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SHERIDAN & SIMS, Proprietors. SUUSOKIITION. One ilCear.81.60 Six Months.........1.00 Ministersoi* the Gospel.J.OO AnVKKTlSKJHCNTS. First Instertlou.!...'.?1.00 'Euch Subsequent Insertion.fto Liberal contracts inado ibr ;j month end over. I _________-, ^ -.- ? m JOI3 OFFICE J8 jfJtfijaitKi? WO HO Mi. KINDS0/ The Peavine Again, iSditor Orangeburg Democrat ; Tell us, Mr. Editor, why it is Unit we farmers, having eyes yet see not, or seeing believe not, how others mukc fino crops, and yet some of us, still seem blindly to plod along in the same old rut, fearing a mishap or some sudden jolt if wo attempt to break away from it. For year having witnessed the beneficial effects of a j heavy crop of pcavincs on the suc ceeding crop, and ill the recuperation of worn soil wherever they were acci dentally allowed to rot upon the ground and net pulled up or totally fed away, and more recently having observed the beautiful result where they were sown and turned in the past winter, in the more vigorous giowtb of cotton this year, I have ventured to drop you this hasty pa per hoping it may catch the eye of some lazily hesitating or still doubt ing Judas and stimulate hitii to put into practice, what others have tried and do heartily recommend, and un hesitatingly say, their crops are greatly improved and their lauds are left in much liner condition for suc ceeding crops. Though a)most too late now to derive tlio full benefit of the plan usually adopted, it is not too late for some limp (o gel :f decid ed improvement in the next crop. It is scarcely necessary after so much has been already said and written about it, to repeat the the process practiced by those that have met with success ; some may not know it and I write it. Jl is simply this : Lay off the land in rqui-dislunl rows ho that one ami a hall or two bushels of peas per acre can be sown evenly broad cast and well ploughed under, (the later the season the greater quan tity of peas should be sown,) and about the middle of October when t ic weather has grown cool, sow upon the same land one or inorc bushels of oats per acre, and turn all under nice ly together. If there are any ripe peas on the vines?and there will be if planted in limjo?rtliey remain in the ground the winter through and come up the next spring and when oats arc cut, which will no doubt be improved 100 per cent, over the past crop, they go vigorously to growing to cover the ground again with both vines and peas to make the farmer's heart jump with joy at the prospect ahead of him for the next crop. Now, now, whenever it is, is the ac cepted time, go light at it, or you will lose the opportunity to increase your crops and improve your lands, and the joyous emotions coming from such a condition of things. There can be no doubt that the plan suggested is the simplest, surest and cheapest of all that can be practi cally carried out. Whilst we have knowu for years how a line crop of pea vines bencfltted the land yet we hesitated to use them in this way be cause it looked like making and giv ing away one fine crop to make an other-, not estimating the great good the land received from Idem, besides the increased crop they caused to be made. But upon practice, we find this is not so, as we are simply giv ing the succeeding cropu belter ma nuring than we could do in any other way, and most of our lands should bu well munurod any how. That great old patriot and farmer, Edmund Ruf- 1 fin, of Virginia, said years ago, that | the pea constituted the gicat remedy ; for Southern agricultural exhaustion, and that where the soil was totally exhausted of potash, phosphoric acid and chloride, thai peas alone or eyen combined with lime could not restore these elements to the soil. Fortun ately such is rarely so in our soils in which ca6e resort should be had to o'her means, such as bone dust and gypsum, stable manure and guano; either will help the pea amazingly in providing a more luxuriant vine which is sure to eliminate from a lateral State enough of these elements to en rich the land. If lands ever made food crops they surely can be made to do so again, simply hy the plan hero suggested, for it is but science re duced to practice and many about ns aro practicing what they preach oil this subject. Alter all, science is nothing more than properly cultiva ted common sense, directed to the in vestigation of facts relating to any subject, and its value to the fanner has been simply and well illustrated in the recuperation of worn lands by the use of the pea vine in the manner herein and heretofore suggested. There are ve-y many who anxiously enquire how their worn hinds can he recovered without tho use of such a' quantity of stable manure and cotton seed as it is impracticable to obtain, and yet when told how they purely can do so ; because they think they have some piece of Crop, measurably