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" '? i-'Xu tnd Swag.' . ... - Atofavw ttto lie blifthV'.' V - i . Aad tto feaeas ere trembll; owa r v Aml sueae ar linked withjoMen light, - ' A4 Mm ire criaumn and brow ; ... WMletoierk-fv4fwratore goa to rest,.. if tatottolittaaaildranat tt: ' ' Bat the wake eurered with- smito a- ' vT the dratswt east swsbrigrbt. '- v Lte meek-ered Somra, the meek-eye lower, Waal beanUW tRa m are gireB. , . tier weary knars. Tbefbirda are singing amid me trees. But their aute seen sb" end Jw; And the rsh.prr ehirpa in tke wsring grass Memnrieanf JoaKaens : ; Tbe aajth wied sigto for be misses now ' The kaad -f ibe summer m tweet, ' Thai scattered reset alone his path, ' Aad dew-drops at his feet. Oh. the awft nh breee. the oreen Vow it thrills iv heart as it sighs along, . And whisrers smong the trees. ' Hid tbe autumn lime, that ad sweet time, , And there enaneth now to me, II; friends, mid tbe leaves and fading flowers, Sweet memories of thee; Of tbe itmid oM times 'he good old times, In tbe hubby mora of life. Of tbe happy boors, when like the flowers Our hearts with odors were rife. Oh, the good old tiroes, tbe good old times. Sweet memories of thee; ' Oi tbe good old times, tbe good old times. In the sunny mora of life. Of tbe happy boars, when like the flowers Our hearts with odors were rife. Oh, tbe good old times, tbe goud old times, My fond heart singeth of ihtfn to-night, In strange melodious rhymes. 1 see or home, our early borne, Ou tbe gently sloping hill ; And the winding stream that swept along 'Mid the willows soft and still ; And the orchard too, with its golden store, . Aad tbe walnut in tbe Una, With tbe grapr-rine dinging around its limbs I see them ail again. O, tbe orchard sweet, tbe orchard sweet. How oft we fonud on its short soft grass A rest for our wtary feet. I will twine a wreath of faded flowers, I will twine a wreath Kir thee. An emblem of our childhood hopes, That faded so silently; I will think of thee, long cherished one. In thee mild autumnal eres; I will call thy image befitre me now, 'Mid the fading flowers and leare, Ob. 'be faded floweta. the withered flowers, Tbey tell me bow the bright hopes died. That sprang in our childhood hours. MR. BARRING ER'S ADDRESS. Urtraets from an Addrett, delivered Jy the Hos. ' Dabivl M. BabkixmBK, October 27, 1859, before the Mecklenburg Agricultural Society. I congratulate you, too. gentlemen, on the mani fest progress which agriculture has made in the last few years throughout all this region of our State. Ton are having your reward in a much larger pro duction from the fields and an increasing general prosperity in the great appreciation of your lands, and in the increased comforts and happiness of borne. Much has been done yet a great deal more remains to be done in bet, little has been done, compared with what can and will be, ultimately ac complished, to restore the natural fertility of this beautiful and originally, rery rich section of the State, The virgin soil which our fathers found and which attracted to its possession one of the best emigrations that settled any portion of our country, has been abused and neglected and has long since disappeared. A new country a sparse population of pure and simple habits of few wants with the necessaries of life easily supplied by the most im perfect and careless cultivation luxuries tbey did not need or care for. I remember when a boy in a store to have heard an aged matron, of Revolution ary times, who had passed her three score and ten years an ancestor of a large and respectable pro geny in a neighboring county, make it a boast that she had never worn a calico dress or taken a dose of medicine. Homespun and health, honesty and pa triotism, were the fashion then. They lived within themselves and on their own means. The low price of land here, and in the farther South and West its very cheapness constantly inducing the farmer to buy other and better soil, when the present was exhausted, instead of improving his own the dis turbance of the