13 runusttED Rvpnv witDJirsDAT, Y V. 11. DUNN. oiticb nr hobisso & vomtwa buildim - ILMrRCTT,TI0NC3TA, PA, TERMS, eioo A YEAR. No Rubseriplions received Tor a shorter twlod than tlirca moiiLlM. 8W" Correspondence Bolleitod from nil parts nnnt0Untry' No ",,li' w l taken of " " .1 " p'rnimn,i,''ul". BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ,4 J' V - - V A. V J.' . "T t"T." 1 . . -ri t . VI , . !V"f JTHiny evening. t,f bythcGood'Tomnl.V; occupied B. H. HASLET, Soc'y .A.nANDAU, N. G 7-tr. TIONESTA COUNCIL, NO O. TJ. .A., nvc. j - y iiinp, nt 7 o'clock 8. A. VAKNER, R. 8. CLAltK, C 81 H. A. KODKRT, M P. 4 FFICE and residence in house former ly lywviipieu ;),.. Winans. Oiiico d.iys, E. L. Davis, A TTOHNEY AT LAW. Tionesta. Pa, Coltoftfons inado in this and ndloln- log eounttes. 40-ly J. B. ACNEW, W. E. LATHY, iioneiM, ra. Erie, p, AGNEW & LATHY, Attorneys at Law, - Tionesta, Pa Oflleo on Elm Street. May 16, 1875.-tf MILE8 W. TATE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, TiH- .W, TIONESTA, P.4. v F. W.Mavs. ATTORNEY AT LAW, and Pum.l'!, Reynolds Hukill Block, feionoca HU, Oil City, Fa, Notary A Co.'a 31)-ly V. HIXKKAn. V. 11. KM ILK Y. KIXN11A11 e SMI LEY, ttornoya at Lavr, ... Franklin, Pa. 1 PRACTICE In tlio several Courts of Ve nango, Crawford, Forest, and adjoin ing counties. IW-ly. UTATIOXAL HOTEL, TI3DIOTJTE., IF .A.. RUCKL1N A MORK, l'KOPniiiTORS. Frlst-ClnMs LlceiiMod IIoumo, Mo connected. Good Hta-13-ly Lawreico House, 'PION'ESTA. PKXN'A. i- (JUAY, pRorniKTOii. Tliix liousn in eontrally located. Kverytliina; new and veil t'urniHliod Superior a;cominoda IIouh and Htrict attention ;i ven to pucstH. Vegetables and Fruits of all kinds Korvod in their Meason. iSamplo room for Com merciul Agents. Tionesta House, ANDRKW WELLER. Proprietor. This Iiouho Iihs been newly llttod up and is now open for tho n(!coniniodntion of the jmbli.!. Charges reasonable. ytly . CENTRAL HOUSE, TOXNHR A AOXEW BLOCK. L. IJ Acinkw, Proprietor. Tills is a new nouse, and lias Just been fitted up for tho ncconunodittioii of tho public. A portion of tho patronage of tho public is solicited. 4'i-ly . ' FOREST HOUSE, SA. VAHNKR Provriktor. Opposito Court llouso, Tionesta, Ta. Just opened. Everything now and clean and . fresh. Tho bobt of liquors kept constantly on hand. A portion of tho public patron age is respectfully solicitod. 4-17-1 v Wv C. COBURN, M. D., PHYSICIAN A SURGEON offers bis X services to tho people of Forent Co. jTavlngf had an experience of Twelve Yoars in constant practice, Dr. Coburn Kiiarantoea to give Katisfaction. Dr. Co burn make a specialty of tho ti'eatmont of Nasal, Throat, Lunr and all other Chronio or linerinc; dlseasefc. Having investigated all scientific metliods of cur ing disease and selected tfi6 kmx1 from all Kystems, he will guarantee relief or a euro in all cases whore a cure Is possible No Chargo for Consultation. All fees will be reasonable. Professional visits made at all hours. Parties at a Uistaueo can con sult him by letter.- Ollico and Residence second building below tho Court llouso, Tionesta, Pa, Ol lico days Wednesdays and Saturdays. 25tf Dr, J. L. Aconb, pliYSICIAN AND feURG EON, who lias 1 had fifteen years' experience in a largo and Huocessfuf practice, will attend all Professional Calls. Oirict in l,is Drug and CJroeory Ktoro, locatod in Tidlouto, near Tidioute llouso. IN HIS STORE WILL BE FOUND A fiill assortment of Modicinos, Liquors 'Tobacco, Cigars, Stationery. Glass, Paints. Oils, Cutlery, all of tho best quality, and will bo sold" at reasonable rates. DR. C1IAH. O. DAY, an experienced Physician and Druggist from Now York, has ehargo of the Ktoro. All prescriptions lu,t up accurately. U. H. MiY. J NO. r. rAKK. A. 11. KKLtlf. MA Y, VA11K C CO., iB Ji. 1ST IKZ 33 IE& S 'Cornor of Elm A Walnut St. Tionesta. Bauk of Discount and Doposlt. Interest allowed ou Tiiuo Deposits. Collections uiiidoonall tho Principal points .. .. ofUieU. H. Collo;liii!i soiicitad. lS-ly. j. V-W wuiiiaiiJH.i iiuo.) p-"",nJH ''on isu.itiV'vJUUuiM v( -ajiv r -Mhii xixjpuu n 4 Jo .Uvpsx t,u vaoStf Xed OAV "uoiksiunuw jo Aj rr Mipj uiuoj l'uu uiN 'XKMKAO'ItHVkU. 