Indiana Palladium, Volume 9, Number 30, Lawrenceburg, Dearborn County, 10 August 1833 — Page 1
By David V. Cullcy. Terms $3 PER YEAR 33i PER CENT. DISCOUNT MADE ON ADVANCE, OR lUi ON HALF YEARLY PAYMENTS 1 fjrrjriJ?Ttr'.i.r2i i
t
ILAWRETCCEBIJIlGIl, (EA.) SATURDAY AUGUST 1, 13
jt
" ' - f r r a i i inf tww
A COMPLETE FARMER. A complete farmer is a most careful, industrious and frugal, as well as reputable and useful man; and unless carefulness, industry, and economy are united in the character, it will be an imperfect one. Althongh :t firmer cannot live without labor, yet by labor alone he can never grow rich and reputable. Much depends upon his laying out and performing certain kinds of labor in the times and seasons when they ought to be perform0'!. If he will not cart out his summer dung, nor plough those lands in the fall, which he means to seed in the following spring if he will not put his seed in the ground early, as soon as the season will admit if he will not attend to his fences and see that they are sufficient and
ifhe will not cut his grass when it is ripe, and do every thing that is necessary to secure it in good order, he will be perpetually hurried from one kind of labor to another, and every one will be slighted; his flix will not be well coated, nor his grain properly filled out; his corn will be shortened for want of being well hoed, and his grass will dry away in the field. Let every kind of labor, therefore, be performed in season. A complete firmer is a man of great carfulness and solicitude; without care, the severest labor on the best of farms will never produce riches and plenty. If the farmer will not milk
his cows in season see that they are promptly tended go to the male in the right time, for the next years profit; and that his dairy j3 neatly and carefully managed he may labor without ceasing will hive a small, poor breed of cattle, and never enjoy a fullness of good butter and cheese. It is care which makes a flock increase and grow to a good size, which brings forth the profits of the dairy, and fills the house of a farmer with good tilings. If he will not carefully inspect his fields and meadows, and see that his fences are in good order, his grass and his corn will be croptby his cattle; and he will not gather and put them up carefully and in due season, he will have a short and mouldy crop. If he mows, rakes, or fodders his cattle, in a careless slovenly manner, his flock will be pinched through the winter, and become poor and lousy in the spring poor oxen, too poor to do the labor of the season; poor cows, with little or no milk, and wretched calves and poor horses, too feeble to draw, and too weak to ride with safety. If his swine, poultry, arid stock in general, and his carls, rakes, and tools of all
kinds, are not carefully attended to, the farmer can never grow rich and respectable. It is attention which gradually collects from various sources, and covers the soil with manure: it is attention which causes the hills, fields and valleys to yield their increase, and advances and completes their most beneficial improvements. There is a third virtue, without the practice of which, farmers can never attain to wealth and independence; I mean Economy. "Without this, both labor in raising, and care in preserving the fruits of the earth, are absolutely thrown away. Economy is an excellent virtue in a man; it is indispensable in the affairs and professions of a firmer. And of this he should never be unmindful v. hen he looks into his barn, his cellar or his garden, or even his pastures; to say nothing of his fields mowing lands and meadows. But farmers, as well as other men, are too apt to forget, that in their pursuit after riches, almost every thing depends upon economy joined with care and industry. A frugal industrious man, blessed with but a common share of understanding, will undoubtedly succeed and advance his inter
est, beyond whatever he expected, when he first sets out in life, provided no singular providential evil should overtake him. More is gained by saving than by hard labor. A farmer, therefore, whose utmost profits are small and slow, as ho cannot grow rich suddenly from his profession, should be a rigid and steady economist. He should rCfiis'.Ccr the saving he may make in every
thing in fuel, tools, clothes, meat, drink and pocket expenses; above all, in his time, which is equal to so much money in hand. Every day that his neighbor goes to market with a pound or two of butter and a few eggs, ifhe stays at home and keeps steady to lvs labor, he gets two if not three days the start of him. While his neighbor wastes his time and spends his money in imprudent and trifling pursuits, he saves both time and money in dressing and improving his lands,
whsch demand all his attention. There is iio leisure hour to be found on a farm from
early in the spring till late in the fall
and other vegetable sulstinccs, will enable him to pay his shoemakers. Scraping his door and barn yards, after rains and showers, will clothe his boy. Saving his early apples, 3nd which are commonly lost entirely, will piy his tailor, his poultry well attended, will pay his maid. IIi3 calves will pay all his taxes, and some part of his hired labor, if proper care be taken of them. In fine, let a firmer who possesses only fifty acres of good land who owes no man and who has a common blessing on the labor of his hands, strictly attend to the management of his affairs, live a life of patient industry, and practice agreeably to the principles of economy, and I think he may live well may he be excused the hardest of labor; leave his spade and hoe to the next generation by the time ha has seen fifty years, when most men begin to think of comfort, ease and independence. iY. E. Farmer.
