L SLOAN, PUBLISHERS. \1 E 26, ESB DIRECTORY .I \lilt I'AYSE Miaca. NT.. 14 , N IWO l■ Coal, us rkitoliC Duct talk ul F= ,i.T•CrS7. .0S; RE'ltltNli.D. • • —N. i•opooa , .14 I: chute h tic .gt•e hie Linda .idit IU 1.1.00 10618 -k sc )IErcALI, fillnett• t h e Pa inlertiol allowedor t+ig.‘t UMW., and Mpe t..• ..arid WI/7111W, buuglt %AO talr.o pr ne p•i Ira In Lb, V. , 1114 mum 1., 'URN OH our ONO ,•••V0.41111111 V h;NTS'I. - 13 -.)-• C.d-ell h. lit.tatrit.l 1./.•o. anp ti at dr' err, t'r.teluPf ~°l5lO ti and 11. Map nit Mutt, Cori. artitt. t r Fa I 4.411 , 1 J W Itc TPPOI.II.I J L t• I E‘k AltT, r—.7.s•sos .rrfree, dt.wir filb• 4 ,/it 104 .e.r..th streets lea. „„. enc GfliaNtafral Wert RUSH NUKE, H. Walk ley &Johnsen, 4,. FA). It 13 ai.o I.lo.abobliC IN) 14001111 ISIZENS Ilbsettow N'aiklel No d h I..duingife. N - 11 A V 11:kt:., ;ld k. tatt dealer In rloor. •al • .14, 11.1111 aloe of Ow • .n. L i , •(.). 1 e 1 Cyr uff. north side ,rev,red la) compeee 'll r el . It ',we.. 4 , 11 Mal ond ..rout Lu Qualt , y dn.!. real vs,ue I. 1 .1.. i Eli/tall' t CU., r , L Dyer , a., 1 -Hirt, It an 11 •rg., Whole .,. Vre rn aua rotia-olrert, /14.10,11, . Y. 1..tr l article in tile above tine let wad h.l eneosiss aleDUSiblat of cc. A.l 1.l adv 01 Ilmuling sod nen • ens hull thbpatcli. uu reasousibew )11...N•! s CAUGIIEY, •n 4 Imported r , luresc (full. Fillit 1 / 1 1,11. t.r 6). 7 ikpapnrli .111.416, =1 :1 , : , t 1 ARRES, . , ‘4l, I %/110 , 1 , C•II Work 1 .7.01. I 0.11 fiILaYIPIF I ' • . to Hein II trJ k Nut[*, „ I ott're•l 0.111 UCI r a/••4flJVe I,IOU %V If liatd Doubt, ,". , &hit. lef C I rillk.,lrd NU I Ugebv. ihoc lc, 10 - loa L CELOiN. I (~,tar, rest lett* uu Sixth it arra.ortl tut ~ r , r - 3 - 7i - Ti7. - ii 7-friii7..7l/. A BELL, „„„. She-man ) •• • -913 re he Need awiri p ./i Yr:, Marraute! )1,0• ~ NV• I alt 'uteri. • •,,,,•• I I,•• • ;•••,-;,.1.1.! ; •;. I. Jr ,, tee, tale 1. .le , aler for lam =!=3 ;10.N II •LJJ... o.) • •IK .1 1 . '142, 311 . 1:11114e, (MI v, P.•r (salisa r). t'iue *Nips ~~ ~ i.~ra 11 „u~e I) EDWARDS, v c -uk 1-2-Ar Warrei. Pa Prokosioaal ~..iii receive pftotisPl %V AL K - i; 3, CO:, Ce n H 01011Ileoleett /IVICSNIIRIS fourth Wage r Yaw, fa. ot, ri rque,o, Fib. god , ....1.114f5, ac , whit . I' o 4 .%11er steesetsuate, Prup. tiers, A, •J...,1 1 ItSO N Glt.l II A3l, r . - t 1,... licarh it .Soutli \ H &- , ~, k.upue., Ylarbinet) ,e e "I M. .kl.:‘ll.N, p,M4 Jr 4 ..4414..• El 1, • c). • a •el NX,114. 111,ICal i•-e, l.Ju.ln • ut: '.;,pate, ti K.l—, t vicle of Stair -meet. Ire. Pa B Oil NNION ~r% \I;, nee. Pub r, Jper. l't Cut oe.L 4 3 ' 1 ' 11 I'r.\l A R I', ta,!ll. t r u.a Nto: le D.) GAL I L, ELL, E /"1.1.;It CO. 1 , 4. Fence, RA.. ,pie Sr... Vault .here, All it ...I • tat ‘I4C was., anti r t r 111.11 • 1 , .•••-,- , 1.• • I= rlI• P 1 end we eut.....0 61.4111 C. "p .Mr .tLIJ 41144.0 f War' re Pi • 1,41 Dry Lrore.. t r. ...od• r • r I .•' I• . !LC . Yrtsur arect, cry MEM 'A A ~ LANE —.)fttfy over Joelaaa's /. 1 .1. I' r4pAre (Je.i) Si CU N 0..... dr kil•.L'ervficaterx of Gs % .e • Cvu • tatiLly .1 Ltie )N I CAltt, Ida r 411 Fuuny 40* 40 re LL! S 11KED • tt i•.. 1 ts,[ Hardware and Oft . A ,ces. MAIO, Nu 3 Illee4 I.LL 1;1:1t•1VOLD, ~ L I/ry G luda. Groeief r• .1 . "-t rug. 11... aft. ifou, Mega ••, -tuna. a: .lt 111 , eal. taut 4xons MOM =I INE3II 4.0,1,1 v l'Oilectuuss and Pr ro ( ,aud di.palcb 1.1.'11 ••14n ‘.. ,I.L 415 toe Public Dock . ea .4.14 . f •o.t AwLS Puhl. COO' iE1:3131t01 . 11 ER. ~„ .Ited.tc.oe. Paint*. 4 4,1: , i1w0r,1141.. ra J.% Ll „"r. n rot bi tr. Square. • few • • • •••• cirr wooly Occupied by I/11 • • HS Ilt:AltS & CO Merc dealers in C4)41. Flout 4 us..) us i.y44 1.46. c Utesuurt•. JRGE J. MORI ON. PIA Ut Poet. Erse.— Ft-4 aner. (2 ‘I Itz:IIALL, .m,e up via, f• is 1 LOSUICI4I, Hall 1,1 04..1a r) • . Oilier, •rle 11‘11:E.S ' , ry arocrrea. Crockery. Hardwire. u•. u ~e./ Hotel kle le Pa 11 ACICSON & SON. Groceries. Chenpaido, t.rir, rs. \\*. THOILN'TON, ARV Plllll4O. . ar.s Wingate.. Leases. ke.. seem. Ir, w a whew NOW.; eitia. 64-41, DR. e . L. ELL! Tl', tut tr, a DLATSAT —trficeawd earelliss ilestb P.r k,w iti aVtR wairmisted DOU47/LA' , ---- 4 ,lt.cr up stairs iu W alias's Bl4ek, MU 110 ISNER & MAU LL, 1 :n.t Br ton a bag Matt IMO Wolfer.- 44. 11..“111 of B Wr Ir. 4>Je•• tadues. witle,ll'l d: CO., U , Aler..t.Uo'dl./J Allyn COis. Dscur • 'A...trams ~ kind LtrunClldee Or UlkP ol6 Ab4 _ . VgiutkuLl COMM kU tibe I.; aud 0 1 . 11, °trice. WiUlaar' Mock. cornet c a I• 1: •Y C t IIItVIUSON. .FU I'IIAYER, 4 ~ v 1.4 4, uerosts is lief], Oldiription 'rt'r,et ci eCiao.u.fLreMo.&o4ratassx. / bird atrocto Olt Lb* Mall C. Illitta il!i!!!! ERIE . WEEKLY: f:ISERVE,'. select c p attrc. A THOUGHT II SPRING. I how it Is west ethris the dawning Epring First Domes with her Inger. full of lowers, Aid we see the glean ed the blue-bird's wing At its oldie play us the sprouting bowers I know It is sweet for the handle' eels To Awl In the air die warn young les" While the Now test is the towing strata, Preis the windy lee( sad the triadic( mesa: ' There'll a gladness besse'es tie thrifts( bruise; Thess's a mystic glory to the sight: Ala *eery breath that we draw in these L knelt ui the heart a deep delight ist • Ines glary appears to me, Asd • deeper stesolug to sly wed Coates oat in the bad el the inspirit wee, *Pi the beanie' sky sad the billows' suti 'no an image ill of the heart that 'primp Pro. the ley toil of Irrer's soaks. Where he lies with his large and lositleoPre Asp In the wintery deep of falsehood's brake. 'Tis as ambles bright:of theater time Whim the seal shall burst fro. the lodes teesh, Asd bet wisp shall 'saris is the Ides slime That is wrapp'd is a glow of dm-bleu bloom Oh' ye., It is these is the dirriug that masks' Saab a rapture o'er the sky sad aud. While we !eel the ma/lest senstaires tabs A sweet, wild joy, d the plain aid lake Main imusseer soon is the rile of Osdi QT,Oict THE FORECASTLE STORY. Water and sky, sky and water--east, west, uortb and south, the same listless rolling sea.