HAHVEY SlCULljElljl'roiirietoi;] NEW SERIES, Itflrth fltattcji fleiufltrat. A waekly Democratic i,, „ juiper, devoted to Pol- - ""■ftottoj *//-/iTT"^ tice, News, the Arts and Sciences Ac. Pub- 3 ' fished every Wcdncs- f> \ty, at Tunkhannoek, AilJsP^^V!iFsX"- f BY HARVEY SICKLER, Terms—l copy 1 year, (in advance) 51.50. I Ytot pain within six months, 52.00 will be charged AJDVEHTISIKTO . lOdtnrr £77 i , Jett, make three four two three j six - one one square weeks weeks mo'th mo'tit mo'th year 1 Square 1,00 1,25) 2,25 2,87' 3,00 5,00 1 do. 2,00! 2.50* 3,25 3.50 4,50 6.00 3 do. 3,00* 3,75; 4,75' 5,50 7.00* 9,00 | Column. 4,00 4.50; 6,50 8.00 10,00 15,00 do. GOO 7,00 10,00 12.00 17.00 25,00 do. 8.00; 9,50 14,00 18,00 25.00 35,00 1 do. 10,00 12.00 17,00 22,00." 28,00 40.00 Business Cards of one square, with paper, 85. JOB wonK bf all kinds neatly executed, and at prices t6 suit the times." fSttsintss sotiffs. BACtTN STAND.—Nicholson. Pa. C. L JACKSON, Proprietor. [vln49tf j GEO. S. TUTTOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Tunkhannoek, Pa. Office in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga street. WM. M. PIATT. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Of fice in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga St., Tunk hannack. Pa. RR.&S, W, LITTLE ATTORNEY'S AT, LAW, Office on Tioga street, Tunkhannoek Pa. JV. SMITII, M D , PHYSICIAN A SURGEON, • Office on Bridge Street, next door to the Demo crat Office, Tunkhannoek, Pa. HS. COOPER, PHYSICIAN A Sl* 1(0EON • Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. 1)11. J. (' BECKER A PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS, Would respectfully announce to tlie citizens of Wy ming that they have located at Tunkhannoek wher ley will promptly attend to all calls in the line of ncir profession. May be found at his Drug Staro #h rw>t professionally absent. JM. (AREA, HI. D. — (Graduate of the • M. lustitute, Cincinnati) would respe.tfuHy announce to the citizens of Wyoming v Luzerne Counties, that he continues his regular practice in the various departments of his profession. May he found dt his office or residence, when not professionally ab nt ftT Particular attention given to the treatment Chronic Disea3. entremoreland, Wyoming Co.. Pa.—v2n2 WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AMERICAN HOUSE/ TUNKHANNOCIv, W YOMING CO., PA -"TMIIS establishment has recently been refitted and JL furnished in the latest style. Every attention twill be given to the comfort aud convenience of those *ho pafronize the House. T. 15. WALL, Owner and Proprietor; Tunkhannoek, September 11, 1361. MAYJJARS'S HOTELT TUNKHAWOCK, WTOM IN (i OOl" NT Y , PENXA JOHN J1 AYNAIt l> , Proprietor. H AA J N , (i > t:lken the llot<s, > in the Borough of lunkhanntck, recently occupied by Rilev Wnrper, the proprietor respectfully solicits a"share ot public patronage. The House has been thoroughly repaired, and the comforts and accomodations of "a Brat class Hotel, will be found by ail who may favor t with their custom. September 11, 1361. WORTH BRANCH HOTEL. MESIIOPPEX, WYOMING COUNTY, PA >Vb. 11. CORTRIGHT, Piop'r HATING resumed the proprietorship of the above •Hotel, the undersigned will sp ire no effort to teader the house an agreeable place ot sojourn for •K who may favor it with their custom. Win. II CCIYTRIHIIT. June, 3rd, 1563 ffoaits Ihihi I'OWiSLIMIDA, PA. D. B. BAIITLET, [Late of the Burainard Horsr., Elmira, N. Y'. PROPRIETOR. The MEANS HOTEL, i- ono of the LARGEST • and BEST ARRANGED Houses in the country—lt is fitted up in the most modern and improved style, and no pains are spared to make it a pleasant and agreeable stopping-place for all, v3.n21.1v. M. GILMAN, DENTIST. M OILMAN, has permanontly located in Tunk • haancck Borough, and respectfully tenders his professional services to the citizens of this place and urrounding country. ALL WORK WARRANTED, TO GIVE SATIS FACTION. J (T Office over Tution's Law Offic#, near th e Pos Office. D c. 11, 186 L TO KER VOUg SLKFEftLKS OF BOTH SEXES. •^r^to E heaUh b i r , a? e T1 f MAN < HAVINO BEEN he usual routine M„ d ir " * U . nder K°!?