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TWO DOLLARS PER ANNUM. )? GOD 1ST33 OXJR COUNTRY. ^ ALWAYS IN ADVANCE VOLUME 7. SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 7, 1873. NUMBER 17 the orangeburg news PUBLISHED AT OKANGEBUEG Every Saturday Morning. by the ORANGEBURG NEWS COMPANY ?:o:? - TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Copy for one year. $2.00 ?? ?? 8ix Month*. 1.00 Any one tending TEN DOLLARS, for a Club of New Subscribers, will receive an EXTRA COPY for ONE YEAR, Tree of charge. Any ona sending FIVE DOLLARS, ?r a Club of New Subscribers, will receive an EXTRA COPY for SIX MONTHS, free of fcharge. ? * -?to:? RATES OF ADVERTISING. 1 Square 1st Insertion. S1.50 ? ? ?? 2d " ". 1.00 A Square consists of 10 lines Brevier or ?one inch of Advertising space. Administrator's Notices, .00 "Notices of Dismissal of Guardians, Ad ministrators, Executors, Ac.$0 00 Contract Advertisements inserted upon the ?roost liberal terms. ?:o:? MARRIAOK and FUNERAL NOTICES, "not exceeding one .Square, inserted without ?charge. ?:o:? 1&- Terms Cash in Avance. Browning & Browning, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, QRAXtfEBYJltG C* ii., So. Ca? Malcolm I. Bnuwxiso. As F. Bt:ntfMj>tQ. nor 4 ? augustu^Tknow (Formerly ot the New Vovk Bar.) ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW? OItAX(iKBI'I?J, S. C. July 8_ti Atrial justice, fteftldcac* tu Fork of Ed Into, ALL BUS1NKSS ENTRUSTED rill be promptly aud carefully ?.t*t*?<re<l to, july?? ly DIL t\ BERWICK LEG ARE, SURGEON foRNTtST, ?lr ftAtiata MaltImorc t oIIoro DtttUt SWrR*ry. ttAfcttST-ST. OVER STORE OF i. A. ttAMttttfN, METALLIC CASKS, .TttS \?NDERSIGNED RAS ?N HAND fcU et th* Yariafes filtes <ef ihe *^ore Cases, Which can be lumishtd Immediately on ?p Hiciieu. AttQ manufactures'* WOOD COFFINS as usual, and at the shortest notico. Apply to ft. nines, mar 6?6m Carriage Manufacturer. REEDER & DAVIS, COTTON FACTORS ana Genend Commission Merchants, 1?? ARLESTON, 8. C. fesffuii Rasps*. '/AHurnuAs Davis. ??t 16 6m t. 9. BtfotHU. R. R. HOBQIKa H. C. H.'nuiNs. B?OD1E ?fc CO. COTTON FACTORS ayii COMM188ION MERCS ANTS, NORTH ATLANTIC WHARF, CHARESTON? S. C. Liberal AdraiKMs made on Co&stgnment. Ritsr to Andrew Simnnds, Esq., l'res i lat National D**k, Charleston, S. C. way 21 " wee tf WASHINGTON HOUSE BY Mrs. M. W. Sfcratton, cor.V?u DKftVAlS k ASSEMBLY STAKETS COLI'31 WA, S. C CoBTMient to the OreenviUe and Char-lenton Railroad* wnd the Ruuineaa portion of the City. Rate of Tran/icnt ? Board?Two Dollars per *>ay. Regular {Boarders recoiled .at Rensonablo ttee. The World at the Death-Bed or Pope Pius. Tn view of the serious illness of Pope Pius, the following artiolo from the New York Herald will be read with great interest.. Is Pius IX tho last uf the Human Pontiff*? The carious prophecy attribu ted to St. Malachy, Archbishop of Ar magh, in Ireland, and who diod in the arms of the "laat of the church," as the French proudly call Bernard of Clair vmux, distinctly asserts as will bo seen from the extraordinary document itself reproduced in the Herald to day?that he is. In that alleged inspired dream, the Irish patriarch gave the number of Popes that remained yet to como, giving to each one of them an epigrammatic mark by which he could bo concisely distinguished and tho Bign he attached to the Pontiff who closes his hazardous enumeration corresponds, in a remarka ble degree, with the venciablo Holy Father who perhaps at this instant, has the death-rattle at the door of his chamber. That sign is three Latin words' " Crux de Cr/?r," which is inter preted by some Catholic authorities to signify the persecution of the cross from a cross?that is, that the Popo suffers crucial afflictions from a royal poorer which has the crossfor tho chief emblem on its escatcheiO of authority. And thia, as had Hbeen paid, points the finger at Victor Emmanuel. In his kingly emblems, tho cross surmounts everything. It we mistake not, Father Saresufcc, a learned Jesuit priest, in a lectaro which he lately delivered not far from New York, g*\'c this interpret.if inn as expli citly M tho fine Inwgttigo could make it to the *^'iK.r dr Crurc," of the ancient metropolitan of Armagh. The lirrald does uot pi'ctond to settle the authority oi" St. I?iuinciiy:s prophecies. Hut it is us clear as tk? ,<nn in the meridian that the words ** CVm;t de CW?-?'