AMERICAN VOLUNTEER. Jdbmsued evert thdbsdat mobnino bt John B> Bratton. ERMS Subscription. —OBfi Dollar and Fifty Cents, 'paid in advance; Two Dollars!! paid within the year; and Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, if not paid within the year. These terms will bo rig idly adhered to in every instance. No sub scription discontinued until all arrearages .are paid unless at Die option of the Editor. Advertisements —Accompanied by the cash, and not exceeding one square, will bo inserted throe times for One Dollar, and twenty-five cents lor each additional insertion. Those of agreat tcr length in proportion. Job-Printing —Such as Hand-biljs, Posting bills, Pamphlets, Blanks, Labels, &6.,&c., exe cuted with accuracy and at the shortest notice. |WraL A dream. BT TLEH’A, • I had a rosy dream— I thought 1 wits again a child, ■ 'And in my shady, woodland homo ;i . Was -wafadering joyous, free and wild— '• . Again T wore a garland bright, ... 6f sweet, wild flowers, rich and rare, *, Tlmt sparkled like the royal gems | Amid my locks of sunny hair. ■' Again I saw ray father smile And join me in my happy play; ; And when a childish sorrow came, ! Ho kissed the falling tears away, i’ Father, in life’s matnrer days, ' My spirit fondly turns to thee— For that kind’ loving smile of thine Will cheer me on life’s darkest sea. Again beside my mother’s knee, I knelt to lisp toy evening prayer,- - And felt her, soothingly, smooth back My flowing loeks ol golden bair. Again I hoard her gentle voice,' In accents holy, soft and mild— And sweetly as a sunboaujjell A benediction on her child. Again those proud and daring boys— The brothers of my infant years— . Joined in my merry, childish plays,. To share my joys and calm toy fears. Again wo.wandered, free and wild, O’ro mountain, valley, hill and dell; Playing amid tho waving corn, , And drinking from tho crystal well.' And, oh I that gentle, dove-like one— A trusting sister, pure and fair— The angel b( my childish years, Was wandering sweetly with me there,- Alas! the scene is real now—■ The bright, the rosy dream is o’er; But oh!’ what would ray heart, not give To boa happy child once more ! yet,fttill a father’s gentle voice ;' ' Como to my oar in accents mild j f And still a mother’s blessings lull Upon her thoughtless, wayward child ; pi- And still those brothers claim my love, if And guard my path from care and strife; 6 And still that gentle sister is p , The guardian angel of my lift!. I \ : ' : ~ ■ • ■ LOGS. Will yon ever weep, love, fe When I have passed away. When cold in death I sleep, love, £ Through many a weary dai ? go .Will you place a wreath; love. Ip;: ■ Upon my little mound ■ At evening’s holy hour, love, When shadows Hover ’round f pt lliy-'.}!,'; Will you often comej love, t To view my lowly bed ? Will you plant a flower, love. To ,blosaom>o’er i.py head ? • ;. 0, kneel beside my grave, -love, And say—diere rests my all I . And let one pearly tear, love, Upon my bosom fall. ; Mmtllmmuß. WHY MRS. PHILLIPS, IS SUCH A SCOLD. BY MBS. F. I). <3ACE, in Wliai does make Mrs. Phillips scold so ?” id slrs.\ Parsons to her husband, as they left o homo of'the lady in question at nineo’clock the evening, September 30,1858. “ Oh, I don’t know,” answered M*. Parsons* guess maybe she has some reason for It.” j « I don’t see what, I’m sure; if I had as big house as her’s, and everything about it so nice she has, I would try to bo a little good- ha red before folks, any how.” « Well, I don’t know, wife* .that big bouse n’t just tbo thing after all;”, « She never was content in the other.” “That’s so; blit there was a reason tor that u Yes to be sure there was ; but that was too tie tor anything. I don’t see how she ever ood it.” “But she did stand if eighteen years., and Isod a family of nine children in ono room, id-one bed room ten foot square, and a lolt.” ”'■ impefipus desires. tPleasure abjured»juvd..bp^preoimtatei ucCT^KicA'l'xii--^I—- 1 —- This sentiment is, howevCi, all our needs and all our des|r'es. The citizen invokes the Deity in favor country, the lover,, separated from' the ojjj&kt of his-lovo, con fides her to the Superintending, oaro of Prori deuce. The prisoner’s prayerpierces the walls of his dungeon; the tyrant upon his throne is disquieted, harassed by invisible powers; he can scarcely reassure himself in imagining them necessary. Did you ever go into the presence of one whose face, hitherto, never failed to brighten at your approach —of one whose features you had never seen contracted by a frown, cold