The Democratic Watchman. BY P. GRAY MEEK Terms, $2 per Anne'ii, in Advance BELLEFONTE, PA -Friday Morning, April 90,1889 "When the Wicked Rule, the People mourn It has been true in all times of the r : : . • , • II • thole who art set up asrulers and goy enters is the chief and great, if not re ally the only cause of the sufferings of the people. And it was to avoid the permanency of wicked rulers, more than for any other thing, that the idea of government by the people was suc cessfully established in the Western world. The Eastern world had given to the Western its bloody and moun flit lessons 'upon this subject,. and it wan to place the power in the hands or the people as a protection of the people against power, that our patriot fAthers conceived the American system of "government by the consent of the gov• erend." It was to protect the people that it was ordained that a wicked ru• ler 'night be spared the people his per petual rule, and that they might be permitted to choose often and to hold power. But with all their wisdom, ith all the guarantees, with all the checks Old balances, with all the Pr'o tech re bulwarks set about the tern ple of popular liberty, the principle has been onferridden, and democratic government ,N 'rurally set at . naught, and we are to day, as a people, as closely hedged in by power wrung from us, and held by usurpation, as•are the people of any of • the unhappy despotisms of the Eastern world. We arc now permitted to mourn with the millions and hundreds of millions, %%Ito lia‘e mourned the uickedness of uicked rulers, and the grief of this people s d lie all the keener, that they once i .sesßed and voluntarily surrendered that libert%, and happiness, and future, uhich no other people have vet possessed. flail we been subjects afid slaves of power, never hat frig enjoyed novereignt% nod liberty and been the source of ismer it sell', our grief might have been thatilull which seek% expression old% iii hours of great suffering, such fl 9 the inoarnings of the subjects of the per petual despotisms of Europe in the throes of dying dynastic; front %%hose wombs come despotisms all the more oppressive and odious, that they are younger and more I igurous. Then. again, slavery under a deopotisin like Russia, kuntria, Pruseia, and the (Ado-. monarch les uf Europe, Is ta skitt'trj, with the assurance of something like even liens and stability; while the slat rr uhich stares this people m the face, is one witlipu4 law or precedent, and till be impressiye to the extent of the 11 cense ufthe hour and the whim of the moment. It will he a despotism of party -of Class —of u ealth over Indus try—of unlicensed and unbridled puu er over it weak, unresisting, and cub tided people. It will be a licentious monarchism without law, built upon ruffle, with an unsafe foundation, and a hopeless future, subject to go dila and rise up each fortnight, as the man% monarchial republics that live about us with power's knife at each sulijeet•s throat, and die periodically %all the knife. A republic on the monarchical principle, in a republic mahout law, and such a' government in the most ishour, criminal, and damnable, N1)1( h can afflict any people A monarchical republic is such a one as has obtained in -tins country during the past decade It is the one which, with the hollow form of democracy, is in reality monarchy, holding conquered provin ces without law, which` puts its heavy foot upon the people, flaring away their governmenta and. laws, defying their will, and usurping their prerogatives. It is the full Monarchical principle, which Jiaregards the equality of corn( monwealtlis or persons, and makes de crees vivo yore, to be executed by arms. It is a government which is deaf to the protests awl prayers of the people, and blind to the condition of the ruled.— Such a eharaeAer of government is to be fled cram, as the wafaser on the high ways of Elilidostan would fly front the crouching tiger. . What till Fieoplehave lost they will learn, alas! all too late. r When power established firmly, ita it ie even now consummating all too plainly, they will mourn, not atone the winkedness of their rulers, for GOO knows there is sufficient cause for mourning on that scare now, but also their own coward- ice. Lt is a sad spectacle that future hich is even now unfolding for the American people.l ----Do you want to gee the wool ktiocketi off of radicaliant —octl two dollar's and get the IV Ari nii ati a )1..11. How will the' Republic be Over- thrown. Peaceably—imperceptibly—or by Stages ! There are those who do not believe that the Republic.Of the United States' can be overthrdwn, and an imperial government set up in its stead. And yet there were those -who did not be lieve