Revolution and subsequent period hi orrr history the constant stream of emigration, which has poured out from our State to all portions or the &outn and West, and above all, the fatal want,, for so long a time, of a good and a Borne Mariet for the productions of the soil ; these have been the leading causes which have retarded agri cultural improvements among us and entirely changed for the worse, the original appearance and character of our soil But its bases still remain. Its present condition invites and demands our ut most scrutiny, care and intelligent culture. It may be shall I say, is now being, as it assuredly will ultimately be made by an improved agriculture, richer and more productive than it ever was. "We have the most powerful and urgent motives to renovate this wasted soil and restore and surpass the natural iertflity of our fatherland. The fatal causes of a pernicious deterioration are no longer in operation. Emigration has nearly or quite ceased to-drain us of our people and our wealth. Our country is gradually filling up and we are rapidly becoming an old and settled community our lands thronghtout the State have more than doubled and in this immediate section, have tripled and quadrup led in value in the last few years. Our wants both of the necessary comforts and luxuries of life, have increased with our increasing population and the facility of their gratification. The social position, as well as the rrosperity of the tiller of the soil has been greatly enhanced and more than all, we now have a ready and a good market for whatever we make. By a mighty power, whose agency was un known to onr forefathers a power which is revo lutionizing the world tbe citities on the sea are brought, as it were, to our homes and the once dis tant and expensive markets for our produce, are now at. our "doors. The slow beast of burden of nesWM blood consuming your substance, is re- SJacod by the Iron Hone, who, fed by fuel and ame, dashes on in his fiery course day and -night doubling the value of the husbandman's la- oor ana rapidly transporting for a comparative tri fle, the produce of the farmer and the goods of the merchant, even when they sleep in the repose of their homes. r Whatever be the trade profession or pursuit of lire, the support of all must come, directly or indi rectly, from the earth and its tillage. It is a decree of heaven. "In the sweat of thy bee sbalt thou eat bread, till thou return unto the ground." It was done in mercy to sweeten the toil of man and give enjoyment to his labor. And this sweat of the face, js tba. best of all fertilisers without which none other will avail. But it roust be assisted by other means. If you cannot afford to buy guano, or "phosphate of lime, op wnnm A. t,Z JiIV2 ctber means to furnish tbe necessary ingredients to arich and producing soil, you can make on your firms and m your stables, that which will answer as well, probably m great deal better and which ia more universal and more certain in its application. But it is not sufficient that you make and save and get manures and put them on your lands. These, too, most be prepared for its proper reception b sorption and beneficial influence. The ground must b wen tended must be well and deeply plowed nrast be made porous and dry as well as rich. The a must penetrate tbe earth, so that tbe plant may lboth b the Pi "d inorgank ele Tnento which comtitute its food, and which ia so Jy Proper growth andmaturi ty. w must drain or ungate the land as its local ctmditw may require. Our lands, however, in general, need more of the former, than the latter. Wifol .and enrVhing ; a the process k, and so ia! dffipensable, in many countries, unsupplied with Jfflciaot naaiatiira, Uka .the Southern provinoes Moot . DtaimgVtoo, n now necessary with us. not only for the soil, but the health of the countrv 2 SkiTiS rTeyT V? J? erP'S top much bagMted witkb. am crops impeverishea the oiU4 11 w,we11 known that our leading staples, avhichwa ao often annually cultivate in tbe same field, corn. tofeceo, cotton and substance of