• ~ • . • . . . • . • - . . • • .... ....-. -•'• .'3. -- 4.t. .., . . •._ . _ - ,•:.- r v - -; 1,14. k ' - , . ' --- ~.:. :. .._. • • _..... . , . , ...• . • ~.,_ .. . :tt ....t....: k _.... .t.' . ' ' * l. : \ 1 '. ..: ' , r 4Zii, ~,,:... ' 4 „ . .,A r' A ..-: -.. kt .. _., • E • ~.....„ .t, ..,_ • . .. .., .i. --. , ~,,, ...-+ - ' • ' , ''' . c: . - .,7 , := 1 " '' 7 . 7-- ..= .z . ... . . • . .. 4 , 3337: W. ,113.1a1V. VOLUME XXII. ualka - caaap of Swiss, English, and American Manufacture ; JEWELRY cheaper than ever before sold in Waynesboro', all the latest styles kept constantly on hand. Every variety of Cuff buttons. A fine assort ment of FINGER AND EAR RINGS. Solid Gold. Engagement and WEDDING RINGS, . Silver Thimbles and sherlds,' Castors, Forks, and Spoons', Salt Cellars, and Butter Knives of the cel ebrated Roger Manufacture, at reduced rates. SPECTACLES :Nr/Olk , 11 1 M-17 9 • To suit everybody's eyes. New glasses put in old frames. Clocks. Watches. and Jewelry prionptly and neatly repaired and warranted. ALEX. LEEDS, Next door to the Town Hall, under the Photograph Gallery. July 31. DEALER IN DRUGS, Chemicals, PATENT MEDICINES, PREPARATIONS FOR THE HAIR, OILS, PAINTS, VARNISIIESES, ante. 4Le. --o 6:rPhysicians dealt with at 20 per cent. discount. Waynesboro' Motel Building, March 27, 1868. WAYNESBORO', PA . WAYNESBORO', FRANKLIN COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 25 0 I860w: 3POIEITXC3.Ek.Za. [By Request. DEATH OF A CHRISTIII.-_,:,,,z-, "THY SLEEP SHALL BE SWEET," She sleeps in the valley so sweet, Above her the green willows wave ;_ We planted the rose at her-feet,: To bloom and decay o'er her grave: She sleeps in the valley so sweet, --- No sound e'er disturb her repose ; So quiet in this calm retreat , She rests safe, secure from life's woes. How calmly, she rested in God : "To thy arms, my Savior, 1 come ; Come quickly, come quickly, 0 Lord, And welcome thy wanderer home !" She sleeps in the valley so sweet ? Her spirit has taken its ilighi; Her form is but dust 'neath our feet, While she is an angel of light. CHORUS.—She sleeps in the valley, ,p Riper- . . . She sleeps in the valley so sweet; She sleeps in the va:ley, She sleeps in the valley, .v 7 lj . ..prLl„idoist lii 0 telo 011ai1t1OM.1 DIES BY AN OLD MAID Now my dear girls, listen one moment, am not going to preach to you; I want 4 have a nice confidential chat with you about the world in general, and a fe.w things in particular. Although I may be an old maid who has turned several 'corners' on the high way of life, does it prove my incapacity to be oracular at times ? •It only shows that I have better opportunities for observing men and things from my stAnd•poincard am, con sequently better prepared to expatiate upon the subject under consi - deratjour than your matronly friends and advisors who are en cumbered with the details of house-keeping and the responsibilities of a family. During the five and forty years of my sojourning, I have neither kept my eyes shut nor been asleep. Now, dear girls, let me begin at the be ginning. There is something in the world to bethought of besides getting married ! You may open your unbelieving eyes and elevate your incredulous noses; but this is the sober conviction of a practical woman supposed to be 'in her right mind.' Your father has spent large sums, it may be, upon your education; and your :nether has striven. both by precept and example, to make you an ornamental as well as a valuable acquisition to the home circle, and a useful member of society. Truly, ,then, here is your sphere. It is pre-eminently a daugh ter's high privilege and duty to make home happy, to seek ta render the house attractive to the weary father as he comes in and leaved the,busy turmoil of the world behind him, and shuts the door.on the face of care, to lighten the burden of the mother, and smooth from her perplexed brow the wrinkles of sorrow or anxiety, by the tender and willing sympathy which only a daughter can give; to help and encourage the wayward brothers, and keep them, by the constraining power of love, away from the temptations of improper amusements, to hold up the blessed example of a pure and womanly life before the young sisters whose guileless feet areedust entering upon the untried borders of the mysterious future There are some of the objects you should live for. True, a woman's heart is so constituted that she longs to love and be loved in return; but a man who would not prize a girl more highly for fulfilling faith: fully the relations of daughter sod_ sister, would not be worth the winning. Here is another item for your considera tion—never flirt 1 I have observed that when a young lady so far forgets het dignity and self-respect as to try to attract the notice of gentlemen, she generally