’, mother of Augu ' brought to him in that well §al~$ Established 1823. Hasza.rd’s Gaaette. . onoaca 1'. HABZARD, rm-riom -d P-bl--livh it. B. IRVING. Editor. Published ever Wsdnrsilay and Saturday mornings 0tl‘ioe,Suuili liile ueen Squnrflu 9- 3- l'l’|_“‘l~ ~ 'I‘r.iius—Annual Subscription, lbs. Discount for cash rlltla or snvlivrlnlso. or ‘ | For Bret insertion aoeu via the incl» ‘ "'° ia..'.., a..'ii.i..'.a. iin1'.“;.—ia lines, . ies iaes, ts. i-l.——25 lines, 5s.- Ulliues 5s. 6d.—-filiue Cs --and 2c. for each ad-litioiia line. One fourth of the above {hr each continuance Advertisements sent without liniitatioii, will he continued until Ibrbi . UNCLE rosi’s CABIN. uni-. xv. Or 'I‘oii‘s< ssw Mas-i-la, ‘Ann VAIIOUI oriixa inr- rir.s.s—liistory ofst. Clare-—Disappointed Love —‘I'he Ideal of a Wife—-New England Farm- house-—0phelia St. Clare—Miss Ophelia's Duties. SINCE the thread of our humble hero's life has now become interwoven with that of higher ones, it is necessary to give some brief intro- duction to them. Augustine St. Clare was the son of a wealthy planter of Iouisiana. The family had its origin in Canada. Of two brothers, very similar in temperament and character, one had settl on a Iourishing farm in Vermont, and the other me an opulent planter in Louisiana. The stine was a Hu enpt French Ind , whose family had emigrate to Louisiana during the days of its early settlement. A s- tine and another brother were the only chil ren of their parents. Having inherited from hi mother an exceeding delicacy of constitution, he was, at the instance of physicians, durin iuany years of his boyhood, sent to the care 0 his uncle in Vermont, in order that his consti- tution mi ht be strengthened by the cold of a more brac rig climate. In childhood he was remarkable for an ex- treme and marked sensitiveuess of character, more akin to the softness of woman than the ordinary hardness of his own sex. Time, how- ever, overgrew this softness with the rou h bark of manhood, and but few knew how liv rig and fresh it still is at the core. His talents were of the very rst order, althou h his mind showed a ferencs always for t e ideal and the msthetih": and there was about him that repuguance to the actual business of life which is the common result of this balance of the faculties. Soon after the completion of his college course, his whole nature was kindled into one intense and ssionate elervescence of romantic passion. lie hour came-—the hour list comes only once ; his star rose in the hori- son—that star that rises so often in vain, to be remembered only as a thing of dreams ; and it rose for him in vain. 'l‘o dro the li re, he saw and won the love of a high-min ed and beautiful woman, in one of the northern states, and they were ailla He returned south to make arrangements for their marriage, when, most unex tedl , his letters were returned to him by mail, wit a short note, from her uar- dian, stating to him that era this reach him the lady would be the wife of another. Stung tomisdness, he vainly hoped, as many another has done, to iling the whole thing from his heart by one desperate efort road to supplicate or seek explanation, he threw himself at once into a whirl of ihshiouable society, and in a fortnight from the time of the fatal letter the accepted lover of the reigning belle of the season ; an soon as arrangements could be made, he became the husband of a line llgure, a pair of bright dark eyes, and a hundred thou- sand dollars; and, of course, everybody thought him a happy fellow. The married couple were enjo °ng their d outsrhinin a bril iant circle villa near Iake ting. It was handedto him while hewas in full tide of gay and successful conversation, in a whole room~full of coinpan . He turned deadly pale when he saw the writing, but still - ed his co‘i:Iosure. and iinished the play 1 war- bre of ‘as which he was at the moment arrying on w th a lady opposite ; and, a short time after, was missed from the circle. In his room, alone, he opened and read the letter, now ;::ehthan idle ant]! useless to It tvivas er, ‘Vin a on account apersecu on to’whleh ii» End begin e b her ar- dian's fitail , to lead her to units one with his son; a e related how, for a lon time, his lettsrshbd‘ '1.