Carlisle herald and expositor. (Carlisle, Pa.) 1837-1845, November 21, 1837, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    I=l
EMI
V(11•UE 7.
, , ,
LE:tISLATIVIS PILOCEr.Ducas
..The'aiiptciarshingr sessi o n'-of—t lie . Leg:lid:x(oi ,
promises to be one of t ionsitalii.terest..and helms
the spirit of its sittipga cannot fail of being mu
'
nientously_ interesting to Ale:general
,pohlie„ „Th e
Intelligencer will be. isstiedSpil.Wf.EKLlr; peed;
• ing the session of that body, We, •heretore,
sppport Of the friends of HARRISON &
RITNER to aid pa iii onr enterprise. de,
sign employing comp etent Reporters, who will
faithfully and impartially note the proceedings - of
. both branches of the Legislattire. The ilioninant
. party . have - come under solemn. promises io de ;
.Vise a•reinedy lorlke existirigAis'eased state Oahe
---turrency,•it will be•oot aniong. the least' amusing
„end ludicroui incidents•in the history orthat par
ty,'-to 'observe the indifrerenee with which those
. -sundry pledges will be regarded antlihe COM-.
•-- . placency with-whichsthey Will be vinlated. _The
tnaority , must restore the circulation of specie,
.. en d- bring buck to its wonted .regularity - and
soundliess, the monetary: affairs.of this-S Or a
thousand promises • will be. broken.. :The action
of this body •on the. internal improvement ques
, - Aion, will alsci be of interest,
' During the.sittingofthe Legislature: - a - number
—Or . Conventions
_will•-•liskmble at the seat of go
vernMent, the triniactions of will be of
ticrordinary interest tb the people, and it shall be
otead:V anctconsta_liCc a_M to. s•:11 ,, iSe Mir reader!s
-...;.-of thilitiport of their, deliberathMs.. • •
- .The Constitutional COnvention, itoiv in session:
• will dottbtless prolong-its session for some nionths•
yet to come, and consequently_regularreports of.
their "proceedings shall also have a place in
paper:: " • .
In short, it shall'he i the.constant endeavor of
the editors to collate and embody:An the 'columns
of the Intelligencerr as great all Arnottnt of inter.
eating matter as practicable, and no pains oe ex
:,..pense will beipared, at any time:, to reinter this
paper the vehicle of - the latest add most impor
tant news, otrull-subjeTnts-of general interest,
• TERIIIS:
•• For the Session, twicea week, • • - .52 00
Forthe wholeyear, - - :I_oo
SIX COPIES will be_sentio_annilace during
the session,
for-PO, if paid. in advance. . • '
A liberal discount will be given to persons at a
distance; disposed to act. as agents for - the Intelh.
gencer. . . • •
THOMPSON & CLARK
Harrisb_urg, Nov. 12, 1837.
- -
PennOliania 'Reporter and.
Slate Journal.
Is published at 'Haryisbuig, twice a- week
durinE the - Se ision- of the, Legislattire,
and:once a week - durmglhe recess,
- The -Reporter has been, and will Continue to
be, a firm and' unwavering laborer in the cause
litemocracy t ,in
,advocatepf.the.Principles of
- the-Adoiinistratitili of - tb - e - Uerierill
an untiring opponent of the",parq which rules in
the. gxecutive. Department of. the State; awl
Which has trampled upon the rigliH, and wanton
: ly disregarded the will of the People of Pennsyl-
Vania.
'• • As the ensuing session will be 'one of more
- than, ordinary importance, tile 'proprietor has
• made such arrangements a's. will enable him to
, • ,give 4111 and satisfactory, reports of the proceed
_ lugs of. the Legislature,. and to:realize the,ex
. . pectations, of those who may patronize the Re
" porter PS. a vehicle of LWgislatit'e information.
' „ Theiermsof the Reporter and Journal, are, '"
. Per, annum., . . , . .$3 Go •
During the session i. • - 2._00_ .
Any agent or other persons fOrwarding.slo,. o ,.
becoming-responsible -therefore, will have six
copies forwarded, as may be directed, during the
the session ()film Legislature. '
' Persons forwarding names of subscribersiare
• requested to be particular in staling whether Th . e
tithscriptiorts are to continue fur the year or the
CA R-L IS L.E.:-B A NK,LN
• - Tl!e Board of Directors , of
.this Institution
.. have to-day declared la dividend. tit 3i per
cent. tnr the last six months, inn_ the capital
strick, Paid in:. The. same be payable to
the stockholders ortheir legal yepr . esenta ,
. lives on or after the 17th instant. -
• W. S. COSEAN; Cashier.
Nov. 14; 1857. , . .
Ittintim
.
gRAHE Subscriber talce_sthis.method_tal-inforin—
ing the Cfrtizens of Carlisle and its vicinity,
_that she hiet-co — r — tifireitMWl - -ilie
. above-named business in nil .
• 4,0v-v.. 3 , —lts-various brandhes in Pont
fret street, a few doors East
_% 4li of the Second Presbyterian
: -Church, where she Ts ready
• to' receives!! those whb may
"/• 4 1` favor her . ivith their custom.
./
She hopes, by stricVattention to business, to
_meYit a' liberal share of patronage, 'and
_pledged
herself that her_ work shall be done in ti neat and
substiutlal manner. She also keeps - oii hand,
;Drees &c : .. E. O'DONELL.
78.- -- -4 - aaiii,ens will be. received regularly
every
every'season. , • E. O'D.
, Carlisle. Nevem 0,1837.
,slate, Of Harkness Sclam's, ...deceased:
OTI
Tietter; ot uil....i rmnistration upon the 1
_Harkness"Xdams, late of East
pennitioro', township, Cu mherland - cOun:
:ty, deceased, have,issued In due form.of
law.Jo the ,Subscri h er, residiug in ,said
.township, All—pertions having, claims ,
against said estate 4111 Kesent'thim - , and
those indebted will make payment tti
ISAAC ADAMS, _
• NM?: 6; 1837.—,6w. • ..Bdßinistrotor.
-i ,
:' OROPERTY" ' F O R SALE,
•• . ,:.-- -," ' .OR RENT. -•-
• ,HE two story Brick House - and Lot situate -
• ' - in South Hanover street, adjoining the Se...
-- ir
„ . °mid Presbyterian Churchiratiiie'..,
.sentoicupied by the subscriber, si
...