— N.t a sail, not a sea bard, not a flying fish to be seeu. Ev,n a nautilus would have l'een welcom• ed; but nothing met our eyes but the blue ocean and the blue sky, and the monotory was produe• mg a mental sea-sickoeas as dreadful as the play ,ical. I had paced the deck that day for four tedious huure—patience had given out, the shores of Eugland were at least ten uod la y s , 41 1 to t h e eastward We yet n.lled lasi!) of tLe batiks vi Newf,undland The sun was d.pping his red, tiery fee in the i Atlantic, a; a few light puff of wiud b..g.in to I fill the white canvass which had flipped agaiust I tilt. yards since noon. A. the uuble ?hip began 1 to show • very slight headway, a school of 4.4. 4,1 \ plans crossed her bough*. ••Plenty of bre e frq,m the north sir, by midnight," said old To to me, a weather-beaten salt of sixty, pulling at his Scotch cap. "I hope so, Tom; thui is dull music. But what makes you think we shall catch it by midnight?" "The dolphins, sir; they I are a curious fish; you will always find it blows from the quarter they some. I think it was just about here, sir, that—" "Lower away—lower away, smartly!" rang out the clear tones of Capt Baekstay, and old Tom's 3am was broken off bet , re it was fairly commenced. We turned oar eyes aft, and saw over the leeward side of the ship, buffeting the vases, a sailor, whom, by his black, curly lucks, I recognised as a Spanish boy, of I.iittesto years, one of the hands in charge of the deck at that hour, his hat had been carri..d away by a flaw o f wind, and the foolisit fellow had itutue itately— as it was almost in dead calm—jumped ih fur it, ne heavy swell had carried Littlii“Me yards from the catp baf ,re the small !slat 'veld be lowered from over the stern where it swung; but the in stant it touched the Witter iight htr•aug arms pul led away and the little shell ...botir o l,, ow l et t h e cabin windows, like an arr , iv A st• u' hand soon fastened like a vice in the boys locih, mud he W L• 4 dragged into the boat in much leas tune than it takes to tell it. =ICI In two minutes the exhausted Ant ,oio crawled up tia ship's side and tutuoied on dick. "flow came you to make such a fool of youself, youlub her," said Captain Backstay. -The rattling. slipped from my band, air," said the boy. It appears be bad once before, on t lusing his cap, seized a rope which was made fast to a belaying pin, and leaped over the side, struck out—for be was a good swimmer—gaited his cap and got back safe. This time he lost his hold, however. "The rattling slipped from your baud, did it? if I 6nd this trick repeated it will not slip from your back, I wamnt you. Go to your duty," growled the old sea-dog. Twilight had well set in, the first four hours' watch on deck for the nigh had ciaumeneed their duty, and at I walked fore and aft to get my usu al evening exercise I heard Tom's voice in the forecastle, evidently preparing for a Saturday night yarn. Sailor's stories are not told ie the most elegant phraseology, but are generally worth listening to, if you have nothing better to do; and as killing time, on shipboard, considered capital sport, if you only can kill it, I concluded to intrude myself upon the mess below, and do the best I could at wasting that, precious com modity. Making my way into a group of ten or a do t in rough-looking tars, t was particularly wel comed by my old weatber-beiten friend, who rose from the chest upon which he sat, and with a most patronising air, waved his band for me to sit down nest to him, having previously careful. ly scrubbed a spot on the chest with his old ban dana, that my white panto might not carry the marks of the forecastle jute that aristix retie quar ter on board of a ship, abaft the miseamast..— "Cbicken.birartedl" said old Tum, evidently in tiontinisstioo of certain prefatory remarks: "it amounts to nothing; because a man May grow sick at the sight of blood. Now, look he my old captain of thy Royal George, as itida youngster —in them days, anyhow—as ewer spliced a rope yarn. I well remember be never allowed the cook to chop a rooster's bead off ou(side she gal ley, because the floundering of the bird, as it di ed, affedted his nerves, he said. And a spot of blood made him sick at heart; yet he was brave as old Bonet'. In the straits of Molneca, when the Chins prows tried to board us, he fought band to band with a Lesser, and speared him through the in'aret--tbe black rascal gore a bloody yell and tumbled overboard; and the old aim said be was sorry to send the dirty pagan to his long usesitutt, as probably he never saw, much less read the Bible, in his life. Throw ~n e over after him, sir, mid L Tom, said be, this is no moment for jokes--sad yet what a &ash that youngster died." "What was it, Tom? Tell us," said I. "Ab, sir, I only know it sit it was told to tar, sad there are many characters sized up with it which' I should have to overlook; but u it is Saturday might, and s truthful story , with a so ber coloring, it will hosier lit us far Sunday, I will tall it to you as well as I eau." Pale the " sad-a("' Tout took a sums -pall, wiped his lips with the shove el his jacket, and 00111111.01- cod. 131:17=1 "It is a many a year gone by—l dank foil two sad meaty, sines I dna knew as foe a !mai Elias as ever carried a topsail. Elba t'a bool is the little tees it Kist. Near dim Wile yip. lase was a handsome old seaport, yea knew the place welt, uessesatae—and to that same saps% tbere lived ewes et see wiles, dollars my lean ing in aritbasetis Would not allow me to went. India amebas% few des the tried yr.., blew MI& whew ship ateeeed the Neu i&ait.dia IT WUJ.LA MOM 1141.1.4 at. reetkius. P 4 among the richest of all these merchants w e a r s2:l l Skinnem, or as be was c call ed, Capt. Bitinnum, he had been fortunate, first making money in the African trade, where he would, year after year, lose whole crews by the black vomit. In this deadly trade he was alnioet slope. Why, a keg of tobacco and a barrel of ruin would almost bring their weight iu gold when I first saw Lando, au4Skinnuta had been there years before. After he first got