The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, January 03, 1856, Image 1

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

    i; •. ; . - i
• iiiii . -.- .•'. .; 7i i',-.':': , ,1, ?„ 7 :-..-.. - --... q . r. ,. i..,;.?. :7, --::::*.• .2....-- -::,--• r :::- : ''. i 7 :-. . 77 -7. '1 , 7: . :: ti -T. - :- F : : -.- .. --,- = 7 - , ..4'
_____...-..........m0inumm0r ......._ _
. \
..,, • .
. . , . .
, ~ . - • . . . , -' 1; ' - ''... • ' - •y - , - i l'' , ,'• •‘-'l->4.1 7 !?4•••;4•:.: , •,;., - •, ,, $ -,'•:. 5 . , - ; , .
_. • ~,. ~.,.-.. , ---. ~ -,,,
1 • • .
•‘.
. •
• .
. . . •
• . 1 : - . ,
...
.. 1 ,
__ • -,,,,. • -1 4. 1 - ~ • -.... 1 -:_ , , , ,'..V.i' , .: •-• .;.•.-., -;- 7 - -. :-•.••• -
~-, „. - -
:,. .., 'r'. ~ t!,2. - 1, 4,7_ ,
; . . . .
• • . .
• -1 -4....' , . ,-- - ,: , . ; f r. .' e • Z.r.-r,i. - ',... •-, . - • • • . .-•, .• - 1 • , • . r -,
' H
i 1 '• - : • -
I ,
. • ,
.. . .
. : •
• ,a • , . . i s, •, -
. , ..„
.. . •
... . .
• .
' , ‘,. t - . „-,. - t 0 4 r.::, . , „:_,-• ~ i k
,1 , ...., f; ~,, i . , ~ , , ~
, _ „,..., -...„ •
' •
. .
~. • .
. I ,' A • ' N 111 i 1 . : ~..............„..,..._
•
! 1 •
. •
1 . , dgp /*"110141?
"f t
• „ - . . -' .. . .-
. - !
- . A 4 lllllllllllli
'.
_ I j t. '... • .' ~. : . .
, .
, .
• .
.. . :. .7,. X, ' l. !,., ~.., ..
t. „ ~ : ';
'.
.:' . .. ' '..., '.•
.-!, ..-• / .' - ~:' 7 . -.. : .-. ..-....:_ ' ;4" --.
-- ,- '-• .... , .
. . ... •
' . 1 i ..• .
i . . - • ~.. ~ . . _ ,
!• ' . •
. _ 7,.
1 9,t4 . .. tliuse,-,Vii,blisq-:,
CARRIER'S
Was getting cold and weary, for the wind howled loud and drea4
And the draught along .the 'doorsill 01104)k my carpet on , the lloor,l
In my arm-chßjr I was napping, when I heard a tin& of tapping,
I It;ri in other wOrdtt, a
,tapping, tappirig at my chamber door;
It is Kitty; with the settale" said at my chamber door, 1-
, - Only this and nothing mom!'
. • .
, .
. • . •
. .
AX I diPtinctiT I remeniher, 'twas the last night in December•
!When I poked , each dying-ember glitutnerM dimmer than b efore; '
* I I may waithere till to-morrow" I bad said; in rige and ,sort ow,
.i•
'l l Ere i' hi.ar ter from the kitchen mounting to tite_upper . floor,
Front the far bick-huilding kitchen mourning to the upper floor, 1'
Tapping at my'ehamber 'door I" 1:
• I '
. ~ ~.:
And thelinstling—sioliuncertain— ? f my worsted window curtain,
IThrilled toe, filled me with a feeling that I never cilt - betore ; •
And. istoniiiied at the. of 'lnv heart., I sto•id riiixtatinni
_,.„ but'- ,- ,
with
the beating• .„ . 1 .. .
1 7ns Kate,
Kitty, with afresh-tilled scuttle tapping at tnY el-,ain!wr door'
I - - This it is, and nOtliing more I -
I I • . 'i .
• .
,
Presentlymy sou' grew - stronger, hesitating then, in longer; -
1 111 Kitty'"lsaid I " rati`t,yotz come in wip,oe; I,vn•k;ll rz it the d oor 1,
1 , wits on ,the'point of nappiiig %Olen you 1a..,',1, ! . me, wiill• your rapping;
!W I hat's the, use of standiul: tapping, ta:pping at my chamber door 17
.
;But" as Kitty made-uo answer, here I o.puti..td wide the, door—
:k i . - !Du rl:n:,.z th,:ye and - nothino , more. •
,
1 ...\. • ,
.
Peep into the darknesq peering.l,->ng FstOod thAre wontleting. fearing;
IVondering.if indeed liw-is Kitty I Ito..irti tapplocr there before; •
But the ilell e _ e wag iinbrokam - and tin: ,:tillues- g%ve no toki.n ;
1u hen 1 i t Lallekoet ".Kiify ! Kitty'" all. was iiklier than before; --
13ut. an echo down the staiwase -whispered "Ki.t-tv" o'er and o'er•--,,
- i 1
Merely this, aiiltiollilng More.
I .
•• , • .
t . ,
ad; into mv,cliamber turninti. to mylrrata !en burning,
Soon heart azain a tapping., , omptvirtr 1. , 11 , 1er thanll...fore;
14 'One tv.3111 think".sairi •• A.tnething tupping at my windo4
• lattiee
•
Tt at the ‘'Yind :done thercrit•i-:, for !'ve heft/..1 hefore•
,
the sa , dr a 7 i:t's„(•l” ,, M with-nit explore,.
'Ti, 11:e wind and nothing more."'
;.1
. . . .
</pen her i ej fling the shutter, wl:en many a flirt nni flutter,
hi there stepped an oil aequaintanee of smite pleasant days a yore;
1 .2T0t the least oheiNance t,nacle ire, not.a motnel:t stopped or stayed
1 ..: 14; •.• ' '
.i . .
V
'Bo+ withimien of lord , or lady strole.aeross My chamber floor,
~
Took a.seat upon the ottoman -Otis F:i.le tity eltamher door,
• , Sat, an,l groaned, and nothingmore..,
thht:
the g
" You'd
You
. re
ut be
ancient Mend begoilinz, my had spirits into smiling
Ye and stern •detortup of the countenance he wore,
- ),k better shorn .and Shaven" kohl sal4 1. f or I' m no craven ,;
'lnd me of a raven, TriNakit,t; strere beside me door—"
'nok his head'and Inuitered, through his beird that swept'
,e flop;,
1 -
? "Nevermore, all, nevermore!"
w , I I
as glad to liave persiaded hini at least to speAlc out plainly,
Thott , rh 1 is 'answer littleitne4ing—little ielevancv bone;
c, b , .. , .
or wee. unfit help agr4iov'tliat to any human being,
'Tis unpleacant to heholl, a riieJul beside one's, chatnher door, • .
