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V I Special ue«U. 1. Is writiif to thia efiot o* bnaia^aa ftlvaya gif* your uaiM mod Poat cftoe add: 1 Buihawi lot'eia and anumunior- tione to be publiahcd Kbould be wriUen on aepartte aheeU. and the o>'j et o'ruch clamrly indie*ted by neetMry note' when required. S. Article* for pubMcition tbould be written in « c'eer, legible hand, and oa only one aide of the png.*. ' —• 4 All ehangaa in ad Tartu amenta muet reach u« oa Friday. •-ifc. — * TOOT fTAC HE. If>-fc*Te'lt out or not—that la the quocUoo i Uhetlbef thi batter for the Jiwi to suffer The pangs and torments of sn aching tooth. Or to take steel agslnat s host of tronbiea And, bj extracting, end them? To pull—fcr'ta*- Jfo more; and by » tag to say *e end 'Tbe toothache, and a thousand natural Ills The Jaw is heir to—’tla a consummation Devoutly to bo wished. To pull—to tug— To tug I perohaaoe to break—ays, there's tbs rub; For In that wrench what agonies may coma, When we hatrt half-dlslddged the atubborn fo^kt kfusfgivs ns pause; there's the respect Thai makea an aching tooth of ao long a Ufa; The old wife's nostrum, driftista’ contumely, TJie pangs of hope deferred, kind sleep delay, When he himself might hie quietus make For one poor > hilling? Who would far deli bear, To groan and sink beneath a load of pain, But that the Bread of something longed within. The linen-twisted force pc, from wbcee pangs " ~ Ko Jaw at ease returns, puszlas the will And makes It rather bggr UlN ills It haa Thaa By to others that It knows not of ^ Thus dentists Bo make cowards of us aU; And thus the native hue of reeolutlon la stckltcd o’er with the pale oast of faar; And many a ooe, whoea oourags sesks tha door With this regard, his footsteps tun* sway, aof dentist t * J- f *t. rf. 1-4-1 , VOL. IV. NO. 41. BARNWELL. C. H.; S. C.. THITRSDAT, JUNE 16, 1881. AN OLD DREAM STORY. Oim anowv winter night an English farmer, tunned Robin Cartwright, Bitting . with hi* wife before his blajung Are of oak wood, fancied that be heard the faint bleating of jl abeep outride hie ' dour, and, anxtotu fog lus flock, took hi* lantern and went out to look fur the |"*ir creature. No aheep waa there, howerer, but ioatead, cioae agatnel the dour Jamb, a basket lined with wool and ooTored with a blanket, ta wbieh ley e eery young child. - There were footatepe ut the Mow which led np to the door, end other atejw which led ewey from it Holding hie lantera low, the farmer followed three tin til they eeaeed abruptly beatde the margin of the ritrwr, which ley at the h* 4 of hi* land. Liftiac hia Then tbe led awoke, determined to go to London. He’wee ao excited by the dream that he oould scarcely wait until morning to tell it^to hia mistress, who, on hearing it, at onoe brought out the silver half buckle that she had kept ever ainoe he had been left at her door,, and vowed that she would go to London with him to see what came of this strange dream. • Together the woman and boy. made the journey, and, after many inquiries and much wandering about the strange city, they learned that there existed in its very heart an old-time charity called, qneerly enough, "Lady Annytage's twenty-four old wtTea. w Twenty-four old women, who had Iteen reputable wives and mothers, were ted, clothed and lodged in these build ings—the funds for the purpose having been bequeathed by a certain pious Lady Annytsge, long dead. To this row of building* the two country folk made their way, and the boy cried out with something very like ter ror whan he new the houses of hia dream, and on one low door the number ten that he had read in thssa very white let ter*. Ha knocked at it with trembling band, and an old woman in a black silk cup, purple gown and a little black ahawl, opened it at once. Bba made a ■ ' -fr — S2 a Tear. | _ Ui* courtesy inch as bomb!