I I v JCIITO01W1 " - ' 'T & mm. The whole art of Government consists in the art of being honest. Jefferson. 31 VOL. 10. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER IS, 1849. No:iM. Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two dollars per annum in advance Two dollars aud a quarter, half yearly and if not paid before the end of the year. Two dollars and a half. Those who receive their papers by a carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprie tor, will be charged 37 l-l! cents, per year, extra. No paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the option of the Editor. IDAdvertiseinents not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) Will be inserted three weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five counts for everj subsequent insertion. The charge for one and tlirce insertions the same. A liberal discount made to yearly advertiseis. K7A11 letters addressed to the Editor must be post-paid. JOB PRINTING. Havingti general assortmcntof large, elegant, plain andoma menlal Type, we are prepared to execute every description of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER I. BIANKS, PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed" with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms .I AT THE OFFICE OF THE v. Jeff ersoniau Republican. From the Tribune. AWAKE TO EFFORT. BY MRS. SARAH T. BOLTON. " The night cometh when no man can work." Awake lo effort while the day is shining ; .The time to labor will not always last, And no regret, repentance nor repingng, Can bring to us again the buried Pas The 3ilent sands of life are falling fast ; Time tells our busy pulses one by one ; And shall our works, so needful and so vast, Be all completed, or but just begun, When twilight shadows veil Life's dim, departing sun ? What duties have our idle hands neglected 1 What useful lesson have we learned and taught! What warmth, what radiance have our minds re flected What rich and rare materials have we brought For deep investigation, earnest thought ; Concealed within the soul's unfathomed mine, How many a sparkling gem remains unwrought, That Industry might place on Learning's shrine, Ordavish on the world, to further God's design. The . smallest bark, on Life's tumultuous ocean, .Will leave a track behind for ever more ; The lightest wave of influence, set in motion, Extends and widens to the eternal shore. We should be wary, then, who go before A myriad yet to be, and we should take Our bearing carefully, where breakers roar And fearfuUempests gather ; one mistake May wreck unnumbered barks that follow in our wake. To eflbrti ye whom God has nobly gifted With that prevailing power, undying Song : For Human Good let every pen be lifted ; For Human Good let every heart be Strong. Is there on crying sin, no grievous wrong That you may help to weaken or repress ! In wayside hut and hovel, 'midst the throng Down-trodden by privation and distress. Is there no stricken heart that ve can cheer and f bless? r- .Sing idle lays to idle harps no longer; . Go peal an authem at the gate of Heaven Exertion makes the fainting-spirit stronger Sing, till the bonds of Ignorance are riven, Till dark oppression from the earth is driven. Sing, till, from every land and every sea, One universal triumph song is given, "To hail the long expected jubilee, When every bond is broke and every vassal free. And ye. whose birthright is the glorious dower Of Eloquence, to thrill the immortal soul, Use not unwisely the transcendent power To waken, guide, restrain, direct, control The heart's deep, deep emotions ; let the goal Of your ambition be, a name enshrined By love and gratitude upon the scroll, Where generations yet unborn shall find The deathless deeds of those who loved and blessed mankind. Go, rouse the mighty energies that slumber Unknown, unnumbered, in the worlds great heart; Remove the stubborn errors that encumber The fields of Science, Literature and Art; Rend Superstition's dark'ning veil apart, rAnd hurl to earth blind Bigotry, the ban From which a thousand grievous evils start, To thwart and mar the great Creator's plan, And break the ties that bind the Brotherhood of Man. And ye who sit aloft in earth's high places, , Perchance amid your wealth ye scarcely know That Want and Woe are leaving fearful traces, Upon the toiling multitude below ; From your abundance, can ye not bestow A mite to smooth the thorny paths they tread 1 Have ye no sympathy with human woe ? No ray of blessed hope and joy to shed Upon the weary hearts lhat pine and toil for bread? Amid' the gorgeous splendor that bedizens Your palaces, no Jonger idly 'stand, While dens of wickedness and loathsome prisons, Arise