-eased I) arrive; how e had written time an again, till she became weary Ind ‘l0“b“Il': w her health had failed under ho? Inliotlfils how, at last, she had disco- vered the whol III which had been actised on than - lefir ended wl expres- sions of hope and t essions I of emotion, which were more bitter than ’ to the unhappy young man. He wrote to her immediately :4-— '- “I have ved ours-button late. I believed all I card. I was desperate. I am married, and al is over. Only flirgek-it is all tbt remains for either of us. ' _ And ended the whole romance and 1%, of life hir Augustine St. Clare; but the remained--the reel, like the hat, bare, oory :3... ll, when the blue sparkling wave, with all its csinpana i boats and white-winged ships, ts mas o of cars and chiming waters, down, and there it lies, ilst, slimy, ha y res . Of course, In novel, ple‘s hearts break, die. the ASZARWS E'AhMEdS° common, AME conzmnncnnn. Ah‘iTEm.'Ij§E;;ll.i Charlottetown, Prince Edward island, Wednesday, March 30, 1853. even see that they had been broken. As before stated, she consisted of a fine are, a pair of splendid eyes, and a hundred thousand dollars ; and none of these items were recisely the ones to minister to a mind diseased]? When Augustine, pale as death, was found lyin on the sofa, and pleaded sudden sick- hea ache as the cause of his distress, she re- commended to him to smell of hartshorn ; and when the paleness and headache came on, week after week, she only said that she never thought Mr. St. Clare was sickly; but it seems he was very liable to sick-headaches, and that it was a very unfortunate thing for her, because he didn‘t enjoy going into company with her, and it seemed odd to so much alone, when the were just married? Augustine was glad in is heart that he had married so undiscerning woman : but as the glosses and civilities of the honeymoon were away, he discovered that a beautiful! young woman, who has lived all her life to be caressed and waited on, might rove quite a. hard mistress in domestic life. arie never had possessed much ca bility of affection or much sensibility;.and t e little that she had mer d into a most intense and uncon- scious se iishncss ; a selfishness the more hope- less from its quiet obtuseness, its utter ig- norance of any claims but her own. From her infancy she had been surrounded with ser- vants, who lived only to study her caprioes: the idea that they had either feelings or rights had never dawned u ii er, even in distant pore ctive. Her fat or, whose only child she ad lilien, had never denied her anything that , lay within the compass of human possibility; and when she entered life, bcnutiful,accom- plished, and an heiress, she had, of course, all the eligibles and non-cligibles of the other sex sigliing at her foet,and she had no doubt, that Augustine was a most fortunate man in having obtained her. It is a great mistake to suppose thata woman with no heart will be an easy creditor in the exchange of nflbction. There is not on earth a more merciless exactor of love from others than a thoroughly selfish woman; and the more uulovely s e_ owe, the more jealously and scrupulously s e exacts love, to the uttermost farthin . When, therefore, St. Clare began to dro 0 those gallantries and small attentions whic flowed at first through the habitude of courtship, he found his sultana no way read to resign her slave; there were abundance o tears, utings, and small tem- pests; there were iscontents, pinings, u‘p- raidings. St.Clnre was od-natured and se f- indul nt, and son htto uy oil‘ with presents and atteries; an when Marie became mother to a beautiful dau htes, he reall felt awakened for a time to someltghin like ten eruess. St. Clare’s mother ad been a woman of un- common elevation and purity of character, and he gave to this child his mother's name, fondly fancying, that she would rove a reproduction of her image. The thing ad been romarked with tulant 'ealousy by his wife, and she re- gurdese her bus nd's absorbing devotion to the child with suspicion and dislike; all that was iveu to her seemed so much taken from herself. cm the time of the birth of this child, her health adually sunk. A life of constant inac- tion,bo ii and mental—the friction of ceaseless ennui’ an discontont, united to the ordinary weakness which attends the period of maternity —in the course of a few years changed the bloom- ing youn belle into a yellow, faded, sickly woman, w ose time was divided among a variet of fanciful diseases, and who considered hersel , in every sense, the most ill-used and sudering person in existence. There was no end of her various complaints ; but her principal forte appeared to lie in sick- headache, which sometimes would confine her to her room three days out of six. As, of course, all family arruii inents fell into the hands of servants, St. (‘lire found his menage anything but comfortable. His only daughter was excecdiiigl delicate, and he feared that, with no one to look after her and attend