a start on rum sod tobacco, and they did say nigger, help ed to swell his pile, as he made a run to the Brasil coasts ono with four hundred in the hold of an eighty too schooner, and only smothered half of them, selling the balance at sight hundred doubokkus a piece. I say, after his African gold got him a start, he never sailed again--stopped at home and got into thelndia trade, doubled up his fortune baud over hand, and at last got to be a white haired old man, who went to church every Sunday, put an eagle on the plate every collection day, and, I suppose, thanked God for a long and prosperous life. Old Bkinnum never married, but he bad rela tions who set everything by him—he had Dot a tweuty-first emelt/ who omitted to enquire daily after his health, sod I think they must have felt quite happy all the time, for be wall very tough .Ad craft, and had not been hauled for repairs in the last fifty years of his life. Old Skit/num liv ed in a big brick house, kept his coach, l ac k l e a, acid servants, and when he walked out—which be often did—you could see how low a bow half a million could command. So much, mossalates for the rich man of Harlem. On a certain evening in the month of April, long time ago, had you looked Into the window of a small cottage, iu the village of Kent, about the hour of sunset, you would have seen the fig ure of a beautiful young female at the bed side of a noble looking bile, of some twenty-five years. He lay in his birth sleeping; she had in her kinds a partly knit stocking, which seemed to grow wonderfully fast under the movements of the forefinger of each hand, but her eyes were liked upon the man, and the labor% of her hands seemed to require no thought or sight. The twi• light deepened into darkness, and the girl watch. ed the restli as sleeper, as he twisted and turned in his bed, till she could see nothing but his term. Lighting *lamp and placing it upon the hearth, oehind a foot-stool, Which served as _a 3ereen, and aleo served to make ugly shadow* upon the wall and ceiling of the room, youcunid had you been there, at once Lave detected nay beautiful maid of Kent and tier brother Dick. This chap had been a wild one for some years-- but nature had stamped him noble, and his lab ifs had 14it yet completelydestruyed that stamp I once would have shared my last groat with Dick Sheldon. He had the very look of his beau tiful 4s , er, a sort of cast iron of her face. There he lay, and there ea: the girl till the village clock struck nine. As the story goes, he had curve home from one ofbis vagabond tramps, a day or two before, took to his bed sick, had a doctor daily, and about sunset that evening had spasms violently. The doctor was again sent for, left medicine which Dick swallowed, and his patient sister sat watching his feverish sleep, till, as I told you, the clock struck nine, when he opened his eyes :bud iu a feeble whisper told her be was better, the remedy would quiet him, lie knew. Said he should sleep till morning. De- eirins the lamp trimmed for the night, be bade his sister seek her chamber, and wishing him a sweet Light's sleep, the little angel left him alone All was quiet for an hour; do old cluck in the eoruer oldie room struck ten, as Dick rose, I and stepped out upon the floor with wouderful strength and agility for asiolt man. Iu less thitu I ten shorts inieutes be was dressed and cautiously opening the vl , wit-ease--a highly ornamented I pi•-(..e of furuiture full six feet high, occupying alui.at all the space between floor and e il.ng— he took out a heavy oaken club. Closing the door of the case, he took from a peg behiud a door in the room, a large camlet cloak and tur cap. After mufflieg himself up to the eyes, and placing the club under his cloak, he silently pass ed out by the back entrance of the Cottage into a garden, and thence into the street. The sea. soli I Lave said was in April, and at the hour in which D:ck stood in the street all was quiet iu that little town. A slight snow was falling, soft ly spreading a white carpet over the earth, as be i turned toward the main road and walked quickly toward Harlem. At the same lour in which I have related all this took place, soother character satin a room in the fourth story of a hotel in Harlem, with cial, sod hat. no. He had sat there like an image of i s'one since the hour of nine, evidently buried iu his thoughts. Yon would have supposed hint frozen to his peat.. As the clock in the old mar ket house tolled in musicll tones the hour of ten, he too seemed to mark it, and at once started to his feet, came quietly down from his room to the lower hall and passed into the street. Casting a hurried glance around, he pulled his hat over his eyes, turned up the collar of his heavy beaver coat and walked quickly down the princip4l street of Harlem. Reaching a cross street, he hesitated a 'moment. and walked onward till he came top snood street running parallel e with the one the hotel was upon. Turning again he went on till he relished what appeared to be the re a r of a garden, the tree tops shooting now and then above the high knee. Here he crossed to the opposite tide of the street, and looked in tently over the few* into the fourth story win dow of an elegant mansion to which the garden b longed, and perhaps some twelve rods off This particular window was lighted by a lamp is the mom, a customary matter is the house. The occupant of that chamber never went asleep without it.. The individual in the coat and hat stood looking at that solitary lamp for at least ball an hour, when a shadow was seen-to pass , Domes the chamber. For "second of time the light was partially darkened, and the elect upon the watcher in the street was very peculiar. Great drops of sweet started from his forehead; he sat down on the curb stew sad buried his face in his bands. He might have sat there half an hour, but, be it longer or shorter, recovering himself, he stood upon his feet again; wiped his brow, and crossed over the street to the high fence. Hy a leap upon the adjoining wall, a