Brunswick advocate. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1837-1839, October 04, 1838, Image 1

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Brmiiotoicb J( ft t> at a t BY CHARLES DAVIS.] VOLUME 2. BRUNSWICK ADVOCATE. AGENTS. ISibb County. Alexander Richards, Esq. Telfair “ Rev. Charles J. Shelton. Mclntosh “ James Blue, Esq. Houston “ B. J. Smith, Esq. Pulaski “ Norman McDuffie, Esq. Ticiggs “ William H. Robinson, Esq. H'mjnt “ Robert Howe, Esq. TERMS. Three Dollars in advance—§4 at the end of the year. (EPNo 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. 17” All letters and communications in relation to the pnper, must be POST PAID to en sure attention. [O’ ADVERTISEMENTS conspicuously in serted at One Dollar per one hundred words, for the first insertion, and Fifty Cents 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 number of insertions will be published until ordered out, and charged accordingly. Legal Advertisements published at the usual rates. O*N. 11. Sales of Land, by Administrators, Executors or Guardians, are 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 which the property is situate.— Notice of these sales must be given in a public gazette, Sixty Days previous to the day of sale. Sales of Nf.guoes must be at public auction, on the first Tuesday 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 days 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 be given in like manner, Forty days previous to the day of sale. Notice to the Debtors and Creditors of an Es tate must be published for Forty days. Notice that application will lie made to the Court of Ordinary for leave to sell Land, must be 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. Ycllmv Pine Lumber. riYllF, BURNT fort STEAM MILL JL COMPANY, on the Satilla River, (Cam den Cos.) Geo., have on hand a large amount of Sawed Lumber, and arc prepared to fill orders to any amount, of any size and length, up to sixty feet. The timber on the Satilla is of the best quality, Yellow Pine, to be found in the Southern States. The Mills (50 miles up the river,) are well built after the Northern fash ion and well manned with Northern millmen. Vessels drawing 8 feet of water can go up to the Mills, and ships of a thousand tons can go within eight miles, where they can have the lumber brought to them, load, and not he sub ject to any charges whatever. The lumber will be put at low prices to secure custom. Hay, Corn, Provisions and West India produc tions will often be taken in exchange for lum ber. (A. Colby, Esq. of Philadelphia, principal owner.) SAMUEL ATKIN&ON, Agent. Burnt Fort, Camden County, Geo. sep Hl—ep'.lin. The Charleston Mercury and Savannah Re publican are requested to publish the above ft ino. and forward their hills to S. A. for pay ment. Notice. A LL Persons are hereby forbid taking or ro- J\_ moving any of the Brick from the Brick kiln in Fort’s Field, near Fort's Creek, with out an order from me, as one half of said Brick are now mine, and on the other half, l have a Lien, for certain moneys, advanced by me for manufacturing the same. JOHN ANDERSON. Brunswick, 13th Sept. 1838. (<eoi'k r in —Waync Connty. WHEREAS Moses S. Harris applies to me for Letters of Administration on the estate and effects of Richard W. Bri an, late of said County, deceased— These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at my office within the time prescribed by law, to shew cause if any they have, why said Letters should not be granted. Given under my hand of office, this twenty ninth of August. A. D. 1838. R. B. WILSON, Clerk C. O. W. C. Oeorjfia--ttlynn County. WHEREAS Robert Moody has applied to me for Letters of Administration on the Estate and Effects of Robert Moody, Sen. late of said County, deceased— These are therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of said deceased, to be and appear at my office within the time prescribed by law, to shew cause if any they have, why said Letters should not be granted. Witness the Honourable F. M. Scarlett, one of the Justices of the Inferior Court, this 20th dav of August. A. D. 1838. JOHN BURNETT, Clerk C. O. G. C. Keoi-skti —(wlynii County. WHEREAS John J. Morgan has applied tome for Letters of Administration on the Estate and Effects of M#s. Susan Morg an, late of said County, deceased— These arc therefore to cite and admonish all and singular the kindred and creditors of said deceased to be and appear at my office in the time prescribed by law, to shew cause if any they have, why said Letters should not be the Honorable J. Hamilton Couper, one of the Justices of said Court, this 22d day of August, 1838. JOHN BURNETT Clerk C U G. C PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, IN THE CITY OF