[?]
"LET ALL THE ENDS THOU AIM'8T AT BE THY GOD'S, THY COUNTRY'S. AND TRUTH'S."
VOL. IX. CAPE ISLAND. CAPE MAT COUNTY. NEW JERSEY, THURSDAY, MAT 19, 1364. ; NO. 51.
JtUrf fytrti. madams Lorn. Mr*. Lolly keepe a carrisg*. So do I ; She bss dappled gray* to draw U, Nod* have I. Sba'a bo prooder of bar eoaebnas Thau aov 1. ; With my bloa eyed laughing baby ren Trundling by. w I hid bu face, last aha aboold aaa . The cherub boy, and en»y ma. ( Bar fine buaband baa white finger*. Mine baa not; , Be can give hi* brida a palace, Mia* a cot. -w Hdrt come* borne beueatb the itarl.ght. i Ne'er caraa aba ; Mine come* in the purple twilight— Ki.sc* me— 1 4 And preyslhal He who turn* life'* aanda WU1 bold hi* loved one* in hi* hand*. , Mr*. Lofty baa bar jewel*. So bare 1 ; Sha wear* her* upon her boaom, fntidt L 1 She will lea** here at Death'* porta!*. By and by ; , 1 ■ ball bear the treaaure* with me When I die; ' dB>r 1 bare lore, and *b* ha* gold. | She count, bar wealth, mine can't be told. ^ She baa tho*a who lore bar elation, , None bare I ; But T»a one true heart baaidw ma, Glad am I ; 1 I'd not change it for a kingdom. No, not I ; God will weigh it in the balance, "By and by; i And tbejrib# dint renea He'll defioa | 'Twist ilra.Lofl>'* waal ib and mine. ^ Jfebrt IgisffUang. . JiioFcREFL J air mem ext is puxiTLrami, ' * 1 The mi»ta"of morning tftili hung hear- , ily on lb* mounUin-top, above the *11- ] lagc of Redcliff ; hot the road* which led toward* It were crowded with the f varied population of the (nrrounding f country, from far and near. At Ayle*- ( bary the ahopa were cloaed, the betamtr ; , of the blacksmith laid npon the anril ; , not a wagon cf any deecriplien we* to j be aea a in the etroet, and eren th| bar , of the tarern waa locked, and tba key ( gone with tba proprietor toward* the , cliff, a* a token of au imporUnl era, , which wa* without a partial in the an- j nil* of the plaee 1 In the itreeta then) w«i a groeting of , "old and Jong-parted acquaintance* ; the , bartering of borae* ; the nettling of old * account*; tba buffoonery of half-Intoxi-cated men ; the clatter of women ; the , crying and hallooing of -children and boya, mud the barking and quarreling of ttrmngcr dog*. To look npon the acone, to mingle with the crowd, to llaten to tht eonremtioit. or to aorrey the coun-
tenance* of the auemblcd multitude, , led to bo Batiifaetory aolution of the ^ canaa for which tht* batargenoni maaa , yi congregated. Within the wail# of the old atone jail , at the foot of tba manolain, a different , •cent bad bean that morning witnweed. , Then, ehalned to a rtake in the miarra- j Ma dnngeda, damp, and acareely iHnmi- , mated by ona ray of light, now lay the , emaciated form of ooe whose final doom j MMiod naar at hand. A few boon ba- , fore, bia wife and litli* danghter had , traveled a hundred mile* to meet bim | oace mora on the threshold of the grave; ( Ibey met, and from that gloomy vault, tba hymn a* ceo dad with the ucending , na ; and tba jailor, a* be listened to the , metodiooa voice* of thru* peraoni whom ( be looked upon aa the mo*t daaolate and ( lost of all It tbe wide world, almost ( doubted the evidence of his Htm, and , atood in fixed astonishment at tbe masaire door. Conld tbeae be the voice of n murderer, _and a murderer1* wife and nbildree ? Thia brief, and to be final Intarviaw, baa passed, however ; those unfortunate ona* had loedly enmmeodud eeeh othtr to tba keying of their beajeoly Parent and pasted ; be to fee* tba "aeaembled ■altitude, on the scaffold, and they, aa tbay aaid, to return by wenry josmya to tbeir sorrowful borne. Tbe convict, wore out with .ieknaas and wsteMog, now abq*. ' Hw — i- «• C~l. W» pbc