somewhat low on:, he wag enabled to reach:the I higher; gained it, and dropped himself down in to the garden. Pawing up the gravelled walk, be arrived at the rear of the house, where he found a window with the lower *ash raised. Without any diffi culty, he drew himself up and through the will doe into the lower hall. Taking off his boots, and placing them by the 'iodate, he palmed up the stairs to the second lour, and with a famili arity with the premises easily . explaiod if the individual was kaowu, ho gamed the sealed light of stainq and in a moieseat steed on the door Mil of the room in which the solitary lamp was Wein,. It was a bed chamber, sad obtained one occu pant, a body from which eke and had parte* Dot half as hour before. A white haired old enas' i lay there, whose marble face /oohed pies,- only upward, se if is a calm sleep, bet whose silvery locks were 'allotted with blood. A blow bad broken is the top of his skull, and so quickly was the deed dose that the calm, sails lad look at the Mg milli mire had sever been disturbed The vitiates iseppal emaikeily to the bed. sidly Gie• is 4hrid -with lawless, but pea Aft is best dove; aid tar* ti i 0 A YEAR, IN PUNCH. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE meat looked searchingly into the features, then placing his hand over the the old man, and imemilelog the iPartalig beet of the body for a readiest of hife, boa maned, and stood irresolute for • seconder tWe• pelt it was only fur a second, for, plunging hit hand into $ breast, pocket of his coat, he drew forth aBpau -1,4 dirk, and indicted blow attar blow, throngs sad through that pulsates+ heat‘till he was eat laded that death had done its work. The node &ad nephew had met. Old Skillman' the rich merchant, and my old 'wale of ;he Royal George, be who owed fainted at 14 eight of blood, stood in that chamber in thought and 'e4 I murderer, although the club of Dick Sideldee had sent the old man into *tarok half sa bow before. • Old Shinano had made two wills, ens Li! i n if Tom a large portion of his mays, and the will made after it taking Tom's portion away. The first will Tom obtained from the old man's safe through the aid of the housekeeper, read.., and when it was again derailed, the ascend was taken and destroyed, and, fearing a discov ery, and a new disposition of the property, he determined the old man, his uncle Dick Sheldon was sell kisows. to Ralph as a desperate iellow, with rather a respectable foot iug in society; too • respectable to be suspected, at any rate, of the crime of =order. Tom. bar gained with Dick for use thousand dollars to do the deed, and particularly instructing him re garding staircases and balls in the old wasn'a house, he bad no difficulty is reaching the room, the sickness of Sheldon, the sioafinemest to his bed at his sister's house, sad the doctor's visits, was a p..rt of the plan. Two hours after he left his room in Kent, he was back and in bed. again. The next morning be wiet up better, and it was a week before he was declared by his medical advisor well, so perfectly did he sham his illness and recovery. Toni Ralf retracted his steps to his hotel, sad in half an hour was in his room again. I never knew whether :cis sleep that night was what they eel retreshing. You may well suppose an immense excitement filled the town of &Agin, on the morning of the tenth of April. All business was suspended; the merchant closed his warehouse, the shop keeper neglected his store. Eves the public schools were vacant. Group; of el:isms gads ered on the corners of the streets to discuss the dreadful murder. Police °Some were followed by crowds, up sad down the town. Suspected persona were visited, houses of supposed bad repute were especially examined; and no rob bery having been commit:4 as large sums of money were known to be in the house, the mat ter was a deeper mystery. The old man had no enemies. On the contrary, many friends, and was well known to the poorer classes, who, on Christmas day, when mutton was cheap, could get a quarter for calling for it. Several arrests were made. Once pour follow was fright ened half out of his senses because the boot he wore happened to fit exactly the print in the mud wade by Rslf, as he let himself due° un the eart2l. softened by the snow which fell in the night, and which footprint was carefully saved on a allure] by a sagacious member of the Elarlew ..detective, and carried to the police office, where a resolution was passed by the ef ficeri to try all the old boots in town if they Gould get at therm. A smart lad brought in a inset.siticit be obi hr raw I. eospicions looking isdivideal throw aw.u, the day bef.re.„ It fitted to a hair, and the polies Weft in great excitement, when the boy, with a grin, told them it was Parson Good. wide, of the brick church: Pam the &oggin,lads, I m dry '' I had observed, as old Tom talked on, his at) le of story Wiling had little or none of that carelees slang habit which discovered a forecastle educati , in I aft••rwavds tweed that, his early advante.ges had been fair, but year. of life on the tleeau Crave bad given a roughness to his deck intercourse with his messmat..a, which you rarely perceived in his yarns below. The. good ship Albers was showing her heels. We bad a splendid breeze, and were makitig twelve know. Old Tom's prediction had been verified, mid if I had not been interested is the continuation of the plot be was yarning to ns, should have gone to my berth, u the rolling of the. ship had become rather unpleasant this otherwise. "As I observed," oontitined old Tom, "all Harlem was in tumult, and a thousand stoteis were afloat. Old Hicks, the beaker, was to be put oat of the way by this same desperate gang. Captain Jones. a retired merchant, *as a doom ed man. The old maids Bendy were to be murdered in their beds; and a thousand other terrible deeds were to be done. flo everybody said, but not a soul could tell by wlan, nor who started the stories. Dick Shelden had &Goldenly gone to work, for the first time in years, u eltirk in a cottuu