like lightning plague-spots oer the land. Go speak a word, and lend a helping hand Torrescue men from Degradatjon's-thrali, Nor deem a just and righteousGod has banned . The toiling millions, while the rain-drops fall, And blessed sunbeams shine from heaven,-alikefoH all. , - DYjNVVoiiDs.rTbo last expression, of lhe veteran: General Gaines to his friends, was, 4 My knapsack is packed, and I am ready for the last march." " The World Owes Tie a laving. " BY HORACE GREELEY. " The world owes me a good living and I'll have it," says some blackleg, as he finishes a luxurious repast ; " here landlord, anoiher bot tle of your prime Madeira !" Half a dozen empiy-headed fops, who sit gazing on him with stealth, in silent admiration, hail the sentiment with rapturous applause. " That's it ! land lord ! more wine here ! we won't go home till morning ! Let us go it while we are young. Who cares for the expense ?" The conse quence of this is, the pilfering of money draw ers, the ignominious loss of employment, gen teel loaferism, and so on, until one of these en terprising gontlemen in eager pursuit of the " good living" ihe world owes him, puis the wrong man's name to a check, or in some kind of a way gets a ticket for the marble palace at Sing Sing, where the state provides a " living" for those it considers deserving, but not just such a one as consist with their own estimate of their exalted merits. The great error in this case is the original maxim. It is falso and detestable. The world owes you a living 1 How owes ? Have you earned it by good servioe 1 If you have, weth er on the anvil or in the pulpit, as a toiler or a teacher, you have acquired a just right to a livelihood. But if vou have eaten as much as you earned, or worse still, have done little or no good, the world owes you nothing. You may be worth millions and able to enjoy every imaginable luxury, without cajc or effort ; but if you have done nothing to increase the sum of human comforts, instead of the world owing you anything, as fools have babbled, you ate morally a bankrupt and a beggar. Mankind are just waking to a consciousness of the duty resting on every man to be active and useful in his day and in his sphere. All are not called to dig and hew or plow or plane but every man has a sphere of useful ness allotted lo him by Providence, and is un faithful to his high trust if he deserts it for idle pomp and heedless luxury. One man may be fined by nature and inclination for an ariizan, anoiher for a sailor, and a third for a merchant ; but no man was ever born filled for an idler and drone. Those who become such are the victims of perverse circumstances and a de plorable false education. " But has not a rich man the right to enjoy his 'wealth V Most certainly. We would be the last to deprive him of it. He has a natural and a legal right to possess and enjoy it in any manner not injurious to others ; but he has no moral right lo be useless because he has supe rior means of being useful. Let him surround himself wilh all the irue comforts and true lux-j uriea of life ; let the masier-pieces of art smile upon him in his galleries and the mighty minds of all ages speak to him from his library. Lei plenty deck his board, and the faces of those he loves gather joyously around it. Let him possess in abundance the means of satisfying every pure and just desire of his nature ; and become wiser, nobler, larger in soul, lhan his less fortunate neighbor. But let him never forget as if he is properly trained, he never can that it is his solemn doiy to be useful to his fellow creatures, especially to ihe depres sed and suffering lo labor for their benefit, and suffer, if need be, for their elevation. The servile idolatry wilh which ignorance, and vulgarity have looked up to power and wealth the hosannahs which trampled mil- linne Kneo Bimo hpfnrn. lliA f?nrn nf rnnniKrnr and other scourges of the earth are fading ,nan d,ed a horse was purchased, .and was in and fitting for ever. In the twilight which sue- ovulated with the matter from the man. 1 he ceeds the gross darkness, there comes a season i horse showed all .the symptoms of acute glan- i i i i . c .i Torn nf wnirn nn ilmn Trifl man nlsn mil ol moral anarcny, wnen men naving iosi laun in the juggles which once blinded and bound them, resolve to believe nothing to decry and prostrate all lhat rises above Us lowest level, Now ihe laborer with his sinews returns hatred for the contempt once cast upon him and says, ' What good is there in anything bui raanu- ai labor! away wilh all elsel-those whose la-! bor is chiefly menial are deceivers and moths!" But this is a transitory ebullition. Tho world soon learns to respect its benefactors in what ever