Brunswick advocate. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1837-1839, September 13, 1838, Image 1

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Bntnsuiuh SCfcbocste. —■ ■ ■ - ■ —: ■"u ■> fib BY CHARLES DAVIS.] VOSUM9 2. BRUNSWICK ADVOCATE. AGENTS. Hibh County. Alexander Richards, Esq. Telfair “ Rev. Charles J. Shelton. ■Mclntosh “ James Bine, Esq. Houston “ B: J. Smith, Esq. Pulaski “ Norman McDuffie, Esq. “ William H. Robinson, Esq. “ Robert Howe, Esq. TERMS. Three Dollars in advance—p 4 at the end of the year. <trj*No subscriptions received for a less term than six months and no paper discontinu ed until all arrearages are paid except at the option of the publisher. •D’AII letters and communications in relation to the paper, must be POST PAID to un safe attention. lt!P ADVERTISEMENTS conspicuously in serted at Owe Dollar per one hundred words, lor the first insertion, and Fifty Cent* for ev ery subsequent continuance— Rule and figure work always double price. Twenty-five per cent, added, if not paid in advance, or during the continuance of the advertisement. Those sent without a specification of the numlicr of insertions will be published until ordered out, and charged accordingly. Leoal Advertisements published at the nsual rates. EFN.B. Sales of Land, by Administrators. Executors ogGuardians, aro required, by law, to be held on the first Tuesday in the month, between the hours of ten in the forenoon and three in the afternoon, at the Court-house in the county in whiph the property is situate.— Notioe of these sales must be given in a public gazette, Sixty Days previous to the day of sale. Sales of Necroes must be at public auction, on the first of the month, between the usual hours of sale, at the place of public sales in the county where the letters testamentary, of Administration or Guardianship, may have been granted, first giving sixty hays notice thereof, in one of the public gazettes of this •State, and at the door of the Court-house,where such sales are to be held. Notice for the sale of Personal Property,must I>e given in like manner, Forty days previous to the day of sale. Notice to tliy Debtors and Creditors of an Es tate must be published for Forty days. . Notice that application will I>q made to the Court of Ordinary for leave to sell Land, must; he published for Four Months. Notice for leave to sell Negroes, must be published for Four Months, before any order absolute shall be made thereon by the Court. LAW. HOWELL COBB, Attorney at Law, Office, at Perry, Houston County, Ga. Howell Cobb will attend to professional business in the counties Houston, of the Flint; Twiggs, Pulaski and Dooly, of the Southern ; rnd Stewart, Randolph, Lee, Sumpter and Ma rion of the Chattahoochie Circuits. July 20, 18.17. ly. .1 Car ft. A. L. KING, attorney and counsellor at law, BItIWSIVICK, Ga. Feb. 1. ts A Cas'd. DOCTOR FRANK GAGE, informs the public that he has located himself in Brunswick and will attend strictly to the prac tice of his profession in its various brandies. Oglethorpe House, Jan. 4, IKIB. FREDERICK BALDWIN, Attorney and Counsellor at Lute, AND SOLICITOR IN CHANCERY, MACON...GA June 15. PROSPECTUS. NEW SERIES OF TIIE LITERARY OMNIStS, Furnishing Books by Mail , at JVewsjwper Pottage! JKfALDIES LITERARY OMNIBUS has * now been in existence twelve months ,and has enjoyed daring that period a very ex tensive shase of public favor. It has furnish ed for two dollars and a half j reprints of Lon 'don books which cost there over fifty-term dot lart! tn addition to a large amount of literary matter, reviews of new books, tales, and do mestic and foreign news. ’ The original proprietor, intending to devote .Jiis time and attention to his other periodical works, has disposed of his interest to the pres ent publisher, who will make no further change ’in its general character than issuing it from an other office, and changing its name from ‘Wal 'die’s’ to ‘Browns.’ , ' Bkoivn’r Literary Omnibus will be issued every Friday morning, printed on excellent 'paper of a large size. It will contain; > 1. Books the newest and best that can be procured, equal every week to a London Duo decimo volume, embracing Novels, Travels, Memoirs, &c., and only chargeable Kith news paper postage. 2. Literary Reviews, Tales, Sketches, No tices of Boyks, and information from the world of tetter* of every description. 3. Tho news of the week, foreign and do mestic. 