BRUNSWICK, GLYNN COUNTY, GEORGIA BRUNSWICK, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 4, 1838. M ISCELLA^Y. [From Mr. Stevens's new ‘lncidents of Trav el.'] ; THE BATTLE OF GIIOKOW. j The battle of Grokotv, the greatest in Europe since that of \V aterloo, was fought on the twenty-fifth of February, 1831, and tlie place where I stood commanded a I view of the whole ground. The Russian army was under the command of Diebitsch, and consisted of one hundred and forty two thousand infantry, forty thousand cav | airy, and three hundred and twelve pieces of cannon. This enormous force was ar ranged in two lines of combatants, and a third of reserve. Its left wing, between Wavre and the niarshesof the Vistula, con sisted of four divisions of infantry of forty seven thousand men; three of cavalry of ten thousand five hundred, and one hun dred and eight pieces of cannon; the right consisted ol three and a half divisions of infantry of thirty-one thousand men, four divisions of cavalry of fifteen thousand seven hundred and fifty men, and fifty-two pieces of cannon. Upon the borders of the great forest opposite the Forest of El-' I tiers, conspicuous from where 1 stood,! was placed the reserve, commanded by the Grand Duke Constantine. Against this immense army the Poles opposed less i than fifty thousand men and a hundred i pieces of cannon, under the command of j General Skrzynecki. j At break ol day the whole force of the Russian right wing, with a terrible fire of | fifty pieces of artillery and columns of in fantry, charged the Polish left with the ! determination of carrying it by a single! and overpowering effort. The Poles, with : six thousand five hundred men and twelve! pieces of artillery, not yielding a foot of! ground, and knowing they could hope for : no succor, resisted this attack for several hours, until the Russians slackened their fire. About ten o’clock the plain was sud denly covered with the Russian forces issu ing from the cover of the forest, seeming one undivided mass ol troops. Two hundred pieces of cannon, posted on a single line, j commenced a lire which made the earth 1 Tremble, and v*<ia mure terrible mail the [oldest officers, many of whom had fought! latMarego and Austerlitz, had ever be-J j held. The Russians now made an attack ! upon the right w ing—but foiled as upon ! the left, Diebitsch directed the strength of! his army against the Forest of Elders, j hoping to divide the Poles into two parts.! One hundred and twenty pieces of camion J were brought to bear on this one point, and fifty battalions, incessantly pushed to the attack, kept up a scene of massacre! unheard of in the annals of war. A Pol ish officer who was in the battle told me ! that the small streams which intersected J the forest were so choked with dead that the infantry marched directly over their j bodies. The heroic Poles, with twelve' battalions, for four hours defended the i forest against the tremendous attack. | Nine times they were driven out, and | •fine times, by a scries of admirably ex ecuted manoeuvres, they repulsed the Rus- j sians with immense loss. Batteries, now concentrated in one point, were in a mo ment hurried to another, and the artille- j jry advanced to the charge like cavalry, | sometimes v-Rli'm a hundred feet of the | enemy s columns, and there opened a mur j derous fire of g t: ,p e . | At three o clock, the Generals, many of , whom were wounded, and most of whom i h.ul their horses shot under them, and fought on loot at the head of their divi-ji sions, resolved upon a retrogndc move ment, so as to draw the Russians on the ; open plain. Diebitsch, supp,, s j„,r Rtobe • a flight, looked over to the city° and ex claimed, “Well then, it appear* that af ter the bloody day, I shall take tcainthe Bel vidcre Palace.”—The Russian troop s de j bouched from the forest. A cloud of I\, lS _ I |sian cavalry, with several regiments of ht,. jvy cuirassiers at their head, advanced to I the attack. Colonel Pietka, who had j ! kept up an unremitting (ire from his bat-; jtery for five hours, seated with perfect! !sang froid upon a disabled piece of can-! non. remained to give another effective fire, then left at full gallop a post which he ' had so long occupied under the terrible lire of t he enemy’s artillery. This rapid movement of his battery animated the j Russian forces. The cavalry advanced * [on a trot upon the line of a battery of! ! rockets. A terrible discharge was poured ! into their ranks, and the horses, galled to ‘ | madness by the flakes of fire, became * wholly ungovernable, and broke away,! spreading disorder in every direction; the' ! whole body swept helplessly along the fire ! !of the Polish infantry, and in a few min : utes was so completely annihilated