Jeffersonian Republican. (Stroudsburg, Pa.) 1840-1853, April 03, 1851, Image 1

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The whole art of Government consists in the art of being honest. Jefferson.
STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, APRIL 3, L851.
VOL. 11.
No. 281
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ft:
Published by Theodore Schoch
TPDMC Ttin rliHar ner anmiHI ill aumHi-c ivuuti
Iho vonV T n .Intl.-trs nild a nail. llivsv uu lacur mtu
1 Timor IllSCOnilliuuu uw I 1 -r-
ptrpnt
atthe oDtion 01 me vinui. ......
Advertisements not exceeding one square (sixteen lines)
wilfbe inserted three weeks for one dollar, and twenty-five
cents for every subsequent insertion. The charge for one and
three insertions the same. A liberal discount made to yearly
advertisers.
IEPAll letters addressed to the Editor must be post-paid.
JOB PRINTING.
Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and orna
ihenlal Type, we are prepared to execute every
description of
Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Noles
Blank Receipts,
- JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER
BLANKS,
t PAMPHLETS, &c.
"Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms
AT THE OFFICE OF THE
Jeffersonian Republican.
Coming of the Spring
I am looking for the coming,
The coming of the Spring;
0h! my heart with joy is swelling,
And gladness in it dwelling ;
While I'm waiting for the coming,
The coming of the Spring.
I've been weary too, with waiting,
Waiting for the Spring ;
When the birds shall tell their praises,
And with heavenly rapture sing
Of the presence of earth's fairest child,
The lovely blooming Spring. j
t
O ! how long must I be waiting,
. For the coming of the Spring?
.. When the flowers smile with tearful eye
At their awakening
A.nd the brooks shall dance so gaily,
To welcome back the Spring..
Cease, cease my heart thy pining,
Thy pining for the Spring !
For soon she'll come, and over all
Her fairest beauties fling,
So I'm looking for the coming,
The coming of the Spring.
t
Illy ?IolIier.
BY ALICE CAREY. x
'Twas in the autumn's dreary close,
A long, long time ago ;
The berries of the brier-rose
Hung bright above the snow,
And night had spread a shadow wild
About the earth and sky,
When calling me her orphan child, V f
She said that she must die.
She rests within the quiet tomb,
The narrow and the chill
The window of our cabin-home
Looks out upon the hill. t
O, when the world seems wide and wild-
And friends to love me few,
I think of how she lived and died,
And gather strength anew.
5' !
Facts from History.
.Kind Alfred's time-keeper consisted of six large
, "wax tapers, each 32 inches long.
In 1505, shillings were first coined in England. ,
Slaves of both sexes were publicly sold in Enn-- j
land near the conclusion of the 14th century.
All the Anglo-Norman kings, to Richard I.,
styled themselves kings, dukes, or counts, of their
jieoplc, not of their dominions.
Hats were not much used till 1500, though men-
tion is made of them in a statute of Richard III., '
Diners bv a carrier or t--j
F-f .:.Tl:lo'nH 37 1.2 cents, per year, extra.
. .-... .!ricr pmn nrrri hv thn nronrie
by which the price of a hat is limited at 30 pence. ' discarded from England.
Windows of glass were first used in England, Li these rude ages, twenty men with their im
for houses, in 1180 ; yet in 1567, glass was so ' perfect means, could not accomplish so much in a
great a rarity as to be found but seldom, even in ; day, as one man now with modern machinery.
the houses of the nobility. And not till the reign ; Hence much less of anything was produced than
of James I. were glass used in farm-houses. j at present, and the majority of modern productions
In Scotland, so late as 1661, the windows of coun-' were unknown. Let us consider printing alone,
try houses were not glazed, and only the upper parts, ! All the men and women now in Philadelphia could
eyen in those of the king's palaces, had glass, the ; not then furnish with a pen, so many copies of any
lower parts having two wooden shutters, to open ' hook in a year, as the printers alone pf the same
at pleasure, for the admission of fresh air. j city will now furnish in a day. Nor could they
In the reign of Richard III. the clergy were the ' furnish so many yards of wollen cloth in a year,
piimapai uibuiuiu prauuuunera. Aiuiougn me age .
j: 1 h,i i ,1 !
waB wouikb,, surgery was mue understood, and
Aissecuon was descried as a barbarous outrage up-
on the dead. ,
Surnames were introduced into England by the
Normans, and adopted by the nobility in 1200.