* English giva their superior*, and mtd : •' What can I do for you, ma'am r And the boy staggered back against tha ioor-puet, too faint to apeak ; but Mrs. Cartwright walked bravely into tha HtUa apartment "Dam*,’’ ah* said, **we've loug way to aak you a little q Hava you tha other half ef a btl of a Uka th«»” s« her a mu " 1 hero, ma’am, and a panel, too, far oa* that ahowa it to me. Bit nad m tall you about iV Mr*. Cartwright sauted hanaL, within ta* ' »r ha ban I Only frvods T Bpt greatly tha banka carefully, ha re turned to hia cottage. Ilia tsifa, maeawhile, had takea the child to the Are and carwd fur it kindly It waa a praUy Lula boy. ita half of a by a curd was •tiros clasp It aretacd orMant Intended to bo a token by which tha ta- faat'o ideality might one day ha aad the farmer s wife pat U away fully, laqumee wore made ta tha noigh- horbood, but they lad to ao discoveries, and Cartwrights kept the child, though they did not deem it wise to adopt him so their own. He wss kindly cored for, (•at brought np ao s servant. He bed been christened Roger, end knew no othe name. - r ’ . As soon a* he was old enough be wss put to oat-door work, and, though taught to read sad write, was otherwise on' e par with hie fellow-laboraru Ha bed never seen any place more elegant than tit* farm-house parlor, nor any drees mure cosily than that hia mistress wore to the church on Sunday; yet his dreams, which he was fond of telling, were all of magnificence and splendor. Often in his sleep he found himself in an elegant room, furnished in yellow satin. There were old portraits on the walls, and bedtltifnl ornaments erery- where.' Here he always saw a lady dressed in black, but wearing diamonds, who was rery beautiful, and who often wept, and a^gcntleman who wore some thing on his breast—as he explained to Mrs. Cartwright, M lilfeyour best breast pin, but more t-piirkling.” thus describ ing an order, as it seemed. He ap peared always to be himself invisible, and onee a man in a livery, who had only one eye, seemed to walk straight through him without knowing it, Mrs. Cartwright alwaya believed that these dreams ‘‘meant something,” but her hnshand laughed at the matter. ‘‘ Poor Roger is no nobleman’s child,” he- used to say. " No doubt his mtflher drowned herself the night she left him here.—poor sonl!” ' <r " So the boy’s sixteenth birthday came, and on it he dresmeAthia dreanw Jfo fbought he was jo-fando^ i stood before a row of rough atone houses, which were plainly very old. Across the front were some raised let ters, quaint and queer enough to poxxle him, but be made out the words: “lAtdjf Armytago.” Before him was one of tbe low door* with the number tea cait, and et it etood an old ToaMa with a black aflk cap on her head, aad a tittle block ahawl ouar the shoulders of «f a >1i two of M fa this way*, ma’am b*ri •a -Heaaeh CiUgg 4 called sod. ia her lael ill kj ftrf.te ah* died she fare aad this parcel. •Wh.-o I’m deed,’ tb* aud, ‘ B<4 brflwe, write to that ptaro wad •ay : ” If you wool Urn other hell of the buckle, come to aw.” WWo any uuc ««uwi. if they show you half of e ulvcr buckle, giva them this parcel.' “ It’s all aha said, ma’am whrB all teas over, I found I had the parcel sale, l card ; that was guoe. Tv* hern thiak- ing to go to lha minister and show the paroal to him, for it’s full uf writing, and there’s a tat of a buckle ta it, too. Bui it senna soma one most Levs told you aimut it I think it's your* by right, and I should give it orer.” The farmer’s wife was wise enough to keep her own counsel She gave a gift to Jho old woman that made her feel her- •elf paid for any trouble she had had, and took the pared away with her. At the hotel where they stopped fur the night the two anxious traveler* read the paper it Contained. It was to thia affect: L Msrths Civvy, who have bvvn living in tbe City of Ixtndun for ten vesrt or mors, and or tbe name of Hannah Qlegg, do hereby swear and affirm that sixteen years sgo, being then employed as none for my Lady Marlowe, of Marlowe Hall, shire, I was deair ju* of pan- ishing lord Marlowe for trifling with the affee- ttoo* of my niece, Kate Grey, wbe died, as I know, of a broken heart, because of his Lord- ship's fickleness—for he had uo mind to marry a poor, ignorant girl, lut only to make love to her—end being none to my Lady Marlowe, I one night contrived to steel the child and have the place with it unseen; and, taking, a boat, 1 roved, with my own hands, stopped near the bouse of one Robin Cartwright, farmer, end laid the child at his door, and then departed u I came, knowing well that it would be believed that tbe mother who had left her child had drowned herself. Since this I have changed my name ind lived uftraspected ; but, being in dresd of death, 1 now make confession, lest 1 be punished