1 The price will be two dollars per annum to clubs of fire individuals. To clubs of two in dividual*, two dollars and a half or five dollars for ihe two. Single mail subscribers, three tlallhrs. Mail remittances to be post paid. As the arrangements for this undertaking are all completed, the proprietor asks from a generous public that consideration to which so diffusive s scheme of circulating knowledge and amusement is entitled. The first number of the JVwe Series com menced on the sth of January, 183 c?, Dorn which period or from any future date new sub scribers may commence. Postmasters and agents for periodicals throughout the Union and Canada, are re quested to act as agents for tho Omnibus, and communicate with the proprietor. • WILLIAM BROWN, No. 50. North Fourth-street, Pnilad PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, IN THE CITY OF BRUNSWICK, GLYNN COUNTY, GEORGIA. BRirSfBWXCR, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNZNO, mwphu 13 1838. POETR Y. ODE TO MURAT. BY BYRON. And thou too, of the snow-white plume! Whose realm refused thee ev’n a tomb; Better hadst thou still bceu leading France o’er hosts of hirelings bleeding, Than sold thyself to death and shame For a meanly royal name; Such as he of Naples wears; Who thy blood-bought title bears. Little didst thou deem when dashing On thy war-horse through the ranks, Like a stream which burst its banks, While helmets cleft, and sabres clashing, Shone and shiver’d fast around thee— Os the fate at last which found thee; Was that haughty plume laid low By a slave’s dishonest blow? Once—as the Moon sways o’er the tide, It roll'd in air, the warrior's guide; Through the smoke-created night Os the black and sulphurous fight, The soldier raised his seeking eye To catch that crest's ascendancy,— And, as it onward rolling rose, So moved his heart upon our foes. There, where death's brief pang was quick est, And the battle’s wreck lay thickest, Strew'd beneath the advancing banner Os the eagle's burning crest— (There with thunder-clouds to fan her.) Who could then her wing arrest— Victory beaming from her breast? While the broken line enlarging Fell, or fled along the plain; There be sure wag Murat charging! There he ne’er shall charge again! MI§CELLAiI Y. The following little tale is none the worse for being old: Tiie Discontented Pendulum. An old clock that had stood for forty years in a farmer’s kitchen without giving its own er any cause of complaint, early one Sum mer's morning, before the family was stir ring, suddenly stopped. Upon this the j dial plate—if we may credit the fable— j changed countenance with alarm; the! wheels remained motionless with surprise; the weights hung speechless; each mem ber felt disposed to lay the blame on the others. At length the dial instituted a formal inquiry as to the cause of the stag nation, when hands, wheels and weights with one voice protested their innocence. But now a faint tick was heard below from the pendulum, who thus spake: ‘I confess myself to he the sole cause of the present stopping, and I am willing, for the general satisfaction, to assign my reason. The truth is that I am tired of ticking.’ Upon hearing this, the old clock became so enraged that it was on the very point of striking. , ‘Lazy wire!’ exclaimed the dial plate, ( holding up its hands. ‘Very good!’ re plied the pendulum. ‘lt is vastly easy for you, Mistress Dial, who, as every bo dy knows, have always set yourself above j me—it is vastly easy for you, I say, to accuse other people of laziness—you, who have nothing to do all the days of vour life but to stare people in the face, and to amuse yourself with watching all that is going on in the kitchen. Think, I beseech you; how you would like to he shut up for life in this dark closet, and wag backwards and forwards year after year as I do.’ ‘As to that,’ said the dial, ‘is there not a window in your house on purpose for you to look through?’ ‘For all that,’ re sumed the pendulum,* it is very dark here; and, although there is a window, I dare not stop even for an instant to look at it. Besides, lam really tired of my way of life, and if you wish I’ll tell you how I took this disgust at my employment. I happened this morning to be calculating how many times I should have to tick in the course of only the next twenty-four hours. Perhaps some of you above there can give me the exact sum.’ The minute hand, being quick at figures, presently replied, ‘Eighty-six thousand four hundred times.’— ‘Exactly so,’ replied the pendulum. ‘Well, I appeal to you all if the very thought of this was not enough to fatigue one. And, when I began to : multiply the strokes of one day by those jol months and years, really it is no won der if I felt discouraged at the prospect; so after a great deal of reasoning and hes itation, thinks I to myself I’ll stop.’ The dial could scarcely keep its coun tenance during this language, hut resum ing its gravity thus replied: ‘Dear Mr. Pendulum, I am really astonished that such a useful, industrious person as your self should have been overcome by this sudden action. It is true you have done a great deal of work in your time—so have we all, and are likely to do, which, al though it may fatigue us to think of, the question is whether it will fatigue us to do. Would you now do me the favor to give , about half a dozen strokes, to illustrate ! my argument?’ The pendulum complied, and ticked six i times in its usual pace. ‘Now,’ resumed ; the dial, ‘I ntay be allowed to inquire if that exertion was at all fatiguing or disa greeable to you?’—‘Not in the least,’ re plied the pendulum. ‘lt is not of six strokes that I complain, nor of sixty, hut of millions.’—Very good,’ replied the di al; ‘hut recollect that though you may think of a million strokes in an instant, you are required to execute hut one, and j that however often you may hereafter have |to swing, a moment will always he given | you to swiug in.’—‘That consideration staggers me, I confess,’ said the pendulum. ‘Then I hope,’ resumed the dial plate, ‘we shall all immediately return to our duty, for the maids will lie in bed if we stand J idling thus.’ • UjKm this the weights, who had ucver been accused of light conduct, used all their influence in urging him to proceed, when as with one consent the wheels be gan to turn, the hands began to move, the peudelum began to swing, and to its cred it ticked as loud as ever, while a red beam of the rising sun that streamed through a hole in the kitchen shining full upon the dial plate, it brightened up as if nothing had been the matter. COUSIN. The subjoined description of this dis tinguished French Philosopher, we copy j from the Notes of a traveller in France, front which occasionally appear | in Zion’s Herald. In a part of the palace is the chamber of Peers. The Hall of the sessions is splendidly decorated with carpets and pic tures from the ‘Gobelins.’ The notable characters here are however its chief at traction. Some of the most scientific men of the age, as well as distinguished states men are among them. The most interest ing member to me is Cousin, the meta physician. He is a tall, thin man, about fifty years of age. His face is long and shallow, shaded with a contemplative mel ancholy. His eyes, which form the most marked feature of his countenance, are exceedingly large and expressive. He is not only an acute thinker, hut an eloquent declaimer. Oratory is much more studied ill France than formerly, *iwl tlio absurd impression somewhat extensive in our own laud that depth of mind cannot combine with high oratorical powers, is exploded here, for the most profound men of France are likewise her greatest orators. Cousin seems wrapt in inspiration when he speaks. His subjects are the most ab stract and profound, but such is his famili arity with his science, that lie usually dis cusses them extemporaneously. Not only his mind, hut his whole frame seems im bued with his subject; hands, bead, eyes, voice, and every feature gives force to what he says, while a style rich and fluent like ‘The liquid lapse of murmuring stream,' gives a charm to the thought of the dryest metaphysical character. When he was active in the duties of his chair his elo quence filled France with interest. One writer says that he lectured extemporane ously to audiences of five or six thousand hearers, and his discourses were reported for the papers with as much regularity as the proceedings of the Chambers. Cousin is a Christian. His philosophy has driven him to religion. He reveres revelation, and all its great facts which were denied by his predecessors, are ac knowledged by him. ‘I never,’ says one who heard him, ‘I never shall forget the animated dignity with which he made pro fession of his beliefin Christianity. Con scious that the majority of his brother stt cans, and perhaps of his audience, in heart, if not openly, would be inclined to sneer, and that his reputation as a philosopher | and among philosophers, was at stake, he seemed to erect his person, elevate his voice, and expand each glowing feature, as if in noble defiance of expected obloquy. ! He is accused by his enemies of a tenden cy to the exploded tenets of Plato; which means in reality, I suppose, a tendency to the spiritual and truly intellectual doc j trines of revelation. His lecture lasted j more than an hour and a half; and though it was in a foreign language, and required 1 therefore the closest application on my part, my attention was not suffered to flag a moment.’ [From the Metropolitan.] Coleridge. —“Coleridge,” says Mr. Gillman, “began the use of opium from I bodily pain, (rheumatism,) and for the same reason continuing it till he had ac ! quired a habit too difficult under his own j management to control. To him it was the thorn in the flesh, which will be seen in the following notes:” | “I have never loved evil " for its own sake: no! nor never sought pleasure for its own sake, but only as the means of escaping from pains that coiled around , the body and wings of an eagle! My sole sensuality was not to be in pain.”