University of South Carolina Libraries
* *^1 jC .-< ? JfiJH ?? -L ^ ^ ^ ^?i^? viJS -????-? ?.?_ . I ' I | I VOLUME XXXIII. CA3IDEN, SOUTH-CAROLINA, THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1874. NUMBER ?? j j ? ?ww THE CAMDEN JOURNAL. AN Independent Family Paper. published weekly by TR.OTHA1 & HAY. SUBSCRIPTION RATES One year, in advance $2 50 six months 1 50 Three months 75 9&r AllTrsient Advertisements will be oharged One Dollar per Square for the first and Seyenty-fivr Cents per Square for each - subsequent insertion. Single insertion, $1 50 per square. (6^ Transient Advertisements must be paid for in advance. PHOTOGRAPHS. The undersigned having returned and opened a gallery will be pleased to see his friends. With more experience and IMPROVED APPARATUS he feels more capable than ever before of pleasing the people. Gome and have your pictures made before grim Winter with his frost and snows pounces upon us. Gallery in Workman House. A. B. LEE. Camden, S. C., Sept. 11, 1873. The Wilmington Star. Anlv iiiv VrfllHi. f mminuru vuij DAiLY STAR. Has the largest circulation of any Daily Newspaper in the State, and a circulation in Wilmington nearly twice as large as any other paper. All the news of the day will be found in it. ondensed when unimportant, at length when f moment, and always presented in a clear, nteiligent and interesting manner. SUBSCRIPTION (IN ADVANCE.) One Year, $7 00 Six Months, 8 50 Three months, 2 00 WEEKLY STAR. PRICE REDUCED. The Weekly Star is now combined with " ? Kn??u Pimi iYt Farmer and is one of the cheapest papers in the country, at the following REDUCED RATES: One copy, one year, $i GO Oue copy, six months, 1 00 Clubs of 5 to 10, one year, $1 25 per copy Clubs of 10 or more, oue year, only $1 00 Specimen copies sent on application. Address, WM. H. BERNARD, Editor and Proprietor, Wilmington, N. C. Hampden Sidney College. THE next session of this Seminary of learn ing will commence on Thursday, September 4th. 1873. Hampden Sidney is Situated in Prince Edward County, Va., within a few hundred yards of Union Theological Seminary, and seven miles from Farmville the nearest depot of the Atlantic, Mississippi and Ohio Kailroad. The locality of the College is most healthy, and the community around distin guished for intelligence and piety. There is no Grammar or Preparatory School connected with the College. It retains the curriculum and the great aim of its teachers is to secure thoroughness in the training and instruction of their pupils and thus to prepare them for professional studies or the actire duties of life. The ordinary expenses of a student exclusive of the cost of clothing, travelling and books, are from $22.1 to $275 a year For Catalogue and further information apply to REV. J. NI. P. ATKINSON, President Hampden Sidney College, Prince Edward County, Va EVERYTHING TO BE FOUND IN A First Class Grocery Store, CAN BE HAD AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES, AT HIRKLEY A OARL.1YIVS BININCER'S OLD LONDON DOCK GIN. Especially designed for the use of the N'dteal Proftttton and the Family, possessing (hose in trintir medicinal properties which belong to an Old and Pure Gin. Indispensable to Females. (Sood for AVf?ey Complaint?. A delicious Tonic. Put up in eases containing one dozen bottles each, and old by all druggists, grocers. Ac. A. M. Bininger & Co., established in 1778. No. 13 Bearer st., N, Y* Oct. 28-hm. MERONEY & WITTER AUCTION A Nil CoiiiiiiiKftioit Jferrliants. Broad-St. Camden, S. C. Will attend to the selling of Real Eitnte, Merchandize, Froduce, &c. Business entrusted to their care will meet with prompt attention. Returns made as Boon as sales Are effected. Mackerel! JIackerel!! 100 kits MACKEREL. 10 barrels do '20 half barrels do. For sale by BAL'M BRO. 1 jund for Sale. QAA At Kfc'N of WOOD LAND, three miles OUV from Caimlen. on the Chernw road, belonging to John T". ftxahamandt'. N*. Graham. Apply to 0. NELSON', Trusteefiffmimi w -j < t ( mm?mm?mmmmmmmmmmm**. man n?wwrwrw THE FAVORITMOME REMEDY. This unrivalled Medicine is warranted not tn pflnlain n ainirln narticlo of MekCCRY. Or ? p? I - ' any injurious miner :' subsance, but is Purely ^Vegetable, containing those Sot thern Hoots and Herbs which an all-wise 1 rovidcncc has placed in countries where Live- Diseases most prevail. It trill cure allDiseas-s caused Ly Dcranytmtnt of Ihc Liver or Hotreh Simmons' Livjr Regulator, or Medicine, Is eminently a Family Medicine: and by being kept ready foi yu n?