The Corner Stone, Volume 5, Number 48, College Corner, Union County, 29 November 1876 — Page 1

i the con Mill, stoat:. MISS ALICK MYRKS, EDITOR AN ! riloPlll liTOK. NOTICE TO CONTRIBUTORS. an r r a I v ;! inli ws i" ,..r. 1 SUBSCRIPTION. One copy one year $1.00 "W A N T K D . from a'J i.rt t-f ii. msr-an ;! .sj o Special Contracts Made with Advertiser! On liberal terms. Bates made known on application, iiegal advertising 60 cents per square each in ertion. VOL. Y. COLLEGE CORNER, INI)., WEDNESDAY, NOV KM HER -25), KS70. NO. -IS.

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" I am willing to risk my reputation as a public man," wrote Edward Mine to Ike Liverpool Mercury, "if the worst case of small-pox can not be cured in three days, simply by the use of cream of tartar. One ounce of cream of tartar dissolved in a pint of water drank at intervals, when cold, is a certain neverfailing remedy. It has cured thousands, never leaves a mark, never causes blindi ess, and avoids tedious linsrerhisr."

The returns recently issued for 1S71 show that sixty-nine of the 526, Go2 persons whose deaths were registered in England in that year were slated to be one hundred years old, or upwards. These eenteneriatis comprised sixteen men and fifty-three women; and the oldest were sis widows, described as being one hundred and four years old. Of the fifty-three women all but eight are registered as being widows. .Among the whole sixty-nine there is only one who is styled a gentleman; one of the men. is described as a pensioner, one woman as an annuitant and another woman (one hundred years old) as a " ward in Chancery." j There is a popular belief that ivy growing upon a building renders it damp and unhealthy, which is quite unreasonable. In fact, if a wall, particularly a north wall be damp, the best treatment is to plant English ivies at its base, for not oely does the dense foliage of the plant keep out the rain, but its aerial roots absorb the moisture already in the wall. The real mischief done by ivy is to old buildings of stone or brick, from whose joints the mortar has been dislodged. An ivy-shoot once lodged in one of these crevices will grow in bulk until in the course of years it has so pressed the joints apart that the masonry can be dislodged by any strong vibration of the buildinsr. Rovsi the world tourists crossing the Facitic en route for Jspait, on arriving at the ISOth degree of longitude, drop a day front their calendar. Tim xelorjtin? ship adds a day to its rVckouing. It lab--i pened to the llev. Dr. Field crossing this meridian on the IStit of June, which fell on a Sunday, to enjoy two successive Sundays in mid-ocean, one of which was the Sunday of Asia, and the other that of America and Europe. The reverend chronicler sadly records the fact that many of his fellow-voyagers, in their perplexity as to which day ought to be observed, failed to keep either day, and so, instead of gaining two Sundays, lost the one which was theirs of riant. The biggest tree in California in not in the Yosemite Valley. King's Tliver Valley, in Fresno County, is five thousand feet above the sea, and it's walls, which are about three thousand feet high, are very precipitous. Iu this valley a new grove of colossal redwood trees has been discovered. One of them eclipses all that have been discovered on the Pacific coast. Its circumference, as high, as a man can reach and pass a tapeline around, is a few inches less than one hundred and fifty feet. This is beyond the measurement of any tree in Calaveras Grove. The height is estimated at one hundred and sixty feet, and a part of the top lyiifg on the ground is over one hundred feet iu lensrtli. Henry Lslop McIvar, a native of Edinburgh, is a leader in the Servian army. He has fought on four continents in twenty years, and almost always on the side of the smallest numbers. He gained a medal in the Indian mutiny, fought under Garibaldi in 1859, under Lee in 1861, for the Mexicans after the rebellion, with a little Indian skirmishing in Texas. He was in the Creton rebellion, served in Greece against the brigands, was in the patriot army in Cuba for a while, and then had a cavalry command in Egypt. He fought in France under Faidherbe against the Germans, turned up in Paris as a Communist, went to Herzegovina as a correspondent of a London paper, and is nw a leader in the Servian irregulars. It so happens that in every twentyeight years the 4th of MarcU, the day fixed for the inauguration of the President, falls on Sunday. This occurs next year for the fourth, time in the history of our nation, and following the precedent established by three of his predecessors, the new President will take his oath of office ou Monday, the 5th of March. The first inauguration on the 5th of March was that of George Washington on entering upon his second term. The next time the 4th of March fell ou Sunday was in 1821, when James Monroe was the President-elect for the second time, and he, too, was inatiouraled on Monday. March 5th. The third occurrence of this kind was in 1849, when Zachary Taylor was inaugurated on Monday, the 5th of ?4j,re5i. After next year In;u:giiratioii-i,,y will not (all on Sunday again until 1305.