—Note from Pocket Book, “The History of my own Mind for my own Improvement.” Dec. 23d, 1804. “1 wrote a few stanzas three-and-twen tv years ago, soon after my eyes had been opened to the true nature of the habit in to which I had been ignorantly deluded by the seeming magic effect of opium, in the sudden removal of a supposed rheu matic affection, attended with swellings in my knees, and palpitations of the heart, and pains all over me, by which I had been bed-ridden for nearly six months. Unhap pily, among my landlord’s books were a large parcel of Medical Reviews and ( Magazines. I had always a fondness (a common case, but most mischievous turn with reading men who are at all dyspep tic) for dabbling in medical writings; and in one of these reviews met a case which I fancied very much like iny own, in j which a cure had been effected by the Kendal black drop. In an evil hour I pro cured it:—it worked miracles—the swell ing disappeared, the pains vanished; I was all all around me being as ig norant as myself, nothing could exceed my triumph. -1 talked of nothing else, prescribed the newly discovered panacea for all complaints, and carried a bottle about with me, not to lose any opportuni ty of administering instant relief and speedy cure to all coinplaincrs, stranger or friend, gentle or simple. Need I say that my own apparent convalescence was of no long continuance; but what then? the remedy was at hand, and infallible. Alas! it is with a bitter smile, a laugh of gall and bitterness, that I recal this period of unsuspecting delusion, and how I first be came aware of the maelstrom, the fatal whirlpool; to which I was drawing, just i when the current was already beyond my strength to stern. * * * * “From that moment I was the victim of pain and terror; nor had I at any time taken the flattering poison as a stimulus, i or for any craving after plcasureablc sen- < sations. I needed none and oh! with j what unutterable sorrow did I read the I “Confessions of an Opium eater,” in I which the writer, with morbid vanity, i makes a boast of what was my misfortune, I for he had been faithfully, and with an ' agonv of zeal, warned of the gulf, and yet willingly struck into the current! Hea- j veil be merciful to him!"—April. 182(5. i These arc awful words—we shudder' and tremble as we read them. S’ti Astley Cooper. —ln Pettigrew’s* Medical Portrait Gallery, part v, lately published in London, are the following amusing anecdotes of the celebrated sur geon, Sir Astley Cooper: ‘ He received, perhaps, the largest fee j ever given at one time for an operation, j It was upon an old gentleman named Hy att, who was a resident in the West Indies, and, when arrived at the age of seventy, j being afflicted with stone in the bladder, j determined on going to England, to un dergo an operation for its removal. He ! selected Sir Astley for the occasion. was performed with his accustomed abil ity; and upon visiting him one day when j able to quit lis«bed, he observed to his surgeon that he had feed his physician, \ hut that he had not yet remunerated his i surgeon. lie desired to know the amount 1 of his debt, and Sir Astley staled ‘two hundred guineas!’ ‘Pooh, pooh!’ exclaim ed the old gentleman, ‘I shan’t give you two hundred guineas; there, that is what I will give you,’ taking oft* his night cap, and tossing it to Sir Astley.—'Thank you, sir,’ said Sir Astley, ‘any thing fromyou is acceptable;’ and he put the cap into his pocket. Upon examination it was found to contain a check for one thousand guin eas.” “One other anecdote must he related as | singularly illustrative of character. Mr. ! Steer consulted Sir Astley at his own rcs i ideflee, and having received his advice, I departed without giving the usual fee. ! Sir Astley took no notice of this, but gave | his assistance to him cheerfully, under a feeling that he was a gentleman who had i seen better days, and was now in indiffer ent circumstances. Shortly after, how- I ever, Sir Astley received a note acquaint -1 ing him that in going to the stock exchange, ! he found that he had some omnium, which ;he had not disposed of, and that he had i taken the liberty to put 3,000/. of it in his name; and finding that it had sooh after risen, he took the further liberty of selling it for him, and now sent the difference, which was 93/. 10s. “Sir Astley’s annual amount of fees far exceeds that of any member of thepro- I Cession. In one year he received no less | a sum than 21,000/, and for many years, : from l.»,000/. upwards.