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About Oregon sentinel. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1858-1888 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1869)
cf aci c a i SBNTINRLf nrnuui'.ii livery Saturday Morning Xiy B. F. DOWELL, we, cohxk: c if mini) stiieets i TKUMS IIP MtlKCItll'lIIIVl j Tor one year, In wlrance. four dollar ; If ' KKt tit.l tt illilti Hit Mrl lv mftfilfi nf Him t nap I ;iii. iii'i '- - - l""ii ftf ilollntoj If mil "ilJ until llin t'Xfittatloti cf Iberusr, six dolltr. TcnMs op ADVnnTistxa i Onfnnari (10 line or !. flrl Insertion. Hi ilolUr tncli ntirj'ii'til Itwrtlnu. inic dftllnr. A dlcnniit til filijr p'-r cent, will In ru'le li llni wlio mlrerl!-- ljr llijcr. Ill Tenders rrcdvul at current rtr The Fall of RUhmond. The lat scone in tlic tall of Rich- mond is ill i described by E. A. Pol lard in hi "Life ol Jclfrsun Davis," Just isucd lioin the press. It U on tiroly new nnd strikingly interesting: "At 11 oVnck in the mornina Gch I.rc wrote n dip.itch to Piesidcnt D i vis, nd'iiug liim that the uiiny 'could not hold iii position, nn.l tlnit prepara Hon should be made to ovncual.t tin1 ripli.il that niulit He milit hnvend ilnl in hi illpitch what liu rem irked to oni' of lil s'afTolliccr, in with cm blt'irel but lofty fac, lie s.iwhlsnriny breaking ti) in tin h'o id sunshine: "It ha liipp-iii-il a I tol.l llicm nt Rich" mrnil, the liir linn been stretched until it ha broke." No sound of the battle n'H nn echo, rot n lire ttli li.nl ytt ronrbed the nVim'd 'iiy. It wiii n lou'lySnbbaih uV, nml Ki 'liinnml basked in Its beau it a-ul c'J iyril nuTC limn iimmI rr. r i mi liom the cuie nf the week. T re weic no sound ns ol the e.cd 1 r 'iighfare, tliu lung meets lui I 1 vi v n vehicle upon them; the iiii'm 1' ol tin1 liver give tone only to o : tl.i- i-nr, anil tlic silent puUes ol in" t. iM'ii' lcit Inwly in tliu nwly rim 1'. t'i 1! I i'd o j tno land-cap . li is n da cf can !m thought:. The 1 i in' iij I ito .vil lounged no ir tli ) " ' fli .i'. 1 fliaii iiig minora ol tin t .i'-, 1 r tin- l.ttct depraved golp o Jlirliuoti I o-icly. Hundred wciidid inurwai ilu'ir niiv to thu chiiiehrh, 1 I i v 11 11 11 lew olMliiirioiinlrj'ii hope' In I tlr ' 1O1" I citiii nn flurp v;ilk, titli l-ai'lk in'ranci" ol t'u vlilnki'y 1 !' mi M.iin Mie-I, muglil roiion I 'ii in tin- rhuilt ol 'I la- ClilcVitihniui 1 y,' 'tin K-liol,' mil 'ihe WiMcrm c ' 1 ulus ilii'iiil in (dd finery, in which I he l.ehii'iinl niiiuy ycai. ccrctninglo'l, v or s at 1 - ft d to in ike n display a' Si. Paul's n'luut cquil to the Loll lay MirdnilK- in better d ivsnf thi'iiegnur nt the Afticm churoh. At the lu.int'i (hitich inlii'C'l Mr. D,iis. lie now nt tilfl'iind id me in the PuldeiuV ew, where no oin outldo his f.iiuiU 1 id ccr date I t hit iiiIj hiiicu Mis Davl had ordered thcM'.xliiii toicmove two ladles who hnd veutuiod theii'( mid who, on turning their iiicck to tin iidiuoiililiin to leave, dellxouil befinc the whole coniiyntion, li'nl p.uvcd, to the di-inny nnd will iIchumiI iiioi. tifiiatlni' ol the Picldcul'ti wit.-, to be tho daughieih t flcncral Liu. Mr Davis vn on cnrncsl woinhipcr. Hut u Sunday beiore this ineinoinblu ime, he, General Lee, nnd .Hcictaiy Tien holm had gouo together to thccoinmu id n Ift'dc, mid many ejer in the coi gicgatiou hnd been inoUteiud to Me tliepi' tlneo m"ii. on whom dept n led mi many human hojicn, km cling hide by ride to peitake ol thu innsl prxiim mid comforting Baciniucnt of thechuich. Now a very different scene wan to be witiicsod. s-- In thuiiiidtil of Jho tervico, a man walked noii-ily mto thu chinch nod handod the Picsidcnt a blip ol piper. Mr. Davis lead thu paper, lone, and walked out of the obiiich without agi tation, but facu nnd manner ei ileiitly coiihiriincd; no uue.iy whis,i r ran through thu crowd of woiehip-pi-is, nnd ninny hnstuncd into tho Hiect. Tho congregation was soon dUmis-red. Tho minor had nlrcady g lined the street that Illohiiiond was In ho evnciiatcd; it was conlirmcd to a kw who peiieliatud the closed doors of tho War Departiiieut, or