poor at that, which needs Uic plowing at the time when the peas should he sown and ploughed under, they have not the time to do so j and ofler.cr than is supposed the little yellow thing called a crop is more hurt than improved by the plowing it gels at that season of the year. Let us throw away the old bag that our grand parents used to carry pumpkins in and try to grow them so large that it will he necessary to provide a new plan of conveyance. Tnic Nkw Dm?akturb. A Strange Tale by a Preacher. The Presiding Elder of the Mur frcCsboro district of the Virginia Con ference of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, which includes about a dozen counties in the northeastern section of North Carolina, lolls the following rcihaikablo snake story upon the authority of one of the pious itinerants under his ccclcsialical direction. There can be no doubt of its entire truth, strange as the narra tive is, and it suggests the existence of many a mystery in the economy of the lower orders of creation which has thus far eluded the most minute and I searching nci entitle investigation. When the minister was a boy he went out Otic day with his bow and arrows and loitered leisurely along the road I side, testing his marksmanship upon various objects. Coming to where a shallow brook, called in the South a branch',* crossed the highway, he ob served a snake, of the deadly species known as the moccasin, basking in the sunlight. lie shot all his arrows at the formidable rep'.ile, wounding him in several places, and repeated the pas'.iue till the snake was to all appearances dead. Seeing a parly of colored petsons approaching at a dis tance, the boy took the wounded snake in his hands and laid him in a coil in the middle of the path, and then hid himself in the bushes to see what the negroes Would do when they came to the spot. In a few moments another snake of the same kind glided out from the thicket and went up to his wounded fellow and examined him. Then darting back into the covert he returned with some leaves in his mouth pieces of which ho placed carefully upon the wounds, making them ail here like plasters. The ap parently dead snake immediately be gan to revive, and soon recovered his| jiowcr of locomotion and crawled away to the woods. Have the snakes doctors? This incident looks thai way. Charity for the Fallen. Never say anything damaging to the good name of a woman, it matters not how poor she may be or what her place in society. They have a hard enough time at best, and God help Ihe man who woiild give them a kick down the hill. We are all too free wjth their names?we talk too much about them and we do very wrong. The least little, bint that there is something wrong, that ''she ain't all right," whether spoken in jest or in earnest, is taken up and unlike the lolling stone gathers m?ss as it goes from place lo place and at last cornea home to the persecuted creatures With crushing weight. She has done noth ing but keep quiet while her idle per secutors have pursued her, and now she is kicked from door to door, and is fallen so low that none do her rev erence. Give a dog a bad name and you bad as well kill him?talk about a good woman on the streets and across bar-room counters, and you had as well sei her down as a social wreck. No one wants to help her. We don't want so much theoretical religion ; we want a kind of blue jeans and homespun pity that will do /on the washtub and the kitchen as well as the drawing-room and parlor.a I sort of universal honesty that , will not think a woman a thief localise siie happens lo wear a sun bonnet and j walk across the street with a string of mackerel in her baud. There is nothing wrong in manual labor and honest poverty is a sure passport to heaven. The head waiter at one of the hotels in tho White Mountains is a Harvard graduate of tho class of ji87b> ,:.<?.>,;;iVtVr*. Grape Culture. Editor Oranyebury Democrat: I have frequently wondered vhy our farmers so generally used whiskey as a stimulating beverage, a great deal of which being of an impure kind, manufactured from drugs thai are destructive to lifo and health (I do not say that we cannot get a pure article of whiskey, but I do say when we do get it, it is an 'exception,) when it is within the reach of every farmer to supply himself and family with the pure juice of the grape. I mean the scuppernong?"a grape to the manor born," and which never fails in producing its annual crop. Jl is not affected by blight or insects, never irjurcd by cold. The writer knows one farmer who has cultivated them for twenty 3ears, and has never had a failure. I will give you, Mr. Editor, his mode of culture, hoping it may in duce our people to cultivate them and make therefrom a beverage infinitely superior Lo all the stimulating liquors now so uivcrsally used ; a beverage of the pure juice of, the grape. 