that, ‘of a regiment of cuirassiers who bore in scribed on their helmets the ‘lnvinciblos,’ j ! not a man escaped. The wreck of the routed cavalry, pursued by the lancers,, carried along in its flight the columns of infantry. A general retreat commenced 1 land the cry of “Poland for ever !” reach ed the walls of Warsaw to cheer the | j hearts of its anxious inhabitants. So ter rible was the fire ol that dav, (hat in the 1 | Polish army there was not a single gener al or staff officer who had not his horse ; killed or wounded under him, two thirds j of the officers, and perhaps, of the soldiers, j had their clothes pierced with halls, and more than a tenth part of the army were wounded. Thirty thousand Russians and ten thousand Poles were left on the field of battle: rank upon rank lay prostrate on the earth, and the Forest of Elders was so strewed with bodies that it received from that day the name of‘Forest of the Dead.’ The Czar heard with dismay, and all Eu rope with astonishment, that the crosser of the Balkan had been foiled under the walls of Warsaw. All day, my companion said, the can nonading was terrible. Crowds of citi zens, of both sexes and all ages, were as sembled on the spot where we stood, ear nestly w atching the progress of the battle, sharing in all its vicissitudes, in the high est state of excitement as the clearing up of the columns of smoke showed when the Russians or Poles had fled; and he describ ed the entry of the ren mint of the Polish army into Warsaw as sublime and terri ble; their hair and faces were begrimed I with powder and blood; their armor shat tered and broken; and all, even dying! men, were singing patriotic songs; and! when the fourth regiment, among whom! was a brother of my companion, and who: had particularly distinguished themselves in the battle, crossed the bridge and filed slowly through the streets, their lances shivered against the cuirasses of the guards, their helmets broken, their faces; black and spotted with blood, some erect,! some tottering, and some barely able to! sustain themselves in the saddle, above | the stern chorus of patriotic songs rose* the distracted cries of mothers, wives, daughters, and lovers, seeking among this broken band for forms dearer than life, many of whom were then sleeping on the battle-field. My companion told me that he was then a lad of seventeen, and had j begged with tears to he allowed to accorn-j pany his brother; hut his widowed mother extorted from him a promise that lie would I not attempt it. All day he had stood with I ins monier uu inquiry spot wneru nu am, his hand in hers, which she grasped con vulsively, as every peal of cannon seemed the knell of her son; and when the lan cers passed, she sprang from his side as she recognized in the drooping figure of an officer, with his spear broken in his hand, the figure of her gallant boy. He was then reeling in his saddle, his eye was glazed and vacant, and he died that night in their arms. llow to i*av for a Farm. A man in the town of D , some twenty years ago, went to a merchant in Portsmouth, N. 11., who was of a Bank, and stated that he lived on a farm, the home of his fathers, which had descended to him by right of inheritance: that this, his only property, was mortgaged to a merciless creditor, anti that the time of redemption would he out in a week. He offered to remortgage his farm. Mer. I have no money to spare; and if I could relieve you now, a similar diffi culty would probably arise in a year or two. Far. No, I would make every exertion: I think I could clear it. Mer. Well, it you will obey my direc tions, I can put you in a way to gel the money; hut it will require the greatest prudence and resolution. If you can get a good endorser on a note, you shall have money from the bank, and you can mort gage your farm to the endorser, for the se curity. You must pay in one hundred dollars every sixty days. Can you do it? Far. I can get Mr. for endorser, I and I can raise the hundred dollars for cv ; ery payment but the first. M cr. Then borrow a hundred dollars more than yon want, and let it lie in the bank: you will lose only one dollar inter est But mind—in order to get along, you must spend nothing—buy nothing: make a r ox t 0 hold all the money you get, as a sacred deposit. He departed, the note was discounted, and the payments punctually made. In something moto than two years, he came again into the si, jre of the merchant, and exclaimed, “ lam u freeman —I don’t owe anjt man ten dollar*—hut look at me.” He was embrowned with labor, and his clothes, trom head to were a tissue of darns and patches. *. Mv wife | oo ks worse than I do ” “So vW|,avc cleared your farm?’ said the inercha„t “Yes,” answered he, “and now I knou>i tmr to gd another.” 