Hindu per sisicnt inijuiiies at the tolographoflicc; but although the Govcinment hnd no motive now to Fuppicrs thu fad truth, bat on the contrary, was in duly bound to infoi in thu people mid pro prre them for tho exigency, it is re in ikublo that theiH was no authentic aunotincuiiieiit ol tho intended evacua tion, no published order on tho subject, no ofljniul notification of any sort; and that news, in which every man's hoijse liold was involved, wo left to wand- r all day as a vnguo rumor in tho ; oitra vor,. xiv. wmfmmmymmme streets, only to be confirmed by thu nctiinl, visible fact of the authori'K-s k'.'iving the city. A little pan noon omo regiments of IjOhg-trectV command, on the north of James river, were seen marching through the city, on their way to rein lorco Lee in the battle he was then ttppoed to be making to save or re cover his lines before Petersburg. The soldiers moved with a slouching step; nml, once, on their disordered march, it is Faid groans wero called f.r Jefferson Davis. Formerly, when Confederate unMiers bad pa:icd ilnotigh Itichmnnd; there had been mi) a c, cheers, crowds of shouting spectators, throngs of ladles standing on the balconies ol the principal hotel on M.iln street, to wavo their adlciix, perchance to scatter flowers on them, nt Icisl to b-ntow upin them sweet nn I inpirinir countenance. Now, as they p'isscd through the thoroughfare, only n lew sp'ct.itors looked on sully nn I cynically; no not of music cheer cil the sullen procession of men m-irch lug sidly and wcirily to death; a few bhmk firis nppLMicd nt the windowsi mid on the bntcouy of the American lintel only two or three Indie stood, Il was melancholy to ? one of them i np'y wnvr n single handkerchief in a hc!intiiig way, and then stop, pale .Mid wounded, ns not n dngle sohllor cheered or recognized 1 1- compliment. A the day wmo on, it wa noticed Hint wngoii were drivtn to the doors ol the depaitments, nnd to the publio storchoUM miuy ol them branded ns (inu'ruiiu'iit wagons, ninny nondes lipu nnd nil molng off lownrd the Ditiviile depot. Tin- accumulation of store i here, and of ticketed boxes, left no doubt that the city was to be ovac u itcd. Sinus of hurry increased; wag on, no longer driven in order, tore through thu streets ; men seemed pos scsc'i with a mania to run to their hotivs, to snatch from them some has ty baggage, and to rush to the near est exit liom the city. In less than nn hour front the firft iippcnranco of the wagon trains on thu Mrcct, the whole pupuVimi of Richmond was involved in a panic. Wbil hccnes ensued it I Impossible to describe. What a chingu lell upon this idly, jia'lel its wanton and hither io tiii.ib.nliud leveliy, nnd spread ter ror through its wickml streets, like n ihiiudeibiilt li out thu uiioliudod ox piuseot heaven, can only bo imagin ed, as the comparison linlicitcs, in the liuht ol somo muMoii wrath iited Irom thu hkies. For lour years Rich mond bad llvod in the easy ilot of tin. war. Now it appeared n if the day of judgment had been called upon it X- w thcro was hurrying to and fro. Sow thu pinlcstricken city broku up, as il by liven lightning, into black, loin crowds of maddened men, con science stricken fugitives, sobered r vi'lem, blanched woiri-n an I children, lleijug wildly through thu streets, ovor tliu' bridges of the rivor, through cieiy uvetiuu ol choipe Irom thu terrible day of julgniciit the chariots of firo and wrath thai wero uoxt day to enter the doqined city. It was n rccuo never to bo forgotten in lh muinories of Rich mond. Thu night was hoaiso with the roar of tho great fight. Thu repoiter ol tho oointod Pri'i, who was nwaro that o o'clouk had been dooginUcd by General Lvu ai thu hour for evacuation, utiles ineniitiino ho succeeded in re-cstab-lUlung his linos, attended thu room of General Urcckluridgo at that hour, nnd was adinittod. He came out with a blank faco. Thcro is no hope, snid General Urcckluridgo, and ho walked quietly from tho room nnd Irom tho building to thu housu where thu President was then concealed, making privato pre parations