1 would right hero put in another im portant claim for this grape. It is in I m.v judgment among the best, if not. the very best, table grape of our Southern country. Nine vines properly arranged, plan ted, manured, and cultivated will in a lew years cover HO feet square, and will yield 100 gallons of superior wine. Planting must be from rooted vines and 550 feet nparty should he p.anted in the month of November. Plough the ground eight or ten inches deep, digging holes four, feet in di ameter, eighteen inches deep, till the Indes with soil from fence corners, or muck from ponds or swamps, mixing with about four pounds of acid phos phate or six pounds of Hour of phos phate, place n pest in 1I12 centre of hole lo train vine to ; be careful lo lay the roots well out, have them about two inches below the surface of; the ground, water occasionally, espe cially if Iho seasons arc 'dry. When they commence growing rub oil" all the buds or canes but three and train them up the posts. When they have reached about seven feet, which will be about the second year, erect for lucm trellis lo iuu on, lei them be just high enough lo be reached when standing on the ground, l'ut down four posts at the distance of live feet from centre post so as to make a square ; across each two post lay a rail or piece of scantling, ten or twelve feet long (I use rails split for fencing) and on theyc lay rails split liner or smaller. This gives a trellis of from ten lo twelve feet square. In one or two years il will be necessary to extend your trellis by pulling two post down mill way between 3*our old er post, and on them put rails as be fore. In this way in tt short time the ninety leet square will be cover ed. It will 1c nccossury to manure every year until the whole surface is completely shaded, Gallier air the old bones and pile around the vines, and give them nn occasional dose of phosphate Hour or acid phosphate, and they will very soon amply pay for all expense and trouble. GitAl'E ViNi:. The Position of Radical Leaders. Every Democratic paper in the country should, during the next year, take particular pains to show the ticasonable attitude the Republican leaders assumed during the extra scs sion of Congress with reference to the Union. Their clearly defined purpose is to provincialize the Stales and nullify the Federal government as one of delegated,limited and restricted powers, and substitute therefor a powerful centralized authority, which will wholly exclude the people from participation in the government, and consequently destroy the Union and the republic. If those treasonable designs arc emphatically ventilated, we will shortly see these blatant con spirators begin to hedge and finally swear they never entertained any such views. They must be compelled lo humblo themselves before the American people, whom they have grievously insulted,- and beg their pardon.?Louisville Courier-Journal. Magistrate?"What ! A man can bo cruel enough lo maltreat his lawful wedded wife, and even hurl a plate at her head?" Prisoner?"Rut, your Honor, do you know my wife?" Mag istrate?"I have not the honor." I Prisoner?"Then just go slow." .Memory fori the Dead. A bereft husbandstrolled upon the seashore to g?icvo alone over the wreck of his huittan. ambition and happiness?tho death of his wife. There is ever a sweet, plaintive, re sponse sent the grooving lic&rt from the great "sad seira and the murmui' of the waves lull'To rest, upon a downy conch, in divine repose, the meditations of the tortured mind and bruised heart. Tins grief stricken wanderer saw at his feet a broken shell, and placing it lo his car, heard within it yet the echo of the ocean ; taking a pencil lie' wtote, upon the1 shell: f,Oh! memory hi iftjOT broken shell1, Win not in loShiif all, l.yse thee as well?". , , How man}' thousand, who mourn to-day, the death op fond relative or friend, would not, if they could, lose lh.: murmur that ling.us in Ihc heart, and say with the sail poof, that as I am broken and ruined, why not let me lose all?even memory, and yet they cling lo.JJ*Kt memory in tears and prayers..! The shell was broken, but the murmur hud C?QOt up into the tinted recess, there to repeat its native echo. And so with the heart, when once love is placed liiere,jwilh most sacred of all ties?marriage?it will linger there though the felt'destroyer break the shell. The mur'yiur will repeal the song that wau burn, the day Ibis? love was placed within their Weddel) hearts: The blow may bend the life of the stricken male, and the billows of grief dash their heart, ruthlessly, hut the star of hope gleams amid the tempest, and the anguished bosom ! calms beneiilh the sacred promise, "f am the re.