; .. for sale—and if not sold by' the mid.,
die of December. next .it will then
be ; genre .. The properly is in good order until
' his a *cistern, and pump at the kitchen door,, to
"-gether with'Mher convenient iniproveinens.
.-- , ,...:AL50.:1 1 '0r Rent, several Houses atitl,Lois in
.
..lromiret l itreet,the property - of Bridget Carney's
heirs.. -,,
..... . ,
For terms &c. apply to
. -• Carlisi4Nov. 13;1837,-
. .
.• .
. .•. ,' .. •
. .
•
. . . .
... . . .
. ~ . .
. .. .
. .
. . ..
. . . ' • . • . • - - .:. -.- . , : --. 2 ~- --•
.. ; :: - tc . , , ~
.. . .
. `...___. -:' .--- '. • • . .
. . •.. ' .
_......
~ ~. i.... r.
. •,..
.. ,
....w.-- -
.. .
. '.. • i:-., .-- • . 4v '-:- -.:,. ,-,,:
:4 - .-.-„, „::.....; •
:
e. r Lir
,„,, • L: s_. i: , .. .. ....
_
..
......
••_ _
. •
..
.. . .
. . .. ...
..._.
. .
.. . .
• . . _. ..
_, .
.., . .
.. ... ~. . . .
. , . _...„
.. • .... , ,
. ,
. .•
. , . .
. ..
.... .
_ . .
. ..
, •..
. . . .
. . .. _ .. . _ • .•. ,
.._ .. . .• . • .. _.. ...
...•
MEW,SIPairgEIg:'DE rPritzlo TO a -E gr - Sy POLITICS ) EITERaTrHE, THE SIRTS ; •67X.D. StallEXCi*, eilaßiCULTUiltEf amilfsEelpß.7‘ T,
NILLIyA\I 1)i HOAS
ZIASON:*. EBY!,
• . REG.ISTEIVS: 'NOTICE, .
-• .. .__. •".REGISTER'S OFFICE,
Carlisle. Nov. I l i ' 1837,. ,
' . Tivall Legtitees, Creditors, ohd all other
persons co,ocetne . d, that - the following 86 7
'counts have :been 'filed iii this .Office for
examination, - by . the accountants therein
nanto,and . will' he presented to the..or-
phaniN , CoUrf pf - _,Coniberland cotinty, - for
eonfirmaiion• and allowanee, - on Tuesday
the 12th day of December . next, tO wit:
. ' . l. The Administration a ccount of Da.
vid W..McCulloch, Administrator ofion"._
'Milan. Huston, deceased, - • • . ..
2. The Administration account of Ru-.
dolph Kry,sher, Es.q., Administrator. of
Peter Lead, deceased.
3. the AdMinistration account, of Jas.
-McElhinney, Administrator of John Fen
k
ton deceased.. .• ; • •.
. - _.__,.......... .-
. .
• 4., - The Administration account of Abra
ham Hetrick, one of the 'Executors of
Johri Hetrick, deceased._ - - •
, . -...
-.' 5. The.supplemental and. final Adfiiiii
istrat ion
,abcount , of .Christia.n BtaymaW
Administrator "with the will annexed" of
Thomas Fisher, - deeeased. .- -- --__=
T 16.: Therlininistration - accountof - Wm
Orown,Executor - of Georg•e_Nortfi,'die'd.
.-__7. The Administration accountof=Clias-_
B White, Administrator of Elisha White,
Esq (deceased. • - -
.... 8; The Adinistration -
account of John
A'gnew..,, one . 1 the' EXectitors of Adam
Reiiinger,
_ ......at in
ased.-- --- '.' . -•- ' '
. .
• 9. The Administration aecouot ofJohn
..Brewn,_Adminiatrator.of Nancy_lailespy,
- deceased. - ' - - ----...----:',..- -
...
10: -The . Administration account of Geo:
1- Brindle, Administrator of. Abraham Paul,
deceased: • • , : . - .
1 I. • The Guardianship account of_Lem/-
uel Davis,. Esq.; Guardian of. - Andrew . M.
,Mille - r, - a•ininor 'son
.of AndieW Miller,
deceased. ' . .
- , - -WILLIA . M. LINE, Register....
Carlisle, Nov: 11, 1837.. -.
RObiIIISOWS Old_Esiablislikd •
-_. LOTTERY St EXCHANdE OFFICE, •
-- -- - -7- 80:Ballitdore,STreet.-. -- ! -
. ~.._
OPLENDID LOTTERIES • rOR .tiDYE r ld-
REM-Orders- from all parts of t*A4tited
otatts respectfully Solicited. - '-"--
.-'• • - -
~
117111 . . Most S. edit'. Yef.• '
r
\ Te'4%-.
• • , 50,000-20,0 -10,000 . ft-p;,-; -,- .
G1?-411 7 D C0N50.1.4 . ST'ED LOTTERY; -
-- . Class n. - -
To be drawn at Wilmingto n , Del.,-on &B. TUR.,.
• - .
D.-I; Nov. 18, 1837. •', -1 , ,
•
511151' SPLENDID pllIZI* .
1 prize of • - 50,000
1 do . - • - , " 20,000
" 1 do :------ ..' ; lO,OOO
-1 - do' 7•": . - 7,500
-- - 3 . 1 do - 1 , ~ 6,040.
2do . . _.• -- . 2,500
• - 3 - do • • 200 -
A 500
- - AO - do - - • _ ------- ' - 1,250
. '2O, do . - '- '_ 1,000
30 ' do ' • - • 750
• 30 do -•-. ' - . 500
GO.. do . • 300
lie. tiles man,y or $2.5')-200-4.so;..b.c._:______
Tickets $lO-11.dres $5-:-.Quarter, $2,50.
Ccrtific.iie of packages td 25 a hole tickets $l4O
'Do
. ' DO--' 40 . 2.3,qtsurtyr do 35
• ect.Ortlers for 'tickets vid shuires or cert:ficats
of -packages-in-tlie-atn4,- - niifgoificent-scliettirs
will receive the most prompt attention,. and t h r
offictill drawing of - , :icitseoritutnedattl•ty after it
is Over, to all who request it. All orders strlcily
confidential. • Address ,-.-- • .
E.. W. ROBINSON,
October 30, 1837.--td.: -
1
ramsz•oaoamtraz
rip HE subscriber has jiisi opened a' ot of
- - 11 - 7 Fili — Grocet les ! Fruits, 19" c. which he
will sell at a IoW profit viz: -
tify so trrea: •
Java'Coffee, 20 years old.
