F :g.071,0, , ~! 1 ---- ;:k -- , -----=----- ' _ .- . . . . ._.....„. - -I t )c. • ~1 1) 1 .4 )11111 ' - ' -- r - ' - - - "?.IA-\ ;k s' ••••• I. ' ""‘ • ' - ..1 T ----- F - I B S- :772 . 11, ' 4 4 _.-; 4 '..:ai :r k 1 ; fli k .-_--, ~. 74 ~,9,,, k,-.-±f.:!ir..7.777;:• ,- ,-...•=.. - -v".l. a \ • = ~.., . - t r. IA ' 2, •- --= .1 r, / - ::: '''' . , -.‘ . z in q ... a ti : ‘ . 4 ... ..Qt.,. , ~, ,,; ir ., ..,: : ; _ : ..,4i, ) ,„.:„ iso •i • . ;:r. .= .1-- - : :-- .. _ ~, _... . • _, ...,.. ....,.,, ..,..„„.,,,. ~flI r.. v ‘d ./ 4 i,i, , ' ~:.•:' -- --.-.-: , 2. -, . 11 F. - .r 7: -- ~. ''' : '':, "." •..• ' ' --,7r----- ------. r. _ ...- - 7 ir, ...56 ; ='-'':', '' ' ' ', ..f:, •." - • . ' --- ""fr •• , - -.... N - 1 ) 7 ) ---- ' ---- FUR FARMER AND MECHANIC. _ . Muotc4 to politics, ;Nem:), £itcrnturc, poetn), '2lqticulturr, the DiffitEnou of Usefut 3nfopitation, 1;3 metal Jutelliconct,'ltinusemtitt, Manias, &c. VOLUME VIII. THE LEHIGH REGISTER 41 published in the Borough of Allentown, lelligh County, Pa., crery Wednesday, by A. L. MIKE, A sz 50 per annum, payable in advance, and 02 00 if not paid until the end of the year. Nu paper discontinued, until all arrearages are pad except at the optoin of the proprietor. M* Office in Hamilton Street, one door East of the German Reformed Church, nearly opposite the ..Freidensbote" Office. Attention Customers CHEAP WITCHES, Ilanlice Ql.loclis cui Jcwctril, At No. 21, WEST FIAMILTON STREET, ALLENTOWN. Good Watch Glasses 6.1- ..---,---- 4 7 i ii. .,,, 4ar 71 - 7-2 il IA 63i1E050=3:2) Best Watch Glasses 12 YANKEE CLCCKS FRC3I $1.25 to 56,00 Joseph H. & Co._ Adopts this method to inform then friends and the public in general, dart they have lately established themselves in the above business at No. 21, WEST 11/..:olLroN Ernwr, where they will exhibit for sale an assort ment of goods, lately purchased in New York and Philadelphia. such as CLOCKS WATCHES AND JEWELRY The following is a list of their articles and prices: Pine Gold .Lapine "Wa , ches 20 to $24 " " Detached " `.).5 to :I5; " " full Jew'el. Pat. Lever. 40 - to 75 Hunting Case" " 43 to I`2s' Silver Lapine Watches 9to 12 " Detached 12 to JO " Patent Lever " 12 to 25 hunting Pat. Lev. watches, 20 to 35. Yankee Clucks. 1,25 to 3,00 8 day Clocks, :3,50 to 0,00 " Iron Frame splcndid:y engraved 5 in 15 Gold Breast pins, from 50 cts. to $lO 00 " Ear rings 25 cis. to 10 00 He also keeps on hand a full assortntent of Gold and Silver spectacles and Spectable Oases's, purses, port monies, &c. Musical instruments such es violins, vio lin strings, Musical Boxes, Accordians,lll of which are sold at wholesale or retaii,andi at prices far below what they ever were sold in this place. Persons in want of Jewelry rill 'find it to' he their advantage . to give them a call be fore purchasing elsewhere, as they feel con fident of satisfying all who may favor them with their patronage. Mr. ILICO, is well known in this place as a skillful mechanic. and all his work will be warranted. Every article sold by them, is warranted to be what it is sold for, and no mistake Clock and watch makers throughout the country, will do well to give them a call as they will sell at wholesale and retaireve ry article kept in their line of business. • la - Through the aid of one of Bottum's Patent improved universal Lathe Chucks, they-are enabled to make repairs on clocks, watches and all kinds of Jewelry, much cheaper than the old way of working,"tonse quently this particular branch of the busi ness will be punctually attended to and done up on the most reasonable terms Allentown, June 14, 1554 YRFAIi S SAS , WEIGHING LESS THAN 21 OUNCES. For the Cure of hernia or Rtpture. Acknowledged*by the highest medical au thorities of Philadelphia, incomparably su perior to any other in use. Sufferers will I be gratified to learn that the occasion now offers to procure not only the lightest and easy. but as durable a Trtiss as any Other, Se lieu of the cumbrons aml uncom, Portable article usually sold. There is no difficulty attending the fitting, and when the pad is located, it will retain its position with out change. Persons at a dista,nce unable to call on the subscriber, can have the Truss sent to any address, by remitting Five Dollars -for the double—with measure round the hips, and stating side affected. It will be exchanged to suit if not fitting, by returning it at once, unsoiled, For sale only by the Importer. CALEB El. NEEDLES, Cor. Twelfth & Race St. Phil -1 Ladies, requiring the benefit of Me. Melded Supports, owing to derangement of the Internal Organs, including Falling of the Womb, Vocal. Pulmonary, Dyspeptic, Nervous