fails of her object, for does she not, by so doing, publicly ad vertise that she has lost that sweet, maiden ly reserve which constituted her chief charm? No true man, when seeking for a sympathet le sharer in his joys and sorrows, would choose one who could dazzle a crowd, for these are not the qualities which endure the wear and tear of life. Where the ornament of a meek and quiet spirit will not attract, it is hardly worth while to add the loadstone of dims and art. A man who values only those external, superficial accomplishments which any wo man of ordinary capacities may acquire,. to the entire neglect of the mind; who hardly seems to tare if she have a soul even, so long as she be handsome enough .to gratify his vanity, may as well buy a puppit to display his wealth-and add to his importance as the owner and proprietor. Let him do it, then ! Let him see that you will be prized for your moral worth, your virtues, yourself!— Such a man might make a desirable escort to places of amusement, bat would ,cover make a good, practical, loving husband; and no girl of sense, or of sound principle, would desire any other, were be possessed of incal culable wealth. Fashion and frivolity seem to be reigning supreme in too many female hearts. The _love of dress has become a passion. Some ladies may argue that they have at their disposal plenty of time and money. Grant edo but is it a valid excuse for leading o there astray YThe devotee of fashion may appear arrayed in a new and elegant suit every time there ,is a shaifow of a change in the style, A.= Xi:icier, 033 clei3.t JE•aari.l.l3r INTevotrovjact.r)cas. and it may cost her comparatively little trou_bie,only the husband and lather must economise in some other direction in order to furnish the requisite funds, and the poor, tired dressmaker be obli:_ed to fore_o her i necessary rest. But does the evil stop there? Assuredly not. And let us hope the fair wearer of this expensive . finery does not realize the extent of the injury she is doing; we could exeroma da other_ charity tottar_t_ her. But there are other considerations.— In the first place, it testers the growth of two most noxious plants in the feasale.heart, namely, vanity and envy. What young lady has not experienced the humiliation of being eclipsed by some more fashionably dressed person than herself-4 Ah! all this engenders any thing but holy emotions in the mind. I would have a lady always neatly and be comingly dressed, richly too, when she can afford it without causing others to suffer in consequence, but never gaudily, or in the extreme of the prevailing styles. Nor would I have her fall into the opposite extreme of ignorin the fashion altogether. It is a duty we o ' ourselves, as well as our friends and socie / in general, to pay a proper regard to our / ppareling, and it is always safe to follow a ;tedium course in the matter of dress, as other things. And remember, girls, that e state of the finances, as well as the per nal taste, must be consulted. And where is harmony in all the details, there can• it ' tfailto be both' elegance and beauty, a erfection and finish which always strike a ell balanced mint!, as the 'eternal fitness of _hiageLand no other would be safe to trust either asa glii - dtTor companion - throng. he tangible realities of life's perilous jour ney. How Small Expenditures Count. Five cents each morning. A mere trifle —thirty-five cents a week. Not much,, yet it would buy ooffee or sugar for a small fam ily. Eighteen dollars and twenty-five cents each year. This amount invested in a sav ing bank at the end of each year, and the interest thereon at six per cent computed annually, would amount to more that $O7O. Enough to buy a good farm in the West. Five oents before each breakfast, dinner and supper, you would scarcely miss it, yet 'tis fifteen cents a da: $1 05 ler week.— Enough to buy your wife or daughter a new dress. $54,50 a year. Enough to buy a small library of books. _lnvest this as be fore, and in 20 years you would—have-- $2,000. Quito enough to buy a goad farm Ten cents each morning—h.aly worth—, second . thought; yet you can buy a paper of pins or a spool of thread. Seventy cents a week; it would buy several yards of muslin. $86,40 in ono year, With it you could get a good suit of clothes. Deposit this as be fore, and you would have $1,340. in twenty years. Quite a snug little fortune. Ton cents before eaoh breakfast, dinner and sup per—thirty cents a day. It would buy a good book for the ohildrren. $2,10 a week —enough to pay a year's subscription to some good newspaper. $109,20 per year— with it you could buy an 'excellent organ, on which your wife or daughters could produce sweet music to pleakantly while the evening hours away. And this moment invested a s before, would, in forty years, produce the desirable fortune of $12,000. Boys, learn a lesson. If you would• be a haply youth, teal a sober life, and bo a wealthy and influential man; instead of squan dering your extra change, invest io a library or saving bank. If you would be a 'tnisera• ble man • lead a drunken life, abuse your children, grieve your wife, be a wretched, despisable being while you live, and finally go down to a dishonored grave. take your extra change and invest it in a drinking 9 a loon, or in tobacco. FIFTEEN GREAT MISTARES.