Columbia advertiser. (Harlem, Ga.) 1880-18??, May 24, 1881, Image 1

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J W. SMlrar A Wabltahvr. 1 BS. Prwwrvetwr. 'MPk vvw r~w l 1 I * *• 04wH« land*. «'<>».- . hin-li I- S'- lb* OTbriii la Wars» meal old Oa3qSvWSHfif'vM| *° k" l4 ,n **** Itab to boo Inborn • her. Z tuJflhA |pv r • p,r!l hjna < 3r doM hu part an a b< wTP" . , WfetflldLr t’O^fcA** o inherit • ’ WM Mm ht« drew?' — » ■»»' ■“ —. A ll«»Flrtt Ah 1 In fro. Ok, iM> amo r ow ibrre U » fata Tbrl «it■•< «lI -.iters Icrel tun®; lantr Asbiv dots n«vvr Boil, Hut only whlton nfi. »WWol,«t>rh_ Tbte H <•»*• h»*t <-w»p Inxn tby land*, Doth bain to Home six l ot ot ami, *• - » * •j» l ta• •/ j i * , ’ ’? I TEH. taSffldHWy WBta TWta- Yau wita notice how lhktopha H® Whir* his fa®**' v- ~xUff. becan ho A ntmfjMfr iw %*k,** ■ igf>y ill. Jtejxirt eri *vte*n » toy Ife. t Tk*y «eki >m go to WtouJtaA i® fib* morn injrat-■** ok#b tidmto* ith their <'-.* at fijnt nfgftt ’ Tfae» are many » ->ti at got* to pajifrgt anti weddingt, He takes l-orfWl »Mto»«»h* JWle who hare ’t'«U|Nto6, ’rffcrihartogy are there or not, and prth»'4taa**> the P*P er the next day. Once a man started for a party, but got too full for utterance be fore and wee locked up. The sociata nporte* said he wan at the party A” asm*, but the police re porter said he was fined 83 for being drunk. So thia man got hi* name tn the paper twine, but he cut out 'O6 of the items for fear hia wife might see them both and thifak th* preen wan mak ing too much of him. Men are not oft en so modest. The sporting re] sorter goes to horse-races, and baa*-ba 11 games, and «Mk-figbta> I>pi wmAi-1 to ro <o horse-race* if you bet on the wrong horse. Once there was a croquet tour namenf in a large city, and the editor of a paper knew that somebody must write it up. So he spoke to the sporting re porter. ‘ 1 What have I got to do with those dizzy croquet players ?" said the s|K>rting reporter. •’That’s a society event" “ I guess you are right,” re plied the editor; "go yon can go up in the country about tiro mite- north of where the street-cars run and see if it looks as if wa wotijrfhav* an, early spring, and thMtdhis evening there tin four Land-League meetings for you to look after." kfortii* apurliag rtporte. had a littM touirtlifng to def, after ass, and clubbed himsglf qjnto heartily- A ruaa need nut Wm clMmual education in order to M a good reporter, but he must be wbtalp hustle arouad fomr snd Inmfv Imnsrif when therein a I dp" firs or a' Bonder Reporters can get nearer to a fire than anybody except the firamen, and Wwuow ones do it But the old heads at the business know bet ter. They sugddti the comer uatiL4h<- tire is out, andliien they get a ha to an<F >■ tn th* house of the man who owns the i mldMg’ > .a*i auk Idm how tuuch the old shell was worth, and if he thinks the in »nrance O' >anu* will have Him arrest ed for sett -it on fire. This is when the man act" mean and does not open for 1 i-;u, bocupae he lias just grtflttkof b*i-.u'i deahnes to answer questions. But if he acts square, yon l*t the boys treat him right, and in the taoiMltg yfcopia ißadvf him as ••<mr estimable citizen, Mr. .” Report- ers seldom die early. They are too tough. Perhaps souse other day 1 rnsy tell you more about the reporters. Many ut them are married men and live happily with their wives, because they never see them except when they oome home to go to bed, A dxowwy man cam- Dot quarrel much. Yon leant*! sftwa.lv what easy buses reporters have; but often those who have chances in this world do not se^gg.toaau^tn this fact, and tins way and thtoka oqgtofeb*jamc 1 So bs tkn .Many o( tbeua do not say ssore flf a dollar 'han soswa Hwea, bw» 'dW know MB ,j| ,th» supvten »«n Mid tow mmoh th«y wonid save their RRMP bay iha ■aoer and then would ba Cka Us Chinese - fulinnhi.i