It was not until the reign of Henry VIII. that
,carrots, salads, turnips, or other edible roots, were ,
generally produced m England When Queen j
.....
, senger to Holland for it
03" Nobody is satisfied in this world. If a
legacy is left a man he regrets it is not larger. If
he finds a sum of money, he searches the spot for
more. It ne is elected to some hiffn omce, lie
wishes a better one. If he is rich and wants noth-
ing, he strives for more wealth. If he is a single
man, he is looking for a wife, and if married, for
children. Man is never satisfied.
Petition against Blood-Letting. Dr. Wil--liam
Turner, an eminent physician of the city of
New York, har petitioned the Legislature of the
state of New York to make the use of the lancet
medical practitioners a penal offence. He1
States that ha has practiced medicine half a centu
ry, and that his experience has .taught him that
$hehabit of JbleeHing is destructive 6f hoal th a r!d
New Inventions.
Do scientific discovery and mechanical invention
promote human happiness 1 Some say that they
do not; that they are unfavorable to liberty, with
out which, human happiness cannot be permanent
or secure; that they promote monopoly, enrich the
few and impoverish the many, and thus render the
many the vassals of the few; that they diminish
the demand for and consequently the value of, hu
man labor, and thus impoverish and enslave the
laborer. And to prove all this, they refer to the
Chinese, who will not use modern machinery, be
cause it deprives labor of employment. We have
already intimated that, if progress be a law of hu
manity, discovery and invention are the results of,
that law, and therefore must be beneficial ; and
that if progress be not such a law, then man can
have no higher destiny, at least in this world, than
the lower animals, all of which are stationary, both
intellectually and morally.
Let us examine the condition of the Chinese.
If it be not better than that of progressive nations,
then the stationary policy does not deserve this
high commendation. And if it exhibit the same
evils which appear in progressive society, then
these evils are not imputable to progress, and con
servation is not their remedy. All accounts tell
us that monopoly, differences in condition, exorbi
tant wealth and excessive poverty, social discon
tent and disorder, and political rebellion, exist in
a greater degree in China, than in any other part
of the world excepting India. The poor of Can
ton and other large Chinese cities arc innumerable,
and their condition far below that of the poorest
in Europe. At the same time, fortunes may be
found in them which far exceed the most exorbi
tant in England, Austria, Russia, or any other
country of excessive wealth. Therefore the per
sistence of the Chinese in ancient customs, their
rejection of all improvements that save labor, have
not saved them from the very evils which their
eulogists ascribe to scientific discover and mecha-
1 nical invention.
Leaving the Chinese, let us compare the present
condition of the "masses" in Europe with their
condition in the middle ages. In the times of the
Crusades, even the nobilitv of England or France
were not so well taught, so well lodged, well clad,
well fed, as the majority of mechanics and traders
of the same countries at the present day. William
the Conqueror or Richard the Lion Hearted knew
not the luxury of a cotton shirt or silk stockings.
The cloths for their coats,' when they did not wear
j sheep-skins, would appear very coarse beside our
duffels 'and blankets. They dwelt in palaces,
which, for convenience, light, ventilation, warmth,
and other means of health, were far inferior to a
modern brick house of the first or second, or even
the third class. They were strangers to all the
refinements of modern cookery now common in
the dwellings of independent mechanics. Carpets
were unknown in England, even so late as the
reign of Elizabeth, whose royal floors were cover
ed with sand or rushes. Before the days of Magna
Charta, few of either Norman or Saxon nobility
could write their names, and not a few of them
could not read. The majority of peasants dwelt
in houses about equal to the modem mud-cabins of
Ireland, in comparison with which, the log houses
1 of our pioneers are palaces. As the compass was I
unknown, navigation was confined to coasting, and
therefore tedious and dangerous. As printing and
paper were unknown, books were confined to
parchment, and multiplied by the pen, and there
fore expensive and few. Agriculture was confined
to the spade, the hoe, the scythe, and the rude
plough, still extant in the most benighted parts of
Europe. Even the spinning-wheel was unknown,
and the loom was the rude contrivance long since
i x? it. - mi!
woui iuamuacmiera 01 uie same cuy win
"w lunu m awm, newspapers could not
men exist, and uooics were rarities, mostly conimed ;
to the clergy and lawyers. Hence very few poo-'
pie, even of the high ranks, could read, and con -
sequently could acquire knowledge only from ob-
servation or narration. Now the most ignorant !
farmer, mechanic, trader, is better informed in '
every science, physical or moral, in agriculture,
!... . .' ' i
pontics, than the great majority of the nobility in
.uaiuu, ugct. AUU mesc aiuerences are
j j qlm juvihiuuu. xer. j
An Irishman, upon. seeing a squirrel shot from
a tree, said "faith and be Jnhors fW Wflfl n wth '
Lof powder, the fall itself would have killed the '
squirrel.