* oro ianiagu lar ngrceiuent between Pius IX nnd the tirst monarch of United Italy. And that being the c?sc, it is an interesting and serious question, is- Pius IX the last of the Kornau Pontiff*? it is a startling question. Its proper form is, is tho great Roman Catholic , Church scutenced to death? For, no Pope, no Catludic church. Catholicity cannot survive the Papacy for one se cond. And Catholicity is a thing of no small radras, diameter and circumfcrcnc * St. Malachy therefore or whoever wrote in bis name, gave ground for patting a qucBtion of tremendous magnitude. A short time, however, will quite solve the curious interrogation, for it cannot be long before the H?]y See "Will havts nu occupant or cease to be the great cen tral religious altar of more than three fourths of the Vast population of Chris tendom. In the mean time, Pius IX is, in all human probability, on his death bed; attd the noble old man?with face one of the finest Home has witnessed for many a day-?has the world watching at his couch. Let us see who these watch ers are. Tho King of Italy has his aiind on the spot with particular anxiety of manner. Princo Bismarck, who by recent sta tutes has made the.Emperor the High Priest of the German people, and who ardently withes that there may never be another pupreroo head of tho Catholics, is attending to the Roman telegrams, to the exclusion oi every other du ty. M. Thier*. President ?f the French republic and, though a Protestant, affirm upholder of the Papacy, ia on the qui vice with all the activity of an aged statesman of genius, for the first intelli gence of an event which he knojrs will move Catholic France to floods of tears and sighs of true devotion. Francis Joseph, of Austria, is in con stant communication with his Embassa dor at th ? Vatican on tho fluctuations in the health of the illustrious pa tient. The Conut do Chaiubard, who once had inipnssioncd hopes that Pius IX Would place the erowu of St. Lout* on his temples and the rwor.l of Henry the Great in his hand, is in unfeigned grief over the appwhentkad dinvolution of one for whose rights the royal blood iu his veins was always ready to flow. 'J ho Turk at Coastsutiuoplo?the Prince of the Cresooat, the successor oi Mahommed?esteem*. bin uotogenariati l'rimate of the Cross, us if Rome hud ?never inspired crusade*- tu Jight npuim-t S.ilidin for fhe recovery of Jerufalotn; as if thcjro never ha 1 befu a battlo at Lepanto; as if thcro had never been a Charles Martcl and plains of Poictiers; and he is listening for tho first intima tion of his death,-that ho may honor his memory by putting -crape on the standards of tho Ottoman Empire. The Czar of Russia, it'is stated, hated Pius IX with a bitter hatred, and he is impatient to bo informed that the Pontiff has breathed his last. Victoria, Protestant Queen of a great Protestant nation, whose first Icings are saints iu the Roman calendar, hes her tender cars open for the sad news that the Holy Father is dead. She congrat ulated him on tho day he was fifty years a priest, she congratulated him on the ?lay he was twenty five years a Pope; when she learns he has expired, she will give to his name and to his vir tues, and to the great office he has so long filled, the gord, private homa'go of her heart. Finally, all the churches feel tho most intense interest in this death-bed.? Around it, it is ensy and just for im agination to conceive clustered all the great leaders of the Protestant forms of faith, anxious with the conjecture and ready to seize the hope that with Pio Mono the "scarlet woman of the Apoca lypse" may die and give up her soul for ever. Rut in a particular position, ami with a pre eminent right and though last in the enumeration yet tho most natural in i(. around this memorable death bed stands the whole Hornau fold, 300,000, J 000 in number. Never was sovereign Pontiff so loved by Catholics as Pius IX He was and he is to them no self made cleric, but the very' vioir of God; grand to look at; most noble in his disposition au angol in every virtue; a second prince of the apojtlcs in all respects; the most outraged of all holy men, and the idol of their hearts wml understandings;? Whether 'ho Catholic fsi'h is true or uot true, this is the way the Cutliolie people of all the earth v?-v? o.