>diate resort v. ill save many an hour of suff< ring and many a dollar in time and doctors' bills. After over forty y us* trial, it is still receiving the most uu .italitied testimonials to its virtues from pers is of the highest character and responsibility Eminent physicians commend it as the mo effectual remedy For Dpspepsi; . or Indigestion. Armed with this A \'T1 DOTE all climates and changes of water .md food may be faced without fear, Asa r> aiedy for MALARIOUS EE VERS, BO WEI. COMPLAINTS, RESTLESSNESS, J A EX J ICE, XAUSEA, IT HAS IxO EQUAL. It is the cheapest, tli purest and best Family .Medicine uthe world. MANUFACTURED ONLY UY J. 11. ZMILIN & CO., MACON, <JA AND PHILADELPHIA. Price $100 Scld by ail Druggists. January 1, 1873. 12m FALL AS? Winter Goods! ;\T J. ?& T. I. C 1EAP CASK STOKE ; Our dtock of General Merchandize, 7 n??r Vsuuaioiiii:. in j'ttii, vt iDiR/ir good8i 1 Groceries, Hardware, Cutlery, Boots, & Shoes, Notions, Hats, &c. Will be sold at the very lowest prices for cash or its eqi :v dent jn barter. All Goods sold 1?> us are warranted 1 as repr rented. We have a large au'. well selected stock of North Carolina Shoes, Which we otbr at low figures. We pay the high si market prices fur ' Cotton and other * '< nntry Produce. ' Agents for Neblnf & (*tH?Jrich* s Cotton Gins, which w. offer at Manufaclu-. rer's prices. I tep~All Goods p> rchused by parties residing within the ? p >rate limits of the town will be deliver' J hy us free of charge ' J *<5 T. I JONES Camden, Sept. _ . tf. Bagging, Ties, &c. 10 hales HAGGi.NG. various brands, ? tuns AltKOW riKS. \i ?/n.* t i)i.'r ... v. K..|f K J1A' in irn ii'i 11 uui i vi?. ?juar. barrels, kit- 'id it r i lil. CROCKKkY. Ac &' .lust received v .' '& T. I. JUNKS. | August 28. it' lfiiggingv ami Tics. 10.000 vard 11 .ft 1X0 25,000 pound V K.s. Fur sale '-y BAUM BBO. v Unties* and ('licik*ck. 50 boxoH ('111 MS M. 25 firkins (.OSII EN BUTTKR. For sale hy BAUM BIIO. NOTICE. All persons indebt ?! t?? mo are requested to pay up immediate y. Those who do not comply with this request by the 10th of January, 1874, will find tneir notes in the hands of an Attorney for collection. I shall remain Caiden until the first of April, and will hare a lot of tine Horses and Mules always on baud, which will he sold lower thau elsewhcrtin South Carolina. W. II. HUDSON. Deo. 86. if ADDRESS a tl OF THE TAX-PAYERft* (0\Vi:\T10\ ^ P TO THE j, PEOPLE OF SOUTH CAROLINA * CI In the Taxpayers' Convention on Fri- ti day, Gen. J. Ii. Kershaw, chairman of j, the committee appointed to prepare an t] address to the people of the State, read a the following, which was unanimously h adopted: ti Fdloic Citizens?The representatives of p the taxpayers to whom has been entrusted t( tho high and solemn duty of recommeud- d mi; uii'douiio ui inumviiuu d^aiiiov vut u corruption and rapacity that rule the or- c ganizcd band of wicked and unscrupulous ti adveutarers who, under the guise of gov- tr ernnicnt and in tho name of party, have n persistently despoiled you of your proper- st ty and outraged your most sacred rights, T deem it becoming and proper to lay before ir you in this form certain considerations in ir connection with their action and delibera- p* tions, which they suppose worthy of your ai earnest and thoughtful attention. bi It would be unnecessary and painful to 111 recite your wrongs ; the sense of these is CI not the least poignant of the sufferings ^ you have been called to endure these ,s liyo years of unparalleled outrage upon a CJ! refined and Christian people. We would ^:1 have our words speak ol courage, of hope, of faith, of work and of duty, lie who has rightfully pondered the dealings of an all-wise and beneficent Providence t(l with the affairs of men, cannot fail to have ai disco 'cred ;ui unvarying and inevitable 1,1 social law, that all great wrongs tend to w their own correction, and work out in the a end a sure compensation for the ills they ar indict. Thus