* a " •reatmen -without £ n - I ® Xp^M ' ve "• odes of 7 to communicate to his Bacrod du the meansf cure. Hen 2? < ir*ed envelope, he will senVifree'a 1 °' •'"•ypboa wed. Direct to Dr Ja„l M° P n 138tfowsw Ml.,.Ci'f k REPUBLICAN TESTIMONY TO RE PUBLICAN CRIMES. Letter from Judge Knapp of Utah. LA MESILLA, NEW MEXICO, March 3 MESSRS. AT WOOD ARCBDEE: Thank you, gentlemen, for having denied for me the im putation of being a copperhead. Yet I atn half inclined to be provoked that you should have ha<l a doubt upon that subject. You know that I have steadily acted and voted with the Republican party since that party was first formed in Madison. You also know that 1 belonged to the free soil wing of the Democracy, though I never did go ruuch on Booth. Abraham Lincoln was my especial candi date for President, in preference to all oth ers before the Chicago convention, and he is mine now for re-election. I may be '• an eccentric man/' aid even " excitable," but I will never consent to a dissolution of the Vnion, nor allow the Constitution of the Uni ted States to be violated in the least paiticu lar, if I Can prevent ft; and it is because I would not consent to violations of if that I did not and could not go to Santa Ee on the first of January last, to attend the Supreme Court. I would not by any act or example of mine, allow a military despotism to be set up in New Mexico or elsewhere, in viola lation of Constitution, the rights of the peo ple, and the laws of Congress. That is the sum of the offending. Twice I attempted to go and was prevented by the commanding officers of the army here, even to being ar rested and taken from the stage in which 1 had engaged my passage ; while before and after, others not in office were allowed to travel by the same conveyance, without com plying with their unjust and illegal de mands. Twice I have been arrested by them and sent to the guard house, under in dignities winch none but copperheads or des pots could invent. One of them has taken occasion to inform me that he did it because he thought I " needed a Utile wholesome co rectionf Because 1 have steadily insisted upon my rights, as an officer of the United States government, the whole tribe of cow ards and traitors here have hooted after me; and finally, to injure me in Washington, some copperhead in Santa Fe has sent over the wires, on the 21 of last month, a dis patch walling me a copperhead. In not going, I may have acted " absurd ly," but did not act " inconsiderately," and I have the consolation of knowing that At torney-General Bates, to whom I have com munteated ail the facts and the correspon dence had with the general in command at this place, has approved ray course and de termination in the business. Hitherto 1 have only complained to the proper depart ments for a redress of the grieveances of the people, except by letters addressed to the Generals themselves, in what manner they had violated their positive duties, and to which they have attempted no replies. HjThere are but live Republicans in San a Fe, not one of whom wrote this dispatch, as they know better, and all of them, suffering like myself, approve of what 1 have done ?o. I say it was written either by men who always hiv'C been and now are in the ranks of the cofipt.'heads, or who at the outbreak ing of the rebellion ,7 t,re cheek by jowl with the traitors, or by the comniu n^'r ar * my, who has never hired to meet ths enemy That you may know seme thing of what has been done in this out-of-the-way place, and what it is that I resist, { wi'! state a few general facts which i am prepared to prove before any court where the rules of law and evidence prevail. I cannot ask you to hear or read particulars, as they are le gion, commencing with the advent of Gener als Carelton and West into New Mexico, and continued to this dale; and by whom I have not been permitted to perform the duties imposed upon me by law, unless I will ac knowledge their illegal usurpations of pow ers—which I will never do. These Generals and their subordinates have trampled down all the laws of Congress and the rights and liberties of the people, and set themselves up as superior to the Constitution and laws of the United States. They have usurped the power of the leg islative, executive, and judicial departments of the government ; stopped the members of the Legislature from attending its se-sions, and passed orders in direct violation of the Constitution, which thoy enforce at the point of the bayonet. They have usurped the powers of the court, both federal and territorial, and com pelled citizens to answer in courts martial for acts not prohibited by any law, or even military order ; as well for offenses against the which were cognizable by courts established by Congress, as for acts not evil of themselves, but which were elevated in;o crimes and misdemeanors by the imaginations of these officers, and pro mulgated for the first time, to the person charged, at the time of the trial. They have for a money consideration granted licenses to men to keep gambling ta bles, in direct violation of tho laws of the territory, and to the evil examples and morals of the community. They have forcibly taken a citizen, bound over to answer to the District Court of the United Sttea for an o* >nse a g ain t of CongroM, Jr*m the custody oourt, "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RIGHT. "—Thomas Jeflerson. TUNKHANNOCIv, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 18, 1864. and compelled him to a trial before their own courts, for