vlcted at a country town aome miles diitant, for the mnrder of a traveler who had borne biin company from tba Lake*, and wa* ascertained to have large a ton of money With bim, and who waa fonnd in the room In which they both alrpt, at a counrry inn near Redcliff, with hi* thro*t cut. Creel bad alwaya protested innocence, declaring that the deed •aa perpetrated by some one while be was aaleep ; but the circumstance* were against bim ; and although tbe money wa* not fonnd on him, he wa* sentenced to ba hong, and bad been removed to the old atone jail at Redcliff for aecority, tbe county jail being considered unsafe Tbi* waa tbe day the execution we» to take place ; the scaffold wa* already creeled ; the crowd preaaed round the building, and frequent cries of "Bring out the murderer, n were heard. The tun at I alt told the hour of eleven, and there conld be no more delay ; the convict'* cell w»* entered by the officer* attendance, who ironsed bim with the information that all was ready for wilbont, and bade bim hasten to bi* execution ; they Uid h»nd* npon him and pinioned him tight, whilb he looked op toward* Heaven, In wild astonishment, a* ooc new born, and only said — "The dream— the dream I" "What dream, Mr. Cruel f" said the sheriff. "Yon would do me a great if yon wool I dream yourself and me ocl of this disagreesble business." | ' "I dreamed," replied the convict, "that while yon read tbe deqth-warTani ma on the scaffold, a man came tbrongb the crowd and stood before as, in a gray dress, with a white hat and whisker*, and that a bird fluttered over him an5 sang distinctly — "This is the murderer of the traveler '" Tbe officers and jailor held a short cowsaltatloa, which ended jn a determination to look aharply after the man in gray, with tbe white hat, accompanied with many bints of tbe resignation of the-prisoner, and tba possibility of Ms being establish ell by-aoper- • natural agency. The prison doora were cloaed, and Creel, pale and fcablc, with a hymn book in bia band, and- a mien ah meekness and humility, waa seen to tie.- - ing from the prison to the scaffold. He no sooner atenndod it. than his eyes to wander over tbe *s«t concourse of people around him, with a scrutiny that seemed like faith in dreamt ; and while the sheriff read the warrant, the convict's anxirty teemed to increase; be looked and looked again ; then raited hia hands and eyea a moment towards tbe ilear sky, a* if breathing a last ejaculation, when lo I aa be rtanmed bit first position, the very person be described
itood within six feat of tbe ladder 1 The prisoner'* jye caught the right, and Hashed with fire, while be called out — "There is Lewis,, the murderer of lbs traveler 1" and tba jailor, at tbe aame moment, seised tbe stranger by tbe collar. At first be attempted to escape, being secured and taksn before a magistrate, be confessed the deed, detailed all the particulars, delivered np part of the money, informed where another part was bidden, end waa folly committed for trial, while Creel waa tat at liberty, and bsstenod like a man oot of bia senses from the setffold. Three days had elapsed ; Creel had vanished immediately after hia liberation, wbeo the pretended Lewis astonbbed and oonnfonnded tba magistrate* hy declaring Creel to be*Tter husband, that aha bad concealed the disgniae, and performed the whole part by bhftBrectioo ; that ha bad given ber the money, which he had snceesefally concealed ; and that the wbdle, from tba prison to tbe scaffold scene, was a contrivance to effect hia escape, having affected which, she was regardless of cooaeqeances. Nothing eooM.be done with her She waa tat at liberty, and neither aba ncr 1 ber haaband ware heard of again. | __ When a davoted Muaaelme* found limit If in the midst of a terrible tam- ' past at aaa, ha recollected that ha had ' violated tbe Mohammedan law by iadsh , flag fa swine's flash oa a eertoia oectjioa Having made a das coafaarioa
