VOL, 40. The Huntingdon Journal J. IL DUIIRORROW, PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS. Office in new Jouswir. Building, Fifth Street TILE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL is published every Friday by J. R. DuanotutOw and J. A. ?Wit, under the firm name of J. R. DURBORItOW & Co., at $2,00 per annum IN ADVANCE, or $2.50 if not paid for in six months from date of subscription, and $3 if not paid within the Yeal. . . . _ . No paper discontinued, unless at the option of the pub lishers, until all arrearages are paid . , • No paper, however, will be sent out of the State unless absolutely paid for in advance. Transient advertisements will be inserted at TWELVE AND A-HALF CENTS peraline for the first insertion, SEVEN AND A-HALF CENTS for the second and FIVE CENTS per line for all subsequent insertions. Itogular quarterly and yearly business advertisements will be inserted at the following rates: 3m 16m 19m Ilyr I I 110 isl 50i 4 bol S 5.1; 8 tpi. 1 4,01 , 9 00118 00427[$ 36 2 " 5401: 8 0.) 10 00 12 00 1 .::,.,01 1 24 0036 00 50 1 65 3 " I 7 000 ‘0,14 00118 110r:4.1j:34 (0150 00 651 80 4 " I 8 00;1-1 00120 00121 0011 .4136 00160 00 80 100 Local notices win Le inserted at FIFTEEN CENTS per line fur each and every insertion. All Resolutions of Associations, Communications of limited or individual interest, all party announcements, and notices of Marriages and Deaths, exceeding live lines, will be charged TEN CENTS per line. Legal and other notices will be charged to the party having them inserted. Advertising Agents must find their commission:outside of these figures. AU advertising accounts are due and collectable when the advertisement is once inserted. JOB PRINTING of every kind, Plain and Fancy Colors, done with neatness and dispatch. liand-bills, Blanks, Cards, Pamphlets, &c., of every variety and style, printed at the shortest notice, and everything in the Printing line will Le executed In the most artistic manner and at the lowest rates. Professional Cards. B. T. BROWN BROWN & BAILEY, Attorneys-at- Law, Office 2d door east of First National Bank. Prompt personal attention will be given to ail legal business entrusted to their care, and to the collection and remittance of claims. .Jan. 7,71. CALDWELL, Attorney -at -Law, • No. 111, ;id street. Office formerly occupied by Messrs. Woods 16 [apl2,'7l. 1 IR. A. B. BRUMBAUGH, offers his profep.'.onal services to the community. — Office, No. 523 Washington street, one door east of the Catholic Parsonage. Dan,4,'7l. G EO. B. °ALA:BY, ATTORNEY-AT-LA 4', novl7'7s] HUNTINGDON, PA, V•. J. GREENE, Dentist. Office re • moved to Leister'e new building, II street rjan.4,ll. Huntingdon. trZ L. ROBB, Dentist, office in S. T. k.A • Brown's new building, No. 520, Hill St., Huntingdon, Pa. [apl2,'7l. 111 IT W. BUCFIANAN, Surgeon Den. A • tie, No. 228, Penn Street, Huntingdon, Pa. [mchl7'7s TT UGH NEAL, ENGINEER AND SURITFYOR, Car. Smithfield Street and Eighth Avenue PITTSBURGH, PA Second Floor City Bank C. MADDEN, Attorney-at-Law. -&-a- Office, No. —, Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. [ap.l9/71. FRA.NKLIN SCHOCK, Attorney v.., • at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Prompt attention given to all legal business. Office 229 Hill .street, corner of Court House Square. {,lec.4,' 72 SYLVANUS BLAIR, Attorney-at ti • Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office, Hill street, ince doors west of Smith. Uan.4'7l. R. DURBORROW, Attorney-at • Law, Huntingdon, Pa., will practice in the several Courts of Huntingdon county. Particular attention given to the settleuient of estates of dece dent, OTilee in he JOURNAL Building. [feb.l,"(l. j W. MATTEE,N, Attorney-at-Law • and General Claim Agent, Huntingdon, Pa., Sonliers' claims against the Government for back pay, bounty, widows' and invalid pensions attend ed .o with great care and promptness. sifice on Hill street. Ljan.4,ll. S. GIASSINUEIt, Attorney-at -A-4. Law, Huntingdon, Pa. Office one doo East of It. M. Speer's offieo. [Feb.s-I P A. ORBISON, Attorney-at-Law, -a-t• Patents Obtained, Office, 321 Hill street, Huntingdon, Pa. [may3l,'7l. E. FLEMING, Attorney-at-Law, Huntingdon, Pa., office 319 Penn street, nearly opposite First National Bank. Prompt and careful attention given to all legal business. Aug.5,'74-limos. IVILLIAM A. FLEMING, Attorney at-Law, given to collections, and all other legal business ;ended to with care and promptness. Office, No. 2 , 5. 11111 street. [apl9,'7l. Hotels JUNIATA HOUSE, BEDFORD, PENN'A This well-known house has recently been leased by the undersigned, who, having had the experi ence of a number of years in keeping a first-class hotel, respectfully solicits the patronage of the !public. ,Special attention wilt be yiren to transient boarders. Arrangements will be made by which persons c.in have meals at all hours. Boarding $1.50 per day Boarders taken by the day, week, month or year. my5,'75-y] MARY J. RIFFLE. MORRISON HOUSE, ( , rposin: PENNSYLVANIA R. R. DEPOT U UNTINGDON, PA J. H. CLOVER, Prop 4.ril 5, 1871-Iy. Miscellaneous T O YS AND GAMES OF ALL KINDS Just received at the JOURNAL Store. ALSO, WRITING DESKS, WORK BOXES, ALBUMS, Ste. CRANDALL'S BUILDING BLOCKS, MENAGERIE and GYMNASTS. PARLOR CROQUET, &c., KNOX FRUIT FARM AND NURSERIES, FRUITS, FLOWERS AND SEEDS FOR EVERYBODY. Handsome Catalogue of Fruits and Flowers, and Handsome Catalogue of Seeds now ready. Mailed free to all applicants. KNOX FRUIT FARM Co., BOX 115, PITTSBURGH, PA., J. F. GRIMES, Supt. J. 0. SLEMMONS,. Business Manager. SEED STORE 131 FIFTH A VENUE. Feb. 11-2 t R ECEIPTS AND EXPENDITURES HUNTINGDON COUNTY From tho 4th day of January, 1575, to the 31 day of January, A. NISEI, REClill'fS. • Received from collectors of 1874, and previous years.eounty tax.. $3198 69 Received fro n collectors of 1874, • and previous 3 ears, State tax... 55 44 FOR THE YR ut 1813—COUNTY TAX. Alexandria borough Barree township Brady townshil. Broad 'fop l'i , y 1.:, tl, ; ii Carbon to,v.:•:,ip Cassville borough Cass township ...... .