The Western Georgian. (Rome, Floyd County, Georgia) 1838-18??, July 17, 1838, Image 1

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WJB WBOTIBS Vol. I. FUELISHUft) EVEHV TUKSDAY MORNING BT Stt.H’EL fr> JACK. —— Tersu®. ’’Tinnse Dollars per annum,in six months or four Dol lar# at tho expiration of the year (Subscribers iiviog uni of ilia State, will be expected in all cases to pay in advance. No subscription received for leso tlian one year, •unless the money is paid »<’ atfvaaev; and no paper •will be discontinued until ail nrrearg-s are paid, ex .copt at the option oftho Publisher. I’eraons request ing a dtscontiiiuanc* of their Papers, are requested to bjar in mind a settlement of their accounts, AuvKßTiemiKNfo r. ill lie inserted at the ii-h •>; rates; "when the number of itt-ortioim i» not specified, they will be continued until ordered out. j r An, Lettcis to the Editor or Publisher, on matters connected with tho tstabltshmtrit, must be Post Paid iii ouier to secure attcuiioti, (LT Noticeqf the sale of Land and Negr .es,’by Administrator#, Executors or (hrmliun!-, must be pub lished Ktxrr o.ars previous to the day ol sate. {D* The mln of Personal Property, in like niiuer, .must bo pubit-u .d roji t v t>.'.«v;i previous lo the uay ol sale. CT Non ’ft 1 1 Debtors and Creditors of an Estate, must be published forty Da-V . O’ Notice that Application w ill bf made to the < 'nutt of Ordinary for Leave to noli Land and N rgross, must be published folk months. (! j' Noiice that Application will tie made for Let ters of Admin?st**’*tieu, ib.ot bi- pub! rhr d lIHRI- liaVS and Leiters of Disillusion, bix|monthil ITT For Advertising—L«tiers of C ituti->n, /> If /’No'.ice to Debtors and < rcditorr, (4 ) day*,) 3 S 3 Four IHonth Nuiioos, '•'* Sales of Peraonrfl Property by Executor , Admin s tratois or GuarJicn", 3 2;> Sales of Land ol , gmes l.y do. 4 Application for Letters of Dtemisr/.-n, 4 Other A'ir*i: -*• n.'iii a v. il *e chained 7 > cot.t-t for every t»-iri»< it lino" «»( “ ori'l typo, (or si -ice ecpit. Valetit,,) first n>-’ rtion, nnd o') cents t-r each wet lily (WBhtVHi nice. II jiubl »l<< d>v, ly other w« <k, 624 < '-■ for each contimmmm. It pubhrht d mien n month it will be civil! ’ I • ich time a* a now adverl'smticiit. Fur a single itui'ttii’ii one Dollar per rquarc. ** M *'**’’ •- '.'“ v I W; TI.- -> . I " I<a * "■ T l.rts pri'Viith <P On yt’Sit'itlny tlio lloii.-te oi Rcprt svntativ< s njrcted lie Constituiioinil ’j’ir;i‘-iiry bit! by n volt; of 125 to Hl- Iho tibln tmil < loqnent nrgmni’nts of Messrs. Drum, goole, I'it’itvns, Rin It, Hunter, uiid others availed nothin l !; ngnmst tlm mysterious nppiul.s of n potner wfic.su Rif totid is inure n sth s than that of Tully or Demonsthem s llcpub. licaiiism ilitl all lliuL.it could to rescue the Government mul tho demoralizing despotism eFn moneyed fti intocruey, but, nil hi vain. us it Ims always done, tallied to gether till tlm elements of opposition. Ihe Ranker, —the Stock .jobber,—the Shaver,-- the anti-Mason, —tlm Abolitionists—tlm con Ncivativc all combined topetin r, anti the it .suit has bet n ns we have sttded’ Tlm (icciision is mm that rails for comment but w<* have iv>‘ leisure to indulge in leinarks. ( Imrei’s of ii Very mvst -im "s and e.xtruordi. muy I'har'icler, Imve becti effected in the lust fuw days—and wo ino !■ ft to conjeciuro as to tho agency. lime, however, in whoso train, truth is ever nn attendant, u.II probably dis close facts and eireumptancis which may leave liitle to conjecture, r'lnouith, for the pi> s-nt, X ' know that hits triuwphtd. Ihe wte<tM.« which it imploved may be the subject , of future mveslignlion. Au I now we turn from this self-constituted board of bank din levs, who aro determined that both tho Government and the People shall submit to their authority—wo turn from them to tho imoi’Li: thkm«ki.vkß. The issuo is made up—U’AftAfZ the monep ilcalers ghall oe. conic the si i'KKMr. row Fit in this countri/. Whether tuky «/i«Z/ dictate to this Govern. ntrnl~—«ssuine and cjcercisc the sovereign av. ’iHOßn'Vhr create a I’APKH ccukkni v for this great nation, in despite at the < unstitv vio.x and compel the fkopi.k io take tl in kx. changk for the J*ROI>V<TS of LABOR OX Tiir.tß own tkrus. d'his is (lie issue now dis tincily made up