, AS DREW JACKSON AID JOBX C. CALHOUN j Being at that time a member of Con- | gross, aud having occasion to call npon i j tbe President on tome'busineu of e con- j stituent, I fonnd bim in his reception ■ | room, in tbe presence of fifteen or twenty ! persons cssually assembled there, moit of whom ba bad probably never teen before, to whom be was discoursing warmly on the great topics of the day. ''Mr Calhoan," aaid he, "talks of a reserved , ronftitntional right of nniilfication, as if any Constitution could provide for it* own deal ruction. He ha* got a few county court lawyer* to back him ; but," and this tba President said, placing hi* band on a large file of letter*, "I've got the people of tbe United States. If be inesns the lsw of nstnre, that's snother thing. Bot what is tbe lavr cf nature 1 It's Andrew Jackson with hia cpu.ket on bis shoulder, and that's a game he'll find that two can play at " As he uttered tbe last word*, be straightened himself and made tbe motion of "carry arm*." This wa* a definition of the jut nature, (law of nature,) different from those of Grotiona and Poffendorf, but not ffl adapted to tbe exigency of tbe timea. In fact, General Jackson had determineffto aet bia iron heel on tbe Incipient rebellion, and made no lecret of hit firm pnrpoae, with the first overt ■ act In Carolina, lo arrest Mr Csihono. > Happily for bim and bia friend*, tbe compromise tariff brought forward by Mr. Clay, at the next session, (with the best intentions, I so sore, though ss s member of Congress snd a warm friend of Mr Clay, I voted against it,) formed a bridge over which the nnilifiers were t able to mak* a aot wholly igoominion* retreat. Looking back on these transections under the light of experience, there is good reason for tbe opiaioo that it would have been better for the country, infinitely batter for tbe Sooth, if hia r treasonable conspiracy had been allowed | to. ran its natnrai course and meet It* just fate. If tbe serpent of nnllifieslion hsd been strangled in South Carolina in 1838, by the baro of New Orleani, «ei ration would not, onder her laid in 1MJ0-6I, have shot forth its hydra heads ihroqgbuot the Sonth.-JErfworrf Errrttt. a. The taste* of children are alike all 1 over the world. Girls lore something to pet, love and foodie, comb, waih, ' above all dress, and'-crownlng glory hnd 1 power of motherhood — pot to bed. Buys > prefer an article with which they own do ' mischief — a sword, a gun, or a cannon 1 — they iikt destruction — anything that ' smokes or smells like gunpowder. A* ' a yonag friand of mine observed : "If ' fireworks are ao nice, what mint a battle - nreworxs are io nice, wnai musi a oaiue t
- ba !" i I | . — M. Delisle once observed a fly only , i 'as large as .a grain of sand, wbieb ran , i three inebet in half a second, and in ( : that space made the enormous number , , of 540 steps. If a man was able to ran , i aa fast, la proportion to hia six*. hap- , - posing his atap to measnrs two feet, he , j would, in tbe coorae of a minute, have , . ron upwards of twenty mile* A I'm . can ' leap two handred lime# It* tfwn t length f as also ean the loenit. Some f spiders ean leap a eoaple of fact npon their prey. * —In describing tbe difference between ' aristocracy and democracy, it is wittily 1 said of Cincinnati — tbe democracy are those who kill hogs for s living; the 1 aristocracy are those wheta fathers " killed bogs. I, — A certain British barrister wrote I three handa — all different Ha wrote one hand which he conld read ff ud hia t clerk couldn't ; another whieh hia elark e conM read and ha eonldnt ; and a third whieh neither he, hia elark, nor anybody # else conld read. T — "Herolae" is perhaps aa peculiar a word as any In onr language ; tbe two d first letters of it are mala, tbe four first i- a brave man, and the whole word a id bravs woman. j. 1 ■ ■ — A biander-bnaa timing the wrong « "*"• -TIMUa m Ilk. 1-lita.i U»J «"•• "(a" *i — "*»r • -