the satne offense, disregard ing the prisoner's plea to the jurisdiction of the District Court previously obtained, and the express exaotment of Congress. In the trial of causes in their courts-mar tial they openly declare that they will not proceed according to law or the Constitu tion of the United States, but will not act upon their own opinio.:s without regard te the law. In the enforcement of their arbitrary wills which must of necessity be unknown to the accused until he is arrested, their subordi nates have by their orders shot dowD citi zens in the streets, and committed many other offenses against the acts of Congress and the territory. They have c'osely confined citizens for days, weeks, and months, whipped thein with horsewhips, and otherwise tortured them to make confessions of crimes, and have condemned Vnein to hard labor, loaded with chains and balls, and then released them without any charges being made against them, or their being informed of the cause of their imprisonment and punishment. Others they have removed from their busi ness and homes ; and they have prohibited all from traveling from place to place upon both public and private business. Having arrested citizens, they have neg lected to give anv information of such ar rests to the proper departments at Washing ton ; and by that means the Secretaries of Wa. atul of State are unable to furnish the lists of prisoners to the judges of the territo ry for trial, or relief upon habeas corpus, as provided by law. Being suspected of offenses and pec'ulitions they have arrested witnesses against them. removed them from their hemes, to pre vent their testimony from being taken by an officer of government sent to inquire int > their conduct. The subordinates have refused obedien c to the writ of habeas corpus in words not proper to be written, and, with full knowl edge of.the facts, the Generals have not dis approved of the acts. They have by force taken away the prop erty of citizens without compensation, and resisted with arms the writ of replevin to retake the same, when i*6ued from tie Dis trict Court of the United States. Well informed of murders and robberies committed by Indians near and at their posts and headquarter, they had threatened to chastise the informants, and taken no steps to punish the Indians or protect the citizens from theif aggressions ; and while reporting to the War Department that they have se verely punished the Indians and subdued them, they well know that these have never been so hostile or committed such "duringrob beries and murders since this territory wa conquered by the American arms ai at the present time; and when citizens have traced the Indians to their lairs and offered to guide the troops to them, these officers have refused to follow them, or give supplies to citizens to conquer then. They have received money upon trust and applied the same to ther own private uses, and refused to refund it or to make any resti tution to the cestui que trust. They have taken upm themselves to deter- QUI Jp<>n the probable guilt of ci'.izens of the republic of Mexico, and to return them to that repul?'' 3 ! ' n violation ot the treaty with Mexico; and have eucred that republic with armed force and arrested and carried oil' per sons not liable to be taken there from. They have committed crimes of various kinds againts the laws of the -United States and the territory, and defy the courts and officers or justice to punish them. They have destroyed the military posts lo cated ou Government and Indian lands and built up at the expense.'of thousauds, perhaps millions, of dollars to the government, and then quartered themselves in rented houses, where they live m opeu prostitution with the women, and in not a few iidian-.es driv ing husbands from their beds, in other sedu cing wives to desert their homes and families thus depraving their commands and them selves and rendering all unfit for service. They have set up in New Mexico a milita ry d.;potism worse and more oppressive ihan the worst and most cruel tyrants of any coun try had ever established, and threaten citi zens with imprisonment and death who dare oppose their unjust and oppressive measures; and all that is done when no enemy is near or any necessity exists for their con duct. The people of New Mexico are dumbfound ed. and 'lare neither complain nor give evi dence while there remains a possibility of their being liable to answer to these tyran nous usurpers of their rights and liberty— Under threats of being treated as traitors to the government they have been compelled by fear to petition to have martial law made permanent ever them. To resist these usur pations and violations of the laws and rights of the people is in vain to attempt here while they command the armies of the United States to enforce their wills. No man in New Mexico dare oppose their will, and knowing this, I have made appeals to the President, and he has issued his orders, which these General's have set at defiance tod because they koo w that I have done so they have undertaken this means and coward ly process to injure me. But I must dose this already too long com munication, the first and only one I have written of such a nature, as I had hoped that these evils and grievances would be removed by the government in a brivatu manner.