and presented Io the country, and every man must uhuko off hid lethargy, aud prepare himself for the contest. It the Federal party succeed, the Government cans cs to boa Government of tho tkoflf. : and beeomes a mere agent —a corrupt machine ol the moneyed mono|>olists of the country. Tho wages of prostitution will he regularly pmd out to members of Congress, who will become to all intents eu I purposes, a mere bo.mi of bank directors, abusing their high functions at tho bidding of their masters and sncrilicing their consiituenia to tho slake, less cupidity of sordid cnp'tahsls. I hey w iii shingle the wbote country with corporations and exclusive privileges, and make tho honest labor of tho people tributary to a vast uemey td aristocracy. If there ever was a lime when the virtue and putrioiixm of the p> oph should be reused into action it is now. The Federal aristoc jraey of money ha* contrived so to manage the iStute Governments as to secure to itself exclusive privileges in the chaiters cf nine hundred banks. These, wielding the immense power of three hundhf.o millions of dol. labs, find hourly adding to the amount, have been organized and brought out into the Hold against the Government and the people, de manding that both should yield obedience and • pay to them the immense annual tribute of ! fifty millions of dollars —nearly equal I j to the nett proceeds of the entire productive i labor of the whol-e Union exported io foreign II markets I 'Pl.is tribute they demand, not for . \ capilal loaned, but for credit sold ; and which 1 1redif has been given to them by laws passed ' iin despite of that equality of rights secured • by our insfituions ! : ; The question arises and demands attention, ’; —u hal is to be the result of this contest? We ( j confidently answer in one word—freedom ! ; 1 freedom from tho shackles of a moneyed ar- i j istocracv. Such has been the result of every I Icontest in which the ieople. of this country I have been engaged against those who would • make themselves, whether foreign or domes- [ I tie. Biitisb power from abroad triedit one?- —and Federalism at home made a similar of-’ fort, in 1708. In each case the people came J off victorious; —and so it .will be again, the ■ VOTE GIVEN YESTERDAY WILL DEriFOY THE j ' POLITICAL ! IIOSPF.CTS OF MORE MEN THAN ANY i TII/VT WAS EVER GIVEN IN THE HALLS OF CON cress; not < xccpting that on the alien and sc. j lion luw«. It has served to show the true at i titude and complexion of individual-, and I I brought matters to a distinct bsue. It will,’ ■ therefore, lead to uu active and er.e.rgeiic or. • | gunization in every district, and by pullic dis i I cession bring out the true merits ol the ques-1 I tion—disseminate correct views—and unde- ; i reive the people who have been d< luded by a ; I Fvstrmatic course <if mi- representation, ndop. 1 I ted, r< commended and practl&kl by the Fede.’ I ral party, Lorn Mr. (lay the leader, to the low. j lost hired slangwhr,ngei, that haunts the galie.j fries and reporh r’s bo.xis. I ins is what is; j most to be desired—fur it is tlm only means of reaching the people, since tho press has ’ become ike men; tool ol ambitious iudividu-; nls—suppressing the truth—or suggesting' I falsehood, just as iln; interest of its favorites required. All that is required is i (j**, ♦*—»-*<.—.,> i nd (or this rea- son no ma*n who voted against'this great meas ure of ‘ DELIVERAXt AND I.IBEBTy” ought io be allowed to pass without opposition, no matter how weak the Republican parly .may be in his district. The object is discussion,; full aibl free discusson; — and this can bd; obtained though there bo but one or two Re-\ publicans to a hundred Federalists. This, I then, is the first step to bo taken. There is not the least doubt but. that many members have knowingly misrepresented their constit-; mmts. I.> Georgia, Alabama, , Mississippi, I South Carolina, North -Carolina, Virginia; j ’f'. in. , un i Louisiana, this is incontro. v< rdblr. I'liev must, therefore, expect to be. hiou ;ht to ncc-iuut; —for the very act i self,, without rulerciice to the qiu-stion, strikes at’ the fund imei't d principles of our fn-n rep i rtsemafive Government. Besides this, the subject involved the vital interests of the en-. tire Smith; wli eh Ims been overlooked in de ft-reime to mere individual ambition, or some- Ihing rise still nearer to Sell’. 