Seated . o4 the velvet ottom an , beside one': chamber door -,
,
- Groaninot ntruaming,evertilkver,
- - - 1- 5 ...:„;„..,„': 11 1 , - ,4,,:,4-;....e.. -; ,-- ' --",,„ . = .:,:rri ~,- .f - - Jr---
\I
_
1 ,..,
But my finest , still sitting 10n..1y in that . ,44;tant nook, spate billy,
,
That one !wont, as if his soul in that one word he !lit! outpotir 1
Not another word lie.;_tittert.,d,and sotnewhai al.asheti 1 stuttered,
. 1 1
JOst above my breath I muttered, " It, is ilalf past ten or more; !'
ill you odge here, and take bit.i.lfast,n3 you've often done before,
.. .
. But he ar„swered "nevermore 1"
,
ratted at the stillness brolic-n b y reply So hoorktly spoken a ,
h," taid!!, " tbatword you utter, - sir, !your only stack and store 1
f ri.% oth'er Ito you ,master ?—has unmerciful Disaster
' 5
, hained yGur tongue that oneo went faster, that von mutter o'er
;..
#na o'er, •
I tbe dirge of bope, that melaneholly burden bore,
• Nevermore--oh nevermore !"
But - his stiangenea still begiiiiing my vexation into smiling, •
Slraight lu - heeled a cushioned seat in front of that hide the door;
up4n the /velvet sinking, I betook myself to linkint ,
:F ! iincy unto fancy, thinking what this ancient friend of yore,
_What this silent, singular, beaided,-sad, eccentric friend of yore,
Ifeant, in croaking uNcrertnore."
bus I sat engaged in guessing big no t liable expresaing
To my ricst.',,Fhose:Cyea,. cold glancing, frOze my 'bosom's; inroad
core,
, is, and.niore rsat diVining, while he leant, in st.tte reelininz,
i n the cushions velvet „lining by the lamplight gilded o'er,
ut whose violet velvet lining by. the lamplight gilded o'er,
..„_,.., •
I . - . Ile shall 'rites% oh beverniore!
melhought, tha air grew denser,
_perfumed, train an unseen
~„
censer;
ad a sonnd is if or fokfalls tinkled on•mr eLainher floor; • 7
• nelent friend," I cried, " Heaven leht - tbeelr To my - hearth lied
Heaven sent thee
•et s year ago. - Content thee':—bide here with me as of yore,
'e've had pleasantl'imes toi•-ther 1--Iridt: here with , me as of yore."
But he xlls , ve're.-1- Nevermwe 1"
. . .
f," PALI I, ":thou brmmest evi!. .neither no el Quite tior
,45
Ut a thiefg bl e nded nature, form . .Atd grovel unto soar--
itrweleome thee'un.duanted, minding me of joys eitelianted,
• this hOroe by; {memory hauntekl,Ahou brooght me oft before.
• 2 . ilc and plainly tell rthineetrand. ss Yho:i bast before:—
Its ush,"said I," that word of e....il : 7\41 zn,- , , is.it si4rite or devil,
1 .
aver the curtain% at air win.low -cm? ilk.'n - i-"i:4::t it• pa.,t:ny door?
is as if i some ',on ow- lad t. Ti . , liiri , -,:r; , :;, 1 1, gT,;,,tly inaidtn
!gbinenr the sbailes of Ai..kim- I .lli.rh:ly 01,4 toy chamber finor,
..r the siiin y shades of Aide:in—lightly trod my chill:her "floor,
\ • Aireepinm curtly, " Nevermore!"
.
I that *aril oursigh oti)iirting I" shrieked I, :4's my guest, upstart-
er, gr4er, colder, Rt.-Incr. strode iteross.the floor
ot a 't i cgli look in token_ thAt some bitter words I've spoken,
d some protnises.l've broken are forgiven If. Speak once morel
rk, theibell tstrikesi twelve 'Tis • mitlnigb t. 'Tarry with `me, I
itniAore."
•
'1 • • ,
his image, never aitLino., when I'm sitting, when I'm sitting,
the violetdvelv s t ent,ltions, piled beiidelny,elutud A r door,
ads with dint eyit full of dreaming turned tipon me in the,gleatn• la h
gojdec iatOPtight streamintv soft Items* mychambecli•xte—,,
"I hay; w r o n ged thesome. 1 1 '110j:to bsp
, • ''
k
, -
' I
°
~I CRESS.
flu be v.. - 13i*F.Jetl- " vertuore
ti Then he shouted gevermore !"
- Pad ho mows a Nowise fl"
IA WEEKLY'
Pisedlanonts.
f•
,i A Wonderful Nape--1777.. -:
- . •
Ott the hanks of. the' beautiful Mohawk.
1, i
where the town of /tome now -stands, striod,
41'01 ,::.
4On Revolution, a Otroilk fortiSeatitak
er '; teal,th in eoiniinieation between the Mo
lm '.k. Vallee and Lake Okario, and te- pro
w' i ;the Indian trade. ,Nt the opening (tithe
en
, I tek ta.ttween the coh.nlieS anti the Mother
1 1 ,.
e - titty, Eort Stan Wilt wris almost in . ruin.,
Si , 'lied as it was at that{ - time, ou • the ex
tr ii . n: outskirts of the white settlements, it
wii , i'ati important post, yi4 it was not. tmtil
the spritig of 1777,..that it was repaired lby
. G4ii. Schuyler in whose name .it was :then
. ,
cli tened. - .
