florthl,FircititAN LINES TO MY 81STER• By 1' ♦ * Dear friend, for indeed bast thou Forever been to me; Wilt thou accept these simplo lines, I pow inscribe to thee ? 'Tis evening's calm and gentle hour, The winds are hushed iind .till ; The setting sun his glories throws Oa yonder eastern hill. how many sad and lonely byre ' H a re passed since we Imon coot ; How often I have thought of ther4. 4 So far swag ; and yet, thy gentle twin seems even near, •Though hills.between US lifT I seem to see theVriTrivroile Light op thy calm blue eyes. Dear sister, I tiiis boon would ask KirunaNen tog►nt to thee ; That thoult Ond many es faithful Wendt As thou hue keen to me. And when on earth thy days are 'May bright, bright, angeis come ; To take thy perfect spirit hence, And bear it safely home, The Man on the Iceberg. reia,tinan !" 'aid( the eaptain, Lan ling hie ielel.eopo to the mate, afior long, eleidy look ; wed he Perms frozen, hard and fast tp the Ride of &he iceberg .Keep her away!" cried the:siipperr "So—o---o. "Steady !" and by thus-tat tering our course we brought tho iceberg r ight a-head. The leeherg bad been in eight since the weather cleare'd at midnight, when It looked like some high rocky bendland, exisept that, by watching the bright stars behind it, we could nee Its gigan tic outline swaying solemnly and ma. iestloally up and down ~ There was. something sublimely-grand in the- slow stately piorement of such a mass. There it dotted, large enough, bail it beet' land to have been the sletelliong-plareasof hun dreds of Imam° beings. The lower part was of so clerk a perple as to look al most black; but, higher up, it shaded off to a bright azure, then tot, light pale green, while on its hefty summµ were long slender spires and pinnacles, and pieces of thin transparent ice. worked Into 411 manner of fantastic forma, and either of a crynsa! whiteness. or tinted with a beautiful pale pink There were bays and promontories, cares and grot toe, bills and dells, with ever+ variety ortight and shade. The island was al fungt equally divided by a great valley running through its centre This was half filled with snow, which. thawing slowly in the sun, formed the source of a waterfall, at a height se great that it was brOwn and smattered into fine rain before it reached the sea Around WI bass--un which ilia ?tea was breaking with a noise lens booming and more mu gel _ etcal than when it dashes OR the solid 'Perhaps, now. - suggested .i. tkird '•it's toinie awful cruel skipper, who's shore—was a broad Kiwi of frozen spray wt' ob glit er ng in the sunshin-,und look been a basing and ill using of his cqw till they couldn't he,r with it no longer ed like the silver setting of nn enormous and was drove to mutiny ; aol put him sapphire :Lahore there. ail alone, to die by hinrseli Not far from the top, and en the side nearest to us. was t, vast, smooth, Rl ._ so lIAI they should not lisve hits b lood up on their hawk; of , mny be he wt.; a .3 , plane, inclining steeply towards the - murderer, or a 1 ankee ',biro keeper' sea. and terminating abruptly in a tre mendous overhanging precipice. Ill'the " 'ill ' Hill:. growled cl" it pre•t"" ker, '•you've always got. a good word Teel °eaten of this plane. thcac among'' us who had good eyes could see a small 0 fo illi t y for eter'y one, you hate." black spot. It was at this the captain It was a very old man who !Take nest. one who was looked up to u• A great nu had been peering through huglitita,when t he said, -It Is a man hordy QII all such matters, alitiough he Every glass in the ship was in requisi I was usually remarkably taciturn, and would mover enter into au argument lien, and every eye strained towards one point. The, tm,,t.e.,ut, be....,, al - lie poly tfeposited his tp . iiil in his hat ; most frantic, whc" ono of Thu watchers II Illi, AY this was 0' ways Ihntr preparn• suddenly exclaimed that lie saw the man tory to his making a /Ipecub, • his ship move his baud 'nate. waited in silence for him to be- We approached ; so near at last that the plaveau above, and its dread ob ject 'were hidden front view by the brink of the precipice itself, which seeni• ed es If about to roll over and ccush us. We sailed along / its cite , hog iently ly inig In, to explore each nook and corner as we poised. The farther end of the island, when t. e rounded it, presented quite a new feature, the base was sap ped away nod undermined for about half lb mile by a suoessien of log/ cavernous hollows, extending inward farther than we could see, while the sea, ruching in and out tumultuously, made the pent-up air within howl and