a few years ago that slavery could be abolished, or that there was any living man or any rart,,ji teen in the country, who would dare to at tempt Its 'overthrow. There were those, also, who voted to make Lorn :;lAPOLEONTriesT , Tent of - ilielte puh,,lc Jr ! France—republicans of the finest. chAr acter—n Ito %mild not helieNe in their day, that Lot,is Nt eorzoN either con template,' or could achieve the to, er- throw of the Republic. Did not France, have a writen Constitution, and were not the masses all bourgeoises and citi zens? The present Emperor was their eitozen BuoNAPAATE, Ms Excellency Louts N),PoI.EON, President of France Iby the suffrages of"t he people." What is he to-day? What was lie too years after his election ? ('dozen Buoy 1- CARTE, in the ipileteSt pogsilde manner, and the implied consent of the re puhlicans of France, became N tcottos lii., Emperor of France, "h p the grace of (Ion," etc. There are those ui this colour) who would base proclaimed, and did propalin, men insane ttho one year before the late a ar prophesied the ,destruction of State ,ukta, the tramp ling oi,the Constitution, and the over runnilfg and subjugation of Staten of the And.el all this, and more, has occurred. There arc those too, now blatant reptiblieallH I II its true sense, who wit it ear or Inc: hence, I as in the case of inns} French repot) licans, compose mobs about the polls of Pentisyl‘ania, armed aWs bludgeOns L eal -imperial ballots, atiii become the loudest champions of the cm ' ore! Stranger and more inconsist , cut things hate happened in the past few years. We al told by these same men that the Republican party is a "progrestme party," and N% th the knowledge that the country has of It, there is no reason to dispute the claim It 1.8 progressive. It has prelressed from bad to worse, and has but little farther to go to reach the end had in I icw by the desperate revol o utionists olio hatched its treasons a few years ago in a :lark room at Indianapolis. h the great mietake of the •,,,,, op i e to look fir resultg u, •:,,(‘ wrong- uiree. Tney are aided In error by the %cry Inca whu tire t yen there ac (.01111,110m% their den:gti,. The hhrewed `revedutll,llll-1 , of 011.1 age do not txpo..e their Helietne4 to the vulgar etc of the ulgar ThVl do not Aet up a noise, v.here the huger actual ly e'CiftS, hut like the arin , „ u t the cc lesUal empire. beat theirdruap.l.4u,legt , Altere they lure runt, that th, ittlentroti, iif the elIC111 . ) !nay h nii.,lireettql NVeobser%e unfolding, the:partial ac ' complialllnent of the first great step tonaro seatering the apparent consent rf the people, to a radical change of goy. eminent, in the enfranchising of the negruee of the country. This is to de grade the ballot arid intelligent...wen I nil naturally enough heroine lingua 'heel arid voluntarilysurrender their high privilege ii, preference to debasing theinsel‘eq by association arid equality with the African race The effect of thin is too cl/:11--doire41ect for the bad lot, and self disfranclie , enient Disres. Ject forrepuldican gu'i,errirrient. follows, and the inclination lb encouraged to rid thenisel% es of that character of goN• they hate the fullest proof ma a fa , lare, by flying 11110 unuth Cr, %1110. e chief reconirtiendittnui then lie relief Iruitl degrading equality and greater protection to person arid property. The %cry object is thus qui etly attained, and the empire at once becomes popular nith the arristueracy, as a relief and escape ! Stranger events than llts ltaNe been successfully accomplished, anti we are not astoniKlial, once in a while, to hear the forerunner of the empire, in such expressions hs that "Republican government is a failure''' Murk the enfolding of correlative event)+, and put the prophecy on re. cord—the attempt ie be* quietly and successfully made to change the form , of gnernment of the United Stateeand to mike ULYSSES R. GRANT, emperor of America, by the consent of the people, and "the grace of (Ion!" —lf any one can read the follow ing deep)) , touching and pathetic epi taph, without wetting his bandana with Ite briny dews of his "busted teelin's," he ought to have a halt bush el of onions stmezed into his unwet. eyes. It is taken from a slab not a thousand miles from this place; From Ufa depth—n.;l bleu .tn he h, Itl ItY /Il.loke ; The purple Kura m x xtionflv. did tor , lb kft a 10441er 11104 0164 •, , The Slate , Printing. After giving its opinion—and a very utior one it is too—of th ' e'Liegislature i n g ,"ueral terms, the ClearfeliNknib• ham, nm "ki „We were g odly dirappelntett in ono thin A committee wax . 