with indifference, when towards you, only to meet an aspect of cloud and gloom 1 If so, how did it make you feel ? Was you not struck, in stantly, with a chill ? . ,t( ■_ Yes, you can remember how it was —there is little doubt of that; and you never want the experiment repeated; There is no obscurity of the heavens, there is no blackness of the night, that make such gloom a? the veil that an angry or a changed heart can hang before the face of one you love, and who has, until now, always seemed to love you. Anything, anything of earthly anguish can be better borne than the loss of thelove and friendship of one yoii love and thoroughly believe in ; And when you have had cause to dread that your friend was changed. That, his eye, indeed, beamed fond ly, and with the kind approval pfthe old : but not on you, and when you have found that your great and dreadful fear was, groundless—that he was not changed, were you pot happy—al most as if you had seen into Heaven, and heard the dwellers there naming your name as one that was written in the Book of life. Friendship and love!,' true love—unchanging and kind like that of Heaven —what would this weary world be were these to forsake it and not return I Clear as Mud.—An editor had a bottle of London'Dock Gin presented to him, after drinking the whole of it,-he'Wfote a ‘notice 1 of the article. Here is a specimen of the stylo : . “Here’s to the ladies and other branches of business [hie] in and around town —and espe cially the Messident’s Pressago, Monington Washument, etc., all of whiqh may be had cheap at the Buck —*Drook —Brook and Duck store of Biningcr’s old Londou-.Dock Gin, for $2 a-ycar, if payment is delayed until the end of theOablantic Able .” Old Age.— lt is not well that a man should always labor. His temporal as well as spiritu al interest demands a cessation in the decline of life. Some years of quiet and reflection are necessary after a life of industry and activity. There is more to concern him than incessant occupation, and its product—-wealth. Ho who has been a drudge all his days, to one monoto nous mechanical pursuit, can hardly be fit lor another world. The release from toil m old ace-most men have the prospective pleasure of; and, in the reality, it is as pleasing as it is sal utary and useful to the mind. Such advanta ges, however, can only bo gained by prudence and economy in youth; we must save, like the ant, before wo can hope to have any rest in the winter of our days. fty* Life is but a span—of horses; one is “ Ago,” the other “ Prime,” up and down the bill our course is: “Go in,” poines—“ make your time.” Boyhood plies the whip of pleas ure ; youtbjul folly gives the stroke ; manhood goards them at his leisure: “lot cm rip, “they’re tough as oak.” “Hi, ya. there, the stakes we’ll pocket; to the wind let care be sent; time. 2:40. “ Whip in socket’ give ’em string’ and let ’em went.” On the sunny road to fifty. “Prime”, is drowned in Lethes stream : “ Ago” is left, lame, old, unthrifty : life then proves a one horse team. “Age” jogs on, grows quite unsteady, reels and slackens in his pade : “ kicks iho bucket” always, ready ; “ give it up.”—Death wins the race. Porter’s Spirit. To make a prelty girl’s cheek red, pay ,her a sweet compliment. A Gomancc inrTdlilics. Did you Ever. ■ sL- ■ 9 ' Ja> jftk e 'VA |J Xil IX.L, V <$ — — • 7 An Independent Caniidnle. Our readers (says the Memphis^ Engle,) will remember a circular published in 6(w columns from Mr. James A. Jones, a candidaV> for Con gress in Arkansas, in opposition to fir- Rust. Jones was defeated by some six or seten thou sand majority, and upon ascertaining the re sult, came out in his paper, the Ouachi' a Rcr aid, as follows :' EEPAETED, Oil OP SAI.T EIVEE. e'cave. ins. “Notia vain should such examples be.”-t Byron. . . Wo—that is to say James A. Jones, editor of the Ouachita Herald and late candidate for Co ngress—are ingloriously defeated. To use a classical and entirely original expression : " Wc evidently oast our pearls before swine. Wo magnanimously, and at a considerable sacrifice of our habitha! self-respect, offered to serve a people, wlip had no-appreciation of the offering. We didn’t make the people, and are riot under contract to supply them with brains. If they were willfully blind to our merit, the fault is theirs, If they are opposed to receiving indi vidually a hundred and sixty acres of land apiece, they have ri .right, to object it -, they know whether or not they deserve it. If they don’t want the rights of the south “ preserved inviolate," why they may have them pickled for all we care. We did our duty and our con science is easy, At the enormous expense of sixteen dollars and thirty two cents we printed a multitude of circulars sufficient to elect any man, with which we flooded this Congressional district and a largo portion of the Cherokee Nation. We wrote to our friends and to some who were not our friends to rally to our jmp port. But they didn’t rally. We concealed ourselves as well as wc could at home, refusing positively to extend our acquaintance, or to see more of the public than the public did of us.