whistle like a hue- ricane. Altering nur eourne again, w• steered almat dun wont under the mouth ern Mole, where it. rant ohs low I , lp read out far ■nd wide toter (be ocean It now looked even grander darker. more fear insnaring than before, with the sun beaming over its rugged crest. ot - shining through the thinner Orli, and showing all the prismatic colors of the rainbow. The form of the ioe-island was that of an irregular triangle. nud in about live hours we had railed coritple tely-round it But there W 44 4r single point at which soy boat could have landed, even had it been a ilsad calm, and the "A as still es* Till pond ; muals tees In hush tR he.vy surf 44 W 44 then form titg ant cirevhin7 all around it !in iiign of a living thing vv•l seen, accept log one great-wleepy seal, that had crop} into a hole just above watermark, and lay there as if be were iu comfortable quarters No sign of host, or spar, or wank. it,was Is picture of utter deeo lit ion W*, 1 !.1 , 0-to tg4in, MI the nehresl iebiut trope which the teen upoit the iciebarg ( ) -- • • -17-1 nit 1211 a ftplaw:: ~/ • /t -/ iv', /., )6_ / VOL. 13 could be seen. We lay on his back with one arm folded In an unusual mutates under bin head, the wtole attitude he lag one of easy - repose; indeed„ had it not been for the marbly look of hit face anti band., we could hive fancied thin, he was sleeping soundly. lie was cloth ed as one of the better class of seamen in rough . blue pilot-cloth, with large horn buttons; ha had no hat, and by his side lay a small boot hook, to which was tied, a !drip of red woolen stuff: ap pnrently a piece of the same which he wore round his neck. This, no doubt. the poor fellow had intended planting on the heights as a signal In such a thin, clear atmosphere, with the aid of a powerful telescope, even bin futures might be plainly traced, and his iron grey hair seen dmving in the wind. The second male eion4declared that lie recognized the man—ho - -vitas quite ewe of4l—an old chum and shipaietti of his, with whom he had sailed many 'll Inntveyage, and some pert of whose wild. varied history. he told us the next evening. What seemed to convince him mars than anything. was the peculiar way in which the dead man's arm woe stowed away under his head—his alit shipmate always slept so. even in his hammock, Numerous and strange were the con jectures aril remarks made by offioree and men. Who nifi what wag he , flow long hod he been there' How tli,l get there? The general cons:usion wee hot he wll.Ol one of the crew of come ves sel wrecked upon a f tt iceberg itself. of which vestige r mined "Yco,anough," paid one of the smart.: '•eke run,into the ice in_ the dark, and went down like a siene.same a we ma hare done any tune this last Nix weeks " ' , Perhaps he wns aloft when mho airsick and got pitched up where he t. now " "As like to he pitched into the moon." rejoined another. coutempitiously "Why, that ihere ptrriptre im three imt;"4 sit high an lhn Loosest meat ever rig That thert ice island, - he said to last, "wasn't launched yesterday, nor yet lest year, nor tire year before, perhaps ,std, by the looks of him, 11...0 been for pretty long eruiseiti warm latitude/l— bw summer. ma.) be—end then "come back home for the winter. If you look away yonder—there—just this ride of that high point like a church steeple, only lower down, there's a plea: looks darker than the rest Now, it's just ttsere I enpeot that a great piece has broken oat and drifted away; and !cal culate 'twos lower and more shelving off- not so strop and rooky-like as it is now 'Twit+ there thVe pour chap was colt ashore from sh or host Ile was trying to make his way sip to the heights to lake a Welt round, and hoist a signal, when he lay down and went to sleep, and never woke again; only, where he to now, you ere, must live been covered will, snow then, or h e couldn't bare kept his fooling Haring said thus mach. he replaced the quid In lII* 1.1101111, and spoke no morn., fheCA Wna no earthly -111M1. iti waiting longer, and yet an: triptain seemed •loth to give the order to Fill 'nod boar &wee ••If th e pooi• fellow hyd spark of life in him' he would have moved before ihir, fat it h six or eteru hours Muer we first sow him. fiat if he did 11.1011.; it would only be to slide down over the precipice, for no living thing could keep tooting on such s slope as thut Anti irtinttO•dre nay more Mt tnermwe eitould nave seen them before Olio inicoilthotigh we could never get them oft it wM did. - Then wising suddenly iti hie walk an the quarirr•deek, ht• gore ou order "STAMM DZONT* AND TEDZINAL