<??o.l their fondness on Pius IX; and sore arc they within nt (earning that Iiis hug rei^n ever them is at last at its end; and when ihey ahull read that he is no more. I copious will be the tears thai will tlovr from their eyes, broken will be the sobs with which they will pronounce his name, und ardent will be the prayers that will penetrate th e clouds for the saactifi:atiou of his spirit. It is n splen did tribute to illustrious worth. Far be it from ail to give it a wanton in sult. Thews facts give an idea of the itif/'r cst that is concentrated on the sick cone Ii or the death bed of Pius IX. Rut there is one watcher of this death bed who is entitled to special eons idera t ion. It is the King of Italy. He has 'xsng witihcd for the death or the Tope; for the Pope kept him long out of Koine on which he set his heart, and now that he has Home he is filled with uneasiness while the Pope lives. Well may he wish that the mediaeval prophet of Ar magh, or whoever wrote in tho ascetic .Metropolitan's name, issued a truo pro phecy when he made the Pope of the uOrux(ft Omee** Resignation the last of the sovereign Pontiffs. The Bukrupt Law?is it Constitu tional r For some time past there ha*been going'ou h discusaiou between the Rich mond Difpatch and the Hatcigh .Wir* relative to the constitutionality of the Amendatory Raokrupt Act. Wo copied a portion of 'aae of the Newt' curlier articles. Relow we neprlut the Dis patch's reply to a position taken by a contributor to the New*, The AVir* seems nearly to agree with the Ditmitch At leant it speaks of not having full confidence iu the constitutionality of the act. The DtMpateh't argument is that the amo idatory set is unconstitutional, in that it docs not establish a uniform bankrupt law. "Thit uniformity," snjs the fh'spatch, "must either be du rived from the fuel (hat it respects the State laws, or the fact (hat it fixes (he amount itself." The smount hore refers to ih exemptions allowed the bankrupt. The DitJHlh h say* : At pre bent we have 4wit a few words to say, ??d ihe.se are upon the following statement in \W arlicle iu (he /Vier? : Rut tho (Dispatch denies tlint Con gress, in tho act of Mxrch 3, 1872, did more than attempt, "by authorization and ratification," to give effect to the State exemption laws an Sin/*- lawn. Let us *ec whether Congress enacted any laws of it* oion in the passage ot said act or not. It enacts that the exemptions in each State shall be tbe amount allowed by the Constitution and lawa of each State as existing in the year 1871?meaning the amount designated or fixed by such State law; nothing more nor nothing less. It simply adopta the exemptions in each State as t he measure of its own exemp tions, without adopting the State home stead lawn. This is obvious from the following enactment: "And it la hereby enacted that such exemptions shall be valid against debts contracted before tho adoption and pas sago of sucbtState Constitution and laws, as well as those contracted afteiwards," kc. Now, they were not so valid under the State laws, and Congress could not, by "authorisation'' of them at State lairs, make them so. In this the Di?, patch ih undoubtedly right. But that is not what Congress did or attempted to do in the act" of March 3, 1873. Thnt body, in which there are some soundaud able constitutional lawers, especially in tho Senat?, simply enacted that such exemption* should be "valid" against all classes of debts uuder the bankrupt law ?a law of Congress, which none can doubt its p<'wer to pass." We have this to say in reply : If the new act of Congress does not change the Virginia law. then the seme amount is to be exempted under the Virginia law, and agniutf the same debts that were thrown out by the Virginia law, as this law was expounded by her highest judi cial trihuu*!.' In a word, the bankrupt law has uot changed the Virginia law. And if the act of Congress does not change the Virginia law, it failed to do what it was intended to do ; for that wai the avowed purpose of its authors. Ou ike other ami. if it does change the Virginia \ar it changes it by validating ?Im?, |a? IX TV (B>? Virzin!? \nn rrli'uli tliu Court of Appeals had pronounced un ooiistitutional. And this is just what the Suprcan: Court of tho United States said, in the case from Georgia, th it Con gress couid not do. The writer in the Xnrt says that Con gross did nut attempt by 'authorization' of thi'lH Statt, laid tt) valid itc ilie homestead laws of the several States. Ho quotes enough of the act Of Con gress to htit his purpose; but ho oihus the following: 'It is hereby ?uautcd that they shall be the atnottut allowed by the Constitu tion and laws of each State respectively as existing in the year 1871 ; and that such cxeiupions .-hall be valid agaiu.it debts contacted before the adoption and pawag* of such State Constitution and laws, as well as those contracted after the ?nie, and against liens by judgment or decree of any State Court, any decisioa of any such court rendered since the a.'