will, a business he knew a little about. His sweet AA ter kept up her little echowl, ati usual, and Captain Ralf, of the Royal OLiorge, walked the streets of Harlem with a sal face and crap• on his bat. Maw wore on, tarp re wards failed to Mid the perpetrators of the ter rible deed. A committee was appointed by the selectmen of Harlem to continue investigations on the part of the public, and business tinily fell back into its proper channel, sad although a deep and singular mystery hung over the whole affair, producing a gloom over the town, sad a large outlay in bolts and bars, to it strap• ger, things seemed to have resumed their limier tone once more. In doe time the disconsolate relations of Clapt. Skinnum were called together to hear' the will read, sad they mustered strongly. It was on a very hot day, and the dirt and pervititatlon on the faces, and the tioantides df wrap• on bats and bonnet*, might allow me to say tbat seek eloth and ashes spoke voltimemof woe. Titsi lie tened and turned from the doors, many of them !Hoer if no sadder.' 'One six foot fallow, a kit of tenth cousin, whose demonstration of grief bad been loader and longer than say of thrreet,ind— isg that he had drawn a blank, stook Ws saw4►d • boot on a, velvet chair bow% sad wlppio g the snipe from his hat, bibs the dust fro• ft his understanding, remarking Mistimings we g es rain soon, his crops would be as dead ac the e id skin aim,. Ili the meantime, the aommittas were on the watch, and investigations, openly sad is sem set, were constautly being maids. Ne of gm ■ mos prominent sod active members of this body was the father of Teta Bait He had married e ariy in life s sister of eapt:lllrionam, wife died at illy after Tom was bore. Thomas Ralf, ttio fa skier, was the etwrespoadiag clerk of the beard, and was daily in the habit of nsweiving Wears sad eammusiaations pertainiag to the matter e f is raitigation. Oee day the pietism, bran** letter to Oil= in tbe street, demand Thomas sq., Har lem, tb• old mss a• tarsal pat the bawl hot, retired to his Ace, i.od being sits., r goesed it et uses. It resdAte follows—my maw qv jot will see, is gotxl: SPIIIWOrta•D, Jyta if)" 1 1--. THOWAL LW?, Esq.—Sr t a+ ,eas m g:seated by fßeeldsa to atit yoa tol lewd himi a portion d i timmaie bY "tar. I wail, direetod to hist Cove Bowe, Niekatat qtr. emattulige t be domino me 4) ea, to. s ip,* List to him* !or ; spit its Wag , that , , =I - 64 tetra id* a ILL L airs lartisalatly tiatina. •IU 9,1855. Omani dist this Is the last opplisatios he shall make to yen; should it fail, the seat OH be to you-father, with each proof of your implication as e certain transaction ss will mod him to the grave and you to the—fallow& "I am Sir, yours, ie., "Jaws WALTUS." oJane Walters! Jane Walters!" said the poor old man, with his band upon his brew. "My son thneatesed by a prostitute—sad ass threats, tool—let me read it spin." Ile read it epic, sad spits, and suspicion lashed akin his brain so dreadful that his agony was too great for words to paint. He saw at a glues the mime* the mistress of Dick Shel• des had addressed the father, by omitting to add junior to the superscription. With a weight of sorrow perfectly limiting—with a load at his heart none but ant tionld feat , the old man tottered hussy a hopeless being—not a ray of doubt, even, penetrated his mind. He saw the part his sop had played in this tragedy, and with prophiiic visien he saw the penalty. The ivett which followed was as years to him. He had, with a eobeentration of thought most w.. 0. sinful in one whom nosy was so Ives*, brought all the eircututaases •fers bie astad's eye. He had also attained himself before the bar of his owe conscience, and bald himself 114:countable to his fellaw men in this eon Lot between duty and lore; was be to place this letter before the board or destroy it, and large hie son W lee before it was too late. Morning came, and with mcareely strength awash to drag hill along, the father sought a brother member of the committee said in brollies accents begged him to rood the communication, cad if there was. a possibility of a cheat or a fraud in that terrible docemeas to tell him so. The letter was again read, cad the old man found not e ray of hope. The consieetion of the girl with Shades' having been estsblishod, warranted the, arrest of thew hole party, and in a few hour, She!. den, his mistress and Tom Ball, the sun, were in- mates of the Harlem jail. I will not Alma the trial and its circurt i etan. Clell. The evidence, however, would not have produced conviction if Ralf had nut made a ounfeedion while the trial was pending The plot was well planned mad executed that had su confessiou bees extorted. doubt would have arisen, and ran jury would have agreed urn a ver dict as so witoesee• could be tound who knew anything of the nutter except the girl, and the letter who wrote was dictated by Sheldon, who re futon' to make further explanations, nor did he ever tnakeasy acksuwledgaaentuti ttiagui.t to her afterward. Rolf believed, when ixitifessing, that inasmuch as medical testimony er- sot to show that the club by the hued .11 Diuk di, i the deed, be could not at least be guilty of oat ;Her, and to effect a mit igation be related how he planned with Shekicu, for a thousand dollars., to put the old man out of the way; Low &wicks, was to pretend sickue‘s, how he, Ro;1, ou the night in question. feariug Dick's heart would fail him when iu the chamber, and its arm i.; piw r , went hiuteelf up owl made sure of t led. Rut the sickening detail I will hurry us er. J.a.dee with sl"w and steady ceps was marching ou stand, and overtook them. Tee girl, of cou::ae, wit released. The two mei, were sentenced to the collate. Nut malty evehiugs after the trial was over, about sunset, a beautiful female was seen walk ing up the jail yurii--itaving beau admitted by the oo t ar oa dull—.ll6, after a Scrutinising look at the girl, &flowed her as she went to ward the graced window whi..h lighted Sueblen'e cell. I was on the lower floor, perhops ur seven feet from the ground. Tbegirl had a chill in her arms, and probably had riziteol the pris oner before, as abs seemed to know which win dow to approach. Walking quietly under the walls of the jail she spoke. to the pri.oner within. in a low tremulous s oioe, "Richard." In au in maul his face was pt retied against the bors awl a voice replied, "Jug., did you bring him?" Sio, fitted the eild--an i ufent of a year or ao—up to the window, and it clutched at the *old baid grating which shut its wretched father from the world, and laughed.. "Is there no hope, Dick—none?"