Georgia vs. JDo wn East. Barroom or a Tavern. Nutmeg. (Addressing Cracker, a Georgian.) I say, Mister, you haint seed nothing of no umbrella no whercs about here, haint you? Cracker. Now, I tell you what, stranger, if you'll jist untwist that and say it over agin, 111 gin you an answer.
Nut. Now do tell; I guess you are about as snappish as Deacon Holmes new in'ented sheap shears; they not only tuck the wool clear oiF, but shaved the ears and tail with it! Crack. You're a screamer! Come, figure in with me in a mint-julup, if you know what that is. Mint's all the go South and if you want to get the first chop, go to the grave of any southern nullifier, who mought have recently died, and there you'll find the mint as they say, shooting up spontaneously. Nut. No? you don't say so? Well now, that's a good one. Uowsomever, mister, I guess you never drinked no blacstrap, did you? 'Spose you hav'nt. Why bless
your'tarnal soul, its the sweetest drink that
tilted it under water; the eddy at the moment seizing it, drew the end downwards, until the boat stood r.lmost perpendicular it; the water. The motion was so sudden that every thing was precipitated into the stream. The horses swam to shore, but all the persons were drowned, with the exception ol Mr. Claik, the child of Mis. John II. Clark, and the ferryman. Mr. Clark saved himself by seizing a horse's tail which brought him to shore, the ferryman on his fht, and the child floated until picked up by a boat which put off from .shore. Thus has been given a death stroke to the happiness of this respected family. The bodies of the unfortunates have not, we understand been found.
Mrs. John B. Clark has left one orphan son. Tight Pant's, have a very fair prospect of soon becoming out of fashion, at least with the candidates for matrimony. A few diys since a young gentleman of this borough who was ns the term is, 'engaged to be married to a buxom voun lass in the country, procured h;s wedding suit, and for fashion's sake, had his pantaloons made tight Icnecl which exposed the shape of a
! pair of limbs bearing a striking resemblance
to the handles of a wheel-barrow set up on end. Thus cquiped he proceeded at the time appointed to claim his 'dear Peggy.' Tli3 mother, on seeing her intended so-in-law ihussuddenly transformed intoa monkey, alios a dandy, screamed out to her d milliter, 'Peggy, if Peter can't afford cloth enough to make a decent pair of trowsers, he'll never be able to buv the child a frock;' and raisin" ihe broomstick, she forthwith beat a retreat. Peter did retreat, and has not been heard of since! Who after this would think of weari ng tight pant's ? Liverpool Mercury.
r. . 1: .1 t ,.. . . . . uibi-v.
lUK-uuiu uu uiemuscics. l catch u up my j 'lie Knight the first battle, tint of Tal.
pc.iuuci Hum io prime, anu 11 supioutot my j lusaatcnee, unuer mo orders ot ueneral Jac!, hand and sunk to the bottom of the river. on, bet not in his presence. This was th
Ihe water was nmazimdv clear, and 1 rnnlil
I- J I -
see it on the bottom. Now. I couldn't swim
i jot, so I stz uncle Zeke, sez I, uncle Ztke you're a pretty clever fellow, just let .no take your pcauder horn to prime. And don't you think the stingy critter wouldn't. NYU, says I, you're a pretty good diver, un if ye'il dive down un git it, I'll give you a primin. I thought he'd leave his pcauder horn, but he didn't; he stuck it ntu his pocket, and down he went and there he staid; (here the old lady opened her eyes with wonder and surprise, and a pause of some minutes ensued, when Jonathan added,) 1 looked down, and what do you think the
critter were a doing?'' "Loidy T exclah
the eld lady, ''I'm sure 1 d
" 1 he re he wa
on
luimed.