-urreelion. and the life, Snilh the fiord } he that bfiliev.cth in me, though he were-dead, yet shall he live, and whosoever livelh and bo licve'h in iuj shall never die." Were il not for this promise the murmur of lo"e would be 4?o. hopeless to dwell within, a humayi heart, the un linnlod depravity ^hopelessness would not, could n1?t, realize the olaim of love, or the 'voice of a deli cate sentiment. Memoiy would diown in the slough of despair, and love perish with the object that created it 1 It is that blessed hope and belief in the "communion (if saints'- that gives memory for the dead its life, "llopo- \ leas grief is passionless," and must die when Ihc sudden hurst of anguish is over. Tho memory for the dead.is I the most sacred of all human associ ations. , The silver chain of lovo be gun on earth and woven to complete ness, with "older, links in Heaven, hold us in perpetual and rapturous fetters. When we look over the scenes of the past in which tho de- 1 parted loved one was a joyous par-1 licipant, painfully lite heart bleeds,) and the anguished bosom breathes u silent prayer. Our tears and sighs arc seen and heard, I believe, by our sainted ones, and as they are the highest testimonials we can render of our devotion, wc arc Wessed when we oiler them. Itieh arc those who have a treasure in Heaven ! and while J i.t often costs the saciilice of every! earthly joy lo possess lhi3 treasure, it is therefore more to be, treasiued, "Despise not the chastening of the Lord," bul alas! many do. Lord Uacou says : "It is better to have no opinion of the Creator than one which is unbecoming to Him." When Gq.l smites us, and alllicts us by taking away those we most loved, wc deem il unmerciful?but if we will think of j the infinitely grander welfare of those whom He has called', wc can no long-1 er entertain this unbecoming feeling ; such a feeling is selfishness; purely. The memory for the dead is given i us for some wise purpose, and it is j our duty not only lo submit to the1 will of God, but to struggle to meet the demands made upon us by ibis judgment or chastisement, Do iiolh-1 ing unworthy of the memory of thaj sainted one ; and che:ish their inoiuo ry with a devotion strengthened by a [claim upon the. riches of .Heaven, j The heart must ache; it is lonely, Nights must be spent ir) tears and sighs, because your voice, calling them back, meets no responsive an swer, but perishes in painful silence and your tears llow on. Days even amid "pleasures and palaces"- arc- bc dimmcd by the eclipse of yonf,carthly joy, alitl all your worldly efforts lo gain solace in a race with 'grief will be futile still. There is but one com forter?Jesus Christ wdio said : "Come untdi pie all ye that labor and are heavy laclcuj and Twill give, you rest." Notes from Sandy Run. Editor Orangcburg Democrat: Having visited Sandy Run, I thought it would not be uninteresting to our farmers to inform them, ns nearly as possible, of the condition of the crops in thut section of the country. .Some of the lending farm ers say that the cotton crop-is equal ly as goud as last year, although not as large, but better fruited. The cause of it being smaller, they think, is on account of suffering so long for rain, which they did not get, so as to do any marked good, from the lClli of May lip to the 24th of July, Tin*, corn crop is injured in some places, in others it is an average crop ; in the swamp, however, it is, taken on an average a little belter than last year. The rain has been very heavy ever since it commenced, and there is I SOine danger of its injuring the cot ton serinesly, in making it throw oil its {fruit. The small grain crops were above average, and particularly the wheat, as most of the farmers made abundance lo do them this year. This should be an encouragement lo our farmers lo plant more small uraih Unit the expense of their family food might be reduced lo a smaller sum. The farmers, principally the young men of said section, have organised a debuting society, which is an at tractive hud on the once lively und nourishing rose bush of Sandy Run; ami it, will bring If) light many n spark which had grown dim. With stich men as officers, with such young men as debaters, ami wit h such young 11-iilies as encouraging instruments, us i they have, the society will ultimately upset the inditl'crenco' of out-siders or critics. Jf .the good people of San dy Run continue to manifest the in terest limy have of late in the im ! pioycmuul of Iheir homes, and work at the same time so cheerfully for their county, they will soon shake [Oil the old scars Jell by the ravaging hand of the last war. Stiltoman. Help Yourself. Fight your own battles. Hoe your own row. Ask no favors of any one and you will succeed live thousand times heller than he who is always beseeching some one's patronage. No one will help you as you will yourself, because no one will be so heartily interested in your affairs. The first step will not bet such a long one, perhaps; carrying your own way up the mountains, you make each one lead to another, and stand firm in that while you chop still another out. Men who have made fortunes are not those who bad $2,000 given them lo start with but started fair with a well earned dollar or Iwo. Men who have by Iheir ex erlions acquired fame, have not been thrust into popularity by puff, begged or paid for, or given in a friendly spiiil. They have outstretched their hands and touched the public heart. Men who win love do their wooing,and I never knew a. man lo fail so signally as the onu who had induced Iiis affec tionate grandmother to speak a good i word for him. Whether you work for fame, fun, love, money or for any thing else, work with your bands and brain. Say ?'