—said the woman, sobbing. Dick made DO re ply but pat his arms through the bars and drew the child's face close enough to kiss it again ant I again. Tip: tears were si lently failing from the eyes of both these able, misguided be ings. The father—murderer, wretch, though be was, had a little of the Letter nature in him,—s a spark of human feeling left. "0 Jane! the bee will grow up, perhaps, and will be told his rather died a felon's death— atrrangled upon tk e scaffold before the gaze of thousands—the fa Cher of this child a convicted murderer. Oh, gt ad! gold! at what a price art thou pnrohased " "Jane, there is hope—some hope of a reprieve for me to-marrow' " said Dick, his face as color less as marble. 'I 'he woman started, and giving a slight wean— , the officer on Duty, who stood at a die anon was tehieg the inturviist, walked pinkly forwado —"Hush, Jane!" whispered Dick: c..Du not st sum, you. ass the guard is alannei I—be may order you home--be quiet.. I said th ere tnigha, might be, a reprieve for me to morns s," The girl looked earnestly into his face, hot Dick assail& her bated, rung it, as with the other be pr ems the child to his face, and kissing it, push edit back into its mother'eartim, whispering "coo to in the morning, Jane," walked away from tbr window in toms. I have heard, said old Tote, of t' se two natural wham I to go to church, the good and the bad which influenced us, one or the other through life, midi think poor Sbel der a realised the better, et times, depraved as he sr? is. Well, to outlaw, morning came, and the rt iprieve with it. Dick was timid at daylight • nspemied by th s neck, with a cord attached to the graLing,of b isoell window, and in loss than forty-eight hour s after, the Harlem paper men tioned the suicide of a woman named Jane ' Wal ters, adding, tie 4 she was noted for her great personal beauty. Tom Ralf was executed, and as the hour drew nigh, be became perfectly reck less, laughed with the jailor, and joked with his visitors, and w hen standiogoo the platform the moment before It fell, his arms pinioued at the elbow, bat ttlh iwiog him to raise his bands as high as his br Jest, he drew front the pocket of his cost a whit s bandkerehiet, and waving it be fore the crowd , as well as the cords spout his arms would all ow, fell with it !u his baud. Thu ended the life • of my tender hearted captain. Pour old Ks If is alive now, nith bait as whit as snow, sod 1 coke as though he felt that be had been overlook' d and slighted by the grim mon ' arch, and hurt at the neglect. Life since that ter rible, § been a sad burden to him. The vil lage whoal mi stress, sweet Kate Shelden, spent the balance of her short life in acts which gave her a rich m std above. I saw her grave a year 'slobs, tad a 1 eautiful spot it was. Old Skint isto's mosey did no good; all who lonelied It no oared boaad to have bad luck. Oita of the loan' mantilla mil* si a hail in Dec. owshito la, I 4.11"0( delirium trauma. Another died a soma ion draskard. A I iird was ruined by gamblim 4, and otidortane followed all the rut. Altlrsougli it is as why thirty yeus sloes es million of bolls= was divided amuag us is divides Is, seta debar of it isms , theirs or them Wis. *Ai, tamp : wigs unto itself sad toe *WV 4 . I md nsvpsgss ale it is well LW ? isiti +sr, as Is looksd essiossly iatob*s soidia 4 : leWsk um as el as his *rut It was pest midnight. I west . lo sky erste room well satisfied with the speed of the rmvi ship through the Atlantic at the pretest moment, and was so , m dreautiog that I bad taken lodg ings at tb.• Stsft,rd House and w 2, e,,nstanfly importuned by Prince Albert to aeoept the Llrd Mayorsittp of L .odoe. CURIOCII CALCUL/L . 1'1031.-110 fuLlowiag wo take from the Boston Poftt: "It bas been a,cortained by carefilly conduct ed experiments, that tbslollllby friction or wear, upon gold wits, wino in IWO as currency, does a , t exam' a twentieth of one per scut, per Salient; and upm silver a half of, one per sent, per annum. In other words, a gold coin kept in stantlY in circulation would Fast two th 'mind years before it would entirely disappear, a silver coin would last tar) hundred years; 900 new ea gles, outweigh 901 which have had ono year's circulation,9oo di Ines out weigh 907 under a wiliar circumstances. After the surface of the coin be ct-ines smoth the friction becomes less, like the attrEitte of a bar of railway iron. The avenge cost, tlwr':fore, of as exclusively metallie tar rainy, would be an eleventh-of one per 000 t, per 11111111110 upon the amount required. The atuotit of !rink notes in circulation, at the present time in the United States is estimated to W11100,000,- 000; awl the amount of specie in the vaults the banks to be $60,000,000. If, therefore, an ad dition of $100,000,090 were made to the specie basis of our currency, and bank notes entirely dispensed with, it would colt about $lOO,OOO to niaintsin it; an amount far below the average annual loss ineasioned by depreciated bank notes, to say nothing of the lesser consequout up..in the expansions and subsequent sudden contraction of paper issues. Tue largest denotnioativo of quill. being gold. which is the le- et td deprcia tion by wear, the coat would be even loss than the amout stated." Il'arrawAss roa OUTIEDCALS AND VINCeII tbis is the season of the year when eunsider• able whitewashing is performed, sodas we hare been inquired of for a good whitewenLing i receipt by numbers of new subscribers who have iu •.d