1AUDS, CARDS.; iting Csrdrt, with I IK 1 snlM, Willi 11HIIIB AW., or uu I'-'l .... - r... it ..111.. t Kin onv n Col. Co., N. Y, " i VOL. IX. NO. 25. Paintinef. Panpr-Hsnrrmr x. T7 II. CHASE, of Tionesta, offers his services to thoso iu need of PAINTING, GRAINING, CAL( TATTNINO, SIZING V. VARNISHING, SIGN WRITING, PAPER HANGING, AND CARRIAGE WORK, Work promptly attended to and HutIruetioii On ui-fiii til. mt. cimso Avill work in tho when desired. country 13-tf. WIL.L.IAM8 Ac CO., MEADVILLE, . - PEXN'A., TAXIDERMISTS. BIRDS and Animals stufTcd and mount ed to order. Artificial Eyes kept in stock. u-ly MILS. C. M. 5IIL1TII, DRESSMAKER, Tionesta, Pa. MRS. HEATH has recently moved to this place for tho purpose of meeting a waniwmcn mo lartios of tlio town -and county have for a long time known, that of having a dressmaker of experience among them. I am prepared to make all kinds of dresses in tho latest Htyles, and guarantee satisfaction. Stamping for braid ing and embroidery done in the best man ner, with tho newest patterns. All I ask is a tair trial. Residence on Water Street, In the house formerly occupiod by Jacob Shriver. i4tf TIME TRIED AND FIRE TESTED ! THK ORIUIITAL ETNA INSURANCE COMPANY OF HARTFORD, CONN. ASSETS Dec. Si, 1873, fi,y:ir,ntt5.?o. MILES W. TATE, Sub Agent, 45 T'onesta, Pa. Frank ilobblit, PHOTOGRAPHER, (SUCTJKSNOR TO DKMIN0).) Pictures in everv stvloof the art. Views of tho oil regions for salo or taken to or dor, CENTRE STREET, near R, R. crossing. SYCAMORE STREET, noar Union Do- PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY. KL9I HTKKKT, SOUTH OF RORINSOX t BONNER'S STORE. Tionesta, Pa., - Proprietor. M. CARPENTER, - - Pictures taken in all tho latest styles tho art. 26-tf FINE GOLD WATCHES, SILVER WATCHES AND mMmm mmm& Watches, Clocks, Solid ami l'lated Jewelry, liUtcli Jewelry. Eye Glasses, Spec tacles, Violin Strings, Ac., tl'c. AT L KLEIN'S JEWELRY STORE, TimouTu;, rv. WATCHES AND CLOCKS 1 toiuiiMtl aud Wammtod, LEAVE YOUR WATCH E? at G. W. Bovard'a Store, Tionosta, l'a. NEBRASKGRISTJnlLL. THE GRIST MILL at Nebraska (Lacy, town,) Forest county, has been thwr- oughly overhauled and reiittod in rirbt clans order, and is now running and doing all kinds of CUSTOM UUINDINO. FLOUR. FEED, AND OATS, Constantly on hand, and told at the very lowest ligurcs. 43-oni II. W. LEDEliUR. j3 T10NESTA, PA., EXTRACTS i-rom bpeech or Ex.Gov. Robert O. Ingersoll, of Illinois, delivered at riusDurgn, ra., 5ept. 15. THK FINANCIAL QUESTIOX. T.. T xjufc now i am going to eay eomo- thine about finance. I always hate to touch tliatquestion, because, as a gen eral thing a man becomes very dull when he does. You know nearly ov ery man thinks be understands it, and ,!. .. ., . ' listens very impatiently to any opin ions advanced by others. But still I will risk being dull, and tell you what I think. We owe a large debt. lwo-thlrds of that debt was incurred in consequence of the action and the meanness of the Democrats. There . - i are nouio peopie wuo Uiiuu that you can defer the payment of a promiso so long that the postponement of the debt will serve in lieu of its liquidation that you pay your debts by putting off your creditor. Some people have an idea that the Government can pay its debts when it substitutes one piece oi money lor another that our Gov ernment can make money by stamp ing its sovereignity on a piece of pa per. But this is not the ase. The Government is a perpetual pauper. It passes round the hat and solicits con tributions ; but then you must remem ber that the Government has a bayo net behind the hat. The Government produces nothing. It docs not plow the land, it does not sow corn, it does not grow trees. The Governmont is a perpetual consumer. The people he ve to support the Government ; the Gov ernment cannot support the people. To suppose that they can issue money to the people is as absured as to sup pose that my hired man can issue cer tificates of my indebtedness to him for me to live on. (Laughter.) The Government has no money bot what it received from the "people. It had therefore to borrow money to carry on the war. Every greenback that it is sued was A FORCED LOAN. .My notes are not a legal tender, though if I bad the power Imiehtnos- sibly make them so.