the earth, who J tion are continuall changing. .OgJW f eeatin in fallow. We restore JOSt ? nta, aodfertilix th soil m&lAm rjXuy thk desira'jl result produced by Teo crop, or green manure a therm ometiw called. -turemust be dad and bar frrorite ImUbmeot men. Set tbe wild prainc, and the tneadow, the forest, the mountain ami the Taller, bow green i they are in nature's robes 1 How beautiful and bow boun tiful her supplies for ever renewing growth and strength and multiplying iiKrca, when untouched by the dextrnring hand of man ! Use, then, not on ly the artificial acd inorganic manures from the sta ble and lime-kiln and marl and guano, but restore the wasted, the overtasked and overwrought powers of the earth, by sometime covering, with ber own beautiful carpet of green and wanning ber into new life and activity, and fr.iifultne. It is tbeae grcco crops, whether of turnips, or peas, or clover, or oth er grasses, or cereals which so much adorn the Eng lish landscape and enrich it soil ; and it is their ab sence which first and most strongly impress the mind of every intelligent Englishman who vsutsour country and especially the South. When our field are bald, or worn, whenever the great protection of nature given by the forest, and the wild covering of the field is removed, tbe hand or man snouiu mur ply, as far as possible, what has been taken away. a a t Mk.w. I h 1nmnfrv KittKtaiwKa which have been CXhaUi4 cd and which are indispcmwhle to the fertility and fruitful condition of every soiL We idiould not for get, too, that by occasional change of tho crop wo destroy the myriads of insect which Prey upon the fruits of our labor, by taking away their rood and depriving them of their means of an ever-multiplied increase, A good fanner should be regular, punc tual, systematic, careful in all things, lie live and moves and holds daily converse with nature, wboae first great law is order, order in all her sublime and glorious beauties. Let there be an air of neatnes and tidiness in all things about the brm ; a smooth and clean surface to the fields; straight rows adding much to its beauty; good fences, dear ditches and fence rows, everything in good repair, and in the right place, with barns and other buildinp properly situated: and especially let there be a good, and com fortable and handsome dwelling for thcwmiVy . If a man cannot afford to have a large or an expen sive house let him bare a small and a cheap one; but by all means, let it not be in the wrong place?, or uncomfortable, unsuitable to the climate, not to say, unhealthy; a receptacle and originator of mala ria from the fatal effects of rotting wood and other decomposing vegetable matter; where the inmate always sleep in the midst of disease and tbe certain causes of death ; with floors so cl.e to the ground that no air can penetrate or dispel the btal moisture and malaria, and so exposed to the heat of summer and the Waits of winter that more money k spent in Doctor's bill for pneumonia and tbcumattMua and ague and typhoids than would pay tcn-fuM, the cost of a better construction and keep it in better repair, while the innocent unconscious inmates won der why they should have taken a cold or the fever and why they should beatMicted with such dit rent ing maladies, while their neighbor i exempt, whose only advantage is that he ha sjcnt some of hi mon ey fur a better and more comfottalile liouse for hi bmily tq live in. 1 regret to say that, heretofore, rural architecture has been too much neglected in our State. But I rejoice to believe tliat we are now beginning to cultivate an improving taste in tbi very important matter; that we are learning how, and are becoming disposed to beautify and embclish our rural homes and to combine the useful with the beautiful. Let no one go beyond hi mean Imt as far as possible within them, let home be made not only a house to live in, not only to eat and to sleep in as some would seem to think, but a sacred spot full of opportunity for high, moral, rrliciou and mental culture full of rhiTihlied. life-time aoria tions around which dear memories may cluster and cling with the fondest afT-ction with a chrr sited memento in every ol ject within and around it the grounds, the trees, and the library, with the map, the drawings and the paintings, where the heart and mind are trained and encouraged to high impulse and noble, generous deeds of patriotic duty and Christian charity and love. Such should be the home of the American farmer, as far as be in his power: and the poorest can do much more to obtain it thin he at first imagines. 