for his flight. There was no last council ot ooulorcnce. All that there was of deliberative assembly all that remained of tho oncu proud mid loquacious government of Jefler son Davis was to appoint tho rendez vousand time for flight; the Cabinet mumbera being inslruolod to meet tho President at the Danvillu dopot a lit tle before midnight The Capital appeared deserted, but as night foil it was "noticed that the JACKSONVILLE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1869. main door was njsr. ITId away in an obscure room in the third story, the City Council was anxiously debating what ceremonies were nccesary for the surrender of the city, since the President was supposed to hare al readr flrd, or to be concealed for the 'present in Manchester and the duty of surrendering the rnpital wt thus de volved upon It municipal authorities It was a cowardly debate, removed from the observation of the cltUcns. One of tho counellmcn was ostentati ously dressed in a Cnnfederalo unt form. So extreme was the concern for the salcty of the city, such tho anxiety for its' readiest humiliation, that it was arranged that a notifica tion of surrender should he given be fore the next day broke, and three hour pist midnight tho Mayor, des plte his eighty years of age, was start id In a dilapidated vehicle on tho mis sion ol surrendering Richmond before the enemy could got in sight of it. Hefiire the Mayor could mount on his mission to tho enemy, a new and surpssslng terror fell upon tho city. It had been fired in various quarters, arid there were already gleams nf con narration on tlieuark iiarizou. wmie the hctving nnd tumultuous city was even at this hour of the night filled with pillng-rs and mitaudcrs eon r let from the penitentiary, who ha I ecaped, their guards having fled, and Uwlcss soldiers nho were no linger mi ler nny control, the main command of General Ewcll having al icady tramped aero tho bridges over the river the wakelul and anxious eyes ol thousands of terrified citizen I looking from their windows behold this new apparition of horror lisinff liom the black wastet of tho night. Word came that the Shockoo ware house was fired; then, again, that three other largo warehouses contain ing tobacco hnd been given to tho flames It was too late; the hand of the Government was recognized In It. The conflagration had proceeded rrom a strangu negligence of Presi dent Davis. It was a standing order in the confederacy that cotton nnd tobicco should be burned on the ap pro ich of the enemy; nnd some weeks holme, in n general dlscusiou in tlic newspapers, ns to what njlght possl lily take placo in Richmond, it was suggested that tho little there was ol these staples In the city should bo ro moved and Impounded in thu Fair Grounds, outide thu city, whore they might be convenient, and cleanly dn I roved in caso ol ns.'csslty. The sug gestion was never heeded by Mr. D.ivl. Tho cotton nnd tobacco re mained htored in large and scattered warehouses in tho most thickly built parts nf the city. In tlio trepidation of his flight, and in tho excessive con cern for his own salcty, Mr. Davis ap pears to have left tho order for burn ing the cotton nnd lolincco uncnangeii; nt loist tho supposition of negleot is most ihuilable, for it is hardly to be supposed that he would have deliber ately imperiled tho homes of 00,000 people, to destioy and to deprive the enemy ol somo insignificant stores of the total ualuo of which it has been computed tlmt it would not furnish ono dnv'a rations for the whole ol Grant's army. A steamboat captain on ono of the lakes was recently feeling hi way along in tho dark, when the lookout ahead cried out, ''Schooner without a light." It was n narrow escape, and as the steamer panned the schooner, the captain demanded: "What nre you doing with your infernal schooner here in the dark without a light ?" To his dismay, tho skipper, who was a Frenchman, answered, "Vat ze diable you do here viz your olo steamboat in three feet of water, eh?" and just then tho steamer landed high and dry on a sand bi nk. The wooden