sclf-pno -Y y* <3^®lßßH®e P the »aU AortoaAflK' or to'.ow Ry .. A but scM- preservatioAlMMMPlßf editors U< i vc » “ of ' serve tliemsiMMUreMg. report \ era never bK t£< cal So you see I that the f to those who do good. Hflhbto’ gt about Oknh a youug man, who ha<i i .ad College, and was a a in base-ball • large Wcvtern a • repeller. The jicxl daj Weeditor him-to an in qn«aL He umiir tou'k tn-fhb office at night with enough manuscript to make « book. The editor gwve this do mi ecx iwrienotid rejxirter and said : ** Chit this down to a atickial. '’ After a while he where the experienced Se- ISHtet tour fitting and said: “Howdhl that new duclj .nutnagt" with the in. quest?” ‘•Ob," aadCo. rejMirfer, “ho got <toA>pt U^w-rdicL* 1 Aad.tben the other re porters tlial werbsitting around laughed heartily, h*it the editor onlv totrlrvp a few words of tropical warmth and dto- i charged the new Reporter, who wrfv very much surprised to aeo that the paper continued to wane out regularly after he had left it to its fate. New reportera always fa-11 everybixly that they are “ jourualinta," but the old ones call tham deck-hands. New reporters olgays ( tliink they know everything, and iu some offioes it is ouatowary to put a I dmh of salt on a new reporter’s desk. This is a deiicaU- way of telling him he is too freah. Reporters never fake to hurt anybody's feelings. Once an ed itor in Cincinnati lured a reporter in ' Chicago to do some work for his paper. I After a while the reporter forgot to send anything about.an important matter, which marie the editor very angry. Ho be sent a dispatch to the reporter say ing,; “I’lMuare Why did yotf get left on that mu«<? Answer." When the reporter read this he laughed ! to himself and said ; •• I wonder if that j old plum thinks ho can get the beat of 1 me? ” So he wrote the longest kind Xf‘ an answer, explaining all about the mat ter, and closed by saying he was glad he had lieen discharged, because he die- ' liked to l»e connected with a paper that allowed iuelf to get seuip d. It took I’ftio words to say this, and, as it was wnt by telegraph, the Cincinnati editor bad a pretty big bill to pay. But it j taught him never to ask for explana- ' tions by telegraph again, and that Chi- ; cago reporters were pretty liable to keep ' up with the procession. aOSH IllLLltiliS- ••TKUJtP 0.4 KD& I I have never known a sekoud wife butfl what waz boss ov the Mituashifai. After a man gita to budti years old kant form any new habite much; tM' litst to' kau do is to iteer hiz old ones. I LuMvxusa who kau swap h<BMe, at . ketch tiali, and not lie about it, iz just M a'Ui'iyr get to be in this ■■VIS Tfae sassy est man I ever met iz a hen |>qekt hilabsutl Whflß bt faiiaway from home. An enthmaiast is su individual who believes About four times az much az he nn prove, and he knn jirove about four times ar. mnc’i as any boitey believes. The dog that will follow anybody ain’t wuth n cum. Thote" people who are tneing to gi t to f heaven 6a their kre d will find out at I last that tliey dum't kava a Urni ticket. I Tcmj long ars 'Urt ulwinw | judicious; tlie party* often tire out ■koreing fors the trot liegius. One quart ov cheep whiskey (the cheaper the better), judiciously applied, • will do more buaiueaa for the devil than the smarted deacou hs b«a g<< I don't rekoTect doing enny thing that , I was just a little ashamed ov but what ) rumsnibecfd it, and woz sure, ones m s while, to put Tne w mjnd ov p. 1 Young man, learn to wail, d yon uu- < tens to to askt ■ hen before she iz ready, you will lose-your time and confuse the hen besides. Nature seldom make® s phool; olie simply furnishes the raw materials and leK ~w Jrltovr finish ibo jot) to suit him self. * trjHTE or muxbt. ? • I A gentleman waa recounting, in a aen [ ous manne »,k* many misfortunes and | loeeez Wk’ X ( '* r , the death , st his fiMjBMl« : 1 ' among the number. “Aad jiktShl® he said, wiping away ( sfas hex teeth fixed m appto- ■ pie MIMMd %etwt of 832, and now that i ■ is wMii the rtet" i Bmam. btoMte* %d dirty ijeck streetsj r ooei tl.Sfi® * , I< ’ rk ’ sua i i room* up four or five fligbffc of stairs t • rsnUor |BO sad fW » month. Devoted the interests tfColumbia County and the State of Georgia. HARLEM. GEORGIA. TUESDAY. MAY 24. 