—It is a great mistake to set up our own standard of right and wrong, and judge people accordingly.— It is a great mistake to measure the enjoy ment of others by our own, to expect uni formity of opinion in this world; to endeavor to mould all dispositions alike, not to yield in immaterial trifles; to look for perfection in a fallen world; not to aim at perfection in our own actions, to worry ourselves and others with what cannot be remedied, not to allevi ate all that need alleviation, as is our power; not to make allowances for the infirmities of others, to consider everything impossible which we cannot perform; to believe only what our finite'minds can grasp; to expect to be able to understand everything. The greatest of all mistakes is to live only for Time, when any moment may launch us into Eternity. TIME AND MONET.—Many people do not take care of their money till they have come nearly to the end of it, and others do just the same with their time. Their best days they throw away—let them run like sand through their fingers, as long as they think they still have an almost countless number of them to spend; but when they find their days flowing rapidly away, so that at .last they have very few left, then they will at once make a very wise use of them, but, un luckily, they have by that time no notion now to do it. Ice is now manufactured in New Orleans so abundantly that it can be afforded to fam ilies all over the city at one cent per pound, and to large consumers at three quarters of a cent, It has been tested with lee from Boston, and is found to be more eompaot and slower in melting. Made from lltered water, it is clear as crystal, and purer than ice nat urally fowled is apt to be, Why is a room of married folks like' a room that is empty? Because there is not a single person in it. Wanted—a strong adhesive plaster, to make busybodies stick to their own business. Power of Religious Decision, _______ln_the_Weatiiv_ed_a_v_ery proud, wealtby, infidel and irreligionsiather, who having one_ day palled his family together. told them if e_n_t_t_oLtbe pray_e_r_meeting_an j religion,' as be called it, he would disinherit them, and banish them all from the house. The wife and. children were included is the threat. The daughter, however, coodimed to to_lbe_p.tayer meetings, and soon found peace in believing in-Jesus. W-hen op, portunity was afforded to make a profession,- she meekly arose, and spoke of the" rent change' in her heart, and of her ' fait the savior. The news was immediately carried to the father.of the young lady. Having come home that night, she was met at the door by her father, standing with the Bible in- Lis arms. • 'Maria,' said' he, I have been told that you have publicly professed, tonight, that you eligion. Is that so ?' sid the girl, love you, and I think I love the Savior too' Opening his Bible to a blank_ leaf, and pointing with his finger, be said : 'Maria, whose_name_is_tha_ ' 'lt is my name, sir.' 'Did I not tell you that I would disinherit you it' you got religion ?' 'Yes, air,' 'Well I must do it. You cannot come into my house.' And tearing t of tho Bible, 'there,' saisLhe, ' your name from among my c ean_go.' She - went to the Louse of a pious—widow in the neighborhood, and she heard no more from — h - e rim iferldr — three — weeks. But—one morning seeing her father's earlia up to-tire door, she ran out, nod sal - 4 11 T hat is- the matter, James ?' 'Your father is very sick, and thinks he is going to die; and ho is afraid he shall go' to hell for his wickedness, and for the great wrong he has done you in disinheriting you, and turning you from his house. He wants you to jump into the carriage, and oome home as quickly as possible.' _ . over f' —She found her father sick, sure enough, on going ho,me; but she soon sa w he was only sin sick. ' She talked with him, prayed with him, andeavored to lead him to Christ. In three days, the father, mother, two brothers and a sister, making the whole . . . . i.