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Georgia @ Statesman.
TERMS,—S3 PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE,]
BURKITT & MEAT
Tilfi
GEORGIA STATESMAN.
IS PUBLISHED EVERT MONDAY IN
MILLEDGEVILLE, GJL
On Wayne-Street, opposite the Eagle Hotel.
BY S. MEACHAM.
FCF 5 Terms.. .. Three Dollars in advance,
or Four Dollars if not paid in six months.—
No subscription received for less than one
year, unless the money is paid in advance,
and no paper discontinued till all arrearages
on subscription and advertisements are paid.
N. B.—Notice of the sales of land and ne
groes, by Administrators, Executors, or Guar
dians, must be published sixty days previous
to the day of sale.
The sale of personal property in like man
ner must be published forty days previous to
rhe day of sale.
Notice that application will be made to the
Court of Ordinary for leave to sell land, must
be published nine months.
Notice that application lias been made so
Letters of Administration, must also be pub
lished forty days.
* + * All letters directed to the Editors on
business relating to the Office, must be post
paid
GEORGIA, Butts. County.
’MniEREAS, Joseph Scntcll, and
Mary Waldrip, applies to me
for Letters of Administration on the
Estate of Abraham Waldrip late of
said County Deceased. These are
therefore to cite and Admonish, all
and singular the Kindred and Credi
tors oi said Deceased, to be and ap
pear at mv office, within the time
prescribed by Law to show cause ii
tiny they can, why said Letters should
not be granted to the, applicants, giv
en under my hand this 22d oi March
1827
JNO TARPLEY, c. c. o.
65—Gt
RULE MSI.
GEORGIA, ( Inlhc Superior Court,
Monroe County. > September Term, 1826.
Anthony Gilmore, RULE NI SI
t’j. ?
Me Lamorc Welkins ) lor foreclosure.
UPON the petition of Anthony Gihnore,
praying a foreclosure oi the equity of
redemption, m and to Lot oi land, ISo on ■
hundeied and fifty seven, in the fourth Dis
trict ia the County of Monroe afor s:.ul,
staling that Me Munore W.dkins, on the i 3th
dny of April, in the year eighteen hundred
ami twenty-five, executed and delivered to
hi n, a deed of Mortgage ior the better seen -
ing the payin' nt oi om -hundred and seventy
five dollars, for said Lot of land, and praying
a Rule Ni :m, for a foreclosure of th.-, equit.}
of Red: mption in and to said premis -. <>n
motion, it is ordered, that the said \\ (kins
do, within twelve months from tins dale, p iv
into the Oilier, of the Clerk of thi- Court., the
prinripltf'nnd interest due on said Mort; ii'v,
together with the cast oi this application, ot
that tiie equity of redemption in md io said
inortgned premises be thenceforth bared, an
forever foreclosed ; It is further ordered that
this Rule be published in one of the public
Gazetts of this State, once a month for
twelve months, or that the same be served on
the mortgager, his agent or attorney, at least
nix months previous to the term at which the
money is directed lobe paid, as aforesaid.
A true extract from the minutes, Given
tinder my ii.uid this Bth day ol Seplendier
1826.
WILLIAM P. HENRY.
Clerk.
Georgia Butts county.
HENSON N. Jackson of capt. Robinsons
district tolls before me one Estray, —
A jcllow soi 111 horse colt, hind fmt white a
tlw white hiirs iu his forehead, between two
and three years old. — Appraised to twenty
live dollars, bv Richard Pounds and Eli Hutto.
This 3ltd day of M itch !Sl7.
E. H'alker J. P.
A true copv taken from the efltray book,
this 31st day of March 1*27.
c 4. L. Robinson, c. i. e.
Margaret Kemp 4
vs. 2 Libel for divorce.
Thomas Kemp. (
OCTOBER Term, 1826.
I N the above stated case it appearing to
the court that the defendant is not to be found
in the conn'v of Rabun. I pon motion ot
Smith and Brown, Solicitors tor Libellant.
It is »rd» i'd that service be perfected by
publication in one of the Gazetts ol this State,
October term 1826.
Th? above is a true extract from the
minutes this 20th, November 1
H. T. Moxley, Cl’k.
65 —tin
Notice.
