and to withdraw gracefully fiom a continent where her institutions ar e out of place and where her in1 Irigucs can only bring trouble upon her colonies and humilatiou to her Uo?crn1 ment at home. 1 Tho acquisition of the new territory ' is of especial importance at the present lime, when the trade of the United Stales with China hi d Japan is being 1 so satisfactorily developed. 1 The Ballimoie Sun comments as foN lows : The whole area is about 380.000 square miles, hut the strip along the coast from the 54lh to the GOib degiee of latitude ia only'fiom twenty to sixty miles broad, yet it cuts out perhaps one half of the British territory of Columbia from tho sea, the Russian line extending some 400 miles, and ceasing at Portland Inlet. The greater portion of the territory lies between the 142J and 100th degree of longtitude. and the GO and V 1st degree of latitude. Portland Inlet ia in about the same parallel aa the most Northwardly portion of Cana' da. On the Noilh, Russian America ia hounded by Bebring's Straights and the ' Arctic Ocean. The population ia now estimated at about "70,000, of which 1 some 40,000 to 50,000 are Indians and Esquimaux, the temaiudcr being Russian, Creoles, Kodiaks, Sic. The principal settlements is New Arcbangel, said ' to contain 1,000 inhabitants, on the island of Basanow or Sitka. The other chief islauds are Prince of Wales. Kodiak, Numvak and St. Lawrence, forming with numerous others, the Aleutian Archipelago. There are also the sets tlcinents of Michaelovski on Norton Sound, Souwaott* on Kvichark Hiver, Fort St. Nicholas on Aliai-ka River, St. (ieorge Factory on Priblov Island, and a factory on St. Paul I.-land. A great | portion of the country, however, may | be considered uninhabitable, but the Southern and const portions of it are considered valuable for the fur trade and fi-hories. It will afford us commercial advantages upon the Pacific, and a strategic position in a naval sense, which may be made available for many purpo>es. It will also give, ua possession of a large extent of country through which the overland telegraph is enrtied. | If this treaty is ratified, as mast probably it will be, the Lititish authorities will he sandwiched in British Oolerabi?fchy the possessions of the United States on the North and on the South of them, llence the announcement cf the negotiation of this treaty is said to have caused a lively sensation in Washington. VVhal may be its ultimate effects on British power in the extreme Northern region in question is an interesting subject for speculation.- -.The thought naturally suggests itself that it tnay lead to further acquisitions there, on the part of the United States, in time, through similar peaceful negotiations with Great Britain?the interest and convenience of both parties mutually working to that end. It is suggested Russia cedes her American territory for 1 the same reasons (hat induced Napoleon # | to eel! Louisiana. That is, having de- o ?igns in Kurope, in tho event of a war, she would probably lose this territory. Hut, apart from that, lbe cession of the United States at ibis lime is the fruit, in pail, of the extremely friendly rela* lions which have been maintained between out own and the Government of the Czar. Go to 6trangers for chaiity, acquaintances for advice, and relatives for oothi inn?and you will always Lave a supply of something, r MT Weddings ip Paris, like (he Ainerals, 1 are to be conducted by an authorised so