Early in the spring of that .year, .I'llayen
40g-ea, oulliant, the chief Sueltent at : the
Sii Nations, made his apPearanee in the val
lek.Of the' Mohawk, with 4 large body urivar-
Tiois, and from his own tAite s .sions,it likaine
evitpktit that the Indians had la..•ti induced by
the:British to take up the hatchet in their
conte4t, and that the settlements in that.bean
tit7til region of the country would be the oh
• It . C ; - •t he ri
jeel: of the a , sau . knives.% saw , ...eces
. :
say:of protoeting the northern anti western
fro n tiers, au.!Gen. &limier wits directed_ to
reOlir F' , .rt Simi wix, andereet others, should
he 'leen': it necessary: COL Dayton was de
tai ('' ,, ty Sitliti:er to Fort Stanw Ix. It - was
w 4
.1. 1
chi I t
- f4 g ,0,1!, ! ,.., of the tlattrer, xrld r .l o .pi s io g
the Ow, 'Whom. he hated ttstit the ardent nu
t r Of trt flow ler ;ma O. 1; t egg st :wed from the
:fort one Morning in colni4tny with three cotn;•
,rad' ~,, for the purpose of shooting game. Otte
of InS comitole, wa, a b o y *hoot thirteen, I.
ihollame;of Wilson,who.l fr9m the fear that
t he3might meet with Itidiatyt {+• s sent Nick
t o ti e fort. He lived to bectoneettsign in the
Ant )icani Misty, and 4 the surrender.. of
Cut i!Wallk Was appointedite receive. the coi
tirs f the various British. regiments. . .
fik-g6r and the two _soldiers, 'relieved of the:
ex t irf the boy, proceeded :to :the neigTh, or
nig .. ' i odds, 1 where they entered with zest epou
the ',Urstaitof gaine. , They 'had been thui en:
.g4:...1 1 '1 but a short time wit...n, mittultftneously•
the
.rackof three rifles, sbuuding - almost , 4S
(lac : iiLiight ' t 1nttu...4414 1 ,46 314 ~tnik. srrl : . ,
t
rlie ' were kit 1 , 74 cm! ii gi ttind
.a ba 1 which, pr.a.e.:l tiot.4gli his' lett sottrintt;
his +ily,-arq Le ieil to the ground, seriously
1
•antlArtngeronsly %vomit - lull.. Raising liitriseif
.on I l'A artn,he Tooke,: aronnd for Iris comrade,
and S'aw an Indian in theiftet of scalping. one
of tf 'Om, another beasittg oil in triumph the
t
ice trophy of the second,. while, at : the
slim
i ig
Oinotnetit that he mailethis discovery the
leay.'' parted, and x Child redskin - . warrior,
mitl,laCe Sttleated With I hii war paint', hi,
beat - -4t.atked with ferrthers, and Iris tomahawk •
rai". rtudied'upon Itim.l. L . Ile succeeded in '
dal'}iig th e first blow, touted at las head,'
Withij took effect in his tiack,intlicting a deep
'won I. The second and third were more
sure' iend fth with cru-lti f og force on the fore
t •
part. ' his head, .and he sank into insensibili
ty. • .;:i . . - 1
. B .lw long he remained in that condition he
------- 01,able to tell, but when he awoke to con
sitesshe was sulTeritor intense acute'
i e'
[7.l 4 'n
. Ills head, and fo.undthat h i s . flog—a
i f *.uteli tenter that' had Iteconlyanied
;was licking his .wOunds. Ile drove him
d for the sako . of easing the.stuarting of
luntls, he, after incredible ezertion, awl'
svikti;
rain:
smni
him
Of,"
his
faint; fag twire on the way, -- ttranaged to crawl
to /1 body of one of 164 companion-, upon
whicithe i t tid his heaii, anti here he expected
to di % Ms faithful thati,,ineantitne, expressed
a syr iutthynlitiost littit4ti, and by whining,
barki rig, Mei lickincs hisl . 'wontels,*ndetteored
in hi Way to show ' 7 'his jde-ire, to relieve his
mastt i s sufferings. Int;tetei of .11:is:however
be ad id. intensely to laiS• pain sby • irritating
and it !laming, in , tead -of soothing his heti&
Hopit g to rid . liiinst.-11011 the animal, and die
1 1
'in pet ;t., he said to Itimi: "•11 you think s o
timeltV me why don't ion go for help ?" As
if end ' - Wed with reason for the occasion- the
6,,,e,
(log . tut..! to understaitd biro, and !started'
off to4tird the fort. At the distance of a mile
in thai.' t direetion he cattle upon two-men who
were 4ping. Rotating tip to thent,he %taught
thetri Lee their clothe.; with his teeth, .• pulling !
and qgging at theirgarnientsond then run
ning to the direction . : ofl!the woods, looking
hack tOssee if they follo..ed him. Their gist
feelitig was :one of fear; thinking pet hap.;
'that Q:;' vitiinal Was tnad.and it was some lit
tie tittiQ !write!! they .se ; ene,l to -understand ,
;lie i•ng,'!-• : 1.--itt- that. 112ev...li o uld follow hint.
T1 , ,,, rk - :6,1 ...-, at;. 1-tst, ttt-i 1: .••,• th : e flitilliti
I.4:l'.ff,tiriy , !::ttc , .:.-i a!,11(:• . :1:-!-0-1 I•ith j,,.--•
R.:A:l:it:2: i•-•!;:r.'i, 'r•l-.4 ':... , 11 :I" . .reetly t0'..‘11,1
the v:4,1 , ...! , ..,•. , :' :old ;hilt 1.:okil;•*;•ack to , c•-.. 1 •
if de•via‘ete (-•,to',:1 ;; •. i .
- i- •
Aftef gettml., -;;Ilit.: little diz.;:ince, into the
il t'l '1 I 'i t. ill i e .4 i Ile c. •re 7-5, t boy bee:aril.. (earl al
of Inittiri t s, :p u tt taking Coutetel of their fears
were at out to turn b; .- Theext.itettut rlf
the d o
. was now extr.....ttle. • He danced about
1
thcat i , n st : perfOt fever :! - ,r anxiety; pair'.: - at
their (+Stites, ran before, barked. and fitting
down op' his 1111 1 Mo...hes give. utterance to one
of the =e lon_► irrourtiftd iltirwls,'which all have
heard hut wide!, none eau descrihe; anti anal-
ly, findirm they`, were trOont to return, he ac-
-tuallyjOinptsl upon then: , and endeavored to
pu4h thetn in the,iiireetton he desired they
should ko. No; one eonlit I►ehal4 his actions:
—whirl) lackefronly language to express the
inteusift: of his !deSire-4-without, feeling'that
mail& fling urgent deurtuded their pre--eue.o in
the deist recessett of alai atoo44,and they final
iv ciinal!Oe-1 toluliow ao,l*st* the end of it.