and Spinal Weakness, are inform ed that a competent and experienced LADY Will be inattandance at the Rooms,(set apart for their exclusive use,) No. 114, T‘vELFTH St.. lit door below Race. • Juno 28, 1851 Job Printing, Neatly exceuted:at the "Itagister Office " A FAMILY NEWSPAI The largest supply of goods ever brought to Allentown, can be found at No. 31. EAST HAMILTON STREET, KECK and AEWHARD'S .BULL of Fel 8 1110.1% These gentlemen adopt this method to inform their friends 4A and the public in general "..:' that they have lately entered into partnership. under the i ( - aboye mentioned firm, and • will follow the M IC • RH ANT TAILORING f . ^.. . BUSINESS, ,n all its various branches at the "old stand" formerly kepi. by Keck and Lek, directly opposite the "Register Office," where they are prepared to sell at the lowest prices all kinds of fashionable Goods, such as blue black and fancy colored Cloths. Cassimeers and Vt stings,Wintt:r Clothes, Collars, Han kerchiefs, Cravats, &c. They also keep on hand at all times a large and fashionable as sortment of geadyinade Clothing, such as Coats of every color and description. Pantaloons of all styles and prices,all kinds of Vestings, Shirts and Undershirts,Col'ars, Cravats, Suspenders, &c., all of which they will sell at Extraordinary Low Prices, that no one, who visits theii establishment, can help to buy eitht r Coat, Pants, Vests, or something in their line of horsiness. .They have just returned from Philadelphia and New York and have replenished their Stock of goods that it may with right be turned the The %%oil( they turn out is under their own supervision, and hating engnged one of the best Cutters in the country, they will be able to turn out the "best fits." Coats, Pantaloons and Vests will be made up to order after the newest fashion, no matter whether the material has been purchased of them or not. The"• return their thanks for the favors •they have received and tiu.Athey continued. Fashion plates as they come out. are al ways kept icr sale. KECK & NEWHARD. Allet.tcwri, August 31. ' 5-3al TEL LE HIGH' T ausvoytatiem C 0111 p . Give notice alat they are now prepared to receive and forward Merchandizo of all kinds from Philadelphia to Easton, Betide- Allentown, Mooch Chunk, and Penn Haven, and all intermediate places. The Goods will be received and shipped at their old stand first warf above Vine street.— They also forward goods to anti from New York, nia Delaware and Raritan Canal and Delaware Canal. Goods by this line from New York will go by A. S. NEILSON'S line of vessels to New Brunswick, by Sloops Fox and Grey Hound, which will be found at the Albany Basin, foot of Cedar Street, North River.. Any information required can be had of Messrs. REYNOLD & CLARK, No. 100. West street, N. Y. at Neilson's Agent office, 88 West street, N. Y. IVith•great increased facilities, they hope to give prompt de,Fpaich to all goods, to so licit the patronage of shippers. • DRAKE, WILSON & Co., Proprietors. • AGENTS. H. S. Morehead. Philadelphia. John Opdycke, Easton. Borheck & Knauss, Bethlehem. A.. J. Ritz, Allentown. A. W. Leisenring. Mauch Chunk. A. Pardee & Co., Penn Haven. Allentown, April 12, 1854. v ¶-6m ¶-6m . • The Best and Cheapest Stock of Boots Shoes, Gai adhp... 1 4 - .4 466 tom, Gums. &c., in the city, at ' Dunbsres 76, South Second St. Philadelphia, (corner of Carters Street.) Being mostly of his own manufacture, he guarrantees them to wear; and will sell— wholesale or retail as cheap as the cheapest. Easy Shoes for Old Ladies. Plain and Fancy Boots, Shoes, Gaiters. &c., always on hand in great variety, for Boys, Y6ulh, Misses and Children. • Prices.—Ladies Gaiters, of every quality and style, from $1 to $2,50. Gents' Calf Skin Boots, from $3 to . ss, Patent Leather Shoes, Gaiter Boots, Congress Boots, But ten Boots, &c., from $1,50 to $4,50. Gum Boots, Shoes, Sand les, Clogs,always on hand. 4 g-ly-$8 Ur Old Gums bought and repaired. • June 28, 18541 *-Iy. ER. Glorious News Allentown flail of Fashion. 