Rio Coffee, prime strong-scented, and free
'from dirt and stones.
Loaf, Lump, and Brown Sugars, _
%team. Sugar
,House Miktsses. •
London Bottl ed Mustard: .
Bottled Cayenne Pepper. . - •
Cinnamon, ground and tmground."
Ground Nuts, Brazil Nuts, English W,al-•
nuts, Soft and -Paper Shell Almotids,..
Raisins,. tcc. •
Old London, Pale Pinet. Champagne and
•. - Cognac-Brandies.... . .
. Holland Gin,lamaica and Boston Burn. ~
Choice Madeira, Fair do.,L; P. Teneriffe:
• • Sicily Madeira,,Lls bon, Port, Fine
ap_d, Common,. and Sweet
_Malaga
Wines.
TwOßet,t4of Beautiful China, one 72; and
. ..one 46 pieces. ' - • .
LargeLiVerpoolßoWls,.inct - iG r ineral As
.- '. sortment-of cllilna h -Liverpool 8c com,_
-rmin,Ware, •
L_COntieeticutiMeSs . Shad, 13i cents peil. b. •
No: 2, Mackeeel.....Smoked_Herring.
...NORTHL RIVER CHEESE, Ist quality..
FRESH - LE,MONS, &c. ,
. , GEo. W.- MUM;
November-7,-1837. • . .• •
FOR •
The iubscribers offerfor sae •- • • •
described . ; • •
Rouse `and_Lot of r i and ,-
Atuated on the north side of ' g ouda Street, I '
the borough of Carlisle, nearly opposite the Col
lege-bounded on. the West by Dickinson col
lege lot, on the East by the Widow Halbert's lot,
caintaining 60 feet - .Front,,,'and 240 feet in
- The , build ings are' a Stone HoUsa,
froriting'or ,Loitther..street,_wiih a
I I II Hsieh back building and stable. The
lot is in tr . good state of. improve
_
Anent_ Persotia wishing to purchus
are Invited to gall 'lnd examinertlie prenrises.,iTh
terms will be Made ituown 147
, tiebrietta
:Nov, 6'. ~lo4tr lluttpo , •
. ,
Moffat's. Vegeta .1 le Lifc
PHilErifiX IitIiTTERS:.•• •
A CONTRAST, ' •
. .
• All nations, from -the remotest ages, have had ships, but.
Columbus on.y found out the- way to America. - Before the
'tittle of pie pu-oc_sphoimi noigator, people were only min
•lded• to paddlii- ohmic the shore}, Just so with the. Life
Medicine?. Itis but two years since 1. first ventured upon
MI ilnknown•ocetin, and I Vivi, discovered the. precious
object I was in searetiof— HE A LTif. Vegetable medicines
were indeed known when r commenced my seareb, hilt
theiruse was- not.. By: the• use. of them, I have not only
passed from the dejected invalid, to the hale, hearty and
active man of business, but, cOmparatively speaking, I have;
renewed my youth. 1 cnn thus, with dOnfl,dence in lay min
experience, niiri,se With my fellow-citizensi . Does the reader
want proof that the VEGETABLY; LIFE MEDICINES
are suitable Co bis own emir? •1 have on file at. my office,
541 Broadway,. luindreds of letters, from some of..the most
respectable citizens of this mymative land,•voltintary offer.
ect in testimony of the virtues of A _GOOD VEGETABLE
MEDICENA. ' •••:-.. ' • .'
.
- Persons wle se constitutions have been nearly ruined by
the uall.infall'bie" mineral - preparaticinz- of the day, will
bear me witness, that the Life Medicines, and etch only, are
the true mule tixperthanent good healthi• •
. • , . JOHI4 MOFFAT. .
. _ . .
; GENERAL EEMARKS,RELATI:VE,YO ADE
... . . _.. _ _
FAT'S LIFE PILLS A PH(ENIN. BITTERS-
.
These Medicines have Iting been kiitiiiii . End appreciated,
forstheir extraordinary and immediate powers of restoritig
perfect health,tetpersons suffet lug under nearly every kind
of disease_te WlliclZtlieliuman frame isiiable. ': ' '
Its many hinidredd of certificated instances, they have
-event:est:nett sufferers-froin the very-verge of an-Unlit - Arty_
grave, aftertall the deceptive nostrums of the dayliati ut
terly failed; and to-many-thousands they liaie permanently
secured that ,uniform_enjoymentof 'width, without whiCb
life itself is but a' partial' blessing.. So:great; indeed has
their efficacy invariably and infallibly proved, that it has
,appeared scarcely less than miraculous to those who were
unuciftiainia - Witlfiljeheautifully philoniphietil - prinelples•
upon which :they are , cempoended, and upon whieta theY
emisecptently,act. --- ft-ins , to-their- manifest -Ind-sensible
action in purifying'the springs and clianneltef life, and
enduing them ,witli renewed tone and vigor, that they were
indebted fbr theirnante, - which was bestowed upon them at
the spontaneous request of several-individuals-whose-Alive'
=
the'y hadobviously saved.
- ' The proprietor rejoices in the - opportunity afforded by
'the Universal diffusion of the - Alaily press, fur-placing his
VEGETABLE. LIFE PILLS within-the knowledge and.
reach of.cvery individnat in,the - nimmunity. ' Unlike she
bust of pernicious quackeries, which boast of vegetable-in
~i.
g letlients,_the 4ife_Pills_arc:eokly vegetable; - anCtjntain_
n alter atercury, - . Antimoloy,. Arsenic, nor any othirr min
e •al, in any form whatever. They are entirely epinpoied
f extracts from - rare and - powerful plantsohe virtues of
'filch, though long knoini to several 'lndian. tribes, and
recently to some eminent pharmaceutical chenti ~,, are alto
•getlier unutiowif - iti - the ignorant pretenders -to- medical
science; and were never he fore adiumistend fit
_so happily ,
alcueious a combination. .
.. . .
.
The first operation is.to loosen the .coats of the-stomach`
and bowels, the curious impurities and crudities constantly
seti.ingitiound Owns; and to ieinove.thii hard's-mil fact,
which collect ist:the cohyla iiiions of the small intestints.