for the deed in the world to.which Ism going. Tbe half ot -tha buckle, uhich-ie in this parcel, will mate that which I hang about the child's neck, end my Lady Marlowe will know it well, sinos it is a family heirloom. This statement I swear la true ; I make it on my death-bed. Mabtha Gan. Of course the poor boy, who had been led so far by thia strange dream, lost no 4>y feed Mns CattwrighA They found Marlow* Oestle easily, and oa entering it the boy's vision* again came into the story, for the one- eyed footmen opened the door for them. All was familiar to the young fellow. The stairway, the passages, tbe yeDows sutin drawing-room-be bed earn than aU te hie dreams. He had 1 be elood fa ha disappearance of* their child being well known by all the county. The letter and the clasp proved his identity, and the servant boy became the heir to a fortune and a title, and found parental love and tenderness at last. The story was not universally known, but it is carefully recorded in the private diary of Dennis Archer, then Vicar of Mar lowe Church, who avers his belief in its truth. a. u sr."-j 1 ; 11 -. t AM AFFECTING LIE. An early settler of Chicago relates an incident in which he waa an actor : *‘ As I sat there in the long ago, anjl, shrouded in the September Laze, was dreaming of a fortunate future for myoelf, I heard the muffled tread of innumerable feet drawing nearer aad nearer to me. The sound was like the footfall of a regiment of infantry approaching, and. I rose to see what was the cause. I had not long to wait, for very soon there hove in sight a very singular spectacle. First came a large Illinois hog at the head of a long column of Uhnoia hogs, ail marching Indian fashion, and grunting with that gentle, placid grunt which the hog ear rice with him. On closer examination into tha singular phenomena, I saw that all the bogs, except the leader, were blind, each enistal haring its pred* ersaor's tail in hie mouth throughout the long line, consisting ci 13,621 unfort unate, sigh tire* bags, cheerfully fallow ing their leader to the water. I waa never so struck with the wonderful in stinct of the brut* nraalinu fa my tele, end my eyes Ailed with tears when 1 sew the eh Adlibs faith aad confidence of each blind animal following with im pUril its way into ij fatal leek xbrntefag ewuy ay idW I drew my revolver end ahui oft of t* the ef the broad prame, with no ifaphlngietineled fail of a CKLLAlt FLOOmB. .. Wooden floors should not be placed in cellars. It is not easy to tell what a cellar floor may conceal from sight, and it should always be remembered that the air of a cellar circulates freely through the house. ' ’ A plank cellar floor of a family in a neighboring city had not been taken np for over ten years. The **cellar smell” was strong, notwithstanding almost daily ventilation, even in winter. On removing the floor there was found beneath it large quantities of sawdust, decomposed to a moist, impalpable pow der. The stirring up connected with its removal resulted in several members of the family being taken with severe ton. sillitis. '' A cemented floor sinoe given to the same cellar has rendered the air in the cellar as pur* aa that in any room in the house. A family near the ooe already men t toned was troubled with constantly-re- curriug attacks of ricknem. After re ceiving correct ideas of domestic hygiene, the " heed of the family ” had his premises carefully examined. An expert Ant found under the L-floor an <>ld, disused usteru, the water of which wimC thickly covered with decayed mat ter. The air in the perfar—though rare was constantly taken that should be aired- having a able odor, the expert went into the front cellar, which waa Beal and elaaa and well warmed. There, ha nag pried ap a oaJ, the product ef deeey. The family at sod her* IWA'e We Timr-woMM mum KB. to a love far old-taahlooeJ The walls of the are b* A FirF-THOCBAK* mot LAB BKABU. A novel ease wee that of Om sennet Kay res, heard brfuse the Buproms Court •4 VanueuA Om woe BeuvtsBedef oa he Liqutw lew, sod sen to pay a floe in tveuty-faur fawn «« be cuonuHtad to the H«uae of Ourree- tmu, ami wus placed fa the custody of the Hhenff for sale keeping daring the twenty-four hours. The Sheriff took him to the Haase of Curreetiua end left bun. The Huperintendeut, Eayree, ex plained to him