" My lad," said a young lady to a boy-carrying
an empty maiLbag, "are youthe mail bby V1 " Yer
doesn't suppose, Pse a female boy, does yer!"
The Rose-To change the color of a-rose,Tlace
a gauieitiu m waiu ac tar ub uie siem :
r l. i j - c. it '
wjii allow, uien powaer it oyer wim nne rappee
ijsnufi being careful not to load it Uo much. In
aboutj.three hours,on shaking off the -snuff it -will
''have become a green rose; f'-l
ii i-i t i M r i
Aiid What Next?
A gentleman, riding near the city, overtook a
young man, and invited him to a seat in his car-
rige.
" And what," said the gentleman to the young
stranger, "are your plans for the future 1"
"lama clerk," replied the young man, " and
my hope is to succeed, and to get into business for
myself." '
" And what next '!" said the gentleman.
"Why, I intend to marry and set up an .estab
lishment of my own."
"And what next?"
" Why, to continue in business and accumulate
wealth." "
"And what npxtl"
" To retire from business and enjoy the fruits of
my labors."
" And what next "
" It is the lot of all to die, and I of course can
not escape."
And what next 1"
But the young man had no answer to make
he had no purpose that reached beyond the present
'life.
0$-" When Burchard, ,the Evangelist was in
Lockport, New York, it was his custom to go about
the village, and call upon the most prominent of
the citizens, especially the wealthy, titled and in
fluential, in order to invite them to attend his mee
tings, and give countenance and eclat to his labors.
In the course of his perambulations, one day, he
fell in with Bob S , an attorney of some re
putation, and very famous for his wit and readiness
of repartee. Good morning, Mr. S
, said
tue evangelist : uncierstanainff xnat you are onu oi
. t 1-1 T . 1 , r a T a X
the leading men of this town, and a lawyer of high
standing, I have called upon you in hopes to en
gage you on Lord's side. Thank you replied Bob,
with an air of p-reat sobnetv, and with the most.
professional manner possible thank you I should
be most happy to be employed on that side of the
case, if I could do so consistently with my engage
ments ; but you will have to go to some other
counsel, as I have a standing retainer from the op
posite party ! The intinerent was amazed, piqued,
nonplussed, and laughing very heartily, and calling
Bob a sad dog, departed from his presence." Bos
ton Post
rtThereisbutabreathofair and a beat
the heart betwixt this world and the next. And
in the brief interval of painful and awful suspense,
while we feel that death is present with us, we
are powerless and the last faint pulsasion here is
but the prelude of endless life hereafter ; we feel,
in the midst of the stunning calamity about to befall
us, that earth has no compensation to mitigate the
severity of our loss. But there is no grief without
some benificient provisions to soften its intenseness.
When the good and lovely die, the memory of their
good deeds like the moonbeams on the stormy sky,
lights up our darkened hearts, and lends to the
surrounding gloom a beauty so sad, so sweet, that
we would not, if we could, dispel the darkness that
environs it. Prentice.
About Cows.
Every one has felt the inconvenience of having
his cows calve during the night. In all seasons,
but especially in winter, this is an exceedingly an
noying, and not only demands continual useless
watching, on the part of the cow keeper, but very
often, indirectly causes the death of the calf and
its mother. Now it has been ascertained by a pcr-
son living in the neighborhood of Utrecht, that a
j cow with calf, milked for the last time at night in
! stead of in the morning, calves in the day and not
at night. Out of 30 cows on which the experiment
was tried, only three or four are mentioned by Mr,
Numon, Professor of Agriculture at Utrecht, as
being exceptions. As confirming the above state
ment, we may mention the fact, that a large far
mer in the Campine has also tried the same plan
with success. Flore des Serres.
Can It Be True ?