- Clay I 3m I tim I 9mllyr Cromwell " Coulmont Borough Dublin townFhip Ilender,on " Frinkliit Hopewell " Huntingdon lea% I s!. sii:ad 1 6 45 f , '.) " 21 " 66 SI :,,1 ii P 53 81 " " 4 h - Jackson town-hi p Juniata t.,w;,,hil Linc(An Mapleton 100 MC Union •' Morris township Oneida Orbiponla borough Porter township — 1357 78 Penn ‘. Marklesburg borough.... lOl 00 Springfield township... Shirley Shirleyeburg borough J. D. DAILEY Shade Gap " Three Springs " Tell township.... Tod " .... Walker " West " Warriorsmark tw'p 1776 34 Union township Received from the same town ships and boroughs, State tax 1875 l2BB 28 RECEIVED FROM JUSTICES OF TUE PEACE SAME YEARS Alexandria bor' Sam'l Hamer 240 00 Barre tw'p R. A. Ramey 1134 78 Brady " Thos. Marlin 551 95 B T city borough C. K. Horton 1:- , 1 78 Carbon tw'p, P. Madigan 327 41 Case '• E B Clay " P. H. Bence 235 10 Cromwell " B F Chilcute 762 22 Cassville bor E. B. Hysong l5 00 Coalmont " Ger.Reisterer 56 42 Dublin township, W. A. Hudson 225 97 Henderson " Jesse Henry 3ll 50 Franklin " W Ruthrock 1516 29 Hopewell " Geo W Putt 6O 69 Huntingdon Ist wd Jou. 0. Mur- 405 Penn Street, ray Huntingdon 2d wd Juo. 0. Mur- ray 863 85 Huntingdon 31 PM S. W. Col- lum - 645 56 Huntingdon 4th wd S. W. Col- ....._ __ lum 606 52 Jackson tw'p J L Mellvain BB5 10 Juniata " W Geissinger 72 27 Lincoln " 11 Richardson ' 185 31 Morris •' Jno S Lytle llll 39 Ma pleton bor A. W Swope BB 92 Mt Union " Jlll Mclntyre 333 95 Marklesb'g bor J Rainey 76 77 Orbisonia bor T M Kelley lOB 40 Oneida tw'p H Wilson 240 63 Porter " Saml Hamer. Penn " J Matey 454 75 Shirley" J M Goodman 7Ol 65 Springfield tw'p S Weigh' Tell tw'p James Rhea 249 39 Tod tw'p W W French... 345 10 Three Springs bar' P. H. Bence 26 10 Ws Iker tw'p Jos Isenberg 436 45 West tw'p J F Thompson 2132 40 Warriorsmark tw'p Sam'l Rall- feb.l7-ly ston Union tw'p Andrew Wise 59 20 19502 20 Received from Justices of Peace State tax, 1875 312 22 RECEIVED ON UNSEATED LANDS County tax 1 69 School tax Redemption money received..... Money borrowed from Sterret Cummins 5OOO 00 Money borrowed from George Miller 1600 00 Forfeited recognizance by 11. S ' Wharton 4OO 00 Fines by Sh'ff Henderson Com monwealth vs. S. Mothers bough Fines by Sh'ff Henderson Com- _ _ _ monwealth in liquor cases..... 147 00 From M. H. hyper, Director of Poor 132 52 From Jos. Rickets by Directur of Poor. From B.C. Madden fines Sr 00 From Blair Co. Directors of Poor 69 79 From W. M. Williamson for Wm. White From Jno. B. Murray for M _ _ _ _ Chaney 5 00 From P. H. Bence for killing a rabbit out of season. From J.S. Lytle From Sheriff Houck, fines and jury fees Balance due the Treasuter, Due T. W. Montgomery, esq., Co. Treas. at last settlement. $874 63 On Common wealth prosecutors paid to Pros., Atty., Sheriff, witnesses, &c.... 2960 25 Constables for making Returns, JULIANA STREET, election fees, &o _ 1025 37 Grand and Traverse Jurors, Court Criers, tip Staves, &c.. 4250 . 46 Judges, Inspectors and Clerks .... of eleetions Assessors for assessing and Reg- stry I its 773 50 Inquisitions on dead. bodies-- ]23 40 Road and bridge view5...........666 70 Road damages as follows : John Gregory sl7s 00 Irvin Johnston lOO 00 M. M. McNeil for N. Shaver 179 00 Robert Greene 29 50 J. R. McCartney 7 00 Alonzo Treater 53 00 William Eckley J. Wilson Weaver 25 00 613 50 ROAD TAX ON UNSEATED LANDS, Walker twp, Abraham Snare $29 49 Broad Top city, E. J. Jones— 513 Hopewell, J. Wilson Weaver 55 25 Union, David L. Smith 37 83 Tod, Isaac. Taylor Jackson, Samuel McCord SCHOOL TAX ON UNSEATED LANDS. Lincoln tip., John Fulton $ 10 68 Tod. " Isaac Curfman 308 26 Jackson " A. D. Scott 77 84 Walker " Jos. Douglass 57 78 Porter " Peter Sprankle 37 37 Brady ' A. Robinson 25 85 517 78 BOUNTY TAX ON UNSEATED LAND, Casa twp K. A. Lovell Atty for J. Stever $ 79 17 Brady " George Eby 3O 28 Hopewell " J. Wilson Weaver 4B 92 Lincoln " John Fulton l4 75 Tod " Isaac Curfman 369 09 542 21 Blank books A stationery for public offices 332 75 Indexing dockets, J. E. Smucker in full 3OO 00 Sheriff Houck, boarding prison ers,conveying convicts to Pen itentiary, summoning Jur ors. Ac Sheriff Henderson ditto 1043 75 2639 29 Fuel for Court House and Jail 305 56 Merchandise for Court House ,15 Jail 419 35 Heater for Court House 252 32 Repairs at Court House and Jail 680 89 Agricultural Society to Graffus Miller lOO 00 J. B. Carothers, Janitor at Court House 219 97 Mrs. Jane Kiem washing for prisoners, 20 00 Mrs. Jane " " " 40 00 Postage ......... Boarding Jurors, A. B. Zeigler, 35 00 " J. H. Clover, 21 00 56 00 Gas at Court House B6 14 Printing—J. It. Durborrow...... 189 70 A. L. Guss 439 85 Fleming & McNeal 427 00 Hugh Lindsey 3 00 1059 55 Western Penitentiary support- _ . _ _ ing convicts__ ......... 162 71 Penna State Lunatic Hospital 904 77 W. G. Waring reporter for Court 397 70 County Auditors 249 00 Premium for killing foxes, wild cats, pole-cats, hawks, owls, Scc 3561 15 ''',..Thr- ti 1. 43 . ..Ai. .1' 411 : ' 0,4 1. 4 li 1444 ) Zo, .111`t' 0 ~,, ri.- .8.: ./. i •S' 4,i 4": A' 1 , .111.• ar • :4.' r, , " "In - 11- ir 1 • 7 1 ;--,,, ..f , ..- ~., g !,.._. 'A - f , 4 f t urri ..„ .: 4 :,`"*. -4. ,„ ; . r .4 ‘. 4 • . t .;-; it t ' 7 , . ',. v ' +l9. , 4 $ ~,: ' a ih, r .11, 7 .1. i 1 1 ~, t ''' ; 4 . # q i ~- ,J .. . ..... I . 1 ' Ll 7 , ..; - -..- - it. -;-4. -..- ~.... -, 4 - , ~ ..- ,- •-..,,, County Finances. .8 465 54 633 47 892 38 129 68 401 13 407 70 1699 83 '2l 54 ;.S•4 ;II 786 16 410 65 825 33 . 486 89 . 1315 08 282 68 , 72 58 .. 412 341 641 70 500 00 1 76 SG3,SI2 12 EXPENDITURES, 24 29 17 46 169 45 County Finances. lt,funkling orders. DRIDUES-REPAIRING Repairing bridge at Alexandria by Henry S. Greene 4OO 00 Bridge above Mapleton, Juhn McComb SO 00 Bridge at Paradise furnace, H S.4reene Bridge near Isett'a mill, J. Lam- _ _ _ aeon Bridge at Eatreken's, H. S _... ._ Greene Bridge in Shirley twp., J. Law- .....,, ~_ . . mon Bridge at Cresswell's will and below Alexandria, J. Lam aeon Bridge at Huntingdon, J. Lain- eson I;ridge in Hopewell twp., 11. S Greene 72 19 BRIDGES-BUILDING Lridge re : built by N. Roder, near J. Duffey's Bridge re-built by J. D. Apple- by Dublin tp Bridge built by N. Rider near John Gregory's across Sha ver's Creek, in Westtp 645 00 Bridge built by A. K. Wagoner near G. W. Corbin's in Clay tp. 440 00 Bridge built by J. Latnaeon across Raystown branch, near Norris' Huntingdon Co. Poor House Treasurer 14321. 28 COMMISSIONERS. David Hare 340 00 N. K. Covert 378 00 W. J. Ammerman... 396 00 1119 00 Corataissionerm' traveling expen ses 1874 and '75 217 34 Clerk of Comm're, If W. Miller... 700 00 Dr. D. P. Miller, physician at jail 72 75 Jury Commissioners 96 50 Attorney for Commissioners, W• M. Williamson for '74 66 '75 .. 123 17 217 41 Iluntinadon County Teacher's In stitute lOO 41 T. IV. Myton, esq., fees as Prot'y Clerk of Sessions, .te 224 84 Watchman at Jail W. J. Clarke 7O 00 For arresting 11. Pumphrey,horso thief 23 84 First National Bank OOOO 00 Interest and discount 682 54 Redemption paid ou► 36 92 Paid indebtedness to the State us per receipts 2172 56 County Treasurer for Collecting as per Act of Assembly 7OO 00 Commission on $45,260 37 at 3 per cent ... .... ........ ..... 1357 81 $63,812 12 In testimony whereof the undersigned Commis sioners have set our hands and seal of office. A. W. WRIGHT, DAVID WEAVER, A. G. NEFF, Commissioners. We, the undersigned Auditors of Huntingdon County, Pa., elected and sworn according to law, report that we have met, did audit, adjust and set tle, according to law, the accounts of T. W. Mont gomery, esq., Treasurer of the county, and the or ders of the Commissioners and receipts for the same for and during the past year, and find a bal ance in favor of the .County Treasurer, T. W. Montgomery, esq., due him by the County of ten hundred and forty•four dollars and fifteen cents, ($1,044 15.) • Given under our hands this 21st day of Janua ry, A. D., 1876. feh4] nUTSTANDING BALANCES k , Due the County at the se , Auditors for trio year 1875 ITOWNSHIPS. YR. COLLECTORS. Benj. Davie S. G. Miller P nyder-. J. ameey EPBrumbangh P. M. Bare S. G. Miller John Canty Levi Evans—. George Eby T. Stewart Henry Taylor John Canty Jesse Henry J. L. M'llvain C. Fisher Shirley Broad Top City Juniata Springfield Lincoln Mt. Union Broad Top City Carbon Coa'monk Brady Barree Casa Carbon Henderson Jackson Tod. Barree Cassvil le Clay Cass Orbbionia Tell Union Walker Henderson Broad Top City -Barree -B Top City -Carbon Caasville Cass j-C1ay....... Cromwell!. 1 - Dublin Henderson Franklin...— Hopewell *LI antingdon t 3 44 29 'a M. Walker A. W. Evans C. R. Sreartliy A. W. Evans T. M. Reny J. G. M'Clure Andrew Wise A. States Jesse Henry J. Mountain R. A. Ramsey 10. R. Horton P. Madagan E. B. Hysong E. B. Ilysong P. H. Bence R. F. Chilcote , Wm.A.Hudson Jesse Henry IWm. Rothrock ,Geo. W. Putt JohnO.Mnrray 2 50 S. W. CoHum. J. L. M'llvain. l W. Geissinger. H. Richardson. J. Mclntyre T. M. Kelly Samuel Hamer J. Ha !ley J. Harney J. H. Lightner G. Sipes J. Rhea Jackson ..... I Juniata tLincoln.-....- Mt. Union Bor Orbisonia •Porter Penn *Marklesburg tShirleysburg : tShade Gap Tell Tod ...... tWalkerr Warrioremark .1-West tUnion Coalmont 1232 00 1014 15 W. W. French. J. Isenberg S. Ballston-- J.F.Thompson Andrew Wise.. G. Renderer... 1302 92 id in No.] full; t paid in part. 10, April Term, 1870, lected by P M. Lyti Comm issioners, from of yet paid over by T. *Since pai Judgment with interns Attorney for collector at county Treas Miscellaneous T HE SAFEST AND BEST INVEST MENT. lIOW TO GET YOUR MONEY BACK WITH LARGE INTEREST. Some persons in West Virginia, surrounded by circumstances that make money a necessity, have put into my hands, for sale, the following lands : 2,460, 2,650 and 28,500 Acres, at the very low price of 85 cents per acre. Thep lands are heavily timbered with Sugar, Poplar, Cucumber, Wild Cherry, Hickory, Ash, Locust, White Linn and Oak. A projected railroad, of which fifteen miles are graded, must run through these lands. They are, when cleared, among the very best lauds for Grass, Oats, Potatoes, Corn, Rye, Wheat, &c., and not surpassed for Wool growing and gen eral grazing purposes. Coal has been discovered on one of these tracts and Iron Oreon another. Address Rev. THOS. F. McCLURE, Cassville, Huntingdon county, Pa. [novl7-3m STAMPING ! STAMPING ! Having just received a fin• assortment of Stamps from the east, I am now prepared to do Stamping for BRAIDING AND EMBROIDERING. I also do Pinking at the shortest notice. MRS. MATTIE G. GRAY, May 3,1875, No. 415 Mifflin Street. NEW GROCERY, CONFECTION ERY AND ICE CREAM SALOON. C. LONG has just opened, at his residence, in West Huntingdon, a new Grocery, Confectioner?! and Ice Cream Saloon, where everything pertain ing to these branches of trade can be had. Ice Cream furnished, at short notice, to families or parties. His rooms are superior to any others in town. The patronage of the public is respectfully solicited. [je2-y SEEDS! SEEDS! send your address at once to Messrs. J. R. and A.:MURDOCH, Nurfierytnen,Flarida and Seedenten, No. 112 Smithfield street, Pittsburgh, Pa., and get their new Catalogue of RELIABLE VEGETABLE AND FLOWER SEEDS just issued, also of Fruit and Ornamental Trces in groat variety. [fall-3m 130 95 JAS. HENDERSON, WM. H. REX, J. J. WHITE, . .. A ti ditora, :clement with the CO. TAX. STATE. MIL. 9 17 113 50 2 05 14 00 20 47 21 67, 8 72, 11 67 601 10 3* 11 37 12 77 1 8 74 9 1,9 8 19 9 17 67 911 14 41 3 01 03 6 92 7 89 12 99 10 99 6 93 5 00 !8061 51 479 92, for $577.26 le. Esq., as delinquent him to the HUNTINGDON, PA., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1876 rifht owtr. For the JOURNAL.] Despair. BY J. W. WELCH. How sad, in darkness, 'tis to sit, The while despair's dread storm-clouds gather; And o'er the trembling spirit flit, While hope and joy lie dead together. Oh who can tell the depth of grief, nave he who feels despair's keen arrow, Which braves the weapons of relief, And wheims the soul in seas of sorrow. To see the bird of golden wing, Soar far beyond the phrcnzied vision, As dies the song she's wont to sing, In moans of mocking, deep derision. Could adamantine heart withstand, The shock, which on its strings vibrating, Rings farewell echoes on the strand, Where worthier breasts her tones are waiting. No earthly po*er can lift the gloom, Which sits upon the soul benighted; Or hid the withered tendrils oloom, Which fell despair has nipt and blighted, 'Tis vain to seek a solace here; No balm is found in earth's dominions, 'Tie found by heavenly waters clear, And rent to earth on angels pinions. Ilending fax the pinion. It Might Have Been. A STORY OF LIFE, Ah ! how time does take the romance out of our lives and leave us high and dry on the lee shore of conceit. It does not seem so many years ago that Mary Jane and we attended the same country schoolhouse, divided the same ap ple, chewed the same piece of gum, and slid down hill on the same sled. It does not seem many years since we stood to gether and pledged each other by all the faithful promises we knew that around the same love our young hearts should ever twine. Fate called us away from our early home and separated us from rary Jane. Dis- tant lands sent forth a call for us and we went. And the parting—the tears shed—the last embrace—the promises renewed under the flaming branches of the old oak tree. Ah ! haw fresh they are in our memory even to this day. Mary Jane could not be expected, much as she loved us, to spend her time moping and mourning. She