V -
preiuue to ui? gionus Hiivessioimf victories which terminated bef re .New Orlear.. (Jon Coffee signalized himself, by U.h vabr and' eomnnndmg powers in the hard foug:;t battles of Talledega, I'muehiaw, I'notuhope.), and Tohopeka. At Ihuuchfaw he was nhut through the body, and although siidering under this dreadful wound, when the Indians attacked the retiring army at I'notichopeo Creek, and thre w it into a'pmie and contusion, General Coffee rose from the litter on which he was hnrne, mounted his horse, und greatly aided the I'omin-iudor-in-Ciiicf in restoring order and retrievingthed iy. "On the summon? f t.eneraf .Ta-kson, without the orders of Government, Cenenl Coffee raised the U.OOO vohmt ers. that enaa m . ..
uleil the l.omw.nder-m-r'iivff to
rtnrni Pmi.
tlou t know, saeola. iiriveout the Hi-if-sb t.i r.tm t!.
he re he was," said our hero, "setting right whole southern frontier, and finally to trithe bottom of the rirer. pouring the im-Iim- :' the HU-cessive conflicts uoon the
dcr out of mxj pcauder-horn into then .'' ! Pins f New Orleans. I "'lie died.' savs a oarrcvnnril e?.t. tV
death of the righteous and manih
From the Fort Wayne Sentinel. Foxt Wayne. This place took its name from the fort built in its environs by Gen. Wayne in 1704. It is situated on the south bank of the river St. Mar)', in part, and reaches down thcMaumee river some twen-
ever streak'd it down a common sizdd gul- ro(1 clow the point where the St. Mary
let. 'Lasses and rum with a leetle dash o' water. Why, do you know, when Deacon Snooks died he was buried in farmer Greg's old lot, just behind Major Stakes' grocery and liquor store; you know where it is? Well, ever since he was laid there, which
I may be, I guess about twelve years ago,
there s been a spring of blackstrap running. Crack. Well, stranger, you can take the rag off the bush about a leetle the cleanest I ever heard tell. I reckon you'll beat our old nigger Coot, who once run again a lawyer, and has never been able to tell the truth since. You C3n come hucklebcry over my priscimmon to day. Nut. Well, I guess I am not quite as slow as a pumpkin-vine or as dull as a rainy
day. But you appear to be a green one in
these parts. How do you like the middlings of Marvland? Crack. Why I can't zactly say, I reckon your niggars are about a notch too independish; why, itsa fact, the vile catamounts are so plaguy slow on their trotters when a feller speaks to 'em, that they .might run a race with a goard and be distanced arterall. I reckon vou had ouhl to see our Gconv
niggerslaey'ie a leetle wurse than the I claimed from its wild condition with but
Introduction of lobacco. It 1? assorted by Camden, that tobacco w:;s for the first time brought into Knghnd by the settlers from Virginia, and there can be little doubt that Lane had been directed to import it by his master, Sir Waller llalcigh, who must
disembogues itself. The elevated position of the town commands beautiful prcspects on t tie northeast, north, and north-west sides. The St. Mary gently winds itself around the west end, and along the north side through a narrow valley, until it mingles its waters with those of the St. Joseph river; which contains a heavy volume, and rushes rapidly towards the town from rather a northeast direction; and the confluence of these streams forms the Maumee. A more eligible site for a town is not in the West. It combines so many commercial advantages, which have hitherto been shrouded and kept back by the suspension of the sale of public lands by the retention of the Canal lind for vacillating periodical vendues; and by the dilatory and timid action of the state in accepting the grant and commencing the canal. But these restraints are now dissolved by the spell of wise legislation, and our country wears the lively asspect of business and general improvement. The stout hearted pioneer used to wend his way to the "beautiful St. Joseph," either because our land was not in market or in
pursuit of a country capable of being re- j upon a quantity of gun powder, wh"eh Uc
,..1 1... . .....