Other medicines partially-cleanse_tlitse, and leave such col
lected maws behind, as to produce habitual cm:lilies-nem
with all its train of evils.nr sudden diarrliceni mills its im
minent dangers. rids fact is Weil known - to all "egnia
anatomists, who emu LL ill c the 'minim bowels•after deatlnr
and hence the - prejudice of these-well Informed men.against
the quack "medicines of the sige. - The second effect of the -
VEGM - rA - 1.1 LE. - 1;11 , E - PILLOir to - cleanse the kidneys and
the_bladdcr ' and- by- this means, the liver -and the. lungs,
the healthfu l - action
* regularity of - the urinary hrgani. The .blood; which takes
its red:color from the agency-of-the liver-and the longs be
fore it passes into - the'heart; being Abut- purslkd by Them,
and-nourished by food eoniimig from a - clean stomach,
courses Reel), throu h the veins, renews..e - fery parymt the
system's, and trittuni f
runty mounts the banner of health in
tic blooming elteci
.
. . . .
The following mffe among (lie .
ed . istressing varietyofhuman
diSeases,"to which.the Vegetable Life • Nal are w ell
- known
to beilifallible:— . - - -
. . ._ „
DYSPI.:PSIA, by thoronglifY.. cleansing the first - and
serond stoMachs. and creating a flow-of pure, bealthy.bile,
i .. l •.ad of the stale and aerial kinds-, Fleltheller,Pl4ll.lllloll -
x . 4 t e heart, Ls's! of - Appetite, Heart-Mini and-Ileadmelie.
' t lessness,. lll.temper, Anxiety, Languor, and. Melon-
C . ly, which ore the general symptoms of Dyspepsia, will
v ' ti as a nutural---colin , quence of WI . cure. Costiveness,
by cleansing the whole length'of the intestines with a sol
vent process, and without violence; all violent purges leave
the Wave fs eosti ve within two days. More/lira and Cholera,
by removing
. the sharp acrid fluids by which these coin;
Wafts aro oceasioned, and by promoting the .lubricative
secretien'ofthe mulct's tnembrazie.- Fever: of ail kinds,
by_restoring the fflood,to-regular circulation, through the
process of perpiratlon iii souse eases, and the thorough so.'
lotion of all intestinal olntructions lit others. The LIFE
PILLS have - hecnittionmitvcare_Rlietstrintisin permanently,
in three weeks,. and- Cunt in half that time, by removing
local •nallaminatine frointhe muscles and ligaments of the
joints , Dropiiet ° f all kinds, by freeing and strengthening
the kidneys and budder; they operate molt delightfully 011
Altainto portant - organs, and - liellee It ave-ever-been found-a
certain reliu?ily for the worst cases of Gravel. Also. Worms,
by ilithalging
. froin the turnings atilt.. boWels the -slimy
matter to w such these creatures adhere; Asthma and Con•
sumption, by relieving the air vessels of the lungs from the
mucus ; a Welt even slight colds will-occasiou, which if not
remov,d becomes hardened. and produces those drt adful
discuses: ' Scan vy, Dicers, and it .eterate sores. by the per
fect purity iili,.ti these. I.ife, - Pill giv . brittle blood; mid all
v
the nu morn ; - sebrbuticErtiptions, i d - bad complexions, - by
their aternitive elf, et upon the ill ' Is-thist feed the shins the
morbid state a a hith occasions till Erupsive compialitts
Sahow, t: muds. and other disagreeable Conlon Mous. Ihe 1
use - of thria-Pilleffirtriery:short - timeTwirmf - cton - con rt. -
cure of Salt Itle um, Er)sipelas and a striking improve
inent ill the Cit arm is of the skin. Common Colds mud lit.
110,11Z11, Will . always lie cured- byqiie-slusi.,-or-hytwojevi tr
in the worst cases. Pitts,-as a retnaffoiit this must dit
ty, mitigated obstinate malady, the V: getable Life Pills de
serve a distinct and emphatic :recommendation. It is well
known to klisidri di in thiteitv. that the Props tiler of these
invutuub:e Pills. was lainiset afflicted with the complaint
forlipwards of thirty-floe.yeare. and lie tried in vain every
remedy pr,s, rifted w ithin the "bole compass of the Metro!'
Medici. lie however, at length, tried the nacificinb which
hollow oil rs to the public, and he was cured in a very short
time, after his recovery had been pronounced not Only im•
probable, but able ut.ly iiimossible, by any human 111e11113.
D MEC I' ;DVS, FOR USE.-flue Propel, tor lift the. Vest.,
talde_Life_Bilis_do.4_Juitrullow4lo,busiinndinirectiory-pylie.
• . .' . ~twins-so-,All
his Pills in large qt' unities. No good no dichte can possi
b.y be so required. These pills are to lie taken at bedtime
eve ey night, fur a week or fortnight, according to the disease.
the usual thine is from 2 to 5, according to the Constitution
of the fermi. Very delicate persons should begin with but
two, and Mercian; as the stature of the case may require:
those-more robust, or of-verycostivelialtit,suaybegm with.
3,. and increase - to 4 or even 5 Pills. and they will I.ffeet a
sufficiently happy change to guide the patient its their fur
ther use. These Pills Bonn times, evasion siekneis and
vomiting, • though very seldom. tittles, the stomach is very
foul; this, liuWeVerona ybe considereilareVerable Symiitollt,
asilli: patient will rind himself at once' elievetioncl by-per
severinice will soon recover. They Usually operate within
10 002 hours, and never give pani_unless the bowels are
very much encumbered.- They may be taken by the most
delicate females under anyni
eirctistances.-It is, however.
,
' recoinanetided, thath
hosc in Inter periods of pregnucy i h LIU lil
take but one at a time, and thus continne to keep- the '
Bowels open: and 'even two may be taken where the patient
is very costive. One pill in a solution ,ef two table spoons
fhll of water, may be given to ail infant in the following
doses-a tea spoon full every, two hours till it operettas . for a
Child from one t to five yea r s of age, , half a pill
and front
,
five to ten, one pill. . .