at rut-: j,. i si: The stream is calmest, when it Hears the tide,

And flowers are sweetest at the eventide, And birds most, musical at close of day, And t,ainls divinest when they pass away. Morii!ii is holy, but a holier eharm Lies folded elose iu Evening's ro'-v of halm, And weary man must ever love her best, For morning talis to toil, but nij-ht t rest. She. tomes from heaven, and on her vvitms doth liear A holy irafiianec, jit:e t he breath of prayer ; I'cotsleps of itiiseis follow in her trace, To shut tin! weary eyes of day !n ace. Ail things are hushed before her as she throws t lYr earth and b!.y her jnant le el repose ; There is a t-almer beaut y and a jwer Thai iiiorninj li no wit not, iu the Even in;; hour. Until (ha Kveniu ; we tmisl weep at d toil 1'iow life's stern furrow, dig the ve...ty s U 'Tread vvii.li .sad feet our roiiH and thorny way, And bear the heat ami lutrd'-n el' tho day. OU ! when ouvsim is eening, may we glide, lake !iii)iiiicr Evening, down liio golden tide ; Atei leave liehind ns, as we pass away, Sweet, tiarry twilight round our sleeping lay. is i-;. i n-siitnuMXtM f.x jxjua. The papers have informed us that the Prince of Wales killed some sloth bears iu the swamp jungles of iheTerai. This bear is one of the most dangerous animals in India; if he succeeds in getting hold of his enemy he holds on till he thinks he has killed him, or till he is driven olL lie is generally found among mountains, where he affords not only an exciting sport, but a vast amount of hard labor to sportsmen on foot. Ou elephants the sport is time ; the bear is slow in his ordinary pace, and is easily seen ; in his charge he is rapid, ftightening elephants more than hurting them ; hisgruntis very ferocious, and his eye exceedingly savage ; when in full pljimage he looms large and powerful ; the h:iir is so thick at times that, it weakens the effect of bullets. Moorcroft and L sent our sleeping-tent to some herdsmen's sheds on the Mahabulestvah range; we reached the place at dusk; the jack-fruit trees showed marks of recent claws, and our shikaree reported three bears, one of which was a very large vine. Startingbefore daybreak next morning we placed ourselves ou the edges of a tongue of bare hind, with a thick' jungle running to the mountain top. A thick fog wits rising from the lowlands; we could not see tine another, or any obiect at twenty yards distant; luckily the moisture rose rapidly ; the voices of the shikarees were heard ou the heights, and a double shot from Moo re roll told of game afoot. Looming as large as a buffalo on the higher ground, through the thin mist, I was aware of an animal coming down upon us at thirty yards I gave him two shots from a smooth-bore, and then stretched back a hand for my rifle. The caitiff bearer had bolted; 1 ran, and seizing the rifle from his shoulder tired a hasty shot ; running on I saw the monster half way down the precipitous end of the tongue. Nothing could have been more beautiful than the sight the gray dawn of day, then the envelope of mist, its rapid rise, its prismatic colors from the rising sun, the weird shouts of the unseen shikarees, and the dash of the bear along the open ground. On examining iiis track, blood-spots and bloodsmears told of severe wounds. As soon as the men could be collected, including my runaway, we followed on into an op posite ravine thick with jungle; here the bear was traced into a wonderful t hicket formed by the boughs of a creeper, en tangled in every possible direction, inpenetrable, dark, and dank. A shikaree crept in, soon to come out again, signaling us to follow. After creeping in among the thick tangle for a few yards in utter silence, except from the dry sticks that cracked beneath our knees, we saw the bear about twelve feet from us, with, an almost impenetrable barrier between us. We knew that if he got at us we could not get out again. Our safely was in hitting a vital spot ; but this was hard to do, owing to his position and the thickness of the cover. We crept on as close as we could get; there was a strong yell ; the smoke hindered our sight; we had reserved a barrel each, but, before we could see, the bear had got out. We followed as quick as possible, and, no sooner had we got out. than the piercing scream of a human being told of mischief up the gorge. An old man ami his wife were gathering jungle fruit; the bear seized the woman by the heel, dragged her down front the tree, and was beginning to maul her, when our men ran up and disturbed him. The bear was badly hurt ; he got behind a rock, where Moorcroft settled him, while I attended to the old woman, who had two great holes through her left heel. No wonder she screamed. The bear was a very fine one. and the grease we made from him was beautiful. We got up a party of six fo show a navy jcaptam some, btar-shooting mar Pnotia. A ride of twelve miles brought us to our shikarees and weapons, with two bears in the hills; the guns were duly posted, and the game was roused.