1 never saw a fanvly mansion, how ever humble in it sixe and unpretegtiou it surroun dings, nestling in the shade and under the beautiful foliage of nature, away from the dust of the road side, with its green sward of grass in a neatly kept yard and its little clomp of tree or stately grove in front, with climbing vines and sweet scented flowers about the doorway, the tasteful handiwork of a mo ther or a daughter, of that lovely rosw who, in the beautiful language of Sheridan, govern us all ; let us render them perfect; the more they are enlight ened so much the more shall we be; it i by woman that nature writes on the heart of men" I say, I never saw such a home with such harmonizing, such refining attractions round about it, that I did not believe that the inmates, whatever their wealth or poverty, were not better and wiser and happier than others. I have seen some home they were "not homes I will not desecrate the sacred name they were eating and eUepimg pluetm (hardly fit for that) of men, who were consumed by a vile and cor roding avarice steeled and encased, a with a coat of mail, against every feeling of human sympathy and love, whose income was at the rate of tbotwand a year, and whose only pleasure and consolation and comfort consisted in being able to count at the end bow much richer they were than at the begining of the year. No wonder that children brought op in such miserable tenement, without comfort or refine ment, too often without any education, should seek, the first opportunity, at least such of them as may have been spared by constant disease and rulhle death, to fly from a dwelling which was not a homo and this, even a birth-place which had no attrac tions. My advice then, to the farmer, is first: to make and keep his land rich tend it (, rrjtrt a improvement became it it nete if it be founded on reason and fair experiment and make hi home the place of all others next to the Church, to be loved most by his wife and children, the home of their af fections as well as their interest, and a her they may learn and cultivate a knowledge of all the du ties and trial of the life that now U and the bless ings and bliss of that which is to come. If you tell roe that you cannot afford to do all tbi on a much land as you wish to work, then I say, tend Urn and make it more productive for tbe labor bestowed, II is far better, on all accounts, to do so. Fanning is the beet burinem M for most and so rest for all Tbe field of Agriculture is wide enough for the exercise of all our faculties and talent and tempers moral, mental and physical. It i tbe most ancient aa well aa among the most honorable of pursuits. Even in the heavenly luxury and an gelic innocence of Eden where every tree grew that was pleasant to the sight and good for food, Adam was placed by the Lord to drem ! to Item iLn We all know the sacred histories of hi Sons and of Abraham of Isaac and of Jacobof Moses and of Gideon, of Saul and of David who wore ashep henTs bag when he went out to fight the battle of Israel and of Elisha plowing with Via twelve yoke of oxen. Almost every orator, on occasion like this, brings out the great CincJnnatus for our ad miration, to which illustrous name might be added that of the equally celebrated statesman. Senator and Philospber, Cato, who wrote one of tbe beat books, of any time, on fanning. All history shows that the natives of the Earth, in the period of their greatest glory and power, have always been tba most agricultural. The history of Agriculture is tiie history of