The New York Sunday Courier edifies its rea
ders with a long editorial, from which we take
this :
There is an extensive organization of house
thieves in jjrooklyn, and the business is carried on
in a regular secundem artem man ner, like that of
a ra5Iroad conipany, or a shipping- house. They
take apprentices to the tradG and instruct them in
all the mysteries 0f the art; they keep a regular
set of books, in which all the transactions of the
are entered b thQ act of thQ Qr.
anization, and decIare reguar dividenda once in
three monthg- As the q(jantit f miBcdlaneoufl
merchandise which the company receives from its
members is great aregular agent is employed
who di ofit tQ the best advantage wherev
er
a marke(. b(J found A of the
prop-
erty is ent t0 PlliladelP1a, d sold on cora"
1IllssIon - A reular register is kept in which the
difFerent hoUses to be mted ul)on are a11 prop:
j erly set down with the name of the occupants and
the probable amount of their silver, watches, jew
elry, &c. The members of this organization from
their habit of entering none but the best houses, and
dealing exclusively in articles of verlu and luxury,
acquire very costly and elegant tastes, and accord-
infflv live in very ffood stvle themselves . in the
pntpGlest narts of the town.
- i- a. - , - - -
O 1
Charcoal, ground to powder, Lne e Deat
thincrs ever discovered to -elearfrknives. This is a
la'te'and valuable discovery. .
The Confession of a Subscriber.
One of our subscribers came into our office a few
weeks ago, and asked what was the amount of
his indebtedness to the Jeffersonian. We told
him. He handed us the full amount, and said ;
" I have been taking the Jeffersonian three or four
years, have been pleased with it, and would like to
continue my name on your list as long as it is pub
lished, but times are hard, and money scarce ; I
find that I can hardly get along at all, so I .must
retrench by stopping your paper."
" Well," said we, " the sum is small a mere
trifle and your credit is good. But what will
your family do for a newspaper to inform them of
the day ? You dont want your children to grow
up in ignorance of what is going on among the
people of our country, as well as the whole world?"
" True," said he, "and there's the rub." My
family oppose my stopping it strongly. It reaches
us every Saturday, and in the evening our eldest3
daughter sits down while my wife is employed in
knitting or sowing, and I am toasting my feet by a
cheerful fire, after a day of hard toil) and reads a
loud one half its contents, and on the next eveninir
our eldest boy finishes, of course, we enjoy it very
much. When I told my wife my intention of dis
continuing the Jeffersonian, she said that she would
sit up till after midnight to knit stockings to pay
for it. But, poor woman, she works hard enough
now ! So I must stop it !"
" You know," said we, with a little warmth
" that you are able to pay, but there's no compul
sion about it so, here it goes," and off went his
name.
The circumstance would have forever been for-
j gotten, had it not been for the re-appearence of our
r 1 -r
. quondam subscnoer, a lew days since, tie came
into our office, and sauntered around for awhile
and seemed to be in quite a gloomy mood. Final -
o j
ly we said to him in rather a light and inquisitive
way, " wen, lur. & , now uo you get along
without your newspaper now ?"
" Bad enough," was the response. "To be can
did about it, I will tell you why. When the first
Saturday came around, after I had stopped my pa
per, my wife sent our eldest boy to the post office
for it. Off he went in high glee. I was ashamed
, iT1., , T . , o. , ,
to tell what I had done, so I said nothing, though
I well knew he would't get it. He returned with
the complaint that the other subscribers' papers
had all come but ours. What can it mean, Mr.
ofiRi d-0,i mv .O'T T or.
pect the printer boy neglected to put it in the pack-
! et
voctnivlnv ' Woll fint tliov nnrpr miRRPrl Tip-
- - - . .
rebel and every rebellion grew worse. Tnus
passed that evening, and Friday evening promised .
1 . m, i x t i 7m h 1
tn br st wose. Things besran to look 'blue' long i
before sunset. I feared the arrival of the night, .
but it came, and as I expected, the children were j
still noisier and more rebellious than ever; and I :
fore,' said she, 'and there must be something wrong,' j common ciay oy uie cart ioaaj usea m mancnesier
i t c i i ii. i,tT,,;,i for the purpose of reducing chicory to 36s per cwt.