UNION." BELL'EFONTE, PA 10 get a gun ready forward. sud•presen ily came the answer: ...All ready with the gun, air." “Fire.” In a few seconds the echo of the loud report resounded trom the icy wall; for another instant all wan still, and then came snake like's rattling °fiend thud der, proceeding from the centre of the bvrg. The danger of nor proximity to this ram object now became more and more apparent, and all nail wan made to get a gond den*. Rut we had bare filiiii ceeded a quarter of a mile when the same trite was heard again, only fowl er. more prolonged, and fIOOOME anted by a rending, crushing sound, the intensi ty and nature of which in psfectly in descrihahle. The rant island wan part ing in the middle, down the course of the deep valley beCure mentioned ; and slowly and majeetioally the eastern half --e.died over into the sea, upheaving what had been its bane, in which were imbed ded buseltoassee of rook. covered with ' long sea wend -- The other pait still re, niained erect, hart - w;ilrawaylng to and fro, as if it intuit alma Milrat.xe Thin corivuhdon caumed less foam and ittrtz L oil Than might have been supposed, M.:f ramed a ware of much tremendous mag ' nilude, that wheu it reached our ship clue seemed about to Tie overwhelmed by a rolling mountnin of water higher than nue mast beads. The good ship rode upon its crest, and before again sinking itibutte hollow, we saw the men upon the timber)* still ih the amine rostare— glut° swiftly down theJlipper,f incline— shoot osier the edge of the. precipice, and plunge IWO the raging surf. A senmation of inexpressible relief was experienced by all; it had seemed no dreadful to sail away and leave him tliere, unburied and ; now; at any role, we bad seen the lOW of biro The Eider Duck Fir ninny in the ley North, to Labra dor and fireeilland, in Iceland and Nor , sr,..x, and other ctr.d etontiteles, lives thin bird so noted for the soft down it gores us ; and there it lays tin eggs and hatch en out its young You nee a mother bird take her ducklings into the chilly water. from which the, hrter,Nori hero Summer t. mn tel 'be tee She is go.ng to feed them on the shell hill and nem urchins Unit she emu pick up from the edges of the rocks and in hollow pliers, You thioli they must be eery cold, 'not they are 1101 God h.ts covered them wtill warm down and feathers, nnJ they are comfortable and happy Shall I tell you acme thing about the way in which the eider down is obtained'. \lost of it contra from Norway and ice land, and from the Fern Islands lying ~IT the coast of Scotland The ler dock F otitis her nest Of fine twilit and mosses on the ground or 'urging rock.r_ wherever they can find a little ; and there 00116 are often so elose together that a man 011111 httnlly walk among them NOli llloUt stepping on the eggs The breasts of the birds are covered thickly stith the softest down ; and as soon as they have laid their eggs they then pluck out enough of this down to cover them warmly, for there is not sufficient hest nt their bodies to hatoli the ego., without help from the down ; and hesult , they bair to leave their nests sometimes to get food, and then, ti it were not for the covering of down, the eggs would he frozen The people who live foray' in the far Northern countries, whore these ducks . make their nests and hatch their young, know about these down-covered eggs. and as soon ns they find them well wrap pod up. take away both eggs and the down Then the mother bird lays anoth er nest full of t• ggs, and a 'timed tril i rei strips the down (rent her nest to cover them and keep thertrwarm. The second time the eggs and down ore taken away, Poor bird ! Btill she is not discouraged, and lays a third nest full of eggs ; hut she has no more down with which to protect them front the cold What is to be done Will the egge he tTOZaII Not en : for now the mato bud comes and picks the downy treasure+ Nom his breast and lays thed oven the eget. This time the down oilmene leave the nest unharmed, sic that a brood of titmice may he hatched that will lay eggs and supply the down another year. Each nest supplier, about half a pound of down, with which the people of 0 "" many end Northern Europe stuff bed coverings that ane need-in winter initnitd mfblntilteln This. eider tlnwtr k vo very light that the weight. of only there ounces will fill .. hot -R: - EMI , FRIDAY FEB. 7, 1868. Smuggling Oev(dna. in die days when the high heeled Frenob boots Were in the pride of fash ion, there was a shoemaker in London who made a fortune by the sale of the beet Paris boots at a pride which all his fellow tradesmen