THETHEV lIX (BITTERS, are secalled.-because they
possess the power of les tiwing th e expiring embers °Chesil!),
too glowing vigor throughout the constitution,as the Pie•
nix as said to be restored to life from the ashes of its own
dissolution. The Phcenix Bitters are entirely vegetable,
.composed of roots fbutid only in certain parole the western
.cmintry,whichwill infallibly cure FEVERS AND AGUES .
of all kinds; will never fail to eradicate entirely all the ef.
feets of Mercury, infinitely sooner than the most powerful
preparations of Sarsaparilla, and will immediately cure the
determination of BLOOD TO THE HEAD; never fail in
the.skkrmtS incident to young fernalesj and will be found a
certain remedy in-all cases of nervous,tlebility an dtveakness
of the most impaired constitution s . A s a remedy for Chro
nic a - nd Idflaiiiiiiatory7Rheumatism ' - the - vfficaerof -the
Phoenix Bitters-will be demnostrated by the, use of a single
bottle. The usual dose or
theso:bitters is half a wine glass
full, in water or wine, and this quantity-may- be taken,tsto
or tutee times S day, about half an= iour before meals, or a
less quantity may he taken at all times. To those who are
afflicted with indigestion after meals, these Diners will
prove invaluable, as they very greatly increase the,,action of
the principal viscera, help them to perform their functions.
and enable . the stomach so discharge into the boWels
whatever is saffeniive. Thus indigestion iteasily_and speedi.
„ty_releoved.Lopp.enteicstored,, and the mouths of the ob.'
sorbent vessels being cleiiseil or ,
m nii in tri d t e ifi th i e fa - a ba , p li p tif y fe r lf u dit it t (
strength of body and ener gy i
For further particulars to • MOFFAT'S LIFE PILLS, and
PHCENIN BIT fERS, apply at Ide..Moffat's office, Na
VI Broadway. New Yee where the Pali can be obiained
fbr 25 cents, 50 cents, or az per box; and the Bitters for-8;
or 82 per bottle, (17 . 'Numerons certifleatessg the wonder.
ul efficacy of both, may there inspieted. ...., ,
In same obstinate and complicated. elks of clironic and
inflammatory Ilbeumatism. Liver Complaints, Peverstr l d,
Agile, Dyspepsia; Palsy, Piles, injurks./I.om the use of mer
cury„ quinine,and other disease; of lonAttandini;linioy be
Mend necessary lq take both the Life Pilis'and Phoenix Ifit
ters, in the,doses ileibre recomMended. .7 : - .:. .
• N.11.--These Pithead the Bitten will et all inereutT out
ofthe system infinite; ter than the best preparationlaf
Sarsaparilla, and area ce in remedy for the rushing of
btood'to' the head, or 'all-vi lent headaches, tie deuleariir,
itte. - ..,411 nelson. w.ho are 'edisposed too- op opie-rv, palsy,
lice., should nevit be With it the .Life. Pills or the ;titters,
for onedosis in time will ea e life:, They squalize theciren
. lotion of the bloody draw allpressure from the head, restore
perspiratitin, and throw Mr every impurity. by the, pores of
e
Igor sale
, t
the .
atone of S) k
ELL ,
iOT.
•• .
bri
.
- . September 18,107. , ;-13r; ........ . .
=I
• • r
ruEs jo SIT 21; 183*.
. ,
THE ".CA R LISLE HERALD AND EXPOBVTOU,'
will be ;Tined nt DOLLARS.per annum;
'to- be .paid--half--yearly.advance ,
. R DPERTlSEMENTSnotexceeiling asquare
for three insertiOn4DNE DOLLAR, - and every
subsequent insertion. Twenty.;five.Cent4longe ,
ones in proportion. .
Letters addressed to the publishers .an busi
tea9,.. !BUST 'BE POST, PAID, otherwiie_they_
will net be attended to:.
• The following- persona• have been appointed
Agents, tor the Carlisle Herald and-. Expositor
to whom paymint ter,subscription and. advertiseA
molts can be made.
D. Swer.r.ir, Esq. Shiremanstown, Cumb. co.
SCOTT COltl.i; Esq. Newvtile, • do. ' •
•
P. KOONTZ, Esq. - Newburg, • " do.
'THOS. W. iltatEs, Esq. Shippepsburg, do.
loam Woun , :nmcli,Tga`q. do. • u do. ,
.3. MATEER, Esq., Flogurstown; do. • •
R._Wrx.sorc, Esq. .Nenhanicsburg, ` • do.
WILLIAM Rormirii, Esq :Flopeivell;"
STunG,natir,,,Esj. Churchtown, do;
Asik-HITE. New cumberland k -- do. '
Tucil BLltoic, Esq. Bloomfield, Perry county
BLAcg, Esq, Landisburg,,
ttwectesi flowersCenribled.
From various "gardenscuird with care.!!
Thou sparkling bowl!—thou sparkling bowl!
Though_lips-of bards thy lirirrmay. press, •
And eyes or_beauty o'er thee roll; '
And tong and dance thy power coact/S i
I will not thee, for there clinge.
A scorpion tothy,side,-tlig stings!'
Thou . crystal glass!, like gOO , O tree,
Thy petted ruby tempte - tkieye.
AMVis from thtit;- th . erecomes fi.mn thee
- The 'voice, - .Ttiott 'that - Mg - sorely die.'
dai.e'imilift thy 1'1(1641, gem!,
A'snnice is twisted 'round thy,gtem! - '
Thou liquhi fire! like tlvit which glowed,
Fcir - Paul-upon Melita'a shore,
Thou'st been upon my guest bestowed;
Dutthou shalt warm my house no more,
For wheresoe'er thy radiance rails,
Form froM thy heart ayiper crawls.
AVlint; though of gold the goblet'be,
Embos.s'd with branches of the vine;
Beneath whose bitrnishia !eaves we see,
____Such_chisiertiii-potted-out- the- winef-
A mong those leaves an adder hangs,
I fear Min for Vve Kit his fangs. -
The I febrew st• s ho the desert trod,
'And felt the fiery serpen?'s bite," .
!poked ttp to that ordained of God, --
And foUnd that life was in the sight,
So the worm bitten's - fiery iveinS :7 .
Cool, when he drinks what God ordains.
Vesraciolis clouds! ye deep cold wells!
._r_c_..gfits.iiLorturnossy_rockA,_thatdrip!
Springs froni the B wth!,i'mysteriims cells,
Gush o'er your granite Intsin7s
To yon't look":—your largess give,
And 1 will drink of you nod
Tomb 'of the mighty dead! •
Sacre:d, be every - tree;
That waves above thy head,
.. Or sheds its bloom o'er thee.
'ad! . Pot o • -
Bright !ateath Moom:Xernotk's sort;
° Tlonor'd and foes;
•
---.--- 7 - 111 - eilt*Tre in ble - iCreriC4F;,.
Washingtoo!_Washincin!
0 why are firmer a made 40 coareri-
•
Or:clergy pad , !O
e ne - • .
- -A that sciti'oe a - bdrse s i.f.,
rluy vil r a-sound •- - .
_- • ,
MEE
TratliCA .