'upointed to Investigate the , „ but It fulled to make it State Printer' report of its proceedln%n We never expected more than o r e p ort. but ty bo cheated even out of that to.' bail. Th the taxpayers haireloien for several years robbed f Stoi,(010 annually by the 'loll' Printers of Ilarrieburg, there coo lie no Queolleit end wiry [nix committee failed to report tho facts, 1s re workably strange t o the ld t;r• hape inciimero can 0 Xj. collect the tribes of that contriiittee,m ' might be more pointed, but we will endeavor to ferret them out " For the benefit of our good friend "rts4r - cil man kind,- as one of that committee, the writer of this article will attempt to ex plain. The resolution instructing the committee on Printing to examine the State Printers account, was ollereil the House on the sth oC February ; tinder the rules, it was rgquired to lie 1 1 over one day,, mind although repeated etrirt. ireve n:I to have it comaler eel, yet it was not until the *2.4th of March that in was acted upon and passed finally, 1'165 wan so lute in the session owl jtett at the tune that stem hers are kept busy trying to get their local legislation attended to, that the committee had little hopes of pertorm ing thoroughly the duller; unposed piton them by the passage of the rest,. lution. Vet it wept to work in goof content. Meetings were held alumni et cry day as the minutes mill show, papers, and bills, and persons cornice. led with the State printing were exam hied, but so short Was the tune, and so great the work to he occomplinheght hat the emiinuttee after laboring assiglounl until tenth in twenty-four hours of the close of the se , .ion, anei finding it lin possible to make such an inveskigation, and report as duty lo themselves, and the plight. required, concluded to ask nnthorltt of the House to finish the in vestigatton and file their report with the resident clerk to be acted upon by the next Legedfit u re. No one to a moment belie\ egl or et, en &Caine I that the House would refuse to grant the, extension of tune asked for, to complete the work, in as much as the same authdritt had been granted almost every session to ~,they coin in Mee., and to a colnfm . :, ee o f t h e Senate at the late sessi-~n, Inn esUxal nth the soldier's „ rp h ni , sc h oo l s. But j ud g e mt . % e urprtee of the committee, when, upon the presentation . 01 the resolution, granting More time, It %%as vigorously opposed by Mr l'iTa k Nn and several other members On the Itepubli can side, and decided by the Speaker `that the }louse had no power to ex tend the tone and that any report the committee had to make should be pre sewed before 12 o'clock of that day, - leaving but about fort impute-, ui which to write out and make the re ME After thin decision the mulurits of the ,conanatee abnillutely refused to take any further action in the matter The member from - the I lth district of Philadelphia, Mr. lit so: and the artier of this, thnnenting front the decision of the majority concluded to make such report as the facts ancertamwl, and the limited time would permit. This was done, and a few minutes before twelve o'clock—the earliest possible moment— offered that report on behalf of the mi• nority of the committee. But here again was opposition—and that opposi lion was front the Representative of Clearfield county, Mr. McCi t.toenn, who, purposely and with the Benign of preventing the filing of that report, mimed to a point of order and by dila' tory action occupied the time of the House nati: a few inomenk after 12 o'clock when he raised the point of order that tt being pant twelve o'clock —the hoar ot final adjournment—the report coal,' ti it be received, which point the Speaker decided well taken, and the report v‘ati not permitted to go upon the record. These facts the edit. or of the Republican in aware Id; for he was upon Limo floor of the House, at the time of their occurrence. The facts set forth in that report were about as follows : Ili 1856 the State !whiting and paper amounted to but 535,282,79 ; in 1868 it reached the exhorbitant sum $137,V3,- •47,—an increase or t!c101,840,68, and $60,674,45, more than in 1864 when the war was being wagel and almost double the amount of printing being done. —That numerous overcharges were made—an instance is tbund in the Legis'ative Directory, a email pampli• let, containing 16 !ages, with about P,400 ears brevier to the page, was charged at the rate orsTalt per thousand copies—the State furnishing the paper. The actual cost of this Directory could scarcely exceed $20,00 pci thousand. Cards, containing nothing but the wattle or, and counties represented by, the different members, prii , fe•cirt plainest style. a refi,an i i .1( the rate of $l,lO p(. , r pact.