declared ruinous. He tinderstond the trade,and obtained troops of customers. These boots must be stol en: said his dealt!, ; but there was no evidence that they were; certainly they. were not smuggled boots, for nay one could satisfy himself that the full duty was paid on thorn at the custom house The - shoemaker retired 'mtt business with a fortune. Afterward bin secret was accidentally discovered—although he had paid duty for the hoots, be had nif paid duty Or every thing that wall in them There was a heavy duty pay able on foreign watches, and every hoot consigned to him from parts had con tained in its-high heel a cavity exactly large engillgh to bold a watch. The great profits obtained by the trade in smuggling watches made it possible for ibis tradesman, when be had tilled up their heels, to Nell his boots under prime cost This is worth while, again, be cause of course by the extension of his 'oot trade he increased his power of porttog watches duty free. Some yearn later an elderly,lady and a - lap dog traveled - a. good deal between Dover and Ostend. It moue to be gene rally tioueitlered at the oustatehouse that her travels were for the sole purpore of smuggling Brussels lace, then subject to exceedingly high duty ; but neither the-examiners of hdr luggage nor the female searchers at the custom house who took charge of her could by the oar , rowed scrutiny find matter fora single accusation. At last, when she was about to resign the einugglibg business, this lady accepted a bribe from au Mil err to make him master of her secret Calling to her aide her lap dog, who was to sal strangers a very snappish little our, she asked the officer to leteba knife and rip the little creature open Like a few of the dogs (which have sometimes' even proven to be rate) sold in the streets of London ft gloried outwardly in a toe° stun; and between the false skin and tbe true skin wits space enough to pro vide a thin deg with the ordinary Ni nepin to a lady's pet, by means of a warm padding of the finest lace In the reign lof Louis the Eighteenth —it nosy be no ted by the way —fierce digs won / 181171 1 1 to carry valuable watches and small ar ticles under false skins across the fron tier They were taught to know and a•uid the uniform of. a custom-house officer. Swift, cunning, and fierce, they wore never to bo taken alive, although they were sometimes pursued and shot Not very long ago a great number of false bank notes were put •nto circulus Lei within the dominions of the Czar They could only have been imported ; but. although the Strictest search was elide habitually over every vessel enter ing a Itusniau port. no smuggling of false looting was discovered. So tam!. is meant to be the - Nerutiny at Russian militant lonises !hot the ship tyllin, who is hound to give art inventory of every ar ticle 011 board, may I'ol Intl unheard ol trouble if lie forget even sn moot' as hto own private dimary bird. Severialorates load pan't's arrived one day from Englan I, owl were being examined, when one of them fell out 01 FL pro:dings. and the coviotu•humse offzuer picked it up, out it to a point, and use I it to sign !the order stools delivered ep the cases to the consignee. Ite kept the one louse pentiil for his own use ; and a few days afterward, beoansa it needed a fresh pint, cut it again, and found that there wan no more lead Another chip into the ocular brought him to a roll of - paper bested into a hollow place. Thin paper was one of the false sort, engraved in London. and thus passed into the domin ion of the Alusoovite.,—Ex. .---The Philadelphia Sunday Transom* au original °rant pa r er, in speaking of Geo. limit, says that be has "forfeited al I elatut to.respect is a gentleman, or cont - .donee as a soldier," and,that "he his sutler • ered his Nat for alike to eretrlde htt iito hood,'"and"rewthereapre says, "6 candidate who °metastases his carver in deceit will not fall tw find shame, if nothing worse, iu t s end" WssILISLIPoIef NATI! —IL iti s 6401 ikot priors Ily known perbsps, that on drew his hut breaili in the tea h•inr in the &utility of the tact week in tlio month ‘if the year, and itt Ibe ro.l yoAr (4 the century- He flied Sat , is n(1;1110'_ o'clock, Dec. St, Filkb. NO. 6 OPEN SECRETS tir /LIMN C.11111T.. The truth He round about us, ell Too slosely to he nought— So open to lur vision that 'Tin hidden to our thought. We know not What the glories Of the grass. the Bower, may be. We need not struggle for the eight Of what-we always tuba. Waiting for storm. and whirlwinds, And to have a sign appear, We deem; not God is npeak Mg in The still small