HAVING understood that John
Johnson, has been off. ring to
trade thro*' promissory note* ot hand,
given by mysell to Mid Johnson, tor
thirty dollars each, payable on the
first of January 1826 ( «> w ’ 6a> re
collected,) I have deemed it tny
dutv to prevent an honest man tro. i
bei. g unp >sed on, to caution all pet
sons from trading I r said notes, the
consideration for which they were
given having tailed, and they b mg
trau iulentlv ditained I am deterniin-
. ed never to pay the aame uni ss co.r
polled hr law
’ ALEX MERIWETHER
Twi<gs co \prd 12, 1827.- It
t i I'.t IR.GIA, Twiggs c
ÜByHERF.AS Senns IL Clark, hath this
▼ v day applied to me f«v. Letters ot Vl
uumstratmn on th estate ofWm. Clark, hte
of said county dec’ 1. these are then ion to
cite and adnumis 1 all and singular, the ki--
,lred and creditors of said leeeased. to a; pear
nt m> office within the tine prescribed uv tan,
to shew cause if any they have why said lit
ters should not be grunted.
Given under my hind ’his 6th rebruary,
ijui PETf-R SJt.ON, C. ’ i
66—. t
’ Blank Writs for Male
At this Office.
I AM, Editors.]
The phases of
this Eclipse may
Be Undei stood
from the subjoin
ed figure .• let the
lesser concentric
circ C, represent
the Earth’s shad
ow,through some
portion of which
the Moon passes
in her eclipse.
The smallest
circles H, G, and
E, represent the
position of the
Moon at the be
ginning, middle,
and end of the E
clipsc. The space
G K, is the eclip
tic difference, or
that part of the
o’s orbit which
is intercepted be
tween the axis of
her orbit and the
axis of the eclip
tic. The distance
from fl to E- ty
ing in the earth’s
shadow, through
which the moon
passes from the
beginning to the
end of the eclipse,
is, by computa
tion, about 5600
geographic miles.
At the point H
the moon first
X /
A I ®
x. i .s
i
7 ar
JT’-. 2.
We have an article on file, prepared at some
length, on the phenomena and method ol compu
ting the phases of a Lunar Eclipse, with precepts
fur predicting their occurrence ior any number of
years or centuries to come. It is too lengthy to
appear in this paper; we therefore select only the
ELEMENTS .LVt) PHASES OE THE
MOON S ECLIPSE.—May Hlh, 1827.
VISIBLE THROUGHOUT THIS HEMISPHERE.
I). 11. M. S.
] Trill' time of Full Moon, A. .V. II 2 50 00
2. Moon's True Latitude at-the
s tne moment, N. Increasing, 29 5
3. Moon's reduced Latitude, 28 56
4. Moon s Horizontal Parallax, CO 5 2
5. Sun’s Horizontal Parallax, 9
fi. Moon’s Senudianieter, 16 .35
7. Sun's Semidiameter, 15 52
8. Moon s Horary motion in Longitude, 37 26
9. Sun's Horary motion in do 2 25
10. Moon's Hor. mot. from the Sun in do. 35 I
!l. Moon’s Horary motion in Latitude, .3 28
12. Semid. of G’s Shadow at the Moon, 45 ID
13. Semid. of o's Shad. 4-Seinid ot $ 61 45
14. Semid. of Q’s Shad.—Semid. of ® 28 >5
15 zl of ® s visible path with Ecliptic, 5° .39 11
These Elements having been accurately computed
from the best tables extant, we derive the phases of
From the Jmeriran Farmer
Dear Sir,
On lh< evening of the 29th or
March I begun to cut green rye for
tny milch cows, about eighteen inch
es high *By the tune I get thr ugh
it, it will be two feet high where 1
began, when 1 shall have cut it all
the second tune, tny clover field tor
grazing will be in lull blossom I hey
then graze until Ist Dec. when I be
gin to iced regularly in the barn
yard, not suffering them to go where
grass or winter small gram is design
ed to be grown next year From
the 1-t December to the 10th or
20th February, they are fed night
and morning, a peck ot pumpkins
each, chopped up with halt an old
M-ythe, the pu pkins preserved by
being carefully put away on the Ist
of November in a fodder house,
suitably located and covered with
husks To drv provender they have
tree access at all times \\ hen the
pumpkins are gone, white turnips
and then rutabaga are given them
in the same quantity; and these
last until the rye (sown early in Sep
! tcmber for the purpose, on strong
' ground, in a favourable situation tor
| early growth,) is high enough tor
cutting with the scythe Ihe lot
contains about an acre, is thickly
■ sown, and alter being mown twice,
is on the 15th of June planted with
. umpk ns, heavily manured in the
hill to keep up its strength. 1 have
two such lots, treated alternately in
this wav , and the one so used last
year produced me upwards ot 2-uU
pumpkins.-This lot is this spring cul
tivated in early corn, spring pota
toes, water melons, canteleups, cu
eumbers and cvmlms, heavily ma
nured in the hill or drill—th yb mg
such crops as will have been used
bv the b'-ih September, when it will
he seeded in rve tor soiling next
year, to be followed by pumpkins.