— With these precisions we deemed success cer tain. A great many persons wrote to us that we should get an overwhelming vole ; they were not deceived; it was overwhelming. Many ored ulous parsons told us that we should be elec ted -, -we listened to them and were deceived.— But we forgive them, for they made us feel very comfortable —for awhile, and all earthly happi ness Is transitory. We shall never become a candidate again without consulting somebody bn the subject first, and ascertain whether they do or do not desire us to run ; for we are satis fied that it is folly to be a candidate'unless somebody does want you to run, and will vote for you on the strength of that desire. Wo are not without consolation. We are not the Duly candidate that was defeated.— There are numbers in as. bad a fix as ourselves and, besides, greater men than we claim to he have been as badlybeaten. Gen; Harrison, af terwards President of the United States, was once defeated, for comity clerk in-Ohio, and James E. Polk was beaten for Governor of Ten id company; and there- which the people should iKrTOnrtnffd;atanrnnm ihqs as some of the aspi. .led V quietly at home,’ and they so highly appreciated ;our modesty that they hove given us the privilege of oootiii; uing to do so. We are thankful for. snia’U fa vors. Among our numerous friends, cx-Qovernor Drew is entitled to our warmest acknowledge ments. His intention doubtless was to assist us in beating Rust, by procuring a large and influential majority of the Democratic parly to vote for him. With this object in view he made a brilliant canvass, ending in no less a brilliant failure. .But, notwithstanding he car ried of! a considerable portion of our vote we honor him for his laudible intentions. Hereaf ter,he has but. to command us and we will obey—if it suits us to do so. To the fifteen patriotic and chivalrous voters who cast their suffrage for us in! Pike county, we beg leave to tender our unfeigned gratitude. Wb owe them a debt that will be difficult to repay. As a slight evidence of our high appre ciation and lasting regard, wo propose that, if they will forward us a list of their names, we will send them the Herald tor life—at the usual price, $3 per annum, invariably fn advance. . In conclusion, we desire permission to re mark that the small experiment we have just made is*eminently satisfactory. Whatever as pirations we may have had for.glory are entire ly subdued. The pursuit of a scat in Congress “ under difficulties 11 is one in which we have no desire to engage. We are satisfied that we carry with us into the.rctircment the best wish es of a gentleman though ungrateful people, and arc content. EYE SIGHT. Milton’s blindness was the cause of over work and dyspepsia. . One of the most eminent American divines having, for some time, been compelled to forego the pleasure of reading, has spent thousands of dollars in vain, and lost years of time, in Con sequence of getting up several hours before day. and studying by artificial light. : His eyes ne ver got,well. ..-u Multitudes of men and women have made their eyes weak for life, by the too free use of the eyesight in reading small print and doing fine sewing. In view of those things, it is well to observe the following rules in the use of the ’eyes: Avoid all sudden changes between light and darkness. . , Never begin to read or write, or sew for seve ral minutes after coming from' darkness into a bright light, , , Never read by twilight, or moonlight, or of a very cloudy day. . Never read or sow directly in front of a light or window or door. It is best to have the light fall from above obliquely over the left shoulder. Never sleep solljat, on first waking, the eyes shall open on tho light of a window. •Do not uso the eye*sight 'light so scant, that it requires an effort to discriminate. Too much light creates a glare, and pains and confuses the sight. The moment you are sensible of an effort to distinguish, that moment cease, and take a walk or ride. As the sky is blue and earth green, it would seem that the ceiling would ho a bluish tinge and the carpet green, and the walls of a mellow tint.. Tho moment you arc instinctively prompted to rub your eyes, then you should cease rubbing them. If the eyelidswe glued together, on waking up, do not forcibly open them but apply the saliva with tho finger—it is the speediest dilu lent in the world —then wash eyes and face in warm water. — Roll’s Journal of Health. The Reason Why.