voice we hear. In reasoning prstud, blind leaders of The blind, through life we go, And do not know the things we see; Nor see the things we know. Single and indivisible, We pass from chair to change, Familiar with the strangest things, And with familiar, strange. We make the-light through which we see The light, and make the dark— To hear the lark sing. we must be At heaven's gate with lbe 'ark• THIS, THAT AND THE OTHER --The Cbarleston ifer 7 viiiy calls tbo no gro convention in thatfltate the "great ring streaked and striped." —rn the reeent Demneratic Convention in Connertient, there were seventeen tick. Kate , . who voted for Hawley, the Radical candidate, last year ---A party of single gentlemen at War. renter], Virginia have organized a 'mutual expense club, rented a house, and gone to housekeeping. --The New Orleans mint, which ba tmen isileleinre the outbreak ing of the rebel !lon, is atrout 05 - rosunte operation. , It wall eminence by eolninertiellee. • i 4 Iltatedtthat Bdwlß ,Booth's re -04,0, averaged saooo a week duehag the past season "Wood up ." is the r♦ of the Port Mb- Rog (Miss.) Stungrord to those - subscribers ho prinsleed to pay in that article. ="-ofrineteen United States Songsters re tire in Mu, six of whom are Degenerate. irhe eloetions thus far have given the Dem ocrats a gain of tabu. --It is related that near Dantaig a young man of twenty four, wild'has Just married a widow of lorty two, has discover ed since the marriage that his wife was his wet nurse. -----A few days nip', two men blarked,and pretending to be serrnnts, knocked at the door of Mr Tyson, agent of the Internal Revenue Collector, at Winona, Mississippi, and, on being admitted, knocked Mr. Tyson down and robbed hint of $5,440. -- Brandon, in St. Louie has recovered a verdict of twehe hundred and fifty dollars damages against D. J. Jocelyn a dentist. The plaintiff claims that Juce lyn broke his Jaw hone and otherwise dam aged him in the proem, of extracting some With. The dentist hao asked for a new trial -The erhooner hone Star, from §avan , sti ilk In Ilead, vrei blown out to era in a gale on Tuesday. Sind wus round with three persons, leaving ten persons missing, the remaining three being ton much worn nut by olhru,tion to trill what beldame at their companions. - --l'aris street railw•ye Lave flat rail/ and the oar wheels have no flange', hu there IA s small rail in the centre on which ern extra grooved wheel rune. This wheel . can be raised by the driver, when the car wildly runs off the track k turn out fur a ear morning . from an eppoeite direction. ----A downeieter ►lverti+se r ■ wife in the following manner . "Any gal -what's gut a oow, a ggod feath er bed with comfortable tlx Ins, Bye hoodoo.' dollars in the hard pewter one that's bad the meazels and understands tendin' chit. dren, can and a customer for life, by writhe small billy (Imo, addressed to Q. Z. and stiokin' It in a crack of Uncle Ebenesor's barn, back side, Joinin' the hog-pen• - -,-Virgin is City, in Nevada, is meeting with • misfortune not common to American cities. The announcement is made that in all probability it will soon be swallowed up by the settling (deb. houses into the work ed out mining drifts, which were not prop . rly eectirad by the miners. Long outs aro exposed In the street', frame houses ern twisteg about In every direction, and brick loicitllnga ere toppling over. --Paris has a queer ease of kleptoma nia. An Roglimb lady of high birth has many tl•aes been before• the eourts on a charge of stealing, althorgh her chewer iitanoia are such that she might buy every thing ■lie hoods. her latest trick was fas tening a fine silk thread to a one .renopdeor and when the person by her side in the om. nibos opened her purse to pay her faro, she handed her the coin with the remark that it fell from her portemonnals. By lIIMIDIII ot the silk thread the portem ,nnais was, aßar wards withdrawn from the huly's pocket,. iiiii‘embling Of Congress The halidayaeason is over, and. soa r i will reitiatmbletothe Capitol albs nation to day., Some of -the menthes.. -Lave been at home. among their consti tuente and heard of hnrillimes; sewn the closed doomof menufactorlee, and. Wor kshops. and listened to the talk of toer ,ghants with reference to the future. Others, during the remits, have had leis tire to examine °irefully the papers from all parts of the nation, and thus' leant into what a state the business of the country bas been thrown by Radioed legislation with reference to the South ern Stelae. During the recess time has also been affyrded members to ponder the questions of