'lne question,| ; though ended l<>r the present here, will but h.i\e its ' i ciiuiiid! in tlm country. Like tlm fabled bird it will receive now life fiom its death. It w ill rest not until both Govern, j j mint and people shall bo rescued from the. i thraldom of a money aristocracy. I his is j our confab nt belief; —und we appeal to lime i for its realization. CANADA. i Tbc following is « copy of a “proclama. Ilion” reccnlly issued by tho loath r of the j gang that desttoytrl tho steamboat bit Ro! ert I I’ecl. I I To all to whom it may concern. -•I, Wi liam Johnson, a national born cili- I r.en of Upper Cana, a, certify that 1 hold a 'commission in (he I’aliiol service of Upper : Canada as commander m chief »>f the natal , forces am! flotilla. I commanded ”e < xpe I i tion that captured and destroyed the stcam » er Sir Robert Peel. The men under tny com mnnd m that expedition were nearly al! nal- I ural born English subjects—the exceptions i were volunteers tor the expedition. My ■ ' Head Quartern was sn an Island in the St. I Law rence without the jurisdiction of the Um- I ted States, at a place named by mo Fort s I Wallace. I am we'd acq laiule I »nh tlm i ! boundary line, and know which of tho Islamls -Lio an! which do cot, belong to theUmt.d • ; Stales; end m the selection of Um Is’und i i I wished to be pos’tice and not iocatu w. s! the jurisdiction of the United Slates, and Im 1 t j reference to the decision of the Cammiseion- - j ere under the Oth article of the Treaty lo I Ghent, done at Utica, in the State of New ' York, (Bth June, 1832, I know the number <*f 1 she Island, end by that decision it was - British territory, hold possession u - that station, and we also occupy a station f some twenty or more rm.es t'ram the louadi- IV im <1 o in , «?tt slice, an d o derati on. ROME, FIxOYO COUNTY, GEORGIA, JULY 17, <B3B# ry line of the United States, in what was her Majesty’s dominions until it was occupied by us. I act under orders. The object of my movements is the independence of tho Cana das. lam not at war with the commerce or property of the citizens of lire United States. “Signed this the tenth day of June, in the the year of our Lord one thousand eight hun dred and thirl v eight. ' “WILLIAM JOHNSON.” From the Montreal Herald. His Ivxccllem-y tlm Earl of Durham has ordered instructions to be issued, for the pres ent, *hat the improvements in tho house which he has .engaged in town, shall be discontinu ed. Various rumors were iu circulation in dbnsoquenco, but none that are general, are true. Lord Durham had demanded the dtdiv i ery to the British author ities of the prisoners | concerned in the burning of tho Sir Robert | Pec.!, and if it is not complied with by the | .American Government, he will take upon him self tlm responsibility, as he has tlm power, 1 of declaring war between Great L-iiluia and 1 tho U. States, ami will proceed at once to ' EugJandin u ship of war. I ' From the Brunswick Advacati. i Indians in Ike Okefinoke Swamp.— Since our last, we have bad an opportunity of con.vcr- 1 sing with a volunteer of Camden, who went . on a tour days lour of July under the corn u and of Maj. Hopkins of Camden, in two i instances, small trails were found leading into , the swamp, which to the experienced seemed • lobe lire tracks of very small parties of Indi- I ans. Beside this, a fan ily at tlm head of the I St. Mary’s, had observed the tracks of Indi : uns f bout their premises. i From the facts thus developed, and from 1 the intelligence received from the troops un the Suwannee, and from West Florida, wo j may it to be well uscer+fimcd that a J small body of Indians imve established them i selvi sin the Swamp. It is not likely that ! they can exceed one hundred and fifty or two > hundred in number. In most maps, we find I the w hole country In tween the head of tlm ■ Si. Mary’s and .the Suwnnneq put down as one vast swamp. This ch>es not correspond Wit h• tvivflß • 'Fhcnfto irn HiSf «.ve*>n th T of those two streams a ridge of more olevaterf, country upon which are many hammocks and pine islands, which havu i.uver been explored. To this district, it is said, the Indians have betaken themselves; an lit is even reported i that they Imve planted then; for the season. ■ Whether it will seem advisable to explore the region in force, (and without a considerable rorco it should not be done,) remains dor the . Government to decide. Meantime, the only security of those who remain in the vicinity : of th« swamp, is tho-presumption, which has. so often proved fatally mistaken, that the In i dians will not commence attacks, so long us they remain unmolested. — i From the jm-ksonvillto Courier Extra. June 91. ANOTHER INDIAN FIGHT. 