AGENTS.
frf" S V t *Tu. -
The, Pledge.
Dr Dal/. PAN rishroNT
17781311MGT0N 7 3 TOMEI.
T.M14 , 10_111,111.0.0.17_1LNX1C
Soni of our pilgrim sires,
Sons Of our boundless West,
Ye, whom the tropic fires, , • ‘,
Or the cold lakes lull to rettt,
Meet here, as brothers meet, --
• - Around a loved hearth-stone,
Meet in communion sweet,
_ Mere at put:father's feet, .
Washin n! Washington! '
Ile of 11 ena's rock,' . --
liath n enduring name,
Echoedin.batile-shock,
-
"•'• " Sculptured in blood and flume.
But the mother at her knee,
Tenclio kir cradled ion,
Leffintiti of Liberty,:'
he•not lisp of thee,
Washington! .Washington!
Should haleful discord steal; .,
.;
Our patriot strOgth stray. '
Or fierce invasion's iti.cklegiieid,
- ..7ltesti4e Otcl : Bunker's day;
Oi mad disunion-Bmiee %Ina tree, '
Thatgrew ;math Glory sun,
What shall the watchword he , '
Rousing the'true and free?"
Washingtpnr Washington!
''LOU.,JS
The - Torn
BY WARY
'lrene, my datigliteti 14m astonished
to are even yotl,- , careless:,as yotttire.,• sit-
ting at thepiano in stichytdisarraY.; 4 beg
youtiV rest/d reinvSY : for. a • - m ore
seemly habiliment,'">"
'O, Mother, tkr;not speak to ma, until
hate conquefettiltis difficult, piece of mu
sic,' replied . Irene; then, ;aft er a few mo
nagots silepee, she. turned-rountrwith...a
triOmPhalft smile 'and , :added, 'There!. I
have it Mr Cooper said it
vitoutd: require.. three :hours - practice' but I
liayele`arned it ;in one?. What. were-you
saying; mother, about my torn sleeve? •
caught it on t • loorknoli;and a sad rerk
it made-truly -'bu - -it- is not worth_while
to change ii w, • for-I am going oti(after
diniter, -and cannot be' at 'die trouble of
dressing twice.'. • .
:ifs_ _Milady like., Irene, for_ ya_u-nit a p-•
pear • before your- father and ..brothers in
such a dress, which', beildes •beitig • • rent,
4si,tto-jay-the best,. not Clean:7 - I -- ti-ltr-„Cnntit
tinti.alty troubled about yourcareless liab-
-its v vvincli-ifnot overcome, wiltsurely-leacl
to nicirtification .and disvaee. :1 - 11a - di'the
bell of. the street door; and you will be
obliged to open it, for I-bave -sent Susan .
on-an -ailand i -and mustattend.to her balt . 4'_'
ing while-she is gone; I have left it too
long already.' _
• . -•• • ..
I don't care.
_lt is som e - coal
t
any of the girls, 4.-canoovfrighten them
Tor ;they - -knovrihat-4-Itaie-to-bestarched.
up.- --There-is=otily tine- persom'yshe
tinued,- talking to herself as her mother !
lefiihe room, 'only ona,-and-that
Scott, whOin I should be -ashamed to have
seen .me in this so ;milk- ,
ular; but thank fortun'e he •is tiventi
off, so I will e'en hurry to waitron tnebell,''
Before weidlow.-aOy- 7 -orte.--to , emer, tint:
reader:shall- be - favored - W ith-4`more,,par
titular-introduction to7the - citar4Cter -, hre - _
presented.
. That Irene' Willis was .the most beait
.
tifut girt in-IL, every. body said,..and what •
every body saya„,must be true.' hat she
was also one of,,th T
e most careless of her
-sex was. no less•-a-tritisrti. - Mrs. Willis,
who was a -- -pattern - , for all - oethes,'had
spareci:.66_ pains -to-eradicate_ this_weedl
which was sprin'gin'g up with Itercherish
blossOm,-but she was as yet unsuccessful
Irene was the only
.sister, -- and she had
been the pet and play-thing of-four broth
ers.. Her Childish sports could not always
-have been fe - Inine, and I do'not think it
wonderful, if she-did grow up a little wild
and heedless. Her• mother had 'trusted
sometimesto time;, hut time
_had. as yet
Worked no ~Voiidcis; l-hoUblflrVas-iiigh
time lie had. . .
. 'lt is well we are unconscious
_of what •
.people_stiy_an_cl,think about us, otherwise - '
Arthur_wotild not this
while at the door so cititetly;_ had lie knowri
Irene was thanking - for the twenty miles'
she' thought lay bet Ween them. Now
Arthur was• a promising Toni; lawyer,-
and 'Well to do iti.the world -exquisitely
neat in it is person: an fastidious
rantie
that it was whispered about
among i _the slander-loviitgossipS of
that-he surelGLwould-be= . .-aii-old-- bachelor.
11 hat Worse fate could malice itself hate
predicted-for him? lie' had- become tic-.
9uainted watt Irene while she was send
illiflCie,W.d4s with a cousin ITIL_M.,.-and
Wkl3 charmed with her beauty. intelligence
11111. d vivactry. When site ietprtiecl to her
home. he felt tbat the son - shine of his life
ed lonely, and Blackstone and Coke opal
- Littleton . hail lost;th - eim powerTh — ClitTfin - "
His copies of briefs, deeds and wills coin:.
menced and ended with the name of'lrene
ancLa_weatthy,heiress she ,mighti-haveJ
been. - had she claimed all the good s and"
ehattlea.thos kindly conveyed to her.—'
At last lie forced . rto-think.that-hia business
called him to .H.. and now, after this lung
preamble we-will unclose the door-that-he•
may again behold an•angel of his fancy,
the finltlesS Irene. --Her greeting , was
far from friendly, for hbw eodld slie extend
her hand graced with - 'the, torn sleeve?
-'The conversation was constrained and
common • place. Never .in "her life had
Irene !oohed and appeared so ill, when itie
,would Gave given - Worlds,t . o - haVe it-other- 1
wise. would 'not-plif'and sing, tho'
141'64 - nested it, fete 'She knetiltwould-be•
impossible - tO - toaimand - her. vace—to're
,frain from tears, so-great- was-her-mortifi. -
c - atitin, l -Thetall was short, and - as Arthur
left thehouse; he itientally.exclaimed.
• Why should .1 seekrp - Effecliiiii_ wo
man kind? • 0 . , rreneirdid; - nOvemiect - to
"find thee - 42110 - cm, Farewell, forev4i?'