—A small lad asked permission of his mother to go to a hall. She told him it was a bad place for little boys. “Why, mother, didn’t you and father use ttf go to balls 1" “Yes, but wo have seen the folly of it,” an swered the mother. “Well, mother,” exclaimed the son, “I waul to see the folly of it too. ” AT 52.00 PER ANNUM The President and Hie Farmers. In an admirable address to a large assem blage of agriculturalists at Washington, a fen days since, the President, among other good tilings, said: - havc-cvcc-bcen, fomLotlngriculture itself, though I have never had much lime to devote to it practically; but I heartily rejoice that the Secretary of the Interior and the Commis sioner of Patents have assembled you here upon this important missioff. The other interests of the country are pressing forward. The farmer slays at home, follows his plough, and minds his own business, and we hear 'very little of J him in public. Notwithstanding the energy, the activity, arid the enterprise of our national ■ character, it is in agriculture very often inef factually exerted without the necessary skill ! and science to produce the effect which is so 1 much desired ; for science combined with prac -1 tical experience, when applied to the pursuit of ■ agriculture, must shed blessings upon the coun try. lam very happy indeed to see here so ’ many practical agriculturalists, who-under stand that science fully. And I have no doubt that the great truths which will bo elicited by the questions which are to ,be propounded to agriculturalists in all parts of the country, when they shall have been collected and bro't here, arranged and circulated all over the na-. tion, will-have the best ellect imaginable upon the whole dountry.” .. Whistling. Wc believe in Whistling—wo love to, hear it, and to do it. The boy or man at the plow who whistles indicates that ho is contented, and he will plow more than your silent, glum one, who hath no music iu his soul, nor in his lips. The Albany Times is right when it says: “The man who don’t believe-in whistling, should go a slop further, and put: a. muzzle on. bobolinks and mocking birds. Whistling is a great institution.. It oils the wheels of care,- and supplies the place of sunshine. A man who whistles lias a good heart under his shirt front. Such a man not only works more wil lingly than any other man, but he works more constantly. A whisllihg cobbler will earn as much again money as a cordtvainer who gives way to Tow spirits and indigestion. Mean or avaricious men never whistle. Who ever heard' of a whistler among the sharp practitioners of Wall st. ? Wo pause fbr an answer. The man who attacks.'Whistling, throws a stone at the, head Of hilarity, and would, if he could, rob June of its roses—August of its meadow lurks. Such a man should be looked to. Winter Comforts nut! Drawbacks, We ere amid the chilliness of winter, with now and then a glimpse of what might be'called the forerunner of spring. To keep the latter always in your heart, says an exchange, learn to sing. There is a great deal of merit in melody, more merit than most pebplc.aro’aware of. A cob bler who smoths hia waxed. cuds -with Bonnie Doon or will do,' its much work in a a r given to “cussing"; "SWFiff nathra weK. - .' 'Songs are like sunshme—they run to cheerfulness ; and so fill your bosom with buoyancy fbr the time being that you feel like a yard of June, or an acre lot,.filled with violets and bobolinks- Try'it on and see. That may all he very well, but will not wholly dispel the' following sum mary of “winter comforts Chilblains sore on all your toes, loicleslmngfromycurno.se, - Rlieumatiz’in alt your limbs, . Noddle full of aches and whims. Chaps upon your hands and lips, • And lumbago m your hips. ■ To your'bed you shivering creep. There to freeze, but not to sleep, For the sheets that look so nice. Are to you two sheets of ice. I How to tell a lawyer. A few days since, a gentleman, Being beyond the limits of his neighborhood, inquired of a