.tpiiou and passage of such constitutions to the contrary notwith standing." "Any dedidon of any such court ?" What does jthix tnoa n ? It mcaus that Congress attempted to override the State courts. It fcems that our Court of Ap peal.? having decided what the law of Virginia wa|, and against what debts the homestead exemption should be allowed, Coagrcaa tried to override both the law aud tie court. Admitting, then, that the w filer tor the Ae?-* is right thus far, hi bus only gotoutofonc difficulty *to it II into a greater. Con gress has pnprr to pass a uniform bank- I nipt law. 'Iii* uniformity must either be derived frta) tho fact that it respects the State litra, or the fact that it fixes the amount ntself. It im, therefore, uot uniform, ana not being uniform, it not constitutional! for if it doos not change the Virgioia law, it has no effect, here, whilst if it doa change the Virginia law it is not ujiform, since the only uni formity it c o possibly claim is due to its allowing what the Stato allows as exemptions."- -Exchange, ft ddtng Cnko Tbey huvcsiotahlo ways of dealing with wedding! cake in Kngland. In I Yorkshire, wl n an Ka i Hiding bride is on the point >f crossing her father's threshold uftoi Pturaing from church, a plate contain tg a few square p ioces of cake is thrown rom an open window of tho house, for I ie purpose of learning whether tdie w be a happy or wrotcited wife.. It the lttc, on reaching the grouud Wreaks, he will n >t escape in- I jury. It is nor ess to say that lite near kinsman of the bride, who Heads the platter from the window, takes good care that - the omen is satisfactory. In some parts of Lancashire and Cumber laud it ia customary to put a ring amongst the ingredients of the cake, and to invite the guests in tarn to out a slice. The person who holds the knife when it comes upon the hidden ring is deemed to be sure of happiness for a t least twelve months. How A Boatoa Reporter Lost Hin Situation. It is said that in a moment of tempor ary insanity a Boston city editor assign ed a horse racing, bass-ball and aquatic reporter to report, in half a column, the Sunday services at the church ?f a sensational preacher. This ia the re port he published, and for which he was discharged. "The house inet at 10,30 a. m. Prayer Lj the chaplain. The first race was between the chaplain and the singers, it being a pretty even match the two first heats ; but the singers got the best of the last three heats, and came ;a on the amen two full lengths ahead, winning the last threo heats and the race. Time 0.64 Petitions were then presented for forgiveness and other matters, and notico was given of special assignment during the coming week for various ob jects. The singers then sailed up to the judges stand, and after getting into position sailed away on the course with all canvass set and a spanking breeze from the organ, which drove them aloug in fine style. The top rigged yacht flying the blue peuuant was well ahesd at the stake, and came home ahead of all the fleet. The speaker then took the floor, announced his intention to ask that the resolution of censure that had been heaped upon Annanias should be rcciiuled, and proceeded to read tho records of the case, from which it ap pears that Annanias had sold IIis house and had not given all the price to the church. The speaker then went on to say that uo reason appeared on tint re cords tor Annanias to give any, and much less all, of his property to tho church, and that he questioned it'an;- of tho>c before him would do any more than Annanias had iu the same place, lie then went on to show that Annanias had obeyed his wife iu the ma ter, and expressed the belief (hat few of those before him could say as much for them selves. After further arguments of a similar character he moved (hat the character of Anuanina be and the same is hereby declared 1 A by the members of the house." tiirK. (?trls are marvels of beauty and wonderfully made. Though fashioned by the bauds of the Creator they are shaped by the dressmakers and milliners. It takes exactly two hundred and eleven pounds of flesh and blood, thirty two yards of dress material, ninety seven yards of yellow tibbon, twelve pounds of cotton, twenty-four copies u" the Coach, sixteen feet of horse hair, thirty-three ouuecs of flour, two boxes of red paint, and a bottle of night blooming soriousness to prepare the average Rocky mountain girl for church. They know less in an hour, and can tell more in a minute than say othcr person on earth*. Their strong suit is to make trouble and bustlss, and the proficiency they have acquired is the conundrum of the ago. In game of talk they invariably hold the right bower or take tue ace with the king. They are totally ignorant of the rules of civilised warfare, and never let up wbou they get a fellow down. A girl flan look prelty and Ugly, happy und sorrowful, hot and cold, sweet and sour, sentiment al and disgustod in ten seconds, aud the only place in the world where tho boys have the be.