and she fixed a searching look upon me, but I said r , . , J , . 1 , . ,
i , m i When heavy gram was used, the packets looked
nothing. That evening passed gloomily enougn.. j so sma1 tbr the money that anoti,cr scheme was
The next day the children became unusually noisy, ! adopted. That was to roast and grind bran along
and got into petty quarrels, and every now and 'with it; and I have seen hundreds of tons roasted
then my wife wold say 'there must be something I for thtat PurP.se' To give a rich blooming appear
J J . , ance to all this rubbish, oxide of iron is used in
wrong.' 4 Yes,' I would sometimes say, there large quantities, and orange buds are ground along
must,' and then look in another direction from her. j with it to give it a different flavor. If even-no grain
Well, the next Saturday come on, and the boy was is used, Venetian red and orange buds are us,ed,
again sent to the office on his useless errand, and ?,r colrinS chicory alone. At present something
,-.ir. Tr ! like calcined sugar is having a great run, and goes
returned with the same complaint as before. My , by the mme of A little of k is put along .
wife's first exclamation, as she anxiously awaited ( with the chicory; but it can easily be detected by
his return, and heard his report, was Indeed, the naked eye, showing itself in bright glittering
Mr. S. , there must be something wrong!' ;' particles like glass. Cocoa also shares the same
, . . T ' . , . . ... .. , f T fate as tea and coffee. At the present time I know
Now. thmks I, I shall have to out with it; but I ; Lancashire soluble cocoa is made at prices
remembered just at that particular moment, that 1 1 which vary from 5d. up to 2s. the lb., from the same
had forgotten to feed the hogs, and they must be i parcel of cocoa. To effect this, flour, potatoes,,
fed, but when I reached the hog-pen, I recollected farina, and other like substances are used ; also,
r. . c . , . i . fJ upQ wi, on I treacle, and here again oxide of iron is used to-
of having fed them but a short time before. hen ! j Thfj dQQs mt end
I returned to the house all was m a uproar the j for tbose shopkeepers who often get the blame for
children quarreling and fighting, and the baby the practices I have alluded to, know nothing of
squalling terribly, and my good natured spouse in them, the fault of is with the wholesale dealers,
, i , i ffrtmfo in ' Cor manufacturers, I may call them,) and often al-
bv no means a pleasant mood. Her attempts to rl """"" 4 .', , .J , . , v . ,
J 1 r . ! so carry on a retail business, but who take care to
pacify were vain. If she should succeed, it would geU nicies themselves, and serve other shops
be but for a moment, the rising household would withgoods which they will not sell. Thus they
then thought that if my even tempered wife was."er-
never angry before, she was then. My house, in
fact, seemed suddenly turned into bedlam. I could
stnrwl it.nn longer and left the house. The last
words I heard my wife say, as I hurried out of the
n
door was. 'indeed Mr. S
there must
no
something wrong !' I borrowed a copy of the Jef-1 cojd feet The feet are at such a distance from
fersonian, and returned home. I had scarcely o-( the wheel at the cistern" of the system, that the
pened the door, when two or three voices cried out circulation of the blood may be very easily checked
. ., vi.i i i u ' there. Yet, for all this, and although every per
'the paper's come!' Our little girl eagerly snatch- JJ sense should be aware of the tmth
ed it and sat down to her old task and soon all was of what we j,aVe stated, there is no part of the hu
quiet ; even the baby, thouglr wide awake, seemed ( man body so much trifled with as the feet The
in a happy, good humor. Now, all this fuss and young and would-be-genteel footed, cramp their
ii . tun Tafrnr toes and feet into thin-soled, bone-pinching boots
trouble was occasionecl by my stopping the Jefier-, f P &
sonian, and before I will pass two more such weeks , ionaWe gense of the term There -s Qne great
I will pay for a dozen newspapers. Here's S2 ; evj against which every person should be on their
for another year. A newspaper is a great 'peace-; guard, and it is one which is not often guarded
maker' in a family. Mind, I have not told my wile ,
-
I had stopped the paper, and wish her never to know ;
it. I should not Have made im utv wnwu, consequences which might ensue. In cold weath
h.id I not thoiiffht that it might save some poor d 1 ; er boots and shoes of eood thick leather, both" in
from falling into my error, his household thrown into ; soles and uppers, should be worn by all. Watej
confusion, and his ears continually greeted with ! tights are not good if they are air-tights also;-it-
"Indeed, there must be someming wrong!" dia rubbe overshoes, should never tie worn except
r--: in wet splashy weather, and then not very long at
(7- One reason why the Londoners omitted the , once. It is hurtful to the feet to wear any cover
use of wood in constructing the building for the ing, that is air-tight over them, and for this reason.