-::, . . , i .. , , 1 ~, hay-alJ;Come--Back• We have news from Winchester, Va., that James M. Mason, of the firm of Mason & Slidell; has returned to that town, where, for the future, he intends to reside. This is something to be noted. They all come back. With die collapse of the confederacy there was a pretty general stampede of die gusted Southerners to other countries to es cape the pains sad penalties of Yankee domi nation and negro emancipation. A colony of them was set up near Cordova, in Mexico, where all that the loveliest climate under the sun and the richest soil could give them was theirs; but the colony wilted and soon fell to pieces, and its members came straggling home again. Several expeditions of exiles from the upset kingdom of King Cotton went down to Brazil, where they dreamed of re nowinglife under the blessings of the 'pecu liar institution;' but those adventures found negro slaver, in Brazil so strongly mixed up with neg ro equality that they could not stand it, and tey, too, as , irom a shipwreck, in which they had lost everything but life, came straggling_back._And so wi.h similar ex peditious to Central Ann riea, the West India Islands and elsewhere. They all failed, and the surviving parties therein all returned, 'for richer or poorer—for better . or worse,' to their old places in the South, as prefera ble, even under the Yankee and free nigger, to any place outside. • Among the distinguished Southern exiles who, for one, two or three years after the war, •continued to roam about in foreign parts, 'seeking rest and finding. none,' were Breckinridge, Soule, C. CA Clay, Lake Thomp son, Toombs, Mallory, Trenholm, the Lamers and a host of others who have all returned —Breckinridge, Thompson, Mason and a good many more under the passport of Presi dent Johnson's last and comprehensiie am nesty proclamation. Of those still abroad the most prominent are Benjamin, Slidell, and last, th ough not least, Jeff Davis and George Sanders—the head-and tail of the rebelion. But Jeff is coming, and .Sanders, no doubt, wit soon-follow. Before the . year is out there will probably • not bo a sing le Southern graduate or freshman of the South ern confederacy in any foreign land, notwith standing the drawbacks and abominitiins in 'the Sunny South' of radical despotism, negro suffrage, negro office-holders ' carpet-baggers , scalawags and Yankee school matins.— .Y. Herald. A little urchin seven or eight years old, in one of our schools where a Miss Blodgett was teacher, composed the following and .wrote it on his slate at prayer time, to the great amusement of the boys.— 'A little mouse ran up the stairs, To hear hlits Blodgett'say her prayers.' The teacher discovered the rhyMe, and called out tho culprit. For a punishment she gave him his choice, to wake soother rhyme in five minutes, or be whipped. So afterthinking and blinking, and scratching his head till his time was nearly out, and the teacher was lifting the stink in a threatning manner, at the last moment be exclaimed— _ 'Here I stand before Miss Blodgett ; Bile's going to strike, and Han going to dodge it.' He was. sent to his seat. Bow very few of as realize that as we rise each morning, and commence our various avocations, we aro one day nearer our final home, • SCOTLAND AND MT.ALTO IL R: , . • __A _abort time ago we noticed an article in the 'Recterd,' beaddd 'Query,' stating briefly, with reference to the projected railway froth' :t. :•I I 4 I I -481orqP, as the Executive Committee; .that we bad been instructed to confer with the C. V. and Penna. R. R. Ce's, and secure their co-oper ation—and that further than this nothing was known. - . To correct the taiitaken toteiiiiiie - s whkb may have resulted from this, as well as - to ad vise all interested (and this is • certainly the whole community) of the present stattis of this important enterprise, we feel impelled to intrude this communication upon your col, umns. _ At a meeting of•. the general committees held at Mons Alto in June '6B—at which all the districts through which the road was to pass, were represented—it was ascertained that about the sum of $185,000 was sub. scribed to the stock of the Company—Sowe d the districts having been thoroughly .an. vassed, and others but partially. Our esti mated cost of the road, exclusive of Right of Wa was $300,000. It was then deemed advisable that the feeling of the Companies to whose interests our road would serve as a feeder, and their willingness to assist in the enterprise should be ascertained, and that if possible they should be induced to have a rtsrua• based the before urt er canvassing was proceeded with. To this end we were instructed. One of our number, Col. Wiestlicg, had already ''so do I blot had - a - c. - • • t• • th=P .14 .