Mv dairy consists ot eight cows,
vhich. with such management, yield
me <SO a year each, in milk sold at
. 25 cents per gallon, butter at from
1 25t0 37 1-2 cents per lb. veal at
6 l- l cents per lb. &c.
I am now planting in corn the on
!y fields of my firm I have never
j before cultivated —an I my system
i for the first time in lull operation.
I [♦ We have recently tasted a apecimen of
|b itt.'r of high colour and delicate fine tl'our,
• \ ’ ll ttd 03 siren rvc ’
Ha> tibieruntartes, pacisque imponere morcm, parcere subjectis et debellare superbos.—Virgil.
Milledgeville, Monday, May 7, 1827.
THB MOON’S ECXJPSS.
It is the live field system. Ro* -
tion —Ist. Wheat iqion a cl« ver lay.
2nd. Corn upon the stubble, and
npon all the manure I can make up
on the farm the year before, or get
elsewhere. Then. 3rdly. Oats or
rye. and clover 4th. Clover, to be
cut for hay. sth. Clover, to be de
pastured from the 10th or 15th May.
The whole farm i- thus annualiv pro
ducing crops of gram or grass with
rapid improvement of the soil wiih
a regularity that ket ps the smallest
hand on the place always informed
what is to be done in everv field at
all times —and with very little labor
at any one time since the first culti
vation, m preparing for which I pre
vailed upon them to exert them
selves to remove everv irnpedimei t
to the operation of the plough, by
t iking up stones and deposit mg them
where they might be conveniently
had tor underpinning or building. :ti d
grubbing up trees or stump- for tire
wood.
Having thus in three years got
mv fields clean and -ecured by good
fencing, I can spare a hand from the
operations of the farm, to be in fu
♦ure devoted, with occasional assi—
tance from the rest, to cultivating
nentlv, and beautifying the garden
and other grounds about the house.
Mv cows have good shelter tn the
winter ; a dr" and comfortable bed.
afforded bv 'i.tuiing ail th<' corn -talks
i to the yard : ami while eating their
pumpkins, turnips or rye, are con
fined in racks, the construction of
which, or eight, cost rm only
which keep them from mterruptmg
each other by fighting, and into
which ach puts her head voluntari
Iv, so n as they n lice the usual
preparations for feeding. It is fre
quently said, that pumpkins, turnip-,
or cabbilge, give th butter an un
pleasant taste Ac -mell ; but my short
expend ce has (bund that '.'fleet to be
produced by giving each cow more
th in half a bushel a day-—that is to
say. bv giving her so much as will
oper te an unhealthy looseness ot
the bowel-. « hen only are such smell
and taste offensive. Halt' i bushel
a dav ofanv such succulent food, is
necessary and sufficient, to enable
them to relish and digest, advanta
geously. a due proportion of dry
food —to make them fee well them
selves and to others, and to keep
the Moon's Eclipse as follows :
Ajilieeltrezille.jMay , 1827. I). JI. . L .S'.
Eclipse begins 11 1 16 32 A., ‘J
Darkness increases for “ I .3 323 “
Middle of Fclipse, “ 250 00
Ecliptic Difference, u 4 54 <£
Ecliptic Opposition, *• 251 5 1
End of Eclipse, (! 423 28 “
Whole Duration, “ 3 658 “
Digits Eclipsed, /s I 1 52 28 “
This Eclipse will be so nearly total that if the
whole face of the Moon, were divided into 288
equal parts, only three of them would be visible above
the darkness of the earth’s shadow.