the march of pi ogres refinement and civilisation. When it h neglected or depreda ted the human mind retrograde and mankind ar not only less refined but lust intellectual. For tbe i out iet intellectual, f or tM ".v'TJf V x oansion of tie IntellecV-io- of moral duty and obbgation- cultivation of the earth development aad ex anirea a hieh sense ol of truth and justice and inculcates a fervent pur ana exalted devotion, it ta toe aaeat necessary and useful of tho avocations of men. Whatever tbo change in the social or political world, until nature herself ia changed the tillage of the ground, to some extent or other, must go on. Every thing depends on it, political and social order, tbo Vavned profes sions, nommarce, naaiiafaeturaa, the mechanic arts and, indeed, there can be no healthful organixaaion of society or encouragement to its usprovement; except on the baaia of a cultivation of the Earth. And yet all ar mutually depeodeat on each other, tbe mriae, the doctor, the lawyer, the aaerebant, tbo mecname, we manufacturer, toe snipper, the ftomor xaa vanoua m tarara m aocarty are uakad .. . - - anakalH TaT wia always aa, vs Oftaal MM fw Dtrl MM boa tree bsjIi lul asrt, arways, asi ewawny an kin fcaaaalM and hwT bast fatSIMBV wba) luJaiauwSJ to array tbe poor agatert tka rkh, or la rkh tbe poor, or any one daan of mdfj h. l.k - hra all haw.nl kbor U r wui au awa mfmm a poor and boaaUtM aiy JimU the greanrat ereallb. ind tn WU wWc-tMablWh- bonoraUe. where the the kirSaat d4inrtios) - - - (kank . mL and td and Mcwred our liUrlW; we have m -raoi". In society and none but loo troo Uuty Mid of worth. It I a atriVlog bet () the LtUory of nations and otptctalty of tbe free, that tho at who bavo rontroikd tbe dsatiniea of eflnpers w amlt bsM hfln and raked in the Cwosttr be rood the tefnpUlbwM and enrrwp! tenaVrape of targe cilie. iff which tbrra i o owtsat leoiirocj to human detmmcr, arreted only by aa bxeowiM and ever frreh inrwioo t popolalion woaa tM i try, the never biting aource frose wbkk tbey be reprnaM)ev. - Tbe rural oiatrkts alwar have, aad always oO rule tbU great rmintry. The lire ad oar mmm rr en, strikingly DIvMrato tbi tnrtb. Oar Wab Inrton. JruVron. Uadawwt. Jackson. Cly. Calhoon and Wrbatrr. and a bright galaiy of other eaaiawnt Mtora, of tba living and tbe deod, were afl rowed I tk. - - - - axaf Jwiaiaawww la bat aUawl wlawl HI Vm WV III TWTII eej hiiwi awras eawa - - wbrn fun of honor and of bsaeu stiQ loved tbtO rural hotrM brT tbeT WT MOnal tO lire wished to die. It i wen that it be a, lib to tbe country we may safely look for all tha happy and expanding icdluvnee af the cJaaractev it ejwTgie and a&rtkx, the aik bearuand bodies which fit men to be good dlitetM of gnat Republic. WhO Agricultar! lib tend to fccaJ our affection and make one love tho seal be oom himself; a almost any one may do ber. aad at tbe same time inert- and erdarfwa oar pairWAs. and make n ever ready to defend and to tba, If oe ccary, for our country, our boom aad our Art aide, . EJmemto awwr rlilJm then, and edorato tfcor of your son to f ia r emmmtrg and lirnaai -era tWtye. aliW braev, oU to tU tb Earth and to hrp it 1 do not aasM that they should be Prufawora or Lrim on bmbag and the Some of Agrfeuftore, Mere Utorw4. bowwrr valuable their ketow ledge in tbo band of 4kl men rarely male good farm or or lawcaid la any branch of practical fohjstry. Rot I aaeaa tbey should hare a krwlrdjre, ye, a soertiific know ke of the basirtrs in which they art to to tttagcw know soancthing, ye, a great deal about mU and vegetation the qualilw of the pbat and th e- Kritic of tba grownd. and learn bow to make two lc of gnr grow where bat one grew btriww" to know much of nature and ber taaarateU law. Let a sound practical lodgeanenl be awoaded by aa intctligml use of that knowlrdg obkb a otD edd cated and well mfirord mind alone ran gtre. Let a wen-directed ww arnar be tbe Maa of all ar tion, a it m tbo fotmdatw! of all swore, wbtther in Agriculture or Mectutra. la tbe lwwd pevdV sion,- in tbe bat tie-field or tbe ft Una, ia $tete