• • t=W -7$ f the Cum. Val. Co., and learned from him of is-eorditilAympath_y_with_us, and of his_wil lingness to advocate the importance and ne cessity of the road - b — e - fore kis - Board of — Di= rectors, and urge, if necessary, their assist. arm by a subscription of at least $160,000 to the enterprise. fle — s - titifd — th - at he felt satisfied that their Board would fully appre• ciate the matter, and that importunity would prove superfluous, to secure the desired end. This_was at least, very encouraging, and we proceeded to Phila. to have an interview with President Thomson of the Penna. R. R, Co. He listened attentively to our repro sentation of facts, examined oar subscription. books and carefully weighed, and interro; . • tra-tts-too Irs-varieus-poin ts-bea ring-n p on the importance of , the lino, its feasibity and coat. He, as also Prest. Watts had done, Li I; •• • * O .- . I II ... .:6111 - _ our citizens who bad manifested their ap. preciation of the great benefit which would accrue to . the whole community in securing R R. facilities, by subscribing to the stock; and finally he told us—that - if we constructed the roadway and placed the cross ties; he felt confident that the Cum. Val. R. R. Co. would furnish the iron and operate the road; --He further stated that in order to enable us to arrive at an approximation of the cost of the graduation, masonry etc.; he would send an Engineer Corps to survey the ground be tween Mont Alto and Waynesboro', and to make such other modifications of the lines al ready run as were needed. This was on the let cf July 1868, and we requested that the Corps should not come until our Farmers had harvested their grain, but as soon thereafter a 3 possible. He courteously fixed the time to be two weeks from our interview or about the 15th July. This ended our mission; all that we had been instructed to do, was per formed, and all that the friends of the enter prise had hoped for, was accomplished. We bad the assurance of not only the sympathy but the substantial aid to the desired extent of these two great Railway Officials, and with this we returned home. liVe reported all these facts to the general committees at a regular meeting held at Mont Alto, which adjlurned subject to the call of the hairman, Col, WiestHey., who was to call a meeting on the arrival of the Engineer • Corps. This is briefly, the whole state of (he case. As all are aware, the Engineer Corps has not yet made its appearance, and hence the ne cessity of calling a meeting has been thus far obviated. While we deprecate the delay; while we realize that the important interests of the 'County are languishing on account of it, yet we see no room to reflect upon any one as being the intentional instrument in causing it. We could have had the survey made hog since, by paying for it, and probably the whole matter brought to consummation; but we haVe forced upon us the old adage that 'Beggars should not be choosers;' and we should patiently await .the convenience of our friends of the R. R. Companies. Mr Thomson is at the head of the greatest Rail way interest in the United States. Combi- nations are necessary; are being made and are in conteriaplation in order to secure to our State a largo share cf Pacific trade, which requires the greatest foresight and ability; and it cannot be wondered at, if temporarily, he has his mind as well as those of his coed jatators monopolize to the exclusion of the interest of this section. We have not a bated one jot or tittle, in our earnest desires far a speedy construction of our road ; neith er in the great importance which attaches to its early completion; neither has our confi dence in the good faith of those who have encouraged our effurts been shaken. Wo believe that Mr. T. will send the prom ised Engineer Corps, just as soon as other, to him larger interests, can be accommodated, and we hope and trust that this may be at no distant day. We have beard it rumored ffom time to time that our Committees were hostile to Chambersburg as a terminus of our road and discouraged all idea of oonneccion with the O. V. R. R. at that point; probably no bet. ter time could be taken advantage of to con • tradict this than now. While all or most all the active enterprises south of Fayetteville, upon whom our road would be larg ely de pendent for.tonnage, wero known to have ad vantages in a connection at Scotland; while ntarest§ had b mmitteo 89.00 or Year knciteit wonillihorteti the mileage to the Susqueharma,atunterice prefered the route r yet no one ever made- it a die quo non.