1881. unfirxit rar m ponttcAmg. The forenoon watch is nearly over ; seven belL—halLpast 1J —have been mxiu Jack dines when hs is at Logac. It is beef and '• duff" day ; Yesterday there were jiea-aoup and pork. Tlui ‘‘duff". was made an hour or twe ago, and, not bemg a Chnstinae plum pudding, the skill required to prepare if was not considerable ; for when the oooii rhnd akuumol off tha greasy from th® water in the ooppers and mixed it with ♦lour, and worked the whole into a paste, and ptttto-liito a oonteal canvas bag, closely resembling a man’s nightcap of fifty years ago, nothing re mained to complete Jack's pudding but to bpd to |t v »ow boti«d and ready for Jack to eat, aa4 So la Hie be<<. The beef is forked out first from the copper and thrown into a mesa-kid; then the pudding is fished out and dvopjied Mrto coldrwater, after which the bag is opened, aad the pudding slides net of it ahd fails rather heavily into another kid. A boy or ordinary sqaman from each watch lays hold of the kids lielonging to his mass, and convey® I them into the forecastle, by which tune, jght bells having texin made by the ‘tkipper’s sextant, all hands assemble in Ihe forecastle, and dmner begins. Tliere is never very much ceremony iu Jack's home, though what etiquette there is is very imngent In this forecastle there >. are no tables. The men help themselves, ! cutting off a junk of beef and a lump of dnff with their sheath knives, each mau judging—and judging vary accurately— how much he should take, so that hs may not come off better nor worse than his matfe, and walking away with his tin j plate either to hia bunk or to a sea-chest, or wherever else he may feel disposed to j sit Ono may Maliy conceive that Jack's apjietite is usually very good ; and though the fames from the meat-kids are deculedly -more greasy than most i land-going palates would relish, aud< though the beef might seem to have a i queer color, and though the duff strong i'vreseiTdtiws a mass of putty after it hax been turned about by the hands of a glazier, yet one can only earnestly hope, ' for the sake of ths poor fellows who sit in all sorts of places anil attitude®, munching the queer repast with more or I k-ss avidity, that the meat and the pud dings ur« to Jack's taste, and that bring t as they both are—that quality not hav ing been diminished by the salt water iu i which they were boiled—nothing more ! 1 unpleasant the excessive aaltatws i ijiredominatea over the general flavor. ' tjta ! Iliff • a»dl amtantJof m<> i tetata ta 1 ' ship does te it furmto fiwrftwi'iflta ■noh— -and a gill of rtuto *1 taxi. *o hr as tny own exj>eri t«to goes, exhausted Jack's bill of fare I It is IxxJ and duH |>ork hud pea soup, I > tea and vuM-gnr, nun, biscuit and hm< i juice. And those who know the life will , admit thia, thste—*> fas as respects the quality of ffietia articles as we find them at M>a—(ho diet sounds very much nicer , than it looks, and look® vary much nicer than it euta. ALLIGAtOB AtIUP. Mindful that an uuteokod-for pleasure k tlirids welcome, Frank Buckland did not advi*M> his guests on a certain ooca- Mon that they were about to enlarge their gastronomic experiences, but when the soup had been disposed of axked n i famous gourmand sitting fiear him h<>« jhe likadit. "Very well, indeed,” w.v j j the answer. " Turtle, la it not? lonh ask liecausa I did rot find any green Ist." Buckland shook his