toothpicks, now In ex tensivo use, aro all manufactured atone establishment near Boston, employing thirty oporalives of both sexes. The machinery ha been patented and Is driven by water power. The woods used aro maple and willow. The Total Eclipse of August 7th. The total solar eclipse of 18C9 has been mora closely nnd successfully ob soncd than nny previous phenomenon of the same class. !t may bo gratify ing to the national pride of somo to know that this country nlrcady con tains a greater nuinbir of laige rcfrac- ior man can uc iuunu in anyone piu' dom ol the Old World. Vet nono or. these, owing to their position, could be brought Into requisition for observ ing the total eclipse. Our astronomers have b. en obliged to travel hundreds, nnd, in some instances, thousand ol milet, to reach the points of observa tion on tho line of totality to which they weie severally Assigned. At Dcs Moines, Iowa, extensive pre pmlions had been made by the United States Naval Aeai'.'-my, by tlio United Stales Coast Surveyor, nnd by mem- her ol the .Surgeon-General's ofllcs ol the Uidtcd States Auny vfObscirntinn, nn the light mid heal ot tlio sun, with the spectroscope, nnd fnt taking p'ioto - graphic negatives ol the eclipo in nil its phases; while Prof Peters, with an able coipsofnslstmits from Hamilton College. X. Y., fitted out by the muni- licei.t iloiiutlnu of K. C. Litchfield, of Hroo'Jyu, was prepared to observe all briefly, expressing his warmest thanks the phenomena which might bu of in-, for the cordiality and hopitality ex t crel to thu world. Tho central lino tended to tho Harvard crew. Looking of tot tlity was discovorel to bo nine- to the crew by which they were defeat teen mile north ol De Moines, by a cd they hnd no reason to be ashamed, vatintiou ol fourteen scoouds in the nc' Willan, on the part of the Oxfords, (mil time ol cimmciiccuieiil ol the regretted thu unavoidable nhscure of ivlipsn fioai that called for in pro. bin tho reinolndur of the crew. With res calculations. Thu correspondent of the peel to the race, as nn old band, he 'JYi'liiiic siys: With this very slight' wild it hnd not boon won easily; It was delay, the exhibition b:gaii, nod the the best race he ever rowed. Thoinns shad iw swept f i on the north wsl to Hughes to.uli'd the London Rowing the oiuheat in imj'.'tic giaudour, C.ub, complimented thu Harvard Uni dwindling the Mil into a crcccut. As' vcrsity and somo of its distinguished the iiiioii ulvanced, tin.' jigged o'llliiie j-radtntcs. At the conclusion ot the of Its mtlaeo pr-Jecti'd upoii the clear, banquet there was a grand display of Ince ol the miii lorm d an undulating fireworks. IIi-c of inky blackness upon a silver) base, and ciu'cd somo of the most In j Siioiinv, It is asserted, is n word tcrctting phtnoiuea.i preceding tint to-( which, trom its application to rotten til obsr oration. When about five- blankets nnd tender clothing, has come sixths ob cured, this lino reminded life to mean anything that is moro showy of the 0'il'iue ol thu C it-kill, ns si en than substaiithl, but the atticlo itself, fiotu ill!' IIiidon, mil nt thu southwes- according to M'Culloch's Commvrcisl tirn pol.it ortlie crccoiit, at one tiiic, Dictionary, is otic of tho greatest tri a jir-'jcc! 'li on the moon's surlace'umphs of art and civilization. The swi r d the 1 ii" on the "tin's ilm, mid a ' manufacture nf shoddy mid mungo or strip o! rllver about seven iUivei in iglt.nted ut ll.it ley, Yorkshire, whoro length, where the sun was i-till seen iher) aro now fifty rag nuchiucs In through a va'lcy on the ninou's surlnec, ' thirty-five mills, producing twclvo mil wholly scpaiati' Irom tliu crescent, linn pounds of rag wool per annum, shone- lor iifirly ten second's before which is nbout one-third of tho yearly thu ftilinuuliii: salillltu entirely obscur1 production. Dowsbury, Yorkshire, is edit, lint the glory of n total ccliisojihu hend-quar'.ers in England of tho is its totality, and soon tho pallor ol shoddy manufacture, though largo the ad vacing 'badow spread an hido.1. quantities nro now made in