5 r. M. —By the Steamer Santee we have • just received uilclhgenee of a battie with the Indians, on day before yesterday, within a few miles of Newnunsville. Capl. Beal ol the Dragoons, with 30* or 40 men, Lieut. Howe of the same corps, with 12 men, <md Capt. Walker a volunteer, tell in with a body of about CO Indians, who ga- • them a w arm s;>- j luieT Walker was killed, and 5 of Beal’s command w re wounded. Five horses were killwl;—among them Beal’s and Howe’s Several Indians said to be killed. Gen. Taylor with six ci inpimics of men ! arrived yesterday at Black Creek. 'I'ALLAH vsfi E, June 23. We learn by a gentleman direct from 'Tam- I pa that a day or two before leaving, the Indi, aus who recently came in with Alligator at ! that post, made an attempt t > escape. • A I party of-twenty warriors stole horses, loaded i them with provision!, and decamped in the ’ night.—Gen, Taylor immediately despatched . two companies of troops in pursuit; who sue -1 reeded in capturing the horses and provisions, but the Indians made their escape. On the return of tlm troops twenty-five horses laden . with provisions was also captured. It was the intention r,o doubt of all the warriors to i have made their escape, but the vigilance ol J Gen. Taylor prevented it. Alligator is yet ; nt Tampa, and we are informed in the employ : of Ge.u. T., at liigh wages, to bring iu the . Indians. j Wo have li tlt# hopes of inducing the Indi ans yet out to surrender. Their movements d are most hostile. We learn that every post 1 abandoned by our troops has been destroyer!. Fort Clinch on the Witu acoochec, Fort King, and Fort Mel! »n have been burnt, and most lof the bridges in the nation destroyed. Scarcely had <.-ur tr~ passed tho bridge i’ near Fort King, ere ?. was buried by the In < dians, who were follow..;g close jn tho rear of the army. i Oar informant states that Gc-n. Tayior is pursuing Gen. Jesup’s plan of coaxing the host Ta. We are n.sakvu i wir opiiii’-ns eatertaiiivJ of th’* officer »f he suffers him- self imposed upon more than once by the trea chery of this faithless remnant of b'eminples. —Floridian. — GEORGIA DISHONORED. When tlm astounding fact was disclosed, that the chief magistrate of Georgia had made > a proposal to buy up John Ross, and had ac tually implored him to accept (be “price” of his perfidy, ave felt that the cup of her di gra dation was full; but we are called upon to record a still darker blot upon her escutcheon. ; Who that knows the character ol Horace' Everett, of Vermont—his vindictive hostility to Georgia, and his unmeasured abuse of her policy towards the Cherokees—who that knows him as one of tho most activo und de- ; cided abolitionists iu Congress or elsewhere — i in fine, who that knows him as an enemy of I the w hole South—as a fantdic who would ex (citc domestic insurrection amongst ns, and bring the tomahawk and scalping knife upon ! Hie heads of our wives and our children, could , : have -believed that the Governor of Georgia, ; j would have called upon him, or solicited his j 1 aid in any matter allccfiny the rights and in-‘ I (crests of-the people over whom he presides?! 'That Governor Gilmer wOuld have bowed himself and his constituents so low ? and yet I such is the fact, and so we charge it in the i face of the country, that Governor Gihher’so j j far comp remitted the honor of the State and I the character of her people, as to address a ■ letter to Horace Everett, u member ofj j Congress from Vermont, the friend and ndvo- t icateof John Ross and the Cherokees—■•the, : reviler of Georgia, her measures and inslitu- ' I (ions, and an open cut throat AtponnONier, ! ami w'e dare him to deny it. ' Weil may his Excellency be reluctant to publish a»l his correspondence upon this sub- ] jeot, a portion of which has been