I As they took an opposite direction to my j rock, .1 tan down the hill ami mounted j my horse. Several -hot were fired ; there. ! veils i o ri:tt scri ni Din '(" nniolio ll.e heaters.

with a crv of pain. I rode up, and 1 found a bear lyinsr on a mnu'.s body, and i deliberately gnawing his arm. A good j poke with the spear made him leave that I . 1 11 :l ; ami run away. iVs it uapeiiea, an me ( guns were attending to lite other, while j I rode along the hillside looking for a bit 1 of ground ou which to close upon the bear before me. i;v-and-by we came to a narrow place, with nearly a nir.ipicc below; here Mr. I'ruin ihouiihl fit to turn and charge ! me. 1 could not hold my own on such ground, so turned and lied, after a scramble. On riding back to get up the j guns, one of my friends asked what he should do to the captain, who had accused him of ririmr signals of distress. "Well, how did it' happen ?" " I was riding," he said, " with my gun over my shoulder. The bear charged me. I did not see him, but the lior.se did. My gun went off by accident; the captain had no busines-i to call it a signal of distress." " And you had no Imsir.ess to carry your ; gun cocked," said I. "But the captain," ! said he, "Til shoot him!" (Duels were J very common in those days ) "Nonsense; ask hint to take a glass of mug!" They 1 - T 1 X 1 I 1 ... 1 ... . J' .....I, 1 ... iiau Kiiieu a very naiiUMitne teinate, out i no one was ready to come on after the j trentleman. Dr. C stelh.-e was very anxious to kill, i the Fgritpoona .Mouluains where he soon .Mian.) o E..- W.i whm v i in i imiu .). ttv. vtv.. ... ji. his track. Bruin showed his nose before j coming out oi the jungle. I fired ; he j veiled tike a child. "Faith," savs the j doctor, " If I had thought he'd crv like that 1 would not have come." We had ' chops for our late breakfast ; they were I i -i V a . .1. - I too mucn lor me uocior, so was tne soup . . , , ii ilniinr out lit- rtitiliiHI CIS 1 lilt Iieaa lustily with the grease. j Aiichinson, Lye, ami I were out early j one morning in the Stilt' Mountains; a bear on foot in low jungle. I fired, and a bear went away along the slope-. . , followed up over the mountain top, down the other side, overtaking her at four p. in., as she climbed the opposite precipice, of a ravine, tine hundred yards wide, breathless, tired, and very thirsty. Four barrels missed her. I hal but one remaining; I rested the rifle on a rock ; 1 refrained from breathing. The bear rolled down the precipice with a broken back from that h'st shot. On reaching my tents I found my friends had got there to breakfast, with a young bear that I had wounded while on its mother's back iu the morning. WhitEiore, the Godfreys, and I, on the hills near Wrengaum. As we walked under, three bears walked along on the top of the scarp. We fired all together, as we stood in line, at the bear opposite to us. All three rolled over in the jungle. We picked up two quite dead; the other got away into a deep ravine. A ball in ids nose made him stand on his hind leixs, twisting round and round, I -!lb blj f.ir ivi vw I'Lioimr his; liMtt in a most touching manner, till another shot ended his career. I look back on those bear-hunting days of forty years ago with a fondness and freshness that will onlv fade with fading j t5rae- :lud with a hoPe tliat the Plince ol I Wales enjoyed the sport and the scenery j as much as I did. .1 Sftt Htfhter ut :f!0,000 Hnl'juriti it. The Cologne (t'azelle observes that Bulgaria has on several occasions figured iu history as the scene of " atrocities" no less horrible than those lately committed by the Bashi-Bazouks. The Greek Euitieror Ba?ilius.llwus nicknamed " Bulgaroktonos " because he ordered fifteen thousand Bulgarian prisoners to ha ve their eyes put out. a few only being left with one eye, iu order that they might guide their fellow-prisoners back to their homes. Even more atrocious was the massacre of the Gothic settlers in Bulgaria. The much-praised Emperor Claudius II gives the following account of this massacre in a letter cited by the historian, Trebellous Pollio : " Claudius Broccho : Delevimus treeenta viginli niillia Gothorum, duo niiilia naviuiu submersimus. Ti eta sunt flumina sculis; spathis et laueeolia omnia littora operiunttir, campi ossibus latent tecti ; nullum iter purum est; ingens carrago desertaest; tan turn inulierum eepimus ul binas tt ternas mulieres victor sibi miles possit adjungere. (Claudius to Breechus: We have destroyed three hundred thousand Goths and sunk two thousand ships. The rivers are covered with shields, their banks with spears aud pikes, and the fields with bones; no road is free from blood ; the huge barricade of wagons is deserted; and we have captured so many women thattach of our conijuering .soldiers can take two orthree for his share.") A E1TTEK dog may have courage before his master's door.