head. ") fiuioseil it had a somewhat musky taste p-culiar, and not st all unpleasant," li. marked his neighbor. "All alligator* have," replied the host} "the caynuai, . |H-cudly—the fellow I diaaoctod tins morning, and which you have just been T a douen of the suddenly-enhght . enad diners suddenly started to their teet, two or thpae tauak from Use room, and the rest of the meal was enjoyed by (Mdy aP" irttau of Ole original •’Hee what imagination is,” said Buck tend. " Had 1 told them it was turtle, or terrapin, or bird’a-nest soup, or lbs fl«tefa << a fiab from the maw of a sea bird, they would have pronounced it ex j ccUsnt, and tbeir digvrtion would have I been nona toe worse. I tall them ti*t | itia alligator soup, and their gorges rise at SS good a diaii as ever a mau need I ' have ' Tnvnw is nothing like teeing properly , trned and equipped for the list lie* of ‘ life. Htif), few mtn are in the happy . euiidiUpn qf the Irishman who sent a letter to a friend aarfhg that while he ■ was writing he had a ptatol tn b tb •bsads and * ®word is the other. Tn iMMbsch aavanta have, for the las I been keeping nine pigs in in a -take of habitual druakenneaa This has IqMi&Hte ’rith a view fa> testing th® effects'll different kinds ei alcohol on these sgimala, and the Protect of th® Heine lest year kindly put some sty, * and a yard in the mumcijial slaughh-r bouses at La Villette at the disposal of the aavanta, Jn.orter that they might condnei tbeir interesting experiment at the amallest possible cost to themselves. The exjieriment is interesting, because we are toldthat ths jgg to the anitqal whose digmtrfb apparatus most closely resembles that of man; but then drunkenness does not act on a man's di gestiuD only, and the behgvior of a tipsy l4g fipiiiahta but • alight indltation of what a tijisy man's would be who had drunk of the same liquors. However, wu learn that the pig who takes absinth® is first gay, then excitable, irritable, combative and, finally, drowsy ; the pig who has liraxnfy mixed with hia food is cheerful all through till he falls to sleep; the rniu-swilling pig becomes sad and somnolent almost at onoe, while the pig who takes gin conducts himself in eo-1 eeuUic ways, grunting, squealing, tilt- j ing Ida bead agaruat toe stye door, and riaihg <Bl tea hind legs as if to sniff the wiad,.' Tft.. Deeaisns, writing on these intoxicated swine in the A-ance, re mark* that they are none ot them the womt" for their year's tippling, which mayibe regarded as aatukaotory or the reverse, according to one's point of view. A XB war JFK* BILL Os rABK. The Baltimore newspaper boys had a grand iwmquet recently, and they turned their funny man loose to prepare the mean. Thia ho succeeded in doing without say perceptible harm to the victuals, which was the main point. Thu carl was a two-oolumned holiday edition of the Hatttrnora PrrAt, Vol. 1, No. 2, Isb*<ml at «Butow House. It was sunuounftkiftQr a grouped fop-titnilA of th* Bslti-*pre dailies. “Inside matter" (toe other half crowd'd out for want of apse*) was the pslatat'ln twvtav® *nsiti|gA l ‘ e its two native shells. "Boiled down" were the aonps. "The old defenders" (pieces of ruaisUuice) were sirloin® and saddles, while “our 'ateemod contempo raries” were, obviously enough, boiled I turkey and the like. "A slight cool neaa" (between English- and Frenclj) - Mimi supplied by the following : " Jr/trAl i -M I’o/aiZ/e garni aux Truflea. Guillo tine de Turkey, su harem deooree. Beef a la mode, sur preme. Patti de foie eras, garni an hankey doireo en aspic. H«ma In sedentaire. Tongues la tai nezvous ornate. Patti froid des capon, | lutirep do business. Aspic of oysters. - *la heavenly smite " "Tjjo .business ' dejsirtaient" was not inaptly namixl, for with canvas beck®, piieswita, yeuiwm, j i wild turcey, Illinois grouse the aerioiu ( : work of