sphere, and to realize lhat he who truly and honestly exerts himself in some depart ment of useful effort, may justly claim a broth erhood with all who toil, and make and cam, Let the rich cease to look down on the poor . the merchant on lhe porter ; let each respect the dignity of man, whether in his own person or in that of his less fortunate brother ; lei haughtiness and pride cease on one side, and envy, jealousy and natred wiin meir train oi direful consequences will vanish from the oth er, and all animated with common kindness will move forward in common concord io the aitaHjjeni of the highest good. ... . , A contemporary says, the following from one Iho n 1 1 I'.rlllsh rsrifitS IS eXnUlSllG. MB lIltnKS it is the very essence of fancy. It was ad dressed io a lady upon whose bosom a flake of snow had fallen and melted : : The envious snow comes down in haste, To prove thy breast less fair, ' But erieve3 to see itself surpassed, 4 ' . And melts into a tear. 1 Pshaw !' says Noah's Messenger,, 'wccan beat that anv time. Look here J , ' , Down her white bosom rolled a tear, We know it hadn'i oughier, Until at last at last, oh dear ! - Her shirt, was wet as water . .. Sure Cure for the Dysentery,---A qor respondent of the Plajnfield, Union, 8ays, ,iliat JPeaelHree bark and Elder bark, ufj .each.equal quantilies-r-the outward bark qf botbJe scraped off and thrown away, the inward bark of both to be boiled and made inip.a.strong lea, to be drank .very freely from the firi stage of the complaint upu cured. It will not hurt any one to dunk as freely as he can, .uu v.v. - - - i 1 Lecture to Country Girls ou Stress. I have wanted, girls, for a long time to give you a long lecture on dress, not because you do not think enough about it, but because you do not think right. It is a very important mailer lo be well-dressed, and most people feel this ; but very few ever learn ihe art. Wo men waste more time and money disfiguring j themselves, than in all other occupations and amusements. Yes, and they wasie health and happiness along. There is an inconceiv able amount of worse than useless sewing done in this country. Thousands of women ruin their health, send themselves to an untimely grave, putting in stitches lhat are neither use ful or ornamental. I believe you country girls are peculiarly addicted to this folly. Most of you make your own dresses, and few of you understand it well, consequently you imagine the more sliiches you put in ihe belter. Then, from want of a properly cultivated taste, you are addicted to buying cheap finery. You need not deny this to me, for I know you too well. I have lived among you a little too long not to know how country girls dress. Your ( storekeepers know it too, and bring out such a parcel of cheap, tawdry, many-colored finery as would be likely to take the fancy of a set of Indians. If they can get lawn or calico with sixty-seven dozen colors in it, so much ' the better. You buy it spend a great deal of time to make it nicely spatter it over with ruffles, folds, and frumples, that would disfig ure anything. Then, the first time it is wash ed, fifiy-two dozen of the colors fade ; you have : a dirty rag ihai is fit for nothing but to wipe the floor. You lament the loss of your money ; but what of your time ? The habit of sew, sew, sewing at a garment sixteen times as much as is necessary to make it, has become an evil of ' sufficient magnitude to require legislative in terference. I once saw a city lady go to the country for health pale, nervous, cross, mise rable ; with a little child as miserable as her self. By way of enjoying fresh air and exer- cise, she sat down and sowed diligently for! two full days to make an apron for the child There were folds, buttons, and braid frum pies and fandangoes past count, and she had some dozens lo make of the same sort, while the poor little child-martyr was condemned to imprisonment and stripes to prevent its disfig uring the evidences of its mother's insanity, which it wore on its poor, miserable little per son. I never felt more strongly templed to do anything than to roll mother and child, finery and work-basket in a mud-puddle. I really thought her husband should have been enti tled to a divorce. Health, happiness and com- fori wero banished from his fireside by the sewing demon. She completely ruined her own healih sewing, then murdered her child ren by inches to keep them from spoiling herjio say that it was observed by them all with j tainly," replied the Colonel " and a very gen work. A woman who cannot make a half-, pretty good faith. Whether Lydia knew the i ilcmanly man he is too." " You may think so," dozen bibs for children in one day, and with j bargain thai