dragged from i l him by the resolution of Mr. Grantland, call- - ling upon the Secretary of War lor iuforma. ; I tion upon the subject, and which, accounts for ; ' the seeming voluntary publication of the let- Iters which appeared in tho recorder ol last ‘ week. ■ If the Governor has nothing to conceal, , j why this reluctance? Why wcro.. .not tlmJ i letters n ’terrrrd 10, made .public, before meas- j •i ures were taken in Congress to bring them to , i light 7 Let him answer. i But if, as he would have it believed, be has ; 'no motive lor concealment, how does it hap- • ‘pen that his letter to Everett, the abolitionist, is kept dark, and # to which the- slightest allu sion has not been made by himself or his I friends? and which, we venture to assert,; would have remained a .profound secret j through all time to con e, had nut the fact ol j its existence found its way to the Itght'through a ditb-runt channel. That the Governor sdmmd have Singled out John Ross and Horace Everett, to aid him in (executing the Cherokee 'Treaty, is one of the I most extraordinary und indefensible procecd ! ings which marks the history of modern limes. Was there ever such a trio? George R. Gilmer, John Ross and Hui:ace Ever :ett!U ' When such men as Horace Eveielt arc jcalled on by .Southern Governors to aid in T.m ving out Southern measures, it is time for jtlie people t > look about them, and to ask ! them elves whv it is, that the incendiary who would light the torch of civil discord anil scat ter firebrands und death among them, is cour ted, consulted, and confided in by those wher I should be the guardian ol their rights? Let 'the guilty tuisv.'-.'. — Standard cj Unian. Th ; opening ntcncc of tho Recorder’s Inst editorial is the only part of its lengthy j lucubrations which it is in our power to pre- . sent to notice, and applies so well lo the po sition of our State Executive, that vve have almost a mind to adopt it as applicable to his case. Our readers will, however, make the application. It reads as follows : “If any thing in the shape of deception and faithlessness, on the part ol the Federal j Administration, could surprise us, its present ; efforts to denv its own words, nnd back out : from the responsibility of its own acts, might ‘ ! well do BJ. ■ “But we are not taken by surprise noir, by -1 this conduct of the powers that be; nor could ; \an! conduct on their part surprise us, were ; the n< xt news to be, that they hud recommun ’ ded abolition.’’ i ’This is rather an unfortunate thrust for Mr. < Gilmer, w’no stands convicted of carrying on [a correspondence upon a question deeply in ’teresting to Georgia, with one of the most ; uncompromising, cut-thront Abolitionists in i the United States —a man who should be scor n- d, and shunned, und execrated by every citizen of Georgia, and held and treated by ; her public authorities as an incendiary and an outlaw, and a proper associate fcr such me.n jonly, us Tappan and Garrison. '! A flex such a disclosure as this, nothing ; that our State Administration could do, would “surprise” us much; and while on the subject of surprises we venture the assertion, that I no aet < f the Federal Administration fur ma-1 fDy years pis’, has surprised tho Recorder? half as much, as the fact of Mr Gilmer’s cor ’ icspondenca with Evlrett the Abolition- IST. 'This is a very serious change, and will star ‘tie thousands of men of all parties, as wa w’ere started, when it camo to our knowledge; but we speak advisedly, and upon good author i ity—lot the Governor deny it, and we “aro ready for trial.” In conclusion, we have only to say, that “If any thing in the shape of deception” and , concealment “on the part of” our State Ad i ministration could surprise us,” its intrigue with John Ross and Horace Everett; und “its : efforts to” conceal its own participation in tho i affair, “and back out from the responsibility •of his own acts, might well do so.” I But we are not taken by surprise now, by this conduct of tho “Executive of Georgia, I “nor could any conduct on” his “part surprise : us,” since it is known that he corresponds with Horace Everett tho Abolitionist.— lk. Wedding Extra.