HoW(MOdun vital the eliangiiin the action of
the and at 1 :He Tao around them,; &nee d .
and ea red, and flaked their handl.. lookinx•
tip intti!their faces with ant+ a look-or:grafi
tude•as titnply repaititlintn for: the apparent
ritdt.they run. '.. ... : , •
- • -
7.,1n !hitt way, he led theta to ; where lay .hi,
nofsixt" . oil)La master, and the noirrei of ibis,
tie aaeledei. - Thiy:situaliW rioc
y ipiiia
~OUlliaL-DEVOTED- TO . POLITICS, NEWS, FITERATUBE, it.f , ;4lCUL i 5C
• •
IR, Intro*, ,%iazquttlai
•
hip watz engaged,. in lenttnexilon with the
n County 'militia, Anit the incident I am_
t to relatteneencre.i.
te eolinnandant of 'me of OW .C.011111:1011es
Was Cairlaia.th'ilrg, a young wan
thle a : peartittev, ;a t & l i ti tt
vt•ith
:.4 1 11 ; .!-NN ,: . 'l;3'
1,, ti4, , ,,!; g1,i-‘,l:h lick% ::It (11'
1:17y.1 througl
t*itlt,tanditta tiro immediate vicinity ot
t,
' I. .!
, t ,i ; ,, f ,..., O w bilika l • 11/ i &LIM,. irtrti4:s wer e
'tently watching for dpo , rtuitities to cut
ra tz -r.ders from the fl , arricna, and et en .
,_,
TeR, Wero./tut. o‘enapttfrom &ail] by tite
'tt,4•Lat::.: .v..:alping knzfe. . .
na Veniek: C trs u QrHii triom
them, and perceiving lifelti_ : the.Oriptaitt, thei
immedinte.ly procee4l It . t::Torm. a litter
.to
convey him to the fort.,..*T,ltia they did by cut-.
'
tiny two long poles, and!laying boughs iiii . O k
them, upon which they'Oat*fnliy laid hislh
tetn,ate form,ind afterhNing the- -bodies of
the others by the side of it4ecnyed trunk un•
mil they. could return, for.O•tu,..- they . starto
for the fort. Dr. ThateheW" . hisjourttal:riaie
" Ile was a rnioit• frighthi s'Oetatele, - -Tlin:
4
whole of big scalp was 1 t; in tiro pia.:
ces, on the fore part of t., a 7•:0tt , *347
hawk had pc' nett/tied hist A ;
, ICIM
..wits . a
wound on his pack with tri*ti „,sluirp . itt7
strument; besides a wetiiistE . :', a t m with a
. ~._ .
~.
musket Bali. . ' . -;,_ .
,*, .- -. ,
jo
Of course no hopes .w , 'le :eojetps.
n
recovery, butoontmry t i . 7.litt ,! 7 1x$ctii,
Lions, he rallied, and altb t righ, ili*: rs.. the
period of many mouths Ittivnt StretB44 up.
on an invalid's couch, hes . inttrerea a lminrod
deaths,. yet he did finally recover : and live d 4
convit.ceing AvitL:.ss of te laul,ality of 'the
savag,". red man. Ilk dot; by who ; , e means
his life had been preserve;l; was ever after hiii
dearest amid MoA cherislu,sl friend.
Capture of Wianiet;:fau Westouann•
Shari. bay, Faroc h eislands. •
It was a most curious . ,sight, and the scen
ery was well caleulated to set it off to ad
vantage. The bay is about three long,
by. three ipariets of a mile broad, and stir-.
rounded .by step rugge;- mquutains, which
looked Li:afield:lily gloomy in the somber'
twilight, :Between the,Whalrev and the out
let. to the sea, fully sixty; ate: were eellecte.l
together, with erews tit r eight Alen - each,
who were lying lazily • on - their . oars ; while
!emi, a "hundred native 4 nit either side were
emir!. i! ed in draegi •;..net Korn,.
rive. 1,,0 1 ,11, ! .I yards lote4'aer ,, ss./ . oe . entratt ee *
11,is net t" lady used :in li' , .!sturtunshavtt,
whete there ate no sh - tieg, shallows liven
the . !vhale ; ; it is, of co ur se ,
"to cateli t_la.nt in, flu no net
eiedil be made sufficiently strong; hut it is
suppes e d to oetard their' e -, cape when thee
I attempt to get. out to The boats were
:he Led:nary ones is dommen the only
iiitfereLee lotion being that they
had now lances shirk -Upright, like masts, at
the stem • and stea ls,, 110(1 al lac itoi to tlic
tkIW4S by several . f)alrestis of ripe.
More beats : cattle d COI4I - 1114 in (Or some
time after our, arrival, tetitil, at eleven„O'clock
we-counted the number up to ninety.; so
that, including ,the ineuon : shore, !rt. fewer
than eight hundred enlist have been.present
- -all off them dressed in the rusty-brown
jaekets and Wart* kart-breeches of the coml.'
try, with as mech. uniferruity -asa regi:aent
of soidiers„ The net was. drawn . .fu:rner and
further up the bay, great care being taken
.te avoid frightenuthe Whales, -which
swam quietly beton:qv,- or rolled about at
thew eve, evidently quite uneouseious'of
.dagger.
.
. Whet matters setin.ei approaching to a
_crisis; our . part}, se prstillrlfe--11-e4 of . US. (rOt.
into a boat rind iqrrod in the, bows V. lilt
Janc . e . in our hands yeady , for action, and the
bay commenced. boats. remained
outside the net to. suppert the lmoyS; and the
rent:tinder, about fifty in number, including
ours, eke:ed . :round t heir prey, and drov e them
by shouting. and - throwing, towards the shore
the animals, tumefy . submitting, until they
.got close to it. .Teey they turued, evident
ly,in great alarm, anal hum 'down : lllAM Its,
looking must forinidahle, rord - - surrounded by
a great, wave, which their• Mita:tits carried
won them. Not. knowing how the. - boats
would . behave,.we tvrus awaited the charge
with no• small Misgivings, under au assu neer •
air of great. calmness. The natives, on the'
other-hand, became trantie With excitement,
jelling like intniaes, splashing the' water.
with their spears, .and seeming about . to
throw them-elvet into it in .their inteuse'de
sire't6 head them back. All, their efforts,
however, were to no purimse. The whole
herd broke through our ranks, though they
were severe!' speaied passln. Allay of
the boats were lifted halt out Of the water in
the collisions while . the- cries" of the boat
then„ mingled. with tire .loud 'blowing of the
whales, natle a wild and not inappropriate I
chorus, which rang throng!! the. surrounding
hills. 'When clear .of us,. the animals . coo
Armed their career at_ the same rapid pace,,
and came in contact- with the net, which .