- Laughter. We borrow money and we have to pay the debt. That debt represents the exnen- ses of the war. The horses and the gunpowder and the rifles and the artil lery are represented in that debt tt represents all the munitions of war. Until we pay that debt we can never be a solvent nation. Uutil our net profits amount to as much as we lost ('uriug tho war wo 3au never bo a sol vent people. If a man cannot under stand that there is no use in talking to him on tho subject. Thealchemists in old times who fancied that thev could make gold out of nothing were not more absurd thvn the American advocates of soft money. They resem ble the early explorers of our conti nent who lost years in searching for the fountain of eternal youth,. but the ear of age never caught the gurgle of that spring. Wo all have heard of men who spent years of labor iu en deavoring to produce perpetual mo tion. They produced machines of the most ingenious character, with cogs aud wheels and pulleys without num ber, but these ingenious machines had one fault, they would not go. You will never find a way to make money out of nothing. It is as groat nonsenso as the fountain of perpetual youth. You cannot do it. THE DEBT TO BE PAID. Gold is the best material which labor has yet found as a measure of value. That measure of value must be as valuable as tho object it meas ures. I saw the sovereignty of Home impressed on a p:ece oi Uiesar s com. Cajsar died as long ago as the Demo cratic party ought to have died, but the coin was intrinsically valuable though the sovereignty it represented had disappeared from the face of the earth. The sovereignty of a -country i to be got in a different way. It has to be raised. It has to represent la bor. The value of gold arises from tho amount of labor expended in pro ducing it. A gold dollar will buy as mush labor as produced that dollar. I tell you another thing. This debt has to be paid. We ought to make the Democrats pay it for they lost the case and should pay the costs. Loud cheers and laughter. There is a mort gage on the continent on tho lan I of the country, on the honor of the lie publican party, and that mortgage must be paid. Every blade of grass is a guarantee that it will be paid ; every field of corn, every bannered hill that rises in the length and breadth of this Republic is a guaran tee that it will be paid every penny of it. All tha minerals of the country are a guarantee that it will be paid. All the coal that was hoarded in the bowels of the earth millions of years ago by that old miser, the Sun, is a guarantee for the liquidation of this debt. Ho is every ounce of silver aud gold slumbering iu the strata of this coutiuout wailing to be excavated f l SEPTEMBER 27, 187G. waiting to give back to the Sun, tho flash which it received from his radi ance. EVERT GOOD MAS and woman everv babe in tha rr die, and every boy in the country that is going to vote tho republican ticket is a guarantee that the national debt win be paid. Long and prolonged cheers. Now tho question is, Who is most apt to pay that debt? Thoso who swore it was constitutional, or those who swore it was unconstitutional? Every time a Democrat sees a green back, it says to him, "I vanquished you." Every time a Republican Bees a greenback, it says, "You and I put the rebellion down." Cheers.) This great debt of ours was con tracted by the war brought on by the Democrats, and now with consummate eflYontry they throw that debt up to us and try to make capital out of it. They talk about the depressed condi tion of the country. Who made it so? Let every one of you workingmen, when you have blistered your hands to pay the debt, take off the. blister and under it you will find a Demo cratic lie. There never has been a more prosperous city in the country than Pittsburgh; but if Pittsburgh and Pennsylvania vote to put the Democratic party in power, her thous ands of towerinc chimne'vs will stand smokeless monuments to her folly. TILDEN S FOLLY. Now gentleman, to pass from the financial part of this; and I say one word before I do it. I will sav that if any man came to you and wanted the date taken lrom a note, you would say he was dishonest ; and any