— 'We feel ilaterested iiitthambetsburg 'as our COuntyiseat.; wtiteatire that our proaperity rinle j ie efleoted.by her wellbeing, and would wel- come any earnest effort *Mob she would put forth •to.secure to.herself the 'great advan tages which:would inure to such a connec tion) and the more, so, as it would greatly inereaSe the prbbabilities of an early rail con notion- betweeafier- atul-Oread We' here regretfully to 'add, that thus far (JbaurberahUrg• ildfi not taken that active ear nest interest which her own progress seemed to demand. Ohambemburg may new hold- the key to the solution of this whole matter. Let the county seat and vicinity take hold earnestly, and we feel thatwe hazard nothing in say ing that she will be met in a proper spirit, and the ,eornpletion of our road will be speed ily ieittized. • • DANT.I4IL-GEISER, E. Com. .JAAJOB B. COOK, . Luckiest Man in America. The New York 'correspondent of the Cin cinnati Times says : At the Metropolitan Hotel are nineteen citizens of Montana, the most distant of our possessions. They-came 3,000 miles across I • I • is rniries aird rivers in on am o pure ago goo, s an , supp tes or Helena, now the capital of Montana. With them is the famous Quartz King, Jas. W. Whitlatch whose his tor is a romance tram. scending tU - wildesrvagaliof fiction in interest and incident. Asa representative man he illustrates the power of - a - atir - 4 , ,y — an - d perso-verance_in_conquoring_obstaelcs inter posed by pioneer life, and moulding fate to human purposes. Jim Whitlatch, as he is called, was born in Pennsylvania, of indigent' parents, and the death of his father left him to shift for himself, at the age of eight years. In 1859 he accompanied an acquaintance on the way to California' as far as Kansas where his friend awed by she perils of the journey, deserted him and returned to the States. Whitlatoh hired as a cattle driver pushed on to California, and after a season of hay makin: commenced mining on his own ac- count. By diligence an. .y •perseverance he accumulated some $5,000, which ho lost b. wild cat s eeculations. He s • ent three years in this region, with variable fortune, and moved on to Nevada, where he was more successful, and again lost all by imprudent adventures. With nothing but his rifle and mining kit, in 1865, he wandered . across Idaho to the - placer diggings of Montana, whom productiveness had just attracted at tention. He wig so delighted with the picturesque 'beauty and fertility of the coun try that he decided for the first time during hilt adventurous wanderings to eettle and begin anew. With twenty-five cents only in his pocket,•he commenced prospecting for gold, concluding that where so much gold abounded on the surface it mast come from some place, he set about !iodine , the origin. For weeks he wandered tap and down the canons, built himself a cabin, and pushed his labors against the jeers of old minors; who had been discouraged in the search before. After months of labor and trials enough to discourage any less 'determined man, one day his experienced eye discovered in a lucky gopher hole unueual quantity of speci mons of gold bearing quartz. Inspired with renewed hope the .young miner plied his pick and shoved,,:and at a distance of - three feet below the swiftest, he uncovered the long sought vein, now known the `Union-Mine,' whence he derived 'th`e foundation of his fortune, and from which - his sucee=s - ors; . the New York Mining. Company, to whom. be sold—to enable. him to. prospect further— will continue • to obtain untold millions. It is said that this' mine alone contains ore enough to employ a thousand men in digging for a hundred „years. Whitlatch, however, continued his investigations, and opened other mines equally rich, procured stamping mills and batteries, enliktened new capital and en terprise) incited emigration to Helena—then a little collection of miners' bats—and today, at the ago of twenty-six, is worth a million of dollars.. Youngsters Seem , to know what's - what es pecially when. 6 4pap'' has been taking too much, overnight, The, paternal, •in dgit'. stance furnishes to us. bad spent the 641110,1 at a'eenvival party, and next morning had the cOmpensating.beadache. 'James,' said he to his little son, aged eight, •'go the drug store and get me a bot tle of soda water.?. The little boY. proceeded to, the drudgers and seeming to' obinpreheod precisely the nature of the paternal ailment, said: 'Please givo - me'a bottle of sober water fur pap.' 'ls my face dirty ?' remarked a yonog lady to her aunt, while, seated at the dinner table on a steamboat running from Cairo to New Orleans. 'Dirty No; why• did you ask r 'Because that insultiog waiter insists upon putting a towel beside my plate. I've thrown three under the table, and yet every time • he comes around• be pats another before me.' Two dutchmen sat quietly fishing on the bank of a river recently, when the following conversation took place 'in regard to the luck Choy were having: "Does nothing pile you, haps?"-Neigh, noting at all." "Veil" replied first dutchman, "noting piles me too. Fools and obstinato people make law2era rich. it is not enough to aim—you must hit, The woman questim—"ie he rich ?" t;# NUMBER 51
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