-/ of them is iu sitting up of nights. Vit with all their faults we love them still, and a few more of our photographs may be bad by addressing the Driver and iuolosjng fifty cents. Marijagn proposals must be prepaid ? The (l 'of ) ('oath'. A stranger, a young matt from the country, after having gat d at the ban anus at the eating house iu a railway ata lion, wanted to know what '?them 'ar sweet potatoes wore wuth," aud why so much pains was taken to ' striug 'm." He couldn't see that he wa? wrong when ho crowd laughed. Legal Miscellany. The N. Y. Court of Appeals have deoided that ao order denying a motion to set aside a summons and complaint becsusa the notice is not uuder the right subdivision of See. 152 of the Code where the complaint was served with the summons does not affect a sub stantial right and is as* appealable. Tbe Supreme Court of Wisconsin, in a late case, held that an order setting aside service of the complaint?(on the ground that the copy served was illegi ble and allowing plantiff to make service thereof within twenty days on term*- ) was not appealable. The Supreme Court of Illinois have deoided tlut checks payable at a future day are entitled to the usual days of grace. Georgia has repoaled all her laws re lating to usury. In l*i*ktt?gill vi. LaheiJ", the U. S. j Supreme Conrt have decided that the estate of a deceased surety was discharg ed from the payment of tbe obligation in controversy on the principle that, if one ol two joint obligors die, the debt is extinguished against bis representatives; Opinion by Davis J; The Supreme Court of Indiana hold that neither the fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States nor the Civil Rights bill passed by Congress has impai i a 1 or aSn gated tho L w of that State on the subject of the mar - riage of whites and negroes. Snob a union between members of the different races is a criminal offense by the statute* of th>t State. A Massachusetts attorney acting for another man, recently acknowledged a deed before himself as Justice of the IN ace. How did he like his "'personal appearance?" They tell a story of a momber of a certain high toned fraternity known oat w.st as ?'shell bark lawyers." This member's client was np on two small charges^?"frivohj'is charges" as shell bark called them?'(forging a note and stealing a horse.) Shell bar* didn't like the In >ks of the jury so he prcpircd an .affidavit for ooutiuuuacc, seltiug forth thj absence of a material witness. lie read it in a whispor to ffre prison er who, shaking his head. Slid, "squire I can't swear to that dokymout." 'Why? ?Hekasc it hain't true." Shell bark grew red in the face and then explo ded loud enough to be heard throughout the room?"what! forge a n >te aud steal a horse and cant eveir to a lie : hang such an infernal fool;" and off he went leaving tho conscientious on a to his fate?M<u4horo Timtt. Where esu We Find Them .' Where ia the eating house waiter who is correct in his arithmetic? Where ia the after-dinner speech maker who, having to propose the toast of the evening, docs not regret that it has not been placed in ah!?r hands ? Where is the railway eonduetor of sufficient self-control to shut a carriage door without giving a good bang to it ? Where is the tourist who ean turn his thalers into francs and no* lose a few centimes by it ? Whore is the f ight aart driver who ever dreams of slackening his paae when going round a corner where there is a crowded crossing ? Where is the man who keep* n diary ! and ever live* to find the slightest use in doing tn ? Whrre )? the young gentleman who can abstain for a whole month from sticking flowers in bis button-bole? Where in the yonng lady who, after going to a ball, is unable to describe in detail a)) tho dresses thai were worn there ? Where is the workman who, wbeo he gets a ri*e in vagus, ever dreams of saving money by 'U-t Where is the amateur who can opeo oysters quickly without leaving the -hell sticking to them f A Cue of $15 and two weeks imprison tneut