must go to singing school, to paring bees, and to candy pulls. We arranged all that. Perhaps we were selfish ir. selecting Tom Jones to do escort duty for us, for Toni was bashful, freckled, a little lame, slightly cross-eyed, and any thing but a "girl's boy." He was a good fellow, Tom was, and if he had been half witted we must have seen the intelligent twinkle in his eye as he promised to do his duty well. Those letters we received. What a tale of lov.e they told I How miserable Mary Jane was, and how different the enjoyment was with Tom Jones instead of the absent one by her side ! How we wept over those lines! Gradual:37 those letters of Mary Jane's did not make us weep. There seemed rather more of Tom Jones in them than we liked, and we wrote a cruel, wicked letter. telling Mary Jane that if she thought so much of Tom Jones to take him. It was the la3t thing in the world we meant, but jealousy is a blind braggart, you know, and we were jealous. It was too true, alas! and the nest thing we heard was that Mary Jane and Tom Jones were engaged. We smashed up her daguerreotype and burnt the hair chain she made us with her own hands, tore up her letters, and drew a picture of an In dian on the broad prairie, with his victim tied to a tree and the fagots heaped all about him, ready to be set on fire. The victim very much resembled Tom Jones— the Indian was—ourself. * * * * * The other day as we stood by the post office a family wagon drove up, and for the first time in many years we saw Mary Jane. How very stout she had grown, and how very coarse those features and how very red that auburn hair that was so soft as it twined about our fingers ! There was a young Tom, and a younger Ezekiel, and a still younger Hezekiah, and a pug nosed, freckled faced girl, and a pair of twins. There was old Toni Jones, too, more• awkward, lamer, more cross eyed and homelier than ever. And when Mary Jane scolded old Tom for not helping her out of the wagon, the notes that once so much reminded us of the nightingale now sounded like a raft scraping against the abutment of a bridge in a spring freshet. Then we thought of what the poet wrote : "0 f all sad words of tongue or pen. The saddest are these—it might have been." We do not hate Tom Jones as badly as we once did.—Chicago Ledger. A Brief History of Alcohol. _Alcohol was invented 950 years ago by the son of a strange woman named Hagar, in Arabia. Ladies used it with a powder to paint themselves that they might appear more beautiful, and this powder was called alcohol. During the reign of William and Mary, an act was passed encouraging the manufacture of spirits. Soon after, intemperance and profligacy prevailed to such an extent, that the retailers in intox icating drinks put up signs in public places, informing the people that they might get drunk on a penny, and have some straw to get sober. In the sixteenth century, distilled spir its spread over the continent of Europe. About this time it was introduced into the colonies as the United States was then called. The first notice we have of its use in publie life, was among the laborers in the Hungarian mines in the fifteenth cen tury. In 1751, it was used by the En glish soldiers as a cordial. The alcohol from Europe was made from grapes and sold in Italy and Spain as medicine. The Genoese afterwards made it from grain, and sold it as medicine in bottles. under the name of the "water of life." Until the sixteenth century it was kept by apotheca ries as a medicine. During the reign of Henry VII, brandy was first known in Ireland, and soon its alarming effects in duced the governor to pass a law prohibit ing its manufacture. About 120 years ago it was used as a beverage, especially among the soldiers in the English colonies in North America under the preposterous notion that it prevented sickness, and made men fearless in the field of battle.— It was looked upon as a sovereign cure.— Such is a brief sketch of its introduction into society as a beverage. The. history of it is written in the wretchedness, the tears, the groans, the poverty and murder of thousands. It has marched through the land with the tread of a giant, leaving the impress of its footprints in the bones, sinews and life blood of the people. Our New York Letter. Crime— PoliCeal— The Spring Trade ilurea —The, Gate—Snow. NEW YORK, Feb. Bth, 1876. TERRIBLE CRIMES. There has been an epidemic of' crime within the past week, the prevailing char acteristics of each ease bein! , cold blooded cruelty. The city was shocked by the murder of a young girl by the Jew, ltu benstien, under peculiar revolting circum stances, which was followed by the slaught er of Simmons by Fuchs. That case is the most horrible on record. The murdered man was made drunk, so drunk as to be unconscious. Then his murderer deliber ately chopped his head off, and, cutting his body into small pieces, baked the most of it in a cook stove till it could not he distinguished from any other meat. He had got the body almost finished when he was interrupted. The head and one leg remained, and by these the crime was dis covered. The only motive for this horri ble crime was the displacement of the mur derer by the murdered man from a situa tion worth $1.50 per day. Fuchs, the mur derer, is a low German, and as complete a brute as was ever suffered to live. He manifests no feeling in the matter, and does not seem to realize that he has done any thing especially wrong. On the contrary, he was rather pleased when taken. to jail to find himself the object of' so much no tice. Close on the heels of this atrocity was the more than terrible murder of an entire family on Long Island. An old man named Skidmore, with three others, laborers, etc., lived in an out-of-the-way place. Near Deer-Park one night last week the house was burned down, and in the morning the charred remains of the four were found in the ruins. There can be no reasonable doubt but that the inmates were murdered, and the house fired to hide the atrocity ; and what adds horror to the crime is a tolerable well-supported conviction that the deed was done by very near relatives of the old man. He was a quarrelsome man, very fond of litigation, and was;at feud witk all his sons. The testimony tak en at the inquest points towards these sons as the criminals. But the witnesses were lowest of the low—so low, indeed, that nothing they could say - would be taken in a court of justice. What is the cause of this Niagara of irime at this time ? The hard times can got be charged