10,D28 min) ALLENTOWN, LEHIGH COUNTY, PA., JULY 26, 1854. poctical 13 cp at timid. The Signal Star lIT T•7il.ll' ronnEsTan I'd not recall my childhood: With all its sweet delight, Its simple hiril.like gladness, It was not always bright. Even morning had her tear drops, And spring her cloudy sky, And on the fairest cradle I've seen the shadows lie. I'd not recall my childhood, Though tend,r memories throng Around its rosy portals, Prelusive to life's song; The full voice living chorus, Is sWelling round int- now, And a rosier light is resting Upon my maiden brow. I have made a changeful journey Up the hill of life since morn, I have gathered flowers and blossoms, I've been pierced by many a thorn; But from out of the core of sorrow, I have plucked a jewel rare, The strength which mortals gather In the ceaseless strife with care. Now I grasp life's burning briplrer. And howe'er the bubbles glow, l'il pause not till L've tasted The deepest wave below ; Though bitter dregs may mingle, The crimson tide shall roll, In full and fearless currents, Through the fountains of my soul . I .siu! I'd not go back to childhood, From the radient flush of noon. And when evening closes found me, 1 crave one only boon; Amid the valloy's darkness, hs dangers and its dread, The signal star of Judah To shine above my head. !-3elcctions. The Western Man. The following characteristic description of the Western Man, is copied from the French paper, the Pays. published in Paris, ..The great and excellent qualities of the Man of the West, are concealed under a rude or even coarse envelope. This is ea sily explained. The great west was form ed by an agglomeration of hundreds of memdepurting separately from every' cor ner of the union, afterwards collecting in groups of ten, then twenty, then of hun dreds, then of thousands, proportionately ast4Ky opened for themselves routes through the Miipen. treble forests ; relating to each 'other their superhuman labors, their strug gles against nature, their combats with the 'lndians, their success in agriculture ; mutat ly discussing the difficulties remaining to be conquered, their hope for the future, and fi nally combining their forces to clear . the land and constitute the ' immense world their labor had subjugated. . All these men had passed through strange trials ; they had made experience of savage life ; they had, as it were, lost the memory of civilization. Their bodies were broken by every variety of fatigue, their minds had lost their polish, by their mode of existence, and they had not sufficient - time left to re cover their forgotten education. All those who came to partake with them of the un fortunate wealth of these new countries, were compelled to adopt their strange man ner, for they also were condemned to pass. throught the sane trials, thesame struggles. of consequence was an agglomeration of beings, always armed for the defence of their persons, going to. church with their rifles upon their shoulders and pistols in their belts. They seemed like a military colony without discipline. • At table, at the church, in the streets, upon a word, upon the least - dispute, a man fell, and sometimes two, by the band of a neighbor and adver sary, und.personal quarrels were often con verted' into. regular battles. This state of things dates not so very far back—to hardly filly years front the present day. They fought on foot or on horseback, with the omnipotent rifle, wherever they might hap pen. to meet, While the witnesses had only the duty of verifying the death of the com batants; and often the witnesses themselves changediarts, and from simple spectators, became actors in these deplorable scenes. long time necessarily passed before those eccentric habits lost their exaggeration. Meanwhile the states of the west were con stituted; splendid cities were built; the pop. ulation increased with a etpulity truly extraordinary. But it needed the heap ing of new population upon new population to effect a. mitigation of ,these evils, which, after all, still retain something of their prim itive character. • And theme!' of the west re. mains at the present day, in many respects, that which he formerly was. He is free and easy, rude, coarse independent, susceptible, proud of his individuality, and meanwhile. familiar to excess.. The Kentuckian, who lIP.-- - ..,..- has long been the type of this half civilized savage, has been defined as •half horse, half alligator;" that is, something monstrous, a being almost supernatural.- With the man of the west the sentiments of equality is pushed to its extreme limits.— This results from his habit of life, and his continued necessities. The most polished among the western men, those whom a lib eral education ought to guarantee from these exaggerations, are the first to glory in this excessive principle and put it in practice. 