5 1 bus, good advice, well improve,) rc> -. cued a family from poverty, and put them in possession of a competency which w e believe they yet live to enjoy. Thus ninv any one retrieve a falling fortune if he will. And by using the same amount of self-de nial, and making as great exertions in the way to heaven, we may secure an “inher tance incorruptible, undefiled, that fadetli not away.”—[Southern News , [From the Richmond Whig.] TO THE OFFICERS OF THE NAVY, j Ihe honor of your profession has been called in question. The officers of the Navy are accused of distracting the serv ice with mean and pitiful jealousies—of skulking from duty—of feeding on the vitals and sucking the blood of their coun try—of being governed by a sordid and itching, grasping, monopolizing spirit— of making gain their object, and money their god. Our character is wantonly as sailed. Reproached with the most oppro brious epithets, we arc spurned as toad eaters, cut-purses and cut throats, and with insult threatened to he dragged into service like Africans into slavery. In short, we are said to be a horde of tinkers and coblers, who have disgraced our cail ing, and brought our navy to so low an ebb, that “no man living can bring it back to the high water mark of glory.” We are denounced in sweeping terms. An attack upon all, is an attack upon each one; and every officer of spirit feels himself as much aggrieved, and as much honorably bound to notice the insult, as though the calumny had been addressed to him alone. ”1 he charges are preferred in the col umns ol a newspaper, which is under the immediate control of the Executive. It is considered and acknowledged to lie the political organ of the administration, and the sentiments and opinions set forth in its columns, are received as the authoriz ed expressions of Executive will. What ever appears in it relating to public meas ures, or to any of the several departments under Executive control, the people are wont to consider as sanctioned by official authority. And the fact is notorious, that the officers both of the Army and the Na vy, are in tho habit of considering and treating all general orders, regulations, and every thing relating to the police of their branch of service published there, as official acts authorised by the head of their department. The so circumstances invest the charg es with the most grave character, and press them home upon us for our most se rious eunstcierattoh. ir raise, they con tain matter of impeachment—if true, ev ery officer must how his head in infamy, and the American Navy will be blotted out from the annals of the nation. Com mon sense forbids the idea that a matter involving such consequences, should be lightly hazarded, or set forth without much deliberation, and the sanction of high authority. Those who preferred them have ( bccn called on by the public voice to withdraw charges—but the charges were reiterated, and it possible made more offensive than ever. Placed in this condition, it would he turpitude itself to talk of an alternative. Wc have but one course left us. We must act. In our passivencss, good men would read guilty! guilty! to every base charge and specification on the long list of crime alleged against us. Every American citizen has a right to demand the name and presence of his ac cuser. This right belonged to us before we were sailors, and we have not surren dered it by our subsequent engagement as officers. Leaning on this privilege, wc look to our country for protection, and to the law for justice. A high functionary of the Government was accused as the calumniator of the Navy. N timorous calls through the pub lic prints have been made, in the most re spectful manner, on him to come and de ny the charge. The respect which we have for his office, forbade the belief among us that he should be so unmindful of decorum, so lost to honor and to prin ciple, as to attack us and our calling, when he should protect and defend both —that he should so far forget the dignity of his station, or would degrade himself by stooping to the columns of a newspa per, thereto seek, in the most insidious manner, to poison the public mind against us and our profession, we are unwilling to believe. He has made no disclaimer. His silence increases the ground of suspi cion. That silence and the relation he holds to the Navy, add to the importance of the charges against us. The honor of the Navy is the honor of the nation. Every true hearted Ameri can looks upon our profession with feel ings of pride, and, with emotions of pa triotism, considers himself, in some meas ure, identified with it. He, too, feels that he Ins been scandalized by the manner in which our character has been assailed. The eyes of our countrymen