to her, her health and life might yet fall a sacrifice to her mother's inelliciency. lie ha taken her with him on a tour to Vermont, and had rena- ded his cousin, Miss O hclia St. Clare, to return with him to his sout oru residence : and they are now returning on this boat, where we have introduced them to our readers. And now, while the distant domes and spires of New Orleans rise to our view, there is yet time for an introduction to Miss Op{helia. cover has travelled in the ow England States will remember, in some cool village, the lar farm-house, with its clean-swept ‘grassy yaise, shaded by the dense and massive oliuge the supr-maple: and remember the air of order and stillness, of perpetuity and unchsu ing repose, that seemed to breathe ove the who e place. Nothin lost, or out of order, not a pick- et loose in the ence, not a particle of litter in the turfy yard, with its clumps of lila_c-bushes owing it under the windows. Within, he will remem r wide clean rooms, where nothing ever seems to be oing or going to _ _ one, where. everything is once and for ever rigidly in place, and where all household arrangements move with the punctual exactness of the_old clock in the corner. In the family “ keeping- rocm," as it is termed, he will remember the skid, respectable old bookcase, with its glau doors where Rolliu’s History, Milton‘s Paradise Inst, liunyau's Pilgrim’s Progress, and Scott's ( or r, with multitudes of 0 or books, equally so and table. There are no servants iuths house, 1 M ‘u _ spaotac , si sewin ever a noon am herodslilgliters, as ifsncthidg ever haq or were to £0 t F apddher 'rs,nsoue ‘ ttea rs o es}. in. .9“ .... "".. .. at uwou see an: ilnis “ done up.¥’“fiis,'.old Ifitcheii-floor ns_ver seems stained or spotted: the tables, the chairs or disorde : aiougbthree and some- ‘tlllllss four meals a da ed? sad ugh pounds of butter and cheese ass, in some. silent and mysterious manner, this Family Bible. stan side b side in decorous M‘ “u ut the lady in the snowy cap, w he done-sh theissrl. ,_ fer the rest of the time, and the various , never seem an ggtlisre, faialgowashing and main‘ thereperforim brought late stance. Oasushs gm lamb shosound-hilly. Miss Ophelia had spent a quiet existence of some forty-five years, when her cousin invited her to visit his southern mansion. The eldest of a large family, she was still considered by er father and mother as one of“ the children, ’ and the proposal that she should go to Orlmns was amost momentous one to the fauiil circle. The old grey-headed father took down lorso’s Atlas out of the bookcase, and looked out the exact latitude and longitude; and road Flint.'s Travels in the South and West, to inako up his own mind as to the nature of the countr . The good mother in uircd, anxious y, “ if Orleans wasn't an awful wicked placc ;" saying, “ that it seemed to her, most equal to going to Ehe Eandwich Islands, or anywhere among the cat en." "It was known at the minister's, and at the doctor’s, and at Miss Pcnbody‘s millincr‘s shop, that Ophelia St. Clare was “ talking about going away down to Orleans with her cousin ; and,of course, the whole village could do no less than help this very im ortunt process by talking about the matter. he minister, who inclined strongly to Abolitionist vicws, was quite doubtful, whether such a step might not tend somewhat to‘encouruge the southcriicrs in holding on to their slaves; while the doctor, who was a staunch Colonisutionist, inclined to the opinion that Miss Ophelia ought to go, to show the Orleans eople that we don't think hardly of them, a ter all. IIe was of opinion, in fact, that southern *0 le iicedcd encourag- ing. When, however, tlili li’t.ct, that she had rc- so ved to go, was fully before the public mind, she was solemiil invited out to too by all her friends and neig hours for the space of a fort- night, and her prospects and lans duly canvas- se and inquired into. Miss osel ,wlio came into the house to hel to do the dyressmaking, acquired daily accessions of im rtancc from the developments with re rd to liss ()phcliii.’s wardrobe which she had icon enabled to make. It was crediblyuscertaincd that Squire Sinclure, as his name was commonly contracted in the neighbourhood, had counted out lift dollars, an given them to Miss Ophelia, an told her to buy any clothes she thought best; and that two new silk dresses, and a bonnet, had been sent for from Boston. As to the propriety ‘of this cxtraordinar outlay, the public mind was divided ; some a rmin that it was well cnough, all things considered, or once in one-‘s life, and others stoutly uilirming, that the