'General Jackson. for example, who was during his whole life the veritable man of the west, whose youth was chequered with rifle and pistol shots, whose public duty as a ffiilitary - commander, and as President of the United States, attests this need of abso lute independence anal this moral indisci pline which is the distinguishing marks of the western tnan—General Jackson, I say, clothed with the highest functions of the government, made no scruples of touching glasses; and strange to say, it never hap pened that he failed to meet with •universal respect'. •Henry-Clay, that eminent statesman, willingly passed his leisure hours in the bar rooms. drinking and, talking politics with the first corner ; and he said once, on the floor of the senate, in a speech moreover of great power, as were all those which fell from his eloquent lips : —•For myself I live upon salt pork and cabbage I' •The western man is, as may be well imagined, rather cureless in his dress ; but it is not in the same manner as the Yankee. Ile disdains the black coat of fine cloth, threadbare and out of fashion ; he dresses himself with thick coarse cloth, and his cloth es are always comfortable and commodi ous. He wears heavy iron shod shoes : his cravat, if he has any. has the devil may care tie, or it is not tied at all, and his hat is of straw or felt, with a large brim 'such is his general style of dress. Whereover Le goes, he is smoking or chewing, alternately or simultaneously. •• Passing in the streets, he will not ask you for fire to light his cigar; be will un ceremoniously take yours from your lips, light his cigar, and return it without render ing thanks, for which he has not the time. If he perceives that you are smoking a bad cigar, he'will throw it'away, and offer you two or three. of his own, if his own are bet ter, nor does be require or expect thanks any more than he offers them. This trait suffi ciently displays what is at bottom, the heart of the western man. He is, in fact, gener ous to excess, grand in his hospitality, devo ted even to death, obliging without calcula tion. You arrive at his house, with a let ter of introduction, a pure formulary of po liteness ; he does not hesitate to place him self and even his purse at your service, and chat without counting, never disquieting himself as to whether you are in a condition to return the favor. •If he is an honest man, says the western man, speaking of the person he is obliging, •he will, sooner or later, repay the loan; if he is a rogue, why let us consider that he has put his hand in my pocket and robbed me, and say no morn about i t. The regret and the remorse will be for him( and not for me.' ' in Effecting Court Incident. We take pleasure in relating an incident which greatly enlisted our sympathies, held us spellbound by its interest, and finally made our hearts leap with joy at its happy termi nation. In die spring of 1838, we chanced to be spending a few days in a beautiful inland country town in Pennsylvania. It was court week, and to relieve us from the somewhat monotonous incidents of village life, we stepped into the room where the court had convened. Among the prisoners in the box we saw a lad but ton years of age, whose sad pen sive countenance, his young and innocent appearance, caused him to look sadly out of place among the hardened criminals, by whom he was surrounded. Close by the box, and manifesting the greatest interest in the proceedings, sat a tearful, woman, whose anxious look from the judge to the boy left us no room to doubt that it was ismother.— We turned with sadness from the scene to inquire of the offence of the prisoner, arid learned he was accused of stealing money. The case was soon 'commenced, and by the interest manifested by that large crowd, we found that our heart was not the only one in which sympathy for the lad existed.— How we pitied him? The bright smile has vanished from his face, and it expressed the cares of the aged. His young sister, a bright eyed girl, had gained admission to his side, and cheered him with the whisper ings of hope. But that sweet 'voice, which before caus ed* his heart to bouncrwith 'happiness, added only to the grief his shame had brought upon him. The progress of the case acquainted us with the circumstances of the loss—the ex tent of which was but a dime, no more? The lad's employer, a wealthy, miserly, and unprincipled manufacturer, had made use of it for the purpose of what he called "testing the boy's honesty." It was plac ed whore, from its very position, the lad would oftenest see it, and least suspect the trap. The day passed, and the master, to his mortification, not pleasure, found the coin untouched. Another day passed: and yet his object was not gained. He, however. determined that the boy should take it, and so let it remain. - _ This continued temptation was too much for the boy's resistance. The dime was ta ken. A simple present for that little sis ter was purchased with ..it. But while re truning home to gladden her heart, his own was made heavy by being arrested for theft, a crime the nature of which he little knew. These circumstances were sustained by sev eral of his employer's workmen, who were also parties to the plot. An attorney urged upon the jury the necessity of making the "little rogue" an example to others by pun ishment. Before. 