r | TABLE or RELATIVE VALUES. - 1 The following table from the New i i York Htraid shows the relative value of j j ■ a currency dollar to coin at the different > i rates of- premium from 1 lo 100. Tb* j ' ! fractions (iven are as near the cents a* ! I i tbey can oe approached without the aid t • | of pert* of milla. The table will be 1 ' . fouA vilnable for preservation, and | " will trad to undeceive many who are of! F I the impression '.hat ihe amount of pre- j £ r ssium mu*t be subtracted from the cur- j I nrncj dollar in order to ascertain its j t ' mlstive value. u ' Value of a V*lu«o»«io IVtm. Ciirreopy IVtm. Currrnej I Hollar. Ikollar ■ L 101 99 111 « 11)2 98 112 61} k : 103 97 113 61} . • 104 96} 114 61 i - . 101 914 111 64} | 1 100 941 IK 64} - • 107 93* 117 63} ; I I 108 92) 118 63} I , 109 911 119 62} ; . ' MD 90) 160 62} > 111 90 161 62 i ■ 112 89 162 61} t 113 88 163 61} i 1 114 871 164 61 L l 111 86 161 60} " , 116 86 166 60} 1 117 85 167 192 | *• ' US - 84 168 19} i i | 119 84 169 19} ! . 120 83 170 681 ! , ' 121 r2 171 18} 1 . 122 82 172 58} | < 123 81} 173 571 i ' 124 80 | 174 57} , 125 80 176 57} | , : 126 79) 176 lb) | 1 , 127 781 177 (6| i 1 128 78} 178 56} , I ' 129 77} 179 65fS( , ; 130 77 180 55} ' ,181 76| 181 14} j 132 71) 182 15 ; I 133 75} 183 64) I . | 134 74) 184 14} 135 74 185 14 , > 136 73} 186 13) . 137 73 187 13) ' ' 138 72} 188 13} 1 ' 139 - 72 169 13 1 I 140 71) 190 12) . 141 ' 71 19t 52} ! 142 _ 701 1 92 62a i 1 143 69) 193 11} I 144 69) 194 51) , < . 145 69 191 51} ' 146 68) 196 11 . > 147 68 197 60} 1 1 1 148 67} 198 60) ' 149 67 199 50} I ' 150 66) 200 10 I I IXTEERlPme A SPEAKER. j There was a "stump speaking," and ' I Abner G. D had the platform, en- , 5 lightening the "ontcrrified" long and ; i , loudly. "Feliotv citixens " eaid he, "I ' i 1 now come to a slanderous rumor which 1 1 s has been most dastardly circulated j 1 j against rat from oue end of .the connty ' i to tho other. My enemiea, not content i J t with endeavoring to ruin my political j ■ prospects, have, assasln-like, attempted ! f to blast my good name by their iosidiona 1 , f reports." Abner then stated what the i
was, and continued "I rejoice, t fellow citixeus, to have it in my power c instantly to fasten the lie npon this 1 malicious snd atrocious slander. I see c among you one of tbe mo*t estimable ( citizens of this connty, whose character for tralh and integrity is above question. Squire Scholar, ot whom I allude, • i* acquainted with all tha facts, and I call oo him hero lo stata whether tbi* rumor ia true or false. I pause for a reply." Whereupon Squire 8ebolar < slowly nrose, and io bis strong, slow, sonorons voice said, "I rather think yon 1 did it, Abner!" "Yon old sconodrel I" ■ exclaimed Abner, "wky do yon inter- | rapt me with jonr low personalities , while I am dlscauing great conetitntional qoestione?" And he accompanied this objogatory exclamation with snch a surge of gesticolation that be atepped back beyond tbe platform, fell backwards npon a big dog, amid the howls of wblck, and tba deafening roars of the "sovereigns," the meeting was effectually broken op. — "Annette, my dear, what country is opposite to na on the globe V' , "Boot know, sir." "Well," said tbe perplexed teacher, if I ware to bore a bole through the earth, and yon were to go In at this end, wbere woold yon come oat J" "Oat of the hole, air." — Sir Charles* Lyell, the eminent geologist, says that the coal-fields of AtMriee eovwr aa arao as largo in axteot fa eK Great Britain.