money had better have been sent to the missionaries; but all parties agreed, that there had been no such rasol seen in those rts as had been sent on in New York, and t t she had one silk dress that might fairl be trusted to stand alone, whatever might said of its mistress. There were credible rumours, also of a hum-stitched ket-handkerchief, and re rt eveniweut so Elfin to state that Miss Ophelili had one pocket- udkerchief with lace all around it——it was even added t t it was worked. in the corners ; but this latterdpoint was never satisfactorily ascertained. an remains, in fact, unsettled to t s . Missytlphelia, as you now behold her, stands fore you, in a very shining brown linen travel- ling-dress, tall, square-formed, and angular. ce was bin, and rather sharp in its out- lines ; the lips compressed, like those of a person who is in the habit of niakin up‘her mind defi- nitely on all subjects; while it.» een, dark eyes had a pecu iarly searching], advised movement, and travel ed ov_er cveryt ing, as if they were lookin for something to take notice of. 1 er movements were sharp, decided, and energetic ; and, thou h she was never much of ii talker, her words were remarkably direct and to the purpose when she did spcak. In her habits she was a living impersonation of ordcr,method,and exactness. in um-tuulity she was as inevitable as a clock, an as inexor- able as a railroad en inc; and she held in most decided contomptau abomination anything of a contrary character. The great sin of sins, in her cycs-—thc sum of all evils-—was expressed by one very common and important word in her vocabulai-y—“ shiftlcse- ness.” Her finale apd ultimatum of contempt consisted in ii very emphatic ronunciatiun o the word “ shiftless;" and by t iis she character- ised all modes of rocedurc which had not a direct and inevitab e relation to accomplishment of some pur then definitely had in uiind. People who 'd nothing, or who did not know exactl what the were going to do, or who not take t e niost irect way to accom lish what they set their hands to, were objects.o her entire contempt: a contempt shown lcss frequently-_ by anything she said than by a kind of stony grim- neu, as if she scorned to say anything about the matter. As to muhl cultivation, she had a clear, -strong, active mind, was well and thoroughly read in history and the older English classics, and thought with peat strength within certain narrow liiaits. Her theological tenets were all made up, labelled in the most positive and dis- tinct forma, and put by, like the bundles in her patch trunk ; there were just so many of them, and there were never to be any more. So. also, were her ' with re rd to most matters of raotiml life-—-such as ousekcoping in all its branches, and the various political relations of her native vi . ,underly' , deeper tlmn anything e se. hi and br er, lay the strongest principle of or being-—oonsoientious- nus s. cwhsrs is conscience so dominant and all-absorbiu as with New-Ii‘-nglsnd women. It is the to formation, which lies deepest, and rises out, even to the tops of the highest mountains. Miss Ophelia was the absolute bond-slave of “sis ." Once ilakehercerlla that the “ path o duty," as she commonly phrased it, lay in any given direction, anghlfire aapdwatp; hvo wen we strai down into a well, or up -to a aunouis lioali,-if she were only quite sure that path is . -Her shudsrd of right was an al -embracing, so minute, and ‘few sense-ions to huumn frailty, gh sheetrove with heroic ardour to reach it, she never actually did so, and of course with I assistant and often harass- . his gave a severe and somewhat gloomy cast to her religious cha- racter. But how in the world can Miss Ophelia get along with Augustine St. Clare—gu. , easy,. unpunctuul, unpructical, sceptical,-—in short, wa king with impudcnt and uonchalant frscdoin over_evcr one 0 her most cherished habits and opinions. To tall the truth, then, Miss Opholia loved him. When a buy, it ha ieen rs to teach liii_n his catcchisiii, mend his clothes. comb his hair, and briii r him up generally in the we. lie - should go ;.uu her heart having a warm in etc it, Augustine had, as he usually did with most pc fplu, iuonopohsod a lar share of it for him- scl ., and therefore it was t int he succeeded very easily in persuading her that the “path of duty ’ lay in the direction of New Orleans, and that she must go with him to take care of Eva, and keep everything from going to wreck and rum ‘during the frequent illnesses of his wife. The idea o a house without anybody to take care of_it went to her heart: than she loved the lovely little