1 could see many tears of sympathy for the lad, his widowed moth er, and faithful sister. But their eyes were all dry now, and none looked as it they car ed for naught else but conviction. The accuser sat in a conspicuous place, smiling as if in fiendike exultation over the misery he had brought upon that poor but once happy trio. We felt that there was but little hope for the and the youthful appearance of the attorney who had volunteered in his de fence gave no encouragement, as we learn ed that it was the young man's maiden plea—his first address. He appeared greatly confused, and reached to a desk near him, from which be took the Bible that had been used to solemnize the testimony. This rnov ment was received with general laughter and tauntine. remarks ; amorig, which we heard a harsh fellow, close to us, cry out: "He forgets what it is. Thinking to get hold of some ponderous law-book, he has made a mistake and got the Bible." The remark made the young attorney blush with auger and turning with flashing ey4s upon the audience he convinced them there was no mistake saying, "Justice wants no better book." His confusion was gone, and instantly he was as calm as the sober Judge on the bench. The Bible was open ed and every eye was upon him, as he qui etly and leisurely turned over the leaves.— Amidst breathless silence he read the jury this sentence, "Lead us not into tempta tion." We felt our heart throb at the sound oi these words. The audience looked at each other without speaking ; and the jurymen exchanged glances as the appropriate quo tation carried its moral to their hearts. Then followed an address which for pathetic4lo quence we have never heard excelled. Its influence was like magic. We saw the guilty accuser leave the room in fear of per sonal violence. The prisoner looked hope ful ; the mother smiled again ; and, before its conclusion, there was not an eye in the court room that was not moist. The speech affecting to that degree which caused tears, held its hearers spell-bound. The little time that was necessary to tran spire before the verdict of the jury could be learned was a period of great anxiety and suspense. But when their whispering con sultation ceased, and those happy words, "Nut guilty," came from the foreman, they passed like a thrill of electricity from lip to lip, the dignity of the court was for gotten, and not a voiceovas there that did not join in the acclamation that hailed the lad's release. The young lawyer's first plea was a succes.sfull one. Ile was soon a favorite, and now represents his district in the Commonwealth. - The lad has never ceased his grateful re membrances, and we by the affecting scene herein attempted to be described, have often been led to think how manifold greater is the crime of the temper than of the tempt ed.—Rrthur Home's Gazette. Oar Prairies. The great prairies of the west are thus spoken of by a late English traveller i'ho word prairie is derived from she French; and signifies meadow. in Ameri ca it means grass land naturally free from timber, and is used in this sense by me.— Prairies have not been found in the eastern parts of North America, and many conject ures exist regarding their origin in the west. Gradually passing from the forests and oak opening of Michigan, it was not until after crossing the river Des Plaint's that 'become fully sensible of the beauty and sublimity of the prairies. They embrace every texture of soil and outline of surface, and are suf ficiently undulating to prevent the stagna tion of water. The herbage consists of tall grass, interspersed with flowering plants of every hue, which succeed each other as the season advances. The blossoming period was nearly over at the time of mrjourney. sunflowers were particularly numerous, and almost all the plants had yellow blossoms. Every day brought me in contact with spe cies formerly unobserved, while others with which I had become familiar, disappeared. Occasionally, clumps of trees stood on the surface, like islands in the man. The bounding forest projected and" receded in pleasing forms, and the distant outlines ap peared graceful. I had no time . for search- . ing Out and studying scenery, and perhaps conceptions of beauty and grouping of trees NUMBER 43. formed in the artificial school of Britain,are inapplicable to the magnir-ent scale on . which nature bath adorned