BY AUTHORITY" k LAWS OP NEW JBRS'KY'. I An aei lo eonfinn I be ackoowiadgnKUit' 1 and proof* of de*d(, mortgage*, anu I other ionlruioents in writing, lakeu by | William Peei. i Whereas. H appears to the Legislature _ that William Peet. of tbe City of New was, on ihe eichteenlb day of March, I eighteen hondred and Bfly^ight, dnly ap- | J pointed by tbe Governor of this SUt« a I comiuistiouer lor Ihe State of New York, j j lo take tne arhuoelcOgiueiii oi proof of ! dred* or mortgage* of land* lying in this | j Slate, or of any other instrument in writing | under baud and aeai required by lb* law* ] ] of this rital* to be arknowledged or proved, i and that the said William Peet proceeded I undur the said appointmrnt to take «c- I and proof* of dtrda, morl- j gage*, and other written instruments, and. j mxappreiitniicu of the inet of this , State, contiuued to take them longer than 1 ho said la*» authorised bim to do, by ! I raaton of nhicb defective acknu«l«dguivuta and proof* innocent | arson* may bo tnb- | jecled to groat lo*s and ioconvtnieuoe — j therefore, for remedy of the mine — 1 Do it enactod by the .Senate and Gen- j ' oral Ayvmbly of the State of Now Jerfay. | i That no acknowledgment or proof of any deed, mortgage, or other Inalromqjit of | writing heretofore taken and certified by - tbe aaid William Peel shall be deemed do | live by reason of ancb acknowledgment j or proof having been taken and certified I after bia term of officii bad expired ; but all | ! sncb acknowledgments and proof* *bal| the same vitality sad effect as if the | amid William Peet had been, at tbe lime of I j taking and certi'yiog such ackoowledgmanta '-or proofs, duly aotborixed by law to take | and certify tbe same. | i 2. And be it enacted, Tbal this act aball take effect immediately, i Approved February 11, 1864. , A supplement to an act anlitiad "An act i authorizing commissioners and others lo i execute deeds to tbe heirs or devisees of I deceased purchasers," approved March l sixteenth, eighteen hundred and fifty. I 1. Ba it enacted by the Senate and Gen- [ eral Assembly of tbe Stale of New Jersey, I j where any person who has heretofore | j purchased or uiay hereafter purchase resl I aatste at any commissioner's, execulor'r. or [ guardian's sale, shall have died, or may ! hereafter die, after snch sale ha* been mado j and tba conditions I hereof subscribed and agreed to by the purchaser, bot before the bat beeu confirmed by tbe proper court, or before tbe deed for inch real estate has been delivered, it aball and may i lawful for each commissioners, executors, , administrators, or gnardiana, after such sale j shall be dnly confirmed by tha proper court, lo execute and deliver to tbe heir; . or devisees of the purchaser a deed for tbe I real ratals ao sold, which deed, whan delivered to Its belts of a purchaser dying iuteatate, or to the devisees of a purchaser leaving a will, who. by said will, would b* \ entitled thereto, shall bav* tha same force and effect aa if delivered to the purchaser _i iui : J_J . k. _ ..ij L. . I —
when ; provided, tha or t! dariseea shall perform lb* conditions of sals enbscribcd and agreed to by the pur cbaaer. 2. Aud ba it enacted, Tbal tbia act aball o lake effect immediately. ii Approved February 19, 1864. * A farther supplement to nn act entitled fi ••An act respecting coroners." approved 0 April aaveutaantb, eighteen hundred and forty-six. 1. B# it enacted by tb* Senate and Gan- - eral Assembly of tb* Hut* of New Jersey, j ' Tbal tha provisions of tb* second, third, ' fourth, fifth, and sixth section* of tbe sop- 1 plameot to an act respecting coroners, ap c proved March eighth, eighteen hundred 1 and sixty-one, ba and the same are hereby * extended and made applicable and io force 1 in aud to the connty of Union. f 2. And be it enacted, Tbat all aet* and ' parts of acta inconsistent with this act are hereby repealed ; and tbal this act aball lake effect immediately. Approved February 26, 1864. I — — — i i A supplement to lbs act entitled "An act , to provide for the Government -of tbe . State and lo;fix tbe salaries ot pnblic officer*. 1. Be it eaaetad by tb* Senate and Gan- 1 aral Assembly of lbs Stata of New Jersey. Tbat tha annual salary of lbs chancellor, of tha chlaf jastiea, and of^each or the eaao- : ■ ciat# justice# of tb* supreme court aball ba ) increased a* ran hondred dollar* from aud i after tha passage of thia aet. 2. And b* it a use tad. That this aet shall take affect Immediately. Approved March 14* 1864. 1 0* There may b# aa honest a difference ' batwaso two man aa bwtwaan two tbermo1 maters. The difference in both earn* may i aria* from differewoa ia porilioe.