r .. . r- . - T t . , . . . 1 "o ...... i.i.ui.i. j 1 iv uiio
curious rjm oj j.igr.inwg. u e iearn ; frith of the Christi u.' The disease of which from altham, that (airing a hevere thunder he died, was an affect i n cftiie hm".,whichhrt
Ii VI- V " w luicmjou, ; contracted ilnrm-j Ins vis.t U tins city lat the N altnam 1 actory yas ft ruck with light- i winter. From the middle of Avril until a ning-. Ihe iluid passed down the rod on the fow weeks before bU death, his eotvtitutio'i small factory unt.l it reached the part of the seemed to rally. The disorder then recurroot, to which the lorcmg pump is attached, j red, with violent symptoms of pleurisy, und It then renarated, a portion of it nus.sitrjr 1 1. nYn;,.0.i c-,,,,, o-,..,, i, i.rJ
larcugn ino root, mailing quite a hole, on to . -l h;s (ivil!!r moments, when gi his the pump pipe. Another portion raeil l,,;,,,! 'i.io' o,...;k- i , i.....a .1...
along the rod until it reached the dressing ! friend dearest to hundesired that he should room window, where the copper pipe was j bo written to, and his blowing alj invoked
it-Muiir jumosi upon tue gia
it passed tare.
the window, breaking ten panes of rla.-s. and
melting the end of the pipe; the remainder of the charge passed into the ground near the picker. There is a pipe which le-ds from the forcing pump at the bottoiu into the femora, to convey water, and another t'u-t leads from the boiler in a wooden box under ground to the large mill, to convey tearn. This pipe ends near the furnace. As the fluid passed drvn the pump pipe, it n ruck
the boiler, and knocked ollVoine of the brick?
passed alon the tteam pipe to the hrir
mill went up the furnace and smoke pipe pasted along the hot air pipe on the floor ignited a number of cotton waste blew oil' and split the cap on the the top of the uprHit
halt, and passed down the water wheel.
fur .him.
'No nir.n ever enjoyed more unbounded confidence and ulitvtion. It vns deeply evinced in the list o'dices paid him, when the military honors which oisticd him to the grave, were lost in the rriei", of the t-ad concourse of the immediate neighbors.'
Thf
Alhany Ariu:;H ivs. "Mr. Vr.n Huron
will not be a candidate ior ti e poxt Presidency, imhvs be shall le presented as Mich by
;s ; the repr. senatiws of the People, resembled
m general convention. And if be idiall bo so represented, be will net only leu candidate, I tit a Miccehsful, triumphant candidate.' The oditor may be considered us speaking the tentintep.ts of Mr. Van lhiren. All who
'i .M- nni' '. 1 ; w 1 v ; ii. .. :.! .. .. ....
both mills were in operation at the time, t,,,,,, ti'. n., ...., . ...v.-1.;. ... '
1 . . , - . . - 1 ...-11.. 1 11. I III Ikl CIIIK 1 111" i.n.ir HI but no person was in the least injured! ,,iCi ,;.. ...... 4.:il.y: . r,. ,!-,,!v ,.,,.