the session may be said to have ' ' tiegun. Halads were mure "Amuse , oieuta," peas, asparagus, beet* and the like, "Our country exchanges,” olives ;md sances “Pungent personatitte*." Cakee and things were sorted under the caption; Pi (XAAst fts Oflcß.) THK WIXI COLt'MX. The creams and ices came under “ An other cold spell.” "Fruitful topics’’ were grapes and figs from the drowsy east, and the combined doxology and benediction was conveyed iu the orna ! mental line: "Lock up and go to proas." Thia arrangement of the menu did not I m tli* least impair appetite, and tlie i whole press must hsve gotten a great scoop on old Boniface. tfllAT AXVtHIAt AIK'T IK THE HABII or DOIHO. "Mrw. Topnoody," sadly remarked . Mr. T., after an agitated scene, “yon ! not what I thought you were in toe happy day* of youth. ” "Oh, 1 ain't, sqn't IF' “No, you art not T tlitoigbt you were an angel, aod now—tuJiruow—” "And now,” broke in Mrs. l(, “and tow ynu find ton* your* wfool, and that angel* ain't fn toe pots and dish-rag* around, and spanking babies, and sewing on buttep*. and wrMtling kitehan stove*, and mskiag muslin plasters for husbands with the colic, and bosaing hired girts, agd doing the <w>kiag for a big family, baaide go j mg to church aad being man ied to a I Topnoody, *ll the tame. No, T< puoody, * angel- ain't fn toe teabit of doing such . things and rt tea mighty good thing ‘ ttiry suit or th* aug*l busfnneateouldn’t ta*t till toe anddfo of u*xt ” Topnoody did. not pursue toe oonver ; ratten further, but put on bis ha* and < want down etwet to wonder how many s'«i«j were aag*la> ■MMitaiiMMMM THK T4QTLLB The sense of touch, when highly trained, enables the blind to read with their fingers almost as readily as others with their eyes. With it alone Laura Bridgman rapidly recognises a friend ; feels the appn ach of one coming fn the hall, and even picks out her own clothe* returned with tone* of other* from the laundry. The ancient sculptor determined the Anal finish of hia statue tn marble, not tty his eye, but by tlie nerves *t flirt exite of his finger-nails. The expert Oom |MMitor depends leas on his eye than on hi* finger-tip* in handling Id* types. The wonderful capacity which he* hid in o)l our sense* is bindght ont only whsn übceasity. force* us to their special train lug, but it might be well if their fuller development was made part of th* edu cation of the young generally. Without thia sense we could hiid uuthuig in our hands, except when look ing at it; nor stand with safety ; nor lie in bed with oomfort. Few aro avmr* how dependent we are on the MiiMtaoan located in the surface of our bodies. A man in Oarmsny, on raouvuriny (rum a severe f»v*r, was sttacked with uumbnees, which was soon fol towed bj loss of all tactile sensation. He would wound or bum himself, and itecomo aware df it only by seeing the blool or the scar. Gangrene (mortification) fol lowing an injury to hi* finger, the latter nsd to be amputated, but it was don-- wid lout tlie slightest pain. Though he retained hia full power of motion, h® could tell only by his eyes whether hi* nrm was extended or l>ent; nor oould he walk, or even stand, in the dark, and ivhon in bed ho simply seemed sus |H-nded in th* air. The case was regarded as aver, inter esting onu by the medical profession, and, on the person's death, some twenty yea's later, a post-mortem examination *howod that hi* brain was wholly anaf fected, but that there had liacn exfa-n vivo softening of the spinal marrow from the top of the neck to the small of too back.