girl, as few could helpdoing ; and though she regarded Au ustine as very. much of ii heathen, yet she love him, hiughed at his jokes, and forbore with his failings, to an extent which those who knew him thou ht perfectly incredible. But what more or o or is to be known of Miss Ophelia, our reader must die- cover by a personal acquaintance. THINGS TALKED OF IN February, I858. Tris a proach of the vernal equinox is reviving the su ject of emigration—that is, if a subject said to have died which has n from time to time galvanized by news of the arrival of ships with tons of gold on board, not such more handfuls of ounces as used to be considered great prizes in the days of the old Spanish gul- leons. The exploits of the huoanecrs read tame, now that we are tiimiliarised with the re- LONDON. sults of the di ins, and have a promise of their .13 continuance. sides five new gold-fields, a number of diamonds have been found; and if report speak truth, ld has been discovered ' New Zealand also. resent indications shew, that the numbers willing to try their fortune in Australia will not be smaller this year than the . At Southampton. a capacious lodging- house has been fitted u by the commissioners for the acoomodiition o emigrants while wait- ing their departure; and due eoautions are taken to preserve health and moralit . If si- milar esta lishments, equall well loo ed after, could be promoted in other r ports, the be- nefit would be extremal great, or there is a dark as well as a bright si e, to the prospect of the golden antipodes. ‘ ' ve arrived in us ' portswitlia ossoffrom50toal00 y death from over crowding during re rts not less fatal have s ip spoken on the pas- sage. So there seems to be as little limit to die stowage of a ship as to that of the pit ofa the- atre. No money being returned in ei you are left to survive the squeeao as best I This question of overcrowding, however. .- E $- is me . is ilir too serious to be pissed over lightly; and - ifnoqof parliament are not strong enouglsto prev ‘ t a species of slave-ship packing, it is im- pera ive on all who are bent on expatrlatin themselves, to stipulate for ample space and plenty of air. Besides the contingency of death y the way, we are beginning now to get news from some of the thousands who went out in 1852 ; marvellous news in some cases, distress- - ing in others: and man exclnim with Touch- stone in the forest: ‘ henl was at hoiue, 1 was in a. better place.’ Disa 'utineum will necessarily abound, until the rude social elo- inents of the new. country shall have become taincd into soinothing like civilisation. There- cent opcning of the first Australian university, may perhaps be regarded as proof that know- ledge is in request its well as id: and now that our government contemplates leaving the res ativecolonies to verii thoniselvos, we sha l have an opportunity of seeing what sanof libert will be most acceptable to our anti dean ircthrcn. Meantime, all sorts of oinigra.- tion ihuts arc discussed with cat interest: 2‘J‘.),.’>04 i-migrants landed in . ewnYork last year ; 10,000 went overland from‘-the Sites to California; the number that left Ireland, it is cstimatod, will considerably exceed that of 1851, when it was more it is utter of a million. It isa fact highly creditable tolrish emigrants, that in 1852, the sums remitted-by theiu to their friends and relatives at home, amounted to 14.990, . 'l‘he means of emigration. too, are occupying a large share of attention. ‘ rhis earnest rojectors will not hear of more than My days or the'pasmge toSydney: and sowe areto have an ‘Australian direct Steam-navigation Company,’ whosebcats are to ply on either side, to and from the Isthmus. Another scheme is for screw c ' by e nine route; but see- ing that the Polo sailed to Melbourne and back in a little over live months, it is retty clear that capability for speed does not Echo alone to steamers. Most promisi , however, for a shortening of the distance, is t s renewed proposal for a ship-canal scron the Isthmus, traversing the teritory of New. Granada, from Port Fecosses on the Atlantic. to San Miguel on the Hiciiic. Certain concessions, it ls~said, have alrmdLbeen obtained for this route, which is shorter t ii any yet surseyul for a similar pzrpose, being not more than thirty-nine mike; ides which, the district is generally dry, sad consequently more free from. vcrsand noxious ' 1 swpai regions. In order r shall yasiswar. its to cats canal which feet deep at low water. 