Ms-wen oourum.
inated in a general convrijtiini. it is cerjtuin, that the friends f the adl-iini-tration
in the di'errnt ;t".tes ctmnet unite v nny one candidate, except by means of a National Convention, and that Mich a convention will beheld, when the tune urrios, for making the nomination. It is equally certain, that the individual, who gets this nomination will, with few 1 eentions, receive the Min.
have seen it used in France during his resi- port of the partv. J), lHVarc Ca:.
itence there. 1 here is a well known Ira-1 dilion, tint Sir Walter first began to smoke I
it privately in his study, and the servant coming in with his tankard of ale and nutmeg, and i'.sho was intent upon bis book, seeing the smoke issuing hem bis mouth, thiew all the liquor in his face, by way of extinguishing the fire, and running down stairs alarmed the family with piercing cries, th;t his master, before thev could net on. would be burnt to ashes. "And ths," continues Oldvs, "has nothing in it more sur-
From the Wyoming JiCpullican. W YOM I Mi M( )N CM LNT. The ceremony of Lying a corner slonc to those who fell in the Massacre on tbo ild day of July, 171S, was perfoiint (I on Wrtlnesilay the I'd instant, 1I10 imnivcrf.ity of tbo day on which that melancholy ct lit occurred. The fccne was inten stiiignml solemn. It was unlike the Mali nary laying of a corner stone of a mou'irnenj, when; i;rditation
prising than the mistake of those Virginians j upon some patliolie event alone insp'rrd themselves, who the fust time they seized I f-' ding. The bone? of ihose w ho were in is-
sharp end of nothing whittled down; if they
can t dodge a panther at three months old. I once see'd a nigger stick it up the Savannah river agin stream and wind, middle deep in the water at the rate of ten miles an hour; if I did'nt, may I be screwed down to a hoe-cake in a cider-press. Nut. Well now do tell; you must have a nil hulsome climate in Gcorgy. Cracx. I tell you what, stranger, our climate's got no nature at all. In the uplands it moe.ghi be the same as this 'ere one day, and another jist about hot enough to
roast a common sized salamander, borne
folks there can't count their children, and dont die until they're so particularly old
that they can't step into their coffins. But I reckon you've never been in the low countries? The fog there is so thick that you have to cut your way through it with a pick
axe. A steamboat was once smashed to pieces by running agin a Georgy fog. Nut I swow! mister, I should like to know what school you got your children in? May be you were brought up in the lying in hospital and fed on razors. ; I guess if you were put into a cider mill you'd come out at a regular built Cholera morbus. I Cijack. Right, stranger and you'd
have to pass through all the cotton gins in
little manual labor. But the emigrant who could calculate the great resulting benefits from certain local advantages, would halt his caravan in this vicinity turn out his herds to browse and fatten on the nativo meadows peculiar to this country strike his rural pavilion commence a war of extermination against the forest and vigorously press forward to the completion of his task; and then sit down in ease and circumstance, in the full fruition of a bountiful farm and a home market. The traveller who visits here, and loves to raise the veil to recur to the dim scenes of other days, will stroll among the vestiges
of the old forts, and in his ruminations, will
bring the pictures of the past to the present,
acred in Mtrumtini: Jo defend their roun-
try, and their familh and to ul.r.s i;einay a Monument is to bo ended, I.: d been dug f om tbo earth, and were exhibited to the :.5-cmblcd multitnde. To look upon a
great immlu-r of skulls, ?;t:d oiher human
longed to the English colony, sowed it for
grain, or the seed of some strange vegetable in tlio earth, with full expectation of reap! n a plentiful crop of combustion by the next year, to scatter their enemies.' 'Edinburgh
Cabinet Lib., No. XI. Life ofXir Walter j bone? some bearing maiks of the tomahawk
anu H;ip:i!g Knue, ami oiner. p' iitrat(.l with balls, iiw.ikem d a ;cneeflbo sutleringsof those Wyoming Ih rors, ?nd h d the mind to reflect upon the c u-e in which they lost llieir lives. There were present st vi ral ;ijjrd veterans who were in the battle. There were pveprnt several whose fathers
were vlain, r.nd whie bones were mr.f s. Truly the sec r,e n :; dc nm
neyoru ueseiaj t:on.
Raleigh.