the ebb and flow of huuian ft' ideas, obeying the divinely implanted ar principle of perpetual gravitati hi towards b; the right, always returns from the widest 1" deviation, and recoils most violently and with accelerated velocity from the greatest 0,1 errors. This truth has impressed itself C(upon the thoughts of the world with the b tbrce of an axiom upon which may be based the. soundest propositions of the 0' statesman. It has been aptly styled "the fanaticism of justice, which the stars in ni their course sustain, and against which C1 no attribute of the Almighty takes part." to It is vain to suppose that the enlightened h< American people are exempt from the ap- l'! nlicntirin nf t.bi>i nnivprs:?l gonial 1:iW. \\ e at feel justified in stating our conviction -1 that, breaking throuuli all the barriers of P< prejudice, political strife, and tlic resent- fi< meats of internecine war, the reflux of the great tide of opinion and sympathy is t'i already moving with overwhelming force. '' bearing with it the prouiiso of a restored C( nationality, based upon the broad and enduring principles of liberty, justice and *' truth. We would not be understood as hi encouraging the thought that what has It been swept away in the past can never be al restored. This great country has taken a new departure; has engrafted upon her P( system of government new principles, and v deals with new elements. The returning tl sense of justice will find its task in the t< adjustment of these new factors of power 1" into harmonious accord with the true h principles of republicanism, and in providing ample protection fur the rights and d liberties of the people. It will probably h deal not with organic laws, but with faithless, corrupt and oppressive administrn- tr tion. ti liile we present these cheerful anticipat inns, wliieli we feel justified in doing c< by many and great changes in sentiment 11 and opinion, manifested among even die '' uio>t extreme of tho great political leaders al and high officials of the country, and still more recent popular movements, it is st intend'd to invite to earnest and hopeful m effort and action, rather than to lull into ti u lalv security. No help can ever reach ai a pi pic who suffer themselves to fall into la apatliyor despair, f lie energies of m o at seeking relief from wrovsg aud oppression el toiisi be vitalized, organized and unite t. hi Kvcry accessible position of power must tc he seized, held and utilized, and the fight tl carefully, vigilantly and faithfully fought from idaeo to place, until the citadel ho at won and (lie right restored The Convert- C tion looks (o your action as the imM re prominent and essential element of the v< sin s-to be achieved. In order to pro- w cure a restoration of an honest admini-l i a- ei tion of affairs, the reins of honest govern- m merit must pass into the hands of honest ot men. Hitherto, political issues have p controlled all elections, and the great in- h ten Ms of the State have been subordina- h ted to the schemes of corrupt and o\il n men, \vhose insatiate avarice and rapacity u have brought us uiore of ruin and desolation, of wrongs and sufferings, than the ft fiercest ravages of war. The coming ideas p will sweep away party lines and destroy p the trade of hungry political adventurers. c< Government will be tuade once more the b gent of the people, not their master, and lie great industrial interests of the coun v, commerce and agriculture, become the rime objects of its protection, rather than :s prey. To participate in these benefits 'c must be placed in a condition to reeivo them. There must be an organizaon upon a basis wholly independent of olitical parties and issues, based upon lie fundamental principle that the rights nd interests of tho people require an onest, faithful and economical adminis ation of public affairs. Nothing but reineditated villainy, blind ignorance or )tal depravity can prevent this self-evient truth from controlling the governient. Our work is to meet and overcome very influence that would bar its recogniion. Public opinion is created by agiition, and no community can long >sist the pressure of a great truth, conantly, earnestly and honestly urged.? 