--, , tationtar . % •nt GO ch. per yiire, and en.velui.e- and odic: ilutt.t( r- 11,14.n.1 of die SOI per cent discount, being inlien from all of the printing arid binding as the minority ed . the committee believed the law and the contract required,it When We proclaim the Pacific rail wars taken from about One third-of th e road ii swindle, we mean just what VVC ,work only, the remainder being Say, nerd ' l 3 . et when we assert that the clietrged at or above regular trade rates. Pacific -railroad in n swindle—it mon- The re t closed as follows : i strous, unspeakablef4Win "Under Act of Assembly or .1864 I dlo and robbery—we do not necessarily the hertd.4 of De rtments are , anthorizt ed to order Such print,'„ng as they may ben au Haply that- any such undertaking would deem necessary and in it•ttll manner as : 2 4)e. On the contrary, it is N or.„„ gemt i ng ,Lat, a railroad across they may prescribe, the taw under the continent, built 0Y I :irate means ' which the State 'printing is coutril attid in a latitude favored nature, and for,mpecifies how it certain class of wor k would be a great convenience shalone,.and_ the contract fixes m • I 't be a great bIICCeSN. But we al the rate per centaur below regular ludeThrlogeTTier to IKe trade rates, at which the present State flaw nearly-completed, and about Which printer has agreed to do this work. Iso !mud' reit onsense has been said The courts, it is.asserted, have decided and written, and a time will con that all work not ordered in necordanee tintte to be Raid and wr en. It is the with the specification, in the net of pet of oeffigreßst and the prlatf,, ,, eo far as. Me) not subject to the deductitm it goes, of more rascality, inore•wwlndt of the per eenlurn fixed in the contract ling, more corr,g4ion, more prolligaey,,, price,and for some reason or other, Ilfl• metre infamy, more perjury, and more know I to the minority oT your cola- i co „,„„ trate d and outcropping moral mittee, the heads of Departments order mil political damnation than was ever re large amount of printing in fl i rt I conceived on earth since the angel of nearly all of it to he done otherwts, thtd loosed and turned forth His chow than in accordance with the sperifica- cot liottled plagues and hissing devils. /Inns, thus giving the State printer MI It II:iv et iriched etery loyal pauper opportunity to charge full rates for who stole Ins Into congress. It very nearly till the work done tier the has battered down the barmen to the State. The minority would therefore people's futtire recommend tie repeal of the Act of II lies saloons and danced WA, elution/mg the heads of Depart t r d e , W e l t jig ernthe plains. ments and clerks of both Houses to stolen a blood-bought d miitt i n order such work (force an they from the people,which dwOovernment, deem proper and 111 the manner the) as trustee, held in trust for the people ! may prescribe. And the passage of an Fo u r hundred and thirty millions of Act requiring that all printing, litho acres of the best lands in the Western graphing, folding, stitching, collating i world, tins been git ell ()ter to that low, binding, ruling done for the State, th er log, se, indlinc monopoly of thieves shall lie subject to the discount named and roldwsrs, called the credit mobilier, in the contract fur doing . the Work. - and the poor man's child in robbed of As we hate taken the time and his heirloom. trouble to explain thus matter as tar as Liberty's will has been newide,since possible for the benefit of the editor of Itberty's throat was grasped, and the the Republican, we hope he will have poor inan's son has been. robbed in the the courtesy to explain to li hy the h i -u- of his helples.i and cowering lath• member from his district acted ill the er manner lie did in regard to this mat Bully for the eftregue Again, on tlw 22i1 of, pri I, in reply to the pig M IPS about him who aonOtt to wentil 100 late speech, did the SPR WEE, of "Little electrify the Senate with "words that burn" Annorr, ('menu'., Cmtvni ER, and BROW N Row, two pair of as perfect %ilhans ita lire under the genial rays of old Sol and steal hoi a lit mg, were thutw whom his former wools list stirred up, and tint foamed under the lashings which the repentant millionaire of the East had given to the bond robbing, tart II irotec led manunteturers, and the tribute hieli he tat given to the cow ardice of one lien. lica%sinE. Bully for the `ea not E! It begins to lobk like he was going ki rip open the rotten, duet• Radical carcass, and let its tester mg bowels out ! Ile is reported to hate re.en m his seat, grasping a monstrous package of letters, asserting that they were in dursenients of his late speech , that he was neither drunk or crazy , but that the Senate •wits both. As to the lien ate and its temporary chairman (Ax• 11109 