Pretty good for I'.v.Vr county. Col. Jacob Drinker, of this Borough, hud off eiht acres and an half, six herdrcd and s'xtythree'dozen of wheat, every two dozn yielding one bushel of clean wheat. We doubt much if this can be beat by any county in Pennsylvania. Butler Pa. Ilej'ository.
in the !nd in
teresting
The following particulars of the death arid
and say: Here was once heard the sounds of i services of General John Coil'ee are taken the martial music and the fierce wild scream ' lWa the ('!obe- (Jcnal Colfee, with the nftlm hoih tondmfT in nntmnro -exception ot our venerable President, contri-
of the savage both tending to entrance
the soul and excite it to hostile action; here
: buted more than any other man to the servi-
! ccs and plans, which resulted in the glorious
I ! I 1111 ll.AVt j .., It? 9 tl
me young, un uiave, ami uu cmvairous, yict ofvew Orleans, lie was the fivoite
nobly tought, ulcu and died in Uetencc ol , Cl!liccr cf (;eneral Jackson, and one in whom of their country. Those fields were once i hfi placed the most implicit confidence. He
! strewed with pallid and mangled forms, with
the dead and the dying; they have now be
served with him in all his campaigns again! the Indians, and shared with him all the
Through all that whole period a cood far-! eor' afore y'd come out an honest man.
tr knows bow tn snennw bnnrnrnrlf- "owsomever, you're a screamer, so gin us
ably on his lands. He can have no time to
pass in idleness in chatting with people as they pass by in making needless visits in attending courts, horso races, taverns, and the like. By these means the public is snuually deprived of many thousand bush-
Ms ot potatoes, corn, Ions of hay, & and 1 1 .
a shal-
die canoes together.
come garden spots, and bloom with vendure ! glory of his success. In his death, this counfor the earner. These waters that once ! tr) has J?st !,f hoJ. lu0 experienced,
blushed with the crimson of uIIarmers arrow" have now become clear, and the finny
1
successful and abb
military commanders.
Jjcla tea re Cnz. "With deep regret, we announce the death
joftieneral Joux ('offkh. He died on the
"ith irst. in the bOd vcar of his aire at his
We hivn been sliown an b 'gar.'ly pf !!: rd box of hickory wood cor.tt.in'i g a t!i z 11 ofaxes, 11u.de by a !o n d.ulnnt woikmcti in llic steam rxe f:ttorv of Ab .:!iidei Hanison, at New Haven, for the juij.cse of presenting to General Ja k( n 0:1 his lato visit
j to that pi :ce. There w:.s a a mpi tit'on be
tween t.ie woikiih 11 rs 1 1 wbt ti one blM make thf bestaxe, ;."d the cor.st piei ce of their rivalry, w;;s lu;t twelve wt re p'.oile.ccil all of such excellence, that it w: s thought
betterto present them all, th.u cuter upon
lie o1 your corn s
tribe bask in their depths. Those hills and hollows that once echo'ed with the shout
u 1.-1 iaiiiui , i;ni vin 1 , 1 pi it n tealcr and let's pad-' of vlclor' and lllG cry 0 "csP:ur r.ow cclio 1 residence near riorenee, Alabama. the sound of the boat horn and the joyful '"This brave man, was one of tin
songs of the reaper
t lie luskc'fsAk etioi:.
A.
.
1 mi.
inrt:
the noblest ; j,.uj
Arccuctc. An Iri.-'.ir.f.n i:i l.f eastern
part of th's State. (Ii.(i:;ii .) 1. ! t;.ken s-
saeon tb.e st:i" hr asemt o i; i.u i s hn
jndiviou iiS themselves, become poor, and j their lives. The ferrv fall into the worst of luhits idleness, gam- j Elijah L. Clark,' and pJi ing and dissipation. .in.mfi,;.. .1.,
From the Port Gibson Correspondent. An awful accident occurcd on the Missis
sippi river, nearly opposite Grand Gulf, on
j Tuesday last, by which nine persons lost 1 river
I
TnnthnnU TTunfhitr Krrur.nn ."TiM 1 President, to whom he had been a ri WiNarm
ci'.me to
be n
lul'.is o:) i!at
)l(iil:Lr
.liniricaa citizen $otdu r. , 1. .. L- , hni. n.inl w il . r , i..,!. .