her charms had occasioned, tradi-j rejoined the wife," but ldon'i and will tell you all ihe requisites of comfort and convenience, tion sayeth noi ! but she subsequently became j why." A few days ago I gathered together all should never take a needle in her fingers." j Mr. Thatcher's wife, and bore him ten children, the trumpery with which you have been clut Mrs. Swisshelm, of the Pittsburg Sat. Visitor., ham whom many members of the numerous j tering the house for the last 12 months, and family have sprung. Our venerable townsman, j sent it to him with orders to sell the lot imme- G!atder iaa I?Iau and Morse. ; jir. peter Thatcher, is the great grandson of' diately to ihe highest bidder for cash. He as When the Eleventh Hussars were lasi quar- peler noiicod above. Yarmouth Register. ' sured me he would do so this week at farthest terea in uuoun a surgeon, in conjunction wiin some of the most eminent medical men in that city, attended a policeman at one of the hospi tals, who died of tho glanders. The unfortunate man, it is supposed, took tho infection from drinking out of a bucket which had been used by a glandered horse. Three days before this Drawings were taken by an eminent ariisi of portions of ihe lungs of the man, and also those of tho horse, which showed the most per- lfect Bimilarity in the tubercles. Drawings were a,3U H,auo Ul ,l,e ociiuuiueuau memuran,; of ,ho man and tho horse, showing ihe identity of lhe ulceration. The man was also shown as ne lay dead, wiin tne appearance oi me pos- tules over the body ; these pustules appoared to have a very marked difference from those in niriap liooocnfl rifivinn n rrYt a nranln molairl ' W L Ills 1 UIQUUOUUj UUI II UltU UIVU1W IUiJIUUU of a red. This case excited great attention at the time,, and our surgeon was requested to at tend at Chatham with the drawings, which were carefully copied and deposited in the Med ical M.useum. Uu tutored Eloquence. A Catawba warrior in 1822, named Peter Harris, made known his wants to tho Legisla- .lore 0r South. Carolina in the following Ian- 2uf.2y' c .u v ' e I am one of lhe lingering survivors of an almost extinguished race. Our graves will ! . it. u-. . t ri soon be our only habitaiions. I am one of ihe r ' -.--it - "1..SII -x; : .u.. c.i.i ... i. 'low siama mm aim milium lit uio iiuiu iviicic, the lem of lhe revolulion passed j have j i innrrni nnninc iiih nruisi inr vnur sil'm 1 1 f , i . . ti - i. rn. .. i lull, ilk k.r:L.i.ii i..w a i . u .w. yiu. British have disappeared and you are free ; yet frfMn-'mn Vin.rji- I Yl A riff.!) , I. . n nnlllfTirr ll H I" ! . . t i . . i i r . I j nave l gained any ttnng Dy tneir ue ea, i , pursuou uie ueer iur Buusmiitc.--iiio . disappearing-l must starve uod oraa.ned mo Inr 1 1, it Inrnot ami m nmt.lt inn IB lhf hnilp .wi ,u.w., j. . fail me in the chase. The hand which fought for your liberties is now open for your relief. In my youih I bled in battle thai you might be independent let not my heart in my old age bleed for want of your commisseration." .m i :i r--n: ini .warrior ctmauyv nr uuuru u, we- ro or Demosttienes, ne never attended me schools ol eipquejiqe.m.me. Areopagus, wqere the divine, art was taughi.; and yet vyhen did those. illustrious orators of antiquity deliver an address w.hich.Jn .vspeecfi. so brief,,coniaiqed snch 'touching ejoquence asthat from this War rior 1 Yet he was a " savage.H- . 'Do you keep thatches here V askedra wag of a re-tailor.' Ohryesa! kfnds.' Then I'll take a trotting match.5 A ILccal Romance. Tradition has preserved a singular anecdote of John Thatcher, a son of one of the earliest settlers of this town. He was married in 1661, , to Miss Rebecca Wtnslow, of Duxbury, in Plymouth county, if we mistake not. On his way home with his new bride, he stopped for the night ai the house of a friend, Col. Gor ham, of Barnslable, one of the most prominent citizens of the town. Merriment and gaily prevailed, and during tho evening a female in fant about three weeks old, was introduced and ihe night of her birth being mentioned, Mr. Thatcher observed, "That is the very night we were married, and taking the child in his arms, he presented ittfrq his bride, and jok ingly said, ' Here my deaTs a little lady that was born on the same night that we were mar ried. I wish you would kiss her, for I intend to have her for my second wife.". " I will, my dear, with great pleasure," replied she, " but I hope it will be very long before your intention is fulfilled in that respect." Mr. Thatcher and his wife lived happily to- gether for about twenty years, and faithfully fulfilled the scriptural injunction to " multiply and replenish the earth." Mrs. T. left a large family of children, among whom