— But after waiting for nearly six months af ter the departments are informed, and see ing no signs of relif, bat that matters grow daily more unendurable. I must confess to some eccitabilily , and further, I confess to that sort of eccentricity that loves to stand in the ways and ask for the old paths by which our government came to be the migh ty nation of freemen and house of refuge to to the oppressed. I love more than life all her old monuments, an 1 her old dialect is sweeter than music to my May I never live to see one of those old monuments crum ble in the dust, or be broken down by tne hand of thedefamer, nor her soil diminished bv the breadth of a hair. My motto is— LET THE UNION BE PERPETUAL ; and by the Con stitution I live or die. J. G. Knapp. (The Indepedent, July 10th, 19G2 ) We are like to be ruined by an administra tion that will rot tell the truth ; that spends precious time in playing at President making-, that is cutting nnd shuttling the cards for the next great political campaign. (New-York Tribune April 22, 1861.) If the Administration has not packed its trunk, the country should be assured of the fact forth with. (New-York Times, April 22, 1861 ) It must be confessed that the administra tion has presented the lamentable spectacle, of wasting precious days and weeks in decid ing upon partisan claims to office, at the very moment that all its energies should have been directed to the state of the country etc. (The New York Times, April 22 1861.) We do not hesitate to say to the Presi dent, thai, unless he acted with mire vigor and more courage, * * hi ran the risk of plunging the government into embar rassment from which it could only be res cued by some one who should more accu rately represent the sentiments and purposes of the American people. * * If they are thwarted and treated with con tempt, * * they will work out a path for themselves, even if they have to override the government , which ought to guide them to the accouip'-.hment of its own wise and just ends. (New York Times, April 1861.) The ['resident runs no small risk of being superseded in his office, if he undertakes to thwart the clear and manifest determination of the people to ina'ntain the authority of the United Statjs, and to protect its honor. [Report of the Committee on conduct of the War 1563.J Not upon those whose duty it was to pro vide the means necessary to put down the re be!lion, but upon those it was to rightfully apply those means, and the agents they employ lor that purpose, rest the blame, if and. that the hopes of the nation have not been realized, &c. [Who ought to be put in Fort Lafayette 1 From the speech of Mr. Van Wyck. of N. Y., [Republican}, in Congress. Fob. 23, 1962 ] With a single exception, when has one of these men [the plunderers of the treasury] been courtmartialed or punished? To-day, they-have injured tne Republic more than the South in arms. Had they been arrested and placed under the gallows, or in Fort Lafay ette, our army would have been stronger,and our people at home more united. No won der that your soldiers and their friends aro dissatisfied. They cannot appreciate the patriotism oj stealing. [Xe.v-York Trihne, March 28-J This nation has learned, by a very exten sive experience, that war is a season of pros perity to scoundrels. It is, to some extent, inevitably so,but. in our case, immeasurably and incredibly so. We have rascals of all degrees and kinds, incapable importers, doing no work, and drawing full pay— gold gam blers, to whom patriotism and loyalty are but empty namse, and in whose there is nothing but speculation,—swindlers and rob bers all. Every one of them is practically a traitor, &.C., &c. [from tho Bibliothoeca Sacra, for Jan. 18t'2, a quar terly theological magazine, published at Andover, Mass., page 193 ] The evidence for the inspiration of thef 119J psalm is clearer than the evidence that its apparant meaning is its real one : therefore, if it be needful to adopt the alternative that the i psalm is not of divine origin, or else that it ' does not utter a wish for the woes of the trai- i tors' household , we have a logical right to in- ; terpret the psalm as breathing a spirit not of positive desire for these woes, hut of cordial admission to them. [! !] Thus ; It is the divine plan to afflict the small household of the traitor, and