- , . . . ,. II'III'IUVIM "' I "" ' " I t'll
itc tan nun UM, wiiiicr I'll U lti U -''
b.'iortly slur h-3 fmb.ikrd, d.e ro:.d lt
you cle
;pit
i Here ;s no
flit containing Mr.
part of his family, con-
i sisting of his son and daughters-in-law, iIrs.
of economy, in the far- j Gibson Clark and child, Mr. John B. Clark
mcr which will not be rewarded.
Early rising will contribute to bis health, "1 -
preserve ms heids t,om tha inroads of
and child and Miss Coursey, sister of Mrs. Gibson Clark, aged about 1 years, also four of his negroes, 3 srrown and one child; ma-
am'
i ! .a t .kfe'l Ik.aY f C ilril Olt 11 ' t
ever hear of the scrape that I and Un-; Ta i T "araiK rruoii : mud, th-I.'n.n ( 1,. oidv P-.s., r.., ,) u,i ,1,1,1 I r . . w;t!it!io plain, ur.pretending, iarmer-like ap- ("""'i 1,1 y ' " " V " I Zf lad hid a duckinon t on Connecticut ,l0,r.,Pf.o il, ., iout toass.st in u U-una ill lutieiicd loi.t.
, j , ,p, , ... i uianv vi u.i, .m hum nt.l u lillllllll-iui'i. ? as:;ed Jonatuan I miuertoes, whi.e , in ih,uie. He had iiothir'r of 'Ac ! 'ch w::3 dent; in shoit o h r. ;,ud piot -t i d-
lsmg his old Dutch uostess, Wuo had .,0M a);ti circumstance of rb.rim1 var" mg with a c.ll occavio:; .hv, lie i. 'a-t ctp.
agreed to entertain Iran under tiie roof of i about him. Although of exceediredv robu.-t, ' eluded to n n. on out of ;J.c i.f.e until ti.rv
her hospitable log-cottage, for and in con- Herculean person, he had not u martini look. ! t;t cf the bad m.id. lie tl.eu tli whU i-
sideration oi a bran new mtli; pin. 'Ao, 1
never: dew tell it, was tne reply. j
"Well you must know that I un uncle
jLieke
iuu:.
it into our heads one Saturday
she unruly creatures; wh'ch commonly be-' king ten in number, and four horses; in cros- arternoon to go a gunnin, r.rter (lurks in lath
'in .Heir trespasses just es the day begin? ' sing from the Louisiana shore to Chittaloosa, ers skiu so in we got and skulled down to dawn. Close mowing and careful rak-1 got into an eddy of the Gulf, and in the the river: a proper sicht of ducks Hew back4 'Milt " ( - J Tit. jr.g. w::i enable htm to wmter one cow ex- j confusion that ensued, the horses became wards and forwards, I tell ye aid i y'm by .juuixhriTiry. Feeding jus hogs by weed.-?; frightened, ?.nd rushing to one end of the 3a?, tew oa 'em lit duwa by the lassh aui wcr.:
i iivintiprs u'pn (rrt n f ovir.'s.-'ii n oi ..l i c 1 i ... .1 1 1 . .1 1.
........... e-..vv nv "110 ii tint u it:i:ov.eo, ..ill I 01 oui. 01 . t nio I ' - A. . 1.1 I A. I'. .1 ..-.I t
:s c" .Tonance quiex and I iiouuiu a.m n(i.Jr, .x; d ,1,,:,.,. h,wu iJi(. ,u:, his whoioair and cspect. wore uo ..ppear- ' . .. .... u
ance of serious, religious iMinrr. And this ' h'J'' tone of mind roused to enthusiasm, charac- FS &M f J 1 ? h ril,L tcrized his soldierrhin. Or.o of ths bravest i'r ir:-
men that ever led a column ta the charge, and ir.soirir.g nil with his owe euorv thar.i mating motive in his ova Uiooj, was devotion to his country.
cf :
ev
r.:cd W. U. i4.i..e ctv