they carried track,.as: well AS all the line of"
boats supporting it, several yards, and in a
f e w seconds escaixst.either under or through
it, leaving a few of their number entangled -I
in its fol.ls, whin g the water, up twenty and
thirty feet-high, in their. desperate struggles .
to disengage _themselves. - In the , end, they
all got awar.'and Swam half a mile Out to
wards Ole sea, when
,they. dived under the
water, and Tem:tined neatly a' minute out of
sight. We then piffled the.a as hard
as we could. The scene rweenbled - an emit- ,
mous :segat ta, with a herd of w hales as the
turning-buoy ; and by • dint of stones mei
shiruts they were headed back, again speared,'
:11111again broke through all the barriers op
posed to. them.
This opeiation u'as repeated three times
At last, much wounded and harmssed, they
e ere ,t; 'reed into . a tin rttower , put of the bay-
All • their enemi e s pee,•ed round them at
Awl! ; t!ieeither will with
l
fet, or .•!:!; , !fti_t:!vi as to the three
l:.•e: t ;wards sh o at,
CiL th e m in the
r )41 a 1: slter the:
. Would -at
oeee hav e bee : , saran, hat this wasso
si te ;) ant lucky, that, after two or three min-
Itiles' melee, during • -Which the boats „and
whales were all mixed iii,- in cake
sCruggiing wive, •only Tie't6aird of.
theta. were ki!le,/ null rho rein:tied:4 reached
deep' water again: real sport was, how..
ever, over,, and 'what fidlowed wits anelely
sickening, though useful,- piece of butchery
in . which, w e took uti Ilan. Those . which
.wernnot taken, has in:, lost their leader, trey;
er reunited, lint rolled groaning in thebay,
quite blinded
-in, their; own blood, and 'thus
till victims in !lentil to tlyir - pursuers.—
When a whole is suffiziently Al/trawled and
,
exhausted to be manageable,
• boat is'run
along. ides and one orthe men strikes a Wok
into the blubber, attacheut' tg, strong rope,
by mhe eens of whiedi 't - rnstlif the crew . bold
their boat :fast to it,,while, a kitife, stuck
.deep in behind the . heath, soon..triniuites jut
sufferings. Others ; Oa ; Shore, hook 104 dis-.
patch the whales: :livitielfget..agrutted in the:
sarmi manner, ';'A fret . :the .• he at - wart
.'c
phstely:broken up:aud separated,
.we:landed,
turf, n front a r,ollliliallding aft 06 /fed with;
- •
!savanna the strange Spectacle, below. he
Mi t :InitKoUtp rid
'~i.cby'.i:.o^gym •.:-s•kr..:.r,~_~_.r:-...z- .
lootor," this is My. hush:
with 'MI air at oil sw,let and
' 171 e. imOr attend tot Started.
a4thast. Lie (mid nut filthy!'
What did you say, matiali
Mered as best he could 1; "
sav,?" - •
slllCis. • -
'The'lloor siteideet 'wit '
4gs-before say 0111/411/1i the
blood ; sonic boat* were towi ,
on idiom' otheie, were . Speari.
nytining living ones ;;.while
beach, men, up to their neck
actively engaged in the great
ter. - :-Occasionaliv the boatme
one mere-liven titan they, sal
lw_hittivivonld tear their ' 'boat
or:l2reak. - away from them, or'
eloudi of water in its agonY•
lloth - e:geripel.: :The few that hr
nity of doing so. returned
.in
and thared the fate of
hinas nad_in tyro hours from
meat the whole two liundre
were destroyed:--Crufse of
1854.
. .
.
: (frottrthe Philmterphiii.
AiiOther Sell...inadiiess .
od ill H.:
. •
, On Wednesday last a neat
prepossessing and prettily . s
somewhere btween sweet sixte
i
five yea r+ of ,age, drove up to
Insane Hospiral,-at;t: whiftia I,
nnil inquired for
. tbat gentlema
ushered into the reception_ roo
the coming of the doctor, wit!
chalance-- which rather facing
who looked upon her with eve
and unfeigned pleasure. ir
she amused herself—a woman
in :gratifying lier curiosity, in
vatiutts articles in the Nein'
'thoroughly.' The doctor, heir
she reeeiVeil. him - with one of 1
ing smiles Which some wVmen
how to bestow,..and whose' Intl
of feeling eau resist. The do
her with lirare than usual ,war
l e arn e d th e obj 7 et of her vi , it ,
She had come, she said, wit,
of melancholy, and , a tone of i
manly tenderness, to aecertain
,in p‘trsn, whether he could - 1
quarters for her husband,,whol
intense fits of aberration of - mil
Itond twt toward; • hcr, bitter a
Was, i?o , all nut alienate tier
which was the all-pervading
soul. lie had grown . 4 , 9 violei
she wished to have hin-seeure
to himself as well as to • her,
eltarthingcreature wept (Ur col
and if she Could make an aril
the doctor, she urged that it li
as private as his most secret tli
husband beyond the ..:_autinyA
then she s:•. : 01 her heart :wo
knew it would, and wept hitt(
.....•
The &Apr; as all who knot
tender-heartedness will readil . ,
not in - sensible to Cho touching
.visitor,and,with that-franknes
ilharaCterizes him, he proinis ,
'Wilk her
. wiithes, to give her
vale apartment and hia spec ia
to - shield . him frotn the gaze o
en.wito . tawsloAti
The lady, was
she M!hil not longln espressit
intermingled with tears ; 1561
in.-settling the details of her
fines:tent ; she was not tong ; ii
king her leave. -.And, as ah
t he. rri age, aided by the.
doctor, he turned her beautifl
him,.4111.1 cast upon him a gl;
full of twierness and solieitud
him anew with admiration am
The eltrriati,e drove away, tl
fo:lowing amid the elonds . ,of ,I
.lowed in its wake, until it' wa
to view. Down . to the
,brid, ,
crowded thoroughfare, over-LW
of Chesnut, Street, to a .fashion
fashionable, jewelry establish,'
•the caribige paused, its swee
inmate glancing out anit smili
:growing radiant with a tbeogi
;another paragraph to lentl:
• She alighted, and glided in.