— I'dtoA® (Jomftanion. Tiraua u a Baltimore boy named " Ollie," who is just out of hi* drease* A friend of (lie family a*k*d Oihu 'tkiioae boy he was ?" " I'm mammy’s j boy.” "Why, Ollie I " said bis father, reproachfully. " Yes,"continued Ollie, "and I'm papa’s boy." “How can tha| l>e," asked the friend. "Why, my gra •touaf" Was the reply, "can’t a w»g“U have two horse* ? " GxHTAl.vnr, a sheriff is an executive officer. - : I RON ■ ” A TRUE TONIC ” A PERFECT BTRENQTHENER.A SURE REVWfo IKON BITTEKS are hinkdy fcr all ’ qnirtng a certain and efficient ton i<»; eeucciftJlr 2nd hfoo- mittnl F'rnrt, Want of ApprMo. Lol of Sirrngth, ttek r**. I artatoa* the blood, .trmgtheiMi the inoaclae, end gfT« new life te thenwree. liarywa like a charm on the dirarti ve organa, removing aildyapcpuc aymptonla, «uch an <Ae Food, KrirJmy, Had in At StumiuA. Hfarwu en, rtr, TWwttwß' Iron Preparation that will not b!aek<*n the tenth or *4v» hcadaoiie. Hold by all drtrggim. Write ft>r the ABU Booh pp. <4 ■eefiil and am Being reading—ar»d A** BROWN CHEMICAL CO., Baltimore, Md. BITTERS 111 IM "" ' 'I"T SAW MILLS, IW MILIS. I A\E WX Planutioo and Mill Macbinart. Enrfnea aad BaMrre, VeUes Tuller., Hangen. Journal Bjaw, Mill Oewlw Uudeeat ' Om Gearing. Judaon’. Ooremow, Dlarton'aC.r«*i’t ” , • Belting. Htbbttt Metal Braea Fitting., Globe and 0 t»ek V Ms. / vx*. Iron and Bran Caillngi, Gin Rit», Iron F/ont*, f <t>KO. EL. 4i . FORE dr CHY FOUNDRY AND MACHfNEddGMKi ~ • 1014 to 1026 FENWICK HfREHT/AUGIKAtdaA,, | MT* Near the Water Tower ] ®OHR»pairlt»g pee aptly d.ne «l Barer rrpaita <4 all kind, dune proaapUf. M OPERA -HOUSE GARi®! BEN N EISZ. PROPRIETi JR choice m won PHILADELPHIA AND CINOINNATimfSR BROAD AND ELLIbBIKUiIt?, AlfoV'-TA, • *T t» Mm ■ I« a • ’ a I > (TKBta*-*l*'< wsr «w ■l* IN ADVANC'K -I nlmbeO. ■' l* iilWtel thk or rHHon- «v .. «*n »> What a wt«uk*rful touigto* Wtata 1 • m-rpeuk is I ObeiAMkU analjsM i**K ‘ ‘ duUwt anything ut i} to ita action. Water, a little some mineral salts, and traces of mucti*’, epi thelia, cells, etc., lumped er m M rxtracFivo. M N’ntfifng mnfta-iiifrtMng «p->ctfic about it at all. IkMHeta*. col orletwi and modorota*,-it.ntay b«i or. the sound akin, or applied to Ox* tffe, -or taken into to< mouth vutooqj *y r»- hiiit wuatevav. Th a bit** t q(j kind* of auskes produce fiiiXMßMfif fa .Seine act as % ‘h’FWWfo 11 -iTf » W oular system, sump a* pweotic, some cause inflammation .jS, toy sppae, while other* seem to give rise «> awor giuuzi’fjbn of tli* *trui'' -raWoffkt&uentH of tlie lilood. Ail are or less witli rigors, delirium, tyfac&pC, A>n mlrions, paralysis and eorota Wiethar the poison* of tny two or taw* aro identical I an B'flt TnMta-W tAnii piobable ; but u* tho fiv* tp*rfrt with which I have axpertmtirted <m rop*elf. ■o far 1 have fiMrod fivs distm*i*nd separate venoms. I iuiagt**r”hW atauix', tlist Un rattlesnake and w*pper head wdl prove to pu*c*A jierUapa swieral of to* vgN r^u * I hojiu *o. Home of nm **ry uastabl*, and decmnpo*Ajl kept only a short tiuu or if i* di»kurli*d, deadly projierties oven whan drieij. A 1 " 1 ’ of tlui conjinou French viper ( [ i/x ra atpit} nay lx# diluted ilowfi til! if form* a mure local irritant No true fSMaote hss ever lieen diacevpted f°r. Wfo «f any snake, and the March for komctlnng which shall be an antMrtte to the l ite of all ap]s-itnf M B»‘‘ to lie irrational in tli* ettrWnrt, •lee ing that there are *o many-dlffl'fciA i poisons, producing in many cam>* oppo site effect*. One nrigbt M-v**il-aspect to find a general antidote M <vpi*in, ladladonna, arwenie and mcrenry poisoning- ' w ' raituw t 1 am monia, npon which an nfo*Jtare*-«a* has I Mum laid, i* probably vnMfong taore than that of a strong stimnlant; <cer- Uiinly Us soil**in maintaunag tiMflniil fty of the Mood i* qurtW Npputtiataca), aid ng that iw-wnMnM cußgaiau** of 1 the flbrinn has nwv.-r-litaßi-taWtaaliy dem onstrated. Indeed, it is said ttaMwfithe aetopsy of file keeper GM‘4Nk bitfa-u many years ago-tqr • «ai>** d» captoj' l * 1 tho Garden*, th* htotal !-Jtßii di®»v<’lol at al), bfft Wiuvfroad prontn—iitay jluid in all the great vessel* :aiuJ r 4X-_>.