our receipt in a former volume, we preactit it 'pin, knowing that a good story is never the worse to be twice told: Take a eleao barrel that will hold water. Put loco it half a bushel of quick !tine, and slack it by p )uring over it boiliug 'Ater sutiqient ti co. ver it four or five inches Jeep. sod stirring it un til slacked. When quit:, slacked, dissolve it in water, and add two p Am.'s of selphste of sine, and ..oe of cumiwon salt, which way be had at any cf the druggiets. awl which in a few days will e.tave the whitewast. to Larden on the wood. work. hold autheirut w der to bring it to the oousisteuev of thick whitewbsb. T., uhlko ttic attovu wonli of & pleasant cream c. , 1• , r, add three pound. of yell iw'oehre. FJr Luria e.plor, add four pounds umber, one pound Indian red, and one pound lampblack. Fir grey or stone color, add four pounds raw utatier and two pounds lampblack. The ei)lor aity be put on with a common white. wa3b bruit, and will bo ()mad much more dura ble than eotntn.,n whitowash - 4 i ILIA! DISPATCII IN BUIDINO.-Thu editor of the Rochesti:r N ) 1.7 UlOl7 vouches fur the truth of the followiog: "An instance of great despatch in erecting lutildiap occurred last week, so remarkable as to he well worth a mouse hers. IL builder of • tilt:, city who owns a farm four miles fr.,tu the railriad, in Byron, Genesee county, bad be, o wakitig arratigoni-utii W tract buil.lings on tb same some time past, sod accordingly pre pared his stuff bore, ready to be transported &hither The cedar—a nice uue, too--tor the himse, wai dug, and the wall laid ready to re ceive the buil:lit:l4 On Tu , silay morning, tht ouiiiltr left the city with on the ear, utia went to Byron Oa Friday night he return bed with his men, having eretted a house 22 b) 3U feet, nue a half st..r) in height, tiulehed thu same even to a coat of bird finish on the walls, a Lau 30 by 40 feet, and a ehed 25 by 37 Pet. All these were enusiru , qed in adorable and tasti manner, nothinv slighted or left undone that seemed accessary to wake them what they shown be for farm pur poses. dud all tLis WA, done in ' Unlit Jays Th.it Mats a.t we havt heard ait©c the days N oh." MILAN TIIINGS.—It is a ruean tbtog to borrow your p.ipsr wlcu ycha ars coo Bubo t "ut t f your uWI2. IL is mum thing t bulwribe frir a new.pa pilr and n..ver pay fur- it. It is a mean tiling to steal the Exchanges from an Editor's sanctum. It is a mean iLiug 10 look over an Editor'r shoulder when be it. writing. It is a ftwan thing to riiieTule an editorial when you have not two atoms of tom° in you own skull. BARBABOCB.—One of our friends was being shaved at Antwerp. The barber was a fewsle. What was his surprise, when be paw the good lady spit into. the box, and besmear ilia face with the foaming saliva! An expressive grimace did not escape the bar ber. "My dear sir," said she "I don't treat you se I d.) other cuetotn,•re, becan4e I perceive very well that you do not belong to these parts." "Br Jupiter! Madame, what do you in their ease?' "Why sir, I spit on their check, instead of spitting into tire soap-box."—Courier des Etta Unit Ant's GOT NOTIIING —We wore visiting at al house the other oreniug, where there was a num• bee of young children. One of them had the measles, one the pooping-eough, sod soother was afflicted with the young poultry pox. They all were receiving the greatest syntp4lty and atteo tient while Ine little girl about - years sat in a corner, cryiug bitterly. We atm-tither what was the mat•lr? She replied ; breaking out into a heart breaking gush of tear., '.l , :very one of the other children's got the measles and the hoopiateough, and I ain't got nothin'—boo boo! boo!" Thos EVILIti WORD —Vivre i< not s newspa per editor or pubtisher in the world who will not fully and truthfully endoree the eiwrectness nt the following scrap which we Had dotting the rounds of the press. "Yon may insert a thousand excellent things in a newspaper, and never hear a word of appro. bation or remark Irani the readers; but ju-t let a paragraph slip in, (by accident or in indiffer ence) of one or two lines that is not in good taste, and you may be sure of hearing about that to your heart's content." A CAP/TAL IDU.—A new +dock has been seaufsetured down east, to be need in those States in which the Maine Law has been passed. Upon the dial, the Gres indicating Awn and /oar o'clock, are otautitted„awd thus the happy possessor of the. timepiece, failing to be reminded of the accustomed hours of refreshment, forgets that he is dry. Tax Darstrzcs.--Oluses re hose talkie& leases F alk without relearns,. Times the &Who hawses lasso ad 'ilassei. 'The difersess betimes esotelege-ketwesdaustisgs. *el 11is this: 1 one goes best when tired, sod the other 1141 B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR. Details of the Shooting of Shaba at Basis, The 13u1LIJ D-oto-v , s , - / 'it Nay 23.. givee' f./11, , vratz. coures.u• o of F.rb,s, now imprhuistill ' cm the charg, 3lietwitsl Aalisrowluarii , 40 su•pocie , l meitietue his 14,,1.'. "lie lett Ile[l,ie N.,, r 3, 1851 1 .19 A • Li s fatulty well provide: I Wben l.e 'rag. g 'he awa ) , &osier said CO Lim: "I will tdk t y tor I :ter.. to your tit* frost ''' the Post and tidit%er them:. Dimas dies tattler CoV,:r Vi u. , 1 will UeVCT MO your haul , want, tf a..) 113 N; •a to yea." lie WOO: to C.i.f . ', it'a and got employment, and sent mon .y under covor to Studor. About throe nioutii• atter tLii. liu ! raceived• fattier frt. In ills wife, stating that *lie bad wort Iht itouse att.! the prop:rty Farbao l 7:ll/ which he Lad buuf,lst with the as.lugs of years.- had usurtgig,el this t,r ti., purpose of tutsibg another pleve t.f property-41rd she had bought it aud it to tjtcttaul B:taler. Tbia could ui.t uu us (.11 wife had mousy', which he had .. tt to is r, 'mud lie wrote to het cost iodiguaotly, i tu.,u 1.,1g the reason of it, and .414 it had hsKti d-ed Slit. r: !10 also mute w 4 . 16 WWI hal t.i•l tie iu it ester, request ing hint to coda to Bufftla ant w. O what this meant—that there v. a.