0 do this, association is essential. The idividual is as powerless as a single twig 1 the faggot, but nothing can resist the I ower of combination. Let tho honest id well meaning citizens, one by one, be [ ought into the Taxpayers' Union, and ado to work for the cause of good gov tiuient, until the State is redeemed.? lie cclat that attends the clash of arms wanting to such a struggle, but no inse can bo more worthy of the earnest, ithful and patient labor of one who ves his people and his State. A triumph kc this is not to be woo by u single jcisive battle, nor it may be, by many ilsome campaigns; but patient, enduring xl honest work, sooner or later, will ing victory to your standards. No laurel rcaths may cr<>vrn the fetor's brow, but ransomed Carolina, aHYee. prosperous id happy people, will jttest to future mentions, that, worthwof your ancestry id true as they to dti^* and honor, you ! ive taken up (lie Gglit in tho darkest >nr of adversity, and faithfully and sucissfully fought it out "'to victory. Wc injure you. then, at once to organize, impact and work" up the Taxpayers' nion. until }*ou anchor the State safe in ic harbor of assured peace and prosperif In e nnccti'^a with gfga^ moveenf. it is desired to appeal to our follow tizcrts. who, despairing of relief are conmpluting the thought of abandoning the J inics of their childhood and graves of icir fathers, to seek in other lands and nong strangers a more hopeful future, tand by the old State. Desert not your j ?opie in llicir extremity. Leave not the ' ;ld while the battle rapes. Take new i mragc and try again. We believe this j i be the turning pnint in the fortunes of 10 State. Stay with us and share the nning good. The same energy, labor | id means that would suffice to establish j io emigrant in a now home, would reabililato the old in abundant blessings, appears to us that duty and patriotism ike demand that the citizen remain at is post, unless called away by more imartant and exceptional considerations, 'henever it can be done, wo urge upon ic people to offer such aid and assistance i any citizen whose necessities may iuid him to leave the State, as may induce iin to remain among us. To retain our d citizens is of more value than to intro- j uce new. Kvcry effort should be made , i this end. Those who have left tho tale in these latter years of adversity and 11 4 ni>Acrti)i'n/1 Mnnv l?li UUt |/i v/opua %.\m, j :ivo returned to their old homes poorer ; kmi they went out, and many, disappoint- j 1 and ruined, look back in vain regret, ! poll a fata' n i^ake. Let us remain at nine and he buried in the tomb of our 1 leestors. A fertile, salubrious climate, valuable a pies, mines, soil, water powers, a kind el hospitable people, commercial facili- j es, railroads and telegraphs, and vast i eas of unutilized and most valuable j lids, denied and ready for the plough, j , prices greatly loss than the cost of j earing the primitive forests, present1 ere the most inviting field ever offered ' i the immigrant. Our people yearn for J le coming stranger of every land and I lti-iii. We will introduce him on his I rival into tlio midst of nn advanced hristinri civilization, witli an assured turn for industry and thrift. This conLMitiun ha- in-titutcd certain utv.des by hich your earnest desire to attract hith the people of America and Kuropc may lost readily be gratified Kroin these and her agencies to be established the hapicst results may be expected. Let your party and liberal support of these schemes e con.-lantly accorded, and .South Carolia will soon achieve a career of prosperity tterly unprecedented in her history. This Convention has not taken counsel om despair, nor heeded that voice of the ast that would awaken the passions and rejudices engendered amid the storm of (intending issues buried on fields of lood, which staudai mouumsnts of Am* ' rican valor, devotion and faith. Whatever may have been the range of its discussions, its results are before you, evincing a spirit of self-restraint, forbearance and conservatism. To the emulation of which J they would earnestly commend you. They have left nothing undone that promised relief, or that any can say should have been done. While they have memorial ized Congress on the subject