His lisinesi, if he ha.d.any,.wasforgotten,
as he left
came over hinS, that his friends . Wondered
what had happened to poor Arthur.
When ivlrs.: Willis-again entered the
c-liete-74
„~
• 9, my. dear mntherovould that I had
gifen ear t 4 your kind 4ounse4 khave
seen One_for, the last • tiara whose -good .
- Opinion 1 . :1441y valued. Arthur . Scott
will never Speak4o me again— : but I will
conqberiny.carelessness, _arid make my.
selfworthy of his friendship arld your love,
my 1144:Aber;
. 1 will never more : trouble
you and disgrace myself hy . aiipesrinOn
an untidy dress , and iangled cads; Sall as :
is good-resolution cannot,be tooation pr.*
used upon,, 1 go now to: make rnyaelf'de.-
colt for.the,ilinner,
Our friend Arthur stood At tho window
BEM
II
of ItixoTfiee.huMming a favorite air, while.
.Mr . : D., a friend from - iH=jiarte r adinictke.
pipers. 'Now Scoti,.SaidlY. looking up ; .
- altri Thinking you want 'a ;helpmate: ant)
1-.know.atoung lady:who-vital "suit.you ex,
-- tinily. :Tile , air you:were,,,just humming:
is alavbrite of iters,-andlias pitt•the idea
intniny head. Come.-to -- 14. •as soon :as
possible, "and let 'filc'haVd . tho pleasure of
introduc ineyou, - to' , the-fair
.. Arthur start, ; and air •
away as if
- Observing Boman), f i he windOw;
but eollectingliimself in a moment, repli
ed,‘,ManyAhankS, D..for yoUr kindness
-in seleCiing me a better half, but methinks
1 have heard.scimewbat of tltia-Same - lady ..
— 7 that she isriot_over nice in her_personal
appearance; an‘whai.• are 9o,auty and an--
nomplis h mentsin - a wife,W4thont neatness?
Above all things akroid,a slattern!.
'Why, Scott, you wrong Miss
-you do-indeed. -,She is' the neatest- and
finest girl in Hr, and:fity wife-says , she is
perfect - in all household virtues; but it
Must have been sometime ago when you"
heard of her. I- believe - she was s• - guidy
thirigince, and I heard solue'atory—l . was
- wit), at 'the time and had forgotten it—
atiout agentlenia - d - idicE7a 16rn dress. I
wish I knew his flame. I would go a hun
dred miles to tell hits how_she is altered.
But it grows late, and I must be ofT., .130
not forget to visit andlet rdelake
you to see Irene.'
. . ,
M'any days did not - pass are Arthur
Scoirigain visited the mansion of ' I VIr.,
Willis. His calls became longer.,add 'Mire
_frequent, till they ended like this simple
sketch, with ti wedt!ing,.-_whtch~io~t ti no
novel .thing, is, the end
. of all , novels; and
-gossips,-who had predicted alife of single
ess edne sir - for - grim - fair - 1r n d - krthu was
somewhat chagrined when they saw-die
illciwing in the morning papers.
- .Married at:H. on 'iVlonday 'rimming
last, - Arthur SeVil, -- Esq. - -Counsellor at
Law, to Miss liene - Willis, only daughter
of C. Willis, 'Zsq.'' .- •
- Extract - fromthe sliced' . of --, Mr:.H.--g,
LEGAy.
n..of South - Carolina , On the
•
-., Bill, imposing, addltiOnal duties as
- depositaViesi•-in cases, - "on
• Publie Officers.:..
Sir,liefore.l take my_peat_theroitiotie
other topic that I . feel it ; my duty,to ad-
Vert to-4 mean to the. supposed' injuz
Tions - effectof - Llankinginstituttonrupon
the laboring classes of society. Al-- 'though I. have.. no donut but there Or
many defects .in the .constitution. as
well as'the Managenient of those insti
tutions 'in this country, and should be
most 'willing- to co-operate, if occasion
served, in -reforming them, I have no
hesitation in acquittipg_theakleast of.
this charge. Who thathas ever,hcavd
of the relation between capital "andla
bor; 'between labor,. and profits, Wt .
must-see-atonce, AliaLit_is_unnunded
- 04 a aeordiiiigly — , Flume object S -to bdifiti
thatity their issues they. raise wag,es,and
so hurt the manufacturing.interests cif a
nation. . I have slreadKJemarkedthat
one of the effects of an increasing cnr
,LeoCV.
_tpjilaken distriliuti'un'.fol_ the
wealth of society more favorable to the
indusiciaas ..claSses of-it—to eoiiflscate;_
iii a - tn - a thb - property Ott hose who
live on fixed . incomes; for the benefit of
those who produce) the - coirtmOditiii
on which those incomes are laid out.—
It is ler this.reason that - the radicals Of
England—Mr r Atwood,fOr example--are
ill strenuous advocates of paper. The .
he-poor-are-tcr-gain-b -a—re--I
turn to .inetalic currency, is so far al I
know. confined to their. friends in this
country,- whose zeal is-certainty greater'
than there knowledge, , ••• •
~...j.ltisi.- , true,:sir;llittj among other
advantages--attending frequent fluctua- .
tions in the 'currency, ,IL Jill- said that.
'wages, are the last thing that-rises ina
.case_ofexpansiOn-z-And that may be co
in countries where the, supply of labor
is greater than the demand, but the very
reverse is most certainly the fact here
where the demand—especially,. when
:stimulated , by any . extraordinary . in- .
erease,•Teal or fictitious,:of.capital)s al
ways greater. • than • the .sopply. ,
i
_ _
price s a question► et power, - or-relative
-necessity- betwoentwo parties, and_eve.,.:.
, ry body .knows • that in a p . priod of es
'citenient -here-wageaL.riseitnmectialely - ,
-and. Ou- otall.proportionmore_than a!ly_
thing else, because the,populatinn of - the
country is entirely.- inadequate to.. its
antsi- f iDuring _the, lasLyear_for_in;
stance, the price of labor-became so ex
orbitant,_;that some-of the meat fertile
landin South Carolina nice finits•Whinli•
have, , been ...cultivated . ..a. hundred 'years,
Were' in danger., : gif beingabandoned fin;n
the - impossibility of paYing - fer it. -
Sir,
as - than ,l - represent ,
,equa :re t, capital-
add wages ; -which
are.alLeonfouildedin our, eststOsH - and
protest against attemptste artay:.tifith
mit cause,..withent - a ill.oi . ....nf..preteit'Or •
plausibility; the different'Classes - of So.
eiety against one another,las if, in' inch .
a.country tli•is,,there• .be. :any .
natural hostility,
:betweerr.thame.e.ountry:Wwhich all,
'lll:6rich . ovitti hardlyan ekcept ion; have,
been.. litior, 7, 'WI' the poor may one
day be rieti-r-a country in which' bank=,
ing institutions nave - been .of
MEIN SERIES!, POL. 17,==-XO,.