! will," and some day you will conquer. Never let any man bavq. it to say, "I have dragged you up." Too many friends hurt a man more than none at nl). A Wise Painter They have a wise sign painter in Detroit. Likewise a woman who knows a good chance to-improvedier piospccts when she sees one. . The 'other* "day a Judy opened .esmall.'inil linCry store and engaged a painter'to 'paint'her a sign. \Mhcn it' Came home' she saw that it read : "Miss.' J. Rlunk," elc, and she called out, "You have got an extra 's' in Mrs., and you must paint the sign over] again." The' painter saw the error/, .but he did not Svatit the job of cor recting it, and' he"replied : "Madam, j haven't you had two husbands?" i"Yes, sir." "You were a Mrs. when I von lost the first?" "I was." "And , do you think a woman can go on j marrying fovever and nok lengthen i out her titlo?. -Mrss. means a woman has'.heon twice married, and-is young enough to marry again, and only yes terday a rich old gontloniah was in our shop, and said if lie had any idea that you woijo heart free he'd come ujK-r" . "Oh, 'woll, you. can nail up the sign," e.lic interrupted. And it is liiere to-day. ? Painful Scene. One morning while seven or eight citizens were holding down chairs and box'cs in a Michigan avenue grocery, and unanimously agreeing that this was the greatest country on earth, a stranger entered and said: "Gentlemen, 1 suppose you are all familiar with politics?" 44We are," they replied in chorus. "And you know all about the fundamental prin ciples of liberty?" "We do." "Well, I'm glad on it, for I've made a bet with a feller back there as to how the] reading of the constitution begins. One of you just write me down the first ten words." While he felt for a stub of a pencil every man began scratching his head and cautiously eyeing his neighbor. One began muttering; "Now I lay me-," and a second said some thing about "Resolved," and a third wrote on the top of a cracker-box : "Oil motion, it was voted that?thai -." There was a great deal of coughing and sneezing and nose blowing, when a boy came in and said tin; stranger's horso had run away. lie rushed out, and seven faces brightened, up ami smiled, and seven men tool; fresh chews of tobac co and tried not to look too impor tant wdien the grocer said : "The con stitution? Why, every ouc of you can repeat it by' heart with your eyes shut?or course you can.** i*p',',U- N i Information Wanted. Editor Ordvgebttrg Democrat; The recent severe drought will (or should') make every farmcr.dou his "?'studying cap,"-and I propose to ask of those who have experience in such matters the following questions: 1st. Arc the blades of sorghum (cured as. fodder good for work ani mals? or is it injurious?: .1 have en quired, buttho usual reply is "they say" it will kill stock by clogging. , 2d, .How eau the stubble of sugar cane bo securely protected through tho winter when left in the ground where grown tho present season? The object is to use all the available cane for syrup, and procure seed from the stubble. Last winter much of my stubble remained alive wilho.ut any attention and is growing finely,, when manured k and loo!-;s more luxuriant than that from the cane planted in the usual way. I trust the "knowing ones" will re ply through your columns as.'-'heajr-, say" goes for nothing with Ac.'.ttCOL.V. The Farmer. It does one's heart good to see a pleasant-faced farmer. So indepen dent and yet so free from vanity and pride ; so rich and yet so industrious ; so patient and persevering in his call ing, and yet so kind, sociable and obliging. There* arc a thousand no ble traits about hi3 character. Eat and drink with him and he won't set a mark on you, and sweat it out of you with double compound interest; somo pcoj.de will; you are welcome. He will do you a kinducss without expecting a return by way of com pensation?it is not so with every bo-, dy. Ho is usually more honest and sincere, less disposed lo deal in b w and underhand cunning, than man}' other people. He gives to society its best support, it firmest pillar that support's the edilico of government. He is the lord of nature. Look at him in his plain attire; laugh at him if. you will, but believe he caif* laugh back if he pleases. More Radical Rascality., It would seem that chronic rascali ty permeates tho Radical.