Y), Stir ill es is Said to have filled it with epithets. lie alluded to the "thie‘es" and "eat throats," who filled the streets of Washington with the slime of their immoral natures; the Senate had degenerated till they nere welcome and priNileged upon its floor, and epithets were bandied between Senators and roughs, qnd loafers, and ti i', CH, under the canopy of Senatorial prii lieges pith the ncymlialaiice and sang-froid 01 a barroom. "Is there," said lie ti, the astonished Senatorial vagabonds three wig Mtn!, lel? in the Constitution ige oat fathers that toll,llnr Mel ril gel, against Which !pit do not pi "pose If, laise you, pal ricidal hando Itig uords these to conic from the mouth of a Itailieul Senator rotten —how utterly, wholly, thor oughly, and coin rotten-110u stinkingly rotten--must be the whole machinery of Federal gill eminent, when a Radical Senator and a Neu nianufacturer is "disgusted and "alarmed" at its workings! "nowhere the majority of the Seit ate shamefully belittled this august body?" SPRAGI F. ( . X1:1E111118 to (hem. "now hale ON Mighty l'allen ?" he re• peals. Hrn lAA is right, and we do [whet e he is honest—in fast, no mall could speak such terrible truths and not be moderately honest! At least, ho is bold and a but Lie has said is alas! ull too true, and ne can_only hope that there ails yet rise up many Sett“WE'S trom the festering meshes, to proclaim thelruth and to arrest ..the hands of parricides, who would strike •down the last hope of freemen for !dare, who virtus. of 11 pt•Opl° thr it. !will !14 , 211.11.. Woldei of sculls laol tkep heti t•not , and stitlerings . 4 rtl.i. flotlhelitus! U. P. R. R. Swindle-430,000,000 Aores of Land Stolen from our chil dren. A territory as great tts the nil New Stater, New York, (thin, lill nol', Virginia. and Kentucky,--com prismg about all the good tillable land in the•,n est—lts been donated to a Corporation of thieves, oho have built a Pacific rail road, which can FR( run only a portion of the year, and which has Post the thi;%es who built it not a single cent or their nail means The original donation of land to this th let trig corporation nits one hundred and eiglity million acre., and Cho bills lately reported favorably Mira by the •mmuuttees ..r ihietes ofthis thie%ing eohgrens, donate two hundred and till) million acres more ! While all this monstrous raseality IM going 4/11, a effla pally it Southern Had French capitalists organize, and yeti min Congiess -Mr wheal? For lands and subsidies? Not at all---..triply ,/'r rig/if if tray! But Congr ens says --No! If pm ran lould tt uttliout all induce ment to corrupt UN, tun shan't build at all. This Southern road Ii proposed to run from Memphis lon the lower MiiniMsrppi) to El Paso and the Pacific The' route 18 NTIOWIVXMOIIe —open lit all lintel.; of the year, and can be built for less than hall thecost of the North ern (or T ion - and "Cello-at" Jail humbugs. lint it HialldS mn AMIN. of et en getting a charter or right of way. while the corruptive power of the Northern magi, with its .130,(XXVX)0 acres and large Lund subsidies, owning half the continent, Congress, and the several Legolature-., is in the field to nay No I AVlien 16.1•111,11 i .111 :111)11 1111%e .iii I :uii e l thie 61181 1,11.1 a few ..it he., the piddle lands are all sold .11 lu 111 , 11 , 0114111 , !i aMI their iinees enhanced lietind the reach - of the poor man—wlien the em pire is furthered and atTomplisheil c as it will be, (unless the people rise in their majesty and hurl the whole crew to hell)—they will awake• to realize that the occupy a position morally and politically far beneath any other people of earth Who pretend ,to possess intelligence and heroism. Would to (;041 that we had the power to arouse the people to a proper roan cation of the dangers which surround us, that they might use the power still remaining in their hands to save them selves I IVe speak to taii but they heed not I We pray them to awake,—to Kee for themeelYea,--to act, while yet their i hope! Will they lie idly by, and I e bound hand and 113ot ? Will they follow "party" to death and political and social destruction and damnation'. Is there nothing which can arouse them '1 Ivo 418 the word 5 give us the rower, that we may animate the popular eurpse, and breathe into its ntill ever• • "Ile lit ing. life O( r .TRICI. HENRY ! Ari .1• ! or sleep furtive! ! --II yv . ,i tit die Apial.9l, kraliefeBl, u,„r uw t indepervlvtit over in the 4 i•it.. 121.: :Mk, I% .1! I lII' "Redundancy of Cuirency." That great tool of Wall street a the money sharks and lenders of N Yotk, McCut.t.onan, Wllmom Retir e 'ry °flits Treasury, was a . great ad cats of the reduction of the volume the carrency. rfis greai