: of g.dd arid silver - and preeiou
all the stateliness cfla queen:,
.the gentlemanly attendiints • to
wish. She Wanted to select a
. ware; nottoo•elaborate in de.i
manship,nor yet too 'plain,. s
:tasteful,and beautiful. • The i
were shoal', and a. set value
'.selected by the lady of state!,
desired the aiticlt..s to be - put t
butand She .would settle ii
, ',w e re complied with, and: the
her elegant porinitomitie, btr
trans but about 4O in it. Shy
Up her Wrong portinoanaie,s'
beWitching sweetness, ar.d she
her stupidity. Site however,
it. . She was the wife of Pr:-
phy,htatni of the Insatte
desired the attendant to ace
that place, when -Nile would p
Who . eou;(1 re.iist such a re4u
qui .woutatt—a request . sp.?.
iiith the eyes as the voice'
certainly.
.The two got into the - carring:!
hack it whisted to the hospi
jnmped from the carriage
by the doctor, whO .w;
trMme.
Doetn - r, • this is my •hu
take him in eluirge.”a.. • -
myiam, I'm
Witat do you mean"
. 1 11:iritting into teura btle,zipbh
1 - la.-another Kpasta ; he has an
Oh, doet9r, if'you have pity-in
cure him, and eave:youraet( nu
Jettee."
In Vain' the poor i fellOvi, ntt
plain. Ile was - hurried ithing.
into x room, and °entitled, - set
men, all - the Waite 'folleiving
.
weeping .ss though her 'heart
:I* . ke doctor and the Indy'retur 4
CeptiOCl fOOtlii mid the. latter, -alf
other tin .Putline of the peculittt
to ed bushnnil'a attack, togeth
tlireptiona in referetice to the . 0
t o l us i e bekciu;ed upon bin); I
to!etinie Again: - in s few-,41n)
whilled the unirringik titeAv et
lady,
neiihAr of ,w,hielk 'has
' , r - ,
I\TAYMRA.Mv ., '•
18.41.
induced to convey,; letter2:N his
employero, Who, all the tiOk., were.suipectiug.
Ilia honesty, and prepsir,ioe,:ttindreqlse tiro
in the newripapers. Upon e.ituelpt.of.the
,fetter it did not take theiti" to . ng , tikdikover
that they had beeni seld:tueilt
upon tbeii aPpeariaCti it:11 - 47jtompital l . it (lid
riot take 'the doctor lOng,.ti'Aikov . er thAt he
had been sold decidedly; - thepeOr'itifendant.
, was satisfied, ,tipon,..sPlarriratut the hosTital;
that had been Rohl 'infilt - t4irie - ivrit . fideltfL
And here, we think, witivill! , ind the' stoi:V;•
which has , been `. talked - Ozer fashionahle
circles for the•past threeoir f3ur. 'days with
many a hearty laugh.
g Jen& whales
gibe :few re
all
in wafer, were
ork of flaugh,
'ti hOok
port it to-be,
rapi4ly about,
lie lashing up
NOt a eitsgle
4 . an' oppoittt
ieareh of their
their eorupan
he eornmence
-11 and twelve
he
,yacht' Ma-
ti
Therea.
the
*ltityJ:4 , 4l6o2
instead of: -. ...ar
"pants"Or gentlemen "genta"-in saying: of
.a. tuati,... w hose dress is old, that
.looks see
av,,'„.'.-4and in alluding to an zimusiug • twee
dole,' or a di v erting iticident,ko say: that is
rick." All slang words are detestable front
the lips- of ladies. We are - .1.,n1 ways sorry
hear a young lady use such a word as "pollt,.
when shetells of having engaged in a
• certain dance, too - fashionable. n'A long -same,
bat happily, now is going out; and, alnicist
banished how the best society. - het-hon
or be it remenibered,. Qtll4ell Victoria has
prohibited.the., polka being I danced: iu her
preSence. • How can a genteel girl bring
herself to" say, " last -night! . I .wss : polking
witk iml,r or " Mr. cope clone and ask
ed me to pull;with him." coarse end _ ill
sounding Haute is worthy oft he dance.
We have little tolerance for. yOung ladies,
who, having .'n• reality neither. wit tior . bto
mgr, set up. for both, and . nothing of
-the right stock to'g9 upon; sitbstittite, coarse-
H1 . J:424 and impertinence (not tusay impudenee;).
:Lad trvto excite laughter, and attractllia at
tention of: gentlemen, -by- ?From, low Where do- they ..pick Ati
t. 'p ?From, low
newspapers or from vulgar ? Surely
not ft otaloW companions. . have herd
of • one of those ladies,. when -her collat.
.chanc6i.to:b pinned awry; say tliat.it was
tiir.;ted on drum;--also, - that. her :bonnet was
me:thing crooked,- on • her Atead.t—
When disconcerted, she was floored." When
submitting to . de a thingunwillingly, she
was brought. to -the scratch. Sometithes, 'she
did things On the sly.". She talked. of a cer
Cain great vocalist • "singing like a beast."
She believed _ it very siniirt and piquantlo
.use these vile expressions. - tree . when,
at patties, she always had half :a dozen gen,
doyen atiLuut her their curiosity
.: besng jeici
tedits. to what -would nay . neat.- • And
yet she was a woman of many good qUalitieS;
and one who -boasted'ef having always :lived •
• in society..=—.Tlti . ladieW.paper.
es.)
lid a Meth-
~vAresstd, very
'ken
' , ll - and ,tweraY,
ckf
n.. was
n,and awaited
an. air of non-.
,
eu the seryant
.s ofadmiration
len left 'Milne
always - will—
nepeciing the
critically and s
g • announced,
lose bewilder
knoW so well
I . l t e o n i ce W n e o lc - o ill in n ed n
!nth, and soon
r a glance full
Lnore than ivo
-11 of the . sluettir
i seeliro private
1 was.suhjeat to
1 11 , 1joit whose
rid cruel as it
love to him,
passion of her
it, of iare, .that
1 frt;to violenee
(and here the
i•
!ire . m.iments;)
•. ugement with
,hould he kept
I tnglits, and her
S t isitors. Arid
Id, break, sho
O rly and lons , .
v his-kind arid
.. ,
Imagine, was
recital "of his
.Whiels always
Id , to comply
husband a. pri
(tare, and alr.o
eurio*ity-seek-
I iitions.