manship and ilifbwoary. Uevriia may oetrvjie, but talent, and knowledge and aonnd in ut execute and Irsd to that sums which k tbe samt -. and meat infallible test of true ability to abjalcror department of lib. PRESIDENTIAL VOTE. 193& JrVaon, Adam, Aggregate vote, Jackson over Aden, 1832. Jackson, Clay, Wirt, Jackson over Clay and Wirt, 1838. Van TWrrn. Hamsun, White, Webster, Aggregate vote. Van Bursa over all, 184a narrvwo. Van Durcn, Birncy, Agrrejale vote, Harrison over Van Boron, Over all, t5A.n 11.173 l.UI.4l I 1J5.4M 7"7.il 7 Ml 1.?6;4I !S4,tM 7U.M i.s.o,ia 1A747 l.f7.T77 i,m7w 7W .4I0.9M 14a.ftf 14&f 1844. Polk, Clay, Birney, RTegto vote, Polk over Clay, Clay and Krocy over Polk, 1848. Taylor, Cas. Van Daren, Aggregate vote. l.Sa434 197.11) 104,770 l.STlfM 1.S13JI7 rl.oi1 f;wA.ttSo Taylor over Ca, Case and Van Burrn over Taylor, 149.73 1 MI Pierce, 1.VA9W l.attiM ISM44 i,t4,U4 Scott, 111, Aggregate vote, Picrco over Scott, Over Scott and Hal. 1836. Buchanan, Fremont, niliaore, SI3.370 67.714 l.ITJ4 I.337.KS7 4.021051 Aggregate vote, FiQnvor and cJaanaa, lVemoot over W7,tn Piucncjtt AtDUTKmnv.-A noiaber of peaada ent Abolitioned froaa tW east a W ar to altoa danc upon lb Evstigvlaral Alalilaaalat Cma tion, now In aaaion In that city, ar aloffg at IW ruenraood iioo, Among irana ar tw Kv. Ia. B. Cheever. of New York. Tralevday, at daar. a af was diacevwed at lb tahl, aHlmg at tW Ml of Brother Coecvtr. wbdc at hi right sat a e4 of Boston hdie. 9om led) at Another part mt I W table callal tbo attention af Mr. Tatasr, oa of IW proprietors, to the bet, and expressed tW very ca mon feeling aaaong peron not practical abtditton iat. that it was not ayrelb to sit at lb danaar in company with a negro. Mr. Tabor at ac da reded on of th black waiurr ta bare IW btorb r moved. and It was don kccordiaglr. Tbo Abati tionat by whom tho aetra was aittiag. ftibtrd great sympathy for tbo black aad nVraai.uVd frrh ly if lb rule of lb boa baaabrd hkfreatW company of bia friend aad campanha at lb paw lie labia. Upon being mfiwwad thai arb was tW cas. they war cowabatoad to acauaaeo, Oa baa log tbo dranar tebla, a Bostaa Aboidaaakt faw4 IW negro wbimporinc la tho kmTL aad la tootbo lb deep sorrow of has heart, pat bis ana areaad tbo black, fondly raranc biaL Tbi apaJa maa- m9tn orwasdla tbo praM7fa;.W abl aamberf etHWnen, and xcrted aaytbtog Wt Toapect for the ladrrMaal who tba aaagbl to odvaw. tin hi political acatimeat. llaw lb aarra caa to be at tho labia could not bo atcartoiaed. Ctourr occupied tho bead of tba talWaegra bat bH. and tbe hdko hh riafrl-Caa y uq. Taa Bbst Rajoa Sraor. Cot a root baai a ry, press tn. dry rt ia ta absdo, abaae it as yaa wadi. andstiaighteoad wrtitaatsars faiakiai Cas it as any other atrop, and oaa to au aa atotrio; off ery aid wkh a ka . H will bo aa emd as bow. i eypts root ar toaioJag to ad saewa Ibo barbers of Sew toatt Caaas aounr aaMav TQ tusrsrs irmr CkA ftrrkj 7 i: r- ' Gmtimi v A rifun TTflT nirt - Tba inwiflsfe of flaw CferwA CWt br Jtfisf. son cwwawy wro btwtht U a daw njtay lawrw- ba amaw 1 sawaawO of waela wstw oard Mthsartelyta tint trwJ of tba llarwrs rvrry twasarralora. TkwGrreMCwnarr . I .TTnrS l'S.ii I ly, ajror Obfab JaWo fWiaw e ttok t ana reo dy. and beSKw Ibe oseawaMy of iWclawbiuJof Oat Utm U tho rawaxy. TktMeAlaMlenow VefwJath 4 Mroba Wf Wl b-fx aw bae lawa trWl aad Ummi j of Ibo kUWoiawltawaMowkex Tbe cassfaa, Uao, lHt elial and Cfe were lewaajbt owt yrtT4ay at ttrt o'eftaeb ) te cviv lb aaotewa-u of Jadlga IVisr. Tbe) eaaft rooea wo weeded, al lb aay a fat aoulrr YSealbeMwfwaaipest. Ibey lwwoU ku the cwtft by the wat aa4 M aa tte War. ha a ranee cUlr boa U JoW Xme C-4 wMMnledCawr. UOardaod Mr. CrwoWy, b4ba4 W4aC liaaaUl tbe WvarM of aaa row tbi afsir lam cast oter Ibrea a4 Ibevr ba ear iva i TV irtiawnrs owe tbea aWvclsd to t4 oa a4 axled a tbey lad ajtk to sy obj sfcaeU net be towed wp Um. CmK 4 Caff Ikwa ponyodoJ toaVbrH abatt nllremn, lb bvMr awtofMrbt eitaawat to bite a it of . in abOt Ibo laiur ajdt a ft btronMiaa by ba creel aad CMiKtiva altla e Vrfvry. iMdvd