with it, for in all these cases the motives were not gain. Among the classes far removed from want crime follows crime in rapid succession, and eve ry case seems more horrible than its pred ecessor. Where is the scientist who can give an explanation of the causes and who can suggest a . cure POLITICAL. The Liberal Republicans of the city con tinue to meet every few days, and resolve that they will continue to labor for the purification of the Government. and the restoration of integrity in officials. From the length of their resolutions, and the loudness of their bellow, those who did not know might suppose that there was actual ly such a party as the "Liberal Republi can," and might suppose that it had vital ity. Don't let it alarm you. When Gen. John Cochrane walks down the street, it is customary t. observe "there goes the Liberal Republican party." Gen John, and about a dozen otlie:s are all that are left of the men who killed poor old Hor ace Greely, and they would not be left if they were of sufficient importance to give an office, or any position of honor, in the Republican party to. They meet and re solve, and bellow, and have their speeches reported, as a means of advertising that they are still alive,—and in the market. They are trying to create the impression that they are strong enough to be worth buying and are horribly disappointed that neither of the dominant parties will put in a bid for them. It is a noticeable fact that after_ the Greeely fiasco the liberals still continued to believe that the Govern ment noed purifying, but that it would have, to be done through the old parties. Is is equally noticeable that each individ ual Liberal, quite as &ally believed that the party that could best rescue the Gov ernment from ruin was the one that could and would give him a good, warm place. It' he was in a Republican district he be lieved the Republican party to be the sal vation of the country, and if in a Demo cratic district., vice-versa. And in either case if he got his place, he subsided into as good a partizan as you ever saw. All that these blatherers want is recognition, which is exactly what they will not get. They are not worth it. TILE DEMOCRACY Of New York are in a bad way. A por Lion of them want Tilden for the Presidency on a hard-money platform, but unfortu nately they feel that in the West there is a strong party in favor of inflation, which would never forget the part he took against Allen, or rather the part he didn't take. He did not oppose Allen, but he was so cold toward him that lie did him more harm than if he had actively opposed him. Still, the Democracy of New York will present Tilden, and trust to the power of party drill to whip in the malcontents in the West, and South. Tilden will go into the Democratic Convention with more money behind him than any candidate yet spoken or, and we all know what money means in a Democratic convention. But he will not be nominated. The Democra cy of the rural districts are suspicious of the money power of New York, o they have a right to be. THE REPUBLICANS Of the city were in favor, very strongly, of Roscoe Conklin. But of late a very strong feeling is showing itself for Bristow, the Secretary of the Treasury. Bristow is making hosts of friends by his vigorous prosecution of the whisky swindlers, and every conviction that is procured sweeps him so much closer to the Presidential chair. If be is level-headed man that his friends say he is, he stands very close to the head. It would be very grateful to the staunch Republicans of Kentucky to have one of their number so honored, and as the Secretary is showing his fitness to rule over a few things, it is not. improbable that he may be called to rule over many TIIE SPRING TRADE. Spring trade in this city is already open, though the snow which put in a tardy ap pearance last night has given the fur deal ers a few days of grace. The large retail dealers have not time to stop and complain of the hard times and I doubt if any of them want to. They have fillind the way to abolish hard times by putting their goods down to selling prices They know exactly what Mr. Greeley meant when he said " the w?ty to resume is to resume." A. T. Stewart & Co. when questioned about the prospects for the season ahead, said that they never knew trade to be bet r, and that last month they had sent out more goods than ever before in th • same time. Their books for January showed 100.000 paekages delivered, an inerea, , e of 10,000 over the same month last year. They also report that they find collections easier, and little perceptible abatement in the quaniity of goods demanded. But utv derstan.l, this only applies to the very largest of the retailers—those who have capital enough to command and control trade. They get the cream of it, for :hey can deal in such goods as fit the elasows to whom all seasor.s are alike. All except these are sufferinc. The package trade last year, spite of the high postage was be tween 15,000 and 20 000 plekage4. It is astonishing haw popular this sy.tern of sending goods is at the Far Vest. i speak from porsonal observation. The women of Colorado and Wyoming do tot int,nd to look like Guys if they are a week by rail from the shops of Broadway. They get their samples and patterns from New York direct, and the consequence is that they are, as a rule, often better dressed - th..n their sisters nearer civilization, who take what the merchants chose to bring them. FAILURES, There were the usual number of faiinreu this week, and some of them unusually ugly. Sixty houses well known in trade went under, some large and some small The list showing Ai] that all branches of trade are represented. One leather house failed for PIANO, with assets of half that amount. This failure was the result. of bad debts, and undue credits. The ten dency a the past ten years has been to swell the volume of business, ami it h,ei led men to give carelessly. Now when the dark days are on us, they find colleetiims impossible, and the merchant sighs for his 'pods as he sees his drifts coming back protested for non-payment. One thing is certain—credit wiii be harder to proenre in New York this year than ever lieb.re The merchant finds it better to have his goods in his warehouse,than to have thew scattered over the country in the hands of men 0. ho may pay or may not. as they think best. Bring your money with you, good people, when you come to New York for goods. The gale of Wedneslay was one f the severest that ever alarmed New York. Out in the