-party from* cenUo to circumference?from Wash ington city to the remotest bouuds of official service. As an evidence of this Col. Mosby, now Consul at i'long Kotig, in a recent letter to the State Department, states that-forty thousand dollars, of the consular fees which belong to the government, col lected at that olllce bcfoic bis arrival, have Hot been accounted for, and that, for, ibq. last seventeen years, of the fees collected under the law regu lating Chinese emigration, he should judge that at least two hundred thou sand dpllars have not. been reported to the treasury. It devolves upon. U"? Republican le'adora- to provo that tho Treasury Department baa. not. often secretly printed millions of dollars to carry elections for the Republican party, and subsequently pretended that the. over issuo was counterfeit. Subjects for Reflection. PuowpjCKPJBf S. C, Aug. ?, 1879. Editor Orangcburg Democrat: '?Trustee," in your issue of August 1st, lias spoken fully on the subject of Free Schools and female compe tence. How utterly absurd to think of a lady pretending to teach when not qualified 1 It is preposterous in the extreme. Allow me, Mr. Editor, the privilege of asking a few ques tions : Are all men competent to Oil offices of trust and honor? Are all successful in their avocatious of life? ?vhclher farmer, (who is the world'* producer,) merchant, lawyer, me chanic or doctor. Do you not know, Mr. Editor, ttint tiiero are incompe tent practitioners of medicine? And alas ! many have been killed (I can't any otherwise) through their igno rance of the practice of physic. Such cannot be said of woman. Her great liepidity of doing wrong will keep her within that sphere of purity for which she was alone created. But enough, or the "iords of creation'* . will think I want the last word. A suggestion to our worthy School'Com missioner, through your valuable col umns : Would it not give more uni versal satisfaction for tile patrons to co-operate with the trustees in elccU lug teachers for their schools? May be then worthy widoW ladies would be elected and get what is due thorn as persons of refinement and culture. The Fair is coming on, and'as usu al the country folks are solicited to contribute. What for, may I askV To woik for months in ndvancc on on [article (or exhibition arid" ;receive nothing ; or to be rewarded by hear ing ' some one of the managers Bay, "Oh,, it will do to fill upV' Such lan guage is quite compliihent?ry to our sensibilities, and many have resolved hot.tb assist in "filling tip" any lrore. S^ow, if the county reallywants the ? FairTo be a complete success, act Just ly towards the inhabitants of the ru ral districts in rewarding according lo merit, and you will have the uni versal support of the people. The showery wcathes which, baa. lasted about two weeks has cleared off, and thereby urges farmers to cure fodder that the. drought did not "icookj' Has QuiHiuo-adtvanood' in> price in spite of the absence of the revenue tax? Ope of youc popular drug stores retails,iu at four dollars and'eighty cents per ounce. If fevers should ? T ,,..1.1 ' Z_?_. 1_ > Ki. CGUiIXi?-iiCt_, x nuUm iguuiauiljr \ s J prescribe dogwood berries and cotton, seed lea as a sure cure. There is an opening here for a lodge of the Knights of Honor. My article is va ried in sentiment, but what is the spice of. life? John Joel. "I was once very shy," said Syd ney Smith, "?but it was not long be fore I made two very useful discove ries : First, that all mankind were not solely employed in observing mo. (a belie lhat all young people have ;)> tho next, that shamming was of OA, use, that the world was very clear*, sighted, and soon estimated a man at his just value. This cured me, and I determined to be natural and let tho world find me out." . The sea is the largest of all ceme teries nnd its numbers sleep without monuments. Over their remains Ibi same storms beat and f,ho same rjcqui om by minstrels of the ocean is sung to Iheir honor; there unmarked thq. weak and the powerful, the plumedj and the unhonored arc aJiUe undiotm tiiiguished, The Kentucky Stale election came off on the 5th,, and resulted , in an overwhelming Democratic victory. Several precincts, which last year were carried by the Greenback party, were carried this 3*car by the Demo crats. The Grcenbackers and Na \ tionnls made no sort of a fight this j lime. Keep cool if you can ; don't drink an)thing with alcoholic poison in it; pat sparingly of plain, simple' food; keep a good conscience; read the Dkmoouat regularly, hut don't forget to pay for it. By a close observance of the above rules you will live until you die. <.-.:' Wc all of us are apt to prate about our independence of, character, and yet the notice of' arrest man affects most folks just, as^ a.jiut on the head does a puppy. _li_<i ,?; ., i. - ? There is nothing lower than bypoc ricy. To profess friedship and act [enmity la a proof o?, total depravity.