160 feet: wide at dis surflss of insects that th_a e and w . This would admit of the . largest hg one cases to use other in .i and we are told that any mailer diaicnsloaethaa these would he bade- quate to the purpose. The estimated cost is twelve millions sterling. Only let die promo- ters creats as Isthmian route without trsnslii ment, and will soon have satisfic evi- deuce, in the shape of profitable tolls, o the eoursewhiehtradewtllhhetsaatlhomthe other ddeet flats. thssates, 140 feet at the bottalh, . in .:-i , , . New Series. No. 20. irhéipoiiiia‘ ._ditmn" iinoci to dahh ‘ h a communication in eir own way ;_ the is s- sanctioned I sc 0 for a. railway from some lace hi up _ Mississippi, to California. ix bun ed miles of the distance are to be com- pleted in the iii-st Good-bye to all the ro- mance about b o-huntiu , and adventures among the Sioux and Blac t, as soon as e steam-whistleshall he heard on the prairie! Much more might be saidabout enter ise in relation to travel, but these are other su jectsto be noticed. One is Mr. Rsga.n’s proposal _to cut ola portion of the Mississippi where that river ' ins‘ the Missouri, b a canal leadingio Luke iehigin, which drainin away the sur- plus waters, will save the p tations and was on the lower course of the stream from the disastrous floods that now so frequently occur. Of scientific matters, some have attracted _ re an rdinary interest-vonoof them being Sir Charles Lyell’s return from America with a land—shell, and the remains of a fossil reptile, found in a fossilized tree sta ' erect in the coal-measures of Nova Scotia. e reptile is prove to a ‘an, a ' to species yet existing in the United States ; andcoqpled with ct, that a somewhat ' ' 0 ' s been discovered in Iansrkahire, it is causing geologists to reconsider their conclusion about air-braateing animals, and other phenomena of the coal- riod. We have information, too. that gold , s been found in more than one place in Canada; an we doubtless get a full report from Mr. Iogsu, the givernment-surve - or, as soon as the snows have incited; but if tile Canadians are wise,_the will not abandon their depositsof cop r on ke Superior for any meref os ct of more preciousnietal. 0n,_ e T es, ex rimeuts havebeeuniade b _which, if success ul, steamers are to burn _t it own smoke ; the prccessis said to consist ' s througli the furnace. _ H . ,, _ers, inspired by the suc- cess of the tub l'?§'ld§0l, are iug up once more the uestion 0 iron innate; and it is stated t tub}: masts maybe made of iron, strong- er a_u_d li liter than tlioseof wood, and with the additions advan_tage, that they might slide down one in telescope fashion, while they would require neither shrouds nor sta s, leaving room for bracing round the yards to he outermost. Shi builders must no ct no_means of speed now hat the ' oric ship has proved her capabilities. There is Pmelhlnzi “>0. for paper-maker‘-s to consider, in the fitctthat Herr vou Panuawits, the invent- or of the process for ma 1% wooldfi-on pine- to ' of ;l|’99I_._llu recently _i-esen f ‘h _ _ specimens 0 _paps_r made_ 0 «m“Wl'|8l- that in iuous. G_i°l'|d0l‘§ has also run e paper from the red pine, which ‘I soyvhite and good as to be fit for writing or, wing. and needs no sizing, be- c8Iue_.0f ltaresinous, quality. ' oonortiu. .1.nc+isr.s'runn. Hausa or ~AssairnLr. Fatmr, 11th March. Pa-mics of TINANT8 on Townships Nos. 57, 58, 450. the Psornrr oftho East of Susan- complaining of the ’l.lsIuis of their Iiusauonn ‘linen. » Ma. Divine presented a Petition, ‘as below 5;. vcn, from certain Inhabitants of Townships Nos. 2?. .53. 470-. being Tenants of the Farl of Sal. 11' 1 V _'I‘b the Honorable the Bones of Assnsu of Prince Edward Island, in Colonial Parliament '°'°"i'l»°ni*dz7ii n fth d ed . e io o,.e'unersi In'bitat ofliotd r.Townsl_iips No. 57, g, is-., bein 5,: DBMS On the Pi-opert of Lord Selkirk, dfihn- don, England, Great rjtain, m Respectfully Shewetli ; hat the ' ' l rti f- ' ' emi rated £’:$%0ld!:y £233: °'ui:fi:i.'§'}:;_' 1 —that, at the timeof their smigration,they werctotally ignorant of His resources of theCo- 10‘|:p. unaoquaiistad with the nature of its sail a .-also strangers to its comm ' inter: coui-so: . -W; ~ , g _ In in cone,an the most ttering. psoniuss haldsiat to them) §'......‘°’ ""f.°,.'.‘i’lZ"l.“! .‘§.i."‘2'i.'i.‘i.’°.i...“""il ""°""“ v , - 0 ere and, therefore, were «u E to comply witli my terms which their _ pi-utog, or M. ‘gut, ' C I lllndfl f ' ' have wifliiii :i:“i..li°rfi°:.'f"-'i'° ulastaaee we slhility of coaiplyin with the I._sasss: thatthe ofsaid Iaasss will ex- goat thesnd o Qldpéll eflfil years from ts . 'I‘hat.th tier lt . - oh” uoié 3fN.id I‘.‘;¢v.y-.Iuhrest fiir Par estsudl -mahs __--pd_-near’:-iiniiaa-in-a i.,y.. ,,,