that by waiving the twenty-fnnr hour privilege, ami being committed et once, he would save outa. Cox agreed to Im committed at once. Under the rubu of the institution hia Ixurd, a rery heavy one, worn fie fifteen years, was removed. Oox protested, but without avail. From this sharing a sore throat resulted, which endangered Cox’* life. He sued the Superintendent for 96,000. At the trial Jndge Roea told (lie jury that Oox had a right to waive the twenty-four-hour privilege, and the jury found for the defendant. The Su preme Court reversed this decision, bolding that the law committed the prisQpcr from a certain time to a certain time, and that neittier he nor any other 1 tower could commit him before, and that any one sharing him without his consent before that time was liable, and sent the case back for a new trial . A VIBCUJTOUS KOVTB. X. The Vermont boy who went down cel lar for a pitcher of cider by way of Dea con Perkins' trout-pond is not a circum stance, as an illustration o! the circuit ous method, to the telegraph meseages which were sent last winter from Peter head to Aberdeen by way of Scandina- ria. It has always been »uppoeed that the Vermont boy acted from choice, but the Scotch telegram took the rounda bout course from necessity, for the hur ricane and snow-drifts had cut off all di rect communication. From Peterhead the messages were first sent tinder the North see to Egersund, where they ware ffahalated into Norwegian by some of the polyglot clerks, of whom 'erury con tinental telegraph office of any import ance can boost. Thence they wore dis patched by Areodal fa Christiana, and from the Norwegian capital fa Gothen burg, in BwbiIm. From Gothenburg they by way of after leaving Peter- *utn«S7vi*ei Ith Might#. as with trie*. The roofs jruwn culutq aad gray The 1 Hr marks of Du not destroy it, t Aw a OMfirra edifies «r, nature sad improve it A ehght ellrreuna of an old gabU, the down <* path tag book of a roof rflroding ef a puroh, a let «utk mvfed brie er there, shnilitwry the laying oat ef a t Inqiii ring it with early fl-’we»» a lew IuUm U marreioaely altar the looks of aa wropaat to ronttaes hie loving week till He a fade is rejnvetiatad. It fa eat fUr Jig rokre at |•eint or le< » • i ittrTi ae the H lligf-et hand of • bo had ea old rim ply follow bis but I U fa hr art e making of MINCE FIB. A **ol«Kl»n (till imp Upon • n«w mlncft pi*; .. • Hr iwcw th*t all thl« niirtitmar* talk 1 Waa but within hia ry«. ABM rr'TTTtMT" Mivam MAMvrAcTCrnrs n n- ••• ma. ' .ri ! itm That night h* tunl>M Into bad. Amid bla toaaahoM (dda,' Whan hi! acmaa tha omintorpaoa. Crap* fourtaan decapoda! * C’rnatacaan rnraaa t " criad tha Ufa “ Hava I haan taklnf toda?" But aa aa apnlie hia |illlow awwmad With Mrsdwapoda! lha parapltatan pawn (Tha kind ana navar fana). Far now tha handlxiard'a hldaona wttfc Muc ratanuatiauaua! - ’ r ' >'* Ha laapa, that Raol>i|(Nin-- H- alrlkan tha'aoM, bar* Boor; ' Ilia drrani ta rod*, hia mind raatored- Hr rata mluca pia no nine*. —AlMany Arfm. I "1" U" RElt V LATION FBBNCH OF TUB FMBBB. In an article in ffitrpcr’t Magtuin*, George Merrill tails how the ^rapfa regulated in France. The laws wtiieh regulate the press continue fa be very atnngewt, though some mndificatioua ef a liVral character here been introduced a 1 nee the fail of the empire. Thus all attacks oa the constituted authorities os m the religion of the state, or on cither of the retigfaoe whoea eefablfahment fa tueegaiseil hy law, ee wall oealtallnefc* upon tbe airerrign or <*her heed *f * lan igu State, ell pabiiaatina of fsfae news, all writings which excite the of incite one clam of citiarne to hatred of dividuab, are punishable by of merely insulting or aboriva epectfriag any mailer of fart to the iletrimetit of pci rata tadivtdaafa L *., a It is sryileesure fa "ms fa be able fa tell our American manufacturers that their goods, hi aU-hrancliea of trade, find a ready market and have a preference here in India. Fhere ia a lack of goods sent eut here, 1 meth of everything which would be adaptable to the country. I have given the subject due ounskUra* ♦ion, and what f^would recommend would t*e the establishment of an amalgameU’il/ company, ta consist of all deimrtm^nte of manufactures. All classes of Ameri can wares are preferred. Look, far' in stenNo, at the large number of