—Married at Chalk Lev. ; <-!, Pittsylvania county, A’lrgitiia, by Joseph • Rice, Esq , commonly called Capt. Rice, Mr. ‘ .Moses Hurriss, commonly called our Mose, to i Miss Sarah Dillard, comtnoidy called “Cousin ’Sally.” In this wedding things were man aged a little different from common utfiir.s. After tho parties were agreed, cousin Sally i waited on old Tom Harriss, (our old friend and witness,) and after a due quantum of pa- > laver, and circumbendibus chat, she made 1 known the state and condition of hi r’s and Moses’ hearts, nnd that they had come to <•>. , elusion to marry, if so be the old folks were willin. Old Tom pulled up his breeches by the waistband, and squirted the tobacco juice ; thuwigh his teeth. He said the crap ic is smartly in the grass, but howsomtte,r as it was | she, Cousin Sally Dillard, she might have I Mogc. What was the most singular of all, was the fact, that in coming home from th<» i wedding, old Harriss, his wife, Mose and cous ■in Sally Dillard, all leaded the big swamp. Tempora mutantur!—Carolina Watchman. SAMMY DXRBY’ri COURTSHIP. ‘Good afternoon, Squire Jones!’ ‘Good i l lwrhy: walk »»»- i Well, Squire, how is your iovtfly darter Sa! ito day, and the rest of the family?’ Why, they are all up and about, particulurlv Sul, ■ she is very hearty, has a good appetite, ' and eats a right smart chance, and the wav she smokes her old pipe io the right way, nnd signs—why man, she sings like a martingale; . ob, sir, she is a burster !” “Well Squire, I’m glad to-hear so much in praise of Sul, for 1 love her mightily, and mean to couit her, too.’ -Why that’s plain, honest and ylever, I’ll go and call Sal.’ Sure enough he did, mid she soon made her appearance. ‘How are .you . Sal?’ says I. ‘Oil, sorter middling, how do von feel, Mr. Darby?’ Why Sal, I aint well; I'm love sick.‘ Oh hush, you don’t say so; well do tell mo who she is?’ With that 1 kin dt.-r sidled up to Sul, and Sal she kinder sidled off. Says I, ‘Sal clout be so darnation skhter isli, for you are the very gul I’m after.’ “Geet out, you don’t say.’ ‘Yes I do, ami I’m in as hard earnest ns ever my old dog Lion was at a Coon.’ That pleased Sal mightily, and she kinder tossed her head and looked as proud as some of your town gals du when they get in a ball room Says I, Sal will you have me?’ ‘I reckon as how I will; you don’t catch this child refusing to do that thing when she Las so good a •chance.’ So oft we went tn , tlm l’ni*.jn’i, and Sa! and 1 got married, and now we live ns kinder happy together us can be, only sometimes she bawls out lo me, ‘Mr. Darby, don’t he spitting your tobacco juice on the fire dogs, and sticking your feet on tho fender; may I be burnt if 1 cun keep any thing decent for you, plague take you tobftc co chewers, 1 say, that are ns misty nbout it as you arc. And tho way she raps my toes with the tongs when she sees my fi et on tho fender, is noways common, 1 tell you ; how. i ever I live as happy as I can expect with a j woman —that is a fuct. EaTRAOKDINARY IKHTANCIt or Gxmxlimo,— -It well i known upon th>western water*, that the fircrnpn and. j other hands employed upon the boata, epfnd much !of their idle tune in playing cards. Os the passion for gaming, thus excited, an instance has been re lated to ns, upon most credible authority, v/tueh sur ' pusses the highest wrought fictions of the gamblrr’s fa'e. z\ colored fireman, on a siehmboat, running ; between this city and New Orleaqp. Ltd ion eH*hi» I money at poker, with his companions. He then aia- • ked his clothing, nnd being suit unfortunate, pledged his own freedom for a small amount, losing this, the bets were doubled, and he finallv, at one desperate hazard, ventured his value as a slave, laid down his free papers to represent the stake. Ho lost, suffered j his certificates to be destroyed, and was actually sold by the winner to a slave denier, who hesitated not to take him at a small discount upon hia atfiesa ,ed value. When last heard of by qjie who knows ' him, and who informed of the fact, he was still < paving in servitude, the penalty of his criminal folly —Cinc:nnaLt Express. of being ruiied.-u.\ girl very sSluent ly dressed, meeting a gentleman in whose service she had been, he congratulated her on the gai.ty of >her appearance, upon which she a&id with «rea» vt i vseity, ‘Law air, what! hav’nt you beard ? *No, Bet tv, wtiat i<i ' -Wfav air, since I sow you te-'. ;*»> lb cen ’ PW 26.