qf your wrongs, in language of simple bnt burning eloquence and emphasis, they have not omitted a proper appeal to the State Government for necessary reform. In ' this they feel assured that they will stand justified by your approval and the enlight-" ened opinion of the world. We shall not in detail attempt to recapitulate the entire action of this body, but earnestly invoke attention to all the j --J ' imioauiCD piupuscu, aim a uuncu avviuu am their support, from the mountains to the sea. In conclusion, imploring Almighty God to bestow upon all the people His best blessing. His wisdom to guide, and His strength to achieve, we commend you to this noble work of duty and patriotism. J. B. Kershaw, Chairman, Kershaw. C. R. Miles, Charleston. John Bratton, Fairfield. John S. Richardson, Sumter. F. A. Conner. Abbeville. Iredell Jones, York. A. B. Woodbury, Spartanburg. Responsibility op Common Carriers.?The Merchant's Dispatch Company was sued by R. Krause, of Davenport, Iowa, for the value of goods lost at the time of the Chicago fire. This company claimed that Chicago was the end of the route, and after they had placed the goods in their waiehouse their responsibility ceased, and they became liable only , as warehousemen. But the court held that the defendants were responsible an til some one else became responsible? until they had placed them in the hands ^ of the connecting carrier. Taking them ont defcndaM's cars and patting them in ^ their warehouse did not shift the liability, in the judgment of the court, who gave a verdict for the plaintiff. If this opinion is contirmod, the Dispatch Company will ^ have to make good a large amount of losses accruing at the time of the great fire. The Validity of Cotton Liens.? ! An important case, showing the binding character of cotton liens and the absolute j necessity of planters complying with the \ strict terms of their contracts, has just t been decided at Anderson, S. C. We | quote from the Intelligencer of the 12th i ult.: ''The State vs. Hiram W. Majors, ] - t!A _ V __ selling personal property on wuicn a ucn existed without giving uotice to purchaser. This was the first case of this nature that has couie up, and uiuch interest was manifested. The judge's charge to the jury was clear and explicit on the law points, and the jury found Mr. Majors guilty. In sentencing, the judge gave the reasons fortius statute, why it was made an indictable offence, and the necessity. and sentenced the prisoner to pay a fine of fifty dollars, and serve twelve months in the State Penitentiary at hard labor, saying that he intended to have the people to understand that when they made a contract for supplies furnished under the Acts of 1S66 and 1872, they had to stick up to thein or bear the consequences." Homestead Decision of Judge j CooKE.?In the case of Hull & Thompson, administrators, vs. Gray, Sheriff McGukin was ruled to show cause why he haJ not made the uioney on plaintiff's judgment. This was a test case to try the validity of the homestead Act, and the Sheriff answered the rule, that, in view of the penalty for selling the homestead, he had declined to levy his execution on the property of defendant given him as a homestead. The whole proceeding was simply a matter of form to bring the case before the court, and Judge Cooke announced his decision to be, that, where judgment was obtained before the passage of the homestead Act, the property i ? " ' ? L- L..i ,L.i was name lor tnc ueoi, out tout iiu uwow> < would he collectible off the homestead, i unless secured by a judgment or mortgage ] obtained or given before the passage of 1 the Act. 1'nder this decision, no home- i stead holds against judgments anterior to i the 16th day of April, 1808?the date of < the adoption of the new Constitution and of the Act in question. Anderson Conservator. While our ships are sounding the Pa- < cific for a cable rouU) from San Francisco i to Japan, the enterprise of the European I and Oriental managers has at length, by 1 completing connections, brought that [ country in tolegraphic communication with : | us via the Atlantic cable. 1 Sensible Words. Maj.