pert negro-if the road ho was traveling led to a certain place. Cuifee gave Ihc required infor mation, but seemed curious to know who the stranger was, aS well as his occupation. If or the fun of the thing, the traveler concluded to humor ebony a little, and the following dia- logue ensued “ Sly name is —, ami as to the business I follow, if you-are at all, smart you can guess that (rom my’ appearance—can't you tell that I am a timber cutter . “No, boss, you no timbei‘'culter.” “ An ovcrseer. lhen ?” “ No, sir, you no look iiko one,” “ Wlmt say you. to my being a doctor ?” •• Don’t tlii'nk so, boss. dey i-idc in sulky.” " Well, hon’ do you think I will do for a preacher?" ; *• I sort’r spects you is dat, sir.” “ Pshaw, cufl'cc, you are a greater fool (han I took you for—don’t I look more like a law yer than anything else?" ’ . .“No, sir ee, boss, don't dat.” “Why, cuflee?” . . “Why, now-, you see, I’so been ridiri’ wid you for a mile, and you hain’t cussed any, aud you know lawyers always cusses." Marshal Key’s Death Scene. The vengeance of the allied powers demands some victims, and the intrepid Key, who had well nigli put the crown again on JJonapartu’a head, was one. to ho one of them. Condemned to bo shot, lip was led to the garden of Luxen hurg, on tho morning of the 7th of December, and placed in front of a tile of soldiers drawn np to kill him. One of the officers stepped up to bandage his eyes, but he stopped him say ing, “Are you ignorant .that for twenty-live years I have been accustomed to face both ball and bullet?” He then lifted his hat above-bis head, and said in his same calm voice “I de clare before Cod and man, that I never betray ed my country; may my death render iter hap. py. Vivo la Franco!” He then turned to the soldiers and striking his hand on his heart, gave the order, “Soldiers, fire!” A simulta neous discharge followed, and the “ bravest of the bravo” sank to rise no more. “ Ho who hud fought five hundred battles fdr France, not ono against her, was shot as a tra tor!’*, As i Iddked on tho spot whetc ho fell, 1 could not but sigh over his fato. ■ True, ho broke his Oath of allegiance i so did others, carried away by their attachment to Napoleon, and the en thusiasm that hailed his approach to Paris; still ho was no trallot. 0= A married woman was brought before a Virginia justice charged with larceny ol some pewter plates. After hearing the evidence, and deciding that the woman Was guilty, he ordered, that ten lashes should bo inflicted upon, her husband, who was then and there present, giv ing as his reason that this Scriptures declared that man and wife were one flesh, and. as the wife Was tho .wcaker vessel, it was right that the man-should bear half' the penalty. rrs- At a dinner in Springfield, Massachu setts, a lady sent tho following volunteer toaSt : i‘Spruce old bachelors—tho cccr greens Of so ciety.” K 7” A, dozen printing offices ore now for sale in Indiana. • v - ■ O’ A gang of buVgiara arc plundering tho river twons along the Ohio. IC7“ The Chicago, lowa and Nebraska Rail road is completed to Lisbon, lowa. (LT”Tho office of ,'City Marshal, in Cincin nati, is said to be worth 320,000 a year. ‘ [C/ 3 Practice without - knowledge is blind, and knowledge without practice is lame. • - (LT*-*! kriow,” said Tipitey, “ water,is- a fine thing, but is so dreadful linn.” OCT” Horace Greeley will riot withdraw from lie Tribune. NO. 34. (C7* Jlte daily sale of slaves, in Richmond, Va., last week, averaged $85,000. \rj~ Tii s tohaccorirop of Ohio for tlic current ydar is estimated to be worth 53,000,000 O’- Moderation is the silken string running -through the pearl-chain of all virtue. Q^,o,irc,hpur_gaincdjb£^ a month of labor in the year. ' ~~ O” Were it riot forMie tears that fill otfr eyes, what an ocean would fill our breast v , 017“ Why is it easier to be a clergyman than a physician ? Because it is easier to preach than to practice.. (C7“A number of young men in Palmyra, N. Y., have organized a company to go to Pike’s'Peak in the Spring. - K7* Woman—thc lnst and best of all the se ries. If we have nna for a toast, we won’t ask for any but her (butter.) - i 0” Heat rnriiics to such an extent that it can be made to occupy 5,500 times tlic space it did before. , (£7» Mynheer Drinkcnhoff, makes a distinc tion thus : “ Too much whiskey- is too ranch, but too much lager-bier is shoost right.” OC7“ Of rill the delicate sensations the mind is capable Of, none, perhaps, will surpass that which attends the relief of an avowed enemy. . ladies