stores Hint have been nold out here; also, hard w*re r iroiunongery,' etc, I need only refer yuff fa the expjffa from ttie United Htetes to India. The cstaMbhment of an American emporium here of imrely American goods would be a suedeae financially. Look et the demand for American dridd frnita, for What litU* doe# outne get. into the handa of a few dealers, and I can tell you that I hare often paid '<0 cenfa a pound for dried Applet, while only Hi* othcNtar i paid fil.60Tur a two-puend tin of (Xlregn salt beef. Great qnftMitiea of gootSlh* sold here labeled American when they are fad; lor inetaace, I went into whet is sailed a respectable Mtabhabmcut sbunf * ith ago fa purchase an Amcticug 1 waa ahowa kngne erfaalea. J fald the daafar that a* Aomriami would ever export eoeh rubbfah. I p«l tfasbig htade ef my kntf* fafl length fate of fa * pul I looked at II ft Oa* ftfal; I A " *M Quertarly, somi-aBnual or yearly ojbs trset* m»<t > on HUrsI tarm«. ^ Oratrvet ndVartfalni ta- gtybfa *6 No communication wit! be published an ires accompanied faff the assn* and ad dress of the writer, not necessarily for publicathn, but ms guarani^ of goal A id ran, TJI PEOPLE, -J - - : t Rsruwell a H., ft 0. mm. ! r marnm* — CkaatAf ftxalsked the folterefrg ^eninfaeepjM A tl^e Ute Fer nando Wood : Between himself and Mr. Wood there existed jilrasant personal relatione, although the Utter had placed Junumli on the furthest plank of ojqwj- siteou fa tha war end was legislation. One day in debate, wltila deDOBneirig a proposed measure of reconstriictipn, Mr. Wood said; “ This WoaLl pittlj, le ro- gaideda*' of this most Infamous Gongrean." He 'Hi-- paused at these words, evidbuUjrexjiei t ing what immediately followed Hon. Robert Bchenck demaatled that the words be taken down, and introdaoed a resolution that Mr. Wood be eenmtred et the bar td tbe House tot Ids'remarks. The sepeeesfan woe erideollp a etetdh-d one, sad Mr. Wood ewaltad the result with the spirit and air of $4 wpqcUnt martyr. He hoped fa Stake political capital in bis dfatatat fay wearing, the deeontfanof a vigorous penmnal <-. > sure from tlie Bj*«iknr of the lU-rr eon OoagrsM. A taw deya Mew Mr. CbHeft bad been reading an "Rnglisii parliamentary work, fh which there Speaker ef the] of a ef While tha yeas gr..l net* takea aa fa* naafattaa Mr. thought of this I fa the library, he ^nd ia hfa heads by the fia* Mr. Wood •u fa Mr. Wood’s be W antktpetad, Mr h maUctB, he would make it a iuvihug object ta eyata of reM. It fa not onedeoireafafind! tome - not latantwtkMt* dfaiday. TUB IBB OK rum AKCIBMTB. Under this bead, the ir has the fidlowing : The ink has, since anoieot through many phases and changes. The ink of the aucicnta, to which we owe the mnftrrvation of many important and priocltws dneumeute, is said to have Ix-en a mixture of three parte of soot and one part of aolutioo of gum, a coi»- (swition which, iu ita eaeence, is similar to the Chinese ink, and which (taking into account the porosity of the paper written on) ia able to account for ita in delibility and good preservation of all writing comniiUod to its keeping. The MSS. of the first century of our era *1111 remain clearer titan those which were written long snluoquently. The writ ings of later days are not nearly ao clear, and are even in some caste already illegible, because when they were writ ten makers hod already begun to fabri cate paper from linen rags, mid to press the sheet of pulp into greater consist ency. The paper being less porous, tbe ink did not penetrate, hut rested on the surface ; and, nuloequently, a new evil was added ; the ink itself was changed in its composition by the employment of other agents than simple soot So that hy the less compactness of the paper used by' mfr forefsthers, and Hie .greater purity of their ink, the writing entered the paper, becoming a part thereof, each lending to the other’s cmlnranoe ; while now the thinner fluid we employ lies on the surface of the, paper, is acted on by tbe air, and iwtjti ‘ink and paper perish together in a lamentably short period. A smooth see never mad* a skillful manner; neither (fa uninterrupted prosperity end success qualify far use fulness and happiness. The storms of aJverrity, like the storms of the faculties end mate fa* in- pitaebU to fa* payment of aU awarded the paper which