Tili: A I It NIC.T.

N ATcnn .shmlder.H when hbe sees a woman throw a stone, but hen a woman ;lt U to .phi wood, Nature covers u r hr:uI UriH l" A al"c !i'J 'k ''"'S 1,1 temporary de-pair. I I'WS fashion letter wys that steel 4,f. 1 . f, r- . t j ,,.,, ..n it.. I. .r..- ..f t.,.t:.,' ..,.. v. i..uc "'X'S with sUcl buckles and bows on ! intep, and :-ome of ihe newot have ; three bows, one across Ihe in-tepand two ; placed porj cndicularly side by side j aivive. Tor walking, shoes with inetal-li-soles are to be worn. White pi Ush, velvet or felt hats are chosen for dress by young ladies who ! .-ss richly. They have broad crowns, hi. h but not pointed, are very hort bciind, and are tiimmed around the crown with a plaited scarf. For iacetrimmings, dark velvet of some In coming shade, or else a fringe of ostrich i feathers very much curled. ! Koi xn to scr.EAM anyhow. ; " I'll rwf&ui if von touch ine 1" exelainied a pert n','ss ,. . ... I thi vvwihh cvmtlucf cold water was' thrown ; ! ih urew baekward, sud left her alone. j i i scream if vou toueh me!" she tried out once ! ne re. He . id, I ain't near yon 1 found it a lore." Sle '.iuu fcly subsided, grew tender to view, Ai I whispered unite softly, "1 11 stieani till yon do." .''.'!,.. f, ! '.:' r. .!,.! '...'.. . I .- A wuw lady entered a In'ston gr-eery fclore, and while talking with the proprietor the latter was taking of barrels for one of his customers. The Iniiv remarked that slip would lit- a ----- - - .. - ha rel of that flour, whereupon tlie grocer replied, " i will give you a barrel if you will carry it home." Toe lady, who weighed ajout two hundred pounds, resehed up to the top of the stack, lifted down a barrel, put it into a wheelbarrow, i ,i. I b .1 .i.l i t t . Km- 1 i ,?M b T 1 I n m i t " mi ,): i- ii i i i I 'la..,., ut am, lunuwfii ov ii i;u;rou"u, iuci fay the grocer was surprised. pAxtruv AVe-: Mrs. Muioch-C'niik i kit- ws what she is talking about. She av to her sex : . When a loan routes heme, Toii'i et :t i.t a Ltt..v ; IVttor far to sleep In the huiii-ry deep, 'Neat U white sheets ni foam, And ol seaweed tangle. This applies more particularly to women who live handy to the hungry deep and seaweed tangle. But to an inland woman on empty ash barrel with an anny overcoat will answer the purpose, Mrs. Craik assures us, in a private note. 'ihe ln-talr Sv.v. When three good little boys get toselhcr of an alterncon, the chances sire that there will be a fight, a window broken, or some stray dog will have a pan tied to his tail. l A ni itY At Irs: At a station on the New Haven Koad, the other day, a man and woman came into the car. livery f-eat had one or two occupants. He put her into one seat which was iu part occupied, and he took another just opposite. The party whom he sat with olkred to sit e Lewi: ere so that he and his lady might have that scat together. "Oh, it does not matter," he replied; "we ate married." The esplamitionVas t; o i tsidered sat i s fac 1 0 ry . "I have a friend," writes Arista rch us, "who is unable to leave London himself this autumn, but whose wife and chil dren are enjoying the breezes of their native Scotland for a few weeks. Wish ing km on he 'must feel rather lonely Mrs. P. and the little ones.' 'Yes,' he replied, 'I do, but the wind is lorn i-e red fti the shorn lamb; you see, when my wile is away I can smoke n bed.' " Attempt to Steal .fnrelH'ii Itetnuiiim The Chicago Times claims that the recent outrage on Lincoln's tomb was prompted by Ben Boyd, the notorious counterfeiter, who was captured by Elmer Washburne, some time ago, and a gang of countefeifers, such as seldom obtain a foothold in the State, was broken up. Boyd, through the agency of his friends and his own wealth, has for some time time pai been trying to liberate himself from prison. The shrewd scheme was to carry oil the remains of Mr. Lincoln, secrete them and keep them until Pre.-ident Grant should be compelled to give Boyd his freedom, cr.nditioncd on the restoration of the remains to their former resting place. 7. . : : ". , , A i-ar.ge whale, sixty-five feet m length and f proportionate breadth, was driven ash-e on the Baudoa Ieach, Coos Bay, Caittoroia, recently. hue two white