was a son named Peter. After Mr. Thatcher had mourned a reason able length of lime, he began to think of getting another partner. None of the maidens, young or old seemed to please him like Lydia Gorham, j the utile lady of the preceding part of ihe sto-j dieve liadttioti, ! ry, now grown up, if we may be to a fair comely girl, " full of gushing life," as i his audience, the poets say But there was one impediment j " Niue dollars and ninety cents ! cried the in the way. His eldest son Peter, had shown j auctioneer,, Gentlemen, ii is a shame, it is bar a predilection for the girl, and the old man was , barous lo stand by and permit such a sacrifice at a loss to decide whether she favored ihe suit j of properly ! Nine dollars aud nmeiy Good of the sire or the son. The one rode a black ! morning Colonel : a magnificent lot of of an horse in his visits, and ihe other rode a white. J tiques and all going for nine dollars and nine There was a kind of tacit agreement between i ty cents. Gentlemen, you'll never see such an- the two, that one should not interfere with the (other lot; and all going for nine dollars and nine visit of the other ; so when ihe father found a 1 ty cents. Col. W. can you permit ouch a sac- white horse tied in front of Col. Gotham's un- like the good Samaritan, he crossed over on the lot, and then wilh a nod and a wiuk assured other side ; and the son, when the black horse him he eould not. The next instant, the ham was there returned ihe favor. Thus things j mer came down a.id the purchase was his at went on until the patience of the old gentle-1 ten dollars. As the articles were to be paid man was well nigh exhausted, and he resohed ) for, and removed immediately, the Col. lost no upon a desperate step to decide tho matter. ; time in getting a cart, and having seen every Taking the son to one side he said to him, " Pe- J thing packed up and on their way to his house, ter, are you or are you not going to marry Ly- he proceeded to his own store chuckling within dia Gorham?" Peter replied that he had not ' himself that now at least, he had made a bargain yet made up his mind." Well," said ihe old at which his wife could nor grumble, gentleman, " I will make you an offer ; if you In due time, the Colonel was sitting at the will give her up and court her no more, I will ; dinner table when lifting his eyes he observed? give you thirteen pounds in money and ihe pair ; a cloud on his wife's brow. " Well, my dear," of black steers. - What do you say lo that ?" said he inquiringly,1' Well," repeated his wife, The young man hesitated but a moment. " Tis " h is not well, I am vexed beyond endurance, a bargain," said he ; and it is due the parties '. You know G , the auctioneer." " Cerr. ; : Habitual drunkenness is a sad evil ; but are there not other intoxications, equally to be avoi- ded I Kead this little anecdate ol an Arabian merchant, who, having hired a waterman's uoai, reiuseu io pay uie ireigmage. i no wu- lerman in a violent passion, appealed several times to the government of Muscat for justice. The governor as often ordered him to come again ; but observing him one day present his petition with coolness, he immediately granied his suit. The waterman, surprised at this con- of;dUCit demanded tho reason why he did not sooner grant his request. ' Because ' said the .judge, 'you were always drunk when I saw you jm lnQ waterman declaring tnai no nad noi been overtaken with wine for many years, the judge replied : 1 The drunkenness with which you were overtaken is the most dan gerous of all : it is the drunkenness of anger !' A ILatly in Pantaloons. Airs. Swisshelm, the editress of the Pitts- j burg Visiter, thinks lhat lhe wide skirts of wo men are impediments in rural exercise, aa she has often felt in walking through wet grass gelling over fences (!) and clambering round rocks. She does noi, however, approve of her sex wearing ihe pantaloons, and says, very em phatically, "it would bo too humiliating to be met and mistaken for a man. Wo should a 1 ureal ileal rathor be arrested as a sheen thief. I VVe shall uso all our influence to preserve . .... , . . , m .., ,r. , . . 