thereby save the large multitudes who had otherwise been undone by his trearon. Therefore, while livers of waters run down my eyes, I sing,— "Let his children be fatherless,* "And his wife a widow : "Let his children be continually vagabonds and beg : "Let them seek their bread also out of t beir desolate placer. * * * * "He has stirred up hta cnnrads to iuhumaa and relentless deeds; and so I rest satisfied with thine arranxement : "Let I here be to extend mercy unto him : '•Neither let there be any Javor to his fatherlees children. "Let his posterity be cut off. "And in the generation following, let their name bo blotted out. * ♦ • • ♦ We have reason to deny that David shud dered when he was inspired to utter them. * God save the country from the tender mercies of such Christains. As the proverb says, we can bear the mis fortunes of others with the most Christian resignation. The article is worthy of the days of the Spanish Inquisition. It is horrible blasphe my. [From the Christian Inquirer, Unitarian, Anti-Slave ry, published at New Yrk In several libraries of New England clergymen we have]seen choice volumes of great cost, bearing the names of southern ministers to whom they still belong , although they have been sent North as gifts from Yan kee soldiers who had appropriated them.— Some Massachusetts parlors are said to be carpeted with spoils of another kind. Now, if any one asks what has become of the Un ion party, once so strong at the South, we answer that, in part, they have been alien ated from the government by the unjuatifi ble outrages committed by wicked or thought less federal soldiers, At Beaufort, South Carolina, tombs were violated. At Holly Springs, Miosiosippi, a communion table was used in behalf of "euchre" and "old sledge." Such tales* of wrong have infuriated many who were disposed to be friends of the Union and their righteous indignation has had some thing to do with reverses that haye overtaken our arms." The Inquirer quotes with indignation, "a letter from an officer, written at camp Saxton Beaufort, South Carolina, in which he says : "I ne splendtd mansion once occupied by that arch rebel, T. Butler King, is on a Geor gia island and we striped it of everything I write this letter on his writing desk, which with his piano, was presented to me, on my return.'" [Charles Sumner on the True Grandeur of Nations.] "It cannot be doabted that this strange and unblessed conjunction of the Christian clergy with war has had no little influence in blinding the world to the truth now begin ning to be recognized, that Christianity for bids the whole custom of war. "Such is the true image of Christian duty nor can I really perceive the d ifforence in principle between those ministers of the Gos pel who tucmslves gird on the sword, as in olden time, and those others who, unarmed and : u customary black, lend the sanction of their presence to the martial array, or to any form of preparation for war." , Local Aristocracies* In Boston, the only recognized arisistocra cy is intellect ; and the question put by a Bostouian is tins .' What do you know ? In New York, it is a mere matter of wealth, and the question is: What are vou worth ? In Philadelphia, it is blood, the exact qual i ity of which is decided by your answer as to who are your relations ? In Washington, where politics govern llow many votes do you control ? In Charleston, as in the Quaker city, it is the blod or pedigree, and the question is ; Who was your grandfather ? In Cincinnati, ihe queen lard oil city. How many hogs do you kill ? In Chicago, before the panic, it was : How many corner lots do you own ? In St. Lonis, the passport to favor is secur ed by an affirmative answer to the question : Have you any interest in a fur company ? In New Orleans, south of Canal street, among the merchants it was : How much cotton do you ship? North of Canal street among the French Creoles: How doe be dress ? In Mobile, it is manners that makes the man, and the question is : How does he be have ? ONLY A PRINTER. —" He is only a pnn terj" was the sneering remark of a leader in society. He was only a printer! Well, what was the earl of Stanhope? He was only a printer ! What is Prince Frederick William, who married the Princess Royal of England ? He, too, is a printer ! Who was William Caxton—one of the fathers of liter ature ? He was only a printer ! What is George D. Prentice, Charles Dickens, M. Thiers, Douglas Jerrold, Ravard Taylor, Geo. P. Willis and Senators Dix, Cameron, Niles, Bigler and King? They, too, are all printers ! What was Benjamin Franklin ? Only a printer J Everybody can't be a prin ter—DßAlNS are necessary. A Kncxvillo array correspondent writes "One cry comes up from the all the camps •Scurf us vegetable If they stand in need of grterxt, let Gen | eral Butler be seat. TERMS: SX.SO