• • os:,;isileg wrong, as came 0 1 . , aud •iftt r soote ine l u•ry. returned. l: Cats I ii-t by wlsd • ei v.. 1, but be wrote to Forties that ail Ray that Soller wouldJeted the property lawn t•, hie wife again. uo • iog to • t r • was a tn,a-rgage ow his tit tle 14 .tt•••, Le tb.t11...i every ibiug, gut a .ituati .u. worl, 4g ut_tit and day, ho was able to sadd w,f iu u,n4 usunths. It w.l •eut at to iiui. a oietit 1 • act' tuonth is -mar .11,11... Ou the 1/3 h .1 F,bru try he sent 1163. li.•r t • 1 ..; ton ht , prorwtly. After this !tat taw Io • g •I •13 his +teat her some 41.21:0 cre,fir.t sent, and the &lOU the 1.•ul. of ills ,t1(114' kW/ Made a t..is I of 62,7dtt io tii. of three rate Ail fair w•witti • .1 ), t. f .1-, uowever. For bes uffeicti tc. it-n.l Sti r£l 000 t buy a aittii tc•reist iu C o Jp,'3 re, 1..011 (Forbes sap) w,.aim .ut the tune tl• r his vit. a t ty with 11r4 l'orb Forhos, con •lu.ling that L."•tre.l o •thi.t ;4 to r , wrote to bit wife ato,ut it, and r a I..cer from her eta tin„ that Le still owed 8349. this he was 'sr.. prised. Attu( :ur i 1,11, .1111.1 lilt.: Lit one be gut Irvin her, eliarg..l 1 int w,,t/ Lelng trial tOLttf I rotn in. T:11, .1 111 .11 up -ilk however, continued tcr, .111 3t:Ut Lll)a,ly the drat u( every t io, 0,, I I,itl d u.olityll..left . San Friaciace .r ~ and :.trot, l L. r • o n the 13th of llsrc.s. L. tit W:tl.l h it c uu tth.r .cf present* fur is it„ t r S, ...r, to/ 8500 is money! Up .0 .11. , st hnt he discovered the aituatiou vt 6te trots Fnbos WB4 almost crate! by the tt..t.tr Ilia wife ("11 bun uhlt she had don e wrong, and ti.ld him h. r sedue.r Rai Brown; that h e bad h ‘tc o coutlict,„! in li i dry puds store, and that he had Lit. f •r litio.t there with the Cuulera. This Faust would out believe, uud for some two wt.: wus on the hunt for this Brow o—or, to F u-b.2s exprnotsed it, "this pltautoiu''--through the ~..gll.•tiootype g a ll e ri e s, dry good stores, at ail the butil•--aceosepasied nearly .ell the woe by bis bu,v&L) fitend Shafer, who was equally isas.ciu .us with Forbes iu find ing this d.•troyel•—ti.i. But it was is vain. Ni I:triw nv meting tl descriptiou could be four,.! Fri qu ot.y 't'.ii r advised hies toles,* hid tr ircr—s.lic: viar a lead n opoau—a w•uton-.-004 worthy of hive. bail Forbes, "what is Cu lot: tut d After d i ii wife told him that Shah r e,i, tbe LLI:111 1! be/ it Id deNtinjrd 1)12 hrppiaess. Forbes would not believe it. Ile went, down to tinge s StOre, vbtit.o Stialur invited him to go up !., to )11) .)Ovv,. the store. When th• y were tai, t0'6;1.1 r 'tall aud Liking front it the t,4.:ta .1 the Knight •Tern lar, be showed it to bas and *.i)d —.Allier. is smut:thing, wiiie's cannot be purelids.d for money —notloog but vti ;is eau k.b.atu th)fle—and I have ~btaiti,..l them tUr. , ugii my irtuo." b's a.10.r iloub.fol of the quality of this II We 'l3.it. en (.1 f • tut f)revar; and •ba uext in o wog scot tor &Aar so come to ni. h t 3. , when to coargt .1 torn with hia IL but Dually ati.• ii%olual, hut de clared that I,e w •h. /lilt 1, I). t the S 4 duccr. Lie went .lot,o on the k 10..14 to Forbes., begged, wept, plead and cutr aced—boal.y acknowledg ing that Le v. 1., ti, -cdu....r, but say lug that Ito eras sotto: tc,r,pt d. 'lie prop,. tt; il..t deed..:d to hits self, :LW d to F h rb s. a o tatted to over .43,1)00. This F.rt..L.:s L.ll/,;LJ h.ni to deed beck agate. For the space of three wceki; Forbes was very nearly iasaue fl Jill 1.11.1 DULLI.I us trouhleb, 101 l fears Were ezctteJ eve! he eh tiilµ; his own 'ilk). [lie !,r,.tooled ti i tti,ce times t bat 4he woubi , ;L,putt.- ed out ',miaow), cup to tirtok. Fothei told bar to go sise.o.l Silt.: poured it hack iu the uoi.l bee thou pr..pused to Shakr to go i.eLr iu Cauad., lie said half the time he did not know wnat lie was cheat,' and should very likely shoot him dau u like a g nit Shakr ref used ail ..,at lefactien—adsised Lou to go back to Cantorui-t, and gave Lius other advice equally consoling. Slater w.ei et tat for at the time Mrs. Potties was confined. When he arrived, the child. lay in it blanket at one Lod of the room. Forbad told him to take his young one, sed kayo ai one.---take it otl instantly, OE tee would throw it into the street. Thaler took it to Use Sisters of Charity and acme back in eons.oi table gliv, ob. • serf lug "tt, was 411110 st—he got st Bled nicely," and then saiti,"Aitek, iced tae a, use motley, to s e .1, op amid pay r ttx liJard now," upon which Pare.•s` bea actu.sity handed him CU or &St?, and Mdsll him he would give Ida) an; :1,111 , 4 to get tidal toe child. th, it act,, tend ill two dije • ter, (L.: disgrace !hiring prey d up.i. Eurhaii• oi l " ' ' IMO as to render him aituwit i n , au. , mslilletiVill• Store of Ge.•rge Gage, aria root Stitderru luta $ previously stat.s4 eve During this relation of tb.:se parties's= to yeutcrils) aficruo•at, Mrs. kortica tat in tbst new, sz•suu to :14.2 rat it of t6i, BLa aucl frtyaeut ly laughing an l .toiling at the t^sling disptsyed by iltir btosbaul. Forbes ti cults Le bus dose per- Petty right is hitt:toting Susltr, add previous to shooting had arrant:4i A 11 , lUCAV heti diger' Pt plata rendering hint baruilvss to the honor and sari ty of other husband, awl I.onito R." air The Ilawitenlcv .„ ( Leszettir m. ntions roams AI tba- the Know S noi Leireiki publisL no in r u -I..ruidn" Italy': I.ev, mad also it is is costenaplattou In bArium iuv "Egret OM Man' from tb*i st.twola o f ;l c C. waloalleekly because it was *t i nge by ulie of tttc P°Pl* se. A. new objoeti le to uao of wine at &Arnow:lion J tiZ•• St. Albans (rt.) rrib lu o i , wi m p m i lk.. e..tiraate that the COM minim Rine iu I • lieiled Shoo% oust the 14111.1014311-$800,04.10 per year, &IQ arks bow may agaioopriee •u I a Every, *int is jaitge.i bti the umx...y .. 0 4 ,4,,1, crik rehire. . , A ItarLacrriow.-11 oar Maker doll* it Wr i ng fur Mato to live stuee I/lOWA f Women 00 earth how tut old bachelor% with itioitittld 'I i) ti • NUMMI 8 EIMI
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