was tbe sentence lately passed by a London magistrate opoa a wretch who pricked out the eves of a chaffinch to improve its song, lie boasted of having treated forty birds in .the same manner in oue day. A little of the lash would have improved his song and probably made him "change his tune," too. Newborn is nothing n >w if not musical. Hostile Advice. Mr. Editor.?It ia said that it in lawful to be taught by an enemy. At leant sos-iys the Latin raixim. It may be lawful to be instructed in this way , but I prefer any other school.teacher. When one whose interests, to say noth ing of his prejudices, arc antagonistic to mine gives mo advice, I always look out for a mouse in the meal tub, and what is moro, I generally find him, and the more earnest the advice and tho . more emphatic the assurance that it is g'v? a from no other motive than affer? tiouate internst in me, the more suspicion* I become, and the less in clined I am to adopt it. A fow day? ago'. I read in a North ?rn paper a long and labored letter, giving a great many figures and no cud of statistics, the object of which was to show us of the Cotton States that we -li uId devote all our land aud time aud 1 .bor to the production of cotton and bay all our provisions and everything else we need from our Northorn frienJs, be. cause we can raise cotton and they can not. We arc told that we should not divide our energies; that oursoil and climate are the very thing for cotton, but not at all suited to corn or provision jrops ; that fertilizers p?y prodigiously when applied to cotton, but are very I unremuncrative from corn, Sec.; that an I acre in cotton will bring $100 cosh, I while au acre of grain, hay, potatoes, kc, will not bring more than about $15 worth of food ; that cotton does not exhaust the land, while tho crops ruin it; and then wo are told that cotton is such an "interesting" crop, that it is so beautiful, that it i.i so easihAurkcd, ?'by the least efficient force of implanta tion, and then, that it is "/Tiegentleman'* crop !M Now all this is as clear as mud. No one ao dull an not to see that to raise an acre of anything but cotton would be a waste of laud, of fertilizers, of labor and of mousy, and that besides the outrage on (h? mstheties by substituting hideous com, wheat, oats or clover for beautiful cotton and abandoning an interesting crop which can be raised by "the (east efficient of the plantation force," we should be giving up "the gentleman's crop" )utr excellence, and adopting one obly fit for the moat abject of boors. This advice has of course, nothing to do with the fact that New England wants a plenty of cheap cotton, and that tho more raised the cheiper it will be to the Yankee spinner. Nor are we ad' vised to buy everything we need to cat, wear and use at the North, because the necessary consequence is that we ?aast send bick to the North every cent we get for our cotton, and have to run in debt besides. Tho man who wrote this letter, giving this advive, must evident, ly be disinterested. "We know he is a friend, from a remark he made." I once heard of a cavalry officer who was sent with his company to attack a party of Indians who were supposed to be concealed in some thick underbrush; he dismounted his men and told them that "some men are good for one tbUg and some for another. I a in good for holdr Log horses. You are good for fighting ; go ia and kill the last one of the Indians." He was disinterested, of course, and ss the probabilities are he is alive yet, and perhaps owns a cotton factory in New England he may be the very man who recommends us to plant all cotton and buy from him and his frisnds everything wo want. But I object, I want to hold tho none* awhile. J. R. Baldwin Co , Oa., April 5, 1873.:? Southern Farm and Hume. Professor Hyatt delivered a leoturo on mercury in Vienna, recently, when he exhibited the leg bone o' a man whoso daath had undoubtedly been hastened by mercury. striking the bona heavily upon the table, out f>il thousand* of little glittering globules of mercury? brig.li/. metallic mercury ? which rolled about upon the black surface before him, collecting here and there into drops. This mercury had been absorbed during lifo, undermined the man's system an i proved fatal to him. Some one says that the lion and tho Jamb may lie down .together in this world, but wbeu the jfion g<*ts up U will be hard work to find the lamb. A New Jersey tobacconist, with commendable frankness, advertises; "1 shall continue, to keep ou hand imported cigars of my own uvinufacture " <