The Phenomenon of a Lunar Eclipse is too well
understood to need explanation.—From the Earth
there projects into the open expanse, opposite.,to
the Sun, an enormous Shadow far exceeding the
distance of the moon from the earth; Through this
shadow, if not above or below it, the moon passes
at a certain period in every lunation; that is, at
every Full Moon. The size, or diameter of the
earth’s shadow at the moon, varies with her Geo
centric distance. As the moon can never be longer
than <b 5 in. ,’sec. in passing through its centre,
nor less time than three >h. > in. 26sec., it follows
that the diameter ol this shadow at the moon's dis
tance from the earth, varies from 7 230 to 6020
miles ; supposing the mean motion of the Moon from
the Sun, to be 1.1 > ) Geographic miles perhour.
Ilii'in giving rich milk ami i i g<» j i
quantity throughout the winter and
feeding season. Any considerable
quantity more 1 have found to b< in
jurious to the aninnial and therefore
to the milk.
From the New-York Mirror.
THIS MICTAHS.
Haply for I am black.
And have not tho»e “oft part* of conv r-’ation
That chainbercru have:—Or, fori am decan’d
Into the vale of years; jet Lhu'.’a m t muc ’
f ij..al:espeare.
lr was in that beautiful -ea-on ci
the year, when the extreme heats ot
summer have passed away, and the
dehcious dav.-, and more deliciou
ev cmngs of autumn succeeded win n
the air i- filled with mu-ic, and the
fanning breeze bears health and fra
grance "n its wings; and when the
darkened line ot field and forest,
(hough stili unladed and lovelv m
their verdure, whisper? that, like all
thing- earthly, they are ha-tenmg to
decay—it was in such a sea-. hi, not
many vears ago. and in a romantic
country place, that the incidents of
the following tale occurred Twi
light had commenced her nr I incneh
reign, in a valley of the Cat-kill
mountains, though the lingering glo
ry of the sunken sun was still glow
ing. like a flood of m >lten gold, upon
their summits, when two person-, a
voung m n and woman, i-sumg trom
the shadow of tho woods, by a little
path, took their seat-on ’ho f.illen
trunk of a tre , beside a stream that
rippled at their feet. The temale
appeared lo be about twenty years
old. and was arrayed in the simple
and mode-’ attire, which i- one o’
the mo-t common characteristics ot
our conn ry maidens. She was not
!• autifui . yet she p --essed. in a
high degree, tneindescribable charm
with which the rosy cheek and
laughing yes of woman arc alway
acc nipamed, when those roses '.re
be-towei'qby health index rci« ■. at) ■
that laughing < xpr-’ iou is prompt
ed by innocence. One of our ow.i
sweetest poets has beautifully an t
truly said, that
woman’s eye,
In rourt or cott ig”, >•h* reso’e’er her hon»e,
Hath a heart.spell, too holy an i too hign
To be o'erpraisel even by her worshipper.
[Powy. •
•F. G. Halleck, bee “ Alnwick Castle .
•n-gji Poem?.’’ htuiv raiblj«h*2-
The young man seemed four or
five years older ; and though dress
ed tn the homespun cotton clothing,
much used by farmers of middlin’,
degree, in our mountain districts, was
certainly handsome, if we may so
term the manly and indeps ndent ex
pression which honesty and toil be
stow upon their followers. He held
the hand of his fair companion within
his own, and was conversing with
her, in that low and softly modulated
tone, which is taught by love itself,
while she sat listening, “ nothing
loth,’' or we might rather say, “ with
greedy ears, devouring his dis
course.’’