Agricultural. 1 biCEET IN POT t TO FLAITO®. Ao old fanner, who is sixty-threw yearof sge. and t-OMpfc that ha has aavar jet : had potato** rot'm the ground, giras th* following for the benefit of th# public : 1 plant my potatoes io tha latter part of j April or in the firal ot May- aed io the old of the mookt. When th#|. g»t «P *i* high. 1 pla.Mcr.pud dress them op oie-tv ' lor s .. Wb*atL Set* abow for | I bics«oming. IbeW ia the lima i>. tak# two ! pert* of platter and one part vf fine tall ; 1 j mix well logi-ther, and pot on# large spoon - j ful of tbi* componnd on each bill; drop it 1 I as ti-ar the centre of th# bill a# possible. - I J net as toon at the pota)w* are ripe, lake ■ ! tht-ni out of the }...bavo them peri frctly dry when put iu tbe collar, and keep i , tbcuk in* a dry cool place. Some farm*™ I get tbeir potatoes remain in tha gioond, . soakmg through al! tbe cold fall _rain», 1 uoiil the snow fall*. The potatoes bacomo - i ktueaaed in this way more and juore erery ■ year; hence the potato rot. ' Witk »uch l management tbey should rot. kTI1E EI.DER-BIBU A PRKVEXTITE OE I.VSEf'TH. 1 I It I* not known to many penoe* tbal tha ''common elder-bosh of our country it a j great safeguard again*! the devastation br ' I insert*. If any one will notice, it will ba 1 I found that worma or insects never ttgich 1 ihe cider. 1 hi. fact was the initial pttBt ' of experiments of an Englishman In 1^04> 1 ; and be communicated th* results of jjrit ' experununin to a Londou tnsg.nina. AAci- ' j dent exhumed hi* old work, and a iSau9 | tacky coriespondent last year eotntnonlcajed to the Dollar Newspaper a copy of We 1 practical results as asserted by tbe Knglil|h experimenter — that tba leaves of the elder scattered over cabbage, squashes, cocum- ( ber*. aud other plants subject to the ri^r- , age* of insect*, effectually shield them, f The plom, and other fruits subject to tfia ' 1 ravage* of ioieets, may be saved by pUofag bunobe* of elder leavee *• tbw h^eacbee and through th* tree*. THOROUCH TILLAGE. | I At one of the lriab aprirnhural mcelinA*. r j one of the speaker* remarked— and tb j l roth may be well applied in tbi* ccoulry 1 D j "What brought oot the immense egricoL j I torsi waailb of Ecotlaod T And what out , abled the small farmer in Belgium, who. oil r (even or eight acres of light, sandy laodk. 1 was able to (do belter far bimsatf and hia^ y family than we can do oo twenty or thirty! acres of land in this country 1 It waa not v „ hy allowing three-fourth* of a light tiliaca V r farm to remain in poor herbage, and making , j tha other qoarter pay the rent. It waa [ e became tb* farmers in tboa* countries It mads agriculture a study, a duty, and a j, pieasore, and becaose tba farmers till tbeir r land to tba'best advantage, and because no „ man there would keep one single acre of e I sod more in bit pmaaaeion th.o hia Mpilal ,r and hi* m so- would anabls bim to col-
li vaU." cure or scouts nr cattle. An English farmor commend* th# us# of acorn meal aa a sura ears Tor diarrheas born cattle, sheep, and lambs, aud young stock generally. H# raja: "1 sent the dried acorns to the mill lo ba ground into and whan I found symptom* of aeonr diarrhoea io my cattle 1 ordered two handful* to be mixed in a hrau mash and giveu warm immediately aud to contlnaa once a day until tbe disease disappeared. Tbi* proved a never-failing core, insomuch " that I never bad any trouble from the disafterwards ; and my neighbor* easing • thia, had recourse to me for a little of my flour when the dissaau appeared ia tbeir cattle, which, of course, I was (1*4 to give them, tbe result beiog the same as la my own caaa." BOW TO STOP BLOO#. Take fine dust of tea, or tb* scrapings of tb* inside of tannad Wether, and- bind it" close npon tb* wound, and blood will soon cans* to flow. These articles are at all ; lima* acoaaaibU and tasy lo be obtained. A'ter lb* blood baa ceased to ^low, laudc- . nam may b* advantageously applied to the wound. Due regard lo lb tea instructions r will save agitatioo of tha mind sad running . for tba turgeoo. wbo wpuld make no butler * , prescripttoo if present. 1 MUUI16. 1 Never lose tight of tha advantage* which thorough draining bring* with it ; and plan all changa* and cukaru wiie^.** view to a vystemalic withdrawal of tA. water from 1 tb* aabaoii at tb* earliest opportunity. f W Neglected duties cry oat sgwiikt u* at every lam.