Germany, eriblc gloom ovor the whole lace ol ua Shoddy Is made of the wool of soft ture. Dogs afliightid inn bowling goods, ntich as stockings, flannels, itc, to ilulr kcnni'lc; n lluck ol tin keys, and mungo ot the wool of hard uoods. surprised that night had found them so1 The old clothes and rags are torn to lar from their accustomed roost, ran .doers by tiio aid of powerful tnaohine hurriedly to cover, and birds nud ni j ryt nnd reduced to their original state mail showed that utinoht Mgns of fear '(. w iol, whiuh is re-spun somotimes On swept the swill moon, and its shad-Jwj-1, tie Rdditlon of fresh wool. In ow, like n pall, blnokencd tho earth iin-'-,i10 parly days of this re-manufacture, til, as suddenly ns a candle is snuffed, 'shoddy was used only for padding and th" sun's last rays were obscured, and'mUar purposes; but now without the thin, with n halo ol glory, the jigged d,nixtiiro of now wool, it is woven outline of the corona shone Irom behind m,0 blanketr, carpets, druggets and the black moon, which seemed motion-j, ni,0 covers. Many ot tho much-ad-less, and plnk-oolorcd flames innrki-1 miretl nnd wnun and serviceable Eng tlio protuberances which astronomers -b, njjot ,i Potorsham overcoats are are so Intently studying. In this caso J nu,0 wholly from shoddy cloth. The tin y shot out from tho sin's surface jjcamjiwi tublo covers, printed in vari ccitalnly not les tlian liom 00,000 to' ,. nltcrns from woodenblocks, are 75.000 miles, nnd fltono with a brilliant,1 rosy lustre. Mercury appeared on the Instant that the sun was obscured, nnd disappeared with the first i ay that shot out from behind the receding oib. Ven us could bo seen for n ininuto before the ccllpe become total, nnd for three minute altor iho sun began tocmeigc. Tho timo ol thu total obscuratiou was 2 min. 53 sec. Tho observers having in charge tho examination of tho heav ens around the sun, did not find any intra-meicuriul planet. Tho photo graphers secured rxcellont negatives of the eolipjo In all Its phnsos, and ta. ken in nil for nil, no moro satisfactory exhibition was possible than that wit nessed, American l)wbyterlan. A Diswstkii Boy. "Mamma I" said a precious littlo boy, who against his will, was made to rook tne cradle of his baby brother: "if thu Lord has any moro babies to giv away, don't you take 'em," ISO. . 34 .-;:? -Tw inULni m Honor to the Harvard. a cnAxn rxTfaivKx in iioaoti or tar lURVARItf AMD TIIK OXONIANS AT TB CRTBTAL PALACK. I.oxdon August 21. A grand fttt was given at tho Crystal Palaca Int evening, in honor of the Harvard nnd Oxford crews, by the London Rowing Club. Mr. Layton, President of tho Club, occupied tho Chair. All tV members of tho Harvard crew were prejent except Loiing Willan alone reprcsf nting the Oxfords. Thcro wero also present one hundred and twenty invited guests, including Charles Dick ens, Tho. Hughes, Edmund Yates, Cnptain Anderson, nnd many other no tables. Minister Motley was unavoid ably" absent. After dinner, Charles Dickens ptoposcd tho toast of the even i.ig, the Harvard an Oxford crows," accompanying it with a speech paying high compliment to tho Harvard crew He regretted the absence ol the Oxford 'men, and aid they had won so oltrn ' they could afford to loso in the event ol another contest, lla wished the Harvatdi good speed on their home 'jnumr-y. and n returning welcome at home, which would find cclio in every corner of England. Simmons replied Kt.n0rally mado from shoddy, and tho same matorinl enters largely into other important manufactures, so that shod dy, it is contendod, is by i o means tho contemptible olioat which many per sons suppnso it to be. m Patik.sts ix iiie Insawk AsvMjy. Tho Clerk ol tho Insane Asylum kind ly furnishes ns tho following, giving tho patients admitted, discharged, and died, during the months of June, July nnd August. Admitted E. Little, Ah Lee, (a chinaman) F. J. Heron. A. C, Lorlng, Jennio W. McCiil'oiIgh 5 Dischar ged Mrs. M, Shurtz, J. C. Loony, J. 0. Couch, Catherine, Saunders 8. Died, Geo. Thrasher, Geo. Fray, 2. Total numbor'of Stale patients msl'o 73 ; fomalo 31. Private patients, 4. Total uumber remaining in tho Asylum HO. -T- Commercial, Mw the Eclipse was RejwrtlKn Chictf o The following is publhffta' as a copy 6f the Instructions recently given to a Chicago reporter by the managing edi tor ol this paper : Mr.: In Writing np the eclipse yon will please observe the following iu strnctlons: 1. Sympathize with the movement half a column. 