are turned towards us with an expression of look that cannot be misunderstood. We owe it to them to explain to the world why we have been so long silent under such foul aspersions. | Wc go upon, and have acted up to, the Principle, that the Navy is the nation’s, j and wc the officers of our country —and 'we i, rf > resolved never to compromit the ! honor yf the one, nor the usefulness of I the other, by lending our official ter to any tfivug that savors of party. The fact that the loudest and most earnest calls lor the author of the charges, came from that portion of the press known as the Opposition, placed us under restraints which prudence required we should not regard. We were constrained to be si lent, lest by demanding the name of our assailant when the press was loudest in its calls, we should lose our vantage ground by incurring the additional charge of act ing with a party, and of lending the Na vy to political purposes. Thus we have forborne to act. We have patiently waited until the excitement pro duced by a circumstance so astonishing and extraordinary, should subside, though not without the hope, that individual charged with the libel would step forth as well to repel the charge against himself, as refute the calumny against the officers, j Our hope has been disappointed. The first burst of indignation is passed—the cause of our silence is removed, a longer inaction would be ruinous. It becomes us as American officers—it is a duty we owe to our country, to our absent comrades and to ourselves, to rise up as one rnan to protect the Navy from the envenomed shafts of calumny, and to challenge our accusers to make good their charges. In the character of officers, we appeal to our commander-in-chief, the President of the United States, and with the lan guage due his station, demand to know of I him how far he sanctions those secret pro ceedings against us. Nor shall the matter rest until the innocent receive justice and the guilty their reward. Yours, very truly, HARRY BLUFF, United States Navy. Anecdotes of Fat Men. A baker in l’ye Corner, Eng., weighed thirty-four stone, (470 lbs.) and frequently ate a shoulder of mutton at a meal. lie per sisted, for one year, to live upon water gruel and brown bread, by which he lost two hundred pounds of his bulk. Mr. Jacob Powell, who died in 1754, weighed 5(51) pounds, his body was above five yards , ill rotjulriug ntKtoon Hum [to bear him to his grave. At Ilainton, j there died in 181(1, Samuel Sugars, who I weighed 50 stone (700 lbs.) Daniel Lambert, of Leicestershire, weighed 739 lbs. Mr. Spooner, of Skillington, weigh ed 40 stone and 9 pounds (5(59 lbs.) At Trenaw there was a man who weighed 4(50 lbs: one of his stockings would con tain sixteen gallonsof wheat. Mr. Collet, master of Evershaui Academy, weighed upwards of twenty-six stone (3(54 lbs.) — when twelve years old, he was nearly as large as at the time of his death. At two years of age, he required two nurses to lift him in and out of his bed, one of whom, in a fit of anger he felled to the Poor with a blow of his hand. Dr. Staf ford, who was enormously fat, was honor ed with this epitaph: Fake heed, oh good traveller, and do not tread hard, For here lies Dr. Stafford, in all this church yard. A n'ecdotck ok Le an Mkn.—A reverend doctor of a very ghostly appearance, was one day accosted by a fellow with the fol lowing salutations: “Well, doctor, I hope you have taken care of your soulV “Why, my friend?” said the divine. “Because,” replied the other, “your body is not worth caring for.” A poor diminutive Frenchman being ordered by his Sangrado, to drink a quart of ptisan daily, replied with a heavy sigh; “Alas! doctor, that is impossible, since I only hold a pint.” When the Duke de Choiscnil, a remark ably meagre man, came to London to ne gotiate a peace, Charles Townsend being asked whether the French government had sent the preliminaries of a treaty, an swered, “I do not know but they have sent the outline of an ambassador.” Periodica!. Stories. The celebrated Bubb Doddington was very lethargic. Falling asleep one day, after dining with Sir Richard Temple and Lord Cobhani, the general, the latter reproached Dod dington with his drowsiness. Dodding ton denied having been to prove he had not, he offered to repeat all Lord Cobham bad been saying. Cobliam challenged him to do so. Doddington re peated a story, and Lord Cobham owned he had been telling it.—‘And yet,’ said Doddington, ‘I did not hear a word of it; but I went to sleep, because I knew that about this time of day, you would tell that story.’ A good story is told of an old boatman, | from the Schuylkill, who repaired to the menagerie in Philadelphia, and seeing all its wonders, thus addressed the chief ex- Jhibitor; "Well friend, I’ve seen all your big beasts and zebras, and zepliyers, and hyenas, and them things—now where’s I your menagerie? where’s his cage—lj want to look at him?” [TERMS $3 Ilf AOYAS^t On the 18th of August, the State debt of Pennsylvania, as officially ascertained, was $24,2£0,0QQ 32, very nearly the whole of which has been expended by the State in the construction of works of In ternal Improvement, Turnpike Roads, Canals and Rail roads,—and when the works which the State is now prosecuting are finished, her debt will rise to fall $30,000,000. This at the first blush would appear to be art enormous burthen for any State to sustain, and yet it is the result of the voluntary of the peo ple, who by their representatives in the Legislature have willed that* the debt should be contracted on their behalf. The sound wisdom of the policy whicli has with so liberal a hand expended million after million in the establishment of artifi cial channels of trade that penetrate ev ery part of her vast territory, is exempli fied by the comparison of Pennsylvania as she was before that policy was com menced, and what she h:p since become under its magic-working influences. The increased value of property of every de scription lias already iuditecUy paid th» debt many times over. Iq fact, no true estimate can be made of the amount of benefits which has resulted to the-people of Pennsylvania from their internal Im provement system, and it will be recollect ed, too, that each successive year iqcreas>- es in a rapidly progressive ratio the vast aggregate of prosperity flowing from this source. But it is not only indirectly that the works of Pennsylvania are productive. The direct revenue derived from tolls thus far in the fiscal year is nearly *BOO,- 000, and by the period of its termination it will probably reach SI,OOQ,OQQ. Had not the freshet taken place which in Jane Inst destroyed thirty miles of the Canal oft the Juniata, and have proved a serious drawback to the business and rpveuue* of the Main line, there is but jifUe doubt that the tolls of the yea? would have reached $ 1,250,000, or more—miaking a gross return of five per cent, on the whole amount of the State’s debt. Tito princi pal portion of the revenue from tdUs is de rived from that part of the public works known as the Main Line — extending from. Philadelphia to Pittsburg. Tho Qaasie above the Juniata, including those on both Branches, costing about $ 5,000,000, have produced but little revenue to the State for want of an appropriate outlet from Columbia directly down to rf |ha Chesapeake. That outlet is now irifUfe course of construction, and its comple tion will at once bring such an amount of new trade into action that the State’s re venue from tolls in 1840 will be but little if any short of $2,000,000. — [Pennsyl vania Inquirer. Tub Alleghany River.— lt is gener ally known that a survey of this noble riv er was made last summer by authority of Congress, from the mouth of Potatoe creek, some miles above the town of Glean, N. Y., to the mouth of French creek, and from the last named point to Pittsburgh and the report of Col. Kearney, who surveyed this part of the river some years since, was adopted. The object of both these surveys was to ascertain the . practicability and probable expense of rendering it a good steamboat navigation. Both reports are highly favorable, and state that for a comparatively trifling sunt the river could he rendered a good Stea mboat navigation from Pittsburgh to Oban. Olean is the point at whicn the great Hudson and Erie Rail Road, and the Rochester and Olean Canal .roach the Alleghany river. Both these improve ments are in progress and will be com pleted in two or three years or perhaps less. When these works shall hocem pleted and the river improved, an im mense trade and intercourse will immedi ately follow. Long before these improve ments can be completed, a Rail Road will be made from Boston to Albany, ao that wc shall have a direct communica tion from this city by Steamboat and Railroad both to and New York, and in fact to the eastern section of the Union. T%Bf«4s no other rente so well calculated tit. secure the trade and travel betwepl that section and the valley of the Ohio.— [Pittsburg Advcoata. I’at Hi hernian, no frcquefUflßf Urge parties, consequently a Poodmn gaQanomv, ru minating in hank of a emnly, “that ever 1 should coma te Amer ica to see a snuff hftX walk!” “Whist!’* When the thermometer is at flfejjMthm tlemen'play busily at “tan at 40, at chess, or domilttm,the glass is at its highest thohußlh, CM Warn them, waltz a/I night, and day too some times; when frost-Mpearthur. dress low in the neck, and tana at the met. Wh® . now will dare to ait Jpute the wisdom of fash ion!