“ You know, Sally,” for thus the
conversation ran, “you know that
my affairs are very much changed
for the worse, since you gave me
your word that you would become
iny wife. If farmer Schcmely hadn’t
died, before he finish d his new mill
power, I dare say he’d a-been able
to’ave -old it for enough to pay me
all 1 lent him, and tak n up that deu
ced note himself; but as it is, it
must all come out of my little farm,
and then I shan't have much left.-
But these hands will he I'ft, Sally ;
and this heart will be left ; you need
n’t be afraid while I have the one,
but we shall always be able to get a
comfortable living, and the love ot
the other will la-t till that heart it
self grows cold in death, and these
hands are folded over it in the sleep
of the grave. Ilowsomevcr, Sally,
v .,j have beauty and merit enough
to get a better iiu-baud—if you re
p ut your bargain, I give you back
vonr word, and though I shall always
• ; ve you to rny dying day, not one
syllable of complaint ‘•hall over pass
my lips ”
“ William. I have known you a
long time, and I have never heard
you speak so unkindly before, rc
-ponded Sally. When you pressed
me to be your wile, and 1 owned I
loved you, and gave you my prom
i-e, do you suppose there was a
falsehood in my heart, and I only
wanted lo get a hu-band that could
make a lady cd me, so that I need
have nothing to do ? Do you think
-o mean oi me, Vv dliain, as to be
lieve that it was your snug farm, am l
the new house that you had built,
and your dairy house, and your cat
tle, that made me love you ? If you
do, you know little of my heart.—
Whi n 1 look’d round, and saw every
thing so pleasant and prosperous
about you, 1 was glad in my soul ;
but it was on your account as much
as on my own. 1 have often thought
when the twilight hour came down
upon the vallei, to make •' very thing
I di misty and dim, ami brought sad
feelings along with it, that if Will
ram’- house was to be burnt down,
nd his cattle was to die fc th" slier
di w as to seize hi- t irm, and he liim
-eif was to be put into prison, that
I would love him still, with a truth
that Line couldn't alter, nor absence
divid . And why did I love von.
Will.am? Was if because affairs
went on smoothly with you, and you
wore smart clothes, and rode a fine
horse, and rode so well ’ I can lay
mv hand here, and answer, no
Wa- it because you beat all tin
\oung men in the village playing
ball, and pitching quoits, and such
t'-in.f- ’ you can t believe me so ioul
,-h. No, 111 jell you why it was.—
You was a good son. lengthening out
vour old father’s and mother’s days
by vour obedience and kmdnc-s to
them: ion was constant at meeting
on Sabbaths, and always bad some
thing for the plate ; and more than
all. you went about doing good, with
out lotting people know who it was
that 'lid it ; o; it wa- by mere chance
1 may sav, ’hat I found out 'twas
vou that helped my own cousin Har
ry out of his troubl , a.id paid the
debt vouiself. 'Twas for these
things that I loved you, William .
and her- ’s mv hand.'it y<uchoo r e to,
t ike it; it - one that will hold by
touches the dork
shadow represen
ted by the large
inner circle C, &.
in lA. 33 m. 28;.
is travelling from
H to the middle
of the eclipse K.
The small circle
K G, represents
the situation of
the moon at the
moment of great
est obscuration:
yet as this en
graving was not
originally design
ed to exhibit the
phases of the pre
sent eclipse, the
small crescents
which reaches a
bove the earth’s
shadow, is even
too large by near
ly one digit, ora
twelfth of then's
dianv ter.
At the point E,
tin ® wholly e
merges from her
obscurity, bright
er for her mourn
ing, upon whose
fair orb, for the
space of THREE
HOURS and sev
en minute-;, the
Sun had refused
Lis beams.
you ti.rough good report, and thro'
evil report, and leave yu only when
death unlocks its gra-p
Tears stood in the eyes of both
these ru-tic lover- . and when tne
pious and affecti- nate girl had finish
ed -peaking, -he was tol'ied to as
manly and true i bosom a- ever wa
light dby the flame of love. Im
printing ‘ a pure kiss, -wcet and
I- ng,” upon her cheek, William a
rose from hi- s at
• Sally, said he, “ I never doubted
vour truth, but I have observed
Squire W ddling since he came up
t.ere l ist spring, has put himself ci
te in your way, and -ecnr- to admir
• u very much. I don’t like to be
uncharitable; but I'm thinking Par
on G odman wouldn’t often have
him to listen to his sermons, it’ i
wasn’t on vour account. I had
made up ray mind to -peak to you
ivout it ; for, thinks I, it wifl n<’
w my love much, if I stand b
• en her and «nch a fortune.
“ You rctin km ‘. v . ''' “L I know
[OR »4 IF NOT PAID IN SIX ’’ONTHB.