of Georgia,have palled a State Fair to 6e held at Augusta, Feb, 15, to increase the Mt. Vernon Fund. (C? Tho next ipecling of the Pennsylvania Editorial Union will be held At Harrisburg, ori tho loth of Febauary. O” The total distance between St. Louis and San Francisco, by the new overland route, is 27C5 miles. fl'T'.Mr. Alex. Duncan; of Providence, E. 1., has recently made a donation of $lO,OOO to the Butler Asylum for the insane. (C7* A correspondent of the Richmond Exam iner, named Cralle, says that John C. Calhoun was a Swedenborgiam .. .. In England railroad cars are not warmed at all. In Prance they ate. admirably warmed by cylinders ot hot Water. OCT* Quite a number of animals,have died ah Elk ton, Md., supposed to have been bitten by mad dogs. BCTT.Why is it retired carpenter like a lectur er i Because he is cx-plancr. U^ii’OiiN r love.— The love of a lady for ad officer who wears a love of a uniform. OCT* “ You look as though you were beside „ yourself,” saida wag to a foil standing by a donkey. , . ” . . 0“ What is-the difference between a good soldier and a fashionable lady 1 One faces the powder, and tho other powders the faces. DCT - Every man mm t in a measure bo nlono in the; world. No hear), was ever, cast in .’the same mould as that Which we bear within us. DC7* The House of Representatives of Ohio, has refused to make seven per cent, the legal rate of interest instead of ten. ■ ■ DCT* English papers report the recent death of a woman in London, 92 years of age, who was born in the room in .which she died, and never . slept put of it for a night in her long life time.' ' OCT* Jerry Diggs remembered his miserly;uri-‘ ole in his will, for he beipiathcd “ to ray moth er’s brotheragtin flint, and a knife to skin it with.” : DC7* The New York News proposes tho for mation of the cities of Hew York and Brooklyn into a separate -state. They should .be named Sodom and Gomorrah. A boarding-house keeper advertises to “ furnish gentlemen with pleasant and comfort able rooms, also one or two gentlemen with wives.” (HT” A company of young men are.organs zing to start from Indiana' to Pike’s Peak, in April next. They calculate the expense at $l3O each. , - . ; (£7* Those men talk most who are in the greatest mental darkness—frogs cease’ their croaking when light is brought to the water side. ■ . ttZr" A young, handsome, and hitherto re spectable, married lady, of Buffalo, was recent ly, arrested for public intoxication, and sent up for thirty days. Bela Squires, a widower, mafrfied Wary Oronitxc, a widow, a Tew days, since, in Hart-' ford, Conn. They commence their matrimoni al engagement with 20childrun. , The Sabbath.— A Sabbath well spent . Brings a xveek of content. And health for the toils of the morrow ; But a Sabbath profaned, Whatsoever be gained Is a sure fore'runnerof sorrow. (£7* The Royal Wail steamship Africa sailed on the SOth inst,. for Liverpool, with the mails; one hundred anti twenty passengers, and $474,• 590 in specie. '■ i K 7” Two sinvesofeX-President Polk’s widow, in Tollab-alohie county. Tenn., have been cori vioted of a conspiracy to make insurrection, an offense which is punishable with death. AVaum Reception.— Rnstiois wroto.a letter;to liis love, . And filled it full of warm and keen desire; ite hoped to raise aflame— and so he did; 0“ The value of food in New York during 1858 is estimated at §12,000,000 and the number 6( quadrupeds eaten was 191,374 beeves, 10,123 cows, 36,075 calves, 551,179 swine. Fpigbau.— A laborer in England riaffled Doc lately lost his wife,.in endeavoring to,,eat ft {found of raw sausage in two minutes. He had nearly ac complished the disgusting feat, when the sau sage stuck in-his throart, and caused his death. A priest was called upon 1 to pray over tho barren Acids ol hia.parishoners. He passed from ono enclosure to another, and pronounced his benediction, until ho came to a most un promising case. He surveyed its sterile acres in despair. “Ah!" said he. “brothcren-no use to pray here—this needs manure!” A French cbfaipany, organized at ‘ the wish of the Emperor, ate about to purchase the Collins steamers, to be placedwith others, as a regular lino of paokols between Franco and Now Fork, the French government having agreed to pay to the company a yearly sum of §15,000,- 000 francs. Yy~ The first newspaper in Ohio, was print ed in 1790. fete ; flnS ’fete. Tlic lady pul his nonsense in the fire ! Fee simple, and a simple fee, And all the fees in tail; Arc nothing whqn compared to thee Thou beat of fees—female.