to sav something civil to him, and ignt aueau, tne.i i.c .eu , uu t ..wing that he and his belter half trot ot ternble K,H'ks' ,liUK'a

Pretty well blether,! remarked that w mTe ""'V .

meJii were disputing over the ownership of 'the prize, " four Indians," says the Co.)3 Bay JYtirs, " under cover of night, qulekly skinned the great. ' mammal to ttp bone, taking away as much blubber wi v fin-in as would be sufficient to 't ie a the wheels of life of the entire ti i s bir iirarly a quarter of a century." .AVE UBfiM'fY

.fr. lltHjaii'M ( ttrmrfut Mule. ! Mr. 1 1an, of il.:pansYitie, Lxd tlf mi.4 cheerful uui'.e that ever ground corn from the cob. He hasn't i!ie attiiual j now. The mule is dead. His dipc;si- j tioo & mild and t-erene, hist marnicrx, for a mule, were perhct, hw hind liet U I were held down to the earth in a ;.r ly. j giwHi-natu red way, and ho amount of abtt-e could induce hi in tosc.nl them fly- f

itig out in search of an enemy. He had j,a;r t, ta;f ul ,, vices. The only mean thing lie ever did was c:U up Hogati's new straw bat one day, last then he did it in s-uch a cheerful way 1 that llt.gan forgave him at oikv, ami ha I worn clulh caps ever since. I loga n U a t very positive. lnbhorn man, but he loved j his nude, and the mule loved Hogan s j oely a mute can love. It was a tjucslioii i among the nt-ibbuM whu h was the : more aftectionate of the two. Mr. Hogao had a brand-tie w wagon j built, and, following a New York style, ite called it the F lyaway, and had the j name fainted on the tla.-hbo.trd. To add ; to the cencr.il effect Ite also h fly painted just under ihe name. Littie did he think when he hitched Ids mule to this r.ew wagon that he was strokii r his clossy sides for the last time.

J and that before nizht the cliter'ulcess j the rest trom making tiieii.ivt- ridkuj of that gentle animal would var.i-ii in ons ,jr,ie t.iii;e or oth- e.