man who wants the date stricken from this pledge of tho Government is dishonest. (.Applause.) Jlr. Tilden wanted the date left out so that Hendricks could crawl in. , (Applause.) No ; the Re publican party intends to pay its debts in coin on the 1st of January, 1879. Paper money means probably the payment of the Confederate debt ; a metallic currency the discharge of honest obligations. We have touched hard pan prices in this country, and we want to do a hard-pan business with hard money. You cannot iumn when you arc in the air. You need a solid footing before you can stand firm, and that is what we have reach ed financially. If the Tienuhl party fails to resume on the date fixed, it will fail nobly, fightinc like the sol dier on the ramparts with the banner in his hands. Why my friends, ifyou can think of any mean thing that could be done, I will find you a Dem ocrat to do it. I do dot say that all Democrats are dishonest, but I do sav that their principles arc dishonest, and that a majority of the party are dis honest. THE rAIiTIES CON! HASTED. Not loii: ago I was passincr alone a road, where there wa3 a sign post which had stood there t it had become wenther-beaten and de cayed. It poiuted to nowhere, and! was a useless, worn out relic of bv-pone daj'S. I thought to myself when -I saw it, that is like tha Democratic party. Again, in another place I saw the ruins of an old inn : the building was uurfieu down, and only tho two tall old-fashioued chimneys at either end of tho building still "stood erect. Up in front of tho tavern the old 6ign still swung and creaked, and spoke to the public of "Entertainment for Man and Beast." And again, I I bought this is like the Democratic party, bo prolific of promises and so unable to fulfilll them. And the two chimnevs rreminded me of Tilden and Hendricks, trying by their prominence aud soph istry to blind the eyes of the peoplo to the ruin about them. Not long ago I was in Paris and there I saw on a monument where all the people could see it, a statue of the Goddcsi of Liberty, aud enduring fig ure of bronze that will last while the ages endure. Iu one hand was the 6tar of progress, aud the other pointed upward, to the pure blue and free aenith ; aud this I thought, is like the Republican party, in iu enduring being and elevated priuciples. Ap plause. THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY is made up of the worst elements of society. There is not a penitentiary in the United States that Tilden and Hendricks cannot carry five to one. In tho Democratic Party can bo found the vicious and foul. The man who wishes to answer an argument with blows, ho is the Democratic party." All men who sympathized with the South in its efforts to destroy this Gov ernment are now iu tho Democratic party ; all the men who shot our sol diers at the dead-mark are uow for honesty aud reform, and if Tilden should bo eleoted President of the United States all these men would be found Bhouting for Tilden aud Hen dricks. Now my friends, keep out of the Democratic party ; do not vote that ticket, auy young man who is go ing to cast hii tirbt vote do uot place $9 PP1) A "KTXTTTH r Tr A Jifc ili 111 1 J ll . your future in the hands of that par "J- TriE REPUBLICAN PAETY on the other hand, is tho nnrtv rvf SOD. 01 ttrofrrAfininn oHnrAf:nn lhe Republican party is the one that believes in the equality of human "vcj. x ueueve is. i am willing to give to every human being every "sin umn cmira ior myselt. iivery man who won't do that is a rascal. fly inends, I believe the world is po ing to got better. I do. I believo we aro getting better all the time. Samuel , "den says wo aro a nation of ineives and robbers. I don't believe it. If we were he ought to be Presi dent. I believe we are getting better, auu every aay ine uepublican party is in power wo will ha And how? Bv free labor nnrl thought. Free labor will give us wealth. Ereo thought will give us truth. Free labor lino rbinn thing that has been done in the United States, because the problem of frea la bor is to do the most work in the least time, and slae labor is to do the least work in tho most time. The political principles of tlio T!pmitil;.ian nnrf. as