Ile was taken .sfiddenly! the 'Council
as.holssra morbus, where he had gone
that day, dreSsed 'With -- more thiin
care. with ail his gay sppitry and ornaments.
When he returned,. he said tolliS wife,' I am
sick ; I could nut stay till the Council had
I At/kited. I shall 'never recover. ' He !then
' took vti all his rich costume, and laid, it
careftillystwav ;- reclined himself ,anon his
-couch, and did 'tart rise again till morning, or'
',speak. except to answer. sums slight question.
Iliswife prepared 'lihn inedtcine, which .he
patiently Rail:, but said,!.-itiivilt iue - no
good shill die.' The ne4day - he called
her to him, and requested her and, the' little
girl he loved somuch to sitibeside him, and
listen to his parting words. ! - •
• •I am going to heAid ;• I shall nev
er leave the house again :•1' wish to
•thank you for your kindness to tne. Four
have loved me. You have itlWays nrepOrei)
my. foed and taken care•of my, clothes; rand
been patient with me.. lan sorry -I 'left you.
on account of your new religion, and
"am
couvincet that, it is a good religion, and as
-made you a better woman, and wish : you : to
persevere in it ; I should-like to 'have: lived
a little lOnger for_ your sako. l• meant ;to'
build you a, new-house and• Make you mores
comfortable, but it is -now too ; late.
hope my daughter will reineuiber!iwhat . • I
letre'often told her—not :to the!: Streets'
with strangers, or 'associate with improper
persons. 'She:must, stay with ;her - mother,
and-grow np respectaldn
• i ! Vheir 1 am dead. it wily be noised about
t r itrOngh will hear of it across
the gteaL waters, and say,' Jacket,- the
great orator is dead. And white - men will 1
ensue and ask you fur my body; They will
wild& to bury- me. 13ut .16 not let them.—'
Clothe mein my simplest dress—put !on ray .
leggings and my moccasins, and • hang the
cros,i which I have worn so lOng . about ;my
neck, and let me lie upon ;114 bosoiti•!—
Then bury me,nmong• my people. •.Neither
do I,Wish to be. buried.' with', pagan
I wish the.ceremonies to be as you like, accor
ding to the customs ol'yonr . - new religion if
you choose. ' Your minister says - the • dead
will, rise. Agitate they If they do;li
do not wish to rise among pale fitces;\t,l wish,
to besurroundeof by red .men.-, Do nut make
a' feast *according' to tlakcitstoms-4' the'Tnali
sihs.
Wlienerer •my friends eho4e, • they .
cotild'cOine and feaSt with me when was'
well, and I do not wish those who havo !nes- -
er eaten .With mein my cabin, to iserfeit
my (Mimi feast.'- ,
Manaus hid finished, -he /aid . . liilasel(
again upon the:conch, And did not fse again.
He lived several,dnYs but was 'most' of the
time in a stupor, or else delirious. • ofteti
asked for Mr: arris, the missionary, and at
rerWards wOuld,unconSciously muter, •,, I do
'not hate him:, he thinks hateliim - ,.b+►t.l•du
'not. I Wntlitt nut hurt hilt) The initiiionary:
was sent for repeatedly , .but did' not: iettirit
omit he TV:IS rlea#l,• When • the -- thessengef
told 'him. Mr.• Era Ms had, not ceme,lo, - repli-.
ed„..'„ Very: well ;the Greak,Spirit iwilt,:nrder ,
at . aile Sees best, whether I hare an ritkport:l
:Unity ore net- to speak . hiin. Agatir he"
Would - mutter, He nintint• me: °V beitiß, :a
s . nake,,andArying -to -bite notnet#4: ,-
'wits very true, And I wish tolepent namike
satisfaction . • ...
ranging terftis,
her thank 4.
rums not. long
n►cLaad's: con
shin!, in tn
`sOppe,l into
hand of the
1 face towardi
nee • that wa
and inspired
I '
e doct o r ' s eves
;list Which : ful-
etniiely 10.4 t
ge, nlong the
pehh6l way
We, if not the
eat of our city
,and . solitary
o within, att.l
t that requires
,o• thee traz:iar
Is . !tunes with
One' or two 'Of
a!to learn her
set of. airver
in l ;gn .or work
!netliing neat,
titolli; patents
c.
at 0500 was
tread. She
a bilinnade
Fier wishes
lady toOk out
t alas !tt:re
e lipd pit, 4.41
ie: raid , wi th
- wag vexed !at
. I
•ould arrange
„ the priuei,
pital,.and die
i mpany her to
1 linwat once.
!t from :A beau
!oil ': as mulch
i 'ot the c!erk
1 i
together, and
41. 7 The lady
was warmly
• s at the eu-
!n(1; 1 1 said site,
arrow
ie.wassirdok
I" '
hat 'you
1, .
and. -,P.lense
lot your huz-
cI :Joni, ‘ . HC.
.attack ;
poi! soul, N.
mefrom
to•-
corridor find
urtty, tho
,elose behind,
wOulid break.
k ed- to the te
ller 'giving the
,
Whether it was bir; Ilarris that he.referral
to all the time he Was tali:Jug in ,1)111! way
could net be '6.4ceitniewt, its'he Aid Mit 'Seem
to comprehend it- any direo46 was
put to him; but from: is.4runaliksp
.I A!?Fa;CPARktY to'tim; Ai 4 wa d :the catural.
suppgsiti u, fiomiatlmes he would , think . be
1 , 4 w,Romii-it bis old frierals about , bitty 'and
(eielailn‘ 'There-la •Farther‘ Biothey;
duel be tlouble nos...wbf dole ligotottioft
iiewur hnr Ni.
with 'wine
ft
5; int. awn
ware, and the ,
heard of
ned for three'
. •
- • -,- A ''
•AP - -" K s ' • ••-lita,t4;*;
4-4 t'.,41,,ti
.~~ e~~
'I From-Littei:e's I.l%irg Age.)
• .
Death Of Red Jacket.