World's Pair is, that there wquld be so many ,' idia rubber should be worn as seldom as possible.
Yankees there they were afraid theywould whittle ; No part of the body should be allowed to have a
it down. j
A Rhode Island lad, under examination by a .
I Connecticut schoolmaster, being asked: How many '
gods
head.
! are there!' The ibov, after scratching his wme,uy. enureiy cubing up tue pmea vi us.aujw-
for some time, replied I donlt, know how upodwarm stpcKings ana iuck eoicq .oow..apai
manv vou ve crot inAUonnetiucuu uta m iwvuuiuue. iywiuwiiiow mwiB ..v -..-....
Danger of Re-Vaccinations.
We perceive that the late Dr. Fisher, of Boston
who is said to have paid attention to the subject of
vaccination, alleges that every person should have
the operation repeated, one or more- times, or untilj
the system ceaces to be effected by the virus.:
This might indeed succeed in extirpating the small
pox, but how much harm it would cause by com
municating various leprous affections from man ta
man, is past calculation. Many experienced phys
icians are far from considering vaccination an un
mixed good and mothers who know how liable
infants are to be attacked with ulcers, and other
scrofulous affections after vaccinations, except in
cases of great liability to the disease against which
it is intended to guard. It is the opinion of some
physicians, that a taint is often communicated to
the blood from unhealthy virus, which affects the
system through life. Physicians should be very
careful never to use the vaccine motter after it has
passed through the system of a scrofulous or other
wise unhealthy child.
Poisonous Breakfast Beverages.
Having seen some remarks in the adulteration4
of coffee in the Leader, I think a few words by one
who has been behind the curtain may be of use.
To begin with green tea, the system of facing, or
getting up, as it is called, is carried on to an ex
tent that few people would believe. Twelve or
fourteen years ago the facing was chiefly done by
the hand in Manchester, at least and the prin
cipal ingredient used was magnesia. Thi3 gave
place to Prussian blue, indigo, and Dutch pink.
Within the last few years various other deleterious
articles have' been brought into use, and the steam
engine is now made to do the work that was form
erly done by hand. When black tea is so much
damaged that it cannot be sold without disguise,
they at once set to work and make it into green.
! iN0 matter now rotten it is, it will be steamed and
1 roasted UP ' if lt f11.1 take,f curlcd leaf' il
, ls oTounfl inrl mrifln into sm:Hl o-rpmi rpr
( piumbago, ivory black, French chalk, and other
like substances, are used to lay a foundation fo"
the Prussian blue, etc.; and the quantity of those
powders used for that purpose is truly frightful.
The system of mixing and repacking is also carried
on to an enormous extent; and great is the ingenu
ity oiten displayed m making the chests look on-
! ginal. The new nails are often sprinkled with
salana water to maUe tnem iooic rusty. Ground
coffee (as most people arc aware) is quite as much
j adultcated as 4 l have remarks ma(e
' about various kinds of grain being used, but the
1 principle article is chicory, which is itself mixed
! with every substance that can assimilate with it.
' . J-iiverpoooi, damaged sea-preau is Dougnt up ior
the purpose, and all kinds of spoiled grain. Rye
is also used in large quantities ; and when chicory
wnc rlpnrpr thnn nt nrpsont T ltfvp cppti nlmr fvna
i 1 1 L. i 1 3 -I 1 T 1 .
monopolize tiie ready-money traoe to memseives,
and get a name oi lair-ueanng we n ;
talk at times about sanitary reform ; but
.r?"., . . , - , ' f.
We hear much
I think
litrlp n-nnrl nan be effected as Ions' as the people's
bod js p0isoned by such doings. I have no doubtg
whatever but every branch of the provision trade
is subject to the same complaints. London Lea?
Take care of the Feet.
"Of all parts of the body," says Dr. Robertson,
"there is not one which ought to be so carefully
attended to as the feet " Every person knows from
i whinh nrnrippr trom tne same, are aunuutauie io
1
agams. - we mean . cuai,gu,g ui worm ir-cum
cUrnr i-t hnntD A nhnnrro ic ntrnn tthiHd tfnm tntL
xe&
covering that entirely obstructs the passage ot tne
carbonic acid gas trom the pores of the skm out-
wards, and the moderate passage of air inwards to
the skill; Life can. be destroyed in a very short?'
Ell
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