, ut.ua, i iwc.j wvumii, . I . , I . I .. I.. . and jfogan's mule, harnt?sed for the first ( time before the new conveyance, trotted j down the street, looking perhaps a trifle certainly more chtcrful than ever. i Mr. I lon? ivnlled tin nt thf Toeerv i - - j j- c . mule was left alone. His look was mild and bland, happiness sat perched upon j his waving ears, and peaceful seremtv I was in every twitch of his hairless tail, He gazed up the street, and was calm ; he . 1 tt rn.).l j i.vn t.l ! n.T cva I ttv : p 1 O . s r.i vu u w.. v. . -- i t. ..,;..! I .. ;t auu iwniu !...' . i.t ju cm uavnwi this cheerful mule looked behind, and he was lost. He got his mi' 1 eye on the big painted rly on the dashboard, and he -food transfixed. A look of horror came into his face ; his eyes oi cued wider ami w '' .ml hj t.rrn:b!e-i in everv H-r.K Hehad switched the piratical blue-bottle from his shies, he had wrestled with the lively and aSl-devouring potato-bug, and he had knocked the life out of the savage grasshopper, but never in till his experience had he ever encountered a foe like the tnoiister he saw b.hiud him. 1 1 i s c h eerfuin e s s vanished in a mom e i u lie grappled his teeth hard and gathered himself together, as it were, and then suddenly he shot out, for ihe first time in his life, his hind leg at an enemy. He put a great deal of vigor into litis first not I. and after lie ha l finished he smoothed his wrinkled front, his cheer-fulae.-s leturned, and with something very like a smile on his countenance he looked back to gaze upon the mangied remains of his fee. In all probability he was the most disappoinled mule that ever drew the breath ot life. The fly sat Here looking higcer and uglier than ever. M r. 1 Toga us cheerful niu'e gazed at it one moment in a dazed, staggered sort of way, and then looked as if he had made up his mi tut never to lie happy again. Once more he gripped his teeth hard, and then he kicked at the fly for ten minutes right straight ahead, and when lie looked buck, tht-re the insect sat looking quite peaceful ami conl.-nted. Then llogau's mule lost faith in himself. He danced a sort of wild war dance for five minutes like mad. Alas! the equable mind of Hoan's mule was gone forever. In hi" mad career he jammed the I lvawav into trees and lences and gate poi-is and stumps until all that he c trrievl behind him was a dismal skeleton i f sbalts anil daslilxiard. It was right on the railroad tracK tliat i.e mntiiy got ri i ci tio;-e. i . i t, i.H. j :,. t, : . : t l t ; , ; alio loin tie iiitucu i.t i. nn i -n turned about, and the first thir.g lviflashing eye lit ou wn the fly on the dashboard. He was, ju-t then, the maddest nude iu the United States. Hark! Pull! pull! pi-il! A whi-ile blows its shrill, hoarse i-hrk k i t warning ; a belt rings! "lis ihe expr..- tr.vin ?pP reach infr! Hogau'a mule Lcedc-.l it r.ut. He danced around thai da.-hb.-rird a:vl he kicked at that fly. He. knkc-d at it sideways and backward; he kicked at it with one foot, then with two fee t, and then with all. his feet b'c--.i::er. . . ... v0li.'..n ...t. f tho curve one despairing Lick, aud , H ,a Cuecrfui mule scnt fifteen feet trai'-ht up into the air, M.d ta uow a in tweuty-tive diilerent places. All that Mr. Hogan over found ot wreck was the da-hht :.l i;h tl. ort it. f!v TfH". BotoU J'Hiti' excitement has tat: -deaths in that city. tys tin' t S - e '. ral 1 1 1- i

without I .still li.t'H, t'l.e.iu ni- ii. v -tis-.

IS IU AX liXf wp 1 T.iik And with b? sim scassv oii d I i : Who I Ely 'at-f t te Win ll It. - !. i And miiM- in a in vr?it-td:y , I -