1 , , . . r . , ,J ought io be us, and his only, for they are. too i f , . ', , ,t ugly for anybody else to wear. rni i t i c ..1A x 1 h"e do ?'ef 0T!i f -4Sf I WHO U5IIIUU a ICIICUUIII 1UI iucii uuauaiiaa iu expresbiblcs think of lhat. ! tSOIilSI.M. Webster, in his Encyclopedia of Domes j j FjCri.mmv. directs that m .houjd bj - ifi0 co!d Waer . r . . pelj,er wnh the water. Liebig gi nut mode, viz : that they should be nut into boiling water, in the manner as directed for) vegetables. The reasoii given Ts, lhat if put into cold water, lhe juices of the meat, on which lhe flavor depends, will bo gradually dis- solved, and -go to enrich tho soup instead of be rjajne(1 jn h eal All authorities re , coimneml ,he uso of hard instea(I ofsofl waleri , fof me unjQs8 H ,0 be made. - - Love. Sal,' said stuttering Sam Suggs, HP'you love fne, ihay tho; and' U ydndou'r love me, inay mo don't like io thay tho, tini her hand upon gentle pressure of her t Diierpaw and was tfsj! happy as a' pollywoggle. . ' ' V ; or u yon mve mp, ami ' corns luswejii, uj-auu puva uuucmiig in. Aug squeoth my .ha'iidv'' Salfi pathin.qrder that he may s'juBght.wiuuthernJ hor Sam felrihe? Well my friends, if you can i move without first A Good Story. ' ' Old Col. W.- , formerly a well knowrf character in one of our eastern cities, was re- markable for but one passion out of the ordinal ry range of humanity, and that was for buying" any lot of trumpery that came under the beadV: of miscellaneous, for ihe reason lhat it coulde? not be classified. Though close-fisied in gen eral, he was continually throwing his money away in fives and tens upon such trash: In this way ho had filled all the old corners okhis dwelling and out-housos with a. collection of non descript articles which would have puzzled" a philosopher to tell what they were made. for,- or to what uso they could be put. This, how- . ever, was a secondary consideration with tho Colonel ; for he seldom troubled his head about such articles afler they were fairly housed. Not so with his wife, however, who was con tinually remonstrating againsi these purchases, which served only to clutter up the house and as food for the mirth of the domestics. But the y Colonel, though he often submitted to these re monstrances of his bettei half, could noi resist4 the passion ; and bo went on, adding from week to week to his heap of miscellanies. One day while sauntering down ihe street, he heard the rich, full tones of the auctioneer, and of course stepped in to see what was being sold. On ihe floor he perceived a collection which looked as if it might have been purloined from" the garret of some museum, and around which a motley group were assembled ; while on" tho counter stood the portly auctioneer, in the very, hoiht of a mock indignant remonstrance wilh rifice V The Col. glanced his eye over the and Dav over the Droceeds io mv order. And here I have been congratulating myself on. two things, first, in having got rid of a most in- j t0erable nuisance ; and secondly, on receiving j inoney enough therefrom to purchase that new. velvet hat you promised me so long. And now what do you think ? this morning about an hour ago, the whole load came back again, without a word of explanation I" The Colonel looked blank for a moment and then proceeded to clear op the mystery. But the good woman was pacjfied only with the promiseV a ten dol- lar note beside that in the hands of the auction eer, on condition, however, that she should never mention it. Of course she kept her promise. : . Advice Gratis. - One of our exchanges says-: Be corite'ntas long as your mouih is full and body covered? rembember ihe poor kiss iha prelty girls don'i rob your neighbor's hen roost never pick an editor's pocket, nor entertain an idea.that.he 1 is pomp to treat Rick dull care io me deuce--- black your own boots sew on;your$ownbui; tons, and be sure to take a paper and pay for it. Good practical advice Rlivniius: Puns. Bob courted Molly for some time, . But Susan's charms were in their p'rimo. And faithloss Booby left poor Klary In unrequittcd love's quandary, " And all her sweetest smiles refusing,' His soul surrendered 10 fair Susan; "Oh, wretch !" (cried Moll, witlrahgrytlookf)' -"'And-is'ii thus that I'm forsook V't :&im v JNo,, (Bob grinned). Moll, ihou'rt-mistaken .feeTis I'm for-SAe, and you for-saken.. . This sranhic writer sees through ajieen pair 1 of our race : We strip pleasuro to the skin take her cloak, frock, bonnet, -bustle and all-'--rob her of every, charm and then say there is no such thing as pleasure in the world 1 We extin guish the Kirch that jlopo holds in her hand. and follow lightning bugs- into a muu-puddle. By superlative folly, you frighten Happiness from ydur firesides, and then say she haslefi vnnr hpil anil honril uithnwt ntncmmlinn -iL.M'bno man.make.s , hills m ure Himself, with climbing --.-produciisdarkn suiting firo .o.yur shirts alt 1 have io say is zl?a"wity--ativ'fiing to give a sTat;,,"oti', Jr. eats for boiliii"ol specs, tor ne reads numan nature iiKeaponK, , and healed lo-Jand tells his experience "just as easy as 'ihe . . I . . i. i. ! r . n i r l .1 I.: .1. ' rJii? ves a dtlier-! ony Knew nis tamer. ixouu mm uu mo loiues
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