country a gale doesn't matter, but in a crowded city it is quite another thing, The seven-story buildings. stand ing alone towering in the air, the sign boards projecting over the side-walks, the immense cornices insecurely attach,d all combine to make a gale a thing to be dreaded ; for it is not nice when wafting home with your head down to the gate to have a sign board twenty feet long come whistling down upon you. Nor is it com fortable to have a building seven stories high fall upon you. There is as mach shammy building .;one in New York as in any other city, and it is not pleasant to tr to sleep with the waifs of your house sway ing. In short, a gale in this city is a ter ror, any way it can be taken. The wind mov ed at the rate of sixty six miles an hour ; and while no casualties are reported, there were many narrow escapes. A great many buildings were badly twisted, and thou sands of signs and cornices blown off'. THE SNOW That fell Thusday night cumbers the ground and is likely to. This is another infliction in a great city. The streets are filled with it ; is left to welt when the sun bees fit to shine ; as it holds all the filth of the city in solution, the nui,ance it is may be intagined. Hut it is a God-send to such of the poor as really want work. for thou sands of them are certain a job for a day at least, which will give them bread for a week. For the JOT RN, The Tramp Question It seems that this knotty question will nev er cease to rise, or it may be, simply. old ones coming out of the duck caves to which the past forces have driven them—'•history repeating itself." But let history lie in its stately se• pulchre, the duties of the hour furnish work enough for all to do. From the metropolis to the cabin under the hill the question is, -what snail be done with the tramp ?" It is the question of the press : lawyers, doctors and preachers talk of it, as sociations talk of it, directors of the poor. and poor directors, talk of it ; they meet in con ventions to talk of it, and ask legislators to talk of it, to pass acts of law to punish tramps. Such acts as the following : " The bill proviih s that if any person shall be found begging in this Commonwealth. he or she may he arrested, at the request of any citizen, and taken before a magistrate, and if the defendant he proven to be a vagrant, on his or her owe confes sion, or in view of the magistrate, or conies within the description of the vagrant act of Ish:ti, such vagrant shall be committed to labor for a term of not less than thirty days nor more than six months to the work-house, poor-house, or house of correc tion, or jolt. Whenever, in the judgment of the custodian of the institution in which such vagrant is confined, suitable labor cannot there be provi ded, he shhll have power to hind them out to Lard labor at any ether place, or to any other person, or corporation, and may compel the performance of labor for the term of which they have been eons ruitted. It is al, provi.le•l. that, should any per son, who is away from house, make app , i.-ition for assistance to re►-'h home, the overseers. county commissioners. or directors of the poor in ey hind him out to labor, and give him the earnings to expenses, increasing the amount, if ne,,ess,i-y, to a sum not exceeding twenty &Wars." May God forgive the man in who-e heart the spirit of the foregoing act originated. De deserves to live under oid King Pharoali and be compeiled to make bricks without either straw or clay. Does he belong to that crowd who, a few years ago, hunted black men, or escaped white men, in the dismal swamps or dreary wilderness of the South, with the cruel blood hound ? 'Tis a pity he did not, for then a gun of freedom would in all probability have been discharged in his front, and, instead of living to pen an ordinance of SLAVERY for white men, he would be calmly and gently sleeping under the grassy sod of the "Sunny South." Such a man cannot be remembered in the prayers of the great benevolent heart of the true and devoted Christian. The phil anthropic son of liberty, if his heart is capa ble of containing so much evil, can only wish that the bonds prescribed for others, by such a bard-hearted misanthrope, may, .with all Cseir virulence, recoil upon his own head. It is not the intention to defend laziness or willing vagrancy, or begging. or the so-called profession of tramping. lint humanity re quires defence. ThZ poor outcast, who i 4 so. not by his own action, who is driven from door to door and fed on what dogs refuse, who receives no refreshing food or rest in all his weary travels, nor a word of comfort from any creature in the form of men, requires de fence. IVlnit crime has he committed that lie must be arrested and put to "hard labor. - "smash ing stones on the streets, - er be bolo,' :o soulless individual orcorporation ? The birds of the air are invited to partake of your dainty feast, but he, who is your fellow mai. must be arrested, and for what ? 11-cause he is poor; because you have denied him a place to dis pose of all he owns—his labor—and to keep his useless soul and body together he begs your crumbs; he is counted a criminal before your ordinances and must he dealt with after the manner of your willing criminals. Shame upon a nation of freemen that cannot provide for the wants of its people without selling them into slavery. "Two hundred thousand strong' sleep un der the grassy plains of the gentle Southern clime that black men may be free. But the men who croaked loudest for that destruction of life, that the chains of slavery might be forever broken, who lost none of their own blood in the sacred cause, now ask for the enslavement of white men. Let the mantle of emir rherty w!leo we r .In no het.. r for •••,r wttivter-s t r 'han 'via , t them with !lie 1113971 ,1 C+ of 'he ehuve 7 if pm t w7e;V:i yonr venc - ance 'Ton I,4w hretiker4. thole in high MAW.., mho trample ynnr orallimanees hem:melt their Feet with imptenity, •lay hr &ay. mn4 whieb nata tion. are known to ill men. r.tt yaw More done thiq. ifors't•lferriae the rime ,if rntinr rya. ion+ heart. upon the poor wimp: .ton t tithe hoi.l of him wit!) yntir Nrroir;t: , r , p white row plaice with fetir th• »iint4 at the .fwar • one of whom if. a thoni4 iS4I tiWbehl Igor.. than all the tramp. that inteet yonr Inn& -From the time man', mind runeeth not to the contrary tYte law condentawd an m e n :wit lie was heard. ' I:nt we are tol.t the 'ramp a good-for-nothing. worth'''. ("flaw, who w ! not wilingly work e.t.a whew Its has portnnity. Wnat offer. 