lorir aj;aiarrw c taa aitaca oa liars v rrrry, OOtil Use ftsbaWth berO lb argbt of lb itca, a bra ibry acre a3rd oa to rover la otoy tbo owirra of tbrwr nm mum be jbwan. Caeaeto trd that be kw b baaJ4 V fwai-brl f ba l4 bardy altempt. bat be lbaagbt it itaauH a bv bklr tbaa bad Urea adjadlfrd. Tba mrpm V cbaed eaytog )tbiag, tcrttXl aw raw rart. J4g Parker Ibra aawrewled la Vbrrr iW Itrww oa Ibo frWer abkb aas rrnirtvd by I Wo aitb greal firmtwn. Tbe aealaatw aa lbt Jaai H Co. Cdwto Ctt. SU.Ua Urewa a4 JWU Ctwlaad t Toar Uaala, mm abkb bar Iowa SO la aswatoysdl baeo at kotb l4rd. 04 aJB Uast rewasaa ft U &m to rafrttc Uawt aaWMsl w eeodiay. ta to tronoior aad rrrtprd Ibe Hip4t barb by lew aM MUw oaaa tba otoaea far baa ywa aa Vera bard, aad of abata joa b fwaif. Tbew rriaiiii bar a9 rrwwa aad of a I ofa tbas Stela, aaale aah Ibo 4efviaJ faT tv to r ia ear m4a lb i4r4 a oa tatarrertaa. ta ibo eiwti of Ibr yanwMa. la Ibe dark of a Sabbath bl. ywa mio4 a Eim of oar fenwaty, eaatawwd wwrl mt ar edUaan b tftlg fWaa aa bawUfv of war aa 14 yaar patty was iaalf siertaaa by ber araail Ha mf oar slave as ywa eaaal aatat of a ah bally weafaaww abkb Ibry wt la ana SjMwH Ibtw owawra, a baa ya aWaarvd to lba at I f y ; aad. to yar taVxt to ph twear UA4 aalaahety scbsoaa ib gb to a awMdWJ bwaa, ya bv ukra b siaia bit a a base Ibaa aa Mfcxva. Tbo nwbara aawd abwitaly f4 Ibaft n lb 1m bad bwa daaaad by Hatotfaf lb rvlratw jwry after Jary be bit fcff tawO tl to Utof hi H mdkt of gwfc-y 4bt eatb oaa IUy IU OTabafe laaiywaoV Uiw4 aa swpcawt Itmm thai fmtUt abrava taa aa coe4tally esyectvd It, Nat a see aar4 baMf to jour fafli fir, bat aa aw a to t oi jer riOa or a i , aa b? baa exaaa frwa a bo eawbl gt adbwat tbo raag i Oaf bt r pKffltKtdr, M 0 baa IrtHrd-a. aad I Urj ba W toa a naWt mm e lb UbWf aal raia, tbo datk aad fcatfal nawrs abxb aat b at tetwlrd rtva Jwwr paflaal ! mm rya 0 aaaa Mad a atoaalda lbAM Uaatyaa Miy averpwomd, fwr lb m9mtv Ibe brw draaa i lb fmkf of dralb, aad aaw a) a lb eWty af w aaawwaag Ibat atrWeaara. it IW awad faawl I bar eve baa eallwj aa lat b. la pato af )ar ibaa aaa't aar tsa I (a ad bt drvfdy trvl be teas, ami aawWity. aMt da rrrvly, do I aymfaibiar awb lba bw4 a4 nb lavas abaww brvaaro baanad a a Jwax m4 to bear to will laj a ar aab gvaf wUa tby ataJI br af la aad bio atoria bs awrtVa ywa. IW mtjrxu mt lbir aat anM aad tot t aJbelaax c Ibrw a all d arwa ; abibt aw tvyaihl tor mm aobiy may net awawt aa t Mrt IW aVaa) mt abkb )M beta mrm gwy, I Uc Ibal Ibry a! lata be euitlaia. aad )a bo 4a. to ibat ! Iktog. aba to ha wrath rvaaaaatorrtb tMrvjr. lk Ibra yaar swace mnm Umm b jwa aat mmm b adwred tola lli I tore to b oVait aitb a II Jajdir a4 IIm lawvvy ay adaax Ta raMtod lb m1 day. I mmm asu nwara Ibat tbe Mtdraca mt IW taw K ttol ywa. a4 rb mmm mt ywa. Jha C. Ca-4. Klato Ct4- Nawbb Ura aad Jba darts I. W bgvd by IW awb a44 yaa b rbol aaij ibat ttaaUa aa laaa eajeaid w aad mom ay um POwrdTaC im ewasdy. mm rily. lb aatteeata da mt Uervaator artt, afa yod. abkU Ura aad Joba Cyftel. Utavea lb bnaw af eijbt to lb Mtaavaa a4 larlra, aaaa, mf lhl day--d4awa yaa. Mm C 04 aad Ma tetie, tttiasva IW i f laaba lmwmA fit mt W wuao dy. Aad IW rwatt baa mt IW faalna Ibal ibo avwlaai mt tVa aearw toall b ia pM It Is farther ardVtad Ibat lbky4raeat b dVdc4 aad twl4, aad la IW tod yard, bat at sawb pwUac pUra caartakal IWw sa IW aaal StoviaT saay arfa al a I easy Ctod hart) lawrvy -aalW ! ebaaaf yaa. thatog lb dlrtry mt IW wav iW alaant kt-r aaa tavfrsi a4 IW sabvaaaiy aa ry towked. A brrr aaaator af ibo sfrvtatov , sto4lW Jad. IW retoaarr awo vravuaJal to ta data to aait lb a(wtaj af lb Jtotfaa. Oirriiiliiaae af rto CaipiMiw LETTER muM BALTtMulUL BkUraa, JCaa. 7, 114. Aaolbrr af tW tAaady daya br akkb iVIiaaaro ba laraeaa sadly ba La to-t anaai mrt ! raOaaatoa) toa affaJtol rwe) ttt Wah fePy la Ibirda af aUVW f arif Ito. IW baa aa4ba bar m tmmfmt'Uf oi fmm toaaa to iVa rdr. Tbaa. la pyai aaOiad of BJltoawa, . bar, bet larv ar gaaaa i tontAfctoi. 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