.-- 'rf.i .,- i f,'?.,'1,::.;:
334
looking Ai
into' auk
;'ilia trf
to - whiwi2 .1
'breliain` g;
family alt
fuliit was
..not
little thus
thtF
and (they
Llieir Motl
'hy„ hit - I)in
Lead.: -
are- now. aj
side On .
npnik-kii"
wents:
ry tend
som, is) Imp).
caught his hurried_ bread:4l2; 77 ;li* arena_
lased their hohl—she looked up, and WI was
Ile had requested that a, vial of cold water
might berlaced in his hand ,when he was
pse em red or the burial, but .the reason of tiin
request nione could divine. It was com
plied with; however, and all hiS - Wishes strict
ly heeded. The funeral took place j»
-the.
little misiiion burying-ground, at the gateway
of what was once an - old - foit-aronnd him
his own people--nged men, sacheakdiers
and warriors, and little children:., •
. . ,
Thee, Loan . ..eine° WiiidOW. '
.-- . .• ~ .. . " . •
~:.
The , pairtbroker is •an "institution" in
every..large city. of the world, . and'hiS wind
ow is. a curiosity. - geis called •bmy, uncle;
,by needy - and seedy young gentlemen who
are fund . .of making . a how and, whiya) . only . •
means of raising, thewhere-withal occasion- -
ally is by,a visit to their obliging occasion
relatii!..-,'But.. needy - aad seedy nephews are
y
not " m uncle's" only .austomeri. He hai
many others, ranging _from - the highest ir--
des of aristocratic priklis.to those.who are ut
one remove :a ;
bove beggary .ind - well d .
k t..
Ile know . how'. to accouttnudate himself to .
their .everLvarYing pectiliataritior. -A keen,
shrewd, 'calculating man is "my uncle," and
poetical Withal; for,.. instead. of thej.prosaic
title of . " pawnbroker's shop," be Lai chatiged.
the.mone of his . shop to , ,"ThnLOaniQffice,"
and lie assumes the - benevolent,.dat , y,:.bf raak, .
in loons to tlie needy "fog a,. .4Corif
i stilerittiori.."
Truly, an accommodating jinn s . " tity. ed-
~ , _
• - .
cle.'.. • - , ' • •
On ft,favorite.street of thiegooci city °font,
a loan office ha% for'soine tiine.floritisbed;and
as, we,. have passed . it iliiiost every day for
a
quite number ofsears, our eye;shaiii become
familiar with its show-window, This 'wind
ow is one of the,niost expressive. kind.
Every article seen'ArOughitis full of:mys
terious eloquet*:sihich cOniieys a: world
We have often :stood " by it, to "Oitif, as
from an"dpen boot ." boot ." .',the st or ies w hich th
rnrions artielos'Aor dirithlll* -- arniiiiiircraz
contrast thein . with one Juiptber, and to spec-
Owe cotyc9roine the circumstanctai .pf the
parties whO deposited them .
• -
Peiliaps it may not be's* to ( others, but
to us every article in pawn individualizes it-
\ becomes -extremely', suggestive
.of
its part associations: There - are, for instinc,
a number of 'watt:lief in the wiudoW; all of
which" mark 4'clitrerent hour and . tent a dif
ferent talc,.
That large, heavy " gold lever," with - the
full, expressive face, belonged once to s
plain, solid, substantial old gentleniitit:_Yod
can read much in its honest - countenance._
There is no trickery or tinsel about it ;
_no
brazen attempt at impositiou—no' hi:lmbue
hile he lived, the old gentleman ,paid
debts - honestly; but" sickness. 'and , tiisfortune
left him, at his death, but little of this viorld's
goods. passe& away-4he Widowed
:partner of his youthful joys became helpless
and• bed=ridden, - and an only -danghter was
left:to` the• support:of he'old. • sage, And
what 'coal& she do to earn - money; _whet& a
helpless mother detnanded" her - undivided
care and ' attention. • Everything - Of 'value
'about ',the . house, except • the;old, 'honest;
full-faced ? watch,, had long . sin ce been solt
and that watch the fond daughter_determin.i
ed never to partpith ; but 'necessity kuciays
no law:. • A inother'S•wanta must be. provfj -
tied for the chill winds of 'autumn caused
her to shiver, and alte.4oks piteously,: Ern
at her daughter, and then at •• • ;
•"t rusty g rate; unconscious of fire."
,1 • •
And ie daughter, poor thing; knows well
enough the tat:ming of the ritut. - .
There is a tear in her eyp, as she takes elk
old watch from its hiding phictv . She kiss.!
es it, while the memories of other. days crowd ,
thick upon her, and places it fondly in• • her
bosom. - -
Ii is n wearisome journey to . the LOan
fice, though the' poor depositor knows but too
well the way._ She, has, been " there
enough ; perliaps tooutten, foi.the, place has •
to her an extremely repultiVe and_ ititittisite.!'.
riel 'tort of kook.' She knOwe the :dear
old' watch" wilfhe slandered - . and;
itiy the ':man !onus; and )9140e.hette"
the . ..heart to hear his flippaney,ott4togita:titi!
stie.h.a subject.-Yet., go-elioMast-::t. ';'
At length; sumnioittng :O. the' 'etterigy abe .
,
cen ,. coMmandoShe enters:: - •
" And 'how 'Much ,do, you - expe ct ; ' op thisp
. ,
old-fashioned turnip l'iinsked theinquisitor.i
. The poor' Oil could: seireelr command
beeutteranee, but at length she .. managed to
stty:—•lorty dollars , If
~ ,,Yoik. please, - sir—it
l e
cost four hu recd »` • . r
- "Forty (Akira!' hit I ha !ha l'lL—latigited
the Mon o timinsforty dollars for such as :
old thing as this 1 'I nit must be jOking._:,
ILI( tn
the itotito would be a large illiyahPl), - ;
I :o'l4 L airOidlel busittesa' is business,' my
--.. And _thus, deeryinLthe.watelt,:viegged the :
rinuly. tongue of the stern. keeper of the shelf,
till the poor girl, with in Sin:lost burliting
he A rr, ezuleinuut—,f. Wen, /het 'volt
will, but Ms nutektitkl9q , j,:ani ; b e l ast
thing I have to wn, ' l i l a
mother is ' twa went."..
prhvely deliherwtely 'the lend
ple9ge, ountO . nnt IMlSAty,7fise: clonal*, Snd i
1 0 1 410lo#0,*(P):14j01,
liberiktetiio *1614 thi
Ati length' 6itiiirkeit: trtty,
.la been a mttr4ol49iiiicide.ria her day,
,butAbea Tm's , Ofitalut totiA.-trepetki
14itt'JY4 *blow! let.y, haw tereitY•lloe dollaisoW bai t bat. it'll el* thleo;
Ulifile p 1401 ssaudog •6104 sod
=TM
..---;- 4 .*Af r „.
= -