itu ' tit, !.:;' ,.)!., ill !, itfiiatt Mien, r iti H rp!ie.t-ues. st ii di-jt( S. ii. ' lorih 1 1- bine u-n t , v.iSV; r , in',.:- m.ij Soft lanmif r . j" til-.- ii.i Wle eis viHess u i: I i : And frojo e.i h tr's ttu" til'- ideal bvlts ! ? s ut l H' ' I.; ;.(' I... W Oh rarer h,t u.. .fi The ws. - iiiiMjoii I i In ivl'.-r- oj-nk-ns, Ali'i -ioHJ '.! t-t '; . To wheie uy Ui'it :ii hirt ; My liesiitt tn -s-i bi l4'et in tit ri h p. ft :4f i';.VtII, AM' tifjOIS. I ' y. i i i:k il;nt the nec the fort a, ad. il.an Tee day tlnu ihe i-iockcii pt-aeI i 1 the very dav thai me hawk take-ho!d of j Lira, There i one tvau e in i.avia a f,wl in every sivia! e;i;ue. He keei'ali t, oi i 1 1 1 ra t Hit-:, 5 ii" tee ; !' .,nT 11 are i.. j ,-un,p tih, h U erin-I u j !,; omi t.rui,.jt a crip i j u; u v .-' ii.ivc one real in mem rn .ii evt ry ii'-i', and nee cracked are s'm.ii . (r. tlsat ar brake ii ; such is a man's -iochI name once tainted with reproach. i A r tn: reetit-ttion is a olant oelica-.e j . '. , . . , in n nature ami i v lio iin.iii i.iinvt in !iiM.t up in a stlg It t pro-het ; btii, may iH-nt-h in the j its growth. It will ! Ukc the cont'd of i r, tl. ,,, ,r ,,,, ; ! H '-" it , night. j If we iteetl asi-og wiH, in order lo ! do jrood, U b more sacc -;ry tor us uH "ta order not i leebi. from which H ! ottca re.-ull lUai tin- noi hJ. .i bie i-a-re l?.e lorce II is t:'io-i v t ! i CiCvi. I !0 ; : . 1 V 1 " Wiiul-". iS it!-;. i afiei . on ii t V. iin .Old - J. l i uy -. v. '1 ioii.;: .r.i t w V": . u V y r. a AtJ tiie -p.:-.. of Ti:r; - t.iv--L i. 1" rvt ry v. t . ii; his .". .!iV villi :t w . Ito i ti-t ulne?s, rather It : e n ct; a l ex; r ia -.iver 1 that ihe b.-y i i i:t his i ;oii;.i t 11 vv ; :t JUil ll.Tli.J ta-'.e j cft'ter It ..re i.iI: '.v.J il i :..y I h spl.t-Vi'l wi;:i iUM w v! t i i vh i ! whin he v-a i !T.:'g .v t r. 1 ; trlii!.-. I m ..1 L.il I .twav '. 1 r,re. i:.e e.-.rri t n a -t rv.i.i i iii..c in ."t I e; i'.;-5 t i:.e i Ah o.l :t !."..- -red yt ,sr . 1 I e fid soul 1. ft a i. i 1 L'..r h'ii t rr -i n:.d i city t'l Lo;- !.;i t e 1 I .at' li.e p: rty iyi.,r. 'He vHr a ai:.it -a i'..t. r tci . t : mi l ow v1 eC.it 1 V. ' ' -J ir t. t. h it I vl I. e i r-.-. ar f tl:.- ia. - :. I v! s:i -.-.i. hit rt-t tin, i e.x p s a n i to - 1 ' C .t:ii' a uu i:.tet vi r.-'.ri: I v,c i 2 " C . t I i : ' r li i . :i a I 1 . 1 :..!n', ft., sircke the Fi-HlNi s: ..rt h :. r cr, ct .. - c" t,h vi i.; 1 L ivi ':d: in s heart i A I I pt .:, wi:h a v ; Ih.s : w iiit-'i is add a 1 st rone hook uuder vvin.ii tt.: t:i ;:. t rin-'h'e c'um s t,;-, i lews the b -at l.ti'id t ! .! re t - an r... I After h- h- w,.s;i. j ing ll-.e b"at f r ; pulled jti, ti.e nn-u--.t : , 1 ' i t-ur'ai t . . . :ea i:i :i ve. A - 1KHH n s iT .ill. t'oMT MostsiMi. b in the mornr a. ant f;t..r 1 ; ' t i a i ' "li ; morn mi. ! The .-uu rl-e-i in i.iO :. J giKid tor our hi a'.tii t I is very pleasant to .-t the morning lio- flow I smell very gt.Hd. If j morning, or there's j le r.dny wt.id.er. I' iv.or.iir.g when you . I to s'.ccv i:i ll:'- m- rr.i 'ii ; v a t :i! v. the u j j j j h Li i a t , t ; Math: brert C -s II ll ft 3n iVCs 1 . I' N. i. : yotut'je ii.e . i ic. i a.-:eoi -ior.etl by me f..;l:pg ;! ir, it I- tv i i'.r )- en s i i Ci ti 1 . ill , I iio v, v.illi 1 er hi.-! ..mi and , L'. .. v.t rtc ivirv i.v:. she v a- i ii - t: -lb I v k t Li t.Vi 1 I

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