puldieh- es e libellous article, or tbor of such article. Tbe stamp duty upon newspapers, which existed under the empire, was eltolished by decree of Hept 8, INTO. Every puhlfakvr fa still obliged to dpjioait two copies of every uewsjiaper, or other periodical fa med by him, in the hands of the public authorities. The law of Dec. 29, 1876, provides that no administrative authoruy shall hare the right to prohibit the sale on the public streets of any particular journal. But the moot important changa recently effected hi favor of Ute press fa the of or eft the nasriy-matad. The very songs we bear *9 dawn of day arw more the result of rivalry and gpMM| than of joyous thanksgiving, the feath ered songster* being desirous of drown ing tbe voice of other* or of excelling them in vocal power in presence of the that made by the lew of April 15, 1871, removing press offenses from the juris diction of the Tribunamx Correction els, and submitting them to trial by jury before the courts of assize. 4 THE OLD NATIONAL FINE. When Gen. Jackson, in 1829, jour neyed from Nashville to Washington to take hfa seat as President of the United Stales, he traveled by stage-coach over the old national pika that led over the Alleghenies. In the palmy days of coaching no post-road in the country did •o large a bnsineM ae fall splendid old highway, which opened fa* West and BBIOUAM TOVNfFB OH ATE. An ill-looking stone wall, about six feet high, incloses an area of nearly an acre. A carriage gate, constructed of rough, nnpatutod boards, stood ajar, and I entered. Fully one-quarter of the inclosure is fenced off by a second atone wall on one aide, and by a wire fence on the other, ar.d in the .southeast corner of this Bub-incloagre Brigham Young rests in final repose. A huge slab of granite, lying flat on his grave, and a high railing of iron, are all that meet the eye, save the walk* and sward of the little cemetery. There is no inscription of any kind—not even his name. Outside of Brigham’s jter- •onal graveyard the grounds are so ahab- lit flier might be taken \rt*m*, fur g* Vimtw row toftf yote arw ■ upjuiually tir.ijiu". wii and graves ift a race, of yiroei noUMpg fa keeww, other than that tfaey Head in ItpOMW and had large building* of wmcbigk ’. .... ’ 1 Bouthwest to the East. The wagons were so nnmerous that the leaden of one team had their nose* in tha trough at fa* end of the next wagon ^haad; amd the four or six hone*. dey coaches, drawn by dashed along at a ntto which made an English coachman of fa* mad with envy. BanUs fan and wagons, there wen gentlemen trav eling ringty pn horseback, with all the of their journey packed by Hist they might be taken fora.lnnijv ing piece for garbage. In one corner of this outer cemetery are four or five neg lected grarea—possibly those of hit de parted wires. Still another grave at that quarter is marked. At ita heed ia an unpointed pin* board, on which ap ron fa* name ef " E. L Young." Underneath Una name aome wag baa plainly written with » pencil: " We are laboring for tbe kingdoat of God, gen tlemen.* Th# Monaco* pay little re- meet for the resting place* of ubbob f*r»«rfatkie;' •* The bicycle hsa some warm advocates. A business man raporta that in fifteen months pest he has ridden 4 Hiachine constantly between hie house end place of business, 1,200 times, at a saving of 180 boon in time, and a redaction in shoe bills from $18 to $A50. Packages era habitually carried. One rider took a piece of timber, four by two inches and twelve trot long, half a aula; this was done for convenience, not lor sport, and the same person regularly carries packages of hardware weighing fifteen ponnds or more. In a fire-months’ trip as agent for a firm dealing in manufact urer's supplies through parts of the New England States, he hss traveled his bicycle, carrying his Handle of asm {dee over 8,000 miles, averaging thirty miles a day, frequently going tea nulea with * ... .1, • • t, ont dismounting, and visiting 'aD mills and manufacturing concerns on the route. He claims that he aooemplished thia distance in lees time then he would have done by rail, beside penetrafing dfa- tricte which he oould t—m Tat discipline of the Ruastan navy ia apparouliy maintained by the infliction of paaflfanro»ta winch in *090 oqnntriee would be tiMfairtawd add, -fafapaewroa the Army