—Mis patients have : comprised all classes of society, and his attention was equally bestowed on the ! wealthy and the indigent.” Advick to a vouno Member of Pak- J liament. —Attend business,.- (said Mr. Wilberfbrce, late in life, to a friend on en tering the House of Commons,) and do not seek occasions of display; if you have a turn for speaking, the proper time will come. Let speaking take care of itself. I never go out of the way to speak, but make myself acquainted with the business; and then, if the dcbgfe pass my door, I. step out and join it. i I ‘Gentle reader, av you ever been on the jotion?—‘The sea, the sea, the hopen sea!’ jas Barry Cromwell says. As soon as we j entered our little wesscl, and I’d looked to master’s luggitch and mine, (mine was rapt up in a very small hankercher,) as soon, I say, as we entered our little wes sel, as soon as I saw the waivs, black and frothy, like fresh-drawn porter, a dashing against the ribbs of our galliant bark, the keal, like a wedge, splitting the billoes in two, the sale a flapping in the hair, the standard of Henglaud floating at the mast head. the steward a geuin ready the basins and things, the proudly tredding the deck and. giving orders to the snlers, the white rox of Albany, and the bathin masheens disappering in the distans—then, then I felt for the first time, the mite, the inagisty of existence. ‘Yellowplttsh, niy boy,’ said I, in a dialog with myself, ‘your life is now about to commence, your career as a man dates from your entraus on board this packet. Be wise, lie manly, ( be cautious; forgit the follies of your youth. Von are no longer a boy now, but foot man. Throw down your tops, your mar bles, your boyish games; throw off your childish hubits, with your clerk’s jackit—throw up your ’ • ••••* ‘Here, I recklect, I was oblceged to stop. A feeling, in the first place singlar, in the next plffbe painful, and at last coin pleatly overpowering, had came upon me while I was making the nbuff speach, and I now found myself in a sityouatiou which dellixy forbids me describe. Sutfistosay thqt I now discovered what basins was made for; that for many, many hours I lay in a hagony of exostion, (lend to all in tencc and porpuses, the ruin pattering in myjjface, tiie salers a trnmpliuk over my body; the panes of purgertory going on inside!’ I Grog. —The etymology of the word grog lias bceu the subject of much con jecture. An English publication treats this difficult question of philology in the following manner: •“Some trace the word to old Admiral Benbow who wore what was termed a program jacket, and hence obtained the l name of old Grog. In some ofhisdnrieg actions he refreshed liisuieu with rum and : water, which ever afterwards retained the title. Others assert thqt a planter of Ja ; maica wishing to send a puncheon of real good stuff’to George the Second, marked upon the head G. R. O. G. lor George Rex, Old Gemakce. Another anecdote refers to the well known act of‘tapping the Gov ernor.’ Monsieur Guilluaine Roussel, Governor of Guadaloitpc, died, and was shipped in a cask of rum for Europe. On the puncheon was painted 'Guilluaine Roussel, obit, Gundaloupe;’ and round the leaf that was nailed over the bun:'' the ini tials G. R. O. G. On her passage, the vessel was captured by the English; and the jolly Jacks, without knowing the actu al contents, soon sucked the Governor dry When they appeared rather out of order . before the officer, his general exclamation was, ‘What, you’ve been foul of the ‘grog’ cask again.’ —lly the Old Suitor. Printer’s Proverbs. Never inquire thou of an editor for the news, for behold it is his duty at the a|q>oiuted time to give it to thcc without asking. When thou dost write for his paper, never say unto him, ‘what thinkest thou of my piece?’ for it may he that the truth might offend thee. It is not lit that thou shouldst ask of him, who is the author of an article: for his du ty requires hun to keep such things to himself When thou dost enter into a printing office, have a care unto thyself, that thou dost not touch the type, for thou myd’st cause the printer much trouble. Look not at the copy which is in the hands of the compositor; for that is not meet in the sight of the printer. Neither examine thou the proof sheet, for it is not ready to meet the eye, that thou may’st understand it. Prefer thy town paper to any other; sub scribe immediately for it, and pay in ad vance, and it shall be well with thoo and thy little ones. Proverbs.