'Dome you mode to aim to work. pray? Why. my. a very pri.r.“ and well flrl gentleman. -I offered *tramp his breakfast if he w.oild .-at a cori of aretesi 0r me and he wonl.l not do it. so I let him zw. • We ventured to remark that "his breakfest nuts; have been a large one or the eori nt worm! very. mail. 24 the price and work not compare well." hat he was nothing hot a tramp. and beggary shoal.. an• h e particii:ar aborts piy. • An. is that en' Nothity.; bii• a tramp are 7 , 1,1 .nry gnat Oss ASA not a demora;ised man' cameo re's... that •-xhatAnever yo would that mon to ant jon,' kr.. and wo have never heniet th.. to t I•eing rrroosisoi.' +roil.' ..aya oar pom pon° friend. "I am not ohliv-f sn.tato the tramps that come is my way. and if my style 4nn't snit these hrtv welshes& iet Mem wo to work and earn 4ortethinggir thentael re*. ' tie.. talk is ..heap. It i. ..-try .0 :Ay Aue ine sarmed an.l clothed. - Heiwrier mach am" he .ailf as to gond treatrerat of the tramp. ' , re above it the rommol fireliwg tnerettie htm. F:vPry nne iy+ •• lot hem ffm ro yrs . *: Rig' who otr.ory work or AO...via hmt trno i:4 it i 4 111 mere •bor4ing rnrrnty iw telligrnnt ritiz.n know+ th*t the rewcNry i 4 fci4 01 awl tioAt M. w`to'rw+ Ant hi+ labor rn or!' -.moot •rnfl when I:lere : Merman.' for it. The Wh0 . ..! tramp qtiestion may. then. be !trimmed ap after this manner Toommad+ have been thrnwn not ,if i•nopinvfistitnt tea EirippaAti or on la i n• . of asavinfeetaring and building enterprises. Anil seeing no prnorirt of employment amend them. fathers. destroy to provide for their faiwiliee. some. lilt maathea f t to be a charge open their parents, have. with a forlorn hope. some tries) no neemas. others with hot lite... started to feet entaleywenet.— But. too soon, were retinerd to the :yenta* strait of begging inhsistetice. sod The ordeal through which hymen beings most pease to this ...million will drive weak meal to 'rime—. to steal. The very went of Cie, fool end rest which nature so morti rectoires. render - = mew miserable. weak and mean. mad makes Oirell, nnfit for any of the hinter soul noti;v- deities of 1-4,. The weak wanting ~n 114 11 1 .. wool-I prefer , ommittinz in the , herb than to he dr;ven fr , rtn afroo4t ever; +my he opcn.i. He tints fur Ts n.,1 either lionised tree wanted in this w horses*, ev• - y semi to 1.3n.1 Ilifitingit hint a:airiat .-nett ma n Tire or.jor:ty of tramp, are 7a-in;. stoat men, and animaget them many may leave been of bed rharacter error, tivey ;tar...l nw theft worthless mi44ion. itey rimy 'tire ht..'" worthless vagabeinds. er peartiival thieves he. fore entering the tramp ho.itavai. hot the ma jority have started nett with the hope, Cad_ ing employment. tsheo:d sorb he made to hear the penalty of yoor criminal ordinances hf•fi.:re they have ir:vi r,ppf i r!inity were Enilty of nn granter 'rime Man poeterty. or to satisfy their Irintrer silted for A lOW* of bread ? Piii.n yon hart. elazbt s trimpinz poni=h bir, 34 ynnr hot let not your iron ro , i full %pnrt h;ni ;uss the courage and marhnad *. 1.: 'or what be wants rather than +teal. But what shall be dose with the tromp ' FF it becoming an unbearable winsome.. h• um.* be put out of the way. most he pot to work. We will not disairrse with yon as to pitting the tramp to work. tint *ppn:• tw , Tert , rtitnr slavery. When yon hay. pin the :rwap th-n" your process whs• tines be row nut' othrWly a ragged. worth:ego tramp. just as he went .a. except *l.ttle more h.tniene , l 111 , fIt40: in the next town a* indigent al before, and be put Cirough tour process Aram, arid • YOU have KA h int hack . t 1 whorl. be Wool:. be mutt again go 'brooch roar pries*: ..e make a wholesale beggar of blrnoelf. iaA other words, a pauper. anal be enpr.rar.l I+7 rshlie charity. Socha plan is hat a stapvl absurdity. The tramp should and Ma:ft woes, lint how it he to obtain work when the 'losers ore ern against him on every side' Ne east's,. enter your house, or workshop. or 11.1 d. if,- lees you want him. He Cannot start Co. bead furnace ire, of your load. He eartn-it roinnet yon to purchase hit handiwork withont your will. Then how ig he to obtain rourdore...o that trampinir may not he nervimiry rier bnt one reasonahie way, an.! that ;70 1r those wbo bare the meant to begin sorb 'a terpri,el and improvemento so will provide work for all williag band* to do. The nits men mutt be employed by those who have enough and to 'pare. Whoa tbe tramp is of fered constant work, at reaeneat4a pay. sea he voluntari.y refuses, he is Shen iwyserhesse without my defence. Rot doOt nrgoanair system of slavcry that may be so tt a ••letting oat of water." hundred veers hen's son may look down frrqn heaven ammo a grandion tramping for a piece of brood, or might p..vii bly look up. or around. for a lisentoio of cool ing beverage. Let every :ramp be .topped where he :• lasi! found and made to fire 3 fitil itreonnt of biro velf and of hi. ahrefe, wh.eh matemewts nosy be verified in a few day 4 by /et„er. or in a row hour. by telegraph. If he prove. in he spool wanderer. bin !Ifni,. 4. (Are, hle pay. for a month or tw o . if be r e il o ,4ost to work, or found to he a hail tramp. he is then at your merry. to 40 with n un so rim think hest. Rut nntil that time. marl has as a man. even though he if a tramp. sad though the liowiimr world may im.t doses at you for it. ifonr dreams will be more photo. fhin't look up the hardest li.hor ! WS rrs find for your wayward tramp. but !nit if a - it tie. and thereby vein rimy ••ronveet a Money from the error of hi 4 way. and yea banw ite reward. Ton *ay there i 4 expense in all Ibis. S o there it . hot we rinnnt tell yoo of any plan that ir4 cheaper. nor of any plan by whir.: even flog" e.in he fed without eoven.... rHILA TA Boric. eduration3l Departawst C.•ll.lrictowi hy J. hiTt‘ KKnt , r • rirr..rn 01 -.menu , ati••r••• to • •-•4vruprir 0t0r.014 ,•••• - Note-Book lotting:.' i'brt..r torn-hip rontains ..x 4rise-o; hosises : three which are eomparativel: new, and 7,re Iz os.d. roustOrtalde. sum p (boos hotkses The rensatniw; thr-e ar.• considerably an.! --os give place to now 0n.... Not more than half of tLeso have suitable Trottrols attached. : 4 ,h...A boil lings should be pot wher..• Laze sad suitable play groonds emits! be -eel:stmt. This would prevent many comp:Janos against scholars for trespas.sing on private property attacent to school homes. The most suitable school site i n th e ifs. triet is at Barre e. The house wawa' ns beautiful grove, which is Lopt frce and other ob,4trist-towm Ito Tara is level. never becom-s middy ami es sur rounded by a fenee. The "Blue Spring - h-oLse is parpprimil with Bancroft furniture. the - fano?" sui "Ridge" houscs have a ID link'''. 