'ervice, precisely beeauSe - they have
been most heeled by people,
had , there .founeti .to make
rt by good
character and, industrious habits. Look
t that rerriarkable-picttire—remailAld'
not as a work of art, but ap a monument
• f .historY—which' you,see iu passing
thrnugh,-the_Ratunda. 'NO() oOt of five,
if that:immortal eoMmittee were mee•
chaniFs, and such men'l
• In'the named
God, 'biri - virliF sh'ould any ane sttidy_td
prikvert the natural good sense, and kind 4 .
ly 'feelings of this moral and noble peci ! t
ple; to infuse into their minds'a mulled
envy, towards one another, .instead
that generous emulation,, Whieh ever .. . •
thing.in their situation: is fitted to ici+ t ,
spire,to breath into , them the Spirit tit •
Cain,(muttering deep curries and Meditai
flog desperate revenge against his broth+ _
er, because the sprite of his sacrific.'
haslis,ceeded -to- heaven before his owni
And do no they who .treaCani - Indus+
trious classes as if they' , Weri'in, thi
sameilebassed and, Wretched^ catiditiod
as the
__poor oriEuropeckninit them by 1_
such an odious comparison.:
Why, Sir, you do not,know What Ov
erly is—Om-have-0 year in-this countrYi - •:::
in the sense in
,Which. that word is aged
abrodd. --Every laborer.i - evenVthe mold
humble, in the ` ,es, 10On be -.-
comes a capitalis if he choosy
es, a . : '
proprietor` • the ,'",
with all ita bonne r e 4
him. How cant tli ctimpari
the mechanics of 'hose inferi
nrity in any
,substa,nuat,parlic.ular—ia- --
telligence, in virttie, in wealth—to the
other classes of otir cinintry, have yet
to learn,/ with that race _of otitcasts.or___
which so lerrible,a picture is presented
by recent ‘yriters4-mthe • poor. of Europe I. •
rase,erhong no incloosiderable
or whom :famine and - postilence .
said ""to dwell cinistantlyHmeny Of 'Whoor, -)-.
are :Without . morals,
e 'country, without ti-God!:alad
may'-be-said to society . "only by the
terrors - ,ot its penal cede, end to live itl -
Perpetual, war with it.:: Poor . benthrieo
'mocked the. name. of 'liberty.-that
they may be. sometimes tertiptedlorbreakl
their,..cheina, in order that after afevi:
. difs Starvationin ulleneois or disiiipv . -
-tion, - they May . be • driver;',baCk tolheie
priSQll house,-to. take them up again, hea•• •
vier and more galling than before seirer -
ed, as it. hai been touchinglvetpressed •
.
-. frolii-,naure, from, the,,curemon air and .
I of
_the RUM • knowing only by. h,ear
that-the-fields7etti2-gre,eni that the"
birds_aiOg-amtl:_that_there_ ise •-perfu
flower. t And is it with e'racewhom the`.
'perverse institutiotis . of Europ e heve thus, •
degraded beneath the , condition of had •
-m a nity : ; - th a till e:_ad voc ate s t he 7 patronai
the protectors of our working -inenipre•%`•: :
tome to. compare them? - • .
Sip, it is to treat them with a seorti at
which their spirit should revolt. and doe .
revolt! Just before I left Charlestoo!
thereAvase.lneeting.ealled , for some purr
pose, which was reg,ariled.by the peoplefot •
- that city a - s - unfavorable . - ,toptiblic - order,'
There was someth ing, n, I, supposei: in the • ,
proceedings, which lo oked to the invidious. •
distinction of which I have been speaking; •••' •
for it led,
-l. have heard, - teen expressitm_
of•sentiment from spLe_ofiiiii• mechanicss .
which struckrfrieas noble beyonit - praise:
He said he wondered what be meant _
my - L e idilressin&-la-lho-industrioits-elissesl---:
-particularly;-all -- inflamtnatory — sppeela
arminst the - institutions of the dmintry--1
as if they wereriot a part of the comma- •
nity, as much interested in its order and.. ' _
peace,-as -any-other4-as , if-lber_
ties of sympathy or connection -----
fellow.citizens-.--above all; z t a r pthey had
not intelligence. and_know ge enough.. •
-to take - Care or their, own, interests.-bot
Were reduced to a state of iiirpetuak
{silage and infancy, and needed the offt..__,,
cious protection of. self constitutediguara s
,dians . ! . .. Sir, tliatytras . a s9timent worthy' -; "-•
of a freemen , and which mtiji be recordede
-with-her;- among the. saying of heroetc:
- knistir.truzind'Snanmpc..Signeke of the Des
claration. blichlet. MN Ratty: • "
FOURTH . JULY Tdrisr.—Ay ihd
editor - of the (Watertovfn) North Atrieri-L.
can.
Tun liAwn—'Harm, our C.C46 l ds nit •
hey - milk P.:MA tyou:shoidd hiretrlke
Modern Dictionitry:. Litt?* ferniki
With her head. stuck in a silk tionfietrhei
waist puckered op to ,ciituniferenai
of a junk bottiei.andhl3l* 3 the 11441-0 -
11e-ttifeking:—
. Gentleman.--4 fend* Sitth a 101 l nine
(c 5._
hi "one hand, and - sword eane'm . _
othei l with two ce, a in' his pocko;and
no sea 6,- he - hea . • - .- - - - - , '
.. - , • .. , .. ~'"*:----.:,„-_---"
quee - lizabell as she fill% ilylnit itio4.
vnt .611i1l 1u
ns4l--money -for one'llieti of -
tiine, 4 ' but thuiiereing cry came !I:01111'6i,
It-will be the •ery:of all' who tniainikove .
ho
te, but ti me: i i ii,alrothei'-' seivanti - dr- -
iblised too lonc , i will refuse to servo yogi.
ME
- 7 -
/
/
E
EN
-_:
P!Mil
1211
FIE
iiiMiNi