-—A white glovc-oft conceals a dirty hand. The remedy for injuries is, not to remember them. Go into the coun try to hear the news of the town. Be not a baker if your head is made of butter. Call me cousin but coain me not. Faint praise is disparagement. Ask thy purse what thou shouldst Iwy. Zeal without knowledge is like lire without light. Youth and white paper soon take an im pression. Vows made iu storms are for gotten in calms. The church is out of temper when charity is cold and zeal is hot. The sting of reproach is the truth of it. Envy shoots at others, and wounds herself. A goose quill is more dangerous 4 than a lion’s claw. Bctrafc of a silent dog ayd a wet rat. [terms fa ur aDyakcb. _____ __ i South by Steam.—A gcntle(rin£s&W¥ j North Carolina has handed ns a map eg. ! hibiting the routes as completed, m pefe. | gress, or in contemplation, for (team portation to the South. Every body keewfc | that the chain of steam conimuuieatiQix iis complete to Baltimore, and thence to Norfolk in one direction, and to Washing ton and thence to Potomac Creel, near Fredericksburg, in another. On the let ter route a rail road is completed a part of the way, and will soon be alt the way to Halifax on the Roanoke river. On t* other route a rail road will alio seau lie completed from Norfolk to the same point on the Roanoke. Thence to Wilming ton, N. C. there is a rail road in progress, and for a considerable portion of the way completed. To this point fU* Weft* ex pected all the works will be re*dy<H a*e by the end of next year. From w ton to Charleston a rail road is contem plated, and a line of steamboats is already in successful operation, which, rwnatiirr so they do near the shore all the way, wifi lib likely to lie less objectionable to papMtt gers than most open sea navigation. From Charleston to Augusta a rail road has for some years been in successful operation. When the rail roads arc completed which we have named above, the passage may be made from Augusta to Boston m three days and nights, the nights being spent in steamboats, and of course in deep. Leav ing Augusta in the morning, ’you come on as follows: Miles.. To Charleston Ist day, 138 Wilmington Ist night, 150 Norfolk 2d day, 240 Baltimore 2d night, 170* New York 3d day, 190 Boston 3d night, 210 > Some of these stints may be rather too* largely set—still, no more ia put down than can be accomplished, and will he ac complished, we daresay, in two years more. The rail road by Richmond and Washington would afford equal & perhaps greater speed. We have selected that by Norfolk, merely to get a nigut'a sleep on the Chesapeake. Such a line of communi cation to be traversed so rapidly and with so little fatigue, is not to be found on the earth besides; and all done not by auto crats or Kings, but by individual:!,- stimu lated by nothing but the genius of our fre& and secure institutions. New Orleans is within two days of Augusta, when,A rail road has been made onto tbc Bay .of &lex ico. Wc might have extended our table to the Kennebec River on the East, for steamboats run thither from Boston, and a rail road is just completed to Salem, and is in progress to Portland. The Ex press Mail will soon be left in the back ground. By means of Well organized stages to fill up the gaps where toe raib roads are not completed, passengers are now transported South with great des patch.—[N. Y. Jour. Com. .n~.. T ■ Moral Effects or Marriage. —The statK.ics of the Eastern. PetHtaattKf of Pennsylvania are curious in the pot in cquallity which ‘hey exhibit beWMfc Mar ried and unmarried convict*. Os the one hundred and sixty prisoners received the last year, one hundred and Un ware un married, six were widowers, and forty-five only were married. I have never seen a stronger illustration of the moral influ ence of marriage. It ia too Jailie 4tk faio gtse the institutions, after «- pcrieucc of its ameliorating influence «p --ou the human conditions for six thousand years. But we may taka this mitwHiT as an evidence of its effects in promoting good habits, morality and virtue, among the lowest classes of society. A Round Bill. — • Tom pressufod his bill to his neighbor Joe hr ttiviees rendered. The latter looked it Or# and expressed much surprise al foe-amount. "Why, Tom, it strikes one that yoe have made out a pretty ' round bill here, eht” “I am sensible it is a nmmd one,” tpftoth Tom—“ and I bare come for of getting it squared." Taking it Quite you pay this small bill to day'?" said I collect or a few days since calling OO a gcntle man for a to morrow, if you eae make it tfiggplent. 1 have a duel' to fight teahi ■t half an hour and hav’ut time to Utah ever your account just now.” — fiX Tieayoae. Whoever has seen a fishing smsck must have noticed the well for keeping foefob; it is eaulkad around the sldee, bat foe hplfoio *f holes to keep the nteh fish. An ambitious loafed on T»*sfofofijfiP**d on board of omaf these I to bail hot out stir 75 cents. He fofl|f*d for the job, and for an 'crowd were amused by hfo-MWHBnus efforts to bail out the well till he gave* job u