broad aa this continent as exten sive as humanity itself. They wel come every one to this country who is a iriena ot humanity and of human progress. Wn hpli allow every man to do his own thiDk inz and to exnress hU nn kn,,n.i,t e will sufler no fetter on the brain, uo cnam on the hand of mnn fit a. newed applause.) EVERY LOYAL MAN. if he be white or black, must bn n. tected. In the dava of 1 - j . v j iS ue bouth the whipping post and instiu- .ucuw ui torture, compelled obedience from the 6laves. To-day they know auu upon me principle that if you can't convince a man you cau knock him down. If a man won't vote as tney want him to they know that the knife can make oue voter less ; that one gun can do more toward convert ing a man than twenty churches. The nepubucan party has sworn tonmipct every man in "life, liberty and the pmBun oj nappiuess, and it intends to do it. The worst ward in the city of Pittsburgh is the one that will give the bierfrest Dem Why, out of 140 voters in the State jiuuu viiuamp, my are lor Tilden and Hendricks. Aud that is the party of Reform I (Laughter and applause.) The best recipe that I can give you to keep out of the Penitentiary is to vote the Republican ticket, (Applause) The Democrats object to having a standing army of twenty-five thous and men for thirty-eight States, and vet it takes twenty-five hundred po licemen for the city of New York to keep the Democratic fiiends from picking your pocket on the way from tho depot to your hotel. THE CANDIDATEa. But now let mo speak of the candi dates of those two parlies. The Dem ocratic party have put forward Mr. Samuel J. Tilden. Mr. Tilden is a Democrat who belongs fo f ha TV-m . tic party of tho city of New York, and the Democratic party of the city of New York never had but two objects grand and petit larceny. (Laugh ter and applause) In Illinois, we have always heard that Tammany Hull bears the same relation to a pen itentiary that Sunnsny School does to a church. (Laughter.) I don't say it is so, but simply etate it as I hear it there. I have heard that the Dem ocratic party got control of New York when it did not owe a dollar, and have stolen and stolen until it owes $160,000,000; and I understand that every election they have had was a fraud every one." I understand that they stole everything they could lay their hands on. And, oh, what banda! (Laughter and applauso.) Grasped and grasped and clutched, until they stole all it was possibla for the people to pay tho interest upon, and now they are all yellin for honestv and reform. I understand that Mr. Tilden was a pupil in that school, and that he is now ateacher in that school. (Laughter.) nAYES RECORD. On the other sido another man has been nomiuated-Rutherford B. Hayes. In the first place, he is an honest man. You Democrats will say that is not rnuchf but I ask you to try it once. Rutherford B. Hayes is a patriotic man, and when the war commenced Rutherford B. Hayes said, "I would rather go into this war and be killed in tho course ot it than live through it, and have taken no part in it." ( A nnlRimal IVimriuro U u-iiK AT ' 11'-- y .-. wwmv iv.. i.t. Tilden's refusal to sign the call for the IT ' T -r . ... . uuiou meenug iu x,ew xoik. Ail tho Democratic suakes, with their forked and poisonous tongue stuck out, have not lound in the reputatiou of Gov. Hayes a crevice in which to deposit the poison of their malignity. Imagine a man so pure that the Democratic party cannot lie about him I (Great laughter.) I would also say William A. Wheeler is also us staunch a Repub- Ratos of Advertising. One Ffqnaro(I inch,) one Inertlon - tl 19 OneHquaro ' one month - . 3 00 One Square " three months . 00 Oneanro one year - - low onif 0 " " - - -.