-Calhoun, of the Columbus (6a.) Enquirer, has been lecturing the'Grangers of Seale, Ala. He told some very homely yet wholesome truths. We quote \ few of his remarks : "If the Southern soldiers worked onetenth as hard for themselves as they did for the Confederacy, the sun in his twentyfour hours course would not shine on a land more glorious or successful." He goes on to show t^e people that it is not the low price of cotton that makes bard times, but the want of energy, business management and forecast. Men are the architects of their own misery. He tells the people that King Cotton is a tyrant. "Yes, Cotton, be is the tyrant king that lias too long lived on the life-blood of his iubjecte, who has impoverished them by Jazzling dreams ot wealth, and sioxenea ;he hearts of the people by hope long deferred. I will not, however, throw the whole blame on King Cotton. He bad, tnd still has. allies nearly as dangeipns. One is extravagance, the other false pride; ind still another called inconsistency, which, while catering to the spirit of paxiotism in the planter's heart, gives him, ; in the other, a perfect contempt for South* irn enterprises, Southern manufactories, ndeed, for everything Southern but King Cotton himself, and, then, this King is fed by a food called fertilizers, whioh he lemands from his subjects, and the more bey feed him the thinner the old King ,rets, and the thinner he gets the more inatuated become his subjects, and to feed the King on fertilisers they rob themselves of food." He tells the people to make their own iread and meat, and be more anxious to ie happy and oomfortable than rich.? l he means he points out clearly. Organ * ze as farmers; improve your homestead, ,nd count improvements as capital laid ip; tickle the subsoil by deep plowing; nake farming honorable by being intelligent and independent; beautify the homeitead, as a means of cultivating taste and efiuing life; and, above all, get out of lebt. Calhoun is a Northern man, and here is w*hat he says : "My faith in the future of the South I bave tried to show by casting my lot with ber. I see, in no distant future, the South freed from the thraldom of New fork, and her planters freed from the daverv of debt and the bonds of igno rant culture. I see a Southern port obtaining the money our section now gives to the great metropolis, and foreign ships . whitening Southern ports with their sails, is they come to bear us the produce of their lands or the labor of their shops, ind take back in exchange that fabric for which the civilized world opens its purse?cotton. But the day is nearing, if we be but true to ourselves, when, instead of shipping to foreign or Northern ports the raw material, we can send them with profit to ourselves the manufactured articles. I can see the time, though I may have passed away, and you and your descendants, when this State and the cotton States of the South, will be the reoogoized home of every kind of manufacture; ind when, instead of cotton being King, cotton will be our subject and the whole world our tributaries, for the world needs nothing that, with intelligent labor, we cannot produce. The day of dreamers, the day nf demagogues and politicians, is passed; ind tho day of honest, earnest workers, has come, and it is for you, the farmers, within the hearing of my voice, to decide whether you will live to see it or not.? Follow out the course you have been pursuing. and your last hours will be troubled by visions of mortgages and liens. Pursue the pathway of honesty and common sense, and you will live to see the South prosper; her mines worked; her factories smoking with tho incense of indus;ry; her fields well tilled; her people eat* ng homo-made food and wearing homenade clothes, while their hearts in charity ire open to the world." Duelling in Virginia.?The following endorsement shows what was the rejent action of Gov. Kempor, of Virginia, upon the application for pardou of W. Page McCarthy, convicted of "involuntarily" killing John A. Mordecai in a duel ' icar this city on the 9th of May last, and lentcnced to pay a fine of five hundred 1 Jollars and be confined in jail for six months: "Governor's Opfice, ) i "Richmond, February 17, 1874. j "There is hut one ground upon which ( executive clemency should be exercised in this caso. It is proved by medical teatimony of very high character that the " ' -* ll-A condition of the prisoner is men uu* his life would be grestly imperilled by further imprisonment. The life of the oitiien may not be taken except in par* snance of a sentoaoe kwfa\\j de< its forfeiture. Pardtnv is granted it yj case solely because it is Bfeeesary to life. The rasas? opon. which ok is invoked la the muter*?signer tiona filed in the oaas em wholly proved, mad it m?t a? he doubted the penalties of the aatfrd?Ksg ? be .