[Vol. 11. No. 18.— Whole No. 70.
you do,” returned the maiden, also
rising. “ But I ask of you as a favor„
.ever to mention that odious Squire
again. If he meant honorably, (and
I’m by no means sure of it) I wouldn’t
have him—no ! not if his pennies
wre all dollars What! I s’pose
because he comes here with his car
riage and horses, and servants, and
dogs he thinks he’s agoing to turn
all the young women’s heads. Now,
merit makes the man, and for my
part, if I was obliged to have a hus
band, whether or no, and had to
chose betwixt the two, I d take Jack
Ration, that lost his leg and eye
’board the Chesapeake, by all odds;
though he has to support himself
and bis old mother by making mats,
and such things. Don’t mention his
name to me any more.”
“ Well, Sally, I'm very willing to
oblige you in that, as in every thing
you ask ; for I always find you have
good reason tor what you say, and I
don’t think much of his principles
myself. ’
Priciples ’ he has no principles.—
But come, Vv iliiam, it’s time for ire
to be at home ; I’ll meet you here to
morrow evening, as I told you.”
“I’ll w ilk with you as far as tho
lane,” replied he ; and entering tho
footpath through the woods, they
were soon lost to sight. *
Not many minutes elapsed after
these rustic lovers disappeared be
fore a person emerged from a leafy
and shaded recess among the trees,
where he had been secreted during
the foregoing conversation, into tho
open moonlight (for the moon had
risen, and wa now sh dding a silver
lustre over the beautiful scene) his
countenance inflamed, and his lip
trembling with anger.
“ Sc, so, Mr. William,” muttered
he, “ you don’t thinl/ much of tho
Squire’s principles, it seems , but I’ll
make you think something of tho
Squire's power before I'm done with
vou; and you, too, Miss Malapert,
vou would pr for Jack Rattlin by all
odds, would you? But 111 have
you in de-pite ofyour squeamishness
and then you may come back, with
your love and sentiment, to be tho
wife of tffe clown. A pretty Collin
and CMoc, ’pen honor ” Thus
grumbp.ig to himself, the Squire pur
sued Ins way to bis own h use; and
sending lor his coachman, he gave
him some private instructions, re
peat mg t hern ova r an I over, that
they might not be misunderstood.—
“Remember, Tom, what I have told
you,” he concluded,” and obey it to
the letter. ‘ The Three Swans,’ a
bout fifteen mites, on the main road.
1 -hall leave on horseback early in
the morning. Go now, and semi Di
nah up with -upper.”
' Dinah has gone down into tho
village, sir,” answered Tom, grin
ning, “ to rig herself out tor a cuffee
ball they' e going o have there to
morrow night.”
“ Well, go along with yoursalf,
sir, and have supper prepared. ’
it was on the evening of the fol
low mg day, that a carriage was seen,
standing near the spot where the lo
vers were to have their meeting,
partly sheltered from observation by
a little thicket, that interposed bc
tweeen it and the p ith we have men
tioned. The moon was riding high
abov the neighboring mountains,
and had been pouring down the silent:
influence of her beauty, over tho
tranquil autumnal scene, lighting up
every branch and leaf into silvery
beauty . but at (Ins moment a cloud,
borne along through the azure hea
vens, bv the scarce-felt breeze pass
ed over its (ace, and spread a tempo
rary darkness over the earth.
Who the deuce is the woman
that master thinks will come along
here. I wonder,” said Tom, (for it
was he who was trudging to and fro,
near the spot, and had been waiting
nearly an hour, in obedience to his
ma-tcr’ sorders) “ 1 ’spcct he’s at
-omc o’ his w ild pranks agin, and my
neck again-t nothin’ he’ll git in somo
rursi'd hobble yet—hu-h'.—there’s
s >me one comm;” and so saying ha
glided behind a tree.
A step was heard tripping along
’he path, & presently a female, in a
white dress, made her appearance—
-he had ju-t reached the tree, and
was passing quickly by, when Tom
rushed out, and -cizmg hold of her.
bore her in his arms towards the car
riage. >he shrieked, and endcav
' red to get loose, but was too firm
iy held. “ Egad, said Tom, “you’ve
prrettv good lungs ofyour own, miss;
• d ant very bad off tn the way of
muscle; but ye see. there s no kind
, u-e in making such a thundering
noise, for go you shall, nnd ther
in end of it —so there! - ’ (slamming
to the carriage door) ' you may
- rceeb now, ns long is you piease.
M v maxim is to obey orders it I break
wners.'” So saving the coachman
manured the bon and drove off at
ii speed.
We will now request our readers
• <-» e- ♦<>? a few mrantcr.