4 home manufacture. while the furstittsre in the remaining !looses scarce st...serree lbw name. Some of the schools are pretty well sup plied with apparatus, but others lack is this particular. A sufficient ansinnt good black board Aurface is not found is all. The work done in dor sehosto or this district ii. on the whole. quite ontisfaetary The care and attention given t., the pri mary pupils is a noticeible feature of tie instruction given i n the veheskt. pnpi;.s are tatiAt to think and to Tire ex pression to their Wens. The Adkins et "general exercises" is recommended to r ir VIIIMIIPP 4n, w.- sir..4v 71..i50 I %.4w.-4 with rw l ,..ms duo ttrlelt•-t prrriitt,l pr , mtpeove lowsolt Tito roritatiner ow. sooly ; pirim.ll with s -walaireas in Elisio'ilry lip silo 4 oft aribiak Thy pearl. riftemerier begiatitew r , ..t., prolise+ issoll syrisre ; ssi *am 440 1.. vs«. tit.. irrititimes 111111111111111/ 4 mw.se ar.e.ho &pawl is oar tali% 77. sr', sot singoo4 to? Ahemben sivi retries so covnilly or it It i. T. be *Una Ilia rebrer oulliesse i. , i:i.triett is an•• a • rept, valiseal in tito mforstiois so it .. Nom Lie so Irv* f.s , ass *Promo issoronot Abe pia sft ... , v0...r0r4 II WA poi wort. % lezawiree fa .roprzio ▪ all .antrhit ••••• taP , op • a. a larxr •islmaismal oirenta•rig row rn...1 0 The r•oor 40.5. pimil Sy thy firm •elia..l. ao surimplimi powni farwinir.. The rommasig Il* its ism. bore latomit maim .164%• .04 mar. Snob r nae ki• Ames iar. *•••04*-.1 avaar. 4 Martlamorti ealever gem mem ill • irtsb s 4as Ad sopa ofliPik • the ammo 4 . I wadi isms mama that el.. voimao. Pio pal via ie wad foam. swil limy I spiones fr•aa VI. 4e4 , 44 t. the aollarei boom ire. I hump mot f+t siliftp4 Ar► Timmy aps is sue r►, a • aim *Paw OD ado.r. Ives+, Tib• am 4. 404 obitesilly 2 1 6,«Prii poo* illeirove slam awl she inv.ump .41borr ~rag 11/041,1114 .at awl swim,. Js owl sad vow. p.o , tr. 4 A. rirl. tows. TnerbreP owiumermiss swig pArso.o. Tho srk wwJ 0 41...1 sire An Alvt4 in 1 1 40 map /r-et awl ,r d 1 syrsowni pow %rums', '4 (limply sea r.erttiv. , i, ow prviesi e-ti Porto -*rtarty awl olofensi n. Aoriptiam sss.t irk lieTT Ticip ow* Rev Sire sod -latweitor We mry.rr•-i nwn ;so al die Hwy mberoGiesoi oestiet sele Uhl is goo "tomer % weeepirr 4 awn yea pos. row ow.. prows& kit at wolitrato ow Moot Mio 'rmr2or zoo *.l digippoo4 r•4l/libiw immtorms woe .vielieutod y tbv.e. ie "- towhee,. 1i -.nip. t.orashrp hew f:ost .rburir, "Re* Gs , Ppr. - arl filibbror bow, se nearly sea. ?No Tr"-iri-ays sot pat iv meow ierzr, "HI restrer.i. sari limegail si 'may ...ariberb ter blew re :fbradyrreviie i. •iller. sari ow lOW fir Irralleild. bee i• lie has repair."' saes or& rimier seas sea MM. Ihrtabk. Tbr Over* grind orrefirs Mart errromme ebserb WNW* se Prow Cr...b. The rums ID am los re the inns& sod NI wisteria prryipr mow at emseils. n • foritititr. i w -e1 tor...* is briar. se& low it i. • itott./. 104 11.0. 314 , Aorrir r. its it. 'wan: 4 mot' bereaarvi. I urt •••rty s.. r.p , rt s :aria xproraitss 'ft •ho 41' :hire , fistrut. A Writ b.mri in nay erlio.ni_ swot s Or! Eire* rib .1%." th.." sa the sppwrster f mt.! qs ii+err• The few -hers kir.- •istow work , es 31410 s thew w rsi r.sesrs wrst sort ittrats TT , . - Tit.o ;.-.• 2:- , --12Fit2...-o otwi 2 , •-• 220.: ,arre.t. !tweeteitto wh-so:we fooribere 1.-e l owerly that' easy , telows• uwaromeloyns die musty. t whirls yin *mho aseresto kange'l frr t irrobit enaloir I. 4 Its schemer The. rb•-•sply , tie , i, 14 •sati..nbir,a:v g X lrSeat. I !!is efikif :hip «sip .Yst .0444 is it* 4iserpiistry 1P- 4 - timerait. meiradr. Merit t”rt. ,issrpriis. db. assoirjej rilrer4 but :is Stow ,Cwistorr pourtimior 0 at 0140......1 awl vrbutro iby imatirt imatir4. 31Nj !h. Law by lb* Amity 4 h ir -r its.4orto row Arr. mental 314 'wrings. y fasV• 4ill tb.tr isevissimuto it die +. wi Itarlor 311 , 4 Asiirries. yos is bra inantnir a et , aboutv piiy niiiirsyssinis Ass -gnialimati 314sfai Amen". to *lrv. P4sis h* it "'— Jaffa Lark,. a Islwingb laa ao. wryiatar. At, rbs an ear innarinnor at breve& thr•noz It OW var.iseur wow., vv.. ?0 fi.rre at an mania g abalmaia 4tat.seirmt anti f.'s.", Tins * rival • ere telisiuis sae! 1.01P310. nal bow nrenintinaind jar .yraihaPA. sail by ire Arrasaustivaa daaketaima from it dar &maw at ph** aphissi aerataaty boa bp.", Tbv zr-,A4 :rutaspreb Afillastpirritro bat 'inns Like inn,/ ausely r Ow turie. atro eirAta tam itllnkr.llll, log WOO 111116. evatapia.br...Am ham* beim sausoy VINIPN O ”A. , •Aataima. **orb se tb.aa vortope , i by 8rrt.4.7 ARP P7440410M0 111 awls 21114 J V rium... bat ch.,. Iwo *seriANA .astapir *tem aaergi, ev%ihooli c imaerfaar rat:..--attattwa rosy sod isteiiertomi 14111111PINIII. beg poi 4so raieceal wider. The isms's" lentatons fr.* Rare 4oro art pre*, 4 na4 ..lr Pt r"11.4•4411101. ipso sow iiireer. T • 04 . lbeik witia h3t II ; , h*lsho* .r.eregres.z is. InwiN•roer ••#* N .11.1mwss War parst, • silostra. 4 n 11111.4 !We. rosaries. hnt :t 11* -4 , 1**4 v* * Mir • the eatiriii."..or in the intheistietty rho. Way !gen-phone sal way be forty viaourd as • estwxydspount pralusetiost ..sr was tier throe Um ***Pliilt, hat !ho. prostreob b." me to the ormesylby liei-x* hies pisrlials-cao slob" weds the Vol fiat eiseowaoye has el 1.1.4.".1 serift.im greys - *e dirrowl ,,pamnst.. t%r esoßatirst.. the high la ..r kn.. 4 rawatualia. itathoremic saw. TL pie r i.-ist it is werreedeoi *Arra aholphrihme liter faliefi Tb. parr phrase* ormettle pheaworros endow* referraels to rohicOmmeo isson , pip.& fail srsL dose. that trier thosiocy i. sot isemorso tem with *star• ft. war ths. 434 Seiko sea 41 moo escarole el aiimer. avid rw!imialse foram; has peipptermall web atieorw powers that the asitasee al Awe* l'hrost has anehlae s. OWN frog, the pa crro. if wirer*, bat it rater tetaktooi and wromehesei by 4 Am solbsowimr, Metayercis re bus limbs sire it.. bits Iseillratine if seirmall yinismook 104 lb* onshiert ima ham solosueoll as the bre .4 acme by it. meliktude of 411444 ts Tbs. physsols i airsses 115. early Awes the result* 4 wawa .slorswatioro. ha sum- Evariass. Mammal. bee his atom saws atressavtlybe drift 44Ply .tposmil by sore estris.44 obarrrati.eo. Rit introseht see lone t std with •iii Jg. NO. 7.
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