^fiexihly eofbrsed-t te - the foreement is damlesd uplfcis ofik "JxwmL. KHOT, . ^ This pardon of this gomnu?a* iff operates to roles? McCarthy fromtf months' impriao?nt imposed qp* He will ham torn??in jail nati ' - II ' ? t-- *- --M?- 1 ?M . UUO IV pNV) V? UV ? KVUVTW Wl W V' General Amaably. ANOTHXB WAB TV AIUCA.?A < dispatch epaeial in the EereUd giver understand that the Egyptian Khed finding'some opposition to l)ie goverr in what is commonly called the \ country. The Saltan of Rarfoor root invaded the territory*the Ehedlte, * the Bahr el-Qanel, hie ohjeet being to tare slaves. The Egyptian Governs: bia Bey, gave him battle. The amy of Saltan of Darirar eras 10,000 strong, battle was keen, and hated six how The Egyptian army was oooapletely cessfol. The Darfeor army was rm four gnn* were oaptnred and the V and many chiefii ware among the slai is gratifying to lad that the Khedi earnestly bent npoa patting down -wrlave trade. Egypt begins to give p ise of beeoming a great power in Cer Africa. A saoeearioa ef ralem Hk< mail Pawka wall emeinm evawini banks of the Nik. * Reasohing nr a Haee.?The fc .%;yg ing cinmmstanoe was related by a ra< table firmer as happening within his observation, and in illustration of its t it may he proper to remark that in ooonty where it happened?Cornw > 0 the hills, which are steep, rise ao abn and near to each other, that what passes on the aide of on may he c discerned on the other. Hi* attoi KN was first drawn to tho hare, which he hedge in a field of tornipe, and soo terwards he perceived in pnauit of 1 couple of dogs. As these dega em tho field he saw that the hare eto| moment and lifted her ears. The ] ere pressed oft, but when they had within gunshot of their hope for the bare stopped and than ran bac! some distance along its former track, bv a sadden soring it threw itself or Bide into the midst of the turnips, there remained crouched and still, dogs passed onward in their Course rapid rate, and as soon as they had pforward, on its traok with a sudden b< the hare sprang back to the plaoe it quitted, and ran along the coarse whir had come down, with the evident i tion of confounding together it* ward and downward course. By thi.< the dogs had come to the lower ext which the hare proceeded, and then stopped, as not knowing what fe course to take. It was thus the per ted creature secured its own safety; my informant was too generous to the dogs out of the diffeulty. Cot. Land and Watt ClLE&T AS A NIEVIITI.?A CO \ pondent writes: I have known many . and women, too, who, from various see, had become so mnch affected * nervousness that when they stretched fKni'r lianrfa thav ahook like asoen 1< on a windy day; and by a daily mod use of the blanched foot stalks of celery leaves ae a salad, they becai strong and steady in limb as other { I have known others so very nervor..* the least annoyanoe pat them in a of agitation, who were alasest in ca perplexity and fear, and who were r 3 4 tually cured by a daily noderate t blanched oelery as a salad at meal ti. I lrave known others cured by using ry for palpitation of the heart. An Illinois yonth is in trouble writes as follows to an editor for adi "Lately becoming acquainted," he s "with a young girl attending school 1 smitten with her, and she appears regard me favorably. She is very n of a lady, although but 16 years of r ? nf a Undi i 1 BCIlb UDl m piVSVHV vt W HWMMC.'I bound book of poems costing $8, w Bho returned with t note, stating thu father would not let her keep it, for' the was very sorry. Don't you th> was an insult to return the book wi i more of an apology t Hadn't I better ^ the old man if ho don't apologise fo. / in. alt?" If yon want to asoond in the work . yourself to somebody. _J3