I> I MTITfI jfr COMPORT BEFORE APPEAR AR CXff* Most people are too apt to sacrifice cqiaj fort to ttf subject fheif oWfi Ikfo. ilies to manifold privations and discomfort* in order to astonish with a 'show of ifffUerfee a few acquaintances who seldom visit them, and who only laugh at tneir foolish and poo rile attempts at displaying a little superior upholstery in a room which none of the fam ily dare make use of. Many is the hoase we havo seen wherein the ''parlor" was craaa* med 4 with useless stuff while not a single room was comfortably furnished. Every family should seek Qrst the otmbkt comfort for its own members that its means will compass ; and then if there is a surplus of funds which they know not what else to do with, let it be devoted to tbe purchase of someshing to please the eyes of stranghr*— er rather to oxcite envy iu their bosoms : lbif ' such things generally occrsion far more envy than pleasure amoug rival Those apartments of a house which are moat used should receive the most attention. Th* dining-room and seeping apartments should receive the most especial care, for on thea* does the health, (and consequently the conar fbrt and happiness) of the family pre-emi nently depend. In short, seek first your own comfort, and the "appearances" will take care of themselves. THE FIRST STRIKING CLOCK. la tha time of Alfred the Great, the Persians imported into Europe a machine which presented the first rudiments of a striking clook. It was brought as a present to Charlemagne from Abdallash, king of Persia, by two monkl of Jerusalem, iu the year 800. Among other presents, says Eginhsrt, was t horologe of brass wonderfully constructed by mechanical artifice, in which the course of the twelve hours elpsydram vertebatur, with as many little brass balls, which, at the close of each hour, droped down oa sort of a heft beneath, and sounded the end of the hour.— There were also twelve figures of horsemen, who, when the twelve hours were completed issued out of twelve windows, which till then stood open, and returning again, shut the windows after them-. It is to be remember ed that Eginhart was an eye-witness of what is here described, and that he was an abbot, a skillful architect, and learned in the sci ences. Pat s Idea oiStstfiv Pat Donahue was a broth of a boy," right from the the " Gem of the Say," and he had a smoll contract in the Confay Rail road, in New Hampshire, in the year of grace, 1855, in which he agreed to take hie pay part in cash, part in bonds and part in stock. The stock of this road, be it bered—!ike many others—was not worth # " Continental," and has always kept up its valve with remarkably uniformity.. In dun time Pat, having completed his job, present ed himself at the treasurer's office for settw ment. The money, the bonds and the eer* tificate of stock were soon in his possession. " And what is this now ?" said Pat flour ishing his certificate of stock, bearing- the ''broad seal" of the corporation. " That is your atock, sir," Hamfly replied? the treasurer. ''And is this what I'm to git for me labor T Was not my contract for stock ?" " Why certainly ; that is your stock.--. What did you expect ?" " What did I expect ? said Pat, excitedly Why, pigs, and shape, and horses, sere." JKI" WHAT WE MAY EXPECT IN THX SHAPE OF TAXES—Secretary Chase's letter to chairman of the Senate Finance Commit— mittee, dated on the 12th nit., will open the eyes of the people to what is coming. lie saya that " nothing short of taxation to the amount of one half our expenditures" will save the Government from bankruptcy and ruin. Now, as It is admitted on all hand* that our expenses are. at the very lowest es timate, one thousand millions per annum, il is easy to perceive that, according to the Secretary's published opinion, the enormous sura of FIVE HUNDRED MILLIONS year must be raised by taxation 1 Can the country stand this, is a pertinent question ? This would require an average assessment of §25 per head for every man, woman sod child in the loyal States Ex. JE£-A Scotland paper tells the follow ing : A few weeks after s late marriage, the doting husband bad some peculiar thoughts when oa putting on his last clean shirt, as he saw no appearance of a" washing." He thereupon rose earlier than usual one morn ing, and kindled the fire. ■' ' I When handing on the kettle, he mad*# noise on purpose to arrouse his wife. She peeped over the biankets, and exclaimed " My dear what's up the <ky He de liberately responded, "Av [ut on ma hist clean sark, and am gaun to wash a one" to myself." " Vera wel," said Mrs. Easy, bad better wash me ane too 1" .. .•• . ' I . 7. ,i .kill rkiitthflt ■ i ■■ # Jealousj is the fear or apprehensions, of superiority ; snvyour uneasiness oadptit wj 4"* r •*..> s I; 'r VOL. 3, NO. 40
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