our national debt, of the onereoey, of taxes, of a tariff, of re tretehment, and the many other impor tent issues indissolubly conneoted with the politics and legislation of the land. have they done so, and what effect will such examination, thought aqd refec tion have upon their actionT , Will it induce them to retrnee their steps, re peal the inflations laws, which base re dwood the Southern people to want end beggary, and lb replace them by wise, and prudent ordinances, national in their score, tendency and' operations; or will the balance of the session be de voted to President-making and ocheites to advance the interests of the dominant party f The business men of the nation are deeply iniereated in the action of Congress at this timn. Trade,oommeroe and manufactures are at the eland still. Contracts, reaching any distance into the future, cannot be made with safety on account of the uncertain motion of Congress whit reference to reconstruction %Voile tun States are kept in an unpro ductive condition, and six millions of people reduced to the verge of starva tion, legislation Ibpen ether subjects, even if proper and right will be shorn of half its moraines... The lest step towards a 'Twist° the right path will. be an abandonment of Om military poli cy which has prevented • restoration of the.old.relatimas between tits.. States., When that is done, other movements can be effected, looking to a return to peace anti•prosperhy in the masa. - Congress oat. do all these things, but will they? We suppose not. The peopleatuA puri fy that body at the next election, and then reform will follow —Aye. A Long Voyage in ■ Canoe Mr F. tiliole a wealthy Englishman*, bite paddled himself in a sans*, Moue July last, a distance of 40,000 miles lie started from Liverpool, and rifler paddling along the (toast and out in •he Irish Sea for several days. be touched at many points on the Lancashire, West moreland and Cumheriand coasts, 'fai ring Ole majority of the English lakes In his frail boat-, then proceeded round the coasts of Wightnewhire, Kirkeudbright shire and Ayrshire, ocessioeally land ing and making • geological survey of the country, tall reaching the Frith of Clyde, in which he stayed for several weeks, exploring the bays and lochs of the F'r•th, and of some of the western islands. Returning to-Giaegow.lhe I ad dled through the Borth moil Clyde Canal to Grangemouth, whence be sailed to Leith. The canoe in which Mr Poole accomplished his voyage was built for him in Canada, by a tribe lit Caughua waga Indians. and is aimposed entirely of one sheet of hireh hick, beautifully .awed and admirably molded The ca noe is very light weighing when empty only sixty pounds, and meseures fifteen feet six inches, and oae foot three inches • in-depth. In ibis frail boat Mr. Poole, as a ge ologist and mining engineer, voyaged for eight years amen; the rivers of British North America to the Rooky Mountains, across which he married it, and paddled thereafter down the many streams arising on the west water shed - ' of the Rocky Mountains down to the l'acifio. By its means he proceeded to Queen Charlotte laboid, which be ex plored, ha•ing been the first white man whii net foot on the ilii d. During all his wandering Angier is'4ods of Bridal" t'gtumbi•, be paddled no lees than 18,- 000 m les, an I a ue • mrse of his geo logical et , rweis be was the only auntie log member of •pry of eighty-six, Europeans ai d Ti. Jilin, MONIST Or rrien,—.. ma people think that is weenie-, to I • wen and mis erly to become wealthy. Thee never was a greater mietelo. Any man of o .inmon intelligence stay bd proverons if he chooses to lab ,r dilig. dtly and faithfully in • calling obi ,11 i k e thorOugh ly understands. Qf e , uree, prude WO is had iepenelble to success prudence, mindattot niggardiy meannelm. The man, who eomMentted With little or nothing. sodium resolvedto ritt,munt else rewtolir• to saeriffee nothing to appearanoe. cannot gain one true Mind, nor obtain' tog popularity that will be really needd to him in his effort. to sobieve indepen *Mee, by endeavoring td seem to hare that with be Man not. The. world /10 shrewder than pretension supposes it do be. it is irentrlons World—looks stump ly luta people's private affair', and ifam individual makes a show beyond hie Maine, moot discovers and dletroolkOhlml. No on. who has a fortune to matt, or who desires to receive even a moderato oompotoece, bat afford, to incur the world's dlttruot. Therefora. if yen are at the font of the lease and want to mould, go up In your workrday guide and don't *fleet purple and sno ibeett.-- Er.