- 180 00 Legal notices at established rate. a n m,K and doaUl ntieop, gratis, l J a H f? ?'Par,I K'lvertifiemenUi cot looted qnarterlj'. Temporary advertUe ment must bo paid for in advance Job work, Cash on Delivery, lican aa ever there waa in th party. (Applause.) There is no one a great er advocate of reform than he. (Ap plause.) Gevernor Hayes already has three Democratic eoalps in his belt. Pendleton, Thurrnan, and rise Upi, , m" A,len Rnd in November he have another ; that of Samuel J. Tilden. (Great applause. (The speaker then gave a glowing exhortation to tlio people to vot for the Republican party, and arraisged the Democratic party in tho most elo quent, burning words ever listened to by a Pittsburgh audience. But let - ---- j " juu iiuicr heard from Maine? (Applause.) And nun, Vermont, f Appiauso again.) You have heard then ? Wdl : all that "tidal wave," that "undertow" that "sober second Hi and when did a Democrat over have a sober thouerht.- W don't bp. much from them aa we did. And lat me remind you that in Maine Jamcs G. Blaine, that knight-errant nf li airy, that true knight who clutched the Confederate Congrcsa bythetbroat and held them until their foreheads became as black as their records and until their tongues snnka out libAflu... of truce (tremendous and 1od con.- wuuea appiause; alter having failed1 to ret the nomination at Cincinnati he did not desert his party, but went -to work in Maine with a will, the the effects of which you saw in tha returns. fCheers for Blaine atrnin The sneaker then A but the crowd would not hear f it and he continued for several minutes oncer, and concluded h-v irforrlnr, in w . J . .....f, Hendricks. In response to a question, by some ono in the crowd. th ano: e,r said ha was not in the habit of pay ing attention to trifles, which was the reason he had not mentioned Mr Hendricks. He Baid Ileudricks -vns a good man, but was in bad coropa'iv, and hia principles were bad. Bid m ine auaicnco good night, he then '. hisseat amid the wildest chet rinj. The meetin? immediately after ndi. journed. m i v A Runaway Locomotive. Last Monday, at noon, ihn tive on the Smyrna Branch Railroad ran away and rearly killed itself. After bringing the noon train into town, and after Engineer MefVinnnrrrnr . 0 - 1, j had started to dinner, the fireman, John Shorts, cut the locomotive lo.se irom the car to Bhilt it to the oilier track and get it out of lhe "way- of a fritrhtened neaeh team. HaMi steam, and as he did so the pin fell out of the throttle bar. He could not shot her off after that, and away she went at a breakueck speed through Commerce street to Clavtn. Phorfa made a perilous leap from lur as she whizzed by Union street and saved himself, though ho was flopped over and over in the dusty street when Lo struck tho ground. In just about tie minute from the time Shorts "pulled out the stopper," here, the locomotive was a ruined mass at Clavtnn 1 ha distance between the two points is one mile and a Quarter. Aa ouirk as nos. siblo a telegram was sent to C'Lytun io "bwiicu ner ou, out she beat the telegram by about two lengths, and had spread herself nrettv well nverf lm depot ground when tho dispatch reach ed there. She did not obev tho curve at Clayton at all, but shot off in a straight lino across tha cronnda Rim jumped off with such force as to throw herself flat on her side, and in this condition she smashed into the plat form along the main track, near the north end of the denot. She slid sidewise for 100 yards or more, snap-. ping uoiis aim rods aa it tney wero ropes of sand. Her wheels that were uppermosUAvhizzod round like n top. and the raging steam wlmzod like mad from every aperture. Fortunate- y the exhaust pipe broke, or tho- mi2ht have burst her boiler. 11m whole affair was over almost as oiitk as wink. In two hours after ih . acci dent a wrecking train from W!ii, ;,,. ton was on the snot, and by 4 ' 1 the wreckers had picked up the j s, put the wreck on the track atd te;e off for tho repair shops. Smyrna, I hi. Times. A man was sawing wood yes. era ; afternoon in a back yard, lie t . ed two sticks us thick as your wrist t and then went into the house. "Mary," said he to his wifj, "uiy country needs me; there is no use talking, we just got to elatigl t m all these Injuus; no true patriot t.iu bo expected to hang arouud a wood pile these days." ' "John," said his wife, "if yon fight Injuus as well hs you 6aw 'ud support your family, it v.. ' ike ono hundred aud eighteen 1 v to capture one squt.w, and tin u d havo to catch her when fbe i the ague and throw pepper in her vyc." John went back to th woodpile, woudering who told bis wile all aUout him, t