the country be tween Chicago and Springfield. The works of man are mere distortions compared with those of nature and I have no doubt many prairies, containing hundreds of square miles exceed the finest English parks in beauty as they do in extent. Sometimes I found myself in the midst of the area without a tree or object of any kind within the range of vision ; the surface, clothed with inter esting vegetation around me, appearing like a sea, suggested ideas which I had not then the means of recording, and which cannot be recalled. The wide e*panse appeared as the gift of God to man for the exercise of h;s industry ; and there being no obstacle to immediate cultivation, nature seemed invit ing the husbandman to till the soil, and par take of her bounty.' Trial of a License Case. A few years since, an effort was made by the public of this county to break up the traffic of ardent spirits between the Indians residing on the Alleghany Reservation and their white neighbors, who were engaged in the business of supplying them with the 4.fire water." In all the trials that were had, the Indians were necessarily called as witness, and as a disclosure of the names of those who were in, the habit of furnishing them with drink usually operated to stop the supplies of those who informed, various expedients were re sorted to by the witnesses, to evade giving the necessarf °rid !nee. On one occasion, where an indictment was pLnding against an inn-keeper for selling liquor to the Indi-, ans, 'John Titus" was called to prove the offence. 'John' loved a drink amazingly, and came upon the witness' stand with the air of a man whose mind was mad.. up to baffle the District Attorney in all his inqui ries, at all hazards. After the usual oath was administered, the f0i1..,..'g slialoghe ensued : • • 'Well, John,' asked the District Attor ney, •were you at Currier's on the day of the circus ?' 'Yes,' was the prompt and laconic reply. •\Yho else was there, John ?' .oh, Dan Killbuck, and two. three other 'Had you been drinking there, John 1' . 'Yes. 'All of you?' .Yes.' 'Were you all drunk?' Yr.' Pretty drunk?' Yea very drunk.' 'Well, John, where did you get your whiskey?' John drew himself up to his full height and assuming all the dignity of his.race re plied with marked deliberation and empha sis, and almost a pause between each word; '.9h—dal—too—muchuestionr No effort would induce. John to give any other answer, and he was allowed to retire. Olean S. Y. Journal. READING A LOVE-LETTER.—An amusing instance of Hibernian simplicity is afforded by the following little story, told us by a friend, in whose word we give it . Molly, our housemaid, is a model one. who handles the broomstick like a scepter, and who has an abhorrence for dirt. and a sympathy . for soapsuds, that amounts to a passion. She is a bustling. busy, rosy ' cheeked, bright-eyed, blundering Hibernian. who hovers about our book-shelves, makes war upon our papers, and goes about thirst ing for new worlds to conquer, in the shape of undusted and unrighted corners.. One day she entered our library in a con fused and uncertain manner, quite different from her usual bustling way. She stood at the door with a 'letter between her thumb and finger, which she held at arm's length as if she had a gunpowder plot in her grasp. In answer to our inquiries as to her business, she answered : * 'An' it please yer honor, I'm a poor girl. and twin's much larnin,' and ye sees, place yer honor, Paddy O'Reilly, and the etthee than him doesn't brathe in ould Ireland; has, been writin' of me a letther—a love lather. plase yer honor; an'—an'—' We guessed at 'het embarrasment and of. fered to relieve it. by reading the letter.— Still she hesitated,, while she twisted a hit of raw cotton in her fingers.." Shure,' she resumed. 'an' that's jist what . I want, but it isn't a atunleman like ger-, self that would be knowing the secrets be-. tween us, and so, here she twisted the cot ton quite nervously, if it 'ill on l y plan yer honor, while yer radeing. it, so that Or may not hero it yerself, y'll jiltput Mishit of cot—. ton in yer ear an' stop up yer heroin,' and thin the socrets ill be unknown to yer.' We hadn't the heart to refuse her. and ; with the gra'vest face possible, complied with her request ; but often since, we have laughed heartily as we have related the in cident.—Exchwrige pope?, Nor Ben.—TwolrishEtt4.4ifunkin Prietn one for stealing a cow, La the& otharlor stealing a watch. "Mike," .said the cow.stealer. what "o'clock is id" ‘.och. Pat, I haven't my watts!) bandy; but I think it ie about oinking
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