horror, if had any besides his own ugly pieta was whatle called _th "redundauc ti currency" in the'country. Why, if t the paid tool of the close corporation. Wall street, sfidithl he fear to let t people have'rnoney in such quantity to enable them conveniently to ti sack the vast business of this comm. Avhyi :raot the deceiver of thebnisia Men of the country on:'ide 'Atli(' 414 of the money-changers, should lid it so great a fear alwa a belintr of a plethora of means with, which transack the peoples' plethora trade. ? But wonderfully wise as these sot became at the bidding of the dig whodive upon the Very happiness peop m ).tke lulling 1 ampyreu fitl( . :K the Woodhull the tisane of sleep ictims, they cirmonly devise ways 1 means of tinanctiamkef for the n u n changers. If the peOpl► arc on pressed for a reliable and p tut (minting medium, they are reit, remedies new and novel to the pub hut nowhere and by nobody knout be safe, or having the least refill' altp to the science of commerce of fundamental principles of a rot economy ill government. I knee, Itl the times were "hardest . ' and nn, was scarcest and host difficult to , we were treated to the novel plan ,t reduction in the circulating ,inedni in other words, when the patient wediest from the loss of blood, to further upon the patient's "cireidat medium . ' to girl hint strength. We are to-day Buffering from suckC I policy of lquevimovi which he succeeded in reducing volume of the currency, not that people might have less, Iso notch that the money-changers might in CEO When it is taken into considerm that in tireat Britian and France, comparatively small territories %.ery large population, a wifie policy Fuoveit that the average capital capt(4l haa been and Is about $3,:0% in our own country, we - have lees t $13,50 ptr capita or circulating in mid that to coquet a vast b 11 efoi spread out over a continent, absolute wickedness of the Kcpubli tinaneiel policy of the last len year riven. Instead of $13,5t1 per cal 111 say that $•III to each tab tart, ot circulating medium, a 4 Pahl aggregate too great a volume of cur ey for a business country so flat! FO ritpllll:S griming as of r inn r'ltedinidaney of the eurrene ForHooth Fourteen thousand milli would he Mlle enough to manage great an internal trade, and with alohty to make the money to ordi with the pa cr and printing ! we..., Auld lt Itil a gold and sifter basis tar sli..it 01 our needs, if there has he.. mill.,er%iuney and truckling to the I uo~i of \Vali street, pray tell us n what character of principles 01 po cal economy t Ina sort of policy is bit which makes money HO scarce /Mil high that lie who lieu I iness can riot hire it arid cave 111111+1 We have nothing now hut papa r money. Then why, ul the mina common Be Imainema lett to cline and the ailed,. of commer. e mould, when all 111111 be Net In im 61 !Printing and ip , Hilemg tnu!l ail — darned t,tutr Tribute to Women Homebody we know not whop this brautifol, and- trunkful tribut OEM Place her alining flowers, foster her lender plant, and she is a thing of friary iiritiles• and sometimes folly, aft.e.Yed dew drop, fretted by the touch of a Initteii wing, and ready to faint nt tho muslin At vi I tie , the tephyrs are too rough, the shoe are too beefy, and she le overpowered by perfingelvf a rosebud. But let rev' coital. come—rouse her affeetions—enk Indic the of of her heart and mark her then , hoe heart strengthmv itself, how strong Is I purpose Place her in the heat of battle g her it clidil, a bird, anything 8130 Imes ler pit to protect, and see her, as Wen instant, nee her white arms as a shield as her blood cr sone her ti:_t Itlll.l forehead, prsy.ng for to protect the helpless. TrllllBplllllt her in dark places of earth—awaken her energte action, and her breath becomes a healing, presence a blessing. She disputes lour Inch, the stride of the stalking when man, the strong and brave, slim away pale and affrighted, Misfortune, dart her not; mho wears away a life of silent en ranee, and goes forward with lens timidity her grave than to her bridal. In prosperity she is a Imil full of odors, tiv log but for the winds of adversity to semi them abroad, pure gold„ valuable hat muted the furnace. In short woman is 0. tall 111 mystery, the centre from witch [adieu great charm of eiliftence. --Que. A. DAN A y of the N York ,41n, proposed lately •to di (lit INT to "collect" for him in is; York, vice somebody tube room( but (in %NT WAR collected matted not see it in that light. I)4NA now Ha spitefully, that it Lc had presen fit a tsf r with a Sclocipcde, or somethi eke as find and valyeo, be wo have hem) collector ''qtitCrnal Itt a"c i' lu tit: !!
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