2. The probable benefits reselling to the gas companies of Chicago give tabular statistics half column. 3. Its effect on population. Rabid bom under tho Influence of the (dip'se will be niggers, with coronal of white. Go into nigger question from timo of Ham to emancipation proclamation hnlf column. 4 General splurge quotations, "Hues of earthquake and eclipse" Shelley. "Oh night with hue so black" Shakespeare. That may be expand ed Into ft column nnd n half. 6. General sketch of enrly eclipses, bringing down the history of Chicago. C. Interview, man In tho moon mnko this htimorou, in the Pickwio!: I.in style half column. 7. Anrclotes of planets, Mercury, Venus, M ms, Jupiter, i to., oo Lcinp tier's Classical Dictionary. 8. EnVta ol elipe on gamblers la Chicago go into facts. 0. Moral effects. Even With Htm. A ceilain butcher ol StciibcnvlllcO., call him Mr. It,, had been very much annoyed by a Inrgc dog which bad sev eral times stolen meat Irom bis stall. Cluing to lawyer Tappati, bo presented his case tliu: "Mr. Tappati, I hava hid beel stolen from me nt vanous tlmrsbyn dog in this town. What shall I do?" "Sue tho owner ol tho dog mid recover the price of thj href," was the answer. "Mr. Tappan, It was your dog," said Mr. C, exultiiigly. "Ah, It was well, what was tho valtio of tho bevl t" snld Mr. Tappan. Three dollars," replied tho butcher. "Very well," said Mr. Tnppvi, and paid ilie money. With i smiliiig eountriiauce tho butcher was closing the ofllcu door, when he was startled by ''Hold on, Mr. 11,, 1 cbargo you five dollars for consultation." Good hum orcdly paying thu foe, Mr. I). departed with two dollars' worth of "legal" ad vice. Tin; Vickiioy or Ec.yit. Tho Vice roy of Egypt, who spends the grrator put of his lime nml money in Paris nnd London, throws nbout tho latter In such quantities that now nnd then ho is sadly put to it for resources. Dur ing his recent sojourn nt Eaux IJounes, in France, his bill for telegraphic dis ' patches alone was 22,000 francs. II was accustomed to scud long docu ments to Calio by the Meditenancsn line. On piivatu conceits given to him, with hugn bands of musicians and siupcrs, be spent immenso sums. A good story Is told ol the joke he played on the many wiics bo has at homo just beforu hi recent return to Cairo. He purchased fi5,000 liaucs' woith of false diamonds and jewelry and sent them down to bo diktiibutcd to the Indies oi bis harem, who will doubtless take them for the veritable magnificence, as they nre not connoisciirs in tho value ol that which glitters. It turns out that tho imperfect state ment relative to the number of Statea which have ratified the fifteenth amend mont, that appeared in thu telcgraphlo dispatches the other day, was .ent by Senator Cascrly from New York. His object was to convoy tho impression' that only twelve Stntos have ratified. "Ho intended," says iho Stockton n (UptmUnt "to convoy nn Impression he knew to b false, and deliberately and intentionally sent it forward, with the additional claim to cicdoncc which ap pearing under his Senatorial toga would give. What sonsitlvo patriot ran re sti-ain a blush at view of such infamous prostitution of the respectability and credit duo the Senatorial office I" Four gentlemanly Democrats efTen. nessco recently rushed into a negro church near Carthage, and deliberately shot doad iho colored minister, Thomas McClellan, nshe was engaged in prayer with several who had gone to the "anx ious scat." A distressed mother writes to an ex ohango for advice, which she get thus ly: "T-r ly way to cure your son of staying out late of nigbu is to break his logs, or get the oalloo he runs with to do your housework." Ml 9